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THE CHERNAGOR PIRATES - SCEPTER OF MERCY BOOK 2 - DAN CHERNENKO
While young King Lanius dreams of being more than a mere figurehead,
his fellow sovereign, the usurper King Grus, is defending Avornis against
the shadowy plots of the Banished One—the dark god cast from heaven, who
seeks now to dominate the mortal world.
With the barbarous, nomadic Menteshe in the south holding the Scepter
of Mercy—and civil war raging among the Chernagor city-states in the
north—Avornis finds itself threatened on two fronts. King Grus and his
army are in the land of the Chernagors, hoping to quell the trouble—
without becoming bogged down in a protracted war. Grus may be able to form
an alliance against the Menteshe....Then again, it could be an inescapable
trap.
But the longer the kings go without acting on their dream of retaking
the Scepter of Mercy, the greater the advantage the Banished One gains.
However, sending soldiers against the Menteshe risks having the army
turned into half-mindless thralls. But sooner or later, King Grus will
have to strike—before his people realize just how formidable an enemy the
Banished One truly is....
Not for the first time—not for the hundredth, either—King Lanius
wondered what it would be like to rule Avornis. His ancestors for a dozen
generations had been kings.
They’d ruled. He, on the other hand . . .
He, on the other hand, sighed and went on poking through the royal
archives. Avornis was a proud and ancient kingdom. That meant it had been
accumulating scrolls and codices and sheets of parchment and the
occasional (often broken) potsherd for centuries. Lanius, fascinated by
history, dug through them as eagerly as a miner went after a rich vein of
gold.
The King—well, one of the Kings—of Avornis looked more like a scholar
than a ruler. He was a tall, thin, weedy man in his midtwenties, with dark
brown hair that needed combing and a beard with a chunk of dust in it down
low on his right cheek where he couldn’t see it and flick it away. Instead
of royal robes, he wore an ordinary—in fact, rather grubby—linen tunic and
baggy wool trousers. The servants had complained that he always came back
from the archives covered in dust and dirt, and that robes so smirched
were impossible to clean. Lanius didn’t like to cause people trouble when
he didn’t have to.
Dispirited sunbeams came through the dusty skylights set into the
ceiling. Motes of dust Lanius had kicked up danced in the light. Somewhere
off in the distance, far beyond the heavy doors that shut the archives
away from the rest of the palace, a couple of serving women shrilly
squabbled over something or other. Lanius smiled—he couldn’t make out a
word they were saying.
He bent for a closer look at the latest parchment he’d unearthed. It
talked about Yozgat—the great southern city where the barbarous Menteshe
held the Scepter of Mercy for their master, the Banished One—back in the
lost and distant days when Yozgat was not Yozgat but rather Prusa, an
Avornan town.
Lanius sighed. “Why do I bother?” he muttered under his breath. Prusa
had been made into Yozgat more than five hundred years before, when the
wild Menteshe horsemen rode out of the hills and took the southern part of
the kingdom away from an Avornis wracked by civil war. It had housed the
Scepter of Mercy, once the great talisman of the Kings of Avornis, for
four centuries. All efforts to reclaim the Scepter had failed, most of
them horribly.
Maybe some clue in Prusa-that-was would yield a key to Yozgat. So
Lanius hoped. In that hope, he kept going through the manuscripts in the
archives one after another. If he didn’t look, he would assuredly find
nothing.
“And if I do look, I’ll probably find nothing,” he said, and sighed
again. Odds were, all his efforts were futile. The Banished One might have
been cast down from the heavens to earth below, but he remained much, much
more than a mere mortal man. He’d spent the intervening years fortifying
Yozgat against assault. Even if an Avornan army fought its way to the
place, what could it do then? Lanius hoped he would find something,
anything, to tell him.
Not on this parchment, which was a tax register and said very little
about Prusa’s geography. The next one . . . The next one talked about a
border squabble between Avornis and the Chernagor city-states at the
opposite end of the kingdom. No one could be sure how, or if, the archives
were organized. One of these days, I’ll have to do something about that.
Lanius laughed at himself. He’d had the same thought ever since he started
coming into the archives as a youth. It hadn’t happened yet. He didn’t
intend to hold his breath waiting for it to happen. He put down the
parchment that didn’t interest him, got up from the chair where he’d been
sitting for a long time, and stretched. Something in his back popped. With
a glance over his shoulder, as though to say he’d be back, he left the
archives.
Servants bowed. “Your Majesty,” they murmured. Their respect might have
shown that Lanius was the ruler of Avornis. It might have, but it didn’t.
All it showed was that he was the descendant of a long line of kings.
As though to underscore his lack of power, one of the servants said,
“Oh, Your Majesty, King Grus wants to see you.”
Not,
King Grus wants to see you at your convenience, or anything of
the sort. No one worried about Lanius’ convenience—Grus certainly didn’t.
“Where is Grus?” Lanius asked. He seldom used the other king’s royal
title—as seldom as he could get away with, in fact.
“He’s at the entranceway to the palace, Your Majesty, enjoying the fine
spring day,” the servant replied.
Lanius couldn’t quarrel with Grus about that. Spring had come late to
the city of Avornis this year. Now that it was finally here, it was worth
savoring. “I’ll meet him there, then,” Lanius said.
If he hadn’t gone, Grus wouldn’t have done anything to him. His fellow
sovereign wasn’t a cruel or vindictive man. Lanius would have had an
easier time disliking him if he were. The rightful King of Avornis—so he
thought of himself—still managed it, but it was sometimes hard work.
Serving women smiled at him as he went past. Sleeping with even a
powerless king might let them escape a life of drudgery. Lanius passed the
chambers where he kept his white-mustached monkeys and his moncats. He
didn’t have time for the menagerie now, either.
Unfiltered by dusty, dirty glass, the sunlight streaming through the
open doors of the palace made Lanius first blink and then smile. Bird-song
came in with the sunshine. Warblers and flycatchers and other birds were
finally coming back from the south. Lanius hadn’t realized how much he’d
missed their music until he started hearing it again.
Storks were coming back from the south, too, building great ramshackle
nests in trees and on rooftops. They didn’t sing—their voices were raucous
croaks—but most people took them for good luck.
Grus stood in the sunshine, not so much basking in it as seeming to
cause it. He had a knack for attaching to himself anything good that
happened. His royal robes, encrusted with jewels and pearls and shot
through with golden threads, gleamed and glittered as though they had come
down from the heavens to illuminate the dull, gross, all-too-material
earth. Their splendor made Lanius in his plain, dirty clothes seem all the
shabbier by contrast.
Turning at the sound of Lanius’ footfalls, Grus smiled and said,
“Hello, Your Majesty. Meaning no offense, but you look like a
teamster.”
“I was in the archives,” Lanius said shortly.
“Oh. I’m sorry.” In spite of the apology, Grus’ smile got wider. “That
means you want to clout me in the head for dragging you out.”
Lanius didn’t care to think what would happen to him if he tried to
clout Grus in the head. The other king was about twice his age and several
inches shorter than he. But Grus, despite a grizzled beard, was solidly
made and trained as a fighting man. Not much in the way of muscle had ever
clung to Lanius’ long bones, while he knew far less of fighting than of
ancient dialects of Avornan. And so, while he might think wistfully of
clouting the usurper, he knew better than to have a go at it.
“It’s all right,” he said now. “I’d come out anyhow. What can I do for
you?”
Before Grus could answer, a priest whose yellow robe displayed his high
rank walked in through the entrance. He bowed to Grus, murmuring, “Your
Majesty.” He started to go on by Lanius, whose attire was anything but
royal, but then stopped and stared and at last bowed again. “Your
Majesties,” he corrected himself, and walked on.
A real teamster with a couple of barrels of ale in a handcart came in
right after the priest. Intent on his work, he noticed neither king.
“Let’s find some quiet place where we can talk,” Grus said.
“Lead on,” Lanius said.
You will anyhow, he thought glumly.
King Grus sat down on a stool in one of the several small dining rooms
in the palace. Servants ate here; royalty didn’t. Grus watched with some
amusement as Lanius perched on another stool a few feet away.
Perched was the right word—with his long limbs and awkward gait,
Lanius put Grus in mind of a crane or a stork or some other large
bird.
“This seems quiet enough,” Lanius remarked. A stout door—oak barred
with iron—muffled the noise from the hallway outside, and would keep
people from eavesdropping on what the two kings said.
“It will do.” Grus watched the younger man fidget. He wondered if
Lanius had any idea he was doing it. Probably not, Grus judged.
“What is it, then?” Lanius sounded hostile and more than a little
nervous. Grus knew his son-in-law didn’t love him. He wouldn’t have loved
a man who’d taken the power rightfully his, either. As for the nerves . .
. Grus thought he understood those, too.
“Tell me what you know about the Chernagors,” he said.
Lanius started.
He thought I was going to ask him something else. Grus clicked
his tongue between his teeth. He expected they would get around to that,
too. Lanius said, “You’ll know a lot already. Hard to be King of
Avornis”—he made a sour face at that—“and not know a good deal about the
Chernagors.”
“I’m not interested in all the trading they do out on the Northern
Sea,” Grus said. “They’ll do that come what may. I’m interested in the
rivalries between their city-states.”
“All right.” Lanius thought for a moment. “Some of them, you know, go
back a long way, back even before the days when their pirate ancestors
took the northern coastline away from us.”
“That’s fine,” Grus said agreeably. “If knowing why they hated each
other before helps me know how they hate each other now, I’ll listen. If
it doesn’t”—he shrugged—“it can wait for some other time.”
Grus was a relentlessly practical man. One of his complaints about
Lanius was that his son-in-law was anything but. Of course, had Lanius
been more like him, he would also have been more likely to try to
overthrow him—and much more likely to succeed.
“What’s this all about?” Lanius asked now, a practical enough question.
“The Chernagors haven’t troubled us much lately—certainly no sea raids on
our coast like the ones in my great-grandfather’s day, and not more than
the usual nuisance raids across the land frontier. Thervingia’s been a
lot bigger problem.”
“Not since Prince Berto became King Berto,” Grus said. Avornis’ western
neighbor was quiet under a king who would rather build cathedrals than
fight. Grus approved of a pious sovereign for a neighbor. Berto’s father,
King Dagipert, had almost made Thervingia the master of Avornis and
himself Lanius’ father-in-law instead of Grus. He’d also come unpleasantly
close to killing Grus on the battlefield. The news that Dagipert had
finally died was some of the best Grus had ever gotten.
“You know what I mean.” Lanius let his impatience show. He had scant
patience for comments he found foolish.
“All right.” Grus spread his hands, trying to placate the younger king.
“I’m concerned because the Banished One may be trying to get a foothold in
some of the Chernagor city-states. With Berto on the throne in Thervingia,
he won’t have any luck there, and he could use a lever against us besides
the Menteshe.”
“I wonder if the Banished One and Dagipert connived together,”
Lanius said. Grus only shrugged once more. He’d wondered the same
thing. Avornans had never proved it. Dagipert had always denied it. Doubt
lingered even so.
“Any which way, our spies have seen Menteshe—which is to say, they’ve
surely seen the Banished One’s—agents in several Chernagor towns,” Grus
said.
“Milvago.” Lanius’ lips shaped the name without a sound.
“Don’t say it.” Grus shook his head in warning. “Don’t even come as
close as you did. That’s nobody’s business but ours—and I wouldn’t be
sorry if we didn’t know, either.”
“Yes.” Despite the warm spring weather, Lanius shivered. Grus didn’t
blame him a bit. Everyone knew King Olor and Queen Quelea and the rest of
the gods had joined together to cast the Banished One out of the heavens
and down to earth more than a thousand years before.
Everyone knew that, yes. What no one knew, these days, was that the
Banished One—Milvago, as he’d been known when he still dwelt in the
heavens—hadn’t been any minor deity. Lanius had found that truth in the
ecclesiastical archives, far below the great cathedral in the capital.
No, Milvago hadn’t been any ordinary god, a god of weather or anger or
earthquakes or other such well-defined function. From what the ancient
archives said, Milvago had fathered Olor and Quelea and the rest. Until
they cast him forth, he’d been Lord of All.
He remained, or seemed to remain, immortal, though he wasn’t
all-powerful anymore—wasn’t, in fact, a god at all anymore. He wanted
dominion on earth, not only for its own sake but also, somehow, as a
stepping-stone back to the heavens. Avornis had always resisted him. Grus
wondered how long his kingdom could go on resisting a power greater than
it held.
“Do you know what I think?” Lanius said.
Grus shook his head. “I haven’t the faintest idea, Your Majesty.” He
stayed polite to Lanius. The other king seldom used his royal title.
Lanius resented reigning rather than ruling. Grus didn’t worry about that,
as long as the resentment stayed no more than resentment. Polite still,
Grus added, “Tell me, please.”
“I think the Banished One is stirring up trouble among the Chernagors
to keep us too busy even to try to go after the Scepter of Mercy down in
the south,” Lanius said.
That hadn’t occurred to Grus. He realized it should have. The Banished
One saw the world as a whole. He had to try to do the same himself. “You
may very well be right,” he said slowly. “But even if you are, what can we
do about it?”
“I don’t know,” Lanius admitted. “I was hoping you might think of
something.”
“Thanks—I think,” Grus said.
“If we get in trouble in the north, what can we do but try to calm it
down before it gets worse?” Lanius asked. “Nothing I can see. We can’t
very well pretend it isn’t there, can we?”
“I don’t see how. I wish I did.” Grus’ laugh was sour as green apples.
“Well, Your Majesty, the Scepter of Mercy has been out of our hands for a
long time now. I don’t suppose a little longer will make that much
difference.”
Lanius’ answering nod was unhappy. Four hundred years ago, the
then-King of Avornis had brought the great talisman down from the capital
to the south to help resist the inroads of the Menteshe. But the
hard-riding nomads had fallen on the Scepter’s escort, galloped off with
it to Yozgat, and held it there ever since. After several disastrously
unsuccessful efforts to retake it, the Avornans hadn’t tried for a couple
of centuries. And yet. . .
Lanius said, “As long as we go without it, the Banished One has the
advantage. All we can do is respond to his moves. Playing the game that
way, we lose sooner or later. With it, maybe we can call the tune.”
“I know.” Now Grus sounded unhappy, too. Sending Avornan soldiers south
of the Stura River was asking either to lose them or to see them made into
thralls—half-mindless men bound to the Menteshe and to the Banished One.
And Yozgat, these days the chief town of the Menteshe Prince Ulash, lay a
long way south of the Stura. “If only our magic could stand up against
what the Banished One can aim at us.”
“Wish for the moon while you’re at it.” But King Lanius caught himself.
“No. Wish for the Scepter of Mercy.”
“If I need to have it already before I can hope to get it—” Grus
stopped. Even if he went around that twenty-two times, he’d still get
caught.
“We have to try. Sooner or later, we have to try,” Lanius said. But
Lanius was no soldier. How much of the bitter consequences of failure did
he grasp?
On the other hand,
not trying to take back the Scepter of Mercy would also be a
failure, a failure most bitter. Grus understood that, too.
He’d never wished more to disagree than when he made his head go up and
down and said, “You’re right.”
Lanius dreamed. He knew he dreamed. But dreams in which the Banished
One appeared were not of the ordinary sort. That supremely cold, supremely
beautiful face seemed more real than most of the things he saw while wide
awake. The Banished One said, “And so you know my name. You know who I
was, who I am, who I shall be again.”
His voice was as beautiful—and as cold—as his features. Lanius heard in
these dreams with the same spectral clarity as he saw.
Milvago. The name, and the knowledge of what it meant, echoed and
reechoed in his mind.
He didn’t speak the name—however one spoke in dreams—but the Banished
One sensed it. “Yes, I am Milvago, shaper of this miserable world,” he
declared. “How dare you presume to stand against me?”
“You want to conquer my kingdom,” Lanius replied. He could answer
honestly; the Banished One, he’d seen, might commandeer his dreams, but
couldn’t harm him in them. “You want to make my people into thralls. If I
can keep you from doing that, I will.”
“No mere mortal may hinder me,” the Banished One said.
“Not so.” Lanius shook his head, or it felt as though he shook his
head, there in this dream that was all too real. “You were cast down from
the heavens long ago. If no man could hinder you, you would have ruled the
world long since.”
“Rule it I shall.” The Banished One tossed his head in more than mortal
scorn. “What is time? Time means nothing to me, not when I created time.
Think you I am trapped in it, to gutter out one day like a lamp running
dry? You had best think again, you mayfly, you brief pimple on the buttock
of the world.”
Lanius knew he would die. He didn’t know the Banished One wouldn’t, but
Milvago had shown no sign of aging in all the long years since coming down
from the heavens. He couldn’t assume the Banished One was lying. Still,
that didn’t matter. The king’s tutors had trained him well. However
intimidating the Banished One was, Lanius saw he was trying to distract
him here. Whether he would die wasn’t the essence of the argument. Whether
he remained omnipotent—if, indeed, he’d ever been omnipotent—was.
“If you were all you say you are, you would have ruled the world since
you came into it,” Lanius said. “That you don’t proves you can be beaten.
I will do everything I know how to do to stop you.”
“Everything you know how to do.” The Banished One’s laughter flayed
like whips of ice. “What do you know? What
can you know, who live but for a season and then go back to the
nothingness from which you sprang?”
“I know it is better to live free than as one of your thralls,” Lanius
answered. “Did the gods who sprang from you decide the same thing?”
Normally, the Banished One’s perfect countenance showed no emotion.
Rage rippled over it now, though. “After yours, their turn shall come,” he
snarled. “You need not doubt that. Oh, no, do not doubt it.
Their turn shall come.”
He
reached for Lanius, the nails on his fingers sharpening into
talons as his hands drew near. As one will in dreams, Lanius turned to
flee. As one will in dreams, he knew he fled too slow. He looked back to
see how much danger he was in. The Banished One, apparently, could make
his arms as long as he chose. His hand closed on the shoulder of the King
of Avornis.
Lanius shrieked himself awake.
“Are you all right?” The hand on his shoulder belonged to his wife.
Even in the dim light of the royal bedchamber, Sosia looked alarmed. “I
haven’t heard you make a noise like that in ...” Grus’ daughter shook her
head. “I don’t know if I’ve ever heard you make a noise like that.”
“Bad dream,” Lanius said.
He would have left it there. He didn’t want to worry Sosia. Grus had
arranged the marriage—forced it on both of them, in other words. The new
king wanted to tie himself to Avornis’ ancient dynasty as closely as he
could. In their seven years of marriage, though, Lanius and Sosia had come
to care for each other as much as a married couple could reasonably be
expected to do—which was, perhaps, more than anything else, a triumph of
good manners and patience on both sides.
Sosia shook her head. Her dark, wavy hair, down for the night, brushed
across his face. “That wasn’t any ordinary dream,” she said. “You don’t
have dreams like that—nightmares, I should say. Did you see ... him?”
She didn’t even want to call him the Banished One. She didn’t know the
name Milvago, or what the Banished One had been before his ouster from the
heavens. So far as Lanius knew, only he and Grus knew that. Grus had told
him not to tell anyone—not his wife, who was Grus’ daughter, and not the
Arch-Hallow of Avornis, who was Grus’ bastard son. Lanius hadn’t argued.
He too could see that the fewer people who knew about exactly what sort of
enemy Avornis faced, the better.
After his scream, he couldn’t very well lie to Sosia. “Yes, I saw him,”
he said with a reluctant nod.
“Why doesn’t he leave you alone?” She sounded indignant, as though,
could she have been alone with the Banished One, she would have given him
a piece of her mind. She probably would have, too.
“He sends me dreams. He sends your father dreams. He doesn’t bother
other people—General Hirundo never gets them, for instance,” Lanius said.
The Banished One didn’t trouble Sosia, either, but Lanius forbore to
mention that.
His wife sounded more irate than ever. “He should bother other people,
and leave you alone.”
But Lanius shook his head. “In an odd way, I think it’s a compliment,”
he said. “He knows your father and I are dangerous to him, so we’re the
ones he visits in dreams. That’s what we think, anyhow.” Maybe we’re giving ourselves too much credit, he thought.
Could he and Grus—could any mortals—seriously discommode the
Banished One? On days when Lanius felt gloomy, he had his doubts. But why
had thralls under the Banished One’s will tried to murder the two Kings of
Avornis the winter before, if those kings didn’t represent some kind of
danger?
Sosia said, “What I think is, you ought to go back to sleep, and hope
no more bad dreams come. And if they don’t, you can worry about all these
things in the morning, when you feel better.”
Lanius leaned over and kissed her. “That’s good advice,” he said. In
fact, he could think of no better advice for the wee small hours of the
morning. He took it, and the Banished One left him alone . . . then.
King Grus and the man he hoped to make his new wizard eyed each other.
The wizard, whose name was Pterocles, said, “I’ll do everything I can for
you, Your Majesty.” He was young and earnest and very bright. Grus was
sure he would be diligent. Whether he would be versatile enough, or
discreet enough, to make a royal wizard . . . Grus wished he weren’t
quite so young.
And what was Pterocles thinking about as he sat studying Grus? The king
couldn’t read his face. That was, if anything, a point in the wizard’s
favor. After dealing with so many petitioners and courtiers over the
years, Grus knew how transparent most men were. Not this one.
“One of the things a king’s wizard needs to do,” Grus said, “is keep
his mouth shut. I think you can manage that.”
“I hope so,” Pterocles replied. “I don’t want to cause you
scandal.”
“Good,” Grus said, a little more heartily than he should have.
“And I do have a certain advantage along those lines,” the wizard went
on.
“Oh? What’s that?” Grus asked.
“I’m a man,” Pterocles answered, and stroked his silky brown beard as
though to emphasize the point.
Grus’ glower would have made most men hoping for royal favor cringe, or
more likely despair. Pterocles sat impassive. Grudgingly, Grus said,
“You’ve got nerve.”
“I hope so, Your Majesty. I wouldn’t be much good to you if I didn’t,”
Pterocles replied. “And would you want me if I were so stupid—no, so
ignorant—that I didn’t know why you need a new wizard?”
“Mph.” Grus pursed his lips and blew a hissing stream of air out
through them. Everyone in the palace, and probably everyone in the city of
Avornis, knew why he needed a new wizard. Alca the witch had been as
skilled at sorcery as anyone in the capital. She’d saved Grus’ life from
murder by magic before he became king. Grus had admired her, used her
talents . . . had an affair with her. Her husband found out. So did
Estrilda, Grus’ wife. The king made himself bring his attention back to
Pterocles. “Are you too frank for your own good?” he wondered aloud.
“If you decide I am, you’ll pick someone else,” the wizard said. “But
if I can’t speak openly to you, what good am I?”
“A point. Yes, definitely a point.” Grus drummed his fingers on the
marble-topped table in front of him. The stone was cool under his
fingertips. “Tell me,” he said, “has the Banished One ever appeared to you
in dreams?”
That cracked Pterocles’ shell of calm. He jerked as though bitten by a
horsefly. His eyes opened very wide. “Once, Your Majesty. Only once, King
Olor and Queen Quelea be praised,” he said. “But how could you know about
that?”
“Wizards aren’t the only ones who know strange things,” Grus answered.
“I wouldn’t want you as my wizard if the Banished One took no interest in
you.”
“Why ever not?” the wizard asked. “
I would be much happier if I had never seen that perfect,
perfectly sneering face, if I had never been reminded I was to him no more
than some crawling insect is to me.”
The way he spoke convinced Grus he told the truth. Nobody who had not
had the Banished One invade at least one of his nights could have imagined
the boundless contempt with which the castaway from the heavens viewed the
human race. The king said, “If you’re going to be a bug, how would you
like to be a bug with a sting?”
He’d surprised Pterocles again; he saw as much. “If I thought I could
sting the Banished One, I would,” the wizard said. “But how?”
“What do you know of the Scepter of Mercy?” Grus asked.
“Why, Your Majesty, I know as much as any Avornan living,” Pterocles
exclaimed, springing to his feet and bowing. Grus’ hopes suddenly soared.
Had good luck—or the hands of the gods, disguised as good luck—led him to
a man who could truly help him against the Banished One? But then, with
another bow, the wizard added, “Which is to say, not very much,” and
perched himself on his stool once more.
“I see.” Grus did his best to sound severe, but the corners of his
mouth couldn’t help twitching up. Pterocles’ grin made him look very young
indeed. Grus said, “How would you like to learn?”
Before answering, Pterocles pulled an amulet on a silver chain out from
under his linen tunic—a fine opal, shimmering in blue and red, half
covered by a laurel leaf. He murmured a low-voiced charm, then explained,
“My amulet and my magic will make me invisible to those who would do me
evil. That being so, Your Majesty, I will tell you I would give all I have
to learn those secrets.”
“Good. You may, and at just the price you offer,” Grus said. If he
could frighten Pterocles away, he wanted to find out now. But the wizard
only nodded, his eyes glowing with excitement. Grus went on, “And I’ll
tell you something else, too. Amulets like that are fine for warding
yourself against an ordinary wizard. All they do against the Banished One
is draw his notice. You might as well be saying,
I’m talking about something I don’t want the Banished One to
hear. Going about your business in the most ordinary way is more
likely to confuse him. Do you understand me?”
“Yes, and I wish I didn’t.” Pterocles had put the amulet away. Now he
drew it out again and looked it over. “This is as strong a spell as any
man can hope to cast.”
“I believe you,” Grus said. “Do you really think you can hope to beat
the Banished One by being stronger than he is?”
Had Pterocles said yes to that, Grus would have dismissed him. The
wizard started to—he had a young man’s confidence in his own strength and
power. But he also had some sense, for he checked himself. “Mm . . . maybe
not.”
“Good,” Grus said. “In that case, you just may do.”
Lanius’ crown lay heavy on his head. His neck would ache tonight from
bearing up under the weight of the gold. He wore it as seldom as he could.
But an embassy from one of the Chernagor city-states was a formal
occasion.
He entered the throne room a quarter of an hour before a servant would
escort the Chernagors into his presence. Courtiers bowed low as he walked
past them. They had to be polite, but he knew they were there more to see
the Chernagors than to see him. He went through the palace all the time.
The Chernagors, on the other hand, came to the city of Avornis but
seldom.
The royal throne rose several feet above the floor, to let the king
look down on the envoys who came before him. Two stalwart bodyguards stood
in front of it, one to the left, the other to the right. They both wore
gilded mailshirts and gilded helms with crests of crimson-dyed horsehair.
As Lanius ascended to the throne, the guards thumped the butts of their
spears against the floor in salute.
He settled himself on the throne as best he could. It was made to look
imposing, not to be comfortable. In his younger days, his mother and
Marshal Lepturus, the commander of the royal guards, would have taken
those places in front of the throne. No more. Grus had exiled both of them
to the Maze, the boggy, swampy country east and south of the capital.
Queen Certhia had tried to kill Grus by sorcery. Lepturus’ crime was more
recent. He’d refused to let his granddaughter marry Grus’ son. Lanius
sympathized. He wouldn’t have wanted anyone connected to him marrying
Ortalis, either.
A stir in the throne room swept such thoughts from his mind. Here came
the Chernagors, advancing up the central aisle toward the throne.
They were big, blocky men with bushy beards and dark hair fixed in neat
buns at the napes of their necks. They wore linen shirts bright with fancy
embroidery and knee-length kilts that left hairy calves on display.
Their leader, whose hair and beard were frosted with gray, bowed low
before Lanius. “Your Majesty,” he said in fluent, gutturally accented
Avornan. “I am Lyut, Your Majesty. I bring you greetings from Prince
Vsevolod of Nishevatz, and from all the other Princes of the
Chernagors.”
That last was polite nonsense; most of the other princes of the
Chernagors were Vsevolod’s rivals, not his allies. “I am pleased to greet
Prince Vsevolod in return,” Lanius replied, and then, deviating from the
usual formalities, “Do you know the ambassador Yaropolk, who has
represented your city-state here in times past?”
“I do, Your Majesty,” Lyut replied. “In fact, I have the honor to be
second cousin to his junior wife.”
“He is an able man,” Lanius said, which seemed a safe enough
compliment. “I have gifts for you and your men.” At his nod, a courtier
brought leather sacks of coins for Lyut and his followers. The
ambassador’s sack was larger and heavier than any of the others. Ancient
custom dictated just how much went into each sack.
Lyut bowed. “Many thanks, Your Majesty. Your generosity knows no
bounds. We have gifts for you as well.”
King Lanius leaned forward. So did the other Avornans in the throne
room. The Chernagors were wide-faring sailors and traders. Equally ancient
custom said their gifts to Kings of Avornis might be anything at all, as
long as they were interesting. Lyut gestured to the men behind him.
“Here, Your Majesty,” Lyut said as the other Chernagors took skins out
of leather sacks and unrolled them. The skins were from great cats,
lion-sized, with orange hair striped with black. “These come from lands
far away.”
“I’m sure they must,” Lanius said politely. “You must tell me more
later.” He tried to sound enthusiastic. The skins
were interesting, but the Chernagors had done better. The
mustachioed monkeys and the strange moncats Lanius raised were, to his way
of thinking, cases in point.
With another bow, Lyut said, “That would be my pleasure, Your Majesty.
In the meantime, though, I hope you will hear my petition.”
“You have come from far away to make it,” Lanius said. “Speak, then.
Tell me what is in your mind.”
“Thank you, Your Majesty. You are as gracious as you are wise.” Lyut
paused, then went on, “Let me be blunt, Your Majesty. There are men in
Nishevatz who would let my city-state fall under the shadow of the
Banished One. More—there are men in my city-state who would
help Nishevatz fall under the shadow of the Banished One. Prince
Vsevolod resists them, but he is not a young man. And who knows in which
direction his son, Prince Vasilko, will turn? We need your help, Your
Majesty. We need Avornis’ help.”
King Lanius wanted to laugh. He also wanted to cry. By himself, he
didn’t have the power to help a Chernagor city-state. That lay in Grus’
hands. Lanius said, “What I can do, I will do.” Lyut bowed again. Maybe he
took that as a promise of aid. Or maybe he knew how weak Lanius truly was,
and took it for a promise of nothing at all.
CHAPTER TWO
Grus hated riding horseback. He wished he could reach the Chernagor
city-states by river galley. He’d been a sailor—a galley captain, a
commodore—for years. Aboard ship, he knew what he was doing. On a horse,
he felt like a buffoon. Very often, the horse he was riding thought he was
a buffoon, too.
Unfortunately, if he wanted to bring an army into the lands of the
Chernagors, he had to go by horseback. Rivers in Avornis came out of the
Bantian Mountains in the west, and flowed east and south to the sea. A low
spur of the Bantians ran west from their northern extremity. Thanks to
that watershed, no one could travel from Avornis to the Chernagor country
by river.
And so, muttering under his breath, Grus turned to General Hirundo and
said, “There has to be another way to do this.”
Hirundo was a cavalry officer. Grus tried not to hold it against him.
Grinning, he said, “Oh, there is, Your Majesty.”
“By Olor’s beard, what is it?” Grus was ready to grasp at any
straw.
“Instead of riding, you could walk like a pikeman,” Hirundo said.
“Thanks so much. I’m glad I asked
you for advice,” Grus said. Hirundo laughed out loud.
The army moved north, horses’ hooves and the feet of marching men
kicking up a cloud of dust that clung to everything and left eyes and
mouths feeling as though they’d been dipped in grit. Out in the fields,
farmers plowed the rich black soil. Down in the south, where Grus and
Hirundo had spent their younger days, crops went into the ground with the
fall rains and were harvested in the spring. Things were different
here.
Some things were different, anyhow. Most of the farmers, though, fled
as soon as they saw soldiers. Grus had seen that countless times before,
in the south and here, not far from the capital. Some farmers took Avornan
soldiers for the enemy. Some simply weren’t inclined to take chances.
Avornans were also known to pillage, to rob, and to kill for the sport of
it.
Grus said, “We aren’t running things as smoothly as we ought to. Our
farmers shouldn’t think they have to run away from our soldiers. If it
weren’t for the soldiers, the farmers would have plenty of worse things to
worry about.”
“Well, yes,” Hirundo said. “My best guess is, they already know that.
But they know our boys can turn on ‘em, too. I wish it didn’t happen as
much as you do. You know what wishes are worth, though. Give men swords
and spears and bows and pay ’em to fight, and you’ll find they’ll go into
business for themselves along with fighting for you.”
“ ‘Go into business for themselves,’” Grus echoed. “That’s the politest
way to say ‘turn brigand’ I’ve ever heard.”
“Oh, I’m polite, Your Majesty,” Hirundo said. “In fact, I’m about the
politest son of a whore you’re ever likely to meet.”
Laughing, Grus said, “So I see.”
Wagons full of grain and a shambling herd of cattle accompanied the
army on the march. This early in the year, the only way the men could have
lived off the countryside was by stealing every cow and sheep and pig for
miles around. That wouldn’t have endeared them to the peasants they were
supposed to protect.
When they camped for the night, some of them slept on bare ground under
the stars, others in little tents of canvas or leather. Grus and Hirundo
had fancy, airy pavilions of silk, the king’s larger than the general’s.
Grus ate the same porridge and beef as his soldiers, though. Eating with
them was the best way to make sure they got food worth eating.
After supper, Hirundo poked his nose into Grus’ tent and said, “Ask you
a couple of things, Your Majesty?”
“Of course. Come in.” Grus picked up a folding chair and unfolded it.
He pointed to a jug of wine with a couple of cups beside it. “Have
something to drink.” The wine was better than what his soldiers drank.
“Don’t mind if I do.” After looking a question at Grus, Hirundo poured
the king a cup, too. “What do you think we can do when we get up to
Nishevatz?” the general asked after they’d both sipped.
“I
hope we can knock down whatever faction the Banished One’s
backers have put together there,” Grus answered.
“That would be good,” Hirundo agreed. “But how likely is it? The
Banished One has a long reach. We’ve seen as much.”
“Haven’t we just?” Grus agreed. “But the Chernagor country is right at
the end of it. We’ll be on the spot. That will make a difference. I hope
it will, anyhow.”
“It had better,” Hirundo said. “If it doesn’t, we’re in a lot of
trouble, you know.”
Grus took a long pull at his wine. He wanted to ease the situation with
a joke, as Hirundo so often did. He wanted to, but couldn’t come up with
one for the life of him. “We
are in a lot of trouble,” he said at last. “The Banished One
hasn’t tried interfering in affairs so openly in a long time—maybe not
ever. Lanius says he never tried to kill Kings of Avornis before when they
weren’t in the field against him.”
Hirundo smiled. “Lanius ought to know.”
“Oh, yes. He knows all sorts of things.” Grus let it go at that. The
one thing Lanius didn’t know, as far as Grus could see, was what was
important and what wasn’t. Grus went on, “You said you wanted to ask me a
couple of things. What’s the other one?”
The general’s mobile features squeezed into a frown. After a moment, he
brightened and said, “All right, now I remember. Once we settle this mess
in Nishevatz, do you think we’ll be able to turn around and march home
again? Or are we going to spend the next five or ten years putting out
fires in the Chernagor country?”
“I
hope we’ll be able to do this quickly and neatly and then go home
again,” Grus said. “I don’t
know whether that will happen, though. It’s not just up to me,
you know. The Banished One will have something to do with it. So will the
Chernagors. They
like squabbling among themselves—and they don’t always like
outsiders sticking their noses in on one side or the other.”
“Might as well be a family,” Hirundo said.
That startled a laugh out of Grus. He said, “You’re right. But it’s
also what worries me most.”
As the army pushed north, the mountains climbed ever higher on the
horizon. They were neither as tall nor as jagged as the Bantians proper.
Snow was already melting from their peaks. In the range to the west, it
would cling to the mountaintops all summer long.
Several passes gave entry to the Chernagor country on the far side of
the mountains. Naturally, Grus led his men to the one closest to
Nishevatz. He ordered scouts out well ahead of the main body of the army.
If the Banished One’s backers (who might include Prince Vasilko) wanted to
ambush them before they got to Nishevatz, the pass was the best place to
try it. Grus remembered Count Corvus coming to grief against the Thervings
because he didn’t watch out for an ambush. Had Corvus found it instead of
the other way around, he likely would have made himself King of Avornis.
As things were, he was a monk in the Maze these days, and would never come
out.
No ambush waited in the pass. But one of the scouts said, “Your
Majesty, we rode up to the watershed and then down a ways. When we looked
to the north, we saw the whole country was full of smoke.” Several other
riders nodded.
Grus and Hirundo exchanged glances. They both knew what was most likely
to cause that. A company of cavalry around him, Grus rode out ahead of the
army to see for himself. Sure enough, when he got to the top of the pass
and peered north, it was just as the scout had said. Grus caught Hirundo’s
eye again. “They’ve gone and started their war without us,” he said. “I’ll
bet I can tell you which side Vasilko’s on, too.”
“Not ours,” Hirundo said. Grus nodded.
King Lanius hated being disturbed when he was with his moncats.
Servants in the palace generally knew better than to bother him there.
When someone knocked on the door to the moncats’ room, Lanius muttered in
annoyance—he had Bronze on his lap. “Who is it?” he called. “What do you
want?”
He sat on the floor with Bronze. The reddish female was one of the
first pair Yaropolk of Nishevatz had given him several years before. She
was about the size of an ordinary house cat, and of a temperament not far
removed from that of an ordinary cat. But moncats’ paws were not those of
ordinary cats. They had hands with real thumbs and feet with big toes that
worked the same way. Even their tails could grip. They were made for life
in the trees on their native islands somewhere out in the Northern
Sea—just where, Yaropolk hadn’t said.
“It’s me,” came the answer from the other side of the door.
“And who are you?” Lanius knew he sounded irritated. He
was irritated. He did his best not to show it to Bronze, stroking
the moncats back and scratching at the corner of its jaw to try to coax a
purr out of it.
The door to the room opened. That made Lanius spring to his feet in
fury, spilling Bronze out of his lap. The moncat yowled at such cavalier
treatment. Lanius whirled to see who besides Grus had the nerve to disturb
him in here. Moncats were smarter than ordinary cats. They realized at
once that an open door meant a chance to get away. With gripping hands and
feet, they could go places ordinary cats couldn’t, too. A couple of
escapes had proved that. One of the few rules Lanius had been able to
enforce as though he really ruled was that servants were banned from his
animals’ chambers.
But this wasn’t a servant. Prince Ortalis stood in the doorway. “Olor’s
beard, shut that before they all get loose!” Lanius exclaimed.
For a wonder, Ortalis did. Grus’ legitimate son was a couple of years
older than Lanius. He was taller, handsomer—and, most of the time,
fouler-tempered. He looked around now with considerable curiosity; as far
as Lanius knew, he’d never been in the moncats’ chamber before. “What
peculiar beasts,” he said. “Are they good for anything?”
“No more—and no less—than any other cat is,” Lanius answered. “Did you
come here to ask me that?”
Ortalis made a horrible face. The question must have reminded him of
why he
had come. “You’ve got to help me, Lanius,” he said.
Lanius’ heart sank. If Ortalis was in trouble, he feared he knew what
sort. Hoping he was wrong, he asked, “Why? What did you do?”
“It wasn’t the way she says it was,” his brother-in-law answered, which
proved he was right. Ortalis went on, “By the gods, she liked it as much
as I did, up until. . . .” He shook his head. “It’s all kind of fuzzy now.
We both drank a lot of wine.”
“What happened?” Lanius wondered if he really wanted to know. He
decided he needed to, whether he wanted to or not. “What did you do?”
“She . . . got hurt a little.” Quickly, Ortalis went on, “It’s not as
bad as she says it is, though—I swear it’s not. And she wanted more while
it was going on. I wouldn’t lie to you, Lanius. She did. She really
did.”
“Your father won’t be very happy with you when he finds out,” Lanius
said.
“That’s what I’m saying!” Ortalis howled. “You’ve got to help me make
sure he doesn’t. If he does ...” He tapped the back of his neck with a
forefinger, as though the headsman’s ax were falling.
“What can I do?” Lanius asked. “I haven’t got the power to do
anything to speak of. You ought to know that.” Even if he could
have done something, he would have only for Sosia’s sake. Her brother
repelled, revolted, and frightened him.
Ortalis said, “Money. She wants money.”
“Who doesn’t?” Lanius pointed to one of the moncats. “You know, I’ve
been painting pictures of these beasts and selling them because the
treasury minister doesn’t give me as much as I need.”
“Oh,” Ortalis said, as though Lanius had betrayed him when he needed
help most. Maybe Lanius had. Grus’ son went on, “I was hoping you could
talk to Petrosus and get whatever I need—whatever you need, I mean.”
“Not likely,” Lanius said, thinking,
You meant what you said the first time. You’re the only one you ever
cared about.
“But what am I going to do?” Ortalis sounded desperate. “What am I
going to
do? If she doesn’t get paid, she
will blab. And then who knows what my father will do? He’s yelled
at me before.” Yes, and that’s because you’ve done nasty things to your women
before— one more thing Lanius saw no point in saying. Ortalis never
paid attention to anyone but himself, and turned nasty—nastier—when he was
crossed. As much to get his brother-in-law out of his hair as for any
other reason, the king said, “Maybe you ought to talk to Arch-Hallow
Anser, instead. He heads the temples, so he can get his hands on money
that doesn’t come through Petrosus.”
“Already tried him. He turned me down. My own flesh and blood, and he
turned me down. Flat.” Anser was also Grus’ son, but a bastard. Despite
his irregular past, Lanius—and everybody else—found him much more
agreeable than Ortalis. The king wasn’t sure how bright Anser was. He was
sure Grus’ bastard, unlike his legitimate son, had his heart in the right
place.
More than ever, he wanted Ortalis gone. Spreading his hands, he said,
“I’m sorry, but I don’t know what else to tell you now.”
“She’s got to disappear,” Ortalis muttered. “One way or another, she’s
got to disappear.”
“By the gods, don’t make it worse than it is already!” Lanius exclaimed
in alarm.
“It can’t get any worse than it is already,” his brother-in-law
replied. “Just
you remember, Lanius—you haven’t heard a thing.”
“I remember,” Lanius said. “If you think I want to walk into the middle
of a quarrel between your father and you, you’d better think again.” He’d
made promises to keep quiet about certain things before, made them and
kept them. He didn’t promise now, and hoped Ortalis wouldn’t notice.
Full of other worries, Ortalis didn’t. “She’s got to disappear,” he
said once more, and then rushed out of the chamber.
The king hurried after him. As Lanius had feared, Ortalis didn’t bother
closing the door behind himself. Lanius did it before any of the moncats
could get out. They did harm to their prey, too, but innocently and
without malice. He wished he could say the same about Ortalis.
Whenever Grus breathed in, he tasted smoke. When he spat, he spat
black. He turned to Hirundo and said, “It’s so nice that we’re welcome in
the land of the Chernagors.”
“Oh, yes. Oh, yes, indeed.” The general spat black, too. Hirundo
swigged from a cup of ale, swallowed, and said, “I’m also glad the men of
Nishevatz invited us to their city-state. Just think what kind of a
greeting they would have given us if they hadn’t.”
“If it’s all the same to you, I’d rather not,” Grus said wearily. The
Avornan army had yet to see the city of Nishevatz itself. It was still
busy reducing forts south of the town. Had it left them behind, the
garrisons in them would have fallen on Grus’ men as soon as they’d gone
by, or else on his supply wagons later.
Varazdin, the latest of them, wasn’t much different from any of the
rest. The local limestone was golden, which made the walls and the keep
inside look deceptively cheerful. As Grus had already seen with three
other fortresses, Varazdin’s looks were indeed deceiving. His men ringed
the fortress, just out of range of the archers and catapults on the walls.
Whenever they came close enough, the Chernagors inside started shooting
and flinging things at them.
A handful of Chernagors of Prince Vsevolod’s party made their way
toward Grus. Several more Avornan bodyguards accompanied them. The
Chernagors
said they were of Vsevolod’s faction. Up until now, they’d acted
as though they were of his faction. But if Grus’ men trusted them on
account of that, and if one of them really favored the rebels and Prince
Vasilko, favored the Banished One who backed the rebels and the young
prince ... If that happened, Avornis would suddenly have Lanius on the
throne, and then things would look very different.
Grus didn’t intend that things should look different. The Chernagors,
fortunately, didn’t seem offended at guardsmen shadowing them wherever
they went. They too played political games with knife and poison and dark
wizardry. Their leader, Duke Radim, bowed to Grus. In gutturally accented
Avornan, he said, “I have found out who commands in Varazdin, Your
Majesty.”
“Have you? Good.” King Grus took a big swig from his mug of ale. He
drank as much to wash the smoke out of his mouth as because he was
thirsty. “Who is he?”
“He is Baron Lev, Your Majesty,” Radim answered. He was an old man, his
beard white, his shoulders stooped. He put Grus in mind of a fortress much
more ancient and weathered than Varazdin. What remained showed how mighty
he must have been in his younger days. He added, “He is, or should be,
loyal to Vsevolod.”
“He has an odd way of showing it,” Hirundo exclaimed.
Radim nodded gravely. “He was not reckoned an important man. No one
told him Vsevolod would seek aid from Avornis. He thought your coming was
a real invasion.”
“Doesn’t he know better now?” Grus asked.
“Oh, yes.” Radim nodded again. “But his honor is touched. How can he
yield you passage when his sovereign insulted him?”
“We’re trying to help his sovereign,” Grus pointed out.
“He knows that. But the insult comes first.”
“Do you mean he’s gone over to Vasilko?” Hirundo asked.
Now Radim shook his head. The Chernagors with him seemed shocked. “Oh,
no,” he said. “Nothing like that. Still, how can a man who has been
treated as though he were of no account cooperate in any way with those
who so abused him? Should a woman who is taken by force cooperate with her
ravisher and lie with him as though they truly loved each other?”
King Grus’ head started to ache. He was a practical man. He’d always
thought the Chernagors were practical men, too. Of course, most of the
Chernagors who came to the city of Avornis were merchants. By the nature
of things, merchants needed to be practical men. He wished the same held
true for nobles. But it didn’t. He’d already seen that in Avornis.
“Well,” he said, “if we have to take the most honorable Baron Lev by
force, that’s what we have to do.”
And, three days later, he did. He thinned his line around the fortress
of Varazdin, using the men thus freed to form two storming parties. Just
as dawn was breaking, the men of the first one rushed at the north wall,
shouting Grus’ name—and, for good measure, Vsevolod’s, too. Archers rushed
forward with them, shooting as fast as they could to make the Chernagors
inside the fort keep their heads down.
Up went ladders against those golden walls. Up swarmed Avornans, and
Chernagors who were not only loyal to the rightful Prince of Nishevatz
but willing to admit it. Lev’s men inside Varazdin rushed to defend the
fort. They pushed over some of the scaling ladders. They poured boiling
water and hot oil on the men ascending others. They were as loyal to their
commander, and as brave, as any soldiers Grus had ever seen.
When the battle in the north was well and truly joined, when the
besieged Chernagors were fully engaged—or so Grus hoped—he ordered the
second assault party forward, against Varazdin’s southern wall. This time,
his men approached the wall without shouting anything. They couldn’t sneak
across a quarter of a mile of open ground, but they did their best not to
draw undue notice.
And it worked. Even though the handful of defenders who hadn’t run to
the north wall cried out in alarm, nobody else inside the fortress paid
much attention to them. Maybe, with the din and excitement of the fight on
the far wall, none of the other Chernagors even heard them.
They were brave. Instead of running away or yielding, they did
everything they could to throw back Grus’ storming party. Using more long,
forked poles, they did manage to tip over some of the scaling ladders that
went up against the wall. Avornans shrieked as they fell. The clank of
chainmail-clad soldiers striking the ground made Grus flinch.
But more Avornans, and Chernagors with them, gained a foothold on the
south wall. They began dropping down into the courtyard. Some of them
rushed to seize the keep, so that Lev’s men would have no chance to make a
last stand there. Seeing that, the defenders of Varazdin threw down their
weapons, threw up their hands, and yielded.
Avornan soldiers brought Baron Lev, none too gently, before King Grus.
The Chernagor noble had a red-soaked bandage tied around his forehead to
stanch a cut. He also bled from a wounded hand. He glared at the king.
Grus glared back. “Your Excellency, you are an idiot,” he growled.
“I would not expect an Avornan to know anything of honor,” Lev growled
in return.
“Do you favor Vsevolod or Vasilko?” King Grus pronounced the Chernagor
names with care; the hums and hisses were alien to Avornan, and he did not
want to confuse the man he backed and the one he opposed.
“Vsevolod, of course,” Lev replied, as though to a half-wit.
“All right, then. I thought as much, but I was not sure. Did you
know—do you know—I have come to aid him if I can?” Grus asked. He waited
until Lev grudged him a nod. Then he threw his hands in the air and
demanded, “In that case, why did you keep trying to murder my men?”
“I told you an Avornan would not understand honor. My countrymen do.”
Lev spoke with somber pride.
“Honor? I have my own notions about that. I understand stupidity when I
see it. I understand stupidity very plainly,” Grus said. “We should fight
on the same side, against Vasilko. Instead, you delayed me, cost me men,
cost yourself men, and helped the man you say you oppose. The Banished One
understands that sort of honor. You are right when you tell me I do
not.”
“We could have put down Vasilko without your interference,” Lev said
sullenly.
“That’s not what Vsevolod thought. He was the one who asked Avornis for
help.”
“He made a mistake. He made another mistake in slighting me,” Baron Lev
said.
“I see.” Grus nodded. “And so you had to make a mistake in turn, to pay
Vsevolod back.”
“Yes,” Lev said, and then, “No! It was not a mistake. I did what I had
to do.”
Grus turned to Duke Radim, who was listening off to one side. Radim
seemed not at all surprised at the way the conversation was going. Indeed,
he’d seemed to understand why Lev hadn’t yielded Varazdin even before the
fortress fell. If not for that, Grus would have wondered whether the
Banished One was somehow clouding Lev’s thoughts, such as those were.
“Let me ask another question,” Grus said. “Now that we’ve peeled you
out of your shell here”—he pointed to Varazdin, which dominated the
horizon from where they stood—“will you and your men fight for
Vsevolod?”
“Of course.” Now the baron sounded surprised. Grus glanced Radim’s way
once more. Radim nodded. He believed Lev. Grus was not at all sure
he did. Still, he’d just proved he didn’t understand how
Chernagor nobles’ minds worked. If Radim was willing to rely on Lev, he
supposed he would, too ... up to a point.
He also looked toward General Hirundo. His own countryman seemed about
ready to jump out of his shoes at the idea of trusting Lev. Grus saw that,
but he’d known Hirundo for many years. He doubted the Chernagors would
realize just how upset Hirundo was.
“Very well. I accept your service,” Grus said to Lev, and then, “Excuse
me for a moment.” He took Hirundo aside and spoke in a low voice. “We’ll
break up his men into small bands and put them among Avornans. If they
turn their coats, we’ll slaughter them. Does that suit you?”
“Yes, Your Majesty,” Hirundo said at once. “I was afraid you’d lost
your mind, too.”
“Oh, no,” Grus said. “Not me.”
King Lanius wished he ruled Avornis instead of just reigning over it.
When a courier came rushing into the palace and was brought before Lanius,
he felt for a heady moment as though he
did rule. The man looked weary unto death. Sweat streaked his
dirty face. He stank of more sweat, and of horse.
“I hope my mount lives, Your Majesty,” he said around an enormous yawn.
“It’s not the first beast I almost killed, coming up from the south with
the news.”
“It must be important, then,” Lanius said gravely. The courier nodded.
The king went on, “Suppose you tell me what it is.”
The courier looked flabbergasted. “King Olor’s beard,” he muttered. “I
haven’t said, have I?”
“No,” Lanius said. “You haven’t.”
“I’d better, then. Here it is, Your Majesty—on the way up from the
south behind me is an ambassador from Prince Ulash, the Menteshe
lord.”
“Oh.” Lanius had to force the word out through lips suddenly numb.
Ulash was far and away the most important of the princes ruling the
southern nomads who bowed down to the Banished One—the Fallen Star, they
called him. That wasn’t because he had the widest realm, though he did. It
wasn’t because his capital, Yozgat, housed the Scepter of Mercy, though it
did. It was because he’d held his place for almost forty years. He was a
sly old fox who got what he wanted as much through guile as through the
arrows and scimitars of his hard-riding horsemen.
“Yes, Your Majesty,” the courier said. “I knew you and King Grus had to
know as soon as you could.” He paused, seeming to realize for the first
time that he was speaking with the ceremonial king, not the real one.
“Where
is King Grus?”
If he’d just ridden up from the south, he wouldn’t have heard. “He’s in
the land of the Chernagors,” Lanius answered. “There’s civil war among
them; we’re seeing what we can gain from it.”
Now the courier said, “Oh,” in a dispirited way. Lanius understood what
that meant—he would have to deal with Ulash’s envoy himself. He wouldn’t
have been disappointed then to have Grus back in the capital to take care
of that for him. It could be worse, he told himself, and then immediately
asked,
How? But that had an answer. Once, the Banished One himself had
sent an ambassador to the city of Avornis—the first time he’d done so in
more than a hundred years. The kingdom had gotten through that; Lanius
supposed it would get through this, too.
He asked, “When will the Menteshe get here?”
“Not for a while, Your Majesty,” the courier replied. “Nobody down
south’ll hurry him along. We know you need to get ready.”
“Good,” Lanius said.
“Will King Grus be able to get back in time to deal with him?” the
courier asked hopefully.
“No.” That was the only answer Lanius could give. The courier looked
disappointed. The king affected not to notice. This fellow had done all he
could to help.
What would Grus do for a man like that? He’d reward him, that’s
what. Lanius said, “You’ll have gold for your hard ride.”
He was annoyed at himself. He should have thought of that without
needing to think of Grus. The courier didn’t seem upset—of course, he
couldn’t know what was in Lanius’ mind. He only knew he was getting a
gift. Bowing low, he said, “Thank you very much, Your Majesty!”
“You’re welcome. You’ve earned it.” Lanius snapped his fingers.
“One thing more. Does Ulash’s ambassador have a wizard with him, or is
he by any chance a wizard himself?”
“He had several servants with him when he crossed over the Stura, but I
didn’t see one who looked like a wizard,” the rider said. “Of course, that
doesn’t mean there isn’t one dressed up like an ordinary servant. And I
have no idea whether he’s a wizard himself. I’m sorry, Your Majesty.”
“It’s all right. You’ve told me what you know, and you haven’t tried to
make up stories to pad that out.” Lanius gestured in dismissal. The
courier bowed again and left his presence.
To stay on the safe side, I’ll have to have a wizard with me when the
envoy gets here, Lanius thought.
He wished Alca the witch were still in the city of Avornis. She
remained the best sorceress he’d known. He also wished Grus hadn’t taken
Pterocles with him when he went north to the land of the Chernagors. Now
he would have to find someone else, someone whose power and reliability he
wouldn’t know nearly so well.
No help for it, though, not unless he wanted to face Ulash’s man
without any wizard at his side. And he didn’t. Ulash was a powerful prince
in his own right. That made him dangerous. But he was also a glove
manipulated by the hand of the Banished One. That made him dangerous, too,
but in a different way. “A wizard,” Lanius muttered. “I must see about a
wizard.” The wizard he needed to see was Pterocles . . . and Pterocles,
unfortunately, was far, far away.
Grus’ army advanced through fog. Men muttered about the uncanny
weather. As they came down into the seaside lowlands of the Chernagor
country, they met these ghostly mists almost every morning. “Do they know
what they’re talking about?” Grus asked his wizard. “Is there anything
unnatural about these fogs?”
“Not that I can find, Your Majesty,” Pterocles answered. “We’re down by
the Northern Sea, after all. It’s only to be expected that we have fog in
the morning. Men who come from the plains and the uplands haven’t seen
anything like it, and so they get upset. Foolishness, if you ask me. You
don’t see the Chernagors jumping up and down and flapping their arms, do
you?”
“Well, no,” Grus admitted. “As a matter of fact, I’d like to see the
Chernagors jumping up and down and flapping their arms. That would be more
interesting than anything that’s happened since we came down from
Varazdin.”
Pterocles gave him a reproachful look. The wizard was a serious man. He
wanted everyone else to be serious, too. Grus wasn’t, not often enough to
suit him. The king missed Alca. She’d had a sense of whimsy. That was one
of the things that had made her attractive to him—and one of the reasons
he’d had to send her away.
He sighed. His breath made more fog, a little billow amidst the great
cottony swirls of the stuff. It tasted like water and salt on his lips.
Kisses and tears, he thought, and shook his head.
Stop that.
The mist seemed to swallow most of his soldiers. He looked around. By
what his senses told him, he had men close by him, wavering specters a
little farther away, and creatures that made noise but could not be seen
beyond those ghosts. He hoped his senses were wrong. He also hoped his
outriders would note other creatures that made noise before they could be
seen.
Pterocles was muttering to himself. He would drop the reins, make a few
passes, and then grab for what he’d just dropped; he wasn’t much of a
horseman. Alca had never had any trouble casting a spell and staying on
her horse at the same time. Grus did a little muttering of his own. Law
allowed a King of Avornis six wives. Estrilda, whom Grus had married long
before he dreamt of becoming King of Avornis, had strong opinions on the
subject—opinions that had nothing to do with what the law allowed.
When Pterocles went on muttering and mumbling, Grus pushed Alca out of
his mind—a relief and a pain at the same time—and asked, “Something?”
“I don’t know,” the wizard answered, which was not at all what Grus
wanted to hear. Pterocles went on, “If I had to guess, I’d say it was
another wizard, feeling for me the same way as I’m feeling for him.”
“I... see.” Grus drummed the fingers of his right hand against his
thigh. “You’re not supposed to guess, not on something like this. You’re
supposed to
know.”
“I work magic, Your Majesty. I don’t work miracles,” Pterocles said
tartly. “If I had to guess” —he took an obvious sour pleasure in repeating
the phrase— “that other groping wizard out there is as confused as am.” No, you don’t work miracles, Grus thought.
But the Banished One is liable to. He didn’t say that to
Pterocles. His wizard had to know it already. Harping on it would hurt the
man’s confidence, which wouldn’t help his magic.
From out of the mist ahead came a shout. “Who goes there?” Grus needed
a moment to realize the call was in Avornan, which meant it had to have
come from the throat of one of his own scouts. His hand dropped to the
hilt of his sword. He hated fighting from horseback. Whether he hated it
or not, though, it was enormously preferable to getting killed out of
hand.
An answering shout came back. Grus did some muttering and mumbling of
his own. The fog played tricks with sound as well as with sight. Not only
did he fail to make out any words in that answer, he couldn’t even tell in
what language it had been. Logically, those had to be Chernagors out there
. . . didn’t they?
What do you expect? he asked himself.
Menteshe to spring out of nowhere, here, hundreds of miles from their
land?
He wished he hadn’t just thought that the Banished One might work
miracles.
But it wasn’t the Banished One. A couple of minutes later, the scout
came back to the main body of the Avornan army. “Your Majesty! Your
Majesty! We’ve met Prince Vsevolod and his men!”
For a moment, Grus took that for good news. Then, realizing what it was
likely to mean, he cursed furiously. “Why isn’t Vsevolod in Nishevatz, by
the gods?” he demanded.
The answer was what he’d feared. The scout said, “Because Prince
Vasilko’s cast him out.” Grus cursed again. He’d come too late. The man
the Banished One backed had seized the city.
CHAPTER THREE
The more Lanius thought about it, the more he wondered why on earth
he’d ever wanted to rule Avornis. Too much was happening too fast, and not
enough of it was good. Prince Ulash’s ambassador now waited in a hostel
only a couple of blocks from the royal palace. Lanius didn’t want to have
anything to do with the fellow, whose name was Farrukh-Zad. The king had
sent quiet orders to delay the envoy’s arrival as much as possible. He’d
hoped Grus would get back and deal with the fellow. But Grus had troubles
of his own in the north.
His father-in-law couldn’t do much about the Menteshe while he was
campaigning up in the Chernagor country. And the news Grus sent back from
the north wasn’t good. About half the Chernagors seemed to welcome Avornan
soldiers with open arms. The other half seemed just as ready to fight them
to the death. Maybe that showed the hand of the Banished One. Maybe it
just showed that the Chernagors didn’t welcome invaders of any sort. And the palace still buzzed with whatever had happened or
might have happened or someone imagined had happened between Prince
Ortalis and a serving girl (or two or three serving girls, depending on
who was telling the story and sometimes on who was listening). Lanius
hadn’t yet sent Grus that delightful news. His father-in-law was already
worrying about enough other things.
Sighing because things had fallen into
his lap, Lanius decked himself in his most splendid robes. The
sunlight pouring through an open window gleamed and sparkled off pearls
and jewels and gold thread running through the scarlet silk. Admiring him,
Sosia said, “You look magnificent.”
“I don’t feel any too magnificent.” Lanius picked up the heavy crown
and set it on his head. “And I’ll have a stiff neck tomorrow, on account
of this miserable thing.”
“Would you rather you didn’t wear it?” his wife asked sharply.
“No,” he admitted. His laugh was rueful. Up until now, he’d chafed at
being king in name without being king in fact. Now, with Grus away, what
he said did matter, and he felt that weight of responsibility much more
than he’d expected to. He went on, “And I have to keep the Menteshe from
noticing anything is bothering me. That should be ... interesting all by
itself.”
But sitting on the Diamond Throne and looking down the length of the
throne room helped steady him. He
was king. Farrukh-Zad was only an ambassador. Whatever happened,
he would soon go back to the south. Lanius laughed again, there on the
throne.
No matter what kind of a mess I make of this meeting, Grus is the one
who’ll have to pay the price.
Courtiers stared at him. But then the guardsmen in front of the throne
stiffened to alertness, and Lanius pulled his face straight. Prince
Ulash’s ambassador advanced up the long central aisle of the throne room.
He strode with a conqueror’s arrogance. That clumping march would have
seemed even more impressive had he not been badly bow-legged. He was
swarthy and hook-nosed, with a black mustache and a hawk’s glittering
black eyes in a forward-thrusting face sharp as the blade of an ax. He
wore a fur cap, a fur jacket, and trousers of sueded leather. A saffron
cloak streamed out behind him.
Three other Menteshe followed in his wake, but Lanius hardly noticed
them. Farrukh-Zad was the man who counted.
And doesn’t he know it? Lanius thought. Just seeing the Menteshe
was plenty to make Lanius’ bodyguards take half a step out from the throne
toward him. Farrukh-Zad noticed as much, too, and smiled as though they’d
paid him a compliment. To his way of thinking, they probably had.
When Prince Ulash’s envoy reached the throne, he bowed so low, he made
a mockery of the ceremony. “Greetings, Your Majesty,” he said in excellent
Avornan. “May peace lie between us.”
“Yes. May there be peace indeed,” Lanius replied. Even polite ritual
had its place. It was no more than polite ritual. He and Farrukh-Zad
surely both knew as much. Ulash’s Menteshe and Avornis might not fight
every year, but there was no peace between them, any more than there was
peace between the gods and the Banished One.
Farrukh-Zad bowed again, even more sardonically than before. “I bring
greetings, Your Majesty, from my sovereign, Prince Ulash, and from his
sovereign. . . .” He did not name the Banished One, but he came close
enough to make an angry murmur run through the throne room. Then he went
on, “They send their warmest regards to you, King Lanius, and to your
sovereign. ...” He did not name King Grus, either, but the salutation was
no less insulting on account of that. He is trying to provoke me, Lanius thought, and then,
He is doing a good job. “I
am King of Avornis,” he remarked.
“Of course, Your Majesty,” Farrukh-Zad said, in a tone that could only
mean,
Of course not,
Your Majesty.
“For example,” Lanius continued, affecting to ignore that tone, “if I
were to order you seized and your head struck off for insolence, I would
have no trouble getting my guards to obey me.”
Farrukh-Zad jerked, as though something had bitten him. So did one of
his retainers.
That may be the wizard, Lanius thought. His own stood in
courtier’s clothing close by the throne. The Menteshe ambassador said, “If
you did, that would mean war between Avornis and my folk.”
“True,” Lanius agreed. “But I have two things to say there. First is,
you would not see the war, no matter how it turned out. And second, when
Prince Evren’s Menteshe invaded Avornis last year, they hurt themselves
more than they hurt us.”
“Prince Ulash is not Prince Evren,” Farrukh-Zad said. “Where his riders
range, no crops ever grow again.”
“That must make life difficult in Ulash’s realm,” King Lanius said.
“Perhaps if his riders bathed more often, they would not have the
problem.”
Avornan courtiers tittered. Farrukh-Zad was not swarthy enough to keep
an angry flush of his own from showing on his cheeks. He gave Lanius a
thin smile. “Your Majesty is pleased to make a joke.”
“As you were earlier,” Lanius replied. “Shall we both settle down to
business now, and speak of what Prince Ulash wants of me, and of
Avornis?”
Before answering, Farrukh-Zad gave him a long, measuring stare. “Things
are not quite as I was led to believe.” He sounded accusing.
“Life is full of surprises,” Lanius said. “I ask once more, shall we go
on?”
“Maybe we had better.” Farrukh-Zad turned and spoke in a low voice with
one of the other Menteshe—the one who had started when Lanius warned him.
They expected me to be less than I am, Lanius thought.
That must be why the embassy came when Grus was away. I’ve surprised
them. That was a compliment—of sorts. The ambassador gave his
attention back to the king. “In the name of my sovereign, Prince Ulash, I
ask you what Avornis intends to do with the thralls who have left his
lands and come to those you rule.”
“Do you also ask that in the name of Prince Ulash’s sovereign?” Lanius
inquired, partly to jab Farrukh-Zad again, partly because he did want to
know. Thralls—the descendants of the Avornan farmers who’d worked the
southern lands before the Menteshe conquered them— were less than full
men, only a little more than barnyard animals, thanks to spells from the
Banished One. Every so often, thralls escaped those dark spells and fled.
Every so often, too, the Banished One and the Menteshe used thralls who
feigned escaping those spells as spies and assassins.
Again Farrukh-Zad conferred with his henchman before answering. “I am
Ulash’s ambassador,” he said, but his hesitation gave the words the lie.
“These thralls are Ulash’s people.”
“When they wake up, they have a different opinion,” Lanius said dryly.
He wished Avornan wizards had had better luck with spells that could
liberate a thrall from his bondage. The Banished One’s sorceries, though,
were stronger than those of any mere mortals. If all of Avornis fell to
the Menteshe, would everyone in the kingdom fall into thrall-dom? The
thought made Lanius shudder.
Farrukh-Zad said, “You have in your hands—you have in this very
palace—many who fled without awakening. What do you say of them?”
“Yes, we do,” Lanius agreed. “One of them tried to kill me this past
winter, while another tried to kill King Grus. We hold your sovereign’s
sovereign to blame for that.”
“You are unjust,” the Menteshe envoy said.
“I doubt it,” Lanius said. “Thralls who stay thralls usually stay on
the land. Why would these men have crossed the Stura River into Avornis,
if not through the will of the Banished One?”
There, he thought.
Let Farrukh-Zad know I’m not—
much—
afraid to speak his master’s name.
Now the ambassador’s companion leaned forward to speak to him.
Nodding, Farrukh-Zad said, “If you admit that these men belong to the
Fallen Star, then you must also admit you should return them to him.”
Lanius would sooner have been pawing through the archives than playing
verbal cut-and-thrust with a tool of a tool of the Banished One. No help
for it, though. He said, “I did not admit that. I said the Banished One
had compelled them to cross the river. Compulsion is not the same as
ownership, and certainly not the same as right.”
“You refuse to give them back, then?” Farrukh-Zad’s voice was silky
with danger.
Avornan wizards still studied the thralls, learning what they could
from them. Maybe the Banished One wanted them back because he was afraid
the wizards would find out something important. Maybe. Lanius didn’t know
what the odds were, but he could only hope. “I do,” he said. “As long as
they have done no wrong in Avornis, they may stay here.”
“I shall take your words back to Prince Ulash,” the envoy said. “Do not
believe you have heard the last of this. You have not.” His last bow held
enough polite irony to satisfy even the most exacting Avornan courtier.
Having given it, he didn’t wait for any response, or even dismissal, from
King Lanius, but simply turned and strode out of the throne room, the
other Menteshe in his wake.
Lanius stared after him. He’d always thought about the power that went
with being king in fact as well as in name. As he began to use it, he saw
that worry went with the job, too.
Riding as usual at the head of his army, Grus got his first good look
at Nishevatz. Seeing the town did not delight him. If anything, it
horrified him. “Olor’s beard, Hirundo, how are we supposed to take that
place?” he yelped.
“Good question, Your Majesty,” his general replied. “Maybe the
defenders inside will laugh themselves to death when they see we’re crazy
enough to try to winkle them out.”
It wasn’t quite as bad as that, but it wasn’t good. Nishevatz had
originally been a small island a quarter of a mile or so off the coast of
the mainland. Before the Chernagors took the northern coast away from
Avornis, the townsfolk had built a causeway from the shore to the island.
The slow wheel of centuries since had seen silt widen the causeway from a
road to a real neck of land. Even so, the approach remained
formidable.
King Grus tried to make the best of things, saying, “Well, if it were
easy, Vsevolod wouldn’t have needed to ask us for help.”
“Huzzah,” Hirundo said sourly. “He was still in charge of things when
he did ask us here, remember. He’s not anymore.”
“I know. We’ll have to see what we can do about that.” He called to
Vsevolod, who rode in the middle of a small party of Chernagor noblemen
not far away. “Your Highness!”
“What you want, Your Majesty?” Vsevolod spoke Avornan with a thick,
guttural accent. He was about sixty, with thinning white hair, bushy
eyebrows, and an enormous hooked nose.
“Do you know any secret ways into your city?” Grus asked. “We could use
one about now, you know.”
“I know some, yes. I use one to get away,” Vsevolod replied. “ Vasilko
know most of these, too, though. I show him, so he get away if he ever
have trouble when he ruling prince. I not show him this one, in case
I have trouble.” He jabbed a large, callused thumb—more the thumb
of a fisherman or metalworker than that of a ruling prince—at his own
broad chest.
“Can an army use it, or just one man?” Grus asked.
The ousted ruler ran a hand through his long, curly beard. A couple of
white hairs clung to his fingers. He brushed his hand against his kilt to
dislodge them. “Would not be easy for army,” he said at last. “Passage is
narrow. Few men could hold it against host.”
“Does Vasilko know
how you got out? Or does he just know
that you did?”
“He did not know of this way ahead of time. I am sure of that,”
Vsevolod replied. “He would have blocked. If he knows now . . . This I
cannot say. I am sorry.”
Hirundo said, “Maybe our wizard could tell us.”
“Maybe.” Grus frowned. “Maybe he’d give it away trying to find out,
too.” He frowned again, hating indecision yet trapped into it. “We’d
better see what he thinks, eh?”
Pterocles seemed determined to think as little as possible, or at least
to admit to as little thought as possible. “I really could not say, Your
Majesty. I know little of the blocking magics the Chernagors use these
days, and how they match against ours. We haven’t warred with them in
their own lands for a long time, so we haven’t had much need to learn such
things. Maybe I can sneak past whatever wizardly wards he has without his
being the wiser, or maybe I would put his wind up at once.”
“Helpful,” Grus said, meaning anything but. “Duke Radim is bound to
have a wizard or two with him, eh? Talk to them, why don’t you? You can
see what sorts of things the Chernagors do. Maybe that will tell you what
you need to know.”
“Maybe.” Pterocles seemed glum, not convinced. Grus longed for Alca. He
longed for her a couple of ways, in fact, even if he had made up with
Estrilda.
He would have pushed Pterocles when the army camped that night, but a
courier galloped into the encampment with a long letter from Lanius.
Reading about the visit from Farrukh-Zad, Grus wished he were back in the
city of Avornis. By what was in the letter, Lanius had done as well as
anyone could have hoped to do. Grus wondered how closely the letter
reflected truth; Lanius was, after all, telling his own story. Even if
Lanius had gotten everything straight, was that all good news? Would he
decide he liked this taste of real kingship and crave more?
Grus summarized the letter in a few sentences for the courier, then
asked, “Is that how it happened?”
“Yes, Your Majesty, as far as I know,” the man replied. “I wasn’t in
the throne room, you understand, but that pretty much matches what I’ve
heard.” Ah, gossip, Grus thought with a smile. “What all
have you heard?” he asked, hoping to pick up some more news about
the embassy, or at least to get more of a feel for what had gone on.
That wasn’t what he got. The courier hesitated, then shrugged and said,
“Well, you’ll have heard about that other business by now, won’t you?”
“I don’t know,” Grus answered. “What other business?”
“About your son.”
“No, I hadn’t heard about that. What about him?” Grus tried to keep his
tone as light and casual as he could. If he’d asked the question the way
he wanted to, he would have frightened the courier out of saying another
word.
He evidently succeeded, for the fellow just asked, “You haven’t heard
about him and the girl?”
“No,” Grus said, again in as mild a voice as he could muster. “What
happened? Is some serving girl going to have his bastard?” Next to a lot
of the things Ortalis might have done, that would be good news. The only
real trouble with royal bastards was finding a fitting place for them once
they grew up.
But the courier said, “Uh, no, Your Majesty, no bastards. Not that I
know about, anyhow.”
That
Uh, no worried Grus. Carefully, he asked, “Well, what
do you know about?” Staying casual wasn’t easy, not anymore.
“About how he—” The courier stopped. He suddenly seemed to remember he
wasn’t passing time with somebody in a tavern. “It wasn’t so good,” he
finished.
“Tell me everything you know,” Grus said. “About how he
what? What wasn’t so good?” The courier stood mute. Grus snapped
his fingers. “Come on. You know more than you’re letting on. Out with
it.”
“Your Majesty, I don’t really
know anything.” The man seemed very unhappy. “I’ve just heard
things people are talking about.”
“Tell me those, then,” Grus said. “I swear by the gods I’ll remember
they don’t come from you. I don’t even know your name.”
“No, but you know my face,” the courier muttered. King Grus folded his
arms and waited. Trapped, the man gave him what was bound to be as
cleaned-up a version of the gossip he’d heard as he could manage on the
spur of the moment. It boiled down to the same sort of story as Grus had
already heard about Ortalis too many times. At last, the man stumbled to a
stop, saying, “And that’s everything I heard.”
Grus doubted it was. Such tales were usually much more lurid. But he
thought he would need a torturer to pull anything else from the fellow.
“All right, you can go,” he said, and the courier fled. “I’ll deal with
this . . . whenever I get a chance.” Only he heard that.
He looked ahead to Nishevatz. The Chernagor city-state would take up
all of his time for who could guess how long. He sighed. Whatever Ortalis
had done was done. With a little luck, he wouldn’t do anything worse until
Grus got back to the capital. Grus looked up at the heavens, wondering if
that could be too much to ask of the gods.
Every once in a while, Lanius liked getting out of the royal palace. He
especially liked going over to the great cathedral not far away, partly
because some of the ecclesiastical archives went back even further than
those in the palace and partly because he liked Arch-Hallow Anser.
He didn’t know anyone who didn’t like Grus’ bastard son. Even Queen
Estrilda liked Anser, and she’d borne Grus’ two legitimate children.
Prince Ortalis liked Anser, too, even though they had quarreled now and
again, and Ortalis rarely liked anybody.
That didn’t mean Lanius thought Anser made a perfect arch-hallow. He’d
been a layman when Grus first named him to the post, and had worn the
black, green, and yellow robes of the ascending grades of the priesthood
on successive days before donning the arch-hallow’s scarlet garb. He still
knew—and cared—little about the gods or the structure of the
ecclesiastical hierarchy. His chief passion, almost his only passion, was
hunting.
But he was loyal to Grus. To the man who held the real power in
Avornis, that counted for much more than anything else. Lanius might prove
a problem for Grus. Ortalis might, too. Anser? No. Anser never would.
He bowed to the king when Lanius stepped into his chamber in a back
part of the cathedral where ordinary worshipers never went. “Good to see
you, Your Majesty!” he exclaimed with a smile, and he sounded as though he
meant it.
“Good to see you, too, most holy sir.” Lanius also meant it. You
couldn’t help being glad to see Anser. He wasn’t far from Lanius’ own age,
and looked a lot like Grus—more like him than either Ortalis or Sosia.
They favored their mother, which probably made them better-looking.
“What can I do for you today?” Anser asked. “Did you come to visit me,
or shall I just send for Ixoreus and wave while you wander down to the
archives?” He grinned at Lanius.
Ixoreus, one of his secretaries, knew more about the ecclesiastical
archives than any man living. But Lanius smiled back and, not without a
certain regret, shook his head. “No, thanks, though it is tempting,” he
said. “I wanted to ask you a question.”
“Well, here I am. Go right ahead,” Anser replied. “If I know, I’ll tell
you.”
And he would, too. Lanius had no doubt of it. He thought back to‘ the
days of Arch-Hallow Bucco, Anser’s predecessor. Bucco had been a
formidable scholar, administrator, and diplomat. He’d been regent during
part of Lanius’ childhood; he’d even sent Lanius’ mother into exile.
He wouldn’t have told anyone his own name unless he saw some
profit or advantage in it. All things considered, Lanius preferred
Anser.
He said, “What I want to know is, did you write to King Grus about. . .
any troubles Ortalis has had lately with women?”
“Not me,” the arch-hallow said at once. “I’ve heard a few things, but I
wouldn’t send gossip to ... the other king.” The hesitation was so small,
Lanius barely noticed it. Anser really did work hard at being polite to
everybody.
“It’s not just gossip. I wish it were,” Lanius said. “But I’ve heard
about it from Ortalis himself. He didn’t want Grus to find out. Now Grus
has. By the letter I have from him, he’s not very happy about it,
either.”
“I can see how he wouldn’t be. Ortalis ... I
like my half brother, most ways,” Anser said. He saw the good in
people—maybe that was why everybody liked him. He proved as much now, for
he went on, “He’s a clever fellow, and I enjoyed hunting with him, at
least until he. ...” His voice trailed away again.
“Yes. Until he.” Lanius didn’t finish the sentence, either. Ortalis
would sooner have hunted men, or rather women, than beasts. And what he
would have done when he caught them . . . was one more thing Lanius didn’t
care to contemplate.
“Somebody told Grus about this latest news.”
“It wasn’t me,” Anser said again. He looked up at the ceiling, as
though hoping to find answers there. “I wish we hadn’t had that. . .
trouble with the hunting. It did seem to help, for a while.”
“Yes, for a while,” Lanius agreed. For several years, Ortalis had held
his demons at bay by killing beasts instead of doing anything with or to
people. But that hadn’t satisfied him, not for good. And so ...
And so I’m hashing this out with Anser, Lanius thought
unhappily.
“I wish I knew what to tell you, Your Majesty. I wish I knew what to
tell Ortalis, too,” the arch-hallow said.
“No one has ever been able to tell Ortalis anything. That’s a big part
of the problem,” Lanius said.
Anser nodded. “So it is.” Suddenly, he grinned again. “Now don’t you
wish you’d gone down under the cathedral with Ixoreus?”
“Now that you mention it, yes,” Lanius said. They both laughed. Then
Lanius had another thought. He asked, “You grew up down in the south,
didn’t you?”
“Yes, that’s right—in Drepanum, right along the Stura River,” Anser
said, and Lanius remembered that Grus had captained a river galley that
patrolled the Stura. Anser went on, “Why do you want to know?”
“I just wondered if you knew anything special about Sanjar and
Korkut—you know, things you might hear because you’re right across the
border but would never come all the way up to the city of Avornis.”
“About Ulash’s sons?” The arch-hallow frowned and shook his head. “The
only thing I ever heard is that they don’t like each other very well—but
you can say that about half the brothers in the world, especially when
they’re princes.”
“I suppose so.” Lanius had no brothers. When King Mergus, his father,
at last had a son by his concubine Certhia, he’d married her although that
made her his seventh wife. All the ecclesiastics in Avornis had screamed
at the top of their lungs, since even King Olor up in the heavens had only
six. A lot of them had reckoned—some still did reckon—Lanius a bastard
because of Mergus’ irregularities. Thanks to his own past, he had a
certain amount of sympathy for Anser. He wondered if that sympathy ran the
other way, too. Anser had never said a word along those lines—but then,
Lanius was known to be touchy about his ancestry.
Anser didn’t say anything about ancestors now, either. He said, “Sorry
I can’t tell you more about them.”
“Who knows when it might matter?” Lanius replied with a shrug. “Who
knows if it will matter at all?”
Slowly—too slowly to suit King Grus—twilight deepened toward darkness.
The tall, frowning walls of Nishevatz seemed to melt into the northern
sky. Only the torches Chernagor sentries carried as they paced along their
stretches of walkway told where the top of the wall was.
Grus turned to Calcarius and Malk, the Avornan and Chernagor officers
who would lead a mixed assault party back through the secret tunnel Prince
Vsevolod had used to flee the city. “You know what you’re going to do?” he
said, and felt foolish a moment later—if they didn’t know by now, why were
they trying it?
“Yes, Your Majesty,” they chorused. Grus had to fight down a laugh.
They were both big, gruff fighting men, but they sounded like a couple of
youths impatient with an overly fussy mother.
The men they would lead waited behind them—Avornans in pants and kilted
Chernagors, their chainmail shirts clanking now and again as they shifted
from foot to foot. They were all big, gruff fighting men, too, and all
volunteers. “Gods go with you, then,” Grus said. “When you seize the gate
near the other end of the tunnel, we’ll come in and take the city. You
don’t need to hold it long. We’ll be there to help as soon as it
opens.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” Calcarius and Malk spoke at the same time once
more. They smiled at each other. They acted like a couple of impatient
youths, too—youths eager to be off on a lark. Calcarius looked around and
asked, “Is it dark enough yet? Can we start?”
“Another half hour,” Grus said after looking around. Color had faded
out of the air, but shape remained. Not only the officers in charge of the
storming party but all the men who would go on it pouted and fumed. Grus
wagged a finger at them. “You hush, every one of you, or I’ll send you to
bed without supper.”
They jeered at him. Some of the Chernagors translated what he’d said
into their language for those who didn’t speak Avornan. Some of the burly
men in kilts said things that didn’t sound as though they would do with
being translated back into Avornan.
Time crawled past. It might have gone on hands and knees. The stars
came out. They grew brighter as twilight ebbed. They too crawled—across
the sky. Grus used them to judge both the time and the darkness. At last,
he slapped Calcarius on his mailed shoulder and said, “Now.”
Even in the darkness, the Avornan officer’s face lit up. “See you soon,
Your Majesty.”
The tunnel by which Prince Vsevolod had emerged from Nishevatz opened
from behind a boulder, which let an escapee leave it without drawing
attention from the walls of the city. He’d covered the trapdoor with dirt
once more after coming out. By all the signs his spies and Grus’ could
gather, and by everything Pterocles’ wizardry and that of the Chernagors
showed, Prince Vasilko and his henchmen in the city still didn’t know how
Vsevolod had gotten away. Grus hoped the spies and the wizards knew what
they were talking about. If they didn’t. . . Grus shook his head. He’d
made up his mind that they did. He would—he had to—believe that until and
unless it turned out not to be so.
Two soldiers with spades uncovered the doorway Vsevolod had buried.
When it was mostly clear of dirt, one of them stooped and seized the heavy
bronze ring mounted on the tarred timbers. Iron might have rusted to
uselessness; not so, bronze. Grunting, the soldier—he was a Chernagor, and
immensely broad through the shoulders—pulled up the trap door. A deeper
darkness appeared, a hole in the night. Calcarius vanished into it
first—vanished as though he had never been. Malk followed. Starlight
glittered for an instant on the honed edge of his sword. Then the black
swallowed him, too.
One by one—now an Avornan, now a Chernagor, now a clump of one folk,
now of the other—the warriors in the storming party disappeared into the
tunnel. After what seemed a very short time, the last man was gone.
Grus found Hirundo and asked, “We
are ready to move when the signal comes and the gate opens?”
“Oh, yes, Your Majesty,” the general answered. “And once we get inside
Nishevatz, it’s ours. I don’t care what Vasilko has in there. If his men
can’t use the walls to save themselves, we’ll whip them.”
“Good. That’s what I wanted you to tell me.” Grus cocked his head
toward the gate the attackers aimed to seize. “We ought to hear the fight
start pretty soon, eh?”
Hirundo nodded in the darkness. “I’d certainly think so, unless all the
Chernagors in there are sleeping and there
is no fight. That’d be nice, wouldn’t it?”
“I wouldn’t mind,” Grus said. “I wouldn’t mind a bit.”
Whether he minded or not, he didn’t believe that would happen. Prince
Vasilko wasn’t—Grus hoped Vasilko wasn’t—expecting attack through the
secret passage. But the new master of Nishevatz did know the Avornan army
was out there. The men who followed him needed to stay alert.
“How long do you think our men will need to get through the tunnel?”
Grus asked Hirundo.
“Well, I don’t exactly know, Your Majesty, but I don’t suppose it will
take very long,” Hirundo replied. “It can’t stretch for more than a
quarter of a mile.”
“No, I wouldn’t think so,” Grus agreed. He called to a servant. The man
hurried off and returned with a cup of wine for him. He sipped and waited.
His fingers drummed on his thigh. A quarter of a mile— even a quarter of a
mile in darkness absolute, through a tunnel shored up with planks with
dirt sifting down between the planks and falling on the back of a
soldier’s neck when he least expected it... that was surely a matter of
minutes, and only a few of them.
He waited. He would know—the whole army would know—when the fighting
inside the city started. Things might go wrong. If they did, the marauders
might not carry the gate. But no one would be in any doubt about when
things began.
Hirundo said, “Won’t be long now.” Grus nodded. The general had thought
along with him. That Hirundo often thought along with him was one reason
they worked well together.
More time passed. Now Grus was the one who said, “
Can’t be long now,” and Hirundo the one who nodded. Grus got up
and started to pace. It should have started already. He knew as much. He
tried to convince himself he didn’t.
“Something’s not right.” Hirundo spoke in a low voice, as though he
wanted to be able to pretend he’d never said any such thing in case he
happened to be mistaken.
King Grus nodded. He stopped pacing, stopped pretending. “Pterocles!”
he called, pitching his voice to carry.
“Yes, Your Majesty?” The wizard hurried up to him. “What do you
need?”
“What can you tell me about the men in the tunnel?” Grus tried to hide
his exasperation. Alca would have known what he wanted without asking. If
the men went into the tunnel and didn’t come out when they were supposed
to, what was he likely to need but some notion of what had happened to
them?
“I’ll do my best, Your Majesty.” Pterocles was willing enough. Grus
only wished he were more aggressive.
The wizard got to work. He peered through crystals and lit braziers
fueled with leaves and twigs that produced odd-scented smokes, some spicy,
others nasty. He cast powders onto the flames, which flared up blue or
crimson or green. His hands twisted in intricate passes. He chanted in
Avornan, and in other languages the king neither knew nor recognized.
Grus kept hoping the fighting would break out while Pterocles was in
the middle of a conjuration. That might make the wizard seem foolish, but
it would show all the worry had been over nothing. No matter what Grus
hoped, it didn’t happen. The spells went on and on. So did the peaceful,
hateful silence inside Nishevatz.
At last, unwillingly, the wizard shook his head. “I can establish no
mystical bond with the men, Your Majesty.”
“What does that mean?” Grus asked harshly.
“It may mean they are not there—” Pterocles began.
“What? What are you talking about? You saw them go. Where else would
they be, could they be, but in Nishevatz?”
“I do not know, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said. “The other possibility
is that they are dead.” He winced. Maybe he hadn’t intended to say that.
Whether he had or not, it seemed hideously probable.
“What could have happened? What could have gone wrong?” Grus
demanded.
“I don’t know that, either,” Pterocles said miserably.
“Can you find out?” What Grus wanted to say was,
What good are you? He didn’t, but holding back wasn’t easy. It
got harder when Prince Vsevolod, who’d also had men go into the tunnel,
came over and glowered at Pterocles. Vsevolod had a face made for
glowering; in the firelight, he looked like an ancient, wattled vulture
with glittering eyes.
Looking more flustered by having two sovereigns watch him than he had
with only one, Pterocles got to work again. He was in the middle of a
spell when he suddenly stiffened, gasped out, “Oh, no!”—and toppled to the
ground, unconscious or worse. At Grus’ shout, healers tried to rouse him.
But, whatever had befallen him, whatever he had seen, he was far past
rousing.
And when morning came the next day, not a sound had been heard from
Nishevatz.
CHAPTER FOUR
“Your Majesty! Your Majesty!” A servant chased Lanius down the
corridors of the royal palace.
“What is it, Bubulcus?” Lanius asked apprehensively. When any servant
called in that tone of voice, something had gone wrong somewhere. When
Bubulcus called in that tone of voice, something dreadful had gone
horribly wrong, and he’d had something to do with it.
And, sure enough, now that he had Lanius’ attention, he didn’t seem to
want it anymore. Looking down at the mosaic flooring, he mumbled, “Well,
Your Majesty, a couple of those moncats have gotten loose.”
He made it sound as though the animals had done it all by themselves.
That probably wasn’t impossible, but it certainly wasn’t likely. If they
had done it all by themselves, Bubulcus wouldn’t have seemed so nervous,
either. “And how did the moncats get loose?” Lanius inquired with what he
hoped was ominous calm.
Bubulcus flinched, which surprised the king not at all. The palace
servant said, “Well, it was when I went into one of their rooms for a
minute, and—”
“Are you supposed to do that?” Lanius asked gently. None of the
servants was supposed to do that. Even when powerless over the rest of
Avornis, Lanius had ruled the rooms where his animals dwelt. He’d laid
down that law after the last time one of Bubulcus’ visits let a moncat
escape.
Angrily defensive, Bubulcus said, “Which I wouldn’t have done if I
hadn’t thought you were in there.” He made his lapse sound as though it
were Lanius’ fault.
“You’re not supposed to go into one of those rooms whether you think
I’m there or not,” Lanius snapped. Bubulcus only glared at him. Nothing
would convince the servant that what he’d done was his fault. Still angry,
Lanius demanded, “Which moncats got away?”
Bubulcus threw his hands in the air. “How am I supposed to know? You
never let anybody but you into those miserable rooms, so who but you can
tell one of those miserable creatures from the next? All I know is, there
were two of ‘em. They scooted out fast as an arrow from a bow. If I hadn’t
slammed the door, more would’ve gotten loose.” Instead of being
embarrassed at letting any of the animals escape, he seemed proud it
hadn’t been worse.
“If you hadn’t slammed the door, Bubulcus, you’d be on your way to the
Maze right now,” Lanius said.
Where nothing else had, that got through to Bubulcus. Kings of Avornis
had exiled people who dissatisfied them to the swamps and marshes east of
the capital for years uncounted. The servant’s smile tried to seem
ingratiating, but came out frightened. “Your Majesty is joking,” he said,
sounding as though he hoped to convince himself.
“My Majesty is doing no such thing,” Lanius replied. “Do you want to
see if I’m joking?” Bubulcus shook his head, looking more frightened than
ever.
This is the power Grus knows all the time, Lanius thought.
Am I jealous? He didn’t need to wonder long.
Yes, I’m jealous. But that too would have to wait. “Where did the
moncats go?”
“Out of that room—that’s all I can tell you,” Bubulcus answered, as
self-righteous as ever. “Nobody could keep track of those . . . things
once they get moving. They aren’t natural, you ask me.”
Lanius wished he knew which moncats had gotten out. Maybe his special
calls would have helped lure them back. Or maybe not; moncats could be as
willful and perverse as ordinary felines. As things were, elegant
solutions would have to fly straight out the window. “Go to the kitchens,”
he told Bubulcus.
“To the kitchens?” the servant echoed. “Why should I do that?”
“To get some raw flesh for me to use to catch the moncats.” Lanius
suddenly looked as fierce as he knew how. “Or would you rather have me
carve some raw flesh from your carcass?”
Bubulcus fled.
When he got back, he had some lovely beef that would probably have gone
on the royal table tonight. And he proved to be capable of thought on his
own, for he also carried a couple of dead mice by the tail. “Good,” Lanius
murmured. “Maybe I won’t have to carve you after all.”
He walked through palace hallways near the moncats’ room, clucking as
though it were general feeding time and holding up the meat and the mice.
Only when servants’ eyes went big did he stop to reflect that this was a
curious thing for a King of Avornis to do. Having reflected, he then quit
letting it bother him. He’d done all sorts of curious things. What was one
more?
As he walked, he eyed wall niches and candelabra hanging from the
ceiling. Unlike ordinary cats, moncats climbed at any excuse or none; they
lived their lives in the trees. That made them especially delightful to
catch when they got loose. It was also the reason Lanius had told his
servants not to come into the animals’ rooms—not that Bubulcus bothered
remembering anything so trivial as a royal order.
A woman saw the meat in Lanius’ hand and waved to him. “Your Majesty,
one of those funny animals of yours is around that corner over there. It
hissed at me, the nasty thing.”
“Thank you, Parula. You’ll have a reward,” Lanius said. He glowered at
Bubulcus. “What
you’ll have . . .”
“
I didn’t do anything, Your Majesty.” Bubulcus sounded affronted.
The next time he did do something wrong would be the first, as far as he
was concerned.
Lanius hurried around the corner at which Parula had pointed. Sure
enough, the moncat was there. It was trying to get out a window. Since the
royal palace was also a citadel, the windows were narrow and set with iron
bars. The moncat couldn’t get out that way, though it might have dashed
out a door.
“Rusty!” Lanius called.
“How can you tell one of the miserable creatures from another?” asked
Bubulcus, who’d trailed along behind him.
“How?” Lanius shrugged. “I can, that’s all.” From then on, he ignored
Bubulcus. Dangling one of the dead mice by the tail, he called the
moncat’s name again.
Rusty turned large green eyes his way. Moncats were smarter than
ordinary cats; they did come to learn the names Lanius called them. And
the offer of a mouse would have tempted any feline small enough to care
about such a morsel. Rusty dropped down from the window and hurried over
to the king.
He gave the moncat the mouse. Rusty held the treat in its hind
feet—whose first toes did duty as thumbs—and used the claws of its front
feet and sharp teeth to butcher it. The moncat ate the mouse in chunks. It
didn’t scratch or bite when Lanius picked it up and carried it off to the
room from which it had escaped.
“There. That’s all taken care of,” Bubulcus said happily, as though
he’d caught the moncat instead of letting it escape.
“No.” Lanius shook his head. “This is one moncat. Two got away, you
said. If the other one isn’t caught soon, you will be very, very sorry. Do
you understand me?” He sounded like a king who ruled as well as reigned.
Bubulcus looked unhappy enough to make Lanius feel like that kind of king,
too.
King Grus stared up at the frowning walls of Nishevatz. He still had no
sure notion of what had happened to the Avornans and Chernagors he’d tried
to sneak into the city. Prince Vasilko hadn’t gloated about them from the
wall or shot their heads out of catapults or anything of the sort. He gave
no sign of knowing they’d tried to enter Nishevatz. In a way, that silence
was more intimidating than anything blatant he might have done. What
had his men done to them? Or, worse, what were they
doing to them?
Not knowing gnawed at Grus. Still, he had to go on. With one effort a
failure, he tried another. An interpreter, a squad of guards, and Prince
Vsevolod at his side, he approached the Chernagor fortress.
“Here is your rightful prince!” he called, and pointed to Vsevolod. The
interpreter turned his words into those of the throaty Chernagor
tongue.
Faces, pale dots in the distance, peered down at Grus from the top of
the frowning wall. Here and there, the sun sparkled off an iron helmet, or
perhaps a sword blade. No one on the wall said a word. The wind blew cold
and salty off the gray sea beyond the city-state.
“Here is your rightful prince!” Grus said again. “Cast down the
ungrateful, unnatural son who has stolen your throne. Do you want the
servants of the Banished One loose in your land? That is what Vasilko will
give you.”
Vsevolod strode forward. Despite his years, he still stood very
straight, very erect. He looked every inch a prince. He shouted up at the
warriors on the wall. He surely knew a lot of them as men, not merely as
Chernagors.
“What does he say?” Grus asked the interpreter.
“He says he will not punish them if they yield up Vasilko to him,” the
Chernagor answered. “He says he knows they were fooled. He says he will
not even kill Vasilko. He says he will send him into exile in Avornis,
where he can learn the error of his ways.”
“Hmm.” Grus wondered how Vsevolod had meant that. He didn’t much want
Vasilko in his kingdom, not even in the Maze. But he supposed Vsevolod was
doing the best he could. If the old man had promised to torture his son to
death the minute he got his throne back, which of them was really likely
to have fallen under the influence of the Banished One?
That thought brought on another.
How do I know Vasilko really is the man the Banished One backs?
Grus wondered. He sent Vsevolod a sudden hard stare. He’d always believed
the old lord of Nishevatz. Why would Vsevolod have summoned him up to the
Chernagor country, if not to fight the forces of the Banished One? Why?
What if the answer is, to lure me into a danger I can’t hope to
escape?
“He is calling on them to open the gates,” the interpreter said. Grus
knew he’d missed a couple of sentences. That jolt of suspicion had driven
everything else out of his mind for a moment. The older he got, the more
complicated life looked. He eyed Vsevolod again. By the time he got
that old, how would things seem? Would he be able to find any
straight paths at all, or would every choice twist back on itself like a
snake with indigestion? The interpreter added, “He says he will not harm
any of them, if they return to his side now. He also says you Avornans
will go home then.”
“Yes, that’s true.” Grus saw no point to putting a permanent garrison
in Nishevatz. That would just embroil him in a war against all the other
Chernagor city-states. Unless he aimed to conquer this whole stretch of
coast, seizing a little of it would be more trouble than it was worth.
Vsevolod called to the men on the wall one more time. The interpreter
said, “He asks them, what is their answer?”
They did not keep him waiting long. Almost as one man, they drew their
bows and started shooting at him and Grus and their companions. The
guardsmen threw up their shields. Thock! Thock! Thock! Arrows thudded into metal-faced wood. A
softer splat was an arrow striking flesh rather than a shield. A guard
gasped, trying to hold in the pain. Then, failing, he howled.
Guards and the royalty they guarded got out of range as fast as they
could. Avornan archers rushed forward to shoot back at the Chernagors on
the walls. Grus doubted they hit many, but maybe they did make the
Chernagors keep their heads down. That would at least spoil the foe’s
aim.
After what seemed like forever but couldn’t have been more than half a
minute, the arrows the Chernagors kept shooting thudded into the ground
behind Grus, and not into shields or flesh. He wasn’t ashamed to let out a
sigh of relief. He turned to Vsevolod and asked, “Are you all right?”
Panting, the deposed lord of Nishevatz nodded. “Only—winded. I am
not—as swift—as I used to be.” He paused to catch his breath. “What will
you do now?”
“Well, we’ve tried being sneaky, and that doesn’t work,” Grus said.
“We’ve tried being reasonable, and that didn’t work, either. We can’t very
well starve them out, can we, not when they can bring in food by sea?”
“What does that leave?” Vsevolod asked morosely.
“Assaulting the walls,” Grus answered. He stared toward those walls
again. The Chernagors were still trading arrows with his archers. They
were getting the better of it, too; they had the advantage of height: Grus
sighed. “Assaulting the walls,” he repeated, and sighed again. “And I hate
to think about it, let alone try.”
Whenever Bubulcus saw King Lanius coming, he did his best to disappear.
With one moncat still on the loose, that was wise of him. It wasn’t wise
enough, though. The longer Pouncer stayed missing, the angrier Lanius got.
Had Bubulcus been truly wise, he would have fled the palace and not just
ducked into another room or around the corner when the king drew near.
“One of these days,” Lanius told Sosia, “I am going to lose all of my
temper, and I really will send that simpering simpleton to the Maze.”
“Go ahead,” his wife answered. “If you’re going to act like a king, act
like a
king.”
The only trouble here was, acting like a king meant acting like an
ogre. No matter how angry at Bubulcus Lanius got, at heart he remained a
mild-mannered man better suited to scholarship than to ruling. He could
too easily imagine what a disaster exiling Bubulcus would be to the
servant’s family. And so he muttered curses under his breath, and told
himself he would condemn Bubulcus tomorrow, and then put it off for
another day.
He left meat in places to which he hoped the moncat might come. A
couple of times, the moncat did come to one of those places . . . and
stole the meat and disappeared again before anybody could catch it.
Bubulcus came very close to exile the first time that happened, very close
indeed.
Lanius did his best to live his life as though nothing were wrong. He
went into the archives, trying to find out as much as he could about
Nishevatz and the Chernagors for Grus. He doubted his father-in-law would
be grateful, but, grateful or not, Grus still might find the information
worth having.
Of course, Lanius would have enjoyed going to the archives regardless
of whether he found anything useful to Grus. He liked nothing better than
poking around through old sheets of parchment. Whenever he did, he learned
something. He had to keep reminding himself he was trying to find out
about the Chernagors. Otherwise, he might have happily wandered down any
of half a dozen sidetracks.
He also liked going into the archives for the same reason he liked
caring for his animals—while he was doing it, people were unlikely to
bother him. Palace servants weren’t forbidden to come into the archives
after him. Old tax records and ambassadors’ reports, unlike moncats and
monkeys, couldn’t escape and cause trouble. But no one in the royal palace
except Lanius seemed to want to venture into the dark, dusty chambers that
held the records of Avornis’ past.
When the Chernagors first descended on the north coast, Avornans had
reacted with horror. Lanius already knew that. The Chernagors hadn’t been
merchant adventurers in those distant days. They’d been sea-raiders and
corsairs. Lanius suspected—he was, in fact, as near sure as made no
difference—they were still sea-raiders and corsairs whenever and wherever
they could get away with it.
He’d just come across an interesting series of letters from an Avornan
envoy who’d visited Nishevatz in the days of Prince Vsevolod’s
great-grandfather when a flash of motion caught from the corner of his eye
made him look up. His first thought was that a servant had come into the
archives after all. He saw no one, though.
“Who’s there?” he called.
Only silence answered.
He suddenly realized his seclusion in the archives had disadvantages as
well as advantages. If anything happened to him here, who would know? Who
would come to his rescue? If an assassin came after him, with what could
he fight back? The most lethal weapon he had was a bronze letter
opener.
And if the Banished One had somehow learned he spent a lot of time
alone in the archives . . . Unease turned to fear. A thrall under the
spell of the Banished One had already tried to murder him while he was
caring for his animals. Flinging a treaty in an assassins face wouldn’t
work nearly as well as throwing a moncat had.
“Who’s there?” This time, Lanius couldn’t keep a wobble of alarm from
his voice.
That alarm got worse when, again, no answer came back.
Slowly, fighting his fear, Lanius rose from the stool where he’d
perched. He clutched the letter opener in his right hand. He was no
warrior. He would never be a warrior. But he intended to put up as much of
a fight as he could.
Another flash of motion, this one from behind a cabinet untidily full
of officers’ reports from a long-ago war against the Thervings. “Who’s
there?” Lanius demanded for a third time. “Come out. I see you.”
And oh, how I wish I didn’t.
More motion—and, at last, a sound to go with it. “Mrowr?”
Lanius’ joints felt all springy with relief. “Olor’s beard!” he said,
and then, “Come out of there, you stupid moncat!”
The moncat, of course, didn’t. All Lanius could see of it now was the
twitching tip of its tail. He hurried over to the oak cabinet. Any moment
now, the moncat was only too likely to start scrambling up the wall, to
somewhere too high for him to reach it.
He was, in fact, a little surprised it hadn’t fled already. With his
fear gone and his wits returning, he clucked as he did when he was about
to feed the moncats. “Mrowr?” this one said again, now on a questioning
note. He hoped it was hungry. Though mice skittered here and there through
the royal palace, hunting them would surely be harder work than coming up
to a dish and getting meat and offal. Wouldn’t it?
“It’s all right,” Lanius said soothingly, stepping around the cabinet.
“It’s not your fault. I’m not angry at you. I wouldn’t mind booting that
bungling Bubulcus into the middle of next month—no, I wouldn’t mind that
at all—but I’m not angry at you.”
There sat the moncat, staring up at him out of greenish-yellow eyes. It
seemed to think it was in trouble no matter how soothingly he spoke, for
it sat on its haunches clutching in its little clawed hands and feet an
enormous wooden serving spoon it must have stolen from the kitchens. The
spoon was at least as tall as the moncat, and that included the animal’s
tail.
“Why, you little thief!” Lanius burst out laughing. “If you went
sneaking through the kitchens, maybe you’re not so hungry after all.” He
stooped to pick up the moncat.
It started to run away, but couldn’t make itself let go of the prize it
had stolen. It was much less agile trying to run with one hand and one
foot still holding the spoon. Lanius scooped it up.
Still hanging on to the spoon, the moncat twisted and snapped. He
smacked it on the nose. “Don’t you bite me!” he said loudly. It subsided.
Most of the moncats knew what that meant, because most of them had tried
biting him at one time or another.
Feeling like a soldier who’d just finished a triumphant campaign,
Lanius carried the moncat—and the spoon, which it refused to drop— back to
its room. Once he’d returned it to its fellows, he sent a couple of
servants after Bubulcus.
“Yes, Your Majesty?” Bubulcus asked apprehensively. Even servants
rarely sounded apprehensive around Lanius. He savored Bubulcus’ fear—and,
savoring it, began to understand how an ordinary man could turn into a
tyrant. Bubulcus went on, “Is it... is it the Maze for me?”
“No, not that you don’t deserve it,” Lanius said. “I caught the missing
moncat myself, so it isn’t missing anymore. Next time, though, by the gods
. . . There had better not be a next time for this, that’s all. Do you
understand me?”
“Yes, Your Majesty! Thank you, Your Majesty! Gods bless you, Your
Majesty!” Blubbering, Bubulcus fell to his knees. Lanius turned away. Yes,
he understood how a man could turn into a tyrant, all right.
The Chernagor stared at Grus. Words poured out of him, a great,
guttural flood. They were in his own language, so Grus understood not a
one of them. Turning to the interpreter, he asked, “What is he saying? Why
did he sneak out of Nishevatz and come here?”
“He says he cannot stand it in there anymore.” The interpreter’s words
were calm, dispassionate, while passion filled the escapee’s voice. Grus
could understand that much, even if he followed not a word of what the man
was saying. “He says Vasiiko is worse than Vsevolod ever dreamed of
being.”
Grus glanced over toward Vsevolod, who stood only a few feet away.
Vsevolod, of course, didn’t need the translation to understand what the
other Chernagor was saying. His forward-thrusting features and beaky nose
made him look like an angry bird of prey—not that Grus had ever seen a
bird of prey with a big, bushy white beard.
More excited speech burst from the Chernagor who’d just gotten out
of Nishevatz. He pointed back toward the city he’d just left.
“What’s he going on about now?” Grus asked.
“He says a man does not even have to do anything to oppose Vasiiko.”
Again, the interpreter’s flat, unemotional voice contrasted oddly with the
tones of the man whose words he was translating. “He says, half the time a
man only has to realize Vasiiko is a galloping horse turd”—the Chernagor
obscenity sounded bizarre when rendered literally into Avornan—“and then
he disappears. He never has a chance to do anything against Vasiiko.”
“You see?” Vsevolod said. “Is how I told you. Banished One works
through my son.” Now grief washed over his face.
“I see.” Grus left it at that, for he still had doubts that worried
him, even if he kept quiet about them. Some of those doubts had to do with
Vsevolod. Others he could voice without offending the refugee Chernagor.
He told the interpreter, “Ask this fellow how he managed to escape from
Nishevatz once he decided Vasiiko was . . . not a good man.” He didn’t try
to imitate that picturesque curse.
The interpreter spoke in throaty gutturals. The man who’d gotten out of
Nishevatz gave back more of them. The interpreter asked him something
else. His voice showed more life while speaking the Chernagor tongue than
when he used Avornan. He turned back to Grus. “He says he did not linger.
He says he ran away before Vasiiko could send anyone after him. He
says—”
Before the interpreter could finish, the other Chernagor gasped. He
flung his arms wide. “No!” he shouted—that was one word
of the Chernagor speech Grus understood. He staggered and began
to crumple, as though an arrow had hit him in the chest. “No!” he shouted
again, this time blurrily. Blood ran from his mouth—and from his nose and
from the corners of his eyes and from his ears, as well. After a moment,
it began to drip from under his fingernails, too. He slumped to the
ground, twitched two or three times, and lay still.
Grimly, Vsevolod said, “Now you see, Your Majesty. This is what my son,
flesh of my life, now does to people.” He covered his face with his
gnarled hands.
“Apparently, Your Majesty, this man did not escape Vasilko’s vengeance
after all.” The interpreter’s dispassionate way of speaking clashed with
Vsevolod’s anguish.
“Apparently. Yes.” Grus took a gingerly step away from the Chernagor’s
corpse, which still leaked blood from every orifice. He took a deep breath
and tried to force his stunned wits into action. “Fetch me Pterocles,” he
told a young officer standing close by. He had to repeat himself. The
officer was staring at the body in horrified fascination. Once Grus got
his attention, he nodded jerkily and hurried away.
The wizard came quickly, but not quickly enough to suit Grus. Pterocles
took one look at the dead Chernagor, then recoiled in dread and dismay.
“Oh, by the gods!” he said harshly. “By the gods!”
Grus thought of Milvago, who was now the Banished One. He wished he
hadn’t. It only made Pterocles righter than he knew. “Do you recognize the
spell that did this?” the king asked.
“Recognize it? No, Your Majesty.” Pterocles shook his head. “But if I
ever saw the man who used it, I’d wash my eyes before I looked at anything
else. Can’t you feel how filthy it is?”
“I can see how filthy it is. Feel it? No. I’m blind that particular
way.”
“Most of the time, I pity ordinary men because they can’t see what I
take for granted.” Pterocles looked at the Chernagor’s corpse again, then
recoiled. “Every once in a while, though, you’re lucky. This, I fear, is
one of
those times.”
Bowing nervously before King Lanius, the peasant said, “If my baron
ever finds out I’ve come before you, I’m in a lot of trouble, Your
Majesty.”
“If the King of Avornis can’t protect you, who can?” Lanius asked.
“You’re here. I live a long ways off from the capital. Wasn’t that I
had a cousin move here more than twenty years ago, give me a place to
stay, I never would’ve come. But Baron Clamator, he’s right there where m
at.”
That probably—no, certainly—reflected reality. Lanius. wished it
didn’t, but recognized that it did. “Well, go on ...” he said.
Knowing the pause for what it was, the peasant said, “My name’s
Flammeus, Your Majesty.”
“Flammeus. Yes, of course.” Lanius was annoyed with himself. A steward
had whispered it to him, and he’d gone and forgotten it. He didn’t like
forgetting anything. “Go on, then, Flammeus.” If he said it a few times,
it
would stick in his memory. “What’s Baron Clamator doing?” He had
a pretty good idea. Farmers usually brought one complaint in particular
against their local nobility.
Sure enough, Flammeus said, “He’s taking land he’s got no right to.
He’s buying some and using his retainers to take more. We’re free men down
there, and he’s doing his best to turn us into thralls like the Menteshe
have.”
He didn’t know much about the thralls, or about the magic that robbed
them of their essential humanity. He was just a farmer who, even after
cleaning up and putting on his best clothes, still smelled of sweat and
onions. He wanted to stay his own master. Lanius, who longed to be fully
his own master, had trouble blaming him for that.
Grus had issued laws making it much harder for nobles to acquire land
from ordinary farmers. He hadn’t done it for the farmers’ sake. He’d done
it to make sure they went on paying taxes to Kings of Avornis and didn’t
become men who looked first to barons and counts and dukes and not to the
crown. Lanius had seen how that helped him keep unruly nobles in line.
And what helped Grus could help any King of Avornis. “Baron Clamator
will hear from me, Flammeus,” Lanius promised.
“He doesn’t listen any too well,” the farmer warned.
“He’ll listen to soldiers,” Lanius said.
“Ahh,” Flammeus said. “I figured King Grus would do that. I didn’t know
about you.” Courtiers stirred and murmured. Flammeus realized he had gone
too far, and quickly added, “Meaning no disrespect, of course.”
“Of course,” Lanius said dryly. Some Kings of Avornis would have slit
the farmer’s tongue for a slip like that. Lanius’ own father, King Mergus,
probably would have. Even Grus might have. Lanius, though, had no taste
for blood—Bubulcus, luckily for him, was living proof of that. “I
will send soldiers,” the king told Flammeus.
The farmer bowed and made his escape from the throne room. He would
have quite a tale to tell the cousin he was staying with. Lanius found new
worries of his own. He’d never given orders to any soldiers except the
royal bodyguards. Would the men obey him? Would they refer his orders to
Grus, to make sure they were real orders after all? Or would they simply
ignore him? Grus was the king with the power in Avornis, and everybody
knew it. Should I write to Grus myself? That might get rid of trouble before
it starts, Lanius thought. But it would also delay things at least
two weeks. Lanius wanted to punish Clamator as quickly as he could, before
the baron got word he was going to be punished.
I’ll write Grus, telling him what I’m doing and why. That pleased
Lanius. It would work fine . . . unless the soldiers refused to obey him
at all.
His heart pounded against his ribs when he summoned an officer from the
barracks. He had to work hard to hold his voice steady as he said,
“Captain Icterus, I am sending you and your troop of riders to the south
to deal with Baron Clamator. He is laying hold of peasant land in a way
King Grus’ laws forbid.” He hoped that would help.
Maybe it did. Or maybe he’d worried over trifles. Captain Icterus
didn’t argue. He didn’t say a word about referring the question to King
Grus. He just bowed low, said, “Yes, Your Majesty,” and went off to do
what Lanius had told him to do. His squadron rode out of the city of
Avornis that very afternoon. Yes, this is what it’s like to be a real
King, Lanius thought happily. His sphere was no longer limited to
the royal chambers, the archives, and the rooms where his moncats and
monkeys lived. With Grus away from the capital, his reach stretched over
the whole kingdom.
It did, at least, until he wrote to the other king to justify what he’d
done. Writing the letter made him want to go wash afterwards. It wasn’t
merely the most abject thing he’d ever written. It was, far and away, the
most abject thing he’d ever imagined. It had to be. He knew that. Grus
would not take kindly to his behaving like a real king. But reading the
words on parchment once he’d set them down . . . He couldn’t stomach it.
He sealed the letter without going through it a second time.
Sosia said, “I’m proud of you. You did what needed doing.”
“I think so,” Lanius said. “I’m glad you do, too. But what will your
father think?”
“He can’t stand nobles who take peasants under their own wing and away
from Avornis,” his wife answered. “He won’t complain about whatever you do
to stop them. You’re not about to overthrow him.”
“No, of course not,” Lanius said quickly. He would have denied it even
if—especially if—it were true. But it wasn’t. He didn’t want to try to
oust Grus. For one thing, his father-in-law was much too likely to win if
they measured themselves against each other. And, for another, this little
taste of ruling Lanius was getting convinced him that Grus was welcome to
most of it. When it came to animals or to ancient manuscripts, Lanius was
patience personified; the smallest details fascinated him. When it came to
the day-to-day work of governing, he had to fight back yawns. He also knew
he would never make a great, or even a good, general. Grus was welcome to
all of that.
Sosia said, “I wish things were going better up in the Chernagor
country. Then Father could come home.”
“I wish things were going better up in the Chernagor country, too,”
Lanius said. “The only reason they aren’t going so well is that the
Banished One must be stronger up there than we thought.”
“That’s not good,” Sosia said.
“No, it isn’t.” Lanius said no more than that.
Sosia asked, “Can we do anything here to make things easier for Father
up there? Would it be worth our while to start trouble with the Menteshe,
to make the Banished One have to pay attention to two places at once?”
Lanius looked at her with admiration. She thought as though she were
King of Avornis. He answered, “The only trouble I can see with that is,
we’d have to pay attention to two places at once, too. Would it work a
bigger hardship on the Banished One or on us? I don’t know, not offhand.
One more thing to go into a letter to your father.”
“One
more thing?” Sosia cocked her head to one side. “What’s Ortalis
gone and done now?”
“I don’t know that he’s done anything since the last time,” Lanius
said. They both made sour faces. Saying he didn’t know that Ortalis had
done anything new and dreadful wasn’t the same as saying Sosia’s brother
hadn’t done any such thing. How much had Ortalis done that nobody but he
knew about?
Lanius shook his head. Whenever Ortalis did such things,
somebody else knew about it. But how many of those
somebodies weren’t around anymore to tell their stories? Only
Ortalis knew that.
“He should start hunting again,” Sosia said. Something must have
changed on Lanius’ face. Quickly, his wife added, “Hunting bear and boar
and birds and deer and rabbits—things like that.”
“I suppose so.” Lanius wished he could sound more cheerful. For a
while, Ortalis had seemed . . . almost civilized. Hunting and killing
animals had let him satiate his lust for blood and hurt in a way no one
much minded. If only it hadn’t lost the power to satisfy him.
Sosia said, “I wish things were simpler.”
“Wish for the moon while you’re at it,” Lanius said. “The older I get,
the more complicated everything looks.” He was married to the daughter of
the man who’d exiled his mother to the Maze. Not only that, he loved her.
If that wasn’t complicated enough for any ordinary use, what could be?
CHAPTER FIVE
King Grus looked from Hirundo to Pterocles to Vsevolod, then back
again. They nodded, one after another. Grus’ eyes went to the walls of
Nishevatz. They frowned down at him, as they had ever since the Avornan
army came before them. “We are agreed?” Grus said. “This is the only thing
we have left to do?”
The general, the wizard, and the deposed Prince of Nishevatz all nodded
again. Hirundo said, “If we didn’t come to fight, why did we come?”
“I haven’t got an answer for that,” Grus said.
But oh, how I wish I did! Since he didn’t, he also nodded,
brusquely. “All right, then. We’ll see what happens. Go to your places. I
know you’ll all do everything you can.”
Hirundo and Pterocles hurried away. Vsevolod’s place was by Grus. “I
thank you for this,” he said in his ponderous Avornan. “I will do, my folk
will do, all things possible to do to help.”
“I know.” Grus turned away. He thought Vsevolod meant well, but still
had other things on his mind. A trumpeter stood by, face tense and alert.
Grus pointed to him. “Signal the attack.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The trumpeter raised the horn to his lips. Martial
music rang out. Only for a moment did it come from one trumpet alone. Then
every horn player in the Avornan army blared forth the identical call.
Cheering Avornan soldiers swarmed forward. Grus wouldn’t have cheered,
not attacking a place like Nishevatz. Maybe the common soldiers didn’t
realize what they were up against. Some of them came within arrow range of
that formidable wall and started shooting at the defenders on top of it,
trying to make them keep their heads down. Others carried scaling ladders
that they leaned up against the gray stone blocks. More Avornans—and some
Chernagors, too—raced up the ladders toward the top of the wall.
“Come on!” Grus muttered, watching them through the clouds of dust the
assault kicked up. “Come on, you mad bastards! You can do it! You
can!”
He blinked. Beside him, King Vsevolod exclaimed in his own guttural
language. Vsevolod grabbed Grus’ arm, hard enough to hurt. The old man
still had strength. “What is that?” he said. “I see ladders. Then I see no
ladders.”
Pterocles was doing his job. “I hope Prince Vasilko’s men don’t see
them, either,” Grus said. “If the men can get to the top of the wall, get
down into Nishevatz . . .”
“Yes,” Vsevolod said. “Then to my son I have some things to say.” His
big, gnarled hands opened and closed, opened and closed. Grus hadn’t cared
to be caught in that grip, and didn’t think Vasilko would, either.
Even from so far away, the din was tremendous, deafening. Men shouted
and screamed. Armor clattered. Dart-throwing engines bucked and snapped.
Stones crashed down on soldiers storming up—the wizard’s magic wasn’t
perfect. Ladders went over or broke, spilling soldiers off them.
And, much closer than the walls of Nishevatz, Pterocles suddenly howled
like a wounded wolf. “Noooo!” he cried, his voice getting higher and
shriller every instant. All at once, every siege ladder became fully
visible again. The ladders started toppling one after another when that
happened. Pterocles also toppled, still wailing.
Vsevolod said something in his own language that sounded incandescent.
Grus said the foulest things he knew how to say in Avornan. None of their
curses did any good. It quickly grew plain the assault on the wall
wouldn’t do any good, either.
Grus hauled Pterocles to his feet. The wizard’s face was a mask of
pain. Grus shook him. “Do something!” he shouted. “Don’t just sound like a
wheel that needs grease.
Do something!”
“I can’t.” Pterocles didn’t just sound like an ungreased wheel. He
sounded like a man who might be about to die, and who knew it. “I can’t,
Your Majesty. He’s too strong. What happened to me before, this is ten
times worse—a hundred times. Whoever’s in there, he’s too strong for me.”
Tears ran down his cheeks. Grus didn’t think he knew he shed them.
The king shook the wizard again. “You have to try. By the gods,
Pterocles, the soldiers are depending on you. The kingdom is depending on
you.”
“I can’t,” Pterocles whispered, but from somewhere he found strength.
He straightened. Grus let go of him. He still swayed, but he stayed on his
feet. “I’ll try,” he said, even more quietly than before. “I don’t know
what will happen to me, but I’ll try.”
Before Grus could even praise him, he exploded into motion. He had a
long, angular frame, and every separate part of him seemed to be moving in
a different direction. Grus had never seen a wizard incant so furiously.
It was as though Pterocles were taking pieces of his pain and flinging
them back into Nishevatz. His magic didn’t seemed aimed at the Chernagor
soldiers on the walls anymore. Whatever he was doing, he was doing
against—doing to—the wizard who’d come so close to killing him moments
before.
“Take that!” he shouted again and again. “Take
that, and see how you like it!”
Vsevolod nudged Grus. “He is mad,” the old Chernagor said, and tapped
the side of his head with a forefinger.
“Sometimes, with a wizard, it helps,” Grus said. But he wondered
exactly whom Pterocles was fighting. Was it some Chernagor wizard who,
like Vasilko, had abandoned the gods and turned to the Banished One, or
was it the being the Menteshe called the Fallen Star himself, in his own
person? If it was the Banished One himself, could any merely mortal wizard
stand against him?
Before Grus got even a hint of an answer, Hirundo distracted him. The
general was bleeding from a cut over one eye. His gilded helmet had a dent
in it, and was jammed down over one ear, which also bled. He seemed
unaware of the small wounds. “Your Majesty, we can’t get over the wall,”
he said without preamble. “You’re just throwing more men away if you keep
trying.”
“No hope?” Grus asked.
“None. Not a bit. No chance.” Hirundo sounded absolutely certain.
“All right. Pull them back,” Grus said. The general bowed and hurried
away. Vsevolod made a wordless noise full of fury and pain. He turned his
back on Grus. Grus started to tell him he was sorry, but checked himself.
If Vsevolod couldn’t figure that out without being told, too bad.
“Take that!” Pterocles shouted again, and laughed a wild, crazy laugh.
“Ha! See how you like it this time!”
He thought he was getting home against whoever or whatever his foe was.
And the more confident he grew, the harder and quicker came the spells he
cast. Maybe—probably—it was madness, but it was inspired madness.
And then, like a man who’d been hit square in the jaw, Pterocles
toppled, right in the middle of an incantation. All his bones might have
turned to water. When Grus stooped beside him, he was sure the wizard was
dead. But, to his surprise, Pterocles went on breathing and still had a
pulse. Grus slapped him in the face, none too gently, to try to bring him
around. He stirred and muttered, but would not wake.
“Will he have any mind when he rouses?” Vsevolod asked.
Grus could only shrug. “We’ll have to see, that’s all. I just hope he
does wake up. Something bigger than he was hit him there.”
“It is mark of Banished One,” the Prince of Nishevatz declared. Grus
found himself nodding. He didn’t see what else it could be, either.
Hirundo, meanwhile, pulled the Avornans back from the walls of the
city-state where Vsevolod had ruled for so long. Many of them limped and
bled. More than a few helped wounded comrades escape the rain of stones
and arrows from the battlements.
“What now?” Vsevolod asked.
The last time Grus had faced that question, he’d decided to try to
storm Nishevatz. Now he’d not only tried that, he’d also seen how
thoroughly it didn’t work. He gave the man who’d asked for his help the
only answer he could—a shrug. “Your Highness, right now I just don’t know
what to tell you.”
He waited for Vsevolod to get angry. Instead, the Chernagor nodded in
dour approval. “At least you do not give me opium in honey sauce. This is
something. You make no fog of pretty, sweet-smelling promises to lull me
to sleep and make me not notice you say nothing.”
“No. I come right out and say nothing,” Grus replied.
“Is better.” Prince Vsevolod sounded certain. Grus had his doubts.
King Lanius read the letter aloud to Queen Sosia, Queen Estrilda,
Prince Ortalis, and Arch-Hallow Anser—Grus’ daughter, wife, legitimate
son, and bastard. “ ‘And so we were repulsed from the walls of
Nishevatz,’ Grus writes,” he said. “‘I should never have tried to storm
them, but looking back is always easier than looking forward.’”
“What will he do now?” The question, which should have come from
Ortalis’ lips if he had the least bit of interest in ruling Avornis,
instead came from Estrilda’s.
“I’m just getting to that,” Lanius answered. “He writes, ‘I do not know
what I’ll do next. I think I will stay in front of the city and see what
happens next inside of it. Maybe Vasilko will make himself hated enough to
spark an uprising against him. I can hope, anyhow.’”
He would have written a much more formal, much more detailed account of
the campaign than Grus had. But Grus’ letter had an interest, an appeal,
of its own.
If it were three hundred years old and I’d found it in the archives,
I’d be delighted, Lanius thought.
It makes me feel I’m there.
Anser asked, “What happened to the wizard?”
“To Pterocles? That’s farther down. Here, this is what he says.
‘Pterocles started coming back to himself the morning after he lost the
magical fight with the wizard in Nishevatz—or with the wizard’s Master. He
knows who he is, and where, but he is not yet strong enough to try
sorcery. This gives me one more reason to wait and see what happens
here.’”
“He’s probably doing the smart thing by not charging ahead with the
war,” Sosia said.
“Yes, probably,” Lanius agreed. “But if we can’t take Nishevatz with
our soldiers or with our magic, what are we doing there?”
His wife had no answer for that. Lanius had none, either. He wondered
if Grus did. He also wondered whether to write to the other King of
Avornis and ask him. But he didn’t need long to decide not to. Grus would
be suspicious because Lanius had ordered soldiers to the south. If he also
wrote a letter questioning what Grus was doing up in the Chernagor
country, the other king might suspect him of ambitions he didn’t have.
Even more dangerous, Grus might suspect him of ambitions he
did have.
Sosia said, “You’re right—if we aren’t doing anything worthwhile up
there, our men ought to come back to Avornis.”
“If Grus decides he needs to do that, I expect he will,” Lanius
answered, and wondered if Grus would have the sense to cut his losses. The
other king was usually a man who saw what needed doing and did it.
Less than a week later, Captain Icterus rode back into the city of
Avornis and reported to Lanius. The grin on the officer’s face told the
king most of what he needed to know before Icterus started talking. When
he did speak, he got his message into one sentence. “You don’t need to
worry about Baron Clamator anymore, Your Majesty.”
“That’s good news, Captain,” Lanius said. “And how did it happen that I
don’t?”
Icterus’ grin got wider. “We happened to ride past him as he was on his
way to drink with the baron who lives the next castle to the west. We
scooped him up smooth as you please, and he was on his way to the Maze
before his people even knew he was missing.”
“Well done, Colonel!” Lanius said, and Icterus’ smile got bigger and
brighter still. Lanius hadn’t thought it could.
The good news kept the king happy the rest of the morning. But he went
back to worrying about the north as he examined tax records from the
provinces later in the day. Almost in spite of himself, he was learning
how the kingdom was administered. The numbers were all they should have
been—better than Lanius had expected, in fact. But that let him worry more
about the land of the Chernagors. Had Pterocles met a powerful wizard who
inclined toward the Banished One? Or had the Banished One himself reached
out from the far south to smite the Avornan wizard? Maybe it didn’t
matter. With the Banished One, though—with Milvago that was—how could any
man say for certain?
And then Lanius got distracted again, this time much more pleasantly. A
serving woman stuck her head into the chamber where he was working and
said, “I beg pardon, Your Majesty, but may I speak to you for a
moment?”
“Yes, of course,” Lanius answered. “What do you want—uh—?” He couldn’t
come up with her name.
“I’m Cristata, Your Majesty,” she said. She was a few years younger
than Lanius—say, about twenty—with light brown hair, green eyes, a pert
nose, and everything else a girl of about twenty should have. But she
looked so nervous and fearful, the king almost didn’t notice how pretty
she was.
“Say whatever you want, Cristata,” he told her now. “Whatever it is, I
promise it won’t land you in trouble.”
That visibly lifted her spirits; the smile she gave him was dazzling
enough to lift his, too. “Thank you, Your Majesty,” she breathed, but then
looked worried again. She asked, “Even if it’s about. . . someone in the
royal family?”
Lanius grimaced. He had a fear of his own now—that he knew what sort of
thing Cristata was going to talk about. He had to answer quickly, to make
her see he had no second thoughts. “Even then.” He made his voice as firm
as he could.
“Will you swear by the gods?” He hadn’t satisfied her.
“By the gods,” he declared. “By all the gods in the heavens.” That left
Milvago—the Banished One—out.
“All right, then,” Cristata said. “This has to do with Prince Ortalis,
Your Majesty. Remember, you swore.”
“I remember.” Lanius started to tell her he’d heard stories about
Ortalis before. But the words never passed his lips. That wasn’t fair to
Grus’ legitimate son. What he’d heard before could have been lies. He
didn’t think so, but it could have been. And, for that matter, what
Cristata was about to tell him might be a lie, too. Lying about a prince
to a king was a risky business for a servant, yet who could say for
certain? Ortalis might—no, Ortalis was bound to—have enemies who could use
her as a tool. With a sigh, Lanius said, “Go ahead.”
Cristata did. The way she told her story made Lanius think it was
likely true. Ortalis’ good looks and his status had both drawn her. That
seemed plausible—and even had Ortalis been wizened and homely, a serving
girl would have taken a chance if she said no when he beckoned. That
wasn’t fair. It probably wasn’t right. But it was the way life worked.
Lanius had taken advantage of it himself, back in the days before he was
married.
Everything between Ortalis and Cristata seemed to have started well.
He’d been sweet. He’d given her presents. She didn’t try to hide that
she’d said yes for reasons partly mercenary, which again made Lanius more
inclined to believe her.
Little by little, things had gone wrong. Cristata had trouble saying
exactly when. Some of what later seemed dreadful had been exciting at the
time ... at first, anyhow. But when she did begin to get alarmed, she
found herself in too deep to get away easily. Her voice became bitter. “By
then, I was just a piece of meat for him, a piece of meat that had the
right kind of holes. Before long, he even stopped caring about those.”
She paused. Lanius didn’t know what to say. Not knowing, he made a
questioning noise.
It must have meant something to Cristata. Nodding as though he’d just
made a clever comment, she said, “I can show you some of it. I can show
you all of it if you like, but some will do.” Her linen tunic fit loosely.
As she turned her back on Lanius, she slipped it down off one shoulder,
baring what should have been soft, smooth skin.
“Oh,” he said, and involuntarily closed his eyes. He didn’t think
anyone with a grudge against Ortalis could have persuaded her to go
through with . . . that for money.
She quickly set her tunic to rights again. “At least it did heal,” she
said matter-of-factly. “And he gave me . . . something for it afterwards.
I thought about just taking that and keeping quiet. But is it right, Your
Majesty, when somebody can just take somebody else and use her for a toy?
What would he have done if he’d killed me? He could have, easy enough.
Some of the girls who’ve left the court. . . Did they really leave, or did
they disappear a different way?”
Lanius had wondered the same thing. But no one had ever found anything
connecting Ortalis to those disappearances—except for the couple of
maidservants who’d gone back to the provinces well rewarded for keeping
their mouths shut afterwards. Cristata, evidently, didn’t want to go that
way. Lanius asked her, “What do you think I should do?”
“Punish him,” she said at once. “You’re the king, aren’t you?”
The real answer to that question was,
yes and no. He reigned, but he hardly ruled. Explaining his own
troubles, though, would do Cristata no good. He said, “King Grus would be
a better one to do that than I am.”
Cristata sent him a look he was more used to feeling on his own face
than to seeing on someone else’s. The look said,
My, you’re not as smart as I thought you were, are you? Cristata
herself said, carefully, “Prince Ortalis is His Majesty’s son.” Sure
enough, she might have been speaking to an idiot child.
“Yes, I know,” Lanius answered. “But King Grus, please believe me,
doesn’t like him doing these things.” Cristata looked eloquently
unconvinced. Sighing, Lanius added, “And King Grus, please believe me, is
also the one who has the power to punish him when he does these things. I
am not, and I do not.”
“Oh,” she said in a dull voice. “I should have realized that, shouldn’t
I? I’m sorry I bothered you, Your Majesty.”
“It wasn’t a bother. I wish I could do more. You’re—” Lanius stopped.
He’d been about to say something like,
You’re too pretty for it to have been a bother. If he did say
something like that, it would be the first step toward complicating his
life with Sosia. And, all too likely, Cristata would have heard the same
sort of thing from Ortalis. She’d believed it from him, and been sorry
afterwards. What did she think Lanius might do to her if she were rash
enough to believe again?
Even though he’d stopped, her eyes showed she understood what he’d
meant. Now she was the one who sighed. Perhaps as much to herself as to
him, she said, “I used to think being pretty was nice. If you’d told me it
was dangerous . . .” She shrugged—prettily. “I’m sorry I took up your
time, Your Majesty.” Before Lanius could find anything to say, she swept
out of the little chamber.
The king spent the next few minutes cursing his brother-in-law, not so
much for exactly what Ortalis had done as for making Lanius himself
embarrassed to be a man.
No one knew the river galleys that prowled Avornan waters better than
King Grus. The deep-bellied, tall-masted ships that went into and out of
Nishevatz were a different breed of vessel altogether, even more different
than cart horses from jumpers. Sailing on the Northern Sea was not the
same business as going up and down the Nine Rivers that cut the Avornan
plain.
“We need ships of our own,” Grus said to Hirundo. “Without them, we’ll
never pry Vasilko out of that city.”
“Yes, Your Majesty,” the general answered. “We do need ships. But where
will we get ‘em? Build ’em ourselves? We haven’t got the woodworkers to
build ‘em or sailors to man ’em. We haven’t got the time, either. We might
hire ‘em from the Chernagors, except the next Chernagor city-state that
wants to let us use any’ll be the first.”
“I know,” Grus said. “They think if we have ships, we’ll use ‘em
against them next.”
Hirundo didn’t reply. Many years before, the Chernagor city-states had
belonged to Avornis. A strong king might want to take them back again.
Grus liked to think of himself as a strong king. That the Chernagors
evidently thought of him the same way was a compliment of sorts. It was,
at the moment, a compliment he could have done without.
His chief wizard walked by. “How are you, Pterocles?” Grus called.
“How am I?” Pterocles echoed, his voice and expression both vague.
“I’ve . . . been better.”
He hadn’t been the same since the sorcerer inside Nishevatz laid him
low. Grus still marveled that he’d survived. So did all the other Avornan
wizards who’d since helped him try to recover. Maybe the same thing would
have happened to Alca—exiled from the capital, if not from Grus’ heart—had
the same spell struck her. Maybe.
Did the power that had smashed Pterocles mean the magic came from the
Banished One himself, and not from one of his mortal minions? Like
Vsevolod, the Avornan wizards seemed to think so. They didn’t want to
commit themselves—one more reason Grus wished he had straight-talking Alca
at his side—but that was the impression he got.
“Can you work magic at need?” Grus asked.
“I suppose so.” But Pterocles didn’t sound as though he fully believed
it.
Grus didn’t fully believe it, either. Pterocles still looked and acted
like a man who’d been hit over the head with a large, pointy rock.
Sometimes he seemed better, sometimes worse, but even
better didn’t mean the same as
good.
Under his own tunic, Grus wore an old protective amulet, one he’d had
since before becoming King of Avornis. It had helped save his life once,
when Queen Certhia, Lanius’ mother, tried to slay him by sorcery. Would it
protect him if the Banished One tried to do the same thing? Grus had his
doubts. He knew he didn’t want to find out the hard way.
Pterocles said, “Half of me makes more of a wizard than a lot of these
odds and sods, Your Majesty—or half of me would, if I didn’t feel so ...
empty inside.” He tapped the side of his head with his fist. It didn’t
sound like a jar from which all the wine was gone, but Grus— and maybe
Pterocles, too—thought it should have.
“You’ll be all right.” Grus hoped he was telling the truth. When he
added, “You
are getting better,” he felt on safer ground. On the other hand,
how much of a compliment was that? If Pterocles hadn’t gotten any better,
the sorcerous stroke he’d taken would have laid him on his pyre.
A messenger came up to Grus. He stood there waiting to be noticed. When
Grus nodded to him, he said, “Your Majesty, a sack of letters from Avornis
is here.”
“Oh, good,” Grus said. “I do want to keep track of what’s going on back
home.” He’d already stayed out of the kingdom longer than he’d intended.
Back in the capital, Lanius behaved more like a real king every day. If he
wanted to try ousting Grus, he might have a chance now. From what Grus had
seen, though, Lanius didn’t like actually governing. Grus chuckled, not
that he really felt amused. That was a small, flimsy platform on which to
rest his own rule.
He turned to walk back to his tent and look at those letters. He hadn’t
gone far, though, before another messenger ran up to him. This one didn’t
wait to be noticed. He shouted, “Your Majesty, they’re coming!”
“Who’s coming?” Grus asked.
“Chernagors! A whole army of Chernagors, from out of the east!” the
messenger answered. “They aren’t on their way to ask us to dance,
either.”
“No?” Grus slid gracefully from heel to toe and back again. The
messenger stared at him. He sighed. “Well, probably not. Tell me
more.”
“We sent men to them to find out if they were coming to help us and
Prince Vsevolod,” the messenger said. “They shot at our men.”
“Then they probably aren’t.” Grus’ eyes involuntarily went back to the
walls of Nishevatz. “If they aren’t coming to help Vsevolod, Vasilko will
be glad to see them. Nice to think someone is, eh?”
“Er—yes.” The messenger didn’t seem to think that was good news. Grus
didn’t think it was good news, either. Unlike the messenger, he knew just
how bad it was liable to be.
He ordered his own army into line of battle facing east. Things could
have been worse. He supposed they could have been worse, anyhow. The army
could have gone on about the business of besieging Nishevatz without
sending scouts out to the east and west. That would have been worse, sure
enough. The Chernagors from the east might have crashed into his force
unsuspected. Instead of a mere disaster, he would have had a catastrophe
on his hands then.
Avornan soldiers were still taking their places when Grus saw a cloud
of dust on the coastal road that came out of the east. He’d had some
practice judging the clouds of dust advancing armies kicked up. He turned
to Hirundo, who’d had considerably more. “Looks like a lot of Chernagors,”
he said.
“Does, doesn’t it?” Hirundo agreed. “Of course, they may be playing
games with us. Send some horses along in front of an army with saplings
fastened on behind them and they’ll stir up enough dust to make you think
every soldier in the world is heading your way.”
“Do you think that’s likely here?” Grus inquired.
Hirundo pursed his lips. “I’d like to,” he answered. But that wasn’t
what the king had asked. Reluctantly, the general shook his head. “No, I
don’t think so. The scouts saw Chernagors, lots of Chernagors. I’m going
to pull some men back out of the line, if that’s all right with you.”
“Why?”
“Because I’d like to have a reserve handy, in case Vasilko decides to
sally from Nishevatz while we’re busy with these other bastards.” Hirundo
gave an airy wave of the hand. “Nothing puts a hole in your day like
getting attacked from two directions at once, if you know what I mean.
“I wish I didn’t, but I do,” Grus said heavily. “That’s a good idea.
See to it.” Hirundo sketched a salute and hurried off.
Prince Vsevolod came up to Grus. He tugged on the sleeve of the king’s
tunic. “Your Majesty, I am sorry I put you in this place,” he said. “I
fight hard for you.” His age-spotted hand fell to the hilt of his
sword.
“Thank you, your Highness. We’ll all do some fighting before long,”
Grus replied. For him, that would mean donning a mailshirt and mounting a
horse. He hated fighting from horseback, as anyone who’d spent more time
on a river galley would have. A tilting deck was one thing, a rearing
mount something else again. He clapped Vsevolod on the back. “You didn’t
put me in this place. Vasilko and the Banished One did. I know who my
enemies are.”
“I thank you, Your Majesty. You are all King of Avornis should be,”
Vsevolod said. “I fight hard. You see.”
“Good.” Grus raised his voice and called, “Let’s move out against
them,” to Hirundo. He went on, “We don’t want them thinking we’re afraid
to face them.”
“Afraid to face a bunch of Chernagors? We’d better not be!” Hirundo
sounded light and cheerful, for the benefit of his men, and probably for
Grus’ benefit, too. But the general knew—and King Grus also knew— the
traders who lived by the Northern Sea made formidable warriors when they
took it into their heads to fight.
Avornan trumpets blared. Shouting Grus’ name and Prince Vsevolod’s
(many of them making a mess of it), the soldiers rode and marched forward.
Soon, through the dust ahead, Grus made out sun-sparkles off spearheads
and swords, helmets and coats of mail. The Chernagors rode big, ponderous
horses, not fast but heavy and strong enough to be formidable in the
charge.
Hirundo shouted orders. Like a painter working on a fresco inside a
temple, he saw how he wanted everything to go long before the scene was
done. Avornan mounted archers galloped out to the wings and started
peppering the Chernagors with arrows. Some of the big, stocky men from the
north slid out of their saddles and crashed to the ground. Some of the
big, stocky horses they rode crashed down, too. Un-wounded beasts tripped
over them and also fell.
But most of the Chernagors ignored the arrows and kept coming. They had
archers of their own, more of them afoot than on horseback, and started
shooting at Grus’ men as soon as they got into range. Arrows thudded into
shields. They clattered off helms and armor. Now and then, they smacked
home against flesh. Every cry of pain made Grus flinch.
An arrow hissed past his head, sounding malevolent as a wasp. A few
inches to one side and he would have been screaming, too. Or maybe he
wouldn’t. Not far away, an Avornan took an arrow in the face and fell from
his horse without a sound. He never knew what hit him. That was an easy
way to go, easier than most men got on the battlefield or off it.
Grus had hoped Hirundo’s mounted archers would make the Chernagors
think twice about closing with his army. But no. Shouting fierce-sounding
incomprehensibilities in their own throaty language, the bushy-bearded
warriors slammed into their Avornan foes.
“Come on, men! Let’s show them what we can do now that we’ve got them
in the open!” Grus shouted. “Up until now, they’ve hidden in forts, afraid
to meet us face-to-face.” Had he commanded the Chernagors, he would have
done the same thing, which had nothing to do with anything when he was
trying to hearten his men. “Let ‘em see they knew what they were doing
when they wouldn’t come out against us.”
A few heartbeats later, he was trading sword strokes with a large
Chernagor who had a large wart by the side of his nose. After almost
cutting off his own horse s ear, Grus managed to wound the enemy warrior.
The fellow howled pain-filled curses at him. The fighting swept them
apart. As so often happened, Grus never found out what happened to the
foe.
Shouts from the north drew the king’s attention. As Hirundo had feared,
Prince Vasilko’s men were swarming out of Nishevatz and into the fight.
Grus wondered whether the general had pulled enough soldiers to hold them
off before they took the main part of the Avornan army in the flank and
rolled it up. One way or the other, he would find out.
His army didn’t come to pieces, which proved Hirundo had a good ‘
notion of what he was doing after all. But the Avornans didn’t win— they
didn’t come close to winning—the sort of victory Grus would have wanted.
All he could do was fight hard and send men now here, now there, to shore
up weak spots in his line. He had the feeling the Chernagor generals were
doing the same thing; it certainly seemed to be a battle with no subtlety,
no surprises.
Late in the afternoon, Vasilko’s sortie collapsed. The men from
Nishevatz still on their feet streamed back into the city. Had things
been going better in the fight against the rest of the Chernagors, Grus’
men might have chased them harder and gotten into Nishevatz with them. But
things weren’t, and the Avornans didn’t. Having only one foe to worry
about struck Grus as being good enough for the time being.
At last, sullenly, the rest of the Chernagors withdrew from the field.
It was a victory, of sorts. Grus thought about ordering a pursuit. He
thought about it, looked at how exhausted and battered his own men were,
and changed his mind. Hirundo rode up to him and dismounted. The general
looked as weary as Grus felt. “Well, Your Majesty, we threw ‘em back,” he
said. “Threw ’em back twice, as a matter of fact.”
Grus nodded. The motion made some bones in his neck pop like cracking
knuckles. “Yes, we did,” he said, and yawned enormously. “King Olor’s
beard, but I’m worn.”
“Me, too,” Hirundo said. “We did everything we could do there,
though.”
“Yes,” Grus said again. He wished he weren’t agreeing. They’d done
everything they could, and they were no closer to ousting Vasilko from
Nishevatz or restoring Vsevolod. Grus looked around for the rightful
Prince of Nishevatz, but didn’t see him.
“Now the next interesting question,” Hirundo said, “is whether the
Chernagors will come back at us tomorrow, or whether they’ve had
enough.”
“Interesting,” Grus repeated. “Well, that’s one way to put it. What do
you think?”
“Hard to say,” Hirundo answered. “I wouldn’t care to send this army
forward to attack them tomorrow, and we had the better of it today. But
you never can tell. Some generals are like goats—they just keep
butting.”
“Would one more Chernagor attack be likelier to ruin them or us?” Grus
asked.
“Another good question,” his general replied. “I think it’s likelier to
ruin them, but you don’t
know until the fight starts. For that matter, another fight where
everybody’s torn up could ruin both sides.”
“You’re full of cheery notions, aren’t you?”
Hirundo bowed. Something in his back creaked, too. “I’m supposed to
think about these things. I wouldn’t be doing my job if I didn’t.”
“I know.” Grus looked around for Vsevolod again. When he didn’t see
him, he yelled for a messenger. “Find out if the prince is hale,” he told
the young man. “If he is, tell him I’d like to see him when he gets the
chance.”
Nodding, the youngster hurried off. A few minutes later, Prince
Vsevolod joined Grus. The ousted lord of Nishevatz wasn’t perfectly hale.
He had a bloody bandage wrapped around his head. Even so, he waved aside
Grus’ worried questions. “You should see man who did this to me,” he said.
“Somewhere now, ravens pick out his eyes.”
“Good,” Grus said. “I have a question for you.”
“Ask,” Vsevolod said.
“How likely is it that we’ll see more Chernagor armies that don’t want
us in this country anymore?”
Vsevolod frowned. Even before donning the bandage, he’d had a face made
for frowning. With it, he looked like a man contemplating his own doom and
not liking what he saw. “It could be,” he said at last. “Yes, it could
be.”
“How likely do you think it is?” Grus persisted.
Now Prince Vsevolod looked as though he hated him. “If I were prince in
another city-state, I would lead forth my warriors,” he said.
“I was afraid of that,” Grus said. “We don’t have the men here to fight
off every Chernagor breathing, you know.”
“What will you do, then?” Vsevolod asked in turn. “Will you say you are
beaten? Will you run back to Avornis with tail between your legs?” He’s trying to make me ashamed, Grus realized.
He’s trying to embarrass me into staying up here and going on with the
war. Grus understood why the Prince of Nishevatz was doing that. Had
he worn Vsevolod’s boots, he wouldn’t have wanted his ally to give up the
fight, either. Being who and what he was, though, he didn’t want to risk
throwing away his whole army. And so, regretfully, he said, “Yes.”
CHAPTER SIX
“Coming back here to the capital?” Lanius asked Grus’ messenger. “Are
you sure?” “Yes, Your Majesty.” The young man sounded offended Lanius
should doubt him. “Didn’t he tell me with his own mouth? Didn’t he give me
the letter you’re holding?”
Lanius hadn’t read the letter yet. He’d enjoyed being King of Avornis
in something more than name for a little while—he’d discovered he
could run the kingdom, something he’d never been sure of before.
Now he would go back to being nothing in fancy robes and crown. Grasping
at straws, he asked, “How soon will he return?”
“It’s in the letter, Your Majesty. Everything is in the letter,” the
messenger replied. When Lanius gave no sign he wanted to open the letter,
the fellow sighed and went on, “They should be back inside of a month—less
than that if they don’t have to fight their way out.”
“Oh.” Lanius didn’t much want to read the letter—seeing Grus’ hand
reminded him how much more power the other king held. Talking to the
courier made
him the stronger one. “How has the fighting gone?”
“We’re better than they are. One of us is worth more than one of them,”
the messenger said. “But there are more of them than there are of us, and
so . . .” He shrugged. “What can you do?” He didn’t seem downcast at
pulling back from the land of the Chernagors. Did that mean Grus wasn’t,
or did it only mean he’d done a good job of persuading his men he wasn’t?
Lanius couldn’t tell.
Even after dismissing the messenger and reading his father-in-law’s
letter, he still wasn’t sure. Grus presented the withdrawal as the only
thing he could do, and as one step in what looked like a long struggle.
The Banished One will not do with the Chernagors as he has done in the
south, he wrote.
Whatever we have to do to stop him, we will.
He wasn’t wrong about how important keeping the Banished One from
dominating the land of the Chernagors was. Lanius saw that, too. But, when
he read Grus’ letter, he wondered if his father-in-law was saying
everything he had in mind. Was he leaving the north country to make sure
Lanius didn’t decide he could rule Avornis all by himself? Again, Lanius
couldn’t tell. Would I throw Grus out of the palace if I had the chance? As
usual, Lanius found himself torn. Part of him insisted that, as scion of a
dynasty going back a dozen generations, he ought to rule as well as reign.
That was his pride talking. But, now that he’d had a taste of running the
kingdom day by day, he found he would sooner spend time with his animals
and in the archives. If Grus wanted to handle things as they came up,
wasn’t he welcome to the job?
All things considered, Lanius was inclined to answer
yes to that. Another question also sprang to mind.
If I try to get rid of Grus and fail, the way I likely would, won’t he
kill me to make sure I don’t try it again? Lanius was inclined to
answer to that, too. Maybe—probably—the present arrangement was best after
all.
No sooner had he decided, yet again, to let things go on as they were
going than another messenger came before him. This one thrust a letter at
him, murmured, “I’m very sorry, Your Majesty,” and withdrew before Lanius
could even ask him why he was sorry.
The king stared at the letter. It gave no obvious clues; he didn’t even
recognize the seal that helped hold it closed or the hand that addressed
it to him. Shrugging, he broke the seal, slid off the ribbon around the
letter, unrolled it, and began to read.
It was, he discovered, from the abbess of a convent dedicated to
preserving the memory of a holy woman who’d died several hundred years
before. For a moment—for more than a moment—the convent’s name meant
nothing to him. He couldn’t have said where in Avornis it lay, whether in
the capital or over in the west near the border with Thervingia or in the
middle of the fertile southern plains. Then, abrupt as stubbing a toe, he
remembered. The convent stood in the middle of the swamps and bogs of the
Maze, not far from the city of Avornis as the crow flies but a million
miles away in terms of everything that mattered. It had held his mother
ever since she’d tried and failed to slay Grus by sorcery.
No more. Queen Certhia was dead. That was what the letter said. The
messenger must have known. That had to be why he’d said he was sorry. It
had to be why he’d slipped away, too—he didn’t want Lanius blaming him for
the news.
“I wouldn’t do that,” Lanius said aloud. But a messenger from out of
the Maze, a messenger who didn’t know him, wouldn’t know about that,
either.
He made himself finish the letter. The abbess said his mother’s passing
had been easy. Of course, she likely would say that whether it was true or
not. She added praise for Certhia’s piety.
Never, she wrote,
was your mother heard to complain of her fate.
Lanius’ mouth twisted when he read that. Anger? Grief? Laughter? He
couldn’t tell. Some of all of them, he supposed. Maybe his mother hadn’t
complained because she was grateful Grus hadn’t done to her what she’d
tried to do to him. Lanius sighed. That might be noble, but it struck him
as unlikely. From all he remembered, gratitude had never been a large part
of Queen Certhia’s makeup. Odds were she hadn’t complained simply because
she’d known it would do no good. Her pyre was set ablaze this morning, the abbess wrote.
What is your desire for her ashes? Shall they remain here, or would
you rather bring them back to the city of Avornis for interment in the
cathedral?
The king called for parchment and pen.
Let her remains be returned to the capital, he wrote.
She served Avornis as well as the gods, acting as Queen Regnant in the
days of my youth. She will be remembered with all due ceremony.
“And if Grus doesn’t like it, too bad,” Lanius muttered. He hadn’t seen
his mother for years. He’d known he was unlikely ever to see her again.
He’d also known ambition burned more brightly in her than love ever had.
Even so, as he stared down at the words he’d written, they suddenly seemed
to run and smear before his eyes. He blinked. The tears that had blurred
his sight ran down his face. He buried his head in his hands and wept as
though his heart would break.
Even now that he was well back inside Avornis, King Grus kept looking
back over his shoulder to make sure the Chernagors weren’t pursuing his
army anymore. Beside him, General Hirundo whistled cheerfully.
“Can’t win ‘em all, Your Majesty,” the general said. “We’ll have
another go at those bushy-bearded bastards next spring, I expect.”
“Yes, I suppose so,” Grus agreed. He took the defeat harder than
Hirundo did. He knew more about the nature of the true foe they faced than
did his general. Part of him wished Lanius had never told him who and what
Milvago had been—part of him, indeed, wished Lanius had never found out.
Fighting a god cast out of the heavens was bad enough. Fighting the
onetime lord of the gods cast down from the heavens . . . No, he didn’t
want his men knowing that was what they had to do.
Not far away, Prince Vsevolod rode along with slumped shoulders and
lowered head. He’d doubtless hoped for better than he’d gotten when he
called on the Avornans to help him hold on to his throne. But his
ungrateful son, Prince Vasilko, still held Nishevatz. And Vasilko would go
right on holding it at least until next spring.
Hirundo looked ahead, not behind. “We’ll be back to the city of Avornis
in a couple of days,” he said.
Vsevolod muttered something his beard muffled. He wasn’t delighted
about riding into exile, even if he was heading toward the greatest city
in the world. Grus said, “Coming home is always good.” Vsevolod muttered
again. He wasn’t coming home. He was going away from his, and had to fear
he would never see it again.
With a grin, Hirundo said, “You’ll get a chance to see what the other
king’s been up to, Your Majesty.”
“So I will.” Grus knew he sounded less gleeful at the prospect than
Hirundo did. Lanius had done very well while he was gone—perhaps too well
for comfort. If the other king was becoming a
king. . . well, what could Grus do about it? Stay home and watch
him all the time? He knew he couldn’t. The two of them could either clash
or find a way of working together. Grus saw no other choices.
He looked around for Pterocles. There was the wizard, as hollow-eyed as
he’d been since the sorcerer in Nishevatz struck him down for the second
time. Grus waved to him. Pterocles nodded back and said, “Still here, Your
Majesty—I think.”
“Good. I know you’re getting better.” Grus knew no such thing.
Pterocles had shown less improvement than the king would have liked.
Saying so, though, wouldn’t have made things any better. Grus wondered if
he ought to have other wizards look Pterocles over when they got back to
the city of Avornis. Then he wondered if that would help.
Pterocles was the best he had. Could some lesser wizard judge whether
something was really wrong with him? Too many things to worry about at the same time, Grus thought.
All we’d need would be an invasion from the Menteshe to make
everything perfect.
He glanced up to the heavens and muttered a quick prayer. He didn’t
want the gods taking him seriously. The only question he had was whether
they would pay any attention to him at all. “You’d better,” he murmured.
If things went wrong down here on earth, the gods in the heavens might yet
have to face their outraged sire. Grus wondered if they knew that. He also
wondered how much help they could deliver even if they did.
Those were no thoughts to be having about gods he’d worshiped all his
life. All the same, he would have been happier if he’d seen more in the
way of real benefits from them.
King Olor, if you happen to be listening, I could use a few blessings
that aren’t in disguise. Grus laughed when that prayer crossed his
mind. How many mortals couldn’t use a few blessings like that?
The men who followed the Banished One—the Menteshe, and presumably
Prince Vasilko and his followers as well—knew what sort of rewards they
got. Those who opposed him weren’t so sure. What they got wasn’t so
obvious in this world. In the next, yes—provided the Banished One lost the
struggle with his children and stayed banished. If he didn’t. . . Grus
preferred not to think about that.
He had a lot of things he didn’t want to think about. By the time the
army got back to the city of Avornis, those seemed to outnumber the things
that were worth contemplating.
He’d sent messengers ahead. Lanius knew to the hour when he and the
army would arrive. One more thing he’d wondered was whether he ought to do
that. If Lanius had anything . . . unpleasant in mind, Grus was letting
his fellow king know things that could be very useful to him. Grus didn’t
think Lanius was plotting anything like that. His own spies back in the
capital hadn’t warned him his son-in-law was hatching plots. Was Lanius
clever enough to do some hatching without drawing their notice? Grus would
have worried less if he hadn’t known how clever Lanius really was.
But no soldiers held the gates and walls of the city of Avornis against
him. Lanius came out through the North Gate to greet him along with Sosia;
with Prince Crex and Princess Pitta, their children; with Ortalis; with
Estrilda; and with Arch-Hallow Anser. “Welcome home!” Lanius said.
“Thank you, Your Majesty,” Grus replied, hoping his relief didn’t show.
He would have worried more if Lanius had used his royal title in greeting
him. He knew his fellow monarch didn’t think him a legitimate king. Had
Lanius been plotting something, he might have tried buttering him up. This
way, things were as they should be.
“Grandpa!” Crex and Pitta squealed. They ran toward Grus’ horse. He
dismounted—something he was always glad to do—stooped, and squeezed them.
That they were glad to see him made him feel he’d done something right
with his life. Unlike adults, children gave you just what they thought you
deserved.
A groom came forward to take charge of the horse. It was a docile
beast, but Grus was still happy to see someone else dealing with it. Sosia
and Anser greeted Grus only a couple of steps behind his grandchildren.
“Good to have you home,” they said, almost in chorus, and both started to
laugh. So did Grus. Neither his daughter nor his bastard boy seemed to
have any reason to regret his return. And Sosia’s anger at his affair with
Alca seemed to have faded, which was also good news.
“I wish things had gone better up in the Chernagor country,” Grus said.
Lanius, hanging back, raised an eyebrow at that. Grus needed a moment to
figure out why. A lot of Kings of Avornis, he supposed, would have
proclaimed victories whether they’d won them or not. He saw no point to
that. He knew what the truth was. So did the whole army. It would get out
even if he did proclaim victory. If he did, the truth would make him look
like a liar or a fool. This way, he would look like an honest man who’d
lost a battle. He hoped that would serve him better.
Grus understood why Lanius hung back. His son-in-law had solid reasons
not to care for him, and was a reserved—even a shy—young man. Ortalis hung
back, too. Grus also understood that. His legitimate son had done plenty
to displease him. He and Ortalis traded looks filled with venom.
And Estrilda also hung back. That hurt. Was his wife still steaming
over Alca? He’d thought they’d patched that up. In fact, they had—but then
he’d gone off to war. Maybe the patch had torn loose. Maybe she wasn’t
angry about Alca, but suspected a Chernagor girl had warmed his bed while
he was in the north. That hadn’t happened, not least because, again, he’d
worried about the truth getting back to her. But, of course, she didn’t
know it hadn’t happened.
Bang Grus sighed.
Half my family likes me, the other half wishes I were still off
fighting the Chernagors. It could be worse. But, by Olor and Quelea, it
could be better, too.
He turned to Hirundo. Whether his family liked him or not, the
kingdom’s business had to go on. “Send the men to the barracks,” he said.
“Give them leave a brigade at a time. That way, they shouldn’t tear the
city to pieces.”
“Here’s hoping,” Hirundo said. “If it looks like the ones who haven’t
gotten leave are turning sour and nasty, I may speed things up.”
Grus nodded. “Do whatever you think best. The point of the exercise is
to keep things as orderly as you can. They won’t be perfect. I don’t
expect them to be. But I don’t want riots and looting, either.”
“I understand.” Hirundo called out orders to his officers.
“What of me, Your Majesty?” Prince Vsevolod asked. “You send me to
barracks, too?”
“As soon as I can, I aim to send you back to Nishevatz, Your Highness.”
Grus pretended not to hear the Chernagor’s bitterness. “In the meantime,
you’ll stay in the palace as my guest.”
“And mine,” Lanius added. “I have many questions to ask you about the
land of the Chernagors and about your customs.”
Grus had all he could do not to laugh out loud. By the look on Sosia’s
face, so did she. Lanius had pet moncats. He had pet monkeys, too. (The
Chernagors, Grus remembered, had brought those beasts here to the
capital.) And now, at last, Lanius had his very own pet Chernagor.
“Your Majesty, what I know, I tell you.” Vsevolod sounded flattered
that Lanius should be interested. Grus had to turn away so neither the
prince nor his fellow king would see him smile. If Vsevolod made a promise
like that, it only proved he didn’t know what he was getting into.
Prince Vsevolod looked discontented. King Lanius had never seen anyone
whose face, all harsh planes and vertical lines and with that formidable
prow of a nose, was better suited to looking discontented. “Questions,
questions, questions!” he said, throwing his hands in the air. “Am I
prisoner, you should ask so many questions?”
“You told me you would tell me what you knew,” Lanius said.
“By gods, not all at once!” Vsevolod exploded.
“Oh.” By the way Lanius sounded, the Prince of Nishevatz might have
just thrown a rock at his favorite moncat. “I
am sorry, Your Highness. I want you to be happy here.”
Vsevolod nodded heavily. Lanius let out a small sigh of relief—he’d
been right about that, anyhow. The exiled prince said, “How can I, cooped
up in palace all time?”
“I am,” Lanius said in honest surprise. “What would you like to
do?”
“Hunt,” Vsevolod said at once. “Hunt anything. Hunt boar, goose, even
rabbit. You are hunter, Your Majesty?”
“Well. . . no,” Lanius replied. Vsevolod’s lip curled. Lanius said,
“Arch-Hallow Anser is a keen hunter.” After another, longer, hesitation,
he added, “Prince Ortalis also sometimes hunts.”
“Ah. Is good,” Vsevolod said, which only proved he didn’t know Ortalis
well. “And I know King Grus is hunting man. Maybe here is not so bad.
Maybe.”
“I hope you will be happy here,” Lanius said again. “Now, can you tell
me a little more about the gods your people worshiped before you learned
of King Olor and Queen Quelea and the rest of the true dwellers in the
heavens?”
Vsevolod’s broad shoulders went up and down in a shrug. “I do not know.
I do not care.” He heaved himself to his feet. “I have had too much of
questions. I go look for hunt.” He lumbered away.
Lanius knew he’d angered the Prince of Nishevatz, but didn’t understand
why. Vsevolod had said he would answer questions. The king went off to
console himself with his monkeys. If they could have answered questions,
he would have asked even more than he’d put to Vsevolod. As things were,
he could only watch them cavort through their chamber. A fire always
burned there, keeping the room at a temperature uncomfortably warm for
him. The monkeys seemed to like it fine. The Chernagor who’d given them to
Lanius had warned they couldn’t stand cold.
They stared at the king from the branches and poles that reached almost
to the ceiling. Both male and female had white eyebrows and long white
mustaches on otherwise black faces. They looked like plump little old men.
Lanius eyed the female. He nodded to himself. She’d looked particularly
plump these past couple of weeks. That Chernagor had said they would never
breed in captivity, but maybe he was wrong.
Behind Lanius, the door opened. He turned in annoyance. But it wasn’t
Bubulcus or any other servant he could blister with impunity. King Grus
stood there. He made a point of closing the door quickly, giving Lanius no
excuse to grumble even about that. “Hello, Your Majesty,” he said. “How
are your creatures here?”
“I think the female’s pregnant,” Lanius answered.
Grus eyed her, then nodded. “Wouldn’t be surprised if you’re right.
You’d have fun with the babies, wouldn’t you?”
“Oh, yes, but it’s not just that,” Lanius said. “If an animal will
breed for you, you know you’re treating it the way you should. From what
the fellow who gave it to me said, the Chernagors can’t get monkeys to
breed. I’d like to do something they can’t.”
With a judicious nod, Grus said, “Mm, yes, I can see that.” His right
hand folded into a fist. “It’s not what
I’d like to do to the Chernagors right now, but I can see it.” He
chuckled. “I was pretty sure you’d question Vsevolod to pieces, you know.
He just tried to talk me into going hunting. I sent him off to Anser. He
has more time for it than I do.”
“I
told Vsevolod I wanted to ask him things,” Lanius said. “Didn’t
he believe me?”
“Nobody who’s never met you believes how many questions you can ask,”
Grus said. “But that isn’t what I wanted to talk to you about. I’ve got
some questions of my own.”
“Go ahead.” Lanius realized Grus wouldn’t have come here to talk about
monkeys. The other king did show some interest in Lanius’ beasts, but not
enough for that. “What do you want to know?”
Grus let out a long sigh. “What about my son?”
Lanius had known this was coming. He hadn’t expected it so soon. “What
about him?”
“Don’t play games with me.” Grus seldom showed Lanius how dangerous he
could be. The impatient snap to that handful of words, though, warned of
trouble ahead if he didn’t get a straight answer.
“Have you spoken with a serving girl named Cristata yet?” Lanius
asked.
“Cristata? No.” Again, Grus sounded thoroughly grim. “What does she
say? How bad is it this time?”
Lanius reached around to pat himself on the back of the shoulder. “I
don’t think those scars will go away. I don’t know what other marks she
has—this was what she showed me.”
“Oh,” Grus said, and then nothing more.
He was silent long enough, in fact, to make Lanius ask, “Is that
all?”
“That’s all I’m going to say
to you,” King Grus answered. But then he shook his head. “No. I
have a question I think you can answer. Is this Cristata the same girl I
heard about when I was up in the land of the Chernagors?”
“I... don’t know,” Lanius said carefully.
His father-in-law heard him speaking carefully, which he hadn’t
intended. Frowning, Grus asked, “What do you think?”
“I think that, since I don’t know, I wouldn’t be doing anyone any good
by guessing.”
By the way Grus cocked his head to one side, Lanius feared his real
opinion was only too evident. But the older man didn’t press him on it.
“Fair enough, Your Majesty. I daresay you’re right. The world would be a
better place if people didn’t guess and gossip so much. It might be a
duller place, but it would be better.” Again, he paused for so long,
Lanius thought he’d finished. Again, Lanius proved wrong. Grus went on,
“Never mind. One way or the other, I’ll find out.”
Lanius didn’t like the sound of that. He suspected he would have liked
it even less if he were Ortalis.
King Grus turned to go. Over his shoulder, he said, “Have fun with your
creatures. Believe me, they don’t cause nearly as much trouble as people
do.” Before Lanius could answer that, Grus left the room.
With no one else there, Lanius naturally turned toward the monkeys,
saying, “Do you think he’s right?” The monkeys didn’t answer. They
certainly made less trouble than a human audience, which might have given
Lanius some reply he didn’t want to hear. Laughing, the king went on, “I
bet you wish you could make more trouble. You make plenty when you get the
chance.”
Still no answer from the monkeys. Lanius took from his belt a small,
slim knife.
That got the animals’ attention. They chattered excitedly and
swarmed down from the branches. One of them tugged at Lanius’ robe. They
both held out beseeching little hands, as a human beggar might have.
He laughed. “Think I’ve got something, do you? Well. . . you’re right.”
He had a couple of peeled hard-boiled eggs he’d brought from the kitchens.
The monkeys loved eggs, and healers assured Lanius they were good for
them. Healers assured Lanius of all sorts of things he found unlikely. He
believed some and ignored others. Here, because the monkeys not only
enjoyed the eggs but flourished on them, he chose to believe.
He cut a slice from an egg and gave it to the male, who stuffed it into
his mouth. One ancient archival record spoke of teaching monkeys table
manners. Lanius had trouble believing that, too. He gave the female some
egg. She ate it even faster than the male—if she hesitated, he was liable
to steal it from her. Lanius had tried withholding egg from him when he
did that, but he didn’t understand. It just infuriated him.
Today, the monkeys seemed in the mood for affection. One of them
wrapped its little hand around Lanius’ thumb as he scratched it behind the
ears with his other hand. The expression on the monkey’s face looked very
much like the one Lanius would have worn had someone done a nice job of
scratching his back. He knew he shouldn’t read too much into a monkey’s
grin. Sometimes, though, he couldn’t help it.
Prince Ortalis shuffled his feet. He stared down at the floor mosaic.
He might have been a schoolboy who’d gotten caught pulling the wings off
flies. Back when he was younger, he
had been a schoolboy who’d gotten caught pulling the wings off
flies. “Well?” Grus growled in disgust. “What have you got to say for
yourself?”
“/don’t know,” Ortalis answered sullenly. “I don’t really
want to do things like that. Sometimes I just can’t help it.”
Grus believed him. If he could have helped it, he wouldn’t have
done—Grus hoped he wouldn’t have done—a lot of the things he undoubtedly
had. But, while that explained, it didn’t justify. “I warned you what
would happen if you ever did anything like this again,” Grus said
heavily.
Ortalis only sneered at him. Grus feared he understood that all too
well. He’d warned his legitimate son about a lot of things. He’d warned
him, and then failed to follow through on the warnings. No wonder Ortalis
didn’t believe he ever would.
“How am I supposed to get it through your thick, nasty head that I mean
what I tell you?” Grus demanded. “I know one way, by the gods.”
“What’s that?” Ortalis was still sneering. He might as well have said,
You can’t make me do anything.
He looked almost comically surprised when his father slapped him in the
face. “This—and I should have done it a long time ago,” Grus said,
breathing hard.
“You can’t do that,” Ortalis blurted in disbelief.
“Oh, yes, I can.” Grus slapped him again. “It’s not a hundredth part of
what you did to those girls. How do you like getting it instead of giving
it.”
Ortalis’ eyes went so wide, Grus could see white all around his irises.
Then, cursing as foully as any river-galley sailor, Ortalis hurled himself
at Grus. His churning fists thudded against his father’s ribs. “I’ll
murder you, you stinking son of a whore!” he screamed.
“Go ahead and try.” Grus ducked a punch that would have flattened his
nose. Ortalis’ fist connected with the top of his head. That hurt his son
more than it did him. Ortalis howled. Grus hit him in the pit of the
stomach. The howl cut off as Ortalis battled to breathe.
He kept fighting even after that. He had courage, of a sort. What he
lacked was skill. Grus had learned to fight in a hard school. Ortalis,
who’d had things much easier in his life, had never really learned at all.
His father gave him a thorough, professional beating.
At last, Ortalis threw up his hands and wailed. “Enough, Father! In the
names of the gods, enough! Please!”
Grus stood over him, breathing hard. The king’s fists stayed clenched.
He willed them open.
If you don’t stop now, you’ll beat him to death, he told himself.
Part of him wanted to. Realizing that was what made him back away from his
son.
“All right,” he said, his voice boulders in his throat. “All right. Get
up.”
“I—I don’t think I can.”
“You can,” Grus ground out. “I know what I did to you. I know what I
should have done to you, too—what you really deserved. And so do you.”
Ortalis didn’t try to argue with him. Keeping quiet was one of the
smarter things his son had ever done. Had he denied what Grus said, Grus
might have started hitting him again, and might not have been able to
stop. Tears and blood and snot smeared across his face, Ortalis struggled
upright.
“They—” The prince stopped. He might have started to say something
like,
They were just serving girls. Again, he was smart to keep quiet.
That might have fired Grus’ fury, too. After a moment, Ortalis said, 1 m
sorry.
That was better. It wasn’t enough, not even the bare beginnings of
enough, but it was better. Grus said, “If you ever do anything like that
again, you’ll get twice what I just gave you. Do you understand me,
Ortalis? I’m not joking. You’d better not think I am.”
“I understand you.” Ortalis’ voice was mushy. His lip was swollen and
cut and bleeding. He glared at Grus as well as he could; one eye was
swollen shut, the other merely blacked. Grus stared stonily back. His
hands ached. So did his ribs, on which Ortalis had connected several
times. And so did the heart thudding under those ribs. His heart ached
worst of all.
If he’d shown that, everything he’d done to Ortalis would have been
wasted. Making his voice stay hard, he said, “Get out of my sight. And go
wash yourself. You’ll want to stay out of everyone’s sight for a few days,
believe me.”
Ortalis inhaled and opened his mouth. Once more, though, nothing came
out. He might have started to say,
I’ll tell people my father beats me. Again, that would have been
the wrong thing to throw at the king. Again, he realized it and kept
quiet. Left hand clutched to
his sore ribs, Grus’ son and heir turned away from him and made
his slow, painful way out the door.
Servants chattered among themselves. Their gossip, though, took a while
to drift up through clerks and scribes and noblemen and finally to King
Lanius’ ears. By the time Lanius heard Grus and Ortalis had had a
falling-out, most of the evidence was gone from Ortalis’ person. A black
eye fades slowly, but a black eye could also have happened in any number
of ways. Lanius asked no questions. Ortalis volunteered nothing.
Lanius thought about asking Grus what had happened. His father-in-law,
though, did not seem approachable—which was, if anything, an
understatement. Lanius resigned himself to never knowing what had gone
on.
Then one day he got word that Cristata wanted to see him. He didn’t
mind seeing her at all, though he carefully didn’t wonder about what Sosia
would have thought of that sentiment. After curtsying before him, Cristata
said, “The gods have blessed Avornis with two fine kings.”
“I’m glad you think so,” Lanius answered.
Would I be happier if the gods had blessed Avornis with only one. fine
king? For the life of me, I don’t know. He made himself stop
woolgathering. “Do you care to tell me why?”
“Because you told King Grus about what happened to me, and he went and
made his own son sorry he did what he did—and then he gave me gold, too,”
the maidservant answered.
“Did he?” Lanius said. Grus hadn’t said a word about doing any such
thing.
But Cristata nodded. “He sure did. It’s more money than I ever had
before. It’s almost enough to make me a taxp—” She broke off. Almost enough to make me a taxpayer. She hadn’t wanted to say
anything like that to someone who was interested in collecting taxes and
making sure other people paid them. Most of the time, she would have been
smart not to say anything like that. Today, though, Lanius smiled and
answered, “I’ll never tell.”
Did he feel so friendly to her just because she was a pretty girl? Or
was he also trying to show her not everyone in the royal family would
behave the way Ortalis had, even if he chanced to get her alone?
What I’d like to do if I chanced to get her alone. . . He shook
his head.
Stop that.
“King Grus even said he was sorry.” Cristata’s eyes got big and round.
“Can you imagine? A king saying he was sorry? To
met And he was so friendly all the time we were talking.”
What would Queen Estrilda say if she heard that? Would she wonder
whether Grus had shown his ... friendliness in ways that had nothing to do
with talking? Lanius knew he did.
Oblivious to the questions she’d spawned, Cristata went on, “He’s going
to see if he can send me to the kitchens. There’s room to move up there;
it’s not like laundry or sweeping.”
“No, I don’t suppose it would be.” Lanius’ voice was vague. He couldn’t
have said which branches of palace service offered the chance to get ahead
and which were dead ends. Grus knew. He knew—and he acted. Why don’t I know things like that? Lanius wondered after
Cristata curtsied again and left the little audience chamber where they’d
been talking. Not even the sight of her pertly swinging backside as she
left was enough to make him stop worrying at the question. Up until now,
knowing things like that had never seemed important the way the reign of,
say, King Alcedo—who’d sat on the throne when the Scepter of Mercy was
lost—had.
Cristata knew the kitchens, and laundry and sweeping. Lanius would have
fainted to learn she’d ever heard of King Alcedo. But Lanius was as
ignorant of the world of service as Cristata was of history. Grus knew
some of both—less history than Lanius, but also more of service. Lanius
wished he had a manual to learn more of that other world.
There was no such manual. He knew that perfectly well. He knew of every
book written in Avornis since long before Alcedo’s day. He hadn’t read
them all, or even most of them, but he knew of them.
“I could write it myself,” he said thoughtfully. It wouldn’t be useful
just for him; Crex and all the Kings of Avornis who came after him might
find it interesting. First, though, he’d have to learn quite a bit he
didn’t know yet. And if he needed to summon Cristata now and again to
answer questions—well, it was all in the cause of advancing knowledge.
Even Sosia would—might—have a hard time complaining.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Grus and Pterocles took turns looking through a peephole in the ceiling
of the palace room where the remaining thralls the king had brought back
from the south were confined. The winter before, two thralls had gotten
out. One of them had almost killed Lanius. The other had almost killed
Estrilda, though Grus had no doubt the thrall wanted him dead and not his
queen.
The thralls paid no attention to the peephole. They might not have paid
any attention even if he’d stood in the room with them. What made them
thralls made them less than fully human. Their wits were dulled down to
the point where they barely had the use of language. They were more than
domestic animals that happened to walk on two legs and not four, but they
weren’t much more than animals.
They could, after a fashion, manage farms. Down south of the Stura
River, in the lands the Menteshe ruled, they raised the crops that helped
feed the nomads. The Menteshe didn’t have to worry about uprisings from
them, any more than they had to worry about uprisings from their
cattle.
And yet, the thralls’ ancestors had been Avornans who were unlucky
enough to dwell in the south when the Menteshe conquered the land. The
magic that made them thralls came from the Banished One. Human wizards had
had little luck reversing it. Avornan armies had tried to reconquer the
lost southern provinces a couple of times—tried and failed, with most of
the defeated soldiers made into thralls. After the last such disaster,
more than two hundred years before (Lanius knew the exact date), Avornis
had given up trying.
Without some way to make thralls back into men and women of the
ordinary sort, any reconquest was doomed to fail. Grus realized that,
however much he wished he could have gotten around it. And so, leaning
toward Pterocles, he asked, “What do you see down there?”
Even if the Chernagor wizard in Nishevatz—or was it the Banished One
himself?—had not laid Pterocles low, Grus would have had no enormous
confidence that he had the answer. Avornan wizards had wrestled with
curing thralls for centuries—wrestled with it and gotten thrown, again and
again and again. Alca seemed to have had the beginnings of some good new
ideas . . . but Alca was gone, and she wouldn’t be coming back. Pterocles
was what the king had to work with.
“What do I see?” the wizard echoed. Grus hadn’t bothered holding his
voice down. Pterocles spoke in a hoarse, worried whisper. “I see
emptiness. I see emptiness everywhere.”
That didn’t surprise Grus. He asked, “How do we go about filling the
emptiness with everything people have and thralls don’t?”
“Fill the emptiness?” Pterocles laughed. That wasn’t mirth coming out,
or no sort of mirth with which Grus wanted to be acquainted. Pterocles
went on, “If I knew how to fill emptiness, Your Majesty, don’t you think I
would fill my own? I wish I could. I wonder if I ever will.”
“Have you learned anything by watching the thralls?” Grus asked. “Would
you like to go in among them and study them at close quarters?”
“Empty. So empty,” Pterocles said, and then, “If I went in, how would
you tell me apart from them?”
“It wouldn’t be hard,” Grus answered. “You would be the one acting like
an idiot. They wouldn’t be acting. They really are idiots.”
Again, the laugh that came from Pterocles only raised Grus’ hackles.
The wizard bent, backside in the air, and peered down at the thralls
again. His face bore an expression of horrified fascination. He might have
been asking himself whether he was or was not one with them.
After a little while, Grus elbowed him out of the way and looked down
at the thralls again on his own behalf. He expected them to be doing what
they usually did, which was not very much. Like cats, they spent a lot of
time sleeping. Several of them stretched out on couches, snoring or simply
lying motionless. One, though, stared up at the peephole with as much
interest as Grus showed looking in the other direction.
Alarm ran through Grus. This wasn’t the way thralls were supposed to
behave. Thralls that acted like thralls were harmless, pitiable things.
Thralls that didn’t were deadly dangerous, not least because no one
expected them to strike.
This one turned away after meeting his eye. It was as though the thrall
cared nothing for him. It had been interested when Pterocles was looking
down at it, though. What did that mean? Grus hoped it didn’t mean the
Banished One looked out through the thrall’s eyes.
When he asked Pterocles about it, the wizard gave back a vague shrug
and answered, “We understand each other, he and I.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Grus demanded. Pterocles only shrugged
again.
Grus asked more questions, but Pterocles’ answers only got vaguer. At
last, the king threw his hands in the air. He went off to his desk to get
some work done. If he didn’t keep a thumb on Avornis’ pulse, who would?
Lanius? Grus didn’t want his son-in-law getting experience at running the
kingdom. He also didn’t want Pterocles staying close to the thralls if he
wasn’t there. He made sure the wizard came away with him. Pterocles looked
unhappy, but didn’t argue.
When Grus sat down behind the great marble-topped desk from which Kings
of Avornis had administered their realm for years uncounted, he found a
leather courier’s sack on top of it. A note on a scrap of parchment was
tied to it.
Brought back from the land of the Chernagors, it said.
Letters inside with seals still intact,
“What the ... ?” Grus muttered. Then he snapped his fingers. This had
to be the bundle he’d gotten just before learning the Chernagors from the
eastern city-states were marching on his army. What with everything that
had happened since, he’d forgotten all about it. Some diligent clerk
hadn’t.
He thought about chucking the sack. What were the odds any of the
letters would matter? In the end, though, sighing, he poured the
parchments out onto the broad desktop.
I
can go through them in a hurry, he told himself, and popped the
wax seal off the first one with his thumbnail.
A moment later, that letter lay in the trash bin by the desk. It
touched on something Lanius had long since dealt with. The second letter
followed the first. So did the third. The fourth had to do with a
land-tenure case down in the south that had dragged on for years. Grus set
it aside to add to the stack he already had on that case.
The fifth letter was from Pelagonia, a medium-sized city down in the
middle of the southern plains. From a king’s point of view, Pelagonia’s
chief virtue was that not much ever happened there. Rulers needed places
like that, places they didn’t have to worry about. Grus couldn’t remember
the last time he’d gotten a petition from Pelagonia. And yet the script on
the outside of the parchment, the script that addressed the letter to him,
looked somehow familiar.
“No,” he said as he broke the seal. “It can’t be.” But it was. Estrilda
had insisted that he send Alca away from the city of Avornis when she
discovered his affair with the witch. He’d picked Pelagonia for her, not
least because it was such a quiet, sedate town. Your Majesty, Alca wrote,
I
send this as from a worried subject to her king, not because of
anything else that may have happened between us. Grus grunted at
that. As soon as Alca mentioned it, even to disclaim it—maybe especially
to disclaim it—she also claimed it. He sighed. He couldn’t do anything
about that. And if he’d known how big a disappointment Pterocles would
prove, he would have thought twice about sending Alca away at all.
She continued,
I
am afraid the investigation of the thralls may not be going as well as
it should. I should have left more behind in writing, to guide those who
would come after me. I would have, if I had known I was leaving the
capital so suddenly. Grus mumbled something under his breath. If that
wasn’t a dig, he’d never run into one. I
hope that all is well for you and for yours (the last three words
were inserted above the line, with a caret to show where they should go)
in the city of Avornis. I hope also that wizards are still studying
the thralls. I have heard how two thralls turned on you and Lanius. I
rejoice that you are both safe. The thralls still in the palace, I think,
can be as dangerous as the ones who already attacked. Unless I am
altogether mistaken, the Banished One reaches them in this way.
The sorcerous charms and calculations that followed meant nothing to
Grus. He hadn’t expected them to. He knew nothing of magic. Alca went on,
I
hope you will show this to a wizard you trust. He will be able to
judge whether I am right.
“I can do that,” Grus said, as though she stood there before him. He
wondered what Pterocles would make of those scribbled symbols. He also
wondered if Pterocles was in any condition to make anything of them. What I have shown here may also give new hope to returning thralls
to true humanity, Alca finished.
The spells will not be easy to shape. Here is a new road, though, and
Avornis has long needed that. What I need. . . is something I may not
have. I knew that when we began. I cannot imagine why, all this time
later, it comes as such of a surprise. With— A scratched-out word,
and then a scrawled signature.
He stared at it for a long time. Because of the calculations, he
couldn’t even throw the letter away. He made a fist and brought it down
hard on the marble desktop, over and over again.
“What did you do to yourself?” Lanius asked Grus; his father-in-law’s
right hand was puffy and bruised.
“Banged it,” Grus said uninformatively.
“Well, yes, but how?” Lanius asked.
“Oh, I managed,” Grus answered.
Lanius sent him an exasperated look. Why couldn’t Grus just say he’d
dropped something on it or caught it in a door or whatever he’d really
done to himself? How could you be embarrassed about hurting your hand?
Grus evidently was. Too bad he didn’t hurt it knocking some sense into Ortalis,
Lanius thought. But then he remembered Grus
had done his best to knock sense into Ortalis. He probably would
have done better if he’d started years earlier. He had tried this time,
though. And Ortalis had done his best to stay invisible ever since. That
suited Lanius fine.
He tried another question, asking, “What are you going to do when
spring comes around again?”
Grus didn’t evade there. “Go back to the country of the Chernagors with
a bigger army,” he answered. “I’m not going to let Vasilko keep Nishevatz
any longer than I can help it. That would be like letting someone carrying
a plague set up shop across the street from the palace. Life hands you
enough troubles without your asking for more.”
“Can you take enough soldiers north to beat all the Chernagors?” Lanius
inquired.
“You’re full of questions today, aren’t you?” Grus gave him a quizzical
look. “While you’re at it, why don’t you ask me about my love life,
too?”
“How’s your love life?” Lanius said, deadpan.
“Certainly nice weather we’re having, isn’t it?” Grus answered, just as
deadpan.
They eyed each other. Then they both started to laugh. “All right,”
Lanius said. “I asked for that, and I think you enjoyed giving it to
me. I assume you have something in mind against Prince Vasilko and the
rest of the Chernagors and the Banished One?”
“Certainly nice weather we’re having, isn’t it?” Grus repeated.
That annoyed Lanius. Maybe Grus didn’t have anything in mind but didn’t
want to admit it. Maybe he did, but didn’t want to tell his fellow king
for fear that Lanius might use it against him or for some other reason,
darker still. “What is it?” Lanius snapped. “Do you think I’ll take
whatever you’ve got in mind straight to ... to the Banished One?” He
almost said
Milvago, but decided he didn’t want to voice that particular
name.
This time, Grus paid him the courtesy of a serious answer. “No, Your
Majesty, I don’t think that,” he said. “What I do think is, the Chernagors
and the Banished One are bound to have plenty of spies and plenty of
wizards trying to find out what I’ve got in mind. The more I talk, the
more help I give them. I don’t want to do that, thanks.”
“Oh.” Lanius considered. Reluctantly, he nodded. “Yes, all right.” It
wasn’t altogether; he still suspected Grus feared he would use the
knowledge himself, and didn’t want to give it to him for that reason. That
being so, he went on, “But we’re the ones who worry the Banished One,
aren’t we? The ones he comes to in dreams. The two of us, and Alca the
witch.”
Grus slammed his bruised hand against the wall. He hissed in pain, and
then cursed. “Sorry,” he said in a gray voice. “You caught me by surprise
there. I don’t want to remember those dreams.”
“Or Alca?” Lanius asked.
Instead of replying, Grus turned away. Did that mean he didn’t want to
remember Alca or that he didn’t want to forget her? Lanius could guess,
but a lot of his guesses about Grus had turned out to be wrong. Maybe this
one would, too.
Lanius also guessed Grus would storm out of the chamber. That turned
out to be a mistake. In fact, the other king turned back. He said, “For
whatever it may be worth to you, you have my sympathy on Queen Certhia’s
passing.”
Now Lanius was the one who got angry. “You say that? You’re sorry my
mother’s dead?” he said, his voice rising with every word. “You’re the one
who sent her to the Maze!”
“I’m sorry she’s dead anyhow,” Grus answered. “She might have died if
she’d stayed in the city of Avornis, you know. She wasn’t an ancient
granny, but she wasn’t a young woman, either.” That was true, and hadn’t
occurred to Lanius. Even so, it did very little to quell his fury. But
Grus went on, “I know you don’t care to be reminded of it, but she tried
to slay me by sorcery—nasty sorcery, too. If it weren’t for a strong
amulet and Alca’s magic, I wouldn’t be here now.”
Again, Lanius imitated Grus, this time by turning his back. Remembering
Alca had probably made Grus remember Queen Certhia. He hadn’t said
anything about her death up until now. Lanius started to blame him for
that, but then checked himself. His mother
had tried to kill Grus, and Grus hadn’t killed her in return.
Didn’t that count for anything?
With a long, wary sigh, Grus said, “Politics only make families more
complicated. You’ve seen that since you were a baby.”
“Politics, yes.” If not for politics, Lanius wouldn’t have wed Sosia,
wouldn’t have had Ortalis as brother-in-law or Grus as father-in-law,
wouldn’t have seen Grus’ bastard as Arch-Hallow of Avornis . . . wouldn’t
have had the Banished One for an enemy. Grus is the Banished One’s enemy, too, Lanius reminded
himself. However much he sometimes detested Grus, that was worth
remembering. Nobody the Banished One wanted horribly dead could be all
bad. One way to know people was by the friends they made. Another was by
their foes. Lanius often thought the latter gave the clearer picture.
Then Grus said, “And speaking of politics, how did you like sending
soldiers out against that noble last summer?” His voice was oddly
constrained. He’s as nervous with me as I am with him, Lanius realized.
That was something new. Up until now, Grus had effortlessly dominated him.
I’m growing. The balance between us is shifting. Lanius answered,
“It needed doing.” He didn’t want Grus too nervous about him. That could
prove hazardous.
“I never said it didn’t,” Grus told him. “I asked how you liked
it.” How much do you want power? How much do you enjoy using it?
Lanius gave back a shrug. “I wish the nobles didn’t cause trouble in the
first place.”
That drew a laugh from Grus. “Wish for the sun to rise in the west
while you’re at it. They wish we weren’t on the throne, so they could do
as they please.”
“Yes, no doubt,” Lanius said. “They can’t always get what they want,
though.”
“You’re right.” Now Grus spoke with complete assurance, and addressed
Lanius as one equal to another. “What we have to do is give them what they
need. And do you know what else?” He waited for Lanius to shake his head,
then finished, “When we do, they’ll hate us for it.” Lanius wanted to tell
him he was wrong. His experience and reading, though, suggested Grus was
only too likely to be right.
When the first snows of winter fell, Grus wondered whether the Banished
One would send blizzard after blizzard against Avornis, as he’d done more
than once in the past. Had the king had it in his power, he knew he would
have used the weather against his enemies.
But winter was only . . . winter—nothing pleasant, but nothing out of
the ordinary, either. Changing the weather couldn’t have been easy, even
for a being who’d once been a god. The couple of times the Banished One
tried it, Avornis had come through better than he’d expected. Grus knew
that was largely Lanius’ doing; thanks to the other king, the capital and
the rest of the cities had laid in supplies well ahead of time. The
smaller towns and the countryside didn’t need to worry so much.
Because the winter stayed on the mild side, Grus used it to gather
soldiers and horses and supplies around the city of Avornis. This time,
when he went up into the land of the Chernagors, he would lack nothing a
general could possibly bring with him. An afterthought also made him
summon wizards from the provinces to the capital. He didn’t know how much
good they would do him—from what he’d seen, most wizards from small towns
and the countryside knew a lot less than those who succeeded in the city
of Avornis—but he didn’t see how they could hurt.
If anything, the tent cities that sprang up around the walls of the
capital were healthier in winter than they would have been in summer.
Sicknesses that would have flourished in the heat lay dormant with snow on
the ground. Latrines didn’t stink the way they would have when the sun
shone high and bright and warm in the sky. Flies were nowhere to be
seen.
When spring came, Grus was ready to move. He hoped he would catch
Prince Vasilko by surprise. Even if he didn’t, he thought he could beat
Prince Vsevolod’s ungrateful son.
If I can’t beat him with what I’ve got here, I can’t beat him at
all, he thought. He knew what Vasilko and the other Chernagor princes
could throw at him. He thought his chances were good.
“Gods keep you safe,” Estrilda said in the quiet of their bedchamber
the night before he left for the north.
“Thanks.” Grus set a hand on her hip. They lay bare in the royal bed.
They’d just made love, which had left both of them almost satisfied.
Something had broken after Estrilda found out about his affair with Alca.
It was repaired these days, but the broken place and the rough spots where
the glue held things together still showed, were still easy to feel. Grus
wondered if they would ever smooth down to where he couldn’t feel them.
After more than a year, he was beginning to doubt it.
She said, “Be careful. The kingdom needs you.”
Grus grunted. Estrilda didn’t say anything about what
she needed. There were bound to be good reasons for that. Almost
too late, he realized ignoring her words except for that grunt wouldn’t be
good. He said, “The one thing that worries me is, I won’t be able to lay
proper siege to their cities, the way I could to Avornan towns.”
“Why not?” Estrilda asked. Talking about cities and sieges was
impersonal, and so safe enough.
“Because I can’t take a fleet north with me,” Grus answered. Here, at
least, he could talk. Estrilda wouldn’t blab, and the royal bedchamber was
as well warded against wizardry as any place in Avornis. “The Chernagors
can fill their big seagoing ships with more than trade trinkets, curse
them. When my army stood in front of Nishevatz last summer, Prince Vasilko
brought grain in by sea, and I couldn’t do a thing about it. I don’t see
how I’ll be able to stop it this year, either. I’ll have to take their
cities by storm. I won’t be able to starve them out.”
“That will cost more men, won’t it?” Estrilda said. “That’s . . .
unfortunate.”
“Yes it will, and yes it is,” Grus agreed. “I don’t see any way around
it, though. Most of our galleys sail the Nine Rivers. Some of them scuttle
along the coast, but I don’t see how I could bring them up to the
Chernagor country. One storm along the way and ...” He shook his head.
“Wouldn’t storms wreck the Chernagor ships, too? Then you wouldn’t have
to worry about them.”
Moodily, Grus shook his head. “It’s not that simple. Their ships are
made to sail on the open sea. Ours mostly aren’t. Ours are fine for what
they do, but sailing on the Northern Sea isn’t it. For the Chernagors, it
is. They build stronger than we do. They need to, traveling from one
little island to the next the way they do.”
“You’ll find something.” When it came to ships, Estrilda had confidence
in the onetime river-galley captain she’d married. When it came to
women—she had confidence there, but confidence of the wrong sort.
When Grus thought about it, he had to admit he’d given her reason.
Lanius came out of the city to see him and the army off. “Gods go with
you,” the other king told him. “We both know how important this is, and
why.” Again, he didn’t say the name Milvago, or even suggest it. Even so,
it was there.
Prince Ortalis came out, too. He said not a word to Grus. Grus said
nothing to him, either. Each of them looked at the other as though he
hoped never to see him again. That was likely to be true.
“Gods bless this army and lead it to victory.” Arch-Hallow Anser
sounded more cheerful than either Grus or Lanius. If he noticed the way
Grus and Ortalis eyed each other, it didn’t show on his smiling face.
With a resigned sigh, Grus swung up into the saddle of his horse.
Another summer of riding lessons, he thought.
I’m turning into a tolerable horseman in spite of myself.
The only ones who looked eager to return to the land of the Chernagors
were Prince Vsevolod and his countrymen who’d gone into exile in Avornis
with him. “I will see my son again,” Vsevolod said, in tones of fierce
anticipation. Grus realized that, as badly as he got along with Ortalis,
the two of them were perfect comrades next to Vsevolod and Vasilko.
“Are we ready?” Grus asked General Hirundo.
“If we’re not, by Olor’s beard, we’ve certainly wasted a lot of time
and money,” Hirundo answered.
“Thank you so much. You’ve made everything clear,” Grus said. Hirundo
bowed in the saddle. Grus laughed. Prince Vsevolod scowled. Vsevolod, as
Grus had seen, spent a lot of time scowling. Grus waved to the trumpeters.
The sun flashed golden from the bells of their horns as they raised them
to their lips. Martial music filled the air. The Avornans began moving
north.
King Lanius wore shabby clothes when he went exploring in the archives.
That kept the palace washerwomen happy. It also let him feel easier about
putting on hunting togs to go hunting with Arch-Hallow Anser. Was he in
perfect style? He neither knew nor cared. If anyone but Anser had invited
him out on a hunt, he not only would have said no but probably laughed in
the other mans face. But he really liked Anser, and so he’d decided to see
just what it was the arch-hallow so enjoyed.
Grus joked about being uncertain on a horse. Lanius really was. He felt
too high off the ground, and too likely to arrive there too suddenly. He
also felt sure he would be saddlesore come morning. If Olor had meant men
to splay their legs apart like that, he would have made them bowlegged to
begin with.
Anser took his bow from the case that held both it and a sheaf of
arrows. He skillfully strung it, then set an arrow to the string, drew,
and let fly. The arrow quivered in the trunk of a tree, a palm’s breadth
above a prominent knot. “A little high,” he said with a rueful shrug. “You
try.”
Clumsily, Lanius strung his own bow. He couldn’t remember the last time
he’d held a weapon in his hand. Even more clumsily, he fitted an arrow to
the string. Drawing the bow made him grunt with effort. The shaft he
loosed came nowhere near the tree, let alone the knot.
Some of the beaters and bodyguards riding along with the king and the
arch-hallow snickered. “Oh, dear,” Anser said. It wasn’t scornful, just
sympathetic. There were reasons why everyone liked him.
“I’m in more danger from the beasts than they are from me,” Lanius
said. If he laughed at himself, maybe the rest of the hunting party
wouldn’t, or at least not so much.
“You will not be in any danger, Your Majesty,” one of the bodyguards
declared. “That’s why we’re along.” He had a thoroughly literal mind. No
doubt that helped make him a good guard. No doubt it also helped make him
a bore.
Bird chirped in the oaks and elms and chestnuts. Lanius heard several
different songs. He wondered which one went with which bird. “Look!” He
pointed. “That one has something in its beak.”
“Building a nest,” Anser said. “It’s that time of year.”
Sunlight came through the leaves in dapples. The horses wanted to stop
every few steps and nibble at the ferns that sprang up at the bases of
gnarled tree trunks. Lanius would have let them, but Anser pressed on,
deeper into the woods. The city of Avornis was only a few miles away, but
might have lain beyond the Northern Sea. City air stank of smoke and
people and dung. The air here smelled as green as the bright new leaves on
the trees.
Wildflowers blazed in a meadow. Butterflies, flitting jewels, darted
from one to another. A rabbit nibbled clover. “Shoot it!” Anser said.
“What?” Lanius wondered if he’d heard straight. “Why?”
“Because you’re hunting,” Anser replied with such patience as he could
muster. “Because we want the meat. Rabbit stew, rabbit pie, rabbit with
pepper, rabbit. . . Rabbit’s run off now.”
Lanius almost said,
Good. If he’d been out with anyone but Anser, he would have. He
was more interested in watching the rabbit than in shooting it or eating
it. Alive and hopping about, it was fascinating. Dead? No.
Anser made the best of things. “Not easy to shoot a rabbit anyhow.
They’re best caught with dogs and nets.”
“You chase them with
dogs?” Lanius knew he should have kept quiet, but that got past
him. Weakly, he added, “It doesn’t seem sporting.”
“The idea
is to catch them, you know,” Anser said.
“Well, yes, but. . .” Lanius gave up. “Let’s ride some more. It’s a
nice day.”
“So it is,” Anser said agreeably. On they rode. If they were going to
hunt something, Lanius had imagined bear or lion—something dangerous,
where killing it would do the countryside good. When he said as much to
the arch-hallow, Anser gave him an odd look. “Aren’t deer and boar enough
to satisfy you? A boar can be as dangerous as any beast around.”
They saw no bears. They saw no lions. They saw no boar, which left
Lanius not at all disappointed. They saw a couple of deer. Anser
courteously offered Lanius the first shot at the first stag. He thought
about shooting wide on purpose, but then decided he was more likely to
miss if he aimed straight at it. Miss he did. The stag bounded away,
spoiling any chance Anser might have had of hitting it.
Anser didn’t say anything. If he thought Lanius had intended to miss,
he was too polite and good-natured to start a quarrel by accusing him of
it. The next time they saw a deer, though, Anser shot first. “Ha! That’s a
hit!” he shouted.
“Is it?” Lanius had his doubts. “It ran away, too.”
“Now we track it down. I hit it right behind the shoulder. It won’t go
far.” Anser rode after the wounded animal. Wounded it was, too— he used
the trail of blood it left to pursue it. The blood came close to making
Lanius sick. When he thought of shooting an animal, he thought of it
falling over dead the instant the arrow struck home. He’d seen one battle.
He knew people didn’t do that. But, no matter what Anser said, the trail
of blood was much too long to suit Lanius. He tried to imagine what the
deer was feeling, then gulped and wished he hadn’t.
When they caught up with it, the deer was down but not dead. Blood ran
from its mouth and bubbled from its nose. It blinked and tried to rise and
run some more, but couldn’t. Anser knelt beside it and cut its throat.
Then he slit its belly and reached inside to pull out the offal. How
Lanius held down his breakfast, he never knew.
“Not such a bad day,” Anser said as they rode back toward the city of
Avornis. Lanius didn’t reply.
But he also didn’t refuse the slab of meat the arch-hallow sent to the
palace. Once the cooks were done with it, it proved very tasty. And he
didn’t have to think of where it came from at all.
As they had the year before, the farmers along the path Grus’ army took
toward the north fled when it came near. The army was bigger this year,
which only meant more people ran away from it. They took their livestock,
abandoned their fields, and ran off to the hills and higher ground away
from the road.
Prince Vsevolod seemed surprised that bothered Grus. “Is an army,” he
said, waving to the tents sprouting like mushrooms by the side of the
road.
“Well, yes,” Grus agreed. “We’re not here to churn butter.”
General Hirundo snickered. He took himself even less seriously than
Grus did. “Churning butter?” Vsevolod said with another of his fearsome
frowns—his big-nosed, strong-boned, wrinkled face was made for
disapproval. “What you talk about? Is an army, like I say. Army steals.
Army always steals.”
“An army shouldn’t steal from its own people,” Grus said.
Vsevolod stared at him in even more confusion than when he’d talked
about butter. “Why not?” the Chernagor demanded. “What difference it make?
No army, no people. So army steal. So what?”
“You may be right.” Grus used that phrase to get rid of persistent
nuisances. Vsevolod went off looking pleased with himself. Like most
nuisances, he didn’t realize it wasn’t even close to the agreement it
sounded like.
The breeze brought the odors of sizzling flatbread, porridge in pots,
and roasting beef to Grus’ nostrils. It also brought another savory odor,
one that sent spit flooding into his mouth. “Tell me what that is,” he
said to Hirundo.
Hirundo obligingly sniffed. “Roast pork,” he answered without
hesitation.
“That’s what I thought, too,” Grus said. “Now, did we bring any pigs up
from the city of Avornis?”
They both knew better. Pigs, short-legged and with minds of their own,
would have been a nightmare to herd. Grus couldn’t imagine an army using
them for meat animals, not unless it was staying someplace for months on
end. The only place soldiers could have gotten hold of a pig was from
farmers who hadn’t fled fast enough.
“Shall I try to track down the men cooking pork?” Hirundo asked.
“No, don’t bother,” Grus answered wearily. “They’ll all say they got it
from someone else. They always do.” Vsevolod hadn’t been wrong. Armies
did plunder their own folk. The difference between the Prince of
Nishevatz and the King of Avornis was that Grus wished they didn’t.
Vsevolod didn’t care.
When morning came, the army started for the Chernagor country again.
Day by day, the mountains separating the coastal lowlands from Avornis
climbed higher into the sky, notching the northern horizon. Riding along
in the van, Grus had no trouble seeing that. Soldiers back toward the rear
of the army probably hadn’t seen the mountains yet, because of all the
dust the men and their horses and wagons kicked up. When the king looked
back in the direction of the city of Avornis, he couldn’t see more than
half the army. The rest disappeared into a haze of its own making.
The army had come within two or three days’ march of the mountains when
a courier rode up from the south. “Your Majesty! Your Majesty!” he
shouted, and then coughed several times from the dust hanging in the
air.
“I’m here,” Grus called, and waved to show where he was. “What is it?”
Whatever it was, he didn’t think it would be good. Good news had its own
speed—not leisurely, but sedate. Bad news was what had to get where it was
going as fast as it could.
“Here, Your Majesty.” The courier came up alongside him. His horse was
caked with dusty foam. It was blowing hard, its dilated nostrils fire-red.
The rider thrust a rolled parchment at Grus.
He broke the seal and slid off the ribbon that helped hold the
parchment closed. Unrolling it was awkward, but he managed. He held it out
at arm’s length to read; his sight had begun to lengthen. Before he got
even halfway through it, he was cursing as foully as he knew how.
“What’s gone wrong, Your Majesty?” General Hirundo asked.
“It’s the Chernagors, that’s what,” Grus answered bitterly. “A whole
great fleet of them, descending on the towns along our east coast. Some
are sacked, some besieged—they’ve caught us by surprise. Some of the
bastards are sailing up the Nine Rivers, too, and attacking inland towns
by the riverside. They haven’t done anything like this in I don’t know how
long.”
Lanius could tell me, he thought. But Lanius wasn’t here.
Hirundo cursed, too. “What do we do, then?” he asked.
Grus looked ahead. Yes, he could cross into the land of the Chernagors
in two or three days. How much good would that do him? Nishevatz was
ready, more than ready, to stand siege. While he reduced it—if he could
reduce it—what would the Chernagor pirates be doing to Avornis? What did
he have to put into river galleys and defend his own cities but this army
here? Not much, and he knew it. Tasting gall, he answered, “We turn
around. We go back.”
CHAPTER EIGHT
King Lanius had hoped to welcome King Grus back to the city of Avornis
as a conquering hero. Grus was back in the capital, all right, but as a
haggard, harried visitor, ready to rush toward the south and east to fight
the Chernagors. “You got this news before I did,” Grus said in his brief
sojourn in the palace. “What did you do?”
“Sent it on to you,” Lanius answered.
Grus exhaled through his nose. “Anything else?”
Hesitantly, Lanius nodded. “I sent an order to river-galley skippers
along the Nine Rivers to head for the coast and fight the invaders. That
doesn’t count the ships here by the capital. I told them to stay put
because I thought your army would need them.” He waited. If he’d made a
botch of things, Grus would come down on him like a rockslide.
His father-in-law exhaled again, but on a different note—relief, not
exasperation. “Gods be praised. You did it right. You did it just right. I
couldn’t have done better if I’d been here myself.”
“You mean that?” Lanius asked. Praise had always been slow heading his
way. He had trouble believing it even when he got it.
But Grus nodded solemnly. “We cant do anything without men and ships.
The faster they get to the coast, the better.” His laugh held little
mirth. “A year ago, I was wondering how the Chernagors’ oceangoing ships
would measure up against our river galleys. This isn’t how I wanted to
find out.”
“Yes, it should be interesting, shouldn’t it?” To Lanius, the
confrontation was abstract, not quite real.
“You don’t understand, do you?” Grus was testy now, not handing out
praise. “If we lose, they’ll ravage our coast all year long. They’ll go up
the rivers as far as they like, and they’ll keep on plundering the
riverside cities, too. This isn’t a game, Your Majesty.” He turned the
royal title into one of reproach. “The kingdom hasn’t seen anything like
this since the Chernagors first settled down in this part of the world,
however many years ago that was.”
Lanius knew, but it didn’t matter right this minute. He nodded. “All
right. I do take your point.”
“Good.” Grus, to his relief, stopped growling. “You must, really, or
you wouldn’t have done such a nice job setting things up so we’ll be able
to get at the Chernagors in a hurry.”
For a moment, that praise warmed Lanius, too. Then he looked at it with
the critical eye he used when deciding how much truth a chronicle or a
letter held. Wasn’t Grus just buttering him up to make him feel better?
Lanius almost called him on it, but held his peace. What was even worse
than Grus trying to keep him happy? The answer came to mind at once—Grus
not bothering to keep him happy.
Three days later, Lanius was able to stop worrying about whether Grus
kept him happy. The other king had loaded his men aboard river galleys and
as much other shipping around the capital as Lanius had commandeered. The
army’s horses stood nervously on barges and rafts. Lanius watched from the
wall as the force departed with as little ceremony as it had arrived.
One vessel after another, the fleet slid around a bend in the river. A
grove of walnuts hid the ships from sight from the capital. Lanius didn’t
wait for the last one to disappear. As soon as the river galley that held
Grus glided around that bend, he turned away. Bodyguards came to stiff
attention. They formed a hollow square around him to escort him back to
the palace.
He was about halfway there, passing through a marketplace full of
honking geese and pungent porkers, when he suddenly started to laugh.
“What’s so funny, Your Majesty?” a guardsman asked.
“Nothing, really,” Lanius answered. He wasn’t about to tell the soldier
that he’d suddenly realized the city of Avornis was
his again. Grus had taken it back in his brief, tumultuous stay.
He would reclaim it again after this campaigning season ended. But for
now, as it had the past summer, the royal capital belonged to Lanius.
If the king said that to the guard, it might reach the other king.
Unpleasant things might happen if it did. Lanius had learned a courtier’s
rules of survival ever since he’d stopped making messes on the floor. One
of the most basic was saying nothing that would land you in trouble if you
could avoid it. He still remembered, and used, it.
The doors to the palace were thrown wide to let in light and air. That
almost let Lanius ignore how massive they were, how strong and heavy their
hinges, how immense the iron bar that could help hold them closed. They
weren’t saying anything they didn’t have to, either. For now, they seemed
innocent and innocuous and not especially strong. But they really are, he thought.
Am I?
Hirundo looked faintly—maybe more than faintly—green. To Grus, the deck
of a river galley was the most natural thing in the world. “Now you know
how I feel on horseback,” the king said.
His general managed a faint smile. “Your Majesty, if you fall off a
horse, you’re not likely to drown,” he observed, and then gulped. Yes, he
was more than faintly green.
“Horses don’t come with rails,” Grus said. “And if you need to give
back breakfast there, kindly lean out over the one the galley has. The
sailors won’t love you if you get it on the deck.”
“If I need to heave it up, I won’t much care what the sailors think,”
Hirundo replied with dignity. Grus gave him a severe look. Puking on the
deck proved a man a lubber as surely as trying to mount from the right
side of the horse proved a man no rider. Under the force of that look,
Hirundo grudged a nod. “All right, Your Majesty. I’ll try.”
Grus knew he would have to be content with that. A weak stomach could
prove stronger than good intentions. That thought made the king wonder how
Pterocles was taking the journey. As far as Grus knew, the wizard hadn’t
traveled far on the Nine Rivers.
Pterocles stood near the port rail. He wasn’t hanging on to it, and he
didn’t seem especially uncomfortable. As he looked out at the fields and
apple and pear orchards sliding by, the expression on his face was more .
. . distant than anything else. King Grus nodded to himself. That was the
word, all right. Pterocles had never quite been himself after the
Chernagor wizard—or
had it been the Banished One himself?—struck him down outside of
Nishevatz. Something was missing . . . from his spirit? From his will?
Grus had a hard time pinpointing where the trouble lay, but he feared it
was serious.
Prince Vsevolod had stayed behind in the city of Avornis. Nothing he
could say would be likely to make the Chernagor pirates change their
minds. Grus didn’t miss him.
Lanius likes being king, he thought.
Let him put up with Vsevolod. That’ll teach him.
Before long, groves of olives and almonds would replace the fruit trees
that grew here. The fleet wasn’t very far south or east of the capital;
they’d just emerged from the confusing tangle of streams in the Maze the
day before. Down farther south, farmers would grow only wheat and barley;
rye and oats would disappear. Before long, though, vineyards would take
the place of some of the grainfields.
The Granicus ran down toward the Azanian Sea through the middle of a
wide, broad valley. The hills to the north and south were low and
weathered, so low they hardly deserved the name. But smaller streams
flowed into the Granicus from those hills to either side. Beyond the
watersheds, the streams ran into neighbors from among the Nine Rivers. I sent Alca to a riverside town, Grus thought, and hoped none
of the pirates had come to Pelagonia. This was the first time he’d come to
the south himself since sending her away from the capital. But Pelagonia
did not lie along the Granicus, and the king had other things on his mind
besides the witch he’d once loved—still loved, though he hadn’t let
himself think that while he was anywhere near Estrilda.
As day followed day and Grus’ fleet sped down the Granicus, he spent
more and more time peering ahead, looking for smoke to warn him he was
drawing near the Chernagors. Once he saw some rising into the air, but it
proved only a grass fire in a field. It might have been a catastrophe for
the farmer the field belonged to. To Grus, it was just a distraction.
And then, a day later, lookouts—and, very soon, Grus himself— spied
another black column of smoke. Grus had a good idea of where they were
along the Granicus, though he hadn’t traveled the river for several years.
To make sure, he asked the steersman, “That’s Araxus up ahead, isn’t
it?”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The man at the steering oar nodded. “When we round
this next bend in the river, we’ll be able to see the place.”
He proved not quite right. When they rounded the bend, all they could
see was the smoke spilling out from the gutted town. Of Araxus itself
there was no sign. But Grus pointed to the ships tied up at the quays. “No
one in Avornis ever built those.”
“How can you tell, Your Majesty?” Hirundo asked.
Grus gaped. His general
was a lubber, and no more a judge of ships than Grus was of
horseflesh. “By looking,” the king answered. “They’re bigger and beamier
than anything we build, and see those masts?”
“They’re ships,” Hirundo said.
“Yes, and we’re going to sink them.” Grus turned to the oarmaster.
“Step up the stroke. Let’s hurry.” As the man nodded and got the rowers
working harder, Grus told the trumpeter, “Signal the rest of the fleet to
up the stroke, too. We don’t want to waste any time.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The man raised the trumpet to his lips and sent
the signal to the other ships close by. Their trumpets passed it along to
the rest of the fleet.
The Chernagors ravaging Araxus were alert. They spotted the Avornan
fleet as soon as it rounded the bend in the river. Grus couldn’t see the
pirates in the town itself, but he saw them when they came out and ran for
their ships. He wondered what they would do once they had them manned. The
wind blew out of the east, from the direction of the sea. That had let
them sail up the Granicus to Araxus. But the only way they could flee down
the river, away from the galleys, was by drifting with the current. If
they tried that, the oar-powered Avornan ships would catch them in short
order.
Grus wondered what he would have done if caught in a like predicament.
No sooner had the thought,
Make the best fight I could, crossed his mind than the Chernagor
ships put on their full spread of sail—a stunning spread, by Avornan
standards—and started
up the Granicus toward the river galleys.
“Now I see it. They
are bigger than we are.” Hirundo sounded nervous. “Can we beat
them?”
“If we can’t, we’d have done better to stay back in the city of
Avornis, don’t you think?” Grus asked. Hirundo grinned. Grus knew he had
to seem confident. In truth, he had no idea what would happen next. How
long had it been since the Chernagors and Avornans squared off against
each other on the water? He had no idea. Lanius had tried to tell him, but
he hadn’t let the other king finish.
He wished things happened quicker aboard ship, but no help for that.
The Chernagor pirates had to claw their way upstream against the current.
More than a quarter of an hour passed between their weighing anchor and
the first arrows splashing into the Granicus. The pirates had only half a
dozen ships, but they were all jammed full of men. And with their high
freeboard, getting Avornan warriors into them from the lower galleys
wouldn’t have been easy even if they hadn’t been.
“Ram the bastards!” Grus shouted. Without his giving the order to the
trumpeter, the man sent it on—cleansed of the curse by his mellow notes—to
the rest of the fleet. To his own crew, Grus called, “ ‘Ware boarders! If
we stick fast when we ram, they’ll swarm down onto us.”
More and more arrows flew from the pirate ships. Grus had never had to
worry about so many in a river battle; he might almost have been fighting
on land. A couple of rowers were hit. That fouled the stroke. The
oarmaster screamed curses until the wounded men were dragged from their
benches and replaced. Archers at the bows of the river galleys were
shooting along with the Chernagors, emptying their quivers as fast as they
could. A pirate threw up his hands and splashed into the Granicus, an
arrow through his throat.
The oarmaster upped the stroke again, this time without waiting for a
command from Grus. The steersman aimed the bronze-tipped ram at the
planking just to port of the bow of a pirate ship. Where everything had
seemed to move slowly before, all at once the pirate ship swelled
enormously.
“Brace yourselves!” Grus shouted just before the collision. Crunch! The ram bit. Grus staggered but kept his feet. “Back
oars!” the oarmaster screamed. The rowers did, with all the strength they
had in them. If the ram did stick fast in the pirate’s timbers, the
Chernagors would board and slaughter them.
“Olor be praised!” Grus gasped when the river galley pulled free. The
pointed ram had torn a hole two feet wide in the pirate ship, just below
the waterline. The Granicus flooded in. The extra weight, growing every
moment, slowed the ship to a crawl.
“Ram ‘em again, sir?” the steersman asked.
Grus shook his head. “No. We got enough of what we needed.” He would
have done far more damage striking another river galley. The Chernagor
ships, built to withstand long voyages and pounding ocean waves, were even
more strongly made than he’d expected.
He looked around to see how the rest of the fight was going. One pirate
ship had ridden up and over the luckless river galley that tried to ram
it. Avornans, some clutching oars, splashed in the Granicus. Another
Chernagor ship traded archery with three river galleys. Two more pirate
ships besides the one Grus had struck had been rammed, and were taking on
water. One pirate ship was afire. A river galley burned, too—the
Chernagors had flung jars of oil lit with wicks down onto its deck. More
Avornans went into the river. So did Chernagors from the northerners’
burning ship. Grus wondered whether they’d set themselves ablaze.
Savagely, he hoped so.
He pointed to the ship that had defeated one ramming attempt. “Turn
about!” he called to the steersman. “We’ll get ‘em in the rear.”
“Right!” The steersman threw back his head and laughed. “Just what they
deserve, too, Your Majesty.”
How the Chernagors on the pirate ship howled as the sharp-beaked river
galley sped toward its stern! They sent a blizzard of arrows at Grus, who
wished he wore something less conspicuous. He wanted to go below, but that
would have made him look like a coward in front of his men.
The things we do for pride, he thought as an arrow stood
thrilling in the river galley’s deck a few inches in front of his
boot. Crunch! Again, the river galley shuddered as the ram struck
home. Again, the oarmaster bellowed, “Back oars!” Again, the rowers pulled
like men possessed. Again, Grus breathed a sigh of relief when the ram
did pull free.
This time, though, the Chernagor ship didn’t sink. The skipper ran her
aground in the shallows before she filled too much and became altogether
unmanageable. Pirates leaped off her and splashed ashore. Grus knew he
would have to land men, too. The galleys had outpaced other forces
following on the river and by land. If all the pirates had taken to their
heels through the fields, they would have been very troublesome. The
survivors from one ship? Probably not.
Hirundo seemed to think along the same lines. “Not
too bad, Your Majesty,” he said.
“No, not too,” Grus agreed. “Not yet. But we’ve only just started
cleaning them out. This is the first bunch we’ve run into, and maybe the
smallest.”
Hirundo made a horrible face. Then, very reluctantly, he nodded.
King Lanius sat in the royal archives, delightfully encased in quiet.
More dust motes than usual danced in the sunbeams that pushed through the
dirty skylights overhead. Lanius had been shoving boxes around again,
looking for interesting things he hadn’t seen before. He often did that.
He didn’t often get rewarded as handsomely as he had this time.
He had to stop and think how long ago King Cathartes had reigned. Seven
hundred years ago? Eight hundred? Something like that. Cathartes hadn’t
spent an especially long time on the Diamond Throne, nor had his reign
been distinguished. But, like all Kings of Avornis until the Menteshe
stole it, he’d wielded the Scepter of Mercy. Unlike most of them, he’d
worked hard to describe what that was like.
Without both patience and luck, Lanius never would have come across the
time-yellowed scrap of parchment. Patience encompassed the labor of
digging out new boxes of documents and the different but even more wearing
labor of going through them one by one to see what each was. Luck came in
when King Cathartes’ letter got stuck by fragments of wax from its seal to
a much less interesting report on sheep farming in the Granicus valley
that was only a quarter as old. If Lanius hadn’t been paying attention, he
would have put the report on wool and mutton aside without noticing it had
another document riding on its back.
King Cathartes’ script looked strange, but Lanius could puzzle it out.
The language was old-fashioned, but not impossibly so. And Cathartes was
talking about something that fascinated Lanius, so the present king worked
especially hard.
Oft have men of me inquired, What feel you? What think you? on laying
hold of the most excellent Scepter. Hath it the massiness of some great
burthen in your hand, as seemingly it needs must, being of size not
inconsiderable? Let all know, as others have said aforetimes, a man
seizing the Scepter of Mercy in the cause of righteousness is in sooth
likewise seized by the same.
Lanius wondered what the cause of righteousness was, and how any man,
let alone a King of Avornis holding the Scepter of Mercy, could know he
was following it. Did Cathartes mean the Scepter gave some sign of what
was right and what wasn’t? Perhaps he did, for he went on,
Know that, when rightly wielded, the Scepter weigheth in the hand, not
naught—
for that were, methinks, a thing impossible e’en mongst the
gods—
but very little, such that a puling babe, purposing to lift it for the
said righteous cause, would find neither hindrance nor
impediment. But if a man depart from that which is good, if he purpose the use
of the aforesaid Scepter of Mercy in a cause unjust, then will he find he
may not lift it at all, but is prevented from all his ends, Cathartes
wrote.
“Well, well,” Lanius murmured. “Isn’t that interesting?” It wasn’t just
interesting. It was new, and he’d almost despaired of finding anything new
about the Scepter of Mercy. Most Kings of Avornis who’d written about it
at all had been maddeningly vague, insisting the wielding of the Scepter
was a matter of touch without ever explaining how. Cathartes had been far
more forthcoming.
It also explained far more than Cathartes could have dreamed. For four
hundred years, the Scepter of Mercy had lain in Yozgat. In all that time,
so far as Lanius knew, the Banished One had never picked it up and used
its powers against his foes. Like all Avornan kings over those four
centuries, Lanius was glad the Banished One hadn’t, but he’d never
understood why not. Now, perhaps, he did. After the Menteshe brought it
back to him, had he tried to lift it, tried and failed? No proof, of
course. But it seemed more reasonable to Lanius than any other idea he’d
ever had along those lines.
Maybe it meant even more than that. Maybe it meant the gods had been
justified in casting Milvago down from the heavens, making him into the
Banished One. Didn’t it argue that his goal of forcing his way back into
the heavens was anything but righteous? Or did it just say their magic
rejected him even as they had themselves?
Lanius laughed.
How am I, one mortal man sitting by himself in these dusty archives,
supposed to figure out all the workings of the gods? If that wasn’t
unmitigated gall, he couldn’t imagine what would be.
He wished he could talk with Grus about it. That failing, he wished
Avornis had an arch-hallow whose passion was learning about and seeking to
understand the gods, not tracking down a deer after he’d put an arrow in
its side. Lanius might have trusted such an arch-hallow with the
terrifying secret of Milvago. Anser? No. However much Lanius liked Grus’
bastard, he knew he was a lightweight.
He even understood why Grus had chosen to invest Anser with the red
robe. Anser was unshakably loyal to his father.
And how many people are unshakably loyal to me? Lanius wondered.
Is anyone?) That had enormous advantages for the other king. But
sometimes an arch-hallow who did more than fill space would have been
useful. Lanius almost wished Bucco still led services in the cathedral,
and Bucco would have married him off to King Dagipert of Thervingia’s
daughter if he’d had his way. Now, Lanius asked himself,
what to do with Cathartes’ letter? At first, he wanted to put it
in some prominent place. Instead, he ended up using its bits of sealing
wax to reattach it to the report on sheep in the Granicus valley to which
it had clung for so long. Sometimes obscurity was best.
Only after Lanius had left the archives did he wonder whether that
applied to him as well as to what King Cathartes had written all those
years ago. Little by little, he’d realized he didn’t much want to
challenge Grus for the sole rule of Avornis, so maybe it did. And if he
didn’t, he might get along with—and work with—his father-in-law better
than he ever had before.
Down the Granicus toward the Azanian Sea sailed the fleet of river
galleys Grus commanded. Other flotillas and contingents of soldiers were,
he hoped, clearing more of the Nine Rivers and their valleys of the
Chernagor pirates.
He’d had to fight again, at Calydon. The Chernagors there weren’t
plundering the town. They were holding it, and hadn’t intended to give it
back to any mere Avornans. Grus used the same ploy he’d succeeded with
against Baron Lev at the fortress of Varazdin. He made an ostentatious
attack against the waterfront from the river. When he judged most of the
pirates had rushed to that part of Calydon, he sent soldiers against the
land wall. They got inside the city before the Chernagors realized they
were in trouble. After that, Calydon fell in short order. His biggest
trouble then was keeping the inhabitants from massacring the Chernagors
he’d taken prisoner.
When he heard some of the stories about what the Chernagors did while
holding Calydon, he was more than halfway sorry he hadn’t let the people
do what they wanted. By then, he’d sent the captured pirates back into the
countryside under guard. He didn’t know just what he would do with
them—put them to work in the mines, maybe, or exchange them for Avornans
their countrymen had taken.
And if I don’t do either of those, he thought,
I can always give them back to the people of Calydon.
As his river galleys and soldiers headed east again, he asked Hirundo,
“Did you expect anything like what we saw there?”
“Not me, your Majesty.” Hirundo shook his head, then looked as though
he wished he hadn’t; any motion might be enough to make him queasy while
he paced the deck of a river galley. After a gulp, he went on, “They
fought us clean enough in their own country last year. Hard, yes, but
clean enough. Not like . . . that.”
“No, not like that,” Grus agreed. “They might as well have been
Menteshe, slaughtering the wounded and killing men who tried to yield. And
what they did to the people in Calydon was ten times worse.” Over by the
rail, Pterocles stirred. The king waved to the wizard. “You have something
to say?”
“I’m . . . not sure, Your Majesty,” Pterocles replied. Grus hoped he
hid his frown. Pterocles wasn’t sure of much of anything these days. To be
fair, he also wasn’t the best of sailors, though he was better than
Hirundo. Like the general, he paused to gather himself before continuing,
“I’m not as surprised as you are, I don’t think.”
“Oh? Why not?” Grus asked.
The wizard looked not north, not east, but to the south. In the hollow
tones that had become usual since his double overthrow in the land of the
Chernagors, he said, “Why not? Because they’ve had a year longer now to
listen to the Banished One, to let him into their hearts.”
“Oh,” Grus said again, this time on a falling note. Pterocles made more
sense than the king wished he did. The wizard didn’t seem to care whether
he made sense or not. Somehow, that made him seem more convincing, not
less.
Grus hoped the fleet was still outrunning the news of its coming. If he
could get to the sea before the Chernagors along the coast heard he was
there, he would have a better chance against them. On the Granicus and,
he believed, the rest of the Nine Rivers, his galleys had the advantage
over the Chernagors’ sailing ships. They were both faster and more agile.
Whether that would hold true on the wide waters of the sea was liable to
be a different question.
The Granicus, a clear, swift-flowing stream, carried little silt and
had no delta to speak of. One moment, or so it seemed to Grus, the river
flowed along as it always had. The next, the horizon ahead widened out to
infinity. The Azanian Sea awed him even more than the Northern Sea had.
That probably had nothing to do with the sea itself. In the Chernagor
country, the weather had been cloudy and hazy, which limited the seascape.
Here, he really felt as though he could see forever.
But seeing forever didn’t really matter. On the north bank of the
Granicus, the town of Dodona sat by the edge of the sea. It lay in
Chernagor hands. The fresh smoke stains darkening the wall around the town
said the corsairs had burned it when they took it.
Several Chernagor ships were tied up at the wharves. The pirates didn’t
seem to expect trouble. Grus could tell exactly when they spied his fleet.
Suddenly, Dodona began stirring like an aroused anthill.
Too late, he thought, and gave his orders. “We’ll hit ‘em hard
and fast,” he declared. “It doesn’t look like it’ll be even as tough as
Calydon. If it is, we’ll try the same trick we used there—feint at the
harbor and then go in on the land side. But whatever we do, we have to
keep those ships from getting away and warning the rest of the
Chernagors.”
Almost everything went the way he’d hoped. Some of the pirates fought
bravely as individuals. He’d seen in the north and here in Avornis that
they were no cowards. But in Dodona they had no time to mount a
coordinated defense. Like ice when warm water hits it, they broke up into
fragments and were swept away.
Several of their ships burned by the piers. Avornan marines and
soldiers swarmed onto others. But the Chernagors got a crew into one,
hoisted sail, and fled northward propelled by a strong breeze from out of
the south. That was when Grus really saw what the great spread of canvas
they used could do. He sent two river galleys after the Chernagor ship.
The men rowed their hearts out, but the pirate ship still pulled away.
Grus cursed when it escaped. The Granicus might be cleared of Chernagors,
but now all the men from the north would know he was hunting them.
“No, thank you,” Lanius said. “I don’t feel like hunting today.”
Arch-Hallow Anser looked surprised and disappointed. “But didn’t you
enjoy yourself the last time we went out?” he asked plaintively.
“I enjoyed the company—I always enjoy your company,” Lanius said. “And
I liked the venison. The hunt itself? I’m very sorry, but. . .” He shook
his head. “Not to my taste.”
“We should have flushed a boar, or a bear,” Anser said. “Then you’d
have seen some real excitement.”
“I don’t much care for excitement.” Lanius marveled at how the
arch-hallow had so completely misunderstood him. “I just don’t see the fun
of tramping through the woods looking for animals to slaughter. If you do,
go right ahead.”
“I do. I will. I’m sorry you don’t, Your Majesty.” Hurt still on his
face, Anser strode down the palace hallway. Oh, dear, Lanius thought. He almost called after Anser,
telling him he’d come along after all. He was willing to pay nearly any
price to keep Anser happy with him. But the key word there was
nearly. Going hunting again flew over the limit.
Instead, he went to the moncats’ room, where he had an easel set up.
He’d discovered a certain small talent for painting the last few years,
and he knew more about moncats than anyone else in Avornis.
Than anyone who doesn’t live on the islands they come from, he
thought, and wondered how many people lived on those islands out in the
Northern Sea. That was something he’d never know.
What he did know was that Petrosus, Grus’ treasury minister, was slow
and stingy with the silver he doled out. No doubt that was partly at Grus’
order, to help keep Lanius from accumulating power to threaten the other
king. But Petrosus, whatever his reasons, enjoyed what he did. Lanius had
sold several of the pictures of moncats he’d painted. As far as he knew,
no King of Avornis had ever done anything like that before. He felt a
modest pride at being the first.
He watched the moncats scramble and climb, looking for a moment he
could sketch in charcoal and then work up into a real painting. When he’d
first started painting the animals, he’d tried to get them to pose. He’d
even succeeded once or twice, by making them take a particular position to
get bits of food. But, as with any cats, getting moncats to do what he
wanted usually proved more trouble than it was worth. These days, he let
the moncats do what they wanted and tried to capture that on canvas.
A moncat leaped. His hand leaped, too. There was the moment. He’d known
it without conscious thought. His hand was often smarter than his brain in
this business. He sketched rapidly, letting that hand do what it would.
His stick of charcoal scratched over the canvas.
When he finished the sketch, he stepped back from it, took a good
look—and shook his head. This wasn’t worth working up. Every so often, his
leaping hand betrayed him.
If I’d really been taught this sketching business, I’d do
better.
He laughed. Several moncats sent him wide-eyed, curious stares. If the
sketch had looked as though it was pretty good, Bubulcus or some other
servant would have knocked on the door in the middle of it, and it never
would have been the same afterwards. That had happened, too.
Before long, he tried another sketch. This one turned out better— not
great, but better. He concentrated hard, working to make the drawing show
some tiny fraction of a climbing moncat’s fluidity. He was never happier
than when he concentrated hard. Maybe that was why he enjoyed both the
painting and his sorties into the archives.
Both painting and archive-crawling would have made Anser yawn until the
top of his head fell off. Put him in the woods stalking a deer, though,
and he concentrated as hard as anyone—and he was happy then (unless he
missed his shot, of course).
For a moment, Lanius thought he’d stumbled onto something important.
But then he realized he’d just rephrased the question. Why did old
parchments make him concentrate, while the arch-hallow needed to try not
to crunch a dry leaf under his foot? Lanius still didn’t know.
He worked hard turning the sketch into a finished painting, too. He
always put extra effort into getting the texture of the moncats’ fur
right. He’d had some special brushes made, only a few bristles wide. They
let him suggest the countless number of fine hairs of slightly different
colors that went into the pelts. The real difficulty, though, didn’t lie
in the brushes. The real difficulty lay in his own right hand, and he knew
it. If he’d had more skill and more training, he could have come closer to
portraying the moncats as they really were.
Every so often, one of the animals would come over and sit close by him
while he painted. The moncats never paid any attention to the work on his
easel; they did sometimes try to steal his brushes or his little pots of
paint. Maybe the linseed oil that held the pigments smelled intriguing. Or
maybe it was the odor of the bristles. Then again, maybe the moncats were
just nuisances. When one of them made a getaway to the very top of the
room with a brush, Lanius was inclined to believe it. After gnawing at the
handle of the brush, the moncat got bored with it and let it drop. Lanius
scooped it up before another animal could steal it.
He was carrying the finished painting down the hall when a maidservant
coming the other way stopped to admire it. “So that’s what your pets look
like, Your Majesty,” she said.
“Yes, that’s right, Cristata,” he answered.
“That’s very good work,” she went on, looking closer. “You can see
every little thing about them. Are their back feet really like that, with
the funny big toes that look like they can grab things?”
“They
can grab things,” he said. “Moncats are born climbers—and born
thieves.” After a moment, he added, “How are you these days?”
“Fair,” she answered. “
It doesn’t bother me anymore, so that’s something.” She didn’t
want to name Ortalis, for which Lanius couldn’t blame her. She went on,
“The money you and King Grus gave me, that’s nice. I’ve never had money
before, except to get by on from day to day. But...” Her pretty face
clouded.
“What’s the matter?” Lanius asked. “Don’t tell me you’re running short
already.”
“Oh, no. It isn’t that. I try hard to be careful,” she said. “It’s just
that. . .” She turned red; Lanius watched—watched with considerable
interest—as the flush rose from her neck to her hairline. “I shouldn’t
tell you this.”
“Then don’t,” Lanius said at once.
“No. If I can’t tell you, who can I tell? You saw. . . what happened .
. . with my shoulder and my back.” Cristata waited for him to nod before
continuing, “Well, there was a fellow, a—oh, never mind what he does here.
I liked him, and I thought he liked me. But when he got a look at some of
that... he didn’t anymore.” She stared down at the floor.
“Oh.” Lanius thought, then said. “If that bothered him, you’re probably
well rid of him. And besides—”
Now he was the one who stopped, much more abruptly than Cristata had.
He feared he was also the one who turned red. “You’re sweet, Your
Majesty,” the serving girl murmured, which meant she knew exactly what he
hadn’t said. She went up the hall. He went down it, trying to convince
himself nothing had happened, nothing at all.
CHAPTER NINE
The ocean was an unfamiliar world for Grus. Up until now, he’d been out
upon it only a handful of times. If his river galley and the rest of the
fleet sailed much farther, they would go out of sight of land. Avornan
coastal traders never did anything like that. Even now, with the horizon
still reassuringly jagged off to the west, he worried about making his way
back to the mainland.
He worried about it, yes, but he went on, even though he increasingly
had the feeling of being a bug on a plate, just waiting for someone to
squash him. He didn’t see that he had much choice. To the Chernagors, the
open ocean wasn’t a wasteland, a danger. It was a highway. They’d come all
this way from their own country to Avornis to prey on his kingdom. He
couldn’t sail back to theirs, not from here. His ships couldn’t carry
enough supplies for their rowers or spread enough sail to do without those
rowers. He didn’t want to think about how they would handle in a bad
storm, either.
But he could—he hoped he could—convince the pirates that they couldn’t
harry his coasts without paying a higher price than they wanted. As far as
he knew, his men had cleared them out of all the river valleys where
they’d landed. But their ships weren’t like his. They could linger
offshore for a long time—exactly how long he wasn’t sure—and strike as
they pleased. They could ... if he didn’t persuade them that was a bad
idea.
Tall and proud, the Chernagors’ ships bobbed in line ahead, not far out
of bowshot. The wind had died to a light breeze, which made the river
galleys more agile than the vessels from out of the north. The Chernagors
wouldn’t be easy meat, though, not when their ships were crammed with
fighting men. If a ramming attempt went wrong, the pirates could swarm
aboard a galley and make it pay. They’d proved that in earlier fights.
Hirundo checked his sword’s edge with his thumb. He nodded to Grus.
“Well, Your Majesty,” he said, “This ought to be interesting.” The river
galley slid down into a trough. He jerked his hand away from the blade.
He’d already cut himself once in a sudden lurch.
At the bow, the chief of the catapult crew looked back to Grus. “I
think we can hit them now, Your Majesty, if we shoot on the uproll.”
“Go ahead,” Grus told him.
The crew winched back the dart and let fly. The catapult clacked as it
flung the four-foot-long arrow, shaft thick as a man’s finger, toward the
closest pirate ship. The dart splashed into the sea just short of its
target. The Chernagors jeered.
“Give them another shot,” Grus told the sailors, who were already
loading a fresh dart into the catapult.
This one thudded into the planking of the Chernagors’ ship. It did no
harm, and the Chernagors went right on mocking. One or two of them tried
to shoot at Grus’ ship, but their arrows didn’t come close. The catapult
could outreach any mere man, no matter how strong.
Grimly, its crew reloaded once more. This time, when they shot, the
great arrow skewered not one but two pirates. One splashed into the sea.
The other let out a shriek Grus could hear across a quarter of a mile of
water. The catapult crew raised a cheer. The Chernagors stopped
laughing.
“Form line abreast and advance on the foe,” Grus told the officer in
charge of signals. The pennants that gave that message fluttered along
both sides of the galley. The ships to either side waved green flags to
show they understood. The system had sprung to life on the Nine Rivers,
and was less than perfect on the ocean. But it worked well enough. Grus
saw no signals from the Chernagor ships. When had the pirates last faced
anyone able to fight back?
Catapult darts flew. Every now and then, one would transfix a pirate,
or two, or three. Marines at the bows of the river galleys started
shooting as soon as they came close enough to the Chernagor ships.
By then, of course, the Chernagors were close enough to shoot back.
Carpenters had rigged shields to give the river galleys’ rowers some
protection—that was a lesson the first encounters with the big ships full
of archers had driven home. Every so often, though, an arrow struck a
rower. Replacements pulled the wounded men from the oars and took their
places. The centipede strokes of the galleys’ advance didn’t falter
badly.
Clouds covered the sun. Grus hardly noticed. He was intent on the
Chernagor ship at which his ram was aimed like an arrow’s point. The wind
also began to rise, and the chop on the sea. Those he did notice, and
cursed them both. The wind made the Chernagor ships more mobile, and with
their greater freeboard they could deal with worse waves than his
galleys.
“Your Majesty—” Pterocles began.
Grus waved the wizard to silence. “Not now! Brace yourself, by the—” Crunch! The ram bit before he could finish the warning. He
staggered. Pterocles fell in a heap. The Chernagor ship had tried to turn
away at the last instant, to take a glancing blow or make the river galley
miss, but Grus’ steersman, anticipating the move, countered it and made
the hit count. “Back oars!” the oarmaster roared. The river galley pulled
free. Green seawater flooded into the stricken pirate ship.
A couple of other Chernagor vessels were rammed as neatly as the one
Grus’ galley gored. Not all the encounters went the Avornans’ way, though.
Some of the Chernagor captains did manage to evade the river galleys’
rams. The kilted pirates, shooting down into the galleys while they were
close, made the Avornans pay for their attacks.
And one river galley had rammed, but then could not pull free— every
skipper’s nightmare. Shouting Chernagors dropped down onto the galley and
battled with the marines and the poorly armed rowers. Grus ordered his own
ship toward the locked pair. His marines shot volley after volley at the
swarming Chernagors. Pirates and Avornans both went over the side,
sometimes in an embrace as deadly as their vessels‘.
Pterocles struggled to his feet. He plucked at Grus’ sleeve. “Your
Majesty, this storm—”
“Storm?” Grus hadn’t realized it was one. But even as he spoke, a
raindrop hit him in the face, and then another and another. “What about
it? Blew up all of a sudden, that’s for sure.”
“That’s what I’m trying to tell you, Your Majesty,” the wizard said.
“It’s got magic behind it, magic or ... something.”
“Something?” Grus asked. Pterocles’ expression told him what the wizard
meant—something that had to do with the Banished One. The king said, “What
can you do about it? Can you hold it off until we’ve finished giving the
Chernagors what they deserve?” As he spoke, another river galley rammed a
pirate ship, rammed and pulled free. The Chernagor ship began to sink.
At the same time, though, a wave crashed up over the bow of Grus’ river
galley, splashing water into the hull. The steersman called, “Your
Majesty, we can’t take a lot of that, you know.”
“Yes,” Grus said, and turned back to Pterocles. “What can you do?” he
asked again.
“Not much,” the wizard answered. “No mortal can, not with the weather.
That’s why I think it’s . . . something.”
“Should we break off, then?” Grus asked doubtfully. “We’re beating
them.” First one, then another, Chernagor ship hoisted all sail and sped
off to the north at a speed the river galleys, fish in the wrong kind of
water, couldn’t hope to match.
“I can’t tell you what to do, Your Majesty. You’re the king. I’m just a
wizard. I can taste the storm, though. I don’t like it,” Pterocles
said.
Grus didn’t like it, either. He didn’t like letting the Chernagors get
away, but their ships could take far more weather than his. “Signal
Break off the fight,” he shouted to the man in charge of the
pennants. Another waved smashed over the bow. That convinced him he was
doing the right thing. He added, “Signal
Make for shore, too.” In the thickening rain, the pennants
drooped. He hoped the other captains would be able to make them out.
The last Chernagor ships that could escaped. The others, mortally
wounded, wallowed in the waves. One had turned turtle. So had a wrecked
river galley. Here and there, men splashed by the ruined warships. Some
paddled; others clung to whatever they could. The river galleys fished out
as many sailors—Avornans and Chernagors—as they could. Make for shore. It had seemed an easy enough command. But now,
with the storm getting worse, with rain and mist filling the air, Grus was
out of sight of land. He and the steersman had to rely on wind and wave to
tell them what their eyes couldn’t.
“We beat them,” Hirundo said. “Now, the next question is, will we get
to celebrate beating them, or do they have the last laugh?”
“They may be better sailors on the open sea than I am,” Grus said,
“but, by the gods, I still know a little something about getting home
in a storm.”
As though to answer that, the freshening sea sent a wave that almost
swamped and almost capsized the river galley. Grus seized a line and clung
for his life. When the ship at last righted herself—slowly, so slowly!—the
first thing he did was look around for Pterocles. The wizard, no sailor,
was all too likely to go overboard.
But Pterocles was there, dripping and sputtering as he hung on to the
rail. And the fleet made shore safe—much battered and abused, but safe.
The storm blew higher and harder and wilder yet after that, but after that
it didn’t matter.
Prince Vsevolod took a long pull at the cup of wine in front of him.
“Ask your questions,” he said, like a wounded man telling the healer to go
ahead and draw the arrow.
Getting the exiled Prince of Nishevatz to show even that much
cooperation was a victory of sorts. He thought everyone else should
cooperate with
him, not the other way around. Lanius said, “Which city-states in
the Chernagor country are likely to oppose Prince Vasilko and the Banished
One?”
Vasilko sent him a scornful stare. “This you should answer for
yourself. King Grus takes prisoners from Nishevatz, from Hisardzik, from
Jobuka, from Hrvace. This means no prisoners from Durdevatz, from Ravno,
from Zavala, from Mojkovatz. These four, they no sail with pirate ships.
They no love Vasilko, eh?”
That made good logical sense, but Lanius had seen that good logical
sense often had little to do with the way the Chernagors behaved. He said,
“Would they ally with Avornis if we send our army into the land of the
Chernagors?”
“No. Of course not.” Yes, while Lanius thought Vsevolod strange,
Vsevolod thought him dull. The Prince of Nishevatz continued, “You want to
drive Durdevatz and other three into Banished One’s hands, you march
in.”
“But you were the one who invited us up to the Chernagor country in the
first place!” Lanius exclaimed in considerable exasperation.
Prince Vsevolod shrugged broad, if somewhat stooped, shoulders. “Is
different now. Then I was prince. Now I am exile.” A tear gleamed in his
eye. Regret or self-pity? By the way Vsevolod refilled the wine cup and
gulped it down, Lanius would have bet on self-pity.
“Why do the city-states line up the way they do?” he asked.
Holding up the battered fingers of one hand, Vsevolod said,
“Nishevatz, Hisardzik, Jobuka, Hrvace.” Holding up those of the other, he
said, “Durdevatz, Ravno, Zavala, Mojkovatz.” He fitted his fingertips
together, alternating those from one hand with those from the other. “You
see?”
“I see,” King Lanius breathed. Immediate neighbors were hostile to one
another. Pro- and anti-Nishevatz city-states alternated along the coast.
After some thought, the king observed, “Vasilko would be stronger if all
the Chernagor towns leaned his way. Can he get them to do that?”
“Vasilko?” The rebel prince’s father made as though to spit, but at the
last moment—the
very last moment—thought better of it. “Vasilko cannot get cat to
shit in box.” That Vasilko had succeeded in ousting him seemed not to have
crossed his mind.
“Let me ask it a different way,” Lanius said. “Working through Vasilko,
can the Banished One bring them together?”
Now Vsevolod started to shake his head, but checked himself. “These
city-states, they are for long time enemies. You understand?” he said.
Lanius nodded. Vsevolod went on, “Not easy to go from enemy to friend. But
not easy to stand up to Banished One, either. So ... I do not know.”
“All right. Thank you,” Lanius said. But it wasn’t all right. If
Vsevolod wasn’t sure the Banished One couldn’t bring all the Chernagor
towns under his sway, he probably could. And if he could . . .
“If he can,” Grus said when Lanius raised the question, “the fleet that
raids our west coast next year or the year after is liable to be twice as
big as the one we beat back.”
“I was afraid you’d say that,” Lanius said.
“Believe me, Your Majesty, I would rather lie to you,” Grus said. “But
that happens to be the truth.”
“Did I ever tell you I found out what King Cathartes had to say about
the Scepter of Mercy?” Lanius asked suddenly.
“Why, no. You never did.” King Grus smiled a crooked smile. “Up until
this minute, as a matter of fact, I wouldn’t have bet anything I worried
about losing that I’d ever even heard of King, uh, Cathartes.”
“I would have said the same thing, until I found a letter of his in the
archives while you were on campaign,” Lanius said. Grus smiled that
crooked smile again; like Lanius’ fondness for strange pets, his
archivescrawling amused his fellow king. But Grus’ expression grew more
serious as he heard Lanius out. Lanius finished, “Now maybe we have some
idea why the Banished One hasn’t tried to turn the Scepter against
us.”
“Maybe we do,” Grus agreed. “That’s . . . some very pretty thinking,
Your Majesty, and you earned what you got. How many crates full of
worthless old parchments did you go through before you came on that
one?”
“Seventeen,” Lanius answered promptly.
Grus laughed. “I might have known you’d have the number on the tip of
your tongue. You usually do.” He spoke with a curious blend of scorn and
admiration.
Lanius said, “One of the parchments turned out not to be worthless,
though, so it was worth doing. And who knows whether another will mean a
lot a hundred years from now, and who knows which one it might be? That’s
why we save them.”
“Hmm.” Grus stopped laughing. Instead of arguing or teasing Lanius some
more, he changed the subject. “Did that monkey of yours ever have
babies?”
“She did—twins, just like the moncats,” Lanius answered. “They seem to
be doing well.”
“Good for her,” Grus said. “Good for you, too. I’ve been thinking about
what you said, about how breeding animals shows you’re really doing a good
job of caring for them. It makes sense to me.”
“Well, thank you,” Lanius said. “Would you like to see the little
monkeys?”
Grus started to shake his head. He checked the gesture, but not quite
soon enough. But when he said, “Yes, show them to me,” he managed to sound
more eager than Lanius had thought he could.
And the smile that spread over his face when he saw the young monkeys
couldn’t have been anything but genuine. Lanius also smiled when he saw
them, though for him, of course, it was far from the first time. Nobody
could look at them without smiling. He was convinced of that. They were
all eyes and curiosity, staring at him and Grus and then scurrying across
the six inches they’d ventured away from their mother to cling to her fur
with both hands, both feet, and their tails.
“They act a lot like children. They look a lot like children, too,”
Grus said. “Anybody would think, looking at them, that there was some kind
of a connection between monkeys and people.”
“Maybe the gods made them about the same time as they made us, and used
some of the same ideas,” Lanius said. “Or maybe it’s just happenstance.
How can we ever hope to know?”
“The gods . . .” Grus’ voice trailed off in a peculiar way. For a
moment, Lanius didn’t understand. Then he did, and wished he hadn’t. What
if it wasn’t
the gods, but only Milvago—only the Banished One?
He forced that thought out of his mind, not because he didn’t believe
it but because he didn’t want to think about it. This was another of the
times when at least half of him wished he’d never stumbled upon that
ancient piece of parchment under the great cathedral. Had finding it been
worth doing?
“Anyhow,” Grus said, “I’m very glad for your sake that your monkeys
have bred. I know you’ve done a lot of hard work keeping them healthy, and
it seems only fair that you’ve gotten your reward.”
“Thank you very much.” At first, Grus’ thoughtfulness touched Lanius.
Then he realized the other king might be doing nothing more than leading
both of them away from thoughts of Milvago. He couldn’t blame Grus for
thinking along with him, and for not wanting to think about what a
daunting foe they had. He didn’t care to do that himself, either.
Rain pattered down outside the palace. In one hallway, rain pattered
down
inside the palace. A bucket caught the drips. When the rain
stopped, the roofers would repair the leak—if they could find it when the
rain wasn’t there. Grus had seen that sort of thing before. Odds were, the
roofers would need at least four tries—and the roof would go right on
leaking until they got it right.
Turning to Pterocles, Grus asked, “I don’t suppose there’s any way to
find leaks by magic, is there?”
“Leaks, Your Majesty?” Pterocles looked puzzled. Grus pointed to the
bucket. The wizard’s face cleared, but he shook his head. “I don’t think
anyone ever worried about it up until now.”
“No? Too bad.” They turned a corner. Grus got around to what he really
wanted to talk about. “You’ve never said anything about the letter I gave
you—the one from Alca the witch. What do you think of her notions for new
ways to shape spells to cure thralls?”
“I don’t think she’s as smart as she thinks she is,” Pterocles answered
at once. He went on, “She doesn’t understand what being a thrall is
like.”
“And you do?”
Grus had intended that for sarcasm, but Pterocles nodded. “Oh, yes,
Your Majesty. I may not understand much, but I do understand that.” The
conviction in his voice commanded respect. Maybe he was wrong. He
certainly thought he was right. Considering what had happened to him,
maybe he was entitled to think so, too.
Backtracking, Grus asked, “Can you use anything in the letter?”
“A bit of this, a dash of that.” Pterocles shrugged. “She’s clever, but
she doesn’t understand. And I have some ideas of my own.”
“Do you?” Grus wished he didn’t sound so surprised. “You haven’t talked
much about them.” That was an understatement of formidable proportions.
Pterocles had shown no signs of having ideas of any sort since being
felled outside of Nishevatz.
He shrugged again. “Sometimes things go better if you don’t talk about
them too soon or too much,” he said vaguely.
“I ... see,” said Grus, who wasn’t at all sure he did. “When will you
be ready to test some of your ideas? Soon, I hope?”
“I don’t know,” the wizard said. “I’ll be ready when I’m ready— that’s
all I can tell you.”
Grus felt himself getting angry. “Well, let me tell
you something. If you’re not ready with your own ideas, why don’t
you go ahead and try the ones the witch sent me?”
“Why? Because they won’t work, that’s why,” Pterocles answered.
“How can you say that without trying them?”
“If I walk out into the sea, I’ll drown. I don’t need to try it to be
sure of that. I know beforehand,” Pterocles said. “I may not be quite what
I was, but I’m not the worst wizard around, either. And I know some things
I didn’t used to know, too.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Grus demanded.
“I’ve already told you.” Pterocles sounded impatient. “I know what it’s
like to be emptied out. I ought to. It’s happened to me. Your Alca’s a
good enough witch, but she doesn’t
know.” Again, he spoke with absolute conviction. If only he spoke that way when he really has to do
something, Grus thought unhappily. But he was the one who turned
away. Pterocles at least thought he knew what he was doing. Grus had a
pretty good idea of how far he could push a man. If he pushed Pterocles
any further here, he’d put the wizard’s back up, but he wouldn’t get him
to change his mind.
At his impatient gesture, Pterocles ambled back down the hall. Grus
wondered whether the wizard would bump into the bucket that caught the
drips from the roof, but he didn’t. Grus also wondered whether he ought to
pension Pterocles off, or just send him away. If he did, though, would
whomever he picked as a replacement prove any better? Alca would. How many times had he had that thought? But, for
one thing, no matter how true it was, Estrilda would make his life not
worth living if he tried it. And was it as true as he thought it was?
Pterocles had a different opinion. What if he was right? Grus muttered
under his breath. He wasn’t sure he could rely on Pterocles to remember
his name twice running, let alone anything more.
And yet Pterocles had warned of the storm the Banished One raised, out
there on the Azanian Sea. Grus had listened to him then, and the fleet had
come back to shore without taking much harm. Yes, and the Chernagor ships got away, the king thought. But
that wasn’t Pterocles’ fault. Was it? Surely blame there belonged to the
Banished One? Grus didn’t know what to believe. He ended up doing nothing,
and wondering every day whether he was making a mistake and how big a
mistake it was. If only I hadn’t taken Alca to bed. If only her husband hadn’t
found out. If only my wife hadn’t found out. If only, if only, if
only . . .
Lanius threw a snowball at Crex. He didn’t come close to hitting his
son. Crex scooped up snow in his little mittened hands. He launched a
snowball at Lanius, whose vision suddenly turned white. “
Got you!” Crex squealed, laughing gleefully.
“Yes, you did.” Lanius wiped snow off his face. “Bet you can’t do it
again.” A moment later, Crex proved him wrong.
After taking three more snowballs in the face—and managing to hit his
son once—Lanius had had enough. He himself had never been accused of
grace. There were good reasons why not, too. Grus, on the other hand, made
a perfectly respectable soldier—perhaps not among the very best, but more
than able to hold his own. Through Sosia, Crex looked to have inherited
that blood.
The boy didn’t want the sport to end; he was having fun pelting his
father with snow. But Lanius couldn’t stand being beaten at a game by a
boy who barely came up to his navel. “Not fair!” Crex squalled, and burst
into tears.
That tempted Lanius to leave him out in the snow. But no, it wouldn’t
do. Losing a game wasn’t excuse enough for freezing his son.
If I were a great and terrible tyrant, I could get away with it,
Lanius thought. But he wasn’t, and he never would be, and so Crex, quite
unfrozen even if still loudly discontented, went back into the palace with
him.
A handful of apricots preserved in honey made Crex forget about the
game. Lanius paid the bribe for the sake of peace and quiet. Sosia
probably wouldn’t have approved, but Sosia probably had too much sense to
get into a snowball fight with their son. If she didn’t, she probably
could throw well enough to give as good as she got. Lanius couldn’t. I’m no good with the bow, either, he thought glumly. The only
time he’d ever thrown something when it really counted, though, he’d
managed to pitch a moncat into the face of the knife-wielding thrall who
intended to murder him. Remembering that made the king feel a little
better—not much, but a little.
Feeling better must not have shown on his face, for several servants
asked him what was wrong when he walked through the palace corridors.
“Nothing,” he said, over and over, hoping he would start to believe it
before long. He didn’t, but kept saying it anyhow.
Most of the servants nodded and went on their way. They weren’t about
to contradict the king. When he said, “Nothing,” to Cristata, though, she
shook her head and said, “I don’t believe you, Your Majesty. You look too
gloomy for it to be nothing.”
Lanius needed serious thought to realize Cristata spoke to him as a
worried friend might. He couldn’t remember the last time anyone had spoken
to him like that. Kings didn’t have friends, as far as he could see. They
had cronies. Or maybe they had lovers.
That thought had crossed his mind before. Of course, Cristata had had
Prince Ortalis for a lover. If that wasn’t enough to put her off royalty
for life, what would be? But she still sounded . . . friendly as she
asked, “What
is wrong, Your Majesty?”
Because she sounded as though she really cared, Lanius found himself
telling her the truth. When he was done, he waited for her to laugh at
him.
Only later did he realize how foolish that was. A maidservant didn’t
laugh at a King of Avornis, even at one without much power. But friendship
left him oddly vulnerable to her. If she had laughed, he wouldn’t have
punished her and he would have been wounded.
But she didn’t. All she said was, “Oh, dear. That must seem very
strange to you.” She sounded sympathetic. Lanius needed longer than he
might have to recognize that, too. He wasn’t used to sympathy from anybody
except, sometimes, Sosia.
He didn’t want to think about Sosia right this minute, not while he
savored Cristata’s sympathy.
Grus probably didn’t want to think about Sosia’s mother while he was
with Alca, either, Lanius thought. Looking at the way Cristata’s eyes
sparkled, at how very inviting her lips were, Lanius understood what had
happened to his fellow king much better than he ever had before.
When he leaned forward and kissed her, he waited for her to scream or
to run away or to bite him. After Ortalis, why wouldn’t she? But she
didn’t. Her eyes widened in surprise, then slid shut. Her arms tightened
around him as his did around her. “I wondered if you’d do that,” she
murmured.
“Did you?” Now Lanius was the one who wondered if he ought to run
away.
But Cristata nodded seriously. “You don’t think I’m ugly.”
“Ugly? By the gods, no!” Lanius exclaimed.
“Well, then,” Cristata said. She looked up and down the corridor.
Lanius did the same thing. No one in sight. He didn’t think anyone had
seen them kiss. But someone might come down the hallway at any time. His
heart pounded with nerves—and with excitement.
Now, for once, he didn’t want to think. He opened the closest door. It
was one of the dozens of nearly identical storerooms in the palace, this
one half full of rolled carpets. He went inside, still wondering if
Cristata would flee. She didn’t. She stepped in beside him. He closed the
door.
It was gloomy in the storeroom; the air smelled of wool and dust.
Lanius kissed the serving girl again. She clung to him. “I knew you were
sweet, Your Majesty,” she whispered.
Were those footsteps on the other side of the door? Yes. But they
didn’t hesitate; they just went on. And so did Lanius. He tugged
Cristata’s tunic up and off over her head, then bent to kiss her breasts
and their darker, firmer tips. Her breath sighed out.
But when he put his arms around her again, he hesitated and almost
recoiled. He’d expected to stroke smooth, soft skin. Her back was anything
but smooth and soft.
She noticed his hands falter, and knew what that had to mean. “Do you
want to stop?” she asked. “Do you want me to go?”
“Hush,” he answered roughly. “I’ll show you what I want.” He set her
hand where she could have no possible doubt. She rubbed gently.
Before long, he laid her down on the floor and poised himself above
her. “Oh,” she whispered. She might have been louder after that, but his
lips came down on hers and muffled whatever noises she would have made . .
. and, presently, whatever noises he would have.
Afterwards, they both dressed quickly. “That’s—what it’s supposed to be
like, I think,” Cristata said.
It had certainly seemed that way to Lanius. Now, of course, he was
screaming at himself because of the way he’d just complicated his life.
But, with the afterglow still on him, he couldn’t make himself believe it
hadn’t been worth it. They kissed again, just for a heartbeat. Cristata
slipped out of the storeroom. When Lanius heard nothing in the hallway, he
did, too. He grinned, a mix of pleasure and relief. He’d gotten away with
it.
Grus turned to Estrilda. “The cooks did a really good job with that
boar, don’t you think?” he said, licking his mustache to get all the
flavorful grease.
His wife nodded. Then she said, “If you think it was good, shouldn’t
you tell Ortalis and not me?”
“Should I?” The king frowned. “You’re usually harder on him than I am.
Why should I say anything to him that I don’t have to?”
“Fair is fair,” Estrilda answered. “You . . . did what you did when he
... made a mistake. When he goes hunting, he’s probably not making that
particular mistake. And shouldn’t you notice him when he does something
well?”
“If he did things well more often, I
would notice him more.” Grus sighed, then nodded reluctantly.
“You’re right. I wish I could tell you you weren’t, but you are. The meat
is good, and he made the kill. I’ll thank him for it.”
On the way to Ortalis’ room, he asked several servants if the prince
was there. None of them knew. He got the idea none of them cared. He
didn’t suppose he could blame the women. The men? Ortalis seemed to have a
gift for antagonizing everyone.
That’s not good in a man who’ll be king one day, Grus thought.
Not good at all.
He knocked on Ortalis’ door. When no one answered, he tried the latch.
The door opened. The sweet smell of wine filled the room, and under it a
gamier odor that said Ortalis hadn’t bathed recently enough. Grus’ son
cradled a wine cup in his lap like the son he’d never had. An empty jar of
wine lay on its side at his feet. One with a dipper in it stood beside the
stool on which he perched.
Ortalis looked up blearily. “What d’you want?” he slurred.
“I came to thank you for the fine boar you brought home,” Grus
answered. “How long have you been drinking?”
“Not long enough,” his son said. “You going to pound on me for it?” He
raised the cup and took another swig.
“No. I have no reason to,” Grus said. “Drinking by yourself is stupid,
but it’s not vicious. And if you do enough of it, it turns into its own
punishment when you finally stop. Once you sober up, you’ll wish your head
would fall off.”
Ortalis shrugged. That he could shrug without hurting himself only
proved he wasn’t close to sobering up yet. “Why don’t you go away?” he
said. “Haven’t you done enough to make my life miserable?”
“I said you shouldn’t hurt women for the fun of it. I showed you some
of what getting hurt was like. You didn’t much care for that,” Grus said.
“If you’re miserable on account of what I did . . . too bad.” He’d started
to say
I’m sorry, but caught himself, for he wasn’t.
His son glared at him. “And didn’t you have fun, giving me my
lesson?”
“No, by Olor’s beard!” Grus burst out. “I wanted to be sick
afterwards.”
By the way Ortalis laughed, he didn’t believe a word of it. Grus turned
away from his son and strode out of the room. Behind him, Ortalis went on
laughing. Grus closed the door, dampening the sound. Praising Ortalis’
hunting wouldn’t heal the rift between them. Would anything? He had his
doubts.
Not for the first time, he wondered about making Anser legitimate. That
would solve some of his problems. Regretfully, he shook his head. It would
hatch more than it solved, not just with Ortalis but also with Estrilda
and Lanius. No, he was stuck with the legitimate son he had, and with the
son-in-law, too. He wondered if Crex, his grandson, would live to be king,
and what kind of king he would make.
Wonder was all Grus would ever do. He was sure of that. By the time
Crex put the royal crown on his head and ascended to the Diamond Throne,
Grus knew he would be gone from the scene. I
haven’t done enough, he thought. Bringing the unruly Avornan
nobles back under the control of the government was important. He’d taken
some strong steps in that direction. He’d fought the Thervings to a
standstill, until King Dagipert gave up the war. King Berto, gods be
praised, really was more interested in praying than fighting. But letting
the Banished One keep and extend his foothold in the land of the
Chernagors would be a disaster.
And, ever since Grus’ days as a river-galley captain down in the south,
he’d wanted a reckoning with the Menteshe, a reckoning on their side of
the Stura River and not on his. He hadn’t gotten that yet. He didn’t know
if he ever would. If his wizards couldn’t protect his men from being made
into thralls after crossing the Stura, if they couldn’t cure the thralls
laboring for the Menteshe, how could he hope to cross the border?
If he couldn’t cross the Stura, how could he even dream about
recovering the Scepter of Mercy? He couldn’t, and he knew it. If he got it
back, Avornis would remember him forever. If he failed ... If he failed,
Avornis would still remember him—as a doomed fool.
CHAPTER TEN
Outside the royal palace, snow swirled through the air. The wind
howled. When people had to move about, they put on fur-lined boots, heavy
cloaks, fur hats with earflaps, and sometimes wool mufflers to protect
their mouths and noses. King Lanius didn’t think the Banished One was
giving the city of Avornis a particularly hard winter, but this was a
nasty blizzard.
It was chilly inside the palace, too. Braziers and fires could do only
so much. The cold slipped in through windows and around doors. Lanius
worried about the baby monkeys. Even the grown ones were vulnerable in the
wintertime. But all the little animals seemed healthy, and the babies got
bigger by the day.
Lanius didn’t worry about them as much as he might have. He had other
things on his mind—not least, how to go on with his affair with Cristata
without letting Sosia find out about it. Cristata, he discovered, worried
about that much less than he did. “She’ll learn sooner or later, Your
Majesty,” she said. “It can’t help but happen.”
Knowing she was right, Lanius shook his head anyhow. They lay side by
side in that same little storeroom—this time on one of the carpets, which
they’d unrolled; the floor was cold. “What would happen then?” the king
said.
“You’d have to send me away, I suppose.” Cristata had few illusions. “I
hope you’d pick somewhere nice, a place where I could get by easy enough.
Maybe you could even help me find a husband.”
He didn’t want to think of her in some other man’s arms. He wanted her
in his. Holding her, he said, “I
will take care of you.”
She studied him before slowly nodding. “Yes, I think you will. That’s
good.”
“If I don’t find you a husband, I’ll be your husband,” Lanius said.
Cristata’s eyes opened enormously wide. “You would do that?” she
whispered.
“Why not?” he said. “First wives are for legitimate heirs, and I have
one. I may get more. It’s not that Sosia and I turn our backs on each
other when we go to bed. We don’t. I wouldn’t lie to you. But second
wives, and later ones, can be for fun.”
“Would I be ... a queen?” Cristata asked. Not long before, she’d been
impressed at having almost enough to count as a taxpayer. She seemed to
need a moment to realize how far above even that previously unimaginable
status she might rise.
“Yes, you would.” Lanius nodded. “But you wouldn’t have the rank Sosia
does.”
Any more than I have the rank Grus does, he thought
unhappily.
Up until this moment, he’d never imagined taking a second wife. The
King of Avornis was allowed six, as King Olor in the heavens had six
wives. But, just as Queen Quelea was Olor’s principal spouse, so most
Kings of Avornis contented themselves with a single wife. King Mergus,
Lanius’ father, hadn’t, but King Mergus had been desperate to find a woman
who would give him a son and heir. He’d been so desperate, he’d made
Lanius’ mother, a concubine, his seventh wife to make the boy she bore
legitimate. He’d also made himself a heretic and Lanius a bastard in the
eyes of a large part of the ecclesiastical hierarchy.
Mergus’ troubles had gone a long way toward souring his son on the idea
of having more than one wife . . . until now.
It wouldn’t be adultery then, he thought.
But if it’s not, would it still be as much fun?
Grus could have wed Alca. He’d sent her away, instead. That, without a
doubt, was Queen Estrilda’s doing. Would Queen Sosia’s views be any more
accommodating than her mother’s? Lanius dared hope. They could hardly be
less.
Cristata asked, “What will Her Majesty say if you do that?” She’d
thought along with him, then.
“She has a right to complain if I take a mistress,” Lanius answered.
“If I take another wife, though, how can she be upset?” He could, in fact,
think of several ways. But he wanted to keep things as simple as possible
for Cristata.
She, however, seemed able to see complications without him pointing
them out. “She’s King Grus’ daughter,” she said. “What will the other king
do?”
“He may grumble, but how could he do more?” Lanius said. “How can he
fuss much about what I do after the way he carried on winter before
this?”
“People
always manage to forget what they did and to fuss about what
other people do,” Cristata said, words that held an unpleasant ring of
truth.
To stop thinking about that, Lanius kissed her. The medicine worked so
well, he gave himself a second dose, and then a third. One thing led to
another, and he and Cristata didn’t leave the storeroom for quite a
while.
“Tell me I’m not hearing this.” Grus’ head ached as though he’d had too
much wine, but he hadn’t had any. “A second wife? A serving girl my own
son abused? Why, in the name of the gods?”
“I said, if I can’t find her a husband that suits her,” Lanius
answered.
“You told
her that?” Grus asked. Lanius nodded. Grus groaned. “What makes
you think she’ll find anyone else ‘suitable’ if she has the chance to be a
queen?”
Lanius frowned. Grus recognized the frown—it was thoughtful. Hadn’t
that occurred to him? Maybe it hadn’t. At last, he said, “Have you paid
any attention to Cristata? Say what you will about her, she’s honest.”
“She’s certainly made you think she is, anyhow,” Grus said. “Whether
that’s the same thing is a different question. And here’s one more for
you—why are you doing this to my daughter?”
“Who knows just why a man and a woman do what they do?” Lanius
answered. “Why did you do
this to your wife, for instance?”
Grus gritted his teeth. He might have known Lanius would find that
particular question. As a matter of fact, he had known it, even if he
hadn’t wanted to admit it to himself. Now he had to find an answer for it.
His first try was an evasion. “That’s different,” he said.
“Yes, it is,” Lanius agreed. “You exiled your other woman. I want to
marry mine. Which of us has the advantage there?”
“You’re not being fair,” Grus said, flicked on a sore spot. He wasn’t
happy about what he’d done about—with—to—Alca, and wasn’t proud of it,
either. It had been the only way he saw to keep peace with Estrilda. That
might have made it necessary, but he had the bad feeling it didn’t make it
right.
The other king shrugged. “I never said anything—not a word— about what
you did with your women up until now. You might have the courtesy to stay
out of my business, too.”
“It’s also my business, you know,” Grus said. “You’re married to my
daughter. I know Sosia’s not happy about this. She’s told me so.”
“She’s told me so, too,” Lanius admitted. “But
I’d be happier with Cristata than without her. I’m King of
Avornis ... I think. Don’t I get to decide anything at all about how I
live—Your Majesty?”
When Grus used the royal title with Lanius, he was usually being
polite. When Lanius used it with Grus—which he seldom did—he was usually
being reproachful. Grus felt his face heat. He held his hands a few inches
apart. “Only about this much of you is ‘happier’ with this girl. You’re
thinking with your crotch, not with your head. That isn’t like you.”
Lanius turned red, but he didn’t change his mind. “Well, what if I am?”
he said. “I’m not the only one who ever has.” He looked straight at
Grus. He’s going to do this, Grus realized.
He’s not going to pay attention to me telling him no. What can I do
about it? He saw one thing he might try, and said, “Go talk to Anser
about this. He’s closer to your age, but I think he’d also tell you it’s
not a good idea.”
“I like Anser. Don’t get me wrong—I do,” Lanius said. “I like him, but
I know he’d tell me whatever you tell him to tell me. And we both know
he’s arch-hallow on account of that, not because he’s holy.”
“Yes.” Grus admitted in private what he never would in public. “Even
so, I swear to you, Lanius, I have not spoken with him about this.
Whatever he says, he will say, and that’s all there is to it. Talk to him.
He has good sense—and you, right now, don’t.”
“When you say I don’t have good sense, you mean I’m not doing what you
want me to,” Lanius said, but then he shrugged. “All right. I’ll talk to
him. But he won’t change my mind.”
Back stiff with defiance, Lanius went off to the cathedral. Grus waited
until he was sure the other king had left the palace, then pointed to
three or four servants. “Fetch me the serving woman named Cristata,” he
told them. His voice held the snap of command. They hurried away.
Before long, one of them led her into the little audience chamber.
“Oh!” she said in surprise when she saw Grus. “When he told me the king
wanted to see me, I thought he meant—”
“Lanius,” Grus said, and Cristata nodded. He went on, “Well, I do.” He
could see why Lanius wanted her, too, and why Ortalis had. But that had
nothing to do with anything. He went on, “Are you really bound and
determined to become Queen of Avornis, or would being quietly set up for
life in a provincial town be enough to satisfy you?”
If she said she
was bound and determined to be Lanius’ queen, Grus knew his own
life would get more difficult. She paused to consider before she answered.
She’s not stupid, either, Grus thought.
Is she smart enough to see when she’s well off? Or is she as
head-over-heels for Lanius as he is for her?
She said, “I’ll go, Your Majesty. If I stay, I’ll have you for an
enemy, won’t I? I don’t want that. Anyone in Avornis would be a fool to
want you for an enemy, and I hope I’m not a fool.”
“You’re not,” Grus assured her. “ ‘Enemy,’ I think, goes too far. But I
am going to protect my own family as best I can. Wouldn’t you do the
same?”
“Probably,” Cristata answered. “I have to trust you, don’t I, about
what ‘quietly set for life’ means? You were generous paying for what
Ortalis did.”
Grus found himself liking her. She had nerve, to bargain with someone
with so much more power—and to make him feel guilty for using it. He said,
“By the gods, Cristata, I won’t cheat you. Believe me or not, as you
please.” When she nodded, he went on, “We have a bargain, then?” She
nodded again. So did he. “Gather up whatever you need to take with you. If
we’re going to do this, I want you gone before Lanius can call you
again.”
“Yes, I can see how you might.” Cristata sighed. “I
will miss him. He’s . . . sweet. But you could have done a lot
worse to me, couldn’t you?”
Only after she was gone did Grus realize that last wasn’t necessarily
praise.
“You . . . You . . .” Lanius’ fury rose up and choked him. What he
could do about it, however, knew some very sharp bounds. Grus was the one
with the power, and he’d just used it.
“Think whatever you like,” he said now. “Call me whatever you like. If
you’re going to take serving girls to bed now and again, I won’t fuss,
though Sosia might. You’re a man. It happens. I ought to know.”
His calm words gave Lanius’ rage nowhere to light. Absurdly, Lanius
realized he never had taken Cristata to
bed. Coupling on the floor, even on a carpet, wasn’t the same. “I
love her!” he exclaimed.
“She’s nice-looking. She’s clever. She’s got spirit,” Grus said. “And
you picked her out yourself. You didn’t have her forced on you. No wonder
you had a good time with her. But love? Don’t be too sure.”
“What do you know about it, you—?” Lanius called him the vilest names
he knew.
“I think you’re sweet, too,” Grus answered calmly. Lanius gaped. Grus
went on, “What do I know about it? Oh, a little something, maybe. Cristata
reminds me more than a little of Anser’s mother.”
“Oh,” Lanius said. Try as he would to stay outraged, he had trouble.
Maybe Grus did know what he was talking about after all. Lanius went on,
“You still had no business—none, do you hear me?—interfering in my affairs
. . . and you can take that last however you want.”
“Don’t be silly,” Grus answered, still calm. “Of course I did. You’re
married to my daughter. You’re my grandchildren’s father. If you do
something that’s liable to hurt them, of course I’ll try to stop you.”
Lanius hadn’t expected him to be quite so frank. He wondered whether
that frankness made things better or worse. “You have no shame at all, do
you?” he said.
“Where my family is concerned? Very little, though I’ve probably been
too soft on Ortalis over the years,” Grus said. “He’s embarrassed me more
times than I wish he had, but that isn’t what you meant, and I know it
isn’t. I’ll do whatever I think I have to do. If you want to be angry at
me, go ahead. You’re entitled to.” And no matter how angry you are, you can’t do anything about
it. That was the other thing Grus meant. He was right, too, as Lanius
knew only too well. His impotence was at times more galling than at
others. This . . . He couldn’t even protect a woman he still insisted to
himself he loved. What could be more humiliating than that? Nothing he
could think of. • “Where did you send her?” he asked after a long
silence.
Some of the tension went out of Grus’ shoulders. He must have realized
he’d won. He said, “You know I won’t tell you that. You’ll find out sooner
or later, but you won’t be up in arms about it by the time you do.”
His obvious assumption that he knew exactly how Lanius worked only
irked the younger man more. So did the alarming suspicion that he might be
right. Lanius said, “At least tell me how much you’re giving her. Is she
really taken care of?”
“You don’t need to worry about that.” Grus named a sum. Lanius blinked;
he might not have been so generous himself. Grus set a hand on his
shoulder. He shook it off. Grus shrugged. “I told you, I’m not going to
get angry at you, and you can go right ahead and be angry at me. We’ll
sort it out later.”
“Will we?” Lanius said tonelessly, but Grus had turned away. He wasn’t
even listening anymore.
Lanius slept by himself that night. Sosia hadn’t wanted to sleep beside
him since finding out about Cristata. He didn’t care to sleep by her now,
either. He knew he would have to make peace sooner or later, but sooner or
later wasn’t yet.
He thought he woke in the middle of the night. Then he realized it was
a dream, but not the sort of dream he would have wanted. The Banished
One’s inhumanly cold, inhumanly beautiful features stared at him.
“You see what your friends are worth?” the Banished One asked with a
mocking laugh. “Who has hurt you worse—Grus, or I?”
“You hurt the whole kingdom,” Lanius answered.
“Who cares about the kingdom? Who has hurt
you?”
“Go away,” Lanius said uselessly.
“You can have your revenge,” the Banished One went on, as though the
king hadn’t said a word. “You can make Grus pay, you can make Grus weep,
for what he has done to you. Think on it. You can make him suffer, as he
has made you suffer. The chance for vengeance is given to few men. Reach
out with both hands and take it.”
Lanius would have liked nothing better than revenge. He’d already had
flights of fantasy filled with nothing else. But, even dreaming, he
understood that anything the Banished One wanted was something to be wary
of. And so, not without a certain regret, he said “No.”
“Fool! Ass! Knave! Jackanapes! Wretch who lives only for a day, and
will not make himself happy for some puny part of his puny little life!”
the Banished One cried. “Die weeping, then, and have what you
deserve!”
The next thing Lanius knew, he was awake again, and drenched in sweat
despite the winter chill. He wished the Banished One would choose to
afflict someone else. He himself was getting to know the one who had been
Milvago much too well.
Land-travel in winter was sometimes easier than it was in spring or
fall. In winter, rain didn’t turn roads to mud. Land travel was sometimes
also the only choice in winter, for the rivers near the city of Avornis
could freeze. After Grus’ troubles with Lanius, he was glad to get away
from the capital any way he could. If the other king tried to get out of
line, he would hear about it and deal with it before anything too drastic
could happen. He had no doubt of that.
Once Grus reached the unfrozen portion of the Granicus, he went faster
still—by river galley downstream to the seaside port of Dodona. The man
who met him at the quays was neither bureaucrat nor politician, neither
general nor commodore. Plegadis was a shipwright and carpenter, the best
Avornis had.
“So she’s ready for me to see, is she?” Grus said.
Plegadis nodded. He was a sun-darkened, broad-shouldered man with
engagingly ugly features, a nose that had once been straighter than it was
now, and a dark brown bushy beard liberally streaked with gray. “Do you
really need to ask, Your Majesty?” he said, pointing. “Stands out from
everything else we make, doesn’t she?”
“Oh, just a bit,” Grus answered. “Yes, just a bit.”
Plegadis laughed out loud. Grus stared at the Avornan copy of a
Chernagor pirate ship. Sure enough, it towered over everything else tied
up at the quays of Dodona. To someone used to the low, sleek lines of
river galleys, it looked blocky, even ugly, but Grus had seen what ships
like this were worth.
“Is she as sturdy as she looks?” the king asked.
“I should hope so.” The shipwright sounded offended. “I didn’t just
copy her shape, Your Majesty. I matched lines and timber and canvas, too,
as best I could. She’s ready to take to the open sea, and to do as well as
a Chernagor ship would.”
Grus nodded. “That’s what I wanted. How soon can I have more just like
her—a proper fleet?”
“Give me the timber and the carpenters and it won’t be too long— middle
of summer, maybe,” Plegadis answered. “Getting sailors who know what
they’re doing in a ship like this . . . That’ll take a little while,
too.”
“I understand.” Grus eyed the tall, tall masts. “Handling all that
canvas will take a lot of practice by itself.”
“We do have some Chernagor prisoners to teach us the ropes,” Plegadis
said. When a shipwright used that phrase, he wasn’t joking or spitting out
a clichй. He meant exactly what the words implied.
He wasn’t joking, but was he being careful enough? “Have you had a
wizard check these Chernagors?” Grus asked. “We may have some of the same
worries with them that we do with the Menteshe, and even with the thralls.
I’m not saying we will, but we may.”
Plegadis’ grimace showed a broken front tooth. “I didn’t even think of
that, Your Majesty, but I’ll see to it, I promise you. What I was going to
tell you is, some of the fishermen here make better crew for this
Chernagor ship than a lot of river-galley men. They know what to do with a
good-sized sail, where on a galley it’s row, row, row all the time.”
“Yes, I can see how that might be so.” Grus looked east, out to the
Azanian Sea. It seemed to go on and on forever. He’d felt that even more
strongly when he went out on it in a river galley. He’d also felt badly
out of his element. He’d gotten away with fighting on the sea, but he
wasn’t eager to try it again in ships not made for it.
Would I be more ready to try it in a monster like that? he
wondered.
Once I had a good crew, I think I might be. Out loud, he went on,
“I don’t care where the men come from, as long as you get them.”
“Good. That’s the right attitude.” Plegadis nodded. “We have to lick
those Chernagor bastards. I’m not fussy about how. They did us a lot of
harm, and they’d better find out they can’t get away with nonsense like
that. I’ll tell you something else, too. Along this coast, plenty of
fishermen’ll think an ordinary sailor’s wages look pretty good, poor
miserable devils.”
“I believe it,” Grus answered. The eastern coast was Avornis’ forgotten
land. If a king wanted to make a man disappear, he sent him to the Maze.
If a man wanted to disappear on his own, he came to the coast. Even tax
collectors often overlooked this part of the kingdom. Grus knew he had
until the Chernagors descended on it. He added, “If all this makes us tie
the coast to the rest of Avornis, some good will have come from it.”
To his surprise, Plegadis hesitated before nodding again. “Well, I
think so, too, Your Majesty, or I suppose I do. But you’ll find people up
and down the coast who won’t. They
like being ... on their own, you might say.”
“How did they like it when the pirates burned their towns and stole
their silver and raped their women?” Grus asked. “They were glad enough to
see us after that.”
“Oh, yes.” The shipwright’s smile was as crooked as that tooth of his.
“But they got over it pretty quick.” Grus started to smile. He started to,
but he didn’t. Once again, Plegadis hadn’t been joking.
When all else failed, King Lanius took refuge in the archives. No one
bothered him there, and when he concentrated on old documents he didn’t
have to dwell on whatever else was bothering him. Over the years, going
there had served him well. But it didn’t come close to easing the pain of
losing Cristata.
And it wasn’t just the pain of losing her. He recognized that. Part of
it was also the humiliation of being unable to do anything for someone he
loved. If Grus had ravished her in front of his eyes, it could hardly have
been worse. Grus hadn’t, of course. He’d been humane, especially compared
to what he might have done. He’d even made Lanius see his point of view,
but so what? Cristata was still gone, she still wouldn’t be back, and
Lanius still bitterly missed her.
Next to that ache in his heart, even finding another letter as
interesting and important as King Cathartes’ probably wouldn’t have meant
much to him. As things turned out, most of what Lanius did find was dull.
There were days when he could plow through tax receipts and stay
interested, but those were days when he was in a better mood than he was
now. He found himself alternately yawning and scowling.
He fought his way through a few sets of receipts, as much from duty as
anything else. But then he shook his head, gave up, and buried his face in
his hands. If he gave in to self-pity here, at least he could do it
without anyone else seeing.
When he raised his head again, sharp curiosity—and the beginnings of
alarm—replaced the self-pity. Any noise he heard in the archives was out
of the ordinary. And any noise he heard here could be a warning of
something dangerous. If one of the thralls had escaped . . .
He turned his head this way and that, trying to pinpoint the noise. It
wasn’t very loud, and it didn’t seem to come from very high off the
ground. “Mouse,” Lanius muttered, and tried to make himself believe
it.
He’d nearly succeeded when a sharp clatter drove such thoughts from his
mind. Mice didn’t carry metal objects—knives?—or knock them against wood.
Today, Lanius had a knife at his own belt. But he was neither warrior nor
assassin, as he knew all too well.
“Who’s there?” he called, slipping the knife from its sheath and
sliding forward as quietly as he could. Only silence answered him. He
peered ahead. Almost anything smaller than an elephant could have hidden
in the archives. He’d never fully understood what
higgledy-piggledy meant until he started coming in here. He often
wondered whether anyone ever read half the parchments various officials
wrote. Sometimes it seemed as though the parchments just ended up here, on
shelves and in boxes and barrels and leather sacks and sometimes even
wide-mouthed pottery jugs all stacked one atop another with scant regard
for sanity or safety.
Elephants Lanius didn’t much worry about. An elephant would have had to
go through a winepress before it could squeeze between the stacks of
documents and receptacles. Assassins, unfortunately, weren’t likely to be
so handicapped.
“Who’s there?” the king called again, his voice breaking nervously.
Again, no answer, not with words. But he did hear another metallic
clatter, down close to the ground.
That made him wonder. There were assassins, and then there were . . .
He made the noise he used when he was about to feed the moncats. Sure
enough, out came one of the beasts, this time carrying not a wooden spoon
but a long-handled silver dipper for lifting soup from a pot or wine from
a barrel.
“You idiot animal!” Lanius exclaimed. Unless he was wildly mistaken,
this was the same moncat that had frightened him in here before. He
pointed an accusing finger at it. “How did you get out this time, Pouncer?
And how did you get into the kitchens and then out of them again?”
“Rowr,” Pouncer said, which didn’t explain enough.
Lanius made the feeding noise again. Still clutching the dipper, the
moncat came over to him. He grabbed it. It hung on to its prize, but
didn’t seem otherwise upset. That noise meant food most of the time. If,
this once, it didn’t, the animal wasn’t going to worry about it.
“What shall I do with you?” Lanius demanded.
Again, Pouncer said, “Rowr.” Again, that told the king less than he
wanted to know.
He carried the moncat back to its room. After putting it inside and
going out into the hallway once more, he waved down the first servant he
saw. “Yes, Your Majesty?” the man said. “Is something wrong?”
“Something or someone,” Lanius answered grimly. “Tell Bubulcus to get
himself over here right away. Tell everybody you see to tell Bubulcus to
get over here right away. Tell him he’d better hurry if he knows what’s
good for him.”
He hardly ever sounded so fierce, so determined. The servant’s eyes
widened. “Yes, Your Majesty,” he said, and hurried away. Lanius composed
himself to wait, not in patience but in impatience.
Bubulcus came trotting up about a quarter of an hour later, a worried
expression on his long, thin, pointy-nosed face. “What’s the trouble now,
Your Majesty?” he asked, as though he and trouble had never met
before.
Knowing better, the king pointed to the barred door that kept the
moncats from escaping. “Have you gone looking for me in there again?”
“Which I haven’t.” Bubulcus shook his head so vigorously, a lock of
greasy black hair flopped down in front of one eye. He brushed it back
with the palm of his hand. “Which I haven’t,” he repeated, his voice
oozing righteousness. “No, sir. I’ve learned my lesson, I have. Once was
plenty, thank you very much.”
Once hadn’t been plenty, of course. He’d let moncats get loose twice—at
least twice. He might forget. Lanius never would. “Are you sure, Bubulcus?
Are you very sure?” he asked. “If you’re lying to me, I
will send you to the Maze, and I won’t blink before I do it. I
promise you that.”
“Me? Lie? Would I do such a thing?” Bubulcus acted astonished,
insulted, at the mere possibility. He went on, “Put me on the rack, if you
care to. I’ll tell you the same. Give me to a Menteshe torturer. Give me
to the Banished One, if you care to.”
The king’s fingers twisted in a gesture that might—or might not— ward
off evil omens. “You don’t know what you’re talking about,” he said.
“Thank the true gods for your ignorance, too.”
“Which I do for everything, Your Majesty,” Bubulcus said. “But I’m not
ignorant about this. I know I didn’t go in there. Do what you want with
me, but I can’t tell you any different.”
Sending him to the rack had more than a little appeal. With a certain
amount of regret, Lanius said, “Go find a mage, Bubulcus. Tell him to
question you about this. Bring him back here with you. Hurry. I’ll be
waiting. If you don’t come back soon, you’ll wish some of the foolish
things you just said did come true.”
Bubulcus disappeared faster than if a mage had conjured him into
nothingness. Lanius leaned against the wall. Would the servant come back
so fast?
He did, or nearly. And he had with him no less a wizard than Pterocles
himself. After bowing to Lanius, the wizard said, “As best I can tell,
Your Majesty, this man is speaking the truth. He was not in those rooms,
and he did not let your pet get out.”
“How
did the moncat get loose, then?” Lanius asked.
Pterocles shrugged. “I can’t tell you that. Maybe another servant let
it out. Maybe there’s a hole in the wall no one has noticed.”
Bubulcus looked not only relieved but triumphant. “Which I told you,
Your Majesty. Which I didn’t have anything to do with.”
“This time, no,” Lanius admitted. “But your record up until now somehow
didn’t fill me with confidence.” Bubulcus looked indignant. Pterocles let
out a small snort of laughter. Lanius gestured. “Go on, Bubulcus. Count
yourself lucky and try to stay out of trouble.”
“Which I’ve already done, except for some people who keep trying to put
me into it,” Bubulcus said. But then he seemed to remember he was talking
to a King of Avornis, not to another servant. He bobbed his head in an
awkward bow and scurried away.
“Thank you,” Lanius told Pterocles.
“You’re welcome, Your Majesty.” The wizard tried a smile on for size.
“Dealing with something easy every once in a while is a pleasure.” He too
nodded to Lanius and ambled down the corridor. Something easy? Lanius wondered. Then he decided Pterocles had
a point. Finding out if a servant lied was bound to be easier—and safer—
than, say, facing a Chernagor sorcerer. But how
had Pouncer escaped? That didn’t look as though it would be so
easy for Lanius to figure out.
Grus listened to Pterocles with more than a little amusement. “A
moncat, you say?” he inquired, and the wizard nodded. Grus went on, “Well,
that’s got to be simpler than working out how to cure thralls.”
Pterocles nodded. “It was this time, anyhow.”
“Good. Not everything should be hard all the time,” Grus said, and
Pterocles nodded again. Grus asked, “And how
are you coming on curing thralls?”
Pterocles’ face fell. He’d plainly hoped Grus wouldn’t ask him
that.
But, once asked, he had to answer. “Not as well as I would like, Your
Majesty,” he said reluctantly, adding, “No one else in Avornis has figured
out how to do it, either, you know, not reliably, not since the Menteshe
wizards first started making our men into thralls however many hundred
years ago that was.”
“Well, yes,” Grus admitted with a certain reluctance of his own. He
didn’t want to think about that; he would sooner have forgotten all those
other failures. That way, he could have believed Pterocles was starting
with a clean slate. As things were, he could only ask, “Do you think
you’ve found any promising approaches?”
“Promising? No. Hopeful? Maybe,” Pterocles replied. “After all, as I’ve
said, I’ve been . . . emptied myself. So have thralls. I know more about
that than any other Avornan wizard ever born.” His laugh had a distinctly
hollow note. “I wish I didn’t, but I do.”
“What about the suggestions Alca the witch sent me?” Grus asked once
more.
With a sigh, the wizard answered, “We’ve been over this ground before,
Your Majesty. I don’t deny the witch is clever, but what she says is not
to the point. She doesn’t understand what being a thrall means.”
“And you do?” Grus asked with heavy sarcasm.
“As well as any man who isn’t a thrall can, yes,” Pterocles replied.
“I’ve told you that before. Will you please listen?”
“No matter how well you say you understand, you haven’t come up with
anything that looks like a cure,” Grus said. “If you do, I’ll believe you.
If you don’t, if you don’t show me you have ideas of your own, I am going
to order you to use Alca’s for the sake of doing
something.”
“Even if it’s wrong,” Pterocles jeered.
“Even if it is,” Grus said stubbornly. “From all I’ve seen, doing
something is better than doing nothing. Something
may work. Nothing never will.”
“If you think I’m doing nothing, Your Majesty, you had better find
yourself another wizard,” Pterocles said. “Then I
will go off and do nothing with a clear conscience, and you can
see what happens after that.”
If he’d spoken threateningly, Grus might have sacked him on the spot.
Instead, he sounded more like a man delivering a prophecy. That gave the
king pause. Too many strange things had happened for him to ignore that
tone of voice. And Pterocles, like Alca, had dreamed of the Banished
One—the only sign Grus had that the Banished One took a mortal opponent
seriously. Where would he find another wizard who had seen that coldly
magnificent countenance?
“If you think you’re smarter than Alca, you’d better be right,” he said
heavily.
“I don’t think anything of the sort,” Pterocles said. “I told you she
was clever. I meant it. But I’ve been through things she hasn’t. A fool
who’s dropped a brick on his toe knows better why he’d better not do that
again than a clever fellow who hasn’t.”
That made sense. It would have made more sense if the wizard had done
anything much with what he knew. “All right, then. I know you’re
pregnant,” Grus said. “I still want to see the baby one of these days
before too long.”
“If the baby lives, you’ll see it,” Pterocles said. “You don’t want it
to come too soon, though, do you? They’re never healthy if they do.”
Grus began to wish he hadn’t used that particular figure of speech.
Even so, he said, “If you miscarry with your notions in spite of what you
think now, I want you to try Alca’s.”
He waited. Pterocles frowned. Obviously, he was looking for one more
comment along the lines he’d been using. When the wizard’s eyes lit up,
Grus knew he’d found one. Pterocles said, “Very well, Your Majesty, though
that would be the first time a woman ever got a man pregnant.”
After a—pregnant—pause, Grus groaned and said, “Are you wizard enough
to make yourself disappear?”
“Yes, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said, and did.
His mulishness still annoyed Grus. But he had a twinkle in his eye
again, and he was getting back the ability to joke. Grus thought—Grus
hoped—that meant he was recovering from the sorcerous pounding he’d taken
outside of Nishevatz. Maybe the baby—if it ever came— would be worth
seeing after all.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Lanius had just finished telling Sosia the story of the moncat and the
stolen silver dipper. It was an amusing story, and he knew he’d told it
well. His wife listened politely enough, but when he was through she just
sat in their bedchamber. She didn’t even smile. “Why did you tell me
that?” she asked.
“Because I thought it was funny,” Lanius answered. “I hoped you would
think it was funny, too. Evidently I was wrong.”
“Evidently you were,” Sosia said in a brittle voice. “You can tell me
funny stories, but you can’t even tell me you’re sorry. Men!” She turned
her back on him. “You’re worse than my father. At least my mother wasn’t
around when he took up with somebody else.”
“Oh.” More slowly than it should have, a light went on in Lanius’ head.
“You’re still angry about Cristata.” He was angry about Cristata,
too—angry that Grus had paid her off and sent her away. Sosia had other
reasons.
“Yes, I’m still angry about Cristata!” his wife blazed. Lanius blinked;
he hadn’t realized
how angry she was. “I loved you. I thought you loved me. And then
you went and did that. How? Why?”
“I never stopped loving you. I still love you,” Lanius said, which was
true—and which he would have been wiser to say sooner and more often.
“It’s just. . . she was there, and then ...” His voice trailed away, which
it should have done sooner.
“She was there, and then you were
there.” Sosia made a gesture boys used in the streets of the city
of Avornis, one that left nothing to the imagination. “Is there anything
else to say about that?”
“I suppose not,” Lanius answered. From Sosia’s point of view, what he’d
done with Cristata didn’t seem so good. From his own . . . He sighed. He
still missed the serving girl. “Kings of Avornis are allowed to have more
than one wife,” he added sulkily.
“Yes—if they can talk their first one into it,” Sosia said. “You
didn’t. You didn’t even try. You were having a good time screwing her, so
you decided you’d marry her.”
“Well, what else but fun are wives after the first one for?” Lanius
asked, he thought reasonably. “Oh, once in a while a king will be trying
to find a woman who can bear him a son, the way my father was. But most of
the time, those extra wives are just for amusement.”
“Maybe you were amused, but I wasn’t,” Sosia snapped. “And I thought I
amused you. Was I wrong?”
Even Lanius, who didn’t always hear the subtleties in what other people
said, got the point there. “No,” he said hastily. “Oh, no indeed.”
Sosia glared at him. “That’s what you say. Why am I supposed to believe
you?”
He started to explain why he saw little point in lying to her,
especially now that Cristata was gone. He didn’t get very far. That wasn’t
the answer she was looking for. He needed another heartbeat or two to
figure out the sort of answer she did want.
Some time later, he said, “There. Do you see now?” They were, by then,
both naked and sweaty, though snow coated the windowsills. Sometimes
answers didn’t need words.
“Maybe,” Sosia said grudgingly.
“Well, I’ll just have to show you again,” Lanius said, and he did.
After that second demonstration, he fell asleep very quickly. When he
woke up, it was light. What woke him was Sosia getting out of bed. He
yawned and stretched. She nodded without saying anything.
“Good morning,” he told her.
“Is it?” she asked.
“Well, I thought so.”
“Of course you did,” she said. “You got what you wanted last
night.”
In some annoyance, Lanius said, “I wasn’t the only one.”
“No?” But Sosia saw that wouldn’t do. She shrugged. “One night’s not
enough to set everything right between us.”
Lanius sighed. “What am I going to have to do now?”
“You’re not going to
have to do anything,” Sosia said. “You need to show me there are
things you
want to do, the kinds of things people who care about each other
do without thinking.”
Since Lanius hardly ever did anything without thinking, he almost asked
her what she was talking about. He quickly decided not to.
Show me you love me, was what she meant.
Keep on showing me until I believe you.
Some of what he did would be an act. He knew that. Sosia undoubtedly
knew it, too. She wanted a convincing act—an act good enough to convince
him as well as her. If he kept doing those things, maybe he
would convince himself.
Maybe I won’t, too, he thought mulishly. But he would have to
make the effort.
He did his best. He went out into the hall and spoke to a serving
woman, who hurried off to the kitchens. She came back with a tray of
poached eggs and pickled lamb’s tongue, Sosia’s favorite breakfast. Lanius
preferred something simpler—bread and honey and a cup of wine suited him
very well.
As Sosia sprinkled salt over the eggs, she smiled at Lanius. She’d
noticed what he’d done. That was something, anyhow.
A snowstorm filled the air around the palace with soft, white silence.
In the middle of that silence, King Grus and Hirundo tried to figure out
what to do when sunshine and green leaves replaced snow and cold. “How
many men do you want to leave behind to make sure the Chernagors don’t
ravage the coast again?” Hirundo asked. “And if you leave that many
behind, will we have enough left to go up into the land of the Chernagors
and do something useful ourselves?”
Those were both good questions. Grus wished they weren’t quite so good.
He said, “Part of that depends on how many ships Plegadis can build, and
on whether we can fight off the pirates before they ever come ashore.”
“You’d know more about that than I do,” Hirundo answered. “All I know
about ships is getting to the rail in a hurry.” He grinned and then stuck
out his tongue. “Give me a horse any day.”
“You’re welcome to mine,” Grus said. The general laughed. More
seriously, Grus went on, “I don’t know as much about these ships as I wish
I did. No Avornan does. I don’t even know if they’ll be able to find the
pirates on the sea and keep them from landing. We’ll find out,
though.”
Hirundo nodded. “Oh, yes. The next question, of course, is
when we’ll find out. Are the pirates going to keep us from
getting up into the Chernagor country again?”
“No,” Grus declared. “No, by Olor’s beard. I’ll let the garrisons and
the ships deal with the Chernagors in the south. It’s not just a question
of throwing Prince Vasilko out on his ear. If it were, I wouldn’t worry so
much. We have to drive the Banished One out of the land of the
Chernagors.”
“When we started out in this fight, I wondered whether Vasilko or
Vsevolod was the Banished One’s cat’s-paw,” Hirundo said.
“I spent a lot of time worrying about that, even though Vsevolod would
probably want to strangle me with his big nobbly hands if he ever found
out,” Grus said. “But there’s not much doubt anymore.”
Hirundo considered that. “Well,” he said, “no.”
Grus sent out orders for cavalrymen and foot soldiers to gather by the
city of Avornis. He also sent out other orders this winter, strengthening
the garrisons in the river towns near the Azanian Sea and moving the
river-galley fleets toward the mouths of the Nine. That meant he would
take a smaller force north with him this coming spring when he moved
against Nishevatz. But it also meant—he hoped it meant— the Chernagors
wouldn’t be able to pull off such a nasty surprise in the new campaigning
season.
No sooner had his couriers ridden away from the capital than a blizzard
rolled out of the north and dumped a foot and a half of snow on the city
and the countryside. Grus tried to tell himself it was only a coincidence.
The Banished One didn’t really have anything to do with it... did he?
The king thought about asking Pterocles, thought about it and then
thought better of it. He’d asked that question of Alca once before, in an
earlier harsh winter. He’d found out the Banished One
had used the weather as a weapon against Avornis, but the deposed
god had almost slain Alca and him and Lanius in the aftermath of the
witch’s magic. Some knowledge came at too high a price.
Mild weather returned after this snowstorm finally blew itself out.
That made Grus doubt the Banished One lay behind it. When he struck at
Avornis, he sent blizzard after blizzard after blizzard. He was very
strong, and reveled in his strength. Being so strong, he’d never had to
worry much about subtlety. He left his foes in no doubt about what he was
doing, and also in no doubt that they couldn’t hope to stop him. Milvago. Had the Banished One been as overwhelmingly mighty in
the heavens as he was here on earth? Perhaps not quite, or the gods he’d
fathered would never have been able to cast him out, to cast him down to
the material world. But Grus would have been astonished if they hadn’t
used their sire’s strength against him. Maybe he’d been arrogant, thinking
they couldn’t possibly challenge him.
He knew better than that now—one more thought Grus wished he hadn’t
had.
Soldiers started coming up out of the south to gather for this year’s
invasion of the land of the Chernagors. A new blizzard howled down on the
capital once their encampment began to swell. By then, though, winter was
dying. Even the Banished One had limits to what he could do to the weather
... if he was doing anything. Grus still hoped he wasn’t.
He couldn’t stop the sun from climbing higher in the sky every day,
couldn’t stop the days from getting longer and warmer, couldn’t stop the
snow from melting. Even after it vanished from the ground, Grus had to
wait a little longer, to let the roads dry out and keep his army from
bogging down. As soon as he thought he could, he climbed aboard a
horse—mounting with the same reluctance Hirundo showed at boarding a river
galley—and set off for the north.
Every so often, he looked back over his shoulder, wondering if a
messenger was galloping up behind the army with word of some new disaster
elsewhere in Avornis that would make him turn around. Every time he saw no
such messenger, he felt as though he’d won a victory. On went the army,
too, toward the Chernagor country.
Each time Grus set out on campaign, Lanius waved farewell and wished
him good fortune. And each time Grus set out on campaign, Lanius’ smile of
farewell grew wider. With Grus off to or beyond the frontiers, power in
the city of Avornis increasingly rested in Lanius’ hands.
Lanius thought he could rise against Grus with some hope of success.
Thinking he could do it didn’t make him anxious to try, though. For one
thing, he wasn’t a man to take many chances. For another, even success
could only mean winning a civil war. He doubted there was any such thing
as
winning a civil war. If he and Grus fought—if they wasted
Avornis’ men and wealth, who gained besides the Banished One? Nobody
Lanius could see. And, though he didn’t like to admit it even to himself,
having someone in place to handle those parts of kingship he didn’t care
for wasn’t always the worst thing in the world. He was no campaigner, and
never would be. Having authority in the palace was a different story.
As usual, Queen Sosia, Crex, Pitta, Queen Estrilda, and Arch-Hallow
Anser came out beyond the walls of the capital to send Grus off and wish
him well. Also as usual, Prince Ortalis stayed away.
That worried Lanius. The more he thought about it, the more it worried
him. If Ortalis had to choose between Grus and the Banished One, which
would he pick? Remembering what had happened in Nishevatz, remembering
how Prince Vasilko had risen against his father and helped the Banished
One enter his city-state, did nothing to give Lanius peace of mind.
Normally, he would have talked things over with Sosia and found out how
worried she was. Ortalis was her brother, after all; she knew him better
than Lanius did. But she was still touchy—which put it mildly—about
Cristata, and so Lanius didn’t want to provoke her in any way.
He thought about hashing it out with Anser, too. But Anser wasn’t the
right man to deal with such concerns. With his sunny nature, he had a hard
time seeing the bad in anyone else. And he didn’t know enough about the
true nature of the Banished One, nor did Lanius feel like instructing
him.
With nobody to talk to about Ortalis, Lanius did his brooding in
privacy on the way back to the royal palace. He was used to that. Once
upon a time, he’d resented being so much alone. Now he took it for
granted.
When he and the rest of the royal family returned to the palace, they
found the servants in a commotion. “He’s done it! He’s gone and done it!”
they exclaimed in ragged chorus.
That sounded inflammatory. It didn’t sound very informative. “Who’s
gone and done what?” Lanius asked.
The servants looked at him as though he were an idiot for not knowing.
“Why, Prince Ortalis, of course,” several of them answered, again all at
once.
Lanius, Sosia, Estrilda, and Anser all looked at one another. Crex and
Pitta were too small to worry about what their uncle did, and ran off to
play. Lanius said, “All right, now we know who. What has Ortalis done?” He
braced himself for almost any atrocity. Had Ortalis hurt
another serving girl? Had he decided to have a couple of moncats
served up in a stew? The king wouldn’t have put anything past him.
But the servants replied, “He’s gotten married.”
“He
has?” Now the king, two queens, and the arch-hallow all cried out
in astonishment. That wasn’t just news; that was an earthquake. Grus had
been trying to find Ortalis a bride on and off for years. He hadn’t had
any luck, either. Ortalis’ reputation was too ripe. Grus had sent
Lepturus, the head of the royal bodyguards, to the Maze for refusing to
let his granddaughter marry the prince. And now Ortalis had found himself
a wife?
“To whom?” Lanius asked. “And how did this happen?”
“How did it happen without us hearing about it?” Sosia added.
Bubulcus knew all the details. Lanius might have guessed he would.
“He’s married to Limosa, Your Majesty. You know, the daughter of
Petrosus, the treasury minister.” He seemed to sneer at the king for
being in the dark. They deserve each other, was the first uncharitable thought
that went through Lanius’ mind. But that wasn’t fair to Limosa, whom he’d
met only a couple of times. He disliked her father, who was stingy and
bad-tempered even for a man of his profession.
“How did it happen?” Sosia asked again. She might have been speaking of
a flood or a fire or some other disaster, not a wedding.
“In the usual way, I’m sure,” Bubulcus replied. “They stood before a
priest, and he said the proper words over them, and then they ...” He
leered.
“Don’t be a bigger fool than you can help,” Lanius snapped, and
Bubulcus, knowing he’d gone too far, turned pale. Lanius added, “You know
what Her Majesty meant.”
“And which priest who wed them?” Anser added, sounding very much like
the man in charge of ecclesiastical affairs. “He did it without the king’s
leave, and without mine. He’ll have more than a few questions to
answer—you may be sure of that.”
Perdix, who’d wed King Mergus and Queen Certhia after Lanius was born,
had had more than a few questions to answer, too. He’d prospered while
Lanius’ father lived . . . and gone to the Maze not long after Mergus
died. He was years dead now.
“Well, I don’t know the name of the priest, though I’m sure you can
find out,” Bubulcus said, implying that, if he didn’t know it, it couldn’t
possibly be important. “But I do know they were wed in some little temple
at the edge of town, not in the cathedral.”
“I should hope not!” Lanius said. “Wouldn’t
that be a scandal? A worse scandal, I mean. He shouldn’t have wed
at all, not on his own. It’s not done in the royal family.” A dozen
generations of kings spoke through him.
“It is now,” Queen Estrilda said. “And it’s not the worst match he
could have made, even if he shouldn’t have made it himself.”
“What do you want to bet Petrosus proposed it?” said Sosia, who liked
the treasury minister no better than Lanius did. “He’s likely eager to
make any kind of connection with our family.”
“Does he ... know about Ortalis?” Anser asked.
“How could he not know?” Lanius replied.
“If he does, how could he do that to the girl?” the arch-hallow
wondered. “I hope she won’t be too unhappy.”
Hoping Limosa wouldn’t be too unhappy was the kindest thing anyone
found to say about the marriage. Lanius had seen omens he liked
better.
Grus had just gotten off his horse when a messenger from the south
galloped into the Avornan army’s encampment shouting his name. “Here!” he
called, and waved to show the rider where he was.
General Hirundo had just dismounted, too. “Can’t we get a couple of
days out of the city of Avornis without having one of these excitable
fellows come after us, riding like he’s got a fire under his
backside?”
“No, that’s me.” Grus made as though to rub the afflicted parts. Up
came the messenger, and thrust a rolled-up sheet of parchment at him.
“Thanks—I suppose,” the king said, taking it. “What’s this?”
“Uh, Your Majesty, it speaks for itself,” the messenger replied. “I
think it had better talk and I’d better keep quiet.”
“Don’t like the sound of
that,” Hirundo remarked.
“Neither do I.” King Grus broke the seal, slid off the ribbon holding
the parchment closed, unrolled the sheet, and read the letter, which was
from King Lanius. When he was done, he muttered a curse that didn’t come
close to satisfying him.
“What is it, Your Majesty?” Hirundo asked.
“My son,” Grus answered. “It seems Prince Ortalis has taken it into his
head to marry Petrosus’ daughter, Limosa. He hasn’t just taken it into his
head, in fact—he’s gone and done it.”
“Oh,” Hirundo said. Seldom had a man managed to pack more meaning into
a single syllable.
“My thoughts exactly.” Grus wanted to doubt Lanius, but the other king,
no matter how clever, would never have had the imagination to make that
up.
“What will you do about it?” Hirundo asked.
The more Grus thought about that, the less he liked the answers that
occurred to him. “I don’t see what I
can do about it, except tell Anser to land on the priest who
married them like a landslide,” he answered reluctantly. “The wedding’s
legal, no doubt about it. I can’t break off this campaign to go back to
the capital and try to set things right. But oh, I wish I could.” The only
reason Petrosus could have dangled Limosa in front of Ortalis was to gain
himself more influence. No one else around the palace had been willing to
use a daughter in a gambit like that. If Petrosus thought it would work,
he would have to think again before too long.
“Yes.” Hirundo didn’t say any of the things he might have, which proved
him an unexpected master of diplomacy. But the expression on his face was
eloquent. “Maybe it will turn out all right.” He didn’t sound as though he
believed it.
“Yes, maybe it will.” Grus sounded even less convinced than Hirundo,
which wasn’t easy.
And I’m talking about my own son. That was a bitter pill. If he’d
sounded any other way, though, he would have been hiding what he really
felt. He sighed. “I have to go on. We have to go on. Whatever happens back
at the capital is less important than what we do against the
Chernagors.”
Hirundo inclined his head. “Yes, Your Majesty.” If the king said it,
they would go on. Grus was sure the news of Ortalis’ wedding was spreading
through the army with the usual speed of rumor. No one but Hirundo seemed
to have the nerve to beard him about it. That suited him fine. I
almost wish a Chernagor fleet would strike our western coast hard
enough to make
me turn around, he thought, and then quick, in case gods or the
Banished One somehow overheard that,
I
did say “almost.”
Except for the hunger for something nasty often smoldering in Ortalis’
eyes, there had never been anything wrong with his looks. And now even
those low fires seemed banked, as they had when he was hunting regularly.
The smile he gave King Lanius was just about everything a smile ought to
be. The bow that followed was more in the way of formal politeness than
Lanius had had from him in years. “Your Majesty,” Ortalis said, “let me
present to you my wife, Princess Limosa.”
“Thank you, Your Highness,” Lanius said, as formally. He nodded to the
treasury minister’s daughter. “We
have met before. Let me welcome you to the royal family.”
What else can I do? “I hope you will be very happy.”
I don’t really believe you will, but anyone can hope. He also
hoped none of what he was thinking showed on his face.
Evidently it didn’t, for Limosa smiled as she dropped him a curtsy and
said, “Thank you very much, Your Majesty. I’m sure I will.” She gazed at
Ortalis with stars in her dark eyes. She was a little on the plump side,
with a round, pink face, curly brown hair with reddish glints in it, and a
crooked front tooth. No one would have called her beautiful, but she was
pleasant enough.
Sosia came into the dining room. Ortalis introduced Limosa again. As
Lanius had, Sosia said all the right things. If she was insincere, as he
was, he couldn’t hear it in her voice. He hoped that meant Ortalis and
Limosa couldn’t, either.
To her brother, Sosia did say, “This was very sudden.”
“Well...” Was Ortalis blushing? Lanius wouldn’t have believed such a
thing possible. The prince went on, “We found we suited each other, and so
we did what we did.” Limosa turned even pinker, but she nodded.
Suited each other? What did that mean?
Do I really want to know? Lanius wondered. Before he could find
any way to ask, servants came in with bread and butter and honey and
apples for breakfast. He and Sosia and Ortalis and his new bride settled
down to eat. Lanius also wondered if Petrosus would wander in. But
Limosa’s father did not put in an appearance. Being polite to Limosa was
easy enough. Lanius would have had to work harder to stay polite to
Petrosus.
Ortalis raised his cup of wine to Limosa’s lips. It was a pretty,
romantic gesture—about the last thing Lanius would have expected from his
brother-in-law.
Cristata was happy with Ortalis at first, too, he reminded
himself.
She said so. Then look what happened.
Limosa said, “I hope the war against the Chernagors goes well.”
No one could argue with that. No one tried. Lanius said, “
I hope your father keeps our allowance at something close to a
reasonable level.”
She blushed again. “You mean he doesn’t always?” Lanius solemnly shook
his head. Limosa said, “That’s terrible!”
“Yes, Sosia and I think so, too,” Lanius agreed, his voice dry. He
wondered how much influence Limosa had on Petrosus. If she really thought
it was terrible, and if she really had some influence . . .
But she said, “I’m sorry, but it’s not like he listens to me very
much.” She’d understood Lanius’ hint, then. That didn’t surprise him.
Petrosus had been a courtier for many years; why wouldn’t his daughter see
that what seemed a comment was in fact a request for her to do something
about it? Then Limosa added, “He didn’t even know we were going to get
married until after the priest conducted the ceremony.”
“No?” Lanius said in surprise and disbelief.
Now she shook her head. So did Ortalis. Lanius glanced at Sosia. She
looked as astonished as he was. If Limosa had asked her father whether he
wanted her to wed Ortalis, what would he have said? What every other
father and grandfather said when approached about it? That
wouldn’t have surprised Lanius . . . too much. Petrosus might
have been willing to sacrifice happiness for the sake of his own
advancement.
Or is that just my dislike for Petrosus coming out? Lanius
wondered. Hard to be sure.
Sosia asked, “What does your father think about it now?”
“He’d better like it,” Ortalis growled before Limosa could answer. She
seemed willing to let him speak for her. That was interesting.
Someone new I’m going to have to try to learn to figure out,
Lanius thought. Archives were much more tractable than living, breathing
people. Even inscrutable moncats were easier to make sense of than
people.
He lifted his cup of wine in salute. “I hope you’ll be ... very happy
together,” he said. He’d started to say,
I hope you’ll be as happy as Sosia and I have been. Considering
the jolt his affair with Cristata had given their happiness, those weren’t
such favorable words as they would have been a little while before.
Ortalis and Limosa beamed. They must not have noticed the hesitation.
Sosia had. Did she know what he’d almost said? He wouldn’t have been
surprised. She knew him better than anyone else did—save perhaps her
father. Lanius didn’t like admitting, even to himself, that Grus had a
knack for getting inside his mind. But he didn’t like denying the truth,
either.
He eyed Ortalis and Limosa again. How were they at facing up to the
truth? Did the thought so much as cross their minds? He doubted it.
Too bad for them, he thought.
“Come on,” Grus said. His horse trudged up toward the top of the pass
that linked Avornis to the land of the Chernagors. He leaned forward in
the saddle and squeezed the beast’s barrel with his knees.
“Get up, there.” The horse went a little faster—not much, but a
little.
Beside the king, Hirundo beamed. “You’re becoming a horseman after all,
Your Majesty.”
“Go ahead—insult me,” Grus said. “If things had gone the way I wish
they would have, I’d hardly ever need to get onto one of these miserable
beasts.”
Hirundo didn’t seem to know what to make of that. Grus had hoped he
wouldn’t. The king rode on. The army followed. Every so often, Grus looked
back over his shoulder to see if a messenger was coming out of the south.
He’d already had one. He spied no more this time. That either meant the
Chernagors weren’t raiding the Avornan coast or that the Avornan garrisons
and river galleys and new oceangoing ships were beating them back. Grus
hoped it meant one of those two things, anyhow.
At the top of the pass, he looked back toward his own kingdom once
more. He hadn’t thought he’d climbed all that high, but he could see a
long way. The bright green of newly planted fields of wheat and barley and
rye and oats contrasted with the darker tones of orchards and forests.
Here and there, smoke plumes rose from towns and obscured the farmland
beyond. Only very gradually did natural mist and haze blur the rest of the
landscape.
When he looked ahead, the story was different. Fog rolling off the
Northern Sea left the land of the Chernagors shrouded in mystery. But Grus
didn’t need to see the Chernagor country to know what lay ahead—trouble.
If the Chernagors weren’t going to cause trouble, he wouldn’t have had to
come here and look out across their land.
He also looked around. There was Prince Vsevolod, hard-faced and grim,
riding along at the head of a handful of retainers. Did he believe Grus
could restore him as Prince of Nishevatz after two years in exile? Grus
hoped he did; he might yet prove valuable to the Avornan cause.
And there rode Pterocles. In one sense, he wasn’t far from Prince
Vsevolod. In another, he might have belonged to a different world. The
wizard didn’t even seem to see Vsevolod and his kilted retainers. All his
attention focused on the view ahead. He looked like a man riding into a
battle he expected to lose—brave enough, but far from hopeful. Remembering
what had happened to Pterocles in the Chernagor country a couple of years
before, Grus didn’t suppose he could blame him.
Pterocles also stood out because of his bad riding. Next to the
seasoned cavalry troopers, Grus wasn’t much of a rider. Next to Pterocles,
he might have been a centaur. The wizard rode as though he’d never heard
of riding before climbing aboard his mule. He was all knees and elbows and
apprehension. Every slightest jounce took him by surprise, and threatened
to pitch him out of the saddle and under the horse’s hoofs. Watching him
made Grus nervous and sympathetic at the same time.
“You’re doing fine,” the king called to the wizard. “Relax a little,
and everything will be all right.”
Pterocles eyed him as though he’d taken leave of his senses. “Relax a
little, and I’ll be dead . . . Your Majesty,” he answered.
Grus wondered whether he was talking about the mule or about the
sorcerous challenges ahead. After some thought, he decided he didn’t want
to ask.
To Grus’ surprise, the Chernagors didn’t try to defend the fortress of
Varazdin. They evacuated it instead, fleeing ahead of the advancing
Avornans. Grus left a small garrison in it—enough men to make sure the
Chernagors didn’t seize it again as soon as he’d gone on toward
Nishevatz.
“This is a funny business,” Hirundo said as they headed for the coastal
lowlands. “When the fellow commanding that fort was loyal to Prince
Vsevolod, he fought us teeth and toenails. Now the man in charge of it
gets his orders from Vasilko, and he runs off. Go figure.”
“Everything about the war with the Chernagors has been backward,” Grus
said. “Why should this be any different?”
He hadn’t come very far into the Chernagor country before realizing
he’d left Avornis behind. The look of the sky and the quality of the
sunlight weren’t the same as they had been down in his own kingdom. A
perpetual haze hung over the lowlands here. It turned the sunlight watery
and the sky a color halfway between blue and gray. Drifting clouds had no
sharp edges; they blurred into the sky behind them in a way they never
would have in a land of bright sun and a sky of a respectable, genuine
blue.
The landscape had a strange look, too. Roofs of thatch replaced those
of red tiles. In this damp, dripping country, fire wasn’t the worry it
would have been farther south. Even the haystacks were different here;
they wore canvas covers on top to keep off the rain. Gliding gulls mewed
and squawked overhead.
And the Northern Sea was nothing like the Azanian Sea. Gray and
chilly-looking, it struck Grus as far from inviting. He knew the
Chernagors thought otherwise. To them, it was the high road to trading—
and raiding—riches. As far as he was concerned, they were welcome to
it.
He and his army reached the sea sooner than he’d expected. Instead of
offering battle away from Nishevatz, Prince Vasilko seemed intent on
defending the city with everything he had. A few archers harassed the
advancing Avornans, but only a few. They would shoot from ambush, then
either rely on concealment or try to get away on fast horses. They would
not stand and fight.
That mortified Prince Vsevolod. “Not enough my son should give self to
Banished One,” he rumbled in disgust. “No, not enough. Also he show self
coward. Better he should die.”
“Better he should surrender, so you can have your throne back and we
can go home to Avornis.” Grus didn’t believe that would happen. Vasilko
had something in mind. The king hoped discovering what it was wouldn’t
prove too painful.
In any case, Vsevolod wasn’t listening to him. “Disgrace,” he muttered.
“My son is disgrace.” There was a feeling Grus knew all too well. He set a hand on
Vsevolod’s shoulder. “Try not to blame yourself, Your Highness. I’m sure
you did everything you could.”
I did with Ortalis.
Vsevolod shrugged off the hand and shook his massive head. Grus didn’t
like to think about his own quarrels with his son, either. And what would
come of Ortalis’ marriage to Limosa? What besides trouble, anyhow? A grandson who might be an heir, Grus thought. Of course, Crex
was already a grandson who might be an heir. If having two grandsons who
might be heirs wasn’t trouble, Grus had no idea what would fit the
definition. How
would things play out once he wasn’t there to make sure they went
the way he wanted?
“Your Majesty!” A cavalry captain rode up to Grus. “Ask you a question,
Your Majesty?”
“Go ahead,” Grus told him. Whatever questions a cavalry captain could
come up with were bound to be less worrisome than thoughts of two
grandsons going to war with each other over which one got to wear the
crown.
“Well, Your Majesty, these fields are full—full to bursting, you might
say—of cows and sheep, and I’d banquet off my boots if the sties aren’t
full of pigs, too,” the officer said. “Now, I know we’re here to help His
Highness the prince, but it would make things a lot easier if we could do
some foraging, too.”
Grus didn’t have to think about that. He didn’t have to ask Prince
Vsevolod, either. He said, “As far as we’re concerned, Captain, this is
enemy country. Go ahead and forage to your heart’s content, and I hope you
stuff yourself full of beefsteaks and mutton chops and roast pork. Right
now, we worry about hurting Vasilko. Once we’ve cast him down, then we
start worrying about helping Vsevolod. Or do you think I’m wrong?”
“Oh, no, sir!” the officer said quickly. Grus laughed at the naked
hunger on his face. He went on, “We’ll forage, all right. We’ll take the
war right to the Chernagors. Let ‘em go hungry.” They wouldn’t go hungry
enough, not when the other Chernagor city-states helped supply them by
sea. Grus knew as much. But his own side would eat well. That counted,
too.
CHAPTER TWELVE
King Lanius looked at the moncat, and the moncat looked at Lanius.
“How did you get out?” the king demanded. Bubulcus wasn’t the only servant
who denied having anything to do with Pouncer’s latest escape. Had it
found some way out of the chamber all by itself? If it had, none of the
other animals in here had proved smart enough to use it.
What did that mean? Did it mean anything? Could one moncat be so much
smarter and sneakier than the rest that it kept an escape route a secret?
Lanius didn’t know. He would have liked to ask Pouncer with some hope of
getting back an answer he could understand. That failing, he would have
liked to catch the beast in the act of escaping.
Neither seemed likely. Moncats were sneaky enough—and enough like
ordinary cats—not to do something while a lowly human being was watching.
And, to a moncat, even a King of Avornis counted as a lowly human
being.
“Mrowr,” Pouncer said, staring at Grus out of large amber eyes. Then it
scampered up the scaffolding of branches and poles that did duty for a
forest canopy. Its retractile claws, always sharp, bit into the wood.
Moncats climbed even better than monkeys.
He still wondered which were smarter, moncats or monkeys. Moncats were
more self-centered and perverse; of that he had no doubt. Monkeys thought
more along the lines of human intelligence. That made them
seem smarter, at least at first glance. But Lanius remained
unconvinced they really were.
Try as he would, he couldn’t think of any way to test the animals that
would prove anything. If the moncats didn’t feel like playing along, they
simply wouldn’t. What did that prove? Were they stupid, or just willful?
Or would he be the stupid one for trying to get them to do things they
weren’t inclined to do?
As things stood now, he certainly felt like the stupid one. He eyed the
moncat he’d twice encountered in the archives. Maybe the servants were
lying, and someone had opened a door that second time, as Bubulcus had
the first time. If they weren’t, though, Pouncer did have a secret it
wasn’t telling.
“If you come to the archives again, I’ll. . .” Lanius’ voice trailed
away. What
would he do to Pouncer if it escaped again? Punish it?
Congratulate it? Both at once? If the moncat didn’t already think so, that
would convince it human beings were crazy.
Reluctantly, he left the moncats’ chamber. He wasn’t going to find out
what he wanted to know there. He wondered if a wizard could figure out
what Pouncer was doing. But plenty of more important things needed
wizards. What a moncat was up to didn’t. Odds were it wouldn’t—couldn’t—do
it again anyway.
So Lanius told himself. All the same, the first few times he went back
to the archives, he kept looking around at every small noise he imagined
he heard. He waited for the moncat to meow and to emerge from concealment
brandishing something it had stolen from the kitchens.
He waited, but nothing out of the ordinary happened. He decided those
small noises really were figments of his imagination. When he stopped
worrying about them, he got more work done than he had for weeks. He
turned up several parchments touching on how Avornis had ruled the
provinces south of the Stura River before the Menteshe—and the Banished
One—took them from the kingdom.
Would those ever really matter again? Every time Avornis tried to
reclaim the lost provinces, disaster had followed. No King of Avornis for
the past two centuries and more had dared do any serious campaigning south
of the Stura. And yet Grus talked about going after the Scepter of Mercy
in a way that suggested he
was serious and
would do it if he got the chance. Lanius would have been more
likely to take that as bluster if the Banished One hadn’t stirred up so
much trouble for Avornis far from the Stura. Didn’t that suggest he was
worried about what might happen if the Avornans did try once more to
reclaim the Scepter and their lost lands?
Didn’t it? Or did it? How could a mere mortal know? Maybe the outcast
god was stirring up trouble elsewhere for its own sake. Or maybe he was
laying an uncommonly deep trap, building up belief in their chances so he
could do a better job of cutting them down.
That troubled Lanius enough to drive him out of the royal archives—and
over to the great cathedral and the ecclesiastical archives. He’d seen
they held more about the Banished One than the royal archives did. The
expelled deity had been a theological problem even before he became a
political problem.
Lanius paid his respects to Arch-Hallow Anser. Then he called on
Ixoreus. The green-robed priest held no high rank. But what he didn’t know
of the archives under the cathedral, no man living did.
After a moment’s thought, the king wondered about that. As he and the
white-bearded archivist went downstairs, Lanius asked, as casually as he
could, “Have you ever run across the name Milvago in all these
parchments?”
Ixoreus stopped. His eyes widened slightly—no, more than slightly. “Oh,
yes, Your Majesty,” he said in a low voice. “I have run across that name.
I didn’t know you had.”
“I often wish I hadn’t,” Lanius said. “Do you know what that name
means?”
“Oh, yes,” the archivist repeated. “But I have never told a living soul
of it. Have you?”
“One,” Lanius answered. “I told Grus. He had to know.”
Ixoreus considered. At last, with some reluctance, he nodded. “Yes, I
suppose he did. But can he keep his mouth shut?” He spoke of the other
king with a casual lack of respect. Lanius was suddenly sure the old man
spoke about him the same way when he was out of earshot.
“Yes,” he said. “Grus and I don’t always get along, but he can hold a
secret.”
“I suppose so,” Ixoreus said. “He hasn’t told the arch-hallow. I’m sure
of that—and Anser is his own flesh and blood.
I never told anybody—not Arch-Hallow Bucco, not King Mergus, not
King Scolopax— gods, no!—not anybody. And I wouldn’t have told you,
either, if you hadn’t found out for yourself.”
Considering what this secret was. . . “Good,” Lanius told the
priest.
The gray stone walls of Nishevatz frowned down on the Avornan army
encamped in front of them. Grus studied the formidable stonework.
“Here we are again,” he said to Hirundo. “How do we do better this time
than we did two years ago?”
“Yes, here we are again,” the general agreed lightly. “How do we do
better? Taking the city would be good, don’t you think?”
“Now that you mention it, yes.” King Grus matched him dry for dry. “And
how do we go about that, if you’d be so kind?”
They stood not far from the outer opening of the tunnel Prince Vsevolod
had used to escape from Nishevatz, the tunnel Avornan and Chernagor
soldiers had entered to sneak into the town . . . and from which, by all
appearances, they’d never emerged. Hirundos eyes flicked in the direction
of that opening. “One thing we’d better
not do,” he said, “and that’s try going underground again.”
“True,” Grus said. “That means we have to go over the wall—or through
it.”
He and Hirundo both looked toward Nishevatz’s works. From behind
battlements, Chernagor fighting men in iron helmets and mail-shirts looked
back. Two years earlier, Grus had seen how well they could fight defending
one of their towns. He had no reason to believe they’d gone soft in those
two years. That meant breaking into Nishevatz wouldn’t be easy.
“Do you think the wizard can do us any good?” Hirundo asked.
“I don’t know,” Grus answered. “We’d better find out, though, eh?”
Pterocles looked his usual haggard self. Grus could hardly blame him.
The last time he’d looked at these walls, he’d almost died. Now, though,
he managed a nod. “I’ll do what I can, Your Majesty.”
“How much do you think that will be?” Grus asked. “If you
can’t help us, tell me now so I can try to make other plans.”
“I think I can,” the wizard said. “I don’t feel anything of the
presence that beat me the last time. That makes me think it
was the Banished One, and that now he’s busy somewhere else.”
Was that good news? Grus wasn’t altogether sure. “Do you know where?
Can you sense what he’s doing?”
“No, Your Majesty,” Pterocles replied. “I don’t feel him at all. That’s
all I can tell you.” He paused. “No. It’s not. I’m not sorry not to feel
him, either.”
Grus pointed north, toward the sea. “Without a sorcerous foe here, can
you do anything about the supply ships that are keeping Nishevatz fed? If
the grain doesn’t come in, this turns into a real siege, one we can win
without trying to storm the walls.”
“I don’t know.” Pterocles looked dubious. “I can try, but magic doesn’t
usually travel well over water—not unless you’re the Banished One, of
course. He can do things ordinary wizards only dream of.” There are reasons for that, too, Grus thought; he knew more of
them than even Pterocles did. Since he couldn’t tell the wizard what he
knew, he said, “It’s not the water we want to aim the magic at. It’s those
ships.”
“Yes, I understand that,” Pterocles said impatiently. “I’m not
altogether an idiot, you know.”
“Well, good,” Grus murmured. “I do like to have that reassurance.” As
he’d hoped, Pterocles sent him a dirty look. An angry wizard, he thought,
would do a better job than one just going through the motions. He hoped
so, anyhow.
Ships full of grain kept getting into Nishevatz for the next few days.
Grus could watch them put in at quays beyond the reach of his catapults.
He could watch men haul sacks of grain into the Chernagor town on their
backs and load more sacks into carts and wagons that donkeys and horses
took inside the walls. As far as he could tell, Prince Vasilko’s soldiers
were eating better than his own men. And he couldn’t do anything about
it.
He couldn’t—but maybe Pterocles could. The wizard didn’t show his face
for some time. Grus checked on him once, and found him sitting with his
chin in his hands staring down at a grimoire on a folding table in front
of him. Pterocles didn’t look up. He didn’t seem to notice the king was
there. Grus silently withdrew. If Pterocles was getting ready to do
something large and important, Grus didn’t want to interfere. If, on the
other hand, the wizard was just sitting there . . . If that’s all he’s doing, he’ll be very sorry, Grus thought.
I’ll make sure he’s very sorry.
In due course, Pterocles emerged. He looked pale but determined. He
always looked pale. Determination often seemed harder to come by. Nodding
to Grus, the wizard said, “I’m ready, Your Majesty.”
Grus nodded. “Good. So are we. Gods grant you good fortune.”
“Thank you, Your Majesty. What I can do, I will.” Pterocles brought out
a basin filled with water. On it floated toy ships made of chips of wood,
with stick masts and scraps of cloth for sails. Pointing to the basin, he
told Grus, “It’s filled with seawater from the Northern Sea.”
To him, the point of that seemed clear. To Grus, it was opaque. The
king asked, “Why?”
“To make it more closely resemble that which is real,” the wizard
replied. “The more closely the magical and the real correspond, the better
the result of the spell is likely to be.”
“You know your business,” Grus said.
I hope you know your business.
Pterocles got down to it as though he knew his business. He began to
chant in a dialect of Avornan even older than the one priests used to
celebrate the sacred liturgies in temples and cathedrals. When a cloud
drifted close to the sun, he pointed a finger at it and spoke in
threatening tones, though the dialect was so old-fashioned, Grus couldn’t
make out exactly what he said. The cloud slid past without covering the
sun. Maybe the wind would have taken it that way anyhow. Grus didn’t think
so, not with the direction in which it was blowing, but maybe. Still,
mortal wizards had trouble manipulating the weather, so maybe not,
too.
The king wondered why Pterocles wanted to preserve the sunshine, which
was about as bright as it ever got in the misty Chernagor country. He soon
found out. The wizard drew from his leather belt pouch what Grus first
took to be a crystal ball. Then he saw it was considerably wider than it
was thick, though still curved on top and bottom.
Chanting still, Pterocles held the crystal a few inches above one of
the miniature ships floating in the basin. A brilliant point of light
appeared on the toy ship’s deck. To Grus’ amazement, smoke began to rise.
A moment later, the toy ship burst into flame. Pterocles shouted out what
was plainly a command.
And then Grus shouted, too, in triumph. He pointed out to sea. One of
the real ships there had also caught fire. A thick plume of black smoke
rose high into the sky. Pterocles never turned his head to look. He went
right on with his spell, poising the crystal over another ship.
Before long, that second toy also burned. When it did, another
Chernagor ship bound for Nishevatz also caught fire. “Well done!” Grus
cried. “By Olor’s beard, Pterocles, well done!”
Pterocles, for once, refused to be distracted. For all the difference
the king’s shout made to his magic, Grus might as well have kept quiet. A
third miniature ship caught fire. A third real ship out on the Northern
Sea burst into flame.
That was enough for the rest of the Chernagor skippers. They put about
and fled from Nishevatz as fast as the wind would take them. That wasn’t
fast enough to keep another tall-masted ship from catching fire and
burning. The survivors fled faster yet.
Pterocles might have burned even more ships, but the strain of what he
was doing caught up with him. He swayed like a tall tree in a high wind.
Then his eyes rolled up in his head and he toppled over in a faint. Grus
caught him before he hit his head on the ground, easing him down.
Once Pterocles wasn’t working magic anymore, he soon recovered. His
eyes opened. “Did I do it, Your Majesty?” he asked.
“See for yourself.” Grus pointed out toward the Northern Sea, and
toward the smoke rising from the burning ships upon it.
The wizard made a fist and smacked it softly into the open palm of his
other hand. “Yes!” he said, one quiet word with more triumph in it than
most of the shouts the king had heard.
“Well done. More than well done, by the gods.” Grus gave Pterocles all
the praise he could. “You had a hard time when you were in the Chernagor
country a couple of years ago, but now you’re making our foes pay.”
“This was . . . much easier than what I did year before last,”
Pterocles replied. “Then ...” He shook his head, plainly not wanting to
remember. “Well, you saw what happened to me then. Now . . . Now I feel as
though I’m not fighting somebody three times as tall as I am, and ten
times as strong.”
Grus wondered what that meant. Probably that, as he’d thought, the
Banished One wasn’t watching Nishevatz as closely as he had then, and
didn’t land on Pterocles like a landslide when the wizard threatened to do
something inconvenient. When that first occurred to him, Grus knew nothing
but relief. But it quickly spawned another obvious question. If the
Banished One wasn’t concentrating on the land of the Chernagors these
days, where
was he concentrating, and why?
When Grus asked the worrisome question out loud, Pterocles said, “I’m
sorry, Your Majesty, but I have no way of learning that.”
“I know you don’t—not until the Banished One shows all of us,” the king
said. “Meanwhile, though, all we can do is keep on here. If we can turn
this into a real siege, we’ll starve Vasilko into yielding up
Nishevatz.”
Pterocles nodded. “Yes,” he repeated, even more low-voiced than before.
It wasn’t triumphant this time—he’d seen how uncertain war could be. But
it held as much anticipation as Grus felt himself.
Little by little, Lanius had resigned himself to Cristata’s being gone.
He wouldn’t see her again. He wouldn’t hold her again. He’d made peace
with Sosia. He’d never stopped caring for his wife. Maybe she finally
believed that. Or maybe she’d decided showing she didn’t believe it wasn’t
a good idea.
But Lanius also began to notice that the serving women in the palace
looked on him with new eyes these days. Before he slept with Cristata,
they’d seemed to think he wouldn’t do anything like that. Now they knew he
might. And they knew how much they might gain if he did—with them. They
straightened up whenever he came by. They batted their eyes. They swung
their hips. Their voices got lower and throatier. They leaped to obey his
every request. It was all very enjoyable, and all very distracting.
Sosia also noticed. She didn’t find it enjoyable. “They’re a pack of
sluts,” she told Lanius. “I hope you can see that, too.”
“Oh, yes. I see it,” he said. That seemed to satisfy Sosia. He’d hoped
it would. He’d even meant it. That didn’t mean he didn’t go on enjoying.
Few men fail to enjoy pretty women finding them attractive, regardless of
whether they intend to do anything about it.
Lanius hadn’t particularly intended to do anything about it. He
understood that some—a lot—of the serving women’s new interest was
mercenary. As things worked out, though, his eyes didn’t ruin his good
intentions. His nose did.
He was going down the corridor that led to the royal archives when he
suddenly stopped and sniffed. The scent was sweet and thick and spicy.
He’d never smelled it before, or at least never noticed it before. He
noticed it now. He couldn’t have noticed it much more if he’d been hit
over the head.
“What
is that perfume?” he said.
“It’s called sandalwood, Your Majesty.” The maidservant’s name, Lanius
recalled, was Zenaida. She was from the south, with wavy midnight hair,
black eyes, and a delicately arched nose. When she smiled at the king, her
lips seemed redder and fuller and softer than ever before. “Do you like
it?”
“Very much,” Lanius answered. “It. . . suits you.”
“Thank you.” Zenaida smiled again, without any coyness about what she
had in mind. “And what would suit
you, Your Majesty?”
Not even Lanius, who often failed to notice hints, could misunderstand
that. He coughed once or twice. If not for the perfume, he might have
passed it off with a joke or pretended not to hear. But the fragrance
unlocked gates in his defenses before he even realized the citadel was
under attack. Up until now, he’d hardly noticed Zenaida. He wondered why
not.
“What
would suit me?” he murmured. The answer came without hesitation.
“Come along,” he told Zenaida. Smiling once more—a woman’s secret smile of
victory—she stepped up by his side.
The palace was full of little rooms—storerooms, small reception halls,
rooms with no particular purpose. Finding an empty one was as easy as
walking down the hallway and opening a door. Lanius and Zenaida went in
together. The king closed the door and barred it. When he turned back to
Zenaida, the maidservant was already pulling her dress off over her
head.
Half an hour later, they came out of the chamber—Zenaida first, then
Lanius, who was still setting his clothes to rights. He blew the
maidservant a kiss as she went off on whatever business he’d interrupted
when he smelled the sandalwood perfume. Laughing a happy little laugh, she
fluttered her fingers at him and disappeared around a corner.
“Oh. The archives.” Lanius had to remind himself where he’d been going
when he smelled Zenaida’s perfume. He suspected he wore a silly grin as he
opened the doors that let him in and closed them behind him.
He sat down and started poking through old tax registers. After a
moment, he realized he was paying no attention to them. Now he laughed.
Thinking about Zenaida’s smooth, creamy skin, about the way she arched her
back and moaned when pleasure took her, was more fun than finding out how
many sheep villagers two hundred years dead had claimed they owned.
Thinking about that also made him realize he’d enjoyed lying with her
as much as he ever had with Cristata. He wondered what that meant.
Actually, he had a pretty good idea. It meant what he’d thought was love
for the other serving woman had probably been nothing but
satisfaction.
Grus had told him as much not long after sending Cristata off to a
provincial town. Lanius hadn’t wanted to listen. Now . . . Now he had to
admit to himself (he never would have admitted it to Grus) that his
father-in-law had been right. Making love with Zenaida had taught him more
than he’d imagined when he first sniffed sandalwood.
And not only had he learned something about himself, he’d also learned
something about Grus. The other king got high marks for cleverness. Lanius
also had a better idea why Grus sometimes bedded other women. Sosia
wouldn’t care for that bit of insight, or how he’d gotten it. Neither
would Estrilda. Lanius shrugged. He had it, come what might.
Another tall-masted, high-pooped ship burned in the waters off
Nishevatz. It lit up the night. The Chernagors had quit trying to
resupply the city during the day; Pterocles’ magic made that impossibly
expensive. They’d tried to sneak the merchantman past the wizard under
cover of darkness. They’d tried, they’d failed, and now they were paying
the price—he’d found that setting ships alight with sorcerously projected
ordinary fire worked at night as well as using sunlight did in the
daytime.
Standing beside King Grus, Prince Vsevolod folded his big, bony hands
into fists. “Cook!” he shouted out to the sailors aboard the burning ship.
“You help my son, the scum, you get what you deserve. Cook!”
“I think we’re getting somewhere, Your Highness,” Grus said.
“I know where I want to get.” Vsevolod turned to the gray stone walls
of Nishevatz, now bathed in flickering red and gold. “And I know what I
want to do. I want to get hands on son.”
“What would you do with Vasilko if you had him?” Grus asked.
“Make him remember who is rightful Prince of Nishevatz,” Vsevolod
answered, which didn’t go into detail but did sound more than a little
menacing.
“I wonder how much food they’ve got in there,” Grus said in musing
tones. “Maybe not so much, if they thought they could bring in fresh
supplies whenever they needed them. They’re going to get hungry by and by,
if they aren’t hungry already.”
Vsevolod shook his fist at the city-state he’d ruled for so many years.
“Starve!” he shouted angrily. “Let them all starve. I take bodies out,
bury in fields, raise cabbages from them. Then I bring in new people,
honest people—not thieves who take away crown from honest man.”
Grus didn’t argue with him. He’d long since seen there was no point to
arguing with Vsevolod. The exiled prince knew what he knew, or thought he
knew what he knew, and didn’t care to change his mind.
Sure enough, Vsevolod demanded, “How soon we attack Nishevatz?”
“When we’re sure the defenders are too hungry and too weak to put up
much of a fight,” Grus answered. “We fought too soon and too hard year
before last, if you’ll remember. We want to win when we go in.”
Vsevolod made a noise down deep in his chest. It wasn’t agreement, or
anything even close to agreement. The prince sounded like a lion balked of
its prey. He didn’t want to wait. He wanted to spring and leap and
kill.
Grus also wanted Nishevatz. What he didn’t want was to pay a crippling
price for the Chernagor city-state. He’d done worse than that on his
earlier campaign against it—he’d paid a high price and failed to take the
place. Another embarrassment of that sort would be the last thing he—or
Avornis—needed.
Vsevolod’s thinking ran along different lines. “When do you attack?” he
asked again. “When is Nishevatz mine once more?”
“I told you, I’ll attack when I think I can win without bankrupting
myself.”
“This is coward’s counsel,” Vsevolod complained.
“Oh?” King Grus sent him a cold stare. “How many men are
you contributing to this attack, Your Highness?”
The deposed Prince of Nishevatz returned a glance full of fury—full of
something not far from hate. “Traitors. My people are traitors,” he
mumbled, and slowly and deliberately turned his back on Grus.
An Avornan who did something like that to his sovereign would find
himself in trouble in short order. But Grus wasn’t Vsevolod’s sovereign.
Vsevolod was, or had been, a sovereign in his own right. The way he acted
in exile made Grus understand why the people of Nishevatz had been
inclined to give Vasilko a chance to rule them. Since Vasilko relied on
the Banished One for backing, that choice hadn’t been a good one. But
Vsevolod hadn’t been the best of rulers, either.
Sighing, Grus wished
he had some other choice besides Vsevolod or Vasilko to offer the
Chernagors inside Nishevatz. But, as he knew all too well, he didn’t. If
only Vsevolod had a long-lost brother or cousin, or Vasilko had a brother
or even a bastard half brother. But they didn’t. Grus was stuck with one
or the other—was, in effect, stuck with Vsevolod, since Vasilko had chosen
the Banished One. The King of Avornis sighed again. In a poem, some other
candidate for Prince of Nishevatz would turn up just when he was needed
most. In real life, this bitter old man, no bargain himself, was the only
tool that fit Grus’ hand.
“Traitors,” Vsevolod muttered again. He swung back toward Grus. “Your
wizard can find way over wall, yes?”
“Maybe.” Grus wasn’t sure himself. “I’d better see, though.”
He sent a messenger to find Pterocles and bring the wizard to him.
Pterocles came promptly enough. The wizard seemed more cheerful than he
had since being felled in front of Nishevatz during the last siege.
Succeeding with his spells had buoyed him, the same way a string of
victories would have buoyed a general.
“What can I do for you, Your Majesty?” he asked.
“I don’t know yet,” Grus answered. “Prince Vsevolod has asked what you
can do to help take Nishevatz away from Vasilko. It strikes me as a
reasonable question.”
“Set walls afire, like you set ships afire,” Vsevolod said eagerly.
“Roast Vasilko like saddle of mutton in oven.”
Pterocles shook his head. “I’m sorry, Your Highness, but I can’t manage
that. The ships are wooden, and burn easily. I’m not wizard enough to set
stone afire. I’m not sure any mortal could do that.”
Maybe the Banished One could hung in the air, unspoken but almost
palpable.
“Burn gates, in that case,” Vsevolod said, which was actually a good
suggestion.
Grus looked at Pterocles. Pterocles looked toward the gates, which were
of timbers heavily plated with iron. “Maybe,” the wizard said. “I could
try, anyhow, when the sun comes out again. For that, I’d want the
strongest, purest sorcery I can work, and sunlight is stronger and purer
than earthly fire.” The day, like many around Nishevatz, was dim and
overcast, with fog rolling in off the Northern Sea.
“Get ready to try, then,” Grus told Pterocles. “We’ll see what
happens.” He didn’t say anything suggesting he would blame the wizard if
the magic failed. He wanted to build up the other man’s confidence, not
tear it down.
Vsevolod cared nothing for such concerns. Glowering at Pterocles, he
demanded, “Why you have to wait for sun?”
“As I said, it gives the best fire to power my spells,” Pterocles
replied.
“You want fire?” Vsevolod pointed toward the rows of cookfires
throughout the Avornan encampment. “We have plenty fires for you.”
“You may think so, but the magic is stronger with the sun,” Pterocles
said. “For a ship that’s very easy to burn, the other fire, I’ve found,
will do. For the gates, which will be much harder, I have to have the
strongest fire I can get. Do I tell you how to run your business, Your
Majesty?”
Vsevolod muttered something in the Chernagor language. Grus didn’t
understand a word of it. All things considered, that was probably just as
well. Before the Prince of Nishevatz could return to Avornan, Grus spoke
up, saying, “We have to trust Pterocles’ judgment here. When he’s ready,
he can cast the spell. Until then, he would do better to wait.”
More mutters from Vsevolod. “Thank you, Your Majesty,” Pterocles
said.
“You’re welcome,” Grus answered, but he couldn’t help adding, “I hope
you don’t have to wait too long.”
Later, he wished he hadn’t said that. He couldn’t help wondering
whether he’d jinxed the wizard and his magic. Day after day of gloom and
fog followed, with never more than a halfhearted glimpse of the sun. Such
stretches of bad weather could happen here, sure enough. Was this one
natural, though?
At last, Grus grew impatient and frustrated enough to ask the question
aloud. Pterocles only shrugged. “Hard to know for certain, Your Majesty. I
will say this once more, though—weatherworking’s not easy, not for
mortals.”
“Not for mortals.” The king chewed on that. “Is the Banished One
turning his eye this way again, then?”
“I haven’t noticed any sign of it.” Pterocles’ sigh sent more fog into
the cool, moist air. “I think I would. A man who’s known the lion’s claw
recognizes it when he feels it again.”
Four days later, the weather finally changed, but not for the better.
Rain began dripping from the heavens. It went on and on, never too hard
but never letting up, either. Avornan soldiers squelched glumly through
their camp, pulling each boot out of the mud in turn.
The rain frustrated Pterocles in more ways than one. “I hope the
Chernagors don’t try to sneak ships into Nishevatz while the weather stays
bad,” he said. “Bad for us, I mean—good for them. They might manage it
without our even noticing. For that matter, using ordinary fire in the
spells against their ships wouldn’t be easy now.”
“How likely are they to do that?” Grus asked. “
I wouldn’t want to try sailing through rain and fog.” He
shuddered, imagining rocks or other ships unseen until too late. Pterocles
only gave him another shrug. That did nothing to reassure him. With a
shrug of his own, Grus said, “Be ready to do what needs doing when the
weather finally clears. Sooner or later, it has to.”
“I’ll be ready, Your Majesty,” the wizard declared. Grus could only
accept that. If he nagged Pterocles after such a promise, he would likely
do the Avornan cause more harm than good.
After another week of fog and drizzle and rain, the king felt about
ready to burst. So did Vsevolod, who muttered darkly into his white beard.
Pterocles paced back and forth like a caged bear. Even General Hirundo,
among the most cheerful men ever born, began snapping at people.
Grus felt like cheering when he finally saw a sunny dawn. Thanks to the
rain that had gone before, it was a beautiful day. All the weeds and
shrubs around Nishevatz glowed like emeralds. Sunbeams sparkled off drops
of water in the greenery, spawning countless tiny rainbows. The bushes
might have been full of diamonds. The air still tasted sweet and damp; the
rain had washed it clean of the stinks that clung to an encamped army.
“Let’s go, Pterocles,” Grus called. He didn’t ask if the wizard was
ready to work his magic against the gate. He assumed Pterocles was. If
that assumption proved wrong, the king would have something to say. Until
it proved so, he would go forward.
Pterocles said, “Your Majesty, I can try the spell now if you order me
to. It may work, but it may not. If you let me wait until the sun stands
higher in the sky and its light is stronger, the spell is almost sure to
work then. I will do as you require either way. What would you like?”
However much Grus wished it weren’t, that was a legitimate question.
“Wait,” he said after thinking a little while. “Your magic is the most
important part of the attack. It needs to work to give us a chance of
taking Nishevatz. Do it when you think the odds are best.”
“Thank you.” Pterocles sketched a salute.
Grus watched the skies, looking for clouds to roll across the sun and
steal the wizard’s chance. He thought he would tell Pterocles to try with
ordinary fire then—if it started the gate burning, well and good; if not,
they could wait for sun again. But the day only got brighter, and about as
warm as it ever seemed to around Nishevatz. Steam rose from the walls of
the city-state, and from the ground around it. The king was about to ask
Pterocles if he was ready to begin when a rider pounded up from the south.
Mud flew from his horse’s hooves as it trotted forward. “Your Majesty!”
the messenger called. “I have important news, your Majesty!”
“Give it to me,” Grus said, as calmly as he could. News like that, news
important enough to rush up from the south, was unlikely to be good.
And, sure enough, the messenger said, “I’m sorry, Your Majesty, but
Prince Ulash’s Menteshe have come north over the Stura. They’re hitting
the provinces on our side of the river hard.”
“
Ulash’s Menteshe?” Grus said, and the rider nodded. Grus cursed.
That was the worst news he could have gotten. Ulash had stayed quiet when
Prince Evren raided the southern provinces a few years before. If he was
running wild now . . . He was at least as strong as all the other Menteshe
princes put together.
No wonder the Banished One stopped worrying about the land of the
Chernagors, Grus thought.
“Shall I go ahead and cast the spell, Your Majesty?” Pterocles
asked.
“No,” Grus said, hating the word. “We have to break off the siege
again. We have to go back.”
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Lanius wished he weren’t once more briefly seeing Grus in the city of
Avornis as the other king hurried from one trouble spot to another. Grus
looked harried. Lanius couldn’t blame him. Grus said, “Is it really as bad
as it’s sounded from all the reports I’ve had?”
“All I have are the same reports,” Lanius answered. “It doesn’t sound
good, does it?”
“This isn’t just a raid, sure enough,” Grus said. “They’re throwing
everything they’ve got into it.”
“In a way, it’s a compliment,” Lanius said. Grus eyed him as though
he’d lost his mind. “It is,” Lanius insisted. “You were doing too well up
in the Chernagor country. The Banished One couldn’t find any way to stop
you up there, so he got Ulash moving down in the south.”
The other king frowned as he thought things over. “Something to that,”
he said at last. His frown got deeper, pulling the lines of his face into
harsh relief.
He’s not a young man anymore, Lanius thought. But even if Grus
wasn’t as young as he had been, he remained vigorous. He also hadn’t lost
his wry wit. “It’s a compliment I could do without, you know.”
“I believe it.” Lanius waited for Grus to warn him not to get too
enthusiastic about running the kingdom from the capital while his fellow
king took the field. Grus didn’t do it. Instead, he threw back his head—
and yawned. Lanius asked him, “How long do you aim to stay in the city of
Avornis?”
“Today, maybe tomorrow,” Grus answered. “No longer than that. A couple
of things I need to take care of here, and then I’ll be on my way down
toward the Stura. It’s not like I haven’t fought in those parts
before.”
“What are you going to do here?” Lanius asked.
Grus’ smile was all sharp teeth. “I know Petrosus isn’t your favorite
minister,” he said. Lanius nodded. The other king went on, “You’ll be
dealing with someone else from now on. Petrosus will spend the rest of his
days in the Maze.”
“Even though he’s Ortalis’ father-in-law?” Lanius said in surprise.
“Because he’s Ortalis’ father-in-law,” Grus answered
grimly.
“But Ortalis and Limosa ran off and got married by themselves,” Lanius
said. “That’s how they both tell it.”
“I don’t care how they tell it,” Grus said. “Ortalis wouldn’t have
chosen her if her father hadn’t pulled wires. And any which way, you can’t
tell me Petrosus wouldn’t try to pull more now that he’s wedged his way
into my family.”
In a way, that was funny. Grus had wedged
his way into Lanius’ family the same way. And Grus didn’t just
pull wires. He had the whole web of the kingdom in his hands. Pointing
that out would not have endeared Lanius to him. The only thing Lanius
found to say was, “You would know best.”
Even that earned him a sharp look from Grus. The other king was far
from a fool, even if Lanius had to remind himself of that every so often.
Grus said, “There are times when I wonder whether I know anything about
anything.” You know enough to hold on to things for yourself, Lanius
thought. He said, “Will you use river galleys against the Menteshe?”
“If I can,” Grus answered. “Past that, I’ll just have to see.”
Lanius nodded. “All right. Until you see how things are down in the
south, I don’t suppose you can say anything more.” He hesitated, then
added, “Are you sure you want to send Petrosus to the Maze? He hasn’t done
anything out of line that I’ve been able to see—and you’re right, I don’t
like him a bit, so I wouldn’t be shy about telling you if he had.”
“I’m sure.” The older king sounded altogether determined.
“By all the signs, Ortalis and Limosa are happy newlyweds,” Lanius
said.
Grus snorted. “Ortalis is getting laid regularly. Of course he’s happy.
But what happens when that isn’t enough to keep him happy?” He made a
particularly sour face. So did Lanius, who knew what his fatherin-Jaw
meant, and wished he didn’t. He wondered what Limosa would think when she
found out about her new husband’s . . . peculiar tastes.
Changing the subject seemed a good idea. Lanius said, “Gods go with you
on your trip to the south.”
“Yes,” Grus said. They sat alone in a small audience chamber. A low
table with a jug of wine and a couple of cups stood between them. Grus
emptied his cup, then looked around to make sure no one lurked outside a
window or in the hallway by the door. Only after he’d satisfied himself
did he continue, “They’d better, don’t you think? Considering who’s behind
Ulash, I mean.”
“Oh, yes. That’s what I had in mind, too.” Lanius also took another sip
of wine.
Grus got up, came around the table, and set a hand on his shoulder.
“You take care of things here. I’ll do what I can with the Menteshe—
to the Menteshe.”
“Good.” Lanius beamed. Grus was starting to accept him as a real
partner, not just as one in name only. No doubt Grus did so only because
he had no choice. Lanius knew as much. He was no less pleased on account
of that.
The fastest way south was by ship through the Maze. That made Hirundo
unhappy. Even on the placid waters of the marsh, Grus’ general was less
than a good sailor. He wagged a finger at the king. “Don’t you laugh at me
now, Your Majesty, or I’ll pay you back when you get on a horse.”
“Me? I didn’t say a thing.” Grus contrived to look innocent.
Hirundo laughed, which made him suspect his contrivance could have been
better. “I saw what you were thinking. The only thing I can say for this
is, it’s better than going out on the open sea.” He shuddered at the
memory.
“It’s better than horseback, too,” Grus said. “Some people might think so,” Hirundo answered pointedly. “I
don’t happen to be one of them.” He glanced around at the water, the weeds
and branches floating in it, the muddy, grassy tussocks rising just out of
it, and shook his head. “I think the only real reason you came through
here was so you could see for yourself the monastery you picked out for
Petrosus.”
Grus had seen the monastery. It sat in the middle of a tussock big
enough to be called an island. The only way off was by boat, and even
boats had trouble getting through the mud surrounding it. All the same,
the place was built like a fortress. Monks who came there would assuredly
spend the rest of their lives in prayer.
Something landed on Grus’ arm. It bit him. He swatted. He didn’t know
whether he smashed it or not. A moment later, something else bit him on
the back of the neck. He swatted there, too. The bug squashed under his
fingers. He wiped his hand on a trouser leg. Monks at Petrosus’ new
monastery might spend every spring and summer praying to be plagued by
fewer bugs.
Hirundo was swatting, too. “Miserable things. This place is good for
nothing—not a single cursed thing.”
“Oh, I don’t know about
that,” Grus said. “I can’t think of any place much better for
getting rid of troublemakers.” He sent Hirundo a speculative stare.
“Don’t look at me that way!” the general exclaimed. “Don’t you dare,
Your Majesty! You tell anybody—me, for instance—he’s liable to have to
stay here for the rest of his days, and he’ll be good forever. I know I
would.”
“Don’t give me that. I’ve known you too long, and I know you too well,”
Grus said. “Nothing could make you stay good forever, or even very
long.”
“The threat of staying here for the rest of my life would do it,”
Hirundo insisted. “Offhand, I can’t think of anything else.”
When the sun set, the flies and gnats went away and the mosquitoes came
out. Their high, thin whine was enough to drive anyone mad. Some of the
sailors, more used to traveling through the Maze than Grus was, draped
fine mesh nets over themselves and slept without being badly bothered.
Grus got some of the netting for himself, too. One of the things nobody
told him, though, was how to pull it over himself without letting
mosquitoes get in under it. The king passed an uncomfortable night and
woke with several new bites from the company he hadn’t wanted.
Noticing Pterocles scratching as the wizard ate bread and ale for
breakfast, he asked, “Don’t you have any magic against mosquitoes?”
Mournfully, the wizard shook his head. “I wish I did, Your Majesty.
Maybe I’ve spent too much time worrying about big things and not enough
about small ones,” he answered, and scratched some more.
Oarmasters on the river galleys got their rowers working as soon as
they could. They worked them hard, too, harder than Grus would have in
their place. When he remarked on that to the oarmaster of his own ship,
the man replied, “Sooner we get out of this miserable place, sooner we
stop getting eaten alive.” Grus had a hard time disagreeing with that.
But getting through the Maze in a hurry wasn’t easy, either. Galleys
and barges went aground on mud banks and had to back oars or, when badly
stuck, to be towed off by other ships. Rowers and officers shouted
curses.
Hirundo said, “There ought to be clearly marked channels, so people
know where they’re going.”
“Part of me says yes to that,” Grus answered. “The other part wonders
whether it’s a good idea to show enemies how to get through the Maze—or,
for that matter, to show people shut up inside the Maze how to get out of
it. I had to dredge one place out so river galleys could get through the
whole length of the Maze. They didn’t used to be able to, you know.”
“Maybe we should have gone around,” Hirundo said.
“Going through it is still the fastest way to get south,” Grus said.
“We’re not crawling now. We’re just not going as fast as we would if
everything were perfect.”
“Oh, hurrah,” Hirundo said sourly.
His general’s sarcasm didn’t faze Grus. He peered south, waiting for
the steersman to find the channel of the Nedon, which ran south for some
little distance after escaping the flat swampland of the Maze. As soon as
the ships were in a place where they could easily tell the difference
between the river and the countryside through which it flowed, they made
much better time.
This left Hirundo no happier. As the river galleys sped up, their
motion grew rougher. Every mile the fleet traveled south, Hirundo got
greener.
Grus, by contrast, enjoyed the journey on the Nedon. Eventually, the
river would turn east, toward the Azanian Sea. Since the Menteshe were
fighting farther south, his men and horses would have to leave the galleys
and barges then. He would have to get on one of those horses. That
prospect left him as delighted as river travel left Hirundo.
When Lanius heard clanks and then a meow in the royal archives, he
wasn’t very surprised, not anymore. He didn’t jump. He didn’t wish he were
a soldier, or even that he had weapons more deadly than pen, parchment,
and ink. He just got to his feet and went over to see if he could find the
moncat responsible for the racket.
After some searching, he did. Pouncer was carrying a stout silver
serving spoon. Lanius wondered how it had gotten the spoon from the
kitchens here to the archives; they weren’t particularly close. For that
matter, the chamber where the moncat lived wasn’t all that close to the
kitchens, either. There had to be passages in the walls a moncat could go
through, regardless of whether a man could.
The king scooped up Pouncer—and the spoon. The moncat twisted and tried
to bite. He tapped it on the nose, hard enough to get its attention. “Stop
that!” he told it, not that it understood Avornan. But it did understand
the tap and the tone of voice. Both told it biting was something it wasn’t
supposed to do. Little by little—about as fast as an ordinary cat would—it
was learning.
Servants exclaimed as Lanius carried Pouncer down the corridor. “How
did it get out this time?” a man asked.
“I don’t know,” the king replied. “I wish I did, but I’ve never seen it
leave its room. I don’t think any cooks have ever seen it sneak into the
kitchens, either.”
“Maybe it’s a ghost.” The servant sounded serious. The workers in the
royal palace were a superstitious lot.
“Feels too solid to be a ghost—and I’ve never heard of a ghost that
steals spoons,” Lanius said. The moncat twisted again, lashing out with
its free front foot. It got Lanius on the forearm. “Ow! I’ve never heard
of a ghost that scratches, either.”
“You never can tell,” the servant said darkly. He went down the
corridor shaking his head. Lanius went up the corridor to the moncats’
chamber.
When he got there, he set Pouncer down. Then he had another small
struggle getting the silver spoon away from the moncat. He watched for a
while, hoping the beast would disappear down whatever hole it had used
while he was there. But, perverse as any cat, it didn’t.
At last, Lanius gave up. He took the spoon off to the kitchens. As he
walked through the palace, he wondered if Pouncer would get there ahead of
him, steal something else, and then disappear again. But he saw no sign of
it when he went through the big swinging doors.
One after another, the cooks denied seeing the moncat. “Has that
miserable beast been in here again?” a fat man asked, pointing to the
spoon in Lanius’ hand.
He held it up. “I didn’t steal this myself.”
He got a laugh. “I don’t suppose you did, Your Majesty,” the fat cook
said, and took it from him. “But how does the moncat keep sneaking
in?”
“That’s what I want to find out,” Lanius answered. “I was hoping you
could tell me.”
“Sorry, Your Majesty,” the cook said. The other men and women who
worked in the kitchens shook their heads. A lot of them sported big
bellies and several chins. That was, Lanius supposed, hardly surprising,
not when they worked with and around food all the time.
A woman said, “What do you suppose the animal’s been eating with that
spoon?” She got a louder laugh than Lanius had, and added, “I suppose we’d
better wash it.” The fat man who was holding it tossed it into a tub of
water ten or fifteen feet away. He had perfect aim. The spoon splashed
into the tub and clattered off whatever crockery already sat in there.
Lanius wondered whether they would have washed it if the cook hadn’t
asked if the moncat had eaten from it. Some things, perhaps, were better
left unknown. He walked out of the kitchen without asking.
He was walking back to his own chambers when he almost bumped into
Limosa, who was coming up the corridor. She dropped him a curtsy,
murmuring, “Good morning, Your Majesty.”
“Good morning, Your Highness,” the king answered. “How are you
today?”
“I am well, thank you,” she answered. “May I please ask you a question,
Your Majesty?”
Lanius thought he knew what the question would be. Since he didn’t see
how he could avoid it, he nodded. “Go ahead.”
“Thank you.” Limosa visibly gathered her courage. “Is there any way you
can release my father from the Maze?”
He’d been right. “I’m sorry,” he said, and did his best to sound as
though he really
were sorry. He knew he had to work at it, considering what he
really thought of Petrosus.
Unfortunately, he wasn’t the only one who knew what he thought of the
former treasury minister. Flushing, Limosa said, “I know you aren’t fond
of my father, Your Majesty. But could you please free him for my
sake?”
“If I could, I would,” Lanius answered, thinking,
If I could, I. . . might. I did ask Grus not to send him to the Maze,
so maybe I would. He wasn’t brokenhearted at having a good excuse not
to, though. “But King Grus sent him away, and King Grus is the only one
who can bring him back to the palace.”
“And King Grus won’t,” Limosa said. Lanius didn’t contradict her.
Biting her lip, she went on, “He thinks my father tricked Ortalis into
marrying me. By the gods, Your Majesty, I tell you again it isn’t
true.”
“I see,” Lanius said—as neutral a phrase as he could find.
“It
isn’t true,” Limosa insisted. “I wanted to marry Ortalis. I love
him.” Lanius wanted to say,
Are you out of your mind? Before either did more than cross his
mind, Limosa went on, “He’s the most wonderful man I ever met—uh, meaning
no disrespect to you, Your Majesty, of course.” She blushed.
“Of course,” Lanius echoed. He was too bewildered, too astonished, to
find anything else to say. Ortalis? The Ortalis who hunted because he was
fond of blood? The Ortalis who hurt women because it excited him?
That Ortalis was the most wonderful man Limosa had ever met?
Something, somewhere, didn’t add up. Lanius had no idea what. He did know
the only individual to whom he less wanted to be married than he did to
Ortalis was the Banished One.
Limosa sighed. “He’s so sweet. And he does such marvelous things.” She
blushed again, this time a bright, bright red. Lanius only scratched his
head. He really did wonder if they were talking about the same Ortalis. If
he hadn’t seen Grus’ son with Limosa, he wouldn’t have believed it.
Horse-drawn wagons full of grain rattled along with Grus’ army. They
didn’t slow it down badly, but they did help tie it to the roads. Grus
wasn’t happy about that, but knew he gained as well as lost from having
them along. The Menteshe made a habit of burning farms and fields and
anything else they came across. Carrying supplies with him was the only
way he could be sure of having them when he needed them most. The horizon
to the south should have been smooth, or gently rolling with the low hills
between the valleys of the Nine Rivers. Instead, an ugly brown-black
smudge obscured part of it. Pointing that way, Grus said, “We’ll find the
nomads there.”
Hirundo nodded. “That’s how it looks to me, too.” He sent the king a
sly smile. “Are you ready to ride into battle, Your Majesty?”
Did
ride have a little extra stress, or was Grus imagining things?
Knowing Hirundo, he probably wasn’t. He answered, “I’m as ready as I’m
going to be,” and set a hand on his horse’s neck. The beast was a placid
gelding. It did what Grus wanted it to do, and didn’t put up much in the
way of argument. That suited him fine. Hirundo rode a stallion. It had
more flash, more fire. Grus cared very little about that. To him, a horse
with fire was a horse that was all too likely to pitch him out of the
saddle and onto the ground headfirst.
He nodded to a trumpeter who rode close by. The man blew
Trot. The king used his knees and the reins to urge his horse up
from a walk. The sooner his men closed with the Menteshe, the better, as
far as he was concerned. Prince Ulash’s men had already come too far north
to suit him.
“Scouts out in the van! Scouts out to the flanks!” Hirundo called.
Riders peeled off from the main body of the army and hurried out to take
those positions. Grus nodded again. He would have given that command in a
moment if Hirundo hadn’t. Generations of painful experience fighting the
southern nomads had taught Avornis that attacks could come from any
direction at any time.
Lanceheads glittered in the sun. His army was split fairly evenly
between lancers and archers. If they could come to close quarters with the
Menteshe, they would have the edge. More painful experience had taught
that closing with the hard-riding nomads wasn’t always easy, or even
possible.
Grus glanced toward Pterocles. “What of their wizards?” the king
asked.
“I don’t feel anything . . . out of the ordinary, Your Majesty,” the
wizard said after a pause for thought. After another pause, he added, “Not
everything is the way it ought to be, though.”
“What do you mean?” Grus asked. Pterocles only shrugged. Grus tried
again, asking, “Why do you say that?” Pterocles gave back another shrug.
The king said, “Could it be because you feel the Banished One paying
attention to what happens here, where you didn’t up by Nishevatz?”
Pterocles jerked, as though someone had stuck him with a pin when he
wasn’t looking. He nodded. “Yes. It could be. In fact, I think it is.
There’s . . . something watching, sure enough.”
“What can you do?”
“What can I do?” Pterocles laughed, more than a little wildly. “I can
hope he doesn’t notice me, that’s what. And a forlorn hope it is, too.” He
pulled on the reins and steered his horse away from the king’s.
Grus hadn’t intended to ask him any more questions anyhow.
Late that afternoon, a scout came galloping back to the king. “Your
Majesty! Your Majesty!” he called, his voice cracking with excitement. “We
just saw our first Menteshe, Your Majesty!”
“Did you?” Grus said, and the young man nodded, his head jerking up and
down, his eyes shining. “Did you catch him? Did you kill him?”
Some of that fervid excitement faded. “No, Your Majesty. I’m sorry. He
rode off to the southwest. We sent a few men after him, but he got
away.”
“Don’t worry about it,” Grus told him. “Plenty more where he came from.
And maybe he showed us where some of his friends are.”
If I find them, will the Banished One be brooding over the
battlefield? Grus wondered.
If I don’t, though, what am I doing here? Why aren’t I just yielding
my southern provinces to Prince Ulash? He couldn’t do that, not if he
wanted to stay King of Avornis, not if he wanted to be able to stand the
sight of his own face whenever he chanced to see a reflection. But he
didn’t relish going forward, either.
The Avornan army didn’t go much farther forward that day. When the army
encamped for the night, Grus ringed it with sentries a long way out.
“That’s very good,” Hirundo said. “That’s very good. I remember how much
trouble Evren’s men gave us at night.”
“So do I,” Grus answered. “That’s why I’m doing this.” The Menteshe
would sneak close if they could, and pepper a camp with arrows. They
didn’t do much harm, but they stole sleep soldiers needed.
Despite all the sentries, a handful of nomads did manage to sneak close
enough to the main camp to shoot a few arrows at it. They wounded two or
three men before shouts roused soldiers who came after them. Then they
disappeared into the night. They’d done what they’d come to do.
The disturbance roused Grus. He lost a couple of hours of sleep
himself, and was yawning and sandy-eyed when the Avornans set out not long
after sunrise. They went past fields the raiders had torched perhaps only
the day before. Sour smoke still hung in the air, rasping the lungs and
stinging the eyes.
He actually saw his first Menteshe on Avornan soil the next morning. A
band of Ulash’s riders had slipped past the Avornan sentries, leaving them
none the wiser. By the surprise with which the Menteshe reacted to the
sight of the whole Avornan army heading their way, they hadn’t so much
eluded the scouts as bypassed them without either side’s noticing.
Despite the way the Menteshe threw up their hands and shouted in their
guttural language, they didn’t wheel their horses and gallop off as fast
as they could go. Instead, they rode toward the Avornans, and started
shooting at a range Avornan bows couldn’t match.
Grus had seen that before, too, most recently in his fight with Prince
Evren’s nomads. “Forward!” he shouted to the trumpeters, who blew the
appropriate horn call. The Avornans pushed their horses up to a gallop as
fast as they could. Grus’ own mount thundered forward with the rest. He
hoped he could stay aboard the jouncing beast. A fall now wouldn’t be
embarrassing. It would be fatal.
The Menteshe, vastly outnumbered, were not ashamed to flee. Grus had
expected nothing else. They kept shooting over their shoulders, too, and
shooting very well. But the Avornans were also shooting now, and some of
them had faster horses than the nomads did. Whether the Menteshe liked it
or not, their pursuers came into range.
And the Avornans could shoot well, top, even if they didn’t carry
double-curved bows reinforced with horn and sinew the way Ulash’s men did.
One nomad after another threw up his hands and crumpled to the ground. A
horse went down, too, and the beast just behind fell over it and crashed
down. Grus hoped both riders got killed.
The surviving nomads scattered then, galloping wildly in all
directions. A few of them might have gotten away, but most didn’t. Grus
waved to the trumpeters. They blew the signal to rein in. Little by
little, the Avornans slowed. Sides heaving, Grus’ horse bent its head to
crop a wisp of grass.
“Very neat, Your Majesty,” Hirundo called, a grin on his face.
“Do you mean this little skirmish, or do you mean that I managed to
stay on the horse?” Grus inquired.
Hirundo’s grin got wider. “Whichever you’d rather, of course.”
“I’m prouder of staying on and even keeping up,” the king said. “This
little band of Menteshe was nothing special—beating them was like cracking
an egg with a sledgehammer. They’re scattered over the countryside,
raiding and looting. Until they come together again, we’ll win some easy
victories like this.”
“We want to win as many of them as we can, too, before they
do come together,” his general said. “The more of them we can get
rid of that way, the fewer we’ll have to worry about then.”
“I know. Believe me, I know,” Grus said. “And even if we do hit them
hard, they spatter like quicksilver. We won’t always be able to pursue the
way we did here, either. If we split up to go after them, they’re liable
to jump us instead of the other way around.”
“Well, Your Majesty, you certainly do understand the problem,” Hirundo
said. “Now if you can figure out a way to solve it...”
Grus grunted and leaned forward to pat the side of his horse’s neck.
Avornans had understood the problem ever since the Menteshe boiled up from
the south centuries before. The nomads, trained since childhood to ride
and to tend their flocks, were simply better horsemen than the Avornans.
Not only did they carry more powerful bows, but they could also cover more
ground. If Avornis hadn’t had the advantage of numbers . . . Grus didn’t
care to think about what might have happened then.
Forcing himself to look on the bright side instead, Grus said, “Well,
we solved it here, anyhow.”
“So we did.” Hirundo nodded. “How many more times will we have to solve
it, though, before we finally drive the Menteshe back over the Stura?”
“I don’t know,” Grus answered with a sigh. He didn’t even know yet
whether the Avornans
could drive Prince Ulash’s men back over the river this year.
That was something else he preferred not to think about. With another
sigh, he went on, “The other question is, how much damage will they do
before we can throw them out? They haven’t mounted an invasion like this
for years.”
“Yes, and we both know why, or think we do,” Hirundo said. The response
made the king no happier. Up until recently, Ulash had seemed both
reasonable and peaceable, qualities Grus wasn’t in the habit of
associating with the Menteshe. But he and his folk reverenced the Banished
One—the Fallen Star, they called him. If he told Ulash to cause trouble
for Avornis, Ulash would—Ulash had—no matter how reasonable and peaceable
he’d seemed for many years.
“I wonder ...” Grus said slowly.
“What’s that, Your Majesty?” Hirundo asked.
“I wonder if we can do anything to persuade Ulash he’d be better off
worshiping the gods in the heavens than the Banished One.”
“I doubt it.” Hirundo, a practical man, sounded like one. “If the
Menteshe haven’t figured out who the true gods are yet, we can’t teach
‘em.”
He was probably right, no matter how much Grus wished he were wrong.
But things were more complicated than Hirundo realized. Bang Olor and
Queen Quelea and the rest were undoubtedly the gods in the heavens. That
made them stronger than the Banished One, yes. Whether it made him any
less a true god . . . was yet another thing Grus would sooner not have
contemplated.
That evening, drums boomed in the distance. Grus knew what that
meant—the Menteshe were signaling back and forth across the miles. The
drumbeats carried far better than horn calls could have. The king wondered
what the nomads were saying with those kettledrums. He kicked at the dirt
inside his tent. He’d served down in the south for years, but he hadn’t
learned to make sense of the drums. He knew no Avornans who had.
Too bad, he thought.
The drums went on all through the night. Grus woke several times, and
each time heard them thudding and muttering, depending on how far off they
were. Every time he woke, he had more trouble falling back to sleep.
“A letter from King Grus, Your Majesty,” a courier said, and handed
King Lanius a rolled and sealed parchment.
“Thank you,” Lanius said in some surprise; he hadn’t expected anything
from Grus. He broke the wax seal and opened the letter.
King Grus to King Lanius—
greetings, he read, and then,
I wonder if you would be kind enough to do me a favor. Does anyone in
the royal archives talk about the drum signals the Menteshe use? Does
anyone know what the different signals mean? If you can find out, please
let me know as quickly as possible. Many thanks for your help. A
scrawled signature completed the letter.
“Is there an answer, Your Majesty?” the courier asked.
“Yes.” Lanius called for parchment, pen, and ink.
King Lanius to Grus—
greetings, he wrote; he still hesitated to admit that Grus
deserved the royal title. But that reluctance didn’t keep him from
continuing,
I
do not know of any records such as you request, but I have never
looked for them, either. I will now, and as soon as I can I will let you
know if I find what you want—
and, for that matter, if I don’t. He signed the letter, sealed it
with candle wax and his signet ring, and gave it to the courier. “Take
this to Grus in the south. I want him to know I will give it my full
attention.”
“Yes, Your Majesty. Thank you, Your Majesty.” The courier bowed and
hurried away.
Lanius, bemused, headed straight for the archives. Grus had never asked
him for information before. He wondered if he could come up with it. He
hoped he could. No Avornan could think of the southern provinces being
ravaged without cringing. Lanius might still wish Grus didn’t wear the
crown. That had nothing to do with whether he wanted Grus to drive the
Menteshe out of the kingdom.
“Drum signals,” Lanius muttered. He knew where a lot of old parchments
that had to do with the Menteshe in one way or another were stored. Maybe
he could find what Grus wanted in among them.
He spent the rest of the day trying, but had no luck. He did discover
there were even more documents in those crates than he’d thought. He
vanished back into the archives after breakfast, and didn’t come out again
until suppertime.
When he disappeared early the following morning, too, Sosia called
after him, “I hope I’ll see you again before too long.”
“That’s right,” answered Lanius, who’d only half heard her. Sosia
laughed and shook her head; she’d seen such fits take her husband
before.
He found the best light he could in the archives. No one ever did a
proper job of cleaning the skylights far above, which left the dusty
daylight in there all the more wan and shirting. Lanius had complained
about that before. He wondered whether complaining again would do any
good. He had his doubts.
Then he started going through the parchments once more, and forgot
about skylights and everything else but the work at hand. He had no
trouble finding parchments mentioning the Menteshe drums. The Avornans
hadn’t needed long to realize the nomads didn’t pound them for amusement
alone. But what they meant? That was a different question.
The more Lanius read, the more annoyed he got.
Why hadn’t his countrymen paid more attention to the drums? More
than a few of them, traders and soldiers, had learned the spoken and
written language of the Menteshe. Why hadn’t anyone bothered to learn
their drum signals? Or, if someone had, why hadn’t he bothered to write
them down?
Lanius kept plugging away. He learned all sorts of interesting things
about the Menteshe, things he’d never known or things he’d seen once
before and then forgotten. He learned the commands a Menteshe used with a
draft horse. Those fascinated him, but they had nothing to do with what
Grus wanted. I
can’t come up empty, Lanius told himself.
I just can’t. If he failed here, Grus would never ask him for
anything again. As though that weren’t bad enough, the other king would
despise the archives. Lanius took that as personally as though Grus were
to despise his children.
And then, half an hour later, the king let out a whoop that echoed
through the big archives chamber. He held a report by a soldier who’d
served along the Stura in the reign of his own
great-great-great-grandfather. The man had carefully described each drum
signal the Menteshe used and what it meant.
After making a copy of the report, Lanius left the chamber. He
scribbled a note to go with the copy, sealed them both, and gave them to a
courier for the long journey south.
“You look pleased with yourself,” Sosia answered when he went back to
the royal chambers in triumph.
“I am,” Lanius answered, and then looked down at the dusty finery he
wore. “But the servants won’t be pleased with me. I forgot to change
before I went into the archives.”
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
“Well, well.” Grus eyed the parchment he’d just unrolled. “King Lanius
came through for us.”
Hirundo looked over his shoulder. “He sure did,” the general agreed.
“This was in the archives?”
“That’s what the note with it says,” Grus answered.
“If we knew this once upon a time, I wonder why we forgot,” Hirundo
said.
“A spell of peace probably lasted longer than any one man’s career,”
Grus said. “The people who knew wouldn’t have passed it on to the younger
officers who needed to know, and so the chain got broken.”
“That makes sense,” Hirundo said.
“Which doesn’t mean it’s true, of course,” Grus said. “How many things
that seem to make perfect sense turn out not to have anything to do with
what looks sensible?”
“Oh, a few,” his general replied. “Yes, just a few.”
“We don’t have to worry about tracking down the whys and wherefores
here,” Grus said with a certain relief. “If what Lanius says in that note
is true, it happened a long time ago.”
“Now that we have what we need, though, let’s see what we can do about
giving the Menteshe a surprise,” Hirundo said.
“Oh, yes.” Grus nodded. “That’s the idea.”
The drums started thumping at sunset that day. In the evening twilight,
Grus peered down at the list of calls Lanius had sent him. Three beats,
pause, two beats . . . That meant
west. Five quick beats was
assemble. Having found those meanings, the king started laughing.
Knowing what the drums meant helped him less than he’d hoped it would.
Yes, Ulash’s men were to assemble somewhere off to the west. But
where?
Grus snapped his fingers.
He didn’t know; this wasn’t a part of Avornis with which he was
intimately familiar. But the army had soldiers from all parts of Avornis
in it. He called for runners, gave them quick orders, and sent them on
their way through the encampment.
Inside half an hour, they came back with four soldiers, all of them
from farms and towns within a few miles of where the army had camped. They
bowed low before the king. “Never mind that nonsense,” Grus said
impatiently, which made their eyes widen in surprise. “If you were going
to gather a large force of horsemen somewhere within a day’s ride west of
here, where would you do it?”
They looked surprised again, but put their heads together even so.
After a few minutes of talk, they all nodded. One of them pointed
southwest. “Your Majesty, there’s a meadow just this side of the Aternus,
before it runs into the Cephisus.” The latter was one of the Nine. The
soldier went on, “It’s got good grazing—Olor’s beard, sir, it’s got
wonderful grazing—the whole year around. It’s about half a day’s ride that
way.”
“Can you guide us to it?” Grus asked. The man nodded. So did his
comrades. And so did the king. “All right, then. Every one of you will do
that come morning. You’ll all have a reward, too. Keep quiet about this
until then, though.”
The men loudly promised they would. Grus hoped so, though he wasn’t
overoptimistic. His father had always said two men could keep a secret if
one of them was dead, and that, if three men tried, one was likely a fool
and the other two spies. After leaving a farm not impossibly far from
here, his father had come to the city of Avornis and served as a royal
guard, so he’d seen enough intrigue to know what he was talking about.
After sending away the soldiers, Grus summoned Hirundo and Pterocles.
He explained what he had in mind. “Can we do this?” he asked.
“A little risky,” Hirundo said. “More than a little, maybe. We’ll look
like idiots if the Menteshe catch on. We may look like
dead idiots if they catch on.”
Grus nodded. He’d already figured that out for himself. He turned to
Pterocles. “Can you mask us, or mask some of us?”
“Some of us,” the wizard answered. “It would have to be some of us. All?” He rolled his eyes. “That would be an impossibly large job for
any human wizard.”
“Do the best you can,” Grus told him. “I don’t expect you to do more
than a human wizard’s capable of.”
“All right, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said.
“You’re going ahead with this scheme, Your Majesty?” Hirundo asked.
“Yes,” Grus said. “If it works, we’ll give Ulash’s men a nasty
surprise.”
And if it doesn’t, they’ll give us one. He refused to worry—too
much—about that. By its nature, war involved risk. The gamble here seemed
good to the king. If they won, they would win a lot.
They rode out before sunrise the next morning, the men from close by
leading the two divisions into which Grus had split the army. Out of a
certain sense of fairness, Grus sent Pterocles off with the division
Hirundo led. The king hadn’t ridden far before regretting his generosity.
If Pterocles had come with him, he would have had a better chance of
staying alive.
No help for it now, though. As Grus had told his guides to do, they led
him and his men on a looping track that would take them around to strike
the Menteshe from the west—if the Menteshe were there. Whether they struck
them at the same time as Hirundo’s men did was going to be largely a
matter of luck.
One of the guards pointed. “There, Your Majesty! Look!”
They’d guessed right. Prince Ulash’s nomads were gathering on the
meadow. Grus knew exactly the moment when they realized the large force
approaching wasn’t theirs but Avornan. So ants boiled after their hill was
kicked.
“Forward!” Grus shouted to the trumpeters. As the fierce horn calls
clove the air, he set spurs to his gelding. The horse whinnied in pained
protest. Grus roweled it again. It bounded ahead. He drew his sword. The
sun flashed fire from the blade. “Forward!” he yelled once more.
Some of the Menteshe started shooting. Others fled. King Grus doubted
the nomads were under any sort of unified command. Each chieftain—maybe
even each horseman—decided for himself what he would do. That made the
Menteshe hard for Avornis to control. It also made them hard for their own
warlords to control.
The Avornans shot back as soon as they came within range. A few of them
had already pitched from the saddle. But Ulash’s warriors began falling,
too. Soon the Menteshe still hale started fleeing. They had never seen any
shame in running away when the odds seemed against them.
Grus brandished the sword, though he had yet to come within fifty feet
of a foe. Where were Hirundo and Pterocles and the other division? Had the
wizard masked them so well, they’d disappeared altogether? Had the
Banished One swept them off the field, as a man might have removed them
from a gaming board? Or had their guides simply gotten lost?
No sooner had Grus begun to worry than the other Avornan force
appeared, as suddenly as though a fog in front of them had blown away. His
own men burst into cheers. The Menteshe, suddenly caught between hammer
and anvil, cried out in dismay. They all tried to flee now, shooting over
their shoulders as they desperately galloped off.
A lot of the nomads did escape. Grus never had to use his sword.
Somehow, none of that mattered much. Many Menteshe lay dead. Looking
around, the king could see that his own force hadn’t suffered badly.
Hirundo saw the same thing. “We hurt ‘em this time, your Majesty,” the
general said, riding up to Grus.
“That’s what we set out to do,” Grus replied, though he knew the
Avornans didn’t always do what they set out to do against the Menteshe.
“Where’s Pterocles? He kept you hidden, all right.”
“He sure did,” Hirundo said enthusiastically. “Even I didn’t know where
we were until just before we got here.” He looked around, then scratched
his head. “I don’t know where he’s gotten to now, though.” His shrug might
have been apology.
Grus also eyed the field. His men, swords drawn, were moving over it.
They plundered the dead Menteshe and cut the throats of the wounded nomads
they found. Had the fight gone against them, the invaders would have done
the same, though they would have reserved some Avornans for torment before
death’s mercy came. Here a trooper held up a fine sword with a glittering
edge, there another displayed a purse nicely heavy with coins, in another
place a man threw on a fur-edged cape not badly bloodstained.
Several Avornans picked up recurved Menteshe bows. One fitted an arrow
to the string, then tried to draw the shaft back to his ear. At the first
pull, he didn’t use enough strength. His friends jeered. Gritting his
teeth, he tried again. This time, the bow bent. He turned it away from his
fellows and let fly. They all exclaimed in surprise at how far the arrow
flew.
“There’s the wizard!” Hirundo pointed as Pterocles emerged from a clump
of bushes. “I thought the rascal had gone and disappeared himself this
time.”
When Grus waved, Pterocles nodded back and made his way toward the
king. Grus clasped his hand and slapped him on the back. Pterocles, none
too steady on his feet, almost fell over. Holding him up, Grus said, “Well
done!”
“Er—thank you, Your Majesty.” Pterocles did not sound like a man who’d
just helped win a good-sized victory. He sounded more like one who’d had
too much to drink and was about to sick up much of what he’d poured down.
His greenish color suggested the same.
“Are you all right?” Grus asked.
Pterocles shrugged. “If you love me, Your Majesty—or even if you hate
me, but not too much—do me the courtesy of never asking me to use that
masking spell against the Menteshe again.” He gulped, and then ran back
into the bushes from which he’d just emerged. When he came out again, his
face was deathly pale, but he looked better. He might have gotten rid of
some of what ailed him.
“Your spell here helped us win,” Grus said, surprised and puzzled. “Why
not use it again?”
“Why not?” The wizard took a deep breath—almost a sob. “I’ll tell you
why not, Your Majesty. I was holding the spell against the Menteshe
horsemen. Thus far, well and good. Then I was holding it against Ulash’s
wizards, which was not such an easy thing, but I managed well enough. But
soon I was also holding it against the Banished One—and gods spare me from
ever having to do that again.” He sat down on the ground; his legs didn’t
seem to want to hold him up anymore.
“But you did it.” The king squatted beside him.
“Oh, yes. I did it.” Pterocles’ voice was hollow, not proud. “He didn’t
take the spell seriously, you might say, until too late. By the time he
grew fully aware of it and realized it might hurt his followers, it
already had. He doesn’t make mistakes twice. He doesn’t make many mistakes
once.” And what would you expect from a foe who was a god? Grus
wondered. But Pterocles already knew about that—not all about it, but
enough.
“It will be as you say,” Grus promised, and the wizard’s shoulders
sagged with relief.
The forest smelled clean and green. When Bang Lanius was in the city of
Avornis, he didn’t notice the mingled stinks of dung and smoke and
unwashed people crowded too close together. When he left, which wasn’t
often enough, the air seemed perfumed in his nostrils. He relished each
inhalation and regretted every breath he had to let out. He also regretted
having to go back to the capital when this day ended. He knew he would
smell the stench he usually ignored.
And part of him regretted letting Arch-Hallow Anser talk him into
coming along on another hunt. After the first one the year before, he’d
vowed never to go hunting again. But this excursion had promised to be too
interesting for him to refuse. For Prince Ortalis also rode with Anser—and
the prince and the arch-hallow had quarreled years before Lanius
disappointed Anser by being immune to the thrills of the chase.
King Grus, of course, was down in the southern provinces fighting the
Menteshe. And yet, though he’d gone hundreds of miles, his influence still
lingered over the city of Avornis—and, indeed, over the hunting party.
Here were his legitimate son, his bastard, and his son-in-law. Had he not
taken the crown, would any of the three younger men even have met the
other two? Lanius doubted it. He would have been just as well pleased
never to have made Ortalis’ acquaintance, but it was years too late to
worry about that.
Some of their beaters were men Anser regularly used in his sport— lean,
silent fellows in leather jerkins and caps who slipped through the trees
with the silent skill of practiced poachers. The rest were Lanius’ royal
bodyguards. The men who served Anser sneered at their jingling mailshirts.
The bodyguards pretended not to hear. They were along to protect King
Lanius first. If they happened to flush out a stag or a wildcat, so much
the better.
Lanius suspected that Anser’s beaters might end up beaten after the
hunting party went back to the city of Avornis. The bodyguards, sensitive
to the royal mood, didn’t want to spoil the day. But they weren’t used to
being mocked, and they had long memories for slights. The men who put
Lanius in mind of poachers seemed strong and tough enough, but the royal
guardsmen were the best Avornis had.
A sharp, staccato drumming high up in an oak made Lanius’ head whip
around. Laughing, Anser said, “It’s nothing—only a woodpecker.”
“What kind?” the king asked. “One of the big black ones with the red
crest, or the small ones that are all black and white stripes, or a
flicker with a black mustache?”
Anser blinked. Ortalis laughed. “Trust Lanius to know about
woodpeckers,” he said. Lanius listened for the malice that usually
informed Ortalis’ words. He didn’t hear it. Maybe not hearing it was
wishful thinking on his part. Or maybe being married to Limosa agreed with
Grus’ son—at least so far. And Lanius didn’t know as much about
woodpeckers, or birds in general, as he would have liked to, but he was
learning.
The drumming rang through the woods again. One of the soft-moving men
in a jerkin said, “Your Majesty, that’s the noise those small, stripy
woodpeckers make. The others, the bigger birds, drum more slowly.”
“Thank you,” Lanius said.
“Yes, thank you,” Anser agreed. “I’ve found something out, too. Who
would have wondered about woodpeckers?”
“Let’s push on,” Ortalis said. “We’ve still got a lot of hunting ahead
of us, woodpeckers or no woodpeckers.”
Anser’s beater vanished among the trees, to drive game back toward the
men with rank enough to kill it. Some of Lanius’ guardsmen went with them.
More, though, stayed behind with the king. “They take no chances, do
they?” Anser said.
“We don’t get paid to take chances, Your Arch-Reverence.” A guard spoke
up before the king could.
A stag bounded past. Ortalis had his bow drawn and an arrow hissing
through the air before Lanius even began to raise his bow.
I
am a hopeless dub at this, Lanius thought.
I
will always be a hopeless dub at this. Ortalis, meanwhile,
whooped. “That’s a hit!” he called, and loped after the deer.
In the palace, Grus’ legitimate son seemed as useless a mortal as any
Lanius had ever seen. Here in the field, he proved to know what he was
doing. Following in his wake, Lanius saw blood splashed on leaves and
bushes. He did not care for the pursuit of wounded animals. Killing beasts
cleanly was one thing. Inflicting such suffering as this on them struck
him as something else again.
It was something else for Ortalis, too—something he relished, as his
excited chatter showed. Lanius would have sneered at his bloodlust— Lanius
had sneered at his bloodlust in the past—but he’d also seen Anser get
excited in the chase. The arch-hallow was mild as milk when he wasn’t
hunting. The king didn’t understand the transformation. Understand it or
not, though, he couldn’t deny it was real.
“Nice shot, Your Highness,” one of the beaters told Ortalis. “He went
down right quick there.” It hadn’t seemed quick to Lanius, who brushed a
twig from his hair as he came up. He didn’t think it had seemed quick to
the stag, either.
Ortalis’ eyes glowed. He knelt beside the fallen deer. Its sides still
heaved feebly as it fought to suck in air. Bloody froth showed at each
nostril; Ortalis’ arrow must have punctured a lung. Drawing a belt knife,
Ortalis cut the stag’s throat. More blood yet poured out onto his hands
and the ground. “Ah,” he said softly, as he might have after a woman.
Lanius’ stomach lurched. He turned away, hoping breakfast would stay
down.
It did. When he looked back, Ortalis was plunging the knife into the
deer’s belly to butcher it. The animal’s eyes were opaque and lusterless
now. That obvious proof of death helped ease the king’s conscience along
with his nausea. Ortalis went right on with the butchering. He seemed to
enjoy it as much as the killing.
Looking up from the work, he remarked, “It’s a bloody job, but
somebody’s got to do it.”
Lanius managed to nod. It wasn’t that Ortalis was wrong. But did a
butcher have to do his work with such fiendish gusto? Lanius doubted that.
He’d doubted it for years.
Getting back on the trail was a relief for him, if not for Ortalis.
Anser had the first shot at the next stag they saw, had it and missed. He
cursed good-naturedly, but with enough pointed comments to startle anyone
who, after hearing him, might suddenly learn he was Arch-Hallow of
Avornis.
Nodding to Lanius, Anser said, “Next one we see, Your Majesty, you can
let fly first.”
“That’s all right,” Lanius said; the honor was one he would gladly have
done without. But both the arch-hallow and Prince Ortalis sent him looks
full of horror. Even his own guardsmen clucked disapprovingly. Without
even knowing it, he’d broken some hunt custom. He did his best to repair
things, adding, “I just don’t want a deer to get away—I’m not much of a
shot.” The last part of that was true, the first part one of the bigger
lies he’d ever told.
But, because he had a reputation for sticking to the truth no matter
what, both Anser and Ortalis accepted his words. “Don’t worry, Your
Majesty,” Anser said. “I missed, and the world won’t end if you do, too,
as long as you try your best.”
“Of course,” said the king, who still couldn’t stomach the idea of
shooting at an animal for the sport of it.
But, before long, he had to try. A magnificent stag stood at the edge
of a clearing twenty or thirty yards away. The wind blew from the stag to
the hunters; the beast, which depended so much on its sensitive nose, had
not the slightest notion they were there. Reluctantly, Lanius drew his bow
and let fly. The arrow flew alarmingly straight. For a bad heartbeat, he
feared he’d actually hit what he aimed at. The shaft zipped over the
deer’s back and thudded into the pale, parchment-barked trunk of a birch
behind it.
The stag bounded away. But Anser and Ortalis’ bowstrings twanged in the
same instant. One of those shafts struck home. The stag crashed to the
ground in the middle of a leap. The arch-hallow and the prince both cried
out in triumph.
And they both turned to Lanius. “Well shot!” Ortalis told him. “You
spooked it perfectly. Now Anser and I have to see who got the kill.”
By the time they reached the carcass, the deer, mercifully, was already
dead. It had two arrows in it—one in the throat, the other through the
ribs. Ortalis had loosed the first, Anser the second. They began arguing
over who deserved credit for bringing down the stag. “Perhaps,” Lanius
said diffidently, “you should share the—” He broke off. He’d almost said
blame. That was what he thought of the whole business, but he
knew it wouldn’t do.
Even though he’d stopped, prince and arch-hallow both stared at him as
though he’d started spouting the Chernagors’ throaty language. Then they
went back to their argument. He wondered if he’d violated some other
unwritten rule of the hunt.
Thinking of unwritten rules made him wonder if there were written ones.
Poking through the archives trying to find out would be more fun than
looking at flies beginning to settle in the blood that had spilled from
the stag, and to walk across the eyeballs that could no longer blink them
away.
Again, Ortalis got the privilege—if that was what it was—of butchering
the deer. He made the gory job as neat as he could. Even so, Lanius saw,
or thought he saw, a gleam of satisfaction in his brother-in-law’s eyes.
It could be worse, the king thought.
If he were hunting women, the way he’d wanted to, he’d butcher
them
after he made the kill.
He shivered. No, he didn’t think Ortalis had been joking about that,
not at all. And he was anything but reassured when Grus’ legitimate son,
after wiping his gory hands on the grass, licked the last of the stag’s
blood from his fingers. Ortalis smacked his lips, too, as though at fine
wine.
Anser and the beaters seemed to find nothing wrong with that. Lanius
told himself he was worrying too much. He also told himself he would be
glad to eat the venison the hunt was bringing home. He believed that. Try
as he would, though, he couldn’t make himself believe the other.
Sestus lay by the Arzus River. When Grus’ army reached the city, the
Menteshe had had it under siege for some little while. Their idea of
besieging a town was different from Grus’ at Nishevatz. They didn’t aim to
storm the walls. They had no catapults or battering rams to knock down its
towers. But that didn’t mean they’d had no chance of forcing the place to
yield. If the royal army hadn’t come when it did, they probably would have
done just that.
They’d ravaged the farms around Sestus. Not a cow, not a sheep, not a
pig survived. Not many farmers did, either. The Menteshe had trampled or
burned most of the wheatfields within a day’s ride of the town. Vineyards
and olive groves and almond orchards also went under the ax or the torch.
The Arzus was not a wide stream. Menteshe on the banks had peppered with
arrows the ships that tried to bring grain into Sestus. They hadn’t
stopped all of them, but they had made skippers most reluctant to run
their gauntlet. Little by little, Sestus had started starving.
Prince Ulash’s men didn’t put up much of a fight when the Avornan army
thundered down on them. The nomads simply rode away. Why not? They could
afflict some other city, and the devastation they’d left behind remained.
Sestus would have a hard and hungry time of it now, regardless of whether
it had opened its gates to the Menteshe.
Riding through fields black with soot or prematurely yellow and dead,
Grus saw that at once. It was, understandably, less obvious to the local
governor, a bald baron named Butastur. He rode out from the city to
welcome the king. “By the gods, Your Majesty, it’s good to see you here!”
he said, beaming. “Another couple of weeks of those demons prowling around
out there and we’d‘ve been eating the grass that grows between the ruts in
the street and boiling shoeleather for soup.”
“I’m glad it won’t come to that.” Grus wasn’t beaming; he was grim. His
wave encompassed the ravaged fields. “Only Queen Quelea can judge how much
you’ll be able to salvage from this.”
Butastur nodded. “Oh, yes. We’ll be a while getting over this, no doubt
about it. But now you’ll be able to bring supplies in to us from places
where the cursed Menteshe haven’t reached.”
He sounded as confident as a little boy who was sure his father could
reach out, pluck the moon from the sky, and hand it to him on a string.
Grus hated to disillusion him, but felt he had no choice. “We’ll be able
to do something for you, Baron,” he said, “but I’m not sure how much.
Sestus isn’t the only hungry city, and yours aren’t the only fields the
nomads have ruined. This is a big invasion—look how far north you are, and
we’re only now reaching you.”
By Butastur’s expression, he cared not a pin for any other part of
Avornis unless it could send him food. “Surely you can’t mean you’re going
to let us famish here!” he cried. “What have we done to deserve such a
fate?”
“You haven’t done anything to deserve it,” Grus answered. “I hope it
doesn’t happen. But I don’t know if I can do all I’d like to help you,
because this isn’t the only town in the kingdom that’s suffering.”
He might as well have saved his breath, for all the effect his words
had on Butastur. “Ruined!” the baron said, and tugged at his bushy beard
as though he wanted to get credit for pulling chunks out by the roots.
“Ruined by the cursed barbarians, and even my sovereign will do nothing to
relieve my city’s suffering!”
“You seem to misunderstand me on purpose,” Grus said.
Butastur, by now, wasn’t even listening to him, let alone
understanding. “Ruined!” he cried once again, more piteously than ever.
“How shall we ever recover from the ravages of the Menteshe?”
Grus lost his temper. He’d just paid in blood to drive the nomads away
from Sestus, and the local governor seemed not to have noticed. “How will
you recover?” he growled. “Shutting up and buckling down to repair the
damage makes a good start. I told you I’d do what I could for you. I just
don’t know how much that’s going to be. Am I plain enough, Your
Excellency?”
Butastur flinched away from him as though he were one of Prince Ulash’s
torturers. “Yes, yes, Your Majesty,” he said. But he didn’t speak from
conviction. He just didn’t dare argue. Grus had seen plenty of palace
servants who yielded to authority like that—not because it was right, but
because it
was authority, and something worse would happen to them if they
didn’t.
Crossing the Arzus in pursuit of the Menteshe came as nothing but a
relief. When the army camped that evening, the king turned to Hirundo and
said, “I can fight the nomads. But what am I supposed to do when someone
on my own side makes me want to hang him from the tallest tower in his
town?”
“You could go ahead and hang him,” the general answered. “You’d have a
lot fewer idiots bothering you afterwards.”
“Don’t tempt me,” Grus said. “But if I start hanging all the fools in
Avornis, how many people will be left alive in six months’ time? And who
hangs me, for being fool enough to start hanging fools in the first
place?”
“A nice question,” Hirundo said. “If you start hanging fools, who would
dare rebel against you and confess that he’s one of those fools?” He
grinned.
“Stop that!” Grus said. “You’re making my head ache, and I couldn’t
even enjoy getting drunk first.”
The next morning, the Avornans rode on. The bands of Menteshe had
melted away during the night. But for burned-out fields and farmhouses, no
one would have known Ulash’s men had come so far. Ahead, though, more
plumes of black smoke rising into the sky said they were still busy at
their work of destruction. Grus tasted smoke every time he breathed. He
felt it in his lungs, and in his stinging eyes.
He sent scouts out by squadrons, fearing the Menteshe weren’t far away.
As the main force of Avornans advanced, he waited for one scout or another
to come pelting back, bringing word the nomads had attacked his squadrons.
He was ready to strike and strike hard.
But, to his surprise and more than a little to his disappointment,
nothing like that happened. His army pushed on through the ravaged
countryside, hardly seeing any Menteshe at all. Maybe Ulash’s men were
fleeing back toward the Stura. Grus wanted to believe they were. He wanted
to, but he couldn’t.
It was midafternoon before he realized he hadn’t heard anything at all
from one scout squadron since the early morning. He pointed west, where
they’d ridden when the army broke camp. “Are things going so very well
over that way, do you suppose?” he asked Hirundo.
“They could be,” the general answered. “We’ve had a pretty quiet day.”
But he fidgeted when Grus eyed him. “All right, Your Majesty. It doesn’t
seem likely.”
“Send out another squadron,” Grus said. “If the first one’s all right,
you can call me a fussy old woman. But if it’s not...”
If it’s not, it’s liable to be too late to do the men any good. Why
didn’t I start worrying sooner?
Off trotted the horsemen. Grus’ unease grew. It reminded him of the
feeling he got when someone was staring at him from behind. He wished he
hadn’t had that thought. It made him suddenly look back over his shoulder,
again and again. Naturally, no one was looking his way—until his antics
drew other people’s attention.
After a while, impatient and nervous, the king summoned Pterocles. “Can
you tell me anything about those scouts?” he demanded.
“I don’t know, Your Majesty. Let me see what I can divine.” Pterocles
set to work, murmuring a charm. Grus recognized the chant; it was the sort
of spell wizards used to find lost coins or strayed sheep. He’d thought
Pterocles would use something fancier, but if a simple charm would serve.
. . .
Pterocles hadn’t finished the spell when he broke off with a gasp of
horror. His long, lean face went white as bone, leaving him looking like
nothing so much as an appalled skull. Before Grus could even ask him what
was wrong, he doubled over and was noisily and violently ill.
Grus wondered if he’d eaten something bad, or perhaps been poisoned.
Before he could do more than stare, galloping hoofbeats distracted him.
“Your Majesty!” shouted the leader of the party Hirundo had ordered out
after the missing scouts. “Oh, Your Majesty! By the gods, Your
Majesty!”
“I’m here,” Grus called, now torn. “What is it? Did you find them?”
The captain nodded. He was as pale as Pterocles, and looked not far
from sickness himself. “Yes, Your Majesty.” He gulped and went even paler.
“We found them.”
“And?” Grus said.
“I will not speak of this,” the captain said. “I
will not. If you order me to, I will take you to them. If you do
not order me, I will never go near that spot again. Never!” The last word
was almost a scream. He shuddered.
“Whatever this is, I had better see it,” Grus said. “Take me there at
once, Captain. At once, do you hear me?”
“I hear you, Your Majesty.” The officer shuddered again. “I do not
thank you for the order, but I will obey it. Come, then.”
“Guards,” Pterocles croaked. “Take guards.”
That hadn’t crossed Grus’ mind. It was plainly a good idea, though. A
squadron of bodyguards surrounded him as he rode with the officer toward .
. . what?
Coming up over the swell of a low rise, he first saw, from perhaps a
quarter of a mile, that the first squadron of scouts and their horses were
down, with some of the would-be rescuers still by them. He was braced for
that much of a disaster. He hadn’t thought he’d lose a whole squadron of
scouts, but it seemed to have happened. “The Menteshe caught them?” he
asked.
“Yes.” The captain managed a ghastly nod. “The Menteshe caught them,
Your Majesty.”
As Grus rode closer, he began to get a better look at how the
scouts—and their horses—had died, and how their bodies had been used after
they were dead ... or while they were dying. “No,” he said, as though
someone had told him about it and he didn’t believe the fellow. “No one
would do that.” But his eyes, his treacherous, truth-telling eyes,
insisted someone had. That they’d been mutilated was bad enough. That the
dead men had also been violated . . .
“You see, Your Majesty,” the Avornan officer said heavily. “I’ve seen,
and I wish I hadn’t.”
Grus didn’t answer. He rode through that scene of horror and torture.
He felt he needed to see it all. He learned more about cruel ingenuity in
those few minutes than he’d ever known, or ever wanted to know. At last,
he said, “I didn’t think even the Menteshe did things like this.”
“They usually don’t,” the officer replied. “I’ve served in the south
for years. This ...” He turned his head away. “There are no words for
this.”
“The Banished One,” Grus said in a voice like iron. “This is his doing.
He’s trying to put us in fear.”
With a laugh on the ragged edge of hysteria, the Avornan captain said,
“He knows how to get what he wants, doesn’t he?”
But Grus shook his head. “No. This—shakes me, but it doesn’t make me
afraid. It makes me angry. I want revenge.” He paused. Did that mean
paying back the Menteshe in their own coin? Could he stomach ordering his
men to do something like this to their foes? If he did that, didn’t he
invite the Banished One to take up residence in Avornis? “The best revenge
I know is whipping them out of the kingdom.”
“What do we do about. . . this, Your Majesty?”
“We make pyres. We burn the dead. We’re all equal in the flames.” Grus
paused again, then added, “This time, we burn the horses, too. They
deserved what the Menteshe did even less than our troopers. They weren’t
enemies, just animals.”
As he ordered, so it was done. The smoke of the great pyre mingled with
the smoke from burning fields. To his relief, the men who made the pyres
and laid the dead on them seemed to feel as he did. The bodies inspired
horror and rage, but not fear. “We’ve got to whip the sons of whores who
did this,” a soldier said. “We owe it to the dead.”
“We’ll give the Menteshe everything we owe,” Grus promised.
“Everything.”
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
To Lanius’ surprise, he found himself missing King Grus. Yes, he’d
chafed when Grus spent his time in the city of Avornis and held the
kingdom in his own hands. With Grus down in the south fighting the
Menteshe, Lanius pulled a lot of strings himself— but they were mostly the
uninteresting strings. He’d wanted to administer Avornis . . . until he
did it for a while. That made him decide Grus was welcome to the
day-to-day drudgery.
But Grus was at war, which meant Lanius was stuck with it. He knew he
was less diligent about it than Grus. It embarrassed him, even shamed him,
to get a reminder from the provinces about something he should have dealt
with the first time, weeks earlier. But he didn’t seem able to do anything
about such mishaps.
He knew why, too. If he’d given administering Avornis all the time it
needed, he wouldn’t have been able to dive into the archives or watch his
monkeys or try to figure out how Pouncer kept getting out of its room and
into the kitchens. Those were more enjoyable pastimes, and he had trouble
thinking of them as less important.
He also would have had less time for amusing himself with maidservants.
Keeping track of the kingdom was more important than that, but it wasn’t
nearly as much fun. So far, Sosia hadn’t found out about his sport—or
rather, hadn’t found out that he’d kept on with it after Grus sent
Cristata away. That his wife hadn’t found out helped keep the sport
pleasurable.
And he would have had less time for talks with Prince Vsevolod.
Having less time to talk with the Prince of Nishevatz, however,
wouldn’t have broken his heart. He’d learned less about the Chernagors
than he wanted to, and more about the way Vsevolod thought.
“When will war in south be over?” the Prince asked in his blunt,
throaty Avornan. He cared nothing about fighting in the war in the south
himself, only about how it affected things in the north—things that
mattered to him.
“I don’t know, Your Highness,” Lanius answered. “I wish I did. I wish
someone did.”
Vsevolod scowled. To Lanius, he looked more than ever like a scrawny
old vulture. “He will win war?”
“By the gods, I hope so!” Lanius exclaimed.
“He will win war by wintertime?”
“I told you, Your Highness—I don’t know that. I don’t think anyone can.
If the gods in the heavens let him do it, he will.” As usual, Lanius said
nothing about the Banished One, who had been Milvago. As usual, the
not-quite-god who no longer dwelt in the heavens wasn’t far from his
mind.
“If Grus does not win war this winter, he fights again in south when
spring comes?” Vsevolod persisted.
“I don’t know,” Lanius replied, his patience beginning to unravel. “I
wouldn’t be surprised, though. Would you?”
“No. Not surprised,” the prince said darkly. “He cares nothing for
Nishevatz, not really. All lies.” He turned away.
Lanius was tempted to kick him in the rear. The king didn’t, but the
temptation lingered. If Vsevolod wasn’t the most self-centered man in the
world, who was? All he cared about was Nishevatz, regardless of what
Avornis needed. More testily than Lanius had expected to, he said, “We’ve
been invaded, you know.”
“Yes, you are invaded. Yes, I know. And what of me? I am robbed. I am
exiled,” Vsevolod said. “I live in strange place, eat strange food, talk
strange, ugly language, with no one to care if I live or die.”
“We do care,” Lanius insisted, though he would have had trouble saying
he cared very much himself. “But we have to drive the invaders from our
own realm before we can worry about anyone else’s.”
Prince Vsevolod might not even have heard him. “I will die in exile,”
he said gloomily. “My city-state will go down to ruin under accursed
Vasilko, my own son. I cannot save it. Life is bitter. Life is hard.” He’s powerless, Lanius realized.
He’s powerless, and he hates it, the way I bated it for so long under
Grus. And he’s old. He’s used to power, and can’t change his ways now that
he doesn’t have it anymore. I’d never had it. I kept wondering what it was
like, the way a boy will before his first woman.
“We’ll do all we can for you, Your Highness.” Lanius’ voice was as
gentle as he could make it. “Don’t worry. We’ll get Nishevatz back for
you. By the gods in the heavens, I swear it.”
“The gods in the heavens are—” Vsevolod violently shook his head. “No.
If I say that, if I think that, I am Vasilko. This I never do.” He got to
his feet and stomped away, as though angry at Lanius for making him think
things he didn’t want to think. But I didn’t. I couldn’t, Lanius thought.
Only he can turn his mind one way or another. Did Vsevolod wonder
if the Banished One were more powerful than the gods in the heavens? The
king wouldn’t have been surprised. He would have had trouble blaming the
exiled Prince of Nishevatz. It still worried him.
Grus relaxed in a roadside tavern. The barmaid, who was a young cousin
of the fellow who ran the place, set a fresh mug of wine in front of him.
He’d had several already. His men had driven the Menteshe off just as they
were riding up with torches in their hands, ready to burn the tavern and
everyone inside it.
“Thank you, sweetheart,” Grus told the barmaid.
“You’re welcome, Your Majesty,” she answered. “Plenty more where that
came from. Don’t be shy.” She wasn’t shy herself. Her name, he’d learned,
was Alauda. She was a widow; her husband had laid his leg open threshing
grain, and died when the wound went bad. She wouldn’t take any silver for
the wine, though Grus had offered. “No,” she’d said, shaking her head.
“You saved us. This is the least we can do.”
Hirundo sat on another three-legged stool at the rickety table with
Grus. “She’s not bad, is she?” the general said, eyeing her as she went to
get more wine.
“No, not bad at all,” Grus agreed. Alauda had a barmaid’s brassy
prettiness, wider through the hips and fuller in the bosom than would have
been fashionable back in the city of Avornis. Her hair was light brown and
very straight. Her saucy blue eyes were probably her best feature; they
sparkled with life.
Hirundo was also drinking wine he didn’t have to pay for. “Just how
grateful do you suppose she’d be?” he murmured.
“What an interesting question.” Grus glanced toward Hirundo.
“You seem to have noticed her first. Do you want to be the one who
finds out?”
“And deprive you, Your Majesty? Gods forbid!” By the dramatic pose the
general struck, he might have been a soldier in a besieged city offering
his sovereign his last bit of bread. But the generous gesture turned out
to be not quite as noble as all that, for he went on, “I’ve already found
a lady friend or two down here. I don’t think you’ve had the chance
yet.”
“Well, no,” Grus admitted. The trouble he’d gotten into over Alca the
witch left him leery of angering Estrilda again. On the other hand,
Estrilda was far to the north, unlikely to learn he’d tumbled a
barmaid.
“Then go on, if you feel like it—and if she feels like it.” Hirundo
sounded as predatory here as he did on the battlefield. He might have
sounded different if he’d had a wife back in the capital. But he didn’t;
he was single. And, knowing him, he might not have, too.
He drank up and strolled out of the tavern, clapping Grus on the back
as he went. The king ostentatiously finished his mug of wine, too. When
Alauda brought him the fresh one she’d poured, he said, “Drink with me, if
you care to.”
“Sure,” she said, smiling. Her mouth was wide and generous. “When will
I ever get another chance like this? I can bore people with the story
until I’m an old granny.” She bent her back and hobbled as she went to get
wine for herself. Grus laughed. So did she. He knew then taking her to bed
wouldn’t be hard.
When she came back with her mug, he sat her on his lap. She slipped an
arm around his shoulder as though she’d expected nothing else. One thing
did worry him. Pointing to the tavern keeper, he asked, “Will your cousin
there be angry?” He didn’t want an outraged male relative lurking and
brooding and maybe trying to stick a knife in him. Sometimes such people
tried to kill without caring whether they lived or died, which made them
hard to stop.
But Alauda only stared in surprise. “No, Morus won’t mind. It’s not
like I’m a maiden. And it’s not like you’re a goatherd, either. You’re the
king”
To make sure Morus didn’t mind, she spoke with him after she’d emptied
her cup. He looked from her to Grus and back again. Then he walked out of
the tavern and closed the door behind him.
“You see?” Alauda said.
“I see.” Grus got to his feet. The room swayed when he did. He suddenly
wished he hadn’t had quite so much to drink. Wine could inflame desire and
ruin performance at the same time—and he wasn’t as young as he had
been.
He took Alauda in his arms. She tilted her face up to him—not very far
up, for she was a tall woman. Her mouth was sweet with wine. His arms
tightened around her. She molded herself against him. The kiss went on and
on.
When it finally ended, Grus had a new reason for feeling dizzy.
“Where?” he asked.
“Here, this way. Morus has given me a little room in back.”
The room couldn’t have been much smaller. It barely held a bed. Grus
was sure it had been a closet or storeroom before Alauda came to the
tavern. Alauda threw off her tunic and long skirt. Naked, she was as round
and ripe as Grus had thought she would be. He bent his mouth to the tips
of her breasts. She murmured something wordless. He got out of his own
clothes as quickly as he could. They lay down together.
Her legs opened. When he stroked her there, he found her wet and ready.
He poised himself above her. “Oh,” she said softly when he thrust home.
Her thighs gripped his flanks. Her arms squeezed tight. Their mouths
clung.
It seemed more like a frenzy than any sort of lovemaking Grus had done
lately. Alauda yowled like a cat. Her nails scored the flesh of his back.
She threshed and flailed beneath him. He pounded away until pleasure
almost blinded him.
When he returned to himself, he noticed the taste of blood in his mouth
along with the wine they’d both drunk. Alauda stared up at him past
half-lowered eyelids.
“So nice to meet you, Your Majesty,” she purred.
He laughed. When he did, he flopped out of her. Regret flitted across
her face, just for a moment. Grus certainly felt regret, too—regret that
he wasn’t twenty years younger, so they could have started over again
right away. He kissed the smooth, white skin in the hollow of her
shoulder. She giggled. He said, “You can bring me my wine—or anything
else—any time you please.”
Alauda smiled. But then her expression darkened. She said, “Tomorrow or
sometime soon, you’ll be gone, won’t you?”
“I can’t stay here,” Grus answered, as gently as he could. “You know
that, dear. I’ve got to drive back the Menteshe.”
If I can.
Everything else moved sweetly when Alauda nodded. “Oh, yes. Gods only know what they would have done if your soldiers hadn’t chased
them away from this place. That wasn’t what I meant. I hope I’m not that
silly. But. . . couldn’t you take me with you? I wouldn’t be any trouble,
and if I did make trouble you could just leave me somewhere. I’d land on
my feet. I always have. And in the meantime—” She wriggled to show what
they might do in the meantime.
Grus started to say no. Then he hesitated. Like anyone who hesitated,
he was lost. Trying not to admit it even to himself, he warned Alauda,
“You know I have a queen. You won’t come back to the city of Avornis with
me, no matter what.”
“Yes, of course I know that,” Alauda said impatiently. “I told you, I
hope I’m not silly. And by the gods, Your Majesty, I’m not out for what I
can get, except maybe this.” She took hold of him, then sighed. “It’s been
a bit since my husband died. I’d almost forgotten how much I missed
it.”
“You say that now,” Grus told her. “Some people say things like that,
and then later on they forget what they’ve said. I wouldn’t be very
happy—and neither would you—if that happened.”
“You’ve got a bargain,” Alauda said at once. “Does that mean the rest
of it’s a bargain, too?” Before he could answer, she went on, “I’ll keep
up my end.” She laughed again. “And I’ll keep up your end. That’s part of
the bargain, isn’t it?”
“I hope so,” Grus answered. “I was just thinking I’m not so young
anymore—but yes, I do hope so.”
Summer heat beat down on the city of Avornis. People who’d spent time
in the south said it wasn’t all that bad, but it was plenty bad enough to
suit Lanius. Plants began to wilt and turn yellow. Flies and other bugs
multiplied as though by magic. Little lizards came out of what seemed to
be nowhere but were probably crevices in boards and holes in the ground to
eat the bugs, or at least some of them.
King Lanius and everyone else in the royal palace did what they could
to beat the heat. He doffed the royal robes and plunged into the river
naked as the day he was born. That brought relief, but only for a little
while. However much he wanted to, though, he couldn’t stay in the water
all the time.
Arch-Hallow Anser and Prince Ortalis disappeared into the woods to hunt
for days at a time. Anser tried to talk Lanius into coming along, but the
king remained unconvinced that that was a good bargain. Yes, the woods
were probably cooler than the city, but weren’t they also going to be
buggier? Lanius thought so, and stayed in the royal palace.
The monkeys flourished in the heat. Even their mustaches seemed to
stick out farther from their faces than before. They ate better than they
ever had, and bounced through the branches and sticks in their rooms with
fresh energy. As far as they were concerned, it could stay hot
forever.
Not so the moncats. The Chernagor merchant who’d brought the first pair
to the palace had told Lanius they came from islands in the Northern
Sea—islands with, the king supposed, a cooler climate than that of the
city of Avornis. They drooped in the heat the same way flowers did. Lanius
made sure they had plenty of water and that it was changed often so it
stayed fresh. Past that, he didn’t know what he could do.
One thing could jolt the moncats out of their lethargy. Whenever a
lizard was foolish enough to show itself in their rooms, they would go
after it with an enthusiasm Lanius had hardly ever seen from them. They
got the same thrill from chasing lizards as Anser did from chasing deer
(Lanius resolutely refused to think about what sort of thrill Ortalis got
from chasing deer). And, like Anser, they got to devour their quarry at
the end of a successful hunt.
Lanius suddenly imagined the arch-hallow, in full ecclesiastical
regalia, with a still-twitching lizard tail hanging from the corner of his
mouth. He started laughing so hard, he frightened the moncats and made
servants out in the hallway pound on the door and ask what was wrong.
“Nothing,” he called back, feeling like a little boy whose parents
demanded out of the blue what he was doing when it was something
naughty.
“Then what’s that racket, Your Majesty?” The voice on the other side of
the door sounded suspicious, even accusing. Was that Bubulcus out there in
the hallway? Lanius thought so, but couldn’t be sure.
Whether it was Bubulcus or not, the king knew he had to say, “Nothing,”
again, and he did. He couldn’t expect the servants to find that
blasphemous image funny. He was more than a little scandalized that he
found it funny himself, but he did, and he couldn’t do anything about
it.
“Are you
sure, Your Majesty?” the servant asked dubiously.
“I’m positive,” Lanius answered. “One of the moncats did something
foolish, and I was laughing, that’s all.” That wasn’t quite what had
happened, but it came close enough.
“Huh,” came from the corridor. That made Lanius more nearly certain it
was Bubulcus out there. Whoever it was, he went away; the king listened
with no small relief to receding footsteps. When Lanius came out of the
moncats’ room, no one asked him any more questions. That suited him
fine.
Two days later, the hot spell broke. Clouds rolled down from the north.
When morning came, the city of Avornis found itself wrapped in chilly
mist. Lanius hurried down to the monkeys’ room and lit the fire that he’d
allowed to die over the past few days. They needed defense against the
cold once more, and he made sure they got it.
It started to rain that afternoon. To his horror, Lanius discovered a
leak in the roof of the royal archives. He sent men up there to fix it, or
at least to cover it, in spite of the rain. There were certain advantages
to being the King of Avornis. A luckless homeowner would have had to wait
for good weather. But Lanius couldn’t stand the notion of water dripping
down onto the precious and irreplaceable parchments in the archives. Being
who he was, he didn’t have to stand for it, either.
Grus looked down from the hills on a riverside town. Like a lot of
riverside towns, it had had its croplands ravaged. He’d seen far worse
devastation elsewhere, though. The landscape wasn’t what kept him staring
and staring.
“Pelagonia,” he murmured.
Hirundo nodded. “That’s what it is, all right,” he said. “Looks like a
provincial town to me.”
“And so it is,” Grus agreed. But that wasn’t all it was, not to him.
Just seeing it made his heart beat faster.
Pterocles understood, but then Pterocles had a wizard’s memory for
detail. “This is the place where you sent the witch,” he said. “Will you
ship me back to the city of Avornis and turn her loose on the
Menteshe?”
It had crossed Grus’ mind. Shipping Alauda back to her cousin’s tavern
had also crossed his mind. He hadn’t seen Alca for three years, not since
his wife made him send her away.
Life gets more complicated all the time, he thought, and laughed,
even though it wasn’t funny.
“Well, Your Majesty?” Pterocles spoke with unwonted sharpness.
“Will you?”
He’d had trouble standing up against the Banished One. Of course, so
had Alca. Any mortal wizard had trouble standing up against the Banished
One. Grus found his answer. “No, I won’t,” he said. “We’re all on the same
side in this fight, or we’d better be.”
He waited to see what Pterocles would say to that. To his relief, the
wizard only nodded. “Can’t say you’re wrong. She acts like she’s pretty
snooty, but her heart’s in the right place.”
Grus bristled at any criticism of his former lover. Fighting to hold on
to his temper, he asked Hirundo, “Can we reach the town tonight?”
“I doubt it,” the general replied. “Tomorrow, yes. Tonight? We’re
farther away than you think.”
Grus stared south. Only the keep and the spires of the cathedral showed
above Pelagonia’s gray stone walls. In the nearer distance, a handful of
Menteshe rode through the burnt fields in front of the town. They would
flee when the Avornan army advanced. Grus knew a lot about fighting the
nomads. Unless they had everything their own way, they didn’t care for
stand-up fights. Why should they? Starvation and raids unceasing worked
well for them.
“Tomorrow, then,” the King of Avornis said, reluctance and eagerness
warring in his voice—reluctance at the delay, eagerness at what might come
afterwards.
Alca. His lips silently shaped the name.
As he’d thought they would, Prince Ulash’s men withdrew at the Avornan
host’s advance. He and Hirundo picked a good campground, one by a stream
so the Menteshe couldn’t cut them off from water—a favorite trick of
theirs. He also made certain he scattered sentries widely about the
camp.
“Is something wrong?” Alauda asked in his tent that night.
“No,” Grus answered, quicker than he should have. Then, hearing that
too-quick word, he had to try to explain himself. “I just want to make
sure the town is safe.”
The explanation sounded false, too. Alauda didn’t challenge him about
it. Who was she—a barmaid, a whim, a toy—to challenge a king? No one, and
she had sense enough to know it. But she also had the sense to hear that
Grus wasn’t telling her the truth, or all of the truth. No, she said not a
thing, but her eyes showed her hurt.
When they made love that night, she rode Grus with a fierce desperation
she’d never shown before. Maybe she sensed he worried more about someone
inside Pelagonia than about the city itself. Was she trying to show him he
needed to worry about her, too? After the day’s travel and after that
ferocious coupling, Grus worried about nothing and nobody, but plunged
headlong into sleep, one arm still around Alauda.
He almost died before dawn, with no chance to worry about Alauda or
Alca or, for that matter, Estrilda. The Menteshe often shied away from
stand-up fights, yes. But a night attack, an assault that caught their
enemies by surprise, was a different story.
Their wizards must have found some way to fuddle the sentries, for the
Avornans knew nothing of their onslaught until moments before it broke
upon them. They would have been caught altogether unaware if Pterocles
hadn’t started up from his pallet, shouting, “Danger! Danger!” By the
confused shock in his voice, he didn’t even know what sort of danger it
was, only that it was real and it was close.
His cry woke Grus. The king’s dreams had been of anything but danger.
When he woke, one of Alauda’s breasts filled his hand. He’d known that
even in his sleep, and it had colored and heated his imaginings.
Now . . . now, along with the wizard’s shouts of alarm, he heard the
oncoming thunder of hoofbeats and harsh war cries in a language not
Avornan. Cursing, he realized at least some of what must have happened. He
threw on drawers, jammed a helmet down on his head, seized sword and
shield, and ran, otherwise naked, from the tent.
“Out!” Grus shouted at the top of his lungs. “Out and fight! Quick,
before they kill you all!”
Soldiers started spilling from their tents. In the crimson light of the
dying campfires, they might have been dipped in blood. Many of them were
as erratically armed and armored as the king himself—this one had a sword,
that one a mailshirt, the other a shield, another a bow.
They were a poor lot to try to stop the rampaging Menteshe. And yet the
nomads seemed to have looked for no opposition whatever. They cried out in
surprise and alarm when Avornans rushed forward to slash at them, to pull
them from their horses, and to shoot arrows at them. They’d been looking
to murder Grus’ soldiers in their tents, to take them altogether unawares.
Whatever happened, that wouldn’t. More and more Avornans streamed into the
fight, these more fully armed than the first few.
One of Prince Ulash’s men reined in right in front of Grus. The nomad
stared around, looking for foes on horseback. He found none—? and had no
idea Grus was there until the king yanked him out of the saddle. He had
time for one startled squawk before landing in a camp-fire. He didn’t
squawk after that. He shrieked. The fire was dying, but not yet dead. And
the coals flared to new life when he crashed down on them.
As for Grus, he sprang into the saddle without even thinking about how
little he cared for horses and horsemanship. The pony under him bucked at
the sudden change of riders. He cuffed it into submission, yelling,
“Avornis! Avornis! To me, men! We can beat these cursed raiders!”
“King Grus!” shouted a soldier who recognized his voice. An instant
later, a hundred, a thousand throats had taken up the cry. “King Grus!
Hurrah for King Grus!”
That proved a mixed blessing. His own men did rally to him. But the
Menteshe cried out, too, and pressed him as hard as they could in the
crimson-shot darkness. Arrow after arrow hissed past his head. If the
archers had been able to see clearly what they were shooting at, he
doubted he could have lasted long. At night, though, they kept missing.
Even as he slashed with his sword, he breathed prayers of thanks to the
gods.
In the screaming, cursing chaos, he took longer to realize something
than he should have. When he did, he bawled it out as loud as he could.
“There aren’t very many of them. Hit them hard! We
can beat them!”
Maybe the magic—Grus presumed it was magic—that had let the Menteshe
slip past his sentries couldn’t have hidden more of them; Pterocles had
also had trouble masking too many men. Whatever the reason, this wasn’t an
assault by their whole army, as he’d feared when Pterocles’ cry of alarm
first woke him. It was a raid. It could have been a costly raid, but now
it wouldn’t be.
Prince Ulash’s men didn’t need much more time to figure that out for
themselves. When they did, they weren’t ashamed to flee. The Avornans
spent some small, panicky stretch of time striking at one another before
they realized the enemy had gone.
More fuel went on the fires. As they flared up, Hirundo waved to Grus.
“Well, that’s one way to settle your supper,” the general said
cheerfully.
Grus noticed three or four cuts, luckily all small, that he’d ignored
in the heat of battle. “For a little while there, I wondered if we’d get
settled along with supper,” he remarked. Hirundo laughed, as though the
Menteshe had done no more than play a clever joke on the Avornan army.
Grus was in no mood for laughter. He raised his voice, shouting,
“Pterocles!”
He had to call the wizard’s name several times before he got an answer.
He’d begun to fear the nomads had slain Pterocles. No sorcerer was immune
to an arrow through the throat or a sword cut that tore out his vitals.
But, at length, Pterocles limped into the firelight. He had an arrow
through him, all right, but through one calf. He’d wrapped a rag around
the wound. Not even the ruddy light of the flames could make his face
anything but pallid.
“Are you all right?” Grus exclaimed.
“That depends, Your Majesty,” the wizard said, biting his lip against
the pain. “Is the wound likely to kill me? No. Do I wish I didn’t have it?
Yes.”
Hirundo said, “I’ve never known a wound I was glad I had.”
“Nor I,” Grus agreed. “Have a healer draw the shaft and give you opium
for the pain. You’re lucky the arrowhead went through—the healer won’t
have to cut it out of you.”
“Lucky.” Pterocles savored the word. After a moment, he shook his head.
“If I were lucky, it would have missed me.”
Grus nodded, yielding the point. He said, “We’re all lucky you sensed
the nomads coming. What sort of spell did they use to get past the
sentries, and can we make sure it won’t work if they try it again?”
“A masking spell on the sentries,” Pterocles answered. “A masking spell
on them, and a sleep spell on me—maybe on this whole camp, but I think
just on me—so we wouldn’t know the Menteshe were here until too late. It
might have done everything the nomads wanted if I hadn’t had an extra cup
of wine last night.”
“What’s that?” Hirundo said. “Wine makes me sleepy.”
The wizard managed a bloodless smile, though blood was darkening the
cloth he’d put around his wounded leg. He said, “Wine makes me sleepy,
too. But it also makes me wake up in the middle of the night— which I did,
for I had to piss or burst. And when I woke ...”
Hirundo clapped his hands. Grus was sure that was the first time he’d
ever heard anyone’s bladder applauded. “Stay where you are. Don’t move on
it anymore,” the king told Pterocles, and turned to a soldier standing not
far away. “Fetch a healer to treat the wizard’s wound.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The man hurried off.
“You didn’t answer the second half of my question,” Grus said to
Pterocles.
“Can we make sure Ulash’s men don’t get away with this again?”
Pterocles said, “The sleep spell isn’t easy. It caught me by surprise
this time. It won’t the next.”
“What about other wizards?” Grus asked.
“I can let them know what to be wary of,” Pterocles told him. “That
will give them a good chance to steer clear of the spell, anyhow.”
“Better than nothing,” Grus said. It wasn’t enough to suit him, but he
judged it would have to do. His army had come through here. And tomorrow .
. .
Tomorrow, Pelagonia, he thought.
Sosia hurried up to Lanius. Some strong emotion was on her face. Had
she found out he’d been dallying with serving women again? He didn’t want
to go through another row.
But instead of screaming at him or trying to slap his face, Sosia burst
out, “He does! Oh, Lanius, he does!”
Lanius knew he was gaping foolishly. He couldn’t help himself. “Who
does?” he inquired. “And, for that matter, who does what?”
She stared at him as though he should have understood at once what she
was talking about. “My brother,” she answered with a grimace. “And he does
. . . what you’d expect.”
“Are you sure?” Lanius grimaced, too. That was very unwelcome news.
“Ortalis is hurting serving girls again, even though he’s hunting? Even
though he’s got a wife?”
“No, no, no!” Sosia’s expression said she’d been right the first time—
he
was an idiot. “He’s hurting
Limosa.”
“You’re crazy.” The words were out of Lanius’ mouth before he had the
chance to regret them. Even then, only part of him
did regret them, for he went on, “I saw her yesterday. She looked
as happy as a moncat with a lizard to chase. She’s looked—and sounded—that
way ever since they got married. I don’t know why, but she has. She loves
your brother, Sosia. She’s not pretending. Nobody’s that good an actress.
And he
does go out hunting. If he were hurting her, she could come to
you or to me or to Anser and scream her head off. She hasn’t. She doesn’t
need to do it, yes?”
“I don’t know.” Now his wife looked confused.
“What exactly
do you know? And how do you know it?”
“I know Limosa’s got scars on her back, the same sort of scars . . .
the same sort of scars Ortalis has put on other girls,” Sosia answered.
Lanius grimaced again, remembering Cristata’s ravaged back. Sosia’s eyes
said she noticed him remembering, and knew he was remembering the rest of
Cristata, too. But she visibly pushed that aside for the time being and
continued, “And I know because a serving woman happened to walk in on
Limosa while she was bathing. She doesn’t usually let any servants attend
her then, and that’s strange all by itself.”
The king nodded; it
was unusual. Did it mean Limosa had scars she didn’t want anyone
to see? Try as he would, he couldn’t think of anything else.
“But Limosa hasn’t said anything about this?” he asked.
“No.” Sosia shook her head. “She chased the maidservant away, and she’s
been going on as though nothing happened ever since.”
“I wonder if the maid was wrong, or if she was making it up,” Lanius
said.
“No,” Sosia repeated. “I know Zenaida. She wouldn’t. She’s
reliable.”
“Well, so she is,” Lanius agreed, his voice as expressionless as he
could make it. He wondered what Sosia would have called the serving woman
had she known he was sleeping with her. Something other than reliable, he
was sure.
He went through the palace the next morning looking for Limosa, and
naturally didn’t find her. Then, after he’d given up, he came around a
corner and almost bumped into her. She dropped him a curtsy, saying,
“Hello, Your Majesty.”
“Hello, Your Highness.” Lanius had almost gotten used to calling Limosa
by the title. He’d also paid her a bigger compliment than that— he’d
almost forgotten she was Petrosus’ daughter. “How are you today?”
Her smile lit up her face. She wasn’t a beautiful woman, but when she
smiled it was easy to forget she wasn’t. “I’m very well, Your Majesty,
very well indeed. I hope you are, too.”
“Pretty well, anyhow,” Lanius said.
“Good. I’m so glad to hear it.” That wasn’t, or didn’t sound like,
simple courtesy alone; it sounded as though Limosa meant it. “If you’ll
excuse me ...”
“Of course,” Lanius said. She smiled again, even more brightly than
before. Fluttering her fingers at him, she hurried down the hall, her
skirt rustling at each step.
She was radiant. That was the only word Lanius could find.
And she’s supposed to bear the mark of the lash on her back? The
king shook his head. He couldn’t believe it. He didn’t believe it. He
didn’t know what Zenaida thought she’d seen. Whatever it was, he was
convinced she’d gotten it wrong.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Pelagonia’s iron-shod gates swung open. The Avornan defenders on the
wall—soldiers of the garrison in helmets and mailshirts, armed with swords
and spears and heavy bows, plus a good many militiamen in leather jerkins,
armed with daggers and with hunting bows good for knocking over rabbits
and squirrels but with no range or punch to speak of—cheered Grus and his
army as he led it into the town.
He waved back to the men who’d held Pelagonia against the Menteshe. He
pasted a smile on his face. His heart pounded as though he were storming
Yozgat and driving Prince Ulash from his throne. That had nothing to do
with Pelagonia itself, so he didn’t want the people here noticing anything
amiss. It had everything to do with one woman who’d come—been sent—to live
here.
He wanted to see Alca as soon as he got the chance. And yet, he would
be quietly setting up housekeeping with Alauda while he stayed here. He
recognized the inconsistency. Recognizing it and doing anything about it
were two different beasts.
A baron named Spizastur commanded in Pelagonia. He was a big, bluff
fellow with gray eyes and a red face—an even redder nose, one that
suggested he put down a lot of wine. “Greetings, Your Majesty!” he boomed.
“Mighty good to see you, and that’s the truth!” Was he drunk? Not in any
large, showy way, anyhow, though he did talk too loud.
“Good to be here,” the king replied.
“I’m not sorry to see the last of those thieving devils,” Spizastur
declared, again louder than he needed to. “Been a long time since they
came this far north. Won’t be sorry if I never see ‘em again, either.”
Grus knew it was far from certain Pelagonia
had seen the last of the Menteshe. He didn’t say that to
Spizastur. It would only have disheartened the noble and the soldiers
who’d held Prince Ulash’s men out of the city. He did say, “I hope you
have billets for my men—and a place for me to stay.”
“Billets for some, anyhow,” Spizastur replied. “This isn’t the big
city, where you can fit in a great host and never notice. For you
yourself, Your Majesty, I’ve got rooms in the keep.”
“I thank you.” Grus would sooner have stayed with some rich
merchant—odds were that would have been more comfortable. But he couldn’t
tell Spizastur no. “I have a ... lady friend with me,” he murmured.
“Do you?” The local commander didn’t seem surprised. “I’ll see to
it.”
Grus didn’t pay much attention to Alauda until that evening. He was
busy with Spizastur and Hirundo, planning where the army would go next and
what it would try to do. And he kept hoping Alca would come to the
keep.
Alauda yawned as the two of them got ready for bed. She said, “I need
to tell you something.”
“What is it?” Grus, his mind partly on the campaign and partly on Alca,
paid little attention to the widowed barmaid he’d brought along on a
whim.
But she found half a dozen words to make him pay attention. “I’m going
to have a baby,” she said. Any man who hears those words, especially from
a woman not his wife,
will pay attention to them.
“Are you sure?” Grus asked—the timeworn, and foolish, common response
to such news.
She nodded, unsurprised. “Yes, I’m positive. My courses should have
come, and they haven’t. My breasts are tender”—Grus had noticed that—“and
I’m sleepy all the time. I had a baby girl, but she died young, poor
thing. I know the signs.” Are you sure it’s mine? But no, he couldn’t ask that. He
didn’t think she’d played him false since they’d become lovers, and they’d
been together long enough so the father couldn’t be anyone from before
even if she hadn’t made it plain she’d slept alone since her husband died.
Grus said, “Well, well. I’ll take care of you, and I’ll take care of the
baby. You don’t need to worry about that.”
“Thank you, Your Majesty,” Alauda breathed. By the way she said it, she
had worried. In her place, Grus supposed he would have, too.
He shook his head. He might have been trying to clear it after a punch
in the jaw. “I hope you’ll forgive me, but I still don’t intend to bring
you back to the capital with me. I don’t think my wife would understand.”
Actually, Estrilda would understand altogether too well. That was what
Grus was afraid of.
“I’m not worried about that,” Alauda said quickly. “You told me you
wouldn’t once before.”
“All right. Good.” He realized he needed to do something more, and went
over and gave her a kiss. She clung to him, making her relief obvious
without a word. He kissed her again, and patted her, and lay down beside
her. She fell asleep almost at once. She’d said being pregnant left her
sleepy. Lying awake beside her as she softly snored, Grus sighed and shook
his head. He’d been thinking about saying good-bye to her. He couldn’t
very well do that now.
And he was drifting off to sleep himself when a new thought woke him up
again. What would Alca think when she found out? After that, sleep took
even longer to find Grus.
Lanius studied Grus’ letters from the south with the obsessive
attention of a priest trying to find truth in an obscure bit of dogma.
Naturally, Grus put the best face he could on the news he sent up to the
city of Avornis— what he said quickly spread from the palace out to the
capital as a whole. Piecing together what lay behind his always optimistic
words was a fascinating game, one made more interesting when played with a
map.
Just now, Lanius suspected his fellow king of cheating. Grus wrote of a
night attack his army had beaten back, and then said,
We have entered a town on the north bank of the Thyamis River, from
which, as opportunity arises, we will proceed against the
Menteshe. “Which town on the north bank of the Thyamis?” Lanius
muttered, more than a little annoyed. It could have been Naucratis, it
could have been Chalcis, or it could have been Pelagonia. Grus didn’t make
himself clear. Depending on where he was, he could strike at the nomads
several different ways.
From the context, the Avornan army seemed most likely to be in
Pelagonia. But why hadn’t Grus come out and said so? Up until now, he’d at
least told people in the capital where he was, if not always why he’d gone
there. Figuring out why was part of the game, too.
And then, after one more glance from the letter to the map, Lanius
said, “Oh,” and decided he knew where the army was after all. If Estrilda
saw the name Pelagonia, she wouldn’t need to look at a map to know where
it was. She already knew that, in the only way likely to matter to her—it
was where Grus had sent his mistress. What was he doing there now? That
was what she would want to know. Did it have anything to do with fighting
Prince Ulash’s men, or was the king seeing the witch again?
If Grus failed to send a dispatch up to the capital, everyone there
would wonder what disaster he was trying to hide. But if he sent a
dispatch that said,
We have entered a town on the north bank of the Thyamis
River—well, so what? If Estrilda saw the dispatch, would she realize
a town on the north bank of the Thyamis River meant
Pelagonia?. Not likely.
From being annoyed at Grus, Lanius went to admiring him. The other king
had had a problem, had seen it, and had solved it in a way that caused him
no more problems. If that wasn’t what being a good king was all about,
Lanius didn’t know what would be.
Back in the palace, Lanius had problems of his own. He might have known
rumors about Limosa would race through it like a fire through brush in a
drought. He
had known it, in fact. And now it had. Servants gossiped and
joked, careless of who heard them. He didn’t want the royal family mocked.
He was touchy about his own dignity—after people had called him a bastard
through much of his childhood, who could blame him for that? And he was
touchy about the dignity of the family.
“What can we do?” he asked Sosia. “I don’t believe it, but people still
spread it.”
“I don’t know,” she answered. “I don’t really think we
can do anything about it. And I’m not so sure I don’t believe it.
Why would Zenaida lie about something like that?”
“How could Limosa seem so happy if it’s true?” Lanius retorted. “We’ve
seen what happens when Ortalis starts abusing serving girls. You can’t
tell me that’s happening now.”
His wife shrugged. “Maybe not. Whether the stories are true or not,
though, all we can do is ignore them. If we say they’re lies, people will
think we have reasons for hiding the truth. If we pretend we don’t hear,
though, what can they do about it?”
“Laugh at us.” To Lanius, that was as gruesome as any other form of
torture.
But Sosia only shrugged again. “The world won’t end. Before long, some
new scandal will come along. Some new scandal always does. By this time
next month, or month after at the latest, people will have forgotten all
about Limosa.”
Things weren’t quite that simple, and Lanius knew it. Limosa was part
of the royal family now. People would always wonder what she was doing and
gossip about what they thought she was doing. Yet Sosia had a point, too.
When new rumors came along, old ones would be forgotten. People didn’t
shout, “Bastard!” at him anymore when he went out into the streets of the
city of Avornis. His parentage had been a scandal, but it wasn’t now.
People had found other things to talk about. They would with Limosa,
too.
“Maybe you’re right,” Lanius said with a sigh. “But I don’t think it
will be much fun until the rumors do die down.”
Grus looked south across the Thyamis River from the walls of
Pelagonia. Clouds of smoke rising in the distance showed the Menteshe had
no intention of leaving Avornis until he threw them out. As he’d known,
this wasn’t a raid; this was a war. The king had been eager to come into
Pelagonia for reasons of his own. Now, for different reasons, he was just
as eager to leave the town.
His bodyguards stirred and stepped aside. Pterocles was one of the men
who could come—limp, these days—right up to him without a challenge. At
Grus’ gesture, the guardsmen moved back so Pterocles and he could talk in
privacy.
“I owe you an apology, Your Majesty,” the wizard said.
“You do?” That wasn’t something Grus heard every day. “Why?”
“Because I thought Alca the witch was a sly little snip who was clever
without really knowing what she was doing,” Pterocles answered. “I was
wrong. I admit it. She’s really very sharp.”
“Oh? How do you know that?”
The look Pterocles gave him said the wizard wondered whether
be was very sharp. “Because I’ve been working with her ever since
we got here, of course. Do you think I’d say that about somebody I didn’t
know?”
“No, I don’t suppose you would,” Grus admitted. “But I wondered,
because I haven’t seen her since we got here.”
“Do you want to?” Pterocles sounded surprised. “Uh, meaning no
disrespect, Your Majesty, but you’ve got another woman with you, and Alca
knows it.”
“Oh,” Grus said. “Does she?” Pterocles nodded. The king wondered
whether Alca knew Alauda was pregnant. She wouldn’t be very happy about
that if she did. Even so, Grus went on, “I would like to see her, yes. Not
because . . . because of what we used to be, but because she’s a powerful
witch.”
Pterocles nodded again, enthusiastically this time. “She really is. You
know how you’ve been nagging me about spells to cure thralls?”
“I know I’ve been interested in that, yes.” Grus’ voice was dry. “I
also know you made a point of telling me Alca’s ideas were worthless.”
“Well, they were. She didn’t understand. But now she does,” the wizard
said. “When I get back to the capital, I’ll have all sorts of good
ideas—hers and mine—to try out.”
“Good. We can use all the good ideas we can find,” Grus said. “And if
you’d be so kind, tell her I can see her this afternoon.”
“I’ll do that.” Pterocles went on his way.
Grus wondered if he’d just been clever or very foolish. Alca
was a powerful witch—and he’d sent her away from the city of
Avornis. Now he came to Pelagonia not with his wife, which would have been
bad enough, but with a new mistress, and one who would have his child.
Would it be surprising if Alca felt like turning him into a dung
beetle?
The real irony was that he didn’t love Alauda. He never had and never
would. He enjoyed her in bed, and that was about as far as it went. She
had the outlook of a peasant girl who’d become a barmaid, which was
exactly what she was. Alca, on the other hand, he’d liked and admired long
before they slept together. That wasn’t a guaranteed recipe for falling in
love, but it was a good start.
He waited more than a little nervously in a small, bare room in the
quarters in the keep Spizastur had given Alauda and him. He didn’t know
what Alauda was doing. He hoped she was napping.
A guardsman stuck his head into the room. “Your Majesty, the witch is
here.” He had tact. He’d served Grus back in the palace. He had to know
all the lurid gossip about the king and Alca. What he knew didn’t show in
his voice.
Gratefully, Grus answered, “Send her in.”
Alca came into the chamber slowly and cautiously. Until Grus saw how
she moved, how her pale, fine-boned face was set to show as little as it
could, he hadn’t realized she was at least as nervous as he was. She
brushed a lock of black hair back from her forehead. “Your Majesty,” she
said, her voice not much above a whisper.
“Hello, Alca,” Grus replied, and he wasn’t much louder. “It’s good to
see you.”
“It’s good to see you, too,” Alca said. “I wasn’t sure it would be, but
it is, in spite of everything.”
“How have you been?” he asked.
“This place is an even bigger hole than I thought it would be, and most
of the men here ought to be horsewhipped,” she answered. “I didn’t much
care for watching the Menteshe burn our fields, either.”
“Oh.” Grus winced. “I’m sorry. Curse it, I
am sorry—about everything. When we started, I didn’t think it
would end up like . . . this.”
“I did,” Alca said bleakly. “I did, but I went ahead anyhow—and so it’s
partly my own fault that this happened to me. Partly.” She cocked her head
to one side and eyed him in a way he remembered painfully well. “Will you
tell this latest woman of yours that you’re sorry about everything,
too?”
Pterocles had said she knew about Alauda. Grus wondered if the wizard
had told her, or if she’d found out by magic, or maybe just by market
gossip. Any which way, a king had a demon of a time keeping secrets,
especially about himself. However Alca knew, her scorn burned. Gruffly,
Grus answered, “I hope not.”
Alca nodded. “Yes, I believe that. You always hope not. And when things
go wrong—and they
do go wrong—you’re always surprised. You’re always disappointed.
And that doesn’t do anybody any good, does it?”
“Is that why you came here? To rail at me?”
“What will you do if I say yes? Exile me to some no-account town in the
middle of nowhere? I take it back, Your Majesty”—the way Alca used the
royal title flayed Grus—“I’m not so glad to see you after all.”
They glared at each other. After a long, furious silence, Grus asked,
“Have you been glad to see Pterocles?”
Alca’s face changed. “Yes,” she breathed. “Oh, yes, indeed. That is a
clever young man. He needs to be kicked every so often—or more than every
so often—but he’ll do great things if—” She broke off.
“If the Banished One doesn’t kill him first,” Grus finished for
her.
“Yes. If.” The witch nodded again. “He’s dreamed of the Banished One.
Did you know that?”
“It’s one of the reasons I made him my chief wizard aft—” Now Grus
stopped short.
After I sent you away was what he’d started to say, but he
decided not to say it. “One of the reasons I made him my chief wizard,” he
repeated. “It’s a sign the Banished One takes you seriously, I think.”
“An honor I could do without,” Alca said, and shivered in the warm
little room.
Grus agreed with her there, no matter how much the two of them
quarreled about their personal affairs. The king asked, “Have you made any
progress on spells to cure the thralls? Pterocles seemed to think you
had.”
Her eyes lit up. “Yes. I really think we have. He knows some things I
never could have imagined. But then, he found out about them the hard way,
too. To be struck down by the Banished One ... I’d sooner have the dreams,
and that’s the truth.”
“I believe it. I think you’re right.” Grus hesitated. “It’s dead, isn’t
it? When I came to Pelagonia, I thought. . .” He shook his head. “But no.
It really is dead.”
“You thought that, when you came here with another woman?” Alca shook
her head, too—in disbelief. “You can still surprise me, Your Majesty, even
when I ought to know better. But yes, it’s as dead as that table there.”
She pointed. “And it would be even if you hadn’t brought her along. I know
how big a fool I am—not big enough to let you hurt me twice, and I thank
the gods I’m not.”
Suddenly Grus was much more eager to escape this provincial town than
he ever had been to come here. “I won’t trouble you anymore,” he
mumbled.
“I’ll work with your wizard,” Alca said. “I’ll do whatever I can to
help Avornis. I told you that when I wrote to you. But I don’t think I
ever want to see you again.”
“All right,” Grus said. Just then, it was more than all right. It came
as an enormous relief.
Whenever a courier came into the city of Avornis from the south, King
Lanius worried. His chief fear was that Grus might have met disaster at
the hands of the Menteshe. That would have put him back on the Diamond
Throne as full-fledged ruler of the kingdom, but only by ruining the
kingdom. Some prices were too high to pay.
He had another worry, small only in comparison to that one. So far this
fighting season, the Chernagor pirates had stayed away from the Avornan
coast. If they descended on it while Grus was busy against the Menteshe .
. . Lanius didn’t know what would happen then, but he knew it wouldn’t be
good.
Reports from Grus came in regularly. He seemed to be making as much
progress against the nomads as anyone could reasonably expect. And the
coast stayed quiet. No tall-masted ships put in there. No kilted
buccaneers swarmed out to loot and burn and kill—and to distract the
Avornans from their campaign against Prince Ulash’s Menteshe.
Lanius wondered why not. If the Banished One’s hand propelled both the
Menteshe and the Chernagors against Avornis, couldn’t he set both foes in
motion against her at the same time? Failing there struck Lanius as inept,
and, while he might wish the god cast down from the heavens made many such
mistakes, he’d seen that the Banished One seldom did.
He asked Prince Vsevolod why the Chernagors were holding back. “Why?”
Vsevolod echoed. “I tell you why.” Maybe the sour gleam in his eye said he
thought Lanius should have figured it out for himself. Maybe it just said
he didn’t care for the King of Avornis. In that case, the feeling was
mutual.
“Go ahead,” Lanius urged.
“Are two reasons,” Vsevolod said. “First reason is, Avornan ships fight
hard two years ago. Not all Chernagor ships get home. Many losses. They
not want many losses again.”
“Yes, I follow that,” Lanius said. “What’s the other reason?”
“Magic.” The exiled Prince of Nishevatz spoke the word with somber
relish. “This spring, they send supply ships to my city-state, send food
to my cursed son. And they watch ships burn up. They see food burn, see
sailors burn. Not want to see that off coast of Avornis. So they stay
home.” Vsevolod jabbed a thumb at his own broad chest. “Me, I like to
watch ships burn. Oh, yes. I like very much. Let me watch Vasilko burn—I
like that better yet.”
Lanius believed him. All the same, the king wondered whether the
Banished One could have set the Chernagors in motion against Avornis
despite their hesitation. Evidently not. The Chernagors, or some of them,
were his allies, yes, but not—or not yet—his puppets, as the Menteshe
were. We can still win, Lanius thought. Avornis wasn’t the only one
with troubles. He tried to imagine how the world looked from the Banished
One’s perspective. Avornis’ great foe was already doing all he could with
the Menteshe. Up in the north, he’d managed to keep Grus from driving
Vasilko out of Nishevatz and putting Vsevolod back on the throne there.
But if he couldn’t get the Chernagors to work with the Menteshe, they had
to make very unsatisfactory tools for him.
What could he do about that? Lanius wondered if thralls would start
showing up in the land of the Chernagors. In an odd way, he hoped so. If
anything could frighten the Chernagors who followed the Banished One into
changing their allegiance, that might do the trick. Down in the south, the
Menteshe wizards had made Avornan peasants into thralls. That bothered the
nomads not at all. They would have abused those peasants any which way.
But in the north, thralls would have to be Chernagors, not members of an
alien folk, and that could work against the Banished One. Despising his
mortal opponents, he did sometimes overreach himself. Why not in the
north, where things weren’t going just as he wished?
Vsevolod said, “When you end this silly war in south? When you go back
to what is important? When you drive Vasilko from Nishevatz? Two times
now, you lay siege, then you quit and go home. Another time, you go home
before you lay siege. For me, is like being woman with man who is bad
lover. You tease, you tease, you tease—but I never go where I want to
go.” Perspective. Point of view, Lanius thought again. Vsevolod’s
was invincibly self-centered—not that Lanius hadn’t already known that.
With some asperity, he said, “I don’t think driving invaders out of our
southern provinces is a silly war. What would you do if someone invaded
Nishevatz?”
“No one invades Nishevatz,” Vsevolod said complacently. “Chernagors
rule seas. Even Avornis does not dare without me at your side.” He struck
a pose.
Lanius felt like hitting him. Plainly, the King of Avornis had no
chance of making things clear to the Prince of Nishevatz. “Your turn will
come,” Lanius said. Only after the words were gone did he wonder how he’d
meant them. Better not to know, maybe.
“Not come soon enough,” Vsevolod grumbled, proving he hadn’t taken it
the way Lanius feared he might. He gave Lanius a creaky bow. “Not soon
enough,” he repeated, and lumbered out of the room.
As a matter of fact, Lanius agreed with him. The sooner the king got
the prince out of the city of Avornis and back to Nishevatz—or anywhere
else far, far, away—the happier he would be. Lanius wondered if he could
send Vsevolod to the Maze until Grus was ready to campaign in the
Chernagor country again. He wouldn’t tell Vsevolod it was exile; he would
tell him it was a holiday—a prolonged holiday. Maybe he could bring it off
without letting Vsevolod know what was really going on.
With a sigh of regret, Lanius shook his head. Vsevolod
would figure out he’d been insulted. His beaky nose smelled out
insults whether they were there or not. And Grus would be furious if
Vsevolod thought he was insulted. The other king needed Vsevolod as a
figurehead when he fought in the north. Otherwise, he would seem an
invader pure and simple.
Or would he? Vsevolod had henchmen, several of high blood, in the city
of Avornis. If anything happened to him, one of them might make a good
enough cat’s-paw. Slowly, thoughtfully, Lanius nodded. Yes, that might
work. And if it did prove enough, if the king found a cooperative
Chernagor, couldn’t he do without the obnoxious Vsevolod? He didn’t know,
not for certain, but he did know one thing—he was tempted to find out.
King Grus looked down into the valley of the Anapus, the river just
north of the Stura. He let out a long sigh of relief. He’d spent a lot of
time and he’d spent a lot of men coming this far, clearing the Menteshe
from several valleys farther north. They’d left devastation behind them,
but it was—he hoped—devastation that could be repaired if the nomads
didn’t come back and make it worse.
Hirundo looked down into the valley, too. “Wasn’t too far from here
that we first met, if I remember right,” the general remarked.
“I thought it was down in the valley of the Stura, myself,” Grus
answered.
“Was it?” Hirundo shrugged. “Well, even if it was, it wasn’t
too far from here, not if you’re looking from the city of
Avornis. I know one thing for certain—we were both a lot younger than we
are now.”
“Well. . . yes.” Grus nodded. “I think time is what happens to you when
you’re not looking. Except for a few things, I don’t feel any older now
than I did then—but how did the gray get into my beard if I’m not?” He
plucked a hair from the middle of the chin. It wasn’t gray. It was white.
Muttering, he opened his fingers and let the wind sweep it away. And if
the wind could have taken the rest of the white hairs with it, he would
have been the happiest man in the world. Time, Grus thought, and muttered under his breath. Time worked
evils the Banished One couldn’t come close to matching. If Lanius and Grus
himself alarmed the Banished One, all the exiled god really had to do was
wait. Soon enough, they would be gone, and he could return to whatever
schemes he’d had before they came to power. But he who had been Milvago
was caught up in time, too, since he’d been cast down from the heavens to
the material world. He might not be mortal in any ordinary sense of the
word, but he too knew impatience, the sense that he couldn’t wait for
things to happen, that he had to
make them happen.
Because of that impatience, he sometimes struck too soon. Sometimes.
Grus dared hope this was one of those times.
“Forward!” he called, and waved to the trumpeters. Their notes blared
out the command. Forward the Avornan army went.
River galleys glided along the Anapus. As Grus and Hirundo had done
when they first met, they could use soldiers on land and the galleys as
hammer and anvil to smash the Menteshe. The nomads were vulnerable trying
to cross rivers. There, the advantage of mobility they had over the
Avornans broke down.
“Let’s push them,” Grus said. Hirundo nodded.
But the Menteshe didn’t feel like being pushed. Instead of riding south
toward the river, they galloped off to east and west, parallel to the
stream. And everywhere they went, new fires, new pyres, rose behind them.
The Avornans slogged along behind them. The nomads lived off the country
even as they ravaged it. Grus’ army remained partly tied to supply
wagons.
And the Menteshe had plans of their own. Grus listened to drums talking
back and forth through the night. He’d done that before, but now he
understood some of what the drums were saying. If he understood them
rightly, the nomads intended to smash his army between two of theirs.
When he said as much to Hirundo, the general nodded. “We’re trying to
do the same to them, Your Majesty,” he said. “All depends on who manages
to bring it off.”
“I know,” Grus said. “Let’s see if we can’t give them a little
surprise, though, shall we? I don’t think they know yet that we can follow
what the drums say.”
“We’d better make this win important, then,” Hirundo said. “Otherwise,
we’ll have given away a secret without getting a good price for it.”
Grus hadn’t thought of that. He slowly nodded. Hirundo, as usual, made
good sense. The king and the general put their heads together, trying to
figure out how to turn what they knew into a real triumph. Grus liked the
plan they hammered out.
Even so, it almost came to pieces at first light the next morning,
because the Menteshe attacked sooner than Grus had thought they would.
Arrows started arcing toward the Avornan army from east and west even
before the sun cleared the eastern horizon. If the Avornans hadn’t pieced
together what the drums were saying, his soldiers might have been caught
still in their tents. As things were, not all of them had reached the
positions he wanted by the time the fighting started.
But they’d done enough, especially in the east, where he wanted to hold
the Menteshe. He had to delay his attack in the west until he had some
confidence the east
would hold. That meant the nomads peppered his men with arrows
for an extra hour or so. But they didn’t push their attack as hard as they
might have. Their main assault was supposed to be in the east. So the
drums had said, and so it proved.
“Forward!” Grus shouted when everything was at least close to his
liking. The Avornans’ horns wailed. The Menteshe probably understood horn
calls the same way he understood their drum signals, but it didn’t matter
here. The Avornans rode bigger horses and wore sturdier armor than the
Menteshe. At close quarters, they had the edge on the nomads. And, because
Prince Ulash’s men were so intent on their own plan, they’d come to close
quarters.
They shouted in dismay when the iron-armored wedge of the Avornan army
thundered at them, smashed their line, and hurled it aside. Grus struck
out to right and left with his sword. A couple of times, it bit into
flesh. More often, it kept one Menteshe or another from getting a good
swipe at him.
When things went wrong, the nomads thought nothing of running away to
try again some other time. Grus had expected that. This time, he tried to
use it to his own purposes. He’d deployed outriders who shot at the nomads
trying to escape to the north. The Menteshe, still surprised at the vigor
of his response, recoiled from that direction and galloped south
instead.
That was where he wanted them to go. Only when they drew close to the
Anapus did they realize as much. They cried out in dismay again, for the
river galleys waited there. Not only that, but the ships also landed
marines who shot volley after volley of arrows into the Menteshe. And the
catapults on the galleys kept the nomads from closing with the marines and
riding them down. After darts from those catapults pinned two or three
Menteshe to their horses and knocked several more off their mounts,
Ulash’s riders didn’t want to go anywhere near the river.
Their other choice was charging at Grus and the men he led. That wasn’t
the sort of fight they wanted, but desperation served where nothing else
would. Shouting fiercely in their own language, the nomads swarmed toward
the Avornan army.
A volley from the Menteshe made several Avornan horsemen pitch from the
saddle and crumple to the ground. Wounded horses squealed and screamed.
But soon the attacking Menteshe got close enough for Grus’ men to shoot
back. And they did, with well-disciplined flights of arrows that tore into
the invaders’ front ranks. “Grus! Grus! King Grus!” the Avornans
cried.
Then it wasn’t just arrows anymore. It was swords and javelins and
lances. It was men shouting and cursing and shrieking at the top of their
lungs. It was iron belling off iron, iron striking sparks from iron, the
hot iron stink of blood in the air. It was cut and hack and slash and
thrust—and, for Grus, it was hoping he could stay alive.
He cut at a Menteshe. Along with a shirt of boiled leather that turned
arrows almost as well as a mailcoat, the fellow wore a close-fitting iron
cap. Grus’ blow jammed it down onto his forehead; the cut from the rim
made blood run down into his eyes. He yammered in pain and yanked the iron
cap back up with his left hand. But Grus struck again a heartbeat later.
His sword crunched into the nomad’s cheek. He felt the blow all the way up
into his shoulder. Face a gory mask, the Menteshe slid off over his
horse’s tail.
Another nomad hacked at Grus. He managed to block the blow with his
shield. He felt that one all the way to the shoulder, too, and knew his
shield arm would be bruised and sore come morning. But if he hadn’t turned
the blade aside, it would have bitten into his ribs. He hoped his
mailshirt and the padding beneath would have kept it out of his vitals,
but that wasn’t the sort of thing anybody wanted to find out the hard
way.
An Avornan to Grus’ left engaged the Menteshe before he could slash at
the king again. An arrow hissed past Grus’ head, the sound of its passage
as malignant as a wasp’s buzz—and its sting, if it had struck home, far
more deadly.
For a little while, he worried that the nomads’ fear and desperation
would fire them to break through his battle line. But the Avornans held,
and then began pushing Ulash’s riders back toward the Anapus regardless of
whether they wanted to go that way. When the marines from the river
galleys and the catapults on the ships began galling them again, they
broke, riding off wildly in all directions.
“After them!” Grus croaked. He took a swig from his water bottle to lay
the dust in his throat, then shouted out the command. Still crying out his
name, the Avornans thundered after their foes. Some of the Menteshe got
away, but many fell.
Hirundo was bleeding from a cut on the back of his sword hand. He
didn’t even seem to know he had the wound. “Not bad, Your Majesty,” he
said. “Not bad at all, by the gods. We hurt ‘em bad this time.”
“Yes,” Grus said. “It’s only fair—they’ve done the same to us.”
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
King Lanius sat on the Diamond Throne. The weight of the royal crown
was heavy on his head. His most splendid royal robes, shot through with
gold threads and encrusted with jewels and pearls, were as heavy as a
mailshirt. Down below his high seat, royal bodyguards clutched swords and
spears. The men were as nervous as big, tough farm dogs when wolves came
near. And Lanius was nervous, too. He hadn’t expected an embassy from the
Chernagor city-state of Durdevatz. Men from Durdevatz had brought him his
monkeys. In those days, though, peace had reigned between the Chernagors
and Avornis. Things were different now.
But how different were they? Lanius himself didn’t know. From what he
did know, Durdevatz wasn’t one of the city-states that had helped resupply
Nishevatz when Grus besieged it. Who could say for certain what had
happened since then, though? No one could—which explained why the guards
clung so tightly to their weapons.
And along with the guards stood a pair of wizards tricked out in
helmets and mailshirts, shields and swords. They wouldn’t be worth much in
a fight, but the disguise might help them cast their spells if any of the
Chernagors in the embassy tried to loose magic against the king.
Would the men from Durdevatz do such a thing? Lanius didn’t know that,
either. All he knew was, he didn’t want to find out the hard way that he
should have had sorcerers there.
A stir at the far end of the throne room. Courtiers’ heads swung that
way. The envoys from Durdevatz came toward the throne. They were large,
burly men with proud hooked noses, thick dark curly beards, and black hair
worn in neat buns at the napes of their necks. They wore linen shirts
enlivened by fancy embroidery at the chest and shoulders, wool knee-length
kilts with checks on dark backgrounds, and boots that reached halfway up
their calves. They all had very hairy legs, judging by the bits that
showed between boot tops and kilts.
Their leader wore the fanciest shirt of all. He bowed low to Lanius,
low enough to show the bald spot on top of his head. “Greetings, Your
Majesty,” he said in fluent but gutturally accented Avornan.
“Greetings to you.” As he went through the formula of introduction with
the ambassador, Lanius kept his voice as noncommittal as he could. “You
are ... ?”
“My name is Kolovrat, Your Majesty,” the ambassador from Durdevatz
replied. “I bring you not only my own greetings but also those of my
overlord, Prince Ratibor, and also the greetings of all the other princes
of the Chernagors.”
A brief murmur ran through the throne room. Lanius would have murmured,
too, if he hadn’t been sitting on the Diamond Throne before everyone’s
eye. “Prince . . . Ratibor?” he said. “What, ah, happened to Prince
Bolush?” Asking a question like that broke protocol, but no one in Avornis
had heard that Bolush had lost his throne.
Kolovrat didn’t seem put out at the question. “A hunting accident, Your
Majesty,” he replied. “Very sad.”
Lanius wondered how accidental the accident had been. He also wondered
where Ratibor and Kolovrat stood on any number of interesting and
important questions. For now, though, formula prevailed. He said, “I am
pleased to accept Prince Ratibor’s greetings along with your own.”
Am I? Well, I’ll find out. He didn’t mention the other Chernagor
princes. For one thing, Kolovrat had no real authority to speak for them.
For another, at least half of them were at war with Avornis at the
moment.
“In my prince’s name, I thank you, Your Majesty.” Kolovrat bowed.
“I am pleased to have gifts for you and your comrades,” Lanius said. A
courtier handed leather sacks to the ambassador and the other
Chernagors.
“I thank you again,” Kolovrat said with another bow. “And I am pleased
to have gifts for you as well, Your Majesty.”
Now all the courtiers leaned forward expectantly. Lanius had gotten not
only his first monkeys but also his first pair of moncats from Chernagor
envoys. Those earlier ambassadors had been at least as much merchants as
they were diplomats. Lanius thought Kolovrat really did come straight from
Prince Ratibor.
The king’s guardsmen and the wizards masquerading as guardsmen also
leaned forward, ready to protect Lanius if this embassy turned out to be
an elaborate disguise for an assassination attempt. That had occurred to
the king, too. For once, he wished the Diamond Throne didn’t elevate him
to quite such a magnificent height. Sitting on it, he made a good
target.
But when one of the Chernagors standing behind Kolovrat opened a box,
no arrows or sheets of flame or spiny, possibly poisonous monsters burst
from it. Instead, it held . . . Were those, could those be ...
parchments?
Kolovrat said, “Prince Ratibor discovered these old writings in the
cathedral after the High Hallow of Durdevatz set the princely crown upon
his head. He has heard of your fondness for such things, and sends them to
you with his warmest esteem and compliments.”
The guardsmen relaxed. So did the wizards. Whatever Ratibor thought
about Lanius, he didn’t seem inclined to murder him. The Avornan courtiers
drew back with dismay bordering on disgust. Old parchments? Not a lot
interesting about
them).
Lanius? Lanius beamed. “Thank you very much!” he exclaimed. “Please
give my most sincere thanks to His Highness as well. I look forward to
finding out what these old parchments say. They’re from the cathedral, you
tell me?”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” Kolovrat nodded.
“How . . . interesting.” Now the king could hardly wait to get his
hands on the documents. Parchments from the cathedral at Durdevatz could
be very old indeed. Lanius wondered if they went back to the days before
the Chernagors swooped down on the coast of the Northern Sea and took the
towns there away from Avornis. That didn’t seem likely, but it wasn’t
impossible, either.
“I am sure your pleasure will delight Prince Ratibor.” Kolovrat said
all the right things. He still sounded more than a little amazed, though,
that Lanius was pleased with the present.
That amazement made Lanius curious. “How did Prince Ratibor know I
would like this gift so well?” he asked.
“How, Your Majesty? Prince Ratibor is a clever man. That is how,”
Kolovrat answered. “And he knows you too are a clever man. He knows you
will aid Durdevatz in her hour of need.” Aha. Now we come down to it, Lanius thought. He hadn’t
supposed Ratibor had sent an embassy just for the sake of sending one—and
Ratibor evidently hadn’t. “What does your prince want from Avornis?” the
king asked cautiously.
“Nishevatz and the city-states allied with Nishevatz harry us,”
Kolovrat said. “Without help, we do not know how long we can stay free. We
fear what will come if we lose our struggle. Vasilko is the Prince of
Nishevatz, but everyone knows who Vasilko’s prince is.” He means the Banished One, Lanius thought unhappily. He wished
the new Prince of Durdevatz had come to him with some foolish, trivial
request, something he could either grant or refuse with no twinge of
conscience. Whatever he did now, he would have more than twinges. “Tell me
what Prince Ratibor wants from us,” he said. “I do not know how much I can
give. We are at war in the south, you know. Avornis itself is
invaded.”
“Yes. I know this,” Kolovrat said. “But what you can do, with soldiers
or ships, Prince Ratibor hopes you will. Durdevatz is hard pressed. If you
can send us any aid at all, we will be ever grateful to the rich and
splendid Kingdom of Avornis. So my prince swears, by all the gods in the
heavens.”
Not too long before, in the archives, Lanius had come across a copy of
a letter from his father to some baron or another. That happened every so
often; it never failed to give him an odd feeling. He’d been a little boy
when King Mergus died, and didn’t remember him well. Surviving documents
helped him understand the cynical but sometimes oddly charming man who’d
sired him.
The Avornan noble had apparently promised King Mergus eternal gratitude
if he would do something for him. And Mergus had written back,
Gratitude, Your Excellency, is worth its weight in gold.
That came back to Lanius now, though he rather wished it wouldn’t have.
But sometimes things needed doing regardless of whether the people for
whom you did them could ever properly repay you. The king feared this
would be one of those times. He said, “When you go back to Durdevatz, tell
him Avornis will do what it can for him. I don’t know what that will be,
not yet, but we’ll do it.”
Kolovrat bowed very low. “May the gods bless you, Your Majesty.”
“Yes,” Lanius said, wondering how he would meet the promise he’d just
made. “May they bless me indeed.”
Grus was questioning prisoners when a courier came down from the north.
Quite a few Menteshe spoke at least a little Avornan, and the nomads were
often breathtakingly candid about what they wanted to do to Avornis. “We
will pasture our flocks and our herds in your meadows,” a chieftain
declared. “We will kill your peasants—kill them or make them into thralls,
whichever suits us better. Your cities will be our cities. We will worship
the Fallen Star, the true light of the world, in your cathedrals.”
“Really? Then how did we happen to capture you?” Grus asked in mild
tones.
With a blithe shrug—surprisingly blithe, considering that he was a
captive—the fellow answered, “I made a mistake. It happens to all of us.
You, for instance”—he pointed at Grus—“do not bow before the Fallen Star.
You will pay for your mistake, and worse than I have paid for mine.”
“Oh?” Grus said. “Suppose I kill you now?”
Another shrug. “Even then.” As far as Grus could tell, that wasn’t
bravado. The Menteshe meant it. Scowling, the king gestured to the guards
who surrounded the prisoner. They took him away. But his confidence
lingered. It worried Grus. As far as he could tell, all the nomads felt
that way. It made them more dangerous than they would have been if they’d
had the same sort of doubts he did.
And yet, no matter how confident they were, he’d driven them back a
long way and inflicted some stinging defeats on them. As soon as he
cleared them from the valley of the Anapus, he could move down to the
Stura and drive them off Avornan soil altogether. He hoped he would be
able to do that before winter ended campaigning. He didn’t want the
Menteshe lingering in Avornis until spring. That would be a disaster,
nothing less.
What they’d already done was disastrous enough. Because of their
devastation, crops here in the south were going to be only a fraction of
normal. Pelagonia wasn’t the only city liable to see hunger this winter—
far from it. And how were farmers supposed to pay their taxes when they
had no crops to sell for cash? The government of Avornis would see hunger
this winter, too.
And all that said nothing about men killed, women violated, children
orphaned, livestock slaughtered. Every time he thought about it, he
seethed. What he wanted to do was go after the Menteshe south of the
Stura, take the fighting to them, and let them see how they liked it.
What he wanted to do and what he could do were two different things.
Until he had—until Avornis had—some reliable way to cure thralls and to
keep men from being made into thralls, he didn’t dare cross the river.
Defeat would turn into catastrophe if he did. And then his son and his
son-in-law would fight over who succeeded him. That would be another
catastrophe, no matter who won. Grus had his own opinion about who would,
had it and refused to dwell on it.
The guards brought up another prisoner. This one blustered, saying, “I
do not care how you torture me. I am Prince Ulash’s man, and the Fallen
Star’s.”
“Who said anything about torturing you?” Grus asked.
“Avornans do that,” the Menteshe said. “Everyone knows it.”
“Oh? How many prisoners whom we’ve tortured have you met?” King Grus
knew Avornans sometimes
did torture prisoners, when they were trying to pull out
something the captive didn’t want to say. But his folk didn’t do it
regularly, as the Menteshe did.
“Everyone knows you do it,” the nomad repeated.
“How do you know?” Grus said again. “Who told you? Did you meet
prisoners who told you what we did to them?” If the man had, he was out of
luck.
But the Menteshe shook his head. “There is no need. Our chieftains have
said it. If they say it, it must be true.”
Grus sent him away. It was either that or go to work on him with ropes
and knives and heated iron. Nothing short of torture would persuade him
what his chieftains said was untrue—and torture, here, would only prove it
was true. The king muttered to himself, most discontented. The nomad had
won that round.
He muttered more when his army crossed the Anapus. Devastation on the
southern side of the river was even worse than it had been in the north.
The Menteshe might have had trouble crossing the Anapus. They’d spent more
time below it, and found more ways to amuse themselves while they were
there. Grus began to wonder what things would be like in the valley of the
Stura. Could they be worse than what he was seeing here? He didn’t know
how, but did know the Menteshe were liable to instruct him.
Before he could worry too much about the valley of the Stura, he had to
finish clearing Prince Ulash’s men from the valley of the Anapus. The
Menteshe on the southern side of the river didn’t try to make a stand.
Instead, after shooting arrows at his army as it landed, they scattered.
That left him with a familiar dilemma—how small were the chunks into which
he could break up his army as he pursued? If he divided it up into many
small ones, he ran the risk of having the Menteshe ambush and destroy some
of them. Remembering what had happened to the troop farther north, he
wasn’t eager to risk that.
Eager or not, he did. Getting rid of the Menteshe came first. This
time, things went the way he wanted them to. The nomads didn’t linger and
fight. They fled over the hills to the south, toward the valley of the
Stura.
As Grus reassembled his army to go after them, he said, “I wonder if
they’ll fight hard down there, or if they’ll see they’re beaten and go
back to their own side of the river.”
“That’s why we’re going down there, Your Majesty,” Hirundo answered.
“To find out what they’ll do, I mean.”
“No.” The king shook his head. “That’s not why. We’re going down there
to make sure they do what we want.”
The general thought it over. He nodded. “Well, I can’t tell you you’re
wrong. Of course, if I tried you’d probably send me to the Maze.”
“No, I wouldn’t.” Grus shook his head again. “I have a worse punishment
than that in mind.” Hirundo raised a questioning eyebrow. Grus went on,
“I’ll leave you right here, in command against the cursed Menteshe.”
“No wonder people say you’re a cruel, hard king!” Hirundo quailed in
artfully simulated terror.
Even though he was joking, what he said touched a nerve. “Do people say
that?” Grus asked. “It’s not what I try to be.” He sounded wistful, even a
little—maybe more than a little—plaintive.
“I know, Your Majesty,” Hirundo said quickly.
Grus stayed thoughtful and not very happy the rest of the day. He knew
he’d given people reason to curse his name. He’d sent more than a few men
to the Maze. He reckoned that merciful; he could have killed them instead.
But they and their families would still find him cruel and hard, as
Hirundo had said. And he hadn’t given towns ravaged by the Menteshe as
much help as they would have liked. He didn’t think he could afford to.
Still... He wished he could do all the things the people of Avornis wanted
him to do. He also wished none of those people spent any time plotting
against him. That would have made his life easier. It would have, yes, but
he feared he couldn’t hold his breath waiting for it to happen.
What
could he do? “Go on,” he muttered to himself. Seeing nothing
else, he turned back to Hirundo. “Let’s finish cleaning the Menteshe out
of this valley, and then we’ll go on to the next.”
“Yes, Your Majesty. Ahh . . .” The general paused, then said, “If you
want to push on to the Stura, and to leave garrisons in the passes to keep
Ulash’s men from getting through, our second-line soldiers could probably
finish hunting down the nomads left behind. Or don’t you think so?”
Grus paused, too. Then he nodded. “Yes. That’s good, Hirundo. Thank
you. We’ll do it. Farther north, I wouldn’t have, but here? You bet I
will. It lets me get down to the border faster, and we may be able to give
the Menteshe a surprise when we show up there sooner than they expect us
to.”
He set things in motion the next day. Some of the armed peasants and
townsmen and the river-galley marines he ordered out against the Menteshe
would probably get mauled. But he would be getting the best use out of his
soldiers, and that mattered more. Hirundo had done what a good general was
supposed to do when he made his suggestions.
From the top of the pass the army took down into the valley of the
Stura, Grus eyed the pillars of black smoke rising into the sky here and
there. They spoke of the destruction Ulash’s men were working, but they
also told him where the Menteshe were busy. He pointed to the closest one.
“Let’s go hunting.”
Hunt they did. They didn’t have the bag Grus would have wanted, for
Prince Ulash’s riders fled before them. Here, though, the ground through
which the Menteshe could flee was narrow—unless, of course, they crossed
the Stura and left Avornis altogether. Grus would sooner have wiped them
off the face of the earth than seen them get away, but he would sooner
have seen them get away than go on ravaging his kingdom.
Not all of the men who tried to get away succeeded. Avornan river
galleys slid along the Stura. As Grus had, their skippers enjoyed nothing
more than ramming and sinking the small boats the Menteshe used to cross
the river. But here the Avornans didn’t have everything their own way, as
they had farther north. Ulash had river galleys in the Stura, too. When
Grus first saw them come forth and assail his ships, he cursed and grinned
at the same time. Yes, the Menteshe could cause trouble on the river. But
they could also
find trouble there, and he hoped they would.
Before long, they did. The Menteshe had galleys in the Stura, true, but
their crews weren’t and never had been a match for the Avornans. After
Grus’ countrymen sank several galleys full of nomads and lost none
themselves, the Menteshe stopped challenging them.
“Too bad,” Grus said. “They’re trouble on land. On the water?” He shook
his head, then waved toward Hirundo. “They make you look like a good
sailor.”
“Then they
must be hopeless,” Hirundo declared.
“Maybe they are,” Grus said. “Now if only they were horsemen like me,
too.”
That the Menteshe weren’t. They shot up a squadron of Avornan cavalry
who pursued them too enthusiastically, then delivered a charge with the
scimitar that sent Grus’ men, or those who survived, reeling off in
headlong retreat. It was a bold exploit, especially since the Menteshe had
spent so long falling back before the Avornans. Grus would have admired it
more if the nomads hadn’t hacked up the corpses of the men they’d
slain.
“We think, when we die, we die dead,” a captured Menteshe told him.
“Only when the Fallen Star regains his place do we live on after death.
But you foolish Avornans, you think you last forever. We treat bodies so
to show you what is true—for now, you are nothing but flesh, the same as
us.”
He spoke excellent Avornan, with conviction chilling enough to make
Grus shiver. If this life was all a man had, why
not do whatever pleased at the moment? What would stop you,
except brute force here on earth? How could a man sure he was trapped in
one brief life show any signs of conscience? By all the evidence from the
Menteshe, he couldn’t. And no wonder the nomads clung so strongly to the
Banished One. If they thought his triumph was their only hope for life
after death . . .
If they thought that, Grus was convinced they were wrong. “The gods in
the heavens are stronger,” he told the nomad. “They cast the Banished One
out, and he will never return.”
“Yes, he will,” the Menteshe answered. “Once he rules the world, he
will take back the heavens, too. The ones you call gods were jealous of
the Fallen Star. They tricked him, and so they cast him down.”
Grus wondered how much truth that held. Only the gods in the heavens
and the Banished One, the one who had been Milvago, knew for sure. Grus
feared the Banished One would send him a dream where the exiled god set
forth his side of the story, as he must have for the Menteshe. But no
dream came. At first, that relieved the king. Then he wondered what else
the Banished One was doing, what left him too busy to strike fear into the
heart of a foe. Imagining some of the possibilities, he felt plenty of
fear even without a dream.
Limosa bowed low before King Lanius. “Your Majesty, may I ask a favor
of you?” she said.
“You may always ask, Your Highness,” Lanius said. “But until I hear
what the favor is, I make no promises.”
Ortalis’ wife nodded. “I understand. No doubt you are wise. The favor I
ask is simple enough, though. Could you please bring my father out of the
Maze?”
“You asked that before. I told you no then. Why do you think anything
is different now? King Grus sent Petrosus to the Maze. He is the one who
would have to bring him out.”
“Why do I think things are different? Because you have more power than
I thought you did,” Princess Limosa answered. “Because King Grus is far
away. You
can do this, if you care to.”
She might well have been right. Grus would fume, but would he do
anything more than fume? Lanius wondered, especially when Ortalis and
Limosa did seem happy together. And yet. . . Lanius knew one of the
reasons he was allowed power was that he used it alongside the power Grus
wielded. Up until now, he’d never tried going dead against Grus’
wishes.
What would happen if he did? Grus was distracted by the war against the
Menteshe, yes. Even so, he would surely hear from someone in the capital
that Petrosus had come back. If he didn’t like the idea, Lanius would have
thrown away years of patient effort—and all on account of a man he didn’t
like.
Caution prevailed. “Here’s what I’ll do,” the king said. “I’ll write a
letter to Grus, urging that he think again in the light of everything
that’s happened since you married Prince Ortalis. I’m sorry, but that’s
about as far as I can go.”
“As far as you dare go, you mean,” Limosa said.
No doubt she meant it for an insult. But it was simple truth. “You’re
right—that is as far as I dare to go,” Lanius answered. “If Ortalis writes
at the same time as I do, it might help change Grus’ mind.”
Limosa went off with her nose in the air. The day was hot and sticky,
one of those late summer days made bearable only by thinking fall would
come soon. Even so, she wore a high-necked, long-sleeved tunic.
What do
she and Ortalis do together? Lanius wondered.
Do I really want to know? He shook his head. No, he didn’t think
so.
He did write the letter. He had trouble sounding enthusiastic, but felt
he could honestly say,
I
do not believe Petrosus will prove a danger to you, especially if you
leave him without a position on his return to the city of Avornis.
He also wrote to Grus of an order he’d given the day before, an order
sending four of Avornis’ new tall-masted ships from the west coast north to
Durdevatz. He hadn’t stripped the coast of all the new ships, but he had
done what he thought he could for Kolovrat and Prince Ratibor.
When he gave the letter to a southbound courier, he asked the man if
Ortalis had also given him one to send to Grus. The fellow shook his head.
“No, Your Majesty.”
“Thank you,” Lanius said. Did Ortalis want nothing to do with his
father, even for his father-in-law’s sake? Was Ortalis one of those people
who never got around to writing, no matter what? Or did he dislike
Petrosus, no matter what he felt about Limosa?
Here, for once, was a topic that failed to rouse Lanius’ curiosity.
None of my business, the king thought,
and a good thing, too. He’d gone as far as he intended to go for
Petrosus.
He didn’t have long to wait for Grus’ reply. It came back to the
capital amazingly fast, especially considering how far south the other
king had traveled. It was also very much to the point.
Petrosus will stay a monk, Grus wrote.
Petrosus will also stay in the Maze. Then he added two more
sentences.
As for the other, I approve. In those circumstances, what else could
you do?
Relieved Grus was not angry at him for his move with the ships, Lanius
read the other part of the note to Limosa. “I’m sorry, Your Highness,” he
lied. “I don’t think I’d better go against King Grus’ will when he makes
it so clear.” That last was true.
Petrosus’ daughter scowled. “You haven’t got the nerve.”
That was also true. Lanius shrugged. “I’m sorry,” he said again. “Maybe
you and Ortalis can persuade him with letters. For your sake, I hope you
do.”
“For
my sake,” Limosa said bitterly. “As far as
you’re concerned, my father can stay in the Maze until he
rots.”
And
that was true, no matter how little Lanius felt like coming out
and saying so. He shrugged again. “If Grus wants to let your father out,
he will. I won’t say a word about it. But he has to be the one to do
it.”
Limosa turned her back on him. She stalked away without a word. Lanius
sighed. As soon as he heard what she had in mind, he’d been sure he was
going to lose no matter what happened. He’d been sure, and he’d been
right, and being right had done him no good at all.
“Well, well,” King Grus said when a courier handed him three sealed
letters from the city of Avornis. “What have we here?”
“Letters, Your Majesty,” the courier said unhelpfully. “One from His
Majesty, one from Prince Ortalis, and one from Princess Limosa.” He was
just a soldier, with a provincial accent. Odds were he neither knew nor
cared how Limosa had become Ortalis’ wife. Grus wished he could say the
same.
He opened Lanius’ letter first. The other king wrote,
King Lanius to Grus—
greetings. Your son and his wife will be petitioning you to let
Petrosus out of the Maze. They expect me to write you yet another letter
to the same effect, which is why I am sending this to you. In point of
fact, I am profoundly indifferent to whatever you choose to do with or to
Petrosus. But now I have written, and they will suppose I am once more
urging you to release him. You will, I am sure, also have written letters
intended to keep the peace. I hope all goes well in the south, for that is
truly important business. He’d scrawled his name below the carefully
written words.
Grus couldn’t help smiling as he read the letter. He could almost hear
Lanius’ voice in the words—intelligent, candid, detached, more than a
little ironic. When he got letters from son, daughter-in-law, and
son-in-law all at once, he’d had a pretty good idea of what they were
about. Now that he knew he was right, he broke the seal on Ortalis’
letter, and then on Limosa’s. From what they (especially Limosa—Ortalis’
letter was brief, and less enthusiastic than his wife’s) said about
Petrosus, Grus might have installed him as Arch-Hallow of Avornis after
recalling him from the Maze. He was good, he was pure, he was honest, he
was reliable, he was saintly . . . and he was nothing like the Petrosus
Grus had known for so long before sending him away from the capital.
If he didn’t let Petrosus come out of the Maze, he would anger Ortalis
and Limosa. They made that plain. But if he did let Petrosus come out, he
would endanger himself. He could see that, even if Ortalis and Limosa
couldn’t. Petrosus would want revenge. Even if he didn’t get his position
back (Lanius’ suggestion in his earlier letter)—and he wouldn’t— he still
had connections. An angry man with connections . . .
I’d need eyes in the back of my head for the rest of my life, the
king thought.
He called for parchment and ink. Grus wrote,
I
am sorry—a polite lie—
but, as I have written before, it is necessary for Petrosus to remain
in the monastery to which he has retired. No further petitions on this
subject will be entertained. He signed his name.
Limosa would pout. Lanius would shrug. Ortalis . . . Grus gritted his
teeth. Who could guess what Ortalis would do? Grus sometimes wondered if
his son knew from one minute to the next. Maybe he would shrug, too. But
maybe he would throw a tantrum instead. That could prove . . .
unpleasant.
The king had just finished sealing his letter when a guard stuck his
head into the tent and said, “Your Majesty, Pterocles would like to speak
to you if you have a moment to spare.”
“Of course,” Grus answered. The guard disappeared. A moment later, the
wizard came in. Grus nodded to him. “Good evening. What can I do for you?
How is your leg?”
Pterocles looked down at the wounded member. “It’s healed well. I still
feel it now and again—well, a little more than now and again—but I can get
around on it. I came to tell you I’ve been doing some thinking.”
“I doubt you’ll take any lasting harm from it,” Grus said. Pterocles
started to reply, then closed his mouth and sent Grus a sharp look. The
king looked back blandly. He asked, “And what have you been thinking
about?”
“Thralls.”
No one word could have been better calculated to seize and hold Grus’
interest. “Have you, now?” he murmured. Pterocles nodded. Grus asked,
“What have you been thinking about them?”
“That I wish I were back in the city of Avornis to try some spells on
the ones you brought back from the south,” Pterocles answered. “I think .
. .” He paused and took a deep breath. “I think, Your Majesty, that I know
how to cure them.” “Do you?” Grus said. The wizard nodded again. “By Olor’s
beard, you have my attention,” Grus told him. “Why do you think you know
this now, when you didn’t before we left the city?” He sent Pterocles a
wry smile. “When you were where the thralls are, you didn’t know. Now that
you’re hundreds of miles from them, you say you do. Will you forget again
when we get back to the capital?”
“I hope not, Your Majesty.” The wizard gave back a wry smile of his
own. “Part of this has to do with my own thinking, thinking that’s been
stewing for a long time. Part of it has to do with the masking spell the
Menteshe threw at us the night before we went into Pelagonia. And part of
it has to do with some of the things your witch said when we were in
Pelagonia.”
Grus remembered some of the things Alca had said to
him while the army was in Pelagonia. He wished he could forget a
lot of them, but those weren’t things she’d said in connection with the
thralls. “Go on,” he told Pterocles. “Believe me, I’m listening.”
“For a few days there, I couldn’t do much but lie around and listen to
her,” Pterocles said. “She made herself a lot clearer, a lot plainer, than
she ever had before. And I told her some things she hadn’t known before,
things I know because of... because of what happened to me outside of
Nishevatz.” Because I almost got killed outside of Nishevatz, he meant.
“Go on,” Grus said. “What does the masking spell have to do with all
this?”
“Well, Your Majesty, part of what makes a thrall is emptying out his
soul,” Pterocles answered. Grus nodded; that much he knew. The wizard went
on, “It finally occurred to me, though, that that’s not all that’s going
on. The Menteshe sorcerers have to leave something behind. They can’t
empty out the
whole soul, or a thrall would be nothing but a corpse or a beast.
And we all know there’s a little more to them than that.”
“Yes, a little. Sometimes more than a little,” Grus said, remembering
the thralls who’d tried to kill Lanius and, in lieu of himself,
Estrilda.
“Sometimes more than a little,” Pterocles agreed. “But now it seems to
me—and to Alca—that the emptying spell isn’t the only one the Menteshe
wizards use. It seems to us that they also use a masking spell. Some of
the true soul that makes a man remains in a thrall, but it’s hidden away
even from him.”
Grus considered. Slowly, he nodded again. “Yes, that makes sense,” he
said. “Which doesn’t mean it’s true, of course. A lot of the time, we’ve
found that the things that seem to make the most sense about thralls turn
out not to be true at all. But you’re right. It may be worth looking into.
You and Alca figured all of this out, you say?”
He could name the witch without flinching now. He could also name her
without longing for her, which he wouldn’t have believed possible. People
said absence made the heart grow fonder. And if the person you cared about
suddenly
wasn’t absent, and the two of you found you
didn’t care for each other anymore? There was a gloomy picture of
human nature, but one Grus couldn’t deny. It had happened to him.
Pterocles said, “We started working on it in Pelagonia, yes. I’ve added
some new touches since. That’s why I’m so eager to get back to the city of
Avornis and try them out on the thralls there.”
“I understand,” Grus said. “But the other thing I understand is, I need
you here as long as we’re campaigning. We’ll head back in the fall, I
expect. They won’t go anywhere in the meantime.” Reluctantly, Pterocles
spread his hands, admitting that was so.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
For a long time, thralls had fascinated King Lanius. They were men
robbed of much of their humanity, forced down to the dusky, shadow-filled
borderland between mankind and the animal world. The existence of thralls
made whole men think about what being human really meant.
Then a thrall tried to kill Lanius.
It wasn’t just a fit of bestial passion, of course. It was the Banished
One reaching out through the thrall, controlling him as a merely human
puppeteer controlled a marionette. From that moment on, thralls hadn’t
seemed the same to Lanius. They didn’t strike him as just being half man
and half animal. Instead, he also saw them as the Banished One’s tools, as
so many hammers and saws and knives (oh yes, knives!) to be picked up
whenever the exiled god needed them.
And tools weren’t so fascinating.
Since the thralls tried to murder Lanius and Estrilda, the king had
paid much less attention to them, except for making sure the ones still in
the palace couldn’t get out and try anything like that again. He didn’t
know what sudden spasm of curiosity had brought him to the room above the
one in which they were imprisoned. Whatever it was, though, he peered down
at them through the peephole in their ceiling.
He started to, anyhow. As soon as he drew back the tile that covered
the peephole, he drew back himself, in dismay. A thick, heavy stench
wafted up through the opening. The thralls cared not a bit about keeping
clean.
By all appearances, they didn’t care much about anything else, either.
Two sprawled on mattresses on the floor. A third tore a chunk off a loaf
of bread and stuffed it into his mouth with filthy hands. He filled a cup
with water and drank it to go with the snack. Then he walked over to a
corner of the room and eased himself. The thralls were in the habit of
doing that. They had chamber pots in the room, but seldom used them. That
added to the stench.
The thrall started to lie down with his comrades, but checked himself.
Instead, he stared up at the peephole. Lanius didn’t think he’d made any
noise uncovering it, but that didn’t always matter. The thralls seemed
able to sense when someone was looking at them. Or maybe it wasn’t the
thralls themselves. Maybe it was the Banished One looking out through
them.
That suspicion always filled Lanius whenever he had to endure a
thrall’s gaze. This thrall’s face showed nothing but idiocy. Who could
guess what lay behind it? Maybe nothing did. Maybe the man (no, the
not-quite-man) was as empty, as
emptied, as any other thrall laboring on a little plot of land
down south of the Stura. Maybe. Lanius had trouble believing it.
Did something glint in the thrall’s eyes? His face didn’t change. His
expression stayed as vacant as ever. But that didn’t feel like a beast’s
stare to Lanius. Nervously, the king shook his head. It might have been
the stare of a beast of sorts—a beast of prey eyeing an intended
victim. Nonsense, Lanius told himself.
That’s only a thrall, with no working wits in his head. He tried
to make himself believe it. He couldn’t.
The thrall kept staring and staring. Sometimes, during one of these
episodes, a thrall would mouth something up at him, or even say
something—a sure sign something more than the poor, damaged thrall was
looking out through those eyes. Not this time. After a couple of minutes,
the thrall turned away.
Lanius turned away, too, with nothing but relief. He covered the
peephole. His knees clicked as he got to his feet. He rubbed his nose, as
though that could get rid of the stink from the thralls’ room. Still, he
kept coming back to look at them. He was no wizard. He couldn’t learn
anything about them that would help anyone find out how to cure them—if,
indeed, anyone
could curs them. But he stayed intrigued. He couldn’t help
wondering what went on in the thralls’ minds. Logic and observation said
nothing much went on there, but he wasn’t sure how far to trust them.
Where sorcery was involved, were logic and observation the right tools to
use?
If they weren’t, what was? What could be? More good questions. Lanius
could come up with any number of good questions. Finding good answers for
them was harder. Maybe the hope of good answers was what kept him coming
back to the peephole.
Not long after that thought crossed his mind, he walked past Limosa in
the hallway. She nodded politely as she went by—she thought he’d tried
harder than he really had to get her father out of the Maze. He nodded
back, though it took an effort. He had plenty of good questions about her
and Ortalis, too, but no good answers, however much he would have liked to
have them. What you need is a peephole into their bedchamber, he thought.
That would tell you what you want to know.
He violently shook his head. What he wanted to know was none of his
business. Knowing it was none of his business didn’t keep him from wanting
to find out. Sosia would be angry at him if she learned he wanted to peep
into other people’s bedrooms—except she was even more curious about this
than he was. No, he told himself firmly.
Some curiosity doesn’t need to be satisfied. That went dead
against everything he’d ever believed. He tried to convince himself of it
anyway.
Here was the Stura. Grus had spent a lot of years traveling up and down
the river in a war galley. Now he approached it on horseback. The sour
smell of old smoke filled his nostrils. This was the valley the Menteshe
had overrun most thoroughly. That meant it was the valley where Prince
Ulash’s men had done the most damage.
Seeing that damage both infuriated and depressed the king. “How am I
supposed to set this to rights?” he demanded of Hirundo.
“Driving the Menteshe back over the river would be a good start,” the
general answered.
Hirundo smiled. He joked. But that was kidding on the square. Unless
the Avornans could drive the Menteshe south of the Stura once more, Grus
had exactly no chance of setting any of this to rights. And here, where
their countrymen could slip north over the river in small boats by night,
where the Menteshe could also bring river galleys— some of them rowed by
brainless thralls—into the fight, driving them out of Avornis was liable
to prove doubly hard.
“We can do it,” Hirundo said. “They don’t want to fight a stand-up
battle. Whenever they try that, they lose, and they know it.”
“They don’t
need to make a stand-up fight,” Grus said darkly. “All they need
to do is keep riding around and burning things. What kind of harvest will
anyone here in this valley have? None to speak of, and we both know it.
The Menteshe know it, too. Wrecking things works as well for them as
winning battles.” He waved toward what had been a vineyard. “No one will
grow grapes here for years. No grapes, no wine, no raisins. It’s the same
with olive groves. Cut the trees down and burn them and it’s years before
you have olives and olive oil again. What do people do in the
meantime?”
“I’ll tell you what they do,” Hirundo answered. “They do
without.”
Another joke that held entirely too much truth. The trouble was that
people
couldn’t very well do without wine and raisins and grapes and
olive oil. Here in the south, those things were almost as important as
wheat and barley—not that the grainfields hadn’t been ravaged, too. A good
harvest next year would go a long way toward putting that worry behind
people . . . provided they didn’t starve in the meantime. But the other
crops would take longer to recover.
“And what happens if the Menteshe swarm over the Stura again next
spring?” Grus demanded.
“We try to hit them before they can cause anywhere near this much
mischief,” Hirundo answered reasonably.
“But can we really do it? Wouldn’t you rather go up into the Chernagor
country and finish what we’ve been trying to do there for years now? And
what about the Chernagor pirates? What if they hit our east coast again
next spring while the Menteshe cross the Stura?”
“You’re full of cheerful ideas,” Hirundo said.
“It could have happened this year,” Grus said. “We’re lucky it
didn’t.”
Hirundo shook his head. “That isn’t just luck, Your Majesty. True, you
didn’t take Nishevatz, but you came close, and you would have done it,
odds are, if the war down here hadn’t drawn you away. And our ships gave
the Chernagor pirates all they wanted, and more besides. It’s no wonder
they didn’t move along with the cursed Menteshe. You put the fear of the
gods in them.”
“The fear of the gods,” Grus murmured. He hoped some of the Chernagors
still felt it, as opposed to the fear of the Banished One. But what he
hoped and what was true were liable to be two different things, as he knew
too well. Confusing the one with the other could only lead to
disappointment.
As he was getting ready to lie down on his cot that evening, Alauda
said, “Ask you something, Your Majesty?”
Grus looked at her in surprise. She didn’t ask a lot of questions. “Go
ahead,” the king said after a moment. “You can always ask. I don’t know
that I’ll answer.”
The peasant girl’s smile was wry. “I understand. You don’t have to, not
for the likes of me. But when we were up in Pelagonia . . . You had
another woman up there, didn’t you?”
“Not another woman I slept with,” Grus said carefully. He’d had enough
rows with women (that a lot of those rows were his own fault never crossed
his mind). He didn’t want another one now. If he had to send Alauda
somewhere far away to keep from having another one, he was ruthlessly
ready to do that.
But she only shrugged. “Another woman you care about, I mean. I don’t
know if you slept with her or not.” She waited. Grus gave her a cautious
nod. She went on, “And you’d cared about her for a while now,” and waited
again. Again, the king nodded. Now he waited. Alauda licked her lips and
then asked, “Why didn’t you just throw me over for her, then?” That was
what she’d really wanted to know all along. I
intended to. But Grus didn’t say that. He got in trouble over
women because he took them to bed whenever he got the chance, not because
he was wantonly cruel. What he did say was, “We aren’t lovers anymore. We
used to be, but we aren’t.”
Alauda surprised him again, this time by laughing. “When we got there,
you thought you were going to be, though, didn’t you?”
“Well. . . yes,” he said in dull embarrassment. He hadn’t thought she’d
noticed that. Now he asked a question of his own. “Why didn’t you bring up
any of this when we were there?”
She laughed once more, on a self-deprecating note. “What good would it
have done me? None I could see. Safer now, when I’m here and she’s
not.”
She did have her share of shrewdness. Grus had seen that before. “Now
you know,” he said, although he’d told her as little as he could. He
changed the subject, asking, “How are you feeling?”
“I’m all right,” she answered. “I’m supposed to have babies. I’m made
for it. It’s not always comfortable—about half the time, breakfast doesn’t
want to stay down—but I’m all right. Is the war going as well as it
looks?”
“Almost,” Grus said. “We’re still going forward, anyhow. I hope we’ll
keep on doing it.”
“Once we chase all the Menteshe out of Avornis, how do we keep them out
for good?” Alauda asked.
“I don’t know,” Grus said, which made her blink. He went on, “Avornans
have been trying to find the answer to that for a long time, but we
haven’t done it yet. If we had, they wouldn’t be in Avornis now, would
they?” He waited for Alauda to shake her head, then added, “One thing I
can do—one thing I will do—is put more river galleys on the Stura. That
will make it harder for them to cross, anyhow.”
She nodded. “That makes good sense. Why weren’t there more river
galleys on the Stura before?”
“They’re expensive,” he answered. “Expensive to build, even more
expensive to man.” The tall-masted ships that aped the ones the Chernagor
pirates made cost more to build. River galleys, with their large crews of
rowers, cost more to maintain. And every man who became a sailor was one
more man who couldn’t till the soil. After the disasters of this war,
Avornis was liable to need farmers even more desperately than she needed
soldiers or sailors. The king hoped she could find enough. If not, lean
times were coming, in the most literal sense of the words.
Lanius liked coming into the kitchens. He nodded to the head cook, a
rotund man named Cucullatus. “Tomorrow is Queen Sosia’s birthday, you
know,” he said. “Do up something special for her.”
Cucullatus’ smile was almost as wide as he was, which said a good deal.
“How about a kidney pie, Your Majesty? That’s one of her favorites.”
“Fine.” Lanius hoped his own smile was also wide and seemed sincere.
Sosia did love kidney pie, or any other dish with kidneys in it. Lanius
didn’t. To him, cooked kidneys smelled nasty. But he did want to make his
wife happy. He worked harder to keep Sosia happy since he’d started taking
lovers among the serving women than he had before. He thought himself
unique in that regard, which only proved he didn’t know everything there
was to know about straying husbands.
“We’ll take care of it, Your Majesty,” Cucullatus promised. “And
whatever kidneys don’t go into the pie, we’ll save for the moncats.”
“Fine,” Lanius said again, this time with real enthusiasm. The moncats
loved kidneys, which didn’t stink nearly as much raw.
The king started to leave the kitchens. A startled noise from one of
the sweepers made him turn back. There was Pouncer, clinging to a beam
with one clawed hand. The moncat’s other hand clutched a big wooden spoon.
Reading moncats’ expressions was a risky game, but Lanius thought Pouncer
looked almost indecently pleased with itself.
“Come back here! Come down here!” the king called in stern tones. But
Pouncer was no better at doing what it was told than any other moncat—or
any other cat of any sort.
Cucullatus said, “Here, don’t worry, Your Majesty. We can lure it down
with a bit of meat.”
“Good idea,” Lanius said. But the sweeper who’d first spotted Pouncer
wasn’t paying any attention to either Cucullatus or the king. He tried to
knock the moncat from the beam with his broom. He missed. Pouncer yowled
and swung up onto the beam, with only its tail hanging down. The sweeper
sprang, trying to grab the tail. He jumped just high enough to pull out a
few of the hairs at the very end. Pouncer yowled again, louder this time,
and took off like a dart hurled from a catapult.
“You stupid, manure-brained idiot!” Cucullatus bawled at the poor
sweeper. Then he turned on the rest of the men and women in the kitchens.
“Well? Don’t just stand there, you fools! Catch the miserable little
beast!”
If that wasn’t a recipe for chaos, Lanius couldn’t have come up with
one. People bumped into one another, tripped one another, and cursed one
another with more passion than Lanius had ever heard from them. Several of
them carried knives, and more knives, long-tined forks, and other
instruments of mayhem lay right at hand. Why they didn’t start stabbing
one another was beyond the king.
After a couple of minutes of screaming anarchy, somebody asked, “Where
did the stinking creature go?”
Lanius looked around. So did the kitchen staff, pausing in their
efforts to tear the place down. “Where
did the stinking creature go?” somebody else said.
Pouncer had disappeared. A wizard couldn’t have done a neater job of
making the moncat disappear. However he got in here, that’s the way he must have gone,
Lanius thought. Unlike the kitchen staff, he had, or believed he had, a
pretty good idea of where the moncat would go next. He pointed to
Cucullatus. “Give me two or three strips of raw meat.”
“But the moncat is gone, Your Majesty,” Cucullatus said reasonably.
“I know that. I’ll eat them myself,” Lanius said. Cucullatus stared.
“Never mind what I want with them,” the king told him. “Just give them to
me.”
He got them. Servants gaped to see him hurrying through the palace
corridors with strips of raw, dripping beef in his hand. A couple of them
even worked up the nerve to ask him what he was doing. He didn’t answer.
He just kept on, not quite trotting, until he got to the archives.
When he closed the heavy doors behind him, he let out a sigh of relief.
No more bellowing cooks, no more nosy servants. Only peace, quiet, dust
motes dancing in sunbeams, and the soothing smell of old parchment. This
was where he belonged, where no one would come and bother him.
Even as he pulled some documents—tax registers, he saw they were—from
the shelf of a cabinet that had known better centuries, he was shaking his
head. Today, he hoped he would be bothered. If he wasn’t... If he wasn’t,
Pouncer had decided to go back to the moncats’ chamber instead. Or maybe
the perverse beast would simply wander through whatever secret ways it had
found until it decided to come out in the kitchens again.
Lanius looked at the registers with one eye while looking all around
the archives chamber with the other. He didn’t know where Pouncer would
appear. Actually, he didn’t know whether Pouncer would appear at all, but
he did his best to forget about that. He did know this was the best bet he
could make.
And it paid off. Just when he’d gotten engrossed in one of the
registers in spite of himself, a faint, rusty, “Mrowr?” came from behind a
crate that probably hadn’t been opened in at least two hundred years.
“Come here, Pouncer!” Lanius called, and then he made the special
little chirping noise that meant he had a treat for the moncat.
Out Pouncer came. The moncat still clutched the spoon it had stolen.
Even the spoon paled in importance, though, before the lure of raw meat.
“Mrowr,” Pouncer said again, this time on a more insistent note.
“Come on,” Lanius coaxed, holding a strip of beef where the moncat
could see—and smell—it. “Come on, you fuzzy moron. You know you want
this.”
Want it Pouncer did. Sidling forward, the moncat reached out with a
clawed hand. Lanius gave it the first piece of meat. The moncat ate
quickly, fearful of being robbed even though none of its fellows were
near. In some ways it was very much like a man. Once the meat had
disappeared, Pouncer held out that little hand and said, “Mrowr,” yet
again. Give me some more, or you’ll be sorry. Lanius had no trouble
translating that particular meow into Avornan. The king gave the moncat
another piece of meat. This one vanished more slowly. As it did, Pouncer
began to purr. Lanius had been waiting for that. It was a sign he could
pick up the moncat without getting his hand shredded. He did. Pouncer kept
on purring.
Feeling more than a little triumphant, Lanius carried the moncat— and
the serving spoon it had stolen—out of the royal archives. The tax
registers he left where they were. They dated from the early years of his
fathers reign. No one had looked at them since; Lanius was sure of that.
They weren’t going anywhere for the time being. And one of these days he
would have to have a peek inside that crate Pouncer had been hiding
behind.
Pouncer started twisting in the king’s arms and trying to get free
before Lanius reached the moncats’ chamber. Lanius still had one strip of
meat left. He offered it to the moncat, and bought just enough contentment
to keep from getting clawed the rest of the way there. Pouncer even let
him take away the wooden spoon.
Cucullatus clapped his hands when Lanius brought the spoon back to the
kitchens. “Well done, Your Majesty!” he said, as though Lanius had just
captured Yozgat and reclaimed the Scepter of Mercy.
“Thank you so much,” Lanius said.
“Kidney pie,” Cucullatus went on, ignoring or more likely not noticing
the king’s irony. Lanius frowned; the commotion with the moncat had almost
made him forget why he’d come to the kitchens in the first place. The
chief cook went on, “Her Majesty will enjoy it. You wait and see.”
“Ah.” Lanius nodded. “Yes, I hope she does.”
Sosia did. When she sat down to supper on her birthday, she smiled and
wagged a finger at Lanius. “Somebody’s been talking to the kitchens,” she
said as a servant gave her a big helping of the pungent dish.
“Why would anyone talk to a kitchen?” Lanius asked. “Ovens and pots and
skewers don’t listen very well.”
His wife gave him a severe look. “You know what I mean,” she said.
“You’ve been talking to the people who work in the kitchens. There. Are
you happier?”
“I couldn’t be happier, not while I’ve got you,” Lanius answered.
Sosia smiled. “That’s sweet,” she said. But then the smile slipped. “In
that case, why—?” She stopped and shook her head. “No, never mind. Not
tonight.”
Lanius had no trouble figuring out what she’d started to say.
In that case, why did you take Cristata to bed? Why did you want to
make her your second wife? To Lanius, it made good enough sense. He
hadn’t been unhappy with Sosia. He’d just wanted to be happy with
Cristata, too. He still didn’t see anything wrong with that. Grus’
daughter, however, had a decidedly different opinion. And what about Zenaida? Lanius asked himself. He knew what
Sosia’s opinion of her would be. He didn’t think he was in love with her,
the way he had with Cristata. Maybe seeing that he didn’t would keep Sosia
from getting so furious this time. On the other hand, maybe it wouldn’t do
him any good at all.
She’d better not find out about Zenaida, the king thought.
He smiled at Sosia. “Happy birthday,” he told her.
“You’re even eating the kidney pie yourself,” she said in some
surprise.
And so Lanius was. His thoughts full of maidservants, he’d hardly
noticed he was doing it. Now that he did notice, he was reminded again
that this was not his favorite dish—too strong for his taste. Still, he
shrugged and answered, “I don’t hate it,” which was true. As though to
prove it, he took another bite. What he did prove, to himself, was that he
didn’t love it, either.
“I’m glad,” Sosia said.
Later that evening, Lanius made love with his wife. He didn’t hate
that, either. If Zenaida was a little more exciting . . . well, maybe that
was because she wasn’t as familiar as Sosia—and maybe, also, because the
thrill of the illicit added spice to what they did. Nothing illicit about
Sosia, but nothing wrong with her, nothing that made him want to sleep
apart. He did his best to please her when they joined.
By the way she responded, his best proved good enough. “You
are sweet,” she said, as though reminding herself.
“I think the same thing—about you,” he added hastily, before she could
tease him about thinking himself sweet. That was what he got for being
precise most of the time.
He waited there in the darkness, wondering if Sosia would ask why he’d
gone after Cristata if he thought she was sweet. But she didn’t. She just
murmured, “Well, good,” rolled over on her side, and fell asleep. Lanius
rolled over, too, in the opposite direction. His backside bumped hers. She
stirred a little, but kept on breathing slowly and deeply. A few minutes
later, Lanius also drifted off, a smile on his face.
A lieutenant from one of the river galleys on the Stura stood before
King Grus. “Your Majesty, an awful lot of the Menteshe are sneaking south
across the river. More and more every day, and especially every night.
We’ve sunk half a dozen boats full of the stinking buggers, and more have
gotten by us.”
This wasn’t the first such report Grus had heard. He scratched his
head. Up until a few days before, Prince Ulash’s men hadn’t been doing
anything of the sort. Sudden changes in what the Menteshe were up to made
the King of Avornis deeply suspicious. “What have they got in mind?” he
asked, though the lieutenant wasn’t going to know.
As he’d expected, the young officer shrugged and answered, “No idea,
sir. We don’t get the chance to ask them a whole lot of questions. When we
ram ‘em, we sink ’em.” By the pride in his voice, he wanted to do nothing
but sink them.
That suited Grus fine. He wanted his river-galley officers aggressive.
He said, “Thank you, Lieutenant. I’ll see what I can do to get to the
bottom of this.”
The officer bowed and left. Grus scratched his head again. He didn’t
shake any answers loose. He hadn’t really thought he would. Being without
answers, he summoned Pterocles. The wizard heard him out, then said, “That
is interesting, Your Majesty. Why would they start going over the
river now when they had seemed to want to stay on this side and
fight?”
“I was hoping you could tell me,” Grus said. “Has there been a magical
summons? Has the Banished One taken a hand in things?”
“I haven’t noticed anything out of the ordinary.” Pterocles spoke
cautiously. Grus approved of that caution. Pterocles recognized the
possibility that something might have slipped past him. He said, “I have
spells that would tell me if something
has gone on under my nose. A summons like that lingers on the
ether. If it was there, I’ll find out about it.”
“Good,” Grus said. “Let me know.”
When Pterocles came back that afternoon, he looked puzzled and
troubled. “Your Majesty, if any sort of sorcerous summons came north, I
can’t find it,” he said. “I don’t quite know what that means.”
“Neither do I,” Grus said. Had the Banished One deceived his wizard? Or
was Pterocles searching for something that wasn’t there to find? “If you
know any other spells, you ought to use them,” Grus told him.
Pterocles nodded. “I will, though I’ve already tried the ones I think
likeliest to work. You ought to try to take some Menteshe prisoners, too.
They may know something I don’t.”
“I’ll do that,” Grus said at once. “I should have sent men out to do it
when I first called you. A lot of the time, the Menteshe like to
sing.”
He gave the orders. His men rode out. But Menteshe were starting to get
scarce on the ground. Even a week earlier, discovering so few of them on
the Avornan side of the Stura would have made Grus rejoice. He would have
rejoiced now, if his men were the ones responsible for making the nomads
want to get back to the lands they usually roamed. But his men hadn’t
driven the Menteshe over the Stura, and he knew it. That left him
suspicious. Why were the Menteshe leaving—fleeing— Avornis when they
didn’t have to?
“I know what it is,” Hirundo said when a day’s search resulted in no
prisoners.
“Tell me,” Grus urged. “I haven’t got any idea why they’re going.”
“It’s simple,” the general answered. “They must have heard you were
going to put a tax on nomads in Avornis, so of course they ran away from
it.” He grinned at his own cleverness. “By Olor’s beard, I would,
too.”
“Funny.” Grus tried to sound severe, but a smile couldn’t help creeping
out from behind the edges of his beard—it
was funny, even if he wished it weren’t. He wagged a finger at
Hirundo, who kept right on grinning, completely unabashed. Grus said, “Do
you have any
real idea why they’re doing it?”
“No,” Hirundo admitted. “All I can say is, good riddance.”
“Certainly, good riddance.” But Grus remained dissatisfied, like a man
who’d just enjoyed a feast but had an annoying piece of gristle stuck
between two back teeth. “They
shouldn’t be running away, though, not when we haven’t finished
beating them. They’ve never done that before.
“Maybe they know we’re going to win this time, and so they want to save
themselves for fights next year or the year after,” Hirundo suggested.
“Maybe.” Grus still didn’t sound happy—still wasn’t happy. He explained
why, repeating, “They’ve never done that before.” The Menteshe usually did
the same sort of things over and over again. If they changed their ways,
they had to have a reason . . . didn’t they?
“Maybe the Banished One is telling them what to do,” Hirundo said.
“Of course the Banished One is telling them what to do,” Grus answered.
He hated the idea, which didn’t mean he disbelieved it. “They’re his
creatures. They’re proud to be his creatures. But why is he telling them
to do that? And how is he telling them? Pterocles can’t find any of his
magic.”
Hirundo considered, then brightened. “Maybe he’s trying to drive you
mad, to make you find reasons for things that haven’t got any.”
“Thank you so much,” Grus said. Hirundo bowed back, as he might have
after any extraordinarily meritorious service. The worst of it was, Grus
couldn’t be sure the general was wrong. The king knew he would go right on
wasting time and losing sleep until he found an answer he could believe.
He sighed. “The more we go on like this, the plainer it gets that we need
prisoners. Until we know more, we’ll just keep coming out with one stupid
guess after another.”
“I don’t think my guesses were stupid.” Mock anger filled Hirundo’s
voice. “I think they were clever, perceptive, even brilliant.”
“You would,” the king muttered. “When your men finally do bring back a
captive or two, we’ll see how brilliant and perceptive you were.”
“They’re doing their best, the same as I am,” Hirundo said.
“I hope theirs is better than yours.” Grus made sure he smiled so
Hirundo knew he was joking. The horrible face the general made said he got
the message but didn’t much care for it.
Along with the cavalry, the men aboard the river galleys got orders to
capture Menteshe if they could. If they could . . . Suddenly, the lands on
this side of the Stura began to seem like a country where the birds had
just flown south for the winter. They had been here. The memory of them
lingered. They would come back. But for now, when you wanted them most,
they were gone.
Grus had never imagined that winning a war could leave him so unhappy.
He had questions he wanted to ask, questions he needed to ask, and nobody
to whom to ask them. He’d snarled at Hirundo in play. He started snarling
at people in earnest.
“They’re gone,” Alauda said. “Thank the gods for it. Praise the gods
for it. But, by Queen Quelea’s mercy, don’t complain about it.”
“I want to know why,” Grus said stubbornly. “They aren’t acting the way
they’re supposed to, and that bothers me.” He’d been down this same road
with Hirundo.
His new mistress had less patience for it. “Who cares?” she said with a
toss of the head. “As long as they’re out of the kingdom, nothing else
matters.” That held enough truth to be annoying, but not enough to make
Grus quit trying to lay his hands on some of the nomads.
When at last he did, it was much easier than he’d thought it would be.
Like a flock of birds that had fallen behind the rest because of a storm,
a band of about twenty Menteshe rode down to the Stura and then along it,
looking for boats to steal so they could cross. Three river galleys and a
regiment of Hirundo’s horsemen converged on them. When Grus heard the
news, he feared the nomads would fight to the death just to thwart him.
But they didn’t. Overmatched, they threw up their hands and
surrendered.
Their chieftain, a bushy-eyebrowed, big-nosed fellow named Yavlak,
proved to speak good Avornan. “Here he is, Your Majesty,” Hirundo said, as
though he were making Grus a present of the man.
And Grus felt as though Yavlak were a present, too. “Why are you
Menteshe leaving Avornis?” he demanded.
Yavlak looked at him as he would have looked at any idiot. “Because we
have to,” he answered.
“You have to? Who told you you have to? Was it the Banished One?” The
king knew he sounded nervous, but couldn’t help it.
“The Fallen Star?” Now Yavlak looked puzzled. With those eyebrows, he
did it very well. “No, the Fallen Star has nothing to do with it. Can it
be you have not heard?” He didn’t seem to want to believe that; he acted
like a man who had no choice. “By some mischance, we found out late. I
thought even you miserable Avornans would surely know by now.”
“Found out what? Know what?” Grus wanted to strangle him. The only
thing that held him back was the certain knowledge that he would have to
go through this again with another nomad, one who might not be so fluent
in Avornan, if he did.
Yavlak finally—and rudely—obliged him. “You stupid fool,” he said.
“Found out that Prince Ulash is dead, of course.”
CHAPTER NINETEEN
“Prince Ulash is dead.”
King Lanius stared at the messenger who brought the word north to the
city of Avornis. “Are you sure?” he blurted. He realized the question was
foolish as soon as it came out of his mouth. He couldn’t help asking,
though. Ulash had been the strongest and canniest prince among the
Menteshe for longer than Lanius had been alive. Imagining how things would
go without him was nothing but a leap in the dark.
The messenger took the question seriously. That was one of the
privileges of being a sovereign. “Yes, Your Majesty. There’s no doubt,” he
answered. “The nomads went south of the Stura when they didn’t have to,
and prisoners have told King Grus why.”
“All right. Thank you,” Lanius said, and then, as an afterthought, “Do
you know who succeeds him? Is it Prince Sanjar or Prince Korkut?”
“That I can’t tell you. The nomads King Grus caught didn’t know,” the
messenger said. “Grus is on his way back here now, with part of the army.
The rest will stay in the south, in case whichever one of Ulash’s sons
does take over decides to start the war up again.”
“Sensible,” Lanius said, hoping neither the messenger nor his own
courtiers noticed his small sigh. With Grus back in the capital, Lanius
would become a figurehead again. Part of Lanius insisted that didn’t
matter—Grus was better at the day-to-day business of running Avornis than
he was, and was welcome to it. But Lanius remembered how often he’d had
power taken away from him. He resented it. He couldn’t help resenting
it.
He dismissed the messenger, who bowed his way out of the throne room.
As the king descended from the Diamond Throne, the news beat in his brain,
pulsing like his own blood, pounding like a drum.
Prince Ulash is dead.
What
would come next? Lanius didn’t know. He was no prophet, to play
the risky game of foreseeing the future. But things wouldn’t be the same.
Neither Sanjar nor Korkut could hope to match Ulash for experience or
cleverness. Will whichever one of them comes to power in Yozgat make an apter
tool for the Banished One’s hand? Lanius wondered. Again, he could
only shrug. He had believed Ulash’s cleverness and power and success had
won him more freedom of action than most Menteshe owned. But then the
prince had hurled his nomads northward to help hold Grus away from
Nishevatz. When the Banished One told him to move, he’d moved. So much for
freedom of action.
By the time Lanius got back to his living quarters, news of Ulash’s
death had spread all over the palace. Not everyone seemed sure who Ulash
was. The king went past a couple of servants arguing over whether he was
King of Thervingia or prince of a Chernagor city-state.
“Well, whoever he is, he
isn’t anymore,” said the man who thought he’d ruled
Thervingia.
“That’s true,” the other servant said. “It’s the first true thing
you’ve said all day, too.”
They could afford to quarrel, and to be ignorant. Lanius, who couldn’t,
almost envied them. Almost—he valued education and knowledge too highly to
be comfortable with ignorance.
Rounding a corner, the king almost bumped into Prince Ortalis. They
both gave back a pace. Grus’ son said, “Is it true?”
“Is what true?” Lanius thought he knew what Ortalis meant, but he might
have been wrong.
He wasn’t. “Is the old bugger south of the Stura dead at last?” Ortalis
asked, adding, “That’s what everybody’s saying.”
“That’s what your father says, or rather his messenger,” Lanius
answered, and watched his brother-in-law scowl. Ortalis and Grus still
didn’t get along. They probably never would. Lanius went on, “Now that the
Menteshe have gone back to their own side of the border, your father will
be coming home.”
“Will he?” Ortalis didn’t bother trying to hide his displeasure at the
news. “I hoped he’d stay down there and chase them all the way to
what’s-its-name, the place where they’ve stashed the
what-do-you-call-it.”
“Yozgat. The Scepter of Mercy.” Yes, Lanius did prefer knowledge to
ignorance. He brought out the names Ortalis needed but didn’t bother
remembering as automatically as he breathed. He judged that his
brother-in-law wanted Grus to go ,on campaigning in the south not so much
because he hoped Avornan arms would triumph as because Grus would stay far
away from the city of Avornis. Lanius couldn’t do anything but try to stay
out of the way when Grus and Ortalis clashed. Doing his best to stay on
safer ground, the king said, “I hope Princess Limosa is well?”
“Oh, yes,” Ortalis said with a smile. “She’s fine. She’s just
fine.”
In a different tone of voice, with a different curve of the lips, the
answer would have been fine, just fine, too. As things were, Lanius pushed
past his brother-in-law as fast as he could. He tried telling himself he
hadn’t seen what he thought he had. Ortalis had looked and sounded that
very same way, had had that very same gleam in his eye, when he was
butchering a deer and up to his elbows in blood. He’d never seemed
happier.
Lanius shook his head again and again. But no, he couldn’t make that
certainty fall out. And he couldn’t make himself believe anymore that
Zenaida hadn’t known exactly what she was talking about.
He also couldn’t help remembering how serene, how radiant, how
joyful Limosa looked. That couldn’t be an act. But he didn’t see
how it could be real, either.
“Well, well,” Grus said when he saw the towers of the palace, the
cathedral’s heaven-reaching spire, and the other tall buildings of the
city of Avornis above the walls that protected the capital from invaders.
“I’m really coming home. I’m not just stopping for a little while before I
have to rush north or south as fast as I can.”
“You hope you’re not, anyhow,” Hirundo said.
Grus glared at him, but finally gave back a reluctant nod. “Yes. I hope
I’m not.”
Guards on the wall had seen the approaching army, too. A postern gate
opened. A rider came out to make sure it really was an Avornan force. When
he waved, the main gates swung open.
Not all the army that had accompanied Grus up from the south went into
the city of Avornis. Much of the part that wasn’t on garrison duty down by
the Stura had gone into barracks in towns on the way north, to spread the
problem of feeding the soldiers over as much of the kingdom as possible.
If a dreadful winter—say, a dreadful winter inspired by the Banished
One—overwhelmed Avornis, extra mouths to feed in the capital, which was
already much the largest city in the kingdom, would only make matters
worse.
Instead of waiting at the royal palace, Lanius met Grus halfway there.
“You must tell me at once—did Sanjar or Korkut succeed Prince Ulash?”
Lanius said. By his expression, he was ready to do something drastic if
Grus didn’t take that
at once seriously.
“I’ll tell you everything I know,” Grus promised. “And everything I
know is—I don’t know.”
“Oh . . .
drat!” Lanius got more use out of what wasn’t even really a curse
than Grus could have from a couple of minutes of blasphemy and obscenity.
His son-in-law went on, “I think which of them takes over in Yozgat really
is important for Avornis. Korkut will cause us more trouble than Sanjar,
though neither one of them is half the man their father was.
“How do you know even that much about them?” Grus asked. “They’re both
just names to me.”
“I’ve been going through the archives—how else?” Lanius answered.
“Things our traders who went south of the Stura in peacetime heard about
them, things Ulash’s ambassadors who came up here had to say. Korkut is
older, but Sanjar is the son of the woman who became Ulash’s
favorite.”
“Isn’t that interesting?” Grus said. “You’ll have to tell me more.”
Now the other king looked faintly abashed. “I’ve already told you
almost everything I know.”
“Oh.” Grus shrugged. “Well, you’re right—it is important. And it’s
already more than I knew before.” After that, Lanius brightened. Grus went
on, “How are things here? How’s Prince Vsevolod?”
The other king’s lip curled. “About the way you’d expect. He’s still
annoyed that we had the nerve to defend our own borders instead or going
on with the fight to put him back on the throne of Nishevatz, which would
actually be important.”
“Oh,” Grus said again, his tone falling. “Well, you’re right. I can’t
say I’m surprised. How are other things?”
“They seem all right,” Lanius answered. “Most of them, anyhow.”
What was that supposed to mean? One obvious answer occurred to Grus.
“Is my son all right?” he asked.
“Prince Ortalis is fine. He and Princess Limosa seem very happy
together, no matter how they happened to meet and wed,” Lanius said.
He spoke with caution he didn’t try to hide. Grus knew he didn’t like
Ortalis. Maybe that explained the caution. Or maybe there were things he
could have said if they weren’t out in the street. Finding out which would
have to wait. Grus said, “Let’s get back to the palace. I’m glad the
Chernagors didn’t raid our coast this year.”
“Yes, so am I,” Lanius said. “How would you have handled it if they
did?”
“Badly, I suspect,” Grus answered. Lanius blinked, then laughed; maybe
he hadn’t expected such blunt honesty. Grus asked, “How are your moncats
doing?”
“Very well,” Lanius said enthusiastically, and told Grus more than he
wanted to hear about the antics and thievery of the beast called
Pouncer.
Not least because Lanius had bored him, Grus put a sardonic edge in his
voice when he asked, “And have you found any other pets while I was away?”
He made it plain he didn’t mean any that walked on four legs.
Just as plainly, Lanius understood him, for he turned red. “Well, yes,”
he confessed with no great eagerness. “You were right about that.” He did
have integrity; not many men would have admitted as much. But then, with a
certain edge of his own, he inquired, “And how was Pelagonia?”
Grus remembered that he hadn’t named the town in his letters north. He
hadn’t wanted to remind Estrilda he was anywhere near it— or near Alca. He
supposed he shouldn’t have been surprised that Lanius had seen through his
ploy; Lanius saw through all sorts of things. For a moment, he thought of
talking about the town and not about the witch. But Lanius had given him a
straight answer, and he supposed he owed his son-in-law one in return.
With a shrug, he said, “It’s dead. I didn’t know if it would be, but it
is.”
He said nothing about Alauda. He most especially said nothing about the
baby Alauda would have. Word that he’d been carrying on with a new woman
down in the south might eventually reach his wife. Since he hadn’t brought
Alauda back to the city of Avornis, Estrilda might not—he hoped she
wouldn’t—get too upset about that. He’d been in the field and away from
her for a long time, after all. But she wouldn’t be happy if she found out
he’d sired another bastard.
Suddenly worried, he wondered whether Lanius knew about Alauda. The
other king gave no sign of it. Lanius wasn’t usually very good at keeping
secrets off his face. That eased Grus’ mind—a little.
And there was the palace, and there, standing in the doorway waving to
him, was Estrilda. That eased Grus’ mind, too. His wife kept her own
counsel about some things, but not about his other women. She didn’t know
about Alauda, either, then, or not yet. Only when Grus was already
hurrying up the steps toward her did he wish those last three words hadn’t
occurred to him.
Lanius studied the harvest reports that came into the capital with even
more attention than he usually gave them. Ever since that one dreadful
winter, he’d worried that the Banished One would wield the weather weapon
once again, and wanted to be as ready as he could in case the exiled god
did. This year, though, he also eyed the news from the south with unusual
attention.
It was every bit as bad as Grus had warned him it would be. Half the
dismal harvest reports from the regions the Menteshe had ravaged asked for
grain and fodder to be sent to towns whose governors insisted their
populace would go hungry and animals would starve if they didn’t get that
kind of help.
Grus examined the reports from the south, too. He’d seen what was going
on down there with his own eyes, and was grim about it. “We’ll have
hunger,” he said bluntly. “I’ll thank Queen Quelea for her kindness if we
don’t have famine. And if the nomads keep coming up over the Stura year
after year, I don’t know what we’ll do. They hurt us badly.”
“Didn’t we hurt them, too?” Lanius asked.
“I hope so,” Grus said. “I hope so, but how can I be sure? They’re so
cursed hard to get a grip on.”
“We drove them back over the Stura,” Lanius said.
“No.” Grus shook his head, as relentlessly precise as Lanius was
himself most of the time. “We drove them back to the valley of the Stura.
They went over by themselves. If Ulash hadn’t chosen that moment to drop
dead, we would have had another big fight on our hands.”
“I do wonder what’s happening on the far side of the river,” Lanius
said. “Sanjar or Korkut? Korkut or Sanjar? How will the Menteshe choose?
How long will it take ehem?”
“How much trouble will we be in once they do?” Grus was also
relentlessly practical.
Since Lanius preferred not to dwell on trouble, he asked, “How did
Pterocles fare against the nomads’ wizards?”
“Fair,” Grus said, and then shook his head, correcting himself.
“No—better than fair. If he hadn’t woken up during that one night attack
the Menteshe tried to bring off, it would have done us much more harm.
Oh!” He shook his head again. “He also says he’s full of new ideas about
how to cure thralls.”
“Does he?” Lanius wished he could have sounded more excited. As he’d
seen in the archives, Avornan wizards had been full of new ideas about how
to cure thralls ever since the Menteshe sorcerers started creating them.
The only trouble was, very few of the new ideas did any good. “And what
are they?”
“I couldn’t begin to tell you,” Grus answered. “I never even asked, not
in any detail. I don’t care how he does what he does, though I wouldn’t
mind watching him try. All I care about is whether he can do it.” How fascinated Lanius almost as much as
why. He almost asked the older man how he could be so indifferent
to it, and why. After a moment’s hesitation, though, he decided not to. A
straightforward insistence on results also had its advantages.
Lanius did say, “You wouldn’t mind watching him? You really think he
has a chance to bring this off?”
“I think he thinks he had a chance to bring it off,” Grus said, and
Lanius smiled at the convolution. His father-in-law went on, “And I think
he’s earned the chance to try. How are we worse off if he fails?”
He’d intended that for a rhetorical question, but Lanius had no trouble
finding a literal answer for it. “How are we worse off? Suppose the
Banished One kills him and the thralls try murdering us again. That would
be worse, wouldn’t it?”
“Maybe a little,” Grus allowed. Lanius yelped indignantly. Grus said,
“We’ll be as careful as we can. You made your point there, believe
me.”
“When will the wizard try?” Lanius asked.
“When he’s ready,” Grus answered with a shrug. “He has to have all his
spells ready before he begins. If he doesn’t, he shouldn’t even try. You’re right about that—this could be one of those things where trying
and failing is worse than not trying at all. Or do you look at it
differently?”
“No, I think you’ve got it straight,” Lanius said at once. “Throwing
rocks at the Banished One isn’t enough. We have to make sure we hit him.
We have to make sure we hurt him.”
He listened to himself. He sounded bold enough. Did he sound like a
fool? He wouldn’t have been surprised. Could he and Grus and Pterocles
really hurt Milvago’s plans?
We’d better be able to, Lanius thought.
If we can’t, we’re going to lose. Avornis is going to lose.
It was more than a week later that Grus hauled Lanius off to the
chamber where the thralls were kept. “Where were you?” Grus asked
irritably while they were on the way. “I looked for you for quite a while,
and it was only luck we ran into each other in the hall here.”
Lanius had been sporting with Zenaida. He didn’t feel like admitting
that to Grus. He just shrugged and answered, “Well, you’ve found me.
Pterocles is ready?”
“He says he is,” Grus told him. “We’ll find out, won’t we?”
“So we will,” Lanius said. “One way or the other . . .”
Half a dozen armed guards brought a thrall from the room where the
not-quite-men were kept to the chamber next door. The guards looked
scornful, plainly wondering why Grus had ordered out so many of them to
deal with one unarmed fellow who hadn’t much more in the way of brains
than a goat. The thrall glanced around with the usual dull lack of
curiosity of his kind.
No matter how dull the thrall seemed, Lanius eyed him suspiciously. The
Banished One could be peering out through those almost unblinking eyes.
Pterocles was giving the thrall that same sharp scrutiny. The haggard
expression the wizard wore said he knew the risk he was taking. Lanius
nodded to him. He wouldn’t have wanted Pterocles to try to free the man
from thralldom without bearing in mind the danger of failure.
“Are you sure you’re ready?” Grus asked.
“I’m sure. We’re here to find out whether I’m right, which is not the
same thing,” Pterocles answered. “I think I am, Your Majesty. I aim to—”
He broke off. “No, I won’t say what I aim to do, not while this fellow’s
ears may pass it on to the Banished One. I’ll just go ahead and try the
sorcery.”
At first, whatever he was doing didn’t seem much like magic at all. He
stepped over to a window and took a small crystal on a silver chain from a
pouch on his belt. Idly, he began to swing the crystal back and forth. It
sparkled in the sunlight streaming in through the window. The glitter and
flash drew Lanius’ eyes to the crystal. He needed an effort of will to
pull them away.
Looking at the thrall helped keep Lanius from looking at the crystal.
The thrall didn’t look at the king. His eyes went back and forth, back and
forth, following the swinging, flashing chunk of clear rock.
“You are an empty one,” Pterocles said quietly. “Your will is not your
own. You have always been empty, your will never your own.”
“I am an empty one,” the thrall repeated. His voice sounded
empty—eerily inhuman, all emotion and feeling washed from it. “My will is
not my own. I have always been empty, my will never my own.”
“Queen Quelea’s mercy,” Grus whispered to Lanius. “Just listen to what
the wizard’s done.”
“What do you mean?” Lanius whispered back.
“I’ve heard plenty of thralls down in the south,” Grus answered. “They
can talk, a little, but they don’t talk as well as that, not usually they
don’t. Pterocles has managed something special to get even that much out
of this fellow.”
“I don’t know,” Lanius said dubiously. “I think the thrall was just
echoing the wizard.”
Pterocles waved impatiently at the two kings. Lanius nodded and fell
silent. Grus looked as though he wanted to say something more, but he too
subsided when Pterocles waved again. The sorcerer kept on swinging his
shining bit of crystal. The thrall’s eyes kept following it. It might have
been the only thing in all the world with meaning for the filthy,
scruffily bearded man.
Softly, Pterocles asked, “Do you want to find your own will? Do you
want to be filled with your own self?”
“I want to find my own will,” the thrall droned. “I want to be filled
with my own self.” Did he understand what he was saying? Or was he only
parroting Pterocles’ words? Lanius still thought he was, but the king had
to admit to himself that he wasn’t so sure anymore.
“I can lift the shadow from your spirit and give you light.” Pterocles
sounded confident. How many Avornan wizards over the years, though, had
sounded confident trying to cure thralls? Many. How many had had reason to
sound confident? Few. No—none. None yet, anyhow. Pterocles went on, “Do
you
want me to lift the shadow from your spirit and give you
light?”
“I want you to lift the shadow from my spirit and give me light.” By
what was in his voice, the thrall still wanted nothing, regardless of the
words he mouthed. Or was that so? Buried under the indifference, was there
a terrible longing struggling to burst free? For an instant, Lanius heard
it, or thought he did. Though he doubted himself again in the very next
heartbeat, a sudden surge of hope warmed him.
“I will do what I can for you, then,” Pterocles said.
“Do what you can for me, then,” the thrall said. Pterocles blinked,
then grinned enormously. Lanius realized the wizard hadn’t expected the
thrall to respond there. If the man did, even if the response was just
another near-echo, wasn’t that a sign he was trying to escape the shadow
on his own? Lanius dared hope it was, anyhow.
Pterocles began to chant, very softly, in a very old dialect of
Avornan. Lanius fancied himself a scholar, but even he had trouble
following what the wizard said. Beside him, Grus looked altogether
bewildered.
Pterocles also kept swinging the crystal in the sunbeam. It cast
rainbows on the walls of the chamber—more and more rainbows by the moment.
The chant went on and on. It got more insistent, though no louder. Ever
more rainbows sprang into being—far more than a single bit of crystal had
any business extracting from an ordinary sunbeam.
Suddenly, the wizard said, “Let them be assembled.” Lanius understood
that very clearly. Pterocles made a pass, and all the rainbows, still
glowing, came off the walls and began to spin around the thrall’s head.
Lanius exclaimed in wonder—no, in awe. Those same two qualities also
filled Grus’ voice. They were watching both the beautiful and the
impossible. Lanius couldn’t have said which side of that coin impressed
him more.
Even the thrall, who was supposed to be hardly more than a beast, took
notice of what was going on around him. He reached up with his right hand,
as though to pluck one of the spinning rainbows out of the air. Was that
awe on
his dull face? Lanius would have had a hard time claiming it
wasn’t.
The king couldn’t see whether the swirling bands of color went around
the thrall’s hand, whether they slipped between his fingers, or whether
they simply passed through his flesh. In the end, what did it matter? His
hand did them no harm, which was all that counted.
“Let them come together!” Pterocles called out in that archaic dialect
of Avornan. And come together the rainbows did. Instead of swirling around
the thrall’s head, they began passing
into it. For a moment, even after they entered his flesh, they
kept their brilliance, or so it seemed to Lanius’ dazzled eye.
“Ahhh!” the thrall said—a long, involuntary exclamation of wonder. His
eyes opened very wide. By then, Lanius had thought himself as full of awe
as he could be. He found out he was wrong. Unless his imagination had
altogether run away with him, the thrall’s eyes held something that had
never been in them before. They held reason.
Grus said it in a slightly different way—he whispered, “By Olor’s
strong right hand, that’s a
man there”—but it meant the same thing. If this wasn’t a cured
thrall, maybe there never would be one.
Little by little, the rainbows faded. No—the rainbows became invisible
from the outside. Lanius was convinced that, in some way he could not
fully fathom, they went on swirling and spinning inside the thrall’s mind,
lighting up all the corners over which darkness had lain for so long.
Chief proof of that was the way the thrall himself reacted. Tears ran
down his grimy cheeks. He seized Pterocles’ hand and brought it up to his
mouth and kissed it again and again. “Good,” he said, and, “Thank you,”
over and over. He didn’t yet have all the words a man might have, but he
had the feelings behind the words. The feelings, up until this moment,
might as well have floated a mile beyond the moon.
Pterocles turned to Grus. “Your Majesty, what I have said I would do, I
have done.” He bowed, then seemed to remember Lanius was there and bowed
to him, too. “Your Majesties, I should say.”
“You
have done it.” Grus still took it for granted that he was the one
to speak for Avornis. “But the next question is, how hard is the spell?
Can other wizards learn it and use it in the field?”
“I don’t see why not, Your Majesty,” Pterocles answered. “Putting the
spell together, seeing what had to go into it—that was hard. Using it?” He
shook his head. “Any halfway decent wizard ought to be able to do that.
I’d like to experiment with the rest of the thralls here in the palace to
be sure, but we’ve seen what can happen.” He pointed to the man he’d just
cured.
“Yes,” Grus said.
“Yes,” Lanius echoed. The two kings looked at each other and nodded.
With any luck at all, they had a weapon they could use against the
Menteshe if Avornan armies ever went south of the Stura. Avornis had been
looking for a weapon like that for a very long time. Lanius asked, “Do you
want to cure those other thralls now? How wearing is the spell?”
“It’s not bad at all, Your Majesty,” Pterocles replied. “I could do
more now, if you like. But if you don’t mind, I’d like to wait a day or
two instead, so I can incorporate what I’ve learned just now into the
spell. I think I can make it better and simpler yet.”
“Good. Do that, then.” Lanius spoke with the voice of royal command.
Grus didn’t contradict him. Even though he knew Grus could have, for a
little while he felt every inch the King of Avornis.
“Your Majesty! Your Majesty!” Someone pounded on the door to Grus’
bedchamber. He opened his eyes. It was still dark. Beside him, Estrilda
stirred and murmured. The pounding went on. “Come quick, Your
Majesty!”
“What’s going on?” Estrilda asked sleepily.
“I don’t know, but I’d better find out.” Grus sat up in bed. “If it
won’t wait for daylight, it usually isn’t good news.” He raised his voice
and called, “Quit that racket, by Olor’s teeth! I’m coming.” The pounding
stopped.
When Grus went to the door, he went sword in hand, in case whoever
waited there wasn’t an ordinary servant. But, when he opened the door a
crack, he recognized the man. The servant said, “Come with me, Your
Majesty. It’s the thralls!”
That got Grus’ attention, as no doubt it was calculated to do. “Take me
to them,” he said at once. “What’s happened?”
“You’d better see for yourself, Your Majesty,” the servant answered.
Grus swore under his breath. He might have known the man would say
something like that.
They hurried through silent corridors lit only by guttering torches set
in every third sconce. From that, and from the feel of the air, Grus
guessed it was a couple of hours before dawn. He yawned as he half trotted
after the servant, the sword still in his hand. The mosaic tiles of the
floor were cold against his bare feet.
Around the chamber where the thralls were kept, all the sconces held
torches, and all the torches blazed brightly. The door to the chamber
stood open. Grus stopped in his tracks when he saw that. “Oh, by the
gods!” he said. “Have they gotten loose?” That could be a deadly dangerous
disaster.
But one of the guards standing in the hallway outside the open door
shook his head. “No, Your Majesty. They’re in there, all right.”
“Then what’s happened?” Grus demanded.
The guard didn’t answer. Neither did any of his comrades or the servant
who’d fetched the king. Muttering, Grus strode forward. The stink of the
thralls’ room hit him like a slap in the face. Doing his best to ignore
it, he walked in ... and found the last two thralls brought north from the
Stura lying dead on the floor.
They had strangled each other. Each still had his hands clenched on the
other’s throat. The chamber was no more disarrayed than usual. By all the
signs, the thralls had both decided to die and taken care of the job as
quickly and neatly as they could. But, unless Grus was very wrong, the
thralls hadn’t decided any such thing. The Banished One had.
“By the gods,” the king said softly. He hoped the magic that made men
into thralls hadn’t so stunted their souls as to keep them from winning
free of this world. He hoped so, but had no way of knowing if that was
true.
“You see, Your Majesty,” a guard said.
“I see, all right,” Grus agreed grimly. He nodded to the guard, who no
longer had anything to do here. “Go fetch me Pterocles.” The man hurried
away. Almost as an afterthought, Grus turned to the servant who’d brought
him to the thralls’ room and added, “Fetch King Lanius here, too.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The servant went off even faster than the guard
had.
Even so, Pterocles got to the thralls’ chamber before the other king.
The wizard was yawning and rubbing his eyes, but he stared at the dead
thralls without astonishment; the guard must have told him what had
happened. “Well, so much for that,” he said.
“Eh?” Grus scratched his head. “I don’t follow you.”
“I was going to do what I could to improve the spell I used to free the
first thrall,” the wizard replied. “I was, but I can’t very well do it
now, not when I don’t have any more thralls to work with—to work on.”
“Oh.” The king thumped his forehead with the heel of his hand. “I
should have seen that for myself.”
“Should have seen what?” King Lanius asked around a yawn of his own.
Then he got a good look at the thralls who’d killed each other. He also
said, “Oh,” and then turned to Pterocles. “We’ll have to get you more
thralls, won’t we, if you’re going to do all the experiments you need
to?”
“Afraid so,” Pterocles said.
Grus grunted, obscurely annoyed with himself. The other king and the
wizard had both seen at once what he’d missed—why the Banished One had
decided to end the lives of the captive thralls. How was he supposed to
run Avornis when other people in the kingdom were smarter than he was?
Then Lanius asked him, “What do we do now?” Pterocles leaned forward
expectantly, also waiting for his answer. They think I can lead them, Grus realized.
Well, they’d better be right, hadn’t they? He said, “The only way
we can get more thralls is to go over the river and take them out of the
lands the Menteshe rule. I don’t know that we want to do that until we see
how things go with Sanjar and Korkut. If they want to quarrel with each
other instead of us, why give them an excuse to change their minds?”
Pterocles looked disappointed. Pterocles, in fact, looked mutinous. He
wanted more thralls, and wanted them badly. But Lanius nodded and said,
“That makes good sense.”
To Pterocles, Grus said, “I know you want to make your spell better.
But isn’t it good enough now?” Reluctantly—ever so reluctantly— the wizard
nodded. “All right, then,” Grus told him. “For now, good enough will have
to do.”
“How do you decide so quickly?” Lanius sounded more than abstractly
curious. He sounded as though he wanted to learn the trick so he could do
it himself.
“Being on the battlefield helps,” Grus said after a momentary pause.
“Sometimes it’s better to try something—to try anything—of your own than
to let the enemy decide what you’re going to do next. If it turns out that
what you tried isn’t working, you try something else instead. The trick is
to impose your will on whatever’s going on, and not to let the other
fellow impose his on you.”
“But there is no other fellow here,” Lanius said.
“No?” Slowly and deliberately, Grus turned toward the south, toward the
lands the Banished One ruled. He waited. Lanius bit his lip. A guard asked,
“Your Majesty, shall we get rid of the bodies here?”
“Yes, do that,” Grus answered. “Put them on a proper pyre. Don’t just
throw them into a hole in the ground or chuck them in the river. In a
strange sort of way, they’re soldiers in the war against the
Menteshe.”
The guard shook his head, plainly not believing that. But he didn’t
argue with Grus. Neither did his comrades. They got the dead thralls
apart—not so easy, for the corpses had begun to stiffen—and carried them
away. Not having people argue was one of the advantages of being king. Wherever we’re going, we’re going because I
want us to get there, Grus thought.
Now . . . I’d better not be wrong.
CHAPTER TWENTY
Outside the royal palace, the wind screamed. Snow blew by almost
horizontally. Braziers and hearth fires blazed everywhere inside, battling
the blizzard. Despite them, the palace was still cold. From the lowliest
sweeper on up, people wore robes of wool or furs over their everyday
trousers and tunics. The noise of chattering teeth was never far away,
even so.
Lanius’ teeth chattered more than most. The king sat in the archives.
He had a brazier by him, but it did less than he would have wished to hold
the chill at bay. No hearth fire here. Even the one brazier made him
nervous. With so many parchments lying around, a single spark escaping
could mean catastrophe.
But he wanted—he needed—to do research, and the archives were simply
too cold to tolerate without some fire by him. Now that Pterocles had—or
thought he had—brought one thrall out from under the shadow the Banished
One’s spell had cast over him, Lanius was wild to learn more about all the
earlier efforts Avornan wizards had made to lead thralls out of
darkness.
He found even more than he’d expected. The archives held dozens, maybe
hundreds, of spells intended to cure thralls. They held just as many
descriptions of what had happened once the spells were tried. The spells
themselves were a monument to ingenuity. The descriptions were a monument
of a different sort, a monument to discouragement. Lanius read of failure
after failure after failure. He marveled that Avornan wizards had kept on
trying after failing so often.
Before long, he realized why they’d kept on trying. Kings of Avornis
could see perfectly well that they had no hope of defeating the Menteshe
in any permanent way if they couldn’t cure thralls. They kept the wizards
at it.
What the present king found gave him pause. Every so often, a wizard
would claim to have beaten the spells that made thralls what they were.
Reports would come into the capital of thralls being completely cured and
made into ordinary men. Every once in a while, the cured thralls
themselves would come into the capital.
That was all very well. But none of the wizards had won enduring fame,
for most of the thralls proved not to be cured after all. Some gradually
drifted back into their previous idiocy. Others—and these were the
heartbreakers—turned out to be the eyes and ears of the Banished One.
The more Lanius thought about that, the more he worried. After a while,
he couldn’t stand the worry anymore, and summoned Pterocles not to the
archives but to a small audience chamber heated by a couple of braziers.
He asked, “Are you sure this thrall is cured, or could the Banished One
still control him?”
“Ah,” the wizard said. “You wonder about the same thing as I do, Your
Majesty.”
“I have reason to.” Lanius spoke of all the reports he’d found of
thralls thought to be cured who proved anything but.
Pterocles nodded. “I know of some of those cases, too. I think you’ve
found more than I knew of, but that doesn’t matter so much.” Lanius had to
fight not to pout;
he thought his thoroughness mattered. The wizard went on, “What
matters is, by every sorcerous test I know how to make, the thrall is a
thrall no more. He’s a man.”
“By every sorcerous test you know how to make,” King Lanius repeated.
The wizard nodded again. Lanius said, “You’re not the first to make that
claim, either, you know.”
“Yes, I do,” Pterocles replied. “But I am the first to make that claim
who knows from the inside what being emptied by the Banished One is like.
I know the shape and size of the hole inside a man. I know how to fill it.
By the gods, Your Majesty, I
have filled it, at least this once.”
He sounded very sure of himself. Lanius would have been more sure of
him if he hadn’t read reports by wizards years, sometimes centuries, dead
who’d been just as sure of themselves and ended up disappointed. Still,
Pterocles had a point—what he’d gone through in front of Nishevatz gave
him a unique perspective on how the Banished One’s wizardry worked.
“We’ll see,” the king said at last. “But I’m afraid that thrall will
need to be watched to the end of his days.”
“I understand why you’re saying that,” Pterocles answered. “If we can
cure enough other thralls, though, maybe you’ll change your mind.”
The only way to cure other thralls was to cross the Stura and take them
away from the Menteshe; as far as Lanius knew, the thrall Pterocles had
cured (or believed he had cured?) was the only one left on Avornan soil.
“I think the war against the Chernagors will come first,” Lanius said.
“I think you’re probably right,” Pterocles replied. “That does seem to
be what His Majesty—uh, His other Majesty—has in mind.”
“His other Majesty. Yes,” Lanius said sourly. Pterocles hadn’t intended
to insult him, to remind him he was King of Avornis more in name than in
fact. Intended or not, the wizard had done it. If anything, the slight
hurt worse because it was unintentional.
“Er ... I meant no offense, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said quickly,
realizing where he’d gone wrong.
“I know you didn’t.” Lanius still sounded sour. Just because the
offense hadn’t been meant didn’t mean it wasn’t there.
Two messengers came north, each from a different town on the north bank
of the Stura. They had left for the city of Avornis on different days.
They’d both struggled through bad roads and blizzards and drifted snow.
And, as luck would have it, they both came before King Grus within the
space of an hour and a half.
The first messenger said, “Your Majesty, Prince Sanjar is sending you
an ambassador to announce his succession to the throne Prince Ulash held
for so long. The ambassador is trailing behind me, and should get to the
city of Avornis before too long.”
“All right. Good, in fact,” Grus said. “I’m glad to know who came out
on top there. When Sanjar’s ambassador gets here, I’ll be as polite as I
can, considering that we’ve just fought a war with the prince’s father.”
He dared hope Sanjar wanted peace. That the new Menteshe prince was
sending an envoy struck him as a good sign.
Grus had just sat down to lunch when the second messenger arrived. The
king asked the servant who announced the fellow’s presence if his news was
urgent. The man said it was. With a sigh, Grus got up from his bread and
cheese and wine. “I’ll see him, then.”
After bowing, the second messenger said, “Your Majesty, Prince Korkut
is sending you an ambassador to announce his succession to the throne
Prince Ulash held for so long. The envoy is on his way to the capital, and
should get here in a few days.”
“Wait a minute. Prince Korkut, you say?” Grus wanted to make sure he’d
heard straight. “Not Prince Sanjar?”
“No, Your Majesty.” The courier shook his head. “From what Prince
Korkut’s ambassador said, Sanjar is nothing but a rebel.”
“Did he say that? How . . . interesting.” Grus dismissed the second
messenger and summoned the first one again. He asked, “Did Prince Sanjar’s
envoy say anything about Prince Korkut?”
“Why, yes, Your Majesty. How did you know that?” the first messenger
replied. “He said Korkut was nothing but a filthy traitor, and he’d be
hunted down soon.”
“Did he? Well, well, well.” King Grus looked up at the ceiling. “We may
have some sparks flying when the embassies get here.”
“Embassy Your Majesty?” The courier, who didn’t know he wasn’t the only
man to come to the capital with news from the south, stressed the last
syllable.
“That’s right.” Grus nodded. “Korkut’s sending one, too. If you listen
to
his ambassador, he’s Ulash’s rightful heir and Sanjar’s nothing
but a rebel.”
“Oh,” the courier said, and then, “Oh, my.”
“Well, yes.” King Grus grinned like a mischievous little boy. “And do
you know what else? It ought to be a lot of fun.”
He did his best to make sure it would be fun, too. Korkut’s ambassador
got to the city of Avornis first. Grus put the man—his name was Er-Tash—up
in a hostel and made excuses not to see him right away. Sanjar’s
representative, a Menteshe called Duqaq, reached the capital three days
later. Grus invited both envoys to confer with him on the same day at the
same time. He made sure neither saw the other until they both reached the
throne room.
Er-Tash glared at Duqaq. Duqaq scowled at Er-Tash. Both of them reached
for their swords. Since they were in the throne room, they’d been relieved
of those swords and other assorted cutlery beforehand. They snarled and
shouted at each other in their own language. Their retainers—each had a
small handful—also growled and made threatening noises.
At Grus’ gesture, Avornan soldiers got between the two rival embassies,
to make sure they didn’t start going at each other with fists— and to make
sure nobody had managed to sneak anything with a point or an edge past the
guards.
“Your Majesty!” Duqaq shouted in good Avornan. “This is an outrage,
Your Majesty!” “He is an outrage, Your Majesty!” Er-Tash cried, pointing at
Duqaq. “How dare he come before you?”
Before Duqaq could let loose with more indignation, Grus held up a
hand. “Enough, both of you,” he said. Several guards pounded the butts of
their spears down on the marble floor of the throne room. The solid thumps
probably did more to convince the Menteshe envoys to keep quiet than any
of the king’s words. When Grus saw they
would keep quiet, he went on, “Both of you came to me on your
own. Don’t you think I ought to hear you both? If I do send one of you
away, which one should it be?”
“Him!” Er-Tash and Duqaq exclaimed at the same time. Each pointed at
the other. Both looked daggers at each other.
“One of you represents Prince Ulash’s legitimate successor,” Grus said.
“One represents a rebel. How do I figure out which is which?”
“Because Prince Ulash left my master—” Duqaq began.
“Liar!” Er-Tash shouted. “The land is Korkut’s!”
“Liar yourself!” Duqaq yelled. Grus reflected that they both could end
up right, if Ulash’s sons split the territory their father had ruled. By
the signs, they were more interested in splitting each other’s heads. That
didn’t break the King of Avornis’ heart. Just the opposite, in fact.
None of what Grus thought showed on his face. Up there on the Diamond
Throne, he remained calm, collected, above it all—metaphorically as well
as literally. “Why should I recognize one of your principals and not the
other?” he inquired, as though the question might be interesting in theory
but had no bearing on the real world.
“Because he is the rightful Prince of Yozgat!” Er-Tash said.
Duqaq shouted, “Liar!” again. He went on, “Sanjar was Ulash’s favorite,
Ulash’s chosen heir, not this—this thefter of a throne.” His Avornan
wasn’t quite perfect.
Again, as though the question were only theoretical, Grus asked, “Which
man does the Banished One prefer?” If the ambassadors knew—and if they would admit they knew—that would tell Grus which contender
Avornis ought to support.
But Er-Tash answered, “The Fallen Star has not yet made his choice
clear.” Duqaq, for once, did not contradict him. How interesting, Grus thought. Did that mean the Banished One
didn’t care, or that he was having trouble making up his mind, or
something else altogether? No way to be sure, not for a mere man.
Then Er-Tash said, “If you recognize Korkut, he will promise peace with
Avornis.”
“Will he?” Grus said. “Now you begin to interest me. How do I know he
will keep his promises? What guarantees will he give me?”
“
I will give you a guarantee,” Duqaq broke in. “I will give you a
guarantee Er-Tash is lying, and Korkut is lying, too.”
“Oh?” Again, Grus carefully didn’t smile, though he felt like it. “Does
Sanjar want peace with Avornis? If he does, what guarantees will
he give? We need guarantees. We have seen we cannot always trust
the Menteshe.” He went no further than that. What he wanted to say about
the Banished One would only anger both ambassadors.
“Sanjar wants peace,” Duqaq said. “Sanjar will pay tribute to have
peace.”
“And try to steal it back again!” Er-Tash burst out. Duqaq snarled at
him, no doubt because he’d told nothing but the truth.
“What will Korkut give?” Grus asked Duqaq.
“He too will pay tribute,” Korkut’s ambassador replied, at which
Er-Tash laughed loud and long. Flushing under his swarthy skin, Duqaq went
on, “And he will also give hostages, so you may be sure his intentions are
good.”
“You may be sure he will cheat, giving men of no account who— whom—who
he says are important,” Er-Tash said.
“Will Sanjar give hostages?” Grus asked. If he had hostages from the
Menteshe, they might think twice about attacking Avornis. Money, he was
sure, would not give him nearly as big an advantage.
Reluctantly, Er-Tash nodded. Now Duqaq was the one who laughed a
raucous laugh. Er-Tash said, “Shut your fool’s mouth, you son of a
backscuttling sheep.” The insult had to be translated literally from his
own tongue; Grus had never heard it in Avornan. Duqaq answered in the
Menteshe language. The rival envoys snapped at each other for a minute or
two.
At last, Duqaq turned away from the quarrel and toward King Grus.
“You see, Your Majesty,” he said. “You will get no more from the rebel
and traitor than you will from Prince Korkut, so you should recognize
him.”
“You will get no more from the robber and usurper than you will from
Prince Sanjar, so you should recognize
him,” Er-Tash said.
They both waited to hear what Grus would say. He thought for a little
while, then spoke. “As long as two sons of Ulash claim to be Prince of
Yoxgat, I will not recognize either of them—unless one attacks Avornis.
Then I will recognize the other, and do all I can to help him. When you
have settled your own problems, I will recognize the prince you have
chosen, however you do that. Until then, I am neutral—unless one of your
principals attacks my kingdom, as I said.”
Duqaq said, “Sanjar’s rogues will attack you and make it look as though
my master’s followers did the wicked deed.”
“You blame Sanjar for what Korkut plans himself,” Er-Tash said.
Again, they started shouting at each other in their own language.
“Enough!” Grus said. “Too much, in fact. I dismiss you both, and order you
to keep the peace as long as you stay in Avornis.”
“When we cross the Stura, this is a dead dog.” Er-Tash pointed to
Duqaq.
“A mouse dreams of being a lion,” Duqaq jeered.
“Dismissed, I said!” Grus was suddenly sick of both of them. They left
the throne room. Avornan guards had to rush in to keep the men from their
retinues from going at one another as they were leaving.
But no matter how severe Grus’ expression while the rival Menteshe
embassies were there to see it, the king smiled a broad and cheerful smile
as soon as they were gone. Nothing pleased him more than strife among his
foes.
Zenaida pouted prettily at King Lanius. “You don’t love me anymore,”
the serving girl complained. I
never loved you, Lanius thought.
I
had a good time with you, and either you had a good time with me or
you’re a better actress than I think you are. But that isn’t love, even if
it can be a start. He hadn’t known as much when he fell for Cristata.
Grus had been right, even if Lanius hated to admit it.
He had to answer Zenaida. “I’ve been busy,” he said—the same weak reply
men have given lovers for as long as men have taken lovers.
This time, Zenaida’s pout wasn’t as pretty. “Busy with who?”
“Nobody,” he answered, which was true, as long as he didn’t count his
wife.
The maidservant tossed her head. “Ha!” she said. “A likely story!
You’ve found somebody else. You took advantage of me, and now you throw me
aside?” She’d been at least as much seducer as seduced—so Lanius
remembered it, anyhow. He didn’t suppose he should have been surprised to
find she recalled it differently. She went on, “If Queen Sosia ever found
out about what was going on . . .”
“If Queen Sosia ever finds out, my life will be very unpleasant,”
Lanius said, and Zenaida smirked. He added, “But if she finds out from
you, you will go straight to the Maze, and you won’t come out again. Not
ever. Is that plain enough?”
“Uh . . .” Zenaida’s smirk vanished. Lanius could all but read her
mind. Did he have the power to do what he threatened? Would he be angry
enough to do it if he could? He could see her deciding he did and he
would. “Yes, Your Majesty,” she said in a very small voice.
“All right, then,” Lanius said. “Was there anything else?”
“No, Your Majesty,” she whispered.
“Good,” Lanius said.
Zenaida wasn’t pouting as she walked away from him. She was scowling,
black as midnight. He sighed. An affair with love had complications. Now
he discovered an affair without love had them, too. She thought he’d taken
advantage of her, or said she did. I’ll give her a present, Lanius thought. With luck, that would
sweeten her. He’d have to do it in such a way that he didn’t look to be
paying her for whoring. He nodded to himself. He could manage that.
Another problem solved, or so it seemed. He walked through the
corridors of the palace suite smiling to himself. He liked solving
problems. He liked few things better, in fact.
Guards came to stiff attention as he approached. He waved for them to
stand at ease and asked, “How is Otus?”
“He’s fine, Your Majesty,” one of the guardsmen answered. “Couldn’t be
better, as far as I can see. You wouldn’t know he was ever a thrall, not
hardly you wouldn’t.”
“Bring him out,” Lanius said. “I’d like to talk to him.”
The guardsmen saluted. One of them unbarred the door, which could only
be done from the outside. The guards kept their weapons ready. No matter
how normal Otus acted, they didn’t completely trust him. Lanius could
hardly quarrel with them on that score, not with what he knew about
“cured” thralls from years gone by.
But things had changed for the man on whom Pterocles had worked his
magic. When the door to Otus’ room opened, no thick barnyard reek poured
out. Nor was Otus himself encrusted with ground-in filth. He looked like
an ordinary Avornan, and was as clean as any of the guards. He’d been
bathed and barbered and had his shaggy beard trimmed. His clothes were of
the same sort as palace servants wore.
He’d learned enough to bow to the king without being told. “Your
Majesty,” he murmured.
“Hello, Otus,” Lanius said. The thrall hadn’t even had a name before
they gave him one. “How are you today?”
“Just fine, thanks,” replied the man brought up from the south. His
accent didn’t just sound southern. It sounded old-fashioned, and was the
one thing that could have placed Otus to the far side of the Stura.
Thralls didn’t speak much, and their way of speaking had changed little
since the Menteshe overran their lands. Over the past centuries, the
currents of Avornan had run on without them. Though born a thrall, Otus
had learned hundreds, maybe thousands, of new words since the shadow was
lifted from his mind, but he spoke them all with his old accent.
“Glad to hear it,” Lanius told him. “What was it like, being a
thrall?”
“What was it... like?” Otus echoed, frowning. “It was . . . dark. I was
. . . stupid. I still feel stupid. So much I don’t know. So much I ought
to know. You say—all you people say—someone did this to me?”
“The Banished One,” Lanius said. “The Menteshe call him the Fallen
Star.”
“Oh.” Otus’ frown remained, but now showed awe rather than puzzlement
or annoyance. “The Fallen Star. Yes. I would see him in ... in dreams they
were. All thralls would. He was bright. Nothing in our lives was bright.
But the Fallen Star. . . The Fallen Star made everything shine inside our
heads.”
Did he mean that literally? Or was he trying to express something that
didn’t lend itself to words? Lanius tried to get him to say more, but he
wouldn’t. Maybe he couldn’t. The king asked, “How do you feel about the
Banished One now?”
Yet another sort of frown from Otus, this one the kind a thoughtful man
might use before speaking. “I feel. . . free of him,” the—former?—thrall
said at last. “He has nothing to do with me anymore.”
“And how does that make you feel?” Lanius asked.
“Glad,” Otus said simply. “I am not an ox. I am not a donkey I am a
man. Here, I can be a man. Before, I never knew what it meant to be a
man.”
“Would you fight against the Banished One if you had the chance?”
“Give me a sword. Give me a spear.” Otus frowned thoughtfully again. “I
stand here. I talk to you. I say what I think. When I do that, I fight the
Fallen Star. Is it not so, Your Majesty?”
“I think it is,” Lanius answered. The thrall spoke against the Banished
One. By all appearances, Otus was indeed cured of the exiled god’s baneful
influence. But how much were those appearances worth? Below them, was the
Banished One still watching and listening and laughing? Lanius didn’t
know. He couldn’t tell. He wasn’t altogether sure whether Pterocles, for
all his skill, could tell, either. That being so, he knew he wouldn’t
trust Otus’ cure any time soon.
Grus read the letter from the south with a satisfaction he could hardly
disguise. “You know what this says?” he asked the courier.
“Yes, Your Majesty,” the man answered. “I had to read it, in case it
came to grief while I traveled.”
“Good.” Grus nodded. “Now—do you know anything more than what’s written
here?”
“I’m sorry, Your Majesty, but I don’t,” the courier said. “I’ve never
been down near the Stura. I only brought this the last thirty miles.”
“All right.” Grus did his best to hide his disappointment. “The news in
here”—he tapped the parchment—“is plain enough, anyhow.”
He dismissed the courier and summoned General Hirundo. When Hirundo
walked into the audience chamber, he looked grumpy. “Did it have to be
right now, Your Majesty?” He sounded grumpy, too. “You spoiled what might
have been a tender moment with a maidservant.
She was certainly tender, and I didn’t have to do much more to
get her to say yes.”
“This is more important than fooling around with a woman,” Grus
declared.
“Yes, Your Majesty.” Hirundo’s words were perfectly obedient. Only a
raised eyebrow reminded Grus of Alauda and all the other women the general
might not happen to know about.
Grus felt himself redden. He passed Hirundo the letter that had just
come up from the south. “Here,” he said. “See for yourself.”
Hirundo started the letter with the same perfect but sarcastic
obedience he’d used to answer the king. He didn’t get very far, though,
before the sarcasm disappeared. “Well, well,” he said when he was through.
“You were right. Every once in a while, the gods do answer a prayer, don’t
they?”
“I was thinking something along those very same lines, as a matter of
fact,” Grus replied. “We couldn’t have asked King Olor for anything much
nicer than a real civil war between Sanjar and Korkut.”
The general tapped the letter with his index finger. “Sounds like
they’re going at it hammer and tongs, too.”
“Who do you suppose will win?” Grus asked.
“Beats me,” Hirundo said cheerfully. “Let’s sit back and drink some
wine and watch and find out.”
“I don’t intend to do anything else,” Grus said. “I hope they spend the
next five years smashing away at each other, and that all the other
Menteshe jump into the fight and jump on each other, too. That way, with a
little luck, they’ll stay too busy to bother Avornis. And after what they
did to us this past year, we can use the time to heal.”
“If I could tell you you were wrong, that would mean we were stronger
than we really are,” Hirundo said.
“We’ll have to strengthen the river-galley fleet on the Stura,” Grus
said. “I was going to do that anyway, but now it’s especially important. I
don’t want the Menteshe getting distracted from their own fight to go
after us.”
Hirundo gave him a brisk nod. “Makes sense. You do most of the time,
Your Majesty.” He paused, then added, “So does Lanius, as a matter of
fact.”
“Well, so he does,” Grus admitted, a little uncomfortably. The more
sense Lanius showed, the more worrisome he became. He also became more
valuable to the kingdom; Grus consoled himself with that.
“With the Menteshe busy playing games among themselves, what do you aim
to do about the Chernagors?” Hirundo asked.
“You’re thinking along with me. Either that means you make sense, too,
or else we’re both crazy the same way,” the king said. Hirundo laughed. So
did Grus, although he hadn’t been kidding, or at least not very much. He
went on, “If Korkut and Sanjar are still bashing each other over the head
come spring, I do aim to go north. We’ll never have a better chance to
take Nishevatz without distractions from the south— or from the Banished
One.”
“You’ll make Prince Vsevolod happy,” the general observed.
“I know.” Grus heaved a sigh. “I suppose I’ll have to do it anyhow.”
Again, Hirundo laughed. Again, so did Grus. Again, though, he hadn’t been
kidding, or at least not very much.
Lanius was pleased with himself as he walked back toward the royal
bedchamber. He’d had a good day in the archives, coming up with a map of
Nishevatz as it had been when it was the Avornan city of Medeon. Vsevolod,
no doubt, would laugh at the map and go on about how much things had
changed. But no one had been able to get Vsevolod to sit down and draw his
own map of Nishevatz. Even old clues were better than no clues at all.
He opened the door. Sosia was standing by the bed, about fifteen feet
away. “Hello, sweetheart,” he said, smiling.
Instead of smiling back, she picked up a cup and flung it at him.
“Sweetheart!” she screeched. The cup smashed against the wall, six inches
to the left of his head. A sharp shard scored his cheek.
“What the—?” Lanius yelped.
Sosia grabbed another cup. She let fly again. This one smacked against
the door, about six inches to the right of Lanius’ head. “Zenaida!” Sosia
shouted. She had one more cup handy. She threw it without a moment’s
hesitation.
This one was aimed dead center. But Lanius ducked.
Now he knew what the trouble was. “Stop that!” he said, straightening
up. He hoped Sosia would. She was, after all, out of cups. But the brass
tray on which they’d stood remained handy. A moment later, it clanged off
the wall. She didn’t aim well,
“Stop that!” Lanius said again.
“I told you to stop that after Cristata, and see how you listened to
me,” Sosia retorted. Now the closest available thing to throw was a table.
Sosia looked tempted, but she didn’t try it. She said, “Why did I ever let
you touch me?”
“Because we’re married?” Lanius suggested.
“That hasn’t made any difference to you. Why should it make any to me?”
Sosia said. “I thought you weren’t going to wander around like a dog in
heat anymore, and—”
“This was different,” Lanius said. “It wasn’t like what it was with
Cristata.”
“Oh? How was it different?” his wife inquired acidly. “Did you find a
posture you hadn’t used before?”
Lanius’ ears heated. “No,” he said, which happened to be the truth, but
which wasn’t the part of the truth he wanted to get across. “I meant, I
didn’t fall in love with Zenaida, or anything like that.”
Sosia stared at him across the gulf separating men and women. “Queen
Quelea’s mercy!” she exclaimed. “Then why did you bother?”
“Why did I bother?” Lanius stared back; the gulf was as wide from his
side as from hers. “Because . . .”
Because it’s fun, came to mind. So did,
Because I could. Even from across the gulf, he could see neither
of those would strike her as a good enough explanation. “Just because,” he
said.
His wife rolled her eyes. “Men,” she said in tones that wished half the
human race would tumble into the chasm separating the sexes and never be
seen again. “And my own father is the same way.”
“Yes, he is a man,” Lanius said, although he knew that wasn’t what
Sosia had meant. He also knew, or at least had strong suspicions, that
Grus had found company for himself while campaigning in the south. He
didn’t say anything about that. If Sosia or Estrilda found out about it,
he didn’t want them finding out from him. He had to get along with his
father-in-law, and didn’t want the other king to think he’d told tales out
of school.
But Sosia only snapped, “Don’t you play the fool with me. You’re a lot
of different things, and I’m not happy with any of them, but you’re not
stupid, and you don’t do a good job of acting stupid. You know what I
meant. You both lie down with sluts whenever you find the chance.”
Lanius stirred at that. He didn’t think of Cristata as a slut, or
Zenaida. He also didn’t think of Alca the witch as one, and he was sure
Grus didn’t, either. If you lay down with a woman who would lie down with
anyone, what made you special? The other side of that coin was, if you lay
down with any woman yourself, what would make you special and worth lying
down with to some other woman? To that side of the coin, Lanius remained
blind.
“I’m sorry,” he said, later than he should have.
It might not have done him any good even if he’d said it right away.
“You’ve told me that before,” Sosia answered. “You’re sorry I found out.
You’re not sorry you did it. And I thought I could count on Zenaida!” She
didn’t say anything about counting on Lanius. That stung.
“I
am sorry,” the king said, and more or less meant it. “I didn’t
want to hurt you.” He did mean that.
“You didn’t want to get caught,” Sosia said. “But how did you think you
wouldn’t? Everybody knows everything that happens in the palace, and
everybody usually knows it in a hurry, too.”
“I’m sorry,” Lanius said for the third time. If he kept saying it,
maybe she’d believe him sooner or later.
Or, then again, maybe she wouldn’t. She said, “Are you sorry enough to
promise me you’ll never do it again?”
“With Zenaida? Yes, by the gods, I promise you that,” Lanius said at
once. He’d begun to tire of the serving girl anyhow.
“Oh, I’ve taken care of Zenaida. She’s not in the palace anymore,”
Sosia said. Lanius wondered if she’d sent Zenaida to the Maze, as he’d
threatened to. He didn’t think she meant the maidservant was no longer
among the living anymore. He hoped it didn’t; his quarrel with her hadn’t
been anywhere near bad enough for him to want her dead. Meanwhile, though,
his wife went on, “That wasn’t what I meant. I meant, you’ll never run
around again with
anyone else. Promise me that.”
Had he been Grus, he would have promised right away, knowing that his
promise didn’t mean anything if he saw another pretty face. Lanius almost
made the same sort of promise himself. He almost did, but a sort of
stubborn honesty made him hesitate. He said, “How can anyone know the
future?”
Sosia looked at him as though she’d found him smeared on the bottom of
her shoe. “Do you know what your future will be like if you fool around
with another slutty little maidservant?” she asked.
“Nasty,” Lanius answered. He had no doubt Sosia could make that kind of
future very nasty indeed. Of course, if life with the queen turned nasty,
didn’t the king have all the more reason to look for consolation with
someone else? So it seemed to Lanius. Somehow, he didn’t think Sosia would
agree.
She said, “It’s not as though I haven’t given you whatever you’ve
wanted from me. When we
are together, you’ve tried to please me. I know that. And you
can’t say I haven’t done the same for you.”
“You’re trying to shame me,” Lanius muttered, for she was telling the
truth. She wasn’t the lover he would have picked for himself, but the King
of Avornis didn’t always have the luxury of such choices. She did
everything she knew how to do, everything he’d taught her to do.
And he still looked at, still looked for, other women every now and
again. He didn’t know why, except for variety’s sake. He did know he was
far from the only man who did. He also knew some women acted the same
way.
He knew one more thing, too—he was glad Sosia wasn’t one of those women
(or, if she was, that no one had caught her at it). If she were, he would
have been even more upset with her than she was with him now. He was sure
he would have.
With a sigh, he said, “I’ll try, Sosia.”
How would she take that? She didn’t seem to know how to take it for a
little while. Then, slowly, her face cleared. “That’s as much as I’m going
to get from you, isn’t it?” she said. “Maybe you even mean it.”
“I do,” he said, wondering if he did.
“You’ll try,” she said bitterly. “You’ll try, and every so often you’ll
do what you please anyway. And you’ll be sorry afterwards. You’re always
sorry afterwards, when it doesn’t do anybody any good. What should I do
the next time you’re sorry afterwards? Practice my aim so I hit you with
the first cup?”
Lanius’ ears burned. He looked at the broken crockery by his feet.
Whether or not Sosia had hit him with a cup, her words had struck dead
center. She saw what lay ahead the same way as he did. If he admitted as
much, he delivered himself into her hands.
Instead of admitting it, he said, “I am sorry. I will try.” His wife
nodded, as though she believed him.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
In the years since Grus first met Prince Vsevolod, the exiled lord of
Nishevatz’s beard had grown whiter. His craggy features, always wrinkled,
were now gullied like steep, bare country after hard rain. And his hands
put the King of Avornis more in mind of tree roots than ever.
The one thing about Vsevolod that had not changed was the fire in his
eyes. As winter reluctantly gave way to spring, the Prince of Nishevatz
came up to Grus and said, “You get rid of Vasilko, yes?”
Grus had his problems with Ortalis. Set against Vsevolod’s problems
with
his son, they hardly seemed worth noticing. Ortalis, after all,
had never tried to usurp the Avornan throne. Vasilko had not only tried to
steal Nishevatz from Vsevolod, he’d succeeded. Grus replied, “We will go
north this spring, Your Highness,
yes.”
“This is good. This is very good. I go back to my own city. I rule in
my own city. I do not have to live on charity of strangers, on charity of
foreigners,” Vsevolod said.
“We have not kept you here out of charity, Your Highness,” Grus
said.
“No. This is true. Charity is to help someone out of goodness of your
heart,” Vsevolod said. “You do not do this. You help me because of what I
can do for you.” He strode away, his back still straight—if stiff—despite
his years. Grus stared after him, feeling obscurely punctured.
Regardless of his reasons for harboring Vsevolod in the city of
Avornis, Grus did want to return him to the throne of Nishevatz. He
assembled men and horses and supplies outside the city of Avornis, ready
to move as soon as the weather turned mild and the roads dried out.
With extra men in the south in case the Menteshe decided to fight
Avornis instead of among themselves, with sailors filling the growing
fleet of Chernagor-style seagoing ships protecting the kingdom’s east
coast, Grus’ army was smaller than it had been on either of his two
earlier moves up into the Chernagor country. That didn’t unduly worry him,
for he thought it would be big enough.
Lanius and Sosia came out from the city to wish him good fortune. His
son-in-law and daughter were wary around each other. He understood why.
Their quarrels through the winter had hardly stayed secret. Grus wished he
were in a position to give Lanius good advice. With one of his own
partners waiting in a provincial town to bear his bastard, he wasn’t, and
he knew it.
To his surprise, Ortalis and Limosa also came out to wish the army
luck. Grus couldn’t remember the last time his legitimate son had cared
enough to bid him farewell. Maybe it had been Limosa’s idea. In spite of
her irregular marriage to Ortalis, she seemed to be making him a good
wife.
Or maybe Ortalis was just interested in looking at men who hunted other
men for a living. Grus had sometimes wondered if his son would try to turn
into a soldier. That would have given Ortalis a way to let out his thirst
for blood without having other people give him strange looks. But Ortalis
had never shown any interest in going to war. Of course, in war the people
you hunted also hunted you. That might have dampened his enthusiasm for
soldiering.
Now he said, “Good fortune go with you, Father.”
“My thanks.” Not even Grus could find anything wrong with that.
“Good fortune go with you indeed,” Lanius said. “May you return
Vsevolod to his throne.” He looked around to make sure the Chernagor was
nowhere nearby, then quietly added, “May you get Vsevolod out of our hair
for good.”
“May it be so.” Grus and Lanius shared a smile. No denying the Prince
of Nishevatz had made a difficult guest in the city of Avornis.
Lanius said, “I will also pray for peace inside the kingdom.”
“Good. You do that,” Grus said. He glanced toward the other King of
Avornis. Lanius wasn’t looking south toward the Stura. He wasn’t looking
east toward the coast. He was looking straight at Sosia. Grus nodded to
himself. He’d thought Lanius meant that kind of peace, not the sort that
came with armies staying home.
“I know you’ll win, Your Majesty,” Limosa said. “Time is on your side,
after all.”
Was it? Grus had his doubts. She might as well have said,
Third times the charm—not that it had been. Vasilko had had
plenty of time to consolidate himself in Nishevatz. How many people there
still longed for Vsevolod’s return? How many people who had longed for
Vsevolod s return had Vasilko disposed of? A lot of them—Grus was sure of
that. It wouldn’t make reconquering the Chernagor town any easier.
He shrugged. Nothing he could do about it. He said, “If the gods are
kind, we’ll come back with victory—and without Vsevolod.”
“That would be perfect,” Lanius said. Ortalis didn’t seem so
concerned—but then, he’d paid as little attention to Vsevolod as he had to
anything else connected to actually ruling Avornis.
Grus turned away from his family and back toward the army. “Let’s
move!” he called. A trumpeter echoed his command. The horsemen who’d go
out ahead of the rest of the force as scouts urged their mounts into
motion. One piece at a time, the remainder of the army followed.
“I’m off,” Grus said when he had to ride or fall out of place. As he
used knees and the reins to get his horse moving, Lanius and Sosia and
Ortalis and Limosa all waved. He waved back. Then, for the fourth time, he
set out for the land of the Chernagors.
Twice, he’d failed to take Nishevatz. Once, he hadn’t even gotten up
into the Chernagor country before bad news forced him to turn away. Oddly,
those disasters heartened him instead of leaving him discouraged. He’d
seen every sort of misfortune when he went north. Didn’t that mean he was
due for good luck sometime soon?
He hoped it did. Maybe it meant he’d see no good luck against the
Chernagors no matter what happened. He refused to believe that. If he did
believe it, he wouldn’t have sent forth this army. He didn’t think he
would have, anyhow.
Not far away, Prince Vsevolod rode toward his homeland. Like the rest
of the beasts in the army, the Prince of Nishevatz’s horse went at a walk.
Vsevolod had to know he couldn’t take back Nishevatz all by himself. Even
so, he gave the impression of heading north at a headlong gallop. That
impression might have been—was—false, but seemed real all the same.
Hirundo, by contrast, might have been sauntering along. It wasn’t that
he didn’t want to get to Nishevatz. Grus knew he did. But he knew he
wouldn’t get there right away, and showed he knew it, too. Grus preferred
his attitude. It struck him as being more sensible than Vsevolod’s.
And what about me? the king asked himself. He answered with a
shrug. With the Menteshe distracted down in the south, he thought he had a
better chance on this campaign than on the ones of years gone by—if the
nomads were distracted, the Banished One should be distracted, too. Grus
hoped to bridge the gap between
should be and
is. If he did, he might win. If not, he’d come home disappointed
again—if he came home at all.
Lanius wondered how long he would have to wait this time for Sosia to
let him back into her bed. He was curious and interested for more than one
reason. First and , . . most urgent was the interest any man would have
shown about that particular question.
A more abstract curiosity, though, accompanied that. . . urgent
interest. Sosia had to make some careful calculations of her own. If she
showed she warmed to him too soon, what would he think? Why, that he could
enjoy himself with a serving girl whenever he felt like it. He’d make
Sosia angry for a little while, but she’d soon forgive and forget.
But if she really was furious—or wanted him to believe she was— and
kept herself to herself for a long time, what would spring from that? He
was a man, after all, with a mans desires. Wouldn’t he go looking
for another serving girl and slake those desires with her? She wouldn’t
want him doing that.
Yes, a nice calculation.
Lanius tried to think along with his wife. She’d known him for a long
time now. She would know how much he heated through each day of denial. He
had a pretty good notion of when he would get fed up and start smiling at
the prettier maidservants if Sosia hadn’t softened by then.
Two days before the time when he figured his impatience would get the
better of his good sense, Sosia sighed and said, “I can’t make you change
very much, can I?”
“I wouldn’t think so,” Lanius answered seriously. “One person usually
can’t change another. By the gods, not many people can change
themselves.”
His wife studied him. “You know what I’m talking about, don’t you?”
“I have some idea.” His voice was dry.
“Good.” The queen sounded relieved. “I wasn’t sure. Sometimes you see
only the questions, not what’s behind them.” That was true enough. Lanius said, “I’m glad you’re not angry
at me anymore,” then quickly amended that to, “Not
too angry at me, I mean.”
“Not
too angry is right,” Sosia said, “and even that’s just barely
right. Still, you’re what I’ve got. I can either make the best of it or
else find we’re in even more trouble.”
Her thinking did mirror his. He said, “I’ll do my best to make you
happy.”
“I know,” Sosia answered. “You always do when you’re with me. It’s one
of the reasons I can stand having you touch me again after—after
everything you’ve done.” She looked at him with more defiance than desire
on her face. “Shall we?”
“All right.” Lanius was more worried than he wanted her to know. If she
didn’t want him to please her, then he wouldn’t, no matter what he did.
He’d seen that with her and with other women. Men were simpler there. If
it felt good, they didn’t worry about much else.
We’re lucky, Lanius thought; he didn’t wonder if it was good luck
or bad.
Physical acts counted, too. He worked especially hard to give Sosia
pleasure when they lay down together. And, to his relief, he succeeded.
She murmured something wordless, then stroked the back of his head. “You,”
she said, and her voice sounded as much accusing as anything else.
“At your service,” he said. “And now—” He poised himself above her.
He’d wondered if she would just lie there when they joined, to punish him
for making love with Zenaida. But she didn’t. Even as his own pleasure
built, he nodded in respect. Sosia didn’t stint. She deserved credit for
that.
Afterward, he kissed the side of her neck. She wiggled; that was a
ticklish spot for her. “You,” she said again, even more accusingly than
before.
“Yes, me,” Lanius said. “You . . . had better believe it.” He’d almost
said,
You were expecting someone else? Considering that he’d enjoyed
himself with someone else, she might have answered,
What if I was? Better not to travel some roads than to see where
they led.
“When we started,” Sosia said, “I wasn’t sure I really wanted you
touching me, kissing me, kissing me
there, at all. But you know what you’re doing.” In the dark
stillness of the bedchamber, her eyes were enormous. “Do you study that
along with everything else?”
“Not much in the archives about it,” Lanius said. A man studied such
things whenever he made love with a woman, but that wasn’t what Sosia had
meant. He didn’t think many men realized that was what they were doing.
The more fools they, he thought.
“Archives,” Sosia muttered, so maybe she had something else in mind for
the source of his research. But she didn’t snipe at him. Instead, she
asked, “What
am I going to do with you?”
“Put up with me, I hope,” Lanius answered. “I’ll try to do the same for
you.”
“For me? Why do I need putting up with?” But then Sosia shook her head.
“Never mind. Don’t tell me. I’ll try to put up with you, you try to put up
with me, and we’ll both try to get along. Bargain?”
“Bargain,” Lanius said. They clasped hands.
Up ahead of the Avornan army, Chernagor cavalry skirmished with King
Grus’ scouts. More Chernagor horsemen galloped off toward the north. Grus
cursed, more in resignation than anything else. “So much for surprise,” he
said.
“Did you really think we’d keep it?” Hirundo asked. “We can’t just
appear out of nowhere, like ghosts in a story to frighten children.”
“Maybe not, but we’d win a lot of battles if we could,” Grus said.
He wondered whether the men of Nishevatz would try to hold Varazdin
against him, but his men found the fortress not only abandoned but
destroyed, the keep wrecked and one of the outer walls pulled down. Maybe
they thought he could quickly overcome whatever garrison they put into the
place, or maybe they were saving everything they had to defend the walls
of their city-state.
Either way, Grus thought they were making a mistake. Had he been in
charge of Nishevatz, he would have defended the place as far forward as he
could. If Vasilko was willing to let him get close, he would say thank you
and do his best to take advantage of that. He pressed on into the land of
the Chernagors.
Three days later, one of his scouts came riding back to the main body
of the army, calling, “The sea! The sea!” The man pointed north.
Grus soon rode up over a low rise and spied the sea for himself. As
always, he was struck by how different it was from the Azanian Sea on the
east coast of Avornis. The waters there were blue and warm and inviting,
the beaches made from golden sand. The beaches here were mud flats. The
sea was greenish gray, a color that didn’t seem quite healthy to him. The
sky was gray, too, the gray of newly sheared wool before it was washed.
Wisps of mist kept the king from getting as good a view of either sea or
sky as he would have wanted.
“No wonder the Chernagors like to turn pirate,” Hirundo said, gazing
out at the bleak landscape. “If I lived in country like this, I’d do my
best to get away from it, too.”
Sandpipers scurried along at the border between sea and land, poking
their beaks into the mud to look for whatever little creatures they
hunted. Gulls mewed overhead, soaring along on narrow pointed wings. The
air smelled of moisture and salt and seaweed and faintly nasty things Grus
couldn’t quite name.
Prince Vsevolod rode up to him. The Chernagors eyes shone, though his
breath smoked each time he exhaled. “Is wonderful country, yes?” he
boomed.
“I’m glad it pleases you, Your Highness,” Grus answered, as
diplomatically as he could.
“Wonderful country,” Vsevolod repeated. “Not too hot like Avornis,
with sweat all time in summer. Not cold all through winter, either. Just
right.”
“To each his own,” Grus said.
“To each his own, yes.” Vsevolod seemed to cherish the clichй. “And
Nishevatz—Nishevatz is my own.”
“May we soon set you back on the throne there, then,” Grus said,
thinking,
And if I never see you again, that will not disappoint you, and it
will not disappoint me, either.
They’d come to the sea east of the town, and moved toward it until they
made camp for the night. Grus took care to post sentries well out from the
camp, to bring back warning if the Chernagors tried to strike. And,
remembering the disaster that had almost befallen his army while fighting
the Menteshe, he summoned Pterocles. “Be sure you drink your fill of wine
this evening,” he told the wizard. “If you have to ease yourself, you’ll
beat any sleep spell the enemy sends your way.”
Pterocles smiled. “I will set up sorcerous wards, too, Your Majesty,”
he replied. “They will not take me by surprise twice the same way.”
“Good.” Grus nodded. “Do you have any idea what new surprises they’ll
try to use?”
“If I did, they wouldn’t be surprises, would they?” Pterocles held the
cheerful expression.
“Do you sense the Banished One?” Grus asked.
Now the wizard’s smile blew out like a candle flame. “So far, I have
not, except in a general way. This is a land where he has an interest, but
it is not a land where he is concentrating all his attention, the way he
did when he laid me low.”
“He has other things on his mind right now,” Grus said, and Pterocles
nodded. The king went on, “As long as Sanjar and Korkut keep whacking away
at each other, the Banished One ought to worry most about the south.”
Pterocles nodded again. Grus finished, “In that case, I hope they fight
each other for the next ten years.”
“That would be nice,” Pterocles agreed, and some of his smile came
back.
The army went on toward Nishevatz the next morning. Offshore, far out
of bowshot or even catapult range, tall-masted Chernagor ships sailed
along, keeping an eye on the Avornans. Grus wished he had tall ships of
his own in these waters; the little flotilla Lanius sent out had come back
to Avornis during the winter, having lost one ship, sunk several, and
earned what the Chernagors of Durdevatz said would be their undying
gratitude. Every so often here, one of these ships would sail off to
Nishevatz, presumably to report on whatever its crew had seen. The rest
kept on shadowing Grus’ army.
After a while, he got fed up with that and called for Pterocles again.
“You made a magic against the Chernagor transports,” he said. “Can you use
the same spell against these snoops?”
The wizard eyed the clouds and swirling mist overhead. He spread his
hands in apology—or started to. His mule chose that moment to misstep, and
he had to make a hasty grab for the reins.
Some people really do ride worse than I do, Grus thought, amused.
Pterocles said, “Your Majesty, I can try that spell. But it works best
with real sunshine to power it. It may well fail.” He rode on for half a
minute or so before something else occurred to him. “The Chernagors may
have worked out a counterspell by now, too. These things do happen. Spells
are often best the first time you use them, because then you catch the
other fellow by surprise.”
“I see.” Trouble was, Grus did; what Pterocles said made altogether too
much sense. Now the king rode thoughtfully for a little while before
saying, “Well, when you see the chance, take it.”
“I will, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said.
As though to mock Grus’ hopes, a fine drizzle began sifting down out of
the sky. Grumpily, he put on a broad-brimmed felt hat to keep the water
off his face and to keep it from trickling down the back of his neck.
“Remind the men to grease their mail well tonight,” he called to Hirundo.
“Otherwise, it will rust.”
“I’ll take care of it,” Hirundo promised.
But the drizzle also made it harder for the Chernagors aboard ship to
watch the Avornan army. They had to come closer and closer to the shore,
until finally they were almost within bowshot. Curses wafted across the
water when one of them ran aground. Grus cursed, too, for he couldn’t do
anything about it. There was no point to assembling his catapults to pound
the ships when they would be as useless with wet skeins of hair as a bow
with a wet string.
Hirundo shared his frustration, but said, “They’re still in trouble out
there, whether we put them in trouble or not.”
“I suppose so,” Grus said. “I wish we could take better advantage of
it, though.” He shrugged ruefully. “I wish for all sorts of things I won’t
get. Who doesn’t?”
“Best way to take advantage is to take Nishevatz,” Vsevolod said. “When
we take Nishevatz, we punish all traitors. Oh, yes.” He rubbed his hands
together in anticipation of doing just that.
Grus wondered how much like Vsevolod his son Vasilko was. He wouldn’t
have been surprised if Vasilko took after his father a great deal indeed.
And if Vsevolod had followed the Banished One, would Vasilko have fled to
the city of Avornis and bowed down to Olor and Quelea and the rest of the
gods in the heavens? Grus wouldn’t have been surprised there, either.
Whatever one of them chose, the other seemed to want the opposite.
That didn’t mean Vsevolod was wrong here. “We’ll do our best, Your
Highness,” Grus said. “Then you should do your best.”
“Oh, I will,” Vsevolod said. “I will.” His tone suggested that what he
meant by
best was likely to be different from what Grus meant by the word.
Whether what he thought best for him would also prove best for Nishevatz
was liable to be an ... interesting question. I’ll worry about that later, Grus told himself.
One thing at a time. Getting Vasilko out of Nishevatz, getting the
Banished One’s influence out of Nishevatz—
that comes first. Everything else can wait. If Vsevolod turns out to
be intolerable, maybe I’ll be able to do something about it.
He rode on toward Nishevatz for a while. Then something else occurred
to him. If a lot of people in Nishevatz hadn’t already decided Vsevolod
was intolerable, would they have banded together behind Vasilko and helped
him oust his father? Grus sighed. He looked over to the white-bearded
Prince of Nishevatz. The longer he looked, the more he wished he hadn’t
thought of that.
“Excuse me,” Limosa said. Ortalis’ wife got up and left the supper
table faster than was seemly. When she came back a few minutes later, she
looked more than a little green.
“Are you all right?” Lanius asked.
Sosia found a different question. She asked, “Are you going to have a
baby?”
Limosa turned from one of them to the other. “Yes, Your Majesty,” she
told the king. A moment later, she said the same thing to the queen,
adding, “Until this”—she gulped—“I managed to keep it a secret. I wanted
to see how long I could.”
“Well, you did,” Lanius said. “Congratulations!” Sosia echoed him.
Lanius turned to Ortalis and congratulated him, too. He hoped he didn’t
sound grudging. Ortalis had behaved . . . pretty well lately.
“I thank you.” Grus’ legitimate son raised his wine cup. “Here’s hoping
it’s a boy.”
For the sake of politeness, Lanius drank to that. So did Sosia. But
their eyes met with complete understanding and agreement. They both hoped
Limosa had a little girl—had lots of little girls, if she conceived again.
Boys would make the succession more complicated. Grus and his family had
managed to graft themselves on to the ancient ruling dynasty. That was one
thing. Uprooting it altogether—having the crown descend through Ortalis
and his line—would be something else again.
Ortalis had never shown any great interest in ruling Avornis. If he had
a son, he might change his mind. That would make court intrigue all the
more intriguing. Lanius hoped he didn’t, but how much was such hope
worth?
That evening, Sosia seemed not just willing but actually eager to make
love for the first time since she found out about Zenaida. While she and
Lanius caressed each other and then joined, he accepted that as good luck.
Afterwards, she rolled over and went straight to sleep. The king smiled a
little. She was doing what men were supposed to do, and he wasn’t.
He lay on his back, looking up at the ceiling. With no lamp burning, it
was just part of the darkness. As he hadn’t before, he wondered what made
Sosia act the way she had. He didn’t need to wonder long. What was
likelier to drive her into his arms than a threat from outside?
He would rather have believed his own charms had more to do with it.
But, since she’d had no trouble resisting those charms before Limosa’s
news, he couldn’t very well do that. Every so often, he wished he were
better at fooling himself. This was one of those times.
In the morning, he went to see Otus. Every time he did, the man from
south of the Stura seemed more like an ordinary Avornan and less like a
thrall. More and more, Lanius believed the guards who surrounded Otus’
chamber were unnecessary. He didn’t order them away, though. He might have
been wrong, and being wrong here could have unfortunate consequences.
“Good morning, Your Majesty,” Otus said, and bowed politely. His eyes
went to the guards who came in with the king, too. He didn’t complain
about them. As far as Lanius knew, he never complained. That did set him
apart from ordinary Avornans.
“Good morning to you,” the king replied. “You speak very well these
days. You’ve learned a lot.”
“I like to learn things,” Otus said. “I never had the chance before.”
He paused and shook his head. “I never could before.”
That let Lanius ask a question he’d wanted to ask for a long time.
“What was it like, being a thrall? Now you have the words to talk about
it, which you didn’t before.”
Otus looked startled, another mark of how far he’d come. “Why, so I
do,” he said. “It was hard. It was boring. If you had a cow that could
talk, it would tell you the same thing, I think. As far as the Menteshe
cared, I
was a cow. Oh, I could do more than a cow. I was smarter than a
cow. But they treated me like a beast. I
was a beast, near enough.”
“What made you decide to cross over the Stura, to come into Avornis?”
Lanius asked.
“I didn’t decide,” Otus said at once. He repeated that. “I
didn’t decide. I just did it. It came into my head that I had to,
and I went. I left my woman. I left my children. I went.” He stopped,
biting his lip.
Gently, Lanius asked, “Do you miss your wife?”
“Woman,” Otus said again. “We weren’t—like people are. I couldn’t be
with her now. She hasn’t. . . changed. It would be like . . . screwing a
cow, almost. But if the wizard cured her, then—oh, then!” His face lit up.
Plainly, the thought was crossing his mind for the first time. He was
becoming a man, beginning to think beyond himself as men could— and did,
though not often enough.
Lanius wondered if the female thrall would care for him once she was
fully herself. The king didn’t say anything about that. Even a man who had
been a thrall was entitled to his dreams.
Suddenly, Otus pointed at him. “One of these days, you go south of the
river. Avornis goes south of the river,”
“Maybe,” Lanius answered, embarrassed at being unable to say more.
“That’s more for King Grus to decide than it is for me. I know he wants to
go south of the Stura. I don’t know whether he thinks he can.”
Otus paid no attention to him. The cured thrall—Lanius had an ever
harder time thinking of him as
the possibly cured thrall—went on, “You
will go south of the river. You have the wonderful magic that set
me free. You can use that magic on the other thralls, on the rest of the
thralls. So many men, so many women, made into beasts.” He took Lanius’
hands in his. “Save them, Your Majesty! You can save them!”
Lanius didn’t know what to say to that. What he did finally say was,
“I’ll try.” Otus’ face lit up. That only made Lanius turn away so the
other man wouldn’t see him blush. His words might have sounded like a
promise—Otus had taken them for one—but he knew they were anything but. He
still lacked the power to make a promise like that. Only Grus had it, and
Grus was far off in the north.
Watery sunshine—the only kind the Chernagor country seemed to know—did
little to make the walls of Nishevatz seem anything but unlovely. The
sunshine did help King Grus spot the town’s defenders; it sparkled off
swords and spearheads and the tips of arrows and shone from helms and
mailshirts. The men who followed Prince Vasilko looked ready to fight, and
to fight hard.
Whether they were ready might prove a different question. They hadn’t
tried to keep the Avornans from shutting them up inside Nishevatz,
preferring to stand siege rather than to come forth and challenge their
foes. But how much in the way of supplies did they have? Grus dared hope
it wasn’t so much.
He also dared hope the other Chernagor city-states allied with
Nishevatz had no luck shipping grain into the town. So far, they hadn’t had
the nerve to try. If that wasn’t a compliment to Pterocles’ sorcery— and a
sign they had no counterspell for it—Grus didn’t know what would be. The
Chernagors presumed the wizard had come north with the Avornan army. That
also made them presume he would burn their ships if they tried to feed
their allies. Grus hoped they were right. (In fact, he hoped he didn’t
have to find out. If the other Chernagors didn’t try to feed Nishevatz, he
wouldn’t have to.)
“Do you aim to assault the town?” Hirundo asked after the siege lines
on land were as tight as the Avornans could make them.
“Not right away,” Grus answered. “They’ve made us pay every time we
did. Or do you think I’m wrong?”
“Not me, Your Majesty,” the general said. “I’d rather be at the top of
a wall pushing a scaling ladder over than at the bottom trying to get up
the ladder before it tips and smashes.”
“Yes. If it will.” Grus looked out to the farmland that had fed
Nishevatz. Now it would have to feed his men instead. Could it? He
wouldn’t be taking grain from it, not this early in the year—and not much
later, either, if it wasn’t cultivated in the meanwhile. Livestock was a
different story, though. Cows and pigs and sheep—if need be, horses and
donkeys—would feed Avornan soldiers well.
After a little thought, Grus nodded to Hirundo. “Fetch me one of
Vsevolod’s pals,” he said‘.
“I’ll get you one,” Hirundo said. “I take it you don’t want Vsevolod to
notice me doing this?”
“How right you are,” the king said fervently, and his general
chuckled.
Hirundo brought Grus a nobleman named Beloyuz. He was one of the
younger men who clung to Vsevolod’s cause, which meant his bushy beard was
gray rather than white. “What do you wish of me, Your Majesty?” he asked
in Avornan better than Prince Vsevolod’s.
“I would like you to go up to the walls of Nishevatz, Your Excellency,”
Grus replied. “I want you to tell the Chernagors in the city that they
won’t have to go through this siege if they cast out Vasilko and give the
throne back to Vsevolod.”
Beloyuz plucked at that bushy gray beard. “His Highness should do
this,” he said, his voice troubled.
“Maybe,” Grus said, “but he has enough enemies inside the walls, it
would not be safe to have him go up to them.” He didn’t mention that most
of the Chernagors inside Nishevatz had made it plain they preferred
Vasilko to Vsevolod.
Beloyuz’s eyes said he knew what Grus was thinking. They also said he
was grateful Grus had found a way not to come right out and say it. He
bowed stiffly to the king. “All right, Your Majesty. Let it be as you
say.”
With Avornan shieldmen accompanying him forward, Beloyuz approached the
walls the next morning. One of the shieldmen carried a flag of truce, but
they all remained very alert. They could not be sure the Chernagors would
honor that flag. Beloyuz began to speak in the throaty, guttural,
consonant-filled Chernagor language. Grus did not understand it, but he
had a good idea of what the noble would be saying.
The defenders did not need to hear much before they made up their
minds. They roared abuse at Beloyuz. Some of them shot arrows despite the
flag of truce, but Grus didn’t think they were trying to hit the nobleman
or his protectors. Beloyuz took no chances, but hastily retreated out of
range. Grus didn’t see how he could blame him for that.
Vsevolod came over to Grus in high dudgeon, demanding, “Why I not go to
wall?”
“I did not want the folk of Nishevatz to insult you, your Highness,”
Grus replied, which was perhaps a tenth part of the truth.
“I do not worry over insults,” Vsevolod said. “I can tell folk of
Nishevatz better than Beloyuz can.” That’s what I was afraid of, Grus thought. He reminded himself
he had to be tactful when speaking to Vsevolod. He needed to remind
himself, because the temptation to tell the unvarnished truth was very
strong. Choosing his words with care, then, he said, “The people of
Nishevatz had heard you before, Your Highness, and did not decide to cast
Vasilko out and bring you back into the city. I thought Beloyuz could give
them a different slant on your virtues.”
Such as they are, Your Highness. The only one Grus could think of
offhand was Vsevolod’s genuine and sincere opposition to the Banished
One.
With a sniff, Vsevolod drew himself up very straight. “I know my
virtues better than any of my followers.”
“Yes, Your Highness.” Grus hoped his resignation wasn’t too obvious—but
if it was, he intended to lose no sleep over it. He said, “No harm done.
Beloyuz didn’t persuade them, either, but he got away safe. Now we’ll go
on with what we were going to do anyhow. We’re going to take Nishevatz
away from Vasilko. That’s what we came here for, and that’s what we’ll
do.”
Prince Vsevolod didn’t want to let him off the hook. “You say this
before,” the Chernagor grumbled. “You say before, and then something else
happen, and then you change mind.”
“I am allowed to defend my own homeland,” Grus said mildly. “But, with
a better fleet on our east coast to guard against Chernagor pirates and
with the Menteshe caught in their own civil war, I don’t think we’ll have
to break things off this time.”
“Better not,” Vsevolod rumbled in ominous tones. “By gods, better
not.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Standing in his robe of crimson silk behind the magnificent altar of
the great cathedral, Arch-Hallow Anser cut a splendid ecclesiastical
figure. By his bearing and appearance, Lanius would readily have believed
him the holiest man in all of Avornis. And then King Grus’ bastard waved
and called, “Hang on for a minute, Your Majesty, and I’ll change into
hunting togs.”
“No hurry,” Lanius answered. He wished Anser hadn’t bounded away from
the altar with such obvious eagerness. The arch-hallow might seem like a
very holy man, but he didn’t like playing the part.
When he returned, he looked more like a poacher than a prelate. He wore
a disreputable hat, a leather jerkin over a linen tunic, and baggy wool
trousers tucked into suede boots that rose almost to his knees. He also
wore an enormous smile. He put on the crimson robe because his father told
him to. Hunting togs were different. Lanius, on the other hand, felt as
though he were in costume for a foolish show, although he looked much less
raffish than Anser.
“Let’s see what we can bag, eh?” he said. “Pity Prince Ortalis couldn’t
come with us today.”
“Why? Did you—?” Lanius broke off, shaking his head. “Never mind.
Forget I said that. Forget I even started to say that.”
“I’d probably better.” Anser made a face. He said, “You’ll have a horse
outside?”
“Oh, yes.” The king nodded. “I’m not going to walk to the woods— I’ll
tell you that.”
“Let’s go, then.”
A couple of hours later, Lanius and the arch-hallow dismounted under
the trees. Grooms took charge of the horses. The king, the arch-hallow,
and their beaters and guards walked into the woods. “Maybe you’ll hit
something this time, Your Majesty,” Anser said. “You never can tell.”
“No, you never can,” Lanius agreed in a hollow voice. Hitting a stag
with an arrow remained about the last thing he wanted to do.
Birds chirped overhead. Looking up, the king wondered what kind they
were. Being able to tell one bird from another when neither was a pigeon
or a sparrow would be interesting, but he hadn’t gotten good at it yet.
Learning to recognize them by their looks and by their songs necessarily
involved staying out in the woods until he could. That made it more
trouble than it was worth to him.
“Are you sure you want me to take the first shot, Your Majesty?” Anser
said. “It’s very kind, but you don’t need to give me the honor.”
“My pleasure,” Lanius said, which was absolutely true. He went on,
“Besides, you’re the one who’s
liable to hit something. If I do, it’ll just be by accident, and
we both know it.”
The beaters fanned out into the woods. Anser’s men vanished silently
among the trees. Lanius’ guards were noisy enough to make the
arch-hallow’s followers smile. But they did no more than smile. The two
groups had tangled after earlier hunts. Lanius’ guards came out on top in
tavern brawls.
Anser chose a spot on the edge of a clearing. Before long, a stag
bounded out into the open space. The arch-hallow let fly. He cursed more
or less good-naturedly when his arrow hissed past the deer’s head. The
stag sprang away.
“Well, you won’t do worse than I did, anyhow,” Anser said to
Lanius.
“No,” the king agreed. He’d never had the nerve to tell Anser he always
shot to miss. He enjoyed eating venison, but not enough to enjoy killing
animals himself so he could have it. He wouldn’t have wanted to be a
butcher, either. He recognized the inconsistency without worrying about
reconciling it.
Half an hour passed with no new game in the clearing. Lanius, who
didn’t mind, said nothing. Anser, who did, grumbled. Then another stag,
smaller and less splendid than the first, trotted out into the open space.
It stopped not fifteen yards in front of Lanius and Anser.
“Your shot, Your Majesty,” Anser whispered.
Awkwardly, with unpracticed ringers, Lanius fit an arrow to the
bowstring. Here was his dilemma, big as life, for he knew he could hit the
stag if he but shot straight. Wouldn’t it have an easier death if he shot
it than if it died under the ripping fangs of wolves or from some slow,
cruel disease?
He drew the bow, let fly ... and the arrow zoomed high, well over the
stag’s back. The animal fled.
“Oh . . . too bad, Your Majesty,” Anser said, doing his good-natured
best not to show how annoyed he was.
“I told you before—I’m hopeless,” Lanius answered. As a matter of fact,
he was rather proud of himself.
Out on the Northern Sea, a ship made for Nishevatz, its great spread of
sail shining white in the spring sun. On the shore, a tiny ship made from
a scrap of wood, a twig, and a rag bobbed in a bowl of seawater. The
spring sun shone on it, too. Hundreds of defenders on the walls of
Nishevatz anxiously eyed the real ship. King Grus and Pterocles paid more
attention to the toy in the bowl.
“Whenever you’re ready,” the king said.
“Now is as good a time as any,” Pterocles replied. He held his curved
bit of crystal above the toy ship. A brilliant spot of light appeared on
the toy. Grus wondered how the crystal did that. He had ever since he
first saw this sorcery. Now was
not the time, though, to ask for an explanation.
Pterocles began a spell—a chant mixed with passes that pointed from the
little ship in the bowl to the big one on the sea. On and on he went,
until smoke began to rise from the toy ship. More and more smoke came from
it, and then it burst into flame. Pterocles cried out commandingly and
pointed once more to the tall-masted ship on the Northern Sea.
Grus’ eye went that way, too. The ship still lay some distance
offshore, but Grus could spot the smoke rising from it. Before long, that
smoke turned to flickering red-yellow flame, too. “Well done!” he
exclaimed.
A loud groan rose from the walls of Nishevatz. The defenders must have
hoped the supply ship would be able to get through, even though they had
found no counterspell against Pterocles’ charm. If it had, the siege would
have become much more difficult. As things were, the Avornans held on to
the advantage.
A longtime sailor himself, Grus knew a certain amount of sympathy for
the Chernagors aboard that burning ship. Nothing afloat could be a worse
horror than fire. That had to be doubly true on the long seagoing voyages
the northern men, formidable traders and formidable pirates, often
undertook. And these flames, springing from magic as they did, would be
all the harder to fight.
The sailors soon gave up trying to fight them. Instead, they went over
the side and made for Nishevatz in boats while the ship burned. The boats
could not hold all the men. Maybe more clung to lines trailing behind
them. Grus hoped so. He wanted to stop the grain the ship carried, but had
nothing special against the sailors.
Another Chernagor ship had come up over the horizon while Pterocles was
casting his spell. When smoke and flame burst from the vessel nearing Nishevatz, the other ship hastily put about and sailed away from the
besieged city-state. Pointing to it, Pterocles asked, “Do you want me to
see if I can set that one afire, too, Your Majesty?”
“No,” Grus said. The wizard looked surprised. The king explained, “Let
that crew go. They’ll spread the word that our magic still works. That
will make the rest of the Chernagors not want to come to Nishevatz. I hope
it will, anyhow.”
“Ah.” Pterocles nodded. “Yes, now that you point it out to me, I can
see how that might be so. If the other ship had kept coming . . .”
Grus nodded, too. “That’s right. If it had kept coming, I would have
told you to do your best to sink it. This way, though, better not. Bad
news isn’t bad news unless someone’s left to bring it.”
“I’ll be ready in case the Chernagors try again,” the wizard said. “If
they come at night, I can use real fire to kindle my symbolic ships. The
spell isn’t as elegant that way, but it should still work. It did the last
time.”
“Working is all I worry about,” Grus said. “I know you sorcerers sweat
for elegance, but it doesn’t matter a bit to me.”
“It should,” Pterocles said. “The more elegant a spell is, the harder
the time wizards on the other side have of picking it to pieces.”
“Really? I didn’t know that,” Grus admitted. “Still, though, the
Chernagor wizards haven’t had any luck trying to cope with this spell.
Doesn’t that mean they won’t be able to no matter what?”
“I wish it did.” Pterocles’ smile was distinctly weary. “All it really
means, though, is that they haven’t figured out how yet. They may work out
a counterspell tomorrow. If they do”—he shrugged—“then that means I have
to come up with something new. And it means Nishevatz gets fed.”
He was frank. He was, perhaps, more frank than Grus would have liked.
After a moment’s thought, the king shook his head. Pterocles had told him
what he needed to know. “Thank you,” Grus said. “If they do find a
counterspell, I know you’ll do your best to get around it.”
You’d better do your best. Otherwise, we’ll have to try storming the
place, and I don’t know if we can. I don’t want to have to find out,
either.
That evening, Prince Vsevolod came up to him and asked him to do
exactly that. “Sooner we are in Nishevatz, sooner we punish Vasilko,”
Vsevolod boomed.
“Well, yes, Your Highness, if we
get into Nishevatz,” Grus said. “If the men on the walls throw us
back, I don’t know if we’ll be able to go on with the siege afterwards.
That would depend on how bad they hurt us.”
“You do not want to fight,” Vsevolod said in accusing tones.
“I want to win,” Grus said. “If I can win without throwing away a lot
of my men, I want that most of all.”
For all Prince Vsevolod followed that, the king might as well have
spoken in the language of the Menteshe. Vsevolod said, “You do not want to
fight,” again. Then he turned his back and stalked away without giving
Grus a chance to reply.
Grus was tempted—sorely tempted—to fling Vsevolod into chains for the
insult. With a mournful sigh, he decided he couldn’t. It was too likely to
cause trouble not only with the Chernagors who’d accompanied the prince to
Nishevatz but also with those inside the city. Grus let out a grunt also
redolent of regret. No matter what his good sense said, the temptation
lingered.
Grus would never have made a poet or a historian, but he did get the
essential facts where they belonged. Lanius had come to rely on that. So
far, everything seemed to be going as the other king hoped. Experience had
taught Lanius not to get too excited about such things. The end of the
campaign—if it didn’t have to break off in the middle—would be the place
to judge.
Other reports came up from the south—reports of the fighting between
Sanjar and Korkut. Lanius enjoyed every word of those. Each account of
another bloody battle between Prince Ulash’s unloving sons made his smile
wider. The more the Menteshe hurt one another, the harder the time they
would have hurting Avornis.
Before the spring was very old, other news came up from the south, news
that the Menteshe to the east and west of what had been Ulash’s realm were
sweeping in to seize what they could from it. In the same way, ravens and
vultures that would never harm a live bear snatched fragments from its
carcass once the beast was dead. Again, the more those Menteshe stole, the
happier Lanius got.
And what made him more cheerful yet was hearing no news at all from the
east. News from that direction, news from the shore of the Azanian Sea,
was unlikely to be good. If the Chernagors sent a fleet to harry the
coast, cries for help would fly back to the city of Avornis. So far...
none.
That left Lanius in an unusually good mood. Even if Sosia had had
nothing to do with causing it, she responded to it, and seemed to forgive
him for amusing himself with Zenaida. He gratefully accepted that.
But the king’s exuberance also made the serving women pay more
attention to him than they did when he was his usual sobersided self.
“You’re so—bouncy, Your Majesty!” exclaimed a plump but pretty maidservant
named Flammea.
No one in all of Lanius’ life up until that moment had ever called him
bouncy—or anything like bouncy. He managed a smile that, if not bouncy,
might at least be taken as friendly. Flammea smiled back. Lanius patted
her in an experimental way. If she’d ignored him and gone about her
business, he would have shrugged and forgotten about her. Instead, she
giggled. He took that as a promising sign.
One thing led to another—led quite quickly to another, as a matter of
fact. “Oh, Your Majesty!” Flammea gasped, an oddly formal salute at that
particular moment. Lanius was too busy to be much inclined to literary
criticism.
Afterwards, the maidservant looked smug. Did that mean she was going to
brag to all her friends? If she did, she would be sorry. Of course, if she
did, Sosia would find out, and then Lanius would be sorry, too.
“Don’t worry, Your Majesty,” she said as she got back into her clothes.
“I don’t blab.”
“Well, good.” Lanius hoped she meant it. If she didn’t, he—and Sosia,
too—would make her regret it.
Flammea slipped out of the little storeroom where they’d gone. A minute
or so later, so did Lanius. Another serving woman—a gray-haired, severely
plain serving woman—was coming up the hallway when he did. She gave him a
curious look, or possibly a dubious look. He nodded back, as imperturbably
as he could, and went on his way. Behind him, the serving woman opened the
door to the storeroom. Lanius smiled to himself. She wouldn’t learn
anything that way.
The king’s smile slipped when he wondered what would happen if Flammea
found herself pregnant. Grus had coped well enough, but Anser was born
long before Grus became king. Lanius laughed at himself. He might be
thinking about making a child with Flammea now, but he hadn’t worried
about it one bit before lying down with her. What man ever did?
Day followed day. Sosia didn’t throw any more crockery at his head.
From that, he concluded Flammea could indeed keep her mouth shut. She also
didn’t make a nuisance of herself when they saw each other. They did
contrive to go off by themselves again not too long after the first time.
Lanius enjoyed that as much as he had earlier on. If Flammea didn’t, she
pretended well.
“You
are in a good humor,” Sosia said that evening. “The Menteshe
should have civil wars more often. They agree with you.”
Lanius didn’t choke on his soup. If that didn’t prove something about
his powers of restraint, he couldn’t imagine what would. “The Menteshe
should have civil wars more often,” he agreed gravely. “Avornis would be
better off if they did.”
His wife was a queen, the wife of one king and the daughter of another
(even if Lanius thought Grus as illegitimate a king as a lot of Avornis
had once reckoned him). She said, “How do we
make the Menteshe fight among themselves?”
“If I knew the answer to that, I’d do it,” Lanius said. “The way things
are, I’m happy enough to try to take advantage of it when it happens.” He
was also happy Sosia thought his good cheer came from policy. Raising his
wine cup, he said, “Here’s to more civil war among the Menteshe.”
Sosia drank with him.
Beloyuz came up to Grus as the King of Avornis eyed the walls of
Nishevatz early one misty morning. “May I speak to you, Your Majesty?” the
Chernagor noble asked.
“If I say no now, you’re a man in trouble, for you just did,” Grus
answered. Beloyuz stared at him in puzzlement. Grus swallowed a sigh. None
of the nobles who followed Prince Vsevolod had much in the way of humor.
The king went on, “Say what you will.”
“I thank you, Your Majesty. Last night, a peasant came to me.” He
paused portentously. Grus nodded and waved for him to continue. The exiles
would have been of small use if they didn’t have connections with folk of
their own land. Beloyuz said, “An army is coming—so this man hears from a
man of Durdevatz.” A man of Durdevatz? Grus thought. Maybe the city-state really
was showing its gratitude. That would be a pleasant novelty. “From which
direction is it coming?” he asked.
The Chernagor noble pointed to the east. “So he said.”
Durdevatz lay to the east, so the Chernagors there would be in a
position to know what their neighbors were doing. Grus said, “All right.
Thank you. I’ll send scouts out that way.” He also intended to send scouts
to the west, in case the peasant had lied to Beloyuz or the man from
Durdevatz had lied to the peasant. He didn’t say a word about that, not
wanting to insult the noble by making him think he wasn’t believed. That
wasn’t how Grus thought about it, though. To him, it was more on the order
of not taking chances.
Out went the scouts, in both directions. Grus cursed the fog, being
unable to do anything else about it. His riders were liable to find the
Chernagor army by tripping over it instead of seeing it at some
distance.
He summoned Hirundo, told him what was likely to happen next, and
asked, “Can we keep the men of Nishevatz from sallying while we beat back
whatever comes at us from the east?”
If it is the east, he added silently to himself.
“We managed it a few years ago, if you’ll recall,” Hirundo answered.
“Well, they did sally, but we beat ‘em back. I think we can do it again.
We have a tighter, stronger line around Nishevatz now than we did then. We
can hold it with fewer men, and that will leave more to fight the
relieving force.”
“Good. Make ready to hold it with as few as you can, then,” Grus told
him. “Free up the others and have them ready to defend our position
against the Chernagors whenever they get the word.”
“Right you are.” The general nodded and started to turn away, but then
checked himself. “Ah . . . what happens if the Chernagors don’t come?”
“In that case, someone’s been lying to Beloyuz, or lying to someone
who’s gone to Beloyuz,” Grus said. “It’s possible. But we have to be ready
just the same.” Hirundo thought that over, nodded, saluted, and briskly
went off to do what needed doing.
Grus made sure his own horse was ready to mount. His place, of course,
was at the van. He’d finally become a tolerable rider—just about at the
time when his years were starting to make him something less than a
tolerable warrior. He would have appreciated the irony more if it weren’t
of the sort that might get him killed.
Little by little, the mist burned off. The sky went from watery gray to
watery blue. Grus peered this way and that, but spied no telltale cloud of
dust to east or west to warn of the Chernagor army. He wasn’t sure how
much that meant, or whether it meant anything. There had been enough mist
and drizzle lately to lay a lot of dust.
The day dragged on. Grus began to believe the Chernagor peasant had
come to Beloyuz for no better reason than to make him jump. But in that
case, how had he known of Durdevatz? About halfway through the afternoon,
two Avornan horsemen came galloping back to the camp—sure enough, from the
east. “Your Majesty! Your Majesty!” they called.
“I’m here.” Grus waved to let them see him, though they were already
making for the royal pavilion. “What news?”
“Chernagors, Your Majesty, a lot of Chernagors,” they answered in
ragged chorus. The man in the lead went on, “They’re about an hour away.
Most of them are foot soldiers—only a few riders.”
“Well, well. Isn’t that interesting?” The peasant—or the emissary from
Durdevatz who’d talked to the peasant (or posed as a peasant?)— had gotten
it straight after all. And the scouts had smelled out the attack before it
could turn into a nasty surprise. “Thank you, friends,” the king said. “I
think we’ll be able to deal with them.” He shouted for Hirundo.
“Yes, Your Majesty?” the general said. “So they really are coming after
all?” Grus nodded. Hirundo clucked mournfully. “Well, better late than
never. I expect we’ll make a good many of them later still.” His smile
held a certain sharp-toothed anticipation.
“Good. That’s what I hoped you’d tell me.” Grus pointed toward the
walls of Nishevatz. “And if Vasilko’s men make their sally?”
“They’re welcome to try,” Hirundo said. “I hope they do, in fact. Maybe we can take the city away from them when they have to retreat
back into it.”
He didn’t lack for confidence. Grus clapped him on the back. “Good
enough. Make sure we’re ready to receive whatever attack the Chernagors
can deliver. I’m not charging out against them. If they want me, they can
attack on ground of my choosing, by the gods.”
Hirundo nodded and hurried away. Grus knew he might have to move out
against the Chernagors whether he wanted to or not. If they started
ravaging the countryside so his army couldn’t feed itself, he’d have to
try to stop them. But if they’d had something like that in mind, wouldn’t
they have brought fewer foot soldiers and more horsemen?
He would have; he knew that.
He donned his gilded mailshirt and helm. Even in the cool, damp air of
the Chernagor country, the quilted padding he wore under the chainmail and
helmet made sweat spring out on his forehead. He swung up onto his horse.
Cavalrymen hurrying to take their places in line gave him a cheer. He
waved to them. The mailshirt clinked musically as he raised his arm.
The Avornans had already taken a good defensive position on a ridgeline
when the Chernagor army came over the last low rise to the east. The
Chernagors roared like bears when they saw Grus’ men drawn up before them.
They were big and blocky and hairy like bears, too. Most of them wore iron
helmets, but a good many had no coats of mail, only tunics and knee-length
kilts. They carried axes and swords— Grus didn’t see many bows, not in
proportion to their numbers.
His eyes kept flicking toward Nishevatz. If he could see the oncoming
Chernagors, so could the men besieged in the city. Were they hoping the
relieving army could do the job without them having to sally? Grus thought
they were wildly optimistic if they did. But that was their business, not
his.
Roaring still, the Chernagors from the east swarmed toward Grus’ men,
whose line held steady. But pipes skirled as the foes came near, and they
drew up out of bowshot. “Come fight us, heroes!” yelled men who spoke
Avornan.
“You come fight us!” Grus’ men shouted back. A few of them had picked
up some words of the Chernagor language. They used those words, which were
less than complimentary. The Chernagors cursed back.
They did more than curse, too. They surged forward toward the Avornan
line. Grus had all he could do not to cheer. He hadn’t thought they would
be so foolish. His men held the high ground, and they had lots of arrows.
They started shooting at the Chernagors as soon as the kilted attackers
came into range. In fact, a lot of them started shooting before the
Chernagors came into range, but that happened in every battle.
Of course, the Chernagors started shooting back at the same time. But
they had fewer archers to begin with, and they were moving into position,
while the Avornans were already where they wanted to be. Also, the
Chernagors were shooting uphill, the Avornans downhill, which gave Grus
men another advantage.
Onrushing Chernagors crumpled, some of them clutching at their wounds
and howling while others lay very still. Here and there, an Avornan fell,
too, but more Avornans wore armor than their foes. King Grus would not
have wanted to be one of those squat, blocky, pigtailed foot soldiers
trying to close with opponents who could hurt him while he couldn’t hit
back.
Grus hoped the withering blast of archery would stop the Chernagors
before they closed with his men, but no such luck. They had courage, no
doubt of that. And, no matter how fast the Avornans shot, they could not
put enough arrows in the air to knock down all the enemies between the
time when the Chernagors first came into range and when they got close
enough to strike with spears and axes.
Just as the Avornan foot soldiers were stronger in archery, the
Chernagors had the edge on them when the fighting came to close quarters.
The men of the north had their cavalry on the wings to protect their foot
from the Avornans on horseback. Grus didn’t think the Chernagors had
nearly enough in the way of cavalry to bring that off. He turned to
Hirundo and asked, “Now?”
“Yes, I think so,” his general answered. “Right about now.”
Hirundo and Grus both waved to the trumpeters, who blared out the
signal for the Avornan cavalry to advance. Grus urged his horse forward.
He drew his sword. All those young Chernagors would be hoping to bring
down the King of Avornis. They would get their chance.
The Chernagor horsemen spurred toward the Avornans. The Chernagors rode
big, strong, heavy beasts. The Avornans outmaneuvered them as readily as
the Menteshe outrode Avornans down in the south. The results were about
the same as they often were down in the south, too. Beset from several
directions at once, the Chernagor riders could not make the most of what
they had. Before long, it was either flee or stay and be cut to pieces.
They
were brave. Most of them held their ground as long as they could.
And most of them went down holding it.
“Keep moving forward!” Grus shouted to his men. “We need to help our
foot soldiers.”
The Avornan cavalry crashed into the flank of the Chernagor force. Grus
slashed at a Chernagor axman. His blade bit into the fellow’s shoulder.
The Chernagor shrieked. Grus never found out what happened to him. Battles
were like that. As often as not, you had no idea how badly you’d hurt your
foe. Sometimes, you didn’t know if you’d hurt him at all.
Grus cut again. A shield turned his stroke. A Chernagor chopped at him
with an ax. He got his own shield in front of the blow. He felt it all the
way up to his shoulder, and knew his left arm would have a bruise. He
counted himself lucky the ax hadn’t split the shield. He counted himself
even luckier that the Chernagor swinging the ax had time for only one
stroke before the battle swept the two of them apart.
He didn’t get to do too much more righting after that encounter. For
one thing, his own horsemen got between him and the Chernagors. They
hadn’t done things like that when his beard had less gray in it. Try as he
would, he had a tough time getting angry at them on account of it. And the
Chernagors, who had failed to break the Avornan line, who had taken a lot
of punishment from the Avornan archers before they ever reached it, and
who were taken in the flank by Avornan cavalry, did not fight hard for
long. They began streaming back toward the east as soon as they became
convinced they could not hope to win, which they soon did.
“After them!” Grus shouted. “Don’t let them get away thinking they
almost beat us. Make sure they know we’re stronger than they are.”
“We don’t want to go too far,” Hirundo said. “If Vasilko does sally
...”
“He hasn’t done it yet,” Grus said. “If he wouldn’t do it before he
knew we’d win, why should he try it now?” Hirundo had no answer for him.
The Avornan cavalry pushed the retreating Chernagors hard until sunset,
killing many and capturing more. Vasilko kept his men on the walls of
Nishevatz, and did not dare to venture beyond them. Seeing what he’d done
to the Chernagors from the east, Grus nodded in sober satisfaction and
said, “Now we can get on with our business here.”
Pouncer prowled through a small room. Carpenters and masons had assured
King Lanius the moncat couldn’t escape. Of course, those same carpenters
and masons hadn’t been able to figure out how Pouncer was escaping from
the chamber where he spent most of his time, so Lanius didn’t fully trust
them. Still, Pouncer had shown no signs of disappearing over the past
hour.
Lanius lay down on his back on the floor in the bare little room. Had
any of his subjects seen him, they would have been sure he’d lost his
mind. With the door closed and barred behind him, nobody could see him but
Pouncer. That suited him fine.
He thumped on his chest with the palm of his right hand, as though he
were playing himself like a drum. Pouncer stopped prowling, came over to
him, and climbed up onto his belly.
“What a good boy!” Lanius praised the moncat and scratched and stroked
it and gave it a piece of meat as a reward. Pouncer held the meat in one
clawed hand before devouring it. The moncat scrambled down from Lanius a
minute or two later.
The king got to his feet. He watched Pouncer for a little while, then
lay down again. He thumped his chest once more. Pouncer hurried over,
climbed up onto his belly, and waited expectantly. He gave the moncat
another tasty reward.
He wondered if he could have taught an ordinary cat the same trick. He
supposed so, though it might have taken longer. Moncats were clever
beasts, especially where their self-interest was concerned. Training moncats, he thought.
Is that a job for a King of Avornis? He’d trained them. He’d
painted their pictures. He’d learned to paw through the royal archives and
those under the great cathedral. Had he been an ordinary man instead of
King of Avornis, none of that would have kept him from starving to death.
As king, he had a lot of worries. Starving, fortunately, wasn’t one of
them.
He picked Pouncer up and carried the moncat back to the room where it
spent most of its time, the room with most of the other moncats. Pouncer
kept wiggling, maybe trying to get away, maybe hoping to see if he had any
more treats it might steal. When he hung on to it, it snapped at him.
“Don’t you bite me!” He tapped it on the nose with a forefinger. The
moncat subsided. It knew it wasn’t supposed to bite. It forgot every once
in a while, and needed to be reminded.
When he opened the door to the moncats’ chamber, Lanius had to be
careful none of them got out. They knew the open door meant they had a
chance, so they crowded toward it. He had to drive them back, flapping his
robe and making loud, horrible noises, before they would retreat.
On leaving the chamber, he made sure he barred the door from the
outside. No matter how clever the moncats were, that had defeated them. It
defeated human prisoners all over Avornis, and no doubt in Thervingia and
the Chernagor country and the lands the Menteshe ruled, too. He just had
to make sure he did it every single time.
The king was pleased with himself. Teaching any cat a trick felt like a
triumph. As tricks went, this one was pretty simple. Anyone who trained
dogs wouldn’t have thought much of it. Still, it made Lanius wonder what
else Pouncer could learn. A moncat that could manage more complicated
tricks might be entertaining.
Nodding to himself, Lanius walked on down the corridor. After he got
the idea, he shoved it down to the back of his mind. He didn’t forget
about it, but it wasn’t anything he had to worry about right away. Pouncer
wouldn’t learn a new trick tomorrow.
That night, the Banished One visited him in a dream. The exiled god’s
perfectly handsome, perfectly chilly visage stared at—stared through—
Lanius with what seemed to be even more contempt than usual. “So,” the
Banished One said, “you seek to trifle with me again.”
Lanius kept quiet. If the Banished One had only just now learned Otus
was truly cured, the king did not intend to tell him anything more.
Silence helped less than it would against a human opponent, for the
Banished One’s words cut like whips even in a dream. “You will fail,” he
said. “You will fail, and you will die.”
“All men die,” Lanius said with such courage as he could muster.
“All men die, yes, and all beasts, too,” the Banished One snarled.
“Some, though, sooner than others.”
At that, Lanius woke up, his heart pounding. He didn’t forget the
dream; he never forgot a dream where the Banished One came calling. He did
not forget, but he did not understand, either.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Somewhere in the world, there was probably something that seemed more
progress-free than a long siege. Grus supposed snail races might fill the
bill. Other than a field of mollusks languidly gliding along eyestalk to
eyestalk, nothing even came close. So the king felt outside of Nishevatz,
anyhow.
Day followed day. Vasilko’s men on the walls hurled insults at the
Avornans who surrounded the city. When the Avornans came too close to the
wall, the Chernagors would shoot at them. Every once in a while, somebody
got hurt. Despite the occasional casualties, though, it hardly seemed like
war.
When Grus grumbled about that, Hirundo laughed at him. “It could be a
lot worse,” the general said. “They could be sallying every day, trying to
break out. They could have ships trying to bring in more supplies. We
could have a pestilence start. They could have hit us from east and west
at the same time, and the army that did hit us from the east could have
shown more in the way of staying power. Are those the sorts of things
you’d rather see, Your Majesty?”
Laughing, Grus shook his head. “Now that you mention it, no. All at
once, I’m happy enough to be bored.”
“Good for you,” Hirundo said. “They’re not bored inside Nishevatz—I
promise you that. They’ve got plenty to think about. How to break our ring
around the place tops their list, if I’m any judge.”
Whatever Vasilko and his henchmen were thinking, they gave no sign of
it. Spring waned. Summer came on. Here in the north, summer days were
noticeably longer than at the city of Avornis—a good deal longer than they
were down by the Stura, where Grus had spent so much time before becoming
king. The weather grew mild, sometimes even fairly warm. For the Chernagor
country, it doubtless counted as a savage heat wave.
Couriers from the capital brought news of the civil war among the
Menteshe. Grus avidly read those. The more the nomads squabbled, the
happier he was. King Lanius wrote that he’d taught a moncat to do tricks.
That amused Grus, anyhow, and livened up what would have been a dull day.
Besides, if Lanius stayed busy with his moncats, he probably wasn’t
planning anything too nefarious.
One day, a letter came up to Nishevatz that hadn’t started or gone
through the city of Avornis. That in itself was interesting enough to make
Grus open it right away. When he’d read it, he smiled to himself and then
put it aside.
One of the advantages of being King of Avornis was that nobody presumed
to ask him what he was smiling about. He didn’t go around bragging,
either, even if part of him felt like it. But if he advertised having a
new bastard boy, word would get to Estrilda sooner than if he kept quiet.
He wanted to put off that evil day as long as possible—forever, if he
could.
Alauda had named the baby Nivalis. It wasn’t a name Grus would have
chosen, but he’d been up here in the north, and hadn’t had any say in it.
“Nivalis.” He tasted the sound of it. It wasn’t so bad, not after he
thought about it. From what the letter said, both the baby and Alauda were
doing well. That mattered more than the name. New mothers and infants died
too easily.
Pterocles answered the king’s smiles with smiles of his own. Did the
wizard use his sorcerous powers to divine why Grus was so pleased with
himself? Or did he just remember that Alauda had been pregnant and would
be having her baby about now? Grus didn’t ask him. How much difference did
it make, one way or the other?
Hirundo kept his usually smiling face serious. He had to remember
Alauda, too. But he, unlike Pterocles, had affairs of his own wherever he
found willing women. He understood discretion. Whatever questions or
congratulations he might have had, he kept them to himself.
Grateful for that, Grus asked, “How hungry do you think they’re getting
in there?”
“They’re not at the end of their tether,” Hirundo replied at once. “If
they were, they’d be slipping down over the wall just to get fed. But they
can’t be in the best of shape, either.”
That marched well with what Grus thought himself. He’d hoped Hirundo
would tell him something more optimistic. But Hirundo, however discreet,
would not say something was so when he thought otherwise. That would get
men who might otherwise live killed, and he was too good a soldier to do
any such thing.
“Fair enough,” Grus said, eyeing the battlements of Nishevatz.
Chernagors on the walls looked out at the army hemming them in. The king
pointed their way. “They aren’t going anywhere. We’ve made sure of
that.”
The pyre that rose on the burning grounds was relatively modest. The
white-bearded priest lying atop it wore only a green robe; he had never
advanced to the yellow of the upper clergy. And yet, not only had the
Arch-Hallow of Avornis come to say farewell to him, so had King
Lanius.
After the usual prayers, the priest in charge of the service touched a
torch to the oil-soaked wood. It caught at once and burned strongly,
swallowing Ixoreus’ mortal remains. “May his spirit rise with the smoke to
the heavens,” the priest intoned.
“May it be so,” the mourners murmured. The small crowd began to break
up. Most of the people there were priests who’d served with Ixoreus in the
great cathedral. By all appearances, he’d had few real friends.
That saddened Lanius, but did not surprise him. Arch-Hallow Anser came
up to him and clasped his hand, saying, “It was good of you to come.”
“A lot of knowledge died with him.” Lanius wondered if Anser had any
idea how much. The king doubted it. Anser knew more—and cared more—about
the hunt than about matters ecclesiastical. To his credit, he’d never
pretended otherwise. Lanius went on, “You will never find another
archivist who comes close to matching him.”
To his surprise, Anser smiled, shook his head, and replied, “Oh, I
don’t know about that, Your Majesty.”
Lanius had some notion of the abilities of Ixoreus’ assistants, and a
low opinion of them. “Who?” he demanded.
“Why, you, of course,” the arch-hallow said.
“Me?” The king blinked. “You do me too much credit, I think. I know the
royal archives tolerably well, but Ixoreus was always my guide to the ones
under the cathedral.”
And now one person fewer knows the name Milvago. That may be just as
well.
“You could do the job,” Anser said. “If you had no other, I mean.”
Not so long before, Lanius had wondered how he might have earned his
bread if he weren’t king. Now he bowed. “If I had no other, maybe I
could.” Anser meant well. Anser never meant less than well. But the job
Lanius had, that of King of Avornis, was less, much less, than it might
have been, which was the fault of one man and one man only—Anser’s father,
King Grus. Lanius brooded on that less than he had in years gone by, but
he knew it was true. Still, he made himself smile and said, “As I told you
before, you flatter me.”
“I don’t think so,” Anser said. “It’s in your blood, the way it was in
Ixoreus‘, and you can’t tell me any different. These other fellows,
they’ll do it, but they’ll do it because someone tells them to. If it fell
to you, you’d do it
right.”
Given a choice, Lanius might well have preferred being an archivist to
wearing the crown. His blood did not give him that choice. He nodded to
the arch-hallow. “You may be right. But you at least had one good
archivist. At the palace, I’ve spent years sifting through chaos.”
“Before long, you may have to do that with our records, too,” Anser
said.
“I hope not,” Lanius said. And yet, if the ancient document that named
Milvago and told what he was were to be lost for a few more generations,
would he be unhappy? He knew perfectly well he would be anything but.
His guardsmen fell in around him as he made his way back to the royal
palace. The priests who’d come to Ixoreus’ cremation stared at him as he
left. They had to be wondering why he’d chosen to pay his personal
respects to an old man good for nothing but shuffling through parchments.
He always found what he was looking for? So what?
Lanius sighed and shook his head. Who but another archivist could
possibly appreciate what an archivist did? Not even Anser really
understood it. He’d come because he liked Ixoreus. But then, he liked
everybody, just as much as everybody liked him, so how much did that
prove?
On the way back to the palace, one of the guardsmen asked, “Your
Majesty, what’s the point of even keeping old parchments, let alone going
through them?”
By the way he said it, he plainly expected the king to have no good
answer for him. Several of the other guards craned their necks toward
Lanius to hear what he would say. The last thing he wanted was to seem a
fool in front of them. He thought for several paces before asking a
question of his own. “Do you read and write, Carbo?”
“Me, Your Majesty?” Carbo laughed. “Not likely!”
“All right. Have you ever gotten into an argument with the paymaster
about what he gives you every fortnight?” Lanius asked. To his relief,
Carbo nodded at that. Lanius said, “You know how he settled things, then.
He went through the parchments that said how much pay you get and when you
got it last. That’s what the archives are—they’re like the pay records for
the whole kingdom, as far back as anybody can remember. No matter what
kind of question you ask about how things were a long time ago, the
answer’s in there—if the mice haven’t chewed up the parchment where it was
hiding.”
“But why would you care about what happened before anybody who’s alive
now was born?” Carbo asked.
“So in case the kingdom gets into a kind of trouble it’s seen before,
I’ll know how it fixed things a long time ago,” Lanius answered. Carbo
could see that that made sense. But no matter how much sense it made, it
was only part of the truth. The main reasons Lanius liked to go exploring
in the archives were that he was interested in the past for its own sake
and that people hardly ever bothered him while he was poking through old
parchments.
And Carbo didn’t bother him the rest of the way back to the palace.
Another triumph for the archives, he thought.
Three Chernagors stood nervously before King Grus. They’d escaped from
Nishevatz with a rope they’d let down from the wall. All three were
hollow-cheeked and scrawny. Through Beloyuz, Grus asked them, “How bad off
for food is Nishevatz?”
They all tried to talk at once. Beloyuz pointed to the man in the
middle, the tallest of the three. He spewed forth a mouthful of gutturals.
“He says the city is hungry,” Beloyuz told Grus. “He says to look at him,
to look at these fellows with him. He says they were strapping men when
this siege started, They might as well be ghosts now, he says.”
They were, to Grus’ eye, rather substantial ghosts even now. The king
asked, “How hard will the Chernagors fight if we attack them?”
Again, all three talked at once. This time, they began to argue.
Beloyuz said, “One of them says Vasilko’s men will strike a blow or two
for appearance’s sake and then give up. The others say they will fight
hard.”
“I heard Prince Vsevolods name in there,” Grus said. “What did they say
about him?”
Vsevolods name in Grus’ mouth was plenty to start the Chernagors
talking. Whatever they said, it sounded impassioned. Beloyuz let them go
on for a while before observing, “They do not think well of His Highness,
Your Majesty.”
“I would have guessed that,” Grus said—an understatement, if anything.
“But what do they think of fighting on the same side as the Banished
One?”
When Beloyuz translated that into the Chernagor tongue, the three
escapees began arguing again. Without a word of the language, Grus had no
trouble figuring that out. One of them said something that touched a
nerve, too, for Beloyuz shouted angrily at him. He shouted back. Before
long, all four Chernagors were yelling at the top of their lungs.
“What do they say?” Grus asked. Beloyuz paid him no attention. “What do
they say?” he asked again. Still no response.
“What do they say?” he roared in a voice that might have carried
across a battlefield.
For a heartbeat, he didn’t think even that would remind Beloyuz he was
there. Then, reluctantly, the noble broke away from the other Chernagors.
“They say vile things, insulting things, Your Majesty,” he said, his voice
full of indignation. “One of them, the vile dog, says better the Banished
One than Vsevolod. You ought to burn a man who says things like that.”
“No, the Banished One burns men who don’t agree with him, burns them or
makes them into thralls,” Grus said. “They will be free of a bad master
once he is gone from Nishevatz. Tell them that, Beloyuz.”
The nobleman spoke. The Chernagors who’d escaped from the besieged city
spoke, too. Beloyuz scowled. Reluctantly, he turned back to the king and
returned to Avornan. “They say Nishevatz will be free of one bad master,
but it will have another one if Vsevolod takes it.”
Grus muttered to himself. He’d known the people of Nishevatz disliked
Prince Vsevolod. He could hardly have helped knowing it. But somehow he
had managed to avoid realizing how much they despised Vsevolod. If they
thought him no different from the Banished One . . . If they thought that,
no wonder they put up with Vasilko even if he followed the exiled god.
“Send them away,” Grus told Beloyuz, pointing to the men who had come
out of Nishevatz. “Feed them. Keep them under guard. Then come back to
me.”
“Just as you say, Your Majesty, so shall it be.” Beloyuz went off with
the other three Chernagors. When he returned a few minutes later,
curiosity filled his features. “What do you want, Your Majesty?”
“How would you like to be Prince of Nishevatz once we take the place?”
Grus came straight out with what he had in mind.
Beloyuz stared. “You ask me to ... to betray my prince?”
“No,” Grus said.
Yes, he thought. Aloud, he went on, “How can Vsevolod be Prince
of Nishevatz if everybody in the place hates him? If we have to kill
everyone in the city to set him back on the throne, what kind of
city-state will he rule? And if we have to kill everyone in Nishevatz to
set him back on the throne, and decide to do it, how are we different from
the Banished One? Whose will do we really work?”
“I think you use this for an excuse to do what you want to do anyhow
because you do not like Prince Vsevolod,” Beloyuz said. “You ask me to
betray my prince, when I went into exile for him.”
That set Grus to muttering again. Beloyuz was right—he didn’t like
Vsevolod. By all appearances, next to nobody could stand Vsevolod. The
three Chernagors who’d gotten out of Nishevatz had had no use for him.
From what they’d said, the rest of the people on the walls and behind them
felt the same way. It was just Grus’ luck to want to replace the
unpleasant exiled Prince of Nishevatz with one of the few men who actually
thought well of him.
With a sigh, the king said, “Well, Your Excellency, I won’t ask you to
do anything that goes against your conscience. Still, you ought to think
about what’s best for you and what’s best for Nishevatz.”
“What is best for Nishevatz is Prince Vsevolod. What is best for me is
Prince Vsevolod.” Beloyuz bowed and strode off.
What Grus muttered this time made two or three of his guardsmen gape.
He’d said worse while a river-galley captain, but not since taking the
crown. He knew what would happen next, too. Beloyuz would tell Vsevolod
about the usurpation he’d tried to arrange, and Vsevolod would throw a
fit. Grus’ head started to ache just thinking about that.
But Vsevolod didn’t come to bother him. Day followed day, and the King
of Avornis didn’t meet the Prince of Nishevatz. He didn’t ask where
Vsevolod was or what he was doing, either. He didn’t care.
Then one of the Avornans who guarded Vsevolod and his followers came to
Grus and said, “Your Majesty, I think you’d better go see the prince.”
“Why?” Even to himself, Grus sounded like a boy told to take a bath he
didn’t want.
“He’s . . . not well,” the guard answered.
“Oh.” Grus made a sour face. “All right, in that case.”
When he went to Vsevolod’s tent, he went with two squads of his own
guardsmen. He assumed Beloyuz would have told the other Chernagors who’d
left Nishevatz with Vsevolod about his proposal. He also assumed they
wouldn’t like the idea, and wouldn’t like him on account of it.
Beloyuz saw him coming, and walked up to greet him with three or four
other refugee Chernagor noblemen. “So you have heard, then,” Beloyuz
said.
“Yes, Your Excellency, I’ve heard,” Grus said, though he hadn’t heard
very much. He asked, “How is His Highness this morning?” With a little
luck, that would tell him more than he already knew.
But Beloyuz only shrugged and answered, “About the same. He has been
about the same since it happened.” Grus nodded as though he understood
what the Chernagor meant. Beloyuz went on, “I suppose you want to see
him.”
“That is why I’m here,
yes.” The king nodded.
Beloyuz didn’t argue. He and the other exiles simply stood aside.
Surrounded by his bodyguards, Grus went on to Vsevolod’s tent. He felt
like scratching his head. The Chernagors seemed more resigned than
furious. Were they finally fed up with Vsevolod, too? If they were, why
had Beloyuz refused to supplant the prince? Things didn’t add up.
And then, as soon as Grus got a glimpse of Vsevolod, they did. The
Prince of Nishevatz lay on a cot much like the one in which Grus slept. He
recognized Grus. The king could see it in his eyes—or rather, in his right
eye. His left eye was half closed. The whole left side of his face was
slack. The left corner of his mouth hung down in an altogether involuntary
frown. He raised his right hand to wag a finger at Grus. The left side of
his body seemed not to be under the control of his will anymore.
He tried to speak. Only gibberish came out of his mouth. Grus couldn’t
even tell if it was meant for the Chernagor language or Avornan. One of
his guardsmen muttered, “Gods spare me from such a fate.”
The guard was young and vigorous. Grus remained vigorous, but he was no
longer young. Every now and then, his body reminded him it wouldn’t last
forever. But this... He shivered. This was like looking at living death.
He completely agreed with the guard. Next to this, simply falling over
dead was a mercy. “Gods spare me indeed,” he said, and left the tent in a
hurry.
“You see,” Beloyuz said when Grus came out into the sunshine again.
“I see,” Grus said heavily. “When did it happen?”
“After I told him what you wanted from me,” Beloyuz replied. “He was
angry, as you would guess. He was furious, in fact. But then, in the
middle of his cursing, he said his head ached fit to burst. And he fell
down, and he has been like—that—ever since.”
“Has a healer seen him?” Grus asked.
“Yes.” Beloyuz nodded. “He said he could do nothing. He also said the
prince was not a young man, and it could have happened at any time. It
could have.”
He did not sound as though he believed it. But he also did not come
right out and blame Grus to his face, as he easily might have. The king
was grateful for his forbearance; he hadn’t expected even that much. “I
will send for my chief wizard,” Grus said. “I don’t know how much help he
can give, but we ought to find out, eh?”
“Thank you.” Now Beloyuz was the one who sounded surprised. “If I had
thought you would do this, I would have come to you sooner. I thought you
would say, ‘Let him suffer. Let him die.’”
“That’s what the Banished One does,” Grus replied. “By the gods in the
heavens, Beloyuz, I would not wish this on Vsevolod. I would not wish this
on anyone. It’s the people of Nishevatz who don’t want him as their
prince, but that’s a different story. You should not be angry with me for
trying to get around it.”
The Chernagor noble didn’t answer. Grus sent one of his guardsmen to
find Pterocles. The wizard came to Prince Vsevolod’s tent a few minutes
later. Grus told him what had happened to the prince. “You want me to cure
him?” Pterocles asked. “I don’t know if I can do anything like that.”
“Do your best, whatever it turns out to be,” Grus said. “Whatever it
is, I don’t think you’ll hurt Vsevolod.” He turned to Beloyuz. “If you
want to say anything different, go ahead.”
“No, not I,” Beloyuz answered. “I say, thank you. I say, gods be with
you.”
Pterocles ducked his way into Vsevolod’s tent. Grus heard the stricken
prince yammering wordlessly. He also heard Pterocles begin a soft,
low-voiced incantation. Vsevolod fell silent. After a little while, the
rhythm of Pterocles’ spell changed. When the wizard came out of the tent,
his face was grave.
“What did you do?” Grus asked.
“Not as much as I would have liked,” Pterocles answered. “Something is
... broken inside his head. I don’t know how to put it any better than
that. I can’t fix it any more than the healer could. The spell I used will
make him more comfortable, but that’s all. I’m sorry.”
“Even this is better than nothing,” Beloyuz said, and bowed to the
wizard. “Thank you.”
“I didn’t do enough to make it worth your while to thank me,” Pterocles
said. “I only wish I could have.” He bowed, too, and walked away kicking
at the dirt.
Grus and Beloyuz looked at each other. After a moment, the king said,
“You know what I’m going to ask, don’t you?”
“Yes.” Beloyuz looked even less happy than Pterocles had. “It makes me
feel like a carrion crow, like a vulture.”
“I understand that,” Grus said. “But can you tell me it isn’t needful?
Nishevatz will need a prince who isn’t Vasilko. Who better than you?”
“Vsevolod,” the nobleman said at once.
“I told you no to that before,” Grus answered. “You thought I was wrong
then. You can’t very well say I’m wrong now.”
Beloyuz’s face twisted. “I need to think this over,” he said.
“Don’t take too long,” Grus warned.
Three days later, Vsevolod died. After that, Beloyuz had no excuses
left.
Most of the time, Lanius was content being who and what he was. He had
seen a battlefield when he was still a boy, and he never wanted to see
another one. He never wanted to hear another one, either, nor to smell
one. Every so often, that particular stink showed up in his
nightmares.
But he sometimes had moments when he wished he could be, if not in the
action, then closer to it than he was while staying in the royal palace
and the city of Avornis. Those moments came most often when the latest
dispatch from Grus in the Chernagor country or from the officers in the
south reached the capital.
He didn’t want to go into the field. But he wanted to know more about
what went on there than he could find out from reading reports in the
comfortable shelter of the palace. He would sometimes question the
couriers who brought them. Some of the men who came down from the north
had actually seen the things Grus was talking about. They helped make them
seem real for Lanius.
The king had less luck with the dispatch riders who brought word of the
civil war among the Menteshe up from the south. One of them said, “I’m
sorry, Your Majesty, but we have to piece this together ourselves. We
don’t have our own people down by Yozgat watching the battles. We wait
until word comes up to our side of the river, and then we try to figure
out who’s lying and who isn’t.”
“How do you go about doing that?” Lanius asked.
“Carefully,” the courier answered, which made the king laugh. The other
man went on, “I wasn’t joking, Your Majesty. All sorts of rumors bubble up
about what’s going on between Sanjar and Korkut. We try to pop the bubbles
and see which ones leave nothing but a bad smell behind.”
“Shame Avornis can’t do more,” Lanius remarked.
Very seriously, the courier shook his head. “We’re ordered
not to favor either one of the Menteshe princes. If we did, the
fellow we showed we didn’t like would use that to rally the rest of the
nomads to his side. We don’t want to give either one of them that edge.
Let them smash away at each other for as long as they please.”
That gray wisdom sounded like Grus. “All right,” Lanius said. “Just my
impatience talking, I suppose.”
His brother-in-law had a different sort of impatience driving him. “I
can’t wait for Limosa to have her baby,” Ortalis said one hot summer
afternoon.
“Ah?” Lanius said. If Ortalis started going on about how much he wanted
a son, Lanius intended to find an excuse to disappear. He didn’t want to
hear about a baby that might prove a threat to his own son’s position.
But that wasn’t what was on his brother-in-law’s mind. Ortalis nodded
like a hungry wolf thinking about meat. “That’s right,” he said. “There
are things you can’t do when a woman’s carrying a child.”
“Ah?” Lanius said again. “Such as what?” Certain postures had been
awkward after Sosia’s belly bulged, but they’d gone on making love until
not long before she bore Crex and Pitta.
“Things,” Ortalis repeated, and declined to elaborate.
This time, Lanius didn’t say, “Ah.” He said, “Oh.” He recalled the
kinds of things his brother-in-law enjoyed. Cristata’s scarred back, and
the way the ruined skin had felt under his fingers, leaped vividly to
mind. What
would happen if you did that sort of thing with—to—a pregnant
woman? After a moment’s thought, he shook his head. Maybe it was squeamish
of him, but he didn’t really want to know.
What he was thinking must have shown on his face. Prince Ortalis turned
red. “Don’t get all high and mighty with me,” he said. “I’m not the only
one who does things like that.”
“I didn’t say you were.” Lanius didn’t want another quarrel with
Ortalis; they’d had too many already. But he didn’t want Grus’ legitimate
son to think he liked Ortalis’ ideas of fun, either. Picking his words
with care, he said, “There’s enough pain in the world as is. I don’t much
see the point of adding more on purpose.” He nearly added,
It seems like something the Banished One would do. At the last
instant, he swallowed that. If Ortalis didn’t have ideas about the
Banished One, why give them to him?
All Ortalis did now was make an exasperated noise. “You don’t
understand,” he said.
“You’re right.” Lanius nodded emphatic agreement. “I don’t.”
He hadn’t asked Ortalis to explain. He hadn’t wanted Ortalis to
explain. But explain his brother-in-law did. “Curse it,” Ortalis said
angrily, “it’s not adding pain the way a Menteshe torturer would. It’s
different.”
“How?” Now Lanius did ask. The word escaped him before he could call it
back.
“How? I’ll tell you how. Because while it’s going on, both people are
enjoying it, that’s how.” Ortalis sent Lanius a defiant stare.
The king remembered Cristata again. Not naming her, he said, “That
isn’t what. . . one of the other people told me.”
Ortalis knew who he was talking about without a name. The prince
laughed harshly. “That may be what she said afterwards. It isn’t what she
said while it was going on. By the gods, it’s not. You should have heard
her. ‘Oh, Ortalis!’”
He was an excellent, even an alarming, mimic. And he believed what he
was saying. The unmistakable anger in his voice convinced Lanius of that.
Was he right? Lanius doubted it. Right or not, though, he was sincere.
How could he be so wrong about that, sincere or not? Well, even
Cristata admitted she’d enjoyed some of it at first. And then, when it had
gone too far for her, maybe Ortalis had taken real fear for the artificial
fear that was part of the game. Maybe. Lanius could hope that was how it
had been. But he wanted to hunt girls for sport. How can I forget that? What
would he have done once he caught them? Part of him, again, didn’t
want to know. Part feared he already knew.
When Lanius didn’t say anything, Ortalis got angrier. “Curse it, I’m
telling you the truth,” he said.
“All right. I believe you.” Lanius didn’t, but he couldn’t help
believing Ortalis believed what he said. And he believed—no, he
knew—arguing with Ortalis was more trouble than it was worth.
Limosa’s labor began a few days later. Netta, the briskly competent
midwife who’d attended Sosia, went in with Ortalis’ wife. Lanius didn’t
linger outside Limosas bedchamber, as he had outside the birthing chamber
where Sosia had borne their son and daughter. That was Ortalis’ job now.
The king did get news from women who attended the midwife. From what they
said, everything was going the way it should. Lanius hoped so. No matter
what he thought of Petrosus, he didn’t dislike the exiled treasury
minister’s daughter.
The sun had just set when the high, thin, furious wail of a newborn
baby burst from the bedchamber. Lanius waited expectantly. Netta came out
of the room and spoke to Ortalis in a voice that could be heard all over
the palace. “Congratulations, Your Highness,” she said. “You have a fine,
healthy new daughter, and the lady your wife is doing well.”
“A daughter?” Ortalis didn’t bother keeping his voice down, either, or
keeping the disappointment out of it. But then he managed a laugh of
sorts. “Well, we’ll just have to try again, that’s all.”
“Not for six weeks,” the midwife said firmly. “You can do her a real
injury if you go to her too soon. I’m not joking about this, Your
Highness. Stay out of her bed until then.”
How long had it been since anyone but Grus had spoken to Ortalis like
that? Too long, probably. The prince took it from Netta, saying nothing
more than, “All right, I’ll do that.”
“Princess Limosa said you were going to name a girl Capella. Is that
right?” Netta asked.
“Yes. It’s her mother’s name,” Ortalis answered.
“Its a good name,” the midwife said. “I have a cousin named Capella.
She’s a lovely woman, and I’m sure your little princess will be, too.”
What Ortalis said in response to that, Lanius didn’t hear. He went into
his bedchamber and told Sosia, “It’s a girl!”
“Yes, I heard,” the queen said. “I don’t think there’s anyone for half
a mile around who didn’t hear.”
“Well, yes,” Lanius said. “It’s still good news,”
“So it is,” Sosia said. “I do worry about the succession.”
Lanius worried about it, too. What
would happen when Grus died? He wasn’t a young man anymore. Lanius
himself thought he ought to be sole king after that, but how likely was
Ortalis to agree with him? Not very, he feared. At the moment, he had a
son and Ortalis didn’t. Ortalis wasn’t happy about that, either; he’d just
proved as much. If he had one, or more than one, too . . .
“It could be complicated,” Lanius said.
“It’s already complicated,” Sosia replied. “It could be a
disaster.”
He started to smile and laugh and to say it couldn’t be as bad as all
that. He started to, yes, but he didn’t. For months now, he’d been reading
all the news about the civil war between Prince Sanjar and Prince Korkut.
Would some Menteshe prince one day read letters about the civil war raging
among the contenders and pretenders to the throne of Avornis? It could
happen, and he knew it.
Sosia read his face. “You see,” she said. “We dodged an arrow this
rime. We may not be so lucky a year from now, or two, or three.”
“You’re not wrong,” Lanius said with a sigh. “By Olor’s beard, I wish
you were. Oh!” He stopped, then went on, “And there’s something else you
weren’t wrong about.”
“What’s that?” Sosia asked.
“Ortalis and Limosa.” Lanius told her what Ortalis had said, and what
he thought it meant, finishing, “The other thing is, Limosa’s head over
heels in love with your brother in spite of—maybe even because
of—this.”
“You mean you think she
does like the horrible things he does?” Sosia made a face.
“That’s disgusting!” But her pause was thoughtful. “Of course, you’re
right—somebody may like what somebody else thinks is disgusting.” Lanius
nodded at that. A moment later, he wished he hadn’t, for her look said she
had his sporting with the serving girls in mind. He turned away so he
could pretend he didn’t know what she was thinking. She laughed. She knew
he knew, all right.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
Avornan soldiers scoured the countryside for timber and oil to make
Prince Vsevolod the most magnificent funeral pyre anyone had ever seen.
They built the pyre just out of bowshot of Nishevatz, and laid the body of
the white-bearded Prince of Nishevatz atop it.
Beloyuz advanced toward the grim gray walls of the city-state behind a
flag of truce. He shouted in his own language. Prince Vasilko’s men stared
down at him from the battlements. They said not a word until he finished,
and let him go back to the Avornan lines without shooting at him in spite
of that flag of truce.
To King Grus, that was progress of a sort. Beloyuz seemed to think the
same. “Well, Your Majesty, I told them His Highness has passed from among
men,” the Chernagor noble said. “I told them I would rule Nishevatz in his
place once Vasilko was driven from the city. I told them—and they heard
me! They did not hate me!”
“Good.” Grus meant it. A small fire burned not far from the pyre.
“Light a torch, then. Send Vsevolod’s spirit up toward the heavens with
the smoke, and then we’ll get on with business here on earth.”
“Yes.” Beloyuz took a torch and thrust it into the flames. The
tallow-soaked head caught at once. The Chernagor raised the torch
high—once, twice, three times. Grus almost asked him what he was doing,
but held back. It had to be some local custom Avornis didn’t share. Then
Beloyuz touched the torch to one corner of the pyre.
The blast of flame that followed sent him and Grus staggering back.
“Ahh!” said the watching Avornan soldiers, who, like their king, had
seen a great many pyres in their day and eyed them with the appreciation
of so many connoisseurs. When Grus watched an old man’s body go up in
smoke, he always thought back to the day when he’d had to burn his father.
Crex, who’d come off a farm in the south to the city of Avornis and found
a position as a royal guardsman, was gone forever. But in the blood of
that Crex’s great-grandson, another Crex, also flowed the blood of the
ancient royal dynasty of Avornis. And that younger Crex would likely wear
the crown himself one day.
Grus wondered what his father would have to say about that. Some bad
joke or other, probably; the old man had no more been able to do without
them than he’d been able to do without bread. He’d died before Grus won
the crown, died quickly and quietly and peacefully. Days went by now when
Grus hardly thought of him. And yet, every so often, just how much he
missed him stabbed like a sword.
He blinked rapidly and turned away from Vsevolod’s pyre. The heat and
smoke and fire were enough to account for his streaming
eyes. He wiped them on the sleeve of his tunic and looked toward
Nishevatz. The burly, bearded warriors on the wall were watching
Vsevolod’s departure from this world as intently as the soldiers Grus
commanded. He saw several of them pointing at the pyre, and wondered what
they would be saying.
“Tell me,” he said to Beloyuz, “do your people have the custom of
reckoning one pyre against another?”
“Oh, yes,” the Chernagor answered. “I think it must be so among every
folk who burn their dead. Things may be different among those who throw
them in a hole in the ground, I suppose. But a pyre, now, a pyre is a
great thing. How could you
not compare one to the next?”
“Prince Vsevolod will be remembered for a long time, then.” Grus had to
raise his voice to make himself understood above the crackling of the
flames.
“Yes. It is so.” Beloyuz nodded. “You have served him better in death,
perhaps, than you did in life.”
Grus sent him a sour stare. “Do you think so, Your Excellency? Excuse
me—I mean, ‘Your Highness.’ Do you truly think so? If I did not care what
became of Vsevolod, why did I spend so many of my men and so much of my
treasure to try to restore him to the throne of Nishevatz?”
“Why? For your own purposes, of course,” Beloyuz replied, with a shrug
that could have made any world-weary Avornan courtier jealous.
“To try to keep the Banished One from gaining a foothold here in the
Chernagor country. I do not say these are bad reasons, Your Majesty. I say
they are reasons that have nothing to do with Vsevolod the man— may the
gods guard his spirit now. He could have been a green goat, and you would
have done the same. We are both men who have seen this and that. Will you
tell me I lie?”
However much Grus would have liked to, he couldn’t. He eyed Beloyuz
with a certain reluctant respect. Vsevolod had never shown much in the way
of brains. Here, plainly, was a man of a different sort. And would
different mean difficult? It often did.
A difficult Prince of Nishevatz, though, would be a distinct
improvement. Vasilko, Vsevolod’s unloving son, wasn’t just difficult. He
was an out-and-out enemy, as much under the thumb of the Banished One as
anybody this side of a thrall could be.
“Let the Chernagors in the city know where you stand about this and
that,” Grus told him. “Let them know you’re not Vsevolod, and let them
know you’re not Vasilko, either. That’s our best chance to get help from
inside the walls, I think.”
“Your best chance, you mean,” Beloyuz said.
Grus exhaled in some annoyance. “When you’re Prince of Nishevatz—when
you’re Prince
inside Nishevatz—I want two things from you. I want you not to
bow down to the Banished One, and I want you not to raid my coasts. Past
that, Your Highness, I don’t care what you do. You can turn your helmet
upside down and hatch puffin eggs in it for all of me. Is that plain
enough?”
Beloyuz sent him an odd look, and then the first smile he’d gotten from
the Chernagor noble, “Yes, Your Majesty. That is very plain. The next
question will be, do you mean it?” Difficult, Grus thought.
Definitely difficult. “You’ll see,” he told Beloyuz.
Lanius had almost gotten used to rustling noises and meows in the
archives. He put away the diplomatic correspondence between his
great-great-grandfather and a King of Thervingia and got to his feet. “All
right, Pouncer,” he said. “Where are you hiding this time, and what have
you stolen from the kitchens?”
No answer from the moncat.
Difficult, Lanius thought.
Definitely difficult. He made his way toward the place from which
he thought the noise had come. Pouncer was usually pretty easy to catch,
not least because he didn’t care to drop whatever he’d carried off. He
would have been much more agile if he’d simply gotten rid of whatever it
was this time when the king came after him. He hadn’t figured that out;
Lanius hoped he wouldn’t.
“Come on, Pouncer,” Lanius called. “Where are you?” How many hiding
places the size of a moncat did the vast hall of the archives boast?
Too many, the king thought. If Pouncer didn’t make a noise or
move when he was close enough for Lanius to see him, he could stay
un-caught for a depressingly long time.
There! Was that a striped tail, sticking out from behind a chest of
drawers stuffed full of rolled-up parchments? It was. It twitched in
excitement. What had Pouncer spotted in there? A cockroach? A mouse? How
many important documents had ended up chewed to pieces in mouse nests over
the centuries? More than Lanius cared to think about—he was sure of
that.
Pouncer . . . pounced. A small clunk said it hadn’t put down its prize
from the kitchens even to hunt. Half a minute later, it emerged from
concealment with a spoon in one clawed hand and with the bloody body of a
mouse dangling by the tail from its jaws. Seeming almost unbearably
pleased with itself, it carried the mouse over to Lanius and dropped it at
his feet.
“Thank you so much,” Lanius said. Pouncer looked up at him, still proud
as could be. Lanius picked up the mouse and then picked up the moncat. As
soon as the mouse was in Lanius’ hand, Pouncer wanted it back. Since the
king was carrying the moncat, it had, essentially, three hands with which
to try to take the dead mouse away from him. Lanius didn’t try to stop it;
he would have gotten clawed if he had.
Getting the mouse back, though, seemed much less important to Pouncer
than trying for it. As soon as it belonged to the moncat and not to the
king, Pouncer let it fall to the floor of the archives. Then the beast
twisted in Lanius’ arms, trying to get away and recover the mouse again.
Moncats and ordinary cats were alike in perversity.
Lanius held on to Pouncer. “Oh, no, you don’t,” he said. The moncat
bared its teeth. He tapped it on the nose. “And don’t you try to bite me,
either. You know better than that.” Pouncer subsided. The king had managed
to convince the beast that he meant what he said. If the moncat had
decided to bite, it could have gotten away easily enough. But, having made
its protest, it seemed content to let the king carry it back to the
chamber where it lived.
It did show its teeth again when Lanius took away the serving spoon it
had stolen. That was a prize, just like the murdered mouse. Lanius tapped
the moncat on the nose once more. Pouncer started to snap at him, but then
visibly thought better of it. He unbarred the door and put Pouncer
inside.
“I’m going to take this back to the kitchens,” he told the animal.
“You’ll probably get loose again and steal another spoon, but you can’t
keep this one.” Then he closed the door in a hurry, before Pouncer or any
of the other moncats could get out.
He was walking down the corridor to the kitchens when Bubulcus came
around a corner and started bustling toward him. He wondered if the
servant had been bustling before spying him. He had his doubts; Bubulcus,
from what he’d seen, seldom moved any faster than he had to.
Bubulcus pointed to the spoon in Lanius’ hand and asked, “Which the
nasty moncat creature has stolen, Your Majesty?” When the king nodded,
Bubulcus went on, “Which I had nothing to do with, not a thing.” He struck
a pose that practically radiated virtue.
“I didn’t say you did,” Lanius pointed out.
“Oh, no. Not this time.” Now Bubulcus looked like virtue abused. “Which
you have before, though, many a time and oft as the saying goes, and all
when I had nothing to do with anything.”
“Not all,” said Lanius, precise as usual. “You’ve let moncats get loose
at least twice, which is at least twice too often,”
Bubulcus’ long, mobile face—his whole scrawny frame, in fact— became
the image of affronted dignity. He seemed insulted that the king should
presume to bring up what were, after all, only facts. “Which wasn’t my
fault at all, hardly,” he declared.
“No doubt,” Lanius said. “Someone held a knife at your throat and made
you do it.”
“Hmp.” Bubulcus looked more affronted still. Lanius hadn’t thought he
could. “Since you seem to have nothing better to do than insult me, Your
Majesty, I had better be on my way, hadn’t I?” And on his way he went,
beaky nose in the air.
“You don’t need to look for me in the moncats’ chambers—I’m nor there,”
Lanius said. Bubulcus stalked down the corridor like an offended cat. The
king had all he could do to keep from laughing out loud. He’d won a round
from his servant. Then the impulse to laugh faded. He wondered what sort
of atrocity Bubulcus would commit to get even.
When Lanius walked into the kitchens, spoon in hand, the cooks and
cleaners all exclaimed. “I saw it, Your Majesty!” a chubby woman named
Quiscula exclaimed. She had a white smear of flour on the end of her nose,
and another on one cheek. “That funny beast of yours came out right there.
He grabbed the spoon from a counter, and then he disappeared again.” She
pointed. Right there was what seemed like nothing more than a crack
between wall and ceiling. Lanius tried to get up there for a closer look,
but none of the stools or chairs in the kitchens raised him high enough.
He sent a cleaner out to have a ladder fetched. He might not command
everything in Avornis, but he could do that.
He could also wait close to half an hour for the ladder to get there.
When it finally did, it proved old and rickety, anything but fit for a
king. He went up it anyway, though not before saying, “Hang on tight down
there. If this miserable thing slips, I’ll land on my head.”
He’d gone up several rungs before he thought to wonder whether his
subjects
wanted him to land on his head. That made him pause, but only for
a moment. He couldn’t very well ask them. That was liable to give them
ideas they might not have had before. If he acted as though an accident
weren’t possible, that might at least make it less likely.
The ladder creaked, but the cooks and cleaners held it steady. And it
was tall enough to let Lanius get a good look at the crack. It was wider
than it had appeared from the ground—certainly wide enough for a moncat’s
head to go through it. And where the head would go, the rest of the moncat
could follow.
Lanius stuck his hand into the crack and felt around. His palms and
fingers scraped against rough stone and brickwork. The opening got wider
farther back. A person couldn’t have hoped to go through the passageway,
but it wouldn’t be any trouble for a moncat.
“This is how you get to the kitchens, all right,” Lanius muttered.
“Now—where do you sneak into the archives?” He’d never seen Pouncer come
out there. The moncat usually appeared in about the same part of that
large chamber, but cabinets and crates and barrels all packed with
parchments made searching for an opening much harder than it was here.
He tried to reach in a little farther—and something tapped him on the
back of the hand.
He jerked his hand away, and almost fell off the ladder. If he landed
on his head and it wasn’t the cooks’ fault. . . He’d still end up with a
smashed skull, or maybe a broken neck. A hasty grab made sure he wouldn’t
fall. But his heart still pounded wildly. What the demon had touched him
in there?
Staring into the crack, he saw only blackness. “Let me have a lamp,” he
called to the people below. A skinny cook’s helper who couldn’t have been
more than twelve came up the ladder to give him one. The rungs creaked
again, but held.
Lanius held the clay lamp up to the crack. The little flame from the
burning oil didn’t reach very far. He poked his face toward the crack,
trying to see farther into it. That only got in the way of the lamplight.
He pulled back a little.
Suddenly, he saw light
inside the crack—two lights, in fact. They appeared, vanished for
a moment, and reappeared once more. That blink of a disappearance ... As
soon as he thought of it as a blink, he realized what he was seeing—the
eyes of an animal, throwing back some of the lamplight that fell on them.
And what sort of animal was most likely to lurk in this particular
crack?
Again, Lanius realized the answer the moment he asked the right
question. “Pouncer!” he exclaimed. “You come out of there this
instant!”
“Mrowr,” Pouncer said. The moncat, of course, did what it wanted to do,
not what Lanius wanted it to do.
The king reached in after it. It batted at his hand once more. As far
as it was concerned, it was playing a game. It kept its claws in their
sheaths, and didn’t try to hurt Lanius, He was enjoying himself a good
deal less than the moncat. Pouncer was too far back in there for him to
grab the beast and haul it out. If he tried, the game would quickly stop
being one. The moncat had very sharp claws, and even sharper teeth. As
long as it stayed in there, it could hurt him, and he couldn’t get it
out.
“Miserable, stupid creature,” he grumbled.
That told the cooks and cleaners what was going on. “Is it the moncat
again, Your Majesty?” a woman asked. Lanius nodded.
“What do you want to do?” asked a cook with a gray beard.
“I want to make the beast come out,” the king replied. “If I try to
haul it out by the scruff of the neck, it’ll tear my hand to pieces.”
“Give it some scraps,” the cook suggested. Lanius hoped he would have
thought of that himself in a few heartbeats. The cook called, “Bring a
scrap of meat for His Majesty!”
Before long, the scrawny assistant who’d come up with the lamp did.
Lanius held the bit of meat at the edge of the crack. Pouncer grabbed it
and ate it without coming out. “Another scrap!” Lanius said. He could hear
the moncat purring. It was having a fine time. He wished he could say the
same.
He got the next scrap. He let Pouncer see this one, but held it far
enough away to make the moncat come out after it.
Since he was still holding the lamp in his right hand, grabbing Pouncer
was an awkward, clumsy business. He managed, though, and also managed to
get down the ladder with lamp, moncat, and himself intact. The kitchen
crew cheered. Pouncer finished the second scrap of meat and looked around
for more.
The cook who’d thought of feeding scraps to the moncat saw that, too.
“Now that thing won’t want to steal spoons anymore,” he said. “It’ll want
to steal meat instead.”
That seemed depressingly probable to Lanius. “I’m going to take it back
to its room for now,” he said. “Maybe it will stay there for a while,
anyhow.” He looked down at Pouncer. The moncat stared back. Was that
animal innocence or animal mischief in its eyes? Lanius couldn’t tell. He
suspected he’d find out.
One day followed another in the siege of Nishevatz. King Grus did his
best to make sure the Avornan army had enough food, and to try to heal the
soldiers who fell sick. Disease could devastate a force more thoroughly
than battle. Healers and wizards did what they could against fluxes of the
bowels and other ailments. None of the sicknesses raced through the camp
like wildfire, as they so often did.
Grus wondered how things were on the other side of the wall. Every so
often, one or two of Vasilkos warriors would slip down a rope and come out
to the Avornan line. Like the first few men who’d given up the fight, they
were hungry and weary, but they weren’t starving. Vasilkos followers still
fought back when Grus poked at them. They showed no signs of being ready
to give up.
And then, one morning that had seemed no different from any other, a
messenger came back from the siege line to the king’s pavilion. “Your
Majesty, Prince Vasilko is on the wall!” the young soldier said excitedly.
“He says he wants to talk to you.”
“Does he?” Grus said, and the young soldier nodded. Grus got off the
stool he’d been sitting on. “Well, then, I’d better find out what he has
to say for himself, hadn’t I?”
In spite of his words, he didn’t approach Nishevatz by himself. He
brought a company of soldiers, enough men to protect himself if Vasilko
turned treacherous, and he also brought Pterocles.
The wizard trembled a little—trembled more than a little—as he
approached the walls of Nishevatz. “I hope I can protect you, Your
Majesty,” he said. “If the Banished One puts forth all his strength
through Vasilko ...”
“If I didn’t think you could help me, I wouldn’t have asked you to come
along,” Grus answered. “You’re the best I’ve got, and by now you have the
measure of what the Banished One can do.”
“Oh, yes. I have his measure,” Pterocles said in a hollow voice. “And
he has mine. That’s what I’m afraid of.”
Grus clapped him on the back. Pterocles’ answering smile was distinctly
wan. Grus tried not to let it worry him. His own curiosity was getting the
better of him as he drew near the walls of Nishevatz. He’d been at war
against Vasilko for years, but had never set eyes on him up until now. He
peered up, trying to pick Vsevolod’s rebellious son out from the rest of
the Chernagor defenders.
Nothing in Vasilko’s dress gave him away. Grus wished he’d taken that
same precaution. Vasilko and the other Chernagors would have no trouble
figuring out who he was if they wanted to try something nasty instead of
parleying. With a shrug, Grus cupped his hands in front of his mouth and
called, “I’m here, Vasilko. What do you want to say to me?”
The Chernagor who stepped up to the very edge of the battlement was
older than Grus had thought he would be. The King of Avornis had expected
to face an angry youth, but Vasilko was on the edge of middle age. Grus
realized he need not have been startled; Vsevolod had died full of years.
Still, it was a surprise.
Vasilko looked down at him with as much curiosity as he felt himself.
“Why do you persecute me?” the usurper asked in Avornan better than
Vsevolod had spoken.
“Why did you overthrow your father when you were his heir?” Grus
answered. “Why do you follow the Banished One and not the gods in the
heavens?”
Some of the Chernagors up on the walls of Nishevatz stirred. Grus
supposed they were the ones who could understand Avornan. In a town full
of traders, that some men could came as no great wonder. A few of them
sent Vasilko startled looks. Did they think he still worshiped King Olor
and Queen Quelea and the rest of the heavenly hierarchy? Maybe they were
learning something new.
Vasilko said, “Avornis’ throne was not yours by right, either, but you
took it.”
“I did not cast out King Lanius,” Grus answered, wishing Vasilko hadn’t
chosen that particular comeback. Grus went on, “King Lanius is in the
royal palace in the city of Avornis right now. And I never cast aside the
gods in the heavens. They knew what they were doing when they exiled the
Banished One.”
I
hope—
I pray—
they knew what they were doing.
“And when did it become your business what god Nishevatz follows?”
Vasilko plainly had a prince’s pride.
“The Banished One has tried to kill me more than once,” Grus said. “The
nomads who follow him have worked all sorts of harm on Avornis. His
friends are my foes, and if he is the sort of god usurpers follow, how
safe are you on your stolen throne?”
That made Vasilko look around in sudden alarm, as though wondering
which of his officers he might be better off not trusting. But then the
Chernagor straightened once more. “We stand united,” he said loudly.
“Is that what you called me here to tell me?” Grus asked. Beside him,
Pterocles stirred. Grus knew what the wizard was thinking—that Vasilko had
called him here to launch a sorcerous attack against him. Grus would have
been happier if he hadn’t found that fairly likely himself.
But some of Vasilko’s pride leaked out of him as he stood there and
looked out on land he could not rule because the Avornan army held him
away from it. He spoke more quietly when he replied, “No. I want to learn
what terms you may have in mind.”
“Are you yielding? Is Nishevatz yielding?” Grus demanded, his voice
taut with excitement.
“Not now. Not yet. Maybe not ever,” Vasilko said. “I told you, I want
to know your terms.”
Grus hadn’t thought hard about terms until this moment. He had always
assumed the siege would have to drag on until the bitter end, until his
men either stormed the walls or starved Nishevatz into surrender—or, with
bad luck, failed. Slowly, he said, “The people of the city are to
acknowledge Beloyuz as Prince of Nishevatz. They are to let my army into
Nishevatz, and to give up all their weapons except for eating knives and
one sword for every three men. You yourself are to come back to Avornis
with me, to live out your days in exile in the Maze.”
He waited to see how Vasilko would respond to that. He didn’t have to
wait long. “No,” Vasilko said, and turned his back. “The fight goes
on.”
“So be it,” Grus said. “You will not get a better bargain from me when
we break into Nishevatz.”
That made Vasilko turn back. “You talk about doing that. Go ahead and
talk. But when you have done it, then you will have earned the right. Not
now.” He disappeared from Grus’ view; the king supposed he had gone down
from the wall.
“So much for that,” Grus remarked as he returned to the siege line the
Avornans had set up. “I’d hoped for better, but I hadn’t really looked for
it.”
“You got more than I thought you would, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said.
Grus raised a questioning eyebrow. The wizard went on, “This was a real
parley, even if it didn’t work. I thought it would be nothing but a try at
assassinating you.”
“Oh.” Grus thought that over. He set a hand on Pterocles’ shoulder.
“You have a pretty strange notion of what goes into progress, you know
that?”
“I suppose I do,” the sorcerer said.
“Any luck?” General Hirundo called when Grus came into the siege
line.
The king shook his head. “Not a bit of it, except that Vasilko didn’t
try to murder me.” Hirundo laughed. Grus would have meant it for a joke
before Pterocles had spoken. Now he wasn’t joking. The siege went on.
“Back when I was your age,” King Lanius told his son, “the Thervings
were a lot fiercer than they are now. They even laid siege to the city of
Avornis a couple of times, though they couldn’t take it.”
Prince Crex listened solemnly. “How come they’re different now?” he
asked.
Lanius beamed. “Good question! King Berto, who rules them nowadays, is
a peaceable fellow. He wants to be a holy man.”
“Like Arch-Hallow Anser?” Crex asked.
“Well... in a way,” Lanius said. Anser wasn’t particularly holy; he
just held a post that required the appearance of holiness from its
occupant. From everything Lanius had seen, King Berto was sincere in his
devotion to the gods. But how to explain that to a little boy? Not seeing
how he could, Lanius continued, “ Berto s father, King Dagipert, was more
interested in fighting than in praying.”
Crex frowned. “So if the next King of Thervingia would sooner fight
than pray, will we have wars with the Thervings all the time again?”
That was an even better question. “I hope we won’t,” Lanius answered.
“But both sides have to want peace for it to stick. Only one needs to want
a war.”
He waited to see what Crex would make of that. After another brief
pause, Crex asked, “When is Grandpa coming home?”
“I don’t know,” Lanius said, blinking at the effortless ease with which
children could change the subject. “When he’s taken Nishevatz, I
suppose.”
“I miss him,” Crex said. “If he were a king who liked to pray instead a
king who likes to fight, would he be home now?”
Maybe he hadn’t changed the subject after all. “I don’t know, son,”
Lanius said again. “He might have to go fight anyhow, because up in the
Chernagor country he’s fighting against the Banished One.”
“Oh,” Crex said. “All right.” And he went off to play without so much
as a backward glance at his father. He ought to know more about these things. He’ll be king one
day—
I
hope, Lanius thought. Crex needed to know about the different
bands of Menteshe, about all the Chernagor city-states and how they fit
together, about the Thervings, and about the barbarous folk who roamed
beyond the Bantian Mountains but might swarm over them to trouble either
Thervingia or Avornis itself. He needed to know about the Banished One,
too, however much Lanius wished he didn’t.
Right now, the only way for Crex to find out everything he needed to
know was to ask someone who already knew. The trouble was, nobody, not
even Lanius, knew offhand everything a King of Avornis might need to learn
about his kingdom’s neighbors.
“I ought to write it all down,” Lanius said. He nodded, pleased with
the idea. It would help Crex. He was sure of that. And it would give him
the excuse to go pawing through the archives to find out whatever he
didn’t already know about the foreigners his kingdom had to deal with.
He laughed at himself. As though he needed excuses to go pawing through
the archives! But now he would be doing it for a reason, not just for his
own amusement. Didn’t that count?
When he told Sosia what he had in mind, she didn’t seem to think so.
“Will I ever see you again?” she asked. “Or will you go into that nasty,
dusty room and disappear forever?”
“It’s not nasty,” Lanius said. He couldn’t deny the archives were
dusty. On the other hand, he had a few very pleasant memories of things
he’d done there, even if his wife didn’t need to hear about them.
Sosia’s shrug showed amused resignation. “Go on, then. At least when
you’re in there, I know what you’re doing.” Again, Lanius congratulated
himself for not telling her it wasn’t necessarily so.
He’d spent a lot of time going through the archives looking for what
they had to say about the Banished One and the Scepter of Mercy. Now he
was looking for some different things—for how his ancestors, and the kings
who’d ruled Avornis before his ancestors came to the throne, had dealt
with their neighbors.
He couldn’t keep from laughing at himself. Arch-Hallow Anser hunted
deer. So did Prince Ortalis, who would have hunted more tender game if he
could have gotten away with it.
And me? Lanius thought.
I
hunt pieces of parchment the mice haven’t nibbled too badly. He
knew Anser and Ortalis would both laugh at him if that thought occurred to
them. Why not beat them to the punch?
Before the end of his first hunting trip in the archives—no serving
girls along to act as beaters for the game he sought—he knew he would have
no trouble coming up with all he needed and more besides. Then he found a
new question. What would he do once he had everything he needed? He’d
written countless letters. This was the first time he’d tried writing a
book—he’d never begun the one on palace life.
What would he call it? The first thing that came to mind was
How to Be a King. He wondered if that was too simple. Would any
ambitious noble or officer think he could rule Avornis if he had the book?
Of course, the kingdom had seen plenty of would-be usurpers without it, so
how much would that matter? Would it matter at all? How to Be a King, then. It said what he wanted to say, and it
would do for now. If he got a better idea later, he could always change
it. The next question was, how to go about writing it? What did he need to
tell Crex, and how should he tell it? How could he make a book like that
interesting enough to tempt a prince who could do anything he wanted to go
on reading it?
He was, he realized, asking himself a lot of questions. As soon as the
thought crossed his mind, he laughed and clapped his hands. He got pen and
parchment. After inking the pen, he wrote,
What do you need to know, my son, to become the sort of king Avornis
should have? Having asked the question, he proceeded to answer it. He
asked another, more specific, question, and answered that, too. The answer
posed yet another question. He also answered that one.
The longer Lanius wrote, the more detailed the questions got, and the
more poking through the archives he had to do to answer them. Not many
days went by before he was trying to sort out the complicated history of
Avornan dealings with the individual Chernagor city-states, and doing his
best to give advice on how to play them off one against another.
He thought about having a scribe make a copy of that part of
How to Be a King so he could send it up to Grus in the Chernagor
country. He thought about it, but he didn’t do it. Grus was liable to
think he was interfering in the campaign—and Grus was also a pretty good
horseback diplomat, even if he didn’t care to spend days at a time digging
through the archives.
Lanius muttered. The older he got, the more complex his feelings toward
his father-in-law became. Grus had stolen most of the royal power. He’d
made Lanius marry his daughter. It hadn’t turned out to be an altogether
loveless marriage, but it wasn’t the one Lanius would have made if he’d
had a choice, either.
Set against that were all the things Grus might have done but hadn’t.
He might have taken Lanius’ head or packed him off to the Maze. He hadn’t.
He might have become a fearsome tyrant, slaughtering anyone who presumed
to disagree with him. Despite repeated revolts against his rule, he
hadn’t. And he might have lost big pieces of Avornis to the Thervings, to
the Menteshe, or to the Chernagor pirates. He hadn’t done that,
either.
He
had raised a worthless son, and he had fathered a bastard or two.
He had also done his best to keep Lanius too poor to cause trouble for
him. Set against that, he had gotten the Banished One’s notice. If the
Banished One took Grus seriously, Lanius didn’t see how he couldn’t. Grus gets the job done, Lanius thought reluctantly.
Whatever he needs to do, he usually manages to do it. The other
king had even found a way to keep nobles from turning Avornan peasants
into their personal retainers. That was a problem Lanius hadn’t even
noticed. Grus hadn’t just noticed it. He’d solved it.
“He’s still a usurper,” Lanius murmured. That was true. It was also
infuriating. But Grus could have been
so much worse. Admitting it was even more infuriating for
Lanius.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
Rain dripped from a sky the color of dirty wool. King Grus squelched
through the mud, heading from his pavilion toward the Avornan line around
Nishevatz. He could hardly see the walls of the city through the shifting
curtain of raindrops. Rain in the summertime came every now and again to
the city of Avornis; down in the south, it was rare, rare enough to be a
prodigy. Here in the Chernagor country, the weather did whatever it
pleased.
The mud tried to pull the boots right off Grus’ feet. Each step took an
effort. Every so often, he would pause to kick gobs of muck from his
boots, or to scrape them against rocks. He tried to imagine Lanius picking
his way through this dirt pudding of a landscape. The image refused to
form. There was more to Lanius than he’d thought when he first took the
throne; he was willing to admit that much. But the other king was
irrevocably a man of the palace. Put him in charge of a siege and he
wouldn’t know what to do. Each cat his own rat, Grus thought. He knew he would have as
much trouble in the archives as Lanius would here in front of Nishevatz.
In his own province, Lanius was perfectly capable. Grus remained convinced
that what
he did was more important for Avornis.
“Halt! Who comes!” A sentry who looked like a phantom called out the
challenge.
“Grus,” Grus answered.
That phantom came to attention. “Advance and be recognized, uh, Your
Majesty.” The king did. The sentry saluted. He wore a wool rain cape over
a helmet and chainmail. He’d smeared the armor with grease and tallow, so
that water beaded on it. Even so, when the weather finally dried—if it
ever did—he and all the other Avornan soldiers would have plenty of
polishing and scraping to do to keep rust from running rampant. With
another salute, the sentry said, “Pass on, Your Majesty.”
“I thank you.” Grus’ own helm and chainmail were gilded to mark his
rank. That made the iron resist rust better, but he would have to do some
polishing and scraping, too. He did not let servants tend to his armor,
but cared for it himself. It protected him. How better to make sure it was
as it should be than to tend it with his own eyes and hands?
Another sentry, alert as could be, challenged him. Again, Grus advanced
and was recognized. The sentry said, “Forgive me, Your Majesty, but where
are your bodyguards?”
“Back there somewhere,” Grus answered vaguely. He felt a small-boy
pride at escaping them.
The sentry clucked in disapproval. “You should let them keep an eye on
you. How will you stay safe if they don’t?”
“I can take care of myself,” Grus said. The sentry, being only a
sentry, didn’t presume to argue. Grus went on. The farther he went,
though, the more shame ate away at his pride. The man was right. He took
good care of his armor and forgot his bodyguards, who might prove at least
as important in keeping him alive.
Promising himself he wouldn’t do that anymore, he pressed on now. He
got away with it, too. When he found Hirundo, the general ordered half a
dozen men to form up around him. Grus didn’t quarrel. Hirundo wagged a
finger. “You’ve been naughty.”
“No doubt.” The king’s tone was dry—the only thing in the dripping
landscape that was. “What do you propose to do about it?”
“Why send you to bed without supper, Your Majesty,” Hirundo answered
with a grin. “Oh, and keep you safe, if I can, since you don’t seem very
interested in doing that for yourself.” Unlike the guard, he had rank
enough to point out Grus’ folly.
“Believe me, you’ve made your point,” Grus said. “I hope you’re not
going to turn into one of those tedious people who keep banging on tent
pegs after they’ve driven them into the ground.”
“Me? I wouldn’t dream of such a thing.” Hirundo was the picture of
soggy innocence. “I hope you’re not going to be one of those tedious tent
pegs that keep coming loose no matter how you bang on them.”
“Ha,” Grus said, and then, for good measure, “Ha, ha.” Hirundo bowed,
unabashed as usual. The king pointed in the general direction of
Nishevatz. “How would you like to try to attack the walls under cover of
this rain?”
“I will if you give the order, Your Majesty.” Hirundo turned serious on
the instant. “If you give me a choice, though, I’d rather not. Archery is
impossible in weather like this, and—”
“For us and for them,” Grus broke in.
“Oh, yes.” The general nodded. “But they don’t need to shoot much. They
can just drop things on our heads while we’re coming up the ladders. We
need archers more than they do, to keep their men on the walls busy
ducking while we’re coming up. And planting scaling ladders in gooey muck
isn’t really something I care to do, either.”
“Oh,” Grus said. “I see.” To his disappointment, he
did see. “You make more sense than I wish you did.”
“Sorry, Your Majesty,” Hirundo replied. “I’ll try not to let it happen
again.”
“A likely story,” Grus said. “All right, then. If you don’t want to
attack in a rainstorm, what about one of the fogs that come off the
Northern Sea? Do you think that would be any better?”
Now Hirundo paused to think it over. “It might,
yes, if you’ve given up on starving Vasilko out. Have you?”
“Summer’s moving along,” Grus said, which both did and did not answer
the question. He continued, “It won’t be easy for us to stay here through
the winter, and who knows how long Vasilko can hold out?”
“Something to that.” Hirundo sounded willing but not consumed by
enthusiasm. “Well, I suppose we could get ready to try. No telling when
another one of those fogs will roll in, you know. The more you want one,
the longer you’re likely to wait.”
“You’re probably right,” Grus agreed. “But let’s get ready. We’ll see
how hard they really want to fight for Vasilko.” He hoped the answer was
not very.
How do we keep the Chernagor pirates from descending on our
coasts? Lanius’ pen raced across the parchment. Since he’d started
writing
How to Be a King for Crex, he’d discovered he was good at posing
broad, sweeping questions. Coming up with answers for them seemed much
harder. He did his best here, as he’d done his best with every one of the
questions he’d asked himself. He wrote about keeping the Chernagor
city-states divided among themselves, about keeping trade with them strong
so they wouldn’t want to send out raiders, and about the tall-masted ships
Grus had ordered built to match those the men from the Chernagor country
used. His pen faltered as he tried to describe those ships. He’d ordered
them forth, but he’d never seen anything except river galleys and barges.
I’ll have to ask Grus more when he comes back from the north, he
thought, and scribbled a note on the parchment to remind himself to do
that.
Once the note was written, the king paused, nibbling on the end of the
reed pen. Some scribes used goose quills, but Lanius was better at cutting
reeds, and was also convinced they held more ink. Besides, nibbling the
end of a goose quill gave you nothing but a mouthful of soggy fluff.
After a few minutes of thought, he came up with another good, broad,
sweeping question, and wrote it down to make sure he didn’t forget it
before he could put it on parchment.
How do we deal with the thrall who may cross into Avornis from the
lands of the Menteshe, and with those we may find in the lands the
Menteshe rule?
He almost scratched out the last half of the question. It struck him as
optimism run wild. In the end, he left it there. He didn’t suppose he
would have if the nomads weren’t fighting one another, but the civil war
that had started among them after Prince Ulash died showed no signs of
slowing down.
With or without the second half, the question was plenty to keep him
thoughtful for some little while. What would Crex or some king who came
after him need to know? Lanius warned that, while some escaped thralls
came across the Stura seeking freedom, others remained under the Banished
One’s enchantments in spite of appearances to the contrary, and served as
the exiled god’s spies.
Or sometimes his assassins, Lanius thought with a shiver of
memory.
Lanius also warned Crex that spells for curing thralls were less
reliable than everyone wished they were.
Although, he wrote,
lately it does seem as though these charms are attended with more
success than was hitherto the case.
The king hoped that was true. He looked at what he’d written. He
decided he’d qualified it well enough. By the time Crex was old enough to
want to look at something like
How to Be a King, everyone would have a better idea of how
effective Pterocles’ spells really were.
After getting up and stretching, Lanius decided not to sit down again
and go back to the book just then. Instead, he stored the parchment and
pen and jar of ink in the cabinet he’d brought into the archives for them.
At first, he’d been nervous each time he turned away from the book,
wondering if he would be stubborn enough to come back to it later. By now,
he’d gotten far enough into it to have some confidence he would keep
returning and would, one day, finish, even if that day seemed a long way
off.
When he came out of the archives in his plain tunic and breeches,
several palace servants walked past without paying him the least
attention. That amused him.
Clothes make the man, he thought. Without them, he seemed just
another servant himself.
When Bubulcus hurried past, oblivious to the rank of the nondescript
fellow in the even more nondescript clothes, Lanius almost called him
back. Showing the toplofty servant he didn’t know everything there was to
know always tempted the king. But Lanius didn’t feel like listening to
Bubulcus’ whined excuses—or to his claims that of course he’d known who
Lanius was all along. Bubulcus, after all, had never made a mistake in his
life, certainly not in his own mind.
Otus, now, Otus was a different story. The former thrall liberated by
Pterocles’ magic seemed glad to be alive, glad to know he
was alive. If he made a mistake, he just laughed about it. And,
when Lanius came to his guarded room, he knew who the king was. Bowing
low, he murmured, “Your Majesty.”
“Hello, Otus,” Lanius said. “How are you today?”
The thrall straightened, a broad smile on his face. “I’m fine, thank
you. Couldn’t be better. Isn’t it a
good day?”
To Lanius, it seemed a day no different from any other. But then,
Lanius hadn’t lived almost his entire life under the shadow of thrall-dom.
To Otus, today
was different from most of the days he’d known, not least because
he knew it so much more completely. Lanius said, “I’ve got a question for
you.”
“Go ahead,” Otus said. If he noticed the guards who flanked King
Lanius, he gave no sign. Lanius still didn’t trust the magic that had
lifted the dark veil of thralldom. Did something of the Banished One lurk
beneath the freed thrall’s sunny exterior? There had been no sign of it,
but that didn’t mean it wasn’t there.
Besides Otus’ behavior, there was other evidence against any lingering
influence from the Banished One in him. The other thralls in the royal
palace had calmly and quietly killed themselves before Pterocles could try
his magic on them. Didn’t that argue that the Banished One feared its
power? Probably. But was he ruthless enough and far-seeing enough to
sacrifice a pair of thralls to leave his opponents thinking they’d gained
an advantage they didn’t really have? Again, probably. And so ...
bodyguards.
Lanius asked, “Do you really think we could free a lot of thralls using
the spells that freed you?” Otus was the only one here who knew from the
inside out what being a thrall was like. If his answer couldn’t be fully
trusted, it had to be considered.
“I sure hope so, Your Majesty,” Otus answered. Then he grinned
sheepishly. “But that wasn’t what you asked, was it?”
“Well, no,” Lanius admitted.
Otus screwed up his face into a parody of deep thought. He finally
shrugged and said, “I do think so. If it freed me, I expect it could free
anybody. I’m nothing special.”
“You are now,” Lanius told him. Otus laughed. The king was right. But
the former thrall also had a point. The longer he was free, the more
ordinary he seemed. These days, he sounded like anyone else—anyone from
the south, for he did keep his accent. When first coming out of the
shadows, he’d had only a thrall’s handful of words, and wouldn’t have
known what to do with more if he had owned them.
He truly must be cured, Lanius thought, but then, doubtfully,
mustn’t he?
Beloyuz came up to King Grus. He pointed toward the walls of
Nishevatz. Bowing, the Chernagor nobleman—the Chernagor whom Grus now
styled Prince of Nishevatz—asked, “Your Majesty, how long is this army
going to do nothing but sit in front of my city-state?”
Grus almost laughed in his face. He had to gnaw on the inside of his
lower lip to keep from doing just that. Call Beloyuz the Prince of
Nishevatz, and what did he do? Why, he started sounding just like Prince
Vsevolod. After a few heartbeats, when Grus was sure he wouldn’t say
anything outrageous or scandalous, he answered, “Well, Your Highness, we
are working on that. We’re not ready to move yet, but we are working on
it.”
He waited to see if that would satisfy Beloyuz. The Chernagor frowned.
He didn’t look as glum or disgusted as Vsevolod would have, but he didn’t
miss by much, either. Suspicion clogging his voice, he said, “You are not
just telling me this to make me go away and leave you alone?”
“By King Olor’s beard, Your Highness, I am not,” Grus said.
Now Beloyuz didn’t answer for a little while. “All right,” he said when
he did speak. “I believe you. For now, I believe you.” He bowed to Grus
once more and strode away.
With a sigh, Grus walked down to the seashore. Guards flanked him. His
shadow stretched out before him. It was longer than it would have been at
high summer, and got longer still every day. He understood Beloyuzs
worries, for the campaigning season was slipping away like grains of sand
through an hourglass. If Nishevatz didn’t fall on its own soon, he would
have to move against it—either move, or try to press on with the siege
through the winter, or give up and go back to Avornis. They were all
unappetizing choices.
The weather was as fine as he’d ever seen it up here in the north. He
muttered a curse at that, tasting the irony of it. He hadn’t been lying to
Beloyuz. He and Hirundo kept waiting for one of the famous fogs of the
land of the Chernagors to come rolling in to conceal an attack on the
walls. They waited and waited, while bright, clear day followed bright,
clear day. The Chernagor country would have been a much more pleasant
place if its summer days were like this all the time. Even so, Grus would
gladly have traded this weather for the more usual murk.
Shorebirds skittered along the beach. Some of them, little balls of
gray and white fluff, scooted on short legs right at the edge of the
lapping sea. They would poke their beaks down into the sandy mud, every
now and then coming away with a prize. Others, larger, waded on legs that
made them look as though they were on stilts. Those had longer bills, too,
some straight, some drooping down, and some, curiously, curving up.
Grus eyed those last birds and scratched his head, wondering what a
bill like that could be good for. He saw no use for it, but supposed it
had to have some, or the wading birds would have looked different.
Thanks to the clear weather, he could see a long way when he looked out
to the Northern Sea. He spied none of the great ships the other Chernagor
city-states had sent during the last siege of Nishevatz. They still feared
Pterocles’ sorcery.
That left Nishevatz to its own devices. Grus turned toward the gray
stone walls that had defied his army for so long. They remained as sturdy
as ever. Small in the distance, men moved along them. The Chernagors’
armor glinted in the unusually bright sunshine. How hard
would Vasilko’s soldiers fight if he assailed those walls? He
scowled. No sure way to know ahead of time. He would have to find out by
experiment. Not today, Grus thought. Today the Chernagors could see
whatever he did, just as he could watch them. If one of the swaddling fogs
this coast could breed ever came . . . then, maybe. But no, not today.
He and his guards weren’t the only men walking up the beach. That lean,
angular shape could only belong to Pterocles. The wizard waved as he
approached. “Good day, Your Majesty,” he called.
“Too good a day, maybe,” Grus answered. “We could do with a spell of
worse weather, if you want to know the truth.”
Pterocles only shrugged. “Beware of any man who calls himself a
weatherworker. He’s lying. No man can do much with the weather. It’s too
big for a mere man to change. The Banished One . . . the Banished One is
another story.”
Grus suddenly saw the cloudless sky in a whole new light. “Are you
saying the Banished One is to blame for this weather?” That gave him a
different and more urgent reason for wanting fog.
And his question worried Pterocles. “No, I don’t think so,” the wizard
answered after a long pause. “I believe I would feel it if he were
meddling with the weather, and I don’t. But he
could, if he chose to. An ordinary sorcerer? No.”
“All right. That eases my mind a bit.” Grus turned and looked toward
the south. His mind’s eye leaped across the land of the Chernagors and
across all of Avornis to the Menteshe country south of the Stura River. By
all the dispatches that came up from Avornis, Sanjar and Korkut were still
clawing away at each other. The princes to either side of what had been
Ulash’s realm were still tearing meat off its bones, too. By all the
signs, the Banished One’s attention remained focused on the strife among
the people who had chosen him for their overlord. They aren’t thralls, though. They’re men, Grus thought. They
might be the Banished One’s servants, but they weren’t his mindless
puppets, weren’t his slaves. They worshiped him, but they had their own
concerns, their own interests, as well. And, for the moment, those counted
for more among them.
That had to infuriate the exiled god. So far, though, the Menteshe
seemed to be doing as they pleased in their wars, not as the Banished One
would have commanded. His eyes on them, he forgot about Nishevatz, about
Vasilko,
“If the Menteshe make peace, or if one of them wins outright. . .” Grus
began.
Pterocles nodded, following his thought perfectly. “If that happens,
the Banished One could well look this way again.”
“Frightening to think we depend on strife among our foes,” Grus
said.
“At least we have it,” Pterocles replied. “And since we have it, we’d
better make the most of it.”
“We will,” Grus said. “I don’t think we’re going to starve them out
before we start running low on food ourselves. I hoped we would, but it
doesn’t look that way. If we want Nishevatz, we’ll have to take it. I
intend to try to take it. But I need fog, to let me move men forward
without being seen.”
“If I could give it to you, I would,” Pterocles said. “Since I can’t,
I’ll hope with you that it comes soon.”
“When I didn’t want them, we had plenty of fogs,” Grus said. “Now that
I do, what do we get? Weather the city of Avornis wouldn’t be ashamed of.
The best weather I’ve ever seen in the Chernagor country, by the gods—the
best, and the worst.”
“The gods can give you fog, if they will,” Pterocles said.
“Yes. If they will.” Grus said no more than that. If the Banished One
had power over wind and weather, surely the gods in the heavens did, too.
Come on, Grus thought in their direction. It wasn’t a prayer—more
like an annoyed nudge.
You can make things harder for the Banished One.
Were they listening? Grus laughed at himself. How could he tell? If
they didn’t pay some attention to it, though, they could earn an
eternity’s worth of regrets. With the world in his hands, the Banished One
might find a way back to the heavens. Grus tried to see beyond the sky. He
couldn’t—he was only a man. But the gods could do whatever they pleased.
Olor could take six wives and still keep Quelea contented. If
that wasn’t a miracle, Grus didn’t know what would be.
If he didn’t believe in the power of the gods, what other power was
there left to believe in? That of the Banished One. Nobody could deny his
power. Yielding to it, worshiping it, was something else again.
“Fog,” Grus said. “We need fog.”
Fog filled the streets of the city of Avornis, rolling off the river,
sliding silently over the walls, muffling life in the capital. The silence
struck Lanius as almost eerie. Did the thick mist really swallow sound, or
was it so quiet because people didn’t care to go out and try to find their
way around in the murk? The question seemed easier to ask than to
answer.
When the king stepped out of the royal palace, it grew indistinct,
ghostly, behind him.
If I walk back toward it, he thought,
will it really be there? Or will it disappear or recede before me like
a will-o‘-the-wisp?
Lanius exhaled.. His own breath added to the fog swirling all around
him. From what he had read, such smothering, obliterating fogs were far
commoner in the land of the Chernagors than they were here. He hoped Grus
kept his army alert through them, and didn’t let Vasilko’s men launch a
surprise attack against the Avornan lines.
He walked a little farther from the palace. Even his footsteps seemed
sorter than they should have. Was that his imagination? He didn’t think
so, but he supposed it could have been.
“Your Majesty?” a guard called from behind him. The man sounded
anxious. When Lanius looked back, he saw why. Or, better, he didn’t see
why, for the guardsman had disappeared altogether. “Your Majesty?” the
fellow called again, something close to panic in his voice. “Where are
you, Your Majesty?”
“I’m here,” Lanius answered, and walked back toward the sound of the
guardsman’s voice. With each step, the royal palace became more decidedly
real. The king nodded to the worried bodyguard. “Thick out there today,
isn’t it?”
“Thick as porridge,” the guard said. “I’m glad you came back, Your
Majesty. I would have gone after you in another moment, and the mist might
have swallowed me whole. You never can tell.”
“No, I suppose not.” Lanius hid a smile. But it faded after a couple of
heartbeats. The Banished One could do things with the weather no ordinary
sorcerer could hope to match. If he had sent the fog, and if someone—or
something—lurked in it... Lanius’ shiver had nothing to do with
the clammy weather. By way of apology, he said, “I was foolish to wander
off in it myself.”
The guardsman nodded. He would never have presumed to criticize the
king. If the king criticized himself, the guard would not presume to
disagree.
Lanius went back inside the palace. His cheeks and beard were beaded
with moisture. He hadn’t noticed it in the fog, where everything was damp,
but he did once he came inside. He wiped his face with the sleeve of his
royal robe. A servant coming up the hallway sent him a scandalized stare.
His cheeks heated, as though he’d been caught picking his nose in
public. At least it wasn’t Bubulcus, the king thought. Bubulcus would
have made him feel guilty about it for the rest of his days.
“Your Majesty! Your Majesty!” That call echoing down the corridor came
not from a guardsman but from a maidservant.
“I’m here,” Lanius called back. “What’s gone wrong now?” By the shrill
note of hysteria in the woman’s voice, something certainly had.
She came around the corner and saw him. “Come quick, Your Majesty!”
“I’m coming,” Lanius said. “What is it?”
“It’s the prince,” she said. Terror gripped Lanius’ heart—had something
happened to Crex? Then the serving woman added, “He’s done something truly
dreadful this time,” and Lanius’ panic eased. Crex wasn’t old enough to do
anything dreadful enough to raise this kind of horror in a grown woman.
Which meant. . .
“Ortalis?”
“Yes, Your Majesty,” the woman said.
“Oh, by the gods!” Lanius said. “What has he done?”
Which serving girl has he outraged, and how badly? was what he
meant.
But this serving woman answered, “Why, he went and killed a man. Poor
Bubulcus.” She started to cry.
“Bubulcus!” Lanius exclaimed. “I was just thinking about him.”
“That’s all anybody will do from now on,” the serving woman said. “He
had a wife and children, too. Queen Queleas mercy on them, for they’ll
need it.”
“How did it happen?” Lanius asked in helpless astonishment. The woman
only shrugged. Lanius spread his hands. “You were going to take me to him.
You’d better do that.”
She did. They had to push through a growing crowd of servants to get to
Ortalis, who still stood over Bubulcus’ body. A whip lay on the floor
behind the prince. Blood soaked the servant’s tunic. It pooled beneath
him. His eyes stared up sightlessly. His mouth, Lanius was not surprised
to find, was open.
In character to the last, the king thought.
The bloody knife in Ortalis’ right hand was a small one, such as he
might have used for cutting up fruit. It had sufficed for nastier work as
well.
“What happened here?” Lanius demanded as he shoved his way to the front
of the crowd. “And put that cursed thing down, Ortalis,” he added sharply.
“You certainly don’t need it now.”
Grus’ son let the knife fall. “He insulted me,” he said in a distant—
almost a dazed—voice. “He insulted me, and I hit him, and he jeered at me
again—said his mother could hit harder than that. And the next thing I
knew . . . The next thing I knew, there he was on the floor.”
Lanius looked around. “Did anyone see this? Did anyone hear it?”
“I did, Your Majesty,” said a sweeper with a grizzled beard. “You know
how Bubulcus always likes—liked—to show how clever he was, to see how
close to the edge he could come.”
“Oh, yes,” Lanius said. “I had noticed that.”
“Well,” the sweeper said, “he sees that there whip in His Highness’
hand—”
“I’d just come in from a ride,” Ortalis said quickly.
“In this horrible fog?” Lanius said. He wished he had the words back as
soon as they were gone. He could guess what Ortalis had really been doing
with the whip.
With whom, and did she like it? he wondered, feeling a little
sick.
“Anyways,” the sweeper went on, “Bubulcus asks him if that’s the whip
he uses to hit little Princess Capella. And that’s when His Highness
smacked him.”
“I... see,” Lanius said slowly. Had he been in Ortalis’ boots, he
thought he would have hit Bubulcus for that, too. Using a whip on a
willing woman was one thing.
Limosa thinks Ortalis is wonderful, Lanius reminded himself,
gulping. Using the same whip on a baby girl was something else again. Not
even Ortalis would do such a thing— Lanius devoutly hoped.
If Ortalis had let it go there, Lanius didn’t see how anyone could have
said anything much. But Bubulcus had had to make one more crack, and then
. . . “After that,” the sweeper said, “His Highness punctured him right
and proper, he did.”
Chastising an offensive servant and killing him were also two different
things. Lanius’ sole relief was that Ortalis didn’t seem to have done it
for his own amusement. Again, killing in a fit of rage was different from
killing for the sport of it.
A servant who killed in a fit of rage would be punished. He might lose
his head. King Grus’ son, Lanius knew, wouldn’t lose his head for slaying
Bubulcus. But Ortalis shouldn’t get off scot-free, either. For all
Bubulcus’ faults—which Lanius knew as well as anybody—he hadn’t deserved
to die for a crude joke or two.
“Hear me, Ortalis,” Lanius said, his tone more for the benefit of the
murmuring servants than for his brother-in-law. “When you killed Bubulcus,
you went beyond what was proper.”
“So did he,” Ortalis muttered, but he didn’t try to deny that he’d
transgressed. That helped.
“Hear me,” Lanius repeated. “Because you went beyond what was proper, I
order you to settle on Bubulcus’ widow enough silver to let her and her
children live comfortably for the rest of their lives. That will repair
some of what you have done.”
He waited. Two things could go wrong with his judgment. Ortalis might
prove arrogant enough to reject it out of hand, or the servants might
decide it wasn’t enough.
Ortalis did some more muttering, but he finally said, “Oh, all right.
Fool should have known when to shut up, though.” That struck Lanius as the
most fitting epitaph Bubulcus would get.
The king’s gaze swung to the servants. None of them said anything right
away; they were gauging what he’d done. After a bit, one of the men said,
“I expect most of us wanted to pop Bubulcus one time or another.” Slowly,
one after another, they began to nod.
Lanius let out a small sigh. He seemed to have gotten away with it on
both counts. “Take the body away and clean up the mess,” he said. The
scarlet pool under Bubulcus’ corpse unpleasantly reminded him how much
blood a body held. “Let Bubulcus’ wife—his widow—know what happened. And
let her know Prince Ortalis will also pay for the funeral pyre.”
Ortalis stirred, but again did not protest. Most of the servants
drifted away. A few remained to carry out Lanius’ orders. One of them
said, “You took care of that pretty well, Your Majesty.” A couple of other
men nodded.
“My thanks,” Lanius said- “Some of these things, you only wish they
never would have happened in the first place.”
Even Ortalis nodded. “That’s true. If he’d just kept quiet. . .” He
still didn’t sound sorry Bubulcus was dead. Expecting him to was probably
asking too much. And the servants had seemed satisfied that he would pay
compensation. It could have turned out worse.
Then Lanius realized it wasn’t over yet.
I have to write Grus and let him know what his son’s done now. He
would almost rather have gone under a dentist’s forceps than set pen to
parchment for that. No help for it, though. Grus
would surely hear. Better he should hear from someone who had the
story straight.
Two men carried Bubulcus’ body away. Women went to work on the pool of
blood. Ortalis scowled at Lanius. “How much silver will you steal from me
to pay for that wretch’s worthless life?”
“However much it is, you can afford it better than he can afford what
you took from him.” Lanius sighed. “I know he could drive a man mad. More
than once, I almost sent him to the Maze. Now I wish I would have. In the
Maze, he’d still be breathing.”
“If he made
you angry, he was too big a fool to hope to live very long,”
Ortalis said. “You’re too soft for your own good.”
“Am I?” Lanius said.
His brother-in-law nodded. “You let the servants get away with
murder.” No, you’ve just gotten away with murder, Lanius thought. No
ordinary man would have come off so lightly. But Ortalis wasn’t an
ordinary man, not when it came to his family connections. That he’d paid
any price at all probably surprised the palace servants.
Grus’ son stooped and picked up the knife he’d used to stab Bubulcus.
“What will you do with that thing?” Lanius asked. If Ortalis wanted to
keep it for a souvenir, he would have to change his mind. The king made up
his mind to be very firm about that.
But Ortalis answered, “I’m going to throw it away. I’ve got no more use
for it now.” He strode down the hallway. Lanius stared after him. Ortalis
still didn’t see that he’d done much out of the ordinary. Lanius sighed
again. Bubulcus, could anyone have asked him, would have had a different
opinion.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
When Grus breathed in, he felt as though he’d fallen into a vat of cold
soup. The sky had gone from black to gray, but he still couldn’t see a
hand in front of his face. The fog felt as thick and smothering—though not
nearly as warm—as wool batting.
“Hirundo!” he called softly. “Are you there?”
“Right here, Your Majesty,” the general answered, almost at his elbow.
Grus had to lean forward and peer to see him at all. Chuckling, Hirundo
said, “Our prayers are answered, aren’t they?” “Too well, maybe,” Grus said. Hirundo laughed again, though
the king wasn’t at all sure he’d been joking. Fog was fog, and this was
excessive. It seemed like the boiled-down essence of every fog Grus had
ever seen in all his life. “By the gods, we’ll be lucky to find the walls
of Nishevatz, let alone storm them.”
“We may have fun finding them—true enough,” Hirundo said, though
fun was the last word Grus would have used. “But just think how
much fun Vasilko and the Chernagors will have trying to keep us out once
we do get up on the battlements. We’ll have a whole great lodgement before
they even realize we’re anywhere close by.”
“Gods grant it be so,” Grus said. He and the Avornan army had spent
weeks waiting through what passed for a heat wave in the Chernagor
country. Now the usual mists were back, with a vengeance. Grus hoped the
vengeance wouldn’t be excessive.
“Your Majesty?”
That was Pterocles’ voice. “I’m here,” Grus said, and the wizard
blundered forward until they bumped into each other. “Can you guide the
men to Nishevatz?” Grus asked. “And can you keep the Chernagors from
hearing them as they come?”
“Well, Your Majesty, if we all splash into the Northern Sea, you’ll
know something has gone wrong,” the wizard replied.
“Heh,” Grus said. “You
will be, able to do it?”
A glow that somehow pierced the fog where nothing else would
illuminated Pterocles’ hands. “I will.”
“Good.” Grus hesitated. “Uh—I hope the Chernagors on the walls won’t be
able to see your sorcery.”
“So do I,” Pterocles said cheerfully. “And yes, I just might be able to
muffle things, too.” Grus gave up. Either the wizard was teasing him or
the whole campaign would unravel in the next few minutes. Grus chose to
believe Pterocles was joking.
One way or the other, I’ll find out soon, the king thought.
“There’s the light.” At least a dozen Avornan officers, spying
Pterocles’ glowing hands, said the same thing at the same time. They all
sounded relieved, too, no matter how the fog muffled their voices.
“Let’s go,” Pterocles said. “Nishevatz is ... that way.” He pointed
with a gleaming forefinger. Grus wondered how he could have any idea of
the direction in which Nishevatz lay. Looking down, the king couldn’t even
see his own feet. As far as he could tell, he disappeared from the knees
down.
But Pterocles spoke with perfect confidence. And when he moved out in
the direction he thought right, the Avornan soldiers followed him. They
could see his hands through the fog. A party of men carrying a scaling
ladder almost ran over Grus. He heard no cries from the walls of the city.
Evidently, the Chernagors really couldn’t see Pterocles. Or maybe he’s going the wrong way. Grus wished that hadn’t
occurred to him. He was committed now. He had to rely on Pterocles. If,
for instance, the Banished One was fooling the wizard . . . Grus wished
that hadn’t occurred to him, too.
“Guards!” he called.
“Here, Your Majesty.” The answer came in a chorus from all around
him.
“Let’s go forward,” Grus said.
The guardsmen formed up in a tight knot, completely surrounding the
king. They seemed under the impression that if they didn’t, he would yank
out his sword and swarm up a scaling ladder ahead of every ordinary
Avornan soldier. He was glad they were under that impression. He’d done a
lot of fighting in his time. By now, though, he was coming up against
soldiers who weren’t just half his age but a third his age. He knew more
than a little pride that he could still hold his own when he had to, but
he wasn’t such an eager warrior anymore.
Not only the guards but Grus himself stumbled more than once on the way
to the walls of Nishevatz. They might see Pterocles’ sorcerously glowing
hands, but they couldn’t see rocks and holes in the ground under their own
feet. Low-voiced curses and occasional thumps from all around said they
weren’t the only ones with that trouble.
Grus craned his neck to one side, trying to listen for shouts of alarm
from Vasilko’s men. He still heard none. His hopes began to rise. Maybe
this would work after all. Maybe . . .
Then he did hear the unmistakable thud of a scaling ladder going up
against a wall. Soldiers rushed toward the top of the ladder. Someone up
on the wall called out in the Chernagor language—a challenge, Grus
supposed. Pterocles hadn’t managed to hide that noise. The answer came
back in the Chernagor tongue, for Hirundo had thought to put some of the
men who’d stayed loyal to Prince Vsevolod at the head of the storming
party.
Whatever the response meant, it quieted the defender who’d challenged.
That meant the Avornans got onto the wall without any trouble. Then more
shouts rang out, and the clash of blade on blade. But Grus knew Vasilko’s
men were in trouble. If the attackers managed to seize a portion of the
wall, they had an enormous advantage on the men trying to hold them
off.
“Up!” shouted officers at the base of the wall. “Up, up, up! Quick!
Quick!” They sounded like parents trying to keep unruly three-year-olds in
line. No child took seriously something said only once. Repeat it and it
might possibly sink in. Soldiers were often the same way.
Men cursed and grunted as they swarmed up toward the battlements of
Nishevatz. More curses and screams rang out up above on those battlements.
So did the sound of running feet as the Chernagors rushed to the
threatened part of the wall. Then frightened shouts came from another part
of the works around Nishevatz. Grus whooped. He knew what that had to
mean—the Avornans had gotten up there, too.
A body thudded to earth at the kings feet. It was a Chernagor; the
black-bearded officer had gear too fine for a common soldier. He writhed
feebly and moaned in pain. One of Grus’ guardsmen raised a spear to finish
the man off. “Wait,” Grus said. “Maybe the healers can save him. He’s no
danger to us, and we may learn something from him.”
The guard said, “Whatever you want, Your Majesty, but I don’t think
you’re doing him any favor by keeping him alive.”
Blood ran from the Chernagor’s mouth. One of his arms and both legs
splayed out at unnatural angles. Grus decided the guardsman was right. “Go
ahead,” he said. The Avornan drove the spear into the injured man’s
throat. It was over quickly after that.
Up on the wall, the Chernagors began to sound desperate, while the
Avornans’ shouts grew ever more excited. “We’re going into the city!”
someone yelled in Avornan. That was even better than a foothold on the
wall. If the Avornans could cut Vasilko’s men off from their last citadels
inside Nishevatz . . .
Grus felt his way to a scaling ladder. “I’m going up,” he told his
guards. “Some of you can go up before me if you like, but I’m going up
now.” He’d known the guards would protest, and they did. But the king
managed to have his way. Half a dozen guardsmen did precede him up the
wall, but he went.
Two Chernagors and an Avornan lay dead in a great pool of blood in
front of the top of the ladder. More bodies came into view through the fog
as Grus walked along the wall. All the Chernagors he saw were dead. Some
Avornans were only wounded. One or two of them gave him feeble cheers.
His guards were as nervous as a mother watching a child take its first
steps. “Be careful, Your Majesty!” they said, and, “Look out, Your
Majesty!” and any number of things intended to keep the king away from the
fighting.
“I do want to see what’s going on, as best I can with the fog,” he
said.
They didn’t want to listen to him. He hadn’t really thought they would.
Somewhere not far away, iron beat on iron—the Chernagors were still trying
to hold off the Avornans and even to drive them back. Grus’ bodyguards got
between him and the sound of fighting, as though the ring of sword against
sword were as deadly as point or edge.
In spite of the guardsmen, Grus saw a good deal. By now, long stretches
of the walls were in Avornan hands. The only Chernagors left in these
parts were dead, wounded, or disarmed and taken prisoner. The captives had
the stunned look of men for whom disaster had come from out of the
blue—or, here, out of the gray. One moment, they’d felt secure enough on
the works that had held out for so long. The next, they saw their comrades
bleeding while they themselves faced an uncertain fate. No wonder they
looked as though they’d just, and just barely, survived an earthquake.
And, as the day advanced toward midmorning, the sun finally began to
thin the fog—not to burn it off, but at least to thin it to the point
where Grus could see farther than his own knees. He got his first real
look inside Nishevatz. Most of the buildings had plastered fronts painted
in various bright colors and steeply pitched slate roofs to shed the
winter snow.
Parties of Avornans and Chernagors ran through the narrow, muddy
streets, pausing every so often to exchange sword strokes or shoot arrows.
Grus watched a shrieking Chernagor go down, beset by two Avornans who
thrust their blades into him again and again until at last he stopped
moving. It took a sickeningly long time.
One of the guardsmen pointed deeper into the city than Grus had been
looking. “See, Your Majesty?” the guard said in pleased tones. “There’s
the first fire. Now they’ll have to worry about putting that out along
with fighting us.”
“So they will,” Grus agreed. This was what he’d been trying to
accomplish for years. Now that he’d finally done it, he was reminded of
the cost. His soldiers and Vasilko’s weren’t the only actors in the drama.
Old men hobbled on sticks, trying to escape both foes and flames. Women
and children ran screaming through the streets, fearing what fate had in
store for them—and well they might.
A Chernagor archer saw Grus peering down from the wall. The man
set an arrow to his bowstring and let fly. The shaft hissed past
the king’s face. Before the Chernagor could shoot again, Grus’ guards
pulled him back from the edge of the wall. “You see, Your Majesty?” one of
them said. “It’s not safe up here.”
“Not safe anywhere,” Grus answered. He shook off the guards and peered
into Nishevatz again. “I wonder where Vasilko is and what he’s doing.”
“Quaking in his boots, most likely,” a guardsman said. “This place is
going to fall now, and he’s got to know it.” As though to prove his point,
what had to be a regiment’s worth of Avornans surged out from the wall,
driving the Chernagor who’d shot at Grus and his comrades back toward the
center of Nishevatz.
Another guard said, “They’re shouting your name, Your Majesty,”
“I hear them,” Grus said. When he first wore the crown, hearing
soldiers use his name as a battle cry had been thrilling. Now it was just
something that happened.
I’m getting old—
or older, anyhow, he thought.
He also heard shouts of “ Vasilko!” He wondered whether Vsevolod’s son
still enjoyed hearing soldiers shouting his name. With a little luck, that
wouldn’t matter much longer.
“Where can we get into the city from the wall?” Grus asked his
guardsmen. That made them look unhappy all over again, but they couldn’t
very well pretend they hadn’t heard him, however much they might have
wanted to. Instead, they fussed all the way to a staircase and all the way
down. Even after Grus came down inside Nishevatz, his bodyguards still
grumbled and fumed.
Avornan soldiers with spears led out long columns of Chernagor
prisoners—grim-faced men who tramped along with empty hands raised high
over their heads or tied behind their backs. Somewhere not far away, women
wailed. Grus winced, knowing they were all too likely to have reason to
wail. His own men were only . . . men, a lot of them no better than they
had to be.
“Where is the prince’s palace?” he asked. “Chances are, that’s where
Vasilko will make his stand.” He stopped and snapped his fingers. “Wait—I
have a map of the town as it was, anyhow.” Maybe Lanius’ gift would do him
some good after all.
A captain said, “I don’t know if we can get anywhere in Nishevatz very
easily. Do you see? The fire is starting to take hold.”
So it was. Grus wondered if anyone in Nishevatz would ever see clearly
again. Even as the fog thinned and the sun struggled to break through,
thick clouds of black smoke began filling the streets of the city. A
building fell down with a rending crash. New flames leaped up from the
ruins. How long before most of Nishevatz was gutted? If it was, would
Beloyuz thank him? He doubted that. If Beloyuz proved like most princes,
he would stay grateful until Vasilko was dead or captive, and not much
longer.
Grus suddenly stared. Was that part of the fire coming his way through
the smoke and fog all on its own? A moment later, he realized it was
Pterocles, whose hands still glowed brightly. “You can take off your spell
now,” the king called.
The wizard looked down at himself. “Oh,” he said sheepishly. “I forgot
all about that.” He muttered in a low voice. His hands once more became no
more than ordinary flesh and blood.
“Can you lead me past the worst of the fires to Vasilkos stronghold?”
Grus asked.
“If someone will tell me where Vasilkos stronghold is, I’ll try to take
you there,” Pterocles answered.
That proved more complicated than Grus had expected. None of the
Avornans nearby had been inside Nishevatz until that morning. None of the
Chernagor captives seemed willing to understand Avornan. At last, the
Avornans rounded up a noble named Pozvizd, who had escaped with Vsevolod
and Beloyuz. He understood Avornan—after a fashion. “Yes, I take you,” he
said, and started off at a brisk pace. Grus, Pterocles, and a host of
guardsmen followed in his wake.
If he’d known just where he was going, all would have been well. But he
promptly got lost. Smoke and fire confused him. No doubt,
so did being away from Nishevatz for several years. And when he
did know the way for a brief stretch, he often couldn’t use what he knew
because of battling Chernagors and Avornans.
“We get there,” he said over his shoulder. “Soon or late, we get
there.”
“Huzzah,” Grus said. “If we can, I’d like to get there before everyone
involved in the fighting dies of old age.”
Several of his guards grinned. Pterocles giggled, which was most
unprofessional of him. And Pozvizd either hadn’t heard all of that or
didn’t understand all of it, for he just kept smiling back over his
shoulder and saying, “We get there. Yes, we get there soon.”
And after a while—not soon enough to suit Grus, but not quite slowly
enough to drive him altogether mad—they did get there. Most of Nishevatz
had its own look, different from anything Grus would have seen in Avornis.
When he came to Vasilkos stronghold, though, he felt a distinct shock of
recognition. This building, plainly, had begun life as an Avornan noble’s
home. The lines were unmistakable, undeniable—and it was right where the
map Lanius had given him said the city governor’s residence should be.
But, just as plainly, it had been serving different needs for a long, long
time.
Heavy iron grills covered all the windows. Thick ironbound gates warded
the entranceways. Towers full of archers rose from the roofs. “We’ll have
to knock it down with catapults or burn it down,” Grus said in dismay.
“Just taking it won’t be too easy.”
From inside, someone was shouting furiously. Pozvizd pointed. “That
Vasilko,” he said. “He yell for more soldiers. He say, somebody pay, he
not get more.”
“I hope he’ll be the one who pays,” Grus said.
Another voice came from the residence-turned-citadel—one not as loud,
but full of authority. Pterocles stiffened. “That is a wizard,” he said.
“I know the serpent by its fangs. That man has power—some of his own, and
some he can call upon from . . . elsewhere.” The Banished One. He means the Banished One, even if he doesn’t
care to say the name, Grus thought. Quietly, he asked, “Can you meet
him?”
Pterocles shrugged. “We’ll find out, won’t we? Right now, he hardly
seems aware of me. He’s worried about how to keep Nishevatz from
falling.”
“A little late for that, wouldn’t you say?” Grus asked.
“I think so,” Pterocles answered, “but I know more about what’s going
on inside the city than ... he does.” The wizard stiffened. He pointed to
a second-story window. “There he is!”
He didn’t mean the Banished One now. He meant the Chernagor wizard.
Grus couldn’t have told the sorcerer from any other Chernagor—a burly,
bearded man in a mailshirt. He wasn’t even sure he was looking in the
right window. But Pterocles seemed very sure. He flung up an arm and
gasped out a counterspell.
“Are you all right?” Grus asked.
“He’s strong,” the wizard answered. “He’s very strong. And he’s drawing
on more power than he owns. It’s . . . him, sure enough.”
“Him? Oh,” Grus said. Pterocles had confused him for a moment. The
Banished One hadn’t paid much attention to the siege of Nishevatz. The
civil war between Korkut and Sanjar had kept him occupied closer to home.
How much could he do, intervening at the last minute?
We’re going to find out, Grus thought.
Pterocles staggered, as though someone had hit him hard. He used
another counterspell. This one sounded more potent—or more desperate—than
the first. If he could do nothing but defend . . . How long until he
couldn’t defend anymore, until the Chernagor sorcerer, aided by power from
the Banished One, emptied and crushed him yet again?
“Hang on,” Grus said. “I’ll find a way out of this for you.”
“How do you propose to manage that?” Pterocles panted. “Will you call
down the gods from the heavens to fight on my side?”
“No, but I’ll come up with something else,” Grus said. The wizard
snorted, obviously not believing a word of that. For a moment, Grus didn’t
know what he could do to make good on his promise. Then he shouted for a
squadron of archers. He pointed to the window where the Chernagor wizard
looked out. “Kill me that man!” he said. “Second story, third window from
the left.”
The bowmen didn’t ask questions. They just said, “Yes, Your Majesty,”
took arrows from their quivers, and let fly. Not content with one shot
apiece, they kept at it, sending scores of shafts at the window. A man
with even an ordinary sense of self-preservation would have moved away
from his dangerous position as soon as the arrows started flying. Infused
with force from the Banished One, Vasilko’s sorcerer stayed where he was.
To him, destroying Pterocles must have seemed more important than anything
else, even life itself.
But then he staggered back not because he wanted to but because he had
to. A pair of arrows had struck him in the chest, less than a hands
breadth apart. “Well done!” Grus shouted. “You’ll all have a reward for
that!”
Pterocles, who had been bending like a sapling in a gale, suddenly
straightened. “He stopped, Your Majesty,” the wizard said, more than a
little amazement in his voice. “He just. . . stopped. How did you do that?
You’re no sorcerer.”
“Maybe not, but I know one magic trick,” Grus replied. “Shoot a man a
couple of times, and he’s a lot less interested in wizardry than he was
before.”
Pterocles took a moment to think that over and, very visibly, to gather
strength. “I see,” he said at last. “That’s—a less elegant solution than I
would have come up with, I think.” Lanius would have said the same thing, Grus thought.
Some people are perfectionists. As for me. . . “I don’t care
whether it’s elegant or not. All I care about is whether it works, and you
can’t very well argue about that.”
“No, Your Majesty, that’s true.” Pterocles seemed to realize something
more might be called for. “And thank you.”
“You’re welcome,” the king answered. “I presume that was Vasilko’s best
wizard. Now we have to find out whether he has any others the Banished One
wants to try to use.”
“Yes.” Pterocles looked as though he wished Grus hadn’t thought of
that.
Meanwhile, though, more and more Avornan soldiers flooded into the
square around the building Vasilko was using for a citadel. Grus didn’t
think it could hold out too much longer. Even with the additions and
improvements the Chernagors had made to it, it hadn’t been built as a
fortress. Sooner or later, the Avornans would find a way to break in or to
set it afire—and that would be the end for Prince Vsevolod’s unloving and
unloved son.
But then the entrance to the stronghold flew open. Out burst a swarm of
Chernagors. They were roaring like lions, some wordlessly, others bawling
out Prince Vasilko’s name. The Avornans rushed to meet them. Vasilko must
have seen the same thing Grus had—his citadel would not hold. Since it
would not, why not sally forth to conquer or die?
That made a certain amount of sense in the abstract. Grus had perhaps
half a dozen heartbeats to think of it in the abstract. Then he realized
that swarm of Chernagors, Prince Vasilko at their head, was rushing
straight toward him. If he went down under their swords and spears, he
wouldn’t much care what happened in the rest of the fight for Nishevatz.
No, that wasn’t true—if he went down, he wouldn’t care at all.
“Rally to me!” he shouted to the Avornans in the square. “Rally to me
and throw them back. We can do it!” He pulled his sword from its
scabbard.
So did Pterocles beside him. The wizard probably had only the vaguest
idea what to do with an unsorcerous weapon. Eyeing the Chernagors and how
young and fresh and fierce they looked, Grus remembered every one of his
own years, too.
How long can I last against an onslaught like this?
He didn’t have to find out on the instant, for his guardsmen sprang out
in front of him and took the brunt of the Chernagor onslaught. Several of
them fell, but they also brought down even more of Vasilko’s men. Yet
still more Chernagors pushed forward. Yelling and cursing, the surviving
bodyguards met them head-on. By then, Grus was in the fight, too, slashing
at a Chernagor who had more ferocity than skill.
The king’s blade bit. The Chernagor reeled back with a shriek,
clutching a gashed forearm. Grus knew a certain somber pride. He could
still hold his own against a younger foe. For a while he could, anyhow.
But the younger men could keep on going long after he flagged.
“Vasilko!” roared the Chernagors.
“Grus!” the royal guardsmen shouted back. Pterocles took a roundhouse
swipe at one of Vasilko’s men. He missed. But then he tackled the
Chernagor. Grus’ sword came down on the man’s neck. Blood fountained. The
Chernagors body convulsed, then went limp.
“Are you all right?” Grus asked Pterocles, hauling him to his feet.
“I—think so,” the wizard answered shakily. Then they were both fighting
for their lives, too busy and too desperate to talk.
More Avornan soldiers rushed up to reinforce the bodyguards. The
archers who’d hit the Chernagor wizard poured volley after volley into
Vasilkos henchmen. The Chernagors had few archers with whom to reply.
Those whistling shafts tore the heart out of their charge. Their shouts
changed to cries of despair as they realized they weren’t going to be able
to break free.
There was Vasilko himself, swinging a two-handed sword as though it
were a willow wand. He spotted Grus and hacked his way toward him. “I may
die,” Vsevolod’s son shouted in Avornan, “but I’ll make the Fallen Star a
present of your soul!”
“By the gods in the heavens, you won’t!” Grus rushed toward Vasilko.
Only later did he wonder whether that was a good idea. At the time, he
didn’t seem able to do anything else.
Vasilkos first cut almost knocked Grus’ sword out of his hand. Vsevolod
had been a big, strong man, and his son was no smaller, but the power
Vasilko displayed hardly seemed natural. The Banished One had lent the
Chernagor wizard one kind of strength. Could he give Vasilko a different
sort? Grus had no idea whether that was possible, but he thought so by the
way the usurping prince handled his big, heavy blade.
Grus managed to beat the slash aside, and answered with a cut of his
own. Vasilko parried with contemptuous ease; by the way he handled it,
that two-handed sword might have weighed nothing at all. His next attack
again jolted Grus from both speed and power.
Am I getting old that fast? the king wondered.
“Steal my throne, will you?” Vasilko shouted. Even his voice seemed
louder and deeper than a man’s voice had any business being.
“You stole it to begin with,” Grus panted.
Vasilko showered him with what had to be curses in the Chernagor
language. He swung his sword again with that same superhuman strength.
Grus’ blade went flying. Vasilko roared in triumph. He brought up the
two-handed sword to finish the king. Grus leaped close and seized his
right wrist with both hands. It was like grappling with a bronze statue
that had come to ferocious, malevolent life. He knew he wouldn’t be able
to hold on long, and knew he would be sorry when he could hold on no
more.
Then Pterocles pointed his index finger at Vasilko and shouted out a
hasty spell. Vasilko shouted, too, in shock and fury. All of a sudden, his
voice was no more than a man’s. All of a sudden, the wrist Grus fought
desperately to hold might have been made from flesh and blood, not animate
metal.
Pterocles grabbed Vasilko around the knees. The usurping Prince of
Nishevatz fell to the cobbles. Grus hadn’t been sure Vasilko could fall.
He kicked the Chernagor in the head. When Vasilko kept on wrestling with
Pterocles after Grus kicked him the first time, he did it again. Pain shot
through his foot. Bleeding from the temple and the nose, Vasilko groaned
and went limp.
“Thanks again, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said, scrambling to his
feet.
“Thank
you,” Grus answered. “I thought I was gone there. What did you
do?”
“Blocked the extra strength the Banished One was feeding Vasilko,” the
wizard said. “Let’s get him tied up—or chained, better still. I don’t know
how long the spell will hold. I wasn’t sure it would hold at all, but I
thought I’d better try it.” He looked down at Vasilko. “Scrambling his
brains there will probably stretch it out a bit.”
“Good!” Grus exclaimed. “He was going to do worse than that to me. Now
let’s see what the rest of these bastards feel like doing.”
With their leader captive, most of the Chernagors who’d sallied from
the citadel threw down their weapons and raised their hands in surrender.
A stubborn handful fought to the end. They shouted something in their own
language, over and over again.
Before long, Grus found a Chernagor who admitted to speaking Avornan.
“What are they yelling about?” he asked.
“They cry for Fallen Star,” the Chernagor answered. “You know who is
Fallen Star?”
“Oh, yes. I know who the Fallen Star is,” Grus said grimly. “The
Menteshe give the Banished One that name, too. But the Menteshe have
always followed him. You Chernagors know the worship of the gods in the
heavens.”
The prisoner shrugged. “Fallen Star is strong power. We stay with
strong power.”
“Not strong enough,” Grus said. The Chernagor shrugged again. Grus
pointed at him. “If the Banished One is so strong and the gods in the
heavens are so weak, how did we take Nishevatz?”
“Luck,” the Chernagor said with another shrug. Grus almost hit him.
There were none so stubborn as those who would not see. But then the king
saw how troubled the man who had followed Vasilko looked. Maybe the
Chernagor wouldn’t admit it, but Grus thought his question had struck
home.
He jerked a thumb at the guards who’d brought the prisoner before him.
“Take this fellow away and put him back with his friends,” The Avornans
led off the Chernagor, none too gently. Grus hoped the captive would
infect his countrymen with doubt.
Hirundo came up to Grus and saluted. “Well, Your Majesty, we’ve got
this town,” he said, and paused to dab at a cut on his cheeks with a rag
as grimy as the hand that held it. Looking around, he made a sour face.
“Now that I’m actually inside, I’m not so sure why we ever wanted it in
the first place.”
“We wanted it because the Banished One had it, and because he could
make a nuisance of himself if he hung on to it. Now we’ve got it, and
we’ve got Vasilko”—the king pointed to the deposed usurper, who wore
enough chains to hold down a horse—“and I may have a broken toe.”
“A broken toe? I don’t follow,” Hirundo said. “And what’s Vasilko’s
problem? He looks like he can’t tell yesterday from turnips.”
Vasilko had regained consciousness, but he did indeed look as though he
didn’t know what to do with it now that he had it. “Maybe I kicked him in
the head too hard,” Grus answered. “That’s how I hurt my toe, too—kicking
him in the head.”
“Well, if you had to do it, you did it for a good reason,” Hirundo
observed.
“Easy for you to say,” Grus snapped. “And do you know what the healers
will do for me? Not a thing, that’s what. I broke a toe once, years ago,
trying to walk through a door instead of a doorway. They told me, ‘If we
put a splint on it, it will heal in six weeks. If we don’t, it will take a
month and a half And so they didn’t—and they won’t.”
“Lucky you,” Hirundo said, still with something less than perfect
sympathy.
Aside from his toe, Grus did feel pretty lucky. The Avornans had taken
Nishevatz, and hadn’t suffered too badly doing it. The Banished One would
be cast out here. And, looking at Vasilko, Grus thought his wits remained
too scrambled to do him much good.
The king waved to Pterocles. “Any sign the Banished One is trying to
feed strength into this fellow again?”
“Let me check,” the wizard answered. What followed wasn’t exactly a
spell. It seemed more as though Pterocles were listening intently than
anything else. After a bit, he shook his head. “No, Your Majesty. If the
Banished One is doing that, I can’t tell he’s doing it, and believe me, I
would be able to.”
“I have to believe you,” Grus said. He glanced toward Vasilko again. If
Vsevolod’s son had any more working brains than a thrall right now, Grus
would have been amazed. “I have to believe you, and I do.” He turned back
to Hirundo. “Where’s Beloyuz? Prince Beloyuz, I ought to say?”
“He’s somewhere in Nishevatz,” the general answered. “I know he came up
a ladder. What happened to him afterwards, I couldn’t tell you.”
“We’d better find him. It’s time for him to start
being the prince, if you know what I mean,” Grus said. “I hope
nothing’s happened to him. That would be bad for us—as far as the
Chernagors who stayed with Vsevolod go, he’s far and away the best of the
lot. He’s one of the younger ones, and he’s one of the more sensible ones,
too.”
“I’ll take care of it.” Hirundo started shouting for soldiers. They
came running. He ordered them to fan out through Nishevatz calling
Beloyuz’s name. The general also made sure they knew what the Chernagor
nobleman looked like. Turning to Grus, he said, “For all we know, every
fifth man in Nishevatz is named Beloyuz. We don’t want a crowd of them; we
want one in particular.”
“True,” Grus said. There weren’t a whole flock of Avornans who bore his
name, but he was sure there were some. The same could easily hold true for
the Chernagor.
Escorted by one of Hirundo’s soldiers, Beloyuz strode into the square
by the citadel about half an hour later. The new Prince of Nishevatz’s
face was as soot-streaked as anyone else’s. But the tracks of Beloyuz’s
tears cut cleanly through the filth. “My poor city!” he cried to Grus.
“Did you have to do this to take it?”
“It’s war, Your Highness,” Grus said. “Haven’t you ever seen a sack
before? It could have been a lot worse, believe me.”
Beloyuz didn’t answer, not directly. Instead, he threw his arms wide
and wailed, “But this is Nishevatz!”
Grus put an arm around his shoulder. “It’s the way I’d feel if someone
sacked the city of Avornis. But you can set this to rights. Believe me,
you can. Most of the city is still standing, and most of the people are
still breathing. In five years or so, no one who comes here a stranger
will have any idea what Nishevatz went through.”
“Easy enough for you to say,” Beloyuz retorted, as Grus had to Hirundo.
“You are not the one who will have to rebuild this city.”
“No, not this city,” Grus replied. “But what do you think I’ll be doing
down in southern Avornis? The Menteshe have sacked a lot of towns there,
and what they’ve done to the farmlands makes the way we behaved here look
like a kiss on the cheek. You’re not the only one with worries like this,
Your Highness.”
Beloyuz grunted. He cared nothing for cities in southern Avornis. In
that, he was much like the late, not particularly lamented (at least by
Grus) Prince Vsevolod. He said, “And what of Durdevatz and Ravno? When
they see how weak we are, they will want to steal our lands.”
“Well, do you want me to leave an Avornan garrison behind?” Grus asked.
Beloyuz quickly shook his head. “I didn’t think so,” Grus told him. “If I
did leave one, people would say I wanted to steal your lands, and I
don’t.”
“Why did I let you talk me into being prince?” Beloyuz said.
“Someone has to. Who would be better? Vsevolod’s dead.” Grus wasn’t at
all convinced Vsevolod had been better, but passed over that in silence.
He pointed to Vasilko instead. “Him?” Beloyuz shook his head again. “Do
you have anyone else in mind?” Grus asked. Another headshake from the
Chernagor. Grus spread his hands. “Well, then, Your Highness—welcome to
the job.”
“I’ll try.” Beloyuz very visibly gathered himself. He might have been
taking the weight of the world on his shoulders. “Yes, I’ll try.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
King Lanius was gnawing the meat off a goose drumstick when he almost
choked. “Are you all right?” Sosia asked. “I think so,” he replied once he
could speak again. He tried to snap his fingers in annoyance, but they
were too greasy. Muttering, he wiped his hands on a napkin—he did remember
not to use the tablecloth, which would have been the style in his
grandfather’s day, or his own clothes, which would have been the style in
his grandfather’s grandfather’s day. He sipped from his wine cup—his voice
needed more lubricating even if his 6ngers didn’t. “The only problem is,
I’m an idiot.”
“Oh.” Sosia eyed him. “Well, I could have told you that.”
“Thank you, sweetheart.” Lanius gave her a seated bow. He waited.
Nothing more happened. He muttered again, then broke down and said,
“Aren’t you going to ask me why I’m an idiot?”
His wife shrugged. “I hadn’t intended to. But all right—how were you an
idiot this time?” Her tone said she knew how he’d been an idiot before,
and with which serving girls.
“It’s not like that.” Lanius hid his own smile. Sosia still hadn’t
found out about Flammea.
“In that case, maybe I really am interested,” Sosia said.
“Thank you,” Lanius repeated. By the elegant way she inclined her head,
her family might have been royal much longer than his. Now he did smile.
That struck him funny. Sosia laughed at him. In a couple of heartbeats, he
was laughing, too.
“Tell me,” the queen said.
“Do you remember the old parchments the envoy from Durdevatz brought me
as a gift when he came down here last summer?”
Sosia shrugged again. “I didn’t, not until you reminded me. Playing
around with those old things is your sport, not mine.” Quickly, she added,
“But its a better sport than playing around with young things, by the
gods.” Lanius made a face at her; he would have guessed she’d say that.
She made one right back at him. “What about these precious parchments,
then?”
“They may
be precious parchments, for all I know. I was so excited to get
them, and then I put them away to go through them in a little while . . .
and here it is more than a year later, and I haven’t done it. That’s why
I’m an idiot.”
“Oh.” Sosia thought that over, then shrugged. “Well, you’ve had reasons
for being one that I’ve liked less, I will say.”
“Yes, I thought you would.” Lanius made another face at her. She
laughed again, so she wasn’t too peeved. Sure enough, she hadn’t found out
about Flammea.
Lanius almost charged away from the supper table to look at the
documents from Durdevatz. He was halfway out of his seat before he
realized that would be rude. Besides, the light was beginning to fail, and
trying to read faded ink by lamplight was a lot less enjoyable than, say,
trying to seduce a maidservant. Tomorrow morning would do.
When the morning came, he found himself busy with moncats and monkeys
and a squabble between two nobles down in the south. He forgot the
parchments again, at least until noon. Then he went into the archives to
look at them. He was sure he remembered where they were, and he was
usually good about such things. Not this time. He confidently went to
where he thought he’d put the gift from Durdevatz, only to find the
parchments weren’t there. Some of the things he said then would have made
a guardsman blush, or more likely blanch.
Cursing didn’t help in any real way, even if it did make him feel
better. Once he stopped filling the air with sparks, he had to go poking
around if he wanted to find the missing parchments. They were bound to be
somewhere in the archives. No one would have stolen them. He was sure of
that. He was the only person in the city of Avornis who thought they were
worth anything.
If they weren’t where he thought he’d put them, where were they likely
to be? He looked around the hall, trying to think back more than a year.
He’d come in, he’d had the parchments in his hand . . . and what had he
done with them?
Good question. He wished he had a good answer for it.
After some more curses—these less spirited than the ones that had gone
before—he started looking. If he hadn’t put them where he thought, what
was the next most likely place?
He was on his way over to it when something interrupted him. Ancient
parchments—even ancient parchments from up in the Chernagor country—were
unlikely to say, “Mrowr?”
“Oh, by the gods!” Lanius threw his hands in the air and fought down a
strong urge to scream. “I haven’t got time to deal with you right now,
Pouncer!”
“Mrowr?” the moncat said again. It didn’t care where the king had put
the documents from Durdevatz. It had gotten out of its room again, and had
probably also paid a call on the kitchens. The cooks had stopped up the
one hole in the wall, but the moncat had found another. It
liked visiting the kitchens—all sorts of interesting things were
there. Who was going to deal with it if the king didn’t? Nobody, and
Lanius knew it only too well.
These days, though, he had a weapon he hadn’t used before. Because he’d
thought he knew where the parchments were, he was wearing a robe instead
of the grubby clothes he often put on to dig through the archives, but he
didn’t care. He lay down on the dusty floor and started thumping his chest
with his right hand.
“Mrowr!” Pouncer came running. Lanius had trained the moncat to know
what that sound meant—
if I get up onto him, he’ll give me something good to eat. That
was what Pouncer had to be thinking. The moncat was carrying a big, heavy
silver spoon. Sure enough, the archives hadn’t been its first stop on its
latest jaunt through the spaces between the palace’s walls.
“You’ve stolen something expensive this time. Congratulations,” Lanius
said, stroking Pouncer under the chin and by the whiskers. Pouncer closed
its eyes and stretched out its neck and rewarded him with a feline smile
and a deep, rumbling purr. The moncat didn’t even seem offended that he
hadn’t fed it anything.
He stood up, carefully cradling the animal in his arms. Pouncer kept
acting remarkably happy. Lanius carried the moncat out of the archives and
down the hall to the chamber where it lived—until it felt like escaping,
anyhow. Pouncer didn’t fuss until he took the silver spoon away from it.
Even then, it didn’t fuss too much. By now, it was used to and probably
resigned to his taking prizes away from it.
Once Pouncer was back with the other moncats, Lanius brought the spoon
to the kitchens. “You didn’t steal that yourself, Your Majesty!” Quiscula
exclaimed when she saw what he carried. “That miserable creature’s been
here again, and nobody even knew it.”
“Pouncer doesn’t think it’s a miserable creature,” Lanius told the
pudgy cook.
“Talented would probably be a better word.”
“Talented, foof!” Quiscula said. “Plenty of thieves on two legs are
talented, too, and what happens to them when they get caught? Not half
what they deserve, a lot of the time.”
“Thieves who go on two legs know the difference between right and
wrong,” Lanius said. “The moncat doesn’t.” He paused. “I don’t think it
does, anyhow.”
“A likely story,” Quiscula said. “It’s a wicked beast, and you can’t
tell me any different, so don’t waste your breath trying.”
“I wouldn’t think of it.” Lanius held out the spoon. “Here. Take charge
of this until Pouncer decides to steal it again.”
“Oh, you’re too generous to me, Your Majesty!” Quiscula played the
coquette so well, she and Lanius both started laughing. She accepted the
spoon from the king.
Lanius started back toward the archives, wondering if he would ever get
to look for those parchments. Everything seemed to be conspiring against
him. And everything, today, included Princess Limosa, who was carrying her
baby down the corridor. “Hello, Your Majesty,” Limosa said. “Isn’t Capella
the sweetest little thing you ever saw?”
“Well. . .” Lanius wondered how to answer that and stay truthful and
polite at the same time. Truth won. He said, “If you don’t count Crex and
Pitta, yes.”
Limosa stared at him, then giggled. “All right, that’s fair enough. Who
doesn’t think their children are the most wonderful ones in the
world?”
“I can’t think of anybody,” Lanius said. “That’s what keeps us from
feeding our children to the hunting hounds, I suppose.”
Limosa’s eyes got even wider than they had been before. She hugged
Capella a little tighter and hurried away as though she feared Lanius had
some dreadful, contagious disease. He wondered why. He hadn’t said he
wanted to feed Capella—or any other children—to hunting hounds. He sighed.
Some people just didn’t listen.
He’d just started searching through the spots likeliest to hold the
missing documents when somebody began banging on the door to the archives.
The king said something pungent. The servants knew they weren’t supposed
to do things like that. Bubulcus, the one who’d been most likely to
“forget” such warnings, was dead. Either someone was making a dreadful
mistake or something dreadful, something he really needed to know about,
had just happened. Adding a few more choice phrases under his breath, he
went to see who was bothering him in his sanctum.
“Sosia!” he said in astonishment. “What are you doing here? What’s
going on?”
“I was going to ask you the same question,” his wife answered. “What on
earth did you say to Limosa? Queen Quelea’s mercy, it’s frightened the
life out of her, whatever it was.”
“Oh, by the gods!” Lanius clapped a hand to his forehead in
exasperation altogether unfeigned. “She really
doesn’t listen.” He spelled out exactly what he’d said to
Limosa.
Even before he got halfway through, one of Sosia’s eyebrows started
climbing. Lanius had seen that expression more often on Grus than on his
wife. He liked it no better on her. Once he’d finished, she said, “Well, I
don’t blame Limosa a bit. Poor thing! Hunting dogs, indeed! You should be
ashamed of yourself.”
“You weren’t listening, either,” Lanius complained. “I didn’t say that
was what we did with children. I didn’t say it was what we should do. I
said it was what we would do if the people who had them didn’t think they
were wonderful. Don’t you see the difference?”
“What I see is that nobody’s got any business talking about feeding
babies to any hounds.” Sosia spoke with impressive certainty. “And that
goes double for talking about babies and hounds to somebody who’s just had
one. Had a baby, I mean.” She wagged a finger at him. “You’re not going to
make me sound foolish. This is important.”
“I wasn’t. This is already nothing but foolishness,” Lanius said.
“It certainly is—
your foolishness. Next time you see Limosa, you apologize to her,
do you hear me?” Sosia didn’t wait for an answer. She stared past Lanius
into the cavernous archives. “So this is where you spend all your time. I
feel as though I’m looking at the other woman.”
“Don’t be silly,” Lanius said, although that comparison made much more
sense to him than the other one had. “And I still don’t see why you want
me to apologize to Limosa when I didn’t say anything bad to begin
with.”
“Yes, you did. You’re just too—too logical to know it.” Sosia turned
her back and stalked off. Over her shoulder, she added, “And if you think
people run on logic all the time, you’d better think again.”
“I don’t think anything of the sort. People cured me of it a long time
ago,” Lanius said plaintively. Sosia didn’t even slow down. She went
around a corner and disappeared. The king almost chased after her to go on
explaining. But he realized—logically—that it wouldn’t do him any good,
and so he stayed where he was.
When he could no longer hear Sosia’s angry footsteps, he shut the door
to the archives once more. For good measure, he barred it behind him. Then
he went back to looking for the parchments from Durdevatz.
He searched on and off for four days, and finally found them by
accident. If he had told Sosia about that, she would either have laughed
at him or rolled her eyes in despair. He’d forgotten he’d put the
parchments in a stout wooden box to keep them safe. How many times had he
walked past it without paying it any mind? More than he wanted to think
about—he was sure of that. If he hadn’t barked his knuckles on a corner of
the box, he might never have found the documents at all.
That moment of sudden, unexpected pain made him take a long,
reproachful look at the box. When he recognized it, he still felt
reproachful—self-reproachful. After all that searching—and after its
ludicrous end—he was almost afraid to look at the parchments. If they
turned out to be worthless or dull, how could he stand it?
Of course, if he didn’t look at them, why had he gone to all the
trouble of finding them? After rubbing his hand, he carried the box over
to the table where he’d written most of
How to Be a King. When he opened the box, he started to laugh.
The Chernagors had made him happy with some of the cheapest presents ever
given to a King of Avornis—a pair of moncats, a pair of monkeys, and a
pile of documents dug out of a decrepit cathedral. For all he knew,
merchants in the north country laughed whenever they heard his name.
He didn’t care. Happiness and having enough money weren’t the same
thing. He’d been happy enough even at times when Grus squeezed him
hardest. That money and happiness weren’t the same thing didn’t mean
happiness had nothing to do with money. Lanius’ intuition, though, didn’t
reach that far.
The first few parchments he unrolled and read had to do with the
cathedral, not with anything that went on inside it. They included a
letter from the yellow-robed high-hallow then presiding in the building
asking a long-dead King of Avornis for funds to repair it and add to its
mosaic decoration. The letter had come to the capital and gone back to
what was then Argithea, not Durdevatz, with the king’s scribbled comment
and signature below it.
We are not made of silver, the sovereign had written.
If the projects are worthy, surely your townsfolk will support them.
If they are not, all the silver in the world will not make them
so.
Lanius studied that with considerable admiration, “I couldn’t have put
it better myself,” he murmured. He studied the response until he’d
memorized it. He could think of so many places to use it. ...
Other documents told him more about the history of Argithea than he’d
ever known before. Some of them talked about the Chernagors as sea
raiders. Up until then, he’d seen only a couple of parchments like that.
They proved Argithea hadn’t been the first town along the coast of the
Northern Sea to fall to the Chernagors. Lanius tried to remember whether
he’d known that before. Try as he would, he couldn’t be sure.
More appeals—for money and for aid—to the capital followed, from the
city governor and from the high-ranking priest at the cathedral. Only one
of them had any sort of reply.
A relieving force is on the way, the answer said.
Hold out until it arrives.
There were no more letters in Avornan after the date of that one. The
messenger bringing the answer must have managed to slip through the
besieging Chernagors; Lanius had read elsewhere that they hadn’t been
polished at the art of taking cities. Polished or not, though, they’d
surely taken Argithea before the promised relieving force arrived. They
must have kept the Avornans from recapturing the town, too. From then on,
the history of Argithea ended and that of Durdevatz began.
One parchment still sat at the bottom of the box. Lanius pulled it out
as much from a sense of duty as for any other reason. Since he was going
through the documents, he thought he ought to go through all of them. He
didn’t expect anything more interesting or exciting than what he’d already
found.
But the first sentence caught and held his eye.
I
wonder why I have written this, it said,
when no one is ever likely to read it, or to understand it if he
does. After that, he couldn’t have stopped reading for anything. The
author was a black-robed priest named Xenops. He had been consecrated the
year before the Chernagors took Argithea out of the Kingdom of Avornis,
and had stayed on at the cathedral under the town’s new masters for the
next fifty years and more.
“Olor’s beard!” Lanius whispered. “This shows how Durdevatz passed from
one world to the other.” He’d never imagined seeing such a document. In
their early years in these parts, the Chernagors hadn’t written in Avornan
or their own language or any other. And he had not thought any Avomans
left behind in the north had set down what they’d seen and heard and felt.
No such chronicles existed in the royal archives—he was sure of that. A
moment later, he shook his head. One did now.
Xenops had caught moments in the transition from the old way of life to
the new. He’d mocked the crude coins the Chernagors began to mint a
generation after the fall of Argithea.
Next to those of Avornis, they are ugly and irregular, he’d
written.
But new coins of Avornis come seldom if at all, while so many old ones
are hoarded against hard times. Even these ugly things may be better than
none.
Later, he’d noted the demise of Avornan in the market square.
Besides me, only a few old grannies use it as a birthspeech
nowadays, he said.
Some of the younger folk can speak it after a fashion, but they prefer
the conquerors’ barbarous jargon. Soon, only those who need Avornan in
trade will know it at all.
Once, earlier, some of the Avornans left in the city had plotted to
rejoin it to the kingdom from which it had been torn. The Chernagors
discovered the plot and bloodily put it down.
But none of them so much as looked toward me, Xenops wrote.
Had they done so, they might have been surprised. I have been for so
long invisible to the new lords of this town, though, that they cannot see
me at all. Well, I know their deeds, regardless of whether they know
mine.
That was interesting, to say the least. How deep in the conspiracy had
Xenops been? Had he quietly started it and managed to survive unnoticed
when it fell to pieces? The only evidence Lanius had—the only evidence he
would ever have—lay before him now, and the priest did not go into detail.
If someone had found and read his chronicle while he still lived in
Durdevatz, he had said enough to hang himself, so why not more? Lanius
knew he would never find out.
A chilling passage began,
He calls himself a spark from the Fallen Star. Xenops went on to
record how an emissary from the Banished One had come to Durdevatz even
that long ago. He’d made a mistake—he’d gotten angry when the Chernagors
didn’t fall down on their knees before him right away.
I
advised the lords of the Chernagors that such a one was not to be
trusted, as he had shown by his own speech and deeds, Xenops wrote.
They were persuaded, and sent him away unsuccessful.
How much did Avornis owe to this altogether unknown priest? If the
Chernagors had fallen under the sway of the Banished One centuries
earlier, how would the other city-states—how would Avornis— have fared?
Not well, not when Avornis might have been trapped between the Banished
Ones backers to north and south.
“Thank you, Xenops,” Lanius murmured. “You’ll get your due centuries
later than you should have, but you’ll have it.” He could think of several
passages in
How to Be a King he would need to revise.
At the end of the long roll of parchment, Xenops wrote,
Now, as I say, I am old. I have heard that the old always remember the
time of their youth as the sweet summer of the world. I dare say it is
true. But who could blame me for having that feeling myself? Before the
barbarians came, Argithea was part of a wider world. Now it is alone, and
I rarely hear what passes beyond its walls. The Chernagors do not even
keep its name, but use some vile appellation of their own. Their speech
drives out Avornan; even I have had to acquire it, however reluctantly I
cough out its gutturals. The tongue I learned in my cradle gutters toward
extinction. When I am gone—
which will not be long—
who here will know, much less care, what I have set down in this
scroll? No one, I fear me—
no one at all. If the gods be kind, let it pass through time until it
comes into the hands of someone who will care for it in the reading as I
have in the writing. King Olor, Queen Quelea, grant this your servants
final prayer.
Tears stung Lanius’ eyes. “The gods heard you,” he whispered, though
Xenops, of course, could not hear him. But how many centuries had Olor and
Quelea taken to deliver the priest’s manuscript into the hands of someone
who could appreciate it as it deserved? If they were going to answer
Xenops’ last request, couldn’t they have done it sooner? Evidently
not.
Was a prayer answered centuries after it was made truly answered at
all? In one sense, Lanius supposed so. But the way the gods had chosen to
respond did poor Xenops no good at all.
Lanius looked again at the long-dead priest’s closing words. No, Xenops
hadn’t expected anyone in his lifetime could make sense of what he’d
written. He’d merely hoped someone would someday. On reflection, the gods
had given him what he’d asked for. Even so, Lanius would have
been surprised if Xenops had thought his chronicle would have to wait so
very long to find an audience.
But then, for all Xenops knew, the scroll might have stayed unread
until time had its way with it. The priest must have thought that likely,
as a matter of fact, for Avornan was a dying language in the town that had
become Durdevatz. And, except among traders who used it for dealing with
the Avornans farther south but not among themselves, it had died there.
Yes, its getting here
was a miracle, even if a slow one.
“A slow miracle.” Lanius spoke the words aloud, liking the way they
felt in his mouth. But the Banished One could also work what men called
miracles when he intervened in the world’s affairs, and he didn’t wait
centuries to do it. There were times when he waited, and wasted, not a
moment.
The gods had exiled him to the material world. In a way, that made it
his. Could they really do much to counter his grip on things
here? If they couldn’t, who could? Ordinary people? He had far more power
than they did, as Lanius knew all too well. Yet somehow the Banished One
had failed to sweep everything before him. Maybe that was a portent. Maybe
it just meant the Banished One hadn’t triumphed. Time was on his
side.
But he still feared Lanius and Grus and Pterocles—and Alca as well, the
king remembered. Lanius only wished he knew what he could do to deserve
even more of the Banished One’s distrust.
For a while, nothing occurred to him. Having the exiled god notice him
at all was something of a compliment, even if one that he could often do
without. Then Lanius nodded to himself. If he—or rather, if Avornis’
wizards—could begin liberating thralls in large numbers, the Banished One
would surely pay heed.
What would he do then? Lanius didn’t know. He couldn’t begin to guess.
One thing he did know, though, was that he would dearly love to find
out.
Hisardzik sat at the end of a long spit of land jutting out into the
Northern Sea. Besieging Nishevatz had been anything but easy. Besieging
this Chernagor city-state would have been harder still, for the defenders
had to hold only a short length of wall against their foes. King Grus, a
longtime naval officer, knew he could have made the Chernagors’ work more
difficult with a fleet, but they had a fleet of their own. Their ships
were tied up at quays beyond the reach of any catapult.
Fortunately, however, it did not look as though it would come to
fighting. Prince Lazutin, the lord of Hisardzik, not only spoke to Grus
from the wall of his city, he came forth from a postern gate to meet the
King of Avornis. Lazutin was in his midthirties, slim by Chernagor
standards, with a sharp nose and clever, foxy features. He denied speaking
Avornan, and brought along an interpreter. Grus suspected he knew more
than he let on, for he listened with alert attention whenever any Avornan
spoke around him.
Grus did his best to sound severe, saying, “You fell into bad company,
Your Highness, when you chose Vasilko’s side.”
Lazutin spoke volubly in the Chernagor tongue after that was translated
for him. The interpreter, a pudgy man named Sverki, said, “He says, Your
Majesty, it was one of those things. It was political. It was not
personal.”
“Men who get killed die just as dead either way,” Grus said.
“You have shown you are stronger than Vasilko,” Lazutin said. Sverki
did such a good job of echoing his master’s inflections, Grus soon forgot
he was there. Through him, the Prince of Hisardzik went on, “You have
shown the gods in the heavens are stronger than the Banished One. This
also is worth knowing.”
Grus had an Avornan who understood the Chernagor speech listening to
the conversation to make sure Sverki did not twist what Lazutin said or
what Grus himself said to Lazutin. The king glanced over to him now. The
Avornan nodded, which meant Lazutin really had spoken of the Banished One,
and not of the Fallen Star. Grus took that for a good sign.
He said, “You should have known that anyhow, Your Highness.”
Prince Lazutin shrugged delicately. “Some things are more readily
accepted with proof. A man may say this or that, but what he says and what
is are often not the same. Or have you found otherwise?” He arched an
eyebrow, as though daring Grus to tell him he had.
And Grus couldn’t, and knew it. “We are not dealing with men here,” he
said. “We are dealing with those who are more than men.”
“The same also applies,” Lazutin answered. “It applies even more, I
would say, for those who are more than men make claims that are more than
claims, if you take my meaning. The only way to be sure who is believable
is to see who prevails when one is measured against another.” Here’s a cool customer, Grus thought. “And now you have seen?”
he asked.
“Oh, yes. Now I have seen.” Even speaking a language Grus didn’t
understand, Prince Lazutin fairly radiated sincerity.
In light of the games Lazutin had played, that made Grus less inclined
to trust him, not more. “Since you’ve seen, what do you propose to do
about it?” the king said.
“Ah ... do about it?” If doing anything about it had occurred to the
Prince of Hisardzik, he concealed it very well.
But Grus nodded. “Yes, do about it. Ships from Hisardzik raided the
coast of Avornis. Hisardzik sided with Vasilko and against me. Do you
think you can get away with that and not pay a price?”
By the look on Lazutin’s face, he’d thought exactly that. He didn’t
much take to the idea of discovering he might be mistaken, either. “If you
think you can take my city as you took Nishevatz, Your Majesty, you had
better think again.”
“Not this late in the year, certainly, Your Highness,” Grus replied in
silky tones, and Lazutin looked smug. But then Grus went on, “But if I
turned my men loose and did a proper job of ravaging your fields, you
would have a lean time of it this winter.”
By the way Prince Lazutin bared his teeth, that had hit home. “You
might tempt me to go back to the Banished One, you know,” he observed.
Yes, he was a cool customer. “I’ll take the chance,” Grus said, “for
you’ve seen the true gods are stronger. You would do better to show you
are sorry because you made a mistake before than you would to go back to
it.”
“Would I?” Lazutin said bleakly. Grus nodded. The Prince of Hisardzik
scowled at him. “How sorry would you expect me to show I am?”
“Fifty thousand pieces of silver, or the equivalent weight,” Grus
answered, “and another fifty thousand a year for the next ten years.”
Lazutin turned purple. He said several things in the Chernagor language
that Sverki didn’t translate. The Avornan who spoke the northern tongue
stirred, but Grus declined to look his way. Finally, through Sverki,
Lazutin sputtered, “This is an outrage! A robbery!”
“I’d sooner think of it as paying for the damage your pirates did, with
interest to remind you those games can be expensive,” Grus said.
Lazutin promptly proved he was a prince of merchants and a merchant
prince—he started haggling with Grus over how much he would have to pay
and for how long. Grus let him dicker the settlement down to a first
payment of forty thousand plus thirty-five thousand a year for eight
years. He was willing not to take all of Lazutin’s pride. This way, the
prince could go back to his people and tell them he’d gotten something
from the hard-hearted King of Avornis.
Grus did say, “We’ll leave your lands as soon as we receive the first
payment.”
“Why am I not surprised?” Lazutin said. After a moment, he chuckled
ruefully. “You’re wasted on the Avornans, Your Majesty. Do you know that?
You should have been born a Chernagor.”
“A pleasant compliment,” said Grus, who supposed Lazutin had meant it
that way. “I am what I am, though.”
And what I am right now is the fellow holding the whip hand.
“So you are,” Lazutin said sourly. “What you are now is a nuisance to
Hisardsik.”
“What you were before was a nuisance to Avornis,” Grus replied. “Do you
think the one has nothing to do with the other?”
Prince Lazutin plainly thought just that. Why shouldn’t he have been
able to do as he pleased without worrying about consequences? What pirate
ever needed to have such worries? After he sailed away, what could the
folk whose coasts he had raided do? Here, it turned out the Avornans could
do more than he had dreamed.
“The sooner we have the payment, the sooner we’ll leave your land,”
Grus said pointedly, “and the sooner you can start the harvest.”
Fury filled Lazutin’s face. But it was impotent fury, for his warriors
were shut up inside Hisardzik. They could stand siege, yes, but they could
not break out. If Grus felt like burning the countryside instead of trying
to break into the city, what could they do about it? Nothing, as their
prince knew.
“You’ll have it,” Lazutin said. Then he turned his back and stalked off
to Hisardzik. Sverki the interpreter stalked after him, mimicking his walk
as expertly as he had conveyed his tone.
“He doesn’t love you. He’s not going to, either,” Hirundo said.
“I don’t care if he loves me or not,” Grus said. “I want him to take me
seriously. By Olor’s beard, he’ll do that from now on.”
“Oh, darling!” The general sounded like a breathless young girl. “Tell
me you—you take me seriously!”
Grus couldn’t take him seriously. Laughing, he made as though to throw
something at him. Hirundo ducked. “Miserable troublemaker,” Grus said. By
the way Hirundo bowed, it might have been highest praise.
But Grus stopped laughing when he read the letter from King Lanius
that had caught up with his army on the march between Nishevatz and
Hisardzik. Lanius sounded as dispassionate as any man could about what had
happened between Ortalis and Bubulcus. However dispassionate he sounded,
that made the servant no less dead. The penalty Lanius had imposed on
Ortalis struck Grus as adequate, but only barely.
After rereading Lanius’ letter several times, Grus sighed. Yes, Ortalis
had been provoked. But striking a man in a fit of fury and killing one
were far different things. Ortalis had always had a temper. Every so
often, it got away from him. This time, he’d done something
irrevocable. What am I going to do with him? Grus wondered. For a long
time, he’d thought Ortalis would outgrow his vicious streak, and ignored
it. That hadn’t worked. Then he’d tried to punish his son harshly enough
to drive it out of him, and that hadn’t worked, either. What was left? The
only thing he could see was accepting that Ortalis was as he was and
trying to minimize the damage he did.
“A fine thing for my son,” Grus muttered.
When Grus took the Avornan throne, he had assumed Ortalis would succeed
him on it, with Lanius remaining in the background to give the new rulers
a whiff of respectability. What else was a legitimate son for? But he’d
begun to wonder some time before. His son-in-law seemed more capable than
he had expected, and Ortalis . . . Ortalis kept doing things where damage
needed minimizing.
He read Lanius’ letter one more time. The king from the ancient dynasty
really had done as much as he could. If his account was to be believed,
the servants despised Ortalis now only a little more than they had before.
Considering what might have been, that amounted to a triumph of sorts.
Grus hadn’t imagined he could feel a certain debt toward his son-in-law,
but he did.
Prince Lazutin made the payment of forty thousand pieces of silver the
day after he agreed to it with Grus. The prince did not accompany the men
bringing out the sacks of silver coins. The interpreter, Sverki, did.
“Tell His Highness I thank him for this,” Grus said (after he’d had a few
of the sacks opened to make sure they really did hold silver and not, say,
scrap iron).
“You are most welcome, I am sure,” Sverki said, sounding and acting
like Lazutin even when the Prince of Hisardzik wasn’t there.
“I look forward to receiving the rest of the payments, too,” Grus
said.
“I am sure you do,” Sverki replied. Something in his tone made Grus
look up sharply. He sounded and acted a little too much like Lazutin,
perhaps. If the interpreter here was any guide to what the prince felt,
Grus got the idea he would be wise not to hold his breath waiting for
future payments to come down to the city of Avornis.
What could he do about that? He said, “If the payments do not come,
Hisardzik will not trade with Avornis, and we may call on you up here
again. Make sure your principal understands that.”
Sverki looked as mutinous as Lazutin would have, too. “I will,” he said
sulkily. Grus hid a smile. He’d gotten his message across.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
Lanius stared at Otus’ guardsman. “You’re joking,” he said. “By the
gods, Your Majesty, I’m not,” the soldier replied. “He’s sweet on Calypte.
Can’t argue with his taste, either. Nice-looking girl.”
“Yes.” Lanius had noticed her once or twice himself. That the thrall’s
eye—the ex-thrall’s eye—might fall on her had never crossed his mind. He
said, “But Otus has a woman down south of the Stura.”
The guardsman shrugged. “I don’t know anything about that. But even if
he does, it wouldn’t be the first time a fellow far from home finds
himself a new friend.”
“True.” Lanius had found himself a few new friends without going far
from home. He asked, “Does Calypte realize this? If she does, what does
she think?”
“She thinks he’s sweet.” By the way the guard said the word, he might
have been giving an exact quote. “Most of the serving girls in the palace
think Otus is sweet, I suppose on account of he looks but doesn’t touch
very much.”
“Is that what it is?” Lanius said.
“Part of it, anyway, I expect,” the guard answered. “Me, I feel ‘em
when I feel like it. Sometimes they hit me, sometimes they enjoy it. You
roll the dice and you see what happens.”
“Do you?” Lanius murmured. He’d never been that cavalier. He could have
been. How many women would haul off and hit the King of Avornis? He
shrugged. Most of the time, he hadn’t tried to find out. “How serious is
Otus?” he asked now. “Is he like a mooncalf youth? Does he just want to go
to bed with her? Or is he after something more? If he is, could she
be?”
With a laugh, the guard said, “By the gods, Your Majesty, you sure ask
a lot of questions, don’t you?”
“Why, of course,” Lanius answered in some surprise. “How would I find
out if I didn’t?” That was another question. Before Otus’ guard could
realize as much, the king said, “Take me to him. I’ll see what he has to
say.”
“Come along with me, then, Your Majesty,” the guard said.
When Lanius walked into Otus’ little room, the ex-thrall bowed low.
“Hello, Your Majesty,” he said. “How are you today?” He was scrupulously
polite. Only that lingering old-fashioned southern accent spoke of his
origins. “What can I do for you?”
“I’m fine, thanks,” Lanius replied. “I came by because I wondered how
you were getting along.”
“Me? Well enough.” Otus laughed. “I’ve got plenty to eat. No one has
given me much work to do. I even get to be clean. I remember what things
were like on the other side of the river. Most ways, I’m as happy as a cow
in clover.”
“Most ways?” There was the opening Lanius had been looking for. “How
aren’t you happy? How can we make you happy?”
“Well, there is a girl here I’ve set my eye on.” Otus was very direct.
Maybe that sprang from his years as a thrall, when he couldn’t have hidden
anything and didn’t have anything worth hiding. Or maybe it was simply
part of his nature. Lanius didn’t care to guess. Otus went on, “I don’t
know if she wants anything to do with me.” He sighed. “If I had my own
woman here—if she was cured, I mean—I wouldn’t look twice at anybody else,
but I’m lonesome.”
“I understand,” Lanius said. “Have you tried finding out what this girl
thinks of you?”
“Oh, yes.” The ex-thrall nodded. “But it’s hard to tell, if you know
what I mean. She doesn’t come right out and say what she wants. She makes
me guess.” He sent Lanius a wide-eyed, guileless smile. “Is this what it’s
like when everybody is awake inside all the time?”
“It can be,” Lanius said. “Are things more complicated than you’re used
to?”
“Complicated! That’s the word!” Otus nodded again, more emphatically
this rime. “I should say so! What can I do?”
“Keep trying to find out. That’s about all I can tell you,” Lanius
answered. “No, one thing more—I hope you have good luck.”
“Thank you, Your Majesty.” Suddenly, Otus looked sly. “Can I tell her
you hope I have good luck? If she hears that, maybe it will help me have
the luck I want to have.”
Lanius said, “You can if you want to. I hope it does.” When he left the
ex-thrall’s chamber, he told the guards, “If he needs privacy, give him
enough. Make sure he can’t go wandering through the palace without being
watched—that, yes. But you don’t need to stay in the same room with
him.”
The guards smiled and nodded. One of them said, “Curse me if I’d want
company then—except the girl, of course.”
“Yes. Except the girl. That’s what I meant,” the king said.
“Are you sure it’s safe, Your Majesty?” a guardsman asked.
“No, I’m not sure,” Lanius answered. “But I think so. Pterocles likely
did cure him of being a thrall. And if the wizard didn’t, I
expect the lot of you will be able to keep Otus from doing too much
harm.”
The soldiers nodded. By their confidence, they expected the same thing.
The man who’d first spoken with the king grinned and said, “There’s one
thing more. We know Otus wants to be alone with Calypte, not if she wants
to be alone with him.”
“True enough. We don’t,” Lanius said. “But I’ll tell you this much— I
think Otus has earned the chance to find out. Don’t you?” The guardsmen
looked at one another as they considered. Then, in better unison than
they’d shown a moment earlier, they nodded once more.
King Grus had overthrown Prince Vasilko and reverence for the Banished
One in Nishevatz. He’d persuaded Prince Lazutin in Hisardzik that backing
the Banished One and joining in attacks against Avornis wasn’t the
smartest thing Lazutin could have done—persuaded him expensively, a way a
man who was a merchant when he couldn’t get away with piracy would
remember. Now Grus led the Avornan army east toward Jobuka, which had also
joined in raids along the Avornan coast. He wanted all the Chernagors to
learn they could not hairy their southern neighbor with impunity.
As the army moved east, Grus kept a wary eye on the weather and on the
crops ripening in the fields. When the harvest was done, the army wouldn’t
be able to live off the land anymore and he would have to go home, and he
wanted to remind not only Jobuka but also Hrvace, which lay farther east
still, of his existence.
Ravno, which ruled the land between Hisardzik and Jobuka, was
unfriendly to both of them, and had not sent ships to join the raiders
who’d ravaged the eastern coast of Avornis. Grus ordered his men not to
plunder the countryside as they traveled through Ravno’s territory. In
gratitude, Prince Osen, who ruled the city-state, sent supply wagons to
the Avornan army. Along with the wagons still coming up from Avornis
itself, they kept Grus’ men well supplied with grain.
“I know what we ought to do,” Hirundo said as the army encamped one
evening. The setting sun streaked his gilded helmet and mailshirt with
blood. “We ought to set up as bakers.”
“As bakers?” Grus echoed, eyeing the grizzled streaks in the general’s
beard. They’d both been young officers when they first met, Hirundo the
younger. Hirundo was still younger than Grus, of course, but neither of
them was a young man anymore.
Where did all the years go? Grus wondered. Wherever they were, he
wouldn’t get them back.
Hirundo, meanwhile, bubbled with enthusiasm. “Yes, bakers, by Olor’s
beard. We’ve got all this wheat. We can bake bread and sell it cheaper
than anybody in the Chernagor city-states. We’ll outdicker all the
merchants, leave ‘em gnashing their teeth, and go home rich.” He beamed at
Grus.
Grus smiled back. You couldn’t help smiling when Hirundo beamed. “Do
you know what?” Grus said. Still beaming, Hirundo shook his head. “You’re
out of your mind,” Grus told him.
With a bow, the general said, “Why, thank you very much, Your Majesty.”
Grus threw his hands in the air. Some days, you were going to lose if you
argued with Hirundo.
Jobuka wasn’t as strongly situated as either Nishevatz or Hisardzik. To
make up for that, the Avornans who’d built the town and the Chernagors
who’d held it for centuries had lavished endless ingenuity on its walls. A
wide, fetid moat kept would-be attackers from even reaching those walls
until they had drained it, and the defenders could punish them while they
were working on that. Grus would not have wanted to try to storm the
town.
But, as at Hisardzik, he didn’t have to. He needed to appear, to scare
the city-state’s army inside the walls, and then to position himself to
devastate the countryside if Prince Gleb paid him no attention. That all
proved surprisingly easy. If the Chernagors didn’t care to meet his men in
the open field—and they made it very plain they didn’t—what choice did
they have but falling back into their fortress? None Grus could see. And
once they did fall back, that left the countryside wide open.
Instead of starting to burn and plunder right away, Grus sent a man
under a flag of truce up to the moat—the drawbridge over it that led to
the main gate had been raised. The herald bawled out that Grus wanted to
speak with Prince Gleb, who led Jobuka, and that he wouldn’t stay patient
forever if Gleb chose not to speak to him. That done, the Avornan tramped
back to the army.
Gleb came out the next day, also under a flag of truce. He didn’t lower
the drawbridge, but emerged from a postern gate and crossed the moat in a
small boat. One guard accompanied him. “He is a symbol only,” the Prince
of Jobuka said in good Avornan. “I know I could not bring enough men to
keep me safe in your midst.”
“He is welcome, as you are welcome,” Grus replied, trying to size Gleb
up. The prince was older than Lazutin, older than Vasilko—
not as old as I am, Grus thought sadly. Gleb looked much more
ordinary than the clever, saturnine Lazutin. His beard needing combing and
his nose, though large, had no particular shape. His eyebrows were dark
and luxuriant.
He brought them down into a frown now. “What are you doing on my land?”
he demanded. “You have no business here, curse it.”
“What were your ships doing raiding my coast a few years ago?” Grus
asked in turn.
“That’s different,” Gleb said.
“Yes, it is, by the gods, and I know how,” Grus said. “The difference
is, you never thought I’d come here to pay you back.”
Gleb scowled. He didn’t try to deny it, from which Grus concluded that
he couldn’t. All he said was, “Well, now that you
are here, what do I have to do to get rid of you?”
“Wait.” Grus held up a hand. “Don’t go so fast. We’re not done with
this bit yet. What were your men doing helping Vasilko against Prince
Vsevolod? What were they doing helping the Banished One against the gods
in the heavens? Do you still bend the knee to the Banished One, Your
Highness?”
“I never did.” Gleb sounded indignant.
“No? Then what were you doing helping Vasilko? I already asked you
once, and you didn’t answer.”
“What was I doing? You Avornans invaded the land of the Chernagors.
What was I supposed to do, let you have your way here? If I could hurt
you, I would.”
Now Grus was the one who scowled. He’d had Chernagors tell him that
before. He could understand it, even believe it. But it also made such a
handy excuse. “And you’re telling me you had no idea Vasilko had abandoned
the gods in the heavens, and that the Banished One backed him? Do you
expect me to believe you?”
“I don’t care what you believe,” Gleb said.
“No?” Grus said. “Are you sure of that? Are you very sure? Because if
you are, I
am going to ravage your countryside. Being a friend to other
Chernagors is one thing. Being a friend to the Banished One is something
else again.”
Prince Gleb opened his mouth. Then he closed it again without saying
anything. After an obvious pause for thought, he tried again. “I told you
once, I do not worship the Banished One. I give reverence to King Olor and
Queen Quelea and the rest of the gods in the heavens. I always have. So
have my people.”
Maybe he was telling the truth. Maybe. Grus said, “Whether that’s so or
not, you are still going to pay for raiding our coasts. You don’t care for
Avornis in the Chernagor country. We don’t like Chernagors plundering
Avornis.”
Again, Gleb started to speak. Grus could make a good guess about what
he was going to say—something like,
Well, what makes you any better than we are? But the answer to
that was so obvious, Gleb again fell silent. An Avornan army camped
outside of Jobuka gave Grus a potent argument. The Chernagor prince’s sour
stare said he knew as much. Sullenly, he asked, “How much are you going to
squeeze out of me?”
Grus told him the same thing as he’d told Prince Lazutin. He wondered
how Gleb would go about haggling. The only thing he was sure of was that
Gleb would.
Sure enough, the Prince of Jobuka exclaimed, “Letting you loose on the
countryside would be cheaper!”
“Well, that can be arranged, Your Highness,” Grus said with a bow. He
called for Hirundo. When the general arrived, the king said, “If you’d be
kind enough to give the orders turning our soldiers loose . . .”
“Certainly, Your Majesty.” Hirundo turned to leave once more. Where
Prince Gleb could see him, he was all brisk business.
He’d taken only a couple of steps before Gleb said, “Wait!” Hirundo
paused, looking back toward the king.
“Why should he wait?” Grus asked. “You told us what your choice was,
Your Highness. We’re willing to give you what you say you want. Carry on,
Hirundo.”
“Wait!” Gleb said again, more urgently—almost frantically—this time.
Again, Hirundo paused. Grus waved him on. Prince Gleb threw his hands in
the air. “Stop, curse you! I was wrong. I’d rather pay.”
“The full sum?” Grus demanded. Now that he had Gleb over a barrel—one
the Prince of Jobuka had brought out himself and then fallen over—he
intended to take full advantage of it.
“Yes, the full sum,” Gleb said. “Just leave the crops alone!”
What did that say? That his storehouses were almost empty? Grus
wouldn’t have been surprised. “Bring out the silver by this hour
tomorrow,” the king told Gleb. “Otherwise . . .”
“I understood you,” Gleb said sourly. “You don’t need to worry about
that, Your Majesty. I understood you very well.”
Having made the promise to pay, he kept it. Grus checked the silver
even more closely than he had the money he’d gotten from Prince Lazutin.
All of it proved good. He doubted any of the Chernagors would pay when he
didn’t have an army at their doorstep, but he didn’t intend to lose a lot
of sleep over it. He’d squeezed them plenty hard as things were. He left
the encampment near the formidable walls of Jobuka and marched his army
south.
“Are we heading for home, Your Majesty?” Hirundo asked in some
surprise. “I thought we’d pay a call on Hrvace, too.”
“We will,” Grus said.
“But. . .” Hirundo pointed west. “It’s that way.”
“Thank you so very much,” Grus said, and the general winced. The king
went on, “Before I turn west, I want to get Jobuka under the horizon. If
Gleb sees me going that way, he’s liable to send a ship to Hrvace. It,
could get there before we do, and that could let Prince Tvorimir set up an
ambush.”
Hirundo bowed in the saddle. “Well, I can’t very well tell you you’re
wrong, because you’re right. The only thing I will say is, Gleb’s liable
to send that ship anyway. We ought to be ready for trouble.”
“So we should,” Grus said. “I trust you’ll make sure we are?”
“You’re a trusting soul, aren’t you?” the general replied.
King Grus laughed out loud at that. Maybe some Kings of Avornis had
been trusting souls. Lanius was a dedicated antiquarian. He might know of
one or two. Grus couldn’t think of any. If a trusting soul had somehow
mounted the Avornan throne, he wouldn’t have lasted long.
Lanius knew he went to the archives like a lover to his beloved—the
figure of speech Sosia had used held some truth. He would never have used
it around her himself. It was too likely to stir up her suspicions.
Working on
How to Be a King gave him a perfect excuse for poking through
ancient documents. He laughed at himself.
Oh, yes, I really need an excuse to get dusty.
He was looking for documents dealing with Thervingia during his fathers
reign and the early years of his own—the days when King Dagipert had ruled
the kingdom to the west, and when Dagipert had threatened to rule Avornis
as well. For the moment, Lanius wrote,
Avornans do not often think of Thervingia. It is a quiet, peaceful
land, not one to cause trouble or alarm here. But this has not always been
so, nor is there any guarantee that it shall always be so. Time may reveal
Thervingia once more as a frightful danger. This being so, my beloved son,
you should know as much as possible about the bygone days when Thervingia
threatened our very dynasty.
To Crex, those days would seem as distant as the time before the
Menteshe seized the Scepter of Mercy. They were beyond his memory, and all
times before one’s own memory ran together. But Lanius remembered them
well, and hoped to give his son some hints about how to deal with
Thervingia if it turned troublesome again.
Knowing how to deal with the Thervings meant knowing how Avornis had
dealt with them in days gone by. So Lanius told himself, anyhow. It gave
him a splendid excuse for going through the archives and reading old
parchments.
How
had his father and Grus dealt with Dagipert? Carefully, it
seemed. Reading the letters Mergus and Grus and Arch-Hallow Bucco had
exchanged with the King of Thervingia, it struck Lanius that Dagipert had
had the upper hand more often than not. That wasn’t the way Lanius
remembered things, but he’d been young and hadn’t been encouraged to worry
about affairs of state. He’d assumed everything was all right, and in the
end he hadn’t been wrong. But the road to the end had been rockier than he
realized.
He started to write advice for how to deal with the Thervings when they
had a strong king, then realized that was foolish. When Thervingia had a
weak king, it wasn’t dangerous to Avornis. He was glad he’d avoided making
a fresh muddle in the text. One of these days, a secretary would make a
fair copy of this manuscript so Crex—and maybe others who came after
Crex—could read it. Even without a new muddle, Lanius pitied that
secretary. His own script was spidery, and the manuscript marred by
scratch-outs, arrows sending what was written here to be placed there,
words and sometimes sentences squeezed in between lines, and every other
flaw that annoyed him when someone else committed it.
After putting down on parchment what was, in his judgment, the best way
to keep Thervingia from causing trouble, he read over what he had written.
If someone who really faced trouble from the Thervings read this, would it
do him any good? Lanius found himself shrugging. He really didn’t know. He
didn’t suppose it would hurt. That would have to do.
When he left the archives, he went to the moncats’ room. Several of the
beasts came up to him in search of handouts. Like any cats, they liked him
better when he had presents than when he didn’t. “Sorry,” he said. “I
didn’t stop in the kitchens.”
They kept sending him slit-eyed, reproachful stares. He perched on a
stool and watched them. After a little while, they seemed to forget he was
there, and went back to scrambling on their framework of boards and
branches, to eating from the bowls of meat that were always there for
them, and to snuggling up not far from the braziers that kept their
chamber warm. They were less sensitive to cold than his mustachioed
monkeys, but they still enjoyed the heat from the braziers. He paid more
attention to the moncats than to the monkeys these days, probably because
the moncats got into more mischief.
He looked around for Pouncer. He at least half expected not to find the
moncat. Would it be off in the kitchen stealing spoons, or had it gone off
to the archives to hunt mice while he came here? But no, Pouncer lolled by
a brazier, not quite asleep but not inclined to do much more than loll,
either.
“You are a nuisance,” Lanius told the moncat. “You’re worse than a
nuisance—you’re a pest.”
Praise of that sort seemed to be what Pouncer wanted most. The moncat
rolled and stretched, all without going any farther from the warmth.
Lanius laughed. Pouncer would be charming for as long as it cared to be,
and not a heartbeat longer. Then it would go back to being a pest
again.
He watched Pouncer. Pouncer watched him. After watching for a while,
Pouncer decided it didn’t want to stay by the brazier anymore. It
scrambled up the framework of boards and branches Lanius had had made so
the moncats could feel more as though they were living in the forest. Two
other moncats higher up on the framework squared off against each other,
snarling and hissing. As usually happened, one of them intimidated the
other, which backed down. Sometimes, though, they would fight.
When Lanius looked back to see what Pouncer was up to, he frowned and
scratched his head. Where was the moncat?-He couldn’t find it.
He looked up and down the frame. He looked back toward the brazier. He
looked all around the moncats’ chamber. Then, for good measure, he looked
again. He rubbed his eyes and looked for a third time.
Pouncer had disappeared.
Lanius got up and examined the part of the frame where Pouncer had been
the last time he paid any attention to the moncat. He also examined the
wall behind the frame. It looked like the brickwork that made up much of
the rest of the palace. As far as the king could tell, Pouncer might have
dug a hole, jumped into it, and pulled the hole in after itself. How long did I take my eye off Pouncer to watch the other
beasts? Lanius wondered. Half a minute? A minute? Maybe even a minute
and a half? No more than that, surely. How far could an unwatched moncat
go in, at most, a minute and a half?
Far enough, evidently.
“Cursed thing,” Lanius said. If he had been paying attention, he would
finally have found out Pouncer’s secret. Instead, the moncat had
outsmarted him. He could almost hear Bubulcus’ mocking voice.
Which is hardly a surprise to anyone who knows them both, the
servant would say.
But Bubulcus was dead. Remembering that brought Lanius up as sharply as
seeing—or rather, not seeing—Pouncer vanish. The servant had mocked once
too often, and paid too high a price.
Where was Pouncer now? Somewhere in the spaces between the walls,
heading for—where? The kitchens? The archives? Someplace else, a spot
known only to the moncat? How did the beast find its way in what had to be
absolute darkness? Smell? Hearing? Touch?
Those were all wonderful questions. Lanius had less trouble coming up
with them than he’d had finding questions to answer for
How to Be a King. He’d replied to those questions. These? No.
Staying here until Pouncer reappeared might give him at least some of
the answers he wanted so badly. Of course, the moncat, left to its own
devices, might not come back for days—might not, in fact, come back at
all. Put a servant in here to watch? Keep sending in servants in shirts
until Pouncer returned? Lanius shook his head. Opening and closing the
door so often would only give the rest of the moncats chances to escape.
And how much attention would servants pay if they did come in and watch?
Not enough, probably.
What to do, then? Lanius let out a few soft curses, just enough to make
some of the moncats look his way again. This was one of the rare times
when he wished he took the field. He was convinced the curses of fighting
soldiers had an unmatched sonorous magnificence.
As things were, once he got done swearing the best thing he could think
to do was leave the moncats’ room. Sooner or later, Pouncer would turn up
somewhere. Then the beast would go back in here . . . and then, sooner or
later, it would escape again. And maybe, with a little luck, I’ll get to see it escaping next
time, Lanius thought.
The road to Hrvace, the easternmost of the Chernagor city-states that
had joined Nishevatz in harrying Avornis, would have been as good as any
Grus had seen in the north country. He wouldn’t have had to worry about
ambushes or anything else while traveling it. It would have been, if a
driving rainstorm from off the Northern Sea hadn’t turned it into a
bottomless ribbon of mud. As things were, horses sank to their bellies,
wagons to their hubs or deeper. Moving forward at all became a desperate
struggle. Moving forward in a hurry—the very idea was laughable.
But Grus knew he had to move forward in a hurry if he wanted to punish
Hrvace for what it had done. That same rain was ruining the last of the
harvest hereabouts. Living off the land wouldn’t be easy. Living off the
land would, in fact, be just as hard as moving forward in a hurry.
“We have to,” Grus said.
“Your Majesty, I don’t work miracles,” Hirundo replied, more than a
little testily. “And if my horse goes down into the mud all the way to its
nose so it drowns, I won’t go forward one bit, let alone fast.” “You don’t work miracles,” Grus said. He raised his voice and
shouted for Pterocles. The rain drowned his voice as effectively as mud
would have drowned Hirundo’s horse. He shouted again, louder.
Eventually, Pterocles heard him. Even more eventually, the wizard
fought his way to the king’s side. “What do you need, Your Majesty?”
Pterocles asked.
Grus looked up into the weeping heavens, and got a faceful of rain for
doing it. “Can you make this stop?” he inquired.
Pterocles shook his head. Water dripped from the end of his nose and
from his beard. “Not me, Your Majesty, and any other wizard who says he
can is lying through his teeth. Wizards aren’t weatherworkers. Men aren’t
strong enough to do anything about rain or wind or sun. The Banished One
could, but I don’t suppose you’d want to ask him.”
“No,” Grus said. “I don’t suppose I would. Is he aiming this weather at
us, or is it just a storm?”
“I think it’s just a storm,” Pterocles replied. “It doesn’t feel like
anything but natural weather.”
“All right,” Grus said, though it wasn’t. He murmured a prayer to the
gods in the heavens. They surely had some control over the weather—if they
chose to do anything about it. But how interested in the material world
were they? Natural or not, this rain helped nobody but the Banished
One. Didn’t Olor and Quelea and the rest see as much?
Regardless of what Olor and Quelea and the other gods in the heavens
saw, the rain kept falling. It didn’t get lighter. If anything, it got
worse. Grus kept the army moving west for as long as he could. But
movement was at best a crawl. What should have taken a quarter of an hour
took a quarter of a day.
At last, Hirundo said, “Your Majesty, may I tell you something
obvious?”
“Go ahead,” Grus said.
“Your Majesty, this is more trouble than it’s worth,” the general said.
“Gods only know how long we’re going to need to get to Hrvace. Once we’re
there, how are we going to feed ourselves? We won’t be able to live off
the country, and supply wagons will have a demon of a time getting
through. The Chernagors inside the walls will laugh their heads off when
they see us.”
He was right. King Grus knew that all too well. Even though he knew it,
he resisted acting on what he knew. Angrily, he asked, “What do you want
me to do? Turn around and go back to the city of Avornis?”
Grus hoped that would make Hirundo say something like,
No, of course not, Your Majesty. Instead, the general nodded
emphatically. “Yes, that’s just what I want you to do,” he said. “If you
ask me, it’s the only sensible thing we
can do.”
“But—” Grus still fought the idea. “If we do that, then the Banished
One still has a toehold in the Chernagor country.”
“Maybe,” Hirundo said. “But maybe not, too. Lazutin and Gleb swore up
and down they didn’t have much to do with him—certainly not directly. We
don’t really
know he had a toehold anywhere but Nishevatz.”
“Tempting to believe that,” Grus said. “I’m almost afraid to, though,
just because it’s so tempting.”
“Well, look at it this way,” Hirundo said. “Suppose we go on to Hrvace
and sit outside it and get weaker and hungrier by the day. We can’t
threaten to ravage the countryside, because the storms already done most
of that. Suppose the Chernagors come out when they see how weak we are.
Suppose they smash us. Don’t you think
that would do the Banished One some good?”
Grus tried not to think how much good that would do the Banished One.
He tried . . . and he failed. He sighed. “All right. You’ve made your
point,” he said, and sighed again. “We’ll go home.”
“King Olor be praised!” Hirundo exclaimed. “You won’t regret this.”
“I already regret it,” Grus answered. “But I’m liable to regret pushing
ahead even more. And so ... and so we’ll go home.” He spent the next few
minutes cursing the weather as comprehensively as he knew how.
Hirundo had heard a good deal. He’d sometimes been known to say a good
deal. His eyes grew wide even so. “That’s. . . impressive, Your Majesty,”
he said when Grus finally ran down.
The king chuckled self-consciously. “Only goes to show you can take the
old river rat away from the river, but you can’t get the river out of the
river rat.”
“You’ll have to teach me some of that one of these days, you old river
rat,” Hirundo said. “But meanwhile—”
“Yes. Meanwhile,” Grus said. “Go ahead. Give the orders. Turn us south.
You’ve won.”
“It’s not me. Its the stinking weather,” Hirundo said. He did give the
necessary orders. He gave them with great assurance and without the
slightest pause for thought. He had been planning those orders for a long
time, and he’d gotten them right.
The army obeyed them with alacrity, too. A lot of the soldiers must
have been thinking about going home. As soon as they had a chance to put
their desires into action, they made the most of it. They could go no
faster traveling south than they had traveling west, but they were much
happier stuck in the mud while homeward bound than they had been on their
way to attack Hrvace.
Even the weather seemed to think turning south was a good idea. Two
days after Grus reluctantly decided to abandon his campaign in the land of
the Chernagors, the rain stopped and the sun came out again. It shone as
brightly as it had in the middle of summer, Grus said several more things
Hirundo hadn’t heard before. He said them with great feeling, too. The
road remained muddy, and would for several more days. Even so, there was
mud, and then there was
mud, soupy ooze without a trace of bottom anywhere.
There was one more thing, too. “You know what would happen if I tried
to use this good weather and went east again, don’t you?” Grus asked
Hirundo.
The general nodded. “Sure I do, Your Majesty. It would start raining
again. And it wouldn’t stop until we all grew fins.”
“That’s right. That’s just exactly right.” Grus waved his hands. All
around him, the landscape gently steamed as the warm sun began drying up
the rain that had already fallen. “But Pterocles tells me it’s just an
ordinary storm. The Banished One has nothing to do with it, he says. By
Olor’s beard, if he doesn’t know, who’s likely to?”
“Nobody,” Hirundo said.
“Nobody,” Grus agreed sadly. “No matter how hard a time I have
believing it, it’s only a what-do-you-call-it. A coincidence, that’s what
I’m trying to say.”
“Pterocles usually knows what he’s talking about, sure enough,” Hirundo
said. “When it comes to magic, I usually don’t, any more than Pterocles
knows how to drive home a cavalry charge.”
“He was brave inside Nishevatz,” Grus said.
“Oh, I wouldn’t be afraid to try a spell—not afraid like that, anyway,”
Hirundo said. “That doesn’t mean a spell I tried would work. I haven’t got
the training, and I haven’t got the talent.”
“Neither have I.” The king looked warily up at the sun. It smiled back,
for all the world—
for all the world, indeed, Grus thought—as though it had never
gone away and never would. But he knew better. He wouldn’t be able to
trust it until the coming spring—and not even then, if he had to campaign
in the Chernagor country.
For now ... for now, he was going home. If he hadn’t done everything
he’d wanted to, he had managed most of it. That wouldn’t have impressed
the gods in the heavens. In the world where mere mortals had to live, it
wasn’t bad at all. Plenty had tried more and accomplished less. So Grus
told himself, anyway.
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
King Lanius waited outside the brown stone walls of the city of Avornis
as King Grus brought the army back to the capital. The whole royal family
had come out to see Grus off. Lanius was there by himself to welcome the
other king and the army back. King Grus waved from horseback. Lanius
solemnly waved back.
“Welcome home,” he called.
“By Olor’s beard, it’s good to be back,” Grus answered.
“Congratulations on driving the Banished One from Nishevatz, and from
the land of the Chernagors.” Lanius did not mind praising Grus for
that.
“I thank you,” the other king replied. “I’m not sure we drove him out
of the Chernagor country altogether, but we did weaken his hold there.” He
had a strong streak of honesty in him—except, perhaps, when he was talking
to his wife about other women (but how many men had that particular streak
of honesty in them?).
Grus guided his horse away from the rest of the army and over beside
Lanius. He always joked about what a bad rider he was, but he handled the
animal perfectly well. Lanius wished he were as smooth. Grus reviewed the
soldiers as they rode and marched past and into the city. The men were
hard and scrawny and scraggly-bearded. Some of them limped; others showed
fresh scars on faces or forearms.
One of the foot soldiers waved to Grus and called, “We earned our pay
this time, didn’t we, Your Majesty?”
“I’d say you did, Buteo,” Grus answered. The soldiers face stretched to
hold a pleased smile. He waved again, and kept looking back over his
shoulder until the gateway hid him.
“You know him?” Lanius asked. “Was he one of your guards up there?”
“Buteo? No, just a soldier,” Grus said. “He’s brave, but not too smart.
He’ll never even make sergeant, not if he lives to be a hundred. But he’s
a good man at your back in a scrap.”
“Is he?” Lanius said. Grus nodded. Lanius asked, “How many soldiers do
you know by name—and by what they can do, the way you did with him?”
“I never thought about it.” Now Grus did. “I can’t tell you exactly,”
he said at last. “But I’ve got some notion of who about every other man
is. Something like that. I know more about some—a lot more about some—and
not so much about others.”
Lanius believed him. Lanius didn’t see how he could do anything else;
Grus radiated conviction. “How do you manage that?” Lanius asked. “I
couldn’t begin to, not to save my life.”
“How do you remember all the things you find in the archives? How do
you put them together in interesting patterns?” Grus returned, “/couldn’t
do that.”
“But knowing people, knowing how they work—that’s more important.”
Lanius was sure it was more important, not least because he couldn’t do it
himself. “I wish I were better at it.”
“You’ve done all right, seems to me,” Grus said. “If you hadn’t, more
people would have taken advantage of you by now.”
“You did,” Lanius said. It was the first thing that came into his mind,
and he brought it out with less bitterness than he would have
expected.
It still made Grus give him a sharp look. “I wouldn’t be where I am if
your mother hadn’t tried to kill me by sorcery,” the other king said. Grus
barked laughter. “I wouldn’t be where I am if she’d done it, either.”
“Well, no,” Lanius admitted. Over the years, Grus had done any number
of things he didn’t like. Lanius could hardly deny that Grus might have
done far worse than he had. It was funny, if you looked at it the right
way. He had to like Grus to a certain degree, because he couldn’t dislike
him as much as he might have.
“How’s my daughter?” Grus asked—a question any father-in-law might ask
of a son-in-law.
“She’s fine,” Lanius said. By and large, it was true. If Sosia
sometimes had reason to throw things at him, that was none of Grus’
business. And it wasn’t as though Estrilda didn’t sometimes have reason to
throw things at Grus.
“And what about Ortalis?” Grus said. “That was some nasty news you sent
me about him and the servant.”
Carefully, Lanius said, “You will know that Ortalis and I don’t always
get along as well as we might.” Grus nodded. Lanius went on, “Even I will
say it wasn’t altogether Ortalis’ fault. Bubulcus provoked him—provoked
him outrageously. Something should have happened to Bubulcus. What did
happen, though, shouldn’t have.”
“That’s about how it seemed to me from your letter,” Grus agreed. “At
least he didn’t do it for sport. That was what I was afraid of.”
“Oh, yes.” Lanius didn’t try to pretend he misunderstood. “That was
what I was afraid of, too. I don’t know what I would have done then.” He
gnawed on the inside of his lower lip. He was glad he hadn’t had to find
out.
To his relief, Grus let it go there. He said, “And I’ve got a new
granddaughter?”
“That’s right.” Lanius felt guarded there, too. If Capella had been a
boy, what
would that have done to the succession in Grus’ eyes? “Limosa
thinks she’s the most wonderful baby in the world. I’d make a couple of
exceptions myself.”
King Grus chuckled. “Yes, I can see how you might.” But the older man’s
grin slipped. “Limosa.” He said the name of Ortalis’ wife as though it
tasted bad. “He finally found somebody who likes the welts he gives her.”
Grus made as though to spit in disgust, then—barely— thought better of
it.
“She loves him,” Lanius said, which didn’t contradict Grus.
“Does that make it better or worse?” the other king asked.
Lanius thought it over. “I don’t know,” he said at last. “Do you?”
“What I know is ... more about Ortalis than I wish I did,” Grus
said—not a direct answer to what Lanius had said, but not an evasion,
either.
The last soldiers passed into the city of Avornis. They were happy to
be home, looking forward to beds in their barracks, to wine, and to women.
What went on in the palace meant nothing to them. If they had to go fight,
they would. Until then, they’d enjoy themselves.
Not for the first time, Lanius found himself jealous of men who could
live for the moment. He sometimes wished he could do the same, without
worrying about what would happen next. He laughed at himself. Given the
nature he’d been born with, he might as well have wished for the moon
while he was at it.
Even though Grus had lived softer in the field than his soldiers had,
he was glad to return to the comforts of the palace. He was older than his
soldiers, too, and needed to live softer. So he told himself, anyhow.
Estrilda greeted him cautiously, the way she did whenever he came back
from campaign. Her look plainly said she wondered what he’d been up to in
the land of the Chernagors. This time, he could look her straight in the
eye, for he’d been up to very little. For one thing, the Chernagor women
hadn’t much appealed to him. For another, he’d reached the age where
conquests of that sort were less urgent than they had been in earlier
years. That didn’t mean he didn’t enjoy them when they happened—Estrilda
evidently hadn’t yet found out about his bastard boy by Alauda, for which
he was duly grateful—but he didn’t go after them as energetically as he
might have when he was younger.
Still somewhat suspicious, Estrilda said, “You were away for a long
time.”
“So I was,” Grus said. “There was a lot to do, and doing it wasn’t
easy. If you paid any attention to my dispatches, you’d know that.”
“Not everything you do ends up in your dispatches,” his wife answered.
“I’ve seen that.”
He wanted to tell her she was wrong, or at least foolish, but she would
know he was lying if he did. All he did do was shrug and say, “Not this
time.” If Estrilda felt like quarreling, she would.
She didn’t. “It’s good to have you back,” she said.
“It’s good to be back,” Grus said. “If I had to right now, I do believe
I’d kill for a hot bath.”
He soaked in a copper tub for more than an hour, scrubbing away the
grime of the campaign and simply luxuriating in the water. Whenever it
began to cool down, servants drained some and fetched in more jars of hot
water from the kitchens. The king hated to get out. After scrubbing, he
leaned his head back in the tub, wondering if he could fall asleep there.
Not quite, he discovered, though he did come close.
After the bath, supper. He’d had his fill of seafood up in the
Chernagor country. Roast goose stuffed with bread crumbs and dried apples
stuck to the ribs. He’d drunk a lot of ale in the north—better that than
water, which often brought disease—but sweet wine was better. And, after
that, lying down in his own bed might have been best of all.
Estrilda lay down beside him. She had, he noticed, put on fresh
perfume. He’d thought he would go straight to sleep. As things turned out,
he didn’t. But when his eyes did close, he slept very soundly.
He woke up in the morning feeling, if not younger than the day before,
then at least oiled and repaired. Now that he was back, he had to get on
top of things again. Otherwise, who was the real king? Was he? Or was
Lanius?
Before any of that, though, he saw his grandchildren. Crex and Pitta
both wondered why he hadn’t brought them any presents from the Chernagor
country. “Sorry, my dears,” he said. “I was worried about bringing me
back. I didn’t worry much about presents.” He had tribute from Hisardzik
and Jobuka, but he didn’t think silver coins with the faces of
shaggy-bearded princes on them would fascinate children.
Capella didn’t ask for presents. She waved her arms and legs in
Limosa’s arms and smiled up toothlessly at the king. “She’s a pretty
child, Your Highness,” Grus said.
“Thank you, Your Majesty,” Limosa answered politely. “I wish her other
grandfather could see her, too.”
“I’m sorry,” Grus said. “I
am sorry, but Petrosus isn’t coming out of the Maze.”
“Even if he isn’t why your son and I got married?” Limosa said. “Even
if we got married because—” She didn’t go on. She turned red and looked
down at her baby.
Grus had a pretty good idea of what she would have said. It made him
want to blush, too, even if he hadn’t actually heard it. He was afraid she
would show him her back. To his relief, she didn’t. He gathered himself.
“Even then,” he told her. “If your father wasn’t plotting that, he was
plotting something else. He’ll stay where he is.”
“Yes, Your Majesty,” Limosa whispered. She took Capella away, as though
that was the only way she could find to punish Grus. And so it probably
was.
Ortalis didn’t come to pay his respects. Grus sent a servant after him.
When the king finally saw his son, he said, “Well, now that you’ve finally
done it, how does it feel to kill a man?”
“I knew you were going to bother me about that,” Ortalis said sullenly.
“I knew it. And I didn’t even enjoy sticking the knife in him. It just. .
. happened, that’s all. I wish it hadn’t. But he got me angry, and then he
said something really foul, and—” He shrugged.
Eyeing him, Grus decided it could easily have been worse. Ortalis
wasn’t consumed by remorse, but at least he had some idea of what it was.
Grus said, “You should have just punched him.”
“I suppose so,” his son said. “His woman and her brats are taken care
of. Lanius made sure of that. Can I go now, or do you want to yell at me
some more? I don’t kill servants for fun.”
“All right,” Grus said, and Ortalis left. Grus sighed. Considering what
Ortalis did do for fun, was it any wonder that Grus had wondered? He
didn’t think so. Business, the king thought. If he was going to pick business,
he wanted to pick interesting business to start with. He went to the
chamber where Otus the former thrall dwelt. “Sorry, Your Majesty,” a guard
said. “He’s not here right now.”
“Where is he?” Grus asked.
“He’s got a lady friend. He’s with her,” the guard answered.
“At this hour of the morning?” Grus exclaimed. The guard smirked and
nodded. Grus said, “If I were wearing a hat, I’d take it off to him. Shall
I wait until he’s, ah, finished?”
“I can fetch him, if you like,” the guardsman said.
“No, never mind,” Grus said. “I’ll come back and visit him later. He
wouldn’t thank me for interrupting him, would he?”
“I don’t know about that, Your Majesty, but /wouldn’t,” the guard
replied, chuckling at his own cleverness.
“All right, then. I’ll try again in an hour or so,” Grus said, and
left.
When he came back, the guard nodded to him. “He’s here now, Your
Majesty,” the fellow said. “He’s waiting for you.”
“Your Majesty!” Otus said when Grus walked into his chamber. “It is
good to see you again.”
“Good to see you,” Grus answered. “I’m more pleased than I can tell you
at how well you’re doing.” That was the truth. Only Otus’ southern accent
and a certain slight hesitation in his speech said that he had been a
thrall. He looked bright and alert and altogether like a normal man. He
evidently acted like a normal man, too. “Who’s your, ah, friend?” Grus
asked.
“Her name is Calypte, Your Majesty.” Otus seemed less happy than Grus
had thought he might. “She is very sweet. And yet. . . You know I have a
woman down in the south, a woman who is still a thrall?”
“Yes, I know that.” The king nodded.
Otus sighed. “I do her wrong when I do this. I understand that. But I
am here, and she is there—and she is hardly more than a brute beast. I
loved her when I was a beast myself. I might love her if she were a beast
no more. Your Majesty, so many thralls down there! Save them!”
Otus’ appeal didn’t surprise Grus. The power with which the ex-thrall
phrased it did. “I’ll do what I can,” the king answered. “I don’t know how
much that will be. It will depend on the civil war among the Menteshe, and
on how well wizards besides Pterocles can learn to cure thralls.” And if they truly can, he thought. He didn’t say that to Otus,
who seemed normal enough. If Otus hadn’t seemed normal, Grus wouldn’t have
thought of campaigning south of the Stura at all.
“You could make beasts into men.” If the former thrall wasn’t cured, he
sounded as though he was. “Who but the gods could ever do that until now?
You would be remembered forever.”
Grus laughed. “Are you sure you weren’t born a courtier?”
“I’m sure, Your Majesty,” Otus said. “Courtiers tell lies. I’m too
stupid to do that. I tell you the truth.”
“I’m going to tell you the truth, too,” Grus said. “I want to fight
south of the Stura. I don’t know if I can. It’s dangerous for Avornan
kings to go over the frontier. There have been whole armies that never
came back. I want to cure thralls. I don’t want to see free men taken down
into thralldom.”
“You wouldn’t!” Otus exclaimed. “Look at me. I’m free. I’m cured. Whatever the Banished One can do, he can’t make me back into what
was.”
From what Lanius wrote, Otus bad always insisted on that. The trouble
was, he would have insisted on it as vehemently if it were a lie as he
would have if it were true. Grus didn’t know how to judge which it was. He
didn’t know what to do, either.
“I already told you—I’ll decide what to do come spring,” he said after
some thought. “If the Menteshe have a prince by then and they’re solidly
behind him, I may have to sit tight. If they don’t... If they don’t, well,
I’ll figure out what to do next then, that’s all.”
“You ought to be ready to move, whether you do or not,” Otus
remarked.
That held a good deal of truth. “I already have soldiers in the south,”
Grus said. “There’s one other thing I need to check up on before I make up
my mind.”
“What’s that?” Otus asked.
Grus didn’t answer, not directly. Instead, he chatted for a little
while longer and then took his leave. He went to a small audience chamber
and told a servant, “Find the serving girl named Calypte and tell her I’d
like to talk with her, please.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The servant dipped his head and hurried off.
Calypte came into the room less than a quarter of an hour later. Until
then, Grus couldn’t have matched her name with her face. She was in her
late twenties, short, a little on the plump side, with a round face, very
white teeth, and dark eyes that sparkled. She wore a leaf-green dress and
had tied a red kerchief over her black hair and under her chin. Dropping
Grus a curtsy, she said, “What is it, Your Majesty?” She sounded nervous.
Grus didn’t suppose he could blame her. She had to think she was either in
trouble or that he was about to try to seduce her.
He said, “You’re . . . friends with Otus, aren’t you?”
“Yes, I am.” Now that she knew where the ground lay, her nerves
vanished. She stuck out her chin. “Why shouldn’t I be?” A feisty little thing, Grus thought, and hid a smile. “No
reason at all,” he answered. “I just wanted to ask you a couple of
questions about him.”
“Why?” Calypte demanded. “What business is it of anybody except him and
me?”
“It’s also the kingdom’s business, I’m afraid,” Grus said. “You haven’t
forgotten he used to be a thrall, have you?”
“Oh.” The maidservant’s face clouded. “If you really want to know, I
had forgotten until you reminded me. He doesn’t act like a
thrall—or the way I suppose a thrall would act. He just acts like—a man.”
She looked down at the mosaics on the floor and turned pink. Grus got the
idea Otus had acted very much like a man earlier in the morning.
This time, he didn’t try to hide his smile. He said, “I don’t want to
know about any of that. It isn’t any of my business—you’re right. What I
want to know is, have you ever seen any places where he doesn’t act just
like a man, where being a thrall left him different?”
Calypte thought that over. She didn’t need long. When she was done, she
shook her head. A black curl popped free. Tucking it back under the
kerchief, she said, “No, I don’t think so. He hasn’t been in the palace
for years, the way most people I know have, so there are things he doesn’t
understand right away, but anybody new here is like that.”
“Are you sure?” Grus asked. “It could be more important than you
know.”
“I’m not a witch or anything, Your Majesty,” Calypte answered. “I can’t
cast a spell or do things like that. But from what I know, he’s as much of
a man as a man could be.”
She was right. Pterocles could make tests she couldn’t even imagine.
But the wizard would have admitted—
had admitted—he couldn’t be altogether sure of the answers he
got, not when he was measuring himself against the strength and subtlety
of the Banished One. But the tests Calypte applied (not that she would
have called them such) were ones that, by the very nature of things,
Pterocles was not equipped to administer.
Grus found himself smiling again. “Fair enough,” he said. “You can go.
And the next time you see Otus, you can tell him from me that I think he’s
a lucky fellow.”
The serving girl smiled, too. “I’ll do better than that. I’ll show
him.” And, by the way her hips swayed when she left the audience chamber,
she would do a good, careful, thorough job of showing him, too.
Leaves blazed gold and maroon and scarlet. When the wind blew through
the trees, it swirled them off branches and sent them dancing like bits of
flame. Lanius admired the autumn. “This is reason to come out to the woods
all by itself,” he said.
Arch-Hallow Anser and Prince Ortalis both laughed at the king. “This is
pretty enough,” Anser said, “but the reason to come out here is the
hunting.”
“That’s right,” Ortalis said, not that Lanius had expected him to say
anything else. Anser came hunting because he enjoyed it. Ortalis came
hunting because he enjoyed hunting, too, but in a different way. Lanius
was glad to have Ortalis hunt, because he might do something worse if he
didn’t. And you—
why do you come hunting? the king wondered. He didn’t take
pleasure in it, the way Anser did. He didn’t need it, crave it, the way
Ortalis did. But every so often Anser looked as though he would curl up
and die of disappointment if he heard “No” one more time, and Anser was
too nice a fellow to disappoint.
Smiling, the arch-hallow said, “Maybe you’ll kill something this
time.”
“Maybe I will,” Lanius said. “Maybe a stag will die laughing at how
badly I shoot.” Anser laughed, whether a stag would or not. Lanius managed
a wry smile at his own ineptitude. He wasn’t much of a bowman. He knew
that. But he also used his bad archery as an excuse not to have to kill
anything. He didn’t think either Anser or Ortalis had ever figured that
out. He hoped not, anyway.
“Think of venison,” Ortalis said lovingly. “Think of a roasted haunch,
or of chunks of venison stewed for a nice long time in wine and herbs,
until all the gamy taste goes away. Doesn’t it make your mouth water?”
Lanius nodded, because it did. He loved eating meat. Killing it himself
had always been a different story. He recognized the inconsistency, and
had no idea what to do about it.
One of Anser’s beaters nodded to the arch-hallow. “We’re off,” he said.
He and his comrades disappeared into the woods.
“They’re better hunters than any of us,” Lanius said.
“I don’t know about that,” Ortalis said. Anser didn’t look convinced,
either. They both enjoyed hunting for its own sake, which Lanius didn’t.
Ortalis added, “The two of us could come out here without beaters, because
we can find game on our own. Some people I could name, though ...”
“If that’s what’s bothering you—” Lanius began.
“What? You think you could do your own stalking?” Ortalis broke in.
“Don’t make me laugh.” That wasn’t what Lanius had started to say. He’d
been about to tell Grus’ legitimate son and his bastard that he couldn’t
have cared less about finding game on his own, that he came hunting for
the sake of their company (especially Anser’s, though he wouldn’t have
said that) and to get out to the forest and away from the palace. Maybe it
was just as well Oitalis had interrupted him.
Something up in a tree chirped. Peering through the branches, Lanius
got a glimpse of a plump brown bird with a striped belly. “Thrush,” Anser
said without even looking toward it. “They fly south for the winter every
year about this time.”
“Do they?” Lanius said. The arch-hallow nodded. Lanius still knew less
about birds than he wished he did. He knew less than he wished he did
about a lot of things. Not enough hours in the day, not enough days in the
year to learn as much as he could about all the things he wanted to
know.
“They’re tasty baked in a pie,” Ortalis said. Anser nodded again. This
time, so did Lanius. Pies and stews full of songbirds were some of his
favorite dishes. Again, though, he didn’t care to hunt thrushes
himself.
A rabbit bounded by and disappeared into the undergrowth. Anser started
to set an arrow to his bowstring, then checked the motion and laughed at
himself. “Not much point to shooting at rabbits,” he said. “You only waste
your arrows that way. If you want rabbits in your stew instead of
songbirds, you go after them with dogs and nets.”
“Then you whack them over the head with a club,” Ortalis said. “That
way, you don’t hurt the pelts.”
“I see,” Lanius said. He wondered what he really saw. What Ortalis said
made perfect sense. Did the prince really sound as though he enjoyed the
idea of whacking rabbits over the head with a club, or was Lanius only
hearing what he expected to hear? The king couldn’t be sure, and decided
he had to give his brother-in-law the benefit of the doubt.
“Come on,” Anser said. “There’s a clearing not far from here. If we
post ourselves at the edge of it, we’ll get good shots.”
He glided down a game track as smoothly and silently as any of the men
who served him, the men who looked so much like poachers. Lanius was sure
he could find his own game if he had to. Ortalis did his best to move the
same way, but wasn’t as good at it. Lanius tried not to trip over his own
feet and not to step on too many twigs. Anser winced only once, so he
supposed he wasn’t doing too bad a job.
The three high-ranking hunters had their usual low-voiced argument
about who would shoot first. Lanius resigned himself to looking foolish in
front of Grus’ sons. He’d done it before.
You could try to kill a deer, he said to himself, and then shook
his head. That wasn’t why he came out here.
A frightened stag bounded into the clearing. “Good luck, Your Majesty,”
Anser whispered.
“Try to frighten it, anyhow, Your Majesty,” Ortalis whispered—a
reasonable estimate of Lanius’ talents.
Since the shot was fairly long, the king didn’t worry much about taking
aim, good, bad, or otherwise. He pointed the bow in the general direction
of the stag and let fly. Even as he did so, the stag bounded forward.
Anser and Ortalis sighed together. So did Lanius, with something
approaching relief. This time, at least, he had a good enough excuse for
missing.
If the stag had stood still, the arrow would have flown past in front
of h. As things were, the shaft caught the animal just behind the left
shoulder. The deer took four or five staggering steps, then fell on its
side, kicking feebly. As Lanius stared in dismay, the kicking stopped and
the stag lay still.
“Well shot, by Olor’s beard!” Anser cried. “Oh, well shot!” Ortalis
whooped and pounded Lanius on the back. The king’s guards whooped,
too.
He’d missed again, but he was the only one who knew it. This time, he’d
missed at missing. Lanius gulped. He didn’t want to look at the animal
he’d just killed.
But his ordeal, evidently, hadn’t ended. “Now you get to learn how to
butcher the beast,” Ortalis said. “I wondered if you ever would.”
“Butcher it?” Lanius gulped. “That. . . isn’t what I had in mind.” He
turned toward Anser for support.
The arch-hallow let him down. “It’s part of the job,” Anser said. “You
ought to know what to do and how to do it. You don’t need to cut its
throat; it’s plainly dead. That was as clean a kill as the one Ortalis had
a while ago.”
“Huzzah,” Lanius said in a hollow voice. Anser and Ortalis clucked in
disapproval and dismay when they discovered he had no knife on his belt.
They would have sounded the same way if he’d gotten up in the morning and
forgotten to put on his breeches. Ortalis drew his own knife and handed it
to the king hilt first. He moved slowly and carefully as he did it,
mindful of Lanius’ bodyguards. The edge of the blade, lovingly honed and
polished, glittered in the sunlight.
“Here’s what you do,” Anser said. Following his instructions, Lanius
did it. He kept his breakfast down, but had no idea how.
“If you want to start a little fire and roast the mountain oysters,
they’re mighty good eating,” a guard said helpfully. “Same with a chunk of
liver when it’s all nice and fresh, though it won’t keep more than a few
hours.”
Lanius knew no more about starting a fire than about butchery. Anser
took care of that. The guard skewered the mountain oysters on a stick and
roasted them over the flames. When they were done, he handed Lanius the
stick. The king wanted to throw it away. But the guardsman waited
expectantly, and both Anser and Ortalis seemed to think he’d done Lanius a
favor. With a silent sigh, Lanius ate.
“Well?” the guard said. “You won’t get anything like that back at the
palace.”
That was true. “Not bad,” Lanius said. The men around him laughed, so
he must have sounded surprised.
Ortalis stooped and cut a bloody slice from the stag’s liver. He
skewered it and toasted it over the fire. “Here,” he said as he thrust the
stick at Lanius. “Best eating in the world.”
It wasn’t—not to the king, anyhow. “Needs salt,” Lanius declared. To
his amazement, not only Anser but also two of the guards carried little
vials of salt in their belt pouches. They all offered it to him. “Thank
you,” he said, and flavored the meat. It still wouldn’t have been his
first choice, but it was tasty. He nodded to the other men. “Anyone who
wants a slice can help himself.”
Several of them did. The speed with which the liver disappeared told
him what a delicacy they thought it. One of them poked at the deer’s heart
with his knife and looked a question at Lanius. He nodded again. The
guards sliced up the heart and roasted it, too.
“Mighty kind of you to share like this, Your Majesty,” one of them
said, his mouth full.
“My pleasure,” Lanius answered. The kidneys also went. He said,
“Venison in the palace tonight.”
“Your turn next,” Anser said to his half brother. “Think you can match
the king’s shot?”
“I don’t know.” Ortalis sent Lanius a sidelong glance. “But then,
seeing the way he usually shoots, I don’t know if he can match it,
either.”
Lanius was sure he couldn’t. “Show some respect for your sovereign,
there,” he said haughtily. In a slightly different tone, the retort would
have frozen Ortalis. As it was, Grus’ legitimate son laughed out loud. So
did Anser and the guards. Lanius found himself laughing, too. He still
cared nothing for the hunt as a chance to stalk and kill animals. For the
hunt as a chance to enjoy himself. . . that was another story.
Ortalis not only didn’t make a clean kill when he got a shot at a deer,
he missed as badly as Lanius usually did. The deer sprang away. “What
happened there?” Anser asked.
“A black fly bit me in the back of the neck just as I loosed,” Ortalis
answered. “You try holding steady when somebody sticks a red-hot pin in
you.” He rubbed at the wounded area.
“Well, it’s an excuse, anyhow,” Anser drawled. Ortalis made a rude
noise and an even ruder gesture. The Arch-Hallow of Avornis returned the
gesture. It wasn’t one Lanius would have looked for from a holy man, but
Anser hardly even pretended to be any such thing.
And he shot a bow better than well enough. He hit a stag when his turn
came to shoot first. The deer fled, but not too far; the trail of blood it
left made it easy to track. It was down by the time the hunters caught up
with it. Anser had a knife on
his belt. He stooped beside the stag and cut its throat.
“Your turn for the, uh, oysters,” Lanius said.
“Good.” Anser beamed. “I like ‘em. You won’t see me turn green, the way
you did before you tasted them.”
“Oh.” Lanius hadn’t known it had shown.
Anser, meanwhile, was grubbing in the dirt by the dead stag. He proudly
displayed some mushrooms. “I’ll toast these with a piece of liver. Not
with the mountain oysters—those are so good, I’ll eat them by themselves.”
And, not much later, he did.
Lanius took better care to miss the next time he got a shot. He did,
and the stag ran off into the woods. Anser and Ortalis teased him harder
than they would have before he’d made a kill.
He teased back. That was the biggest part of the reason he came hunting
at all. And yet, after he’d shot the stag, his conscience troubled him
much less than he’d expected. One of these days, he might even try to hit
something when he shot.
CHAPTER THIRTY
King Grus sat on the Diamond Throne, staring down at the ambassadors
from Hrvace. The Chernagors looked up at him in turn. “Well?” Grus said in
a voice colder than the autumn wind that howled outside the palace. “What
have you got to say for yourselves? What have you got to say for your
prince?”
The Chernagors eyed one another. Even the Avornan courtiers in the
throne room muttered back and forth. Grus knew why. He wasn’t following
the formulas Kings of Avornis used with envoys from the Chernagor
city-states. He didn’t care. Unlike Lanius, he cared nothing for ceremony
for its own sake. He wasn’t sure the polite formulas applied to a
city-state with which Avornis was practically at war, anyhow.
“Your Majesty, I am Bonyak, ambassador from Prince Tvorimir of Hrvace,”
said one of the Chernagors—the one with the fanciest embroidery on his
tunic. He did his best to stay close to the formula, continuing, “I bring
you Tvorimir’s greetings, as well as those of all the other Chernagor
princes.”
“By the gods, I’ve already dealt with the other Chernagor princes,”
Grus growled. “I would have dealt with Tvorimir, too, if it hadn’t decided
to rain cats and dogs up there. Do you also bring me greetings from the
Banished One?”
“No, Your Majesty,” Bonyak replied. “I bring you assurances from Prince
Tvorimir that he has nothing to do with the Banished One, and that he has
never had anything to do with him.”
“Oh? And will Tvorimir tell me his ships weren’t part of the fleet that
raided my coast? How much nerve does he have?”
Bonyak’s smile was an odd blend of wolf and sheep. “Prince Tvorimir
does not deny that his ships raided your coast. But he told me to tell
you—he told me to remind you—that a Chernagor does not need to go on his
knees to the Banished One to smell the sweet scent of plunder.”
“Sweet, is it?” Grus had to work not to laugh. When Bonyak solemnly
nodded, the king had to work even harder. He said, “And you would know
this from personal experience, would you?”
“Oh, yes,” Prince Tvorimir’s ambassador assured him. Hastily, the
Chernagor added, “Though I have never plundered the coast of Avornis, of
course.”
“Of course.” Grus’ voice was dry, so very dry that it made Bonyak look
more sheepish than ever. But Grus grudged him a nod. “It could be. And I
suppose that what Prince Tvorimir says could be, too. Why has he sent you
down here to the city of Avornis?”
“Why? To make amends for our raids, Your Majesty.” Bonyak gestured to
his henchmen. “We have gifts for the kingdom, and we also have gifts for
you.”
“Wait.” Now Grus nodded to a courtier who’d been waiting down below the
Diamond Throne. The man had remained discreetly out of sight behind a
stout pillar, so Grus could have failed to call on him without
embarrassing the Chernagors. But, since Bonyak seemed conciliatory . . .
“First, Your Excellency, I have presents for you and your men.”
The courtier doled out leather sacks from a tray. Bonyak hefted the one
the Avornan gave him. He nodded, for it had the right weight. He also
looked relieved—Grus was steering the ceremony back into the lines it
should take.
“My thanks, Your Majesty,” the ambassador said. “My very great thanks
indeed. Now shall we give our gifts in return?”
“If you would be so kind,” Grus answered.
Bonyak nudged the flunkies, who were busy feeling the weight of their
own sacks. They set one heavy, metal-bound wooden chest after another in
front of the Diamond Throne. “These are for Avornis, Your Majesty,” Bonyak
said. Courtiers leaned forward, waiting for him to open one of the boxes,
their faces full of avid curiosity.
At Bonyak’s nod, one of the men who followed him undid the hasp on the
topmost chest and opened it. “Fifty thousand pieces of silver, from Prince
Tvorimir to Avornis,” Bonyak said. “His Highness will also make an
agreement like the ones the princes of Hisardzik and Jobuka made with your
kingdom not long ago.”
“Will he?” Grus said. Bonyak nodded again. The Avornan courtiers
murmured among themselves. The present wasn’t very interesting— they’d
seen plenty of silver themselves—but the news that came with it was good.
Grus nodded back. “I am pleased to accept this silver for the kingdom,” he
declared in loud, formal tones. “Never let it be said that I did not seek
peace between Avornis and the Chernagor city-states.”
“Prince Tvorimir has this same thought,” Bonyak said.
Of course he does—
for the time being, Grus thought.
I’ve made him afraid of me. The Chernagor ambassador went on,
“Prince Tvorimir also sends you a personal gift, a gift from him to you,
not from Hrvace to Avornis.”
As Bonyak had before, he gestured to the burly, bearded men who
accompanied him. One of them came forward with an enormous earthenware
jug, which he set beside the chests of silver pieces. Bonyak said, “This
is a special kind of liquor, which we have in trade from an island far out
in the Northern Sea. It is stronger than any ale or wine, strong enough so
that it burns the gullet a little on the way down.”
“Does it indeed?” Grus said, his voice as neutral as he could make
it.
Bonyak understood what he wasn’t saying. “I will gladly drink of this,
Your Majesty. And let your wizards test it, if you think I have taken an
antidote,” the envoy said. “By the gods in the heavens, may my head answer
if it is poison.”
He did drink, and with every sign of enjoyment. “I will make a magical
test anyhow,” Grus replied, “and if it is poison, your head
will answer. For now, you and your comrades are dismissed.”
Bowing, the Chernagors departed from the throne room. Grus summoned
Pterocles and explained what he wanted. The wizard looked intrigued.
“Liquor that isn’t wine or ale? How interesting! I suppose it isn’t mead,
either, for mead’s no stronger than either of the others. Yes, I can test
it against poisons.” He dipped out a little of the liquid from the mug,
then poured it over an amethyst. Neither the stone nor the liquor showed
any change. Pterocles added a couple of sprigs of herbs to the dipper.
“Cinquefoil and vervain,” he explained to Grus. “They’re sovereign against
noxious things.” He murmured a charm, waited, and then shrugged. “All
seems as it should, Your Majesty. There is one other test to make, of
course.” He fished the herbs out of the dipper.
“What’s that?” the king asked.
“A very basic one.” Pterocles grinned. He raised the dipper to his lips
and drank what was in it. He coughed as he swallowed. “Whew! That’s strong
as a demon—your Chernagor wasn’t joking.” He paused, considering. “Can’t
complain about the way it warms me up inside, though, I wonder how the
people the Chernagors got it from made it.”
“Ask Bonyak—not that he’ll tell you even if he knows,” Grus said.
“Well, if it hasn’t turned you inside out and upside down, why don’t you
let me have a taste, too?”
“I don’t know. Why don’t I?” Pterocles filled the dipper again and
handed it to him.
Grus took it. He sniffed. The stuff smelled more like wine than
anything else, though less fruity. He sipped cautiously. When he
swallowed, he could feel the heat sliding down to his stomach. It spread
out from there. “Not bad,” he said after the same sort of pause for
thought as Pterocles had used. “A mug’s worth would be plenty to get you
drunk.”
Pterocles eyed the jug. “I’d say a mug’s worth would be enough to get
you dead—but what a way to go.”
“If you were going to make something like this, how would you do it?”
Grus asked.
The wizard laughed. “If I knew the answer to that, I’d already be doing
it. Some things you can concentrate by boiling. But when you boil wine,
you make it weaker than it was before, not stronger. I don’t know why. But
it is so—I know that.”
“Maybe you need to save what’s boiling away instead of what’s left in
the pot, then,” Grus said with a laugh of his own.
“Who knows? Maybe I do.” Pterocles kept on smiling. “I don’t know how
I’d do that, though,”
“I was only joking,” Grus said. “Probably nothing to it.”
Lanius’ head felt as though some demented smith with a heavy hammer
were using it for an anvil. Pterocles insisted the liquor Prince Tvorimir
gave to King Grus wasn’t poisoned. But Lanius had poisoned himself with it
the night before. His father-in-law had warned him a little would get him
drunk. Lanius hated to admit it, bur his father-in-law had been right and
more than right.
And because Grus had been so right, Lanius faced the moncats’ room with
a wince. The warmth and the smells—especially the smells— were not what he
wanted with a tender head. But he had never trusted the servants to take
care of the animals. If they didn’t do the work, that meant he had to.
Despite the wince, he opened the door, went in, and quickly closed it
behind him.
It was as bad as he’d thought it would be. His stomach twisted. He
almost had to leave very abruptly. After one gulp, though, he brought
things under control again and got to work. Cleaning the moncats’ sandbox
was a job nasty enough as things were, and seemed even worse when he was
nauseated himself. He was glad the animals used a sandbox like ordinary
cats; if they’d done what they wanted wherever they wanted, they would
have been much harder to keep.
After he took care of that, he went to the kitchens to get them some
meat. The fat cook named Cucullatus grinned at him and said, “Haven’t seen
that funny animal of yours for a while now. Did you chain it up?”
“No, but I’m tempted to,” he answered. “Pouncer makes me suspicious
when it’s being good—it’s probably up to something.” Cucullatus laughed a
sour laugh.
Lanius went back to the moncats’ room with the meat. The animals
swarmed around his feet, rubbing and purring and acting for all the world
as though they really were lovable creatures and not furry opportunists.
He knew better. They were as heartless and self-centered as any of his
courtiers.
Before dumping most of the food in their dishes, he doled out treats to
one moncat or another. He was busy doing that when he noticed Pouncer
wasn’t begging there with the rest of the moncats. He looked around the
room—and didn’t see it.
“Oh, by the gods, where has the stupid creature gone now?” he
exclaimed. But the problem wasn’t that Pouncer was stupid—the problem was
that the moncat was too smart for its own good.
The two places where Lanius knew the moncat went were the kitchens and
the archives. Pouncer hadn’t gone to the kitchens lately. Did that mean it
was likely to make an appearance there now, or that it would keep on
staying away? The king pondered. Trying to think like a Chernagor was hard
enough. Trying to think like a moncat? He wanted to throw up his hands at
the mere idea.
But he had to decide. Kitchens or archives? He took some scraps of meat
and hurried off toward the room where he’d spent so much happy time. If
Pouncer did show up there, he wanted to kick the moncat for disturbing his
peace of mind.
He still didn’t know how Pouncer got into the archives, any more than
he knew how the miserable beast escaped from its room. Instead of
contentedly pawing through parchments, he had to poke around in dark
corners where Pouncer was likely to come forth. Wherever the moncat did
emerge, it always looked enormously pleased with itself. Lanius couldn’t
decide whether that amused him or infuriated him.
“Pouncer?” he called. “Are you there, Pouncer, you stinking, mangy
creature?” Pouncer was as fastidious as any other moncat, and didn’t
stink. The beast’s luxuriant fur proved it wasn’t mangy. Lanius slandered
it anyhow. Why not? It was no more likely to pay attention to anything he
said to or about it than any other moncat, either.
It did, however, pay attention to food. Lanius lay down on his back on
the least dusty stretch of floor he could find. He thumped on his chest.
If Pouncer was anywhere close by, that noise ought to attract the moncat.
It would do its trick, climb up on his chest, and win its tasty reward. It
would ... if it was close enough to hear.
“Mrowr?” The meow, though muffled, made Lanius want to cheer. It also
made him proud—in a peculiar way. Here he was, congratulating himself for
. . . what? For beating the Menteshe? For finding something important
about the Chernagors in the archives? No. What had he done to win those
congratulations? He’d outthought a moncat.
Of course, what was the alternative? As far as he could see, it was
not outthinking a moncat. And how proud would he have been of
that?
“Mrowr?” Pouncers meow definitely sounded strange, as though the moncat
were behind something that deadened the noise ... or as though it had
something in its mouth.
And so it did, as Lanius discovered when the moncat came toward him. A
rat’s tail dangled from one side of Pouncer’s jaws, the rat’s snout from
the other. As it had been trained to do, Pouncer climbed up onto the
king’s chest. The moncat dropped the rat right there.
“Thank you so much!” Lanius exclaimed. He didn’t want to grab the rat
even to throw it away. And Pouncer, naturally, was convinced it had done
him not only a favor but an honor by presenting him with its kill. Pouncer
was also convinced it deserved a treat from his hands—it had gotten up on
his chest the way it was supposed to.
He gave the moncat a scrap of meat. Pouncer purred and ate it.
Then Pouncer picked up the rat again, walked farther up Lanius’ chest
with it, and, still purring all the while, almost dropped it on his
face.
“If you think you’re trying to train me to eat that, you’d better think
again,” the king told the moncat.
“Mrowr,” Pouncer answered, in tones that could only mean,
Why aren’t you picking this up now that I’ve given it to you?
“Sorry,” said Lanius, who was anything but. When he sat up, the rat
rolled away from where Pouncer had put it and fell on the floor. With
another meow, this one of dismay, the moncat dove after it. The king
grabbed the animal. The moncat grabbed the rat. “Mutton’s not good enough
for you, eh?” Lanius demanded. This time, Pouncer didn’t say anything. The
moncat held the rat in both clawed hands and daintily nibbled at its
tail.
Lanius didn’t try to take away its prize. Pouncer was less likely to
kick or scratch or bite as long as it had the rat. That remained true even
after the chunk of meat the king had fed it.
And yet, even though Pouncer had caught the rat on its own, it hadn’t
declined to clamber up onto him for the little bit of mutton. He’d trained
it to do that, and it had.
“Not much of a trick,” Lanius told the moncat. Pouncer didn’t even
pretend to pay attention. The rat’s tail was much more interesting, to say
nothing of tasty. The king went on, “Of course, I’m not much of an animal
trainer, either. I wonder what someone who really knows what he’s doing
could teach you.”
“Mrowr,” Pouncer said, as though doubting whether anybody—Lanius
included—could teach it anything.
How much
could a moncat learn? Suppose a skilled trainer really went to
work with the beasts. What could he teach them? Would it be worth doing,
or would Grus grumble that Lanius was wasting money? Grus often grumbled
about money he wasn’t spending himself. Still, it might be amusing.
Or, just possibly, it might be more than amusing. Lanius stopped short
and stared at Pouncer. “Could you learn something like that?” he said.
“Are you smart enough? Could you stay interested long enough?”
With the rat’s tail, now gnawed down to the bone here and there,
dangling from the corners of Pouncer’s mouth, the moncat didn’t look smart
enough for anything. Even so, Lanius eyed it in a way he never had
before.
He put it back in its room, knowing it probably wouldn’t stay there
long. Then he went looking for King Grus, which wasn’t something he did
very often. He found the other king closeted with General Hirundo. They
were hashing out the campaign in the Chernagor country over mugs of wine.
“Hello, Your Majesty,” Grus said, courteous as usual. “Would you care to
join me?”
“As a matter of fact, Your Majesty, I’d like to talk to you in private
for a little while, if I could,” Lanius answered.
Grus’ gaze sharpened. Lanius didn’t call him
Your Majesty every day, or every month, either. The older man
rose. “If you’ll excuse us, Hirundo . . .” he said.
“Certainly, Your Majesty. I can tell when I’m not wanted.” The general
bowed and left. Had he spoken in a different tone of voice, he would have
thought himself mortally insulted, and an uprising would have followed in
short order. As things were, he just sounded amused.
After Hirundo closed the door behind him, Grus turned back to Lanius.
“All right, Your Majesty. If you wanted my attention, you’ve got it. What
can I do for you?”
Lanius shook his head. “No, it’s what I can do for you.” Honesty
compelled him to add, “Or it may be what I can do for you, anyhow.” He set
out the idea he’d had a little while earlier.
The other king stared at him, then started to laugh. Lanius scowled. He
hated to be laughed at. Grus held up a hand. “No, no, no. By the gods,
Your Majesty, it’s not you.”
“What is it, then?” Lanius asked stiffly.
“It’s the idea,” Grus said. “It’s not you.” It’s my idea, Lanius thought, still offended. “What’s wrong
with it?”
“Why—” Grus started to be glib, but caught himself. He did some
thinking, then admitted, “I don’t know that anything’s wrong with it. It’s
still funny, though.”
When Lanius went to bed that night, the Banished One appeared to him in
a dream. Before that cold, beautiful, inhuman gaze, the king felt less
than a moncat himself. The Banished One always raised that feeling in him,
but never more than tonight. Those eyes seemed to pierce the very center
of his soul. “You are plotting against me,” the Banished One said.
“We are enemies,” Lanius said. “You have always plotted against
Avornis.”
“You deserve whatever happens to you,” the Banished One replied. “You
deserve worse than what has happened to you. You deserve it, and I intend
to give it to you. But if you plot and scheme against me, your days will
be even shorter than they would otherwise, and even more full of pain and
grief. Do you doubt me? You had better not doubt me, you puling little
wretch of a man.”
“I have never doubted you,” Lanius told him. “You need not worry about
that.”
The Banished One laughed. His laughter flayed, even in a dream. “I,
worry over what a sorry mortal does? Your life at best is no more than a
sneeze. If you think you worry me, you exaggerate your importance in the
grand scheme of things.”
Even in a dream, Lanius’ logical faculties still worked—after a
fashion. “In that case,” he asked, “why do you bother appearing to
me?”
“You exaggerate your importance,” the Banished One repeated. “A flea
bite annoys a man without worrying him. But when the man crushes the flea,
though he worries not a bit, the flea is but a smear. And so shall you be,
and sooner than you think.”
“Sometimes the flea hops away,” Lanius said.
“That is because there is very little difference between a man and a
flea,” the Banished One retorted. “But between a man and me—you shall see
what the difference is between a man and me. Oh, yes—you shall see.” As he
had once before, years earlier, he made as though to reach out for
Lanius.
In the nick of time—in the very nick of time—the king fought himself
awake. He sat bolt upright in his bed, his heart pounding. “Are you all
right?” Sosia asked sleepily.
“Bad dream. Just a bad dream,” Lanius answered, his voice shaking. A
bad dream it was.
Just a bad dream? Oh, no. He knew better than that.
In the nick of time—in the very nick of time—the king fought himself
awake. Grus sat bolt upright in bed, his heart pounding. “Are you all
right?” Estrilda asked sleepily.
“Bad dream. Just a bad dream,” Grus answered, his voice shaking. A bad
dream it
was. Just a bad dream? Oh, no. He knew better than that. The
Banished One had been on the very point of seizing him when he escaped
back into the world of mundane reality. And if the Banished One’s hands
had touched him, as they’d been on the point of doing . . .
He didn’t know what would have happened then. He didn’t know, and he
never, ever wanted to find out.
Little by little, his thudding heart and gasping breath slowed toward
normal. The Banished One had come too close to scaring him to death
without touching him. But Grus had also learned more from that horrid
nighttime visitation than the Banished One might have intended.
Fortified by the thought the exiled god had never come to him more than
once of a night, he lay down and tried to go back to sleep. Try as he
would, though, he couldn’t sleep anymore. He let out a small sigh of
frustration. The dream the exiled god had sent remained burned on his
memory, as those dreams always did. He wished he could forget them, the
way he forgot dreams of the ordinary sort. But no. Whatever else the
Banished One was, he was nothing of the ordinary sort.
Estrilda muttered to herself and went back to sleep. Grus wished again
that he could do the same. Whatever he wished, more sleep eluded him. He
waited until he was sure his wife was well under, then poked his feet into
slippers, pulled a cloak on over his nightshirt, and left the royal
bedchamber. The guardsmen in the corridor came to stiff attention. “As you
were,” Grus told them, and they relaxed.
Torches in sconces on the wall guttered and crackled. Quite a few had
burned out. Why not? At this hour of the night, hardly anyone was
stirring. No need for much light. Grus walked down the hall. He was and
was not surprised when another guarded door opened. Out came Lanius,
wearing the same sort of irregular outfit as Grus had on.
After telling his own guards to stand at ease, Lanius looked up and
down the corridor. He seemed . . . surprised and not surprised to discover
Grus also up and about. “Hello, Your Majesty,” Grus said. “You, too?”
“Yes, me, too . . . Your Majesty,” Lanius answered. Grus nodded to
himself. Whenever Lanius deigned to use his title, the other king took
things very seriously indeed. As though to prove the point, Lanius
gestured courteously. “Shall we walk?”
“I think maybe we’d better,” Grus said.
Behind them, guardsmen muttered among themselves. The soldiers no doubt
wondered how both kings had happened to wake up at the same time. Grus
wished he wondered, too. But he had no doubts whatsoever.
Neither did Lanius. The younger king said, “The Banished One knows we
have something in mind.”
“He certainly does,” Grus agreed.
“Good,” Lanius said. “Next spring—”
Grus held up a hand. “Maybe next spring. Maybe the spring after that,
or the spring after
that. As long as the Menteshe want to keep doing part of our job
for us, I won’t complain a bit.”
“Well, no. Neither will I,” Lanius said. “We ought to use however much
time we have wisely. I wish we could lay our hands on some more ordinary
thralls.”
“So do I,” Grus said. “But we’d have to cross the Stura to do it, and I
don’t want to do that while the Menteshe are still in the middle of their
civil war.”
“I suppose you’re right.” Lanius sounded regretful but not mutinous.
“Pterocles should start teaching other wizards the spell he’s worked out.
When we do go south of the Stura, we’ll need it.”
“We’d better need it,” Grus said, and Lanius nodded. Grus went on, “I
have had work for Pterocles up in the Chernagor country, you
know.”
“Oh, yes.” Lanius did not seem in a quarrelsome mood. After facing up
to the Banished One, mere mortals seldom felt like fighting among
themselves. The younger king continued, “But he’s not up in the Chernagor
country now. And he can teach more wizards here in the capital than
anywhere else in Avornis.”
“More of everything here in the capital than anywhere else in Avornis,”
Grus said.
Lanius nodded again. This time, he followed the nod with a yawn. “I
think I can sleep again,” he said.
“Do you?” Grus looked inside himself. After a moment, he gave Lanius a
sad little shrug. “Well, Your Majesty, I’m jealous, because I don’t. I’m
afraid I’m up for the rest of the night.”
“Sorry to hear that.” Lanius yawned again. He turned around. “If you’ll
excuse me—”
“Good night,” Grus told him. “Don’t snore so loud, you wake up my
daughter.” Laughing, Lanius headed back to his bedchamber.
Grus wandered down the hallway. The soft leather soles of his slippers
scuffed over the floor’s mosaic tiles. How many times had he walked along
here, not noticing the hunting scenes over which so many craftsmen had
worked so hard and so long? Tonight, he noticed. Tonight, he had nothing
to distract him.
Another man’s footsteps came from around a corner. Grus realized he had
not even an eating knife on his belt. Had the Banished One come to Otus as
he’d come to the two kings? Was the thrall on the prowl? Would his guards
let him go because they thought him cured?
Did he have murder on his mind? Did he have a mind, or was he but a
reflection of the Banished One’s will?
The other man came into sight. For a moment, in the dim torchlight,
Grus thought it
was Otus. Then he saw with his eyes, not his late-night fears.
“Hello, Pterocles,” he called. “What are you doing up at this ghastly
hour?”
“Your Majesty?” Pterocles sounded as surprised and alarmed as Grus had
felt. “I could ask you the same question, you know.”
“Well, so you could,” Grus said. “I couldn’t sleep. I ... had a bad
dream.”
He knew Pterocles had dreamed of the Banished One. That the Banished
One took Pterocles seriously enough to send him a dream was one reason he
was chief wizard in Avornis these days. As far as the king knew, though,
the Banished One had visited Pterocles only once in the night.
Until tonight. The wizard jerked as though Grus had poked him with a
pin. “Why, so did I, Your Majesty.” Pterocles nodded jerkily. “So did
I.”
“One of—those dreams?” Grus asked.
Pterocles nodded again. “Oh, yes, Your Majesty. One of—those dreams.”
He mimicked Grus’ tone very well. “I haven’t had one of— those dreams for
years now. I wouldn’t have been sorry not to have this one, either.”
“I believe you,” Grus said. “Nobody wants a visit from the Banished
One.” There. He’d said it. The ceiling didn’t fall in on him. The name
didn’t even raise any particular echoes—except in his own mind. Gathering
himself, he went on, “It’s an honor of sorts, though, if you look at it
the right way.”
“An honor?” Pterocles frowned. “I’m not sure I see ... Oh. Wait. Maybe I
do.”
Now King Grus was the one who nodded. “That’s what I meant, all right.
Most people never have to worry about seeing the Banished One looking out
of their dreams. He never needs to notice them. If he notices you, it’s a
sign you’ve done something, or you’re going to do something, to worry
him.”
“He visited both of us tonight, then?” the wizard asked.
“That’s right.” Grus gave him another nod. “And he visited King Lanius,
too.”
“Did he?” Pterocles said. “Do you know why he visited the, uh, other
king?”
Grus smiled a slightly sour smile. Even after he and Lanius had shared
the throne for a good many years, people still found the arrangement
awkward every now and again. He chuckled. He still found it awkward every
now and again himself. But that was neither here nor there. He told
Pterocles why he thought the Banished One had paid the nighttime call.
“Really?” Pterocles said when he was done. “You surprise me, Your
Majesty. When was the last time the Banished One sent three people dreams
at the same time?” Pterocles wondered.
“I don’t know,” Grus said. “I don’t know if he’s ever done anything
like that before. Interesting, isn’t it?”
“It could be.” Pterocles cocked his head to one side as he considered.
“Yes, it could be.”
“That’s what I thought,” Grus said. “And so I don’t mind wandering the
hallways here in the wee small hours of the night quite as much as I would
if I’d gotten out of bed with a headache or a sour stomach.”
Pterocles grunted. Then he yawned. “It could be so, Your Majesty. But
whether it’s so or not, I’m still sleepy. If you don’t mind, I think I’m
going to try to go back to bed.”
“King Lanius did the same thing. I envied him, and I envy you, too,”
Grus said. “Maybe I’ll nap in the afternoon, but I can’t sleep more
tonight. I’m sure of that.”
“I’m off, then.” Pterocles sketched a salute to Grus, turned around,
and went back the way he had come.
Grus wandered the hallways aimlessly—or maybe not so aimlessly, for he
ended up at the entrance to the palace. The guards there needed a
heartbeat or two to recognize him. When they did, they sprang to attention
all the more rigid for being embarrassed. His wave told them they could
relax. He walked out into the night.
It was cold on the palace steps, but not cold enough to drive him back
inside. When he looked to the east, he saw a faint grayness that said
sunrise was coming. He stood and waited, watching the gray spread up the
dome of the sky, watching the stars fade and then disappear, watching pink
and gold follow the gray. All around him, the bricks and stone and slate
roof tiles of the city of Avornis took on solid shape and then, a little
at a time, color as well.
Lanius had had an idea that worried the Banished One. The more Grus
thought about that, the better he liked it.
A new day dawned.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA:
Chernenko, Dan.
The chernagor pirates / Dan Chernenko. p. cm.—(The scepter of mercy,
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I. Title. II. Series: Chernenko, Dan. Scepter of mercy ; bk. 2.
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While young King Lanius dreams of being more than a mere figurehead,
his fellow sovereign, the usurper King Grus, is defending Avornis against
the shadowy plots of the Banished One—the dark god cast from heaven, who
seeks now to dominate the mortal world.
With the barbarous, nomadic Menteshe in the south holding the Scepter
of Mercy—and civil war raging among the Chernagor city-states in the
north—Avornis finds itself threatened on two fronts. King Grus and his
army are in the land of the Chernagors, hoping to quell the trouble—
without becoming bogged down in a protracted war. Grus may be able to form
an alliance against the Menteshe....Then again, it could be an inescapable
trap.
But the longer the kings go without acting on their dream of retaking
the Scepter of Mercy, the greater the advantage the Banished One gains.
However, sending soldiers against the Menteshe risks having the army
turned into half-mindless thralls. But sooner or later, King Grus will
have to strike—before his people realize just how formidable an enemy the
Banished One truly is....
Not for the first time—not for the hundredth, either—King Lanius
wondered what it would be like to rule Avornis. His ancestors for a dozen
generations had been kings.
They’d ruled. He, on the other hand . . .
He, on the other hand, sighed and went on poking through the royal
archives. Avornis was a proud and ancient kingdom. That meant it had been
accumulating scrolls and codices and sheets of parchment and the
occasional (often broken) potsherd for centuries. Lanius, fascinated by
history, dug through them as eagerly as a miner went after a rich vein of
gold.
The King—well, one of the Kings—of Avornis looked more like a scholar
than a ruler. He was a tall, thin, weedy man in his midtwenties, with dark
brown hair that needed combing and a beard with a chunk of dust in it down
low on his right cheek where he couldn’t see it and flick it away. Instead
of royal robes, he wore an ordinary—in fact, rather grubby—linen tunic and
baggy wool trousers. The servants had complained that he always came back
from the archives covered in dust and dirt, and that robes so smirched
were impossible to clean. Lanius didn’t like to cause people trouble when
he didn’t have to.
Dispirited sunbeams came through the dusty skylights set into the
ceiling. Motes of dust Lanius had kicked up danced in the light. Somewhere
off in the distance, far beyond the heavy doors that shut the archives
away from the rest of the palace, a couple of serving women shrilly
squabbled over something or other. Lanius smiled—he couldn’t make out a
word they were saying.
He bent for a closer look at the latest parchment he’d unearthed. It
talked about Yozgat—the great southern city where the barbarous Menteshe
held the Scepter of Mercy for their master, the Banished One—back in the
lost and distant days when Yozgat was not Yozgat but rather Prusa, an
Avornan town.
Lanius sighed. “Why do I bother?” he muttered under his breath. Prusa
had been made into Yozgat more than five hundred years before, when the
wild Menteshe horsemen rode out of the hills and took the southern part of
the kingdom away from an Avornis wracked by civil war. It had housed the
Scepter of Mercy, once the great talisman of the Kings of Avornis, for
four centuries. All efforts to reclaim the Scepter had failed, most of
them horribly.
Maybe some clue in Prusa-that-was would yield a key to Yozgat. So
Lanius hoped. In that hope, he kept going through the manuscripts in the
archives one after another. If he didn’t look, he would assuredly find
nothing.
“And if I do look, I’ll probably find nothing,” he said, and sighed
again. Odds were, all his efforts were futile. The Banished One might have
been cast down from the heavens to earth below, but he remained much, much
more than a mere mortal man. He’d spent the intervening years fortifying
Yozgat against assault. Even if an Avornan army fought its way to the
place, what could it do then? Lanius hoped he would find something,
anything, to tell him.
Not on this parchment, which was a tax register and said very little
about Prusa’s geography. The next one . . . The next one talked about a
border squabble between Avornis and the Chernagor city-states at the
opposite end of the kingdom. No one could be sure how, or if, the archives
were organized. One of these days, I’ll have to do something about that.
Lanius laughed at himself. He’d had the same thought ever since he started
coming into the archives as a youth. It hadn’t happened yet. He didn’t
intend to hold his breath waiting for it to happen. He put down the
parchment that didn’t interest him, got up from the chair where he’d been
sitting for a long time, and stretched. Something in his back popped. With
a glance over his shoulder, as though to say he’d be back, he left the
archives.
Servants bowed. “Your Majesty,” they murmured. Their respect might have
shown that Lanius was the ruler of Avornis. It might have, but it didn’t.
All it showed was that he was the descendant of a long line of kings.
As though to underscore his lack of power, one of the servants said,
“Oh, Your Majesty, King Grus wants to see you.”
Not,
King Grus wants to see you at your convenience, or anything of
the sort. No one worried about Lanius’ convenience—Grus certainly didn’t.
“Where is Grus?” Lanius asked. He seldom used the other king’s royal
title—as seldom as he could get away with, in fact.
“He’s at the entranceway to the palace, Your Majesty, enjoying the fine
spring day,” the servant replied.
Lanius couldn’t quarrel with Grus about that. Spring had come late to
the city of Avornis this year. Now that it was finally here, it was worth
savoring. “I’ll meet him there, then,” Lanius said.
If he hadn’t gone, Grus wouldn’t have done anything to him. His fellow
sovereign wasn’t a cruel or vindictive man. Lanius would have had an
easier time disliking him if he were. The rightful King of Avornis—so he
thought of himself—still managed it, but it was sometimes hard work.
Serving women smiled at him as he went past. Sleeping with even a
powerless king might let them escape a life of drudgery. Lanius passed the
chambers where he kept his white-mustached monkeys and his moncats. He
didn’t have time for the menagerie now, either.
Unfiltered by dusty, dirty glass, the sunlight streaming through the
open doors of the palace made Lanius first blink and then smile. Bird-song
came in with the sunshine. Warblers and flycatchers and other birds were
finally coming back from the south. Lanius hadn’t realized how much he’d
missed their music until he started hearing it again.
Storks were coming back from the south, too, building great ramshackle
nests in trees and on rooftops. They didn’t sing—their voices were raucous
croaks—but most people took them for good luck.
Grus stood in the sunshine, not so much basking in it as seeming to
cause it. He had a knack for attaching to himself anything good that
happened. His royal robes, encrusted with jewels and pearls and shot
through with golden threads, gleamed and glittered as though they had come
down from the heavens to illuminate the dull, gross, all-too-material
earth. Their splendor made Lanius in his plain, dirty clothes seem all the
shabbier by contrast.
Turning at the sound of Lanius’ footfalls, Grus smiled and said,
“Hello, Your Majesty. Meaning no offense, but you look like a
teamster.”
“I was in the archives,” Lanius said shortly.
“Oh. I’m sorry.” In spite of the apology, Grus’ smile got wider. “That
means you want to clout me in the head for dragging you out.”
Lanius didn’t care to think what would happen to him if he tried to
clout Grus in the head. The other king was about twice his age and several
inches shorter than he. But Grus, despite a grizzled beard, was solidly
made and trained as a fighting man. Not much in the way of muscle had ever
clung to Lanius’ long bones, while he knew far less of fighting than of
ancient dialects of Avornan. And so, while he might think wistfully of
clouting the usurper, he knew better than to have a go at it.
“It’s all right,” he said now. “I’d come out anyhow. What can I do for
you?”
Before Grus could answer, a priest whose yellow robe displayed his high
rank walked in through the entrance. He bowed to Grus, murmuring, “Your
Majesty.” He started to go on by Lanius, whose attire was anything but
royal, but then stopped and stared and at last bowed again. “Your
Majesties,” he corrected himself, and walked on.
A real teamster with a couple of barrels of ale in a handcart came in
right after the priest. Intent on his work, he noticed neither king.
“Let’s find some quiet place where we can talk,” Grus said.
“Lead on,” Lanius said.
You will anyhow, he thought glumly.
King Grus sat down on a stool in one of the several small dining rooms
in the palace. Servants ate here; royalty didn’t. Grus watched with some
amusement as Lanius perched on another stool a few feet away.
Perched was the right word—with his long limbs and awkward gait,
Lanius put Grus in mind of a crane or a stork or some other large
bird.
“This seems quiet enough,” Lanius remarked. A stout door—oak barred
with iron—muffled the noise from the hallway outside, and would keep
people from eavesdropping on what the two kings said.
“It will do.” Grus watched the younger man fidget. He wondered if
Lanius had any idea he was doing it. Probably not, Grus judged.
“What is it, then?” Lanius sounded hostile and more than a little
nervous. Grus knew his son-in-law didn’t love him. He wouldn’t have loved
a man who’d taken the power rightfully his, either. As for the nerves . .
. Grus thought he understood those, too.
“Tell me what you know about the Chernagors,” he said.
Lanius started.
He thought I was going to ask him something else. Grus clicked
his tongue between his teeth. He expected they would get around to that,
too. Lanius said, “You’ll know a lot already. Hard to be King of
Avornis”—he made a sour face at that—“and not know a good deal about the
Chernagors.”
“I’m not interested in all the trading they do out on the Northern
Sea,” Grus said. “They’ll do that come what may. I’m interested in the
rivalries between their city-states.”
“All right.” Lanius thought for a moment. “Some of them, you know, go
back a long way, back even before the days when their pirate ancestors
took the northern coastline away from us.”
“That’s fine,” Grus said agreeably. “If knowing why they hated each
other before helps me know how they hate each other now, I’ll listen. If
it doesn’t”—he shrugged—“it can wait for some other time.”
Grus was a relentlessly practical man. One of his complaints about
Lanius was that his son-in-law was anything but. Of course, had Lanius
been more like him, he would also have been more likely to try to
overthrow him—and much more likely to succeed.
“What’s this all about?” Lanius asked now, a practical enough question.
“The Chernagors haven’t troubled us much lately—certainly no sea raids on
our coast like the ones in my great-grandfather’s day, and not more than
the usual nuisance raids across the land frontier. Thervingia’s been a
lot bigger problem.”
“Not since Prince Berto became King Berto,” Grus said. Avornis’ western
neighbor was quiet under a king who would rather build cathedrals than
fight. Grus approved of a pious sovereign for a neighbor. Berto’s father,
King Dagipert, had almost made Thervingia the master of Avornis and
himself Lanius’ father-in-law instead of Grus. He’d also come unpleasantly
close to killing Grus on the battlefield. The news that Dagipert had
finally died was some of the best Grus had ever gotten.
“You know what I mean.” Lanius let his impatience show. He had scant
patience for comments he found foolish.
“All right.” Grus spread his hands, trying to placate the younger king.
“I’m concerned because the Banished One may be trying to get a foothold in
some of the Chernagor city-states. With Berto on the throne in Thervingia,
he won’t have any luck there, and he could use a lever against us besides
the Menteshe.”
“I wonder if the Banished One and Dagipert connived together,”
Lanius said. Grus only shrugged once more. He’d wondered the same
thing. Avornans had never proved it. Dagipert had always denied it. Doubt
lingered even so.
“Any which way, our spies have seen Menteshe—which is to say, they’ve
surely seen the Banished One’s—agents in several Chernagor towns,” Grus
said.
“Milvago.” Lanius’ lips shaped the name without a sound.
“Don’t say it.” Grus shook his head in warning. “Don’t even come as
close as you did. That’s nobody’s business but ours—and I wouldn’t be
sorry if we didn’t know, either.”
“Yes.” Despite the warm spring weather, Lanius shivered. Grus didn’t
blame him a bit. Everyone knew King Olor and Queen Quelea and the rest of
the gods had joined together to cast the Banished One out of the heavens
and down to earth more than a thousand years before.
Everyone knew that, yes. What no one knew, these days, was that the
Banished One—Milvago, as he’d been known when he still dwelt in the
heavens—hadn’t been any minor deity. Lanius had found that truth in the
ecclesiastical archives, far below the great cathedral in the capital.
No, Milvago hadn’t been any ordinary god, a god of weather or anger or
earthquakes or other such well-defined function. From what the ancient
archives said, Milvago had fathered Olor and Quelea and the rest. Until
they cast him forth, he’d been Lord of All.
He remained, or seemed to remain, immortal, though he wasn’t
all-powerful anymore—wasn’t, in fact, a god at all anymore. He wanted
dominion on earth, not only for its own sake but also, somehow, as a
stepping-stone back to the heavens. Avornis had always resisted him. Grus
wondered how long his kingdom could go on resisting a power greater than
it held.
“Do you know what I think?” Lanius said.
Grus shook his head. “I haven’t the faintest idea, Your Majesty.” He
stayed polite to Lanius. The other king seldom used his royal title.
Lanius resented reigning rather than ruling. Grus didn’t worry about that,
as long as the resentment stayed no more than resentment. Polite still,
Grus added, “Tell me, please.”
“I think the Banished One is stirring up trouble among the Chernagors
to keep us too busy even to try to go after the Scepter of Mercy down in
the south,” Lanius said.
That hadn’t occurred to Grus. He realized it should have. The Banished
One saw the world as a whole. He had to try to do the same himself. “You
may very well be right,” he said slowly. “But even if you are, what can we
do about it?”
“I don’t know,” Lanius admitted. “I was hoping you might think of
something.”
“Thanks—I think,” Grus said.
“If we get in trouble in the north, what can we do but try to calm it
down before it gets worse?” Lanius asked. “Nothing I can see. We can’t
very well pretend it isn’t there, can we?”
“I don’t see how. I wish I did.” Grus’ laugh was sour as green apples.
“Well, Your Majesty, the Scepter of Mercy has been out of our hands for a
long time now. I don’t suppose a little longer will make that much
difference.”
Lanius’ answering nod was unhappy. Four hundred years ago, the
then-King of Avornis had brought the great talisman down from the capital
to the south to help resist the inroads of the Menteshe. But the
hard-riding nomads had fallen on the Scepter’s escort, galloped off with
it to Yozgat, and held it there ever since. After several disastrously
unsuccessful efforts to retake it, the Avornans hadn’t tried for a couple
of centuries. And yet. . .
Lanius said, “As long as we go without it, the Banished One has the
advantage. All we can do is respond to his moves. Playing the game that
way, we lose sooner or later. With it, maybe we can call the tune.”
“I know.” Now Grus sounded unhappy, too. Sending Avornan soldiers south
of the Stura River was asking either to lose them or to see them made into
thralls—half-mindless men bound to the Menteshe and to the Banished One.
And Yozgat, these days the chief town of the Menteshe Prince Ulash, lay a
long way south of the Stura. “If only our magic could stand up against
what the Banished One can aim at us.”
“Wish for the moon while you’re at it.” But King Lanius caught himself.
“No. Wish for the Scepter of Mercy.”
“If I need to have it already before I can hope to get it—” Grus
stopped. Even if he went around that twenty-two times, he’d still get
caught.
“We have to try. Sooner or later, we have to try,” Lanius said. But
Lanius was no soldier. How much of the bitter consequences of failure did
he grasp?
On the other hand,
not trying to take back the Scepter of Mercy would also be a
failure, a failure most bitter. Grus understood that, too.
He’d never wished more to disagree than when he made his head go up and
down and said, “You’re right.”
Lanius dreamed. He knew he dreamed. But dreams in which the Banished
One appeared were not of the ordinary sort. That supremely cold, supremely
beautiful face seemed more real than most of the things he saw while wide
awake. The Banished One said, “And so you know my name. You know who I
was, who I am, who I shall be again.”
His voice was as beautiful—and as cold—as his features. Lanius heard in
these dreams with the same spectral clarity as he saw.
Milvago. The name, and the knowledge of what it meant, echoed and
reechoed in his mind.
He didn’t speak the name—however one spoke in dreams—but the Banished
One sensed it. “Yes, I am Milvago, shaper of this miserable world,” he
declared. “How dare you presume to stand against me?”
“You want to conquer my kingdom,” Lanius replied. He could answer
honestly; the Banished One, he’d seen, might commandeer his dreams, but
couldn’t harm him in them. “You want to make my people into thralls. If I
can keep you from doing that, I will.”
“No mere mortal may hinder me,” the Banished One said.
“Not so.” Lanius shook his head, or it felt as though he shook his
head, there in this dream that was all too real. “You were cast down from
the heavens long ago. If no man could hinder you, you would have ruled the
world long since.”
“Rule it I shall.” The Banished One tossed his head in more than mortal
scorn. “What is time? Time means nothing to me, not when I created time.
Think you I am trapped in it, to gutter out one day like a lamp running
dry? You had best think again, you mayfly, you brief pimple on the buttock
of the world.”
Lanius knew he would die. He didn’t know the Banished One wouldn’t, but
Milvago had shown no sign of aging in all the long years since coming down
from the heavens. He couldn’t assume the Banished One was lying. Still,
that didn’t matter. The king’s tutors had trained him well. However
intimidating the Banished One was, Lanius saw he was trying to distract
him here. Whether he would die wasn’t the essence of the argument. Whether
he remained omnipotent—if, indeed, he’d ever been omnipotent—was.
“If you were all you say you are, you would have ruled the world since
you came into it,” Lanius said. “That you don’t proves you can be beaten.
I will do everything I know how to do to stop you.”
“Everything you know how to do.” The Banished One’s laughter flayed
like whips of ice. “What do you know? What
can you know, who live but for a season and then go back to the
nothingness from which you sprang?”
“I know it is better to live free than as one of your thralls,” Lanius
answered. “Did the gods who sprang from you decide the same thing?”
Normally, the Banished One’s perfect countenance showed no emotion.
Rage rippled over it now, though. “After yours, their turn shall come,” he
snarled. “You need not doubt that. Oh, no, do not doubt it.
Their turn shall come.”
He
reached for Lanius, the nails on his fingers sharpening into
talons as his hands drew near. As one will in dreams, Lanius turned to
flee. As one will in dreams, he knew he fled too slow. He looked back to
see how much danger he was in. The Banished One, apparently, could make
his arms as long as he chose. His hand closed on the shoulder of the King
of Avornis.
Lanius shrieked himself awake.
“Are you all right?” The hand on his shoulder belonged to his wife.
Even in the dim light of the royal bedchamber, Sosia looked alarmed. “I
haven’t heard you make a noise like that in ...” Grus’ daughter shook her
head. “I don’t know if I’ve ever heard you make a noise like that.”
“Bad dream,” Lanius said.
He would have left it there. He didn’t want to worry Sosia. Grus had
arranged the marriage—forced it on both of them, in other words. The new
king wanted to tie himself to Avornis’ ancient dynasty as closely as he
could. In their seven years of marriage, though, Lanius and Sosia had come
to care for each other as much as a married couple could reasonably be
expected to do—which was, perhaps, more than anything else, a triumph of
good manners and patience on both sides.
Sosia shook her head. Her dark, wavy hair, down for the night, brushed
across his face. “That wasn’t any ordinary dream,” she said. “You don’t
have dreams like that—nightmares, I should say. Did you see ... him?”
She didn’t even want to call him the Banished One. She didn’t know the
name Milvago, or what the Banished One had been before his ouster from the
heavens. So far as Lanius knew, only he and Grus knew that. Grus had told
him not to tell anyone—not his wife, who was Grus’ daughter, and not the
Arch-Hallow of Avornis, who was Grus’ bastard son. Lanius hadn’t argued.
He too could see that the fewer people who knew about exactly what sort of
enemy Avornis faced, the better.
After his scream, he couldn’t very well lie to Sosia. “Yes, I saw him,”
he said with a reluctant nod.
“Why doesn’t he leave you alone?” She sounded indignant, as though,
could she have been alone with the Banished One, she would have given him
a piece of her mind. She probably would have, too.
“He sends me dreams. He sends your father dreams. He doesn’t bother
other people—General Hirundo never gets them, for instance,” Lanius said.
The Banished One didn’t trouble Sosia, either, but Lanius forbore to
mention that.
His wife sounded more irate than ever. “He should bother other people,
and leave you alone.”
But Lanius shook his head. “In an odd way, I think it’s a compliment,”
he said. “He knows your father and I are dangerous to him, so we’re the
ones he visits in dreams. That’s what we think, anyhow.” Maybe we’re giving ourselves too much credit, he thought.
Could he and Grus—could any mortals—seriously discommode the
Banished One? On days when Lanius felt gloomy, he had his doubts. But why
had thralls under the Banished One’s will tried to murder the two Kings of
Avornis the winter before, if those kings didn’t represent some kind of
danger?
Sosia said, “What I think is, you ought to go back to sleep, and hope
no more bad dreams come. And if they don’t, you can worry about all these
things in the morning, when you feel better.”
Lanius leaned over and kissed her. “That’s good advice,” he said. In
fact, he could think of no better advice for the wee small hours of the
morning. He took it, and the Banished One left him alone . . . then.
King Grus and the man he hoped to make his new wizard eyed each other.
The wizard, whose name was Pterocles, said, “I’ll do everything I can for
you, Your Majesty.” He was young and earnest and very bright. Grus was
sure he would be diligent. Whether he would be versatile enough, or
discreet enough, to make a royal wizard . . . Grus wished he weren’t
quite so young.
And what was Pterocles thinking about as he sat studying Grus? The king
couldn’t read his face. That was, if anything, a point in the wizard’s
favor. After dealing with so many petitioners and courtiers over the
years, Grus knew how transparent most men were. Not this one.
“One of the things a king’s wizard needs to do,” Grus said, “is keep
his mouth shut. I think you can manage that.”
“I hope so,” Pterocles replied. “I don’t want to cause you
scandal.”
“Good,” Grus said, a little more heartily than he should have.
“And I do have a certain advantage along those lines,” the wizard went
on.
“Oh? What’s that?” Grus asked.
“I’m a man,” Pterocles answered, and stroked his silky brown beard as
though to emphasize the point.
Grus’ glower would have made most men hoping for royal favor cringe, or
more likely despair. Pterocles sat impassive. Grudgingly, Grus said,
“You’ve got nerve.”
“I hope so, Your Majesty. I wouldn’t be much good to you if I didn’t,”
Pterocles replied. “And would you want me if I were so stupid—no, so
ignorant—that I didn’t know why you need a new wizard?”
“Mph.” Grus pursed his lips and blew a hissing stream of air out
through them. Everyone in the palace, and probably everyone in the city of
Avornis, knew why he needed a new wizard. Alca the witch had been as
skilled at sorcery as anyone in the capital. She’d saved Grus’ life from
murder by magic before he became king. Grus had admired her, used her
talents . . . had an affair with her. Her husband found out. So did
Estrilda, Grus’ wife. The king made himself bring his attention back to
Pterocles. “Are you too frank for your own good?” he wondered aloud.
“If you decide I am, you’ll pick someone else,” the wizard said. “But
if I can’t speak openly to you, what good am I?”
“A point. Yes, definitely a point.” Grus drummed his fingers on the
marble-topped table in front of him. The stone was cool under his
fingertips. “Tell me,” he said, “has the Banished One ever appeared to you
in dreams?”
That cracked Pterocles’ shell of calm. He jerked as though bitten by a
horsefly. His eyes opened very wide. “Once, Your Majesty. Only once, King
Olor and Queen Quelea be praised,” he said. “But how could you know about
that?”
“Wizards aren’t the only ones who know strange things,” Grus answered.
“I wouldn’t want you as my wizard if the Banished One took no interest in
you.”
“Why ever not?” the wizard asked. “
I would be much happier if I had never seen that perfect,
perfectly sneering face, if I had never been reminded I was to him no more
than some crawling insect is to me.”
The way he spoke convinced Grus he told the truth. Nobody who had not
had the Banished One invade at least one of his nights could have imagined
the boundless contempt with which the castaway from the heavens viewed the
human race. The king said, “If you’re going to be a bug, how would you
like to be a bug with a sting?”
He’d surprised Pterocles again; he saw as much. “If I thought I could
sting the Banished One, I would,” the wizard said. “But how?”
“What do you know of the Scepter of Mercy?” Grus asked.
“Why, Your Majesty, I know as much as any Avornan living,” Pterocles
exclaimed, springing to his feet and bowing. Grus’ hopes suddenly soared.
Had good luck—or the hands of the gods, disguised as good luck—led him to
a man who could truly help him against the Banished One? But then, with
another bow, the wizard added, “Which is to say, not very much,” and
perched himself on his stool once more.
“I see.” Grus did his best to sound severe, but the corners of his
mouth couldn’t help twitching up. Pterocles’ grin made him look very young
indeed. Grus said, “How would you like to learn?”
Before answering, Pterocles pulled an amulet on a silver chain out from
under his linen tunic—a fine opal, shimmering in blue and red, half
covered by a laurel leaf. He murmured a low-voiced charm, then explained,
“My amulet and my magic will make me invisible to those who would do me
evil. That being so, Your Majesty, I will tell you I would give all I have
to learn those secrets.”
“Good. You may, and at just the price you offer,” Grus said. If he
could frighten Pterocles away, he wanted to find out now. But the wizard
only nodded, his eyes glowing with excitement. Grus went on, “And I’ll
tell you something else, too. Amulets like that are fine for warding
yourself against an ordinary wizard. All they do against the Banished One
is draw his notice. You might as well be saying,
I’m talking about something I don’t want the Banished One to
hear. Going about your business in the most ordinary way is more
likely to confuse him. Do you understand me?”
“Yes, and I wish I didn’t.” Pterocles had put the amulet away. Now he
drew it out again and looked it over. “This is as strong a spell as any
man can hope to cast.”
“I believe you,” Grus said. “Do you really think you can hope to beat
the Banished One by being stronger than he is?”
Had Pterocles said yes to that, Grus would have dismissed him. The
wizard started to—he had a young man’s confidence in his own strength and
power. But he also had some sense, for he checked himself. “Mm . . . maybe
not.”
“Good,” Grus said. “In that case, you just may do.”
Lanius’ crown lay heavy on his head. His neck would ache tonight from
bearing up under the weight of the gold. He wore it as seldom as he could.
But an embassy from one of the Chernagor city-states was a formal
occasion.
He entered the throne room a quarter of an hour before a servant would
escort the Chernagors into his presence. Courtiers bowed low as he walked
past them. They had to be polite, but he knew they were there more to see
the Chernagors than to see him. He went through the palace all the time.
The Chernagors, on the other hand, came to the city of Avornis but
seldom.
The royal throne rose several feet above the floor, to let the king
look down on the envoys who came before him. Two stalwart bodyguards stood
in front of it, one to the left, the other to the right. They both wore
gilded mailshirts and gilded helms with crests of crimson-dyed horsehair.
As Lanius ascended to the throne, the guards thumped the butts of their
spears against the floor in salute.
He settled himself on the throne as best he could. It was made to look
imposing, not to be comfortable. In his younger days, his mother and
Marshal Lepturus, the commander of the royal guards, would have taken
those places in front of the throne. No more. Grus had exiled both of them
to the Maze, the boggy, swampy country east and south of the capital.
Queen Certhia had tried to kill Grus by sorcery. Lepturus’ crime was more
recent. He’d refused to let his granddaughter marry Grus’ son. Lanius
sympathized. He wouldn’t have wanted anyone connected to him marrying
Ortalis, either.
A stir in the throne room swept such thoughts from his mind. Here came
the Chernagors, advancing up the central aisle toward the throne.
They were big, blocky men with bushy beards and dark hair fixed in neat
buns at the napes of their necks. They wore linen shirts bright with fancy
embroidery and knee-length kilts that left hairy calves on display.
Their leader, whose hair and beard were frosted with gray, bowed low
before Lanius. “Your Majesty,” he said in fluent, gutturally accented
Avornan. “I am Lyut, Your Majesty. I bring you greetings from Prince
Vsevolod of Nishevatz, and from all the other Princes of the
Chernagors.”
That last was polite nonsense; most of the other princes of the
Chernagors were Vsevolod’s rivals, not his allies. “I am pleased to greet
Prince Vsevolod in return,” Lanius replied, and then, deviating from the
usual formalities, “Do you know the ambassador Yaropolk, who has
represented your city-state here in times past?”
“I do, Your Majesty,” Lyut replied. “In fact, I have the honor to be
second cousin to his junior wife.”
“He is an able man,” Lanius said, which seemed a safe enough
compliment. “I have gifts for you and your men.” At his nod, a courtier
brought leather sacks of coins for Lyut and his followers. The
ambassador’s sack was larger and heavier than any of the others. Ancient
custom dictated just how much went into each sack.
Lyut bowed. “Many thanks, Your Majesty. Your generosity knows no
bounds. We have gifts for you as well.”
King Lanius leaned forward. So did the other Avornans in the throne
room. The Chernagors were wide-faring sailors and traders. Equally ancient
custom said their gifts to Kings of Avornis might be anything at all, as
long as they were interesting. Lyut gestured to the men behind him.
“Here, Your Majesty,” Lyut said as the other Chernagors took skins out
of leather sacks and unrolled them. The skins were from great cats,
lion-sized, with orange hair striped with black. “These come from lands
far away.”
“I’m sure they must,” Lanius said politely. “You must tell me more
later.” He tried to sound enthusiastic. The skins
were interesting, but the Chernagors had done better. The
mustachioed monkeys and the strange moncats Lanius raised were, to his way
of thinking, cases in point.
With another bow, Lyut said, “That would be my pleasure, Your Majesty.
In the meantime, though, I hope you will hear my petition.”
“You have come from far away to make it,” Lanius said. “Speak, then.
Tell me what is in your mind.”
“Thank you, Your Majesty. You are as gracious as you are wise.” Lyut
paused, then went on, “Let me be blunt, Your Majesty. There are men in
Nishevatz who would let my city-state fall under the shadow of the
Banished One. More—there are men in my city-state who would
help Nishevatz fall under the shadow of the Banished One. Prince
Vsevolod resists them, but he is not a young man. And who knows in which
direction his son, Prince Vasilko, will turn? We need your help, Your
Majesty. We need Avornis’ help.”
King Lanius wanted to laugh. He also wanted to cry. By himself, he
didn’t have the power to help a Chernagor city-state. That lay in Grus’
hands. Lanius said, “What I can do, I will do.” Lyut bowed again. Maybe he
took that as a promise of aid. Or maybe he knew how weak Lanius truly was,
and took it for a promise of nothing at all.
CHAPTER TWO
Grus hated riding horseback. He wished he could reach the Chernagor
city-states by river galley. He’d been a sailor—a galley captain, a
commodore—for years. Aboard ship, he knew what he was doing. On a horse,
he felt like a buffoon. Very often, the horse he was riding thought he was
a buffoon, too.
Unfortunately, if he wanted to bring an army into the lands of the
Chernagors, he had to go by horseback. Rivers in Avornis came out of the
Bantian Mountains in the west, and flowed east and south to the sea. A low
spur of the Bantians ran west from their northern extremity. Thanks to
that watershed, no one could travel from Avornis to the Chernagor country
by river.
And so, muttering under his breath, Grus turned to General Hirundo and
said, “There has to be another way to do this.”
Hirundo was a cavalry officer. Grus tried not to hold it against him.
Grinning, he said, “Oh, there is, Your Majesty.”
“By Olor’s beard, what is it?” Grus was ready to grasp at any
straw.
“Instead of riding, you could walk like a pikeman,” Hirundo said.
“Thanks so much. I’m glad I asked
you for advice,” Grus said. Hirundo laughed out loud.
The army moved north, horses’ hooves and the feet of marching men
kicking up a cloud of dust that clung to everything and left eyes and
mouths feeling as though they’d been dipped in grit. Out in the fields,
farmers plowed the rich black soil. Down in the south, where Grus and
Hirundo had spent their younger days, crops went into the ground with the
fall rains and were harvested in the spring. Things were different
here.
Some things were different, anyhow. Most of the farmers, though, fled
as soon as they saw soldiers. Grus had seen that countless times before,
in the south and here, not far from the capital. Some farmers took Avornan
soldiers for the enemy. Some simply weren’t inclined to take chances.
Avornans were also known to pillage, to rob, and to kill for the sport of
it.
Grus said, “We aren’t running things as smoothly as we ought to. Our
farmers shouldn’t think they have to run away from our soldiers. If it
weren’t for the soldiers, the farmers would have plenty of worse things to
worry about.”
“Well, yes,” Hirundo said. “My best guess is, they already know that.
But they know our boys can turn on ‘em, too. I wish it didn’t happen as
much as you do. You know what wishes are worth, though. Give men swords
and spears and bows and pay ’em to fight, and you’ll find they’ll go into
business for themselves along with fighting for you.”
“ ‘Go into business for themselves,’” Grus echoed. “That’s the politest
way to say ‘turn brigand’ I’ve ever heard.”
“Oh, I’m polite, Your Majesty,” Hirundo said. “In fact, I’m about the
politest son of a whore you’re ever likely to meet.”
Laughing, Grus said, “So I see.”
Wagons full of grain and a shambling herd of cattle accompanied the
army on the march. This early in the year, the only way the men could have
lived off the countryside was by stealing every cow and sheep and pig for
miles around. That wouldn’t have endeared them to the peasants they were
supposed to protect.
When they camped for the night, some of them slept on bare ground under
the stars, others in little tents of canvas or leather. Grus and Hirundo
had fancy, airy pavilions of silk, the king’s larger than the general’s.
Grus ate the same porridge and beef as his soldiers, though. Eating with
them was the best way to make sure they got food worth eating.
After supper, Hirundo poked his nose into Grus’ tent and said, “Ask you
a couple of things, Your Majesty?”
“Of course. Come in.” Grus picked up a folding chair and unfolded it.
He pointed to a jug of wine with a couple of cups beside it. “Have
something to drink.” The wine was better than what his soldiers drank.
“Don’t mind if I do.” After looking a question at Grus, Hirundo poured
the king a cup, too. “What do you think we can do when we get up to
Nishevatz?” the general asked after they’d both sipped.
“I
hope we can knock down whatever faction the Banished One’s
backers have put together there,” Grus answered.
“That would be good,” Hirundo agreed. “But how likely is it? The
Banished One has a long reach. We’ve seen as much.”
“Haven’t we just?” Grus agreed. “But the Chernagor country is right at
the end of it. We’ll be on the spot. That will make a difference. I hope
it will, anyhow.”
“It had better,” Hirundo said. “If it doesn’t, we’re in a lot of
trouble, you know.”
Grus took a long pull at his wine. He wanted to ease the situation with
a joke, as Hirundo so often did. He wanted to, but couldn’t come up with
one for the life of him. “We
are in a lot of trouble,” he said at last. “The Banished One
hasn’t tried interfering in affairs so openly in a long time—maybe not
ever. Lanius says he never tried to kill Kings of Avornis before when they
weren’t in the field against him.”
Hirundo smiled. “Lanius ought to know.”
“Oh, yes. He knows all sorts of things.” Grus let it go at that. The
one thing Lanius didn’t know, as far as Grus could see, was what was
important and what wasn’t. Grus went on, “You said you wanted to ask me a
couple of things. What’s the other one?”
The general’s mobile features squeezed into a frown. After a moment, he
brightened and said, “All right, now I remember. Once we settle this mess
in Nishevatz, do you think we’ll be able to turn around and march home
again? Or are we going to spend the next five or ten years putting out
fires in the Chernagor country?”
“I
hope we’ll be able to do this quickly and neatly and then go home
again,” Grus said. “I don’t
know whether that will happen, though. It’s not just up to me,
you know. The Banished One will have something to do with it. So will the
Chernagors. They
like squabbling among themselves—and they don’t always like
outsiders sticking their noses in on one side or the other.”
“Might as well be a family,” Hirundo said.
That startled a laugh out of Grus. He said, “You’re right. But it’s
also what worries me most.”
As the army pushed north, the mountains climbed ever higher on the
horizon. They were neither as tall nor as jagged as the Bantians proper.
Snow was already melting from their peaks. In the range to the west, it
would cling to the mountaintops all summer long.
Several passes gave entry to the Chernagor country on the far side of
the mountains. Naturally, Grus led his men to the one closest to
Nishevatz. He ordered scouts out well ahead of the main body of the army.
If the Banished One’s backers (who might include Prince Vasilko) wanted to
ambush them before they got to Nishevatz, the pass was the best place to
try it. Grus remembered Count Corvus coming to grief against the Thervings
because he didn’t watch out for an ambush. Had Corvus found it instead of
the other way around, he likely would have made himself King of Avornis.
As things were, he was a monk in the Maze these days, and would never come
out.
No ambush waited in the pass. But one of the scouts said, “Your
Majesty, we rode up to the watershed and then down a ways. When we looked
to the north, we saw the whole country was full of smoke.” Several other
riders nodded.
Grus and Hirundo exchanged glances. They both knew what was most likely
to cause that. A company of cavalry around him, Grus rode out ahead of the
army to see for himself. Sure enough, when he got to the top of the pass
and peered north, it was just as the scout had said. Grus caught Hirundo’s
eye again. “They’ve gone and started their war without us,” he said. “I’ll
bet I can tell you which side Vasilko’s on, too.”
“Not ours,” Hirundo said. Grus nodded.
King Lanius hated being disturbed when he was with his moncats.
Servants in the palace generally knew better than to bother him there.
When someone knocked on the door to the moncats’ room, Lanius muttered in
annoyance—he had Bronze on his lap. “Who is it?” he called. “What do you
want?”
He sat on the floor with Bronze. The reddish female was one of the
first pair Yaropolk of Nishevatz had given him several years before. She
was about the size of an ordinary house cat, and of a temperament not far
removed from that of an ordinary cat. But moncats’ paws were not those of
ordinary cats. They had hands with real thumbs and feet with big toes that
worked the same way. Even their tails could grip. They were made for life
in the trees on their native islands somewhere out in the Northern
Sea—just where, Yaropolk hadn’t said.
“It’s me,” came the answer from the other side of the door.
“And who are you?” Lanius knew he sounded irritated. He
was irritated. He did his best not to show it to Bronze, stroking
the moncats back and scratching at the corner of its jaw to try to coax a
purr out of it.
The door to the room opened. That made Lanius spring to his feet in
fury, spilling Bronze out of his lap. The moncat yowled at such cavalier
treatment. Lanius whirled to see who besides Grus had the nerve to disturb
him in here. Moncats were smarter than ordinary cats. They realized at
once that an open door meant a chance to get away. With gripping hands and
feet, they could go places ordinary cats couldn’t, too. A couple of
escapes had proved that. One of the few rules Lanius had been able to
enforce as though he really ruled was that servants were banned from his
animals’ chambers.
But this wasn’t a servant. Prince Ortalis stood in the doorway. “Olor’s
beard, shut that before they all get loose!” Lanius exclaimed.
For a wonder, Ortalis did. Grus’ legitimate son was a couple of years
older than Lanius. He was taller, handsomer—and, most of the time,
fouler-tempered. He looked around now with considerable curiosity; as far
as Lanius knew, he’d never been in the moncats’ chamber before. “What
peculiar beasts,” he said. “Are they good for anything?”
“No more—and no less—than any other cat is,” Lanius answered. “Did you
come here to ask me that?”
Ortalis made a horrible face. The question must have reminded him of
why he
had come. “You’ve got to help me, Lanius,” he said.
Lanius’ heart sank. If Ortalis was in trouble, he feared he knew what
sort. Hoping he was wrong, he asked, “Why? What did you do?”
“It wasn’t the way she says it was,” his brother-in-law answered, which
proved he was right. Ortalis went on, “By the gods, she liked it as much
as I did, up until. . . .” He shook his head. “It’s all kind of fuzzy now.
We both drank a lot of wine.”
“What happened?” Lanius wondered if he really wanted to know. He
decided he needed to, whether he wanted to or not. “What did you do?”
“She . . . got hurt a little.” Quickly, Ortalis went on, “It’s not as
bad as she says it is, though—I swear it’s not. And she wanted more while
it was going on. I wouldn’t lie to you, Lanius. She did. She really
did.”
“Your father won’t be very happy with you when he finds out,” Lanius
said.
“That’s what I’m saying!” Ortalis howled. “You’ve got to help me make
sure he doesn’t. If he does ...” He tapped the back of his neck with a
forefinger, as though the headsman’s ax were falling.
“What can I do?” Lanius asked. “I haven’t got the power to do
anything to speak of. You ought to know that.” Even if he could
have done something, he would have only for Sosia’s sake. Her brother
repelled, revolted, and frightened him.
Ortalis said, “Money. She wants money.”
“Who doesn’t?” Lanius pointed to one of the moncats. “You know, I’ve
been painting pictures of these beasts and selling them because the
treasury minister doesn’t give me as much as I need.”
“Oh,” Ortalis said, as though Lanius had betrayed him when he needed
help most. Maybe Lanius had. Grus’ son went on, “I was hoping you could
talk to Petrosus and get whatever I need—whatever you need, I mean.”
“Not likely,” Lanius said, thinking,
You meant what you said the first time. You’re the only one you ever
cared about.
“But what am I going to do?” Ortalis sounded desperate. “What am I
going to
do? If she doesn’t get paid, she
will blab. And then who knows what my father will do? He’s yelled
at me before.” Yes, and that’s because you’ve done nasty things to your women
before— one more thing Lanius saw no point in saying. Ortalis never
paid attention to anyone but himself, and turned nasty—nastier—when he was
crossed. As much to get his brother-in-law out of his hair as for any
other reason, the king said, “Maybe you ought to talk to Arch-Hallow
Anser, instead. He heads the temples, so he can get his hands on money
that doesn’t come through Petrosus.”
“Already tried him. He turned me down. My own flesh and blood, and he
turned me down. Flat.” Anser was also Grus’ son, but a bastard. Despite
his irregular past, Lanius—and everybody else—found him much more
agreeable than Ortalis. The king wasn’t sure how bright Anser was. He was
sure Grus’ bastard, unlike his legitimate son, had his heart in the right
place.
More than ever, he wanted Ortalis gone. Spreading his hands, he said,
“I’m sorry, but I don’t know what else to tell you now.”
“She’s got to disappear,” Ortalis muttered. “One way or another, she’s
got to disappear.”
“By the gods, don’t make it worse than it is already!” Lanius exclaimed
in alarm.
“It can’t get any worse than it is already,” his brother-in-law
replied. “Just
you remember, Lanius—you haven’t heard a thing.”
“I remember,” Lanius said. “If you think I want to walk into the middle
of a quarrel between your father and you, you’d better think again.” He’d
made promises to keep quiet about certain things before, made them and
kept them. He didn’t promise now, and hoped Ortalis wouldn’t notice.
Full of other worries, Ortalis didn’t. “She’s got to disappear,” he
said once more, and then rushed out of the chamber.
The king hurried after him. As Lanius had feared, Ortalis didn’t bother
closing the door behind himself. Lanius did it before any of the moncats
could get out. They did harm to their prey, too, but innocently and
without malice. He wished he could say the same about Ortalis.
Whenever Grus breathed in, he tasted smoke. When he spat, he spat
black. He turned to Hirundo and said, “It’s so nice that we’re welcome in
the land of the Chernagors.”
“Oh, yes. Oh, yes, indeed.” The general spat black, too. Hirundo
swigged from a cup of ale, swallowed, and said, “I’m also glad the men of
Nishevatz invited us to their city-state. Just think what kind of a
greeting they would have given us if they hadn’t.”
“If it’s all the same to you, I’d rather not,” Grus said wearily. The
Avornan army had yet to see the city of Nishevatz itself. It was still
busy reducing forts south of the town. Had it left them behind, the
garrisons in them would have fallen on Grus’ men as soon as they’d gone
by, or else on his supply wagons later.
Varazdin, the latest of them, wasn’t much different from any of the
rest. The local limestone was golden, which made the walls and the keep
inside look deceptively cheerful. As Grus had already seen with three
other fortresses, Varazdin’s looks were indeed deceiving. His men ringed
the fortress, just out of range of the archers and catapults on the walls.
Whenever they came close enough, the Chernagors inside started shooting
and flinging things at them.
A handful of Chernagors of Prince Vsevolod’s party made their way
toward Grus. Several more Avornan bodyguards accompanied them. The
Chernagors
said they were of Vsevolod’s faction. Up until now, they’d acted
as though they were of his faction. But if Grus’ men trusted them on
account of that, and if one of them really favored the rebels and Prince
Vasilko, favored the Banished One who backed the rebels and the young
prince ... If that happened, Avornis would suddenly have Lanius on the
throne, and then things would look very different.
Grus didn’t intend that things should look different. The Chernagors,
fortunately, didn’t seem offended at guardsmen shadowing them wherever
they went. They too played political games with knife and poison and dark
wizardry. Their leader, Duke Radim, bowed to Grus. In gutturally accented
Avornan, he said, “I have found out who commands in Varazdin, Your
Majesty.”
“Have you? Good.” King Grus took a big swig from his mug of ale. He
drank as much to wash the smoke out of his mouth as because he was
thirsty. “Who is he?”
“He is Baron Lev, Your Majesty,” Radim answered. He was an old man, his
beard white, his shoulders stooped. He put Grus in mind of a fortress much
more ancient and weathered than Varazdin. What remained showed how mighty
he must have been in his younger days. He added, “He is, or should be,
loyal to Vsevolod.”
“He has an odd way of showing it,” Hirundo exclaimed.
Radim nodded gravely. “He was not reckoned an important man. No one
told him Vsevolod would seek aid from Avornis. He thought your coming was
a real invasion.”
“Doesn’t he know better now?” Grus asked.
“Oh, yes.” Radim nodded again. “But his honor is touched. How can he
yield you passage when his sovereign insulted him?”
“We’re trying to help his sovereign,” Grus pointed out.
“He knows that. But the insult comes first.”
“Do you mean he’s gone over to Vasilko?” Hirundo asked.
Now Radim shook his head. The Chernagors with him seemed shocked. “Oh,
no,” he said. “Nothing like that. Still, how can a man who has been
treated as though he were of no account cooperate in any way with those
who so abused him? Should a woman who is taken by force cooperate with her
ravisher and lie with him as though they truly loved each other?”
King Grus’ head started to ache. He was a practical man. He’d always
thought the Chernagors were practical men, too. Of course, most of the
Chernagors who came to the city of Avornis were merchants. By the nature
of things, merchants needed to be practical men. He wished the same held
true for nobles. But it didn’t. He’d already seen that in Avornis.
“Well,” he said, “if we have to take the most honorable Baron Lev by
force, that’s what we have to do.”
And, three days later, he did. He thinned his line around the fortress
of Varazdin, using the men thus freed to form two storming parties. Just
as dawn was breaking, the men of the first one rushed at the north wall,
shouting Grus’ name—and, for good measure, Vsevolod’s, too. Archers rushed
forward with them, shooting as fast as they could to make the Chernagors
inside the fort keep their heads down.
Up went ladders against those golden walls. Up swarmed Avornans, and
Chernagors who were not only loyal to the rightful Prince of Nishevatz
but willing to admit it. Lev’s men inside Varazdin rushed to defend the
fort. They pushed over some of the scaling ladders. They poured boiling
water and hot oil on the men ascending others. They were as loyal to their
commander, and as brave, as any soldiers Grus had ever seen.
When the battle in the north was well and truly joined, when the
besieged Chernagors were fully engaged—or so Grus hoped—he ordered the
second assault party forward, against Varazdin’s southern wall. This time,
his men approached the wall without shouting anything. They couldn’t sneak
across a quarter of a mile of open ground, but they did their best not to
draw undue notice.
And it worked. Even though the handful of defenders who hadn’t run to
the north wall cried out in alarm, nobody else inside the fortress paid
much attention to them. Maybe, with the din and excitement of the fight on
the far wall, none of the other Chernagors even heard them.
They were brave. Instead of running away or yielding, they did
everything they could to throw back Grus’ storming party. Using more long,
forked poles, they did manage to tip over some of the scaling ladders that
went up against the wall. Avornans shrieked as they fell. The clank of
chainmail-clad soldiers striking the ground made Grus flinch.
But more Avornans, and Chernagors with them, gained a foothold on the
south wall. They began dropping down into the courtyard. Some of them
rushed to seize the keep, so that Lev’s men would have no chance to make a
last stand there. Seeing that, the defenders of Varazdin threw down their
weapons, threw up their hands, and yielded.
Avornan soldiers brought Baron Lev, none too gently, before King Grus.
The Chernagor noble had a red-soaked bandage tied around his forehead to
stanch a cut. He also bled from a wounded hand. He glared at the king.
Grus glared back. “Your Excellency, you are an idiot,” he growled.
“I would not expect an Avornan to know anything of honor,” Lev growled
in return.
“Do you favor Vsevolod or Vasilko?” King Grus pronounced the Chernagor
names with care; the hums and hisses were alien to Avornan, and he did not
want to confuse the man he backed and the one he opposed.
“Vsevolod, of course,” Lev replied, as though to a half-wit.
“All right, then. I thought as much, but I was not sure. Did you
know—do you know—I have come to aid him if I can?” Grus asked. He waited
until Lev grudged him a nod. Then he threw his hands in the air and
demanded, “In that case, why did you keep trying to murder my men?”
“I told you an Avornan would not understand honor. My countrymen do.”
Lev spoke with somber pride.
“Honor? I have my own notions about that. I understand stupidity when I
see it. I understand stupidity very plainly,” Grus said. “We should fight
on the same side, against Vasilko. Instead, you delayed me, cost me men,
cost yourself men, and helped the man you say you oppose. The Banished One
understands that sort of honor. You are right when you tell me I do
not.”
“We could have put down Vasilko without your interference,” Lev said
sullenly.
“That’s not what Vsevolod thought. He was the one who asked Avornis for
help.”
“He made a mistake. He made another mistake in slighting me,” Baron Lev
said.
“I see.” Grus nodded. “And so you had to make a mistake in turn, to pay
Vsevolod back.”
“Yes,” Lev said, and then, “No! It was not a mistake. I did what I had
to do.”
Grus turned to Duke Radim, who was listening off to one side. Radim
seemed not at all surprised at the way the conversation was going. Indeed,
he’d seemed to understand why Lev hadn’t yielded Varazdin even before the
fortress fell. If not for that, Grus would have wondered whether the
Banished One was somehow clouding Lev’s thoughts, such as those were.
“Let me ask another question,” Grus said. “Now that we’ve peeled you
out of your shell here”—he pointed to Varazdin, which dominated the
horizon from where they stood—“will you and your men fight for
Vsevolod?”
“Of course.” Now the baron sounded surprised. Grus glanced Radim’s way
once more. Radim nodded. He believed Lev. Grus was not at all sure
he did. Still, he’d just proved he didn’t understand how
Chernagor nobles’ minds worked. If Radim was willing to rely on Lev, he
supposed he would, too ... up to a point.
He also looked toward General Hirundo. His own countryman seemed about
ready to jump out of his shoes at the idea of trusting Lev. Grus saw that,
but he’d known Hirundo for many years. He doubted the Chernagors would
realize just how upset Hirundo was.
“Very well. I accept your service,” Grus said to Lev, and then, “Excuse
me for a moment.” He took Hirundo aside and spoke in a low voice. “We’ll
break up his men into small bands and put them among Avornans. If they
turn their coats, we’ll slaughter them. Does that suit you?”
“Yes, Your Majesty,” Hirundo said at once. “I was afraid you’d lost
your mind, too.”
“Oh, no,” Grus said. “Not me.”
King Lanius wished he ruled Avornis instead of just reigning over it.
When a courier came rushing into the palace and was brought before Lanius,
he felt for a heady moment as though he
did rule. The man looked weary unto death. Sweat streaked his
dirty face. He stank of more sweat, and of horse.
“I hope my mount lives, Your Majesty,” he said around an enormous yawn.
“It’s not the first beast I almost killed, coming up from the south with
the news.”
“It must be important, then,” Lanius said gravely. The courier nodded.
The king went on, “Suppose you tell me what it is.”
The courier looked flabbergasted. “King Olor’s beard,” he muttered. “I
haven’t said, have I?”
“No,” Lanius said. “You haven’t.”
“I’d better, then. Here it is, Your Majesty—on the way up from the
south behind me is an ambassador from Prince Ulash, the Menteshe
lord.”
“Oh.” Lanius had to force the word out through lips suddenly numb.
Ulash was far and away the most important of the princes ruling the
southern nomads who bowed down to the Banished One—the Fallen Star, they
called him. That wasn’t because he had the widest realm, though he did. It
wasn’t because his capital, Yozgat, housed the Scepter of Mercy, though it
did. It was because he’d held his place for almost forty years. He was a
sly old fox who got what he wanted as much through guile as through the
arrows and scimitars of his hard-riding horsemen.
“Yes, Your Majesty,” the courier said. “I knew you and King Grus had to
know as soon as you could.” He paused, seeming to realize for the first
time that he was speaking with the ceremonial king, not the real one.
“Where
is King Grus?”
If he’d just ridden up from the south, he wouldn’t have heard. “He’s in
the land of the Chernagors,” Lanius answered. “There’s civil war among
them; we’re seeing what we can gain from it.”
Now the courier said, “Oh,” in a dispirited way. Lanius understood what
that meant—he would have to deal with Ulash’s envoy himself. He wouldn’t
have been disappointed then to have Grus back in the capital to take care
of that for him. It could be worse, he told himself, and then immediately
asked,
How? But that had an answer. Once, the Banished One himself had
sent an ambassador to the city of Avornis—the first time he’d done so in
more than a hundred years. The kingdom had gotten through that; Lanius
supposed it would get through this, too.
He asked, “When will the Menteshe get here?”
“Not for a while, Your Majesty,” the courier replied. “Nobody down
south’ll hurry him along. We know you need to get ready.”
“Good,” Lanius said.
“Will King Grus be able to get back in time to deal with him?” the
courier asked hopefully.
“No.” That was the only answer Lanius could give. The courier looked
disappointed. The king affected not to notice. This fellow had done all he
could to help.
What would Grus do for a man like that? He’d reward him, that’s
what. Lanius said, “You’ll have gold for your hard ride.”
He was annoyed at himself. He should have thought of that without
needing to think of Grus. The courier didn’t seem upset—of course, he
couldn’t know what was in Lanius’ mind. He only knew he was getting a
gift. Bowing low, he said, “Thank you very much, Your Majesty!”
“You’re welcome. You’ve earned it.” Lanius snapped his fingers.
“One thing more. Does Ulash’s ambassador have a wizard with him, or is
he by any chance a wizard himself?”
“He had several servants with him when he crossed over the Stura, but I
didn’t see one who looked like a wizard,” the rider said. “Of course, that
doesn’t mean there isn’t one dressed up like an ordinary servant. And I
have no idea whether he’s a wizard himself. I’m sorry, Your Majesty.”
“It’s all right. You’ve told me what you know, and you haven’t tried to
make up stories to pad that out.” Lanius gestured in dismissal. The
courier bowed again and left his presence.
To stay on the safe side, I’ll have to have a wizard with me when the
envoy gets here, Lanius thought.
He wished Alca the witch were still in the city of Avornis. She
remained the best sorceress he’d known. He also wished Grus hadn’t taken
Pterocles with him when he went north to the land of the Chernagors. Now
he would have to find someone else, someone whose power and reliability he
wouldn’t know nearly so well.
No help for it, though, not unless he wanted to face Ulash’s man
without any wizard at his side. And he didn’t. Ulash was a powerful prince
in his own right. That made him dangerous. But he was also a glove
manipulated by the hand of the Banished One. That made him dangerous, too,
but in a different way. “A wizard,” Lanius muttered. “I must see about a
wizard.” The wizard he needed to see was Pterocles . . . and Pterocles,
unfortunately, was far, far away.
Grus’ army advanced through fog. Men muttered about the uncanny
weather. As they came down into the seaside lowlands of the Chernagor
country, they met these ghostly mists almost every morning. “Do they know
what they’re talking about?” Grus asked his wizard. “Is there anything
unnatural about these fogs?”
“Not that I can find, Your Majesty,” Pterocles answered. “We’re down by
the Northern Sea, after all. It’s only to be expected that we have fog in
the morning. Men who come from the plains and the uplands haven’t seen
anything like it, and so they get upset. Foolishness, if you ask me. You
don’t see the Chernagors jumping up and down and flapping their arms, do
you?”
“Well, no,” Grus admitted. “As a matter of fact, I’d like to see the
Chernagors jumping up and down and flapping their arms. That would be more
interesting than anything that’s happened since we came down from
Varazdin.”
Pterocles gave him a reproachful look. The wizard was a serious man. He
wanted everyone else to be serious, too. Grus wasn’t, not often enough to
suit him. The king missed Alca. She’d had a sense of whimsy. That was one
of the things that had made her attractive to him—and one of the reasons
he’d had to send her away.
He sighed. His breath made more fog, a little billow amidst the great
cottony swirls of the stuff. It tasted like water and salt on his lips.
Kisses and tears, he thought, and shook his head.
Stop that.
The mist seemed to swallow most of his soldiers. He looked around. By
what his senses told him, he had men close by him, wavering specters a
little farther away, and creatures that made noise but could not be seen
beyond those ghosts. He hoped his senses were wrong. He also hoped his
outriders would note other creatures that made noise before they could be
seen.
Pterocles was muttering to himself. He would drop the reins, make a few
passes, and then grab for what he’d just dropped; he wasn’t much of a
horseman. Alca had never had any trouble casting a spell and staying on
her horse at the same time. Grus did a little muttering of his own. Law
allowed a King of Avornis six wives. Estrilda, whom Grus had married long
before he dreamt of becoming King of Avornis, had strong opinions on the
subject—opinions that had nothing to do with what the law allowed.
When Pterocles went on muttering and mumbling, Grus pushed Alca out of
his mind—a relief and a pain at the same time—and asked, “Something?”
“I don’t know,” the wizard answered, which was not at all what Grus
wanted to hear. Pterocles went on, “If I had to guess, I’d say it was
another wizard, feeling for me the same way as I’m feeling for him.”
“I... see.” Grus drummed the fingers of his right hand against his
thigh. “You’re not supposed to guess, not on something like this. You’re
supposed to
know.”
“I work magic, Your Majesty. I don’t work miracles,” Pterocles said
tartly. “If I had to guess” —he took an obvious sour pleasure in repeating
the phrase— “that other groping wizard out there is as confused as am.” No, you don’t work miracles, Grus thought.
But the Banished One is liable to. He didn’t say that to
Pterocles. His wizard had to know it already. Harping on it would hurt the
man’s confidence, which wouldn’t help his magic.
From out of the mist ahead came a shout. “Who goes there?” Grus needed
a moment to realize the call was in Avornan, which meant it had to have
come from the throat of one of his own scouts. His hand dropped to the
hilt of his sword. He hated fighting from horseback. Whether he hated it
or not, though, it was enormously preferable to getting killed out of
hand.
An answering shout came back. Grus did some muttering and mumbling of
his own. The fog played tricks with sound as well as with sight. Not only
did he fail to make out any words in that answer, he couldn’t even tell in
what language it had been. Logically, those had to be Chernagors out there
. . . didn’t they?
What do you expect? he asked himself.
Menteshe to spring out of nowhere, here, hundreds of miles from their
land?
He wished he hadn’t just thought that the Banished One might work
miracles.
But it wasn’t the Banished One. A couple of minutes later, the scout
came back to the main body of the Avornan army. “Your Majesty! Your
Majesty! We’ve met Prince Vsevolod and his men!”
For a moment, Grus took that for good news. Then, realizing what it was
likely to mean, he cursed furiously. “Why isn’t Vsevolod in Nishevatz, by
the gods?” he demanded.
The answer was what he’d feared. The scout said, “Because Prince
Vasilko’s cast him out.” Grus cursed again. He’d come too late. The man
the Banished One backed had seized the city.
CHAPTER THREE
The more Lanius thought about it, the more he wondered why on earth
he’d ever wanted to rule Avornis. Too much was happening too fast, and not
enough of it was good. Prince Ulash’s ambassador now waited in a hostel
only a couple of blocks from the royal palace. Lanius didn’t want to have
anything to do with the fellow, whose name was Farrukh-Zad. The king had
sent quiet orders to delay the envoy’s arrival as much as possible. He’d
hoped Grus would get back and deal with the fellow. But Grus had troubles
of his own in the north.
His father-in-law couldn’t do much about the Menteshe while he was
campaigning up in the Chernagor country. And the news Grus sent back from
the north wasn’t good. About half the Chernagors seemed to welcome Avornan
soldiers with open arms. The other half seemed just as ready to fight them
to the death. Maybe that showed the hand of the Banished One. Maybe it
just showed that the Chernagors didn’t welcome invaders of any sort. And the palace still buzzed with whatever had happened or
might have happened or someone imagined had happened between Prince
Ortalis and a serving girl (or two or three serving girls, depending on
who was telling the story and sometimes on who was listening). Lanius
hadn’t yet sent Grus that delightful news. His father-in-law was already
worrying about enough other things.
Sighing because things had fallen into
his lap, Lanius decked himself in his most splendid robes. The
sunlight pouring through an open window gleamed and sparkled off pearls
and jewels and gold thread running through the scarlet silk. Admiring him,
Sosia said, “You look magnificent.”
“I don’t feel any too magnificent.” Lanius picked up the heavy crown
and set it on his head. “And I’ll have a stiff neck tomorrow, on account
of this miserable thing.”
“Would you rather you didn’t wear it?” his wife asked sharply.
“No,” he admitted. His laugh was rueful. Up until now, he’d chafed at
being king in name without being king in fact. Now, with Grus away, what
he said did matter, and he felt that weight of responsibility much more
than he’d expected to. He went on, “And I have to keep the Menteshe from
noticing anything is bothering me. That should be ... interesting all by
itself.”
But sitting on the Diamond Throne and looking down the length of the
throne room helped steady him. He
was king. Farrukh-Zad was only an ambassador. Whatever happened,
he would soon go back to the south. Lanius laughed again, there on the
throne.
No matter what kind of a mess I make of this meeting, Grus is the one
who’ll have to pay the price.
Courtiers stared at him. But then the guardsmen in front of the throne
stiffened to alertness, and Lanius pulled his face straight. Prince
Ulash’s ambassador advanced up the long central aisle of the throne room.
He strode with a conqueror’s arrogance. That clumping march would have
seemed even more impressive had he not been badly bow-legged. He was
swarthy and hook-nosed, with a black mustache and a hawk’s glittering
black eyes in a forward-thrusting face sharp as the blade of an ax. He
wore a fur cap, a fur jacket, and trousers of sueded leather. A saffron
cloak streamed out behind him.
Three other Menteshe followed in his wake, but Lanius hardly noticed
them. Farrukh-Zad was the man who counted.
And doesn’t he know it? Lanius thought. Just seeing the Menteshe
was plenty to make Lanius’ bodyguards take half a step out from the throne
toward him. Farrukh-Zad noticed as much, too, and smiled as though they’d
paid him a compliment. To his way of thinking, they probably had.
When Prince Ulash’s envoy reached the throne, he bowed so low, he made
a mockery of the ceremony. “Greetings, Your Majesty,” he said in excellent
Avornan. “May peace lie between us.”
“Yes. May there be peace indeed,” Lanius replied. Even polite ritual
had its place. It was no more than polite ritual. He and Farrukh-Zad
surely both knew as much. Ulash’s Menteshe and Avornis might not fight
every year, but there was no peace between them, any more than there was
peace between the gods and the Banished One.
Farrukh-Zad bowed again, even more sardonically than before. “I bring
greetings, Your Majesty, from my sovereign, Prince Ulash, and from his
sovereign. . . .” He did not name the Banished One, but he came close
enough to make an angry murmur run through the throne room. Then he went
on, “They send their warmest regards to you, King Lanius, and to your
sovereign. ...” He did not name King Grus, either, but the salutation was
no less insulting on account of that. He is trying to provoke me, Lanius thought, and then,
He is doing a good job. “I
am King of Avornis,” he remarked.
“Of course, Your Majesty,” Farrukh-Zad said, in a tone that could only
mean,
Of course not,
Your Majesty.
“For example,” Lanius continued, affecting to ignore that tone, “if I
were to order you seized and your head struck off for insolence, I would
have no trouble getting my guards to obey me.”
Farrukh-Zad jerked, as though something had bitten him. So did one of
his retainers.
That may be the wizard, Lanius thought. His own stood in
courtier’s clothing close by the throne. The Menteshe ambassador said, “If
you did, that would mean war between Avornis and my folk.”
“True,” Lanius agreed. “But I have two things to say there. First is,
you would not see the war, no matter how it turned out. And second, when
Prince Evren’s Menteshe invaded Avornis last year, they hurt themselves
more than they hurt us.”
“Prince Ulash is not Prince Evren,” Farrukh-Zad said. “Where his riders
range, no crops ever grow again.”
“That must make life difficult in Ulash’s realm,” King Lanius said.
“Perhaps if his riders bathed more often, they would not have the
problem.”
Avornan courtiers tittered. Farrukh-Zad was not swarthy enough to keep
an angry flush of his own from showing on his cheeks. He gave Lanius a
thin smile. “Your Majesty is pleased to make a joke.”
“As you were earlier,” Lanius replied. “Shall we both settle down to
business now, and speak of what Prince Ulash wants of me, and of
Avornis?”
Before answering, Farrukh-Zad gave him a long, measuring stare. “Things
are not quite as I was led to believe.” He sounded accusing.
“Life is full of surprises,” Lanius said. “I ask once more, shall we go
on?”
“Maybe we had better.” Farrukh-Zad turned and spoke in a low voice with
one of the other Menteshe—the one who had started when Lanius warned him.
They expected me to be less than I am, Lanius thought.
That must be why the embassy came when Grus was away. I’ve surprised
them. That was a compliment—of sorts. The ambassador gave his
attention back to the king. “In the name of my sovereign, Prince Ulash, I
ask you what Avornis intends to do with the thralls who have left his
lands and come to those you rule.”
“Do you also ask that in the name of Prince Ulash’s sovereign?” Lanius
inquired, partly to jab Farrukh-Zad again, partly because he did want to
know. Thralls—the descendants of the Avornan farmers who’d worked the
southern lands before the Menteshe conquered them— were less than full
men, only a little more than barnyard animals, thanks to spells from the
Banished One. Every so often, thralls escaped those dark spells and fled.
Every so often, too, the Banished One and the Menteshe used thralls who
feigned escaping those spells as spies and assassins.
Again Farrukh-Zad conferred with his henchman before answering. “I am
Ulash’s ambassador,” he said, but his hesitation gave the words the lie.
“These thralls are Ulash’s people.”
“When they wake up, they have a different opinion,” Lanius said dryly.
He wished Avornan wizards had had better luck with spells that could
liberate a thrall from his bondage. The Banished One’s sorceries, though,
were stronger than those of any mere mortals. If all of Avornis fell to
the Menteshe, would everyone in the kingdom fall into thrall-dom? The
thought made Lanius shudder.
Farrukh-Zad said, “You have in your hands—you have in this very
palace—many who fled without awakening. What do you say of them?”
“Yes, we do,” Lanius agreed. “One of them tried to kill me this past
winter, while another tried to kill King Grus. We hold your sovereign’s
sovereign to blame for that.”
“You are unjust,” the Menteshe envoy said.
“I doubt it,” Lanius said. “Thralls who stay thralls usually stay on
the land. Why would these men have crossed the Stura River into Avornis,
if not through the will of the Banished One?”
There, he thought.
Let Farrukh-Zad know I’m not—
much—
afraid to speak his master’s name.
Now the ambassador’s companion leaned forward to speak to him.
Nodding, Farrukh-Zad said, “If you admit that these men belong to the
Fallen Star, then you must also admit you should return them to him.”
Lanius would sooner have been pawing through the archives than playing
verbal cut-and-thrust with a tool of a tool of the Banished One. No help
for it, though. He said, “I did not admit that. I said the Banished One
had compelled them to cross the river. Compulsion is not the same as
ownership, and certainly not the same as right.”
“You refuse to give them back, then?” Farrukh-Zad’s voice was silky
with danger.
Avornan wizards still studied the thralls, learning what they could
from them. Maybe the Banished One wanted them back because he was afraid
the wizards would find out something important. Maybe. Lanius didn’t know
what the odds were, but he could only hope. “I do,” he said. “As long as
they have done no wrong in Avornis, they may stay here.”
“I shall take your words back to Prince Ulash,” the envoy said. “Do not
believe you have heard the last of this. You have not.” His last bow held
enough polite irony to satisfy even the most exacting Avornan courtier.
Having given it, he didn’t wait for any response, or even dismissal, from
King Lanius, but simply turned and strode out of the throne room, the
other Menteshe in his wake.
Lanius stared after him. He’d always thought about the power that went
with being king in fact as well as in name. As he began to use it, he saw
that worry went with the job, too.
Riding as usual at the head of his army, Grus got his first good look
at Nishevatz. Seeing the town did not delight him. If anything, it
horrified him. “Olor’s beard, Hirundo, how are we supposed to take that
place?” he yelped.
“Good question, Your Majesty,” his general replied. “Maybe the
defenders inside will laugh themselves to death when they see we’re crazy
enough to try to winkle them out.”
It wasn’t quite as bad as that, but it wasn’t good. Nishevatz had
originally been a small island a quarter of a mile or so off the coast of
the mainland. Before the Chernagors took the northern coast away from
Avornis, the townsfolk had built a causeway from the shore to the island.
The slow wheel of centuries since had seen silt widen the causeway from a
road to a real neck of land. Even so, the approach remained
formidable.
King Grus tried to make the best of things, saying, “Well, if it were
easy, Vsevolod wouldn’t have needed to ask us for help.”
“Huzzah,” Hirundo said sourly. “He was still in charge of things when
he did ask us here, remember. He’s not anymore.”
“I know. We’ll have to see what we can do about that.” He called to
Vsevolod, who rode in the middle of a small party of Chernagor noblemen
not far away. “Your Highness!”
“What you want, Your Majesty?” Vsevolod spoke Avornan with a thick,
guttural accent. He was about sixty, with thinning white hair, bushy
eyebrows, and an enormous hooked nose.
“Do you know any secret ways into your city?” Grus asked. “We could use
one about now, you know.”
“I know some, yes. I use one to get away,” Vsevolod replied. “ Vasilko
know most of these, too, though. I show him, so he get away if he ever
have trouble when he ruling prince. I not show him this one, in case
I have trouble.” He jabbed a large, callused thumb—more the thumb
of a fisherman or metalworker than that of a ruling prince—at his own
broad chest.
“Can an army use it, or just one man?” Grus asked.
The ousted ruler ran a hand through his long, curly beard. A couple of
white hairs clung to his fingers. He brushed his hand against his kilt to
dislodge them. “Would not be easy for army,” he said at last. “Passage is
narrow. Few men could hold it against host.”
“Does Vasilko know
how you got out? Or does he just know
that you did?”
“He did not know of this way ahead of time. I am sure of that,”
Vsevolod replied. “He would have blocked. If he knows now . . . This I
cannot say. I am sorry.”
Hirundo said, “Maybe our wizard could tell us.”
“Maybe.” Grus frowned. “Maybe he’d give it away trying to find out,
too.” He frowned again, hating indecision yet trapped into it. “We’d
better see what he thinks, eh?”
Pterocles seemed determined to think as little as possible, or at least
to admit to as little thought as possible. “I really could not say, Your
Majesty. I know little of the blocking magics the Chernagors use these
days, and how they match against ours. We haven’t warred with them in
their own lands for a long time, so we haven’t had much need to learn such
things. Maybe I can sneak past whatever wizardly wards he has without his
being the wiser, or maybe I would put his wind up at once.”
“Helpful,” Grus said, meaning anything but. “Duke Radim is bound to
have a wizard or two with him, eh? Talk to them, why don’t you? You can
see what sorts of things the Chernagors do. Maybe that will tell you what
you need to know.”
“Maybe.” Pterocles seemed glum, not convinced. Grus longed for Alca. He
longed for her a couple of ways, in fact, even if he had made up with
Estrilda.
He would have pushed Pterocles when the army camped that night, but a
courier galloped into the encampment with a long letter from Lanius.
Reading about the visit from Farrukh-Zad, Grus wished he were back in the
city of Avornis. By what was in the letter, Lanius had done as well as
anyone could have hoped to do. Grus wondered how closely the letter
reflected truth; Lanius was, after all, telling his own story. Even if
Lanius had gotten everything straight, was that all good news? Would he
decide he liked this taste of real kingship and crave more?
Grus summarized the letter in a few sentences for the courier, then
asked, “Is that how it happened?”
“Yes, Your Majesty, as far as I know,” the man replied. “I wasn’t in
the throne room, you understand, but that pretty much matches what I’ve
heard.” Ah, gossip, Grus thought with a smile. “What all
have you heard?” he asked, hoping to pick up some more news about
the embassy, or at least to get more of a feel for what had gone on.
That wasn’t what he got. The courier hesitated, then shrugged and said,
“Well, you’ll have heard about that other business by now, won’t you?”
“I don’t know,” Grus answered. “What other business?”
“About your son.”
“No, I hadn’t heard about that. What about him?” Grus tried to keep his
tone as light and casual as he could. If he’d asked the question the way
he wanted to, he would have frightened the courier out of saying another
word.
He evidently succeeded, for the fellow just asked, “You haven’t heard
about him and the girl?”
“No,” Grus said, again in as mild a voice as he could muster. “What
happened? Is some serving girl going to have his bastard?” Next to a lot
of the things Ortalis might have done, that would be good news. The only
real trouble with royal bastards was finding a fitting place for them once
they grew up.
But the courier said, “Uh, no, Your Majesty, no bastards. Not that I
know about, anyhow.”
That
Uh, no worried Grus. Carefully, he asked, “Well, what
do you know about?” Staying casual wasn’t easy, not anymore.
“About how he—” The courier stopped. He suddenly seemed to remember he
wasn’t passing time with somebody in a tavern. “It wasn’t so good,” he
finished.
“Tell me everything you know,” Grus said. “About how he
what? What wasn’t so good?” The courier stood mute. Grus snapped
his fingers. “Come on. You know more than you’re letting on. Out with
it.”
“Your Majesty, I don’t really
know anything.” The man seemed very unhappy. “I’ve just heard
things people are talking about.”
“Tell me those, then,” Grus said. “I swear by the gods I’ll remember
they don’t come from you. I don’t even know your name.”
“No, but you know my face,” the courier muttered. King Grus folded his
arms and waited. Trapped, the man gave him what was bound to be as
cleaned-up a version of the gossip he’d heard as he could manage on the
spur of the moment. It boiled down to the same sort of story as Grus had
already heard about Ortalis too many times. At last, the man stumbled to a
stop, saying, “And that’s everything I heard.”
Grus doubted it was. Such tales were usually much more lurid. But he
thought he would need a torturer to pull anything else from the fellow.
“All right, you can go,” he said, and the courier fled. “I’ll deal with
this . . . whenever I get a chance.” Only he heard that.
He looked ahead to Nishevatz. The Chernagor city-state would take up
all of his time for who could guess how long. He sighed. Whatever Ortalis
had done was done. With a little luck, he wouldn’t do anything worse until
Grus got back to the capital. Grus looked up at the heavens, wondering if
that could be too much to ask of the gods.
Every once in a while, Lanius liked getting out of the royal palace. He
especially liked going over to the great cathedral not far away, partly
because some of the ecclesiastical archives went back even further than
those in the palace and partly because he liked Arch-Hallow Anser.
He didn’t know anyone who didn’t like Grus’ bastard son. Even Queen
Estrilda liked Anser, and she’d borne Grus’ two legitimate children.
Prince Ortalis liked Anser, too, even though they had quarreled now and
again, and Ortalis rarely liked anybody.
That didn’t mean Lanius thought Anser made a perfect arch-hallow. He’d
been a layman when Grus first named him to the post, and had worn the
black, green, and yellow robes of the ascending grades of the priesthood
on successive days before donning the arch-hallow’s scarlet garb. He still
knew—and cared—little about the gods or the structure of the
ecclesiastical hierarchy. His chief passion, almost his only passion, was
hunting.
But he was loyal to Grus. To the man who held the real power in
Avornis, that counted for much more than anything else. Lanius might prove
a problem for Grus. Ortalis might, too. Anser? No. Anser never would.
He bowed to the king when Lanius stepped into his chamber in a back
part of the cathedral where ordinary worshipers never went. “Good to see
you, Your Majesty!” he exclaimed with a smile, and he sounded as though he
meant it.
“Good to see you, too, most holy sir.” Lanius also meant it. You
couldn’t help being glad to see Anser. He wasn’t far from Lanius’ own age,
and looked a lot like Grus—more like him than either Ortalis or Sosia.
They favored their mother, which probably made them better-looking.
“What can I do for you today?” Anser asked. “Did you come to visit me,
or shall I just send for Ixoreus and wave while you wander down to the
archives?” He grinned at Lanius.
Ixoreus, one of his secretaries, knew more about the ecclesiastical
archives than any man living. But Lanius smiled back and, not without a
certain regret, shook his head. “No, thanks, though it is tempting,” he
said. “I wanted to ask you a question.”
“Well, here I am. Go right ahead,” Anser replied. “If I know, I’ll tell
you.”
And he would, too. Lanius had no doubt of it. He thought back to‘ the
days of Arch-Hallow Bucco, Anser’s predecessor. Bucco had been a
formidable scholar, administrator, and diplomat. He’d been regent during
part of Lanius’ childhood; he’d even sent Lanius’ mother into exile.
He wouldn’t have told anyone his own name unless he saw some
profit or advantage in it. All things considered, Lanius preferred
Anser.
He said, “What I want to know is, did you write to King Grus about. . .
any troubles Ortalis has had lately with women?”
“Not me,” the arch-hallow said at once. “I’ve heard a few things, but I
wouldn’t send gossip to ... the other king.” The hesitation was so small,
Lanius barely noticed it. Anser really did work hard at being polite to
everybody.
“It’s not just gossip. I wish it were,” Lanius said. “But I’ve heard
about it from Ortalis himself. He didn’t want Grus to find out. Now Grus
has. By the letter I have from him, he’s not very happy about it,
either.”
“I can see how he wouldn’t be. Ortalis ... I
like my half brother, most ways,” Anser said. He saw the good in
people—maybe that was why everybody liked him. He proved as much now, for
he went on, “He’s a clever fellow, and I enjoyed hunting with him, at
least until he. ...” His voice trailed away again.
“Yes. Until he.” Lanius didn’t finish the sentence, either. Ortalis
would sooner have hunted men, or rather women, than beasts. And what he
would have done when he caught them . . . was one more thing Lanius didn’t
care to contemplate.
“Somebody told Grus about this latest news.”
“It wasn’t me,” Anser said again. He looked up at the ceiling, as
though hoping to find answers there. “I wish we hadn’t had that. . .
trouble with the hunting. It did seem to help, for a while.”
“Yes, for a while,” Lanius agreed. For several years, Ortalis had held
his demons at bay by killing beasts instead of doing anything with or to
people. But that hadn’t satisfied him, not for good. And so ...
And so I’m hashing this out with Anser, Lanius thought
unhappily.
“I wish I knew what to tell you, Your Majesty. I wish I knew what to
tell Ortalis, too,” the arch-hallow said.
“No one has ever been able to tell Ortalis anything. That’s a big part
of the problem,” Lanius said.
Anser nodded. “So it is.” Suddenly, he grinned again. “Now don’t you
wish you’d gone down under the cathedral with Ixoreus?”
“Now that you mention it, yes,” Lanius said. They both laughed. Then
Lanius had another thought. He asked, “You grew up down in the south,
didn’t you?”
“Yes, that’s right—in Drepanum, right along the Stura River,” Anser
said, and Lanius remembered that Grus had captained a river galley that
patrolled the Stura. Anser went on, “Why do you want to know?”
“I just wondered if you knew anything special about Sanjar and
Korkut—you know, things you might hear because you’re right across the
border but would never come all the way up to the city of Avornis.”
“About Ulash’s sons?” The arch-hallow frowned and shook his head. “The
only thing I ever heard is that they don’t like each other very well—but
you can say that about half the brothers in the world, especially when
they’re princes.”
“I suppose so.” Lanius had no brothers. When King Mergus, his father,
at last had a son by his concubine Certhia, he’d married her although that
made her his seventh wife. All the ecclesiastics in Avornis had screamed
at the top of their lungs, since even King Olor up in the heavens had only
six. A lot of them had reckoned—some still did reckon—Lanius a bastard
because of Mergus’ irregularities. Thanks to his own past, he had a
certain amount of sympathy for Anser. He wondered if that sympathy ran the
other way, too. Anser had never said a word along those lines—but then,
Lanius was known to be touchy about his ancestry.
Anser didn’t say anything about ancestors now, either. He said, “Sorry
I can’t tell you more about them.”
“Who knows when it might matter?” Lanius replied with a shrug. “Who
knows if it will matter at all?”
Slowly—too slowly to suit King Grus—twilight deepened toward darkness.
The tall, frowning walls of Nishevatz seemed to melt into the northern
sky. Only the torches Chernagor sentries carried as they paced along their
stretches of walkway told where the top of the wall was.
Grus turned to Calcarius and Malk, the Avornan and Chernagor officers
who would lead a mixed assault party back through the secret tunnel Prince
Vsevolod had used to flee the city. “You know what you’re going to do?” he
said, and felt foolish a moment later—if they didn’t know by now, why were
they trying it?
“Yes, Your Majesty,” they chorused. Grus had to fight down a laugh.
They were both big, gruff fighting men, but they sounded like a couple of
youths impatient with an overly fussy mother.
The men they would lead waited behind them—Avornans in pants and kilted
Chernagors, their chainmail shirts clanking now and again as they shifted
from foot to foot. They were all big, gruff fighting men, too, and all
volunteers. “Gods go with you, then,” Grus said. “When you seize the gate
near the other end of the tunnel, we’ll come in and take the city. You
don’t need to hold it long. We’ll be there to help as soon as it
opens.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” Calcarius and Malk spoke at the same time once
more. They smiled at each other. They acted like a couple of impatient
youths, too—youths eager to be off on a lark. Calcarius looked around and
asked, “Is it dark enough yet? Can we start?”
“Another half hour,” Grus said after looking around. Color had faded
out of the air, but shape remained. Not only the officers in charge of the
storming party but all the men who would go on it pouted and fumed. Grus
wagged a finger at them. “You hush, every one of you, or I’ll send you to
bed without supper.”
They jeered at him. Some of the Chernagors translated what he’d said
into their language for those who didn’t speak Avornan. Some of the burly
men in kilts said things that didn’t sound as though they would do with
being translated back into Avornan.
Time crawled past. It might have gone on hands and knees. The stars
came out. They grew brighter as twilight ebbed. They too crawled—across
the sky. Grus used them to judge both the time and the darkness. At last,
he slapped Calcarius on his mailed shoulder and said, “Now.”
Even in the darkness, the Avornan officer’s face lit up. “See you soon,
Your Majesty.”
The tunnel by which Prince Vsevolod had emerged from Nishevatz opened
from behind a boulder, which let an escapee leave it without drawing
attention from the walls of the city. He’d covered the trapdoor with dirt
once more after coming out. By all the signs his spies and Grus’ could
gather, and by everything Pterocles’ wizardry and that of the Chernagors
showed, Prince Vasilko and his henchmen in the city still didn’t know how
Vsevolod had gotten away. Grus hoped the spies and the wizards knew what
they were talking about. If they didn’t. . . Grus shook his head. He’d
made up his mind that they did. He would—he had to—believe that until and
unless it turned out not to be so.
Two soldiers with spades uncovered the doorway Vsevolod had buried.
When it was mostly clear of dirt, one of them stooped and seized the heavy
bronze ring mounted on the tarred timbers. Iron might have rusted to
uselessness; not so, bronze. Grunting, the soldier—he was a Chernagor, and
immensely broad through the shoulders—pulled up the trap door. A deeper
darkness appeared, a hole in the night. Calcarius vanished into it
first—vanished as though he had never been. Malk followed. Starlight
glittered for an instant on the honed edge of his sword. Then the black
swallowed him, too.
One by one—now an Avornan, now a Chernagor, now a clump of one folk,
now of the other—the warriors in the storming party disappeared into the
tunnel. After what seemed a very short time, the last man was gone.
Grus found Hirundo and asked, “We
are ready to move when the signal comes and the gate opens?”
“Oh, yes, Your Majesty,” the general answered. “And once we get inside
Nishevatz, it’s ours. I don’t care what Vasilko has in there. If his men
can’t use the walls to save themselves, we’ll whip them.”
“Good. That’s what I wanted you to tell me.” Grus cocked his head
toward the gate the attackers aimed to seize. “We ought to hear the fight
start pretty soon, eh?”
Hirundo nodded in the darkness. “I’d certainly think so, unless all the
Chernagors in there are sleeping and there
is no fight. That’d be nice, wouldn’t it?”
“I wouldn’t mind,” Grus said. “I wouldn’t mind a bit.”
Whether he minded or not, he didn’t believe that would happen. Prince
Vasilko wasn’t—Grus hoped Vasilko wasn’t—expecting attack through the
secret passage. But the new master of Nishevatz did know the Avornan army
was out there. The men who followed him needed to stay alert.
“How long do you think our men will need to get through the tunnel?”
Grus asked Hirundo.
“Well, I don’t exactly know, Your Majesty, but I don’t suppose it will
take very long,” Hirundo replied. “It can’t stretch for more than a
quarter of a mile.”
“No, I wouldn’t think so,” Grus agreed. He called to a servant. The man
hurried off and returned with a cup of wine for him. He sipped and waited.
His fingers drummed on his thigh. A quarter of a mile— even a quarter of a
mile in darkness absolute, through a tunnel shored up with planks with
dirt sifting down between the planks and falling on the back of a
soldier’s neck when he least expected it... that was surely a matter of
minutes, and only a few of them.
He waited. He would know—the whole army would know—when the fighting
inside the city started. Things might go wrong. If they did, the marauders
might not carry the gate. But no one would be in any doubt about when
things began.
Hirundo said, “Won’t be long now.” Grus nodded. The general had thought
along with him. That Hirundo often thought along with him was one reason
they worked well together.
More time passed. Now Grus was the one who said, “
Can’t be long now,” and Hirundo the one who nodded. Grus got up
and started to pace. It should have started already. He knew as much. He
tried to convince himself he didn’t.
“Something’s not right.” Hirundo spoke in a low voice, as though he
wanted to be able to pretend he’d never said any such thing in case he
happened to be mistaken.
King Grus nodded. He stopped pacing, stopped pretending. “Pterocles!”
he called, pitching his voice to carry.
“Yes, Your Majesty?” The wizard hurried up to him. “What do you
need?”
“What can you tell me about the men in the tunnel?” Grus tried to hide
his exasperation. Alca would have known what he wanted without asking. If
the men went into the tunnel and didn’t come out when they were supposed
to, what was he likely to need but some notion of what had happened to
them?
“I’ll do my best, Your Majesty.” Pterocles was willing enough. Grus
only wished he were more aggressive.
The wizard got to work. He peered through crystals and lit braziers
fueled with leaves and twigs that produced odd-scented smokes, some spicy,
others nasty. He cast powders onto the flames, which flared up blue or
crimson or green. His hands twisted in intricate passes. He chanted in
Avornan, and in other languages the king neither knew nor recognized.
Grus kept hoping the fighting would break out while Pterocles was in
the middle of a conjuration. That might make the wizard seem foolish, but
it would show all the worry had been over nothing. No matter what Grus
hoped, it didn’t happen. The spells went on and on. So did the peaceful,
hateful silence inside Nishevatz.
At last, unwillingly, the wizard shook his head. “I can establish no
mystical bond with the men, Your Majesty.”
“What does that mean?” Grus asked harshly.
“It may mean they are not there—” Pterocles began.
“What? What are you talking about? You saw them go. Where else would
they be, could they be, but in Nishevatz?”
“I do not know, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said. “The other possibility
is that they are dead.” He winced. Maybe he hadn’t intended to say that.
Whether he had or not, it seemed hideously probable.
“What could have happened? What could have gone wrong?” Grus
demanded.
“I don’t know that, either,” Pterocles said miserably.
“Can you find out?” What Grus wanted to say was,
What good are you? He didn’t, but holding back wasn’t easy. It
got harder when Prince Vsevolod, who’d also had men go into the tunnel,
came over and glowered at Pterocles. Vsevolod had a face made for
glowering; in the firelight, he looked like an ancient, wattled vulture
with glittering eyes.
Looking more flustered by having two sovereigns watch him than he had
with only one, Pterocles got to work again. He was in the middle of a
spell when he suddenly stiffened, gasped out, “Oh, no!”—and toppled to the
ground, unconscious or worse. At Grus’ shout, healers tried to rouse him.
But, whatever had befallen him, whatever he had seen, he was far past
rousing.
And when morning came the next day, not a sound had been heard from
Nishevatz.
CHAPTER FOUR
“Your Majesty! Your Majesty!” A servant chased Lanius down the
corridors of the royal palace.
“What is it, Bubulcus?” Lanius asked apprehensively. When any servant
called in that tone of voice, something had gone wrong somewhere. When
Bubulcus called in that tone of voice, something dreadful had gone
horribly wrong, and he’d had something to do with it.
And, sure enough, now that he had Lanius’ attention, he didn’t seem to
want it anymore. Looking down at the mosaic flooring, he mumbled, “Well,
Your Majesty, a couple of those moncats have gotten loose.”
He made it sound as though the animals had done it all by themselves.
That probably wasn’t impossible, but it certainly wasn’t likely. If they
had done it all by themselves, Bubulcus wouldn’t have seemed so nervous,
either. “And how did the moncats get loose?” Lanius inquired with what he
hoped was ominous calm.
Bubulcus flinched, which surprised the king not at all. The palace
servant said, “Well, it was when I went into one of their rooms for a
minute, and—”
“Are you supposed to do that?” Lanius asked gently. None of the
servants was supposed to do that. Even when powerless over the rest of
Avornis, Lanius had ruled the rooms where his animals dwelt. He’d laid
down that law after the last time one of Bubulcus’ visits let a moncat
escape.
Angrily defensive, Bubulcus said, “Which I wouldn’t have done if I
hadn’t thought you were in there.” He made his lapse sound as though it
were Lanius’ fault.
“You’re not supposed to go into one of those rooms whether you think
I’m there or not,” Lanius snapped. Bubulcus only glared at him. Nothing
would convince the servant that what he’d done was his fault. Still angry,
Lanius demanded, “Which moncats got away?”
Bubulcus threw his hands in the air. “How am I supposed to know? You
never let anybody but you into those miserable rooms, so who but you can
tell one of those miserable creatures from the next? All I know is, there
were two of ‘em. They scooted out fast as an arrow from a bow. If I hadn’t
slammed the door, more would’ve gotten loose.” Instead of being
embarrassed at letting any of the animals escape, he seemed proud it
hadn’t been worse.
“If you hadn’t slammed the door, Bubulcus, you’d be on your way to the
Maze right now,” Lanius said.
Where nothing else had, that got through to Bubulcus. Kings of Avornis
had exiled people who dissatisfied them to the swamps and marshes east of
the capital for years uncounted. The servant’s smile tried to seem
ingratiating, but came out frightened. “Your Majesty is joking,” he said,
sounding as though he hoped to convince himself.
“My Majesty is doing no such thing,” Lanius replied. “Do you want to
see if I’m joking?” Bubulcus shook his head, looking more frightened than
ever.
This is the power Grus knows all the time, Lanius thought.
Am I jealous? He didn’t need to wonder long.
Yes, I’m jealous. But that too would have to wait. “Where did the
moncats go?”
“Out of that room—that’s all I can tell you,” Bubulcus answered, as
self-righteous as ever. “Nobody could keep track of those . . . things
once they get moving. They aren’t natural, you ask me.”
Lanius wished he knew which moncats had gotten out. Maybe his special
calls would have helped lure them back. Or maybe not; moncats could be as
willful and perverse as ordinary felines. As things were, elegant
solutions would have to fly straight out the window. “Go to the kitchens,”
he told Bubulcus.
“To the kitchens?” the servant echoed. “Why should I do that?”
“To get some raw flesh for me to use to catch the moncats.” Lanius
suddenly looked as fierce as he knew how. “Or would you rather have me
carve some raw flesh from your carcass?”
Bubulcus fled.
When he got back, he had some lovely beef that would probably have gone
on the royal table tonight. And he proved to be capable of thought on his
own, for he also carried a couple of dead mice by the tail. “Good,” Lanius
murmured. “Maybe I won’t have to carve you after all.”
He walked through palace hallways near the moncats’ room, clucking as
though it were general feeding time and holding up the meat and the mice.
Only when servants’ eyes went big did he stop to reflect that this was a
curious thing for a King of Avornis to do. Having reflected, he then quit
letting it bother him. He’d done all sorts of curious things. What was one
more?
As he walked, he eyed wall niches and candelabra hanging from the
ceiling. Unlike ordinary cats, moncats climbed at any excuse or none; they
lived their lives in the trees. That made them especially delightful to
catch when they got loose. It was also the reason Lanius had told his
servants not to come into the animals’ rooms—not that Bubulcus bothered
remembering anything so trivial as a royal order.
A woman saw the meat in Lanius’ hand and waved to him. “Your Majesty,
one of those funny animals of yours is around that corner over there. It
hissed at me, the nasty thing.”
“Thank you, Parula. You’ll have a reward,” Lanius said. He glowered at
Bubulcus. “What
you’ll have . . .”
“
I didn’t do anything, Your Majesty.” Bubulcus sounded affronted.
The next time he did do something wrong would be the first, as far as he
was concerned.
Lanius hurried around the corner at which Parula had pointed. Sure
enough, the moncat was there. It was trying to get out a window. Since the
royal palace was also a citadel, the windows were narrow and set with iron
bars. The moncat couldn’t get out that way, though it might have dashed
out a door.
“Rusty!” Lanius called.
“How can you tell one of the miserable creatures from another?” asked
Bubulcus, who’d trailed along behind him.
“How?” Lanius shrugged. “I can, that’s all.” From then on, he ignored
Bubulcus. Dangling one of the dead mice by the tail, he called the
moncat’s name again.
Rusty turned large green eyes his way. Moncats were smarter than
ordinary cats; they did come to learn the names Lanius called them. And
the offer of a mouse would have tempted any feline small enough to care
about such a morsel. Rusty dropped down from the window and hurried over
to the king.
He gave the moncat the mouse. Rusty held the treat in its hind
feet—whose first toes did duty as thumbs—and used the claws of its front
feet and sharp teeth to butcher it. The moncat ate the mouse in chunks. It
didn’t scratch or bite when Lanius picked it up and carried it off to the
room from which it had escaped.
“There. That’s all taken care of,” Bubulcus said happily, as though
he’d caught the moncat instead of letting it escape.
“No.” Lanius shook his head. “This is one moncat. Two got away, you
said. If the other one isn’t caught soon, you will be very, very sorry. Do
you understand me?” He sounded like a king who ruled as well as reigned.
Bubulcus looked unhappy enough to make Lanius feel like that kind of king,
too.
King Grus stared up at the frowning walls of Nishevatz. He still had no
sure notion of what had happened to the Avornans and Chernagors he’d tried
to sneak into the city. Prince Vasilko hadn’t gloated about them from the
wall or shot their heads out of catapults or anything of the sort. He gave
no sign of knowing they’d tried to enter Nishevatz. In a way, that silence
was more intimidating than anything blatant he might have done. What
had his men done to them? Or, worse, what were they
doing to them?
Not knowing gnawed at Grus. Still, he had to go on. With one effort a
failure, he tried another. An interpreter, a squad of guards, and Prince
Vsevolod at his side, he approached the Chernagor fortress.
“Here is your rightful prince!” he called, and pointed to Vsevolod. The
interpreter turned his words into those of the throaty Chernagor
tongue.
Faces, pale dots in the distance, peered down at Grus from the top of
the frowning wall. Here and there, the sun sparkled off an iron helmet, or
perhaps a sword blade. No one on the wall said a word. The wind blew cold
and salty off the gray sea beyond the city-state.
“Here is your rightful prince!” Grus said again. “Cast down the
ungrateful, unnatural son who has stolen your throne. Do you want the
servants of the Banished One loose in your land? That is what Vasilko will
give you.”
Vsevolod strode forward. Despite his years, he still stood very
straight, very erect. He looked every inch a prince. He shouted up at the
warriors on the wall. He surely knew a lot of them as men, not merely as
Chernagors.
“What does he say?” Grus asked the interpreter.
“He says he will not punish them if they yield up Vasilko to him,” the
Chernagor answered. “He says he knows they were fooled. He says he will
not even kill Vasilko. He says he will send him into exile in Avornis,
where he can learn the error of his ways.”
“Hmm.” Grus wondered how Vsevolod had meant that. He didn’t much want
Vasilko in his kingdom, not even in the Maze. But he supposed Vsevolod was
doing the best he could. If the old man had promised to torture his son to
death the minute he got his throne back, which of them was really likely
to have fallen under the influence of the Banished One?
That thought brought on another.
How do I know Vasilko really is the man the Banished One backs?
Grus wondered. He sent Vsevolod a sudden hard stare. He’d always believed
the old lord of Nishevatz. Why would Vsevolod have summoned him up to the
Chernagor country, if not to fight the forces of the Banished One? Why?
What if the answer is, to lure me into a danger I can’t hope to
escape?
“He is calling on them to open the gates,” the interpreter said. Grus
knew he’d missed a couple of sentences. That jolt of suspicion had driven
everything else out of his mind for a moment. The older he got, the more
complicated life looked. He eyed Vsevolod again. By the time he got
that old, how would things seem? Would he be able to find any
straight paths at all, or would every choice twist back on itself like a
snake with indigestion? The interpreter added, “He says he will not harm
any of them, if they return to his side now. He also says you Avornans
will go home then.”
“Yes, that’s true.” Grus saw no point to putting a permanent garrison
in Nishevatz. That would just embroil him in a war against all the other
Chernagor city-states. Unless he aimed to conquer this whole stretch of
coast, seizing a little of it would be more trouble than it was worth.
Vsevolod called to the men on the wall one more time. The interpreter
said, “He asks them, what is their answer?”
They did not keep him waiting long. Almost as one man, they drew their
bows and started shooting at him and Grus and their companions. The
guardsmen threw up their shields. Thock! Thock! Thock! Arrows thudded into metal-faced wood. A
softer splat was an arrow striking flesh rather than a shield. A guard
gasped, trying to hold in the pain. Then, failing, he howled.
Guards and the royalty they guarded got out of range as fast as they
could. Avornan archers rushed forward to shoot back at the Chernagors on
the walls. Grus doubted they hit many, but maybe they did make the
Chernagors keep their heads down. That would at least spoil the foe’s
aim.
After what seemed like forever but couldn’t have been more than half a
minute, the arrows the Chernagors kept shooting thudded into the ground
behind Grus, and not into shields or flesh. He wasn’t ashamed to let out a
sigh of relief. He turned to Vsevolod and asked, “Are you all right?”
Panting, the deposed lord of Nishevatz nodded. “Only—winded. I am
not—as swift—as I used to be.” He paused to catch his breath. “What will
you do now?”
“Well, we’ve tried being sneaky, and that doesn’t work,” Grus said.
“We’ve tried being reasonable, and that didn’t work, either. We can’t very
well starve them out, can we, not when they can bring in food by sea?”
“What does that leave?” Vsevolod asked morosely.
“Assaulting the walls,” Grus answered. He stared toward those walls
again. The Chernagors were still trading arrows with his archers. They
were getting the better of it, too; they had the advantage of height: Grus
sighed. “Assaulting the walls,” he repeated, and sighed again. “And I hate
to think about it, let alone try.”
Whenever Bubulcus saw King Lanius coming, he did his best to disappear.
With one moncat still on the loose, that was wise of him. It wasn’t wise
enough, though. The longer Pouncer stayed missing, the angrier Lanius got.
Had Bubulcus been truly wise, he would have fled the palace and not just
ducked into another room or around the corner when the king drew near.
“One of these days,” Lanius told Sosia, “I am going to lose all of my
temper, and I really will send that simpering simpleton to the Maze.”
“Go ahead,” his wife answered. “If you’re going to act like a king, act
like a
king.”
The only trouble here was, acting like a king meant acting like an
ogre. No matter how angry at Bubulcus Lanius got, at heart he remained a
mild-mannered man better suited to scholarship than to ruling. He could
too easily imagine what a disaster exiling Bubulcus would be to the
servant’s family. And so he muttered curses under his breath, and told
himself he would condemn Bubulcus tomorrow, and then put it off for
another day.
He left meat in places to which he hoped the moncat might come. A
couple of times, the moncat did come to one of those places . . . and
stole the meat and disappeared again before anybody could catch it.
Bubulcus came very close to exile the first time that happened, very close
indeed.
Lanius did his best to live his life as though nothing were wrong. He
went into the archives, trying to find out as much as he could about
Nishevatz and the Chernagors for Grus. He doubted his father-in-law would
be grateful, but, grateful or not, Grus still might find the information
worth having.
Of course, Lanius would have enjoyed going to the archives regardless
of whether he found anything useful to Grus. He liked nothing better than
poking around through old sheets of parchment. Whenever he did, he learned
something. He had to keep reminding himself he was trying to find out
about the Chernagors. Otherwise, he might have happily wandered down any
of half a dozen sidetracks.
He also liked going into the archives for the same reason he liked
caring for his animals—while he was doing it, people were unlikely to
bother him. Palace servants weren’t forbidden to come into the archives
after him. Old tax records and ambassadors’ reports, unlike moncats and
monkeys, couldn’t escape and cause trouble. But no one in the royal palace
except Lanius seemed to want to venture into the dark, dusty chambers that
held the records of Avornis’ past.
When the Chernagors first descended on the north coast, Avornans had
reacted with horror. Lanius already knew that. The Chernagors hadn’t been
merchant adventurers in those distant days. They’d been sea-raiders and
corsairs. Lanius suspected—he was, in fact, as near sure as made no
difference—they were still sea-raiders and corsairs whenever and wherever
they could get away with it.
He’d just come across an interesting series of letters from an Avornan
envoy who’d visited Nishevatz in the days of Prince Vsevolod’s
great-grandfather when a flash of motion caught from the corner of his eye
made him look up. His first thought was that a servant had come into the
archives after all. He saw no one, though.
“Who’s there?” he called.
Only silence answered.
He suddenly realized his seclusion in the archives had disadvantages as
well as advantages. If anything happened to him here, who would know? Who
would come to his rescue? If an assassin came after him, with what could
he fight back? The most lethal weapon he had was a bronze letter
opener.
And if the Banished One had somehow learned he spent a lot of time
alone in the archives . . . Unease turned to fear. A thrall under the
spell of the Banished One had already tried to murder him while he was
caring for his animals. Flinging a treaty in an assassins face wouldn’t
work nearly as well as throwing a moncat had.
“Who’s there?” This time, Lanius couldn’t keep a wobble of alarm from
his voice.
That alarm got worse when, again, no answer came back.
Slowly, fighting his fear, Lanius rose from the stool where he’d
perched. He clutched the letter opener in his right hand. He was no
warrior. He would never be a warrior. But he intended to put up as much of
a fight as he could.
Another flash of motion, this one from behind a cabinet untidily full
of officers’ reports from a long-ago war against the Thervings. “Who’s
there?” Lanius demanded for a third time. “Come out. I see you.”
And oh, how I wish I didn’t.
More motion—and, at last, a sound to go with it. “Mrowr?”
Lanius’ joints felt all springy with relief. “Olor’s beard!” he said,
and then, “Come out of there, you stupid moncat!”
The moncat, of course, didn’t. All Lanius could see of it now was the
twitching tip of its tail. He hurried over to the oak cabinet. Any moment
now, the moncat was only too likely to start scrambling up the wall, to
somewhere too high for him to reach it.
He was, in fact, a little surprised it hadn’t fled already. With his
fear gone and his wits returning, he clucked as he did when he was about
to feed the moncats. “Mrowr?” this one said again, now on a questioning
note. He hoped it was hungry. Though mice skittered here and there through
the royal palace, hunting them would surely be harder work than coming up
to a dish and getting meat and offal. Wouldn’t it?
“It’s all right,” Lanius said soothingly, stepping around the cabinet.
“It’s not your fault. I’m not angry at you. I wouldn’t mind booting that
bungling Bubulcus into the middle of next month—no, I wouldn’t mind that
at all—but I’m not angry at you.”
There sat the moncat, staring up at him out of greenish-yellow eyes. It
seemed to think it was in trouble no matter how soothingly he spoke, for
it sat on its haunches clutching in its little clawed hands and feet an
enormous wooden serving spoon it must have stolen from the kitchens. The
spoon was at least as tall as the moncat, and that included the animal’s
tail.
“Why, you little thief!” Lanius burst out laughing. “If you went
sneaking through the kitchens, maybe you’re not so hungry after all.” He
stooped to pick up the moncat.
It started to run away, but couldn’t make itself let go of the prize it
had stolen. It was much less agile trying to run with one hand and one
foot still holding the spoon. Lanius scooped it up.
Still hanging on to the spoon, the moncat twisted and snapped. He
smacked it on the nose. “Don’t you bite me!” he said loudly. It subsided.
Most of the moncats knew what that meant, because most of them had tried
biting him at one time or another.
Feeling like a soldier who’d just finished a triumphant campaign,
Lanius carried the moncat—and the spoon, which it refused to drop— back to
its room. Once he’d returned it to its fellows, he sent a couple of
servants after Bubulcus.
“Yes, Your Majesty?” Bubulcus asked apprehensively. Even servants
rarely sounded apprehensive around Lanius. He savored Bubulcus’ fear—and,
savoring it, began to understand how an ordinary man could turn into a
tyrant. Bubulcus went on, “Is it... is it the Maze for me?”
“No, not that you don’t deserve it,” Lanius said. “I caught the missing
moncat myself, so it isn’t missing anymore. Next time, though, by the gods
. . . There had better not be a next time for this, that’s all. Do you
understand me?”
“Yes, Your Majesty! Thank you, Your Majesty! Gods bless you, Your
Majesty!” Blubbering, Bubulcus fell to his knees. Lanius turned away. Yes,
he understood how a man could turn into a tyrant, all right.
The Chernagor stared at Grus. Words poured out of him, a great,
guttural flood. They were in his own language, so Grus understood not a
one of them. Turning to the interpreter, he asked, “What is he saying? Why
did he sneak out of Nishevatz and come here?”
“He says he cannot stand it in there anymore.” The interpreter’s words
were calm, dispassionate, while passion filled the escapee’s voice. Grus
could understand that much, even if he followed not a word of what the man
was saying. “He says Vasiiko is worse than Vsevolod ever dreamed of
being.”
Grus glanced over toward Vsevolod, who stood only a few feet away.
Vsevolod, of course, didn’t need the translation to understand what the
other Chernagor was saying. His forward-thrusting features and beaky nose
made him look like an angry bird of prey—not that Grus had ever seen a
bird of prey with a big, bushy white beard.
More excited speech burst from the Chernagor who’d just gotten out
of Nishevatz. He pointed back toward the city he’d just left.
“What’s he going on about now?” Grus asked.
“He says a man does not even have to do anything to oppose Vasiiko.”
Again, the interpreter’s flat, unemotional voice contrasted oddly with the
tones of the man whose words he was translating. “He says, half the time a
man only has to realize Vasiiko is a galloping horse turd”—the Chernagor
obscenity sounded bizarre when rendered literally into Avornan—“and then
he disappears. He never has a chance to do anything against Vasiiko.”
“You see?” Vsevolod said. “Is how I told you. Banished One works
through my son.” Now grief washed over his face.
“I see.” Grus left it at that, for he still had doubts that worried
him, even if he kept quiet about them. Some of those doubts had to do with
Vsevolod. Others he could voice without offending the refugee Chernagor.
He told the interpreter, “Ask this fellow how he managed to escape from
Nishevatz once he decided Vasiiko was . . . not a good man.” He didn’t try
to imitate that picturesque curse.
The interpreter spoke in throaty gutturals. The man who’d gotten out of
Nishevatz gave back more of them. The interpreter asked him something
else. His voice showed more life while speaking the Chernagor tongue than
when he used Avornan. He turned back to Grus. “He says he did not linger.
He says he ran away before Vasiiko could send anyone after him. He
says—”
Before the interpreter could finish, the other Chernagor gasped. He
flung his arms wide. “No!” he shouted—that was one word
of the Chernagor speech Grus understood. He staggered and began
to crumple, as though an arrow had hit him in the chest. “No!” he shouted
again, this time blurrily. Blood ran from his mouth—and from his nose and
from the corners of his eyes and from his ears, as well. After a moment,
it began to drip from under his fingernails, too. He slumped to the
ground, twitched two or three times, and lay still.
Grimly, Vsevolod said, “Now you see, Your Majesty. This is what my son,
flesh of my life, now does to people.” He covered his face with his
gnarled hands.
“Apparently, Your Majesty, this man did not escape Vasilko’s vengeance
after all.” The interpreter’s dispassionate way of speaking clashed with
Vsevolod’s anguish.
“Apparently. Yes.” Grus took a gingerly step away from the Chernagor’s
corpse, which still leaked blood from every orifice. He took a deep breath
and tried to force his stunned wits into action. “Fetch me Pterocles,” he
told a young officer standing close by. He had to repeat himself. The
officer was staring at the body in horrified fascination. Once Grus got
his attention, he nodded jerkily and hurried away.
The wizard came quickly, but not quickly enough to suit Grus. Pterocles
took one look at the dead Chernagor, then recoiled in dread and dismay.
“Oh, by the gods!” he said harshly. “By the gods!”
Grus thought of Milvago, who was now the Banished One. He wished he
hadn’t. It only made Pterocles righter than he knew. “Do you recognize the
spell that did this?” the king asked.
“Recognize it? No, Your Majesty.” Pterocles shook his head. “But if I
ever saw the man who used it, I’d wash my eyes before I looked at anything
else. Can’t you feel how filthy it is?”
“I can see how filthy it is. Feel it? No. I’m blind that particular
way.”
“Most of the time, I pity ordinary men because they can’t see what I
take for granted.” Pterocles looked at the Chernagor’s corpse again, then
recoiled. “Every once in a while, though, you’re lucky. This, I fear, is
one of
those times.”
Bowing nervously before King Lanius, the peasant said, “If my baron
ever finds out I’ve come before you, I’m in a lot of trouble, Your
Majesty.”
“If the King of Avornis can’t protect you, who can?” Lanius asked.
“You’re here. I live a long ways off from the capital. Wasn’t that I
had a cousin move here more than twenty years ago, give me a place to
stay, I never would’ve come. But Baron Clamator, he’s right there where m
at.”
That probably—no, certainly—reflected reality. Lanius. wished it
didn’t, but recognized that it did. “Well, go on ...” he said.
Knowing the pause for what it was, the peasant said, “My name’s
Flammeus, Your Majesty.”
“Flammeus. Yes, of course.” Lanius was annoyed with himself. A steward
had whispered it to him, and he’d gone and forgotten it. He didn’t like
forgetting anything. “Go on, then, Flammeus.” If he said it a few times,
it
would stick in his memory. “What’s Baron Clamator doing?” He had
a pretty good idea. Farmers usually brought one complaint in particular
against their local nobility.
Sure enough, Flammeus said, “He’s taking land he’s got no right to.
He’s buying some and using his retainers to take more. We’re free men down
there, and he’s doing his best to turn us into thralls like the Menteshe
have.”
He didn’t know much about the thralls, or about the magic that robbed
them of their essential humanity. He was just a farmer who, even after
cleaning up and putting on his best clothes, still smelled of sweat and
onions. He wanted to stay his own master. Lanius, who longed to be fully
his own master, had trouble blaming him for that.
Grus had issued laws making it much harder for nobles to acquire land
from ordinary farmers. He hadn’t done it for the farmers’ sake. He’d done
it to make sure they went on paying taxes to Kings of Avornis and didn’t
become men who looked first to barons and counts and dukes and not to the
crown. Lanius had seen how that helped him keep unruly nobles in line.
And what helped Grus could help any King of Avornis. “Baron Clamator
will hear from me, Flammeus,” Lanius promised.
“He doesn’t listen any too well,” the farmer warned.
“He’ll listen to soldiers,” Lanius said.
“Ahh,” Flammeus said. “I figured King Grus would do that. I didn’t know
about you.” Courtiers stirred and murmured. Flammeus realized he had gone
too far, and quickly added, “Meaning no disrespect, of course.”
“Of course,” Lanius said dryly. Some Kings of Avornis would have slit
the farmer’s tongue for a slip like that. Lanius’ own father, King Mergus,
probably would have. Even Grus might have. Lanius, though, had no taste
for blood—Bubulcus, luckily for him, was living proof of that. “I
will send soldiers,” the king told Flammeus.
The farmer bowed and made his escape from the throne room. He would
have quite a tale to tell the cousin he was staying with. Lanius found new
worries of his own. He’d never given orders to any soldiers except the
royal bodyguards. Would the men obey him? Would they refer his orders to
Grus, to make sure they were real orders after all? Or would they simply
ignore him? Grus was the king with the power in Avornis, and everybody
knew it. Should I write to Grus myself? That might get rid of trouble before
it starts, Lanius thought. But it would also delay things at least
two weeks. Lanius wanted to punish Clamator as quickly as he could, before
the baron got word he was going to be punished.
I’ll write Grus, telling him what I’m doing and why. That pleased
Lanius. It would work fine . . . unless the soldiers refused to obey him
at all.
His heart pounded against his ribs when he summoned an officer from the
barracks. He had to work hard to hold his voice steady as he said,
“Captain Icterus, I am sending you and your troop of riders to the south
to deal with Baron Clamator. He is laying hold of peasant land in a way
King Grus’ laws forbid.” He hoped that would help.
Maybe it did. Or maybe he’d worried over trifles. Captain Icterus
didn’t argue. He didn’t say a word about referring the question to King
Grus. He just bowed low, said, “Yes, Your Majesty,” and went off to do
what Lanius had told him to do. His squadron rode out of the city of
Avornis that very afternoon. Yes, this is what it’s like to be a real
King, Lanius thought happily. His sphere was no longer limited to
the royal chambers, the archives, and the rooms where his moncats and
monkeys lived. With Grus away from the capital, his reach stretched over
the whole kingdom.
It did, at least, until he wrote to the other king to justify what he’d
done. Writing the letter made him want to go wash afterwards. It wasn’t
merely the most abject thing he’d ever written. It was, far and away, the
most abject thing he’d ever imagined. It had to be. He knew that. Grus
would not take kindly to his behaving like a real king. But reading the
words on parchment once he’d set them down . . . He couldn’t stomach it.
He sealed the letter without going through it a second time.
Sosia said, “I’m proud of you. You did what needed doing.”
“I think so,” Lanius said. “I’m glad you do, too. But what will your
father think?”
“He can’t stand nobles who take peasants under their own wing and away
from Avornis,” his wife answered. “He won’t complain about whatever you do
to stop them. You’re not about to overthrow him.”
“No, of course not,” Lanius said quickly. He would have denied it even
if—especially if—it were true. But it wasn’t. He didn’t want to try to
oust Grus. For one thing, his father-in-law was much too likely to win if
they measured themselves against each other. And, for another, this little
taste of ruling Lanius was getting convinced him that Grus was welcome to
most of it. When it came to animals or to ancient manuscripts, Lanius was
patience personified; the smallest details fascinated him. When it came to
the day-to-day work of governing, he had to fight back yawns. He also knew
he would never make a great, or even a good, general. Grus was welcome to
all of that.
Sosia said, “I wish things were going better up in the Chernagor
country. Then Father could come home.”
“I wish things were going better up in the Chernagor country, too,”
Lanius said. “The only reason they aren’t going so well is that the
Banished One must be stronger up there than we thought.”
“That’s not good,” Sosia said.
“No, it isn’t.” Lanius said no more than that.
Sosia asked, “Can we do anything here to make things easier for Father
up there? Would it be worth our while to start trouble with the Menteshe,
to make the Banished One have to pay attention to two places at once?”
Lanius looked at her with admiration. She thought as though she were
King of Avornis. He answered, “The only trouble I can see with that is,
we’d have to pay attention to two places at once, too. Would it work a
bigger hardship on the Banished One or on us? I don’t know, not offhand.
One more thing to go into a letter to your father.”
“One
more thing?” Sosia cocked her head to one side. “What’s Ortalis
gone and done now?”
“I don’t know that he’s done anything since the last time,” Lanius
said. They both made sour faces. Saying he didn’t know that Ortalis had
done anything new and dreadful wasn’t the same as saying Sosia’s brother
hadn’t done any such thing. How much had Ortalis done that nobody but he
knew about?
Lanius shook his head. Whenever Ortalis did such things,
somebody else knew about it. But how many of those
somebodies weren’t around anymore to tell their stories? Only
Ortalis knew that.
“He should start hunting again,” Sosia said. Something must have
changed on Lanius’ face. Quickly, his wife added, “Hunting bear and boar
and birds and deer and rabbits—things like that.”
“I suppose so.” Lanius wished he could sound more cheerful. For a
while, Ortalis had seemed . . . almost civilized. Hunting and killing
animals had let him satiate his lust for blood and hurt in a way no one
much minded. If only it hadn’t lost the power to satisfy him.
Sosia said, “I wish things were simpler.”
“Wish for the moon while you’re at it,” Lanius said. “The older I get,
the more complicated everything looks.” He was married to the daughter of
the man who’d exiled his mother to the Maze. Not only that, he loved her.
If that wasn’t complicated enough for any ordinary use, what could be?
CHAPTER FIVE
King Grus looked from Hirundo to Pterocles to Vsevolod, then back
again. They nodded, one after another. Grus’ eyes went to the walls of
Nishevatz. They frowned down at him, as they had ever since the Avornan
army came before them. “We are agreed?” Grus said. “This is the only thing
we have left to do?”
The general, the wizard, and the deposed Prince of Nishevatz all nodded
again. Hirundo said, “If we didn’t come to fight, why did we come?”
“I haven’t got an answer for that,” Grus said.
But oh, how I wish I did! Since he didn’t, he also nodded,
brusquely. “All right, then. We’ll see what happens. Go to your places. I
know you’ll all do everything you can.”
Hirundo and Pterocles hurried away. Vsevolod’s place was by Grus. “I
thank you for this,” he said in his ponderous Avornan. “I will do, my folk
will do, all things possible to do to help.”
“I know.” Grus turned away. He thought Vsevolod meant well, but still
had other things on his mind. A trumpeter stood by, face tense and alert.
Grus pointed to him. “Signal the attack.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The trumpeter raised the horn to his lips. Martial
music rang out. Only for a moment did it come from one trumpet alone. Then
every horn player in the Avornan army blared forth the identical call.
Cheering Avornan soldiers swarmed forward. Grus wouldn’t have cheered,
not attacking a place like Nishevatz. Maybe the common soldiers didn’t
realize what they were up against. Some of them came within arrow range of
that formidable wall and started shooting at the defenders on top of it,
trying to make them keep their heads down. Others carried scaling ladders
that they leaned up against the gray stone blocks. More Avornans—and some
Chernagors, too—raced up the ladders toward the top of the wall.
“Come on!” Grus muttered, watching them through the clouds of dust the
assault kicked up. “Come on, you mad bastards! You can do it! You
can!”
He blinked. Beside him, King Vsevolod exclaimed in his own guttural
language. Vsevolod grabbed Grus’ arm, hard enough to hurt. The old man
still had strength. “What is that?” he said. “I see ladders. Then I see no
ladders.”
Pterocles was doing his job. “I hope Prince Vasilko’s men don’t see
them, either,” Grus said. “If the men can get to the top of the wall, get
down into Nishevatz . . .”
“Yes,” Vsevolod said. “Then to my son I have some things to say.” His
big, gnarled hands opened and closed, opened and closed. Grus hadn’t cared
to be caught in that grip, and didn’t think Vasilko would, either.
Even from so far away, the din was tremendous, deafening. Men shouted
and screamed. Armor clattered. Dart-throwing engines bucked and snapped.
Stones crashed down on soldiers storming up—the wizard’s magic wasn’t
perfect. Ladders went over or broke, spilling soldiers off them.
And, much closer than the walls of Nishevatz, Pterocles suddenly howled
like a wounded wolf. “Noooo!” he cried, his voice getting higher and
shriller every instant. All at once, every siege ladder became fully
visible again. The ladders started toppling one after another when that
happened. Pterocles also toppled, still wailing.
Vsevolod said something in his own language that sounded incandescent.
Grus said the foulest things he knew how to say in Avornan. None of their
curses did any good. It quickly grew plain the assault on the wall
wouldn’t do any good, either.
Grus hauled Pterocles to his feet. The wizard’s face was a mask of
pain. Grus shook him. “Do something!” he shouted. “Don’t just sound like a
wheel that needs grease.
Do something!”
“I can’t.” Pterocles didn’t just sound like an ungreased wheel. He
sounded like a man who might be about to die, and who knew it. “I can’t,
Your Majesty. He’s too strong. What happened to me before, this is ten
times worse—a hundred times. Whoever’s in there, he’s too strong for me.”
Tears ran down his cheeks. Grus didn’t think he knew he shed them.
The king shook the wizard again. “You have to try. By the gods,
Pterocles, the soldiers are depending on you. The kingdom is depending on
you.”
“I can’t,” Pterocles whispered, but from somewhere he found strength.
He straightened. Grus let go of him. He still swayed, but he stayed on his
feet. “I’ll try,” he said, even more quietly than before. “I don’t know
what will happen to me, but I’ll try.”
Before Grus could even praise him, he exploded into motion. He had a
long, angular frame, and every separate part of him seemed to be moving in
a different direction. Grus had never seen a wizard incant so furiously.
It was as though Pterocles were taking pieces of his pain and flinging
them back into Nishevatz. His magic didn’t seemed aimed at the Chernagor
soldiers on the walls anymore. Whatever he was doing, he was doing
against—doing to—the wizard who’d come so close to killing him moments
before.
“Take that!” he shouted again and again. “Take
that, and see how you like it!”
Vsevolod nudged Grus. “He is mad,” the old Chernagor said, and tapped
the side of his head with a forefinger.
“Sometimes, with a wizard, it helps,” Grus said. But he wondered
exactly whom Pterocles was fighting. Was it some Chernagor wizard who,
like Vasilko, had abandoned the gods and turned to the Banished One, or
was it the being the Menteshe called the Fallen Star himself, in his own
person? If it was the Banished One himself, could any merely mortal wizard
stand against him?
Before Grus got even a hint of an answer, Hirundo distracted him. The
general was bleeding from a cut over one eye. His gilded helmet had a dent
in it, and was jammed down over one ear, which also bled. He seemed
unaware of the small wounds. “Your Majesty, we can’t get over the wall,”
he said without preamble. “You’re just throwing more men away if you keep
trying.”
“No hope?” Grus asked.
“None. Not a bit. No chance.” Hirundo sounded absolutely certain.
“All right. Pull them back,” Grus said. The general bowed and hurried
away. Vsevolod made a wordless noise full of fury and pain. He turned his
back on Grus. Grus started to tell him he was sorry, but checked himself.
If Vsevolod couldn’t figure that out without being told, too bad.
“Take that!” Pterocles shouted again, and laughed a wild, crazy laugh.
“Ha! See how you like it this time!”
He thought he was getting home against whoever or whatever his foe was.
And the more confident he grew, the harder and quicker came the spells he
cast. Maybe—probably—it was madness, but it was inspired madness.
And then, like a man who’d been hit square in the jaw, Pterocles
toppled, right in the middle of an incantation. All his bones might have
turned to water. When Grus stooped beside him, he was sure the wizard was
dead. But, to his surprise, Pterocles went on breathing and still had a
pulse. Grus slapped him in the face, none too gently, to try to bring him
around. He stirred and muttered, but would not wake.
“Will he have any mind when he rouses?” Vsevolod asked.
Grus could only shrug. “We’ll have to see, that’s all. I just hope he
does wake up. Something bigger than he was hit him there.”
“It is mark of Banished One,” the Prince of Nishevatz declared. Grus
found himself nodding. He didn’t see what else it could be, either.
Hirundo, meanwhile, pulled the Avornans back from the walls of the
city-state where Vsevolod had ruled for so long. Many of them limped and
bled. More than a few helped wounded comrades escape the rain of stones
and arrows from the battlements.
“What now?” Vsevolod asked.
The last time Grus had faced that question, he’d decided to try to
storm Nishevatz. Now he’d not only tried that, he’d also seen how
thoroughly it didn’t work. He gave the man who’d asked for his help the
only answer he could—a shrug. “Your Highness, right now I just don’t know
what to tell you.”
He waited for Vsevolod to get angry. Instead, the Chernagor nodded in
dour approval. “At least you do not give me opium in honey sauce. This is
something. You make no fog of pretty, sweet-smelling promises to lull me
to sleep and make me not notice you say nothing.”
“No. I come right out and say nothing,” Grus replied.
“Is better.” Prince Vsevolod sounded certain. Grus had his doubts.
King Lanius read the letter aloud to Queen Sosia, Queen Estrilda,
Prince Ortalis, and Arch-Hallow Anser—Grus’ daughter, wife, legitimate
son, and bastard. “ ‘And so we were repulsed from the walls of
Nishevatz,’ Grus writes,” he said. “‘I should never have tried to storm
them, but looking back is always easier than looking forward.’”
“What will he do now?” The question, which should have come from
Ortalis’ lips if he had the least bit of interest in ruling Avornis,
instead came from Estrilda’s.
“I’m just getting to that,” Lanius answered. “He writes, ‘I do not know
what I’ll do next. I think I will stay in front of the city and see what
happens next inside of it. Maybe Vasilko will make himself hated enough to
spark an uprising against him. I can hope, anyhow.’”
He would have written a much more formal, much more detailed account of
the campaign than Grus had. But Grus’ letter had an interest, an appeal,
of its own.
If it were three hundred years old and I’d found it in the archives,
I’d be delighted, Lanius thought.
It makes me feel I’m there.
Anser asked, “What happened to the wizard?”
“To Pterocles? That’s farther down. Here, this is what he says.
‘Pterocles started coming back to himself the morning after he lost the
magical fight with the wizard in Nishevatz—or with the wizard’s Master. He
knows who he is, and where, but he is not yet strong enough to try
sorcery. This gives me one more reason to wait and see what happens
here.’”
“He’s probably doing the smart thing by not charging ahead with the
war,” Sosia said.
“Yes, probably,” Lanius agreed. “But if we can’t take Nishevatz with
our soldiers or with our magic, what are we doing there?”
His wife had no answer for that. Lanius had none, either. He wondered
if Grus did. He also wondered whether to write to the other King of
Avornis and ask him. But he didn’t need long to decide not to. Grus would
be suspicious because Lanius had ordered soldiers to the south. If he also
wrote a letter questioning what Grus was doing up in the Chernagor
country, the other king might suspect him of ambitions he didn’t have.
Even more dangerous, Grus might suspect him of ambitions he
did have.
Sosia said, “You’re right—if we aren’t doing anything worthwhile up
there, our men ought to come back to Avornis.”
“If Grus decides he needs to do that, I expect he will,” Lanius
answered, and wondered if Grus would have the sense to cut his losses. The
other king was usually a man who saw what needed doing and did it.
Less than a week later, Captain Icterus rode back into the city of
Avornis and reported to Lanius. The grin on the officer’s face told the
king most of what he needed to know before Icterus started talking. When
he did speak, he got his message into one sentence. “You don’t need to
worry about Baron Clamator anymore, Your Majesty.”
“That’s good news, Captain,” Lanius said. “And how did it happen that I
don’t?”
Icterus’ grin got wider. “We happened to ride past him as he was on his
way to drink with the baron who lives the next castle to the west. We
scooped him up smooth as you please, and he was on his way to the Maze
before his people even knew he was missing.”
“Well done, Colonel!” Lanius said, and Icterus’ smile got bigger and
brighter still. Lanius hadn’t thought it could.
The good news kept the king happy the rest of the morning. But he went
back to worrying about the north as he examined tax records from the
provinces later in the day. Almost in spite of himself, he was learning
how the kingdom was administered. The numbers were all they should have
been—better than Lanius had expected, in fact. But that let him worry more
about the land of the Chernagors. Had Pterocles met a powerful wizard who
inclined toward the Banished One? Or had the Banished One himself reached
out from the far south to smite the Avornan wizard? Maybe it didn’t
matter. With the Banished One, though—with Milvago that was—how could any
man say for certain?
And then Lanius got distracted again, this time much more pleasantly. A
serving woman stuck her head into the chamber where he was working and
said, “I beg pardon, Your Majesty, but may I speak to you for a
moment?”
“Yes, of course,” Lanius answered. “What do you want—uh—?” He couldn’t
come up with her name.
“I’m Cristata, Your Majesty,” she said. She was a few years younger
than Lanius—say, about twenty—with light brown hair, green eyes, a pert
nose, and everything else a girl of about twenty should have. But she
looked so nervous and fearful, the king almost didn’t notice how pretty
she was.
“Say whatever you want, Cristata,” he told her now. “Whatever it is, I
promise it won’t land you in trouble.”
That visibly lifted her spirits; the smile she gave him was dazzling
enough to lift his, too. “Thank you, Your Majesty,” she breathed, but then
looked worried again. She asked, “Even if it’s about. . . someone in the
royal family?”
Lanius grimaced. He had a fear of his own now—that he knew what sort of
thing Cristata was going to talk about. He had to answer quickly, to make
her see he had no second thoughts. “Even then.” He made his voice as firm
as he could.
“Will you swear by the gods?” He hadn’t satisfied her.
“By the gods,” he declared. “By all the gods in the heavens.” That left
Milvago—the Banished One—out.
“All right, then,” Cristata said. “This has to do with Prince Ortalis,
Your Majesty. Remember, you swore.”
“I remember.” Lanius started to tell her he’d heard stories about
Ortalis before. But the words never passed his lips. That wasn’t fair to
Grus’ legitimate son. What he’d heard before could have been lies. He
didn’t think so, but it could have been. And, for that matter, what
Cristata was about to tell him might be a lie, too. Lying about a prince
to a king was a risky business for a servant, yet who could say for
certain? Ortalis might—no, Ortalis was bound to—have enemies who could use
her as a tool. With a sigh, Lanius said, “Go ahead.”
Cristata did. The way she told her story made Lanius think it was
likely true. Ortalis’ good looks and his status had both drawn her. That
seemed plausible—and even had Ortalis been wizened and homely, a serving
girl would have taken a chance if she said no when he beckoned. That
wasn’t fair. It probably wasn’t right. But it was the way life worked.
Lanius had taken advantage of it himself, back in the days before he was
married.
Everything between Ortalis and Cristata seemed to have started well.
He’d been sweet. He’d given her presents. She didn’t try to hide that
she’d said yes for reasons partly mercenary, which again made Lanius more
inclined to believe her.
Little by little, things had gone wrong. Cristata had trouble saying
exactly when. Some of what later seemed dreadful had been exciting at the
time ... at first, anyhow. But when she did begin to get alarmed, she
found herself in too deep to get away easily. Her voice became bitter. “By
then, I was just a piece of meat for him, a piece of meat that had the
right kind of holes. Before long, he even stopped caring about those.”
She paused. Lanius didn’t know what to say. Not knowing, he made a
questioning noise.
It must have meant something to Cristata. Nodding as though he’d just
made a clever comment, she said, “I can show you some of it. I can show
you all of it if you like, but some will do.” Her linen tunic fit loosely.
As she turned her back on Lanius, she slipped it down off one shoulder,
baring what should have been soft, smooth skin.
“Oh,” he said, and involuntarily closed his eyes. He didn’t think
anyone with a grudge against Ortalis could have persuaded her to go
through with . . . that for money.
She quickly set her tunic to rights again. “At least it did heal,” she
said matter-of-factly. “And he gave me . . . something for it afterwards.
I thought about just taking that and keeping quiet. But is it right, Your
Majesty, when somebody can just take somebody else and use her for a toy?
What would he have done if he’d killed me? He could have, easy enough.
Some of the girls who’ve left the court. . . Did they really leave, or did
they disappear a different way?”
Lanius had wondered the same thing. But no one had ever found anything
connecting Ortalis to those disappearances—except for the couple of
maidservants who’d gone back to the provinces well rewarded for keeping
their mouths shut afterwards. Cristata, evidently, didn’t want to go that
way. Lanius asked her, “What do you think I should do?”
“Punish him,” she said at once. “You’re the king, aren’t you?”
The real answer to that question was,
yes and no. He reigned, but he hardly ruled. Explaining his own
troubles, though, would do Cristata no good. He said, “King Grus would be
a better one to do that than I am.”
Cristata sent him a look he was more used to feeling on his own face
than to seeing on someone else’s. The look said,
My, you’re not as smart as I thought you were, are you? Cristata
herself said, carefully, “Prince Ortalis is His Majesty’s son.” Sure
enough, she might have been speaking to an idiot child.
“Yes, I know,” Lanius answered. “But King Grus, please believe me,
doesn’t like him doing these things.” Cristata looked eloquently
unconvinced. Sighing, Lanius added, “And King Grus, please believe me, is
also the one who has the power to punish him when he does these things. I
am not, and I do not.”
“Oh,” she said in a dull voice. “I should have realized that, shouldn’t
I? I’m sorry I bothered you, Your Majesty.”
“It wasn’t a bother. I wish I could do more. You’re—” Lanius stopped.
He’d been about to say something like,
You’re too pretty for it to have been a bother. If he did say
something like that, it would be the first step toward complicating his
life with Sosia. And, all too likely, Cristata would have heard the same
sort of thing from Ortalis. She’d believed it from him, and been sorry
afterwards. What did she think Lanius might do to her if she were rash
enough to believe again?
Even though he’d stopped, her eyes showed she understood what he’d
meant. Now she was the one who sighed. Perhaps as much to herself as to
him, she said, “I used to think being pretty was nice. If you’d told me it
was dangerous . . .” She shrugged—prettily. “I’m sorry I took up your
time, Your Majesty.” Before Lanius could find anything to say, she swept
out of the little chamber.
The king spent the next few minutes cursing his brother-in-law, not so
much for exactly what Ortalis had done as for making Lanius himself
embarrassed to be a man.
No one knew the river galleys that prowled Avornan waters better than
King Grus. The deep-bellied, tall-masted ships that went into and out of
Nishevatz were a different breed of vessel altogether, even more different
than cart horses from jumpers. Sailing on the Northern Sea was not the
same business as going up and down the Nine Rivers that cut the Avornan
plain.
“We need ships of our own,” Grus said to Hirundo. “Without them, we’ll
never pry Vasilko out of that city.”
“Yes, Your Majesty,” the general answered. “We do need ships. But where
will we get ‘em? Build ’em ourselves? We haven’t got the woodworkers to
build ‘em or sailors to man ’em. We haven’t got the time, either. We might
hire ‘em from the Chernagors, except the next Chernagor city-state that
wants to let us use any’ll be the first.”
“I know,” Grus said. “They think if we have ships, we’ll use ‘em
against them next.”
Hirundo didn’t reply. Many years before, the Chernagor city-states had
belonged to Avornis. A strong king might want to take them back again.
Grus liked to think of himself as a strong king. That the Chernagors
evidently thought of him the same way was a compliment of sorts. It was,
at the moment, a compliment he could have done without.
His chief wizard walked by. “How are you, Pterocles?” Grus called.
“How am I?” Pterocles echoed, his voice and expression both vague.
“I’ve . . . been better.”
He hadn’t been the same since the sorcerer inside Nishevatz laid him
low. Grus still marveled that he’d survived. So did all the other Avornan
wizards who’d since helped him try to recover. Maybe the same thing would
have happened to Alca—exiled from the capital, if not from Grus’ heart—had
the same spell struck her. Maybe.
Did the power that had smashed Pterocles mean the magic came from the
Banished One himself, and not from one of his mortal minions? Like
Vsevolod, the Avornan wizards seemed to think so. They didn’t want to
commit themselves—one more reason Grus wished he had straight-talking Alca
at his side—but that was the impression he got.
“Can you work magic at need?” Grus asked.
“I suppose so.” But Pterocles didn’t sound as though he fully believed
it.
Grus didn’t fully believe it, either. Pterocles still looked and acted
like a man who’d been hit over the head with a large, pointy rock.
Sometimes he seemed better, sometimes worse, but even
better didn’t mean the same as
good.
Under his own tunic, Grus wore an old protective amulet, one he’d had
since before becoming King of Avornis. It had helped save his life once,
when Queen Certhia, Lanius’ mother, tried to slay him by sorcery. Would it
protect him if the Banished One tried to do the same thing? Grus had his
doubts. He knew he didn’t want to find out the hard way.
Pterocles said, “Half of me makes more of a wizard than a lot of these
odds and sods, Your Majesty—or half of me would, if I didn’t feel so ...
empty inside.” He tapped the side of his head with his fist. It didn’t
sound like a jar from which all the wine was gone, but Grus— and maybe
Pterocles, too—thought it should have.
“You’ll be all right.” Grus hoped he was telling the truth. When he
added, “You
are getting better,” he felt on safer ground. On the other hand,
how much of a compliment was that? If Pterocles hadn’t gotten any better,
the sorcerous stroke he’d taken would have laid him on his pyre.
A messenger came up to Grus. He stood there waiting to be noticed. When
Grus nodded to him, he said, “Your Majesty, a sack of letters from Avornis
is here.”
“Oh, good,” Grus said. “I do want to keep track of what’s going on back
home.” He’d already stayed out of the kingdom longer than he’d intended.
Back in the capital, Lanius behaved more like a real king every day. If he
wanted to try ousting Grus, he might have a chance now. From what Grus had
seen, though, Lanius didn’t like actually governing. Grus chuckled, not
that he really felt amused. That was a small, flimsy platform on which to
rest his own rule.
He turned to walk back to his tent and look at those letters. He hadn’t
gone far, though, before another messenger ran up to him. This one didn’t
wait to be noticed. He shouted, “Your Majesty, they’re coming!”
“Who’s coming?” Grus asked.
“Chernagors! A whole army of Chernagors, from out of the east!” the
messenger answered. “They aren’t on their way to ask us to dance,
either.”
“No?” Grus slid gracefully from heel to toe and back again. The
messenger stared at him. He sighed. “Well, probably not. Tell me
more.”
“We sent men to them to find out if they were coming to help us and
Prince Vsevolod,” the messenger said. “They shot at our men.”
“Then they probably aren’t.” Grus’ eyes involuntarily went back to the
walls of Nishevatz. “If they aren’t coming to help Vsevolod, Vasilko will
be glad to see them. Nice to think someone is, eh?”
“Er—yes.” The messenger didn’t seem to think that was good news. Grus
didn’t think it was good news, either. Unlike the messenger, he knew just
how bad it was liable to be.
He ordered his own army into line of battle facing east. Things could
have been worse. He supposed they could have been worse, anyhow. The army
could have gone on about the business of besieging Nishevatz without
sending scouts out to the east and west. That would have been worse, sure
enough. The Chernagors from the east might have crashed into his force
unsuspected. Instead of a mere disaster, he would have had a catastrophe
on his hands then.
Avornan soldiers were still taking their places when Grus saw a cloud
of dust on the coastal road that came out of the east. He’d had some
practice judging the clouds of dust advancing armies kicked up. He turned
to Hirundo, who’d had considerably more. “Looks like a lot of Chernagors,”
he said.
“Does, doesn’t it?” Hirundo agreed. “Of course, they may be playing
games with us. Send some horses along in front of an army with saplings
fastened on behind them and they’ll stir up enough dust to make you think
every soldier in the world is heading your way.”
“Do you think that’s likely here?” Grus inquired.
Hirundo pursed his lips. “I’d like to,” he answered. But that wasn’t
what the king had asked. Reluctantly, the general shook his head. “No, I
don’t think so. The scouts saw Chernagors, lots of Chernagors. I’m going
to pull some men back out of the line, if that’s all right with you.”
“Why?”
“Because I’d like to have a reserve handy, in case Vasilko decides to
sally from Nishevatz while we’re busy with these other bastards.” Hirundo
gave an airy wave of the hand. “Nothing puts a hole in your day like
getting attacked from two directions at once, if you know what I mean.
“I wish I didn’t, but I do,” Grus said heavily. “That’s a good idea.
See to it.” Hirundo sketched a salute and hurried off.
Prince Vsevolod came up to Grus. He tugged on the sleeve of the king’s
tunic. “Your Majesty, I am sorry I put you in this place,” he said. “I
fight hard for you.” His age-spotted hand fell to the hilt of his
sword.
“Thank you, your Highness. We’ll all do some fighting before long,”
Grus replied. For him, that would mean donning a mailshirt and mounting a
horse. He hated fighting from horseback, as anyone who’d spent more time
on a river galley would have. A tilting deck was one thing, a rearing
mount something else again. He clapped Vsevolod on the back. “You didn’t
put me in this place. Vasilko and the Banished One did. I know who my
enemies are.”
“I thank you, Your Majesty. You are all King of Avornis should be,”
Vsevolod said. “I fight hard. You see.”
“Good.” Grus raised his voice and called, “Let’s move out against
them,” to Hirundo. He went on, “We don’t want them thinking we’re afraid
to face them.”
“Afraid to face a bunch of Chernagors? We’d better not be!” Hirundo
sounded light and cheerful, for the benefit of his men, and probably for
Grus’ benefit, too. But the general knew—and King Grus also knew— the
traders who lived by the Northern Sea made formidable warriors when they
took it into their heads to fight.
Avornan trumpets blared. Shouting Grus’ name and Prince Vsevolod’s
(many of them making a mess of it), the soldiers rode and marched forward.
Soon, through the dust ahead, Grus made out sun-sparkles off spearheads
and swords, helmets and coats of mail. The Chernagors rode big, ponderous
horses, not fast but heavy and strong enough to be formidable in the
charge.
Hirundo shouted orders. Like a painter working on a fresco inside a
temple, he saw how he wanted everything to go long before the scene was
done. Avornan mounted archers galloped out to the wings and started
peppering the Chernagors with arrows. Some of the big, stocky men from the
north slid out of their saddles and crashed to the ground. Some of the
big, stocky horses they rode crashed down, too. Un-wounded beasts tripped
over them and also fell.
But most of the Chernagors ignored the arrows and kept coming. They had
archers of their own, more of them afoot than on horseback, and started
shooting at Grus’ men as soon as they got into range. Arrows thudded into
shields. They clattered off helms and armor. Now and then, they smacked
home against flesh. Every cry of pain made Grus flinch.
An arrow hissed past his head, sounding malevolent as a wasp. A few
inches to one side and he would have been screaming, too. Or maybe he
wouldn’t. Not far away, an Avornan took an arrow in the face and fell from
his horse without a sound. He never knew what hit him. That was an easy
way to go, easier than most men got on the battlefield or off it.
Grus had hoped Hirundo’s mounted archers would make the Chernagors
think twice about closing with his army. But no. Shouting fierce-sounding
incomprehensibilities in their own throaty language, the bushy-bearded
warriors slammed into their Avornan foes.
“Come on, men! Let’s show them what we can do now that we’ve got them
in the open!” Grus shouted. “Up until now, they’ve hidden in forts, afraid
to meet us face-to-face.” Had he commanded the Chernagors, he would have
done the same thing, which had nothing to do with anything when he was
trying to hearten his men. “Let ‘em see they knew what they were doing
when they wouldn’t come out against us.”
A few heartbeats later, he was trading sword strokes with a large
Chernagor who had a large wart by the side of his nose. After almost
cutting off his own horse s ear, Grus managed to wound the enemy warrior.
The fellow howled pain-filled curses at him. The fighting swept them
apart. As so often happened, Grus never found out what happened to the
foe.
Shouts from the north drew the king’s attention. As Hirundo had feared,
Prince Vasilko’s men were swarming out of Nishevatz and into the fight.
Grus wondered whether the general had pulled enough soldiers to hold them
off before they took the main part of the Avornan army in the flank and
rolled it up. One way or the other, he would find out.
His army didn’t come to pieces, which proved Hirundo had a good ‘
notion of what he was doing after all. But the Avornans didn’t win— they
didn’t come close to winning—the sort of victory Grus would have wanted.
All he could do was fight hard and send men now here, now there, to shore
up weak spots in his line. He had the feeling the Chernagor generals were
doing the same thing; it certainly seemed to be a battle with no subtlety,
no surprises.
Late in the afternoon, Vasilko’s sortie collapsed. The men from
Nishevatz still on their feet streamed back into the city. Had things
been going better in the fight against the rest of the Chernagors, Grus’
men might have chased them harder and gotten into Nishevatz with them. But
things weren’t, and the Avornans didn’t. Having only one foe to worry
about struck Grus as being good enough for the time being.
At last, sullenly, the rest of the Chernagors withdrew from the field.
It was a victory, of sorts. Grus thought about ordering a pursuit. He
thought about it, looked at how exhausted and battered his own men were,
and changed his mind. Hirundo rode up to him and dismounted. The general
looked as weary as Grus felt. “Well, Your Majesty, we threw ‘em back,” he
said. “Threw ’em back twice, as a matter of fact.”
Grus nodded. The motion made some bones in his neck pop like cracking
knuckles. “Yes, we did,” he said, and yawned enormously. “King Olor’s
beard, but I’m worn.”
“Me, too,” Hirundo said. “We did everything we could do there,
though.”
“Yes,” Grus said again. He wished he weren’t agreeing. They’d done
everything they could, and they were no closer to ousting Vasilko from
Nishevatz or restoring Vsevolod. Grus looked around for the rightful
Prince of Nishevatz, but didn’t see him.
“Now the next interesting question,” Hirundo said, “is whether the
Chernagors will come back at us tomorrow, or whether they’ve had
enough.”
“Interesting,” Grus repeated. “Well, that’s one way to put it. What do
you think?”
“Hard to say,” Hirundo answered. “I wouldn’t care to send this army
forward to attack them tomorrow, and we had the better of it today. But
you never can tell. Some generals are like goats—they just keep
butting.”
“Would one more Chernagor attack be likelier to ruin them or us?” Grus
asked.
“Another good question,” his general replied. “I think it’s likelier to
ruin them, but you don’t
know until the fight starts. For that matter, another fight where
everybody’s torn up could ruin both sides.”
“You’re full of cheery notions, aren’t you?”
Hirundo bowed. Something in his back creaked, too. “I’m supposed to
think about these things. I wouldn’t be doing my job if I didn’t.”
“I know.” Grus looked around for Vsevolod again. When he didn’t see
him, he yelled for a messenger. “Find out if the prince is hale,” he told
the young man. “If he is, tell him I’d like to see him when he gets the
chance.”
Nodding, the youngster hurried off. A few minutes later, Prince
Vsevolod joined Grus. The ousted lord of Nishevatz wasn’t perfectly hale.
He had a bloody bandage wrapped around his head. Even so, he waved aside
Grus’ worried questions. “You should see man who did this to me,” he said.
“Somewhere now, ravens pick out his eyes.”
“Good,” Grus said. “I have a question for you.”
“Ask,” Vsevolod said.
“How likely is it that we’ll see more Chernagor armies that don’t want
us in this country anymore?”
Vsevolod frowned. Even before donning the bandage, he’d had a face made
for frowning. With it, he looked like a man contemplating his own doom and
not liking what he saw. “It could be,” he said at last. “Yes, it could
be.”
“How likely do you think it is?” Grus persisted.
Now Prince Vsevolod looked as though he hated him. “If I were prince in
another city-state, I would lead forth my warriors,” he said.
“I was afraid of that,” Grus said. “We don’t have the men here to fight
off every Chernagor breathing, you know.”
“What will you do, then?” Vsevolod asked in turn. “Will you say you are
beaten? Will you run back to Avornis with tail between your legs?” He’s trying to make me ashamed, Grus realized.
He’s trying to embarrass me into staying up here and going on with the
war. Grus understood why the Prince of Nishevatz was doing that. Had
he worn Vsevolod’s boots, he wouldn’t have wanted his ally to give up the
fight, either. Being who and what he was, though, he didn’t want to risk
throwing away his whole army. And so, regretfully, he said, “Yes.”
CHAPTER SIX
“Coming back here to the capital?” Lanius asked Grus’ messenger. “Are
you sure?” “Yes, Your Majesty.” The young man sounded offended Lanius
should doubt him. “Didn’t he tell me with his own mouth? Didn’t he give me
the letter you’re holding?”
Lanius hadn’t read the letter yet. He’d enjoyed being King of Avornis
in something more than name for a little while—he’d discovered he
could run the kingdom, something he’d never been sure of before.
Now he would go back to being nothing in fancy robes and crown. Grasping
at straws, he asked, “How soon will he return?”
“It’s in the letter, Your Majesty. Everything is in the letter,” the
messenger replied. When Lanius gave no sign he wanted to open the letter,
the fellow sighed and went on, “They should be back inside of a month—less
than that if they don’t have to fight their way out.”
“Oh.” Lanius didn’t much want to read the letter—seeing Grus’ hand
reminded him how much more power the other king held. Talking to the
courier made
him the stronger one. “How has the fighting gone?”
“We’re better than they are. One of us is worth more than one of them,”
the messenger said. “But there are more of them than there are of us, and
so . . .” He shrugged. “What can you do?” He didn’t seem downcast at
pulling back from the land of the Chernagors. Did that mean Grus wasn’t,
or did it only mean he’d done a good job of persuading his men he wasn’t?
Lanius couldn’t tell.
Even after dismissing the messenger and reading his father-in-law’s
letter, he still wasn’t sure. Grus presented the withdrawal as the only
thing he could do, and as one step in what looked like a long struggle.
The Banished One will not do with the Chernagors as he has done in the
south, he wrote.
Whatever we have to do to stop him, we will.
He wasn’t wrong about how important keeping the Banished One from
dominating the land of the Chernagors was. Lanius saw that, too. But, when
he read Grus’ letter, he wondered if his father-in-law was saying
everything he had in mind. Was he leaving the north country to make sure
Lanius didn’t decide he could rule Avornis all by himself? Again, Lanius
couldn’t tell. Would I throw Grus out of the palace if I had the chance? As
usual, Lanius found himself torn. Part of him insisted that, as scion of a
dynasty going back a dozen generations, he ought to rule as well as reign.
That was his pride talking. But, now that he’d had a taste of running the
kingdom day by day, he found he would sooner spend time with his animals
and in the archives. If Grus wanted to handle things as they came up,
wasn’t he welcome to the job?
All things considered, Lanius was inclined to answer
yes to that. Another question also sprang to mind.
If I try to get rid of Grus and fail, the way I likely would, won’t he
kill me to make sure I don’t try it again? Lanius was inclined to
answer to that, too. Maybe—probably—the present arrangement was best after
all.
No sooner had he decided, yet again, to let things go on as they were
going than another messenger came before him. This one thrust a letter at
him, murmured, “I’m very sorry, Your Majesty,” and withdrew before Lanius
could even ask him why he was sorry.
The king stared at the letter. It gave no obvious clues; he didn’t even
recognize the seal that helped hold it closed or the hand that addressed
it to him. Shrugging, he broke the seal, slid off the ribbon around the
letter, unrolled it, and began to read.
It was, he discovered, from the abbess of a convent dedicated to
preserving the memory of a holy woman who’d died several hundred years
before. For a moment—for more than a moment—the convent’s name meant
nothing to him. He couldn’t have said where in Avornis it lay, whether in
the capital or over in the west near the border with Thervingia or in the
middle of the fertile southern plains. Then, abrupt as stubbing a toe, he
remembered. The convent stood in the middle of the swamps and bogs of the
Maze, not far from the city of Avornis as the crow flies but a million
miles away in terms of everything that mattered. It had held his mother
ever since she’d tried and failed to slay Grus by sorcery.
No more. Queen Certhia was dead. That was what the letter said. The
messenger must have known. That had to be why he’d said he was sorry. It
had to be why he’d slipped away, too—he didn’t want Lanius blaming him for
the news.
“I wouldn’t do that,” Lanius said aloud. But a messenger from out of
the Maze, a messenger who didn’t know him, wouldn’t know about that,
either.
He made himself finish the letter. The abbess said his mother’s passing
had been easy. Of course, she likely would say that whether it was true or
not. She added praise for Certhia’s piety.
Never, she wrote,
was your mother heard to complain of her fate.
Lanius’ mouth twisted when he read that. Anger? Grief? Laughter? He
couldn’t tell. Some of all of them, he supposed. Maybe his mother hadn’t
complained because she was grateful Grus hadn’t done to her what she’d
tried to do to him. Lanius sighed. That might be noble, but it struck him
as unlikely. From all he remembered, gratitude had never been a large part
of Queen Certhia’s makeup. Odds were she hadn’t complained simply because
she’d known it would do no good. Her pyre was set ablaze this morning, the abbess wrote.
What is your desire for her ashes? Shall they remain here, or would
you rather bring them back to the city of Avornis for interment in the
cathedral?
The king called for parchment and pen.
Let her remains be returned to the capital, he wrote.
She served Avornis as well as the gods, acting as Queen Regnant in the
days of my youth. She will be remembered with all due ceremony.
“And if Grus doesn’t like it, too bad,” Lanius muttered. He hadn’t seen
his mother for years. He’d known he was unlikely ever to see her again.
He’d also known ambition burned more brightly in her than love ever had.
Even so, as he stared down at the words he’d written, they suddenly seemed
to run and smear before his eyes. He blinked. The tears that had blurred
his sight ran down his face. He buried his head in his hands and wept as
though his heart would break.
Even now that he was well back inside Avornis, King Grus kept looking
back over his shoulder to make sure the Chernagors weren’t pursuing his
army anymore. Beside him, General Hirundo whistled cheerfully.
“Can’t win ‘em all, Your Majesty,” the general said. “We’ll have
another go at those bushy-bearded bastards next spring, I expect.”
“Yes, I suppose so,” Grus agreed. He took the defeat harder than
Hirundo did. He knew more about the nature of the true foe they faced than
did his general. Part of him wished Lanius had never told him who and what
Milvago had been—part of him, indeed, wished Lanius had never found out.
Fighting a god cast out of the heavens was bad enough. Fighting the
onetime lord of the gods cast down from the heavens . . . No, he didn’t
want his men knowing that was what they had to do.
Not far away, Prince Vsevolod rode along with slumped shoulders and
lowered head. He’d doubtless hoped for better than he’d gotten when he
called on the Avornans to help him hold on to his throne. But his
ungrateful son, Prince Vasilko, still held Nishevatz. And Vasilko would go
right on holding it at least until next spring.
Hirundo looked ahead, not behind. “We’ll be back to the city of Avornis
in a couple of days,” he said.
Vsevolod muttered something his beard muffled. He wasn’t delighted
about riding into exile, even if he was heading toward the greatest city
in the world. Grus said, “Coming home is always good.” Vsevolod muttered
again. He wasn’t coming home. He was going away from his, and had to fear
he would never see it again.
With a grin, Hirundo said, “You’ll get a chance to see what the other
king’s been up to, Your Majesty.”
“So I will.” Grus knew he sounded less gleeful at the prospect than
Hirundo did. Lanius had done very well while he was gone—perhaps too well
for comfort. If the other king was becoming a
king. . . well, what could Grus do about it? Stay home and watch
him all the time? He knew he couldn’t. The two of them could either clash
or find a way of working together. Grus saw no other choices.
He looked around for Pterocles. There was the wizard, as hollow-eyed as
he’d been since the sorcerer in Nishevatz struck him down for the second
time. Grus waved to him. Pterocles nodded back and said, “Still here, Your
Majesty—I think.”
“Good. I know you’re getting better.” Grus knew no such thing.
Pterocles had shown less improvement than the king would have liked.
Saying so, though, wouldn’t have made things any better. Grus wondered if
he ought to have other wizards look Pterocles over when they got back to
the city of Avornis. Then he wondered if that would help.
Pterocles was the best he had. Could some lesser wizard judge whether
something was really wrong with him? Too many things to worry about at the same time, Grus thought.
All we’d need would be an invasion from the Menteshe to make
everything perfect.
He glanced up to the heavens and muttered a quick prayer. He didn’t
want the gods taking him seriously. The only question he had was whether
they would pay any attention to him at all. “You’d better,” he murmured.
If things went wrong down here on earth, the gods in the heavens might yet
have to face their outraged sire. Grus wondered if they knew that. He also
wondered how much help they could deliver even if they did.
Those were no thoughts to be having about gods he’d worshiped all his
life. All the same, he would have been happier if he’d seen more in the
way of real benefits from them.
King Olor, if you happen to be listening, I could use a few blessings
that aren’t in disguise. Grus laughed when that prayer crossed his
mind. How many mortals couldn’t use a few blessings like that?
The men who followed the Banished One—the Menteshe, and presumably
Prince Vasilko and his followers as well—knew what sort of rewards they
got. Those who opposed him weren’t so sure. What they got wasn’t so
obvious in this world. In the next, yes—provided the Banished One lost the
struggle with his children and stayed banished. If he didn’t. . . Grus
preferred not to think about that.
He had a lot of things he didn’t want to think about. By the time the
army got back to the city of Avornis, those seemed to outnumber the things
that were worth contemplating.
He’d sent messengers ahead. Lanius knew to the hour when he and the
army would arrive. One more thing he’d wondered was whether he ought to do
that. If Lanius had anything . . . unpleasant in mind, Grus was letting
his fellow king know things that could be very useful to him. Grus didn’t
think Lanius was plotting anything like that. His own spies back in the
capital hadn’t warned him his son-in-law was hatching plots. Was Lanius
clever enough to do some hatching without drawing their notice? Grus would
have worried less if he hadn’t known how clever Lanius really was.
But no soldiers held the gates and walls of the city of Avornis against
him. Lanius came out through the North Gate to greet him along with Sosia;
with Prince Crex and Princess Pitta, their children; with Ortalis; with
Estrilda; and with Arch-Hallow Anser. “Welcome home!” Lanius said.
“Thank you, Your Majesty,” Grus replied, hoping his relief didn’t show.
He would have worried more if Lanius had used his royal title in greeting
him. He knew his fellow monarch didn’t think him a legitimate king. Had
Lanius been plotting something, he might have tried buttering him up. This
way, things were as they should be.
“Grandpa!” Crex and Pitta squealed. They ran toward Grus’ horse. He
dismounted—something he was always glad to do—stooped, and squeezed them.
That they were glad to see him made him feel he’d done something right
with his life. Unlike adults, children gave you just what they thought you
deserved.
A groom came forward to take charge of the horse. It was a docile
beast, but Grus was still happy to see someone else dealing with it. Sosia
and Anser greeted Grus only a couple of steps behind his grandchildren.
“Good to have you home,” they said, almost in chorus, and both started to
laugh. So did Grus. Neither his daughter nor his bastard boy seemed to
have any reason to regret his return. And Sosia’s anger at his affair with
Alca seemed to have faded, which was also good news.
“I wish things had gone better up in the Chernagor country,” Grus said.
Lanius, hanging back, raised an eyebrow at that. Grus needed a moment to
figure out why. A lot of Kings of Avornis, he supposed, would have
proclaimed victories whether they’d won them or not. He saw no point to
that. He knew what the truth was. So did the whole army. It would get out
even if he did proclaim victory. If he did, the truth would make him look
like a liar or a fool. This way, he would look like an honest man who’d
lost a battle. He hoped that would serve him better.
Grus understood why Lanius hung back. His son-in-law had solid reasons
not to care for him, and was a reserved—even a shy—young man. Ortalis hung
back, too. Grus also understood that. His legitimate son had done plenty
to displease him. He and Ortalis traded looks filled with venom.
And Estrilda also hung back. That hurt. Was his wife still steaming
over Alca? He’d thought they’d patched that up. In fact, they had—but then
he’d gone off to war. Maybe the patch had torn loose. Maybe she wasn’t
angry about Alca, but suspected a Chernagor girl had warmed his bed while
he was in the north. That hadn’t happened, not least because, again, he’d
worried about the truth getting back to her. But, of course, she didn’t
know it hadn’t happened.
Bang Grus sighed.
Half my family likes me, the other half wishes I were still off
fighting the Chernagors. It could be worse. But, by Olor and Quelea, it
could be better, too.
He turned to Hirundo. Whether his family liked him or not, the
kingdom’s business had to go on. “Send the men to the barracks,” he said.
“Give them leave a brigade at a time. That way, they shouldn’t tear the
city to pieces.”
“Here’s hoping,” Hirundo said. “If it looks like the ones who haven’t
gotten leave are turning sour and nasty, I may speed things up.”
Grus nodded. “Do whatever you think best. The point of the exercise is
to keep things as orderly as you can. They won’t be perfect. I don’t
expect them to be. But I don’t want riots and looting, either.”
“I understand.” Hirundo called out orders to his officers.
“What of me, Your Majesty?” Prince Vsevolod asked. “You send me to
barracks, too?”
“As soon as I can, I aim to send you back to Nishevatz, Your Highness.”
Grus pretended not to hear the Chernagor’s bitterness. “In the meantime,
you’ll stay in the palace as my guest.”
“And mine,” Lanius added. “I have many questions to ask you about the
land of the Chernagors and about your customs.”
Grus had all he could do not to laugh out loud. By the look on Sosia’s
face, so did she. Lanius had pet moncats. He had pet monkeys, too. (The
Chernagors, Grus remembered, had brought those beasts here to the
capital.) And now, at last, Lanius had his very own pet Chernagor.
“Your Majesty, what I know, I tell you.” Vsevolod sounded flattered
that Lanius should be interested. Grus had to turn away so neither the
prince nor his fellow king would see him smile. If Vsevolod made a promise
like that, it only proved he didn’t know what he was getting into.
Prince Vsevolod looked discontented. King Lanius had never seen anyone
whose face, all harsh planes and vertical lines and with that formidable
prow of a nose, was better suited to looking discontented. “Questions,
questions, questions!” he said, throwing his hands in the air. “Am I
prisoner, you should ask so many questions?”
“You told me you would tell me what you knew,” Lanius said.
“By gods, not all at once!” Vsevolod exploded.
“Oh.” By the way Lanius sounded, the Prince of Nishevatz might have
just thrown a rock at his favorite moncat. “I
am sorry, Your Highness. I want you to be happy here.”
Vsevolod nodded heavily. Lanius let out a small sigh of relief—he’d
been right about that, anyhow. The exiled prince said, “How can I, cooped
up in palace all time?”
“I am,” Lanius said in honest surprise. “What would you like to
do?”
“Hunt,” Vsevolod said at once. “Hunt anything. Hunt boar, goose, even
rabbit. You are hunter, Your Majesty?”
“Well. . . no,” Lanius replied. Vsevolod’s lip curled. Lanius said,
“Arch-Hallow Anser is a keen hunter.” After another, longer, hesitation,
he added, “Prince Ortalis also sometimes hunts.”
“Ah. Is good,” Vsevolod said, which only proved he didn’t know Ortalis
well. “And I know King Grus is hunting man. Maybe here is not so bad.
Maybe.”
“I hope you will be happy here,” Lanius said again. “Now, can you tell
me a little more about the gods your people worshiped before you learned
of King Olor and Queen Quelea and the rest of the true dwellers in the
heavens?”
Vsevolod’s broad shoulders went up and down in a shrug. “I do not know.
I do not care.” He heaved himself to his feet. “I have had too much of
questions. I go look for hunt.” He lumbered away.
Lanius knew he’d angered the Prince of Nishevatz, but didn’t understand
why. Vsevolod had said he would answer questions. The king went off to
console himself with his monkeys. If they could have answered questions,
he would have asked even more than he’d put to Vsevolod. As things were,
he could only watch them cavort through their chamber. A fire always
burned there, keeping the room at a temperature uncomfortably warm for
him. The monkeys seemed to like it fine. The Chernagor who’d given them to
Lanius had warned they couldn’t stand cold.
They stared at the king from the branches and poles that reached almost
to the ceiling. Both male and female had white eyebrows and long white
mustaches on otherwise black faces. They looked like plump little old men.
Lanius eyed the female. He nodded to himself. She’d looked particularly
plump these past couple of weeks. That Chernagor had said they would never
breed in captivity, but maybe he was wrong.
Behind Lanius, the door opened. He turned in annoyance. But it wasn’t
Bubulcus or any other servant he could blister with impunity. King Grus
stood there. He made a point of closing the door quickly, giving Lanius no
excuse to grumble even about that. “Hello, Your Majesty,” he said. “How
are your creatures here?”
“I think the female’s pregnant,” Lanius answered.
Grus eyed her, then nodded. “Wouldn’t be surprised if you’re right.
You’d have fun with the babies, wouldn’t you?”
“Oh, yes, but it’s not just that,” Lanius said. “If an animal will
breed for you, you know you’re treating it the way you should. From what
the fellow who gave it to me said, the Chernagors can’t get monkeys to
breed. I’d like to do something they can’t.”
With a judicious nod, Grus said, “Mm, yes, I can see that.” His right
hand folded into a fist. “It’s not what
I’d like to do to the Chernagors right now, but I can see it.” He
chuckled. “I was pretty sure you’d question Vsevolod to pieces, you know.
He just tried to talk me into going hunting. I sent him off to Anser. He
has more time for it than I do.”
“I
told Vsevolod I wanted to ask him things,” Lanius said. “Didn’t
he believe me?”
“Nobody who’s never met you believes how many questions you can ask,”
Grus said. “But that isn’t what I wanted to talk to you about. I’ve got
some questions of my own.”
“Go ahead.” Lanius realized Grus wouldn’t have come here to talk about
monkeys. The other king did show some interest in Lanius’ beasts, but not
enough for that. “What do you want to know?”
Grus let out a long sigh. “What about my son?”
Lanius had known this was coming. He hadn’t expected it so soon. “What
about him?”
“Don’t play games with me.” Grus seldom showed Lanius how dangerous he
could be. The impatient snap to that handful of words, though, warned of
trouble ahead if he didn’t get a straight answer.
“Have you spoken with a serving girl named Cristata yet?” Lanius
asked.
“Cristata? No.” Again, Grus sounded thoroughly grim. “What does she
say? How bad is it this time?”
Lanius reached around to pat himself on the back of the shoulder. “I
don’t think those scars will go away. I don’t know what other marks she
has—this was what she showed me.”
“Oh,” Grus said, and then nothing more.
He was silent long enough, in fact, to make Lanius ask, “Is that
all?”
“That’s all I’m going to say
to you,” King Grus answered. But then he shook his head. “No. I
have a question I think you can answer. Is this Cristata the same girl I
heard about when I was up in the land of the Chernagors?”
“I... don’t know,” Lanius said carefully.
His father-in-law heard him speaking carefully, which he hadn’t
intended. Frowning, Grus asked, “What do you think?”
“I think that, since I don’t know, I wouldn’t be doing anyone any good
by guessing.”
By the way Grus cocked his head to one side, Lanius feared his real
opinion was only too evident. But the older man didn’t press him on it.
“Fair enough, Your Majesty. I daresay you’re right. The world would be a
better place if people didn’t guess and gossip so much. It might be a
duller place, but it would be better.” Again, he paused for so long,
Lanius thought he’d finished. Again, Lanius proved wrong. Grus went on,
“Never mind. One way or the other, I’ll find out.”
Lanius didn’t like the sound of that. He suspected he would have liked
it even less if he were Ortalis.
King Grus turned to go. Over his shoulder, he said, “Have fun with your
creatures. Believe me, they don’t cause nearly as much trouble as people
do.” Before Lanius could answer that, Grus left the room.
With no one else there, Lanius naturally turned toward the monkeys,
saying, “Do you think he’s right?” The monkeys didn’t answer. They
certainly made less trouble than a human audience, which might have given
Lanius some reply he didn’t want to hear. Laughing, the king went on, “I
bet you wish you could make more trouble. You make plenty when you get the
chance.”
Still no answer from the monkeys. Lanius took from his belt a small,
slim knife.
That got the animals’ attention. They chattered excitedly and
swarmed down from the branches. One of them tugged at Lanius’ robe. They
both held out beseeching little hands, as a human beggar might have.
He laughed. “Think I’ve got something, do you? Well. . . you’re right.”
He had a couple of peeled hard-boiled eggs he’d brought from the kitchens.
The monkeys loved eggs, and healers assured Lanius they were good for
them. Healers assured Lanius of all sorts of things he found unlikely. He
believed some and ignored others. Here, because the monkeys not only
enjoyed the eggs but flourished on them, he chose to believe.
He cut a slice from an egg and gave it to the male, who stuffed it into
his mouth. One ancient archival record spoke of teaching monkeys table
manners. Lanius had trouble believing that, too. He gave the female some
egg. She ate it even faster than the male—if she hesitated, he was liable
to steal it from her. Lanius had tried withholding egg from him when he
did that, but he didn’t understand. It just infuriated him.
Today, the monkeys seemed in the mood for affection. One of them
wrapped its little hand around Lanius’ thumb as he scratched it behind the
ears with his other hand. The expression on the monkey’s face looked very
much like the one Lanius would have worn had someone done a nice job of
scratching his back. He knew he shouldn’t read too much into a monkey’s
grin. Sometimes, though, he couldn’t help it.
Prince Ortalis shuffled his feet. He stared down at the floor mosaic.
He might have been a schoolboy who’d gotten caught pulling the wings off
flies. Back when he was younger, he
had been a schoolboy who’d gotten caught pulling the wings off
flies. “Well?” Grus growled in disgust. “What have you got to say for
yourself?”
“/don’t know,” Ortalis answered sullenly. “I don’t really
want to do things like that. Sometimes I just can’t help it.”
Grus believed him. If he could have helped it, he wouldn’t have
done—Grus hoped he wouldn’t have done—a lot of the things he undoubtedly
had. But, while that explained, it didn’t justify. “I warned you what
would happen if you ever did anything like this again,” Grus said
heavily.
Ortalis only sneered at him. Grus feared he understood that all too
well. He’d warned his legitimate son about a lot of things. He’d warned
him, and then failed to follow through on the warnings. No wonder Ortalis
didn’t believe he ever would.
“How am I supposed to get it through your thick, nasty head that I mean
what I tell you?” Grus demanded. “I know one way, by the gods.”
“What’s that?” Ortalis was still sneering. He might as well have said,
You can’t make me do anything.
He looked almost comically surprised when his father slapped him in the
face. “This—and I should have done it a long time ago,” Grus said,
breathing hard.
“You can’t do that,” Ortalis blurted in disbelief.
“Oh, yes, I can.” Grus slapped him again. “It’s not a hundredth part of
what you did to those girls. How do you like getting it instead of giving
it.”
Ortalis’ eyes went so wide, Grus could see white all around his irises.
Then, cursing as foully as any river-galley sailor, Ortalis hurled himself
at Grus. His churning fists thudded against his father’s ribs. “I’ll
murder you, you stinking son of a whore!” he screamed.
“Go ahead and try.” Grus ducked a punch that would have flattened his
nose. Ortalis’ fist connected with the top of his head. That hurt his son
more than it did him. Ortalis howled. Grus hit him in the pit of the
stomach. The howl cut off as Ortalis battled to breathe.
He kept fighting even after that. He had courage, of a sort. What he
lacked was skill. Grus had learned to fight in a hard school. Ortalis,
who’d had things much easier in his life, had never really learned at all.
His father gave him a thorough, professional beating.
At last, Ortalis threw up his hands and wailed. “Enough, Father! In the
names of the gods, enough! Please!”
Grus stood over him, breathing hard. The king’s fists stayed clenched.
He willed them open.
If you don’t stop now, you’ll beat him to death, he told himself.
Part of him wanted to. Realizing that was what made him back away from his
son.
“All right,” he said, his voice boulders in his throat. “All right. Get
up.”
“I—I don’t think I can.”
“You can,” Grus ground out. “I know what I did to you. I know what I
should have done to you, too—what you really deserved. And so do you.”
Ortalis didn’t try to argue with him. Keeping quiet was one of the
smarter things his son had ever done. Had he denied what Grus said, Grus
might have started hitting him again, and might not have been able to
stop. Tears and blood and snot smeared across his face, Ortalis struggled
upright.
“They—” The prince stopped. He might have started to say something
like,
They were just serving girls. Again, he was smart to keep quiet.
That might have fired Grus’ fury, too. After a moment, Ortalis said, 1 m
sorry.
That was better. It wasn’t enough, not even the bare beginnings of
enough, but it was better. Grus said, “If you ever do anything like that
again, you’ll get twice what I just gave you. Do you understand me,
Ortalis? I’m not joking. You’d better not think I am.”
“I understand you.” Ortalis’ voice was mushy. His lip was swollen and
cut and bleeding. He glared at Grus as well as he could; one eye was
swollen shut, the other merely blacked. Grus stared stonily back. His
hands ached. So did his ribs, on which Ortalis had connected several
times. And so did the heart thudding under those ribs. His heart ached
worst of all.
If he’d shown that, everything he’d done to Ortalis would have been
wasted. Making his voice stay hard, he said, “Get out of my sight. And go
wash yourself. You’ll want to stay out of everyone’s sight for a few days,
believe me.”
Ortalis inhaled and opened his mouth. Once more, though, nothing came
out. He might have started to say,
I’ll tell people my father beats me. Again, that would have been
the wrong thing to throw at the king. Again, he realized it and kept
quiet. Left hand clutched to
his sore ribs, Grus’ son and heir turned away from him and made
his slow, painful way out the door.
Servants chattered among themselves. Their gossip, though, took a while
to drift up through clerks and scribes and noblemen and finally to King
Lanius’ ears. By the time Lanius heard Grus and Ortalis had had a
falling-out, most of the evidence was gone from Ortalis’ person. A black
eye fades slowly, but a black eye could also have happened in any number
of ways. Lanius asked no questions. Ortalis volunteered nothing.
Lanius thought about asking Grus what had happened. His father-in-law,
though, did not seem approachable—which was, if anything, an
understatement. Lanius resigned himself to never knowing what had gone
on.
Then one day he got word that Cristata wanted to see him. He didn’t
mind seeing her at all, though he carefully didn’t wonder about what Sosia
would have thought of that sentiment. After curtsying before him, Cristata
said, “The gods have blessed Avornis with two fine kings.”
“I’m glad you think so,” Lanius answered.
Would I be happier if the gods had blessed Avornis with only one. fine
king? For the life of me, I don’t know. He made himself stop
woolgathering. “Do you care to tell me why?”
“Because you told King Grus about what happened to me, and he went and
made his own son sorry he did what he did—and then he gave me gold, too,”
the maidservant answered.
“Did he?” Lanius said. Grus hadn’t said a word about doing any such
thing.
But Cristata nodded. “He sure did. It’s more money than I ever had
before. It’s almost enough to make me a taxp—” She broke off. Almost enough to make me a taxpayer. She hadn’t wanted to say
anything like that to someone who was interested in collecting taxes and
making sure other people paid them. Most of the time, she would have been
smart not to say anything like that. Today, though, Lanius smiled and
answered, “I’ll never tell.”
Did he feel so friendly to her just because she was a pretty girl? Or
was he also trying to show her not everyone in the royal family would
behave the way Ortalis had, even if he chanced to get her alone?
What I’d like to do if I chanced to get her alone. . . He shook
his head.
Stop that.
“King Grus even said he was sorry.” Cristata’s eyes got big and round.
“Can you imagine? A king saying he was sorry? To
met And he was so friendly all the time we were talking.”
What would Queen Estrilda say if she heard that? Would she wonder
whether Grus had shown his ... friendliness in ways that had nothing to do
with talking? Lanius knew he did.
Oblivious to the questions she’d spawned, Cristata went on, “He’s going
to see if he can send me to the kitchens. There’s room to move up there;
it’s not like laundry or sweeping.”
“No, I don’t suppose it would be.” Lanius’ voice was vague. He couldn’t
have said which branches of palace service offered the chance to get ahead
and which were dead ends. Grus knew. He knew—and he acted. Why don’t I know things like that? Lanius wondered after
Cristata curtsied again and left the little audience chamber where they’d
been talking. Not even the sight of her pertly swinging backside as she
left was enough to make him stop worrying at the question. Up until now,
knowing things like that had never seemed important the way the reign of,
say, King Alcedo—who’d sat on the throne when the Scepter of Mercy was
lost—had.
Cristata knew the kitchens, and laundry and sweeping. Lanius would have
fainted to learn she’d ever heard of King Alcedo. But Lanius was as
ignorant of the world of service as Cristata was of history. Grus knew
some of both—less history than Lanius, but also more of service. Lanius
wished he had a manual to learn more of that other world.
There was no such manual. He knew that perfectly well. He knew of every
book written in Avornis since long before Alcedo’s day. He hadn’t read
them all, or even most of them, but he knew of them.
“I could write it myself,” he said thoughtfully. It wouldn’t be useful
just for him; Crex and all the Kings of Avornis who came after him might
find it interesting. First, though, he’d have to learn quite a bit he
didn’t know yet. And if he needed to summon Cristata now and again to
answer questions—well, it was all in the cause of advancing knowledge.
Even Sosia would—might—have a hard time complaining.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Grus and Pterocles took turns looking through a peephole in the ceiling
of the palace room where the remaining thralls the king had brought back
from the south were confined. The winter before, two thralls had gotten
out. One of them had almost killed Lanius. The other had almost killed
Estrilda, though Grus had no doubt the thrall wanted him dead and not his
queen.
The thralls paid no attention to the peephole. They might not have paid
any attention even if he’d stood in the room with them. What made them
thralls made them less than fully human. Their wits were dulled down to
the point where they barely had the use of language. They were more than
domestic animals that happened to walk on two legs and not four, but they
weren’t much more than animals.
They could, after a fashion, manage farms. Down south of the Stura
River, in the lands the Menteshe ruled, they raised the crops that helped
feed the nomads. The Menteshe didn’t have to worry about uprisings from
them, any more than they had to worry about uprisings from their
cattle.
And yet, the thralls’ ancestors had been Avornans who were unlucky
enough to dwell in the south when the Menteshe conquered the land. The
magic that made them thralls came from the Banished One. Human wizards had
had little luck reversing it. Avornan armies had tried to reconquer the
lost southern provinces a couple of times—tried and failed, with most of
the defeated soldiers made into thralls. After the last such disaster,
more than two hundred years before (Lanius knew the exact date), Avornis
had given up trying.
Without some way to make thralls back into men and women of the
ordinary sort, any reconquest was doomed to fail. Grus realized that,
however much he wished he could have gotten around it. And so, leaning
toward Pterocles, he asked, “What do you see down there?”
Even if the Chernagor wizard in Nishevatz—or was it the Banished One
himself?—had not laid Pterocles low, Grus would have had no enormous
confidence that he had the answer. Avornan wizards had wrestled with
curing thralls for centuries—wrestled with it and gotten thrown, again and
again and again. Alca seemed to have had the beginnings of some good new
ideas . . . but Alca was gone, and she wouldn’t be coming back. Pterocles
was what the king had to work with.
“What do I see?” the wizard echoed. Grus hadn’t bothered holding his
voice down. Pterocles spoke in a hoarse, worried whisper. “I see
emptiness. I see emptiness everywhere.”
That didn’t surprise Grus. He asked, “How do we go about filling the
emptiness with everything people have and thralls don’t?”
“Fill the emptiness?” Pterocles laughed. That wasn’t mirth coming out,
or no sort of mirth with which Grus wanted to be acquainted. Pterocles
went on, “If I knew how to fill emptiness, Your Majesty, don’t you think I
would fill my own? I wish I could. I wonder if I ever will.”
“Have you learned anything by watching the thralls?” Grus asked. “Would
you like to go in among them and study them at close quarters?”
“Empty. So empty,” Pterocles said, and then, “If I went in, how would
you tell me apart from them?”
“It wouldn’t be hard,” Grus answered. “You would be the one acting like
an idiot. They wouldn’t be acting. They really are idiots.”
Again, the laugh that came from Pterocles only raised Grus’ hackles.
The wizard bent, backside in the air, and peered down at the thralls
again. His face bore an expression of horrified fascination. He might have
been asking himself whether he was or was not one with them.
After a little while, Grus elbowed him out of the way and looked down
at the thralls again on his own behalf. He expected them to be doing what
they usually did, which was not very much. Like cats, they spent a lot of
time sleeping. Several of them stretched out on couches, snoring or simply
lying motionless. One, though, stared up at the peephole with as much
interest as Grus showed looking in the other direction.
Alarm ran through Grus. This wasn’t the way thralls were supposed to
behave. Thralls that acted like thralls were harmless, pitiable things.
Thralls that didn’t were deadly dangerous, not least because no one
expected them to strike.
This one turned away after meeting his eye. It was as though the thrall
cared nothing for him. It had been interested when Pterocles was looking
down at it, though. What did that mean? Grus hoped it didn’t mean the
Banished One looked out through the thrall’s eyes.
When he asked Pterocles about it, the wizard gave back a vague shrug
and answered, “We understand each other, he and I.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Grus demanded. Pterocles only shrugged
again.
Grus asked more questions, but Pterocles’ answers only got vaguer. At
last, the king threw his hands in the air. He went off to his desk to get
some work done. If he didn’t keep a thumb on Avornis’ pulse, who would?
Lanius? Grus didn’t want his son-in-law getting experience at running the
kingdom. He also didn’t want Pterocles staying close to the thralls if he
wasn’t there. He made sure the wizard came away with him. Pterocles looked
unhappy, but didn’t argue.
When Grus sat down behind the great marble-topped desk from which Kings
of Avornis had administered their realm for years uncounted, he found a
leather courier’s sack on top of it. A note on a scrap of parchment was
tied to it.
Brought back from the land of the Chernagors, it said.
Letters inside with seals still intact,
“What the ... ?” Grus muttered. Then he snapped his fingers. This had
to be the bundle he’d gotten just before learning the Chernagors from the
eastern city-states were marching on his army. What with everything that
had happened since, he’d forgotten all about it. Some diligent clerk
hadn’t.
He thought about chucking the sack. What were the odds any of the
letters would matter? In the end, though, sighing, he poured the
parchments out onto the broad desktop.
I
can go through them in a hurry, he told himself, and popped the
wax seal off the first one with his thumbnail.
A moment later, that letter lay in the trash bin by the desk. It
touched on something Lanius had long since dealt with. The second letter
followed the first. So did the third. The fourth had to do with a
land-tenure case down in the south that had dragged on for years. Grus set
it aside to add to the stack he already had on that case.
The fifth letter was from Pelagonia, a medium-sized city down in the
middle of the southern plains. From a king’s point of view, Pelagonia’s
chief virtue was that not much ever happened there. Rulers needed places
like that, places they didn’t have to worry about. Grus couldn’t remember
the last time he’d gotten a petition from Pelagonia. And yet the script on
the outside of the parchment, the script that addressed the letter to him,
looked somehow familiar.
“No,” he said as he broke the seal. “It can’t be.” But it was. Estrilda
had insisted that he send Alca away from the city of Avornis when she
discovered his affair with the witch. He’d picked Pelagonia for her, not
least because it was such a quiet, sedate town. Your Majesty, Alca wrote,
I
send this as from a worried subject to her king, not because of
anything else that may have happened between us. Grus grunted at
that. As soon as Alca mentioned it, even to disclaim it—maybe especially
to disclaim it—she also claimed it. He sighed. He couldn’t do anything
about that. And if he’d known how big a disappointment Pterocles would
prove, he would have thought twice about sending Alca away at all.
She continued,
I
am afraid the investigation of the thralls may not be going as well as
it should. I should have left more behind in writing, to guide those who
would come after me. I would have, if I had known I was leaving the
capital so suddenly. Grus mumbled something under his breath. If that
wasn’t a dig, he’d never run into one. I
hope that all is well for you and for yours (the last three words
were inserted above the line, with a caret to show where they should go)
in the city of Avornis. I hope also that wizards are still studying
the thralls. I have heard how two thralls turned on you and Lanius. I
rejoice that you are both safe. The thralls still in the palace, I think,
can be as dangerous as the ones who already attacked. Unless I am
altogether mistaken, the Banished One reaches them in this way.
The sorcerous charms and calculations that followed meant nothing to
Grus. He hadn’t expected them to. He knew nothing of magic. Alca went on,
I
hope you will show this to a wizard you trust. He will be able to
judge whether I am right.
“I can do that,” Grus said, as though she stood there before him. He
wondered what Pterocles would make of those scribbled symbols. He also
wondered if Pterocles was in any condition to make anything of them. What I have shown here may also give new hope to returning thralls
to true humanity, Alca finished.
The spells will not be easy to shape. Here is a new road, though, and
Avornis has long needed that. What I need. . . is something I may not
have. I knew that when we began. I cannot imagine why, all this time
later, it comes as such of a surprise. With— A scratched-out word,
and then a scrawled signature.
He stared at it for a long time. Because of the calculations, he
couldn’t even throw the letter away. He made a fist and brought it down
hard on the marble desktop, over and over again.
“What did you do to yourself?” Lanius asked Grus; his father-in-law’s
right hand was puffy and bruised.
“Banged it,” Grus said uninformatively.
“Well, yes, but how?” Lanius asked.
“Oh, I managed,” Grus answered.
Lanius sent him an exasperated look. Why couldn’t Grus just say he’d
dropped something on it or caught it in a door or whatever he’d really
done to himself? How could you be embarrassed about hurting your hand?
Grus evidently was. Too bad he didn’t hurt it knocking some sense into Ortalis,
Lanius thought. But then he remembered Grus
had done his best to knock sense into Ortalis. He probably would
have done better if he’d started years earlier. He had tried this time,
though. And Ortalis had done his best to stay invisible ever since. That
suited Lanius fine.
He tried another question, asking, “What are you going to do when
spring comes around again?”
Grus didn’t evade there. “Go back to the country of the Chernagors with
a bigger army,” he answered. “I’m not going to let Vasilko keep Nishevatz
any longer than I can help it. That would be like letting someone carrying
a plague set up shop across the street from the palace. Life hands you
enough troubles without your asking for more.”
“Can you take enough soldiers north to beat all the Chernagors?” Lanius
inquired.
“You’re full of questions today, aren’t you?” Grus gave him a quizzical
look. “While you’re at it, why don’t you ask me about my love life,
too?”
“How’s your love life?” Lanius said, deadpan.
“Certainly nice weather we’re having, isn’t it?” Grus answered, just as
deadpan.
They eyed each other. Then they both started to laugh. “All right,”
Lanius said. “I asked for that, and I think you enjoyed giving it to
me. I assume you have something in mind against Prince Vasilko and the
rest of the Chernagors and the Banished One?”
“Certainly nice weather we’re having, isn’t it?” Grus repeated.
That annoyed Lanius. Maybe Grus didn’t have anything in mind but didn’t
want to admit it. Maybe he did, but didn’t want to tell his fellow king
for fear that Lanius might use it against him or for some other reason,
darker still. “What is it?” Lanius snapped. “Do you think I’ll take
whatever you’ve got in mind straight to ... to the Banished One?” He
almost said
Milvago, but decided he didn’t want to voice that particular
name.
This time, Grus paid him the courtesy of a serious answer. “No, Your
Majesty, I don’t think that,” he said. “What I do think is, the Chernagors
and the Banished One are bound to have plenty of spies and plenty of
wizards trying to find out what I’ve got in mind. The more I talk, the
more help I give them. I don’t want to do that, thanks.”
“Oh.” Lanius considered. Reluctantly, he nodded. “Yes, all right.” It
wasn’t altogether; he still suspected Grus feared he would use the
knowledge himself, and didn’t want to give it to him for that reason. That
being so, he went on, “But we’re the ones who worry the Banished One,
aren’t we? The ones he comes to in dreams. The two of us, and Alca the
witch.”
Grus slammed his bruised hand against the wall. He hissed in pain, and
then cursed. “Sorry,” he said in a gray voice. “You caught me by surprise
there. I don’t want to remember those dreams.”
“Or Alca?” Lanius asked.
Instead of replying, Grus turned away. Did that mean he didn’t want to
remember Alca or that he didn’t want to forget her? Lanius could guess,
but a lot of his guesses about Grus had turned out to be wrong. Maybe this
one would, too.
Lanius also guessed Grus would storm out of the chamber. That turned
out to be a mistake. In fact, the other king turned back. He said, “For
whatever it may be worth to you, you have my sympathy on Queen Certhia’s
passing.”
Now Lanius was the one who got angry. “You say that? You’re sorry my
mother’s dead?” he said, his voice rising with every word. “You’re the one
who sent her to the Maze!”
“I’m sorry she’s dead anyhow,” Grus answered. “She might have died if
she’d stayed in the city of Avornis, you know. She wasn’t an ancient
granny, but she wasn’t a young woman, either.” That was true, and hadn’t
occurred to Lanius. Even so, it did very little to quell his fury. But
Grus went on, “I know you don’t care to be reminded of it, but she tried
to slay me by sorcery—nasty sorcery, too. If it weren’t for a strong
amulet and Alca’s magic, I wouldn’t be here now.”
Again, Lanius imitated Grus, this time by turning his back. Remembering
Alca had probably made Grus remember Queen Certhia. He hadn’t said
anything about her death up until now. Lanius started to blame him for
that, but then checked himself. His mother
had tried to kill Grus, and Grus hadn’t killed her in return.
Didn’t that count for anything?
With a long, wary sigh, Grus said, “Politics only make families more
complicated. You’ve seen that since you were a baby.”
“Politics, yes.” If not for politics, Lanius wouldn’t have wed Sosia,
wouldn’t have had Ortalis as brother-in-law or Grus as father-in-law,
wouldn’t have seen Grus’ bastard as Arch-Hallow of Avornis . . . wouldn’t
have had the Banished One for an enemy. Grus is the Banished One’s enemy, too, Lanius reminded
himself. However much he sometimes detested Grus, that was worth
remembering. Nobody the Banished One wanted horribly dead could be all
bad. One way to know people was by the friends they made. Another was by
their foes. Lanius often thought the latter gave the clearer picture.
Then Grus said, “And speaking of politics, how did you like sending
soldiers out against that noble last summer?” His voice was oddly
constrained. He’s as nervous with me as I am with him, Lanius realized.
That was something new. Up until now, Grus had effortlessly dominated him.
I’m growing. The balance between us is shifting. Lanius answered,
“It needed doing.” He didn’t want Grus too nervous about him. That could
prove hazardous.
“I never said it didn’t,” Grus told him. “I asked how you liked
it.” How much do you want power? How much do you enjoy using it?
Lanius gave back a shrug. “I wish the nobles didn’t cause trouble in the
first place.”
That drew a laugh from Grus. “Wish for the sun to rise in the west
while you’re at it. They wish we weren’t on the throne, so they could do
as they please.”
“Yes, no doubt,” Lanius said. “They can’t always get what they want,
though.”
“You’re right.” Now Grus spoke with complete assurance, and addressed
Lanius as one equal to another. “What we have to do is give them what they
need. And do you know what else?” He waited for Lanius to shake his head,
then finished, “When we do, they’ll hate us for it.” Lanius wanted to tell
him he was wrong. His experience and reading, though, suggested Grus was
only too likely to be right.
When the first snows of winter fell, Grus wondered whether the Banished
One would send blizzard after blizzard against Avornis, as he’d done more
than once in the past. Had the king had it in his power, he knew he would
have used the weather against his enemies.
But winter was only . . . winter—nothing pleasant, but nothing out of
the ordinary, either. Changing the weather couldn’t have been easy, even
for a being who’d once been a god. The couple of times the Banished One
tried it, Avornis had come through better than he’d expected. Grus knew
that was largely Lanius’ doing; thanks to the other king, the capital and
the rest of the cities had laid in supplies well ahead of time. The
smaller towns and the countryside didn’t need to worry so much.
Because the winter stayed on the mild side, Grus used it to gather
soldiers and horses and supplies around the city of Avornis. This time,
when he went up into the land of the Chernagors, he would lack nothing a
general could possibly bring with him. An afterthought also made him
summon wizards from the provinces to the capital. He didn’t know how much
good they would do him—from what he’d seen, most wizards from small towns
and the countryside knew a lot less than those who succeeded in the city
of Avornis—but he didn’t see how they could hurt.
If anything, the tent cities that sprang up around the walls of the
capital were healthier in winter than they would have been in summer.
Sicknesses that would have flourished in the heat lay dormant with snow on
the ground. Latrines didn’t stink the way they would have when the sun
shone high and bright and warm in the sky. Flies were nowhere to be
seen.
When spring came, Grus was ready to move. He hoped he would catch
Prince Vasilko by surprise. Even if he didn’t, he thought he could beat
Prince Vsevolod’s ungrateful son.
If I can’t beat him with what I’ve got here, I can’t beat him at
all, he thought. He knew what Vasilko and the other Chernagor princes
could throw at him. He thought his chances were good.
“Gods keep you safe,” Estrilda said in the quiet of their bedchamber
the night before he left for the north.
“Thanks.” Grus set a hand on her hip. They lay bare in the royal bed.
They’d just made love, which had left both of them almost satisfied.
Something had broken after Estrilda found out about his affair with Alca.
It was repaired these days, but the broken place and the rough spots where
the glue held things together still showed, were still easy to feel. Grus
wondered if they would ever smooth down to where he couldn’t feel them.
After more than a year, he was beginning to doubt it.
She said, “Be careful. The kingdom needs you.”
Grus grunted. Estrilda didn’t say anything about what
she needed. There were bound to be good reasons for that. Almost
too late, he realized ignoring her words except for that grunt wouldn’t be
good. He said, “The one thing that worries me is, I won’t be able to lay
proper siege to their cities, the way I could to Avornan towns.”
“Why not?” Estrilda asked. Talking about cities and sieges was
impersonal, and so safe enough.
“Because I can’t take a fleet north with me,” Grus answered. Here, at
least, he could talk. Estrilda wouldn’t blab, and the royal bedchamber was
as well warded against wizardry as any place in Avornis. “The Chernagors
can fill their big seagoing ships with more than trade trinkets, curse
them. When my army stood in front of Nishevatz last summer, Prince Vasilko
brought grain in by sea, and I couldn’t do a thing about it. I don’t see
how I’ll be able to stop it this year, either. I’ll have to take their
cities by storm. I won’t be able to starve them out.”
“That will cost more men, won’t it?” Estrilda said. “That’s . . .
unfortunate.”
“Yes it will, and yes it is,” Grus agreed. “I don’t see any way around
it, though. Most of our galleys sail the Nine Rivers. Some of them scuttle
along the coast, but I don’t see how I could bring them up to the
Chernagor country. One storm along the way and ...” He shook his head.
“Wouldn’t storms wreck the Chernagor ships, too? Then you wouldn’t have
to worry about them.”
Moodily, Grus shook his head. “It’s not that simple. Their ships are
made to sail on the open sea. Ours mostly aren’t. Ours are fine for what
they do, but sailing on the Northern Sea isn’t it. For the Chernagors, it
is. They build stronger than we do. They need to, traveling from one
little island to the next the way they do.”
“You’ll find something.” When it came to ships, Estrilda had confidence
in the onetime river-galley captain she’d married. When it came to
women—she had confidence there, but confidence of the wrong sort.
When Grus thought about it, he had to admit he’d given her reason.
Lanius came out of the city to see him and the army off. “Gods go with
you,” the other king told him. “We both know how important this is, and
why.” Again, he didn’t say the name Milvago, or even suggest it. Even so,
it was there.
Prince Ortalis came out, too. He said not a word to Grus. Grus said
nothing to him, either. Each of them looked at the other as though he
hoped never to see him again. That was likely to be true.
“Gods bless this army and lead it to victory.” Arch-Hallow Anser
sounded more cheerful than either Grus or Lanius. If he noticed the way
Grus and Ortalis eyed each other, it didn’t show on his smiling face.
With a resigned sigh, Grus swung up into the saddle of his horse.
Another summer of riding lessons, he thought.
I’m turning into a tolerable horseman in spite of myself.
The only ones who looked eager to return to the land of the Chernagors
were Prince Vsevolod and his countrymen who’d gone into exile in Avornis
with him. “I will see my son again,” Vsevolod said, in tones of fierce
anticipation. Grus realized that, as badly as he got along with Ortalis,
the two of them were perfect comrades next to Vsevolod and Vasilko.
“Are we ready?” Grus asked General Hirundo.
“If we’re not, by Olor’s beard, we’ve certainly wasted a lot of time
and money,” Hirundo answered.
“Thank you so much. You’ve made everything clear,” Grus said. Hirundo
bowed in the saddle. Grus laughed. Prince Vsevolod scowled. Vsevolod, as
Grus had seen, spent a lot of time scowling. Grus waved to the trumpeters.
The sun flashed golden from the bells of their horns as they raised them
to their lips. Martial music filled the air. The Avornans began moving
north.
King Lanius wore shabby clothes when he went exploring in the archives.
That kept the palace washerwomen happy. It also let him feel easier about
putting on hunting togs to go hunting with Arch-Hallow Anser. Was he in
perfect style? He neither knew nor cared. If anyone but Anser had invited
him out on a hunt, he not only would have said no but probably laughed in
the other mans face. But he really liked Anser, and so he’d decided to see
just what it was the arch-hallow so enjoyed.
Grus joked about being uncertain on a horse. Lanius really was. He felt
too high off the ground, and too likely to arrive there too suddenly. He
also felt sure he would be saddlesore come morning. If Olor had meant men
to splay their legs apart like that, he would have made them bowlegged to
begin with.
Anser took his bow from the case that held both it and a sheaf of
arrows. He skillfully strung it, then set an arrow to the string, drew,
and let fly. The arrow quivered in the trunk of a tree, a palm’s breadth
above a prominent knot. “A little high,” he said with a rueful shrug. “You
try.”
Clumsily, Lanius strung his own bow. He couldn’t remember the last time
he’d held a weapon in his hand. Even more clumsily, he fitted an arrow to
the string. Drawing the bow made him grunt with effort. The shaft he
loosed came nowhere near the tree, let alone the knot.
Some of the beaters and bodyguards riding along with the king and the
arch-hallow snickered. “Oh, dear,” Anser said. It wasn’t scornful, just
sympathetic. There were reasons why everyone liked him.
“I’m in more danger from the beasts than they are from me,” Lanius
said. If he laughed at himself, maybe the rest of the hunting party
wouldn’t, or at least not so much.
“You will not be in any danger, Your Majesty,” one of the bodyguards
declared. “That’s why we’re along.” He had a thoroughly literal mind. No
doubt that helped make him a good guard. No doubt it also helped make him
a bore.
Bird chirped in the oaks and elms and chestnuts. Lanius heard several
different songs. He wondered which one went with which bird. “Look!” He
pointed. “That one has something in its beak.”
“Building a nest,” Anser said. “It’s that time of year.”
Sunlight came through the leaves in dapples. The horses wanted to stop
every few steps and nibble at the ferns that sprang up at the bases of
gnarled tree trunks. Lanius would have let them, but Anser pressed on,
deeper into the woods. The city of Avornis was only a few miles away, but
might have lain beyond the Northern Sea. City air stank of smoke and
people and dung. The air here smelled as green as the bright new leaves on
the trees.
Wildflowers blazed in a meadow. Butterflies, flitting jewels, darted
from one to another. A rabbit nibbled clover. “Shoot it!” Anser said.
“What?” Lanius wondered if he’d heard straight. “Why?”
“Because you’re hunting,” Anser replied with such patience as he could
muster. “Because we want the meat. Rabbit stew, rabbit pie, rabbit with
pepper, rabbit. . . Rabbit’s run off now.”
Lanius almost said,
Good. If he’d been out with anyone but Anser, he would have. He
was more interested in watching the rabbit than in shooting it or eating
it. Alive and hopping about, it was fascinating. Dead? No.
Anser made the best of things. “Not easy to shoot a rabbit anyhow.
They’re best caught with dogs and nets.”
“You chase them with
dogs?” Lanius knew he should have kept quiet, but that got past
him. Weakly, he added, “It doesn’t seem sporting.”
“The idea
is to catch them, you know,” Anser said.
“Well, yes, but. . .” Lanius gave up. “Let’s ride some more. It’s a
nice day.”
“So it is,” Anser said agreeably. On they rode. If they were going to
hunt something, Lanius had imagined bear or lion—something dangerous,
where killing it would do the countryside good. When he said as much to
the arch-hallow, Anser gave him an odd look. “Aren’t deer and boar enough
to satisfy you? A boar can be as dangerous as any beast around.”
They saw no bears. They saw no lions. They saw no boar, which left
Lanius not at all disappointed. They saw a couple of deer. Anser
courteously offered Lanius the first shot at the first stag. He thought
about shooting wide on purpose, but then decided he was more likely to
miss if he aimed straight at it. Miss he did. The stag bounded away,
spoiling any chance Anser might have had of hitting it.
Anser didn’t say anything. If he thought Lanius had intended to miss,
he was too polite and good-natured to start a quarrel by accusing him of
it. The next time they saw a deer, though, Anser shot first. “Ha! That’s a
hit!” he shouted.
“Is it?” Lanius had his doubts. “It ran away, too.”
“Now we track it down. I hit it right behind the shoulder. It won’t go
far.” Anser rode after the wounded animal. Wounded it was, too— he used
the trail of blood it left to pursue it. The blood came close to making
Lanius sick. When he thought of shooting an animal, he thought of it
falling over dead the instant the arrow struck home. He’d seen one battle.
He knew people didn’t do that. But, no matter what Anser said, the trail
of blood was much too long to suit Lanius. He tried to imagine what the
deer was feeling, then gulped and wished he hadn’t.
When they caught up with it, the deer was down but not dead. Blood ran
from its mouth and bubbled from its nose. It blinked and tried to rise and
run some more, but couldn’t. Anser knelt beside it and cut its throat.
Then he slit its belly and reached inside to pull out the offal. How
Lanius held down his breakfast, he never knew.
“Not such a bad day,” Anser said as they rode back toward the city of
Avornis. Lanius didn’t reply.
But he also didn’t refuse the slab of meat the arch-hallow sent to the
palace. Once the cooks were done with it, it proved very tasty. And he
didn’t have to think of where it came from at all.
As they had the year before, the farmers along the path Grus’ army took
toward the north fled when it came near. The army was bigger this year,
which only meant more people ran away from it. They took their livestock,
abandoned their fields, and ran off to the hills and higher ground away
from the road.
Prince Vsevolod seemed surprised that bothered Grus. “Is an army,” he
said, waving to the tents sprouting like mushrooms by the side of the
road.
“Well, yes,” Grus agreed. “We’re not here to churn butter.”
General Hirundo snickered. He took himself even less seriously than
Grus did. “Churning butter?” Vsevolod said with another of his fearsome
frowns—his big-nosed, strong-boned, wrinkled face was made for
disapproval. “What you talk about? Is an army, like I say. Army steals.
Army always steals.”
“An army shouldn’t steal from its own people,” Grus said.
Vsevolod stared at him in even more confusion than when he’d talked
about butter. “Why not?” the Chernagor demanded. “What difference it make?
No army, no people. So army steal. So what?”
“You may be right.” Grus used that phrase to get rid of persistent
nuisances. Vsevolod went off looking pleased with himself. Like most
nuisances, he didn’t realize it wasn’t even close to the agreement it
sounded like.
The breeze brought the odors of sizzling flatbread, porridge in pots,
and roasting beef to Grus’ nostrils. It also brought another savory odor,
one that sent spit flooding into his mouth. “Tell me what that is,” he
said to Hirundo.
Hirundo obligingly sniffed. “Roast pork,” he answered without
hesitation.
“That’s what I thought, too,” Grus said. “Now, did we bring any pigs up
from the city of Avornis?”
They both knew better. Pigs, short-legged and with minds of their own,
would have been a nightmare to herd. Grus couldn’t imagine an army using
them for meat animals, not unless it was staying someplace for months on
end. The only place soldiers could have gotten hold of a pig was from
farmers who hadn’t fled fast enough.
“Shall I try to track down the men cooking pork?” Hirundo asked.
“No, don’t bother,” Grus answered wearily. “They’ll all say they got it
from someone else. They always do.” Vsevolod hadn’t been wrong. Armies
did plunder their own folk. The difference between the Prince of
Nishevatz and the King of Avornis was that Grus wished they didn’t.
Vsevolod didn’t care.
When morning came, the army started for the Chernagor country again.
Day by day, the mountains separating the coastal lowlands from Avornis
climbed higher into the sky, notching the northern horizon. Riding along
in the van, Grus had no trouble seeing that. Soldiers back toward the rear
of the army probably hadn’t seen the mountains yet, because of all the
dust the men and their horses and wagons kicked up. When the king looked
back in the direction of the city of Avornis, he couldn’t see more than
half the army. The rest disappeared into a haze of its own making.
The army had come within two or three days’ march of the mountains when
a courier rode up from the south. “Your Majesty! Your Majesty!” he
shouted, and then coughed several times from the dust hanging in the
air.
“I’m here,” Grus called, and waved to show where he was. “What is it?”
Whatever it was, he didn’t think it would be good. Good news had its own
speed—not leisurely, but sedate. Bad news was what had to get where it was
going as fast as it could.
“Here, Your Majesty.” The courier came up alongside him. His horse was
caked with dusty foam. It was blowing hard, its dilated nostrils fire-red.
The rider thrust a rolled parchment at Grus.
He broke the seal and slid off the ribbon that helped hold the
parchment closed. Unrolling it was awkward, but he managed. He held it out
at arm’s length to read; his sight had begun to lengthen. Before he got
even halfway through it, he was cursing as foully as he knew how.
“What’s gone wrong, Your Majesty?” General Hirundo asked.
“It’s the Chernagors, that’s what,” Grus answered bitterly. “A whole
great fleet of them, descending on the towns along our east coast. Some
are sacked, some besieged—they’ve caught us by surprise. Some of the
bastards are sailing up the Nine Rivers, too, and attacking inland towns
by the riverside. They haven’t done anything like this in I don’t know how
long.”
Lanius could tell me, he thought. But Lanius wasn’t here.
Hirundo cursed, too. “What do we do, then?” he asked.
Grus looked ahead. Yes, he could cross into the land of the Chernagors
in two or three days. How much good would that do him? Nishevatz was
ready, more than ready, to stand siege. While he reduced it—if he could
reduce it—what would the Chernagor pirates be doing to Avornis? What did
he have to put into river galleys and defend his own cities but this army
here? Not much, and he knew it. Tasting gall, he answered, “We turn
around. We go back.”
CHAPTER EIGHT
King Lanius had hoped to welcome King Grus back to the city of Avornis
as a conquering hero. Grus was back in the capital, all right, but as a
haggard, harried visitor, ready to rush toward the south and east to fight
the Chernagors. “You got this news before I did,” Grus said in his brief
sojourn in the palace. “What did you do?”
“Sent it on to you,” Lanius answered.
Grus exhaled through his nose. “Anything else?”
Hesitantly, Lanius nodded. “I sent an order to river-galley skippers
along the Nine Rivers to head for the coast and fight the invaders. That
doesn’t count the ships here by the capital. I told them to stay put
because I thought your army would need them.” He waited. If he’d made a
botch of things, Grus would come down on him like a rockslide.
His father-in-law exhaled again, but on a different note—relief, not
exasperation. “Gods be praised. You did it right. You did it just right. I
couldn’t have done better if I’d been here myself.”
“You mean that?” Lanius asked. Praise had always been slow heading his
way. He had trouble believing it even when he got it.
But Grus nodded solemnly. “We cant do anything without men and ships.
The faster they get to the coast, the better.” His laugh held little
mirth. “A year ago, I was wondering how the Chernagors’ oceangoing ships
would measure up against our river galleys. This isn’t how I wanted to
find out.”
“Yes, it should be interesting, shouldn’t it?” To Lanius, the
confrontation was abstract, not quite real.
“You don’t understand, do you?” Grus was testy now, not handing out
praise. “If we lose, they’ll ravage our coast all year long. They’ll go up
the rivers as far as they like, and they’ll keep on plundering the
riverside cities, too. This isn’t a game, Your Majesty.” He turned the
royal title into one of reproach. “The kingdom hasn’t seen anything like
this since the Chernagors first settled down in this part of the world,
however many years ago that was.”
Lanius knew, but it didn’t matter right this minute. He nodded. “All
right. I do take your point.”
“Good.” Grus, to his relief, stopped growling. “You must, really, or
you wouldn’t have done such a nice job setting things up so we’ll be able
to get at the Chernagors in a hurry.”
For a moment, that praise warmed Lanius, too. Then he looked at it with
the critical eye he used when deciding how much truth a chronicle or a
letter held. Wasn’t Grus just buttering him up to make him feel better?
Lanius almost called him on it, but held his peace. What was even worse
than Grus trying to keep him happy? The answer came to mind at once—Grus
not bothering to keep him happy.
Three days later, Lanius was able to stop worrying about whether Grus
kept him happy. The other king had loaded his men aboard river galleys and
as much other shipping around the capital as Lanius had commandeered. The
army’s horses stood nervously on barges and rafts. Lanius watched from the
wall as the force departed with as little ceremony as it had arrived.
One vessel after another, the fleet slid around a bend in the river. A
grove of walnuts hid the ships from sight from the capital. Lanius didn’t
wait for the last one to disappear. As soon as the river galley that held
Grus glided around that bend, he turned away. Bodyguards came to stiff
attention. They formed a hollow square around him to escort him back to
the palace.
He was about halfway there, passing through a marketplace full of
honking geese and pungent porkers, when he suddenly started to laugh.
“What’s so funny, Your Majesty?” a guardsman asked.
“Nothing, really,” Lanius answered. He wasn’t about to tell the soldier
that he’d suddenly realized the city of Avornis was
his again. Grus had taken it back in his brief, tumultuous stay.
He would reclaim it again after this campaigning season ended. But for
now, as it had the past summer, the royal capital belonged to Lanius.
If the king said that to the guard, it might reach the other king.
Unpleasant things might happen if it did. Lanius had learned a courtier’s
rules of survival ever since he’d stopped making messes on the floor. One
of the most basic was saying nothing that would land you in trouble if you
could avoid it. He still remembered, and used, it.
The doors to the palace were thrown wide to let in light and air. That
almost let Lanius ignore how massive they were, how strong and heavy their
hinges, how immense the iron bar that could help hold them closed. They
weren’t saying anything they didn’t have to, either. For now, they seemed
innocent and innocuous and not especially strong. But they really are, he thought.
Am I?
Hirundo looked faintly—maybe more than faintly—green. To Grus, the deck
of a river galley was the most natural thing in the world. “Now you know
how I feel on horseback,” the king said.
His general managed a faint smile. “Your Majesty, if you fall off a
horse, you’re not likely to drown,” he observed, and then gulped. Yes, he
was more than faintly green.
“Horses don’t come with rails,” Grus said. “And if you need to give
back breakfast there, kindly lean out over the one the galley has. The
sailors won’t love you if you get it on the deck.”
“If I need to heave it up, I won’t much care what the sailors think,”
Hirundo replied with dignity. Grus gave him a severe look. Puking on the
deck proved a man a lubber as surely as trying to mount from the right
side of the horse proved a man no rider. Under the force of that look,
Hirundo grudged a nod. “All right, Your Majesty. I’ll try.”
Grus knew he would have to be content with that. A weak stomach could
prove stronger than good intentions. That thought made the king wonder how
Pterocles was taking the journey. As far as Grus knew, the wizard hadn’t
traveled far on the Nine Rivers.
Pterocles stood near the port rail. He wasn’t hanging on to it, and he
didn’t seem especially uncomfortable. As he looked out at the fields and
apple and pear orchards sliding by, the expression on his face was more .
. . distant than anything else. King Grus nodded to himself. That was the
word, all right. Pterocles had never quite been himself after the
Chernagor wizard—or
had it been the Banished One himself?—struck him down outside of
Nishevatz. Something was missing . . . from his spirit? From his will?
Grus had a hard time pinpointing where the trouble lay, but he feared it
was serious.
Prince Vsevolod had stayed behind in the city of Avornis. Nothing he
could say would be likely to make the Chernagor pirates change their
minds. Grus didn’t miss him.
Lanius likes being king, he thought.
Let him put up with Vsevolod. That’ll teach him.
Before long, groves of olives and almonds would replace the fruit trees
that grew here. The fleet wasn’t very far south or east of the capital;
they’d just emerged from the confusing tangle of streams in the Maze the
day before. Down farther south, farmers would grow only wheat and barley;
rye and oats would disappear. Before long, though, vineyards would take
the place of some of the grainfields.
The Granicus ran down toward the Azanian Sea through the middle of a
wide, broad valley. The hills to the north and south were low and
weathered, so low they hardly deserved the name. But smaller streams
flowed into the Granicus from those hills to either side. Beyond the
watersheds, the streams ran into neighbors from among the Nine Rivers. I sent Alca to a riverside town, Grus thought, and hoped none
of the pirates had come to Pelagonia. This was the first time he’d come to
the south himself since sending her away from the capital. But Pelagonia
did not lie along the Granicus, and the king had other things on his mind
besides the witch he’d once loved—still loved, though he hadn’t let
himself think that while he was anywhere near Estrilda.
As day followed day and Grus’ fleet sped down the Granicus, he spent
more and more time peering ahead, looking for smoke to warn him he was
drawing near the Chernagors. Once he saw some rising into the air, but it
proved only a grass fire in a field. It might have been a catastrophe for
the farmer the field belonged to. To Grus, it was just a distraction.
And then, a day later, lookouts—and, very soon, Grus himself— spied
another black column of smoke. Grus had a good idea of where they were
along the Granicus, though he hadn’t traveled the river for several years.
To make sure, he asked the steersman, “That’s Araxus up ahead, isn’t
it?”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The man at the steering oar nodded. “When we round
this next bend in the river, we’ll be able to see the place.”
He proved not quite right. When they rounded the bend, all they could
see was the smoke spilling out from the gutted town. Of Araxus itself
there was no sign. But Grus pointed to the ships tied up at the quays. “No
one in Avornis ever built those.”
“How can you tell, Your Majesty?” Hirundo asked.
Grus gaped. His general
was a lubber, and no more a judge of ships than Grus was of
horseflesh. “By looking,” the king answered. “They’re bigger and beamier
than anything we build, and see those masts?”
“They’re ships,” Hirundo said.
“Yes, and we’re going to sink them.” Grus turned to the oarmaster.
“Step up the stroke. Let’s hurry.” As the man nodded and got the rowers
working harder, Grus told the trumpeter, “Signal the rest of the fleet to
up the stroke, too. We don’t want to waste any time.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The man raised the trumpet to his lips and sent
the signal to the other ships close by. Their trumpets passed it along to
the rest of the fleet.
The Chernagors ravaging Araxus were alert. They spotted the Avornan
fleet as soon as it rounded the bend in the river. Grus couldn’t see the
pirates in the town itself, but he saw them when they came out and ran for
their ships. He wondered what they would do once they had them manned. The
wind blew out of the east, from the direction of the sea. That had let
them sail up the Granicus to Araxus. But the only way they could flee down
the river, away from the galleys, was by drifting with the current. If
they tried that, the oar-powered Avornan ships would catch them in short
order.
Grus wondered what he would have done if caught in a like predicament.
No sooner had the thought,
Make the best fight I could, crossed his mind than the Chernagor
ships put on their full spread of sail—a stunning spread, by Avornan
standards—and started
up the Granicus toward the river galleys.
“Now I see it. They
are bigger than we are.” Hirundo sounded nervous. “Can we beat
them?”
“If we can’t, we’d have done better to stay back in the city of
Avornis, don’t you think?” Grus asked. Hirundo grinned. Grus knew he had
to seem confident. In truth, he had no idea what would happen next. How
long had it been since the Chernagors and Avornans squared off against
each other on the water? He had no idea. Lanius had tried to tell him, but
he hadn’t let the other king finish.
He wished things happened quicker aboard ship, but no help for that.
The Chernagor pirates had to claw their way upstream against the current.
More than a quarter of an hour passed between their weighing anchor and
the first arrows splashing into the Granicus. The pirates had only half a
dozen ships, but they were all jammed full of men. And with their high
freeboard, getting Avornan warriors into them from the lower galleys
wouldn’t have been easy even if they hadn’t been.
“Ram the bastards!” Grus shouted. Without his giving the order to the
trumpeter, the man sent it on—cleansed of the curse by his mellow notes—to
the rest of the fleet. To his own crew, Grus called, “ ‘Ware boarders! If
we stick fast when we ram, they’ll swarm down onto us.”
More and more arrows flew from the pirate ships. Grus had never had to
worry about so many in a river battle; he might almost have been fighting
on land. A couple of rowers were hit. That fouled the stroke. The
oarmaster screamed curses until the wounded men were dragged from their
benches and replaced. Archers at the bows of the river galleys were
shooting along with the Chernagors, emptying their quivers as fast as they
could. A pirate threw up his hands and splashed into the Granicus, an
arrow through his throat.
The oarmaster upped the stroke again, this time without waiting for a
command from Grus. The steersman aimed the bronze-tipped ram at the
planking just to port of the bow of a pirate ship. Where everything had
seemed to move slowly before, all at once the pirate ship swelled
enormously.
“Brace yourselves!” Grus shouted just before the collision. Crunch! The ram bit. Grus staggered but kept his feet. “Back
oars!” the oarmaster screamed. The rowers did, with all the strength they
had in them. If the ram did stick fast in the pirate’s timbers, the
Chernagors would board and slaughter them.
“Olor be praised!” Grus gasped when the river galley pulled free. The
pointed ram had torn a hole two feet wide in the pirate ship, just below
the waterline. The Granicus flooded in. The extra weight, growing every
moment, slowed the ship to a crawl.
“Ram ‘em again, sir?” the steersman asked.
Grus shook his head. “No. We got enough of what we needed.” He would
have done far more damage striking another river galley. The Chernagor
ships, built to withstand long voyages and pounding ocean waves, were even
more strongly made than he’d expected.
He looked around to see how the rest of the fight was going. One pirate
ship had ridden up and over the luckless river galley that tried to ram
it. Avornans, some clutching oars, splashed in the Granicus. Another
Chernagor ship traded archery with three river galleys. Two more pirate
ships besides the one Grus had struck had been rammed, and were taking on
water. One pirate ship was afire. A river galley burned, too—the
Chernagors had flung jars of oil lit with wicks down onto its deck. More
Avornans went into the river. So did Chernagors from the northerners’
burning ship. Grus wondered whether they’d set themselves ablaze.
Savagely, he hoped so.
He pointed to the ship that had defeated one ramming attempt. “Turn
about!” he called to the steersman. “We’ll get ‘em in the rear.”
“Right!” The steersman threw back his head and laughed. “Just what they
deserve, too, Your Majesty.”
How the Chernagors on the pirate ship howled as the sharp-beaked river
galley sped toward its stern! They sent a blizzard of arrows at Grus, who
wished he wore something less conspicuous. He wanted to go below, but that
would have made him look like a coward in front of his men.
The things we do for pride, he thought as an arrow stood
thrilling in the river galley’s deck a few inches in front of his
boot. Crunch! Again, the river galley shuddered as the ram struck
home. Again, the oarmaster bellowed, “Back oars!” Again, the rowers pulled
like men possessed. Again, Grus breathed a sigh of relief when the ram
did pull free.
This time, though, the Chernagor ship didn’t sink. The skipper ran her
aground in the shallows before she filled too much and became altogether
unmanageable. Pirates leaped off her and splashed ashore. Grus knew he
would have to land men, too. The galleys had outpaced other forces
following on the river and by land. If all the pirates had taken to their
heels through the fields, they would have been very troublesome. The
survivors from one ship? Probably not.
Hirundo seemed to think along the same lines. “Not
too bad, Your Majesty,” he said.
“No, not too,” Grus agreed. “Not yet. But we’ve only just started
cleaning them out. This is the first bunch we’ve run into, and maybe the
smallest.”
Hirundo made a horrible face. Then, very reluctantly, he nodded.
King Lanius sat in the royal archives, delightfully encased in quiet.
More dust motes than usual danced in the sunbeams that pushed through the
dirty skylights overhead. Lanius had been shoving boxes around again,
looking for interesting things he hadn’t seen before. He often did that.
He didn’t often get rewarded as handsomely as he had this time.
He had to stop and think how long ago King Cathartes had reigned. Seven
hundred years ago? Eight hundred? Something like that. Cathartes hadn’t
spent an especially long time on the Diamond Throne, nor had his reign
been distinguished. But, like all Kings of Avornis until the Menteshe
stole it, he’d wielded the Scepter of Mercy. Unlike most of them, he’d
worked hard to describe what that was like.
Without both patience and luck, Lanius never would have come across the
time-yellowed scrap of parchment. Patience encompassed the labor of
digging out new boxes of documents and the different but even more wearing
labor of going through them one by one to see what each was. Luck came in
when King Cathartes’ letter got stuck by fragments of wax from its seal to
a much less interesting report on sheep farming in the Granicus valley
that was only a quarter as old. If Lanius hadn’t been paying attention, he
would have put the report on wool and mutton aside without noticing it had
another document riding on its back.
King Cathartes’ script looked strange, but Lanius could puzzle it out.
The language was old-fashioned, but not impossibly so. And Cathartes was
talking about something that fascinated Lanius, so the present king worked
especially hard.
Oft have men of me inquired, What feel you? What think you? on laying
hold of the most excellent Scepter. Hath it the massiness of some great
burthen in your hand, as seemingly it needs must, being of size not
inconsiderable? Let all know, as others have said aforetimes, a man
seizing the Scepter of Mercy in the cause of righteousness is in sooth
likewise seized by the same.
Lanius wondered what the cause of righteousness was, and how any man,
let alone a King of Avornis holding the Scepter of Mercy, could know he
was following it. Did Cathartes mean the Scepter gave some sign of what
was right and what wasn’t? Perhaps he did, for he went on,
Know that, when rightly wielded, the Scepter weigheth in the hand, not
naught—
for that were, methinks, a thing impossible e’en mongst the
gods—
but very little, such that a puling babe, purposing to lift it for the
said righteous cause, would find neither hindrance nor
impediment. But if a man depart from that which is good, if he purpose the use
of the aforesaid Scepter of Mercy in a cause unjust, then will he find he
may not lift it at all, but is prevented from all his ends, Cathartes
wrote.
“Well, well,” Lanius murmured. “Isn’t that interesting?” It wasn’t just
interesting. It was new, and he’d almost despaired of finding anything new
about the Scepter of Mercy. Most Kings of Avornis who’d written about it
at all had been maddeningly vague, insisting the wielding of the Scepter
was a matter of touch without ever explaining how. Cathartes had been far
more forthcoming.
It also explained far more than Cathartes could have dreamed. For four
hundred years, the Scepter of Mercy had lain in Yozgat. In all that time,
so far as Lanius knew, the Banished One had never picked it up and used
its powers against his foes. Like all Avornan kings over those four
centuries, Lanius was glad the Banished One hadn’t, but he’d never
understood why not. Now, perhaps, he did. After the Menteshe brought it
back to him, had he tried to lift it, tried and failed? No proof, of
course. But it seemed more reasonable to Lanius than any other idea he’d
ever had along those lines.
Maybe it meant even more than that. Maybe it meant the gods had been
justified in casting Milvago down from the heavens, making him into the
Banished One. Didn’t it argue that his goal of forcing his way back into
the heavens was anything but righteous? Or did it just say their magic
rejected him even as they had themselves?
Lanius laughed.
How am I, one mortal man sitting by himself in these dusty archives,
supposed to figure out all the workings of the gods? If that wasn’t
unmitigated gall, he couldn’t imagine what would be.
He wished he could talk with Grus about it. That failing, he wished
Avornis had an arch-hallow whose passion was learning about and seeking to
understand the gods, not tracking down a deer after he’d put an arrow in
its side. Lanius might have trusted such an arch-hallow with the
terrifying secret of Milvago. Anser? No. However much Lanius liked Grus’
bastard, he knew he was a lightweight.
He even understood why Grus had chosen to invest Anser with the red
robe. Anser was unshakably loyal to his father.
And how many people are unshakably loyal to me? Lanius wondered.
Is anyone?) That had enormous advantages for the other king. But
sometimes an arch-hallow who did more than fill space would have been
useful. Lanius almost wished Bucco still led services in the cathedral,
and Bucco would have married him off to King Dagipert of Thervingia’s
daughter if he’d had his way. Now, Lanius asked himself,
what to do with Cathartes’ letter? At first, he wanted to put it
in some prominent place. Instead, he ended up using its bits of sealing
wax to reattach it to the report on sheep in the Granicus valley to which
it had clung for so long. Sometimes obscurity was best.
Only after Lanius had left the archives did he wonder whether that
applied to him as well as to what King Cathartes had written all those
years ago. Little by little, he’d realized he didn’t much want to
challenge Grus for the sole rule of Avornis, so maybe it did. And if he
didn’t, he might get along with—and work with—his father-in-law better
than he ever had before.
Down the Granicus toward the Azanian Sea sailed the fleet of river
galleys Grus commanded. Other flotillas and contingents of soldiers were,
he hoped, clearing more of the Nine Rivers and their valleys of the
Chernagor pirates.
He’d had to fight again, at Calydon. The Chernagors there weren’t
plundering the town. They were holding it, and hadn’t intended to give it
back to any mere Avornans. Grus used the same ploy he’d succeeded with
against Baron Lev at the fortress of Varazdin. He made an ostentatious
attack against the waterfront from the river. When he judged most of the
pirates had rushed to that part of Calydon, he sent soldiers against the
land wall. They got inside the city before the Chernagors realized they
were in trouble. After that, Calydon fell in short order. His biggest
trouble then was keeping the inhabitants from massacring the Chernagors
he’d taken prisoner.
When he heard some of the stories about what the Chernagors did while
holding Calydon, he was more than halfway sorry he hadn’t let the people
do what they wanted. By then, he’d sent the captured pirates back into the
countryside under guard. He didn’t know just what he would do with
them—put them to work in the mines, maybe, or exchange them for Avornans
their countrymen had taken.
And if I don’t do either of those, he thought,
I can always give them back to the people of Calydon.
As his river galleys and soldiers headed east again, he asked Hirundo,
“Did you expect anything like what we saw there?”
“Not me, your Majesty.” Hirundo shook his head, then looked as though
he wished he hadn’t; any motion might be enough to make him queasy while
he paced the deck of a river galley. After a gulp, he went on, “They
fought us clean enough in their own country last year. Hard, yes, but
clean enough. Not like . . . that.”
“No, not like that,” Grus agreed. “They might as well have been
Menteshe, slaughtering the wounded and killing men who tried to yield. And
what they did to the people in Calydon was ten times worse.” Over by the
rail, Pterocles stirred. The king waved to the wizard. “You have something
to say?”
“I’m . . . not sure, Your Majesty,” Pterocles replied. Grus hoped he
hid his frown. Pterocles wasn’t sure of much of anything these days. To be
fair, he also wasn’t the best of sailors, though he was better than
Hirundo. Like the general, he paused to gather himself before continuing,
“I’m not as surprised as you are, I don’t think.”
“Oh? Why not?” Grus asked.
The wizard looked not north, not east, but to the south. In the hollow
tones that had become usual since his double overthrow in the land of the
Chernagors, he said, “Why not? Because they’ve had a year longer now to
listen to the Banished One, to let him into their hearts.”
“Oh,” Grus said again, this time on a falling note. Pterocles made more
sense than the king wished he did. The wizard didn’t seem to care whether
he made sense or not. Somehow, that made him seem more convincing, not
less.
Grus hoped the fleet was still outrunning the news of its coming. If he
could get to the sea before the Chernagors along the coast heard he was
there, he would have a better chance against them. On the Granicus and,
he believed, the rest of the Nine Rivers, his galleys had the advantage
over the Chernagors’ sailing ships. They were both faster and more agile.
Whether that would hold true on the wide waters of the sea was liable to
be a different question.
The Granicus, a clear, swift-flowing stream, carried little silt and
had no delta to speak of. One moment, or so it seemed to Grus, the river
flowed along as it always had. The next, the horizon ahead widened out to
infinity. The Azanian Sea awed him even more than the Northern Sea had.
That probably had nothing to do with the sea itself. In the Chernagor
country, the weather had been cloudy and hazy, which limited the seascape.
Here, he really felt as though he could see forever.
But seeing forever didn’t really matter. On the north bank of the
Granicus, the town of Dodona sat by the edge of the sea. It lay in
Chernagor hands. The fresh smoke stains darkening the wall around the town
said the corsairs had burned it when they took it.
Several Chernagor ships were tied up at the wharves. The pirates didn’t
seem to expect trouble. Grus could tell exactly when they spied his fleet.
Suddenly, Dodona began stirring like an aroused anthill.
Too late, he thought, and gave his orders. “We’ll hit ‘em hard
and fast,” he declared. “It doesn’t look like it’ll be even as tough as
Calydon. If it is, we’ll try the same trick we used there—feint at the
harbor and then go in on the land side. But whatever we do, we have to
keep those ships from getting away and warning the rest of the
Chernagors.”
Almost everything went the way he’d hoped. Some of the pirates fought
bravely as individuals. He’d seen in the north and here in Avornis that
they were no cowards. But in Dodona they had no time to mount a
coordinated defense. Like ice when warm water hits it, they broke up into
fragments and were swept away.
Several of their ships burned by the piers. Avornan marines and
soldiers swarmed onto others. But the Chernagors got a crew into one,
hoisted sail, and fled northward propelled by a strong breeze from out of
the south. That was when Grus really saw what the great spread of canvas
they used could do. He sent two river galleys after the Chernagor ship.
The men rowed their hearts out, but the pirate ship still pulled away.
Grus cursed when it escaped. The Granicus might be cleared of Chernagors,
but now all the men from the north would know he was hunting them.
“No, thank you,” Lanius said. “I don’t feel like hunting today.”
Arch-Hallow Anser looked surprised and disappointed. “But didn’t you
enjoy yourself the last time we went out?” he asked plaintively.
“I enjoyed the company—I always enjoy your company,” Lanius said. “And
I liked the venison. The hunt itself? I’m very sorry, but. . .” He shook
his head. “Not to my taste.”
“We should have flushed a boar, or a bear,” Anser said. “Then you’d
have seen some real excitement.”
“I don’t much care for excitement.” Lanius marveled at how the
arch-hallow had so completely misunderstood him. “I just don’t see the fun
of tramping through the woods looking for animals to slaughter. If you do,
go right ahead.”
“I do. I will. I’m sorry you don’t, Your Majesty.” Hurt still on his
face, Anser strode down the palace hallway. Oh, dear, Lanius thought. He almost called after Anser,
telling him he’d come along after all. He was willing to pay nearly any
price to keep Anser happy with him. But the key word there was
nearly. Going hunting again flew over the limit.
Instead, he went to the moncats’ room, where he had an easel set up.
He’d discovered a certain small talent for painting the last few years,
and he knew more about moncats than anyone else in Avornis.
Than anyone who doesn’t live on the islands they come from, he
thought, and wondered how many people lived on those islands out in the
Northern Sea. That was something he’d never know.
What he did know was that Petrosus, Grus’ treasury minister, was slow
and stingy with the silver he doled out. No doubt that was partly at Grus’
order, to help keep Lanius from accumulating power to threaten the other
king. But Petrosus, whatever his reasons, enjoyed what he did. Lanius had
sold several of the pictures of moncats he’d painted. As far as he knew,
no King of Avornis had ever done anything like that before. He felt a
modest pride at being the first.
He watched the moncats scramble and climb, looking for a moment he
could sketch in charcoal and then work up into a real painting. When he’d
first started painting the animals, he’d tried to get them to pose. He’d
even succeeded once or twice, by making them take a particular position to
get bits of food. But, as with any cats, getting moncats to do what he
wanted usually proved more trouble than it was worth. These days, he let
the moncats do what they wanted and tried to capture that on canvas.
A moncat leaped. His hand leaped, too. There was the moment. He’d known
it without conscious thought. His hand was often smarter than his brain in
this business. He sketched rapidly, letting that hand do what it would.
His stick of charcoal scratched over the canvas.
When he finished the sketch, he stepped back from it, took a good
look—and shook his head. This wasn’t worth working up. Every so often, his
leaping hand betrayed him.
If I’d really been taught this sketching business, I’d do
better.
He laughed. Several moncats sent him wide-eyed, curious stares. If the
sketch had looked as though it was pretty good, Bubulcus or some other
servant would have knocked on the door in the middle of it, and it never
would have been the same afterwards. That had happened, too.
Before long, he tried another sketch. This one turned out better— not
great, but better. He concentrated hard, working to make the drawing show
some tiny fraction of a climbing moncat’s fluidity. He was never happier
than when he concentrated hard. Maybe that was why he enjoyed both the
painting and his sorties into the archives.
Both painting and archive-crawling would have made Anser yawn until the
top of his head fell off. Put him in the woods stalking a deer, though,
and he concentrated as hard as anyone—and he was happy then (unless he
missed his shot, of course).
For a moment, Lanius thought he’d stumbled onto something important.
But then he realized he’d just rephrased the question. Why did old
parchments make him concentrate, while the arch-hallow needed to try not
to crunch a dry leaf under his foot? Lanius still didn’t know.
He worked hard turning the sketch into a finished painting, too. He
always put extra effort into getting the texture of the moncats’ fur
right. He’d had some special brushes made, only a few bristles wide. They
let him suggest the countless number of fine hairs of slightly different
colors that went into the pelts. The real difficulty, though, didn’t lie
in the brushes. The real difficulty lay in his own right hand, and he knew
it. If he’d had more skill and more training, he could have come closer to
portraying the moncats as they really were.
Every so often, one of the animals would come over and sit close by him
while he painted. The moncats never paid any attention to the work on his
easel; they did sometimes try to steal his brushes or his little pots of
paint. Maybe the linseed oil that held the pigments smelled intriguing. Or
maybe it was the odor of the bristles. Then again, maybe the moncats were
just nuisances. When one of them made a getaway to the very top of the
room with a brush, Lanius was inclined to believe it. After gnawing at the
handle of the brush, the moncat got bored with it and let it drop. Lanius
scooped it up before another animal could steal it.
He was carrying the finished painting down the hall when a maidservant
coming the other way stopped to admire it. “So that’s what your pets look
like, Your Majesty,” she said.
“Yes, that’s right, Cristata,” he answered.
“That’s very good work,” she went on, looking closer. “You can see
every little thing about them. Are their back feet really like that, with
the funny big toes that look like they can grab things?”
“They
can grab things,” he said. “Moncats are born climbers—and born
thieves.” After a moment, he added, “How are you these days?”
“Fair,” she answered. “
It doesn’t bother me anymore, so that’s something.” She didn’t
want to name Ortalis, for which Lanius couldn’t blame her. She went on,
“The money you and King Grus gave me, that’s nice. I’ve never had money
before, except to get by on from day to day. But...” Her pretty face
clouded.
“What’s the matter?” Lanius asked. “Don’t tell me you’re running short
already.”
“Oh, no. It isn’t that. I try hard to be careful,” she said. “It’s just
that. . .” She turned red; Lanius watched—watched with considerable
interest—as the flush rose from her neck to her hairline. “I shouldn’t
tell you this.”
“Then don’t,” Lanius said at once.
“No. If I can’t tell you, who can I tell? You saw. . . what happened .
. . with my shoulder and my back.” Cristata waited for him to nod before
continuing, “Well, there was a fellow, a—oh, never mind what he does here.
I liked him, and I thought he liked me. But when he got a look at some of
that... he didn’t anymore.” She stared down at the floor.
“Oh.” Lanius thought, then said. “If that bothered him, you’re probably
well rid of him. And besides—”
Now he was the one who stopped, much more abruptly than Cristata had.
He feared he was also the one who turned red. “You’re sweet, Your
Majesty,” the serving girl murmured, which meant she knew exactly what he
hadn’t said. She went up the hall. He went down it, trying to convince
himself nothing had happened, nothing at all.
CHAPTER NINE
The ocean was an unfamiliar world for Grus. Up until now, he’d been out
upon it only a handful of times. If his river galley and the rest of the
fleet sailed much farther, they would go out of sight of land. Avornan
coastal traders never did anything like that. Even now, with the horizon
still reassuringly jagged off to the west, he worried about making his way
back to the mainland.
He worried about it, yes, but he went on, even though he increasingly
had the feeling of being a bug on a plate, just waiting for someone to
squash him. He didn’t see that he had much choice. To the Chernagors, the
open ocean wasn’t a wasteland, a danger. It was a highway. They’d come all
this way from their own country to Avornis to prey on his kingdom. He
couldn’t sail back to theirs, not from here. His ships couldn’t carry
enough supplies for their rowers or spread enough sail to do without those
rowers. He didn’t want to think about how they would handle in a bad
storm, either.
But he could—he hoped he could—convince the pirates that they couldn’t
harry his coasts without paying a higher price than they wanted. As far as
he knew, his men had cleared them out of all the river valleys where
they’d landed. But their ships weren’t like his. They could linger
offshore for a long time—exactly how long he wasn’t sure—and strike as
they pleased. They could ... if he didn’t persuade them that was a bad
idea.
Tall and proud, the Chernagors’ ships bobbed in line ahead, not far out
of bowshot. The wind had died to a light breeze, which made the river
galleys more agile than the vessels from out of the north. The Chernagors
wouldn’t be easy meat, though, not when their ships were crammed with
fighting men. If a ramming attempt went wrong, the pirates could swarm
aboard a galley and make it pay. They’d proved that in earlier fights.
Hirundo checked his sword’s edge with his thumb. He nodded to Grus.
“Well, Your Majesty,” he said, “This ought to be interesting.” The river
galley slid down into a trough. He jerked his hand away from the blade.
He’d already cut himself once in a sudden lurch.
At the bow, the chief of the catapult crew looked back to Grus. “I
think we can hit them now, Your Majesty, if we shoot on the uproll.”
“Go ahead,” Grus told him.
The crew winched back the dart and let fly. The catapult clacked as it
flung the four-foot-long arrow, shaft thick as a man’s finger, toward the
closest pirate ship. The dart splashed into the sea just short of its
target. The Chernagors jeered.
“Give them another shot,” Grus told the sailors, who were already
loading a fresh dart into the catapult.
This one thudded into the planking of the Chernagors’ ship. It did no
harm, and the Chernagors went right on mocking. One or two of them tried
to shoot at Grus’ ship, but their arrows didn’t come close. The catapult
could outreach any mere man, no matter how strong.
Grimly, its crew reloaded once more. This time, when they shot, the
great arrow skewered not one but two pirates. One splashed into the sea.
The other let out a shriek Grus could hear across a quarter of a mile of
water. The catapult crew raised a cheer. The Chernagors stopped
laughing.
“Form line abreast and advance on the foe,” Grus told the officer in
charge of signals. The pennants that gave that message fluttered along
both sides of the galley. The ships to either side waved green flags to
show they understood. The system had sprung to life on the Nine Rivers,
and was less than perfect on the ocean. But it worked well enough. Grus
saw no signals from the Chernagor ships. When had the pirates last faced
anyone able to fight back?
Catapult darts flew. Every now and then, one would transfix a pirate,
or two, or three. Marines at the bows of the river galleys started
shooting as soon as they came close enough to the Chernagor ships.
By then, of course, the Chernagors were close enough to shoot back.
Carpenters had rigged shields to give the river galleys’ rowers some
protection—that was a lesson the first encounters with the big ships full
of archers had driven home. Every so often, though, an arrow struck a
rower. Replacements pulled the wounded men from the oars and took their
places. The centipede strokes of the galleys’ advance didn’t falter
badly.
Clouds covered the sun. Grus hardly noticed. He was intent on the
Chernagor ship at which his ram was aimed like an arrow’s point. The wind
also began to rise, and the chop on the sea. Those he did notice, and
cursed them both. The wind made the Chernagor ships more mobile, and with
their greater freeboard they could deal with worse waves than his
galleys.
“Your Majesty—” Pterocles began.
Grus waved the wizard to silence. “Not now! Brace yourself, by the—” Crunch! The ram bit before he could finish the warning. He
staggered. Pterocles fell in a heap. The Chernagor ship had tried to turn
away at the last instant, to take a glancing blow or make the river galley
miss, but Grus’ steersman, anticipating the move, countered it and made
the hit count. “Back oars!” the oarmaster roared. The river galley pulled
free. Green seawater flooded into the stricken pirate ship.
A couple of other Chernagor vessels were rammed as neatly as the one
Grus’ galley gored. Not all the encounters went the Avornans’ way, though.
Some of the Chernagor captains did manage to evade the river galleys’
rams. The kilted pirates, shooting down into the galleys while they were
close, made the Avornans pay for their attacks.
And one river galley had rammed, but then could not pull free— every
skipper’s nightmare. Shouting Chernagors dropped down onto the galley and
battled with the marines and the poorly armed rowers. Grus ordered his own
ship toward the locked pair. His marines shot volley after volley at the
swarming Chernagors. Pirates and Avornans both went over the side,
sometimes in an embrace as deadly as their vessels‘.
Pterocles struggled to his feet. He plucked at Grus’ sleeve. “Your
Majesty, this storm—”
“Storm?” Grus hadn’t realized it was one. But even as he spoke, a
raindrop hit him in the face, and then another and another. “What about
it? Blew up all of a sudden, that’s for sure.”
“That’s what I’m trying to tell you, Your Majesty,” the wizard said.
“It’s got magic behind it, magic or ... something.”
“Something?” Grus asked. Pterocles’ expression told him what the wizard
meant—something that had to do with the Banished One. The king said, “What
can you do about it? Can you hold it off until we’ve finished giving the
Chernagors what they deserve?” As he spoke, another river galley rammed a
pirate ship, rammed and pulled free. The Chernagor ship began to sink.
At the same time, though, a wave crashed up over the bow of Grus’ river
galley, splashing water into the hull. The steersman called, “Your
Majesty, we can’t take a lot of that, you know.”
“Yes,” Grus said, and turned back to Pterocles. “What can you do?” he
asked again.
“Not much,” the wizard answered. “No mortal can, not with the weather.
That’s why I think it’s . . . something.”
“Should we break off, then?” Grus asked doubtfully. “We’re beating
them.” First one, then another, Chernagor ship hoisted all sail and sped
off to the north at a speed the river galleys, fish in the wrong kind of
water, couldn’t hope to match.
“I can’t tell you what to do, Your Majesty. You’re the king. I’m just a
wizard. I can taste the storm, though. I don’t like it,” Pterocles
said.
Grus didn’t like it, either. He didn’t like letting the Chernagors get
away, but their ships could take far more weather than his. “Signal
Break off the fight,” he shouted to the man in charge of the
pennants. Another waved smashed over the bow. That convinced him he was
doing the right thing. He added, “Signal
Make for shore, too.” In the thickening rain, the pennants
drooped. He hoped the other captains would be able to make them out.
The last Chernagor ships that could escaped. The others, mortally
wounded, wallowed in the waves. One had turned turtle. So had a wrecked
river galley. Here and there, men splashed by the ruined warships. Some
paddled; others clung to whatever they could. The river galleys fished out
as many sailors—Avornans and Chernagors—as they could. Make for shore. It had seemed an easy enough command. But now,
with the storm getting worse, with rain and mist filling the air, Grus was
out of sight of land. He and the steersman had to rely on wind and wave to
tell them what their eyes couldn’t.
“We beat them,” Hirundo said. “Now, the next question is, will we get
to celebrate beating them, or do they have the last laugh?”
“They may be better sailors on the open sea than I am,” Grus said,
“but, by the gods, I still know a little something about getting home
in a storm.”
As though to answer that, the freshening sea sent a wave that almost
swamped and almost capsized the river galley. Grus seized a line and clung
for his life. When the ship at last righted herself—slowly, so slowly!—the
first thing he did was look around for Pterocles. The wizard, no sailor,
was all too likely to go overboard.
But Pterocles was there, dripping and sputtering as he hung on to the
rail. And the fleet made shore safe—much battered and abused, but safe.
The storm blew higher and harder and wilder yet after that, but after that
it didn’t matter.
Prince Vsevolod took a long pull at the cup of wine in front of him.
“Ask your questions,” he said, like a wounded man telling the healer to go
ahead and draw the arrow.
Getting the exiled Prince of Nishevatz to show even that much
cooperation was a victory of sorts. He thought everyone else should
cooperate with
him, not the other way around. Lanius said, “Which city-states in
the Chernagor country are likely to oppose Prince Vasilko and the Banished
One?”
Vasilko sent him a scornful stare. “This you should answer for
yourself. King Grus takes prisoners from Nishevatz, from Hisardzik, from
Jobuka, from Hrvace. This means no prisoners from Durdevatz, from Ravno,
from Zavala, from Mojkovatz. These four, they no sail with pirate ships.
They no love Vasilko, eh?”
That made good logical sense, but Lanius had seen that good logical
sense often had little to do with the way the Chernagors behaved. He said,
“Would they ally with Avornis if we send our army into the land of the
Chernagors?”
“No. Of course not.” Yes, while Lanius thought Vsevolod strange,
Vsevolod thought him dull. The Prince of Nishevatz continued, “You want to
drive Durdevatz and other three into Banished One’s hands, you march
in.”
“But you were the one who invited us up to the Chernagor country in the
first place!” Lanius exclaimed in considerable exasperation.
Prince Vsevolod shrugged broad, if somewhat stooped, shoulders. “Is
different now. Then I was prince. Now I am exile.” A tear gleamed in his
eye. Regret or self-pity? By the way Vsevolod refilled the wine cup and
gulped it down, Lanius would have bet on self-pity.
“Why do the city-states line up the way they do?” he asked.
Holding up the battered fingers of one hand, Vsevolod said,
“Nishevatz, Hisardzik, Jobuka, Hrvace.” Holding up those of the other, he
said, “Durdevatz, Ravno, Zavala, Mojkovatz.” He fitted his fingertips
together, alternating those from one hand with those from the other. “You
see?”
“I see,” King Lanius breathed. Immediate neighbors were hostile to one
another. Pro- and anti-Nishevatz city-states alternated along the coast.
After some thought, the king observed, “Vasilko would be stronger if all
the Chernagor towns leaned his way. Can he get them to do that?”
“Vasilko?” The rebel prince’s father made as though to spit, but at the
last moment—the
very last moment—thought better of it. “Vasilko cannot get cat to
shit in box.” That Vasilko had succeeded in ousting him seemed not to have
crossed his mind.
“Let me ask it a different way,” Lanius said. “Working through Vasilko,
can the Banished One bring them together?”
Now Vsevolod started to shake his head, but checked himself. “These
city-states, they are for long time enemies. You understand?” he said.
Lanius nodded. Vsevolod went on, “Not easy to go from enemy to friend. But
not easy to stand up to Banished One, either. So ... I do not know.”
“All right. Thank you,” Lanius said. But it wasn’t all right. If
Vsevolod wasn’t sure the Banished One couldn’t bring all the Chernagor
towns under his sway, he probably could. And if he could . . .
“If he can,” Grus said when Lanius raised the question, “the fleet that
raids our west coast next year or the year after is liable to be twice as
big as the one we beat back.”
“I was afraid you’d say that,” Lanius said.
“Believe me, Your Majesty, I would rather lie to you,” Grus said. “But
that happens to be the truth.”
“Did I ever tell you I found out what King Cathartes had to say about
the Scepter of Mercy?” Lanius asked suddenly.
“Why, no. You never did.” King Grus smiled a crooked smile. “Up until
this minute, as a matter of fact, I wouldn’t have bet anything I worried
about losing that I’d ever even heard of King, uh, Cathartes.”
“I would have said the same thing, until I found a letter of his in the
archives while you were on campaign,” Lanius said. Grus smiled that
crooked smile again; like Lanius’ fondness for strange pets, his
archivescrawling amused his fellow king. But Grus’ expression grew more
serious as he heard Lanius out. Lanius finished, “Now maybe we have some
idea why the Banished One hasn’t tried to turn the Scepter against
us.”
“Maybe we do,” Grus agreed. “That’s . . . some very pretty thinking,
Your Majesty, and you earned what you got. How many crates full of
worthless old parchments did you go through before you came on that
one?”
“Seventeen,” Lanius answered promptly.
Grus laughed. “I might have known you’d have the number on the tip of
your tongue. You usually do.” He spoke with a curious blend of scorn and
admiration.
Lanius said, “One of the parchments turned out not to be worthless,
though, so it was worth doing. And who knows whether another will mean a
lot a hundred years from now, and who knows which one it might be? That’s
why we save them.”
“Hmm.” Grus stopped laughing. Instead of arguing or teasing Lanius some
more, he changed the subject. “Did that monkey of yours ever have
babies?”
“She did—twins, just like the moncats,” Lanius answered. “They seem to
be doing well.”
“Good for her,” Grus said. “Good for you, too. I’ve been thinking about
what you said, about how breeding animals shows you’re really doing a good
job of caring for them. It makes sense to me.”
“Well, thank you,” Lanius said. “Would you like to see the little
monkeys?”
Grus started to shake his head. He checked the gesture, but not quite
soon enough. But when he said, “Yes, show them to me,” he managed to sound
more eager than Lanius had thought he could.
And the smile that spread over his face when he saw the young monkeys
couldn’t have been anything but genuine. Lanius also smiled when he saw
them, though for him, of course, it was far from the first time. Nobody
could look at them without smiling. He was convinced of that. They were
all eyes and curiosity, staring at him and Grus and then scurrying across
the six inches they’d ventured away from their mother to cling to her fur
with both hands, both feet, and their tails.
“They act a lot like children. They look a lot like children, too,”
Grus said. “Anybody would think, looking at them, that there was some kind
of a connection between monkeys and people.”
“Maybe the gods made them about the same time as they made us, and used
some of the same ideas,” Lanius said. “Or maybe it’s just happenstance.
How can we ever hope to know?”
“The gods . . .” Grus’ voice trailed off in a peculiar way. For a
moment, Lanius didn’t understand. Then he did, and wished he hadn’t. What
if it wasn’t
the gods, but only Milvago—only the Banished One?
He forced that thought out of his mind, not because he didn’t believe
it but because he didn’t want to think about it. This was another of the
times when at least half of him wished he’d never stumbled upon that
ancient piece of parchment under the great cathedral. Had finding it been
worth doing?
“Anyhow,” Grus said, “I’m very glad for your sake that your monkeys
have bred. I know you’ve done a lot of hard work keeping them healthy, and
it seems only fair that you’ve gotten your reward.”
“Thank you very much.” At first, Grus’ thoughtfulness touched Lanius.
Then he realized the other king might be doing nothing more than leading
both of them away from thoughts of Milvago. He couldn’t blame Grus for
thinking along with him, and for not wanting to think about what a
daunting foe they had. He didn’t care to do that himself, either.
Rain pattered down outside the palace. In one hallway, rain pattered
down
inside the palace. A bucket caught the drips. When the rain
stopped, the roofers would repair the leak—if they could find it when the
rain wasn’t there. Grus had seen that sort of thing before. Odds were, the
roofers would need at least four tries—and the roof would go right on
leaking until they got it right.
Turning to Pterocles, Grus asked, “I don’t suppose there’s any way to
find leaks by magic, is there?”
“Leaks, Your Majesty?” Pterocles looked puzzled. Grus pointed to the
bucket. The wizard’s face cleared, but he shook his head. “I don’t think
anyone ever worried about it up until now.”
“No? Too bad.” They turned a corner. Grus got around to what he really
wanted to talk about. “You’ve never said anything about the letter I gave
you—the one from Alca the witch. What do you think of her notions for new
ways to shape spells to cure thralls?”
“I don’t think she’s as smart as she thinks she is,” Pterocles answered
at once. He went on, “She doesn’t understand what being a thrall is
like.”
“And you do?”
Grus had intended that for sarcasm, but Pterocles nodded. “Oh, yes,
Your Majesty. I may not understand much, but I do understand that.” The
conviction in his voice commanded respect. Maybe he was wrong. He
certainly thought he was right. Considering what had happened to him,
maybe he was entitled to think so, too.
Backtracking, Grus asked, “Can you use anything in the letter?”
“A bit of this, a dash of that.” Pterocles shrugged. “She’s clever, but
she doesn’t understand. And I have some ideas of my own.”
“Do you?” Grus wished he didn’t sound so surprised. “You haven’t talked
much about them.” That was an understatement of formidable proportions.
Pterocles had shown no signs of having ideas of any sort since being
felled outside of Nishevatz.
He shrugged again. “Sometimes things go better if you don’t talk about
them too soon or too much,” he said vaguely.
“I ... see,” said Grus, who wasn’t at all sure he did. “When will you
be ready to test some of your ideas? Soon, I hope?”
“I don’t know,” the wizard said. “I’ll be ready when I’m ready— that’s
all I can tell you.”
Grus felt himself getting angry. “Well, let me tell
you something. If you’re not ready with your own ideas, why don’t
you go ahead and try the ones the witch sent me?”
“Why? Because they won’t work, that’s why,” Pterocles answered.
“How can you say that without trying them?”
“If I walk out into the sea, I’ll drown. I don’t need to try it to be
sure of that. I know beforehand,” Pterocles said. “I may not be quite what
I was, but I’m not the worst wizard around, either. And I know some things
I didn’t used to know, too.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Grus demanded.
“I’ve already told you.” Pterocles sounded impatient. “I know what it’s
like to be emptied out. I ought to. It’s happened to me. Your Alca’s a
good enough witch, but she doesn’t
know.” Again, he spoke with absolute conviction. If only he spoke that way when he really has to do
something, Grus thought unhappily. But he was the one who turned
away. Pterocles at least thought he knew what he was doing. Grus had a
pretty good idea of how far he could push a man. If he pushed Pterocles
any further here, he’d put the wizard’s back up, but he wouldn’t get him
to change his mind.
At his impatient gesture, Pterocles ambled back down the hall. Grus
wondered whether the wizard would bump into the bucket that caught the
drips from the roof, but he didn’t. Grus also wondered whether he ought to
pension Pterocles off, or just send him away. If he did, though, would
whomever he picked as a replacement prove any better? Alca would. How many times had he had that thought? But, for
one thing, no matter how true it was, Estrilda would make his life not
worth living if he tried it. And was it as true as he thought it was?
Pterocles had a different opinion. What if he was right? Grus muttered
under his breath. He wasn’t sure he could rely on Pterocles to remember
his name twice running, let alone anything more.
And yet Pterocles had warned of the storm the Banished One raised, out
there on the Azanian Sea. Grus had listened to him then, and the fleet had
come back to shore without taking much harm. Yes, and the Chernagor ships got away, the king thought. But
that wasn’t Pterocles’ fault. Was it? Surely blame there belonged to the
Banished One? Grus didn’t know what to believe. He ended up doing nothing,
and wondering every day whether he was making a mistake and how big a
mistake it was. If only I hadn’t taken Alca to bed. If only her husband hadn’t
found out. If only my wife hadn’t found out. If only, if only, if
only . . .
Lanius threw a snowball at Crex. He didn’t come close to hitting his
son. Crex scooped up snow in his little mittened hands. He launched a
snowball at Lanius, whose vision suddenly turned white. “
Got you!” Crex squealed, laughing gleefully.
“Yes, you did.” Lanius wiped snow off his face. “Bet you can’t do it
again.” A moment later, Crex proved him wrong.
After taking three more snowballs in the face—and managing to hit his
son once—Lanius had had enough. He himself had never been accused of
grace. There were good reasons why not, too. Grus, on the other hand, made
a perfectly respectable soldier—perhaps not among the very best, but more
than able to hold his own. Through Sosia, Crex looked to have inherited
that blood.
The boy didn’t want the sport to end; he was having fun pelting his
father with snow. But Lanius couldn’t stand being beaten at a game by a
boy who barely came up to his navel. “Not fair!” Crex squalled, and burst
into tears.
That tempted Lanius to leave him out in the snow. But no, it wouldn’t
do. Losing a game wasn’t excuse enough for freezing his son.
If I were a great and terrible tyrant, I could get away with it,
Lanius thought. But he wasn’t, and he never would be, and so Crex, quite
unfrozen even if still loudly discontented, went back into the palace with
him.
A handful of apricots preserved in honey made Crex forget about the
game. Lanius paid the bribe for the sake of peace and quiet. Sosia
probably wouldn’t have approved, but Sosia probably had too much sense to
get into a snowball fight with their son. If she didn’t, she probably
could throw well enough to give as good as she got. Lanius couldn’t. I’m no good with the bow, either, he thought glumly. The only
time he’d ever thrown something when it really counted, though, he’d
managed to pitch a moncat into the face of the knife-wielding thrall who
intended to murder him. Remembering that made the king feel a little
better—not much, but a little.
Feeling better must not have shown on his face, for several servants
asked him what was wrong when he walked through the palace corridors.
“Nothing,” he said, over and over, hoping he would start to believe it
before long. He didn’t, but kept saying it anyhow.
Most of the servants nodded and went on their way. They weren’t about
to contradict the king. When he said, “Nothing,” to Cristata, though, she
shook her head and said, “I don’t believe you, Your Majesty. You look too
gloomy for it to be nothing.”
Lanius needed serious thought to realize Cristata spoke to him as a
worried friend might. He couldn’t remember the last time anyone had spoken
to him like that. Kings didn’t have friends, as far as he could see. They
had cronies. Or maybe they had lovers.
That thought had crossed his mind before. Of course, Cristata had had
Prince Ortalis for a lover. If that wasn’t enough to put her off royalty
for life, what would be? But she still sounded . . . friendly as she
asked, “What
is wrong, Your Majesty?”
Because she sounded as though she really cared, Lanius found himself
telling her the truth. When he was done, he waited for her to laugh at
him.
Only later did he realize how foolish that was. A maidservant didn’t
laugh at a King of Avornis, even at one without much power. But friendship
left him oddly vulnerable to her. If she had laughed, he wouldn’t have
punished her and he would have been wounded.
But she didn’t. All she said was, “Oh, dear. That must seem very
strange to you.” She sounded sympathetic. Lanius needed longer than he
might have to recognize that, too. He wasn’t used to sympathy from anybody
except, sometimes, Sosia.
He didn’t want to think about Sosia right this minute, not while he
savored Cristata’s sympathy.
Grus probably didn’t want to think about Sosia’s mother while he was
with Alca, either, Lanius thought. Looking at the way Cristata’s eyes
sparkled, at how very inviting her lips were, Lanius understood what had
happened to his fellow king much better than he ever had before.
When he leaned forward and kissed her, he waited for her to scream or
to run away or to bite him. After Ortalis, why wouldn’t she? But she
didn’t. Her eyes widened in surprise, then slid shut. Her arms tightened
around him as his did around her. “I wondered if you’d do that,” she
murmured.
“Did you?” Now Lanius was the one who wondered if he ought to run
away.
But Cristata nodded seriously. “You don’t think I’m ugly.”
“Ugly? By the gods, no!” Lanius exclaimed.
“Well, then,” Cristata said. She looked up and down the corridor.
Lanius did the same thing. No one in sight. He didn’t think anyone had
seen them kiss. But someone might come down the hallway at any time. His
heart pounded with nerves—and with excitement.
Now, for once, he didn’t want to think. He opened the closest door. It
was one of the dozens of nearly identical storerooms in the palace, this
one half full of rolled carpets. He went inside, still wondering if
Cristata would flee. She didn’t. She stepped in beside him. He closed the
door.
It was gloomy in the storeroom; the air smelled of wool and dust.
Lanius kissed the serving girl again. She clung to him. “I knew you were
sweet, Your Majesty,” she whispered.
Were those footsteps on the other side of the door? Yes. But they
didn’t hesitate; they just went on. And so did Lanius. He tugged
Cristata’s tunic up and off over her head, then bent to kiss her breasts
and their darker, firmer tips. Her breath sighed out.
But when he put his arms around her again, he hesitated and almost
recoiled. He’d expected to stroke smooth, soft skin. Her back was anything
but smooth and soft.
She noticed his hands falter, and knew what that had to mean. “Do you
want to stop?” she asked. “Do you want me to go?”
“Hush,” he answered roughly. “I’ll show you what I want.” He set her
hand where she could have no possible doubt. She rubbed gently.
Before long, he laid her down on the floor and poised himself above
her. “Oh,” she whispered. She might have been louder after that, but his
lips came down on hers and muffled whatever noises she would have made . .
. and, presently, whatever noises he would have.
Afterwards, they both dressed quickly. “That’s—what it’s supposed to be
like, I think,” Cristata said.
It had certainly seemed that way to Lanius. Now, of course, he was
screaming at himself because of the way he’d just complicated his life.
But, with the afterglow still on him, he couldn’t make himself believe it
hadn’t been worth it. They kissed again, just for a heartbeat. Cristata
slipped out of the storeroom. When Lanius heard nothing in the hallway, he
did, too. He grinned, a mix of pleasure and relief. He’d gotten away with
it.
Grus turned to Estrilda. “The cooks did a really good job with that
boar, don’t you think?” he said, licking his mustache to get all the
flavorful grease.
His wife nodded. Then she said, “If you think it was good, shouldn’t
you tell Ortalis and not me?”
“Should I?” The king frowned. “You’re usually harder on him than I am.
Why should I say anything to him that I don’t have to?”
“Fair is fair,” Estrilda answered. “You . . . did what you did when he
... made a mistake. When he goes hunting, he’s probably not making that
particular mistake. And shouldn’t you notice him when he does something
well?”
“If he did things well more often, I
would notice him more.” Grus sighed, then nodded reluctantly.
“You’re right. I wish I could tell you you weren’t, but you are. The meat
is good, and he made the kill. I’ll thank him for it.”
On the way to Ortalis’ room, he asked several servants if the prince
was there. None of them knew. He got the idea none of them cared. He
didn’t suppose he could blame the women. The men? Ortalis seemed to have a
gift for antagonizing everyone.
That’s not good in a man who’ll be king one day, Grus thought.
Not good at all.
He knocked on Ortalis’ door. When no one answered, he tried the latch.
The door opened. The sweet smell of wine filled the room, and under it a
gamier odor that said Ortalis hadn’t bathed recently enough. Grus’ son
cradled a wine cup in his lap like the son he’d never had. An empty jar of
wine lay on its side at his feet. One with a dipper in it stood beside the
stool on which he perched.
Ortalis looked up blearily. “What d’you want?” he slurred.
“I came to thank you for the fine boar you brought home,” Grus
answered. “How long have you been drinking?”
“Not long enough,” his son said. “You going to pound on me for it?” He
raised the cup and took another swig.
“No. I have no reason to,” Grus said. “Drinking by yourself is stupid,
but it’s not vicious. And if you do enough of it, it turns into its own
punishment when you finally stop. Once you sober up, you’ll wish your head
would fall off.”
Ortalis shrugged. That he could shrug without hurting himself only
proved he wasn’t close to sobering up yet. “Why don’t you go away?” he
said. “Haven’t you done enough to make my life miserable?”
“I said you shouldn’t hurt women for the fun of it. I showed you some
of what getting hurt was like. You didn’t much care for that,” Grus said.
“If you’re miserable on account of what I did . . . too bad.” He’d started
to say
I’m sorry, but caught himself, for he wasn’t.
His son glared at him. “And didn’t you have fun, giving me my
lesson?”
“No, by Olor’s beard!” Grus burst out. “I wanted to be sick
afterwards.”
By the way Ortalis laughed, he didn’t believe a word of it. Grus turned
away from his son and strode out of the room. Behind him, Ortalis went on
laughing. Grus closed the door, dampening the sound. Praising Ortalis’
hunting wouldn’t heal the rift between them. Would anything? He had his
doubts.
Not for the first time, he wondered about making Anser legitimate. That
would solve some of his problems. Regretfully, he shook his head. It would
hatch more than it solved, not just with Ortalis but also with Estrilda
and Lanius. No, he was stuck with the legitimate son he had, and with the
son-in-law, too. He wondered if Crex, his grandson, would live to be king,
and what kind of king he would make.
Wonder was all Grus would ever do. He was sure of that. By the time
Crex put the royal crown on his head and ascended to the Diamond Throne,
Grus knew he would be gone from the scene. I
haven’t done enough, he thought. Bringing the unruly Avornan
nobles back under the control of the government was important. He’d taken
some strong steps in that direction. He’d fought the Thervings to a
standstill, until King Dagipert gave up the war. King Berto, gods be
praised, really was more interested in praying than fighting. But letting
the Banished One keep and extend his foothold in the land of the
Chernagors would be a disaster.
And, ever since Grus’ days as a river-galley captain down in the south,
he’d wanted a reckoning with the Menteshe, a reckoning on their side of
the Stura River and not on his. He hadn’t gotten that yet. He didn’t know
if he ever would. If his wizards couldn’t protect his men from being made
into thralls after crossing the Stura, if they couldn’t cure the thralls
laboring for the Menteshe, how could he hope to cross the border?
If he couldn’t cross the Stura, how could he even dream about
recovering the Scepter of Mercy? He couldn’t, and he knew it. If he got it
back, Avornis would remember him forever. If he failed ... If he failed,
Avornis would still remember him—as a doomed fool.
CHAPTER TEN
Outside the royal palace, snow swirled through the air. The wind
howled. When people had to move about, they put on fur-lined boots, heavy
cloaks, fur hats with earflaps, and sometimes wool mufflers to protect
their mouths and noses. King Lanius didn’t think the Banished One was
giving the city of Avornis a particularly hard winter, but this was a
nasty blizzard.
It was chilly inside the palace, too. Braziers and fires could do only
so much. The cold slipped in through windows and around doors. Lanius
worried about the baby monkeys. Even the grown ones were vulnerable in the
wintertime. But all the little animals seemed healthy, and the babies got
bigger by the day.
Lanius didn’t worry about them as much as he might have. He had other
things on his mind—not least, how to go on with his affair with Cristata
without letting Sosia find out about it. Cristata, he discovered, worried
about that much less than he did. “She’ll learn sooner or later, Your
Majesty,” she said. “It can’t help but happen.”
Knowing she was right, Lanius shook his head anyhow. They lay side by
side in that same little storeroom—this time on one of the carpets, which
they’d unrolled; the floor was cold. “What would happen then?” the king
said.
“You’d have to send me away, I suppose.” Cristata had few illusions. “I
hope you’d pick somewhere nice, a place where I could get by easy enough.
Maybe you could even help me find a husband.”
He didn’t want to think of her in some other man’s arms. He wanted her
in his. Holding her, he said, “I
will take care of you.”
She studied him before slowly nodding. “Yes, I think you will. That’s
good.”
“If I don’t find you a husband, I’ll be your husband,” Lanius said.
Cristata’s eyes opened enormously wide. “You would do that?” she
whispered.
“Why not?” he said. “First wives are for legitimate heirs, and I have
one. I may get more. It’s not that Sosia and I turn our backs on each
other when we go to bed. We don’t. I wouldn’t lie to you. But second
wives, and later ones, can be for fun.”
“Would I be ... a queen?” Cristata asked. Not long before, she’d been
impressed at having almost enough to count as a taxpayer. She seemed to
need a moment to realize how far above even that previously unimaginable
status she might rise.
“Yes, you would.” Lanius nodded. “But you wouldn’t have the rank Sosia
does.”
Any more than I have the rank Grus does, he thought
unhappily.
Up until this moment, he’d never imagined taking a second wife. The
King of Avornis was allowed six, as King Olor in the heavens had six
wives. But, just as Queen Quelea was Olor’s principal spouse, so most
Kings of Avornis contented themselves with a single wife. King Mergus,
Lanius’ father, hadn’t, but King Mergus had been desperate to find a woman
who would give him a son and heir. He’d been so desperate, he’d made
Lanius’ mother, a concubine, his seventh wife to make the boy she bore
legitimate. He’d also made himself a heretic and Lanius a bastard in the
eyes of a large part of the ecclesiastical hierarchy.
Mergus’ troubles had gone a long way toward souring his son on the idea
of having more than one wife . . . until now.
It wouldn’t be adultery then, he thought.
But if it’s not, would it still be as much fun?
Grus could have wed Alca. He’d sent her away, instead. That, without a
doubt, was Queen Estrilda’s doing. Would Queen Sosia’s views be any more
accommodating than her mother’s? Lanius dared hope. They could hardly be
less.
Cristata asked, “What will Her Majesty say if you do that?” She’d
thought along with him, then.
“She has a right to complain if I take a mistress,” Lanius answered.
“If I take another wife, though, how can she be upset?” He could, in fact,
think of several ways. But he wanted to keep things as simple as possible
for Cristata.
She, however, seemed able to see complications without him pointing
them out. “She’s King Grus’ daughter,” she said. “What will the other king
do?”
“He may grumble, but how could he do more?” Lanius said. “How can he
fuss much about what I do after the way he carried on winter before
this?”
“People
always manage to forget what they did and to fuss about what
other people do,” Cristata said, words that held an unpleasant ring of
truth.
To stop thinking about that, Lanius kissed her. The medicine worked so
well, he gave himself a second dose, and then a third. One thing led to
another, and he and Cristata didn’t leave the storeroom for quite a
while.
“Tell me I’m not hearing this.” Grus’ head ached as though he’d had too
much wine, but he hadn’t had any. “A second wife? A serving girl my own
son abused? Why, in the name of the gods?”
“I said, if I can’t find her a husband that suits her,” Lanius
answered.
“You told
her that?” Grus asked. Lanius nodded. Grus groaned. “What makes
you think she’ll find anyone else ‘suitable’ if she has the chance to be a
queen?”
Lanius frowned. Grus recognized the frown—it was thoughtful. Hadn’t
that occurred to him? Maybe it hadn’t. At last, he said, “Have you paid
any attention to Cristata? Say what you will about her, she’s honest.”
“She’s certainly made you think she is, anyhow,” Grus said. “Whether
that’s the same thing is a different question. And here’s one more for
you—why are you doing this to my daughter?”
“Who knows just why a man and a woman do what they do?” Lanius
answered. “Why did you do
this to your wife, for instance?”
Grus gritted his teeth. He might have known Lanius would find that
particular question. As a matter of fact, he had known it, even if he
hadn’t wanted to admit it to himself. Now he had to find an answer for it.
His first try was an evasion. “That’s different,” he said.
“Yes, it is,” Lanius agreed. “You exiled your other woman. I want to
marry mine. Which of us has the advantage there?”
“You’re not being fair,” Grus said, flicked on a sore spot. He wasn’t
happy about what he’d done about—with—to—Alca, and wasn’t proud of it,
either. It had been the only way he saw to keep peace with Estrilda. That
might have made it necessary, but he had the bad feeling it didn’t make it
right.
The other king shrugged. “I never said anything—not a word— about what
you did with your women up until now. You might have the courtesy to stay
out of my business, too.”
“It’s also my business, you know,” Grus said. “You’re married to my
daughter. I know Sosia’s not happy about this. She’s told me so.”
“She’s told me so, too,” Lanius admitted. “But
I’d be happier with Cristata than without her. I’m King of
Avornis ... I think. Don’t I get to decide anything at all about how I
live—Your Majesty?”
When Grus used the royal title with Lanius, he was usually being
polite. When Lanius used it with Grus—which he seldom did—he was usually
being reproachful. Grus felt his face heat. He held his hands a few inches
apart. “Only about this much of you is ‘happier’ with this girl. You’re
thinking with your crotch, not with your head. That isn’t like you.”
Lanius turned red, but he didn’t change his mind. “Well, what if I am?”
he said. “I’m not the only one who ever has.” He looked straight at
Grus. He’s going to do this, Grus realized.
He’s not going to pay attention to me telling him no. What can I do
about it? He saw one thing he might try, and said, “Go talk to Anser
about this. He’s closer to your age, but I think he’d also tell you it’s
not a good idea.”
“I like Anser. Don’t get me wrong—I do,” Lanius said. “I like him, but
I know he’d tell me whatever you tell him to tell me. And we both know
he’s arch-hallow on account of that, not because he’s holy.”
“Yes.” Grus admitted in private what he never would in public. “Even
so, I swear to you, Lanius, I have not spoken with him about this.
Whatever he says, he will say, and that’s all there is to it. Talk to him.
He has good sense—and you, right now, don’t.”
“When you say I don’t have good sense, you mean I’m not doing what you
want me to,” Lanius said, but then he shrugged. “All right. I’ll talk to
him. But he won’t change my mind.”
Back stiff with defiance, Lanius went off to the cathedral. Grus waited
until he was sure the other king had left the palace, then pointed to
three or four servants. “Fetch me the serving woman named Cristata,” he
told them. His voice held the snap of command. They hurried away.
Before long, one of them led her into the little audience chamber.
“Oh!” she said in surprise when she saw Grus. “When he told me the king
wanted to see me, I thought he meant—”
“Lanius,” Grus said, and Cristata nodded. He went on, “Well, I do.” He
could see why Lanius wanted her, too, and why Ortalis had. But that had
nothing to do with anything. He went on, “Are you really bound and
determined to become Queen of Avornis, or would being quietly set up for
life in a provincial town be enough to satisfy you?”
If she said she
was bound and determined to be Lanius’ queen, Grus knew his own
life would get more difficult. She paused to consider before she answered.
She’s not stupid, either, Grus thought.
Is she smart enough to see when she’s well off? Or is she as
head-over-heels for Lanius as he is for her?
She said, “I’ll go, Your Majesty. If I stay, I’ll have you for an
enemy, won’t I? I don’t want that. Anyone in Avornis would be a fool to
want you for an enemy, and I hope I’m not a fool.”
“You’re not,” Grus assured her. “ ‘Enemy,’ I think, goes too far. But I
am going to protect my own family as best I can. Wouldn’t you do the
same?”
“Probably,” Cristata answered. “I have to trust you, don’t I, about
what ‘quietly set for life’ means? You were generous paying for what
Ortalis did.”
Grus found himself liking her. She had nerve, to bargain with someone
with so much more power—and to make him feel guilty for using it. He said,
“By the gods, Cristata, I won’t cheat you. Believe me or not, as you
please.” When she nodded, he went on, “We have a bargain, then?” She
nodded again. So did he. “Gather up whatever you need to take with you. If
we’re going to do this, I want you gone before Lanius can call you
again.”
“Yes, I can see how you might.” Cristata sighed. “I
will miss him. He’s . . . sweet. But you could have done a lot
worse to me, couldn’t you?”
Only after she was gone did Grus realize that last wasn’t necessarily
praise.
“You . . . You . . .” Lanius’ fury rose up and choked him. What he
could do about it, however, knew some very sharp bounds. Grus was the one
with the power, and he’d just used it.
“Think whatever you like,” he said now. “Call me whatever you like. If
you’re going to take serving girls to bed now and again, I won’t fuss,
though Sosia might. You’re a man. It happens. I ought to know.”
His calm words gave Lanius’ rage nowhere to light. Absurdly, Lanius
realized he never had taken Cristata to
bed. Coupling on the floor, even on a carpet, wasn’t the same. “I
love her!” he exclaimed.
“She’s nice-looking. She’s clever. She’s got spirit,” Grus said. “And
you picked her out yourself. You didn’t have her forced on you. No wonder
you had a good time with her. But love? Don’t be too sure.”
“What do you know about it, you—?” Lanius called him the vilest names
he knew.
“I think you’re sweet, too,” Grus answered calmly. Lanius gaped. Grus
went on, “What do I know about it? Oh, a little something, maybe. Cristata
reminds me more than a little of Anser’s mother.”
“Oh,” Lanius said. Try as he would to stay outraged, he had trouble.
Maybe Grus did know what he was talking about after all. Lanius went on,
“You still had no business—none, do you hear me?—interfering in my affairs
. . . and you can take that last however you want.”
“Don’t be silly,” Grus answered, still calm. “Of course I did. You’re
married to my daughter. You’re my grandchildren’s father. If you do
something that’s liable to hurt them, of course I’ll try to stop you.”
Lanius hadn’t expected him to be quite so frank. He wondered whether
that frankness made things better or worse. “You have no shame at all, do
you?” he said.
“Where my family is concerned? Very little, though I’ve probably been
too soft on Ortalis over the years,” Grus said. “He’s embarrassed me more
times than I wish he had, but that isn’t what you meant, and I know it
isn’t. I’ll do whatever I think I have to do. If you want to be angry at
me, go ahead. You’re entitled to.” And no matter how angry you are, you can’t do anything about
it. That was the other thing Grus meant. He was right, too, as Lanius
knew only too well. His impotence was at times more galling than at
others. This . . . He couldn’t even protect a woman he still insisted to
himself he loved. What could be more humiliating than that? Nothing he
could think of. • “Where did you send her?” he asked after a long
silence.
Some of the tension went out of Grus’ shoulders. He must have realized
he’d won. He said, “You know I won’t tell you that. You’ll find out sooner
or later, but you won’t be up in arms about it by the time you do.”
His obvious assumption that he knew exactly how Lanius worked only
irked the younger man more. So did the alarming suspicion that he might be
right. Lanius said, “At least tell me how much you’re giving her. Is she
really taken care of?”
“You don’t need to worry about that.” Grus named a sum. Lanius blinked;
he might not have been so generous himself. Grus set a hand on his
shoulder. He shook it off. Grus shrugged. “I told you, I’m not going to
get angry at you, and you can go right ahead and be angry at me. We’ll
sort it out later.”
“Will we?” Lanius said tonelessly, but Grus had turned away. He wasn’t
even listening anymore.
Lanius slept by himself that night. Sosia hadn’t wanted to sleep beside
him since finding out about Cristata. He didn’t care to sleep by her now,
either. He knew he would have to make peace sooner or later, but sooner or
later wasn’t yet.
He thought he woke in the middle of the night. Then he realized it was
a dream, but not the sort of dream he would have wanted. The Banished
One’s inhumanly cold, inhumanly beautiful features stared at him.
“You see what your friends are worth?” the Banished One asked with a
mocking laugh. “Who has hurt you worse—Grus, or I?”
“You hurt the whole kingdom,” Lanius answered.
“Who cares about the kingdom? Who has hurt
you?”
“Go away,” Lanius said uselessly.
“You can have your revenge,” the Banished One went on, as though the
king hadn’t said a word. “You can make Grus pay, you can make Grus weep,
for what he has done to you. Think on it. You can make him suffer, as he
has made you suffer. The chance for vengeance is given to few men. Reach
out with both hands and take it.”
Lanius would have liked nothing better than revenge. He’d already had
flights of fantasy filled with nothing else. But, even dreaming, he
understood that anything the Banished One wanted was something to be wary
of. And so, not without a certain regret, he said “No.”
“Fool! Ass! Knave! Jackanapes! Wretch who lives only for a day, and
will not make himself happy for some puny part of his puny little life!”
the Banished One cried. “Die weeping, then, and have what you
deserve!”
The next thing Lanius knew, he was awake again, and drenched in sweat
despite the winter chill. He wished the Banished One would choose to
afflict someone else. He himself was getting to know the one who had been
Milvago much too well.
Land-travel in winter was sometimes easier than it was in spring or
fall. In winter, rain didn’t turn roads to mud. Land travel was sometimes
also the only choice in winter, for the rivers near the city of Avornis
could freeze. After Grus’ troubles with Lanius, he was glad to get away
from the capital any way he could. If the other king tried to get out of
line, he would hear about it and deal with it before anything too drastic
could happen. He had no doubt of that.
Once Grus reached the unfrozen portion of the Granicus, he went faster
still—by river galley downstream to the seaside port of Dodona. The man
who met him at the quays was neither bureaucrat nor politician, neither
general nor commodore. Plegadis was a shipwright and carpenter, the best
Avornis had.
“So she’s ready for me to see, is she?” Grus said.
Plegadis nodded. He was a sun-darkened, broad-shouldered man with
engagingly ugly features, a nose that had once been straighter than it was
now, and a dark brown bushy beard liberally streaked with gray. “Do you
really need to ask, Your Majesty?” he said, pointing. “Stands out from
everything else we make, doesn’t she?”
“Oh, just a bit,” Grus answered. “Yes, just a bit.”
Plegadis laughed out loud. Grus stared at the Avornan copy of a
Chernagor pirate ship. Sure enough, it towered over everything else tied
up at the quays of Dodona. To someone used to the low, sleek lines of
river galleys, it looked blocky, even ugly, but Grus had seen what ships
like this were worth.
“Is she as sturdy as she looks?” the king asked.
“I should hope so.” The shipwright sounded offended. “I didn’t just
copy her shape, Your Majesty. I matched lines and timber and canvas, too,
as best I could. She’s ready to take to the open sea, and to do as well as
a Chernagor ship would.”
Grus nodded. “That’s what I wanted. How soon can I have more just like
her—a proper fleet?”
“Give me the timber and the carpenters and it won’t be too long— middle
of summer, maybe,” Plegadis answered. “Getting sailors who know what
they’re doing in a ship like this . . . That’ll take a little while,
too.”
“I understand.” Grus eyed the tall, tall masts. “Handling all that
canvas will take a lot of practice by itself.”
“We do have some Chernagor prisoners to teach us the ropes,” Plegadis
said. When a shipwright used that phrase, he wasn’t joking or spitting out
a clichй. He meant exactly what the words implied.
He wasn’t joking, but was he being careful enough? “Have you had a
wizard check these Chernagors?” Grus asked. “We may have some of the same
worries with them that we do with the Menteshe, and even with the thralls.
I’m not saying we will, but we may.”
Plegadis’ grimace showed a broken front tooth. “I didn’t even think of
that, Your Majesty, but I’ll see to it, I promise you. What I was going to
tell you is, some of the fishermen here make better crew for this
Chernagor ship than a lot of river-galley men. They know what to do with a
good-sized sail, where on a galley it’s row, row, row all the time.”
“Yes, I can see how that might be so.” Grus looked east, out to the
Azanian Sea. It seemed to go on and on forever. He’d felt that even more
strongly when he went out on it in a river galley. He’d also felt badly
out of his element. He’d gotten away with fighting on the sea, but he
wasn’t eager to try it again in ships not made for it.
Would I be more ready to try it in a monster like that? he
wondered.
Once I had a good crew, I think I might be. Out loud, he went on,
“I don’t care where the men come from, as long as you get them.”
“Good. That’s the right attitude.” Plegadis nodded. “We have to lick
those Chernagor bastards. I’m not fussy about how. They did us a lot of
harm, and they’d better find out they can’t get away with nonsense like
that. I’ll tell you something else, too. Along this coast, plenty of
fishermen’ll think an ordinary sailor’s wages look pretty good, poor
miserable devils.”
“I believe it,” Grus answered. The eastern coast was Avornis’ forgotten
land. If a king wanted to make a man disappear, he sent him to the Maze.
If a man wanted to disappear on his own, he came to the coast. Even tax
collectors often overlooked this part of the kingdom. Grus knew he had
until the Chernagors descended on it. He added, “If all this makes us tie
the coast to the rest of Avornis, some good will have come from it.”
To his surprise, Plegadis hesitated before nodding again. “Well, I
think so, too, Your Majesty, or I suppose I do. But you’ll find people up
and down the coast who won’t. They
like being ... on their own, you might say.”
“How did they like it when the pirates burned their towns and stole
their silver and raped their women?” Grus asked. “They were glad enough to
see us after that.”
“Oh, yes.” The shipwright’s smile was as crooked as that tooth of his.
“But they got over it pretty quick.” Grus started to smile. He started to,
but he didn’t. Once again, Plegadis hadn’t been joking.
When all else failed, King Lanius took refuge in the archives. No one
bothered him there, and when he concentrated on old documents he didn’t
have to dwell on whatever else was bothering him. Over the years, going
there had served him well. But it didn’t come close to easing the pain of
losing Cristata.
And it wasn’t just the pain of losing her. He recognized that. Part of
it was also the humiliation of being unable to do anything for someone he
loved. If Grus had ravished her in front of his eyes, it could hardly have
been worse. Grus hadn’t, of course. He’d been humane, especially compared
to what he might have done. He’d even made Lanius see his point of view,
but so what? Cristata was still gone, she still wouldn’t be back, and
Lanius still bitterly missed her.
Next to that ache in his heart, even finding another letter as
interesting and important as King Cathartes’ probably wouldn’t have meant
much to him. As things turned out, most of what Lanius did find was dull.
There were days when he could plow through tax receipts and stay
interested, but those were days when he was in a better mood than he was
now. He found himself alternately yawning and scowling.
He fought his way through a few sets of receipts, as much from duty as
anything else. But then he shook his head, gave up, and buried his face in
his hands. If he gave in to self-pity here, at least he could do it
without anyone else seeing.
When he raised his head again, sharp curiosity—and the beginnings of
alarm—replaced the self-pity. Any noise he heard in the archives was out
of the ordinary. And any noise he heard here could be a warning of
something dangerous. If one of the thralls had escaped . . .
He turned his head this way and that, trying to pinpoint the noise. It
wasn’t very loud, and it didn’t seem to come from very high off the
ground. “Mouse,” Lanius muttered, and tried to make himself believe
it.
He’d nearly succeeded when a sharp clatter drove such thoughts from his
mind. Mice didn’t carry metal objects—knives?—or knock them against wood.
Today, Lanius had a knife at his own belt. But he was neither warrior nor
assassin, as he knew all too well.
“Who’s there?” he called, slipping the knife from its sheath and
sliding forward as quietly as he could. Only silence answered him. He
peered ahead. Almost anything smaller than an elephant could have hidden
in the archives. He’d never fully understood what
higgledy-piggledy meant until he started coming in here. He often
wondered whether anyone ever read half the parchments various officials
wrote. Sometimes it seemed as though the parchments just ended up here, on
shelves and in boxes and barrels and leather sacks and sometimes even
wide-mouthed pottery jugs all stacked one atop another with scant regard
for sanity or safety.
Elephants Lanius didn’t much worry about. An elephant would have had to
go through a winepress before it could squeeze between the stacks of
documents and receptacles. Assassins, unfortunately, weren’t likely to be
so handicapped.
“Who’s there?” the king called again, his voice breaking nervously.
Again, no answer, not with words. But he did hear another metallic
clatter, down close to the ground.
That made him wonder. There were assassins, and then there were . . .
He made the noise he used when he was about to feed the moncats. Sure
enough, out came one of the beasts, this time carrying not a wooden spoon
but a long-handled silver dipper for lifting soup from a pot or wine from
a barrel.
“You idiot animal!” Lanius exclaimed. Unless he was wildly mistaken,
this was the same moncat that had frightened him in here before. He
pointed an accusing finger at it. “How did you get out this time, Pouncer?
And how did you get into the kitchens and then out of them again?”
“Rowr,” Pouncer said, which didn’t explain enough.
Lanius made the feeding noise again. Still clutching the dipper, the
moncat came over to him. He grabbed it. It hung on to its prize, but
didn’t seem otherwise upset. That noise meant food most of the time. If,
this once, it didn’t, the animal wasn’t going to worry about it.
“What shall I do with you?” Lanius demanded.
Again, Pouncer said, “Rowr.” Again, that told the king less than he
wanted to know.
He carried the moncat back to its room. After putting it inside and
going out into the hallway once more, he waved down the first servant he
saw. “Yes, Your Majesty?” the man said. “Is something wrong?”
“Something or someone,” Lanius answered grimly. “Tell Bubulcus to get
himself over here right away. Tell everybody you see to tell Bubulcus to
get over here right away. Tell him he’d better hurry if he knows what’s
good for him.”
He hardly ever sounded so fierce, so determined. The servant’s eyes
widened. “Yes, Your Majesty,” he said, and hurried away. Lanius composed
himself to wait, not in patience but in impatience.
Bubulcus came trotting up about a quarter of an hour later, a worried
expression on his long, thin, pointy-nosed face. “What’s the trouble now,
Your Majesty?” he asked, as though he and trouble had never met
before.
Knowing better, the king pointed to the barred door that kept the
moncats from escaping. “Have you gone looking for me in there again?”
“Which I haven’t.” Bubulcus shook his head so vigorously, a lock of
greasy black hair flopped down in front of one eye. He brushed it back
with the palm of his hand. “Which I haven’t,” he repeated, his voice
oozing righteousness. “No, sir. I’ve learned my lesson, I have. Once was
plenty, thank you very much.”
Once hadn’t been plenty, of course. He’d let moncats get loose twice—at
least twice. He might forget. Lanius never would. “Are you sure, Bubulcus?
Are you very sure?” he asked. “If you’re lying to me, I
will send you to the Maze, and I won’t blink before I do it. I
promise you that.”
“Me? Lie? Would I do such a thing?” Bubulcus acted astonished,
insulted, at the mere possibility. He went on, “Put me on the rack, if you
care to. I’ll tell you the same. Give me to a Menteshe torturer. Give me
to the Banished One, if you care to.”
The king’s fingers twisted in a gesture that might—or might not— ward
off evil omens. “You don’t know what you’re talking about,” he said.
“Thank the true gods for your ignorance, too.”
“Which I do for everything, Your Majesty,” Bubulcus said. “But I’m not
ignorant about this. I know I didn’t go in there. Do what you want with
me, but I can’t tell you any different.”
Sending him to the rack had more than a little appeal. With a certain
amount of regret, Lanius said, “Go find a mage, Bubulcus. Tell him to
question you about this. Bring him back here with you. Hurry. I’ll be
waiting. If you don’t come back soon, you’ll wish some of the foolish
things you just said did come true.”
Bubulcus disappeared faster than if a mage had conjured him into
nothingness. Lanius leaned against the wall. Would the servant come back
so fast?
He did, or nearly. And he had with him no less a wizard than Pterocles
himself. After bowing to Lanius, the wizard said, “As best I can tell,
Your Majesty, this man is speaking the truth. He was not in those rooms,
and he did not let your pet get out.”
“How
did the moncat get loose, then?” Lanius asked.
Pterocles shrugged. “I can’t tell you that. Maybe another servant let
it out. Maybe there’s a hole in the wall no one has noticed.”
Bubulcus looked not only relieved but triumphant. “Which I told you,
Your Majesty. Which I didn’t have anything to do with.”
“This time, no,” Lanius admitted. “But your record up until now somehow
didn’t fill me with confidence.” Bubulcus looked indignant. Pterocles let
out a small snort of laughter. Lanius gestured. “Go on, Bubulcus. Count
yourself lucky and try to stay out of trouble.”
“Which I’ve already done, except for some people who keep trying to put
me into it,” Bubulcus said. But then he seemed to remember he was talking
to a King of Avornis, not to another servant. He bobbed his head in an
awkward bow and scurried away.
“Thank you,” Lanius told Pterocles.
“You’re welcome, Your Majesty.” The wizard tried a smile on for size.
“Dealing with something easy every once in a while is a pleasure.” He too
nodded to Lanius and ambled down the corridor. Something easy? Lanius wondered. Then he decided Pterocles had
a point. Finding out if a servant lied was bound to be easier—and safer—
than, say, facing a Chernagor sorcerer. But how
had Pouncer escaped? That didn’t look as though it would be so
easy for Lanius to figure out.
Grus listened to Pterocles with more than a little amusement. “A
moncat, you say?” he inquired, and the wizard nodded. Grus went on, “Well,
that’s got to be simpler than working out how to cure thralls.”
Pterocles nodded. “It was this time, anyhow.”
“Good. Not everything should be hard all the time,” Grus said, and
Pterocles nodded again. Grus asked, “And how
are you coming on curing thralls?”
Pterocles’ face fell. He’d plainly hoped Grus wouldn’t ask him
that.
But, once asked, he had to answer. “Not as well as I would like, Your
Majesty,” he said reluctantly, adding, “No one else in Avornis has figured
out how to do it, either, you know, not reliably, not since the Menteshe
wizards first started making our men into thralls however many hundred
years ago that was.”
“Well, yes,” Grus admitted with a certain reluctance of his own. He
didn’t want to think about that; he would sooner have forgotten all those
other failures. That way, he could have believed Pterocles was starting
with a clean slate. As things were, he could only ask, “Do you think
you’ve found any promising approaches?”
“Promising? No. Hopeful? Maybe,” Pterocles replied. “After all, as I’ve
said, I’ve been . . . emptied myself. So have thralls. I know more about
that than any other Avornan wizard ever born.” His laugh had a distinctly
hollow note. “I wish I didn’t, but I do.”
“What about the suggestions Alca the witch sent me?” Grus asked once
more.
With a sigh, the wizard answered, “We’ve been over this ground before,
Your Majesty. I don’t deny the witch is clever, but what she says is not
to the point. She doesn’t understand what being a thrall means.”
“And you do?” Grus asked with heavy sarcasm.
“As well as any man who isn’t a thrall can, yes,” Pterocles replied.
“I’ve told you that before. Will you please listen?”
“No matter how well you say you understand, you haven’t come up with
anything that looks like a cure,” Grus said. “If you do, I’ll believe you.
If you don’t, if you don’t show me you have ideas of your own, I am going
to order you to use Alca’s for the sake of doing
something.”
“Even if it’s wrong,” Pterocles jeered.
“Even if it is,” Grus said stubbornly. “From all I’ve seen, doing
something is better than doing nothing. Something
may work. Nothing never will.”
“If you think I’m doing nothing, Your Majesty, you had better find
yourself another wizard,” Pterocles said. “Then I
will go off and do nothing with a clear conscience, and you can
see what happens after that.”
If he’d spoken threateningly, Grus might have sacked him on the spot.
Instead, he sounded more like a man delivering a prophecy. That gave the
king pause. Too many strange things had happened for him to ignore that
tone of voice. And Pterocles, like Alca, had dreamed of the Banished
One—the only sign Grus had that the Banished One took a mortal opponent
seriously. Where would he find another wizard who had seen that coldly
magnificent countenance?
“If you think you’re smarter than Alca, you’d better be right,” he said
heavily.
“I don’t think anything of the sort,” Pterocles said. “I told you she
was clever. I meant it. But I’ve been through things she hasn’t. A fool
who’s dropped a brick on his toe knows better why he’d better not do that
again than a clever fellow who hasn’t.”
That made sense. It would have made more sense if the wizard had done
anything much with what he knew. “All right, then. I know you’re
pregnant,” Grus said. “I still want to see the baby one of these days
before too long.”
“If the baby lives, you’ll see it,” Pterocles said. “You don’t want it
to come too soon, though, do you? They’re never healthy if they do.”
Grus began to wish he hadn’t used that particular figure of speech.
Even so, he said, “If you miscarry with your notions in spite of what you
think now, I want you to try Alca’s.”
He waited. Pterocles frowned. Obviously, he was looking for one more
comment along the lines he’d been using. When the wizard’s eyes lit up,
Grus knew he’d found one. Pterocles said, “Very well, Your Majesty, though
that would be the first time a woman ever got a man pregnant.”
After a—pregnant—pause, Grus groaned and said, “Are you wizard enough
to make yourself disappear?”
“Yes, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said, and did.
His mulishness still annoyed Grus. But he had a twinkle in his eye
again, and he was getting back the ability to joke. Grus thought—Grus
hoped—that meant he was recovering from the sorcerous pounding he’d taken
outside of Nishevatz. Maybe the baby—if it ever came— would be worth
seeing after all.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Lanius had just finished telling Sosia the story of the moncat and the
stolen silver dipper. It was an amusing story, and he knew he’d told it
well. His wife listened politely enough, but when he was through she just
sat in their bedchamber. She didn’t even smile. “Why did you tell me
that?” she asked.
“Because I thought it was funny,” Lanius answered. “I hoped you would
think it was funny, too. Evidently I was wrong.”
“Evidently you were,” Sosia said in a brittle voice. “You can tell me
funny stories, but you can’t even tell me you’re sorry. Men!” She turned
her back on him. “You’re worse than my father. At least my mother wasn’t
around when he took up with somebody else.”
“Oh.” More slowly than it should have, a light went on in Lanius’ head.
“You’re still angry about Cristata.” He was angry about Cristata,
too—angry that Grus had paid her off and sent her away. Sosia had other
reasons.
“Yes, I’m still angry about Cristata!” his wife blazed. Lanius blinked;
he hadn’t realized
how angry she was. “I loved you. I thought you loved me. And then
you went and did that. How? Why?”
“I never stopped loving you. I still love you,” Lanius said, which was
true—and which he would have been wiser to say sooner and more often.
“It’s just. . . she was there, and then ...” His voice trailed away, which
it should have done sooner.
“She was there, and then you were
there.” Sosia made a gesture boys used in the streets of the city
of Avornis, one that left nothing to the imagination. “Is there anything
else to say about that?”
“I suppose not,” Lanius answered. From Sosia’s point of view, what he’d
done with Cristata didn’t seem so good. From his own . . . He sighed. He
still missed the serving girl. “Kings of Avornis are allowed to have more
than one wife,” he added sulkily.
“Yes—if they can talk their first one into it,” Sosia said. “You
didn’t. You didn’t even try. You were having a good time screwing her, so
you decided you’d marry her.”
“Well, what else but fun are wives after the first one for?” Lanius
asked, he thought reasonably. “Oh, once in a while a king will be trying
to find a woman who can bear him a son, the way my father was. But most of
the time, those extra wives are just for amusement.”
“Maybe you were amused, but I wasn’t,” Sosia snapped. “And I thought I
amused you. Was I wrong?”
Even Lanius, who didn’t always hear the subtleties in what other people
said, got the point there. “No,” he said hastily. “Oh, no indeed.”
Sosia glared at him. “That’s what you say. Why am I supposed to believe
you?”
He started to explain why he saw little point in lying to her,
especially now that Cristata was gone. He didn’t get very far. That wasn’t
the answer she was looking for. He needed another heartbeat or two to
figure out the sort of answer she did want.
Some time later, he said, “There. Do you see now?” They were, by then,
both naked and sweaty, though snow coated the windowsills. Sometimes
answers didn’t need words.
“Maybe,” Sosia said grudgingly.
“Well, I’ll just have to show you again,” Lanius said, and he did.
After that second demonstration, he fell asleep very quickly. When he
woke up, it was light. What woke him was Sosia getting out of bed. He
yawned and stretched. She nodded without saying anything.
“Good morning,” he told her.
“Is it?” she asked.
“Well, I thought so.”
“Of course you did,” she said. “You got what you wanted last
night.”
In some annoyance, Lanius said, “I wasn’t the only one.”
“No?” But Sosia saw that wouldn’t do. She shrugged. “One night’s not
enough to set everything right between us.”
Lanius sighed. “What am I going to have to do now?”
“You’re not going to
have to do anything,” Sosia said. “You need to show me there are
things you
want to do, the kinds of things people who care about each other
do without thinking.”
Since Lanius hardly ever did anything without thinking, he almost asked
her what she was talking about. He quickly decided not to.
Show me you love me, was what she meant.
Keep on showing me until I believe you.
Some of what he did would be an act. He knew that. Sosia undoubtedly
knew it, too. She wanted a convincing act—an act good enough to convince
him as well as her. If he kept doing those things, maybe he
would convince himself.
Maybe I won’t, too, he thought mulishly. But he would have to
make the effort.
He did his best. He went out into the hall and spoke to a serving
woman, who hurried off to the kitchens. She came back with a tray of
poached eggs and pickled lamb’s tongue, Sosia’s favorite breakfast. Lanius
preferred something simpler—bread and honey and a cup of wine suited him
very well.
As Sosia sprinkled salt over the eggs, she smiled at Lanius. She’d
noticed what he’d done. That was something, anyhow.
A snowstorm filled the air around the palace with soft, white silence.
In the middle of that silence, King Grus and Hirundo tried to figure out
what to do when sunshine and green leaves replaced snow and cold. “How
many men do you want to leave behind to make sure the Chernagors don’t
ravage the coast again?” Hirundo asked. “And if you leave that many
behind, will we have enough left to go up into the land of the Chernagors
and do something useful ourselves?”
Those were both good questions. Grus wished they weren’t quite so good.
He said, “Part of that depends on how many ships Plegadis can build, and
on whether we can fight off the pirates before they ever come ashore.”
“You’d know more about that than I do,” Hirundo answered. “All I know
about ships is getting to the rail in a hurry.” He grinned and then stuck
out his tongue. “Give me a horse any day.”
“You’re welcome to mine,” Grus said. The general laughed. More
seriously, Grus went on, “I don’t know as much about these ships as I wish
I did. No Avornan does. I don’t even know if they’ll be able to find the
pirates on the sea and keep them from landing. We’ll find out,
though.”
Hirundo nodded. “Oh, yes. The next question, of course, is
when we’ll find out. Are the pirates going to keep us from
getting up into the Chernagor country again?”
“No,” Grus declared. “No, by Olor’s beard. I’ll let the garrisons and
the ships deal with the Chernagors in the south. It’s not just a question
of throwing Prince Vasilko out on his ear. If it were, I wouldn’t worry so
much. We have to drive the Banished One out of the land of the
Chernagors.”
“When we started out in this fight, I wondered whether Vasilko or
Vsevolod was the Banished One’s cat’s-paw,” Hirundo said.
“I spent a lot of time worrying about that, even though Vsevolod would
probably want to strangle me with his big nobbly hands if he ever found
out,” Grus said. “But there’s not much doubt anymore.”
Hirundo considered that. “Well,” he said, “no.”
Grus sent out orders for cavalrymen and foot soldiers to gather by the
city of Avornis. He also sent out other orders this winter, strengthening
the garrisons in the river towns near the Azanian Sea and moving the
river-galley fleets toward the mouths of the Nine. That meant he would
take a smaller force north with him this coming spring when he moved
against Nishevatz. But it also meant—he hoped it meant— the Chernagors
wouldn’t be able to pull off such a nasty surprise in the new campaigning
season.
No sooner had his couriers ridden away from the capital than a blizzard
rolled out of the north and dumped a foot and a half of snow on the city
and the countryside. Grus tried to tell himself it was only a coincidence.
The Banished One didn’t really have anything to do with it... did he?
The king thought about asking Pterocles, thought about it and then
thought better of it. He’d asked that question of Alca once before, in an
earlier harsh winter. He’d found out the Banished One
had used the weather as a weapon against Avornis, but the deposed
god had almost slain Alca and him and Lanius in the aftermath of the
witch’s magic. Some knowledge came at too high a price.
Mild weather returned after this snowstorm finally blew itself out.
That made Grus doubt the Banished One lay behind it. When he struck at
Avornis, he sent blizzard after blizzard after blizzard. He was very
strong, and reveled in his strength. Being so strong, he’d never had to
worry much about subtlety. He left his foes in no doubt about what he was
doing, and also in no doubt that they couldn’t hope to stop him. Milvago. Had the Banished One been as overwhelmingly mighty in
the heavens as he was here on earth? Perhaps not quite, or the gods he’d
fathered would never have been able to cast him out, to cast him down to
the material world. But Grus would have been astonished if they hadn’t
used their sire’s strength against him. Maybe he’d been arrogant, thinking
they couldn’t possibly challenge him.
He knew better than that now—one more thought Grus wished he hadn’t
had.
Soldiers started coming up out of the south to gather for this year’s
invasion of the land of the Chernagors. A new blizzard howled down on the
capital once their encampment began to swell. By then, though, winter was
dying. Even the Banished One had limits to what he could do to the weather
... if he was doing anything. Grus still hoped he wasn’t.
He couldn’t stop the sun from climbing higher in the sky every day,
couldn’t stop the days from getting longer and warmer, couldn’t stop the
snow from melting. Even after it vanished from the ground, Grus had to
wait a little longer, to let the roads dry out and keep his army from
bogging down. As soon as he thought he could, he climbed aboard a
horse—mounting with the same reluctance Hirundo showed at boarding a river
galley—and set off for the north.
Every so often, he looked back over his shoulder, wondering if a
messenger was galloping up behind the army with word of some new disaster
elsewhere in Avornis that would make him turn around. Every time he saw no
such messenger, he felt as though he’d won a victory. On went the army,
too, toward the Chernagor country.
Each time Grus set out on campaign, Lanius waved farewell and wished
him good fortune. And each time Grus set out on campaign, Lanius’ smile of
farewell grew wider. With Grus off to or beyond the frontiers, power in
the city of Avornis increasingly rested in Lanius’ hands.
Lanius thought he could rise against Grus with some hope of success.
Thinking he could do it didn’t make him anxious to try, though. For one
thing, he wasn’t a man to take many chances. For another, even success
could only mean winning a civil war. He doubted there was any such thing
as
winning a civil war. If he and Grus fought—if they wasted
Avornis’ men and wealth, who gained besides the Banished One? Nobody
Lanius could see. And, though he didn’t like to admit it even to himself,
having someone in place to handle those parts of kingship he didn’t care
for wasn’t always the worst thing in the world. He was no campaigner, and
never would be. Having authority in the palace was a different story.
As usual, Queen Sosia, Crex, Pitta, Queen Estrilda, and Arch-Hallow
Anser came out beyond the walls of the capital to send Grus off and wish
him well. Also as usual, Prince Ortalis stayed away.
That worried Lanius. The more he thought about it, the more it worried
him. If Ortalis had to choose between Grus and the Banished One, which
would he pick? Remembering what had happened in Nishevatz, remembering
how Prince Vasilko had risen against his father and helped the Banished
One enter his city-state, did nothing to give Lanius peace of mind.
Normally, he would have talked things over with Sosia and found out how
worried she was. Ortalis was her brother, after all; she knew him better
than Lanius did. But she was still touchy—which put it mildly—about
Cristata, and so Lanius didn’t want to provoke her in any way.
He thought about hashing it out with Anser, too. But Anser wasn’t the
right man to deal with such concerns. With his sunny nature, he had a hard
time seeing the bad in anyone else. And he didn’t know enough about the
true nature of the Banished One, nor did Lanius feel like instructing
him.
With nobody to talk to about Ortalis, Lanius did his brooding in
privacy on the way back to the royal palace. He was used to that. Once
upon a time, he’d resented being so much alone. Now he took it for
granted.
When he and the rest of the royal family returned to the palace, they
found the servants in a commotion. “He’s done it! He’s gone and done it!”
they exclaimed in ragged chorus.
That sounded inflammatory. It didn’t sound very informative. “Who’s
gone and done what?” Lanius asked.
The servants looked at him as though he were an idiot for not knowing.
“Why, Prince Ortalis, of course,” several of them answered, again all at
once.
Lanius, Sosia, Estrilda, and Anser all looked at one another. Crex and
Pitta were too small to worry about what their uncle did, and ran off to
play. Lanius said, “All right, now we know who. What has Ortalis done?” He
braced himself for almost any atrocity. Had Ortalis hurt
another serving girl? Had he decided to have a couple of moncats
served up in a stew? The king wouldn’t have put anything past him.
But the servants replied, “He’s gotten married.”
“He
has?” Now the king, two queens, and the arch-hallow all cried out
in astonishment. That wasn’t just news; that was an earthquake. Grus had
been trying to find Ortalis a bride on and off for years. He hadn’t had
any luck, either. Ortalis’ reputation was too ripe. Grus had sent
Lepturus, the head of the royal bodyguards, to the Maze for refusing to
let his granddaughter marry the prince. And now Ortalis had found himself
a wife?
“To whom?” Lanius asked. “And how did this happen?”
“How did it happen without us hearing about it?” Sosia added.
Bubulcus knew all the details. Lanius might have guessed he would.
“He’s married to Limosa, Your Majesty. You know, the daughter of
Petrosus, the treasury minister.” He seemed to sneer at the king for
being in the dark. They deserve each other, was the first uncharitable thought
that went through Lanius’ mind. But that wasn’t fair to Limosa, whom he’d
met only a couple of times. He disliked her father, who was stingy and
bad-tempered even for a man of his profession.
“How did it happen?” Sosia asked again. She might have been speaking of
a flood or a fire or some other disaster, not a wedding.
“In the usual way, I’m sure,” Bubulcus replied. “They stood before a
priest, and he said the proper words over them, and then they ...” He
leered.
“Don’t be a bigger fool than you can help,” Lanius snapped, and
Bubulcus, knowing he’d gone too far, turned pale. Lanius added, “You know
what Her Majesty meant.”
“And which priest who wed them?” Anser added, sounding very much like
the man in charge of ecclesiastical affairs. “He did it without the king’s
leave, and without mine. He’ll have more than a few questions to
answer—you may be sure of that.”
Perdix, who’d wed King Mergus and Queen Certhia after Lanius was born,
had had more than a few questions to answer, too. He’d prospered while
Lanius’ father lived . . . and gone to the Maze not long after Mergus
died. He was years dead now.
“Well, I don’t know the name of the priest, though I’m sure you can
find out,” Bubulcus said, implying that, if he didn’t know it, it couldn’t
possibly be important. “But I do know they were wed in some little temple
at the edge of town, not in the cathedral.”
“I should hope not!” Lanius said. “Wouldn’t
that be a scandal? A worse scandal, I mean. He shouldn’t have wed
at all, not on his own. It’s not done in the royal family.” A dozen
generations of kings spoke through him.
“It is now,” Queen Estrilda said. “And it’s not the worst match he
could have made, even if he shouldn’t have made it himself.”
“What do you want to bet Petrosus proposed it?” said Sosia, who liked
the treasury minister no better than Lanius did. “He’s likely eager to
make any kind of connection with our family.”
“Does he ... know about Ortalis?” Anser asked.
“How could he not know?” Lanius replied.
“If he does, how could he do that to the girl?” the arch-hallow
wondered. “I hope she won’t be too unhappy.”
Hoping Limosa wouldn’t be too unhappy was the kindest thing anyone
found to say about the marriage. Lanius had seen omens he liked
better.
Grus had just gotten off his horse when a messenger from the south
galloped into the Avornan army’s encampment shouting his name. “Here!” he
called, and waved to show the rider where he was.
General Hirundo had just dismounted, too. “Can’t we get a couple of
days out of the city of Avornis without having one of these excitable
fellows come after us, riding like he’s got a fire under his
backside?”
“No, that’s me.” Grus made as though to rub the afflicted parts. Up
came the messenger, and thrust a rolled-up sheet of parchment at him.
“Thanks—I suppose,” the king said, taking it. “What’s this?”
“Uh, Your Majesty, it speaks for itself,” the messenger replied. “I
think it had better talk and I’d better keep quiet.”
“Don’t like the sound of
that,” Hirundo remarked.
“Neither do I.” King Grus broke the seal, slid off the ribbon holding
the parchment closed, unrolled the sheet, and read the letter, which was
from King Lanius. When he was done, he muttered a curse that didn’t come
close to satisfying him.
“What is it, Your Majesty?” Hirundo asked.
“My son,” Grus answered. “It seems Prince Ortalis has taken it into his
head to marry Petrosus’ daughter, Limosa. He hasn’t just taken it into his
head, in fact—he’s gone and done it.”
“Oh,” Hirundo said. Seldom had a man managed to pack more meaning into
a single syllable.
“My thoughts exactly.” Grus wanted to doubt Lanius, but the other king,
no matter how clever, would never have had the imagination to make that
up.
“What will you do about it?” Hirundo asked.
The more Grus thought about that, the less he liked the answers that
occurred to him. “I don’t see what I
can do about it, except tell Anser to land on the priest who
married them like a landslide,” he answered reluctantly. “The wedding’s
legal, no doubt about it. I can’t break off this campaign to go back to
the capital and try to set things right. But oh, I wish I could.” The only
reason Petrosus could have dangled Limosa in front of Ortalis was to gain
himself more influence. No one else around the palace had been willing to
use a daughter in a gambit like that. If Petrosus thought it would work,
he would have to think again before too long.
“Yes.” Hirundo didn’t say any of the things he might have, which proved
him an unexpected master of diplomacy. But the expression on his face was
eloquent. “Maybe it will turn out all right.” He didn’t sound as though he
believed it.
“Yes, maybe it will.” Grus sounded even less convinced than Hirundo,
which wasn’t easy.
And I’m talking about my own son. That was a bitter pill. If he’d
sounded any other way, though, he would have been hiding what he really
felt. He sighed. “I have to go on. We have to go on. Whatever happens back
at the capital is less important than what we do against the
Chernagors.”
Hirundo inclined his head. “Yes, Your Majesty.” If the king said it,
they would go on. Grus was sure the news of Ortalis’ wedding was spreading
through the army with the usual speed of rumor. No one but Hirundo seemed
to have the nerve to beard him about it. That suited him fine. I
almost wish a Chernagor fleet would strike our western coast hard
enough to make
me turn around, he thought, and then quick, in case gods or the
Banished One somehow overheard that,
I
did say “almost.”
Except for the hunger for something nasty often smoldering in Ortalis’
eyes, there had never been anything wrong with his looks. And now even
those low fires seemed banked, as they had when he was hunting regularly.
The smile he gave King Lanius was just about everything a smile ought to
be. The bow that followed was more in the way of formal politeness than
Lanius had had from him in years. “Your Majesty,” Ortalis said, “let me
present to you my wife, Princess Limosa.”
“Thank you, Your Highness,” Lanius said, as formally. He nodded to the
treasury minister’s daughter. “We
have met before. Let me welcome you to the royal family.”
What else can I do? “I hope you will be very happy.”
I don’t really believe you will, but anyone can hope. He also
hoped none of what he was thinking showed on his face.
Evidently it didn’t, for Limosa smiled as she dropped him a curtsy and
said, “Thank you very much, Your Majesty. I’m sure I will.” She gazed at
Ortalis with stars in her dark eyes. She was a little on the plump side,
with a round, pink face, curly brown hair with reddish glints in it, and a
crooked front tooth. No one would have called her beautiful, but she was
pleasant enough.
Sosia came into the dining room. Ortalis introduced Limosa again. As
Lanius had, Sosia said all the right things. If she was insincere, as he
was, he couldn’t hear it in her voice. He hoped that meant Ortalis and
Limosa couldn’t, either.
To her brother, Sosia did say, “This was very sudden.”
“Well...” Was Ortalis blushing? Lanius wouldn’t have believed such a
thing possible. The prince went on, “We found we suited each other, and so
we did what we did.” Limosa turned even pinker, but she nodded.
Suited each other? What did that mean?
Do I really want to know? Lanius wondered. Before he could find
any way to ask, servants came in with bread and butter and honey and
apples for breakfast. He and Sosia and Ortalis and his new bride settled
down to eat. Lanius also wondered if Petrosus would wander in. But
Limosa’s father did not put in an appearance. Being polite to Limosa was
easy enough. Lanius would have had to work harder to stay polite to
Petrosus.
Ortalis raised his cup of wine to Limosa’s lips. It was a pretty,
romantic gesture—about the last thing Lanius would have expected from his
brother-in-law.
Cristata was happy with Ortalis at first, too, he reminded
himself.
She said so. Then look what happened.
Limosa said, “I hope the war against the Chernagors goes well.”
No one could argue with that. No one tried. Lanius said, “
I hope your father keeps our allowance at something close to a
reasonable level.”
She blushed again. “You mean he doesn’t always?” Lanius solemnly shook
his head. Limosa said, “That’s terrible!”
“Yes, Sosia and I think so, too,” Lanius agreed, his voice dry. He
wondered how much influence Limosa had on Petrosus. If she really thought
it was terrible, and if she really had some influence . . .
But she said, “I’m sorry, but it’s not like he listens to me very
much.” She’d understood Lanius’ hint, then. That didn’t surprise him.
Petrosus had been a courtier for many years; why wouldn’t his daughter see
that what seemed a comment was in fact a request for her to do something
about it? Then Limosa added, “He didn’t even know we were going to get
married until after the priest conducted the ceremony.”
“No?” Lanius said in surprise and disbelief.
Now she shook her head. So did Ortalis. Lanius glanced at Sosia. She
looked as astonished as he was. If Limosa had asked her father whether he
wanted her to wed Ortalis, what would he have said? What every other
father and grandfather said when approached about it? That
wouldn’t have surprised Lanius . . . too much. Petrosus might
have been willing to sacrifice happiness for the sake of his own
advancement.
Or is that just my dislike for Petrosus coming out? Lanius
wondered. Hard to be sure.
Sosia asked, “What does your father think about it now?”
“He’d better like it,” Ortalis growled before Limosa could answer. She
seemed willing to let him speak for her. That was interesting.
Someone new I’m going to have to try to learn to figure out,
Lanius thought. Archives were much more tractable than living, breathing
people. Even inscrutable moncats were easier to make sense of than
people.
He lifted his cup of wine in salute. “I hope you’ll be ... very happy
together,” he said. He’d started to say,
I hope you’ll be as happy as Sosia and I have been. Considering
the jolt his affair with Cristata had given their happiness, those weren’t
such favorable words as they would have been a little while before.
Ortalis and Limosa beamed. They must not have noticed the hesitation.
Sosia had. Did she know what he’d almost said? He wouldn’t have been
surprised. She knew him better than anyone else did—save perhaps her
father. Lanius didn’t like admitting, even to himself, that Grus had a
knack for getting inside his mind. But he didn’t like denying the truth,
either.
He eyed Ortalis and Limosa again. How were they at facing up to the
truth? Did the thought so much as cross their minds? He doubted it.
Too bad for them, he thought.
“Come on,” Grus said. His horse trudged up toward the top of the pass
that linked Avornis to the land of the Chernagors. He leaned forward in
the saddle and squeezed the beast’s barrel with his knees.
“Get up, there.” The horse went a little faster—not much, but a
little.
Beside the king, Hirundo beamed. “You’re becoming a horseman after all,
Your Majesty.”
“Go ahead—insult me,” Grus said. “If things had gone the way I wish
they would have, I’d hardly ever need to get onto one of these miserable
beasts.”
Hirundo didn’t seem to know what to make of that. Grus had hoped he
wouldn’t. The king rode on. The army followed. Every so often, Grus looked
back over his shoulder to see if a messenger was coming out of the south.
He’d already had one. He spied no more this time. That either meant the
Chernagors weren’t raiding the Avornan coast or that the Avornan garrisons
and river galleys and new oceangoing ships were beating them back. Grus
hoped it meant one of those two things, anyhow.
At the top of the pass, he looked back toward his own kingdom once
more. He hadn’t thought he’d climbed all that high, but he could see a
long way. The bright green of newly planted fields of wheat and barley and
rye and oats contrasted with the darker tones of orchards and forests.
Here and there, smoke plumes rose from towns and obscured the farmland
beyond. Only very gradually did natural mist and haze blur the rest of the
landscape.
When he looked ahead, the story was different. Fog rolling off the
Northern Sea left the land of the Chernagors shrouded in mystery. But Grus
didn’t need to see the Chernagor country to know what lay ahead—trouble.
If the Chernagors weren’t going to cause trouble, he wouldn’t have had to
come here and look out across their land.
He also looked around. There was Prince Vsevolod, hard-faced and grim,
riding along at the head of a handful of retainers. Did he believe Grus
could restore him as Prince of Nishevatz after two years in exile? Grus
hoped he did; he might yet prove valuable to the Avornan cause.
And there rode Pterocles. In one sense, he wasn’t far from Prince
Vsevolod. In another, he might have belonged to a different world. The
wizard didn’t even seem to see Vsevolod and his kilted retainers. All his
attention focused on the view ahead. He looked like a man riding into a
battle he expected to lose—brave enough, but far from hopeful. Remembering
what had happened to Pterocles in the Chernagor country a couple of years
before, Grus didn’t suppose he could blame him.
Pterocles also stood out because of his bad riding. Next to the
seasoned cavalry troopers, Grus wasn’t much of a rider. Next to Pterocles,
he might have been a centaur. The wizard rode as though he’d never heard
of riding before climbing aboard his mule. He was all knees and elbows and
apprehension. Every slightest jounce took him by surprise, and threatened
to pitch him out of the saddle and under the horse’s hoofs. Watching him
made Grus nervous and sympathetic at the same time.
“You’re doing fine,” the king called to the wizard. “Relax a little,
and everything will be all right.”
Pterocles eyed him as though he’d taken leave of his senses. “Relax a
little, and I’ll be dead . . . Your Majesty,” he answered.
Grus wondered whether he was talking about the mule or about the
sorcerous challenges ahead. After some thought, he decided he didn’t want
to ask.
To Grus’ surprise, the Chernagors didn’t try to defend the fortress of
Varazdin. They evacuated it instead, fleeing ahead of the advancing
Avornans. Grus left a small garrison in it—enough men to make sure the
Chernagors didn’t seize it again as soon as he’d gone on toward
Nishevatz.
“This is a funny business,” Hirundo said as they headed for the coastal
lowlands. “When the fellow commanding that fort was loyal to Prince
Vsevolod, he fought us teeth and toenails. Now the man in charge of it
gets his orders from Vasilko, and he runs off. Go figure.”
“Everything about the war with the Chernagors has been backward,” Grus
said. “Why should this be any different?”
He hadn’t come very far into the Chernagor country before realizing
he’d left Avornis behind. The look of the sky and the quality of the
sunlight weren’t the same as they had been down in his own kingdom. A
perpetual haze hung over the lowlands here. It turned the sunlight watery
and the sky a color halfway between blue and gray. Drifting clouds had no
sharp edges; they blurred into the sky behind them in a way they never
would have in a land of bright sun and a sky of a respectable, genuine
blue.
The landscape had a strange look, too. Roofs of thatch replaced those
of red tiles. In this damp, dripping country, fire wasn’t the worry it
would have been farther south. Even the haystacks were different here;
they wore canvas covers on top to keep off the rain. Gliding gulls mewed
and squawked overhead.
And the Northern Sea was nothing like the Azanian Sea. Gray and
chilly-looking, it struck Grus as far from inviting. He knew the
Chernagors thought otherwise. To them, it was the high road to trading—
and raiding—riches. As far as he was concerned, they were welcome to
it.
He and his army reached the sea sooner than he’d expected. Instead of
offering battle away from Nishevatz, Prince Vasilko seemed intent on
defending the city with everything he had. A few archers harassed the
advancing Avornans, but only a few. They would shoot from ambush, then
either rely on concealment or try to get away on fast horses. They would
not stand and fight.
That mortified Prince Vsevolod. “Not enough my son should give self to
Banished One,” he rumbled in disgust. “No, not enough. Also he show self
coward. Better he should die.”
“Better he should surrender, so you can have your throne back and we
can go home to Avornis.” Grus didn’t believe that would happen. Vasilko
had something in mind. The king hoped discovering what it was wouldn’t
prove too painful.
In any case, Vsevolod wasn’t listening to him. “Disgrace,” he muttered.
“My son is disgrace.” There was a feeling Grus knew all too well. He set a hand on
Vsevolod’s shoulder. “Try not to blame yourself, Your Highness. I’m sure
you did everything you could.”
I did with Ortalis.
Vsevolod shrugged off the hand and shook his massive head. Grus didn’t
like to think about his own quarrels with his son, either. And what would
come of Ortalis’ marriage to Limosa? What besides trouble, anyhow? A grandson who might be an heir, Grus thought. Of course, Crex
was already a grandson who might be an heir. If having two grandsons who
might be heirs wasn’t trouble, Grus had no idea what would fit the
definition. How
would things play out once he wasn’t there to make sure they went
the way he wanted?
“Your Majesty!” A cavalry captain rode up to Grus. “Ask you a question,
Your Majesty?”
“Go ahead,” Grus told him. Whatever questions a cavalry captain could
come up with were bound to be less worrisome than thoughts of two
grandsons going to war with each other over which one got to wear the
crown.
“Well, Your Majesty, these fields are full—full to bursting, you might
say—of cows and sheep, and I’d banquet off my boots if the sties aren’t
full of pigs, too,” the officer said. “Now, I know we’re here to help His
Highness the prince, but it would make things a lot easier if we could do
some foraging, too.”
Grus didn’t have to think about that. He didn’t have to ask Prince
Vsevolod, either. He said, “As far as we’re concerned, Captain, this is
enemy country. Go ahead and forage to your heart’s content, and I hope you
stuff yourself full of beefsteaks and mutton chops and roast pork. Right
now, we worry about hurting Vasilko. Once we’ve cast him down, then we
start worrying about helping Vsevolod. Or do you think I’m wrong?”
“Oh, no, sir!” the officer said quickly. Grus laughed at the naked
hunger on his face. He went on, “We’ll forage, all right. We’ll take the
war right to the Chernagors. Let ‘em go hungry.” They wouldn’t go hungry
enough, not when the other Chernagor city-states helped supply them by
sea. Grus knew as much. But his own side would eat well. That counted,
too.
CHAPTER TWELVE
King Lanius looked at the moncat, and the moncat looked at Lanius.
“How did you get out?” the king demanded. Bubulcus wasn’t the only servant
who denied having anything to do with Pouncer’s latest escape. Had it
found some way out of the chamber all by itself? If it had, none of the
other animals in here had proved smart enough to use it.
What did that mean? Did it mean anything? Could one moncat be so much
smarter and sneakier than the rest that it kept an escape route a secret?
Lanius didn’t know. He would have liked to ask Pouncer with some hope of
getting back an answer he could understand. That failing, he would have
liked to catch the beast in the act of escaping.
Neither seemed likely. Moncats were sneaky enough—and enough like
ordinary cats—not to do something while a lowly human being was watching.
And, to a moncat, even a King of Avornis counted as a lowly human
being.
“Mrowr,” Pouncer said, staring at Grus out of large amber eyes. Then it
scampered up the scaffolding of branches and poles that did duty for a
forest canopy. Its retractile claws, always sharp, bit into the wood.
Moncats climbed even better than monkeys.
He still wondered which were smarter, moncats or monkeys. Moncats were
more self-centered and perverse; of that he had no doubt. Monkeys thought
more along the lines of human intelligence. That made them
seem smarter, at least at first glance. But Lanius remained
unconvinced they really were.
Try as he would, he couldn’t think of any way to test the animals that
would prove anything. If the moncats didn’t feel like playing along, they
simply wouldn’t. What did that prove? Were they stupid, or just willful?
Or would he be the stupid one for trying to get them to do things they
weren’t inclined to do?
As things stood now, he certainly felt like the stupid one. He eyed the
moncat he’d twice encountered in the archives. Maybe the servants were
lying, and someone had opened a door that second time, as Bubulcus had
the first time. If they weren’t, though, Pouncer did have a secret it
wasn’t telling.
“If you come to the archives again, I’ll. . .” Lanius’ voice trailed
away. What
would he do to Pouncer if it escaped again? Punish it?
Congratulate it? Both at once? If the moncat didn’t already think so, that
would convince it human beings were crazy.
Reluctantly, he left the moncats’ chamber. He wasn’t going to find out
what he wanted to know there. He wondered if a wizard could figure out
what Pouncer was doing. But plenty of more important things needed
wizards. What a moncat was up to didn’t. Odds were it wouldn’t—couldn’t—do
it again anyway.
So Lanius told himself. All the same, the first few times he went back
to the archives, he kept looking around at every small noise he imagined
he heard. He waited for the moncat to meow and to emerge from concealment
brandishing something it had stolen from the kitchens.
He waited, but nothing out of the ordinary happened. He decided those
small noises really were figments of his imagination. When he stopped
worrying about them, he got more work done than he had for weeks. He
turned up several parchments touching on how Avornis had ruled the
provinces south of the Stura River before the Menteshe—and the Banished
One—took them from the kingdom.
Would those ever really matter again? Every time Avornis tried to
reclaim the lost provinces, disaster had followed. No King of Avornis for
the past two centuries and more had dared do any serious campaigning south
of the Stura. And yet Grus talked about going after the Scepter of Mercy
in a way that suggested he
was serious and
would do it if he got the chance. Lanius would have been more
likely to take that as bluster if the Banished One hadn’t stirred up so
much trouble for Avornis far from the Stura. Didn’t that suggest he was
worried about what might happen if the Avornans did try once more to
reclaim the Scepter and their lost lands?
Didn’t it? Or did it? How could a mere mortal know? Maybe the outcast
god was stirring up trouble elsewhere for its own sake. Or maybe he was
laying an uncommonly deep trap, building up belief in their chances so he
could do a better job of cutting them down.
That troubled Lanius enough to drive him out of the royal archives—and
over to the great cathedral and the ecclesiastical archives. He’d seen
they held more about the Banished One than the royal archives did. The
expelled deity had been a theological problem even before he became a
political problem.
Lanius paid his respects to Arch-Hallow Anser. Then he called on
Ixoreus. The green-robed priest held no high rank. But what he didn’t know
of the archives under the cathedral, no man living did.
After a moment’s thought, the king wondered about that. As he and the
white-bearded archivist went downstairs, Lanius asked, as casually as he
could, “Have you ever run across the name Milvago in all these
parchments?”
Ixoreus stopped. His eyes widened slightly—no, more than slightly. “Oh,
yes, Your Majesty,” he said in a low voice. “I have run across that name.
I didn’t know you had.”
“I often wish I hadn’t,” Lanius said. “Do you know what that name
means?”
“Oh, yes,” the archivist repeated. “But I have never told a living soul
of it. Have you?”
“One,” Lanius answered. “I told Grus. He had to know.”
Ixoreus considered. At last, with some reluctance, he nodded. “Yes, I
suppose he did. But can he keep his mouth shut?” He spoke of the other
king with a casual lack of respect. Lanius was suddenly sure the old man
spoke about him the same way when he was out of earshot.
“Yes,” he said. “Grus and I don’t always get along, but he can hold a
secret.”
“I suppose so,” Ixoreus said. “He hasn’t told the arch-hallow. I’m sure
of that—and Anser is his own flesh and blood.
I never told anybody—not Arch-Hallow Bucco, not King Mergus, not
King Scolopax— gods, no!—not anybody. And I wouldn’t have told you,
either, if you hadn’t found out for yourself.”
Considering what this secret was. . . “Good,” Lanius told the
priest.
The gray stone walls of Nishevatz frowned down on the Avornan army
encamped in front of them. Grus studied the formidable stonework.
“Here we are again,” he said to Hirundo. “How do we do better this time
than we did two years ago?”
“Yes, here we are again,” the general agreed lightly. “How do we do
better? Taking the city would be good, don’t you think?”
“Now that you mention it, yes.” King Grus matched him dry for dry. “And
how do we go about that, if you’d be so kind?”
They stood not far from the outer opening of the tunnel Prince Vsevolod
had used to escape from Nishevatz, the tunnel Avornan and Chernagor
soldiers had entered to sneak into the town . . . and from which, by all
appearances, they’d never emerged. Hirundos eyes flicked in the direction
of that opening. “One thing we’d better
not do,” he said, “and that’s try going underground again.”
“True,” Grus said. “That means we have to go over the wall—or through
it.”
He and Hirundo both looked toward Nishevatz’s works. From behind
battlements, Chernagor fighting men in iron helmets and mail-shirts looked
back. Two years earlier, Grus had seen how well they could fight defending
one of their towns. He had no reason to believe they’d gone soft in those
two years. That meant breaking into Nishevatz wouldn’t be easy.
“Do you think the wizard can do us any good?” Hirundo asked.
“I don’t know,” Grus answered. “We’d better find out, though, eh?”
Pterocles looked his usual haggard self. Grus could hardly blame him.
The last time he’d looked at these walls, he’d almost died. Now, though,
he managed a nod. “I’ll do what I can, Your Majesty.”
“How much do you think that will be?” Grus asked. “If you
can’t help us, tell me now so I can try to make other plans.”
“I think I can,” the wizard said. “I don’t feel anything of the
presence that beat me the last time. That makes me think it
was the Banished One, and that now he’s busy somewhere else.”
Was that good news? Grus wasn’t altogether sure. “Do you know where?
Can you sense what he’s doing?”
“No, Your Majesty,” Pterocles replied. “I don’t feel him at all. That’s
all I can tell you.” He paused. “No. It’s not. I’m not sorry not to feel
him, either.”
Grus pointed north, toward the sea. “Without a sorcerous foe here, can
you do anything about the supply ships that are keeping Nishevatz fed? If
the grain doesn’t come in, this turns into a real siege, one we can win
without trying to storm the walls.”
“I don’t know.” Pterocles looked dubious. “I can try, but magic doesn’t
usually travel well over water—not unless you’re the Banished One, of
course. He can do things ordinary wizards only dream of.” There are reasons for that, too, Grus thought; he knew more of
them than even Pterocles did. Since he couldn’t tell the wizard what he
knew, he said, “It’s not the water we want to aim the magic at. It’s those
ships.”
“Yes, I understand that,” Pterocles said impatiently. “I’m not
altogether an idiot, you know.”
“Well, good,” Grus murmured. “I do like to have that reassurance.” As
he’d hoped, Pterocles sent him a dirty look. An angry wizard, he thought,
would do a better job than one just going through the motions. He hoped
so, anyhow.
Ships full of grain kept getting into Nishevatz for the next few days.
Grus could watch them put in at quays beyond the reach of his catapults.
He could watch men haul sacks of grain into the Chernagor town on their
backs and load more sacks into carts and wagons that donkeys and horses
took inside the walls. As far as he could tell, Prince Vasilko’s soldiers
were eating better than his own men. And he couldn’t do anything about
it.
He couldn’t—but maybe Pterocles could. The wizard didn’t show his face
for some time. Grus checked on him once, and found him sitting with his
chin in his hands staring down at a grimoire on a folding table in front
of him. Pterocles didn’t look up. He didn’t seem to notice the king was
there. Grus silently withdrew. If Pterocles was getting ready to do
something large and important, Grus didn’t want to interfere. If, on the
other hand, the wizard was just sitting there . . . If that’s all he’s doing, he’ll be very sorry, Grus thought.
I’ll make sure he’s very sorry.
In due course, Pterocles emerged. He looked pale but determined. He
always looked pale. Determination often seemed harder to come by. Nodding
to Grus, the wizard said, “I’m ready, Your Majesty.”
Grus nodded. “Good. So are we. Gods grant you good fortune.”
“Thank you, Your Majesty. What I can do, I will.” Pterocles brought out
a basin filled with water. On it floated toy ships made of chips of wood,
with stick masts and scraps of cloth for sails. Pointing to the basin, he
told Grus, “It’s filled with seawater from the Northern Sea.”
To him, the point of that seemed clear. To Grus, it was opaque. The
king asked, “Why?”
“To make it more closely resemble that which is real,” the wizard
replied. “The more closely the magical and the real correspond, the better
the result of the spell is likely to be.”
“You know your business,” Grus said.
I hope you know your business.
Pterocles got down to it as though he knew his business. He began to
chant in a dialect of Avornan even older than the one priests used to
celebrate the sacred liturgies in temples and cathedrals. When a cloud
drifted close to the sun, he pointed a finger at it and spoke in
threatening tones, though the dialect was so old-fashioned, Grus couldn’t
make out exactly what he said. The cloud slid past without covering the
sun. Maybe the wind would have taken it that way anyhow. Grus didn’t think
so, not with the direction in which it was blowing, but maybe. Still,
mortal wizards had trouble manipulating the weather, so maybe not,
too.
The king wondered why Pterocles wanted to preserve the sunshine, which
was about as bright as it ever got in the misty Chernagor country. He soon
found out. The wizard drew from his leather belt pouch what Grus first
took to be a crystal ball. Then he saw it was considerably wider than it
was thick, though still curved on top and bottom.
Chanting still, Pterocles held the crystal a few inches above one of
the miniature ships floating in the basin. A brilliant point of light
appeared on the toy ship’s deck. To Grus’ amazement, smoke began to rise.
A moment later, the toy ship burst into flame. Pterocles shouted out what
was plainly a command.
And then Grus shouted, too, in triumph. He pointed out to sea. One of
the real ships there had also caught fire. A thick plume of black smoke
rose high into the sky. Pterocles never turned his head to look. He went
right on with his spell, poising the crystal over another ship.
Before long, that second toy also burned. When it did, another
Chernagor ship bound for Nishevatz also caught fire. “Well done!” Grus
cried. “By Olor’s beard, Pterocles, well done!”
Pterocles, for once, refused to be distracted. For all the difference
the king’s shout made to his magic, Grus might as well have kept quiet. A
third miniature ship caught fire. A third real ship out on the Northern
Sea burst into flame.
That was enough for the rest of the Chernagor skippers. They put about
and fled from Nishevatz as fast as the wind would take them. That wasn’t
fast enough to keep another tall-masted ship from catching fire and
burning. The survivors fled faster yet.
Pterocles might have burned even more ships, but the strain of what he
was doing caught up with him. He swayed like a tall tree in a high wind.
Then his eyes rolled up in his head and he toppled over in a faint. Grus
caught him before he hit his head on the ground, easing him down.
Once Pterocles wasn’t working magic anymore, he soon recovered. His
eyes opened. “Did I do it, Your Majesty?” he asked.
“See for yourself.” Grus pointed out toward the Northern Sea, and
toward the smoke rising from the burning ships upon it.
The wizard made a fist and smacked it softly into the open palm of his
other hand. “Yes!” he said, one quiet word with more triumph in it than
most of the shouts the king had heard.
“Well done. More than well done, by the gods.” Grus gave Pterocles all
the praise he could. “You had a hard time when you were in the Chernagor
country a couple of years ago, but now you’re making our foes pay.”
“This was . . . much easier than what I did year before last,”
Pterocles replied. “Then ...” He shook his head, plainly not wanting to
remember. “Well, you saw what happened to me then. Now . . . Now I feel as
though I’m not fighting somebody three times as tall as I am, and ten
times as strong.”
Grus wondered what that meant. Probably that, as he’d thought, the
Banished One wasn’t watching Nishevatz as closely as he had then, and
didn’t land on Pterocles like a landslide when the wizard threatened to do
something inconvenient. When that first occurred to him, Grus knew nothing
but relief. But it quickly spawned another obvious question. If the
Banished One wasn’t concentrating on the land of the Chernagors these
days, where
was he concentrating, and why?
When Grus asked the worrisome question out loud, Pterocles said, “I’m
sorry, Your Majesty, but I have no way of learning that.”
“I know you don’t—not until the Banished One shows all of us,” the king
said. “Meanwhile, though, all we can do is keep on here. If we can turn
this into a real siege, we’ll starve Vasilko into yielding up
Nishevatz.”
Pterocles nodded. “Yes,” he repeated, even more low-voiced than before.
It wasn’t triumphant this time—he’d seen how uncertain war could be. But
it held as much anticipation as Grus felt himself.
Little by little, Lanius had resigned himself to Cristata’s being gone.
He wouldn’t see her again. He wouldn’t hold her again. He’d made peace
with Sosia. He’d never stopped caring for his wife. Maybe she finally
believed that. Or maybe she’d decided showing she didn’t believe it wasn’t
a good idea.
But Lanius also began to notice that the serving women in the palace
looked on him with new eyes these days. Before he slept with Cristata,
they’d seemed to think he wouldn’t do anything like that. Now they knew he
might. And they knew how much they might gain if he did—with them. They
straightened up whenever he came by. They batted their eyes. They swung
their hips. Their voices got lower and throatier. They leaped to obey his
every request. It was all very enjoyable, and all very distracting.
Sosia also noticed. She didn’t find it enjoyable. “They’re a pack of
sluts,” she told Lanius. “I hope you can see that, too.”
“Oh, yes. I see it,” he said. That seemed to satisfy Sosia. He’d hoped
it would. He’d even meant it. That didn’t mean he didn’t go on enjoying.
Few men fail to enjoy pretty women finding them attractive, regardless of
whether they intend to do anything about it.
Lanius hadn’t particularly intended to do anything about it. He
understood that some—a lot—of the serving women’s new interest was
mercenary. As things worked out, though, his eyes didn’t ruin his good
intentions. His nose did.
He was going down the corridor that led to the royal archives when he
suddenly stopped and sniffed. The scent was sweet and thick and spicy.
He’d never smelled it before, or at least never noticed it before. He
noticed it now. He couldn’t have noticed it much more if he’d been hit
over the head.
“What
is that perfume?” he said.
“It’s called sandalwood, Your Majesty.” The maidservant’s name, Lanius
recalled, was Zenaida. She was from the south, with wavy midnight hair,
black eyes, and a delicately arched nose. When she smiled at the king, her
lips seemed redder and fuller and softer than ever before. “Do you like
it?”
“Very much,” Lanius answered. “It. . . suits you.”
“Thank you.” Zenaida smiled again, without any coyness about what she
had in mind. “And what would suit
you, Your Majesty?”
Not even Lanius, who often failed to notice hints, could misunderstand
that. He coughed once or twice. If not for the perfume, he might have
passed it off with a joke or pretended not to hear. But the fragrance
unlocked gates in his defenses before he even realized the citadel was
under attack. Up until now, he’d hardly noticed Zenaida. He wondered why
not.
“What
would suit me?” he murmured. The answer came without hesitation.
“Come along,” he told Zenaida. Smiling once more—a woman’s secret smile of
victory—she stepped up by his side.
The palace was full of little rooms—storerooms, small reception halls,
rooms with no particular purpose. Finding an empty one was as easy as
walking down the hallway and opening a door. Lanius and Zenaida went in
together. The king closed the door and barred it. When he turned back to
Zenaida, the maidservant was already pulling her dress off over her
head.
Half an hour later, they came out of the chamber—Zenaida first, then
Lanius, who was still setting his clothes to rights. He blew the
maidservant a kiss as she went off on whatever business he’d interrupted
when he smelled the sandalwood perfume. Laughing a happy little laugh, she
fluttered her fingers at him and disappeared around a corner.
“Oh. The archives.” Lanius had to remind himself where he’d been going
when he smelled Zenaida’s perfume. He suspected he wore a silly grin as he
opened the doors that let him in and closed them behind him.
He sat down and started poking through old tax registers. After a
moment, he realized he was paying no attention to them. Now he laughed.
Thinking about Zenaida’s smooth, creamy skin, about the way she arched her
back and moaned when pleasure took her, was more fun than finding out how
many sheep villagers two hundred years dead had claimed they owned.
Thinking about that also made him realize he’d enjoyed lying with her
as much as he ever had with Cristata. He wondered what that meant.
Actually, he had a pretty good idea. It meant what he’d thought was love
for the other serving woman had probably been nothing but
satisfaction.
Grus had told him as much not long after sending Cristata off to a
provincial town. Lanius hadn’t wanted to listen. Now . . . Now he had to
admit to himself (he never would have admitted it to Grus) that his
father-in-law had been right. Making love with Zenaida had taught him more
than he’d imagined when he first sniffed sandalwood.
And not only had he learned something about himself, he’d also learned
something about Grus. The other king got high marks for cleverness. Lanius
also had a better idea why Grus sometimes bedded other women. Sosia
wouldn’t care for that bit of insight, or how he’d gotten it. Neither
would Estrilda. Lanius shrugged. He had it, come what might.
Another tall-masted, high-pooped ship burned in the waters off
Nishevatz. It lit up the night. The Chernagors had quit trying to
resupply the city during the day; Pterocles’ magic made that impossibly
expensive. They’d tried to sneak the merchantman past the wizard under
cover of darkness. They’d tried, they’d failed, and now they were paying
the price—he’d found that setting ships alight with sorcerously projected
ordinary fire worked at night as well as using sunlight did in the
daytime.
Standing beside King Grus, Prince Vsevolod folded his big, bony hands
into fists. “Cook!” he shouted out to the sailors aboard the burning ship.
“You help my son, the scum, you get what you deserve. Cook!”
“I think we’re getting somewhere, Your Highness,” Grus said.
“I know where I want to get.” Vsevolod turned to the gray stone walls
of Nishevatz, now bathed in flickering red and gold. “And I know what I
want to do. I want to get hands on son.”
“What would you do with Vasilko if you had him?” Grus asked.
“Make him remember who is rightful Prince of Nishevatz,” Vsevolod
answered, which didn’t go into detail but did sound more than a little
menacing.
“I wonder how much food they’ve got in there,” Grus said in musing
tones. “Maybe not so much, if they thought they could bring in fresh
supplies whenever they needed them. They’re going to get hungry by and by,
if they aren’t hungry already.”
Vsevolod shook his fist at the city-state he’d ruled for so many years.
“Starve!” he shouted angrily. “Let them all starve. I take bodies out,
bury in fields, raise cabbages from them. Then I bring in new people,
honest people—not thieves who take away crown from honest man.”
Grus didn’t argue with him. He’d long since seen there was no point to
arguing with Vsevolod. The exiled prince knew what he knew, or thought he
knew what he knew, and didn’t care to change his mind.
Sure enough, Vsevolod demanded, “How soon we attack Nishevatz?”
“When we’re sure the defenders are too hungry and too weak to put up
much of a fight,” Grus answered. “We fought too soon and too hard year
before last, if you’ll remember. We want to win when we go in.”
Vsevolod made a noise down deep in his chest. It wasn’t agreement, or
anything even close to agreement. The prince sounded like a lion balked of
its prey. He didn’t want to wait. He wanted to spring and leap and
kill.
Grus also wanted Nishevatz. What he didn’t want was to pay a crippling
price for the Chernagor city-state. He’d done worse than that on his
earlier campaign against it—he’d paid a high price and failed to take the
place. Another embarrassment of that sort would be the last thing he—or
Avornis—needed.
Vsevolod’s thinking ran along different lines. “When do you attack?” he
asked again. “When is Nishevatz mine once more?”
“I told you, I’ll attack when I think I can win without bankrupting
myself.”
“This is coward’s counsel,” Vsevolod complained.
“Oh?” King Grus sent him a cold stare. “How many men are
you contributing to this attack, Your Highness?”
The deposed Prince of Nishevatz returned a glance full of fury—full of
something not far from hate. “Traitors. My people are traitors,” he
mumbled, and slowly and deliberately turned his back on Grus.
An Avornan who did something like that to his sovereign would find
himself in trouble in short order. But Grus wasn’t Vsevolod’s sovereign.
Vsevolod was, or had been, a sovereign in his own right. The way he acted
in exile made Grus understand why the people of Nishevatz had been
inclined to give Vasilko a chance to rule them. Since Vasilko relied on
the Banished One for backing, that choice hadn’t been a good one. But
Vsevolod hadn’t been the best of rulers, either.
Sighing, Grus wished
he had some other choice besides Vsevolod or Vasilko to offer the
Chernagors inside Nishevatz. But, as he knew all too well, he didn’t. If
only Vsevolod had a long-lost brother or cousin, or Vasilko had a brother
or even a bastard half brother. But they didn’t. Grus was stuck with one
or the other—was, in effect, stuck with Vsevolod, since Vasilko had chosen
the Banished One. The King of Avornis sighed again. In a poem, some other
candidate for Prince of Nishevatz would turn up just when he was needed
most. In real life, this bitter old man, no bargain himself, was the only
tool that fit Grus’ hand.
“Traitors,” Vsevolod muttered again. He swung back toward Grus. “Your
wizard can find way over wall, yes?”
“Maybe.” Grus wasn’t sure himself. “I’d better see, though.”
He sent a messenger to find Pterocles and bring the wizard to him.
Pterocles came promptly enough. The wizard seemed more cheerful than he
had since being felled in front of Nishevatz during the last siege.
Succeeding with his spells had buoyed him, the same way a string of
victories would have buoyed a general.
“What can I do for you, Your Majesty?” he asked.
“I don’t know yet,” Grus answered. “Prince Vsevolod has asked what you
can do to help take Nishevatz away from Vasilko. It strikes me as a
reasonable question.”
“Set walls afire, like you set ships afire,” Vsevolod said eagerly.
“Roast Vasilko like saddle of mutton in oven.”
Pterocles shook his head. “I’m sorry, Your Highness, but I can’t manage
that. The ships are wooden, and burn easily. I’m not wizard enough to set
stone afire. I’m not sure any mortal could do that.”
Maybe the Banished One could hung in the air, unspoken but almost
palpable.
“Burn gates, in that case,” Vsevolod said, which was actually a good
suggestion.
Grus looked at Pterocles. Pterocles looked toward the gates, which were
of timbers heavily plated with iron. “Maybe,” the wizard said. “I could
try, anyhow, when the sun comes out again. For that, I’d want the
strongest, purest sorcery I can work, and sunlight is stronger and purer
than earthly fire.” The day, like many around Nishevatz, was dim and
overcast, with fog rolling in off the Northern Sea.
“Get ready to try, then,” Grus told Pterocles. “We’ll see what
happens.” He didn’t say anything suggesting he would blame the wizard if
the magic failed. He wanted to build up the other man’s confidence, not
tear it down.
Vsevolod cared nothing for such concerns. Glowering at Pterocles, he
demanded, “Why you have to wait for sun?”
“As I said, it gives the best fire to power my spells,” Pterocles
replied.
“You want fire?” Vsevolod pointed toward the rows of cookfires
throughout the Avornan encampment. “We have plenty fires for you.”
“You may think so, but the magic is stronger with the sun,” Pterocles
said. “For a ship that’s very easy to burn, the other fire, I’ve found,
will do. For the gates, which will be much harder, I have to have the
strongest fire I can get. Do I tell you how to run your business, Your
Majesty?”
Vsevolod muttered something in the Chernagor language. Grus didn’t
understand a word of it. All things considered, that was probably just as
well. Before the Prince of Nishevatz could return to Avornan, Grus spoke
up, saying, “We have to trust Pterocles’ judgment here. When he’s ready,
he can cast the spell. Until then, he would do better to wait.”
More mutters from Vsevolod. “Thank you, Your Majesty,” Pterocles
said.
“You’re welcome,” Grus answered, but he couldn’t help adding, “I hope
you don’t have to wait too long.”
Later, he wished he hadn’t said that. He couldn’t help wondering
whether he’d jinxed the wizard and his magic. Day after day of gloom and
fog followed, with never more than a halfhearted glimpse of the sun. Such
stretches of bad weather could happen here, sure enough. Was this one
natural, though?
At last, Grus grew impatient and frustrated enough to ask the question
aloud. Pterocles only shrugged. “Hard to know for certain, Your Majesty. I
will say this once more, though—weatherworking’s not easy, not for
mortals.”
“Not for mortals.” The king chewed on that. “Is the Banished One
turning his eye this way again, then?”
“I haven’t noticed any sign of it.” Pterocles’ sigh sent more fog into
the cool, moist air. “I think I would. A man who’s known the lion’s claw
recognizes it when he feels it again.”
Four days later, the weather finally changed, but not for the better.
Rain began dripping from the heavens. It went on and on, never too hard
but never letting up, either. Avornan soldiers squelched glumly through
their camp, pulling each boot out of the mud in turn.
The rain frustrated Pterocles in more ways than one. “I hope the
Chernagors don’t try to sneak ships into Nishevatz while the weather stays
bad,” he said. “Bad for us, I mean—good for them. They might manage it
without our even noticing. For that matter, using ordinary fire in the
spells against their ships wouldn’t be easy now.”
“How likely are they to do that?” Grus asked. “
I wouldn’t want to try sailing through rain and fog.” He
shuddered, imagining rocks or other ships unseen until too late. Pterocles
only gave him another shrug. That did nothing to reassure him. With a
shrug of his own, Grus said, “Be ready to do what needs doing when the
weather finally clears. Sooner or later, it has to.”
“I’ll be ready, Your Majesty,” the wizard declared. Grus could only
accept that. If he nagged Pterocles after such a promise, he would likely
do the Avornan cause more harm than good.
After another week of fog and drizzle and rain, the king felt about
ready to burst. So did Vsevolod, who muttered darkly into his white beard.
Pterocles paced back and forth like a caged bear. Even General Hirundo,
among the most cheerful men ever born, began snapping at people.
Grus felt like cheering when he finally saw a sunny dawn. Thanks to the
rain that had gone before, it was a beautiful day. All the weeds and
shrubs around Nishevatz glowed like emeralds. Sunbeams sparkled off drops
of water in the greenery, spawning countless tiny rainbows. The bushes
might have been full of diamonds. The air still tasted sweet and damp; the
rain had washed it clean of the stinks that clung to an encamped army.
“Let’s go, Pterocles,” Grus called. He didn’t ask if the wizard was
ready to work his magic against the gate. He assumed Pterocles was. If
that assumption proved wrong, the king would have something to say. Until
it proved so, he would go forward.
Pterocles said, “Your Majesty, I can try the spell now if you order me
to. It may work, but it may not. If you let me wait until the sun stands
higher in the sky and its light is stronger, the spell is almost sure to
work then. I will do as you require either way. What would you like?”
However much Grus wished it weren’t, that was a legitimate question.
“Wait,” he said after thinking a little while. “Your magic is the most
important part of the attack. It needs to work to give us a chance of
taking Nishevatz. Do it when you think the odds are best.”
“Thank you.” Pterocles sketched a salute.
Grus watched the skies, looking for clouds to roll across the sun and
steal the wizard’s chance. He thought he would tell Pterocles to try with
ordinary fire then—if it started the gate burning, well and good; if not,
they could wait for sun again. But the day only got brighter, and about as
warm as it ever seemed to around Nishevatz. Steam rose from the walls of
the city-state, and from the ground around it. The king was about to ask
Pterocles if he was ready to begin when a rider pounded up from the south.
Mud flew from his horse’s hooves as it trotted forward. “Your Majesty!”
the messenger called. “I have important news, your Majesty!”
“Give it to me,” Grus said, as calmly as he could. News like that, news
important enough to rush up from the south, was unlikely to be good.
And, sure enough, the messenger said, “I’m sorry, Your Majesty, but
Prince Ulash’s Menteshe have come north over the Stura. They’re hitting
the provinces on our side of the river hard.”
“
Ulash’s Menteshe?” Grus said, and the rider nodded. Grus cursed.
That was the worst news he could have gotten. Ulash had stayed quiet when
Prince Evren raided the southern provinces a few years before. If he was
running wild now . . . He was at least as strong as all the other Menteshe
princes put together.
No wonder the Banished One stopped worrying about the land of the
Chernagors, Grus thought.
“Shall I go ahead and cast the spell, Your Majesty?” Pterocles
asked.
“No,” Grus said, hating the word. “We have to break off the siege
again. We have to go back.”
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Lanius wished he weren’t once more briefly seeing Grus in the city of
Avornis as the other king hurried from one trouble spot to another. Grus
looked harried. Lanius couldn’t blame him. Grus said, “Is it really as bad
as it’s sounded from all the reports I’ve had?”
“All I have are the same reports,” Lanius answered. “It doesn’t sound
good, does it?”
“This isn’t just a raid, sure enough,” Grus said. “They’re throwing
everything they’ve got into it.”
“In a way, it’s a compliment,” Lanius said. Grus eyed him as though
he’d lost his mind. “It is,” Lanius insisted. “You were doing too well up
in the Chernagor country. The Banished One couldn’t find any way to stop
you up there, so he got Ulash moving down in the south.”
The other king frowned as he thought things over. “Something to that,”
he said at last. His frown got deeper, pulling the lines of his face into
harsh relief.
He’s not a young man anymore, Lanius thought. But even if Grus
wasn’t as young as he had been, he remained vigorous. He also hadn’t lost
his wry wit. “It’s a compliment I could do without, you know.”
“I believe it.” Lanius waited for Grus to warn him not to get too
enthusiastic about running the kingdom from the capital while his fellow
king took the field. Grus didn’t do it. Instead, he threw back his head—
and yawned. Lanius asked him, “How long do you aim to stay in the city of
Avornis?”
“Today, maybe tomorrow,” Grus answered. “No longer than that. A couple
of things I need to take care of here, and then I’ll be on my way down
toward the Stura. It’s not like I haven’t fought in those parts
before.”
“What are you going to do here?” Lanius asked.
Grus’ smile was all sharp teeth. “I know Petrosus isn’t your favorite
minister,” he said. Lanius nodded. The other king went on, “You’ll be
dealing with someone else from now on. Petrosus will spend the rest of his
days in the Maze.”
“Even though he’s Ortalis’ father-in-law?” Lanius said in surprise.
“Because he’s Ortalis’ father-in-law,” Grus answered
grimly.
“But Ortalis and Limosa ran off and got married by themselves,” Lanius
said. “That’s how they both tell it.”
“I don’t care how they tell it,” Grus said. “Ortalis wouldn’t have
chosen her if her father hadn’t pulled wires. And any which way, you can’t
tell me Petrosus wouldn’t try to pull more now that he’s wedged his way
into my family.”
In a way, that was funny. Grus had wedged
his way into Lanius’ family the same way. And Grus didn’t just
pull wires. He had the whole web of the kingdom in his hands. Pointing
that out would not have endeared Lanius to him. The only thing Lanius
found to say was, “You would know best.”
Even that earned him a sharp look from Grus. The other king was far
from a fool, even if Lanius had to remind himself of that every so often.
Grus said, “There are times when I wonder whether I know anything about
anything.” You know enough to hold on to things for yourself, Lanius
thought. He said, “Will you use river galleys against the Menteshe?”
“If I can,” Grus answered. “Past that, I’ll just have to see.”
Lanius nodded. “All right. Until you see how things are down in the
south, I don’t suppose you can say anything more.” He hesitated, then
added, “Are you sure you want to send Petrosus to the Maze? He hasn’t done
anything out of line that I’ve been able to see—and you’re right, I don’t
like him a bit, so I wouldn’t be shy about telling you if he had.”
“I’m sure.” The older king sounded altogether determined.
“By all the signs, Ortalis and Limosa are happy newlyweds,” Lanius
said.
Grus snorted. “Ortalis is getting laid regularly. Of course he’s happy.
But what happens when that isn’t enough to keep him happy?” He made a
particularly sour face. So did Lanius, who knew what his fatherin-Jaw
meant, and wished he didn’t. He wondered what Limosa would think when she
found out about her new husband’s . . . peculiar tastes.
Changing the subject seemed a good idea. Lanius said, “Gods go with you
on your trip to the south.”
“Yes,” Grus said. They sat alone in a small audience chamber. A low
table with a jug of wine and a couple of cups stood between them. Grus
emptied his cup, then looked around to make sure no one lurked outside a
window or in the hallway by the door. Only after he’d satisfied himself
did he continue, “They’d better, don’t you think? Considering who’s behind
Ulash, I mean.”
“Oh, yes. That’s what I had in mind, too.” Lanius also took another sip
of wine.
Grus got up, came around the table, and set a hand on his shoulder.
“You take care of things here. I’ll do what I can with the Menteshe—
to the Menteshe.”
“Good.” Lanius beamed. Grus was starting to accept him as a real
partner, not just as one in name only. No doubt Grus did so only because
he had no choice. Lanius knew as much. He was no less pleased on account
of that.
The fastest way south was by ship through the Maze. That made Hirundo
unhappy. Even on the placid waters of the marsh, Grus’ general was less
than a good sailor. He wagged a finger at the king. “Don’t you laugh at me
now, Your Majesty, or I’ll pay you back when you get on a horse.”
“Me? I didn’t say a thing.” Grus contrived to look innocent.
Hirundo laughed, which made him suspect his contrivance could have been
better. “I saw what you were thinking. The only thing I can say for this
is, it’s better than going out on the open sea.” He shuddered at the
memory.
“It’s better than horseback, too,” Grus said. “Some people might think so,” Hirundo answered pointedly. “I
don’t happen to be one of them.” He glanced around at the water, the weeds
and branches floating in it, the muddy, grassy tussocks rising just out of
it, and shook his head. “I think the only real reason you came through
here was so you could see for yourself the monastery you picked out for
Petrosus.”
Grus had seen the monastery. It sat in the middle of a tussock big
enough to be called an island. The only way off was by boat, and even
boats had trouble getting through the mud surrounding it. All the same,
the place was built like a fortress. Monks who came there would assuredly
spend the rest of their lives in prayer.
Something landed on Grus’ arm. It bit him. He swatted. He didn’t know
whether he smashed it or not. A moment later, something else bit him on
the back of the neck. He swatted there, too. The bug squashed under his
fingers. He wiped his hand on a trouser leg. Monks at Petrosus’ new
monastery might spend every spring and summer praying to be plagued by
fewer bugs.
Hirundo was swatting, too. “Miserable things. This place is good for
nothing—not a single cursed thing.”
“Oh, I don’t know about
that,” Grus said. “I can’t think of any place much better for
getting rid of troublemakers.” He sent Hirundo a speculative stare.
“Don’t look at me that way!” the general exclaimed. “Don’t you dare,
Your Majesty! You tell anybody—me, for instance—he’s liable to have to
stay here for the rest of his days, and he’ll be good forever. I know I
would.”
“Don’t give me that. I’ve known you too long, and I know you too well,”
Grus said. “Nothing could make you stay good forever, or even very
long.”
“The threat of staying here for the rest of my life would do it,”
Hirundo insisted. “Offhand, I can’t think of anything else.”
When the sun set, the flies and gnats went away and the mosquitoes came
out. Their high, thin whine was enough to drive anyone mad. Some of the
sailors, more used to traveling through the Maze than Grus was, draped
fine mesh nets over themselves and slept without being badly bothered.
Grus got some of the netting for himself, too. One of the things nobody
told him, though, was how to pull it over himself without letting
mosquitoes get in under it. The king passed an uncomfortable night and
woke with several new bites from the company he hadn’t wanted.
Noticing Pterocles scratching as the wizard ate bread and ale for
breakfast, he asked, “Don’t you have any magic against mosquitoes?”
Mournfully, the wizard shook his head. “I wish I did, Your Majesty.
Maybe I’ve spent too much time worrying about big things and not enough
about small ones,” he answered, and scratched some more.
Oarmasters on the river galleys got their rowers working as soon as
they could. They worked them hard, too, harder than Grus would have in
their place. When he remarked on that to the oarmaster of his own ship,
the man replied, “Sooner we get out of this miserable place, sooner we
stop getting eaten alive.” Grus had a hard time disagreeing with that.
But getting through the Maze in a hurry wasn’t easy, either. Galleys
and barges went aground on mud banks and had to back oars or, when badly
stuck, to be towed off by other ships. Rowers and officers shouted
curses.
Hirundo said, “There ought to be clearly marked channels, so people
know where they’re going.”
“Part of me says yes to that,” Grus answered. “The other part wonders
whether it’s a good idea to show enemies how to get through the Maze—or,
for that matter, to show people shut up inside the Maze how to get out of
it. I had to dredge one place out so river galleys could get through the
whole length of the Maze. They didn’t used to be able to, you know.”
“Maybe we should have gone around,” Hirundo said.
“Going through it is still the fastest way to get south,” Grus said.
“We’re not crawling now. We’re just not going as fast as we would if
everything were perfect.”
“Oh, hurrah,” Hirundo said sourly.
His general’s sarcasm didn’t faze Grus. He peered south, waiting for
the steersman to find the channel of the Nedon, which ran south for some
little distance after escaping the flat swampland of the Maze. As soon as
the ships were in a place where they could easily tell the difference
between the river and the countryside through which it flowed, they made
much better time.
This left Hirundo no happier. As the river galleys sped up, their
motion grew rougher. Every mile the fleet traveled south, Hirundo got
greener.
Grus, by contrast, enjoyed the journey on the Nedon. Eventually, the
river would turn east, toward the Azanian Sea. Since the Menteshe were
fighting farther south, his men and horses would have to leave the galleys
and barges then. He would have to get on one of those horses. That
prospect left him as delighted as river travel left Hirundo.
When Lanius heard clanks and then a meow in the royal archives, he
wasn’t very surprised, not anymore. He didn’t jump. He didn’t wish he were
a soldier, or even that he had weapons more deadly than pen, parchment,
and ink. He just got to his feet and went over to see if he could find the
moncat responsible for the racket.
After some searching, he did. Pouncer was carrying a stout silver
serving spoon. Lanius wondered how it had gotten the spoon from the
kitchens here to the archives; they weren’t particularly close. For that
matter, the chamber where the moncat lived wasn’t all that close to the
kitchens, either. There had to be passages in the walls a moncat could go
through, regardless of whether a man could.
The king scooped up Pouncer—and the spoon. The moncat twisted and tried
to bite. He tapped it on the nose, hard enough to get its attention. “Stop
that!” he told it, not that it understood Avornan. But it did understand
the tap and the tone of voice. Both told it biting was something it wasn’t
supposed to do. Little by little—about as fast as an ordinary cat would—it
was learning.
Servants exclaimed as Lanius carried Pouncer down the corridor. “How
did it get out this time?” a man asked.
“I don’t know,” the king replied. “I wish I did, but I’ve never seen it
leave its room. I don’t think any cooks have ever seen it sneak into the
kitchens, either.”
“Maybe it’s a ghost.” The servant sounded serious. The workers in the
royal palace were a superstitious lot.
“Feels too solid to be a ghost—and I’ve never heard of a ghost that
steals spoons,” Lanius said. The moncat twisted again, lashing out with
its free front foot. It got Lanius on the forearm. “Ow! I’ve never heard
of a ghost that scratches, either.”
“You never can tell,” the servant said darkly. He went down the
corridor shaking his head. Lanius went up the corridor to the moncats’
chamber.
When he got there, he set Pouncer down. Then he had another small
struggle getting the silver spoon away from the moncat. He watched for a
while, hoping the beast would disappear down whatever hole it had used
while he was there. But, perverse as any cat, it didn’t.
At last, Lanius gave up. He took the spoon off to the kitchens. As he
walked through the palace, he wondered if Pouncer would get there ahead of
him, steal something else, and then disappear again. But he saw no sign of
it when he went through the big swinging doors.
One after another, the cooks denied seeing the moncat. “Has that
miserable beast been in here again?” a fat man asked, pointing to the
spoon in Lanius’ hand.
He held it up. “I didn’t steal this myself.”
He got a laugh. “I don’t suppose you did, Your Majesty,” the fat cook
said, and took it from him. “But how does the moncat keep sneaking
in?”
“That’s what I want to find out,” Lanius answered. “I was hoping you
could tell me.”
“Sorry, Your Majesty,” the cook said. The other men and women who
worked in the kitchens shook their heads. A lot of them sported big
bellies and several chins. That was, Lanius supposed, hardly surprising,
not when they worked with and around food all the time.
A woman said, “What do you suppose the animal’s been eating with that
spoon?” She got a louder laugh than Lanius had, and added, “I suppose we’d
better wash it.” The fat man who was holding it tossed it into a tub of
water ten or fifteen feet away. He had perfect aim. The spoon splashed
into the tub and clattered off whatever crockery already sat in there.
Lanius wondered whether they would have washed it if the cook hadn’t
asked if the moncat had eaten from it. Some things, perhaps, were better
left unknown. He walked out of the kitchen without asking.
He was walking back to his own chambers when he almost bumped into
Limosa, who was coming up the corridor. She dropped him a curtsy,
murmuring, “Good morning, Your Majesty.”
“Good morning, Your Highness,” the king answered. “How are you
today?”
“I am well, thank you,” she answered. “May I please ask you a question,
Your Majesty?”
Lanius thought he knew what the question would be. Since he didn’t see
how he could avoid it, he nodded. “Go ahead.”
“Thank you.” Limosa visibly gathered her courage. “Is there any way you
can release my father from the Maze?”
He’d been right. “I’m sorry,” he said, and did his best to sound as
though he really
were sorry. He knew he had to work at it, considering what he
really thought of Petrosus.
Unfortunately, he wasn’t the only one who knew what he thought of the
former treasury minister. Flushing, Limosa said, “I know you aren’t fond
of my father, Your Majesty. But could you please free him for my
sake?”
“If I could, I would,” Lanius answered, thinking,
If I could, I. . . might. I did ask Grus not to send him to the Maze,
so maybe I would. He wasn’t brokenhearted at having a good excuse not
to, though. “But King Grus sent him away, and King Grus is the only one
who can bring him back to the palace.”
“And King Grus won’t,” Limosa said. Lanius didn’t contradict her.
Biting her lip, she went on, “He thinks my father tricked Ortalis into
marrying me. By the gods, Your Majesty, I tell you again it isn’t
true.”
“I see,” Lanius said—as neutral a phrase as he could find.
“It
isn’t true,” Limosa insisted. “I wanted to marry Ortalis. I love
him.” Lanius wanted to say,
Are you out of your mind? Before either did more than cross his
mind, Limosa went on, “He’s the most wonderful man I ever met—uh, meaning
no disrespect to you, Your Majesty, of course.” She blushed.
“Of course,” Lanius echoed. He was too bewildered, too astonished, to
find anything else to say. Ortalis? The Ortalis who hunted because he was
fond of blood? The Ortalis who hurt women because it excited him?
That Ortalis was the most wonderful man Limosa had ever met?
Something, somewhere, didn’t add up. Lanius had no idea what. He did know
the only individual to whom he less wanted to be married than he did to
Ortalis was the Banished One.
Limosa sighed. “He’s so sweet. And he does such marvelous things.” She
blushed again, this time a bright, bright red. Lanius only scratched his
head. He really did wonder if they were talking about the same Ortalis. If
he hadn’t seen Grus’ son with Limosa, he wouldn’t have believed it.
Horse-drawn wagons full of grain rattled along with Grus’ army. They
didn’t slow it down badly, but they did help tie it to the roads. Grus
wasn’t happy about that, but knew he gained as well as lost from having
them along. The Menteshe made a habit of burning farms and fields and
anything else they came across. Carrying supplies with him was the only
way he could be sure of having them when he needed them most. The horizon
to the south should have been smooth, or gently rolling with the low hills
between the valleys of the Nine Rivers. Instead, an ugly brown-black
smudge obscured part of it. Pointing that way, Grus said, “We’ll find the
nomads there.”
Hirundo nodded. “That’s how it looks to me, too.” He sent the king a
sly smile. “Are you ready to ride into battle, Your Majesty?”
Did
ride have a little extra stress, or was Grus imagining things?
Knowing Hirundo, he probably wasn’t. He answered, “I’m as ready as I’m
going to be,” and set a hand on his horse’s neck. The beast was a placid
gelding. It did what Grus wanted it to do, and didn’t put up much in the
way of argument. That suited him fine. Hirundo rode a stallion. It had
more flash, more fire. Grus cared very little about that. To him, a horse
with fire was a horse that was all too likely to pitch him out of the
saddle and onto the ground headfirst.
He nodded to a trumpeter who rode close by. The man blew
Trot. The king used his knees and the reins to urge his horse up
from a walk. The sooner his men closed with the Menteshe, the better, as
far as he was concerned. Prince Ulash’s men had already come too far north
to suit him.
“Scouts out in the van! Scouts out to the flanks!” Hirundo called.
Riders peeled off from the main body of the army and hurried out to take
those positions. Grus nodded again. He would have given that command in a
moment if Hirundo hadn’t. Generations of painful experience fighting the
southern nomads had taught Avornis that attacks could come from any
direction at any time.
Lanceheads glittered in the sun. His army was split fairly evenly
between lancers and archers. If they could come to close quarters with the
Menteshe, they would have the edge. More painful experience had taught
that closing with the hard-riding nomads wasn’t always easy, or even
possible.
Grus glanced toward Pterocles. “What of their wizards?” the king
asked.
“I don’t feel anything . . . out of the ordinary, Your Majesty,” the
wizard said after a pause for thought. After another pause, he added, “Not
everything is the way it ought to be, though.”
“What do you mean?” Grus asked. Pterocles only shrugged. Grus tried
again, asking, “Why do you say that?” Pterocles gave back another shrug.
The king said, “Could it be because you feel the Banished One paying
attention to what happens here, where you didn’t up by Nishevatz?”
Pterocles jerked, as though someone had stuck him with a pin when he
wasn’t looking. He nodded. “Yes. It could be. In fact, I think it is.
There’s . . . something watching, sure enough.”
“What can you do?”
“What can I do?” Pterocles laughed, more than a little wildly. “I can
hope he doesn’t notice me, that’s what. And a forlorn hope it is, too.” He
pulled on the reins and steered his horse away from the king’s.
Grus hadn’t intended to ask him any more questions anyhow.
Late that afternoon, a scout came galloping back to the king. “Your
Majesty! Your Majesty!” he called, his voice cracking with excitement. “We
just saw our first Menteshe, Your Majesty!”
“Did you?” Grus said, and the young man nodded, his head jerking up and
down, his eyes shining. “Did you catch him? Did you kill him?”
Some of that fervid excitement faded. “No, Your Majesty. I’m sorry. He
rode off to the southwest. We sent a few men after him, but he got
away.”
“Don’t worry about it,” Grus told him. “Plenty more where he came from.
And maybe he showed us where some of his friends are.”
If I find them, will the Banished One be brooding over the
battlefield? Grus wondered.
If I don’t, though, what am I doing here? Why aren’t I just yielding
my southern provinces to Prince Ulash? He couldn’t do that, not if he
wanted to stay King of Avornis, not if he wanted to be able to stand the
sight of his own face whenever he chanced to see a reflection. But he
didn’t relish going forward, either.
The Avornan army didn’t go much farther forward that day. When the army
encamped for the night, Grus ringed it with sentries a long way out.
“That’s very good,” Hirundo said. “That’s very good. I remember how much
trouble Evren’s men gave us at night.”
“So do I,” Grus answered. “That’s why I’m doing this.” The Menteshe
would sneak close if they could, and pepper a camp with arrows. They
didn’t do much harm, but they stole sleep soldiers needed.
Despite all the sentries, a handful of nomads did manage to sneak close
enough to the main camp to shoot a few arrows at it. They wounded two or
three men before shouts roused soldiers who came after them. Then they
disappeared into the night. They’d done what they’d come to do.
The disturbance roused Grus. He lost a couple of hours of sleep
himself, and was yawning and sandy-eyed when the Avornans set out not long
after sunrise. They went past fields the raiders had torched perhaps only
the day before. Sour smoke still hung in the air, rasping the lungs and
stinging the eyes.
He actually saw his first Menteshe on Avornan soil the next morning. A
band of Ulash’s riders had slipped past the Avornan sentries, leaving them
none the wiser. By the surprise with which the Menteshe reacted to the
sight of the whole Avornan army heading their way, they hadn’t so much
eluded the scouts as bypassed them without either side’s noticing.
Despite the way the Menteshe threw up their hands and shouted in their
guttural language, they didn’t wheel their horses and gallop off as fast
as they could go. Instead, they rode toward the Avornans, and started
shooting at a range Avornan bows couldn’t match.
Grus had seen that before, too, most recently in his fight with Prince
Evren’s nomads. “Forward!” he shouted to the trumpeters, who blew the
appropriate horn call. The Avornans pushed their horses up to a gallop as
fast as they could. Grus’ own mount thundered forward with the rest. He
hoped he could stay aboard the jouncing beast. A fall now wouldn’t be
embarrassing. It would be fatal.
The Menteshe, vastly outnumbered, were not ashamed to flee. Grus had
expected nothing else. They kept shooting over their shoulders, too, and
shooting very well. But the Avornans were also shooting now, and some of
them had faster horses than the nomads did. Whether the Menteshe liked it
or not, their pursuers came into range.
And the Avornans could shoot well, top, even if they didn’t carry
double-curved bows reinforced with horn and sinew the way Ulash’s men did.
One nomad after another threw up his hands and crumpled to the ground. A
horse went down, too, and the beast just behind fell over it and crashed
down. Grus hoped both riders got killed.
The surviving nomads scattered then, galloping wildly in all
directions. A few of them might have gotten away, but most didn’t. Grus
waved to the trumpeters. They blew the signal to rein in. Little by
little, the Avornans slowed. Sides heaving, Grus’ horse bent its head to
crop a wisp of grass.
“Very neat, Your Majesty,” Hirundo called, a grin on his face.
“Do you mean this little skirmish, or do you mean that I managed to
stay on the horse?” Grus inquired.
Hirundo’s grin got wider. “Whichever you’d rather, of course.”
“I’m prouder of staying on and even keeping up,” the king said. “This
little band of Menteshe was nothing special—beating them was like cracking
an egg with a sledgehammer. They’re scattered over the countryside,
raiding and looting. Until they come together again, we’ll win some easy
victories like this.”
“We want to win as many of them as we can, too, before they
do come together,” his general said. “The more of them we can get
rid of that way, the fewer we’ll have to worry about then.”
“I know. Believe me, I know,” Grus said. “And even if we do hit them
hard, they spatter like quicksilver. We won’t always be able to pursue the
way we did here, either. If we split up to go after them, they’re liable
to jump us instead of the other way around.”
“Well, Your Majesty, you certainly do understand the problem,” Hirundo
said. “Now if you can figure out a way to solve it...”
Grus grunted and leaned forward to pat the side of his horse’s neck.
Avornans had understood the problem ever since the Menteshe boiled up from
the south centuries before. The nomads, trained since childhood to ride
and to tend their flocks, were simply better horsemen than the Avornans.
Not only did they carry more powerful bows, but they could also cover more
ground. If Avornis hadn’t had the advantage of numbers . . . Grus didn’t
care to think about what might have happened then.
Forcing himself to look on the bright side instead, Grus said, “Well,
we solved it here, anyhow.”
“So we did.” Hirundo nodded. “How many more times will we have to solve
it, though, before we finally drive the Menteshe back over the Stura?”
“I don’t know,” Grus answered with a sigh. He didn’t even know yet
whether the Avornans
could drive Prince Ulash’s men back over the river this year.
That was something else he preferred not to think about. With another
sigh, he went on, “The other question is, how much damage will they do
before we can throw them out? They haven’t mounted an invasion like this
for years.”
“Yes, and we both know why, or think we do,” Hirundo said. The response
made the king no happier. Up until recently, Ulash had seemed both
reasonable and peaceable, qualities Grus wasn’t in the habit of
associating with the Menteshe. But he and his folk reverenced the Banished
One—the Fallen Star, they called him. If he told Ulash to cause trouble
for Avornis, Ulash would—Ulash had—no matter how reasonable and peaceable
he’d seemed for many years.
“I wonder ...” Grus said slowly.
“What’s that, Your Majesty?” Hirundo asked.
“I wonder if we can do anything to persuade Ulash he’d be better off
worshiping the gods in the heavens than the Banished One.”
“I doubt it.” Hirundo, a practical man, sounded like one. “If the
Menteshe haven’t figured out who the true gods are yet, we can’t teach
‘em.”
He was probably right, no matter how much Grus wished he were wrong.
But things were more complicated than Hirundo realized. Bang Olor and
Queen Quelea and the rest were undoubtedly the gods in the heavens. That
made them stronger than the Banished One, yes. Whether it made him any
less a true god . . . was yet another thing Grus would sooner not have
contemplated.
That evening, drums boomed in the distance. Grus knew what that
meant—the Menteshe were signaling back and forth across the miles. The
drumbeats carried far better than horn calls could have. The king wondered
what the nomads were saying with those kettledrums. He kicked at the dirt
inside his tent. He’d served down in the south for years, but he hadn’t
learned to make sense of the drums. He knew no Avornans who had.
Too bad, he thought.
The drums went on all through the night. Grus woke several times, and
each time heard them thudding and muttering, depending on how far off they
were. Every time he woke, he had more trouble falling back to sleep.
“A letter from King Grus, Your Majesty,” a courier said, and handed
King Lanius a rolled and sealed parchment.
“Thank you,” Lanius said in some surprise; he hadn’t expected anything
from Grus. He broke the wax seal and opened the letter.
King Grus to King Lanius—
greetings, he read, and then,
I wonder if you would be kind enough to do me a favor. Does anyone in
the royal archives talk about the drum signals the Menteshe use? Does
anyone know what the different signals mean? If you can find out, please
let me know as quickly as possible. Many thanks for your help. A
scrawled signature completed the letter.
“Is there an answer, Your Majesty?” the courier asked.
“Yes.” Lanius called for parchment, pen, and ink.
King Lanius to Grus—
greetings, he wrote; he still hesitated to admit that Grus
deserved the royal title. But that reluctance didn’t keep him from
continuing,
I
do not know of any records such as you request, but I have never
looked for them, either. I will now, and as soon as I can I will let you
know if I find what you want—
and, for that matter, if I don’t. He signed the letter, sealed it
with candle wax and his signet ring, and gave it to the courier. “Take
this to Grus in the south. I want him to know I will give it my full
attention.”
“Yes, Your Majesty. Thank you, Your Majesty.” The courier bowed and
hurried away.
Lanius, bemused, headed straight for the archives. Grus had never asked
him for information before. He wondered if he could come up with it. He
hoped he could. No Avornan could think of the southern provinces being
ravaged without cringing. Lanius might still wish Grus didn’t wear the
crown. That had nothing to do with whether he wanted Grus to drive the
Menteshe out of the kingdom.
“Drum signals,” Lanius muttered. He knew where a lot of old parchments
that had to do with the Menteshe in one way or another were stored. Maybe
he could find what Grus wanted in among them.
He spent the rest of the day trying, but had no luck. He did discover
there were even more documents in those crates than he’d thought. He
vanished back into the archives after breakfast, and didn’t come out again
until suppertime.
When he disappeared early the following morning, too, Sosia called
after him, “I hope I’ll see you again before too long.”
“That’s right,” answered Lanius, who’d only half heard her. Sosia
laughed and shook her head; she’d seen such fits take her husband
before.
He found the best light he could in the archives. No one ever did a
proper job of cleaning the skylights far above, which left the dusty
daylight in there all the more wan and shirting. Lanius had complained
about that before. He wondered whether complaining again would do any
good. He had his doubts.
Then he started going through the parchments once more, and forgot
about skylights and everything else but the work at hand. He had no
trouble finding parchments mentioning the Menteshe drums. The Avornans
hadn’t needed long to realize the nomads didn’t pound them for amusement
alone. But what they meant? That was a different question.
The more Lanius read, the more annoyed he got.
Why hadn’t his countrymen paid more attention to the drums? More
than a few of them, traders and soldiers, had learned the spoken and
written language of the Menteshe. Why hadn’t anyone bothered to learn
their drum signals? Or, if someone had, why hadn’t he bothered to write
them down?
Lanius kept plugging away. He learned all sorts of interesting things
about the Menteshe, things he’d never known or things he’d seen once
before and then forgotten. He learned the commands a Menteshe used with a
draft horse. Those fascinated him, but they had nothing to do with what
Grus wanted. I
can’t come up empty, Lanius told himself.
I just can’t. If he failed here, Grus would never ask him for
anything again. As though that weren’t bad enough, the other king would
despise the archives. Lanius took that as personally as though Grus were
to despise his children.
And then, half an hour later, the king let out a whoop that echoed
through the big archives chamber. He held a report by a soldier who’d
served along the Stura in the reign of his own
great-great-great-grandfather. The man had carefully described each drum
signal the Menteshe used and what it meant.
After making a copy of the report, Lanius left the chamber. He
scribbled a note to go with the copy, sealed them both, and gave them to a
courier for the long journey south.
“You look pleased with yourself,” Sosia answered when he went back to
the royal chambers in triumph.
“I am,” Lanius answered, and then looked down at the dusty finery he
wore. “But the servants won’t be pleased with me. I forgot to change
before I went into the archives.”
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
“Well, well.” Grus eyed the parchment he’d just unrolled. “King Lanius
came through for us.”
Hirundo looked over his shoulder. “He sure did,” the general agreed.
“This was in the archives?”
“That’s what the note with it says,” Grus answered.
“If we knew this once upon a time, I wonder why we forgot,” Hirundo
said.
“A spell of peace probably lasted longer than any one man’s career,”
Grus said. “The people who knew wouldn’t have passed it on to the younger
officers who needed to know, and so the chain got broken.”
“That makes sense,” Hirundo said.
“Which doesn’t mean it’s true, of course,” Grus said. “How many things
that seem to make perfect sense turn out not to have anything to do with
what looks sensible?”
“Oh, a few,” his general replied. “Yes, just a few.”
“We don’t have to worry about tracking down the whys and wherefores
here,” Grus said with a certain relief. “If what Lanius says in that note
is true, it happened a long time ago.”
“Now that we have what we need, though, let’s see what we can do about
giving the Menteshe a surprise,” Hirundo said.
“Oh, yes.” Grus nodded. “That’s the idea.”
The drums started thumping at sunset that day. In the evening twilight,
Grus peered down at the list of calls Lanius had sent him. Three beats,
pause, two beats . . . That meant
west. Five quick beats was
assemble. Having found those meanings, the king started laughing.
Knowing what the drums meant helped him less than he’d hoped it would.
Yes, Ulash’s men were to assemble somewhere off to the west. But
where?
Grus snapped his fingers.
He didn’t know; this wasn’t a part of Avornis with which he was
intimately familiar. But the army had soldiers from all parts of Avornis
in it. He called for runners, gave them quick orders, and sent them on
their way through the encampment.
Inside half an hour, they came back with four soldiers, all of them
from farms and towns within a few miles of where the army had camped. They
bowed low before the king. “Never mind that nonsense,” Grus said
impatiently, which made their eyes widen in surprise. “If you were going
to gather a large force of horsemen somewhere within a day’s ride west of
here, where would you do it?”
They looked surprised again, but put their heads together even so.
After a few minutes of talk, they all nodded. One of them pointed
southwest. “Your Majesty, there’s a meadow just this side of the Aternus,
before it runs into the Cephisus.” The latter was one of the Nine. The
soldier went on, “It’s got good grazing—Olor’s beard, sir, it’s got
wonderful grazing—the whole year around. It’s about half a day’s ride that
way.”
“Can you guide us to it?” Grus asked. The man nodded. So did his
comrades. And so did the king. “All right, then. Every one of you will do
that come morning. You’ll all have a reward, too. Keep quiet about this
until then, though.”
The men loudly promised they would. Grus hoped so, though he wasn’t
overoptimistic. His father had always said two men could keep a secret if
one of them was dead, and that, if three men tried, one was likely a fool
and the other two spies. After leaving a farm not impossibly far from
here, his father had come to the city of Avornis and served as a royal
guard, so he’d seen enough intrigue to know what he was talking about.
After sending away the soldiers, Grus summoned Hirundo and Pterocles.
He explained what he had in mind. “Can we do this?” he asked.
“A little risky,” Hirundo said. “More than a little, maybe. We’ll look
like idiots if the Menteshe catch on. We may look like
dead idiots if they catch on.”
Grus nodded. He’d already figured that out for himself. He turned to
Pterocles. “Can you mask us, or mask some of us?”
“Some of us,” the wizard answered. “It would have to be some of us. All?” He rolled his eyes. “That would be an impossibly large job for
any human wizard.”
“Do the best you can,” Grus told him. “I don’t expect you to do more
than a human wizard’s capable of.”
“All right, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said.
“You’re going ahead with this scheme, Your Majesty?” Hirundo asked.
“Yes,” Grus said. “If it works, we’ll give Ulash’s men a nasty
surprise.”
And if it doesn’t, they’ll give us one. He refused to worry—too
much—about that. By its nature, war involved risk. The gamble here seemed
good to the king. If they won, they would win a lot.
They rode out before sunrise the next morning, the men from close by
leading the two divisions into which Grus had split the army. Out of a
certain sense of fairness, Grus sent Pterocles off with the division
Hirundo led. The king hadn’t ridden far before regretting his generosity.
If Pterocles had come with him, he would have had a better chance of
staying alive.
No help for it now, though. As Grus had told his guides to do, they led
him and his men on a looping track that would take them around to strike
the Menteshe from the west—if the Menteshe were there. Whether they struck
them at the same time as Hirundo’s men did was going to be largely a
matter of luck.
One of the guards pointed. “There, Your Majesty! Look!”
They’d guessed right. Prince Ulash’s nomads were gathering on the
meadow. Grus knew exactly the moment when they realized the large force
approaching wasn’t theirs but Avornan. So ants boiled after their hill was
kicked.
“Forward!” Grus shouted to the trumpeters. As the fierce horn calls
clove the air, he set spurs to his gelding. The horse whinnied in pained
protest. Grus roweled it again. It bounded ahead. He drew his sword. The
sun flashed fire from the blade. “Forward!” he yelled once more.
Some of the Menteshe started shooting. Others fled. King Grus doubted
the nomads were under any sort of unified command. Each chieftain—maybe
even each horseman—decided for himself what he would do. That made the
Menteshe hard for Avornis to control. It also made them hard for their own
warlords to control.
The Avornans shot back as soon as they came within range. A few of them
had already pitched from the saddle. But Ulash’s warriors began falling,
too. Soon the Menteshe still hale started fleeing. They had never seen any
shame in running away when the odds seemed against them.
Grus brandished the sword, though he had yet to come within fifty feet
of a foe. Where were Hirundo and Pterocles and the other division? Had the
wizard masked them so well, they’d disappeared altogether? Had the
Banished One swept them off the field, as a man might have removed them
from a gaming board? Or had their guides simply gotten lost?
No sooner had Grus begun to worry than the other Avornan force
appeared, as suddenly as though a fog in front of them had blown away. His
own men burst into cheers. The Menteshe, suddenly caught between hammer
and anvil, cried out in dismay. They all tried to flee now, shooting over
their shoulders as they desperately galloped off.
A lot of the nomads did escape. Grus never had to use his sword.
Somehow, none of that mattered much. Many Menteshe lay dead. Looking
around, the king could see that his own force hadn’t suffered badly.
Hirundo saw the same thing. “We hurt ‘em this time, your Majesty,” the
general said, riding up to Grus.
“That’s what we set out to do,” Grus replied, though he knew the
Avornans didn’t always do what they set out to do against the Menteshe.
“Where’s Pterocles? He kept you hidden, all right.”
“He sure did,” Hirundo said enthusiastically. “Even I didn’t know where
we were until just before we got here.” He looked around, then scratched
his head. “I don’t know where he’s gotten to now, though.” His shrug might
have been apology.
Grus also eyed the field. His men, swords drawn, were moving over it.
They plundered the dead Menteshe and cut the throats of the wounded nomads
they found. Had the fight gone against them, the invaders would have done
the same, though they would have reserved some Avornans for torment before
death’s mercy came. Here a trooper held up a fine sword with a glittering
edge, there another displayed a purse nicely heavy with coins, in another
place a man threw on a fur-edged cape not badly bloodstained.
Several Avornans picked up recurved Menteshe bows. One fitted an arrow
to the string, then tried to draw the shaft back to his ear. At the first
pull, he didn’t use enough strength. His friends jeered. Gritting his
teeth, he tried again. This time, the bow bent. He turned it away from his
fellows and let fly. They all exclaimed in surprise at how far the arrow
flew.
“There’s the wizard!” Hirundo pointed as Pterocles emerged from a clump
of bushes. “I thought the rascal had gone and disappeared himself this
time.”
When Grus waved, Pterocles nodded back and made his way toward the
king. Grus clasped his hand and slapped him on the back. Pterocles, none
too steady on his feet, almost fell over. Holding him up, Grus said, “Well
done!”
“Er—thank you, Your Majesty.” Pterocles did not sound like a man who’d
just helped win a good-sized victory. He sounded more like one who’d had
too much to drink and was about to sick up much of what he’d poured down.
His greenish color suggested the same.
“Are you all right?” Grus asked.
Pterocles shrugged. “If you love me, Your Majesty—or even if you hate
me, but not too much—do me the courtesy of never asking me to use that
masking spell against the Menteshe again.” He gulped, and then ran back
into the bushes from which he’d just emerged. When he came out again, his
face was deathly pale, but he looked better. He might have gotten rid of
some of what ailed him.
“Your spell here helped us win,” Grus said, surprised and puzzled. “Why
not use it again?”
“Why not?” The wizard took a deep breath—almost a sob. “I’ll tell you
why not, Your Majesty. I was holding the spell against the Menteshe
horsemen. Thus far, well and good. Then I was holding it against Ulash’s
wizards, which was not such an easy thing, but I managed well enough. But
soon I was also holding it against the Banished One—and gods spare me from
ever having to do that again.” He sat down on the ground; his legs didn’t
seem to want to hold him up anymore.
“But you did it.” The king squatted beside him.
“Oh, yes. I did it.” Pterocles’ voice was hollow, not proud. “He didn’t
take the spell seriously, you might say, until too late. By the time he
grew fully aware of it and realized it might hurt his followers, it
already had. He doesn’t make mistakes twice. He doesn’t make many mistakes
once.” And what would you expect from a foe who was a god? Grus
wondered. But Pterocles already knew about that—not all about it, but
enough.
“It will be as you say,” Grus promised, and the wizard’s shoulders
sagged with relief.
The forest smelled clean and green. When Bang Lanius was in the city of
Avornis, he didn’t notice the mingled stinks of dung and smoke and
unwashed people crowded too close together. When he left, which wasn’t
often enough, the air seemed perfumed in his nostrils. He relished each
inhalation and regretted every breath he had to let out. He also regretted
having to go back to the capital when this day ended. He knew he would
smell the stench he usually ignored.
And part of him regretted letting Arch-Hallow Anser talk him into
coming along on another hunt. After the first one the year before, he’d
vowed never to go hunting again. But this excursion had promised to be too
interesting for him to refuse. For Prince Ortalis also rode with Anser—and
the prince and the arch-hallow had quarreled years before Lanius
disappointed Anser by being immune to the thrills of the chase.
King Grus, of course, was down in the southern provinces fighting the
Menteshe. And yet, though he’d gone hundreds of miles, his influence still
lingered over the city of Avornis—and, indeed, over the hunting party.
Here were his legitimate son, his bastard, and his son-in-law. Had he not
taken the crown, would any of the three younger men even have met the
other two? Lanius doubted it. He would have been just as well pleased
never to have made Ortalis’ acquaintance, but it was years too late to
worry about that.
Some of their beaters were men Anser regularly used in his sport— lean,
silent fellows in leather jerkins and caps who slipped through the trees
with the silent skill of practiced poachers. The rest were Lanius’ royal
bodyguards. The men who served Anser sneered at their jingling mailshirts.
The bodyguards pretended not to hear. They were along to protect King
Lanius first. If they happened to flush out a stag or a wildcat, so much
the better.
Lanius suspected that Anser’s beaters might end up beaten after the
hunting party went back to the city of Avornis. The bodyguards, sensitive
to the royal mood, didn’t want to spoil the day. But they weren’t used to
being mocked, and they had long memories for slights. The men who put
Lanius in mind of poachers seemed strong and tough enough, but the royal
guardsmen were the best Avornis had.
A sharp, staccato drumming high up in an oak made Lanius’ head whip
around. Laughing, Anser said, “It’s nothing—only a woodpecker.”
“What kind?” the king asked. “One of the big black ones with the red
crest, or the small ones that are all black and white stripes, or a
flicker with a black mustache?”
Anser blinked. Ortalis laughed. “Trust Lanius to know about
woodpeckers,” he said. Lanius listened for the malice that usually
informed Ortalis’ words. He didn’t hear it. Maybe not hearing it was
wishful thinking on his part. Or maybe being married to Limosa agreed with
Grus’ son—at least so far. And Lanius didn’t know as much about
woodpeckers, or birds in general, as he would have liked to, but he was
learning.
The drumming rang through the woods again. One of the soft-moving men
in a jerkin said, “Your Majesty, that’s the noise those small, stripy
woodpeckers make. The others, the bigger birds, drum more slowly.”
“Thank you,” Lanius said.
“Yes, thank you,” Anser agreed. “I’ve found something out, too. Who
would have wondered about woodpeckers?”
“Let’s push on,” Ortalis said. “We’ve still got a lot of hunting ahead
of us, woodpeckers or no woodpeckers.”
Anser’s beater vanished among the trees, to drive game back toward the
men with rank enough to kill it. Some of Lanius’ guardsmen went with them.
More, though, stayed behind with the king. “They take no chances, do
they?” Anser said.
“We don’t get paid to take chances, Your Arch-Reverence.” A guard spoke
up before the king could.
A stag bounded past. Ortalis had his bow drawn and an arrow hissing
through the air before Lanius even began to raise his bow.
I
am a hopeless dub at this, Lanius thought.
I
will always be a hopeless dub at this. Ortalis, meanwhile,
whooped. “That’s a hit!” he called, and loped after the deer.
In the palace, Grus’ legitimate son seemed as useless a mortal as any
Lanius had ever seen. Here in the field, he proved to know what he was
doing. Following in his wake, Lanius saw blood splashed on leaves and
bushes. He did not care for the pursuit of wounded animals. Killing beasts
cleanly was one thing. Inflicting such suffering as this on them struck
him as something else again.
It was something else for Ortalis, too—something he relished, as his
excited chatter showed. Lanius would have sneered at his bloodlust— Lanius
had sneered at his bloodlust in the past—but he’d also seen Anser get
excited in the chase. The arch-hallow was mild as milk when he wasn’t
hunting. The king didn’t understand the transformation. Understand it or
not, though, he couldn’t deny it was real.
“Nice shot, Your Highness,” one of the beaters told Ortalis. “He went
down right quick there.” It hadn’t seemed quick to Lanius, who brushed a
twig from his hair as he came up. He didn’t think it had seemed quick to
the stag, either.
Ortalis’ eyes glowed. He knelt beside the fallen deer. Its sides still
heaved feebly as it fought to suck in air. Bloody froth showed at each
nostril; Ortalis’ arrow must have punctured a lung. Drawing a belt knife,
Ortalis cut the stag’s throat. More blood yet poured out onto his hands
and the ground. “Ah,” he said softly, as he might have after a woman.
Lanius’ stomach lurched. He turned away, hoping breakfast would stay
down.
It did. When he looked back, Ortalis was plunging the knife into the
deer’s belly to butcher it. The animal’s eyes were opaque and lusterless
now. That obvious proof of death helped ease the king’s conscience along
with his nausea. Ortalis went right on with the butchering. He seemed to
enjoy it as much as the killing.
Looking up from the work, he remarked, “It’s a bloody job, but
somebody’s got to do it.”
Lanius managed to nod. It wasn’t that Ortalis was wrong. But did a
butcher have to do his work with such fiendish gusto? Lanius doubted that.
He’d doubted it for years.
Getting back on the trail was a relief for him, if not for Ortalis.
Anser had the first shot at the next stag they saw, had it and missed. He
cursed good-naturedly, but with enough pointed comments to startle anyone
who, after hearing him, might suddenly learn he was Arch-Hallow of
Avornis.
Nodding to Lanius, Anser said, “Next one we see, Your Majesty, you can
let fly first.”
“That’s all right,” Lanius said; the honor was one he would gladly have
done without. But both the arch-hallow and Prince Ortalis sent him looks
full of horror. Even his own guardsmen clucked disapprovingly. Without
even knowing it, he’d broken some hunt custom. He did his best to repair
things, adding, “I just don’t want a deer to get away—I’m not much of a
shot.” The last part of that was true, the first part one of the bigger
lies he’d ever told.
But, because he had a reputation for sticking to the truth no matter
what, both Anser and Ortalis accepted his words. “Don’t worry, Your
Majesty,” Anser said. “I missed, and the world won’t end if you do, too,
as long as you try your best.”
“Of course,” said the king, who still couldn’t stomach the idea of
shooting at an animal for the sport of it.
But, before long, he had to try. A magnificent stag stood at the edge
of a clearing twenty or thirty yards away. The wind blew from the stag to
the hunters; the beast, which depended so much on its sensitive nose, had
not the slightest notion they were there. Reluctantly, Lanius drew his bow
and let fly. The arrow flew alarmingly straight. For a bad heartbeat, he
feared he’d actually hit what he aimed at. The shaft zipped over the
deer’s back and thudded into the pale, parchment-barked trunk of a birch
behind it.
The stag bounded away. But Anser and Ortalis’ bowstrings twanged in the
same instant. One of those shafts struck home. The stag crashed to the
ground in the middle of a leap. The arch-hallow and the prince both cried
out in triumph.
And they both turned to Lanius. “Well shot!” Ortalis told him. “You
spooked it perfectly. Now Anser and I have to see who got the kill.”
By the time they reached the carcass, the deer, mercifully, was already
dead. It had two arrows in it—one in the throat, the other through the
ribs. Ortalis had loosed the first, Anser the second. They began arguing
over who deserved credit for bringing down the stag. “Perhaps,” Lanius
said diffidently, “you should share the—” He broke off. He’d almost said
blame. That was what he thought of the whole business, but he
knew it wouldn’t do.
Even though he’d stopped, prince and arch-hallow both stared at him as
though he’d started spouting the Chernagors’ throaty language. Then they
went back to their argument. He wondered if he’d violated some other
unwritten rule of the hunt.
Thinking of unwritten rules made him wonder if there were written ones.
Poking through the archives trying to find out would be more fun than
looking at flies beginning to settle in the blood that had spilled from
the stag, and to walk across the eyeballs that could no longer blink them
away.
Again, Ortalis got the privilege—if that was what it was—of butchering
the deer. He made the gory job as neat as he could. Even so, Lanius saw,
or thought he saw, a gleam of satisfaction in his brother-in-law’s eyes.
It could be worse, the king thought.
If he were hunting women, the way he’d wanted to, he’d butcher
them
after he made the kill.
He shivered. No, he didn’t think Ortalis had been joking about that,
not at all. And he was anything but reassured when Grus’ legitimate son,
after wiping his gory hands on the grass, licked the last of the stag’s
blood from his fingers. Ortalis smacked his lips, too, as though at fine
wine.
Anser and the beaters seemed to find nothing wrong with that. Lanius
told himself he was worrying too much. He also told himself he would be
glad to eat the venison the hunt was bringing home. He believed that. Try
as he would, though, he couldn’t make himself believe the other.
Sestus lay by the Arzus River. When Grus’ army reached the city, the
Menteshe had had it under siege for some little while. Their idea of
besieging a town was different from Grus’ at Nishevatz. They didn’t aim to
storm the walls. They had no catapults or battering rams to knock down its
towers. But that didn’t mean they’d had no chance of forcing the place to
yield. If the royal army hadn’t come when it did, they probably would have
done just that.
They’d ravaged the farms around Sestus. Not a cow, not a sheep, not a
pig survived. Not many farmers did, either. The Menteshe had trampled or
burned most of the wheatfields within a day’s ride of the town. Vineyards
and olive groves and almond orchards also went under the ax or the torch.
The Arzus was not a wide stream. Menteshe on the banks had peppered with
arrows the ships that tried to bring grain into Sestus. They hadn’t
stopped all of them, but they had made skippers most reluctant to run
their gauntlet. Little by little, Sestus had started starving.
Prince Ulash’s men didn’t put up much of a fight when the Avornan army
thundered down on them. The nomads simply rode away. Why not? They could
afflict some other city, and the devastation they’d left behind remained.
Sestus would have a hard and hungry time of it now, regardless of whether
it had opened its gates to the Menteshe.
Riding through fields black with soot or prematurely yellow and dead,
Grus saw that at once. It was, understandably, less obvious to the local
governor, a bald baron named Butastur. He rode out from the city to
welcome the king. “By the gods, Your Majesty, it’s good to see you here!”
he said, beaming. “Another couple of weeks of those demons prowling around
out there and we’d‘ve been eating the grass that grows between the ruts in
the street and boiling shoeleather for soup.”
“I’m glad it won’t come to that.” Grus wasn’t beaming; he was grim. His
wave encompassed the ravaged fields. “Only Queen Quelea can judge how much
you’ll be able to salvage from this.”
Butastur nodded. “Oh, yes. We’ll be a while getting over this, no doubt
about it. But now you’ll be able to bring supplies in to us from places
where the cursed Menteshe haven’t reached.”
He sounded as confident as a little boy who was sure his father could
reach out, pluck the moon from the sky, and hand it to him on a string.
Grus hated to disillusion him, but felt he had no choice. “We’ll be able
to do something for you, Baron,” he said, “but I’m not sure how much.
Sestus isn’t the only hungry city, and yours aren’t the only fields the
nomads have ruined. This is a big invasion—look how far north you are, and
we’re only now reaching you.”
By Butastur’s expression, he cared not a pin for any other part of
Avornis unless it could send him food. “Surely you can’t mean you’re going
to let us famish here!” he cried. “What have we done to deserve such a
fate?”
“You haven’t done anything to deserve it,” Grus answered. “I hope it
doesn’t happen. But I don’t know if I can do all I’d like to help you,
because this isn’t the only town in the kingdom that’s suffering.”
He might as well have saved his breath, for all the effect his words
had on Butastur. “Ruined!” the baron said, and tugged at his bushy beard
as though he wanted to get credit for pulling chunks out by the roots.
“Ruined by the cursed barbarians, and even my sovereign will do nothing to
relieve my city’s suffering!”
“You seem to misunderstand me on purpose,” Grus said.
Butastur, by now, wasn’t even listening to him, let alone
understanding. “Ruined!” he cried once again, more piteously than ever.
“How shall we ever recover from the ravages of the Menteshe?”
Grus lost his temper. He’d just paid in blood to drive the nomads away
from Sestus, and the local governor seemed not to have noticed. “How will
you recover?” he growled. “Shutting up and buckling down to repair the
damage makes a good start. I told you I’d do what I could for you. I just
don’t know how much that’s going to be. Am I plain enough, Your
Excellency?”
Butastur flinched away from him as though he were one of Prince Ulash’s
torturers. “Yes, yes, Your Majesty,” he said. But he didn’t speak from
conviction. He just didn’t dare argue. Grus had seen plenty of palace
servants who yielded to authority like that—not because it was right, but
because it
was authority, and something worse would happen to them if they
didn’t.
Crossing the Arzus in pursuit of the Menteshe came as nothing but a
relief. When the army camped that evening, the king turned to Hirundo and
said, “I can fight the nomads. But what am I supposed to do when someone
on my own side makes me want to hang him from the tallest tower in his
town?”
“You could go ahead and hang him,” the general answered. “You’d have a
lot fewer idiots bothering you afterwards.”
“Don’t tempt me,” Grus said. “But if I start hanging all the fools in
Avornis, how many people will be left alive in six months’ time? And who
hangs me, for being fool enough to start hanging fools in the first
place?”
“A nice question,” Hirundo said. “If you start hanging fools, who would
dare rebel against you and confess that he’s one of those fools?” He
grinned.
“Stop that!” Grus said. “You’re making my head ache, and I couldn’t
even enjoy getting drunk first.”
The next morning, the Avornans rode on. The bands of Menteshe had
melted away during the night. But for burned-out fields and farmhouses, no
one would have known Ulash’s men had come so far. Ahead, though, more
plumes of black smoke rising into the sky said they were still busy at
their work of destruction. Grus tasted smoke every time he breathed. He
felt it in his lungs, and in his stinging eyes.
He sent scouts out by squadrons, fearing the Menteshe weren’t far away.
As the main force of Avornans advanced, he waited for one scout or another
to come pelting back, bringing word the nomads had attacked his squadrons.
He was ready to strike and strike hard.
But, to his surprise and more than a little to his disappointment,
nothing like that happened. His army pushed on through the ravaged
countryside, hardly seeing any Menteshe at all. Maybe Ulash’s men were
fleeing back toward the Stura. Grus wanted to believe they were. He wanted
to, but he couldn’t.
It was midafternoon before he realized he hadn’t heard anything at all
from one scout squadron since the early morning. He pointed west, where
they’d ridden when the army broke camp. “Are things going so very well
over that way, do you suppose?” he asked Hirundo.
“They could be,” the general answered. “We’ve had a pretty quiet day.”
But he fidgeted when Grus eyed him. “All right, Your Majesty. It doesn’t
seem likely.”
“Send out another squadron,” Grus said. “If the first one’s all right,
you can call me a fussy old woman. But if it’s not...”
If it’s not, it’s liable to be too late to do the men any good. Why
didn’t I start worrying sooner?
Off trotted the horsemen. Grus’ unease grew. It reminded him of the
feeling he got when someone was staring at him from behind. He wished he
hadn’t had that thought. It made him suddenly look back over his shoulder,
again and again. Naturally, no one was looking his way—until his antics
drew other people’s attention.
After a while, impatient and nervous, the king summoned Pterocles. “Can
you tell me anything about those scouts?” he demanded.
“I don’t know, Your Majesty. Let me see what I can divine.” Pterocles
set to work, murmuring a charm. Grus recognized the chant; it was the sort
of spell wizards used to find lost coins or strayed sheep. He’d thought
Pterocles would use something fancier, but if a simple charm would serve.
. . .
Pterocles hadn’t finished the spell when he broke off with a gasp of
horror. His long, lean face went white as bone, leaving him looking like
nothing so much as an appalled skull. Before Grus could even ask him what
was wrong, he doubled over and was noisily and violently ill.
Grus wondered if he’d eaten something bad, or perhaps been poisoned.
Before he could do more than stare, galloping hoofbeats distracted him.
“Your Majesty!” shouted the leader of the party Hirundo had ordered out
after the missing scouts. “Oh, Your Majesty! By the gods, Your
Majesty!”
“I’m here,” Grus called, now torn. “What is it? Did you find them?”
The captain nodded. He was as pale as Pterocles, and looked not far
from sickness himself. “Yes, Your Majesty.” He gulped and went even paler.
“We found them.”
“And?” Grus said.
“I will not speak of this,” the captain said. “I
will not. If you order me to, I will take you to them. If you do
not order me, I will never go near that spot again. Never!” The last word
was almost a scream. He shuddered.
“Whatever this is, I had better see it,” Grus said. “Take me there at
once, Captain. At once, do you hear me?”
“I hear you, Your Majesty.” The officer shuddered again. “I do not
thank you for the order, but I will obey it. Come, then.”
“Guards,” Pterocles croaked. “Take guards.”
That hadn’t crossed Grus’ mind. It was plainly a good idea, though. A
squadron of bodyguards surrounded him as he rode with the officer toward .
. . what?
Coming up over the swell of a low rise, he first saw, from perhaps a
quarter of a mile, that the first squadron of scouts and their horses were
down, with some of the would-be rescuers still by them. He was braced for
that much of a disaster. He hadn’t thought he’d lose a whole squadron of
scouts, but it seemed to have happened. “The Menteshe caught them?” he
asked.
“Yes.” The captain managed a ghastly nod. “The Menteshe caught them,
Your Majesty.”
As Grus rode closer, he began to get a better look at how the
scouts—and their horses—had died, and how their bodies had been used after
they were dead ... or while they were dying. “No,” he said, as though
someone had told him about it and he didn’t believe the fellow. “No one
would do that.” But his eyes, his treacherous, truth-telling eyes,
insisted someone had. That they’d been mutilated was bad enough. That the
dead men had also been violated . . .
“You see, Your Majesty,” the Avornan officer said heavily. “I’ve seen,
and I wish I hadn’t.”
Grus didn’t answer. He rode through that scene of horror and torture.
He felt he needed to see it all. He learned more about cruel ingenuity in
those few minutes than he’d ever known, or ever wanted to know. At last,
he said, “I didn’t think even the Menteshe did things like this.”
“They usually don’t,” the officer replied. “I’ve served in the south
for years. This ...” He turned his head away. “There are no words for
this.”
“The Banished One,” Grus said in a voice like iron. “This is his doing.
He’s trying to put us in fear.”
With a laugh on the ragged edge of hysteria, the Avornan captain said,
“He knows how to get what he wants, doesn’t he?”
But Grus shook his head. “No. This—shakes me, but it doesn’t make me
afraid. It makes me angry. I want revenge.” He paused. Did that mean
paying back the Menteshe in their own coin? Could he stomach ordering his
men to do something like this to their foes? If he did that, didn’t he
invite the Banished One to take up residence in Avornis? “The best revenge
I know is whipping them out of the kingdom.”
“What do we do about. . . this, Your Majesty?”
“We make pyres. We burn the dead. We’re all equal in the flames.” Grus
paused again, then added, “This time, we burn the horses, too. They
deserved what the Menteshe did even less than our troopers. They weren’t
enemies, just animals.”
As he ordered, so it was done. The smoke of the great pyre mingled with
the smoke from burning fields. To his relief, the men who made the pyres
and laid the dead on them seemed to feel as he did. The bodies inspired
horror and rage, but not fear. “We’ve got to whip the sons of whores who
did this,” a soldier said. “We owe it to the dead.”
“We’ll give the Menteshe everything we owe,” Grus promised.
“Everything.”
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
To Lanius’ surprise, he found himself missing King Grus. Yes, he’d
chafed when Grus spent his time in the city of Avornis and held the
kingdom in his own hands. With Grus down in the south fighting the
Menteshe, Lanius pulled a lot of strings himself— but they were mostly the
uninteresting strings. He’d wanted to administer Avornis . . . until he
did it for a while. That made him decide Grus was welcome to the
day-to-day drudgery.
But Grus was at war, which meant Lanius was stuck with it. He knew he
was less diligent about it than Grus. It embarrassed him, even shamed him,
to get a reminder from the provinces about something he should have dealt
with the first time, weeks earlier. But he didn’t seem able to do anything
about such mishaps.
He knew why, too. If he’d given administering Avornis all the time it
needed, he wouldn’t have been able to dive into the archives or watch his
monkeys or try to figure out how Pouncer kept getting out of its room and
into the kitchens. Those were more enjoyable pastimes, and he had trouble
thinking of them as less important.
He also would have had less time for amusing himself with maidservants.
Keeping track of the kingdom was more important than that, but it wasn’t
nearly as much fun. So far, Sosia hadn’t found out about his sport—or
rather, hadn’t found out that he’d kept on with it after Grus sent
Cristata away. That his wife hadn’t found out helped keep the sport
pleasurable.
And he would have had less time for talks with Prince Vsevolod.
Having less time to talk with the Prince of Nishevatz, however,
wouldn’t have broken his heart. He’d learned less about the Chernagors
than he wanted to, and more about the way Vsevolod thought.
“When will war in south be over?” the Prince asked in his blunt,
throaty Avornan. He cared nothing about fighting in the war in the south
himself, only about how it affected things in the north—things that
mattered to him.
“I don’t know, Your Highness,” Lanius answered. “I wish I did. I wish
someone did.”
Vsevolod scowled. To Lanius, he looked more than ever like a scrawny
old vulture. “He will win war?”
“By the gods, I hope so!” Lanius exclaimed.
“He will win war by wintertime?”
“I told you, Your Highness—I don’t know that. I don’t think anyone can.
If the gods in the heavens let him do it, he will.” As usual, Lanius said
nothing about the Banished One, who had been Milvago. As usual, the
not-quite-god who no longer dwelt in the heavens wasn’t far from his
mind.
“If Grus does not win war this winter, he fights again in south when
spring comes?” Vsevolod persisted.
“I don’t know,” Lanius replied, his patience beginning to unravel. “I
wouldn’t be surprised, though. Would you?”
“No. Not surprised,” the prince said darkly. “He cares nothing for
Nishevatz, not really. All lies.” He turned away.
Lanius was tempted to kick him in the rear. The king didn’t, but the
temptation lingered. If Vsevolod wasn’t the most self-centered man in the
world, who was? All he cared about was Nishevatz, regardless of what
Avornis needed. More testily than Lanius had expected to, he said, “We’ve
been invaded, you know.”
“Yes, you are invaded. Yes, I know. And what of me? I am robbed. I am
exiled,” Vsevolod said. “I live in strange place, eat strange food, talk
strange, ugly language, with no one to care if I live or die.”
“We do care,” Lanius insisted, though he would have had trouble saying
he cared very much himself. “But we have to drive the invaders from our
own realm before we can worry about anyone else’s.”
Prince Vsevolod might not even have heard him. “I will die in exile,”
he said gloomily. “My city-state will go down to ruin under accursed
Vasilko, my own son. I cannot save it. Life is bitter. Life is hard.” He’s powerless, Lanius realized.
He’s powerless, and he hates it, the way I bated it for so long under
Grus. And he’s old. He’s used to power, and can’t change his ways now that
he doesn’t have it anymore. I’d never had it. I kept wondering what it was
like, the way a boy will before his first woman.
“We’ll do all we can for you, Your Highness.” Lanius’ voice was as
gentle as he could make it. “Don’t worry. We’ll get Nishevatz back for
you. By the gods in the heavens, I swear it.”
“The gods in the heavens are—” Vsevolod violently shook his head. “No.
If I say that, if I think that, I am Vasilko. This I never do.” He got to
his feet and stomped away, as though angry at Lanius for making him think
things he didn’t want to think. But I didn’t. I couldn’t, Lanius thought.
Only he can turn his mind one way or another. Did Vsevolod wonder
if the Banished One were more powerful than the gods in the heavens? The
king wouldn’t have been surprised. He would have had trouble blaming the
exiled Prince of Nishevatz. It still worried him.
Grus relaxed in a roadside tavern. The barmaid, who was a young cousin
of the fellow who ran the place, set a fresh mug of wine in front of him.
He’d had several already. His men had driven the Menteshe off just as they
were riding up with torches in their hands, ready to burn the tavern and
everyone inside it.
“Thank you, sweetheart,” Grus told the barmaid.
“You’re welcome, Your Majesty,” she answered. “Plenty more where that
came from. Don’t be shy.” She wasn’t shy herself. Her name, he’d learned,
was Alauda. She was a widow; her husband had laid his leg open threshing
grain, and died when the wound went bad. She wouldn’t take any silver for
the wine, though Grus had offered. “No,” she’d said, shaking her head.
“You saved us. This is the least we can do.”
Hirundo sat on another three-legged stool at the rickety table with
Grus. “She’s not bad, is she?” the general said, eyeing her as she went to
get more wine.
“No, not bad at all,” Grus agreed. Alauda had a barmaid’s brassy
prettiness, wider through the hips and fuller in the bosom than would have
been fashionable back in the city of Avornis. Her hair was light brown and
very straight. Her saucy blue eyes were probably her best feature; they
sparkled with life.
Hirundo was also drinking wine he didn’t have to pay for. “Just how
grateful do you suppose she’d be?” he murmured.
“What an interesting question.” Grus glanced toward Hirundo.
“You seem to have noticed her first. Do you want to be the one who
finds out?”
“And deprive you, Your Majesty? Gods forbid!” By the dramatic pose the
general struck, he might have been a soldier in a besieged city offering
his sovereign his last bit of bread. But the generous gesture turned out
to be not quite as noble as all that, for he went on, “I’ve already found
a lady friend or two down here. I don’t think you’ve had the chance
yet.”
“Well, no,” Grus admitted. The trouble he’d gotten into over Alca the
witch left him leery of angering Estrilda again. On the other hand,
Estrilda was far to the north, unlikely to learn he’d tumbled a
barmaid.
“Then go on, if you feel like it—and if she feels like it.” Hirundo
sounded as predatory here as he did on the battlefield. He might have
sounded different if he’d had a wife back in the capital. But he didn’t;
he was single. And, knowing him, he might not have, too.
He drank up and strolled out of the tavern, clapping Grus on the back
as he went. The king ostentatiously finished his mug of wine, too. When
Alauda brought him the fresh one she’d poured, he said, “Drink with me, if
you care to.”
“Sure,” she said, smiling. Her mouth was wide and generous. “When will
I ever get another chance like this? I can bore people with the story
until I’m an old granny.” She bent her back and hobbled as she went to get
wine for herself. Grus laughed. So did she. He knew then taking her to bed
wouldn’t be hard.
When she came back with her mug, he sat her on his lap. She slipped an
arm around his shoulder as though she’d expected nothing else. One thing
did worry him. Pointing to the tavern keeper, he asked, “Will your cousin
there be angry?” He didn’t want an outraged male relative lurking and
brooding and maybe trying to stick a knife in him. Sometimes such people
tried to kill without caring whether they lived or died, which made them
hard to stop.
But Alauda only stared in surprise. “No, Morus won’t mind. It’s not
like I’m a maiden. And it’s not like you’re a goatherd, either. You’re the
king”
To make sure Morus didn’t mind, she spoke with him after she’d emptied
her cup. He looked from her to Grus and back again. Then he walked out of
the tavern and closed the door behind him.
“You see?” Alauda said.
“I see.” Grus got to his feet. The room swayed when he did. He suddenly
wished he hadn’t had quite so much to drink. Wine could inflame desire and
ruin performance at the same time—and he wasn’t as young as he had
been.
He took Alauda in his arms. She tilted her face up to him—not very far
up, for she was a tall woman. Her mouth was sweet with wine. His arms
tightened around her. She molded herself against him. The kiss went on and
on.
When it finally ended, Grus had a new reason for feeling dizzy.
“Where?” he asked.
“Here, this way. Morus has given me a little room in back.”
The room couldn’t have been much smaller. It barely held a bed. Grus
was sure it had been a closet or storeroom before Alauda came to the
tavern. Alauda threw off her tunic and long skirt. Naked, she was as round
and ripe as Grus had thought she would be. He bent his mouth to the tips
of her breasts. She murmured something wordless. He got out of his own
clothes as quickly as he could. They lay down together.
Her legs opened. When he stroked her there, he found her wet and ready.
He poised himself above her. “Oh,” she said softly when he thrust home.
Her thighs gripped his flanks. Her arms squeezed tight. Their mouths
clung.
It seemed more like a frenzy than any sort of lovemaking Grus had done
lately. Alauda yowled like a cat. Her nails scored the flesh of his back.
She threshed and flailed beneath him. He pounded away until pleasure
almost blinded him.
When he returned to himself, he noticed the taste of blood in his mouth
along with the wine they’d both drunk. Alauda stared up at him past
half-lowered eyelids.
“So nice to meet you, Your Majesty,” she purred.
He laughed. When he did, he flopped out of her. Regret flitted across
her face, just for a moment. Grus certainly felt regret, too—regret that
he wasn’t twenty years younger, so they could have started over again
right away. He kissed the smooth, white skin in the hollow of her
shoulder. She giggled. He said, “You can bring me my wine—or anything
else—any time you please.”
Alauda smiled. But then her expression darkened. She said, “Tomorrow or
sometime soon, you’ll be gone, won’t you?”
“I can’t stay here,” Grus answered, as gently as he could. “You know
that, dear. I’ve got to drive back the Menteshe.”
If I can.
Everything else moved sweetly when Alauda nodded. “Oh, yes. Gods only know what they would have done if your soldiers hadn’t chased
them away from this place. That wasn’t what I meant. I hope I’m not that
silly. But. . . couldn’t you take me with you? I wouldn’t be any trouble,
and if I did make trouble you could just leave me somewhere. I’d land on
my feet. I always have. And in the meantime—” She wriggled to show what
they might do in the meantime.
Grus started to say no. Then he hesitated. Like anyone who hesitated,
he was lost. Trying not to admit it even to himself, he warned Alauda,
“You know I have a queen. You won’t come back to the city of Avornis with
me, no matter what.”
“Yes, of course I know that,” Alauda said impatiently. “I told you, I
hope I’m not silly. And by the gods, Your Majesty, I’m not out for what I
can get, except maybe this.” She took hold of him, then sighed. “It’s been
a bit since my husband died. I’d almost forgotten how much I missed
it.”
“You say that now,” Grus told her. “Some people say things like that,
and then later on they forget what they’ve said. I wouldn’t be very
happy—and neither would you—if that happened.”
“You’ve got a bargain,” Alauda said at once. “Does that mean the rest
of it’s a bargain, too?” Before he could answer, she went on, “I’ll keep
up my end.” She laughed again. “And I’ll keep up your end. That’s part of
the bargain, isn’t it?”
“I hope so,” Grus answered. “I was just thinking I’m not so young
anymore—but yes, I do hope so.”
Summer heat beat down on the city of Avornis. People who’d spent time
in the south said it wasn’t all that bad, but it was plenty bad enough to
suit Lanius. Plants began to wilt and turn yellow. Flies and other bugs
multiplied as though by magic. Little lizards came out of what seemed to
be nowhere but were probably crevices in boards and holes in the ground to
eat the bugs, or at least some of them.
King Lanius and everyone else in the royal palace did what they could
to beat the heat. He doffed the royal robes and plunged into the river
naked as the day he was born. That brought relief, but only for a little
while. However much he wanted to, though, he couldn’t stay in the water
all the time.
Arch-Hallow Anser and Prince Ortalis disappeared into the woods to hunt
for days at a time. Anser tried to talk Lanius into coming along, but the
king remained unconvinced that that was a good bargain. Yes, the woods
were probably cooler than the city, but weren’t they also going to be
buggier? Lanius thought so, and stayed in the royal palace.
The monkeys flourished in the heat. Even their mustaches seemed to
stick out farther from their faces than before. They ate better than they
ever had, and bounced through the branches and sticks in their rooms with
fresh energy. As far as they were concerned, it could stay hot
forever.
Not so the moncats. The Chernagor merchant who’d brought the first pair
to the palace had told Lanius they came from islands in the Northern
Sea—islands with, the king supposed, a cooler climate than that of the
city of Avornis. They drooped in the heat the same way flowers did. Lanius
made sure they had plenty of water and that it was changed often so it
stayed fresh. Past that, he didn’t know what he could do.
One thing could jolt the moncats out of their lethargy. Whenever a
lizard was foolish enough to show itself in their rooms, they would go
after it with an enthusiasm Lanius had hardly ever seen from them. They
got the same thrill from chasing lizards as Anser did from chasing deer
(Lanius resolutely refused to think about what sort of thrill Ortalis got
from chasing deer). And, like Anser, they got to devour their quarry at
the end of a successful hunt.
Lanius suddenly imagined the arch-hallow, in full ecclesiastical
regalia, with a still-twitching lizard tail hanging from the corner of his
mouth. He started laughing so hard, he frightened the moncats and made
servants out in the hallway pound on the door and ask what was wrong.
“Nothing,” he called back, feeling like a little boy whose parents
demanded out of the blue what he was doing when it was something
naughty.
“Then what’s that racket, Your Majesty?” The voice on the other side of
the door sounded suspicious, even accusing. Was that Bubulcus out there in
the hallway? Lanius thought so, but couldn’t be sure.
Whether it was Bubulcus or not, the king knew he had to say, “Nothing,”
again, and he did. He couldn’t expect the servants to find that
blasphemous image funny. He was more than a little scandalized that he
found it funny himself, but he did, and he couldn’t do anything about
it.
“Are you
sure, Your Majesty?” the servant asked dubiously.
“I’m positive,” Lanius answered. “One of the moncats did something
foolish, and I was laughing, that’s all.” That wasn’t quite what had
happened, but it came close enough.
“Huh,” came from the corridor. That made Lanius more nearly certain it
was Bubulcus out there. Whoever it was, he went away; the king listened
with no small relief to receding footsteps. When Lanius came out of the
moncats’ room, no one asked him any more questions. That suited him
fine.
Two days later, the hot spell broke. Clouds rolled down from the north.
When morning came, the city of Avornis found itself wrapped in chilly
mist. Lanius hurried down to the monkeys’ room and lit the fire that he’d
allowed to die over the past few days. They needed defense against the
cold once more, and he made sure they got it.
It started to rain that afternoon. To his horror, Lanius discovered a
leak in the roof of the royal archives. He sent men up there to fix it, or
at least to cover it, in spite of the rain. There were certain advantages
to being the King of Avornis. A luckless homeowner would have had to wait
for good weather. But Lanius couldn’t stand the notion of water dripping
down onto the precious and irreplaceable parchments in the archives. Being
who he was, he didn’t have to stand for it, either.
Grus looked down from the hills on a riverside town. Like a lot of
riverside towns, it had had its croplands ravaged. He’d seen far worse
devastation elsewhere, though. The landscape wasn’t what kept him staring
and staring.
“Pelagonia,” he murmured.
Hirundo nodded. “That’s what it is, all right,” he said. “Looks like a
provincial town to me.”
“And so it is,” Grus agreed. But that wasn’t all it was, not to him.
Just seeing it made his heart beat faster.
Pterocles understood, but then Pterocles had a wizard’s memory for
detail. “This is the place where you sent the witch,” he said. “Will you
ship me back to the city of Avornis and turn her loose on the
Menteshe?”
It had crossed Grus’ mind. Shipping Alauda back to her cousin’s tavern
had also crossed his mind. He hadn’t seen Alca for three years, not since
his wife made him send her away.
Life gets more complicated all the time, he thought, and laughed,
even though it wasn’t funny.
“Well, Your Majesty?” Pterocles spoke with unwonted sharpness.
“Will you?”
He’d had trouble standing up against the Banished One. Of course, so
had Alca. Any mortal wizard had trouble standing up against the Banished
One. Grus found his answer. “No, I won’t,” he said. “We’re all on the same
side in this fight, or we’d better be.”
He waited to see what Pterocles would say to that. To his relief, the
wizard only nodded. “Can’t say you’re wrong. She acts like she’s pretty
snooty, but her heart’s in the right place.”
Grus bristled at any criticism of his former lover. Fighting to hold on
to his temper, he asked Hirundo, “Can we reach the town tonight?”
“I doubt it,” the general replied. “Tomorrow, yes. Tonight? We’re
farther away than you think.”
Grus stared south. Only the keep and the spires of the cathedral showed
above Pelagonia’s gray stone walls. In the nearer distance, a handful of
Menteshe rode through the burnt fields in front of the town. They would
flee when the Avornan army advanced. Grus knew a lot about fighting the
nomads. Unless they had everything their own way, they didn’t care for
stand-up fights. Why should they? Starvation and raids unceasing worked
well for them.
“Tomorrow, then,” the King of Avornis said, reluctance and eagerness
warring in his voice—reluctance at the delay, eagerness at what might come
afterwards.
Alca. His lips silently shaped the name.
As he’d thought they would, Prince Ulash’s men withdrew at the Avornan
host’s advance. He and Hirundo picked a good campground, one by a stream
so the Menteshe couldn’t cut them off from water—a favorite trick of
theirs. He also made certain he scattered sentries widely about the
camp.
“Is something wrong?” Alauda asked in his tent that night.
“No,” Grus answered, quicker than he should have. Then, hearing that
too-quick word, he had to try to explain himself. “I just want to make
sure the town is safe.”
The explanation sounded false, too. Alauda didn’t challenge him about
it. Who was she—a barmaid, a whim, a toy—to challenge a king? No one, and
she had sense enough to know it. But she also had the sense to hear that
Grus wasn’t telling her the truth, or all of the truth. No, she said not a
thing, but her eyes showed her hurt.
When they made love that night, she rode Grus with a fierce desperation
she’d never shown before. Maybe she sensed he worried more about someone
inside Pelagonia than about the city itself. Was she trying to show him he
needed to worry about her, too? After the day’s travel and after that
ferocious coupling, Grus worried about nothing and nobody, but plunged
headlong into sleep, one arm still around Alauda.
He almost died before dawn, with no chance to worry about Alauda or
Alca or, for that matter, Estrilda. The Menteshe often shied away from
stand-up fights, yes. But a night attack, an assault that caught their
enemies by surprise, was a different story.
Their wizards must have found some way to fuddle the sentries, for the
Avornans knew nothing of their onslaught until moments before it broke
upon them. They would have been caught altogether unaware if Pterocles
hadn’t started up from his pallet, shouting, “Danger! Danger!” By the
confused shock in his voice, he didn’t even know what sort of danger it
was, only that it was real and it was close.
His cry woke Grus. The king’s dreams had been of anything but danger.
When he woke, one of Alauda’s breasts filled his hand. He’d known that
even in his sleep, and it had colored and heated his imaginings.
Now . . . now, along with the wizard’s shouts of alarm, he heard the
oncoming thunder of hoofbeats and harsh war cries in a language not
Avornan. Cursing, he realized at least some of what must have happened. He
threw on drawers, jammed a helmet down on his head, seized sword and
shield, and ran, otherwise naked, from the tent.
“Out!” Grus shouted at the top of his lungs. “Out and fight! Quick,
before they kill you all!”
Soldiers started spilling from their tents. In the crimson light of the
dying campfires, they might have been dipped in blood. Many of them were
as erratically armed and armored as the king himself—this one had a sword,
that one a mailshirt, the other a shield, another a bow.
They were a poor lot to try to stop the rampaging Menteshe. And yet the
nomads seemed to have looked for no opposition whatever. They cried out in
surprise and alarm when Avornans rushed forward to slash at them, to pull
them from their horses, and to shoot arrows at them. They’d been looking
to murder Grus’ soldiers in their tents, to take them altogether unawares.
Whatever happened, that wouldn’t. More and more Avornans streamed into the
fight, these more fully armed than the first few.
One of Prince Ulash’s men reined in right in front of Grus. The nomad
stared around, looking for foes on horseback. He found none—? and had no
idea Grus was there until the king yanked him out of the saddle. He had
time for one startled squawk before landing in a camp-fire. He didn’t
squawk after that. He shrieked. The fire was dying, but not yet dead. And
the coals flared to new life when he crashed down on them.
As for Grus, he sprang into the saddle without even thinking about how
little he cared for horses and horsemanship. The pony under him bucked at
the sudden change of riders. He cuffed it into submission, yelling,
“Avornis! Avornis! To me, men! We can beat these cursed raiders!”
“King Grus!” shouted a soldier who recognized his voice. An instant
later, a hundred, a thousand throats had taken up the cry. “King Grus!
Hurrah for King Grus!”
That proved a mixed blessing. His own men did rally to him. But the
Menteshe cried out, too, and pressed him as hard as they could in the
crimson-shot darkness. Arrow after arrow hissed past his head. If the
archers had been able to see clearly what they were shooting at, he
doubted he could have lasted long. At night, though, they kept missing.
Even as he slashed with his sword, he breathed prayers of thanks to the
gods.
In the screaming, cursing chaos, he took longer to realize something
than he should have. When he did, he bawled it out as loud as he could.
“There aren’t very many of them. Hit them hard! We
can beat them!”
Maybe the magic—Grus presumed it was magic—that had let the Menteshe
slip past his sentries couldn’t have hidden more of them; Pterocles had
also had trouble masking too many men. Whatever the reason, this wasn’t an
assault by their whole army, as he’d feared when Pterocles’ cry of alarm
first woke him. It was a raid. It could have been a costly raid, but now
it wouldn’t be.
Prince Ulash’s men didn’t need much more time to figure that out for
themselves. When they did, they weren’t ashamed to flee. The Avornans
spent some small, panicky stretch of time striking at one another before
they realized the enemy had gone.
More fuel went on the fires. As they flared up, Hirundo waved to Grus.
“Well, that’s one way to settle your supper,” the general said
cheerfully.
Grus noticed three or four cuts, luckily all small, that he’d ignored
in the heat of battle. “For a little while there, I wondered if we’d get
settled along with supper,” he remarked. Hirundo laughed, as though the
Menteshe had done no more than play a clever joke on the Avornan army.
Grus was in no mood for laughter. He raised his voice, shouting,
“Pterocles!”
He had to call the wizard’s name several times before he got an answer.
He’d begun to fear the nomads had slain Pterocles. No sorcerer was immune
to an arrow through the throat or a sword cut that tore out his vitals.
But, at length, Pterocles limped into the firelight. He had an arrow
through him, all right, but through one calf. He’d wrapped a rag around
the wound. Not even the ruddy light of the flames could make his face
anything but pallid.
“Are you all right?” Grus exclaimed.
“That depends, Your Majesty,” the wizard said, biting his lip against
the pain. “Is the wound likely to kill me? No. Do I wish I didn’t have it?
Yes.”
Hirundo said, “I’ve never known a wound I was glad I had.”
“Nor I,” Grus agreed. “Have a healer draw the shaft and give you opium
for the pain. You’re lucky the arrowhead went through—the healer won’t
have to cut it out of you.”
“Lucky.” Pterocles savored the word. After a moment, he shook his head.
“If I were lucky, it would have missed me.”
Grus nodded, yielding the point. He said, “We’re all lucky you sensed
the nomads coming. What sort of spell did they use to get past the
sentries, and can we make sure it won’t work if they try it again?”
“A masking spell on the sentries,” Pterocles answered. “A masking spell
on them, and a sleep spell on me—maybe on this whole camp, but I think
just on me—so we wouldn’t know the Menteshe were here until too late. It
might have done everything the nomads wanted if I hadn’t had an extra cup
of wine last night.”
“What’s that?” Hirundo said. “Wine makes me sleepy.”
The wizard managed a bloodless smile, though blood was darkening the
cloth he’d put around his wounded leg. He said, “Wine makes me sleepy,
too. But it also makes me wake up in the middle of the night— which I did,
for I had to piss or burst. And when I woke ...”
Hirundo clapped his hands. Grus was sure that was the first time he’d
ever heard anyone’s bladder applauded. “Stay where you are. Don’t move on
it anymore,” the king told Pterocles, and turned to a soldier standing not
far away. “Fetch a healer to treat the wizard’s wound.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The man hurried off.
“You didn’t answer the second half of my question,” Grus said to
Pterocles.
“Can we make sure Ulash’s men don’t get away with this again?”
Pterocles said, “The sleep spell isn’t easy. It caught me by surprise
this time. It won’t the next.”
“What about other wizards?” Grus asked.
“I can let them know what to be wary of,” Pterocles told him. “That
will give them a good chance to steer clear of the spell, anyhow.”
“Better than nothing,” Grus said. It wasn’t enough to suit him, but he
judged it would have to do. His army had come through here. And tomorrow .
. .
Tomorrow, Pelagonia, he thought.
Sosia hurried up to Lanius. Some strong emotion was on her face. Had
she found out he’d been dallying with serving women again? He didn’t want
to go through another row.
But instead of screaming at him or trying to slap his face, Sosia burst
out, “He does! Oh, Lanius, he does!”
Lanius knew he was gaping foolishly. He couldn’t help himself. “Who
does?” he inquired. “And, for that matter, who does what?”
She stared at him as though he should have understood at once what she
was talking about. “My brother,” she answered with a grimace. “And he does
. . . what you’d expect.”
“Are you sure?” Lanius grimaced, too. That was very unwelcome news.
“Ortalis is hurting serving girls again, even though he’s hunting? Even
though he’s got a wife?”
“No, no, no!” Sosia’s expression said she’d been right the first time—
he
was an idiot. “He’s hurting
Limosa.”
“You’re crazy.” The words were out of Lanius’ mouth before he had the
chance to regret them. Even then, only part of him
did regret them, for he went on, “I saw her yesterday. She looked
as happy as a moncat with a lizard to chase. She’s looked—and sounded—that
way ever since they got married. I don’t know why, but she has. She loves
your brother, Sosia. She’s not pretending. Nobody’s that good an actress.
And he
does go out hunting. If he were hurting her, she could come to
you or to me or to Anser and scream her head off. She hasn’t. She doesn’t
need to do it, yes?”
“I don’t know.” Now his wife looked confused.
“What exactly
do you know? And how do you know it?”
“I know Limosa’s got scars on her back, the same sort of scars . . .
the same sort of scars Ortalis has put on other girls,” Sosia answered.
Lanius grimaced again, remembering Cristata’s ravaged back. Sosia’s eyes
said she noticed him remembering, and knew he was remembering the rest of
Cristata, too. But she visibly pushed that aside for the time being and
continued, “And I know because a serving woman happened to walk in on
Limosa while she was bathing. She doesn’t usually let any servants attend
her then, and that’s strange all by itself.”
The king nodded; it
was unusual. Did it mean Limosa had scars she didn’t want anyone
to see? Try as he would, he couldn’t think of anything else.
“But Limosa hasn’t said anything about this?” he asked.
“No.” Sosia shook her head. “She chased the maidservant away, and she’s
been going on as though nothing happened ever since.”
“I wonder if the maid was wrong, or if she was making it up,” Lanius
said.
“No,” Sosia repeated. “I know Zenaida. She wouldn’t. She’s
reliable.”
“Well, so she is,” Lanius agreed, his voice as expressionless as he
could make it. He wondered what Sosia would have called the serving woman
had she known he was sleeping with her. Something other than reliable, he
was sure.
He went through the palace the next morning looking for Limosa, and
naturally didn’t find her. Then, after he’d given up, he came around a
corner and almost bumped into her. She dropped him a curtsy, saying,
“Hello, Your Majesty.”
“Hello, Your Highness.” Lanius had almost gotten used to calling Limosa
by the title. He’d also paid her a bigger compliment than that— he’d
almost forgotten she was Petrosus’ daughter. “How are you today?”
Her smile lit up her face. She wasn’t a beautiful woman, but when she
smiled it was easy to forget she wasn’t. “I’m very well, Your Majesty,
very well indeed. I hope you are, too.”
“Pretty well, anyhow,” Lanius said.
“Good. I’m so glad to hear it.” That wasn’t, or didn’t sound like,
simple courtesy alone; it sounded as though Limosa meant it. “If you’ll
excuse me ...”
“Of course,” Lanius said. She smiled again, even more brightly than
before. Fluttering her fingers at him, she hurried down the hall, her
skirt rustling at each step.
She was radiant. That was the only word Lanius could find.
And she’s supposed to bear the mark of the lash on her back? The
king shook his head. He couldn’t believe it. He didn’t believe it. He
didn’t know what Zenaida thought she’d seen. Whatever it was, he was
convinced she’d gotten it wrong.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Pelagonia’s iron-shod gates swung open. The Avornan defenders on the
wall—soldiers of the garrison in helmets and mailshirts, armed with swords
and spears and heavy bows, plus a good many militiamen in leather jerkins,
armed with daggers and with hunting bows good for knocking over rabbits
and squirrels but with no range or punch to speak of—cheered Grus and his
army as he led it into the town.
He waved back to the men who’d held Pelagonia against the Menteshe. He
pasted a smile on his face. His heart pounded as though he were storming
Yozgat and driving Prince Ulash from his throne. That had nothing to do
with Pelagonia itself, so he didn’t want the people here noticing anything
amiss. It had everything to do with one woman who’d come—been sent—to live
here.
He wanted to see Alca as soon as he got the chance. And yet, he would
be quietly setting up housekeeping with Alauda while he stayed here. He
recognized the inconsistency. Recognizing it and doing anything about it
were two different beasts.
A baron named Spizastur commanded in Pelagonia. He was a big, bluff
fellow with gray eyes and a red face—an even redder nose, one that
suggested he put down a lot of wine. “Greetings, Your Majesty!” he boomed.
“Mighty good to see you, and that’s the truth!” Was he drunk? Not in any
large, showy way, anyhow, though he did talk too loud.
“Good to be here,” the king replied.
“I’m not sorry to see the last of those thieving devils,” Spizastur
declared, again louder than he needed to. “Been a long time since they
came this far north. Won’t be sorry if I never see ‘em again, either.”
Grus knew it was far from certain Pelagonia
had seen the last of the Menteshe. He didn’t say that to
Spizastur. It would only have disheartened the noble and the soldiers
who’d held Prince Ulash’s men out of the city. He did say, “I hope you
have billets for my men—and a place for me to stay.”
“Billets for some, anyhow,” Spizastur replied. “This isn’t the big
city, where you can fit in a great host and never notice. For you
yourself, Your Majesty, I’ve got rooms in the keep.”
“I thank you.” Grus would sooner have stayed with some rich
merchant—odds were that would have been more comfortable. But he couldn’t
tell Spizastur no. “I have a ... lady friend with me,” he murmured.
“Do you?” The local commander didn’t seem surprised. “I’ll see to
it.”
Grus didn’t pay much attention to Alauda until that evening. He was
busy with Spizastur and Hirundo, planning where the army would go next and
what it would try to do. And he kept hoping Alca would come to the
keep.
Alauda yawned as the two of them got ready for bed. She said, “I need
to tell you something.”
“What is it?” Grus, his mind partly on the campaign and partly on Alca,
paid little attention to the widowed barmaid he’d brought along on a
whim.
But she found half a dozen words to make him pay attention. “I’m going
to have a baby,” she said. Any man who hears those words, especially from
a woman not his wife,
will pay attention to them.
“Are you sure?” Grus asked—the timeworn, and foolish, common response
to such news.
She nodded, unsurprised. “Yes, I’m positive. My courses should have
come, and they haven’t. My breasts are tender”—Grus had noticed that—“and
I’m sleepy all the time. I had a baby girl, but she died young, poor
thing. I know the signs.” Are you sure it’s mine? But no, he couldn’t ask that. He
didn’t think she’d played him false since they’d become lovers, and they’d
been together long enough so the father couldn’t be anyone from before
even if she hadn’t made it plain she’d slept alone since her husband died.
Grus said, “Well, well. I’ll take care of you, and I’ll take care of the
baby. You don’t need to worry about that.”
“Thank you, Your Majesty,” Alauda breathed. By the way she said it, she
had worried. In her place, Grus supposed he would have, too.
He shook his head. He might have been trying to clear it after a punch
in the jaw. “I hope you’ll forgive me, but I still don’t intend to bring
you back to the capital with me. I don’t think my wife would understand.”
Actually, Estrilda would understand altogether too well. That was what
Grus was afraid of.
“I’m not worried about that,” Alauda said quickly. “You told me you
wouldn’t once before.”
“All right. Good.” He realized he needed to do something more, and went
over and gave her a kiss. She clung to him, making her relief obvious
without a word. He kissed her again, and patted her, and lay down beside
her. She fell asleep almost at once. She’d said being pregnant left her
sleepy. Lying awake beside her as she softly snored, Grus sighed and shook
his head. He’d been thinking about saying good-bye to her. He couldn’t
very well do that now.
And he was drifting off to sleep himself when a new thought woke him up
again. What would Alca think when she found out? After that, sleep took
even longer to find Grus.
Lanius studied Grus’ letters from the south with the obsessive
attention of a priest trying to find truth in an obscure bit of dogma.
Naturally, Grus put the best face he could on the news he sent up to the
city of Avornis— what he said quickly spread from the palace out to the
capital as a whole. Piecing together what lay behind his always optimistic
words was a fascinating game, one made more interesting when played with a
map.
Just now, Lanius suspected his fellow king of cheating. Grus wrote of a
night attack his army had beaten back, and then said,
We have entered a town on the north bank of the Thyamis River, from
which, as opportunity arises, we will proceed against the
Menteshe. “Which town on the north bank of the Thyamis?” Lanius
muttered, more than a little annoyed. It could have been Naucratis, it
could have been Chalcis, or it could have been Pelagonia. Grus didn’t make
himself clear. Depending on where he was, he could strike at the nomads
several different ways.
From the context, the Avornan army seemed most likely to be in
Pelagonia. But why hadn’t Grus come out and said so? Up until now, he’d at
least told people in the capital where he was, if not always why he’d gone
there. Figuring out why was part of the game, too.
And then, after one more glance from the letter to the map, Lanius
said, “Oh,” and decided he knew where the army was after all. If Estrilda
saw the name Pelagonia, she wouldn’t need to look at a map to know where
it was. She already knew that, in the only way likely to matter to her—it
was where Grus had sent his mistress. What was he doing there now? That
was what she would want to know. Did it have anything to do with fighting
Prince Ulash’s men, or was the king seeing the witch again?
If Grus failed to send a dispatch up to the capital, everyone there
would wonder what disaster he was trying to hide. But if he sent a
dispatch that said,
We have entered a town on the north bank of the Thyamis
River—well, so what? If Estrilda saw the dispatch, would she realize
a town on the north bank of the Thyamis River meant
Pelagonia?. Not likely.
From being annoyed at Grus, Lanius went to admiring him. The other king
had had a problem, had seen it, and had solved it in a way that caused him
no more problems. If that wasn’t what being a good king was all about,
Lanius didn’t know what would be.
Back in the palace, Lanius had problems of his own. He might have known
rumors about Limosa would race through it like a fire through brush in a
drought. He
had known it, in fact. And now it had. Servants gossiped and
joked, careless of who heard them. He didn’t want the royal family mocked.
He was touchy about his own dignity—after people had called him a bastard
through much of his childhood, who could blame him for that? And he was
touchy about the dignity of the family.
“What can we do?” he asked Sosia. “I don’t believe it, but people still
spread it.”
“I don’t know,” she answered. “I don’t really think we
can do anything about it. And I’m not so sure I don’t believe it.
Why would Zenaida lie about something like that?”
“How could Limosa seem so happy if it’s true?” Lanius retorted. “We’ve
seen what happens when Ortalis starts abusing serving girls. You can’t
tell me that’s happening now.”
His wife shrugged. “Maybe not. Whether the stories are true or not,
though, all we can do is ignore them. If we say they’re lies, people will
think we have reasons for hiding the truth. If we pretend we don’t hear,
though, what can they do about it?”
“Laugh at us.” To Lanius, that was as gruesome as any other form of
torture.
But Sosia only shrugged again. “The world won’t end. Before long, some
new scandal will come along. Some new scandal always does. By this time
next month, or month after at the latest, people will have forgotten all
about Limosa.”
Things weren’t quite that simple, and Lanius knew it. Limosa was part
of the royal family now. People would always wonder what she was doing and
gossip about what they thought she was doing. Yet Sosia had a point, too.
When new rumors came along, old ones would be forgotten. People didn’t
shout, “Bastard!” at him anymore when he went out into the streets of the
city of Avornis. His parentage had been a scandal, but it wasn’t now.
People had found other things to talk about. They would with Limosa,
too.
“Maybe you’re right,” Lanius said with a sigh. “But I don’t think it
will be much fun until the rumors do die down.”
Grus looked south across the Thyamis River from the walls of
Pelagonia. Clouds of smoke rising in the distance showed the Menteshe had
no intention of leaving Avornis until he threw them out. As he’d known,
this wasn’t a raid; this was a war. The king had been eager to come into
Pelagonia for reasons of his own. Now, for different reasons, he was just
as eager to leave the town.
His bodyguards stirred and stepped aside. Pterocles was one of the men
who could come—limp, these days—right up to him without a challenge. At
Grus’ gesture, the guardsmen moved back so Pterocles and he could talk in
privacy.
“I owe you an apology, Your Majesty,” the wizard said.
“You do?” That wasn’t something Grus heard every day. “Why?”
“Because I thought Alca the witch was a sly little snip who was clever
without really knowing what she was doing,” Pterocles answered. “I was
wrong. I admit it. She’s really very sharp.”
“Oh? How do you know that?”
The look Pterocles gave him said the wizard wondered whether
be was very sharp. “Because I’ve been working with her ever since
we got here, of course. Do you think I’d say that about somebody I didn’t
know?”
“No, I don’t suppose you would,” Grus admitted. “But I wondered,
because I haven’t seen her since we got here.”
“Do you want to?” Pterocles sounded surprised. “Uh, meaning no
disrespect, Your Majesty, but you’ve got another woman with you, and Alca
knows it.”
“Oh,” Grus said. “Does she?” Pterocles nodded. The king wondered
whether Alca knew Alauda was pregnant. She wouldn’t be very happy about
that if she did. Even so, Grus went on, “I would like to see her, yes. Not
because . . . because of what we used to be, but because she’s a powerful
witch.”
Pterocles nodded again, enthusiastically this time. “She really is. You
know how you’ve been nagging me about spells to cure thralls?”
“I know I’ve been interested in that, yes.” Grus’ voice was dry. “I
also know you made a point of telling me Alca’s ideas were worthless.”
“Well, they were. She didn’t understand. But now she does,” the wizard
said. “When I get back to the capital, I’ll have all sorts of good
ideas—hers and mine—to try out.”
“Good. We can use all the good ideas we can find,” Grus said. “And if
you’d be so kind, tell her I can see her this afternoon.”
“I’ll do that.” Pterocles went on his way.
Grus wondered if he’d just been clever or very foolish. Alca
was a powerful witch—and he’d sent her away from the city of
Avornis. Now he came to Pelagonia not with his wife, which would have been
bad enough, but with a new mistress, and one who would have his child.
Would it be surprising if Alca felt like turning him into a dung
beetle?
The real irony was that he didn’t love Alauda. He never had and never
would. He enjoyed her in bed, and that was about as far as it went. She
had the outlook of a peasant girl who’d become a barmaid, which was
exactly what she was. Alca, on the other hand, he’d liked and admired long
before they slept together. That wasn’t a guaranteed recipe for falling in
love, but it was a good start.
He waited more than a little nervously in a small, bare room in the
quarters in the keep Spizastur had given Alauda and him. He didn’t know
what Alauda was doing. He hoped she was napping.
A guardsman stuck his head into the room. “Your Majesty, the witch is
here.” He had tact. He’d served Grus back in the palace. He had to know
all the lurid gossip about the king and Alca. What he knew didn’t show in
his voice.
Gratefully, Grus answered, “Send her in.”
Alca came into the chamber slowly and cautiously. Until Grus saw how
she moved, how her pale, fine-boned face was set to show as little as it
could, he hadn’t realized she was at least as nervous as he was. She
brushed a lock of black hair back from her forehead. “Your Majesty,” she
said, her voice not much above a whisper.
“Hello, Alca,” Grus replied, and he wasn’t much louder. “It’s good to
see you.”
“It’s good to see you, too,” Alca said. “I wasn’t sure it would be, but
it is, in spite of everything.”
“How have you been?” he asked.
“This place is an even bigger hole than I thought it would be, and most
of the men here ought to be horsewhipped,” she answered. “I didn’t much
care for watching the Menteshe burn our fields, either.”
“Oh.” Grus winced. “I’m sorry. Curse it, I
am sorry—about everything. When we started, I didn’t think it
would end up like . . . this.”
“I did,” Alca said bleakly. “I did, but I went ahead anyhow—and so it’s
partly my own fault that this happened to me. Partly.” She cocked her head
to one side and eyed him in a way he remembered painfully well. “Will you
tell this latest woman of yours that you’re sorry about everything,
too?”
Pterocles had said she knew about Alauda. Grus wondered if the wizard
had told her, or if she’d found out by magic, or maybe just by market
gossip. Any which way, a king had a demon of a time keeping secrets,
especially about himself. However Alca knew, her scorn burned. Gruffly,
Grus answered, “I hope not.”
Alca nodded. “Yes, I believe that. You always hope not. And when things
go wrong—and they
do go wrong—you’re always surprised. You’re always disappointed.
And that doesn’t do anybody any good, does it?”
“Is that why you came here? To rail at me?”
“What will you do if I say yes? Exile me to some no-account town in the
middle of nowhere? I take it back, Your Majesty”—the way Alca used the
royal title flayed Grus—“I’m not so glad to see you after all.”
They glared at each other. After a long, furious silence, Grus asked,
“Have you been glad to see Pterocles?”
Alca’s face changed. “Yes,” she breathed. “Oh, yes, indeed. That is a
clever young man. He needs to be kicked every so often—or more than every
so often—but he’ll do great things if—” She broke off.
“If the Banished One doesn’t kill him first,” Grus finished for
her.
“Yes. If.” The witch nodded again. “He’s dreamed of the Banished One.
Did you know that?”
“It’s one of the reasons I made him my chief wizard aft—” Now Grus
stopped short.
After I sent you away was what he’d started to say, but he
decided not to say it. “One of the reasons I made him my chief wizard,” he
repeated. “It’s a sign the Banished One takes you seriously, I think.”
“An honor I could do without,” Alca said, and shivered in the warm
little room.
Grus agreed with her there, no matter how much the two of them
quarreled about their personal affairs. The king asked, “Have you made any
progress on spells to cure the thralls? Pterocles seemed to think you
had.”
Her eyes lit up. “Yes. I really think we have. He knows some things I
never could have imagined. But then, he found out about them the hard way,
too. To be struck down by the Banished One ... I’d sooner have the dreams,
and that’s the truth.”
“I believe it. I think you’re right.” Grus hesitated. “It’s dead, isn’t
it? When I came to Pelagonia, I thought. . .” He shook his head. “But no.
It really is dead.”
“You thought that, when you came here with another woman?” Alca shook
her head, too—in disbelief. “You can still surprise me, Your Majesty, even
when I ought to know better. But yes, it’s as dead as that table there.”
She pointed. “And it would be even if you hadn’t brought her along. I know
how big a fool I am—not big enough to let you hurt me twice, and I thank
the gods I’m not.”
Suddenly Grus was much more eager to escape this provincial town than
he ever had been to come here. “I won’t trouble you anymore,” he
mumbled.
“I’ll work with your wizard,” Alca said. “I’ll do whatever I can to
help Avornis. I told you that when I wrote to you. But I don’t think I
ever want to see you again.”
“All right,” Grus said. Just then, it was more than all right. It came
as an enormous relief.
Whenever a courier came into the city of Avornis from the south, King
Lanius worried. His chief fear was that Grus might have met disaster at
the hands of the Menteshe. That would have put him back on the Diamond
Throne as full-fledged ruler of the kingdom, but only by ruining the
kingdom. Some prices were too high to pay.
He had another worry, small only in comparison to that one. So far this
fighting season, the Chernagor pirates had stayed away from the Avornan
coast. If they descended on it while Grus was busy against the Menteshe .
. . Lanius didn’t know what would happen then, but he knew it wouldn’t be
good.
Reports from Grus came in regularly. He seemed to be making as much
progress against the nomads as anyone could reasonably expect. And the
coast stayed quiet. No tall-masted ships put in there. No kilted
buccaneers swarmed out to loot and burn and kill—and to distract the
Avornans from their campaign against Prince Ulash’s Menteshe.
Lanius wondered why not. If the Banished One’s hand propelled both the
Menteshe and the Chernagors against Avornis, couldn’t he set both foes in
motion against her at the same time? Failing there struck Lanius as inept,
and, while he might wish the god cast down from the heavens made many such
mistakes, he’d seen that the Banished One seldom did.
He asked Prince Vsevolod why the Chernagors were holding back. “Why?”
Vsevolod echoed. “I tell you why.” Maybe the sour gleam in his eye said he
thought Lanius should have figured it out for himself. Maybe it just said
he didn’t care for the King of Avornis. In that case, the feeling was
mutual.
“Go ahead,” Lanius urged.
“Are two reasons,” Vsevolod said. “First reason is, Avornan ships fight
hard two years ago. Not all Chernagor ships get home. Many losses. They
not want many losses again.”
“Yes, I follow that,” Lanius said. “What’s the other reason?”
“Magic.” The exiled Prince of Nishevatz spoke the word with somber
relish. “This spring, they send supply ships to my city-state, send food
to my cursed son. And they watch ships burn up. They see food burn, see
sailors burn. Not want to see that off coast of Avornis. So they stay
home.” Vsevolod jabbed a thumb at his own broad chest. “Me, I like to
watch ships burn. Oh, yes. I like very much. Let me watch Vasilko burn—I
like that better yet.”
Lanius believed him. All the same, the king wondered whether the
Banished One could have set the Chernagors in motion against Avornis
despite their hesitation. Evidently not. The Chernagors, or some of them,
were his allies, yes, but not—or not yet—his puppets, as the Menteshe
were. We can still win, Lanius thought. Avornis wasn’t the only one
with troubles. He tried to imagine how the world looked from the Banished
One’s perspective. Avornis’ great foe was already doing all he could with
the Menteshe. Up in the north, he’d managed to keep Grus from driving
Vasilko out of Nishevatz and putting Vsevolod back on the throne there.
But if he couldn’t get the Chernagors to work with the Menteshe, they had
to make very unsatisfactory tools for him.
What could he do about that? Lanius wondered if thralls would start
showing up in the land of the Chernagors. In an odd way, he hoped so. If
anything could frighten the Chernagors who followed the Banished One into
changing their allegiance, that might do the trick. Down in the south, the
Menteshe wizards had made Avornan peasants into thralls. That bothered the
nomads not at all. They would have abused those peasants any which way.
But in the north, thralls would have to be Chernagors, not members of an
alien folk, and that could work against the Banished One. Despising his
mortal opponents, he did sometimes overreach himself. Why not in the
north, where things weren’t going just as he wished?
Vsevolod said, “When you end this silly war in south? When you go back
to what is important? When you drive Vasilko from Nishevatz? Two times
now, you lay siege, then you quit and go home. Another time, you go home
before you lay siege. For me, is like being woman with man who is bad
lover. You tease, you tease, you tease—but I never go where I want to
go.” Perspective. Point of view, Lanius thought again. Vsevolod’s
was invincibly self-centered—not that Lanius hadn’t already known that.
With some asperity, he said, “I don’t think driving invaders out of our
southern provinces is a silly war. What would you do if someone invaded
Nishevatz?”
“No one invades Nishevatz,” Vsevolod said complacently. “Chernagors
rule seas. Even Avornis does not dare without me at your side.” He struck
a pose.
Lanius felt like hitting him. Plainly, the King of Avornis had no
chance of making things clear to the Prince of Nishevatz. “Your turn will
come,” Lanius said. Only after the words were gone did he wonder how he’d
meant them. Better not to know, maybe.
“Not come soon enough,” Vsevolod grumbled, proving he hadn’t taken it
the way Lanius feared he might. He gave Lanius a creaky bow. “Not soon
enough,” he repeated, and lumbered out of the room.
As a matter of fact, Lanius agreed with him. The sooner the king got
the prince out of the city of Avornis and back to Nishevatz—or anywhere
else far, far, away—the happier he would be. Lanius wondered if he could
send Vsevolod to the Maze until Grus was ready to campaign in the
Chernagor country again. He wouldn’t tell Vsevolod it was exile; he would
tell him it was a holiday—a prolonged holiday. Maybe he could bring it off
without letting Vsevolod know what was really going on.
With a sigh of regret, Lanius shook his head. Vsevolod
would figure out he’d been insulted. His beaky nose smelled out
insults whether they were there or not. And Grus would be furious if
Vsevolod thought he was insulted. The other king needed Vsevolod as a
figurehead when he fought in the north. Otherwise, he would seem an
invader pure and simple.
Or would he? Vsevolod had henchmen, several of high blood, in the city
of Avornis. If anything happened to him, one of them might make a good
enough cat’s-paw. Slowly, thoughtfully, Lanius nodded. Yes, that might
work. And if it did prove enough, if the king found a cooperative
Chernagor, couldn’t he do without the obnoxious Vsevolod? He didn’t know,
not for certain, but he did know one thing—he was tempted to find out.
King Grus looked down into the valley of the Anapus, the river just
north of the Stura. He let out a long sigh of relief. He’d spent a lot of
time and he’d spent a lot of men coming this far, clearing the Menteshe
from several valleys farther north. They’d left devastation behind them,
but it was—he hoped—devastation that could be repaired if the nomads
didn’t come back and make it worse.
Hirundo looked down into the valley, too. “Wasn’t too far from here
that we first met, if I remember right,” the general remarked.
“I thought it was down in the valley of the Stura, myself,” Grus
answered.
“Was it?” Hirundo shrugged. “Well, even if it was, it wasn’t
too far from here, not if you’re looking from the city of
Avornis. I know one thing for certain—we were both a lot younger than we
are now.”
“Well. . . yes.” Grus nodded. “I think time is what happens to you when
you’re not looking. Except for a few things, I don’t feel any older now
than I did then—but how did the gray get into my beard if I’m not?” He
plucked a hair from the middle of the chin. It wasn’t gray. It was white.
Muttering, he opened his fingers and let the wind sweep it away. And if
the wind could have taken the rest of the white hairs with it, he would
have been the happiest man in the world. Time, Grus thought, and muttered under his breath. Time worked
evils the Banished One couldn’t come close to matching. If Lanius and Grus
himself alarmed the Banished One, all the exiled god really had to do was
wait. Soon enough, they would be gone, and he could return to whatever
schemes he’d had before they came to power. But he who had been Milvago
was caught up in time, too, since he’d been cast down from the heavens to
the material world. He might not be mortal in any ordinary sense of the
word, but he too knew impatience, the sense that he couldn’t wait for
things to happen, that he had to
make them happen.
Because of that impatience, he sometimes struck too soon. Sometimes.
Grus dared hope this was one of those times.
“Forward!” he called, and waved to the trumpeters. Their notes blared
out the command. Forward the Avornan army went.
River galleys glided along the Anapus. As Grus and Hirundo had done
when they first met, they could use soldiers on land and the galleys as
hammer and anvil to smash the Menteshe. The nomads were vulnerable trying
to cross rivers. There, the advantage of mobility they had over the
Avornans broke down.
“Let’s push them,” Grus said. Hirundo nodded.
But the Menteshe didn’t feel like being pushed. Instead of riding south
toward the river, they galloped off to east and west, parallel to the
stream. And everywhere they went, new fires, new pyres, rose behind them.
The Avornans slogged along behind them. The nomads lived off the country
even as they ravaged it. Grus’ army remained partly tied to supply
wagons.
And the Menteshe had plans of their own. Grus listened to drums talking
back and forth through the night. He’d done that before, but now he
understood some of what the drums were saying. If he understood them
rightly, the nomads intended to smash his army between two of theirs.
When he said as much to Hirundo, the general nodded. “We’re trying to
do the same to them, Your Majesty,” he said. “All depends on who manages
to bring it off.”
“I know,” Grus said. “Let’s see if we can’t give them a little
surprise, though, shall we? I don’t think they know yet that we can follow
what the drums say.”
“We’d better make this win important, then,” Hirundo said. “Otherwise,
we’ll have given away a secret without getting a good price for it.”
Grus hadn’t thought of that. He slowly nodded. Hirundo, as usual, made
good sense. The king and the general put their heads together, trying to
figure out how to turn what they knew into a real triumph. Grus liked the
plan they hammered out.
Even so, it almost came to pieces at first light the next morning,
because the Menteshe attacked sooner than Grus had thought they would.
Arrows started arcing toward the Avornan army from east and west even
before the sun cleared the eastern horizon. If the Avornans hadn’t pieced
together what the drums were saying, his soldiers might have been caught
still in their tents. As things were, not all of them had reached the
positions he wanted by the time the fighting started.
But they’d done enough, especially in the east, where he wanted to hold
the Menteshe. He had to delay his attack in the west until he had some
confidence the east
would hold. That meant the nomads peppered his men with arrows
for an extra hour or so. But they didn’t push their attack as hard as they
might have. Their main assault was supposed to be in the east. So the
drums had said, and so it proved.
“Forward!” Grus shouted when everything was at least close to his
liking. The Avornans’ horns wailed. The Menteshe probably understood horn
calls the same way he understood their drum signals, but it didn’t matter
here. The Avornans rode bigger horses and wore sturdier armor than the
Menteshe. At close quarters, they had the edge on the nomads. And, because
Prince Ulash’s men were so intent on their own plan, they’d come to close
quarters.
They shouted in dismay when the iron-armored wedge of the Avornan army
thundered at them, smashed their line, and hurled it aside. Grus struck
out to right and left with his sword. A couple of times, it bit into
flesh. More often, it kept one Menteshe or another from getting a good
swipe at him.
When things went wrong, the nomads thought nothing of running away to
try again some other time. Grus had expected that. This time, he tried to
use it to his own purposes. He’d deployed outriders who shot at the nomads
trying to escape to the north. The Menteshe, still surprised at the vigor
of his response, recoiled from that direction and galloped south
instead.
That was where he wanted them to go. Only when they drew close to the
Anapus did they realize as much. They cried out in dismay again, for the
river galleys waited there. Not only that, but the ships also landed
marines who shot volley after volley of arrows into the Menteshe. And the
catapults on the galleys kept the nomads from closing with the marines and
riding them down. After darts from those catapults pinned two or three
Menteshe to their horses and knocked several more off their mounts,
Ulash’s riders didn’t want to go anywhere near the river.
Their other choice was charging at Grus and the men he led. That wasn’t
the sort of fight they wanted, but desperation served where nothing else
would. Shouting fiercely in their own language, the nomads swarmed toward
the Avornan army.
A volley from the Menteshe made several Avornan horsemen pitch from the
saddle and crumple to the ground. Wounded horses squealed and screamed.
But soon the attacking Menteshe got close enough for Grus’ men to shoot
back. And they did, with well-disciplined flights of arrows that tore into
the invaders’ front ranks. “Grus! Grus! King Grus!” the Avornans
cried.
Then it wasn’t just arrows anymore. It was swords and javelins and
lances. It was men shouting and cursing and shrieking at the top of their
lungs. It was iron belling off iron, iron striking sparks from iron, the
hot iron stink of blood in the air. It was cut and hack and slash and
thrust—and, for Grus, it was hoping he could stay alive.
He cut at a Menteshe. Along with a shirt of boiled leather that turned
arrows almost as well as a mailcoat, the fellow wore a close-fitting iron
cap. Grus’ blow jammed it down onto his forehead; the cut from the rim
made blood run down into his eyes. He yammered in pain and yanked the iron
cap back up with his left hand. But Grus struck again a heartbeat later.
His sword crunched into the nomad’s cheek. He felt the blow all the way up
into his shoulder. Face a gory mask, the Menteshe slid off over his
horse’s tail.
Another nomad hacked at Grus. He managed to block the blow with his
shield. He felt that one all the way to the shoulder, too, and knew his
shield arm would be bruised and sore come morning. But if he hadn’t turned
the blade aside, it would have bitten into his ribs. He hoped his
mailshirt and the padding beneath would have kept it out of his vitals,
but that wasn’t the sort of thing anybody wanted to find out the hard
way.
An Avornan to Grus’ left engaged the Menteshe before he could slash at
the king again. An arrow hissed past Grus’ head, the sound of its passage
as malignant as a wasp’s buzz—and its sting, if it had struck home, far
more deadly.
For a little while, he worried that the nomads’ fear and desperation
would fire them to break through his battle line. But the Avornans held,
and then began pushing Ulash’s riders back toward the Anapus regardless of
whether they wanted to go that way. When the marines from the river
galleys and the catapults on the ships began galling them again, they
broke, riding off wildly in all directions.
“After them!” Grus croaked. He took a swig from his water bottle to lay
the dust in his throat, then shouted out the command. Still crying out his
name, the Avornans thundered after their foes. Some of the Menteshe got
away, but many fell.
Hirundo was bleeding from a cut on the back of his sword hand. He
didn’t even seem to know he had the wound. “Not bad, Your Majesty,” he
said. “Not bad at all, by the gods. We hurt ‘em bad this time.”
“Yes,” Grus said. “It’s only fair—they’ve done the same to us.”
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
King Lanius sat on the Diamond Throne. The weight of the royal crown
was heavy on his head. His most splendid royal robes, shot through with
gold threads and encrusted with jewels and pearls, were as heavy as a
mailshirt. Down below his high seat, royal bodyguards clutched swords and
spears. The men were as nervous as big, tough farm dogs when wolves came
near. And Lanius was nervous, too. He hadn’t expected an embassy from the
Chernagor city-state of Durdevatz. Men from Durdevatz had brought him his
monkeys. In those days, though, peace had reigned between the Chernagors
and Avornis. Things were different now.
But how different were they? Lanius himself didn’t know. From what he
did know, Durdevatz wasn’t one of the city-states that had helped resupply
Nishevatz when Grus besieged it. Who could say for certain what had
happened since then, though? No one could—which explained why the guards
clung so tightly to their weapons.
And along with the guards stood a pair of wizards tricked out in
helmets and mailshirts, shields and swords. They wouldn’t be worth much in
a fight, but the disguise might help them cast their spells if any of the
Chernagors in the embassy tried to loose magic against the king.
Would the men from Durdevatz do such a thing? Lanius didn’t know that,
either. All he knew was, he didn’t want to find out the hard way that he
should have had sorcerers there.
A stir at the far end of the throne room. Courtiers’ heads swung that
way. The envoys from Durdevatz came toward the throne. They were large,
burly men with proud hooked noses, thick dark curly beards, and black hair
worn in neat buns at the napes of their necks. They wore linen shirts
enlivened by fancy embroidery at the chest and shoulders, wool knee-length
kilts with checks on dark backgrounds, and boots that reached halfway up
their calves. They all had very hairy legs, judging by the bits that
showed between boot tops and kilts.
Their leader wore the fanciest shirt of all. He bowed low to Lanius,
low enough to show the bald spot on top of his head. “Greetings, Your
Majesty,” he said in fluent but gutturally accented Avornan.
“Greetings to you.” As he went through the formula of introduction with
the ambassador, Lanius kept his voice as noncommittal as he could. “You
are ... ?”
“My name is Kolovrat, Your Majesty,” the ambassador from Durdevatz
replied. “I bring you not only my own greetings but also those of my
overlord, Prince Ratibor, and also the greetings of all the other princes
of the Chernagors.”
A brief murmur ran through the throne room. Lanius would have murmured,
too, if he hadn’t been sitting on the Diamond Throne before everyone’s
eye. “Prince . . . Ratibor?” he said. “What, ah, happened to Prince
Bolush?” Asking a question like that broke protocol, but no one in Avornis
had heard that Bolush had lost his throne.
Kolovrat didn’t seem put out at the question. “A hunting accident, Your
Majesty,” he replied. “Very sad.”
Lanius wondered how accidental the accident had been. He also wondered
where Ratibor and Kolovrat stood on any number of interesting and
important questions. For now, though, formula prevailed. He said, “I am
pleased to accept Prince Ratibor’s greetings along with your own.”
Am I? Well, I’ll find out. He didn’t mention the other Chernagor
princes. For one thing, Kolovrat had no real authority to speak for them.
For another, at least half of them were at war with Avornis at the
moment.
“In my prince’s name, I thank you, Your Majesty.” Kolovrat bowed.
“I am pleased to have gifts for you and your comrades,” Lanius said. A
courtier handed leather sacks to the ambassador and the other
Chernagors.
“I thank you again,” Kolovrat said with another bow. “And I am pleased
to have gifts for you as well, Your Majesty.”
Now all the courtiers leaned forward expectantly. Lanius had gotten not
only his first monkeys but also his first pair of moncats from Chernagor
envoys. Those earlier ambassadors had been at least as much merchants as
they were diplomats. Lanius thought Kolovrat really did come straight from
Prince Ratibor.
The king’s guardsmen and the wizards masquerading as guardsmen also
leaned forward, ready to protect Lanius if this embassy turned out to be
an elaborate disguise for an assassination attempt. That had occurred to
the king, too. For once, he wished the Diamond Throne didn’t elevate him
to quite such a magnificent height. Sitting on it, he made a good
target.
But when one of the Chernagors standing behind Kolovrat opened a box,
no arrows or sheets of flame or spiny, possibly poisonous monsters burst
from it. Instead, it held . . . Were those, could those be ...
parchments?
Kolovrat said, “Prince Ratibor discovered these old writings in the
cathedral after the High Hallow of Durdevatz set the princely crown upon
his head. He has heard of your fondness for such things, and sends them to
you with his warmest esteem and compliments.”
The guardsmen relaxed. So did the wizards. Whatever Ratibor thought
about Lanius, he didn’t seem inclined to murder him. The Avornan courtiers
drew back with dismay bordering on disgust. Old parchments? Not a lot
interesting about
them).
Lanius? Lanius beamed. “Thank you very much!” he exclaimed. “Please
give my most sincere thanks to His Highness as well. I look forward to
finding out what these old parchments say. They’re from the cathedral, you
tell me?”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” Kolovrat nodded.
“How . . . interesting.” Now the king could hardly wait to get his
hands on the documents. Parchments from the cathedral at Durdevatz could
be very old indeed. Lanius wondered if they went back to the days before
the Chernagors swooped down on the coast of the Northern Sea and took the
towns there away from Avornis. That didn’t seem likely, but it wasn’t
impossible, either.
“I am sure your pleasure will delight Prince Ratibor.” Kolovrat said
all the right things. He still sounded more than a little amazed, though,
that Lanius was pleased with the present.
That amazement made Lanius curious. “How did Prince Ratibor know I
would like this gift so well?” he asked.
“How, Your Majesty? Prince Ratibor is a clever man. That is how,”
Kolovrat answered. “And he knows you too are a clever man. He knows you
will aid Durdevatz in her hour of need.” Aha. Now we come down to it, Lanius thought. He hadn’t
supposed Ratibor had sent an embassy just for the sake of sending one—and
Ratibor evidently hadn’t. “What does your prince want from Avornis?” the
king asked cautiously.
“Nishevatz and the city-states allied with Nishevatz harry us,”
Kolovrat said. “Without help, we do not know how long we can stay free. We
fear what will come if we lose our struggle. Vasilko is the Prince of
Nishevatz, but everyone knows who Vasilko’s prince is.” He means the Banished One, Lanius thought unhappily. He wished
the new Prince of Durdevatz had come to him with some foolish, trivial
request, something he could either grant or refuse with no twinge of
conscience. Whatever he did now, he would have more than twinges. “Tell me
what Prince Ratibor wants from us,” he said. “I do not know how much I can
give. We are at war in the south, you know. Avornis itself is
invaded.”
“Yes. I know this,” Kolovrat said. “But what you can do, with soldiers
or ships, Prince Ratibor hopes you will. Durdevatz is hard pressed. If you
can send us any aid at all, we will be ever grateful to the rich and
splendid Kingdom of Avornis. So my prince swears, by all the gods in the
heavens.”
Not too long before, in the archives, Lanius had come across a copy of
a letter from his father to some baron or another. That happened every so
often; it never failed to give him an odd feeling. He’d been a little boy
when King Mergus died, and didn’t remember him well. Surviving documents
helped him understand the cynical but sometimes oddly charming man who’d
sired him.
The Avornan noble had apparently promised King Mergus eternal gratitude
if he would do something for him. And Mergus had written back,
Gratitude, Your Excellency, is worth its weight in gold.
That came back to Lanius now, though he rather wished it wouldn’t have.
But sometimes things needed doing regardless of whether the people for
whom you did them could ever properly repay you. The king feared this
would be one of those times. He said, “When you go back to Durdevatz, tell
him Avornis will do what it can for him. I don’t know what that will be,
not yet, but we’ll do it.”
Kolovrat bowed very low. “May the gods bless you, Your Majesty.”
“Yes,” Lanius said, wondering how he would meet the promise he’d just
made. “May they bless me indeed.”
Grus was questioning prisoners when a courier came down from the north.
Quite a few Menteshe spoke at least a little Avornan, and the nomads were
often breathtakingly candid about what they wanted to do to Avornis. “We
will pasture our flocks and our herds in your meadows,” a chieftain
declared. “We will kill your peasants—kill them or make them into thralls,
whichever suits us better. Your cities will be our cities. We will worship
the Fallen Star, the true light of the world, in your cathedrals.”
“Really? Then how did we happen to capture you?” Grus asked in mild
tones.
With a blithe shrug—surprisingly blithe, considering that he was a
captive—the fellow answered, “I made a mistake. It happens to all of us.
You, for instance”—he pointed at Grus—“do not bow before the Fallen Star.
You will pay for your mistake, and worse than I have paid for mine.”
“Oh?” Grus said. “Suppose I kill you now?”
Another shrug. “Even then.” As far as Grus could tell, that wasn’t
bravado. The Menteshe meant it. Scowling, the king gestured to the guards
who surrounded the prisoner. They took him away. But his confidence
lingered. It worried Grus. As far as he could tell, all the nomads felt
that way. It made them more dangerous than they would have been if they’d
had the same sort of doubts he did.
And yet, no matter how confident they were, he’d driven them back a
long way and inflicted some stinging defeats on them. As soon as he
cleared them from the valley of the Anapus, he could move down to the
Stura and drive them off Avornan soil altogether. He hoped he would be
able to do that before winter ended campaigning. He didn’t want the
Menteshe lingering in Avornis until spring. That would be a disaster,
nothing less.
What they’d already done was disastrous enough. Because of their
devastation, crops here in the south were going to be only a fraction of
normal. Pelagonia wasn’t the only city liable to see hunger this winter—
far from it. And how were farmers supposed to pay their taxes when they
had no crops to sell for cash? The government of Avornis would see hunger
this winter, too.
And all that said nothing about men killed, women violated, children
orphaned, livestock slaughtered. Every time he thought about it, he
seethed. What he wanted to do was go after the Menteshe south of the
Stura, take the fighting to them, and let them see how they liked it.
What he wanted to do and what he could do were two different things.
Until he had—until Avornis had—some reliable way to cure thralls and to
keep men from being made into thralls, he didn’t dare cross the river.
Defeat would turn into catastrophe if he did. And then his son and his
son-in-law would fight over who succeeded him. That would be another
catastrophe, no matter who won. Grus had his own opinion about who would,
had it and refused to dwell on it.
The guards brought up another prisoner. This one blustered, saying, “I
do not care how you torture me. I am Prince Ulash’s man, and the Fallen
Star’s.”
“Who said anything about torturing you?” Grus asked.
“Avornans do that,” the Menteshe said. “Everyone knows it.”
“Oh? How many prisoners whom we’ve tortured have you met?” King Grus
knew Avornans sometimes
did torture prisoners, when they were trying to pull out
something the captive didn’t want to say. But his folk didn’t do it
regularly, as the Menteshe did.
“Everyone knows you do it,” the nomad repeated.
“How do you know?” Grus said again. “Who told you? Did you meet
prisoners who told you what we did to them?” If the man had, he was out of
luck.
But the Menteshe shook his head. “There is no need. Our chieftains have
said it. If they say it, it must be true.”
Grus sent him away. It was either that or go to work on him with ropes
and knives and heated iron. Nothing short of torture would persuade him
what his chieftains said was untrue—and torture, here, would only prove it
was true. The king muttered to himself, most discontented. The nomad had
won that round.
He muttered more when his army crossed the Anapus. Devastation on the
southern side of the river was even worse than it had been in the north.
The Menteshe might have had trouble crossing the Anapus. They’d spent more
time below it, and found more ways to amuse themselves while they were
there. Grus began to wonder what things would be like in the valley of the
Stura. Could they be worse than what he was seeing here? He didn’t know
how, but did know the Menteshe were liable to instruct him.
Before he could worry too much about the valley of the Stura, he had to
finish clearing Prince Ulash’s men from the valley of the Anapus. The
Menteshe on the southern side of the river didn’t try to make a stand.
Instead, after shooting arrows at his army as it landed, they scattered.
That left him with a familiar dilemma—how small were the chunks into which
he could break up his army as he pursued? If he divided it up into many
small ones, he ran the risk of having the Menteshe ambush and destroy some
of them. Remembering what had happened to the troop farther north, he
wasn’t eager to risk that.
Eager or not, he did. Getting rid of the Menteshe came first. This
time, things went the way he wanted them to. The nomads didn’t linger and
fight. They fled over the hills to the south, toward the valley of the
Stura.
As Grus reassembled his army to go after them, he said, “I wonder if
they’ll fight hard down there, or if they’ll see they’re beaten and go
back to their own side of the river.”
“That’s why we’re going down there, Your Majesty,” Hirundo answered.
“To find out what they’ll do, I mean.”
“No.” The king shook his head. “That’s not why. We’re going down there
to make sure they do what we want.”
The general thought it over. He nodded. “Well, I can’t tell you you’re
wrong. Of course, if I tried you’d probably send me to the Maze.”
“No, I wouldn’t.” Grus shook his head again. “I have a worse punishment
than that in mind.” Hirundo raised a questioning eyebrow. Grus went on,
“I’ll leave you right here, in command against the cursed Menteshe.”
“No wonder people say you’re a cruel, hard king!” Hirundo quailed in
artfully simulated terror.
Even though he was joking, what he said touched a nerve. “Do people say
that?” Grus asked. “It’s not what I try to be.” He sounded wistful, even a
little—maybe more than a little—plaintive.
“I know, Your Majesty,” Hirundo said quickly.
Grus stayed thoughtful and not very happy the rest of the day. He knew
he’d given people reason to curse his name. He’d sent more than a few men
to the Maze. He reckoned that merciful; he could have killed them instead.
But they and their families would still find him cruel and hard, as
Hirundo had said. And he hadn’t given towns ravaged by the Menteshe as
much help as they would have liked. He didn’t think he could afford to.
Still... He wished he could do all the things the people of Avornis wanted
him to do. He also wished none of those people spent any time plotting
against him. That would have made his life easier. It would have, yes, but
he feared he couldn’t hold his breath waiting for it to happen.
What
could he do? “Go on,” he muttered to himself. Seeing nothing
else, he turned back to Hirundo. “Let’s finish cleaning the Menteshe out
of this valley, and then we’ll go on to the next.”
“Yes, Your Majesty. Ahh . . .” The general paused, then said, “If you
want to push on to the Stura, and to leave garrisons in the passes to keep
Ulash’s men from getting through, our second-line soldiers could probably
finish hunting down the nomads left behind. Or don’t you think so?”
Grus paused, too. Then he nodded. “Yes. That’s good, Hirundo. Thank
you. We’ll do it. Farther north, I wouldn’t have, but here? You bet I
will. It lets me get down to the border faster, and we may be able to give
the Menteshe a surprise when we show up there sooner than they expect us
to.”
He set things in motion the next day. Some of the armed peasants and
townsmen and the river-galley marines he ordered out against the Menteshe
would probably get mauled. But he would be getting the best use out of his
soldiers, and that mattered more. Hirundo had done what a good general was
supposed to do when he made his suggestions.
From the top of the pass the army took down into the valley of the
Stura, Grus eyed the pillars of black smoke rising into the sky here and
there. They spoke of the destruction Ulash’s men were working, but they
also told him where the Menteshe were busy. He pointed to the closest one.
“Let’s go hunting.”
Hunt they did. They didn’t have the bag Grus would have wanted, for
Prince Ulash’s riders fled before them. Here, though, the ground through
which the Menteshe could flee was narrow—unless, of course, they crossed
the Stura and left Avornis altogether. Grus would sooner have wiped them
off the face of the earth than seen them get away, but he would sooner
have seen them get away than go on ravaging his kingdom.
Not all of the men who tried to get away succeeded. Avornan river
galleys slid along the Stura. As Grus had, their skippers enjoyed nothing
more than ramming and sinking the small boats the Menteshe used to cross
the river. But here the Avornans didn’t have everything their own way, as
they had farther north. Ulash had river galleys in the Stura, too. When
Grus first saw them come forth and assail his ships, he cursed and grinned
at the same time. Yes, the Menteshe could cause trouble on the river. But
they could also
find trouble there, and he hoped they would.
Before long, they did. The Menteshe had galleys in the Stura, true, but
their crews weren’t and never had been a match for the Avornans. After
Grus’ countrymen sank several galleys full of nomads and lost none
themselves, the Menteshe stopped challenging them.
“Too bad,” Grus said. “They’re trouble on land. On the water?” He shook
his head, then waved toward Hirundo. “They make you look like a good
sailor.”
“Then they
must be hopeless,” Hirundo declared.
“Maybe they are,” Grus said. “Now if only they were horsemen like me,
too.”
That the Menteshe weren’t. They shot up a squadron of Avornan cavalry
who pursued them too enthusiastically, then delivered a charge with the
scimitar that sent Grus’ men, or those who survived, reeling off in
headlong retreat. It was a bold exploit, especially since the Menteshe had
spent so long falling back before the Avornans. Grus would have admired it
more if the nomads hadn’t hacked up the corpses of the men they’d
slain.
“We think, when we die, we die dead,” a captured Menteshe told him.
“Only when the Fallen Star regains his place do we live on after death.
But you foolish Avornans, you think you last forever. We treat bodies so
to show you what is true—for now, you are nothing but flesh, the same as
us.”
He spoke excellent Avornan, with conviction chilling enough to make
Grus shiver. If this life was all a man had, why
not do whatever pleased at the moment? What would stop you,
except brute force here on earth? How could a man sure he was trapped in
one brief life show any signs of conscience? By all the evidence from the
Menteshe, he couldn’t. And no wonder the nomads clung so strongly to the
Banished One. If they thought his triumph was their only hope for life
after death . . .
If they thought that, Grus was convinced they were wrong. “The gods in
the heavens are stronger,” he told the nomad. “They cast the Banished One
out, and he will never return.”
“Yes, he will,” the Menteshe answered. “Once he rules the world, he
will take back the heavens, too. The ones you call gods were jealous of
the Fallen Star. They tricked him, and so they cast him down.”
Grus wondered how much truth that held. Only the gods in the heavens
and the Banished One, the one who had been Milvago, knew for sure. Grus
feared the Banished One would send him a dream where the exiled god set
forth his side of the story, as he must have for the Menteshe. But no
dream came. At first, that relieved the king. Then he wondered what else
the Banished One was doing, what left him too busy to strike fear into the
heart of a foe. Imagining some of the possibilities, he felt plenty of
fear even without a dream.
Limosa bowed low before King Lanius. “Your Majesty, may I ask a favor
of you?” she said.
“You may always ask, Your Highness,” Lanius said. “But until I hear
what the favor is, I make no promises.”
Ortalis’ wife nodded. “I understand. No doubt you are wise. The favor I
ask is simple enough, though. Could you please bring my father out of the
Maze?”
“You asked that before. I told you no then. Why do you think anything
is different now? King Grus sent Petrosus to the Maze. He is the one who
would have to bring him out.”
“Why do I think things are different? Because you have more power than
I thought you did,” Princess Limosa answered. “Because King Grus is far
away. You
can do this, if you care to.”
She might well have been right. Grus would fume, but would he do
anything more than fume? Lanius wondered, especially when Ortalis and
Limosa did seem happy together. And yet. . . Lanius knew one of the
reasons he was allowed power was that he used it alongside the power Grus
wielded. Up until now, he’d never tried going dead against Grus’
wishes.
What would happen if he did? Grus was distracted by the war against the
Menteshe, yes. Even so, he would surely hear from someone in the capital
that Petrosus had come back. If he didn’t like the idea, Lanius would have
thrown away years of patient effort—and all on account of a man he didn’t
like.
Caution prevailed. “Here’s what I’ll do,” the king said. “I’ll write a
letter to Grus, urging that he think again in the light of everything
that’s happened since you married Prince Ortalis. I’m sorry, but that’s
about as far as I can go.”
“As far as you dare go, you mean,” Limosa said.
No doubt she meant it for an insult. But it was simple truth. “You’re
right—that is as far as I dare to go,” Lanius answered. “If Ortalis writes
at the same time as I do, it might help change Grus’ mind.”
Limosa went off with her nose in the air. The day was hot and sticky,
one of those late summer days made bearable only by thinking fall would
come soon. Even so, she wore a high-necked, long-sleeved tunic.
What do
she and Ortalis do together? Lanius wondered.
Do I really want to know? He shook his head. No, he didn’t think
so.
He did write the letter. He had trouble sounding enthusiastic, but felt
he could honestly say,
I
do not believe Petrosus will prove a danger to you, especially if you
leave him without a position on his return to the city of Avornis.
He also wrote to Grus of an order he’d given the day before, an order
sending four of Avornis’ new tall-masted ships from the west coast north to
Durdevatz. He hadn’t stripped the coast of all the new ships, but he had
done what he thought he could for Kolovrat and Prince Ratibor.
When he gave the letter to a southbound courier, he asked the man if
Ortalis had also given him one to send to Grus. The fellow shook his head.
“No, Your Majesty.”
“Thank you,” Lanius said. Did Ortalis want nothing to do with his
father, even for his father-in-law’s sake? Was Ortalis one of those people
who never got around to writing, no matter what? Or did he dislike
Petrosus, no matter what he felt about Limosa?
Here, for once, was a topic that failed to rouse Lanius’ curiosity.
None of my business, the king thought,
and a good thing, too. He’d gone as far as he intended to go for
Petrosus.
He didn’t have long to wait for Grus’ reply. It came back to the
capital amazingly fast, especially considering how far south the other
king had traveled. It was also very much to the point.
Petrosus will stay a monk, Grus wrote.
Petrosus will also stay in the Maze. Then he added two more
sentences.
As for the other, I approve. In those circumstances, what else could
you do?
Relieved Grus was not angry at him for his move with the ships, Lanius
read the other part of the note to Limosa. “I’m sorry, Your Highness,” he
lied. “I don’t think I’d better go against King Grus’ will when he makes
it so clear.” That last was true.
Petrosus’ daughter scowled. “You haven’t got the nerve.”
That was also true. Lanius shrugged. “I’m sorry,” he said again. “Maybe
you and Ortalis can persuade him with letters. For your sake, I hope you
do.”
“For
my sake,” Limosa said bitterly. “As far as
you’re concerned, my father can stay in the Maze until he
rots.”
And
that was true, no matter how little Lanius felt like coming out
and saying so. He shrugged again. “If Grus wants to let your father out,
he will. I won’t say a word about it. But he has to be the one to do
it.”
Limosa turned her back on him. She stalked away without a word. Lanius
sighed. As soon as he heard what she had in mind, he’d been sure he was
going to lose no matter what happened. He’d been sure, and he’d been
right, and being right had done him no good at all.
“Well, well,” King Grus said when a courier handed him three sealed
letters from the city of Avornis. “What have we here?”
“Letters, Your Majesty,” the courier said unhelpfully. “One from His
Majesty, one from Prince Ortalis, and one from Princess Limosa.” He was
just a soldier, with a provincial accent. Odds were he neither knew nor
cared how Limosa had become Ortalis’ wife. Grus wished he could say the
same.
He opened Lanius’ letter first. The other king wrote,
King Lanius to Grus—
greetings. Your son and his wife will be petitioning you to let
Petrosus out of the Maze. They expect me to write you yet another letter
to the same effect, which is why I am sending this to you. In point of
fact, I am profoundly indifferent to whatever you choose to do with or to
Petrosus. But now I have written, and they will suppose I am once more
urging you to release him. You will, I am sure, also have written letters
intended to keep the peace. I hope all goes well in the south, for that is
truly important business. He’d scrawled his name below the carefully
written words.
Grus couldn’t help smiling as he read the letter. He could almost hear
Lanius’ voice in the words—intelligent, candid, detached, more than a
little ironic. When he got letters from son, daughter-in-law, and
son-in-law all at once, he’d had a pretty good idea of what they were
about. Now that he knew he was right, he broke the seal on Ortalis’
letter, and then on Limosa’s. From what they (especially Limosa—Ortalis’
letter was brief, and less enthusiastic than his wife’s) said about
Petrosus, Grus might have installed him as Arch-Hallow of Avornis after
recalling him from the Maze. He was good, he was pure, he was honest, he
was reliable, he was saintly . . . and he was nothing like the Petrosus
Grus had known for so long before sending him away from the capital.
If he didn’t let Petrosus come out of the Maze, he would anger Ortalis
and Limosa. They made that plain. But if he did let Petrosus come out, he
would endanger himself. He could see that, even if Ortalis and Limosa
couldn’t. Petrosus would want revenge. Even if he didn’t get his position
back (Lanius’ suggestion in his earlier letter)—and he wouldn’t— he still
had connections. An angry man with connections . . .
I’d need eyes in the back of my head for the rest of my life, the
king thought.
He called for parchment and ink. Grus wrote,
I
am sorry—a polite lie—
but, as I have written before, it is necessary for Petrosus to remain
in the monastery to which he has retired. No further petitions on this
subject will be entertained. He signed his name.
Limosa would pout. Lanius would shrug. Ortalis . . . Grus gritted his
teeth. Who could guess what Ortalis would do? Grus sometimes wondered if
his son knew from one minute to the next. Maybe he would shrug, too. But
maybe he would throw a tantrum instead. That could prove . . .
unpleasant.
The king had just finished sealing his letter when a guard stuck his
head into the tent and said, “Your Majesty, Pterocles would like to speak
to you if you have a moment to spare.”
“Of course,” Grus answered. The guard disappeared. A moment later, the
wizard came in. Grus nodded to him. “Good evening. What can I do for you?
How is your leg?”
Pterocles looked down at the wounded member. “It’s healed well. I still
feel it now and again—well, a little more than now and again—but I can get
around on it. I came to tell you I’ve been doing some thinking.”
“I doubt you’ll take any lasting harm from it,” Grus said. Pterocles
started to reply, then closed his mouth and sent Grus a sharp look. The
king looked back blandly. He asked, “And what have you been thinking
about?”
“Thralls.”
No one word could have been better calculated to seize and hold Grus’
interest. “Have you, now?” he murmured. Pterocles nodded. Grus asked,
“What have you been thinking about them?”
“That I wish I were back in the city of Avornis to try some spells on
the ones you brought back from the south,” Pterocles answered. “I think .
. .” He paused and took a deep breath. “I think, Your Majesty, that I know
how to cure them.” “Do you?” Grus said. The wizard nodded again. “By Olor’s
beard, you have my attention,” Grus told him. “Why do you think you know
this now, when you didn’t before we left the city?” He sent Pterocles a
wry smile. “When you were where the thralls are, you didn’t know. Now that
you’re hundreds of miles from them, you say you do. Will you forget again
when we get back to the capital?”
“I hope not, Your Majesty.” The wizard gave back a wry smile of his
own. “Part of this has to do with my own thinking, thinking that’s been
stewing for a long time. Part of it has to do with the masking spell the
Menteshe threw at us the night before we went into Pelagonia. And part of
it has to do with some of the things your witch said when we were in
Pelagonia.”
Grus remembered some of the things Alca had said to
him while the army was in Pelagonia. He wished he could forget a
lot of them, but those weren’t things she’d said in connection with the
thralls. “Go on,” he told Pterocles. “Believe me, I’m listening.”
“For a few days there, I couldn’t do much but lie around and listen to
her,” Pterocles said. “She made herself a lot clearer, a lot plainer, than
she ever had before. And I told her some things she hadn’t known before,
things I know because of... because of what happened to me outside of
Nishevatz.” Because I almost got killed outside of Nishevatz, he meant.
“Go on,” Grus said. “What does the masking spell have to do with all
this?”
“Well, Your Majesty, part of what makes a thrall is emptying out his
soul,” Pterocles answered. Grus nodded; that much he knew. The wizard went
on, “It finally occurred to me, though, that that’s not all that’s going
on. The Menteshe sorcerers have to leave something behind. They can’t
empty out the
whole soul, or a thrall would be nothing but a corpse or a beast.
And we all know there’s a little more to them than that.”
“Yes, a little. Sometimes more than a little,” Grus said, remembering
the thralls who’d tried to kill Lanius and, in lieu of himself,
Estrilda.
“Sometimes more than a little,” Pterocles agreed. “But now it seems to
me—and to Alca—that the emptying spell isn’t the only one the Menteshe
wizards use. It seems to us that they also use a masking spell. Some of
the true soul that makes a man remains in a thrall, but it’s hidden away
even from him.”
Grus considered. Slowly, he nodded again. “Yes, that makes sense,” he
said. “Which doesn’t mean it’s true, of course. A lot of the time, we’ve
found that the things that seem to make the most sense about thralls turn
out not to be true at all. But you’re right. It may be worth looking into.
You and Alca figured all of this out, you say?”
He could name the witch without flinching now. He could also name her
without longing for her, which he wouldn’t have believed possible. People
said absence made the heart grow fonder. And if the person you cared about
suddenly
wasn’t absent, and the two of you found you
didn’t care for each other anymore? There was a gloomy picture of
human nature, but one Grus couldn’t deny. It had happened to him.
Pterocles said, “We started working on it in Pelagonia, yes. I’ve added
some new touches since. That’s why I’m so eager to get back to the city of
Avornis and try them out on the thralls there.”
“I understand,” Grus said. “But the other thing I understand is, I need
you here as long as we’re campaigning. We’ll head back in the fall, I
expect. They won’t go anywhere in the meantime.” Reluctantly, Pterocles
spread his hands, admitting that was so.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
For a long time, thralls had fascinated King Lanius. They were men
robbed of much of their humanity, forced down to the dusky, shadow-filled
borderland between mankind and the animal world. The existence of thralls
made whole men think about what being human really meant.
Then a thrall tried to kill Lanius.
It wasn’t just a fit of bestial passion, of course. It was the Banished
One reaching out through the thrall, controlling him as a merely human
puppeteer controlled a marionette. From that moment on, thralls hadn’t
seemed the same to Lanius. They didn’t strike him as just being half man
and half animal. Instead, he also saw them as the Banished One’s tools, as
so many hammers and saws and knives (oh yes, knives!) to be picked up
whenever the exiled god needed them.
And tools weren’t so fascinating.
Since the thralls tried to murder Lanius and Estrilda, the king had
paid much less attention to them, except for making sure the ones still in
the palace couldn’t get out and try anything like that again. He didn’t
know what sudden spasm of curiosity had brought him to the room above the
one in which they were imprisoned. Whatever it was, though, he peered down
at them through the peephole in their ceiling.
He started to, anyhow. As soon as he drew back the tile that covered
the peephole, he drew back himself, in dismay. A thick, heavy stench
wafted up through the opening. The thralls cared not a bit about keeping
clean.
By all appearances, they didn’t care much about anything else, either.
Two sprawled on mattresses on the floor. A third tore a chunk off a loaf
of bread and stuffed it into his mouth with filthy hands. He filled a cup
with water and drank it to go with the snack. Then he walked over to a
corner of the room and eased himself. The thralls were in the habit of
doing that. They had chamber pots in the room, but seldom used them. That
added to the stench.
The thrall started to lie down with his comrades, but checked himself.
Instead, he stared up at the peephole. Lanius didn’t think he’d made any
noise uncovering it, but that didn’t always matter. The thralls seemed
able to sense when someone was looking at them. Or maybe it wasn’t the
thralls themselves. Maybe it was the Banished One looking out through
them.
That suspicion always filled Lanius whenever he had to endure a
thrall’s gaze. This thrall’s face showed nothing but idiocy. Who could
guess what lay behind it? Maybe nothing did. Maybe the man (no, the
not-quite-man) was as empty, as
emptied, as any other thrall laboring on a little plot of land
down south of the Stura. Maybe. Lanius had trouble believing it.
Did something glint in the thrall’s eyes? His face didn’t change. His
expression stayed as vacant as ever. But that didn’t feel like a beast’s
stare to Lanius. Nervously, the king shook his head. It might have been
the stare of a beast of sorts—a beast of prey eyeing an intended
victim. Nonsense, Lanius told himself.
That’s only a thrall, with no working wits in his head. He tried
to make himself believe it. He couldn’t.
The thrall kept staring and staring. Sometimes, during one of these
episodes, a thrall would mouth something up at him, or even say
something—a sure sign something more than the poor, damaged thrall was
looking out through those eyes. Not this time. After a couple of minutes,
the thrall turned away.
Lanius turned away, too, with nothing but relief. He covered the
peephole. His knees clicked as he got to his feet. He rubbed his nose, as
though that could get rid of the stink from the thralls’ room. Still, he
kept coming back to look at them. He was no wizard. He couldn’t learn
anything about them that would help anyone find out how to cure them—if,
indeed, anyone
could curs them. But he stayed intrigued. He couldn’t help
wondering what went on in the thralls’ minds. Logic and observation said
nothing much went on there, but he wasn’t sure how far to trust them.
Where sorcery was involved, were logic and observation the right tools to
use?
If they weren’t, what was? What could be? More good questions. Lanius
could come up with any number of good questions. Finding good answers for
them was harder. Maybe the hope of good answers was what kept him coming
back to the peephole.
Not long after that thought crossed his mind, he walked past Limosa in
the hallway. She nodded politely as she went by—she thought he’d tried
harder than he really had to get her father out of the Maze. He nodded
back, though it took an effort. He had plenty of good questions about her
and Ortalis, too, but no good answers, however much he would have liked to
have them. What you need is a peephole into their bedchamber, he thought.
That would tell you what you want to know.
He violently shook his head. What he wanted to know was none of his
business. Knowing it was none of his business didn’t keep him from wanting
to find out. Sosia would be angry at him if she learned he wanted to peep
into other people’s bedrooms—except she was even more curious about this
than he was. No, he told himself firmly.
Some curiosity doesn’t need to be satisfied. That went dead
against everything he’d ever believed. He tried to convince himself of it
anyway.
Here was the Stura. Grus had spent a lot of years traveling up and down
the river in a war galley. Now he approached it on horseback. The sour
smell of old smoke filled his nostrils. This was the valley the Menteshe
had overrun most thoroughly. That meant it was the valley where Prince
Ulash’s men had done the most damage.
Seeing that damage both infuriated and depressed the king. “How am I
supposed to set this to rights?” he demanded of Hirundo.
“Driving the Menteshe back over the river would be a good start,” the
general answered.
Hirundo smiled. He joked. But that was kidding on the square. Unless
the Avornans could drive the Menteshe south of the Stura once more, Grus
had exactly no chance of setting any of this to rights. And here, where
their countrymen could slip north over the river in small boats by night,
where the Menteshe could also bring river galleys— some of them rowed by
brainless thralls—into the fight, driving them out of Avornis was liable
to prove doubly hard.
“We can do it,” Hirundo said. “They don’t want to fight a stand-up
battle. Whenever they try that, they lose, and they know it.”
“They don’t
need to make a stand-up fight,” Grus said darkly. “All they need
to do is keep riding around and burning things. What kind of harvest will
anyone here in this valley have? None to speak of, and we both know it.
The Menteshe know it, too. Wrecking things works as well for them as
winning battles.” He waved toward what had been a vineyard. “No one will
grow grapes here for years. No grapes, no wine, no raisins. It’s the same
with olive groves. Cut the trees down and burn them and it’s years before
you have olives and olive oil again. What do people do in the
meantime?”
“I’ll tell you what they do,” Hirundo answered. “They do
without.”
Another joke that held entirely too much truth. The trouble was that
people
couldn’t very well do without wine and raisins and grapes and
olive oil. Here in the south, those things were almost as important as
wheat and barley—not that the grainfields hadn’t been ravaged, too. A good
harvest next year would go a long way toward putting that worry behind
people . . . provided they didn’t starve in the meantime. But the other
crops would take longer to recover.
“And what happens if the Menteshe swarm over the Stura again next
spring?” Grus demanded.
“We try to hit them before they can cause anywhere near this much
mischief,” Hirundo answered reasonably.
“But can we really do it? Wouldn’t you rather go up into the Chernagor
country and finish what we’ve been trying to do there for years now? And
what about the Chernagor pirates? What if they hit our east coast again
next spring while the Menteshe cross the Stura?”
“You’re full of cheerful ideas,” Hirundo said.
“It could have happened this year,” Grus said. “We’re lucky it
didn’t.”
Hirundo shook his head. “That isn’t just luck, Your Majesty. True, you
didn’t take Nishevatz, but you came close, and you would have done it,
odds are, if the war down here hadn’t drawn you away. And our ships gave
the Chernagor pirates all they wanted, and more besides. It’s no wonder
they didn’t move along with the cursed Menteshe. You put the fear of the
gods in them.”
“The fear of the gods,” Grus murmured. He hoped some of the Chernagors
still felt it, as opposed to the fear of the Banished One. But what he
hoped and what was true were liable to be two different things, as he knew
too well. Confusing the one with the other could only lead to
disappointment.
As he was getting ready to lie down on his cot that evening, Alauda
said, “Ask you something, Your Majesty?”
Grus looked at her in surprise. She didn’t ask a lot of questions. “Go
ahead,” the king said after a moment. “You can always ask. I don’t know
that I’ll answer.”
The peasant girl’s smile was wry. “I understand. You don’t have to, not
for the likes of me. But when we were up in Pelagonia . . . You had
another woman up there, didn’t you?”
“Not another woman I slept with,” Grus said carefully. He’d had enough
rows with women (that a lot of those rows were his own fault never crossed
his mind). He didn’t want another one now. If he had to send Alauda
somewhere far away to keep from having another one, he was ruthlessly
ready to do that.
But she only shrugged. “Another woman you care about, I mean. I don’t
know if you slept with her or not.” She waited. Grus gave her a cautious
nod. She went on, “And you’d cared about her for a while now,” and waited
again. Again, the king nodded. Now he waited. Alauda licked her lips and
then asked, “Why didn’t you just throw me over for her, then?” That was
what she’d really wanted to know all along. I
intended to. But Grus didn’t say that. He got in trouble over
women because he took them to bed whenever he got the chance, not because
he was wantonly cruel. What he did say was, “We aren’t lovers anymore. We
used to be, but we aren’t.”
Alauda surprised him again, this time by laughing. “When we got there,
you thought you were going to be, though, didn’t you?”
“Well. . . yes,” he said in dull embarrassment. He hadn’t thought she’d
noticed that. Now he asked a question of his own. “Why didn’t you bring up
any of this when we were there?”
She laughed once more, on a self-deprecating note. “What good would it
have done me? None I could see. Safer now, when I’m here and she’s
not.”
She did have her share of shrewdness. Grus had seen that before. “Now
you know,” he said, although he’d told her as little as he could. He
changed the subject, asking, “How are you feeling?”
“I’m all right,” she answered. “I’m supposed to have babies. I’m made
for it. It’s not always comfortable—about half the time, breakfast doesn’t
want to stay down—but I’m all right. Is the war going as well as it
looks?”
“Almost,” Grus said. “We’re still going forward, anyhow. I hope we’ll
keep on doing it.”
“Once we chase all the Menteshe out of Avornis, how do we keep them out
for good?” Alauda asked.
“I don’t know,” Grus said, which made her blink. He went on, “Avornans
have been trying to find the answer to that for a long time, but we
haven’t done it yet. If we had, they wouldn’t be in Avornis now, would
they?” He waited for Alauda to shake her head, then added, “One thing I
can do—one thing I will do—is put more river galleys on the Stura. That
will make it harder for them to cross, anyhow.”
She nodded. “That makes good sense. Why weren’t there more river
galleys on the Stura before?”
“They’re expensive,” he answered. “Expensive to build, even more
expensive to man.” The tall-masted ships that aped the ones the Chernagor
pirates made cost more to build. River galleys, with their large crews of
rowers, cost more to maintain. And every man who became a sailor was one
more man who couldn’t till the soil. After the disasters of this war,
Avornis was liable to need farmers even more desperately than she needed
soldiers or sailors. The king hoped she could find enough. If not, lean
times were coming, in the most literal sense of the words.
Lanius liked coming into the kitchens. He nodded to the head cook, a
rotund man named Cucullatus. “Tomorrow is Queen Sosia’s birthday, you
know,” he said. “Do up something special for her.”
Cucullatus’ smile was almost as wide as he was, which said a good deal.
“How about a kidney pie, Your Majesty? That’s one of her favorites.”
“Fine.” Lanius hoped his own smile was also wide and seemed sincere.
Sosia did love kidney pie, or any other dish with kidneys in it. Lanius
didn’t. To him, cooked kidneys smelled nasty. But he did want to make his
wife happy. He worked harder to keep Sosia happy since he’d started taking
lovers among the serving women than he had before. He thought himself
unique in that regard, which only proved he didn’t know everything there
was to know about straying husbands.
“We’ll take care of it, Your Majesty,” Cucullatus promised. “And
whatever kidneys don’t go into the pie, we’ll save for the moncats.”
“Fine,” Lanius said again, this time with real enthusiasm. The moncats
loved kidneys, which didn’t stink nearly as much raw.
The king started to leave the kitchens. A startled noise from one of
the sweepers made him turn back. There was Pouncer, clinging to a beam
with one clawed hand. The moncat’s other hand clutched a big wooden spoon.
Reading moncats’ expressions was a risky game, but Lanius thought Pouncer
looked almost indecently pleased with itself.
“Come back here! Come down here!” the king called in stern tones. But
Pouncer was no better at doing what it was told than any other moncat—or
any other cat of any sort.
Cucullatus said, “Here, don’t worry, Your Majesty. We can lure it down
with a bit of meat.”
“Good idea,” Lanius said. But the sweeper who’d first spotted Pouncer
wasn’t paying any attention to either Cucullatus or the king. He tried to
knock the moncat from the beam with his broom. He missed. Pouncer yowled
and swung up onto the beam, with only its tail hanging down. The sweeper
sprang, trying to grab the tail. He jumped just high enough to pull out a
few of the hairs at the very end. Pouncer yowled again, louder this time,
and took off like a dart hurled from a catapult.
“You stupid, manure-brained idiot!” Cucullatus bawled at the poor
sweeper. Then he turned on the rest of the men and women in the kitchens.
“Well? Don’t just stand there, you fools! Catch the miserable little
beast!”
If that wasn’t a recipe for chaos, Lanius couldn’t have come up with
one. People bumped into one another, tripped one another, and cursed one
another with more passion than Lanius had ever heard from them. Several of
them carried knives, and more knives, long-tined forks, and other
instruments of mayhem lay right at hand. Why they didn’t start stabbing
one another was beyond the king.
After a couple of minutes of screaming anarchy, somebody asked, “Where
did the stinking creature go?”
Lanius looked around. So did the kitchen staff, pausing in their
efforts to tear the place down. “Where
did the stinking creature go?” somebody else said.
Pouncer had disappeared. A wizard couldn’t have done a neater job of
making the moncat disappear. However he got in here, that’s the way he must have gone,
Lanius thought. Unlike the kitchen staff, he had, or believed he had, a
pretty good idea of where the moncat would go next. He pointed to
Cucullatus. “Give me two or three strips of raw meat.”
“But the moncat is gone, Your Majesty,” Cucullatus said reasonably.
“I know that. I’ll eat them myself,” Lanius said. Cucullatus stared.
“Never mind what I want with them,” the king told him. “Just give them to
me.”
He got them. Servants gaped to see him hurrying through the palace
corridors with strips of raw, dripping beef in his hand. A couple of them
even worked up the nerve to ask him what he was doing. He didn’t answer.
He just kept on, not quite trotting, until he got to the archives.
When he closed the heavy doors behind him, he let out a sigh of relief.
No more bellowing cooks, no more nosy servants. Only peace, quiet, dust
motes dancing in sunbeams, and the soothing smell of old parchment. This
was where he belonged, where no one would come and bother him.
Even as he pulled some documents—tax registers, he saw they were—from
the shelf of a cabinet that had known better centuries, he was shaking his
head. Today, he hoped he would be bothered. If he wasn’t... If he wasn’t,
Pouncer had decided to go back to the moncats’ chamber instead. Or maybe
the perverse beast would simply wander through whatever secret ways it had
found until it decided to come out in the kitchens again.
Lanius looked at the registers with one eye while looking all around
the archives chamber with the other. He didn’t know where Pouncer would
appear. Actually, he didn’t know whether Pouncer would appear at all, but
he did his best to forget about that. He did know this was the best bet he
could make.
And it paid off. Just when he’d gotten engrossed in one of the
registers in spite of himself, a faint, rusty, “Mrowr?” came from behind a
crate that probably hadn’t been opened in at least two hundred years.
“Come here, Pouncer!” Lanius called, and then he made the special
little chirping noise that meant he had a treat for the moncat.
Out Pouncer came. The moncat still clutched the spoon it had stolen.
Even the spoon paled in importance, though, before the lure of raw meat.
“Mrowr,” Pouncer said again, this time on a more insistent note.
“Come on,” Lanius coaxed, holding a strip of beef where the moncat
could see—and smell—it. “Come on, you fuzzy moron. You know you want
this.”
Want it Pouncer did. Sidling forward, the moncat reached out with a
clawed hand. Lanius gave it the first piece of meat. The moncat ate
quickly, fearful of being robbed even though none of its fellows were
near. In some ways it was very much like a man. Once the meat had
disappeared, Pouncer held out that little hand and said, “Mrowr,” yet
again. Give me some more, or you’ll be sorry. Lanius had no trouble
translating that particular meow into Avornan. The king gave the moncat
another piece of meat. This one vanished more slowly. As it did, Pouncer
began to purr. Lanius had been waiting for that. It was a sign he could
pick up the moncat without getting his hand shredded. He did. Pouncer kept
on purring.
Feeling more than a little triumphant, Lanius carried the moncat— and
the serving spoon it had stolen—out of the royal archives. The tax
registers he left where they were. They dated from the early years of his
fathers reign. No one had looked at them since; Lanius was sure of that.
They weren’t going anywhere for the time being. And one of these days he
would have to have a peek inside that crate Pouncer had been hiding
behind.
Pouncer started twisting in the king’s arms and trying to get free
before Lanius reached the moncats’ chamber. Lanius still had one strip of
meat left. He offered it to the moncat, and bought just enough contentment
to keep from getting clawed the rest of the way there. Pouncer even let
him take away the wooden spoon.
Cucullatus clapped his hands when Lanius brought the spoon back to the
kitchens. “Well done, Your Majesty!” he said, as though Lanius had just
captured Yozgat and reclaimed the Scepter of Mercy.
“Thank you so much,” Lanius said.
“Kidney pie,” Cucullatus went on, ignoring or more likely not noticing
the king’s irony. Lanius frowned; the commotion with the moncat had almost
made him forget why he’d come to the kitchens in the first place. The
chief cook went on, “Her Majesty will enjoy it. You wait and see.”
“Ah.” Lanius nodded. “Yes, I hope she does.”
Sosia did. When she sat down to supper on her birthday, she smiled and
wagged a finger at Lanius. “Somebody’s been talking to the kitchens,” she
said as a servant gave her a big helping of the pungent dish.
“Why would anyone talk to a kitchen?” Lanius asked. “Ovens and pots and
skewers don’t listen very well.”
His wife gave him a severe look. “You know what I mean,” she said.
“You’ve been talking to the people who work in the kitchens. There. Are
you happier?”
“I couldn’t be happier, not while I’ve got you,” Lanius answered.
Sosia smiled. “That’s sweet,” she said. But then the smile slipped. “In
that case, why—?” She stopped and shook her head. “No, never mind. Not
tonight.”
Lanius had no trouble figuring out what she’d started to say.
In that case, why did you take Cristata to bed? Why did you want to
make her your second wife? To Lanius, it made good enough sense. He
hadn’t been unhappy with Sosia. He’d just wanted to be happy with
Cristata, too. He still didn’t see anything wrong with that. Grus’
daughter, however, had a decidedly different opinion. And what about Zenaida? Lanius asked himself. He knew what
Sosia’s opinion of her would be. He didn’t think he was in love with her,
the way he had with Cristata. Maybe seeing that he didn’t would keep Sosia
from getting so furious this time. On the other hand, maybe it wouldn’t do
him any good at all.
She’d better not find out about Zenaida, the king thought.
He smiled at Sosia. “Happy birthday,” he told her.
“You’re even eating the kidney pie yourself,” she said in some
surprise.
And so Lanius was. His thoughts full of maidservants, he’d hardly
noticed he was doing it. Now that he did notice, he was reminded again
that this was not his favorite dish—too strong for his taste. Still, he
shrugged and answered, “I don’t hate it,” which was true. As though to
prove it, he took another bite. What he did prove, to himself, was that he
didn’t love it, either.
“I’m glad,” Sosia said.
Later that evening, Lanius made love with his wife. He didn’t hate
that, either. If Zenaida was a little more exciting . . . well, maybe that
was because she wasn’t as familiar as Sosia—and maybe, also, because the
thrill of the illicit added spice to what they did. Nothing illicit about
Sosia, but nothing wrong with her, nothing that made him want to sleep
apart. He did his best to please her when they joined.
By the way she responded, his best proved good enough. “You
are sweet,” she said, as though reminding herself.
“I think the same thing—about you,” he added hastily, before she could
tease him about thinking himself sweet. That was what he got for being
precise most of the time.
He waited there in the darkness, wondering if Sosia would ask why he’d
gone after Cristata if he thought she was sweet. But she didn’t. She just
murmured, “Well, good,” rolled over on her side, and fell asleep. Lanius
rolled over, too, in the opposite direction. His backside bumped hers. She
stirred a little, but kept on breathing slowly and deeply. A few minutes
later, Lanius also drifted off, a smile on his face.
A lieutenant from one of the river galleys on the Stura stood before
King Grus. “Your Majesty, an awful lot of the Menteshe are sneaking south
across the river. More and more every day, and especially every night.
We’ve sunk half a dozen boats full of the stinking buggers, and more have
gotten by us.”
This wasn’t the first such report Grus had heard. He scratched his
head. Up until a few days before, Prince Ulash’s men hadn’t been doing
anything of the sort. Sudden changes in what the Menteshe were up to made
the King of Avornis deeply suspicious. “What have they got in mind?” he
asked, though the lieutenant wasn’t going to know.
As he’d expected, the young officer shrugged and answered, “No idea,
sir. We don’t get the chance to ask them a whole lot of questions. When we
ram ‘em, we sink ’em.” By the pride in his voice, he wanted to do nothing
but sink them.
That suited Grus fine. He wanted his river-galley officers aggressive.
He said, “Thank you, Lieutenant. I’ll see what I can do to get to the
bottom of this.”
The officer bowed and left. Grus scratched his head again. He didn’t
shake any answers loose. He hadn’t really thought he would. Being without
answers, he summoned Pterocles. The wizard heard him out, then said, “That
is interesting, Your Majesty. Why would they start going over the
river now when they had seemed to want to stay on this side and
fight?”
“I was hoping you could tell me,” Grus said. “Has there been a magical
summons? Has the Banished One taken a hand in things?”
“I haven’t noticed anything out of the ordinary.” Pterocles spoke
cautiously. Grus approved of that caution. Pterocles recognized the
possibility that something might have slipped past him. He said, “I have
spells that would tell me if something
has gone on under my nose. A summons like that lingers on the
ether. If it was there, I’ll find out about it.”
“Good,” Grus said. “Let me know.”
When Pterocles came back that afternoon, he looked puzzled and
troubled. “Your Majesty, if any sort of sorcerous summons came north, I
can’t find it,” he said. “I don’t quite know what that means.”
“Neither do I,” Grus said. Had the Banished One deceived his wizard? Or
was Pterocles searching for something that wasn’t there to find? “If you
know any other spells, you ought to use them,” Grus told him.
Pterocles nodded. “I will, though I’ve already tried the ones I think
likeliest to work. You ought to try to take some Menteshe prisoners, too.
They may know something I don’t.”
“I’ll do that,” Grus said at once. “I should have sent men out to do it
when I first called you. A lot of the time, the Menteshe like to
sing.”
He gave the orders. His men rode out. But Menteshe were starting to get
scarce on the ground. Even a week earlier, discovering so few of them on
the Avornan side of the Stura would have made Grus rejoice. He would have
rejoiced now, if his men were the ones responsible for making the nomads
want to get back to the lands they usually roamed. But his men hadn’t
driven the Menteshe over the Stura, and he knew it. That left him
suspicious. Why were the Menteshe leaving—fleeing— Avornis when they
didn’t have to?
“I know what it is,” Hirundo said when a day’s search resulted in no
prisoners.
“Tell me,” Grus urged. “I haven’t got any idea why they’re going.”
“It’s simple,” the general answered. “They must have heard you were
going to put a tax on nomads in Avornis, so of course they ran away from
it.” He grinned at his own cleverness. “By Olor’s beard, I would,
too.”
“Funny.” Grus tried to sound severe, but a smile couldn’t help creeping
out from behind the edges of his beard—it
was funny, even if he wished it weren’t. He wagged a finger at
Hirundo, who kept right on grinning, completely unabashed. Grus said, “Do
you have any
real idea why they’re doing it?”
“No,” Hirundo admitted. “All I can say is, good riddance.”
“Certainly, good riddance.” But Grus remained dissatisfied, like a man
who’d just enjoyed a feast but had an annoying piece of gristle stuck
between two back teeth. “They
shouldn’t be running away, though, not when we haven’t finished
beating them. They’ve never done that before.
“Maybe they know we’re going to win this time, and so they want to save
themselves for fights next year or the year after,” Hirundo suggested.
“Maybe.” Grus still didn’t sound happy—still wasn’t happy. He explained
why, repeating, “They’ve never done that before.” The Menteshe usually did
the same sort of things over and over again. If they changed their ways,
they had to have a reason . . . didn’t they?
“Maybe the Banished One is telling them what to do,” Hirundo said.
“Of course the Banished One is telling them what to do,” Grus answered.
He hated the idea, which didn’t mean he disbelieved it. “They’re his
creatures. They’re proud to be his creatures. But why is he telling them
to do that? And how is he telling them? Pterocles can’t find any of his
magic.”
Hirundo considered, then brightened. “Maybe he’s trying to drive you
mad, to make you find reasons for things that haven’t got any.”
“Thank you so much,” Grus said. Hirundo bowed back, as he might have
after any extraordinarily meritorious service. The worst of it was, Grus
couldn’t be sure the general was wrong. The king knew he would go right on
wasting time and losing sleep until he found an answer he could believe.
He sighed. “The more we go on like this, the plainer it gets that we need
prisoners. Until we know more, we’ll just keep coming out with one stupid
guess after another.”
“I don’t think my guesses were stupid.” Mock anger filled Hirundo’s
voice. “I think they were clever, perceptive, even brilliant.”
“You would,” the king muttered. “When your men finally do bring back a
captive or two, we’ll see how brilliant and perceptive you were.”
“They’re doing their best, the same as I am,” Hirundo said.
“I hope theirs is better than yours.” Grus made sure he smiled so
Hirundo knew he was joking. The horrible face the general made said he got
the message but didn’t much care for it.
Along with the cavalry, the men aboard the river galleys got orders to
capture Menteshe if they could. If they could . . . Suddenly, the lands on
this side of the Stura began to seem like a country where the birds had
just flown south for the winter. They had been here. The memory of them
lingered. They would come back. But for now, when you wanted them most,
they were gone.
Grus had never imagined that winning a war could leave him so unhappy.
He had questions he wanted to ask, questions he needed to ask, and nobody
to whom to ask them. He’d snarled at Hirundo in play. He started snarling
at people in earnest.
“They’re gone,” Alauda said. “Thank the gods for it. Praise the gods
for it. But, by Queen Quelea’s mercy, don’t complain about it.”
“I want to know why,” Grus said stubbornly. “They aren’t acting the way
they’re supposed to, and that bothers me.” He’d been down this same road
with Hirundo.
His new mistress had less patience for it. “Who cares?” she said with a
toss of the head. “As long as they’re out of the kingdom, nothing else
matters.” That held enough truth to be annoying, but not enough to make
Grus quit trying to lay his hands on some of the nomads.
When at last he did, it was much easier than he’d thought it would be.
Like a flock of birds that had fallen behind the rest because of a storm,
a band of about twenty Menteshe rode down to the Stura and then along it,
looking for boats to steal so they could cross. Three river galleys and a
regiment of Hirundo’s horsemen converged on them. When Grus heard the
news, he feared the nomads would fight to the death just to thwart him.
But they didn’t. Overmatched, they threw up their hands and
surrendered.
Their chieftain, a bushy-eyebrowed, big-nosed fellow named Yavlak,
proved to speak good Avornan. “Here he is, Your Majesty,” Hirundo said, as
though he were making Grus a present of the man.
And Grus felt as though Yavlak were a present, too. “Why are you
Menteshe leaving Avornis?” he demanded.
Yavlak looked at him as he would have looked at any idiot. “Because we
have to,” he answered.
“You have to? Who told you you have to? Was it the Banished One?” The
king knew he sounded nervous, but couldn’t help it.
“The Fallen Star?” Now Yavlak looked puzzled. With those eyebrows, he
did it very well. “No, the Fallen Star has nothing to do with it. Can it
be you have not heard?” He didn’t seem to want to believe that; he acted
like a man who had no choice. “By some mischance, we found out late. I
thought even you miserable Avornans would surely know by now.”
“Found out what? Know what?” Grus wanted to strangle him. The only
thing that held him back was the certain knowledge that he would have to
go through this again with another nomad, one who might not be so fluent
in Avornan, if he did.
Yavlak finally—and rudely—obliged him. “You stupid fool,” he said.
“Found out that Prince Ulash is dead, of course.”
CHAPTER NINETEEN
“Prince Ulash is dead.”
King Lanius stared at the messenger who brought the word north to the
city of Avornis. “Are you sure?” he blurted. He realized the question was
foolish as soon as it came out of his mouth. He couldn’t help asking,
though. Ulash had been the strongest and canniest prince among the
Menteshe for longer than Lanius had been alive. Imagining how things would
go without him was nothing but a leap in the dark.
The messenger took the question seriously. That was one of the
privileges of being a sovereign. “Yes, Your Majesty. There’s no doubt,” he
answered. “The nomads went south of the Stura when they didn’t have to,
and prisoners have told King Grus why.”
“All right. Thank you,” Lanius said, and then, as an afterthought, “Do
you know who succeeds him? Is it Prince Sanjar or Prince Korkut?”
“That I can’t tell you. The nomads King Grus caught didn’t know,” the
messenger said. “Grus is on his way back here now, with part of the army.
The rest will stay in the south, in case whichever one of Ulash’s sons
does take over decides to start the war up again.”
“Sensible,” Lanius said, hoping neither the messenger nor his own
courtiers noticed his small sigh. With Grus back in the capital, Lanius
would become a figurehead again. Part of Lanius insisted that didn’t
matter—Grus was better at the day-to-day business of running Avornis than
he was, and was welcome to it. But Lanius remembered how often he’d had
power taken away from him. He resented it. He couldn’t help resenting
it.
He dismissed the messenger, who bowed his way out of the throne room.
As the king descended from the Diamond Throne, the news beat in his brain,
pulsing like his own blood, pounding like a drum.
Prince Ulash is dead.
What
would come next? Lanius didn’t know. He was no prophet, to play
the risky game of foreseeing the future. But things wouldn’t be the same.
Neither Sanjar nor Korkut could hope to match Ulash for experience or
cleverness. Will whichever one of them comes to power in Yozgat make an apter
tool for the Banished One’s hand? Lanius wondered. Again, he could
only shrug. He had believed Ulash’s cleverness and power and success had
won him more freedom of action than most Menteshe owned. But then the
prince had hurled his nomads northward to help hold Grus away from
Nishevatz. When the Banished One told him to move, he’d moved. So much for
freedom of action.
By the time Lanius got back to his living quarters, news of Ulash’s
death had spread all over the palace. Not everyone seemed sure who Ulash
was. The king went past a couple of servants arguing over whether he was
King of Thervingia or prince of a Chernagor city-state.
“Well, whoever he is, he
isn’t anymore,” said the man who thought he’d ruled
Thervingia.
“That’s true,” the other servant said. “It’s the first true thing
you’ve said all day, too.”
They could afford to quarrel, and to be ignorant. Lanius, who couldn’t,
almost envied them. Almost—he valued education and knowledge too highly to
be comfortable with ignorance.
Rounding a corner, the king almost bumped into Prince Ortalis. They
both gave back a pace. Grus’ son said, “Is it true?”
“Is what true?” Lanius thought he knew what Ortalis meant, but he might
have been wrong.
He wasn’t. “Is the old bugger south of the Stura dead at last?” Ortalis
asked, adding, “That’s what everybody’s saying.”
“That’s what your father says, or rather his messenger,” Lanius
answered, and watched his brother-in-law scowl. Ortalis and Grus still
didn’t get along. They probably never would. Lanius went on, “Now that the
Menteshe have gone back to their own side of the border, your father will
be coming home.”
“Will he?” Ortalis didn’t bother trying to hide his displeasure at the
news. “I hoped he’d stay down there and chase them all the way to
what’s-its-name, the place where they’ve stashed the
what-do-you-call-it.”
“Yozgat. The Scepter of Mercy.” Yes, Lanius did prefer knowledge to
ignorance. He brought out the names Ortalis needed but didn’t bother
remembering as automatically as he breathed. He judged that his
brother-in-law wanted Grus to go ,on campaigning in the south not so much
because he hoped Avornan arms would triumph as because Grus would stay far
away from the city of Avornis. Lanius couldn’t do anything but try to stay
out of the way when Grus and Ortalis clashed. Doing his best to stay on
safer ground, the king said, “I hope Princess Limosa is well?”
“Oh, yes,” Ortalis said with a smile. “She’s fine. She’s just
fine.”
In a different tone of voice, with a different curve of the lips, the
answer would have been fine, just fine, too. As things were, Lanius pushed
past his brother-in-law as fast as he could. He tried telling himself he
hadn’t seen what he thought he had. Ortalis had looked and sounded that
very same way, had had that very same gleam in his eye, when he was
butchering a deer and up to his elbows in blood. He’d never seemed
happier.
Lanius shook his head again and again. But no, he couldn’t make that
certainty fall out. And he couldn’t make himself believe anymore that
Zenaida hadn’t known exactly what she was talking about.
He also couldn’t help remembering how serene, how radiant, how
joyful Limosa looked. That couldn’t be an act. But he didn’t see
how it could be real, either.
“Well, well,” Grus said when he saw the towers of the palace, the
cathedral’s heaven-reaching spire, and the other tall buildings of the
city of Avornis above the walls that protected the capital from invaders.
“I’m really coming home. I’m not just stopping for a little while before I
have to rush north or south as fast as I can.”
“You hope you’re not, anyhow,” Hirundo said.
Grus glared at him, but finally gave back a reluctant nod. “Yes. I hope
I’m not.”
Guards on the wall had seen the approaching army, too. A postern gate
opened. A rider came out to make sure it really was an Avornan force. When
he waved, the main gates swung open.
Not all the army that had accompanied Grus up from the south went into
the city of Avornis. Much of the part that wasn’t on garrison duty down by
the Stura had gone into barracks in towns on the way north, to spread the
problem of feeding the soldiers over as much of the kingdom as possible.
If a dreadful winter—say, a dreadful winter inspired by the Banished
One—overwhelmed Avornis, extra mouths to feed in the capital, which was
already much the largest city in the kingdom, would only make matters
worse.
Instead of waiting at the royal palace, Lanius met Grus halfway there.
“You must tell me at once—did Sanjar or Korkut succeed Prince Ulash?”
Lanius said. By his expression, he was ready to do something drastic if
Grus didn’t take that
at once seriously.
“I’ll tell you everything I know,” Grus promised. “And everything I
know is—I don’t know.”
“Oh . . .
drat!” Lanius got more use out of what wasn’t even really a curse
than Grus could have from a couple of minutes of blasphemy and obscenity.
His son-in-law went on, “I think which of them takes over in Yozgat really
is important for Avornis. Korkut will cause us more trouble than Sanjar,
though neither one of them is half the man their father was.
“How do you know even that much about them?” Grus asked. “They’re both
just names to me.”
“I’ve been going through the archives—how else?” Lanius answered.
“Things our traders who went south of the Stura in peacetime heard about
them, things Ulash’s ambassadors who came up here had to say. Korkut is
older, but Sanjar is the son of the woman who became Ulash’s
favorite.”
“Isn’t that interesting?” Grus said. “You’ll have to tell me more.”
Now the other king looked faintly abashed. “I’ve already told you
almost everything I know.”
“Oh.” Grus shrugged. “Well, you’re right—it is important. And it’s
already more than I knew before.” After that, Lanius brightened. Grus went
on, “How are things here? How’s Prince Vsevolod?”
The other king’s lip curled. “About the way you’d expect. He’s still
annoyed that we had the nerve to defend our own borders instead or going
on with the fight to put him back on the throne of Nishevatz, which would
actually be important.”
“Oh,” Grus said again, his tone falling. “Well, you’re right. I can’t
say I’m surprised. How are other things?”
“They seem all right,” Lanius answered. “Most of them, anyhow.”
What was that supposed to mean? One obvious answer occurred to Grus.
“Is my son all right?” he asked.
“Prince Ortalis is fine. He and Princess Limosa seem very happy
together, no matter how they happened to meet and wed,” Lanius said.
He spoke with caution he didn’t try to hide. Grus knew he didn’t like
Ortalis. Maybe that explained the caution. Or maybe there were things he
could have said if they weren’t out in the street. Finding out which would
have to wait. Grus said, “Let’s get back to the palace. I’m glad the
Chernagors didn’t raid our coast this year.”
“Yes, so am I,” Lanius said. “How would you have handled it if they
did?”
“Badly, I suspect,” Grus answered. Lanius blinked, then laughed; maybe
he hadn’t expected such blunt honesty. Grus asked, “How are your moncats
doing?”
“Very well,” Lanius said enthusiastically, and told Grus more than he
wanted to hear about the antics and thievery of the beast called
Pouncer.
Not least because Lanius had bored him, Grus put a sardonic edge in his
voice when he asked, “And have you found any other pets while I was away?”
He made it plain he didn’t mean any that walked on four legs.
Just as plainly, Lanius understood him, for he turned red. “Well, yes,”
he confessed with no great eagerness. “You were right about that.” He did
have integrity; not many men would have admitted as much. But then, with a
certain edge of his own, he inquired, “And how was Pelagonia?”
Grus remembered that he hadn’t named the town in his letters north. He
hadn’t wanted to remind Estrilda he was anywhere near it— or near Alca. He
supposed he shouldn’t have been surprised that Lanius had seen through his
ploy; Lanius saw through all sorts of things. For a moment, he thought of
talking about the town and not about the witch. But Lanius had given him a
straight answer, and he supposed he owed his son-in-law one in return.
With a shrug, he said, “It’s dead. I didn’t know if it would be, but it
is.”
He said nothing about Alauda. He most especially said nothing about the
baby Alauda would have. Word that he’d been carrying on with a new woman
down in the south might eventually reach his wife. Since he hadn’t brought
Alauda back to the city of Avornis, Estrilda might not—he hoped she
wouldn’t—get too upset about that. He’d been in the field and away from
her for a long time, after all. But she wouldn’t be happy if she found out
he’d sired another bastard.
Suddenly worried, he wondered whether Lanius knew about Alauda. The
other king gave no sign of it. Lanius wasn’t usually very good at keeping
secrets off his face. That eased Grus’ mind—a little.
And there was the palace, and there, standing in the doorway waving to
him, was Estrilda. That eased Grus’ mind, too. His wife kept her own
counsel about some things, but not about his other women. She didn’t know
about Alauda, either, then, or not yet. Only when Grus was already
hurrying up the steps toward her did he wish those last three words hadn’t
occurred to him.
Lanius studied the harvest reports that came into the capital with even
more attention than he usually gave them. Ever since that one dreadful
winter, he’d worried that the Banished One would wield the weather weapon
once again, and wanted to be as ready as he could in case the exiled god
did. This year, though, he also eyed the news from the south with unusual
attention.
It was every bit as bad as Grus had warned him it would be. Half the
dismal harvest reports from the regions the Menteshe had ravaged asked for
grain and fodder to be sent to towns whose governors insisted their
populace would go hungry and animals would starve if they didn’t get that
kind of help.
Grus examined the reports from the south, too. He’d seen what was going
on down there with his own eyes, and was grim about it. “We’ll have
hunger,” he said bluntly. “I’ll thank Queen Quelea for her kindness if we
don’t have famine. And if the nomads keep coming up over the Stura year
after year, I don’t know what we’ll do. They hurt us badly.”
“Didn’t we hurt them, too?” Lanius asked.
“I hope so,” Grus said. “I hope so, but how can I be sure? They’re so
cursed hard to get a grip on.”
“We drove them back over the Stura,” Lanius said.
“No.” Grus shook his head, as relentlessly precise as Lanius was
himself most of the time. “We drove them back to the valley of the Stura.
They went over by themselves. If Ulash hadn’t chosen that moment to drop
dead, we would have had another big fight on our hands.”
“I do wonder what’s happening on the far side of the river,” Lanius
said. “Sanjar or Korkut? Korkut or Sanjar? How will the Menteshe choose?
How long will it take ehem?”
“How much trouble will we be in once they do?” Grus was also
relentlessly practical.
Since Lanius preferred not to dwell on trouble, he asked, “How did
Pterocles fare against the nomads’ wizards?”
“Fair,” Grus said, and then shook his head, correcting himself.
“No—better than fair. If he hadn’t woken up during that one night attack
the Menteshe tried to bring off, it would have done us much more harm.
Oh!” He shook his head again. “He also says he’s full of new ideas about
how to cure thralls.”
“Does he?” Lanius wished he could have sounded more excited. As he’d
seen in the archives, Avornan wizards had been full of new ideas about how
to cure thralls ever since the Menteshe sorcerers started creating them.
The only trouble was, very few of the new ideas did any good. “And what
are they?”
“I couldn’t begin to tell you,” Grus answered. “I never even asked, not
in any detail. I don’t care how he does what he does, though I wouldn’t
mind watching him try. All I care about is whether he can do it.” How fascinated Lanius almost as much as
why. He almost asked the older man how he could be so indifferent
to it, and why. After a moment’s hesitation, though, he decided not to. A
straightforward insistence on results also had its advantages.
Lanius did say, “You wouldn’t mind watching him? You really think he
has a chance to bring this off?”
“I think he thinks he had a chance to bring it off,” Grus said, and
Lanius smiled at the convolution. His father-in-law went on, “And I think
he’s earned the chance to try. How are we worse off if he fails?”
He’d intended that for a rhetorical question, but Lanius had no trouble
finding a literal answer for it. “How are we worse off? Suppose the
Banished One kills him and the thralls try murdering us again. That would
be worse, wouldn’t it?”
“Maybe a little,” Grus allowed. Lanius yelped indignantly. Grus said,
“We’ll be as careful as we can. You made your point there, believe
me.”
“When will the wizard try?” Lanius asked.
“When he’s ready,” Grus answered with a shrug. “He has to have all his
spells ready before he begins. If he doesn’t, he shouldn’t even try. You’re right about that—this could be one of those things where trying
and failing is worse than not trying at all. Or do you look at it
differently?”
“No, I think you’ve got it straight,” Lanius said at once. “Throwing
rocks at the Banished One isn’t enough. We have to make sure we hit him.
We have to make sure we hurt him.”
He listened to himself. He sounded bold enough. Did he sound like a
fool? He wouldn’t have been surprised. Could he and Grus and Pterocles
really hurt Milvago’s plans?
We’d better be able to, Lanius thought.
If we can’t, we’re going to lose. Avornis is going to lose.
It was more than a week later that Grus hauled Lanius off to the
chamber where the thralls were kept. “Where were you?” Grus asked
irritably while they were on the way. “I looked for you for quite a while,
and it was only luck we ran into each other in the hall here.”
Lanius had been sporting with Zenaida. He didn’t feel like admitting
that to Grus. He just shrugged and answered, “Well, you’ve found me.
Pterocles is ready?”
“He says he is,” Grus told him. “We’ll find out, won’t we?”
“So we will,” Lanius said. “One way or the other . . .”
Half a dozen armed guards brought a thrall from the room where the
not-quite-men were kept to the chamber next door. The guards looked
scornful, plainly wondering why Grus had ordered out so many of them to
deal with one unarmed fellow who hadn’t much more in the way of brains
than a goat. The thrall glanced around with the usual dull lack of
curiosity of his kind.
No matter how dull the thrall seemed, Lanius eyed him suspiciously. The
Banished One could be peering out through those almost unblinking eyes.
Pterocles was giving the thrall that same sharp scrutiny. The haggard
expression the wizard wore said he knew the risk he was taking. Lanius
nodded to him. He wouldn’t have wanted Pterocles to try to free the man
from thralldom without bearing in mind the danger of failure.
“Are you sure you’re ready?” Grus asked.
“I’m sure. We’re here to find out whether I’m right, which is not the
same thing,” Pterocles answered. “I think I am, Your Majesty. I aim to—”
He broke off. “No, I won’t say what I aim to do, not while this fellow’s
ears may pass it on to the Banished One. I’ll just go ahead and try the
sorcery.”
At first, whatever he was doing didn’t seem much like magic at all. He
stepped over to a window and took a small crystal on a silver chain from a
pouch on his belt. Idly, he began to swing the crystal back and forth. It
sparkled in the sunlight streaming in through the window. The glitter and
flash drew Lanius’ eyes to the crystal. He needed an effort of will to
pull them away.
Looking at the thrall helped keep Lanius from looking at the crystal.
The thrall didn’t look at the king. His eyes went back and forth, back and
forth, following the swinging, flashing chunk of clear rock.
“You are an empty one,” Pterocles said quietly. “Your will is not your
own. You have always been empty, your will never your own.”
“I am an empty one,” the thrall repeated. His voice sounded
empty—eerily inhuman, all emotion and feeling washed from it. “My will is
not my own. I have always been empty, my will never my own.”
“Queen Quelea’s mercy,” Grus whispered to Lanius. “Just listen to what
the wizard’s done.”
“What do you mean?” Lanius whispered back.
“I’ve heard plenty of thralls down in the south,” Grus answered. “They
can talk, a little, but they don’t talk as well as that, not usually they
don’t. Pterocles has managed something special to get even that much out
of this fellow.”
“I don’t know,” Lanius said dubiously. “I think the thrall was just
echoing the wizard.”
Pterocles waved impatiently at the two kings. Lanius nodded and fell
silent. Grus looked as though he wanted to say something more, but he too
subsided when Pterocles waved again. The sorcerer kept on swinging his
shining bit of crystal. The thrall’s eyes kept following it. It might have
been the only thing in all the world with meaning for the filthy,
scruffily bearded man.
Softly, Pterocles asked, “Do you want to find your own will? Do you
want to be filled with your own self?”
“I want to find my own will,” the thrall droned. “I want to be filled
with my own self.” Did he understand what he was saying? Or was he only
parroting Pterocles’ words? Lanius still thought he was, but the king had
to admit to himself that he wasn’t so sure anymore.
“I can lift the shadow from your spirit and give you light.” Pterocles
sounded confident. How many Avornan wizards over the years, though, had
sounded confident trying to cure thralls? Many. How many had had reason to
sound confident? Few. No—none. None yet, anyhow. Pterocles went on, “Do
you
want me to lift the shadow from your spirit and give you
light?”
“I want you to lift the shadow from my spirit and give me light.” By
what was in his voice, the thrall still wanted nothing, regardless of the
words he mouthed. Or was that so? Buried under the indifference, was there
a terrible longing struggling to burst free? For an instant, Lanius heard
it, or thought he did. Though he doubted himself again in the very next
heartbeat, a sudden surge of hope warmed him.
“I will do what I can for you, then,” Pterocles said.
“Do what you can for me, then,” the thrall said. Pterocles blinked,
then grinned enormously. Lanius realized the wizard hadn’t expected the
thrall to respond there. If the man did, even if the response was just
another near-echo, wasn’t that a sign he was trying to escape the shadow
on his own? Lanius dared hope it was, anyhow.
Pterocles began to chant, very softly, in a very old dialect of
Avornan. Lanius fancied himself a scholar, but even he had trouble
following what the wizard said. Beside him, Grus looked altogether
bewildered.
Pterocles also kept swinging the crystal in the sunbeam. It cast
rainbows on the walls of the chamber—more and more rainbows by the moment.
The chant went on and on. It got more insistent, though no louder. Ever
more rainbows sprang into being—far more than a single bit of crystal had
any business extracting from an ordinary sunbeam.
Suddenly, the wizard said, “Let them be assembled.” Lanius understood
that very clearly. Pterocles made a pass, and all the rainbows, still
glowing, came off the walls and began to spin around the thrall’s head.
Lanius exclaimed in wonder—no, in awe. Those same two qualities also
filled Grus’ voice. They were watching both the beautiful and the
impossible. Lanius couldn’t have said which side of that coin impressed
him more.
Even the thrall, who was supposed to be hardly more than a beast, took
notice of what was going on around him. He reached up with his right hand,
as though to pluck one of the spinning rainbows out of the air. Was that
awe on
his dull face? Lanius would have had a hard time claiming it
wasn’t.
The king couldn’t see whether the swirling bands of color went around
the thrall’s hand, whether they slipped between his fingers, or whether
they simply passed through his flesh. In the end, what did it matter? His
hand did them no harm, which was all that counted.
“Let them come together!” Pterocles called out in that archaic dialect
of Avornan. And come together the rainbows did. Instead of swirling around
the thrall’s head, they began passing
into it. For a moment, even after they entered his flesh, they
kept their brilliance, or so it seemed to Lanius’ dazzled eye.
“Ahhh!” the thrall said—a long, involuntary exclamation of wonder. His
eyes opened very wide. By then, Lanius had thought himself as full of awe
as he could be. He found out he was wrong. Unless his imagination had
altogether run away with him, the thrall’s eyes held something that had
never been in them before. They held reason.
Grus said it in a slightly different way—he whispered, “By Olor’s
strong right hand, that’s a
man there”—but it meant the same thing. If this wasn’t a cured
thrall, maybe there never would be one.
Little by little, the rainbows faded. No—the rainbows became invisible
from the outside. Lanius was convinced that, in some way he could not
fully fathom, they went on swirling and spinning inside the thrall’s mind,
lighting up all the corners over which darkness had lain for so long.
Chief proof of that was the way the thrall himself reacted. Tears ran
down his grimy cheeks. He seized Pterocles’ hand and brought it up to his
mouth and kissed it again and again. “Good,” he said, and, “Thank you,”
over and over. He didn’t yet have all the words a man might have, but he
had the feelings behind the words. The feelings, up until this moment,
might as well have floated a mile beyond the moon.
Pterocles turned to Grus. “Your Majesty, what I have said I would do, I
have done.” He bowed, then seemed to remember Lanius was there and bowed
to him, too. “Your Majesties, I should say.”
“You
have done it.” Grus still took it for granted that he was the one
to speak for Avornis. “But the next question is, how hard is the spell?
Can other wizards learn it and use it in the field?”
“I don’t see why not, Your Majesty,” Pterocles answered. “Putting the
spell together, seeing what had to go into it—that was hard. Using it?” He
shook his head. “Any halfway decent wizard ought to be able to do that.
I’d like to experiment with the rest of the thralls here in the palace to
be sure, but we’ve seen what can happen.” He pointed to the man he’d just
cured.
“Yes,” Grus said.
“Yes,” Lanius echoed. The two kings looked at each other and nodded.
With any luck at all, they had a weapon they could use against the
Menteshe if Avornan armies ever went south of the Stura. Avornis had been
looking for a weapon like that for a very long time. Lanius asked, “Do you
want to cure those other thralls now? How wearing is the spell?”
“It’s not bad at all, Your Majesty,” Pterocles replied. “I could do
more now, if you like. But if you don’t mind, I’d like to wait a day or
two instead, so I can incorporate what I’ve learned just now into the
spell. I think I can make it better and simpler yet.”
“Good. Do that, then.” Lanius spoke with the voice of royal command.
Grus didn’t contradict him. Even though he knew Grus could have, for a
little while he felt every inch the King of Avornis.
“Your Majesty! Your Majesty!” Someone pounded on the door to Grus’
bedchamber. He opened his eyes. It was still dark. Beside him, Estrilda
stirred and murmured. The pounding went on. “Come quick, Your
Majesty!”
“What’s going on?” Estrilda asked sleepily.
“I don’t know, but I’d better find out.” Grus sat up in bed. “If it
won’t wait for daylight, it usually isn’t good news.” He raised his voice
and called, “Quit that racket, by Olor’s teeth! I’m coming.” The pounding
stopped.
When Grus went to the door, he went sword in hand, in case whoever
waited there wasn’t an ordinary servant. But, when he opened the door a
crack, he recognized the man. The servant said, “Come with me, Your
Majesty. It’s the thralls!”
That got Grus’ attention, as no doubt it was calculated to do. “Take me
to them,” he said at once. “What’s happened?”
“You’d better see for yourself, Your Majesty,” the servant answered.
Grus swore under his breath. He might have known the man would say
something like that.
They hurried through silent corridors lit only by guttering torches set
in every third sconce. From that, and from the feel of the air, Grus
guessed it was a couple of hours before dawn. He yawned as he half trotted
after the servant, the sword still in his hand. The mosaic tiles of the
floor were cold against his bare feet.
Around the chamber where the thralls were kept, all the sconces held
torches, and all the torches blazed brightly. The door to the chamber
stood open. Grus stopped in his tracks when he saw that. “Oh, by the
gods!” he said. “Have they gotten loose?” That could be a deadly dangerous
disaster.
But one of the guards standing in the hallway outside the open door
shook his head. “No, Your Majesty. They’re in there, all right.”
“Then what’s happened?” Grus demanded.
The guard didn’t answer. Neither did any of his comrades or the servant
who’d fetched the king. Muttering, Grus strode forward. The stink of the
thralls’ room hit him like a slap in the face. Doing his best to ignore
it, he walked in ... and found the last two thralls brought north from the
Stura lying dead on the floor.
They had strangled each other. Each still had his hands clenched on the
other’s throat. The chamber was no more disarrayed than usual. By all the
signs, the thralls had both decided to die and taken care of the job as
quickly and neatly as they could. But, unless Grus was very wrong, the
thralls hadn’t decided any such thing. The Banished One had.
“By the gods,” the king said softly. He hoped the magic that made men
into thralls hadn’t so stunted their souls as to keep them from winning
free of this world. He hoped so, but had no way of knowing if that was
true.
“You see, Your Majesty,” a guard said.
“I see, all right,” Grus agreed grimly. He nodded to the guard, who no
longer had anything to do here. “Go fetch me Pterocles.” The man hurried
away. Almost as an afterthought, Grus turned to the servant who’d brought
him to the thralls’ room and added, “Fetch King Lanius here, too.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The servant went off even faster than the guard
had.
Even so, Pterocles got to the thralls’ chamber before the other king.
The wizard was yawning and rubbing his eyes, but he stared at the dead
thralls without astonishment; the guard must have told him what had
happened. “Well, so much for that,” he said.
“Eh?” Grus scratched his head. “I don’t follow you.”
“I was going to do what I could to improve the spell I used to free the
first thrall,” the wizard replied. “I was, but I can’t very well do it
now, not when I don’t have any more thralls to work with—to work on.”
“Oh.” The king thumped his forehead with the heel of his hand. “I
should have seen that for myself.”
“Should have seen what?” King Lanius asked around a yawn of his own.
Then he got a good look at the thralls who’d killed each other. He also
said, “Oh,” and then turned to Pterocles. “We’ll have to get you more
thralls, won’t we, if you’re going to do all the experiments you need
to?”
“Afraid so,” Pterocles said.
Grus grunted, obscurely annoyed with himself. The other king and the
wizard had both seen at once what he’d missed—why the Banished One had
decided to end the lives of the captive thralls. How was he supposed to
run Avornis when other people in the kingdom were smarter than he was?
Then Lanius asked him, “What do we do now?” Pterocles leaned forward
expectantly, also waiting for his answer. They think I can lead them, Grus realized.
Well, they’d better be right, hadn’t they? He said, “The only way
we can get more thralls is to go over the river and take them out of the
lands the Menteshe rule. I don’t know that we want to do that until we see
how things go with Sanjar and Korkut. If they want to quarrel with each
other instead of us, why give them an excuse to change their minds?”
Pterocles looked disappointed. Pterocles, in fact, looked mutinous. He
wanted more thralls, and wanted them badly. But Lanius nodded and said,
“That makes good sense.”
To Pterocles, Grus said, “I know you want to make your spell better.
But isn’t it good enough now?” Reluctantly—ever so reluctantly— the wizard
nodded. “All right, then,” Grus told him. “For now, good enough will have
to do.”
“How do you decide so quickly?” Lanius sounded more than abstractly
curious. He sounded as though he wanted to learn the trick so he could do
it himself.
“Being on the battlefield helps,” Grus said after a momentary pause.
“Sometimes it’s better to try something—to try anything—of your own than
to let the enemy decide what you’re going to do next. If it turns out that
what you tried isn’t working, you try something else instead. The trick is
to impose your will on whatever’s going on, and not to let the other
fellow impose his on you.”
“But there is no other fellow here,” Lanius said.
“No?” Slowly and deliberately, Grus turned toward the south, toward the
lands the Banished One ruled. He waited. Lanius bit his lip. A guard asked,
“Your Majesty, shall we get rid of the bodies here?”
“Yes, do that,” Grus answered. “Put them on a proper pyre. Don’t just
throw them into a hole in the ground or chuck them in the river. In a
strange sort of way, they’re soldiers in the war against the
Menteshe.”
The guard shook his head, plainly not believing that. But he didn’t
argue with Grus. Neither did his comrades. They got the dead thralls
apart—not so easy, for the corpses had begun to stiffen—and carried them
away. Not having people argue was one of the advantages of being king. Wherever we’re going, we’re going because I
want us to get there, Grus thought.
Now . . . I’d better not be wrong.
CHAPTER TWENTY
Outside the royal palace, the wind screamed. Snow blew by almost
horizontally. Braziers and hearth fires blazed everywhere inside, battling
the blizzard. Despite them, the palace was still cold. From the lowliest
sweeper on up, people wore robes of wool or furs over their everyday
trousers and tunics. The noise of chattering teeth was never far away,
even so.
Lanius’ teeth chattered more than most. The king sat in the archives.
He had a brazier by him, but it did less than he would have wished to hold
the chill at bay. No hearth fire here. Even the one brazier made him
nervous. With so many parchments lying around, a single spark escaping
could mean catastrophe.
But he wanted—he needed—to do research, and the archives were simply
too cold to tolerate without some fire by him. Now that Pterocles had—or
thought he had—brought one thrall out from under the shadow the Banished
One’s spell had cast over him, Lanius was wild to learn more about all the
earlier efforts Avornan wizards had made to lead thralls out of
darkness.
He found even more than he’d expected. The archives held dozens, maybe
hundreds, of spells intended to cure thralls. They held just as many
descriptions of what had happened once the spells were tried. The spells
themselves were a monument to ingenuity. The descriptions were a monument
of a different sort, a monument to discouragement. Lanius read of failure
after failure after failure. He marveled that Avornan wizards had kept on
trying after failing so often.
Before long, he realized why they’d kept on trying. Kings of Avornis
could see perfectly well that they had no hope of defeating the Menteshe
in any permanent way if they couldn’t cure thralls. They kept the wizards
at it.
What the present king found gave him pause. Every so often, a wizard
would claim to have beaten the spells that made thralls what they were.
Reports would come into the capital of thralls being completely cured and
made into ordinary men. Every once in a while, the cured thralls
themselves would come into the capital.
That was all very well. But none of the wizards had won enduring fame,
for most of the thralls proved not to be cured after all. Some gradually
drifted back into their previous idiocy. Others—and these were the
heartbreakers—turned out to be the eyes and ears of the Banished One.
The more Lanius thought about that, the more he worried. After a while,
he couldn’t stand the worry anymore, and summoned Pterocles not to the
archives but to a small audience chamber heated by a couple of braziers.
He asked, “Are you sure this thrall is cured, or could the Banished One
still control him?”
“Ah,” the wizard said. “You wonder about the same thing as I do, Your
Majesty.”
“I have reason to.” Lanius spoke of all the reports he’d found of
thralls thought to be cured who proved anything but.
Pterocles nodded. “I know of some of those cases, too. I think you’ve
found more than I knew of, but that doesn’t matter so much.” Lanius had to
fight not to pout;
he thought his thoroughness mattered. The wizard went on, “What
matters is, by every sorcerous test I know how to make, the thrall is a
thrall no more. He’s a man.”
“By every sorcerous test you know how to make,” King Lanius repeated.
The wizard nodded again. Lanius said, “You’re not the first to make that
claim, either, you know.”
“Yes, I do,” Pterocles replied. “But I am the first to make that claim
who knows from the inside what being emptied by the Banished One is like.
I know the shape and size of the hole inside a man. I know how to fill it.
By the gods, Your Majesty, I
have filled it, at least this once.”
He sounded very sure of himself. Lanius would have been more sure of
him if he hadn’t read reports by wizards years, sometimes centuries, dead
who’d been just as sure of themselves and ended up disappointed. Still,
Pterocles had a point—what he’d gone through in front of Nishevatz gave
him a unique perspective on how the Banished One’s wizardry worked.
“We’ll see,” the king said at last. “But I’m afraid that thrall will
need to be watched to the end of his days.”
“I understand why you’re saying that,” Pterocles answered. “If we can
cure enough other thralls, though, maybe you’ll change your mind.”
The only way to cure other thralls was to cross the Stura and take them
away from the Menteshe; as far as Lanius knew, the thrall Pterocles had
cured (or believed he had cured?) was the only one left on Avornan soil.
“I think the war against the Chernagors will come first,” Lanius said.
“I think you’re probably right,” Pterocles replied. “That does seem to
be what His Majesty—uh, His other Majesty—has in mind.”
“His other Majesty. Yes,” Lanius said sourly. Pterocles hadn’t intended
to insult him, to remind him he was King of Avornis more in name than in
fact. Intended or not, the wizard had done it. If anything, the slight
hurt worse because it was unintentional.
“Er ... I meant no offense, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said quickly,
realizing where he’d gone wrong.
“I know you didn’t.” Lanius still sounded sour. Just because the
offense hadn’t been meant didn’t mean it wasn’t there.
Two messengers came north, each from a different town on the north bank
of the Stura. They had left for the city of Avornis on different days.
They’d both struggled through bad roads and blizzards and drifted snow.
And, as luck would have it, they both came before King Grus within the
space of an hour and a half.
The first messenger said, “Your Majesty, Prince Sanjar is sending you
an ambassador to announce his succession to the throne Prince Ulash held
for so long. The ambassador is trailing behind me, and should get to the
city of Avornis before too long.”
“All right. Good, in fact,” Grus said. “I’m glad to know who came out
on top there. When Sanjar’s ambassador gets here, I’ll be as polite as I
can, considering that we’ve just fought a war with the prince’s father.”
He dared hope Sanjar wanted peace. That the new Menteshe prince was
sending an envoy struck him as a good sign.
Grus had just sat down to lunch when the second messenger arrived. The
king asked the servant who announced the fellow’s presence if his news was
urgent. The man said it was. With a sigh, Grus got up from his bread and
cheese and wine. “I’ll see him, then.”
After bowing, the second messenger said, “Your Majesty, Prince Korkut
is sending you an ambassador to announce his succession to the throne
Prince Ulash held for so long. The envoy is on his way to the capital, and
should get here in a few days.”
“Wait a minute. Prince Korkut, you say?” Grus wanted to make sure he’d
heard straight. “Not Prince Sanjar?”
“No, Your Majesty.” The courier shook his head. “From what Prince
Korkut’s ambassador said, Sanjar is nothing but a rebel.”
“Did he say that? How . . . interesting.” Grus dismissed the second
messenger and summoned the first one again. He asked, “Did Prince Sanjar’s
envoy say anything about Prince Korkut?”
“Why, yes, Your Majesty. How did you know that?” the first messenger
replied. “He said Korkut was nothing but a filthy traitor, and he’d be
hunted down soon.”
“Did he? Well, well, well.” King Grus looked up at the ceiling. “We may
have some sparks flying when the embassies get here.”
“Embassy Your Majesty?” The courier, who didn’t know he wasn’t the only
man to come to the capital with news from the south, stressed the last
syllable.
“That’s right.” Grus nodded. “Korkut’s sending one, too. If you listen
to
his ambassador, he’s Ulash’s rightful heir and Sanjar’s nothing
but a rebel.”
“Oh,” the courier said, and then, “Oh, my.”
“Well, yes.” King Grus grinned like a mischievous little boy. “And do
you know what else? It ought to be a lot of fun.”
He did his best to make sure it would be fun, too. Korkut’s ambassador
got to the city of Avornis first. Grus put the man—his name was Er-Tash—up
in a hostel and made excuses not to see him right away. Sanjar’s
representative, a Menteshe called Duqaq, reached the capital three days
later. Grus invited both envoys to confer with him on the same day at the
same time. He made sure neither saw the other until they both reached the
throne room.
Er-Tash glared at Duqaq. Duqaq scowled at Er-Tash. Both of them reached
for their swords. Since they were in the throne room, they’d been relieved
of those swords and other assorted cutlery beforehand. They snarled and
shouted at each other in their own language. Their retainers—each had a
small handful—also growled and made threatening noises.
At Grus’ gesture, Avornan soldiers got between the two rival embassies,
to make sure they didn’t start going at each other with fists— and to make
sure nobody had managed to sneak anything with a point or an edge past the
guards.
“Your Majesty!” Duqaq shouted in good Avornan. “This is an outrage,
Your Majesty!” “He is an outrage, Your Majesty!” Er-Tash cried, pointing at
Duqaq. “How dare he come before you?”
Before Duqaq could let loose with more indignation, Grus held up a
hand. “Enough, both of you,” he said. Several guards pounded the butts of
their spears down on the marble floor of the throne room. The solid thumps
probably did more to convince the Menteshe envoys to keep quiet than any
of the king’s words. When Grus saw they
would keep quiet, he went on, “Both of you came to me on your
own. Don’t you think I ought to hear you both? If I do send one of you
away, which one should it be?”
“Him!” Er-Tash and Duqaq exclaimed at the same time. Each pointed at
the other. Both looked daggers at each other.
“One of you represents Prince Ulash’s legitimate successor,” Grus said.
“One represents a rebel. How do I figure out which is which?”
“Because Prince Ulash left my master—” Duqaq began.
“Liar!” Er-Tash shouted. “The land is Korkut’s!”
“Liar yourself!” Duqaq yelled. Grus reflected that they both could end
up right, if Ulash’s sons split the territory their father had ruled. By
the signs, they were more interested in splitting each other’s heads. That
didn’t break the King of Avornis’ heart. Just the opposite, in fact.
None of what Grus thought showed on his face. Up there on the Diamond
Throne, he remained calm, collected, above it all—metaphorically as well
as literally. “Why should I recognize one of your principals and not the
other?” he inquired, as though the question might be interesting in theory
but had no bearing on the real world.
“Because he is the rightful Prince of Yozgat!” Er-Tash said.
Duqaq shouted, “Liar!” again. He went on, “Sanjar was Ulash’s favorite,
Ulash’s chosen heir, not this—this thefter of a throne.” His Avornan
wasn’t quite perfect.
Again, as though the question were only theoretical, Grus asked, “Which
man does the Banished One prefer?” If the ambassadors knew—and if they would admit they knew—that would tell Grus which contender
Avornis ought to support.
But Er-Tash answered, “The Fallen Star has not yet made his choice
clear.” Duqaq, for once, did not contradict him. How interesting, Grus thought. Did that mean the Banished One
didn’t care, or that he was having trouble making up his mind, or
something else altogether? No way to be sure, not for a mere man.
Then Er-Tash said, “If you recognize Korkut, he will promise peace with
Avornis.”
“Will he?” Grus said. “Now you begin to interest me. How do I know he
will keep his promises? What guarantees will he give me?”
“
I will give you a guarantee,” Duqaq broke in. “I will give you a
guarantee Er-Tash is lying, and Korkut is lying, too.”
“Oh?” Again, Grus carefully didn’t smile, though he felt like it. “Does
Sanjar want peace with Avornis? If he does, what guarantees will
he give? We need guarantees. We have seen we cannot always trust
the Menteshe.” He went no further than that. What he wanted to say about
the Banished One would only anger both ambassadors.
“Sanjar wants peace,” Duqaq said. “Sanjar will pay tribute to have
peace.”
“And try to steal it back again!” Er-Tash burst out. Duqaq snarled at
him, no doubt because he’d told nothing but the truth.
“What will Korkut give?” Grus asked Duqaq.
“He too will pay tribute,” Korkut’s ambassador replied, at which
Er-Tash laughed loud and long. Flushing under his swarthy skin, Duqaq went
on, “And he will also give hostages, so you may be sure his intentions are
good.”
“You may be sure he will cheat, giving men of no account who— whom—who
he says are important,” Er-Tash said.
“Will Sanjar give hostages?” Grus asked. If he had hostages from the
Menteshe, they might think twice about attacking Avornis. Money, he was
sure, would not give him nearly as big an advantage.
Reluctantly, Er-Tash nodded. Now Duqaq was the one who laughed a
raucous laugh. Er-Tash said, “Shut your fool’s mouth, you son of a
backscuttling sheep.” The insult had to be translated literally from his
own tongue; Grus had never heard it in Avornan. Duqaq answered in the
Menteshe language. The rival envoys snapped at each other for a minute or
two.
At last, Duqaq turned away from the quarrel and toward King Grus.
“You see, Your Majesty,” he said. “You will get no more from the rebel
and traitor than you will from Prince Korkut, so you should recognize
him.”
“You will get no more from the robber and usurper than you will from
Prince Sanjar, so you should recognize
him,” Er-Tash said.
They both waited to hear what Grus would say. He thought for a little
while, then spoke. “As long as two sons of Ulash claim to be Prince of
Yoxgat, I will not recognize either of them—unless one attacks Avornis.
Then I will recognize the other, and do all I can to help him. When you
have settled your own problems, I will recognize the prince you have
chosen, however you do that. Until then, I am neutral—unless one of your
principals attacks my kingdom, as I said.”
Duqaq said, “Sanjar’s rogues will attack you and make it look as though
my master’s followers did the wicked deed.”
“You blame Sanjar for what Korkut plans himself,” Er-Tash said.
Again, they started shouting at each other in their own language.
“Enough!” Grus said. “Too much, in fact. I dismiss you both, and order you
to keep the peace as long as you stay in Avornis.”
“When we cross the Stura, this is a dead dog.” Er-Tash pointed to
Duqaq.
“A mouse dreams of being a lion,” Duqaq jeered.
“Dismissed, I said!” Grus was suddenly sick of both of them. They left
the throne room. Avornan guards had to rush in to keep the men from their
retinues from going at one another as they were leaving.
But no matter how severe Grus’ expression while the rival Menteshe
embassies were there to see it, the king smiled a broad and cheerful smile
as soon as they were gone. Nothing pleased him more than strife among his
foes.
Zenaida pouted prettily at King Lanius. “You don’t love me anymore,”
the serving girl complained. I
never loved you, Lanius thought.
I
had a good time with you, and either you had a good time with me or
you’re a better actress than I think you are. But that isn’t love, even if
it can be a start. He hadn’t known as much when he fell for Cristata.
Grus had been right, even if Lanius hated to admit it.
He had to answer Zenaida. “I’ve been busy,” he said—the same weak reply
men have given lovers for as long as men have taken lovers.
This time, Zenaida’s pout wasn’t as pretty. “Busy with who?”
“Nobody,” he answered, which was true, as long as he didn’t count his
wife.
The maidservant tossed her head. “Ha!” she said. “A likely story!
You’ve found somebody else. You took advantage of me, and now you throw me
aside?” She’d been at least as much seducer as seduced—so Lanius
remembered it, anyhow. He didn’t suppose he should have been surprised to
find she recalled it differently. She went on, “If Queen Sosia ever found
out about what was going on . . .”
“If Queen Sosia ever finds out, my life will be very unpleasant,”
Lanius said, and Zenaida smirked. He added, “But if she finds out from
you, you will go straight to the Maze, and you won’t come out again. Not
ever. Is that plain enough?”
“Uh . . .” Zenaida’s smirk vanished. Lanius could all but read her
mind. Did he have the power to do what he threatened? Would he be angry
enough to do it if he could? He could see her deciding he did and he
would. “Yes, Your Majesty,” she said in a very small voice.
“All right, then,” Lanius said. “Was there anything else?”
“No, Your Majesty,” she whispered.
“Good,” Lanius said.
Zenaida wasn’t pouting as she walked away from him. She was scowling,
black as midnight. He sighed. An affair with love had complications. Now
he discovered an affair without love had them, too. She thought he’d taken
advantage of her, or said she did. I’ll give her a present, Lanius thought. With luck, that would
sweeten her. He’d have to do it in such a way that he didn’t look to be
paying her for whoring. He nodded to himself. He could manage that.
Another problem solved, or so it seemed. He walked through the
corridors of the palace suite smiling to himself. He liked solving
problems. He liked few things better, in fact.
Guards came to stiff attention as he approached. He waved for them to
stand at ease and asked, “How is Otus?”
“He’s fine, Your Majesty,” one of the guardsmen answered. “Couldn’t be
better, as far as I can see. You wouldn’t know he was ever a thrall, not
hardly you wouldn’t.”
“Bring him out,” Lanius said. “I’d like to talk to him.”
The guardsmen saluted. One of them unbarred the door, which could only
be done from the outside. The guards kept their weapons ready. No matter
how normal Otus acted, they didn’t completely trust him. Lanius could
hardly quarrel with them on that score, not with what he knew about
“cured” thralls from years gone by.
But things had changed for the man on whom Pterocles had worked his
magic. When the door to Otus’ room opened, no thick barnyard reek poured
out. Nor was Otus himself encrusted with ground-in filth. He looked like
an ordinary Avornan, and was as clean as any of the guards. He’d been
bathed and barbered and had his shaggy beard trimmed. His clothes were of
the same sort as palace servants wore.
He’d learned enough to bow to the king without being told. “Your
Majesty,” he murmured.
“Hello, Otus,” Lanius said. The thrall hadn’t even had a name before
they gave him one. “How are you today?”
“Just fine, thanks,” replied the man brought up from the south. His
accent didn’t just sound southern. It sounded old-fashioned, and was the
one thing that could have placed Otus to the far side of the Stura.
Thralls didn’t speak much, and their way of speaking had changed little
since the Menteshe overran their lands. Over the past centuries, the
currents of Avornan had run on without them. Though born a thrall, Otus
had learned hundreds, maybe thousands, of new words since the shadow was
lifted from his mind, but he spoke them all with his old accent.
“Glad to hear it,” Lanius told him. “What was it like, being a
thrall?”
“What was it... like?” Otus echoed, frowning. “It was . . . dark. I was
. . . stupid. I still feel stupid. So much I don’t know. So much I ought
to know. You say—all you people say—someone did this to me?”
“The Banished One,” Lanius said. “The Menteshe call him the Fallen
Star.”
“Oh.” Otus’ frown remained, but now showed awe rather than puzzlement
or annoyance. “The Fallen Star. Yes. I would see him in ... in dreams they
were. All thralls would. He was bright. Nothing in our lives was bright.
But the Fallen Star. . . The Fallen Star made everything shine inside our
heads.”
Did he mean that literally? Or was he trying to express something that
didn’t lend itself to words? Lanius tried to get him to say more, but he
wouldn’t. Maybe he couldn’t. The king asked, “How do you feel about the
Banished One now?”
Yet another sort of frown from Otus, this one the kind a thoughtful man
might use before speaking. “I feel. . . free of him,” the—former?—thrall
said at last. “He has nothing to do with me anymore.”
“And how does that make you feel?” Lanius asked.
“Glad,” Otus said simply. “I am not an ox. I am not a donkey I am a
man. Here, I can be a man. Before, I never knew what it meant to be a
man.”
“Would you fight against the Banished One if you had the chance?”
“Give me a sword. Give me a spear.” Otus frowned thoughtfully again. “I
stand here. I talk to you. I say what I think. When I do that, I fight the
Fallen Star. Is it not so, Your Majesty?”
“I think it is,” Lanius answered. The thrall spoke against the Banished
One. By all appearances, Otus was indeed cured of the exiled god’s baneful
influence. But how much were those appearances worth? Below them, was the
Banished One still watching and listening and laughing? Lanius didn’t
know. He couldn’t tell. He wasn’t altogether sure whether Pterocles, for
all his skill, could tell, either. That being so, he knew he wouldn’t
trust Otus’ cure any time soon.
Grus read the letter from the south with a satisfaction he could hardly
disguise. “You know what this says?” he asked the courier.
“Yes, Your Majesty,” the man answered. “I had to read it, in case it
came to grief while I traveled.”
“Good.” Grus nodded. “Now—do you know anything more than what’s written
here?”
“I’m sorry, Your Majesty, but I don’t,” the courier said. “I’ve never
been down near the Stura. I only brought this the last thirty miles.”
“All right.” Grus did his best to hide his disappointment. “The news in
here”—he tapped the parchment—“is plain enough, anyhow.”
He dismissed the courier and summoned General Hirundo. When Hirundo
walked into the audience chamber, he looked grumpy. “Did it have to be
right now, Your Majesty?” He sounded grumpy, too. “You spoiled what might
have been a tender moment with a maidservant.
She was certainly tender, and I didn’t have to do much more to
get her to say yes.”
“This is more important than fooling around with a woman,” Grus
declared.
“Yes, Your Majesty.” Hirundo’s words were perfectly obedient. Only a
raised eyebrow reminded Grus of Alauda and all the other women the general
might not happen to know about.
Grus felt himself redden. He passed Hirundo the letter that had just
come up from the south. “Here,” he said. “See for yourself.”
Hirundo started the letter with the same perfect but sarcastic
obedience he’d used to answer the king. He didn’t get very far, though,
before the sarcasm disappeared. “Well, well,” he said when he was through.
“You were right. Every once in a while, the gods do answer a prayer, don’t
they?”
“I was thinking something along those very same lines, as a matter of
fact,” Grus replied. “We couldn’t have asked King Olor for anything much
nicer than a real civil war between Sanjar and Korkut.”
The general tapped the letter with his index finger. “Sounds like
they’re going at it hammer and tongs, too.”
“Who do you suppose will win?” Grus asked.
“Beats me,” Hirundo said cheerfully. “Let’s sit back and drink some
wine and watch and find out.”
“I don’t intend to do anything else,” Grus said. “I hope they spend the
next five years smashing away at each other, and that all the other
Menteshe jump into the fight and jump on each other, too. That way, with a
little luck, they’ll stay too busy to bother Avornis. And after what they
did to us this past year, we can use the time to heal.”
“If I could tell you you were wrong, that would mean we were stronger
than we really are,” Hirundo said.
“We’ll have to strengthen the river-galley fleet on the Stura,” Grus
said. “I was going to do that anyway, but now it’s especially important. I
don’t want the Menteshe getting distracted from their own fight to go
after us.”
Hirundo gave him a brisk nod. “Makes sense. You do most of the time,
Your Majesty.” He paused, then added, “So does Lanius, as a matter of
fact.”
“Well, so he does,” Grus admitted, a little uncomfortably. The more
sense Lanius showed, the more worrisome he became. He also became more
valuable to the kingdom; Grus consoled himself with that.
“With the Menteshe busy playing games among themselves, what do you aim
to do about the Chernagors?” Hirundo asked.
“You’re thinking along with me. Either that means you make sense, too,
or else we’re both crazy the same way,” the king said. Hirundo laughed. So
did Grus, although he hadn’t been kidding, or at least not very much. He
went on, “If Korkut and Sanjar are still bashing each other over the head
come spring, I do aim to go north. We’ll never have a better chance to
take Nishevatz without distractions from the south— or from the Banished
One.”
“You’ll make Prince Vsevolod happy,” the general observed.
“I know.” Grus heaved a sigh. “I suppose I’ll have to do it anyhow.”
Again, Hirundo laughed. Again, so did Grus. Again, though, he hadn’t been
kidding, or at least not very much.
Lanius was pleased with himself as he walked back toward the royal
bedchamber. He’d had a good day in the archives, coming up with a map of
Nishevatz as it had been when it was the Avornan city of Medeon. Vsevolod,
no doubt, would laugh at the map and go on about how much things had
changed. But no one had been able to get Vsevolod to sit down and draw his
own map of Nishevatz. Even old clues were better than no clues at all.
He opened the door. Sosia was standing by the bed, about fifteen feet
away. “Hello, sweetheart,” he said, smiling.
Instead of smiling back, she picked up a cup and flung it at him.
“Sweetheart!” she screeched. The cup smashed against the wall, six inches
to the left of his head. A sharp shard scored his cheek.
“What the—?” Lanius yelped.
Sosia grabbed another cup. She let fly again. This one smacked against
the door, about six inches to the right of Lanius’ head. “Zenaida!” Sosia
shouted. She had one more cup handy. She threw it without a moment’s
hesitation.
This one was aimed dead center. But Lanius ducked.
Now he knew what the trouble was. “Stop that!” he said, straightening
up. He hoped Sosia would. She was, after all, out of cups. But the brass
tray on which they’d stood remained handy. A moment later, it clanged off
the wall. She didn’t aim well,
“Stop that!” Lanius said again.
“I told you to stop that after Cristata, and see how you listened to
me,” Sosia retorted. Now the closest available thing to throw was a table.
Sosia looked tempted, but she didn’t try it. She said, “Why did I ever let
you touch me?”
“Because we’re married?” Lanius suggested.
“That hasn’t made any difference to you. Why should it make any to me?”
Sosia said. “I thought you weren’t going to wander around like a dog in
heat anymore, and—”
“This was different,” Lanius said. “It wasn’t like what it was with
Cristata.”
“Oh? How was it different?” his wife inquired acidly. “Did you find a
posture you hadn’t used before?”
Lanius’ ears heated. “No,” he said, which happened to be the truth, but
which wasn’t the part of the truth he wanted to get across. “I meant, I
didn’t fall in love with Zenaida, or anything like that.”
Sosia stared at him across the gulf separating men and women. “Queen
Quelea’s mercy!” she exclaimed. “Then why did you bother?”
“Why did I bother?” Lanius stared back; the gulf was as wide from his
side as from hers. “Because . . .”
Because it’s fun, came to mind. So did,
Because I could. Even from across the gulf, he could see neither
of those would strike her as a good enough explanation. “Just because,” he
said.
His wife rolled her eyes. “Men,” she said in tones that wished half the
human race would tumble into the chasm separating the sexes and never be
seen again. “And my own father is the same way.”
“Yes, he is a man,” Lanius said, although he knew that wasn’t what
Sosia had meant. He also knew, or at least had strong suspicions, that
Grus had found company for himself while campaigning in the south. He
didn’t say anything about that. If Sosia or Estrilda found out about it,
he didn’t want them finding out from him. He had to get along with his
father-in-law, and didn’t want the other king to think he’d told tales out
of school.
But Sosia only snapped, “Don’t you play the fool with me. You’re a lot
of different things, and I’m not happy with any of them, but you’re not
stupid, and you don’t do a good job of acting stupid. You know what I
meant. You both lie down with sluts whenever you find the chance.”
Lanius stirred at that. He didn’t think of Cristata as a slut, or
Zenaida. He also didn’t think of Alca the witch as one, and he was sure
Grus didn’t, either. If you lay down with a woman who would lie down with
anyone, what made you special? The other side of that coin was, if you lay
down with any woman yourself, what would make you special and worth lying
down with to some other woman? To that side of the coin, Lanius remained
blind.
“I’m sorry,” he said, later than he should have.
It might not have done him any good even if he’d said it right away.
“You’ve told me that before,” Sosia answered. “You’re sorry I found out.
You’re not sorry you did it. And I thought I could count on Zenaida!” She
didn’t say anything about counting on Lanius. That stung.
“I
am sorry,” the king said, and more or less meant it. “I didn’t
want to hurt you.” He did mean that.
“You didn’t want to get caught,” Sosia said. “But how did you think you
wouldn’t? Everybody knows everything that happens in the palace, and
everybody usually knows it in a hurry, too.”
“I’m sorry,” Lanius said for the third time. If he kept saying it,
maybe she’d believe him sooner or later.
Or, then again, maybe she wouldn’t. She said, “Are you sorry enough to
promise me you’ll never do it again?”
“With Zenaida? Yes, by the gods, I promise you that,” Lanius said at
once. He’d begun to tire of the serving girl anyhow.
“Oh, I’ve taken care of Zenaida. She’s not in the palace anymore,”
Sosia said. Lanius wondered if she’d sent Zenaida to the Maze, as he’d
threatened to. He didn’t think she meant the maidservant was no longer
among the living anymore. He hoped it didn’t; his quarrel with her hadn’t
been anywhere near bad enough for him to want her dead. Meanwhile, though,
his wife went on, “That wasn’t what I meant. I meant, you’ll never run
around again with
anyone else. Promise me that.”
Had he been Grus, he would have promised right away, knowing that his
promise didn’t mean anything if he saw another pretty face. Lanius almost
made the same sort of promise himself. He almost did, but a sort of
stubborn honesty made him hesitate. He said, “How can anyone know the
future?”
Sosia looked at him as though she’d found him smeared on the bottom of
her shoe. “Do you know what your future will be like if you fool around
with another slutty little maidservant?” she asked.
“Nasty,” Lanius answered. He had no doubt Sosia could make that kind of
future very nasty indeed. Of course, if life with the queen turned nasty,
didn’t the king have all the more reason to look for consolation with
someone else? So it seemed to Lanius. Somehow, he didn’t think Sosia would
agree.
She said, “It’s not as though I haven’t given you whatever you’ve
wanted from me. When we
are together, you’ve tried to please me. I know that. And you
can’t say I haven’t done the same for you.”
“You’re trying to shame me,” Lanius muttered, for she was telling the
truth. She wasn’t the lover he would have picked for himself, but the King
of Avornis didn’t always have the luxury of such choices. She did
everything she knew how to do, everything he’d taught her to do.
And he still looked at, still looked for, other women every now and
again. He didn’t know why, except for variety’s sake. He did know he was
far from the only man who did. He also knew some women acted the same
way.
He knew one more thing, too—he was glad Sosia wasn’t one of those women
(or, if she was, that no one had caught her at it). If she were, he would
have been even more upset with her than she was with him now. He was sure
he would have.
With a sigh, he said, “I’ll try, Sosia.”
How would she take that? She didn’t seem to know how to take it for a
little while. Then, slowly, her face cleared. “That’s as much as I’m going
to get from you, isn’t it?” she said. “Maybe you even mean it.”
“I do,” he said, wondering if he did.
“You’ll try,” she said bitterly. “You’ll try, and every so often you’ll
do what you please anyway. And you’ll be sorry afterwards. You’re always
sorry afterwards, when it doesn’t do anybody any good. What should I do
the next time you’re sorry afterwards? Practice my aim so I hit you with
the first cup?”
Lanius’ ears burned. He looked at the broken crockery by his feet.
Whether or not Sosia had hit him with a cup, her words had struck dead
center. She saw what lay ahead the same way as he did. If he admitted as
much, he delivered himself into her hands.
Instead of admitting it, he said, “I am sorry. I will try.” His wife
nodded, as though she believed him.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
In the years since Grus first met Prince Vsevolod, the exiled lord of
Nishevatz’s beard had grown whiter. His craggy features, always wrinkled,
were now gullied like steep, bare country after hard rain. And his hands
put the King of Avornis more in mind of tree roots than ever.
The one thing about Vsevolod that had not changed was the fire in his
eyes. As winter reluctantly gave way to spring, the Prince of Nishevatz
came up to Grus and said, “You get rid of Vasilko, yes?”
Grus had his problems with Ortalis. Set against Vsevolod’s problems
with
his son, they hardly seemed worth noticing. Ortalis, after all,
had never tried to usurp the Avornan throne. Vasilko had not only tried to
steal Nishevatz from Vsevolod, he’d succeeded. Grus replied, “We will go
north this spring, Your Highness,
yes.”
“This is good. This is very good. I go back to my own city. I rule in
my own city. I do not have to live on charity of strangers, on charity of
foreigners,” Vsevolod said.
“We have not kept you here out of charity, Your Highness,” Grus
said.
“No. This is true. Charity is to help someone out of goodness of your
heart,” Vsevolod said. “You do not do this. You help me because of what I
can do for you.” He strode away, his back still straight—if stiff—despite
his years. Grus stared after him, feeling obscurely punctured.
Regardless of his reasons for harboring Vsevolod in the city of
Avornis, Grus did want to return him to the throne of Nishevatz. He
assembled men and horses and supplies outside the city of Avornis, ready
to move as soon as the weather turned mild and the roads dried out.
With extra men in the south in case the Menteshe decided to fight
Avornis instead of among themselves, with sailors filling the growing
fleet of Chernagor-style seagoing ships protecting the kingdom’s east
coast, Grus’ army was smaller than it had been on either of his two
earlier moves up into the Chernagor country. That didn’t unduly worry him,
for he thought it would be big enough.
Lanius and Sosia came out from the city to wish him good fortune. His
son-in-law and daughter were wary around each other. He understood why.
Their quarrels through the winter had hardly stayed secret. Grus wished he
were in a position to give Lanius good advice. With one of his own
partners waiting in a provincial town to bear his bastard, he wasn’t, and
he knew it.
To his surprise, Ortalis and Limosa also came out to wish the army
luck. Grus couldn’t remember the last time his legitimate son had cared
enough to bid him farewell. Maybe it had been Limosa’s idea. In spite of
her irregular marriage to Ortalis, she seemed to be making him a good
wife.
Or maybe Ortalis was just interested in looking at men who hunted other
men for a living. Grus had sometimes wondered if his son would try to turn
into a soldier. That would have given Ortalis a way to let out his thirst
for blood without having other people give him strange looks. But Ortalis
had never shown any interest in going to war. Of course, in war the people
you hunted also hunted you. That might have dampened his enthusiasm for
soldiering.
Now he said, “Good fortune go with you, Father.”
“My thanks.” Not even Grus could find anything wrong with that.
“Good fortune go with you indeed,” Lanius said. “May you return
Vsevolod to his throne.” He looked around to make sure the Chernagor was
nowhere nearby, then quietly added, “May you get Vsevolod out of our hair
for good.”
“May it be so.” Grus and Lanius shared a smile. No denying the Prince
of Nishevatz had made a difficult guest in the city of Avornis.
Lanius said, “I will also pray for peace inside the kingdom.”
“Good. You do that,” Grus said. He glanced toward the other King of
Avornis. Lanius wasn’t looking south toward the Stura. He wasn’t looking
east toward the coast. He was looking straight at Sosia. Grus nodded to
himself. He’d thought Lanius meant that kind of peace, not the sort that
came with armies staying home.
“I know you’ll win, Your Majesty,” Limosa said. “Time is on your side,
after all.”
Was it? Grus had his doubts. She might as well have said,
Third times the charm—not that it had been. Vasilko had had
plenty of time to consolidate himself in Nishevatz. How many people there
still longed for Vsevolod’s return? How many people who had longed for
Vsevolod s return had Vasilko disposed of? A lot of them—Grus was sure of
that. It wouldn’t make reconquering the Chernagor town any easier.
He shrugged. Nothing he could do about it. He said, “If the gods are
kind, we’ll come back with victory—and without Vsevolod.”
“That would be perfect,” Lanius said. Ortalis didn’t seem so
concerned—but then, he’d paid as little attention to Vsevolod as he had to
anything else connected to actually ruling Avornis.
Grus turned away from his family and back toward the army. “Let’s
move!” he called. A trumpeter echoed his command. The horsemen who’d go
out ahead of the rest of the force as scouts urged their mounts into
motion. One piece at a time, the remainder of the army followed.
“I’m off,” Grus said when he had to ride or fall out of place. As he
used knees and the reins to get his horse moving, Lanius and Sosia and
Ortalis and Limosa all waved. He waved back. Then, for the fourth time, he
set out for the land of the Chernagors.
Twice, he’d failed to take Nishevatz. Once, he hadn’t even gotten up
into the Chernagor country before bad news forced him to turn away. Oddly,
those disasters heartened him instead of leaving him discouraged. He’d
seen every sort of misfortune when he went north. Didn’t that mean he was
due for good luck sometime soon?
He hoped it did. Maybe it meant he’d see no good luck against the
Chernagors no matter what happened. He refused to believe that. If he did
believe it, he wouldn’t have sent forth this army. He didn’t think he
would have, anyhow.
Not far away, Prince Vsevolod rode toward his homeland. Like the rest
of the beasts in the army, the Prince of Nishevatz’s horse went at a walk.
Vsevolod had to know he couldn’t take back Nishevatz all by himself. Even
so, he gave the impression of heading north at a headlong gallop. That
impression might have been—was—false, but seemed real all the same.
Hirundo, by contrast, might have been sauntering along. It wasn’t that
he didn’t want to get to Nishevatz. Grus knew he did. But he knew he
wouldn’t get there right away, and showed he knew it, too. Grus preferred
his attitude. It struck him as being more sensible than Vsevolod’s.
And what about me? the king asked himself. He answered with a
shrug. With the Menteshe distracted down in the south, he thought he had a
better chance on this campaign than on the ones of years gone by—if the
nomads were distracted, the Banished One should be distracted, too. Grus
hoped to bridge the gap between
should be and
is. If he did, he might win. If not, he’d come home disappointed
again—if he came home at all.
Lanius wondered how long he would have to wait this time for Sosia to
let him back into her bed. He was curious and interested for more than one
reason. First and , . . most urgent was the interest any man would have
shown about that particular question.
A more abstract curiosity, though, accompanied that. . . urgent
interest. Sosia had to make some careful calculations of her own. If she
showed she warmed to him too soon, what would he think? Why, that he could
enjoy himself with a serving girl whenever he felt like it. He’d make
Sosia angry for a little while, but she’d soon forgive and forget.
But if she really was furious—or wanted him to believe she was— and
kept herself to herself for a long time, what would spring from that? He
was a man, after all, with a mans desires. Wouldn’t he go looking
for another serving girl and slake those desires with her? She wouldn’t
want him doing that.
Yes, a nice calculation.
Lanius tried to think along with his wife. She’d known him for a long
time now. She would know how much he heated through each day of denial. He
had a pretty good notion of when he would get fed up and start smiling at
the prettier maidservants if Sosia hadn’t softened by then.
Two days before the time when he figured his impatience would get the
better of his good sense, Sosia sighed and said, “I can’t make you change
very much, can I?”
“I wouldn’t think so,” Lanius answered seriously. “One person usually
can’t change another. By the gods, not many people can change
themselves.”
His wife studied him. “You know what I’m talking about, don’t you?”
“I have some idea.” His voice was dry.
“Good.” The queen sounded relieved. “I wasn’t sure. Sometimes you see
only the questions, not what’s behind them.” That was true enough. Lanius said, “I’m glad you’re not angry
at me anymore,” then quickly amended that to, “Not
too angry at me, I mean.”
“Not
too angry is right,” Sosia said, “and even that’s just barely
right. Still, you’re what I’ve got. I can either make the best of it or
else find we’re in even more trouble.”
Her thinking did mirror his. He said, “I’ll do my best to make you
happy.”
“I know,” Sosia answered. “You always do when you’re with me. It’s one
of the reasons I can stand having you touch me again after—after
everything you’ve done.” She looked at him with more defiance than desire
on her face. “Shall we?”
“All right.” Lanius was more worried than he wanted her to know. If she
didn’t want him to please her, then he wouldn’t, no matter what he did.
He’d seen that with her and with other women. Men were simpler there. If
it felt good, they didn’t worry about much else.
We’re lucky, Lanius thought; he didn’t wonder if it was good luck
or bad.
Physical acts counted, too. He worked especially hard to give Sosia
pleasure when they lay down together. And, to his relief, he succeeded.
She murmured something wordless, then stroked the back of his head. “You,”
she said, and her voice sounded as much accusing as anything else.
“At your service,” he said. “And now—” He poised himself above her.
He’d wondered if she would just lie there when they joined, to punish him
for making love with Zenaida. But she didn’t. Even as his own pleasure
built, he nodded in respect. Sosia didn’t stint. She deserved credit for
that.
Afterward, he kissed the side of her neck. She wiggled; that was a
ticklish spot for her. “You,” she said again, even more accusingly than
before.
“Yes, me,” Lanius said. “You . . . had better believe it.” He’d almost
said,
You were expecting someone else? Considering that he’d enjoyed
himself with someone else, she might have answered,
What if I was? Better not to travel some roads than to see where
they led.
“When we started,” Sosia said, “I wasn’t sure I really wanted you
touching me, kissing me, kissing me
there, at all. But you know what you’re doing.” In the dark
stillness of the bedchamber, her eyes were enormous. “Do you study that
along with everything else?”
“Not much in the archives about it,” Lanius said. A man studied such
things whenever he made love with a woman, but that wasn’t what Sosia had
meant. He didn’t think many men realized that was what they were doing.
The more fools they, he thought.
“Archives,” Sosia muttered, so maybe she had something else in mind for
the source of his research. But she didn’t snipe at him. Instead, she
asked, “What
am I going to do with you?”
“Put up with me, I hope,” Lanius answered. “I’ll try to do the same for
you.”
“For me? Why do I need putting up with?” But then Sosia shook her head.
“Never mind. Don’t tell me. I’ll try to put up with you, you try to put up
with me, and we’ll both try to get along. Bargain?”
“Bargain,” Lanius said. They clasped hands.
Up ahead of the Avornan army, Chernagor cavalry skirmished with King
Grus’ scouts. More Chernagor horsemen galloped off toward the north. Grus
cursed, more in resignation than anything else. “So much for surprise,” he
said.
“Did you really think we’d keep it?” Hirundo asked. “We can’t just
appear out of nowhere, like ghosts in a story to frighten children.”
“Maybe not, but we’d win a lot of battles if we could,” Grus said.
He wondered whether the men of Nishevatz would try to hold Varazdin
against him, but his men found the fortress not only abandoned but
destroyed, the keep wrecked and one of the outer walls pulled down. Maybe
they thought he could quickly overcome whatever garrison they put into the
place, or maybe they were saving everything they had to defend the walls
of their city-state.
Either way, Grus thought they were making a mistake. Had he been in
charge of Nishevatz, he would have defended the place as far forward as he
could. If Vasilko was willing to let him get close, he would say thank you
and do his best to take advantage of that. He pressed on into the land of
the Chernagors.
Three days later, one of his scouts came riding back to the main body
of the army, calling, “The sea! The sea!” The man pointed north.
Grus soon rode up over a low rise and spied the sea for himself. As
always, he was struck by how different it was from the Azanian Sea on the
east coast of Avornis. The waters there were blue and warm and inviting,
the beaches made from golden sand. The beaches here were mud flats. The
sea was greenish gray, a color that didn’t seem quite healthy to him. The
sky was gray, too, the gray of newly sheared wool before it was washed.
Wisps of mist kept the king from getting as good a view of either sea or
sky as he would have wanted.
“No wonder the Chernagors like to turn pirate,” Hirundo said, gazing
out at the bleak landscape. “If I lived in country like this, I’d do my
best to get away from it, too.”
Sandpipers scurried along at the border between sea and land, poking
their beaks into the mud to look for whatever little creatures they
hunted. Gulls mewed overhead, soaring along on narrow pointed wings. The
air smelled of moisture and salt and seaweed and faintly nasty things Grus
couldn’t quite name.
Prince Vsevolod rode up to him. The Chernagors eyes shone, though his
breath smoked each time he exhaled. “Is wonderful country, yes?” he
boomed.
“I’m glad it pleases you, Your Highness,” Grus answered, as
diplomatically as he could.
“Wonderful country,” Vsevolod repeated. “Not too hot like Avornis,
with sweat all time in summer. Not cold all through winter, either. Just
right.”
“To each his own,” Grus said.
“To each his own, yes.” Vsevolod seemed to cherish the clichй. “And
Nishevatz—Nishevatz is my own.”
“May we soon set you back on the throne there, then,” Grus said,
thinking,
And if I never see you again, that will not disappoint you, and it
will not disappoint me, either.
They’d come to the sea east of the town, and moved toward it until they
made camp for the night. Grus took care to post sentries well out from the
camp, to bring back warning if the Chernagors tried to strike. And,
remembering the disaster that had almost befallen his army while fighting
the Menteshe, he summoned Pterocles. “Be sure you drink your fill of wine
this evening,” he told the wizard. “If you have to ease yourself, you’ll
beat any sleep spell the enemy sends your way.”
Pterocles smiled. “I will set up sorcerous wards, too, Your Majesty,”
he replied. “They will not take me by surprise twice the same way.”
“Good.” Grus nodded. “Do you have any idea what new surprises they’ll
try to use?”
“If I did, they wouldn’t be surprises, would they?” Pterocles held the
cheerful expression.
“Do you sense the Banished One?” Grus asked.
Now the wizard’s smile blew out like a candle flame. “So far, I have
not, except in a general way. This is a land where he has an interest, but
it is not a land where he is concentrating all his attention, the way he
did when he laid me low.”
“He has other things on his mind right now,” Grus said, and Pterocles
nodded. The king went on, “As long as Sanjar and Korkut keep whacking away
at each other, the Banished One ought to worry most about the south.”
Pterocles nodded again. Grus finished, “In that case, I hope they fight
each other for the next ten years.”
“That would be nice,” Pterocles agreed, and some of his smile came
back.
The army went on toward Nishevatz the next morning. Offshore, far out
of bowshot or even catapult range, tall-masted Chernagor ships sailed
along, keeping an eye on the Avornans. Grus wished he had tall ships of
his own in these waters; the little flotilla Lanius sent out had come back
to Avornis during the winter, having lost one ship, sunk several, and
earned what the Chernagors of Durdevatz said would be their undying
gratitude. Every so often here, one of these ships would sail off to
Nishevatz, presumably to report on whatever its crew had seen. The rest
kept on shadowing Grus’ army.
After a while, he got fed up with that and called for Pterocles again.
“You made a magic against the Chernagor transports,” he said. “Can you use
the same spell against these snoops?”
The wizard eyed the clouds and swirling mist overhead. He spread his
hands in apology—or started to. His mule chose that moment to misstep, and
he had to make a hasty grab for the reins.
Some people really do ride worse than I do, Grus thought, amused.
Pterocles said, “Your Majesty, I can try that spell. But it works best
with real sunshine to power it. It may well fail.” He rode on for half a
minute or so before something else occurred to him. “The Chernagors may
have worked out a counterspell by now, too. These things do happen. Spells
are often best the first time you use them, because then you catch the
other fellow by surprise.”
“I see.” Trouble was, Grus did; what Pterocles said made altogether too
much sense. Now the king rode thoughtfully for a little while before
saying, “Well, when you see the chance, take it.”
“I will, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said.
As though to mock Grus’ hopes, a fine drizzle began sifting down out of
the sky. Grumpily, he put on a broad-brimmed felt hat to keep the water
off his face and to keep it from trickling down the back of his neck.
“Remind the men to grease their mail well tonight,” he called to Hirundo.
“Otherwise, it will rust.”
“I’ll take care of it,” Hirundo promised.
But the drizzle also made it harder for the Chernagors aboard ship to
watch the Avornan army. They had to come closer and closer to the shore,
until finally they were almost within bowshot. Curses wafted across the
water when one of them ran aground. Grus cursed, too, for he couldn’t do
anything about it. There was no point to assembling his catapults to pound
the ships when they would be as useless with wet skeins of hair as a bow
with a wet string.
Hirundo shared his frustration, but said, “They’re still in trouble out
there, whether we put them in trouble or not.”
“I suppose so,” Grus said. “I wish we could take better advantage of
it, though.” He shrugged ruefully. “I wish for all sorts of things I won’t
get. Who doesn’t?”
“Best way to take advantage is to take Nishevatz,” Vsevolod said. “When
we take Nishevatz, we punish all traitors. Oh, yes.” He rubbed his hands
together in anticipation of doing just that.
Grus wondered how much like Vsevolod his son Vasilko was. He wouldn’t
have been surprised if Vasilko took after his father a great deal indeed.
And if Vsevolod had followed the Banished One, would Vasilko have fled to
the city of Avornis and bowed down to Olor and Quelea and the rest of the
gods in the heavens? Grus wouldn’t have been surprised there, either.
Whatever one of them chose, the other seemed to want the opposite.
That didn’t mean Vsevolod was wrong here. “We’ll do our best, Your
Highness,” Grus said. “Then you should do your best.”
“Oh, I will,” Vsevolod said. “I will.” His tone suggested that what he
meant by
best was likely to be different from what Grus meant by the word.
Whether what he thought best for him would also prove best for Nishevatz
was liable to be an ... interesting question. I’ll worry about that later, Grus told himself.
One thing at a time. Getting Vasilko out of Nishevatz, getting the
Banished One’s influence out of Nishevatz—
that comes first. Everything else can wait. If Vsevolod turns out to
be intolerable, maybe I’ll be able to do something about it.
He rode on toward Nishevatz for a while. Then something else occurred
to him. If a lot of people in Nishevatz hadn’t already decided Vsevolod
was intolerable, would they have banded together behind Vasilko and helped
him oust his father? Grus sighed. He looked over to the white-bearded
Prince of Nishevatz. The longer he looked, the more he wished he hadn’t
thought of that.
“Excuse me,” Limosa said. Ortalis’ wife got up and left the supper
table faster than was seemly. When she came back a few minutes later, she
looked more than a little green.
“Are you all right?” Lanius asked.
Sosia found a different question. She asked, “Are you going to have a
baby?”
Limosa turned from one of them to the other. “Yes, Your Majesty,” she
told the king. A moment later, she said the same thing to the queen,
adding, “Until this”—she gulped—“I managed to keep it a secret. I wanted
to see how long I could.”
“Well, you did,” Lanius said. “Congratulations!” Sosia echoed him.
Lanius turned to Ortalis and congratulated him, too. He hoped he didn’t
sound grudging. Ortalis had behaved . . . pretty well lately.
“I thank you.” Grus’ legitimate son raised his wine cup. “Here’s hoping
it’s a boy.”
For the sake of politeness, Lanius drank to that. So did Sosia. But
their eyes met with complete understanding and agreement. They both hoped
Limosa had a little girl—had lots of little girls, if she conceived again.
Boys would make the succession more complicated. Grus and his family had
managed to graft themselves on to the ancient ruling dynasty. That was one
thing. Uprooting it altogether—having the crown descend through Ortalis
and his line—would be something else again.
Ortalis had never shown any great interest in ruling Avornis. If he had
a son, he might change his mind. That would make court intrigue all the
more intriguing. Lanius hoped he didn’t, but how much was such hope
worth?
That evening, Sosia seemed not just willing but actually eager to make
love for the first time since she found out about Zenaida. While she and
Lanius caressed each other and then joined, he accepted that as good luck.
Afterwards, she rolled over and went straight to sleep. The king smiled a
little. She was doing what men were supposed to do, and he wasn’t.
He lay on his back, looking up at the ceiling. With no lamp burning, it
was just part of the darkness. As he hadn’t before, he wondered what made
Sosia act the way she had. He didn’t need to wonder long. What was
likelier to drive her into his arms than a threat from outside?
He would rather have believed his own charms had more to do with it.
But, since she’d had no trouble resisting those charms before Limosa’s
news, he couldn’t very well do that. Every so often, he wished he were
better at fooling himself. This was one of those times.
In the morning, he went to see Otus. Every time he did, the man from
south of the Stura seemed more like an ordinary Avornan and less like a
thrall. More and more, Lanius believed the guards who surrounded Otus’
chamber were unnecessary. He didn’t order them away, though. He might have
been wrong, and being wrong here could have unfortunate consequences.
“Good morning, Your Majesty,” Otus said, and bowed politely. His eyes
went to the guards who came in with the king, too. He didn’t complain
about them. As far as Lanius knew, he never complained. That did set him
apart from ordinary Avornans.
“Good morning to you,” the king replied. “You speak very well these
days. You’ve learned a lot.”
“I like to learn things,” Otus said. “I never had the chance before.”
He paused and shook his head. “I never could before.”
That let Lanius ask a question he’d wanted to ask for a long time.
“What was it like, being a thrall? Now you have the words to talk about
it, which you didn’t before.”
Otus looked startled, another mark of how far he’d come. “Why, so I
do,” he said. “It was hard. It was boring. If you had a cow that could
talk, it would tell you the same thing, I think. As far as the Menteshe
cared, I
was a cow. Oh, I could do more than a cow. I was smarter than a
cow. But they treated me like a beast. I
was a beast, near enough.”
“What made you decide to cross over the Stura, to come into Avornis?”
Lanius asked.
“I didn’t decide,” Otus said at once. He repeated that. “I
didn’t decide. I just did it. It came into my head that I had to,
and I went. I left my woman. I left my children. I went.” He stopped,
biting his lip.
Gently, Lanius asked, “Do you miss your wife?”
“Woman,” Otus said again. “We weren’t—like people are. I couldn’t be
with her now. She hasn’t. . . changed. It would be like . . . screwing a
cow, almost. But if the wizard cured her, then—oh, then!” His face lit up.
Plainly, the thought was crossing his mind for the first time. He was
becoming a man, beginning to think beyond himself as men could— and did,
though not often enough.
Lanius wondered if the female thrall would care for him once she was
fully herself. The king didn’t say anything about that. Even a man who had
been a thrall was entitled to his dreams.
Suddenly, Otus pointed at him. “One of these days, you go south of the
river. Avornis goes south of the river,”
“Maybe,” Lanius answered, embarrassed at being unable to say more.
“That’s more for King Grus to decide than it is for me. I know he wants to
go south of the Stura. I don’t know whether he thinks he can.”
Otus paid no attention to him. The cured thrall—Lanius had an ever
harder time thinking of him as
the possibly cured thrall—went on, “You
will go south of the river. You have the wonderful magic that set
me free. You can use that magic on the other thralls, on the rest of the
thralls. So many men, so many women, made into beasts.” He took Lanius’
hands in his. “Save them, Your Majesty! You can save them!”
Lanius didn’t know what to say to that. What he did finally say was,
“I’ll try.” Otus’ face lit up. That only made Lanius turn away so the
other man wouldn’t see him blush. His words might have sounded like a
promise—Otus had taken them for one—but he knew they were anything but. He
still lacked the power to make a promise like that. Only Grus had it, and
Grus was far off in the north.
Watery sunshine—the only kind the Chernagor country seemed to know—did
little to make the walls of Nishevatz seem anything but unlovely. The
sunshine did help King Grus spot the town’s defenders; it sparkled off
swords and spearheads and the tips of arrows and shone from helms and
mailshirts. The men who followed Prince Vasilko looked ready to fight, and
to fight hard.
Whether they were ready might prove a different question. They hadn’t
tried to keep the Avornans from shutting them up inside Nishevatz,
preferring to stand siege rather than to come forth and challenge their
foes. But how much in the way of supplies did they have? Grus dared hope
it wasn’t so much.
He also dared hope the other Chernagor city-states allied with
Nishevatz had no luck shipping grain into the town. So far, they hadn’t had
the nerve to try. If that wasn’t a compliment to Pterocles’ sorcery— and a
sign they had no counterspell for it—Grus didn’t know what would be. The
Chernagors presumed the wizard had come north with the Avornan army. That
also made them presume he would burn their ships if they tried to feed
their allies. Grus hoped they were right. (In fact, he hoped he didn’t
have to find out. If the other Chernagors didn’t try to feed Nishevatz, he
wouldn’t have to.)
“Do you aim to assault the town?” Hirundo asked after the siege lines
on land were as tight as the Avornans could make them.
“Not right away,” Grus answered. “They’ve made us pay every time we
did. Or do you think I’m wrong?”
“Not me, Your Majesty,” the general said. “I’d rather be at the top of
a wall pushing a scaling ladder over than at the bottom trying to get up
the ladder before it tips and smashes.”
“Yes. If it will.” Grus looked out to the farmland that had fed
Nishevatz. Now it would have to feed his men instead. Could it? He
wouldn’t be taking grain from it, not this early in the year—and not much
later, either, if it wasn’t cultivated in the meanwhile. Livestock was a
different story, though. Cows and pigs and sheep—if need be, horses and
donkeys—would feed Avornan soldiers well.
After a little thought, Grus nodded to Hirundo. “Fetch me one of
Vsevolod’s pals,” he said‘.
“I’ll get you one,” Hirundo said. “I take it you don’t want Vsevolod to
notice me doing this?”
“How right you are,” the king said fervently, and his general
chuckled.
Hirundo brought Grus a nobleman named Beloyuz. He was one of the
younger men who clung to Vsevolod’s cause, which meant his bushy beard was
gray rather than white. “What do you wish of me, Your Majesty?” he asked
in Avornan better than Prince Vsevolod’s.
“I would like you to go up to the walls of Nishevatz, Your Excellency,”
Grus replied. “I want you to tell the Chernagors in the city that they
won’t have to go through this siege if they cast out Vasilko and give the
throne back to Vsevolod.”
Beloyuz plucked at that bushy gray beard. “His Highness should do
this,” he said, his voice troubled.
“Maybe,” Grus said, “but he has enough enemies inside the walls, it
would not be safe to have him go up to them.” He didn’t mention that most
of the Chernagors inside Nishevatz had made it plain they preferred
Vasilko to Vsevolod.
Beloyuz’s eyes said he knew what Grus was thinking. They also said he
was grateful Grus had found a way not to come right out and say it. He
bowed stiffly to the king. “All right, Your Majesty. Let it be as you
say.”
With Avornan shieldmen accompanying him forward, Beloyuz approached the
walls the next morning. One of the shieldmen carried a flag of truce, but
they all remained very alert. They could not be sure the Chernagors would
honor that flag. Beloyuz began to speak in the throaty, guttural,
consonant-filled Chernagor language. Grus did not understand it, but he
had a good idea of what the noble would be saying.
The defenders did not need to hear much before they made up their
minds. They roared abuse at Beloyuz. Some of them shot arrows despite the
flag of truce, but Grus didn’t think they were trying to hit the nobleman
or his protectors. Beloyuz took no chances, but hastily retreated out of
range. Grus didn’t see how he could blame him for that.
Vsevolod came over to Grus in high dudgeon, demanding, “Why I not go to
wall?”
“I did not want the folk of Nishevatz to insult you, your Highness,”
Grus replied, which was perhaps a tenth part of the truth.
“I do not worry over insults,” Vsevolod said. “I can tell folk of
Nishevatz better than Beloyuz can.” That’s what I was afraid of, Grus thought. He reminded himself
he had to be tactful when speaking to Vsevolod. He needed to remind
himself, because the temptation to tell the unvarnished truth was very
strong. Choosing his words with care, then, he said, “The people of
Nishevatz had heard you before, Your Highness, and did not decide to cast
Vasilko out and bring you back into the city. I thought Beloyuz could give
them a different slant on your virtues.”
Such as they are, Your Highness. The only one Grus could think of
offhand was Vsevolod’s genuine and sincere opposition to the Banished
One.
With a sniff, Vsevolod drew himself up very straight. “I know my
virtues better than any of my followers.”
“Yes, Your Highness.” Grus hoped his resignation wasn’t too obvious—but
if it was, he intended to lose no sleep over it. He said, “No harm done.
Beloyuz didn’t persuade them, either, but he got away safe. Now we’ll go
on with what we were going to do anyhow. We’re going to take Nishevatz
away from Vasilko. That’s what we came here for, and that’s what we’ll
do.”
Prince Vsevolod didn’t want to let him off the hook. “You say this
before,” the Chernagor grumbled. “You say before, and then something else
happen, and then you change mind.”
“I am allowed to defend my own homeland,” Grus said mildly. “But, with
a better fleet on our east coast to guard against Chernagor pirates and
with the Menteshe caught in their own civil war, I don’t think we’ll have
to break things off this time.”
“Better not,” Vsevolod rumbled in ominous tones. “By gods, better
not.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Standing in his robe of crimson silk behind the magnificent altar of
the great cathedral, Arch-Hallow Anser cut a splendid ecclesiastical
figure. By his bearing and appearance, Lanius would readily have believed
him the holiest man in all of Avornis. And then King Grus’ bastard waved
and called, “Hang on for a minute, Your Majesty, and I’ll change into
hunting togs.”
“No hurry,” Lanius answered. He wished Anser hadn’t bounded away from
the altar with such obvious eagerness. The arch-hallow might seem like a
very holy man, but he didn’t like playing the part.
When he returned, he looked more like a poacher than a prelate. He wore
a disreputable hat, a leather jerkin over a linen tunic, and baggy wool
trousers tucked into suede boots that rose almost to his knees. He also
wore an enormous smile. He put on the crimson robe because his father told
him to. Hunting togs were different. Lanius, on the other hand, felt as
though he were in costume for a foolish show, although he looked much less
raffish than Anser.
“Let’s see what we can bag, eh?” he said. “Pity Prince Ortalis couldn’t
come with us today.”
“Why? Did you—?” Lanius broke off, shaking his head. “Never mind.
Forget I said that. Forget I even started to say that.”
“I’d probably better.” Anser made a face. He said, “You’ll have a horse
outside?”
“Oh, yes.” The king nodded. “I’m not going to walk to the woods— I’ll
tell you that.”
“Let’s go, then.”
A couple of hours later, Lanius and the arch-hallow dismounted under
the trees. Grooms took charge of the horses. The king, the arch-hallow,
and their beaters and guards walked into the woods. “Maybe you’ll hit
something this time, Your Majesty,” Anser said. “You never can tell.”
“No, you never can,” Lanius agreed in a hollow voice. Hitting a stag
with an arrow remained about the last thing he wanted to do.
Birds chirped overhead. Looking up, the king wondered what kind they
were. Being able to tell one bird from another when neither was a pigeon
or a sparrow would be interesting, but he hadn’t gotten good at it yet.
Learning to recognize them by their looks and by their songs necessarily
involved staying out in the woods until he could. That made it more
trouble than it was worth to him.
“Are you sure you want me to take the first shot, Your Majesty?” Anser
said. “It’s very kind, but you don’t need to give me the honor.”
“My pleasure,” Lanius said, which was absolutely true. He went on,
“Besides, you’re the one who’s
liable to hit something. If I do, it’ll just be by accident, and
we both know it.”
The beaters fanned out into the woods. Anser’s men vanished silently
among the trees. Lanius’ guards were noisy enough to make the
arch-hallow’s followers smile. But they did no more than smile. The two
groups had tangled after earlier hunts. Lanius’ guards came out on top in
tavern brawls.
Anser chose a spot on the edge of a clearing. Before long, a stag
bounded out into the open space. The arch-hallow let fly. He cursed more
or less good-naturedly when his arrow hissed past the deer’s head. The
stag sprang away.
“Well, you won’t do worse than I did, anyhow,” Anser said to
Lanius.
“No,” the king agreed. He’d never had the nerve to tell Anser he always
shot to miss. He enjoyed eating venison, but not enough to enjoy killing
animals himself so he could have it. He wouldn’t have wanted to be a
butcher, either. He recognized the inconsistency without worrying about
reconciling it.
Half an hour passed with no new game in the clearing. Lanius, who
didn’t mind, said nothing. Anser, who did, grumbled. Then another stag,
smaller and less splendid than the first, trotted out into the open space.
It stopped not fifteen yards in front of Lanius and Anser.
“Your shot, Your Majesty,” Anser whispered.
Awkwardly, with unpracticed ringers, Lanius fit an arrow to the
bowstring. Here was his dilemma, big as life, for he knew he could hit the
stag if he but shot straight. Wouldn’t it have an easier death if he shot
it than if it died under the ripping fangs of wolves or from some slow,
cruel disease?
He drew the bow, let fly ... and the arrow zoomed high, well over the
stag’s back. The animal fled.
“Oh . . . too bad, Your Majesty,” Anser said, doing his good-natured
best not to show how annoyed he was.
“I told you before—I’m hopeless,” Lanius answered. As a matter of fact,
he was rather proud of himself.
Out on the Northern Sea, a ship made for Nishevatz, its great spread of
sail shining white in the spring sun. On the shore, a tiny ship made from
a scrap of wood, a twig, and a rag bobbed in a bowl of seawater. The
spring sun shone on it, too. Hundreds of defenders on the walls of
Nishevatz anxiously eyed the real ship. King Grus and Pterocles paid more
attention to the toy in the bowl.
“Whenever you’re ready,” the king said.
“Now is as good a time as any,” Pterocles replied. He held his curved
bit of crystal above the toy ship. A brilliant spot of light appeared on
the toy. Grus wondered how the crystal did that. He had ever since he
first saw this sorcery. Now was
not the time, though, to ask for an explanation.
Pterocles began a spell—a chant mixed with passes that pointed from the
little ship in the bowl to the big one on the sea. On and on he went,
until smoke began to rise from the toy ship. More and more smoke came from
it, and then it burst into flame. Pterocles cried out commandingly and
pointed once more to the tall-masted ship on the Northern Sea.
Grus’ eye went that way, too. The ship still lay some distance
offshore, but Grus could spot the smoke rising from it. Before long, that
smoke turned to flickering red-yellow flame, too. “Well done!” he
exclaimed.
A loud groan rose from the walls of Nishevatz. The defenders must have
hoped the supply ship would be able to get through, even though they had
found no counterspell against Pterocles’ charm. If it had, the siege would
have become much more difficult. As things were, the Avornans held on to
the advantage.
A longtime sailor himself, Grus knew a certain amount of sympathy for
the Chernagors aboard that burning ship. Nothing afloat could be a worse
horror than fire. That had to be doubly true on the long seagoing voyages
the northern men, formidable traders and formidable pirates, often
undertook. And these flames, springing from magic as they did, would be
all the harder to fight.
The sailors soon gave up trying to fight them. Instead, they went over
the side and made for Nishevatz in boats while the ship burned. The boats
could not hold all the men. Maybe more clung to lines trailing behind
them. Grus hoped so. He wanted to stop the grain the ship carried, but had
nothing special against the sailors.
Another Chernagor ship had come up over the horizon while Pterocles was
casting his spell. When smoke and flame burst from the vessel nearing Nishevatz, the other ship hastily put about and sailed away from the
besieged city-state. Pointing to it, Pterocles asked, “Do you want me to
see if I can set that one afire, too, Your Majesty?”
“No,” Grus said. The wizard looked surprised. The king explained, “Let
that crew go. They’ll spread the word that our magic still works. That
will make the rest of the Chernagors not want to come to Nishevatz. I hope
it will, anyhow.”
“Ah.” Pterocles nodded. “Yes, now that you point it out to me, I can
see how that might be so. If the other ship had kept coming . . .”
Grus nodded, too. “That’s right. If it had kept coming, I would have
told you to do your best to sink it. This way, though, better not. Bad
news isn’t bad news unless someone’s left to bring it.”
“I’ll be ready in case the Chernagors try again,” the wizard said. “If
they come at night, I can use real fire to kindle my symbolic ships. The
spell isn’t as elegant that way, but it should still work. It did the last
time.”
“Working is all I worry about,” Grus said. “I know you sorcerers sweat
for elegance, but it doesn’t matter a bit to me.”
“It should,” Pterocles said. “The more elegant a spell is, the harder
the time wizards on the other side have of picking it to pieces.”
“Really? I didn’t know that,” Grus admitted. “Still, though, the
Chernagor wizards haven’t had any luck trying to cope with this spell.
Doesn’t that mean they won’t be able to no matter what?”
“I wish it did.” Pterocles’ smile was distinctly weary. “All it really
means, though, is that they haven’t figured out how yet. They may work out
a counterspell tomorrow. If they do”—he shrugged—“then that means I have
to come up with something new. And it means Nishevatz gets fed.”
He was frank. He was, perhaps, more frank than Grus would have liked.
After a moment’s thought, the king shook his head. Pterocles had told him
what he needed to know. “Thank you,” Grus said. “If they do find a
counterspell, I know you’ll do your best to get around it.”
You’d better do your best. Otherwise, we’ll have to try storming the
place, and I don’t know if we can. I don’t want to have to find out,
either.
That evening, Prince Vsevolod came up to him and asked him to do
exactly that. “Sooner we are in Nishevatz, sooner we punish Vasilko,”
Vsevolod boomed.
“Well, yes, Your Highness, if we
get into Nishevatz,” Grus said. “If the men on the walls throw us
back, I don’t know if we’ll be able to go on with the siege afterwards.
That would depend on how bad they hurt us.”
“You do not want to fight,” Vsevolod said in accusing tones.
“I want to win,” Grus said. “If I can win without throwing away a lot
of my men, I want that most of all.”
For all Prince Vsevolod followed that, the king might as well have
spoken in the language of the Menteshe. Vsevolod said, “You do not want to
fight,” again. Then he turned his back and stalked away without giving
Grus a chance to reply.
Grus was tempted—sorely tempted—to fling Vsevolod into chains for the
insult. With a mournful sigh, he decided he couldn’t. It was too likely to
cause trouble not only with the Chernagors who’d accompanied the prince to
Nishevatz but also with those inside the city. Grus let out a grunt also
redolent of regret. No matter what his good sense said, the temptation
lingered.
Grus would never have made a poet or a historian, but he did get the
essential facts where they belonged. Lanius had come to rely on that. So
far, everything seemed to be going as the other king hoped. Experience had
taught Lanius not to get too excited about such things. The end of the
campaign—if it didn’t have to break off in the middle—would be the place
to judge.
Other reports came up from the south—reports of the fighting between
Sanjar and Korkut. Lanius enjoyed every word of those. Each account of
another bloody battle between Prince Ulash’s unloving sons made his smile
wider. The more the Menteshe hurt one another, the harder the time they
would have hurting Avornis.
Before the spring was very old, other news came up from the south, news
that the Menteshe to the east and west of what had been Ulash’s realm were
sweeping in to seize what they could from it. In the same way, ravens and
vultures that would never harm a live bear snatched fragments from its
carcass once the beast was dead. Again, the more those Menteshe stole, the
happier Lanius got.
And what made him more cheerful yet was hearing no news at all from the
east. News from that direction, news from the shore of the Azanian Sea,
was unlikely to be good. If the Chernagors sent a fleet to harry the
coast, cries for help would fly back to the city of Avornis. So far...
none.
That left Lanius in an unusually good mood. Even if Sosia had had
nothing to do with causing it, she responded to it, and seemed to forgive
him for amusing himself with Zenaida. He gratefully accepted that.
But the king’s exuberance also made the serving women pay more
attention to him than they did when he was his usual sobersided self.
“You’re so—bouncy, Your Majesty!” exclaimed a plump but pretty maidservant
named Flammea.
No one in all of Lanius’ life up until that moment had ever called him
bouncy—or anything like bouncy. He managed a smile that, if not bouncy,
might at least be taken as friendly. Flammea smiled back. Lanius patted
her in an experimental way. If she’d ignored him and gone about her
business, he would have shrugged and forgotten about her. Instead, she
giggled. He took that as a promising sign.
One thing led to another—led quite quickly to another, as a matter of
fact. “Oh, Your Majesty!” Flammea gasped, an oddly formal salute at that
particular moment. Lanius was too busy to be much inclined to literary
criticism.
Afterwards, the maidservant looked smug. Did that mean she was going to
brag to all her friends? If she did, she would be sorry. Of course, if she
did, Sosia would find out, and then Lanius would be sorry, too.
“Don’t worry, Your Majesty,” she said as she got back into her clothes.
“I don’t blab.”
“Well, good.” Lanius hoped she meant it. If she didn’t, he—and Sosia,
too—would make her regret it.
Flammea slipped out of the little storeroom where they’d gone. A minute
or so later, so did Lanius. Another serving woman—a gray-haired, severely
plain serving woman—was coming up the hallway when he did. She gave him a
curious look, or possibly a dubious look. He nodded back, as imperturbably
as he could, and went on his way. Behind him, the serving woman opened the
door to the storeroom. Lanius smiled to himself. She wouldn’t learn
anything that way.
The king’s smile slipped when he wondered what would happen if Flammea
found herself pregnant. Grus had coped well enough, but Anser was born
long before Grus became king. Lanius laughed at himself. He might be
thinking about making a child with Flammea now, but he hadn’t worried
about it one bit before lying down with her. What man ever did?
Day followed day. Sosia didn’t throw any more crockery at his head.
From that, he concluded Flammea could indeed keep her mouth shut. She also
didn’t make a nuisance of herself when they saw each other. They did
contrive to go off by themselves again not too long after the first time.
Lanius enjoyed that as much as he had earlier on. If Flammea didn’t, she
pretended well.
“You
are in a good humor,” Sosia said that evening. “The Menteshe
should have civil wars more often. They agree with you.”
Lanius didn’t choke on his soup. If that didn’t prove something about
his powers of restraint, he couldn’t imagine what would. “The Menteshe
should have civil wars more often,” he agreed gravely. “Avornis would be
better off if they did.”
His wife was a queen, the wife of one king and the daughter of another
(even if Lanius thought Grus as illegitimate a king as a lot of Avornis
had once reckoned him). She said, “How do we
make the Menteshe fight among themselves?”
“If I knew the answer to that, I’d do it,” Lanius said. “The way things
are, I’m happy enough to try to take advantage of it when it happens.” He
was also happy Sosia thought his good cheer came from policy. Raising his
wine cup, he said, “Here’s to more civil war among the Menteshe.”
Sosia drank with him.
Beloyuz came up to Grus as the King of Avornis eyed the walls of
Nishevatz early one misty morning. “May I speak to you, Your Majesty?” the
Chernagor noble asked.
“If I say no now, you’re a man in trouble, for you just did,” Grus
answered. Beloyuz stared at him in puzzlement. Grus swallowed a sigh. None
of the nobles who followed Prince Vsevolod had much in the way of humor.
The king went on, “Say what you will.”
“I thank you, Your Majesty. Last night, a peasant came to me.” He
paused portentously. Grus nodded and waved for him to continue. The exiles
would have been of small use if they didn’t have connections with folk of
their own land. Beloyuz said, “An army is coming—so this man hears from a
man of Durdevatz.” A man of Durdevatz? Grus thought. Maybe the city-state really
was showing its gratitude. That would be a pleasant novelty. “From which
direction is it coming?” he asked.
The Chernagor noble pointed to the east. “So he said.”
Durdevatz lay to the east, so the Chernagors there would be in a
position to know what their neighbors were doing. Grus said, “All right.
Thank you. I’ll send scouts out that way.” He also intended to send scouts
to the west, in case the peasant had lied to Beloyuz or the man from
Durdevatz had lied to the peasant. He didn’t say a word about that, not
wanting to insult the noble by making him think he wasn’t believed. That
wasn’t how Grus thought about it, though. To him, it was more on the order
of not taking chances.
Out went the scouts, in both directions. Grus cursed the fog, being
unable to do anything else about it. His riders were liable to find the
Chernagor army by tripping over it instead of seeing it at some
distance.
He summoned Hirundo, told him what was likely to happen next, and
asked, “Can we keep the men of Nishevatz from sallying while we beat back
whatever comes at us from the east?”
If it is the east, he added silently to himself.
“We managed it a few years ago, if you’ll recall,” Hirundo answered.
“Well, they did sally, but we beat ‘em back. I think we can do it again.
We have a tighter, stronger line around Nishevatz now than we did then. We
can hold it with fewer men, and that will leave more to fight the
relieving force.”
“Good. Make ready to hold it with as few as you can, then,” Grus told
him. “Free up the others and have them ready to defend our position
against the Chernagors whenever they get the word.”
“Right you are.” The general nodded and started to turn away, but then
checked himself. “Ah . . . what happens if the Chernagors don’t come?”
“In that case, someone’s been lying to Beloyuz, or lying to someone
who’s gone to Beloyuz,” Grus said. “It’s possible. But we have to be ready
just the same.” Hirundo thought that over, nodded, saluted, and briskly
went off to do what needed doing.
Grus made sure his own horse was ready to mount. His place, of course,
was at the van. He’d finally become a tolerable rider—just about at the
time when his years were starting to make him something less than a
tolerable warrior. He would have appreciated the irony more if it weren’t
of the sort that might get him killed.
Little by little, the mist burned off. The sky went from watery gray to
watery blue. Grus peered this way and that, but spied no telltale cloud of
dust to east or west to warn of the Chernagor army. He wasn’t sure how
much that meant, or whether it meant anything. There had been enough mist
and drizzle lately to lay a lot of dust.
The day dragged on. Grus began to believe the Chernagor peasant had
come to Beloyuz for no better reason than to make him jump. But in that
case, how had he known of Durdevatz? About halfway through the afternoon,
two Avornan horsemen came galloping back to the camp—sure enough, from the
east. “Your Majesty! Your Majesty!” they called.
“I’m here.” Grus waved to let them see him, though they were already
making for the royal pavilion. “What news?”
“Chernagors, Your Majesty, a lot of Chernagors,” they answered in
ragged chorus. The man in the lead went on, “They’re about an hour away.
Most of them are foot soldiers—only a few riders.”
“Well, well. Isn’t that interesting?” The peasant—or the emissary from
Durdevatz who’d talked to the peasant (or posed as a peasant?)— had gotten
it straight after all. And the scouts had smelled out the attack before it
could turn into a nasty surprise. “Thank you, friends,” the king said. “I
think we’ll be able to deal with them.” He shouted for Hirundo.
“Yes, Your Majesty?” the general said. “So they really are coming after
all?” Grus nodded. Hirundo clucked mournfully. “Well, better late than
never. I expect we’ll make a good many of them later still.” His smile
held a certain sharp-toothed anticipation.
“Good. That’s what I hoped you’d tell me.” Grus pointed toward the
walls of Nishevatz. “And if Vasilko’s men make their sally?”
“They’re welcome to try,” Hirundo said. “I hope they do, in fact. Maybe we can take the city away from them when they have to retreat
back into it.”
He didn’t lack for confidence. Grus clapped him on the back. “Good
enough. Make sure we’re ready to receive whatever attack the Chernagors
can deliver. I’m not charging out against them. If they want me, they can
attack on ground of my choosing, by the gods.”
Hirundo nodded and hurried away. Grus knew he might have to move out
against the Chernagors whether he wanted to or not. If they started
ravaging the countryside so his army couldn’t feed itself, he’d have to
try to stop them. But if they’d had something like that in mind, wouldn’t
they have brought fewer foot soldiers and more horsemen?
He would have; he knew that.
He donned his gilded mailshirt and helm. Even in the cool, damp air of
the Chernagor country, the quilted padding he wore under the chainmail and
helmet made sweat spring out on his forehead. He swung up onto his horse.
Cavalrymen hurrying to take their places in line gave him a cheer. He
waved to them. The mailshirt clinked musically as he raised his arm.
The Avornans had already taken a good defensive position on a ridgeline
when the Chernagor army came over the last low rise to the east. The
Chernagors roared like bears when they saw Grus’ men drawn up before them.
They were big and blocky and hairy like bears, too. Most of them wore iron
helmets, but a good many had no coats of mail, only tunics and knee-length
kilts. They carried axes and swords— Grus didn’t see many bows, not in
proportion to their numbers.
His eyes kept flicking toward Nishevatz. If he could see the oncoming
Chernagors, so could the men besieged in the city. Were they hoping the
relieving army could do the job without them having to sally? Grus thought
they were wildly optimistic if they did. But that was their business, not
his.
Roaring still, the Chernagors from the east swarmed toward Grus’ men,
whose line held steady. But pipes skirled as the foes came near, and they
drew up out of bowshot. “Come fight us, heroes!” yelled men who spoke
Avornan.
“You come fight us!” Grus’ men shouted back. A few of them had picked
up some words of the Chernagor language. They used those words, which were
less than complimentary. The Chernagors cursed back.
They did more than curse, too. They surged forward toward the Avornan
line. Grus had all he could do not to cheer. He hadn’t thought they would
be so foolish. His men held the high ground, and they had lots of arrows.
They started shooting at the Chernagors as soon as the kilted attackers
came into range. In fact, a lot of them started shooting before the
Chernagors came into range, but that happened in every battle.
Of course, the Chernagors started shooting back at the same time. But
they had fewer archers to begin with, and they were moving into position,
while the Avornans were already where they wanted to be. Also, the
Chernagors were shooting uphill, the Avornans downhill, which gave Grus
men another advantage.
Onrushing Chernagors crumpled, some of them clutching at their wounds
and howling while others lay very still. Here and there, an Avornan fell,
too, but more Avornans wore armor than their foes. King Grus would not
have wanted to be one of those squat, blocky, pigtailed foot soldiers
trying to close with opponents who could hurt him while he couldn’t hit
back.
Grus hoped the withering blast of archery would stop the Chernagors
before they closed with his men, but no such luck. They had courage, no
doubt of that. And, no matter how fast the Avornans shot, they could not
put enough arrows in the air to knock down all the enemies between the
time when the Chernagors first came into range and when they got close
enough to strike with spears and axes.
Just as the Avornan foot soldiers were stronger in archery, the
Chernagors had the edge on them when the fighting came to close quarters.
The men of the north had their cavalry on the wings to protect their foot
from the Avornans on horseback. Grus didn’t think the Chernagors had
nearly enough in the way of cavalry to bring that off. He turned to
Hirundo and asked, “Now?”
“Yes, I think so,” his general answered. “Right about now.”
Hirundo and Grus both waved to the trumpeters, who blared out the
signal for the Avornan cavalry to advance. Grus urged his horse forward.
He drew his sword. All those young Chernagors would be hoping to bring
down the King of Avornis. They would get their chance.
The Chernagor horsemen spurred toward the Avornans. The Chernagors rode
big, strong, heavy beasts. The Avornans outmaneuvered them as readily as
the Menteshe outrode Avornans down in the south. The results were about
the same as they often were down in the south, too. Beset from several
directions at once, the Chernagor riders could not make the most of what
they had. Before long, it was either flee or stay and be cut to pieces.
They
were brave. Most of them held their ground as long as they could.
And most of them went down holding it.
“Keep moving forward!” Grus shouted to his men. “We need to help our
foot soldiers.”
The Avornan cavalry crashed into the flank of the Chernagor force. Grus
slashed at a Chernagor axman. His blade bit into the fellow’s shoulder.
The Chernagor shrieked. Grus never found out what happened to him. Battles
were like that. As often as not, you had no idea how badly you’d hurt your
foe. Sometimes, you didn’t know if you’d hurt him at all.
Grus cut again. A shield turned his stroke. A Chernagor chopped at him
with an ax. He got his own shield in front of the blow. He felt it all the
way up to his shoulder, and knew his left arm would have a bruise. He
counted himself lucky the ax hadn’t split the shield. He counted himself
even luckier that the Chernagor swinging the ax had time for only one
stroke before the battle swept the two of them apart.
He didn’t get to do too much more righting after that encounter. For
one thing, his own horsemen got between him and the Chernagors. They
hadn’t done things like that when his beard had less gray in it. Try as he
would, he had a tough time getting angry at them on account of it. And the
Chernagors, who had failed to break the Avornan line, who had taken a lot
of punishment from the Avornan archers before they ever reached it, and
who were taken in the flank by Avornan cavalry, did not fight hard for
long. They began streaming back toward the east as soon as they became
convinced they could not hope to win, which they soon did.
“After them!” Grus shouted. “Don’t let them get away thinking they
almost beat us. Make sure they know we’re stronger than they are.”
“We don’t want to go too far,” Hirundo said. “If Vasilko does sally
...”
“He hasn’t done it yet,” Grus said. “If he wouldn’t do it before he
knew we’d win, why should he try it now?” Hirundo had no answer for him.
The Avornan cavalry pushed the retreating Chernagors hard until sunset,
killing many and capturing more. Vasilko kept his men on the walls of
Nishevatz, and did not dare to venture beyond them. Seeing what he’d done
to the Chernagors from the east, Grus nodded in sober satisfaction and
said, “Now we can get on with our business here.”
Pouncer prowled through a small room. Carpenters and masons had assured
King Lanius the moncat couldn’t escape. Of course, those same carpenters
and masons hadn’t been able to figure out how Pouncer was escaping from
the chamber where he spent most of his time, so Lanius didn’t fully trust
them. Still, Pouncer had shown no signs of disappearing over the past
hour.
Lanius lay down on his back on the floor in the bare little room. Had
any of his subjects seen him, they would have been sure he’d lost his
mind. With the door closed and barred behind him, nobody could see him but
Pouncer. That suited him fine.
He thumped on his chest with the palm of his right hand, as though he
were playing himself like a drum. Pouncer stopped prowling, came over to
him, and climbed up onto his belly.
“What a good boy!” Lanius praised the moncat and scratched and stroked
it and gave it a piece of meat as a reward. Pouncer held the meat in one
clawed hand before devouring it. The moncat scrambled down from Lanius a
minute or two later.
The king got to his feet. He watched Pouncer for a little while, then
lay down again. He thumped his chest once more. Pouncer hurried over,
climbed up onto his belly, and waited expectantly. He gave the moncat
another tasty reward.
He wondered if he could have taught an ordinary cat the same trick. He
supposed so, though it might have taken longer. Moncats were clever
beasts, especially where their self-interest was concerned. Training moncats, he thought.
Is that a job for a King of Avornis? He’d trained them. He’d
painted their pictures. He’d learned to paw through the royal archives and
those under the great cathedral. Had he been an ordinary man instead of
King of Avornis, none of that would have kept him from starving to death.
As king, he had a lot of worries. Starving, fortunately, wasn’t one of
them.
He picked Pouncer up and carried the moncat back to the room where it
spent most of its time, the room with most of the other moncats. Pouncer
kept wiggling, maybe trying to get away, maybe hoping to see if he had any
more treats it might steal. When he hung on to it, it snapped at him.
“Don’t you bite me!” He tapped it on the nose with a forefinger. The
moncat subsided. It knew it wasn’t supposed to bite. It forgot every once
in a while, and needed to be reminded.
When he opened the door to the moncats’ chamber, Lanius had to be
careful none of them got out. They knew the open door meant they had a
chance, so they crowded toward it. He had to drive them back, flapping his
robe and making loud, horrible noises, before they would retreat.
On leaving the chamber, he made sure he barred the door from the
outside. No matter how clever the moncats were, that had defeated them. It
defeated human prisoners all over Avornis, and no doubt in Thervingia and
the Chernagor country and the lands the Menteshe ruled, too. He just had
to make sure he did it every single time.
The king was pleased with himself. Teaching any cat a trick felt like a
triumph. As tricks went, this one was pretty simple. Anyone who trained
dogs wouldn’t have thought much of it. Still, it made Lanius wonder what
else Pouncer could learn. A moncat that could manage more complicated
tricks might be entertaining.
Nodding to himself, Lanius walked on down the corridor. After he got
the idea, he shoved it down to the back of his mind. He didn’t forget
about it, but it wasn’t anything he had to worry about right away. Pouncer
wouldn’t learn a new trick tomorrow.
That night, the Banished One visited him in a dream. The exiled god’s
perfectly handsome, perfectly chilly visage stared at—stared through—
Lanius with what seemed to be even more contempt than usual. “So,” the
Banished One said, “you seek to trifle with me again.”
Lanius kept quiet. If the Banished One had only just now learned Otus
was truly cured, the king did not intend to tell him anything more.
Silence helped less than it would against a human opponent, for the
Banished One’s words cut like whips even in a dream. “You will fail,” he
said. “You will fail, and you will die.”
“All men die,” Lanius said with such courage as he could muster.
“All men die, yes, and all beasts, too,” the Banished One snarled.
“Some, though, sooner than others.”
At that, Lanius woke up, his heart pounding. He didn’t forget the
dream; he never forgot a dream where the Banished One came calling. He did
not forget, but he did not understand, either.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Somewhere in the world, there was probably something that seemed more
progress-free than a long siege. Grus supposed snail races might fill the
bill. Other than a field of mollusks languidly gliding along eyestalk to
eyestalk, nothing even came close. So the king felt outside of Nishevatz,
anyhow.
Day followed day. Vasilko’s men on the walls hurled insults at the
Avornans who surrounded the city. When the Avornans came too close to the
wall, the Chernagors would shoot at them. Every once in a while, somebody
got hurt. Despite the occasional casualties, though, it hardly seemed like
war.
When Grus grumbled about that, Hirundo laughed at him. “It could be a
lot worse,” the general said. “They could be sallying every day, trying to
break out. They could have ships trying to bring in more supplies. We
could have a pestilence start. They could have hit us from east and west
at the same time, and the army that did hit us from the east could have
shown more in the way of staying power. Are those the sorts of things
you’d rather see, Your Majesty?”
Laughing, Grus shook his head. “Now that you mention it, no. All at
once, I’m happy enough to be bored.”
“Good for you,” Hirundo said. “They’re not bored inside Nishevatz—I
promise you that. They’ve got plenty to think about. How to break our ring
around the place tops their list, if I’m any judge.”
Whatever Vasilko and his henchmen were thinking, they gave no sign of
it. Spring waned. Summer came on. Here in the north, summer days were
noticeably longer than at the city of Avornis—a good deal longer than they
were down by the Stura, where Grus had spent so much time before becoming
king. The weather grew mild, sometimes even fairly warm. For the Chernagor
country, it doubtless counted as a savage heat wave.
Couriers from the capital brought news of the civil war among the
Menteshe. Grus avidly read those. The more the nomads squabbled, the
happier he was. King Lanius wrote that he’d taught a moncat to do tricks.
That amused Grus, anyhow, and livened up what would have been a dull day.
Besides, if Lanius stayed busy with his moncats, he probably wasn’t
planning anything too nefarious.
One day, a letter came up to Nishevatz that hadn’t started or gone
through the city of Avornis. That in itself was interesting enough to make
Grus open it right away. When he’d read it, he smiled to himself and then
put it aside.
One of the advantages of being King of Avornis was that nobody presumed
to ask him what he was smiling about. He didn’t go around bragging,
either, even if part of him felt like it. But if he advertised having a
new bastard boy, word would get to Estrilda sooner than if he kept quiet.
He wanted to put off that evil day as long as possible—forever, if he
could.
Alauda had named the baby Nivalis. It wasn’t a name Grus would have
chosen, but he’d been up here in the north, and hadn’t had any say in it.
“Nivalis.” He tasted the sound of it. It wasn’t so bad, not after he
thought about it. From what the letter said, both the baby and Alauda were
doing well. That mattered more than the name. New mothers and infants died
too easily.
Pterocles answered the king’s smiles with smiles of his own. Did the
wizard use his sorcerous powers to divine why Grus was so pleased with
himself? Or did he just remember that Alauda had been pregnant and would
be having her baby about now? Grus didn’t ask him. How much difference did
it make, one way or the other?
Hirundo kept his usually smiling face serious. He had to remember
Alauda, too. But he, unlike Pterocles, had affairs of his own wherever he
found willing women. He understood discretion. Whatever questions or
congratulations he might have had, he kept them to himself.
Grateful for that, Grus asked, “How hungry do you think they’re getting
in there?”
“They’re not at the end of their tether,” Hirundo replied at once. “If
they were, they’d be slipping down over the wall just to get fed. But they
can’t be in the best of shape, either.”
That marched well with what Grus thought himself. He’d hoped Hirundo
would tell him something more optimistic. But Hirundo, however discreet,
would not say something was so when he thought otherwise. That would get
men who might otherwise live killed, and he was too good a soldier to do
any such thing.
“Fair enough,” Grus said, eyeing the battlements of Nishevatz.
Chernagors on the walls looked out at the army hemming them in. The king
pointed their way. “They aren’t going anywhere. We’ve made sure of
that.”
The pyre that rose on the burning grounds was relatively modest. The
white-bearded priest lying atop it wore only a green robe; he had never
advanced to the yellow of the upper clergy. And yet, not only had the
Arch-Hallow of Avornis come to say farewell to him, so had King
Lanius.
After the usual prayers, the priest in charge of the service touched a
torch to the oil-soaked wood. It caught at once and burned strongly,
swallowing Ixoreus’ mortal remains. “May his spirit rise with the smoke to
the heavens,” the priest intoned.
“May it be so,” the mourners murmured. The small crowd began to break
up. Most of the people there were priests who’d served with Ixoreus in the
great cathedral. By all appearances, he’d had few real friends.
That saddened Lanius, but did not surprise him. Arch-Hallow Anser came
up to him and clasped his hand, saying, “It was good of you to come.”
“A lot of knowledge died with him.” Lanius wondered if Anser had any
idea how much. The king doubted it. Anser knew more—and cared more—about
the hunt than about matters ecclesiastical. To his credit, he’d never
pretended otherwise. Lanius went on, “You will never find another
archivist who comes close to matching him.”
To his surprise, Anser smiled, shook his head, and replied, “Oh, I
don’t know about that, Your Majesty.”
Lanius had some notion of the abilities of Ixoreus’ assistants, and a
low opinion of them. “Who?” he demanded.
“Why, you, of course,” the arch-hallow said.
“Me?” The king blinked. “You do me too much credit, I think. I know the
royal archives tolerably well, but Ixoreus was always my guide to the ones
under the cathedral.”
And now one person fewer knows the name Milvago. That may be just as
well.
“You could do the job,” Anser said. “If you had no other, I mean.”
Not so long before, Lanius had wondered how he might have earned his
bread if he weren’t king. Now he bowed. “If I had no other, maybe I
could.” Anser meant well. Anser never meant less than well. But the job
Lanius had, that of King of Avornis, was less, much less, than it might
have been, which was the fault of one man and one man only—Anser’s father,
King Grus. Lanius brooded on that less than he had in years gone by, but
he knew it was true. Still, he made himself smile and said, “As I told you
before, you flatter me.”
“I don’t think so,” Anser said. “It’s in your blood, the way it was in
Ixoreus‘, and you can’t tell me any different. These other fellows,
they’ll do it, but they’ll do it because someone tells them to. If it fell
to you, you’d do it
right.”
Given a choice, Lanius might well have preferred being an archivist to
wearing the crown. His blood did not give him that choice. He nodded to
the arch-hallow. “You may be right. But you at least had one good
archivist. At the palace, I’ve spent years sifting through chaos.”
“Before long, you may have to do that with our records, too,” Anser
said.
“I hope not,” Lanius said. And yet, if the ancient document that named
Milvago and told what he was were to be lost for a few more generations,
would he be unhappy? He knew perfectly well he would be anything but.
His guardsmen fell in around him as he made his way back to the royal
palace. The priests who’d come to Ixoreus’ cremation stared at him as he
left. They had to be wondering why he’d chosen to pay his personal
respects to an old man good for nothing but shuffling through parchments.
He always found what he was looking for? So what?
Lanius sighed and shook his head. Who but another archivist could
possibly appreciate what an archivist did? Not even Anser really
understood it. He’d come because he liked Ixoreus. But then, he liked
everybody, just as much as everybody liked him, so how much did that
prove?
On the way back to the palace, one of the guardsmen asked, “Your
Majesty, what’s the point of even keeping old parchments, let alone going
through them?”
By the way he said it, he plainly expected the king to have no good
answer for him. Several of the other guards craned their necks toward
Lanius to hear what he would say. The last thing he wanted was to seem a
fool in front of them. He thought for several paces before asking a
question of his own. “Do you read and write, Carbo?”
“Me, Your Majesty?” Carbo laughed. “Not likely!”
“All right. Have you ever gotten into an argument with the paymaster
about what he gives you every fortnight?” Lanius asked. To his relief,
Carbo nodded at that. Lanius said, “You know how he settled things, then.
He went through the parchments that said how much pay you get and when you
got it last. That’s what the archives are—they’re like the pay records for
the whole kingdom, as far back as anybody can remember. No matter what
kind of question you ask about how things were a long time ago, the
answer’s in there—if the mice haven’t chewed up the parchment where it was
hiding.”
“But why would you care about what happened before anybody who’s alive
now was born?” Carbo asked.
“So in case the kingdom gets into a kind of trouble it’s seen before,
I’ll know how it fixed things a long time ago,” Lanius answered. Carbo
could see that that made sense. But no matter how much sense it made, it
was only part of the truth. The main reasons Lanius liked to go exploring
in the archives were that he was interested in the past for its own sake
and that people hardly ever bothered him while he was poking through old
parchments.
And Carbo didn’t bother him the rest of the way back to the palace.
Another triumph for the archives, he thought.
Three Chernagors stood nervously before King Grus. They’d escaped from
Nishevatz with a rope they’d let down from the wall. All three were
hollow-cheeked and scrawny. Through Beloyuz, Grus asked them, “How bad off
for food is Nishevatz?”
They all tried to talk at once. Beloyuz pointed to the man in the
middle, the tallest of the three. He spewed forth a mouthful of gutturals.
“He says the city is hungry,” Beloyuz told Grus. “He says to look at him,
to look at these fellows with him. He says they were strapping men when
this siege started, They might as well be ghosts now, he says.”
They were, to Grus’ eye, rather substantial ghosts even now. The king
asked, “How hard will the Chernagors fight if we attack them?”
Again, all three talked at once. This time, they began to argue.
Beloyuz said, “One of them says Vasilko’s men will strike a blow or two
for appearance’s sake and then give up. The others say they will fight
hard.”
“I heard Prince Vsevolods name in there,” Grus said. “What did they say
about him?”
Vsevolods name in Grus’ mouth was plenty to start the Chernagors
talking. Whatever they said, it sounded impassioned. Beloyuz let them go
on for a while before observing, “They do not think well of His Highness,
Your Majesty.”
“I would have guessed that,” Grus said—an understatement, if anything.
“But what do they think of fighting on the same side as the Banished
One?”
When Beloyuz translated that into the Chernagor tongue, the three
escapees began arguing again. Without a word of the language, Grus had no
trouble figuring that out. One of them said something that touched a
nerve, too, for Beloyuz shouted angrily at him. He shouted back. Before
long, all four Chernagors were yelling at the top of their lungs.
“What do they say?” Grus asked. Beloyuz paid him no attention. “What do
they say?” he asked again. Still no response.
“What do they say?” he roared in a voice that might have carried
across a battlefield.
For a heartbeat, he didn’t think even that would remind Beloyuz he was
there. Then, reluctantly, the noble broke away from the other Chernagors.
“They say vile things, insulting things, Your Majesty,” he said, his voice
full of indignation. “One of them, the vile dog, says better the Banished
One than Vsevolod. You ought to burn a man who says things like that.”
“No, the Banished One burns men who don’t agree with him, burns them or
makes them into thralls,” Grus said. “They will be free of a bad master
once he is gone from Nishevatz. Tell them that, Beloyuz.”
The nobleman spoke. The Chernagors who’d escaped from the besieged city
spoke, too. Beloyuz scowled. Reluctantly, he turned back to the king and
returned to Avornan. “They say Nishevatz will be free of one bad master,
but it will have another one if Vsevolod takes it.”
Grus muttered to himself. He’d known the people of Nishevatz disliked
Prince Vsevolod. He could hardly have helped knowing it. But somehow he
had managed to avoid realizing how much they despised Vsevolod. If they
thought him no different from the Banished One . . . If they thought that,
no wonder they put up with Vasilko even if he followed the exiled god.
“Send them away,” Grus told Beloyuz, pointing to the men who had come
out of Nishevatz. “Feed them. Keep them under guard. Then come back to
me.”
“Just as you say, Your Majesty, so shall it be.” Beloyuz went off with
the other three Chernagors. When he returned a few minutes later,
curiosity filled his features. “What do you want, Your Majesty?”
“How would you like to be Prince of Nishevatz once we take the place?”
Grus came straight out with what he had in mind.
Beloyuz stared. “You ask me to ... to betray my prince?”
“No,” Grus said.
Yes, he thought. Aloud, he went on, “How can Vsevolod be Prince
of Nishevatz if everybody in the place hates him? If we have to kill
everyone in the city to set him back on the throne, what kind of
city-state will he rule? And if we have to kill everyone in Nishevatz to
set him back on the throne, and decide to do it, how are we different from
the Banished One? Whose will do we really work?”
“I think you use this for an excuse to do what you want to do anyhow
because you do not like Prince Vsevolod,” Beloyuz said. “You ask me to
betray my prince, when I went into exile for him.”
That set Grus to muttering again. Beloyuz was right—he didn’t like
Vsevolod. By all appearances, next to nobody could stand Vsevolod. The
three Chernagors who’d gotten out of Nishevatz had had no use for him.
From what they’d said, the rest of the people on the walls and behind them
felt the same way. It was just Grus’ luck to want to replace the
unpleasant exiled Prince of Nishevatz with one of the few men who actually
thought well of him.
With a sigh, the king said, “Well, Your Excellency, I won’t ask you to
do anything that goes against your conscience. Still, you ought to think
about what’s best for you and what’s best for Nishevatz.”
“What is best for Nishevatz is Prince Vsevolod. What is best for me is
Prince Vsevolod.” Beloyuz bowed and strode off.
What Grus muttered this time made two or three of his guardsmen gape.
He’d said worse while a river-galley captain, but not since taking the
crown. He knew what would happen next, too. Beloyuz would tell Vsevolod
about the usurpation he’d tried to arrange, and Vsevolod would throw a
fit. Grus’ head started to ache just thinking about that.
But Vsevolod didn’t come to bother him. Day followed day, and the King
of Avornis didn’t meet the Prince of Nishevatz. He didn’t ask where
Vsevolod was or what he was doing, either. He didn’t care.
Then one of the Avornans who guarded Vsevolod and his followers came to
Grus and said, “Your Majesty, I think you’d better go see the prince.”
“Why?” Even to himself, Grus sounded like a boy told to take a bath he
didn’t want.
“He’s . . . not well,” the guard answered.
“Oh.” Grus made a sour face. “All right, in that case.”
When he went to Vsevolod’s tent, he went with two squads of his own
guardsmen. He assumed Beloyuz would have told the other Chernagors who’d
left Nishevatz with Vsevolod about his proposal. He also assumed they
wouldn’t like the idea, and wouldn’t like him on account of it.
Beloyuz saw him coming, and walked up to greet him with three or four
other refugee Chernagor noblemen. “So you have heard, then,” Beloyuz
said.
“Yes, Your Excellency, I’ve heard,” Grus said, though he hadn’t heard
very much. He asked, “How is His Highness this morning?” With a little
luck, that would tell him more than he already knew.
But Beloyuz only shrugged and answered, “About the same. He has been
about the same since it happened.” Grus nodded as though he understood
what the Chernagor meant. Beloyuz went on, “I suppose you want to see
him.”
“That is why I’m here,
yes.” The king nodded.
Beloyuz didn’t argue. He and the other exiles simply stood aside.
Surrounded by his bodyguards, Grus went on to Vsevolod’s tent. He felt
like scratching his head. The Chernagors seemed more resigned than
furious. Were they finally fed up with Vsevolod, too? If they were, why
had Beloyuz refused to supplant the prince? Things didn’t add up.
And then, as soon as Grus got a glimpse of Vsevolod, they did. The
Prince of Nishevatz lay on a cot much like the one in which Grus slept. He
recognized Grus. The king could see it in his eyes—or rather, in his right
eye. His left eye was half closed. The whole left side of his face was
slack. The left corner of his mouth hung down in an altogether involuntary
frown. He raised his right hand to wag a finger at Grus. The left side of
his body seemed not to be under the control of his will anymore.
He tried to speak. Only gibberish came out of his mouth. Grus couldn’t
even tell if it was meant for the Chernagor language or Avornan. One of
his guardsmen muttered, “Gods spare me from such a fate.”
The guard was young and vigorous. Grus remained vigorous, but he was no
longer young. Every now and then, his body reminded him it wouldn’t last
forever. But this... He shivered. This was like looking at living death.
He completely agreed with the guard. Next to this, simply falling over
dead was a mercy. “Gods spare me indeed,” he said, and left the tent in a
hurry.
“You see,” Beloyuz said when Grus came out into the sunshine again.
“I see,” Grus said heavily. “When did it happen?”
“After I told him what you wanted from me,” Beloyuz replied. “He was
angry, as you would guess. He was furious, in fact. But then, in the
middle of his cursing, he said his head ached fit to burst. And he fell
down, and he has been like—that—ever since.”
“Has a healer seen him?” Grus asked.
“Yes.” Beloyuz nodded. “He said he could do nothing. He also said the
prince was not a young man, and it could have happened at any time. It
could have.”
He did not sound as though he believed it. But he also did not come
right out and blame Grus to his face, as he easily might have. The king
was grateful for his forbearance; he hadn’t expected even that much. “I
will send for my chief wizard,” Grus said. “I don’t know how much help he
can give, but we ought to find out, eh?”
“Thank you.” Now Beloyuz was the one who sounded surprised. “If I had
thought you would do this, I would have come to you sooner. I thought you
would say, ‘Let him suffer. Let him die.’”
“That’s what the Banished One does,” Grus replied. “By the gods in the
heavens, Beloyuz, I would not wish this on Vsevolod. I would not wish this
on anyone. It’s the people of Nishevatz who don’t want him as their
prince, but that’s a different story. You should not be angry with me for
trying to get around it.”
The Chernagor noble didn’t answer. Grus sent one of his guardsmen to
find Pterocles. The wizard came to Prince Vsevolod’s tent a few minutes
later. Grus told him what had happened to the prince. “You want me to cure
him?” Pterocles asked. “I don’t know if I can do anything like that.”
“Do your best, whatever it turns out to be,” Grus said. “Whatever it
is, I don’t think you’ll hurt Vsevolod.” He turned to Beloyuz. “If you
want to say anything different, go ahead.”
“No, not I,” Beloyuz answered. “I say, thank you. I say, gods be with
you.”
Pterocles ducked his way into Vsevolod’s tent. Grus heard the stricken
prince yammering wordlessly. He also heard Pterocles begin a soft,
low-voiced incantation. Vsevolod fell silent. After a little while, the
rhythm of Pterocles’ spell changed. When the wizard came out of the tent,
his face was grave.
“What did you do?” Grus asked.
“Not as much as I would have liked,” Pterocles answered. “Something is
... broken inside his head. I don’t know how to put it any better than
that. I can’t fix it any more than the healer could. The spell I used will
make him more comfortable, but that’s all. I’m sorry.”
“Even this is better than nothing,” Beloyuz said, and bowed to the
wizard. “Thank you.”
“I didn’t do enough to make it worth your while to thank me,” Pterocles
said. “I only wish I could have.” He bowed, too, and walked away kicking
at the dirt.
Grus and Beloyuz looked at each other. After a moment, the king said,
“You know what I’m going to ask, don’t you?”
“Yes.” Beloyuz looked even less happy than Pterocles had. “It makes me
feel like a carrion crow, like a vulture.”
“I understand that,” Grus said. “But can you tell me it isn’t needful?
Nishevatz will need a prince who isn’t Vasilko. Who better than you?”
“Vsevolod,” the nobleman said at once.
“I told you no to that before,” Grus answered. “You thought I was wrong
then. You can’t very well say I’m wrong now.”
Beloyuz’s face twisted. “I need to think this over,” he said.
“Don’t take too long,” Grus warned.
Three days later, Vsevolod died. After that, Beloyuz had no excuses
left.
Most of the time, Lanius was content being who and what he was. He had
seen a battlefield when he was still a boy, and he never wanted to see
another one. He never wanted to hear another one, either, nor to smell
one. Every so often, that particular stink showed up in his
nightmares.
But he sometimes had moments when he wished he could be, if not in the
action, then closer to it than he was while staying in the royal palace
and the city of Avornis. Those moments came most often when the latest
dispatch from Grus in the Chernagor country or from the officers in the
south reached the capital.
He didn’t want to go into the field. But he wanted to know more about
what went on there than he could find out from reading reports in the
comfortable shelter of the palace. He would sometimes question the
couriers who brought them. Some of the men who came down from the north
had actually seen the things Grus was talking about. They helped make them
seem real for Lanius.
The king had less luck with the dispatch riders who brought word of the
civil war among the Menteshe up from the south. One of them said, “I’m
sorry, Your Majesty, but we have to piece this together ourselves. We
don’t have our own people down by Yozgat watching the battles. We wait
until word comes up to our side of the river, and then we try to figure
out who’s lying and who isn’t.”
“How do you go about doing that?” Lanius asked.
“Carefully,” the courier answered, which made the king laugh. The other
man went on, “I wasn’t joking, Your Majesty. All sorts of rumors bubble up
about what’s going on between Sanjar and Korkut. We try to pop the bubbles
and see which ones leave nothing but a bad smell behind.”
“Shame Avornis can’t do more,” Lanius remarked.
Very seriously, the courier shook his head. “We’re ordered
not to favor either one of the Menteshe princes. If we did, the
fellow we showed we didn’t like would use that to rally the rest of the
nomads to his side. We don’t want to give either one of them that edge.
Let them smash away at each other for as long as they please.”
That gray wisdom sounded like Grus. “All right,” Lanius said. “Just my
impatience talking, I suppose.”
His brother-in-law had a different sort of impatience driving him. “I
can’t wait for Limosa to have her baby,” Ortalis said one hot summer
afternoon.
“Ah?” Lanius said. If Ortalis started going on about how much he wanted
a son, Lanius intended to find an excuse to disappear. He didn’t want to
hear about a baby that might prove a threat to his own son’s position.
But that wasn’t what was on his brother-in-law’s mind. Ortalis nodded
like a hungry wolf thinking about meat. “That’s right,” he said. “There
are things you can’t do when a woman’s carrying a child.”
“Ah?” Lanius said again. “Such as what?” Certain postures had been
awkward after Sosia’s belly bulged, but they’d gone on making love until
not long before she bore Crex and Pitta.
“Things,” Ortalis repeated, and declined to elaborate.
This time, Lanius didn’t say, “Ah.” He said, “Oh.” He recalled the
kinds of things his brother-in-law enjoyed. Cristata’s scarred back, and
the way the ruined skin had felt under his fingers, leaped vividly to
mind. What
would happen if you did that sort of thing with—to—a pregnant
woman? After a moment’s thought, he shook his head. Maybe it was squeamish
of him, but he didn’t really want to know.
What he was thinking must have shown on his face. Prince Ortalis turned
red. “Don’t get all high and mighty with me,” he said. “I’m not the only
one who does things like that.”
“I didn’t say you were.” Lanius didn’t want another quarrel with
Ortalis; they’d had too many already. But he didn’t want Grus’ legitimate
son to think he liked Ortalis’ ideas of fun, either. Picking his words
with care, he said, “There’s enough pain in the world as is. I don’t much
see the point of adding more on purpose.” He nearly added,
It seems like something the Banished One would do. At the last
instant, he swallowed that. If Ortalis didn’t have ideas about the
Banished One, why give them to him?
All Ortalis did now was make an exasperated noise. “You don’t
understand,” he said.
“You’re right.” Lanius nodded emphatic agreement. “I don’t.”
He hadn’t asked Ortalis to explain. He hadn’t wanted Ortalis to
explain. But explain his brother-in-law did. “Curse it,” Ortalis said
angrily, “it’s not adding pain the way a Menteshe torturer would. It’s
different.”
“How?” Now Lanius did ask. The word escaped him before he could call it
back.
“How? I’ll tell you how. Because while it’s going on, both people are
enjoying it, that’s how.” Ortalis sent Lanius a defiant stare.
The king remembered Cristata again. Not naming her, he said, “That
isn’t what. . . one of the other people told me.”
Ortalis knew who he was talking about without a name. The prince
laughed harshly. “That may be what she said afterwards. It isn’t what she
said while it was going on. By the gods, it’s not. You should have heard
her. ‘Oh, Ortalis!’”
He was an excellent, even an alarming, mimic. And he believed what he
was saying. The unmistakable anger in his voice convinced Lanius of that.
Was he right? Lanius doubted it. Right or not, though, he was sincere.
How could he be so wrong about that, sincere or not? Well, even
Cristata admitted she’d enjoyed some of it at first. And then, when it had
gone too far for her, maybe Ortalis had taken real fear for the artificial
fear that was part of the game. Maybe. Lanius could hope that was how it
had been. But he wanted to hunt girls for sport. How can I forget that? What
would he have done once he caught them? Part of him, again, didn’t
want to know. Part feared he already knew.
When Lanius didn’t say anything, Ortalis got angrier. “Curse it, I’m
telling you the truth,” he said.
“All right. I believe you.” Lanius didn’t, but he couldn’t help
believing Ortalis believed what he said. And he believed—no, he
knew—arguing with Ortalis was more trouble than it was worth.
Limosa’s labor began a few days later. Netta, the briskly competent
midwife who’d attended Sosia, went in with Ortalis’ wife. Lanius didn’t
linger outside Limosas bedchamber, as he had outside the birthing chamber
where Sosia had borne their son and daughter. That was Ortalis’ job now.
The king did get news from women who attended the midwife. From what they
said, everything was going the way it should. Lanius hoped so. No matter
what he thought of Petrosus, he didn’t dislike the exiled treasury
minister’s daughter.
The sun had just set when the high, thin, furious wail of a newborn
baby burst from the bedchamber. Lanius waited expectantly. Netta came out
of the room and spoke to Ortalis in a voice that could be heard all over
the palace. “Congratulations, Your Highness,” she said. “You have a fine,
healthy new daughter, and the lady your wife is doing well.”
“A daughter?” Ortalis didn’t bother keeping his voice down, either, or
keeping the disappointment out of it. But then he managed a laugh of
sorts. “Well, we’ll just have to try again, that’s all.”
“Not for six weeks,” the midwife said firmly. “You can do her a real
injury if you go to her too soon. I’m not joking about this, Your
Highness. Stay out of her bed until then.”
How long had it been since anyone but Grus had spoken to Ortalis like
that? Too long, probably. The prince took it from Netta, saying nothing
more than, “All right, I’ll do that.”
“Princess Limosa said you were going to name a girl Capella. Is that
right?” Netta asked.
“Yes. It’s her mother’s name,” Ortalis answered.
“Its a good name,” the midwife said. “I have a cousin named Capella.
She’s a lovely woman, and I’m sure your little princess will be, too.”
What Ortalis said in response to that, Lanius didn’t hear. He went into
his bedchamber and told Sosia, “It’s a girl!”
“Yes, I heard,” the queen said. “I don’t think there’s anyone for half
a mile around who didn’t hear.”
“Well, yes,” Lanius said. “It’s still good news,”
“So it is,” Sosia said. “I do worry about the succession.”
Lanius worried about it, too. What
would happen when Grus died? He wasn’t a young man anymore. Lanius
himself thought he ought to be sole king after that, but how likely was
Ortalis to agree with him? Not very, he feared. At the moment, he had a
son and Ortalis didn’t. Ortalis wasn’t happy about that, either; he’d just
proved as much. If he had one, or more than one, too . . .
“It could be complicated,” Lanius said.
“It’s already complicated,” Sosia replied. “It could be a
disaster.”
He started to smile and laugh and to say it couldn’t be as bad as all
that. He started to, yes, but he didn’t. For months now, he’d been reading
all the news about the civil war between Prince Sanjar and Prince Korkut.
Would some Menteshe prince one day read letters about the civil war raging
among the contenders and pretenders to the throne of Avornis? It could
happen, and he knew it.
Sosia read his face. “You see,” she said. “We dodged an arrow this
rime. We may not be so lucky a year from now, or two, or three.”
“You’re not wrong,” Lanius said with a sigh. “By Olor’s beard, I wish
you were. Oh!” He stopped, then went on, “And there’s something else you
weren’t wrong about.”
“What’s that?” Sosia asked.
“Ortalis and Limosa.” Lanius told her what Ortalis had said, and what
he thought it meant, finishing, “The other thing is, Limosa’s head over
heels in love with your brother in spite of—maybe even because
of—this.”
“You mean you think she
does like the horrible things he does?” Sosia made a face.
“That’s disgusting!” But her pause was thoughtful. “Of course, you’re
right—somebody may like what somebody else thinks is disgusting.” Lanius
nodded at that. A moment later, he wished he hadn’t, for her look said she
had his sporting with the serving girls in mind. He turned away so he
could pretend he didn’t know what she was thinking. She laughed. She knew
he knew, all right.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
Avornan soldiers scoured the countryside for timber and oil to make
Prince Vsevolod the most magnificent funeral pyre anyone had ever seen.
They built the pyre just out of bowshot of Nishevatz, and laid the body of
the white-bearded Prince of Nishevatz atop it.
Beloyuz advanced toward the grim gray walls of the city-state behind a
flag of truce. He shouted in his own language. Prince Vasilko’s men stared
down at him from the battlements. They said not a word until he finished,
and let him go back to the Avornan lines without shooting at him in spite
of that flag of truce.
To King Grus, that was progress of a sort. Beloyuz seemed to think the
same. “Well, Your Majesty, I told them His Highness has passed from among
men,” the Chernagor noble said. “I told them I would rule Nishevatz in his
place once Vasilko was driven from the city. I told them—and they heard
me! They did not hate me!”
“Good.” Grus meant it. A small fire burned not far from the pyre.
“Light a torch, then. Send Vsevolod’s spirit up toward the heavens with
the smoke, and then we’ll get on with business here on earth.”
“Yes.” Beloyuz took a torch and thrust it into the flames. The
tallow-soaked head caught at once. The Chernagor raised the torch
high—once, twice, three times. Grus almost asked him what he was doing,
but held back. It had to be some local custom Avornis didn’t share. Then
Beloyuz touched the torch to one corner of the pyre.
The blast of flame that followed sent him and Grus staggering back.
“Ahh!” said the watching Avornan soldiers, who, like their king, had
seen a great many pyres in their day and eyed them with the appreciation
of so many connoisseurs. When Grus watched an old man’s body go up in
smoke, he always thought back to the day when he’d had to burn his father.
Crex, who’d come off a farm in the south to the city of Avornis and found
a position as a royal guardsman, was gone forever. But in the blood of
that Crex’s great-grandson, another Crex, also flowed the blood of the
ancient royal dynasty of Avornis. And that younger Crex would likely wear
the crown himself one day.
Grus wondered what his father would have to say about that. Some bad
joke or other, probably; the old man had no more been able to do without
them than he’d been able to do without bread. He’d died before Grus won
the crown, died quickly and quietly and peacefully. Days went by now when
Grus hardly thought of him. And yet, every so often, just how much he
missed him stabbed like a sword.
He blinked rapidly and turned away from Vsevolod’s pyre. The heat and
smoke and fire were enough to account for his streaming
eyes. He wiped them on the sleeve of his tunic and looked toward
Nishevatz. The burly, bearded warriors on the wall were watching
Vsevolod’s departure from this world as intently as the soldiers Grus
commanded. He saw several of them pointing at the pyre, and wondered what
they would be saying.
“Tell me,” he said to Beloyuz, “do your people have the custom of
reckoning one pyre against another?”
“Oh, yes,” the Chernagor answered. “I think it must be so among every
folk who burn their dead. Things may be different among those who throw
them in a hole in the ground, I suppose. But a pyre, now, a pyre is a
great thing. How could you
not compare one to the next?”
“Prince Vsevolod will be remembered for a long time, then.” Grus had to
raise his voice to make himself understood above the crackling of the
flames.
“Yes. It is so.” Beloyuz nodded. “You have served him better in death,
perhaps, than you did in life.”
Grus sent him a sour stare. “Do you think so, Your Excellency? Excuse
me—I mean, ‘Your Highness.’ Do you truly think so? If I did not care what
became of Vsevolod, why did I spend so many of my men and so much of my
treasure to try to restore him to the throne of Nishevatz?”
“Why? For your own purposes, of course,” Beloyuz replied, with a shrug
that could have made any world-weary Avornan courtier jealous.
“To try to keep the Banished One from gaining a foothold here in the
Chernagor country. I do not say these are bad reasons, Your Majesty. I say
they are reasons that have nothing to do with Vsevolod the man— may the
gods guard his spirit now. He could have been a green goat, and you would
have done the same. We are both men who have seen this and that. Will you
tell me I lie?”
However much Grus would have liked to, he couldn’t. He eyed Beloyuz
with a certain reluctant respect. Vsevolod had never shown much in the way
of brains. Here, plainly, was a man of a different sort. And would
different mean difficult? It often did.
A difficult Prince of Nishevatz, though, would be a distinct
improvement. Vasilko, Vsevolod’s unloving son, wasn’t just difficult. He
was an out-and-out enemy, as much under the thumb of the Banished One as
anybody this side of a thrall could be.
“Let the Chernagors in the city know where you stand about this and
that,” Grus told him. “Let them know you’re not Vsevolod, and let them
know you’re not Vasilko, either. That’s our best chance to get help from
inside the walls, I think.”
“Your best chance, you mean,” Beloyuz said.
Grus exhaled in some annoyance. “When you’re Prince of Nishevatz—when
you’re Prince
inside Nishevatz—I want two things from you. I want you not to
bow down to the Banished One, and I want you not to raid my coasts. Past
that, Your Highness, I don’t care what you do. You can turn your helmet
upside down and hatch puffin eggs in it for all of me. Is that plain
enough?”
Beloyuz sent him an odd look, and then the first smile he’d gotten from
the Chernagor noble, “Yes, Your Majesty. That is very plain. The next
question will be, do you mean it?” Difficult, Grus thought.
Definitely difficult. “You’ll see,” he told Beloyuz.
Lanius had almost gotten used to rustling noises and meows in the
archives. He put away the diplomatic correspondence between his
great-great-grandfather and a King of Thervingia and got to his feet. “All
right, Pouncer,” he said. “Where are you hiding this time, and what have
you stolen from the kitchens?”
No answer from the moncat.
Difficult, Lanius thought.
Definitely difficult. He made his way toward the place from which
he thought the noise had come. Pouncer was usually pretty easy to catch,
not least because he didn’t care to drop whatever he’d carried off. He
would have been much more agile if he’d simply gotten rid of whatever it
was this time when the king came after him. He hadn’t figured that out;
Lanius hoped he wouldn’t.
“Come on, Pouncer,” Lanius called. “Where are you?” How many hiding
places the size of a moncat did the vast hall of the archives boast?
Too many, the king thought. If Pouncer didn’t make a noise or
move when he was close enough for Lanius to see him, he could stay
un-caught for a depressingly long time.
There! Was that a striped tail, sticking out from behind a chest of
drawers stuffed full of rolled-up parchments? It was. It twitched in
excitement. What had Pouncer spotted in there? A cockroach? A mouse? How
many important documents had ended up chewed to pieces in mouse nests over
the centuries? More than Lanius cared to think about—he was sure of
that.
Pouncer . . . pounced. A small clunk said it hadn’t put down its prize
from the kitchens even to hunt. Half a minute later, it emerged from
concealment with a spoon in one clawed hand and with the bloody body of a
mouse dangling by the tail from its jaws. Seeming almost unbearably
pleased with itself, it carried the mouse over to Lanius and dropped it at
his feet.
“Thank you so much,” Lanius said. Pouncer looked up at him, still proud
as could be. Lanius picked up the mouse and then picked up the moncat. As
soon as the mouse was in Lanius’ hand, Pouncer wanted it back. Since the
king was carrying the moncat, it had, essentially, three hands with which
to try to take the dead mouse away from him. Lanius didn’t try to stop it;
he would have gotten clawed if he had.
Getting the mouse back, though, seemed much less important to Pouncer
than trying for it. As soon as it belonged to the moncat and not to the
king, Pouncer let it fall to the floor of the archives. Then the beast
twisted in Lanius’ arms, trying to get away and recover the mouse again.
Moncats and ordinary cats were alike in perversity.
Lanius held on to Pouncer. “Oh, no, you don’t,” he said. The moncat
bared its teeth. He tapped it on the nose. “And don’t you try to bite me,
either. You know better than that.” Pouncer subsided. The king had managed
to convince the beast that he meant what he said. If the moncat had
decided to bite, it could have gotten away easily enough. But, having made
its protest, it seemed content to let the king carry it back to the
chamber where it lived.
It did show its teeth again when Lanius took away the serving spoon it
had stolen. That was a prize, just like the murdered mouse. Lanius tapped
the moncat on the nose once more. Pouncer started to snap at him, but then
visibly thought better of it. He unbarred the door and put Pouncer
inside.
“I’m going to take this back to the kitchens,” he told the animal.
“You’ll probably get loose again and steal another spoon, but you can’t
keep this one.” Then he closed the door in a hurry, before Pouncer or any
of the other moncats could get out.
He was walking down the corridor to the kitchens when Bubulcus came
around a corner and started bustling toward him. He wondered if the
servant had been bustling before spying him. He had his doubts; Bubulcus,
from what he’d seen, seldom moved any faster than he had to.
Bubulcus pointed to the spoon in Lanius’ hand and asked, “Which the
nasty moncat creature has stolen, Your Majesty?” When the king nodded,
Bubulcus went on, “Which I had nothing to do with, not a thing.” He struck
a pose that practically radiated virtue.
“I didn’t say you did,” Lanius pointed out.
“Oh, no. Not this time.” Now Bubulcus looked like virtue abused. “Which
you have before, though, many a time and oft as the saying goes, and all
when I had nothing to do with anything.”
“Not all,” said Lanius, precise as usual. “You’ve let moncats get loose
at least twice, which is at least twice too often,”
Bubulcus’ long, mobile face—his whole scrawny frame, in fact— became
the image of affronted dignity. He seemed insulted that the king should
presume to bring up what were, after all, only facts. “Which wasn’t my
fault at all, hardly,” he declared.
“No doubt,” Lanius said. “Someone held a knife at your throat and made
you do it.”
“Hmp.” Bubulcus looked more affronted still. Lanius hadn’t thought he
could. “Since you seem to have nothing better to do than insult me, Your
Majesty, I had better be on my way, hadn’t I?” And on his way he went,
beaky nose in the air.
“You don’t need to look for me in the moncats’ chambers—I’m nor there,”
Lanius said. Bubulcus stalked down the corridor like an offended cat. The
king had all he could do to keep from laughing out loud. He’d won a round
from his servant. Then the impulse to laugh faded. He wondered what sort
of atrocity Bubulcus would commit to get even.
When Lanius walked into the kitchens, spoon in hand, the cooks and
cleaners all exclaimed. “I saw it, Your Majesty!” a chubby woman named
Quiscula exclaimed. She had a white smear of flour on the end of her nose,
and another on one cheek. “That funny beast of yours came out right there.
He grabbed the spoon from a counter, and then he disappeared again.” She
pointed. Right there was what seemed like nothing more than a crack
between wall and ceiling. Lanius tried to get up there for a closer look,
but none of the stools or chairs in the kitchens raised him high enough.
He sent a cleaner out to have a ladder fetched. He might not command
everything in Avornis, but he could do that.
He could also wait close to half an hour for the ladder to get there.
When it finally did, it proved old and rickety, anything but fit for a
king. He went up it anyway, though not before saying, “Hang on tight down
there. If this miserable thing slips, I’ll land on my head.”
He’d gone up several rungs before he thought to wonder whether his
subjects
wanted him to land on his head. That made him pause, but only for
a moment. He couldn’t very well ask them. That was liable to give them
ideas they might not have had before. If he acted as though an accident
weren’t possible, that might at least make it less likely.
The ladder creaked, but the cooks and cleaners held it steady. And it
was tall enough to let Lanius get a good look at the crack. It was wider
than it had appeared from the ground—certainly wide enough for a moncat’s
head to go through it. And where the head would go, the rest of the moncat
could follow.
Lanius stuck his hand into the crack and felt around. His palms and
fingers scraped against rough stone and brickwork. The opening got wider
farther back. A person couldn’t have hoped to go through the passageway,
but it wouldn’t be any trouble for a moncat.
“This is how you get to the kitchens, all right,” Lanius muttered.
“Now—where do you sneak into the archives?” He’d never seen Pouncer come
out there. The moncat usually appeared in about the same part of that
large chamber, but cabinets and crates and barrels all packed with
parchments made searching for an opening much harder than it was here.
He tried to reach in a little farther—and something tapped him on the
back of the hand.
He jerked his hand away, and almost fell off the ladder. If he landed
on his head and it wasn’t the cooks’ fault. . . He’d still end up with a
smashed skull, or maybe a broken neck. A hasty grab made sure he wouldn’t
fall. But his heart still pounded wildly. What the demon had touched him
in there?
Staring into the crack, he saw only blackness. “Let me have a lamp,” he
called to the people below. A skinny cook’s helper who couldn’t have been
more than twelve came up the ladder to give him one. The rungs creaked
again, but held.
Lanius held the clay lamp up to the crack. The little flame from the
burning oil didn’t reach very far. He poked his face toward the crack,
trying to see farther into it. That only got in the way of the lamplight.
He pulled back a little.
Suddenly, he saw light
inside the crack—two lights, in fact. They appeared, vanished for
a moment, and reappeared once more. That blink of a disappearance ... As
soon as he thought of it as a blink, he realized what he was seeing—the
eyes of an animal, throwing back some of the lamplight that fell on them.
And what sort of animal was most likely to lurk in this particular
crack?
Again, Lanius realized the answer the moment he asked the right
question. “Pouncer!” he exclaimed. “You come out of there this
instant!”
“Mrowr,” Pouncer said. The moncat, of course, did what it wanted to do,
not what Lanius wanted it to do.
The king reached in after it. It batted at his hand once more. As far
as it was concerned, it was playing a game. It kept its claws in their
sheaths, and didn’t try to hurt Lanius, He was enjoying himself a good
deal less than the moncat. Pouncer was too far back in there for him to
grab the beast and haul it out. If he tried, the game would quickly stop
being one. The moncat had very sharp claws, and even sharper teeth. As
long as it stayed in there, it could hurt him, and he couldn’t get it
out.
“Miserable, stupid creature,” he grumbled.
That told the cooks and cleaners what was going on. “Is it the moncat
again, Your Majesty?” a woman asked. Lanius nodded.
“What do you want to do?” asked a cook with a gray beard.
“I want to make the beast come out,” the king replied. “If I try to
haul it out by the scruff of the neck, it’ll tear my hand to pieces.”
“Give it some scraps,” the cook suggested. Lanius hoped he would have
thought of that himself in a few heartbeats. The cook called, “Bring a
scrap of meat for His Majesty!”
Before long, the scrawny assistant who’d come up with the lamp did.
Lanius held the bit of meat at the edge of the crack. Pouncer grabbed it
and ate it without coming out. “Another scrap!” Lanius said. He could hear
the moncat purring. It was having a fine time. He wished he could say the
same.
He got the next scrap. He let Pouncer see this one, but held it far
enough away to make the moncat come out after it.
Since he was still holding the lamp in his right hand, grabbing Pouncer
was an awkward, clumsy business. He managed, though, and also managed to
get down the ladder with lamp, moncat, and himself intact. The kitchen
crew cheered. Pouncer finished the second scrap of meat and looked around
for more.
The cook who’d thought of feeding scraps to the moncat saw that, too.
“Now that thing won’t want to steal spoons anymore,” he said. “It’ll want
to steal meat instead.”
That seemed depressingly probable to Lanius. “I’m going to take it back
to its room for now,” he said. “Maybe it will stay there for a while,
anyhow.” He looked down at Pouncer. The moncat stared back. Was that
animal innocence or animal mischief in its eyes? Lanius couldn’t tell. He
suspected he’d find out.
One day followed another in the siege of Nishevatz. King Grus did his
best to make sure the Avornan army had enough food, and to try to heal the
soldiers who fell sick. Disease could devastate a force more thoroughly
than battle. Healers and wizards did what they could against fluxes of the
bowels and other ailments. None of the sicknesses raced through the camp
like wildfire, as they so often did.
Grus wondered how things were on the other side of the wall. Every so
often, one or two of Vasilkos warriors would slip down a rope and come out
to the Avornan line. Like the first few men who’d given up the fight, they
were hungry and weary, but they weren’t starving. Vasilkos followers still
fought back when Grus poked at them. They showed no signs of being ready
to give up.
And then, one morning that had seemed no different from any other, a
messenger came back from the siege line to the king’s pavilion. “Your
Majesty, Prince Vasilko is on the wall!” the young soldier said excitedly.
“He says he wants to talk to you.”
“Does he?” Grus said, and the young soldier nodded. Grus got off the
stool he’d been sitting on. “Well, then, I’d better find out what he has
to say for himself, hadn’t I?”
In spite of his words, he didn’t approach Nishevatz by himself. He
brought a company of soldiers, enough men to protect himself if Vasilko
turned treacherous, and he also brought Pterocles.
The wizard trembled a little—trembled more than a little—as he
approached the walls of Nishevatz. “I hope I can protect you, Your
Majesty,” he said. “If the Banished One puts forth all his strength
through Vasilko ...”
“If I didn’t think you could help me, I wouldn’t have asked you to come
along,” Grus answered. “You’re the best I’ve got, and by now you have the
measure of what the Banished One can do.”
“Oh, yes. I have his measure,” Pterocles said in a hollow voice. “And
he has mine. That’s what I’m afraid of.”
Grus clapped him on the back. Pterocles’ answering smile was distinctly
wan. Grus tried not to let it worry him. His own curiosity was getting the
better of him as he drew near the walls of Nishevatz. He’d been at war
against Vasilko for years, but had never set eyes on him up until now. He
peered up, trying to pick Vsevolod’s rebellious son out from the rest of
the Chernagor defenders.
Nothing in Vasilko’s dress gave him away. Grus wished he’d taken that
same precaution. Vasilko and the other Chernagors would have no trouble
figuring out who he was if they wanted to try something nasty instead of
parleying. With a shrug, Grus cupped his hands in front of his mouth and
called, “I’m here, Vasilko. What do you want to say to me?”
The Chernagor who stepped up to the very edge of the battlement was
older than Grus had thought he would be. The King of Avornis had expected
to face an angry youth, but Vasilko was on the edge of middle age. Grus
realized he need not have been startled; Vsevolod had died full of years.
Still, it was a surprise.
Vasilko looked down at him with as much curiosity as he felt himself.
“Why do you persecute me?” the usurper asked in Avornan better than
Vsevolod had spoken.
“Why did you overthrow your father when you were his heir?” Grus
answered. “Why do you follow the Banished One and not the gods in the
heavens?”
Some of the Chernagors up on the walls of Nishevatz stirred. Grus
supposed they were the ones who could understand Avornan. In a town full
of traders, that some men could came as no great wonder. A few of them
sent Vasilko startled looks. Did they think he still worshiped King Olor
and Queen Quelea and the rest of the heavenly hierarchy? Maybe they were
learning something new.
Vasilko said, “Avornis’ throne was not yours by right, either, but you
took it.”
“I did not cast out King Lanius,” Grus answered, wishing Vasilko hadn’t
chosen that particular comeback. Grus went on, “King Lanius is in the
royal palace in the city of Avornis right now. And I never cast aside the
gods in the heavens. They knew what they were doing when they exiled the
Banished One.”
I
hope—
I pray—
they knew what they were doing.
“And when did it become your business what god Nishevatz follows?”
Vasilko plainly had a prince’s pride.
“The Banished One has tried to kill me more than once,” Grus said. “The
nomads who follow him have worked all sorts of harm on Avornis. His
friends are my foes, and if he is the sort of god usurpers follow, how
safe are you on your stolen throne?”
That made Vasilko look around in sudden alarm, as though wondering
which of his officers he might be better off not trusting. But then the
Chernagor straightened once more. “We stand united,” he said loudly.
“Is that what you called me here to tell me?” Grus asked. Beside him,
Pterocles stirred. Grus knew what the wizard was thinking—that Vasilko had
called him here to launch a sorcerous attack against him. Grus would have
been happier if he hadn’t found that fairly likely himself.
But some of Vasilko’s pride leaked out of him as he stood there and
looked out on land he could not rule because the Avornan army held him
away from it. He spoke more quietly when he replied, “No. I want to learn
what terms you may have in mind.”
“Are you yielding? Is Nishevatz yielding?” Grus demanded, his voice
taut with excitement.
“Not now. Not yet. Maybe not ever,” Vasilko said. “I told you, I want
to know your terms.”
Grus hadn’t thought hard about terms until this moment. He had always
assumed the siege would have to drag on until the bitter end, until his
men either stormed the walls or starved Nishevatz into surrender—or, with
bad luck, failed. Slowly, he said, “The people of the city are to
acknowledge Beloyuz as Prince of Nishevatz. They are to let my army into
Nishevatz, and to give up all their weapons except for eating knives and
one sword for every three men. You yourself are to come back to Avornis
with me, to live out your days in exile in the Maze.”
He waited to see how Vasilko would respond to that. He didn’t have to
wait long. “No,” Vasilko said, and turned his back. “The fight goes
on.”
“So be it,” Grus said. “You will not get a better bargain from me when
we break into Nishevatz.”
That made Vasilko turn back. “You talk about doing that. Go ahead and
talk. But when you have done it, then you will have earned the right. Not
now.” He disappeared from Grus’ view; the king supposed he had gone down
from the wall.
“So much for that,” Grus remarked as he returned to the siege line the
Avornans had set up. “I’d hoped for better, but I hadn’t really looked for
it.”
“You got more than I thought you would, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said.
Grus raised a questioning eyebrow. The wizard went on, “This was a real
parley, even if it didn’t work. I thought it would be nothing but a try at
assassinating you.”
“Oh.” Grus thought that over. He set a hand on Pterocles’ shoulder.
“You have a pretty strange notion of what goes into progress, you know
that?”
“I suppose I do,” the sorcerer said.
“Any luck?” General Hirundo called when Grus came into the siege
line.
The king shook his head. “Not a bit of it, except that Vasilko didn’t
try to murder me.” Hirundo laughed. Grus would have meant it for a joke
before Pterocles had spoken. Now he wasn’t joking. The siege went on.
“Back when I was your age,” King Lanius told his son, “the Thervings
were a lot fiercer than they are now. They even laid siege to the city of
Avornis a couple of times, though they couldn’t take it.”
Prince Crex listened solemnly. “How come they’re different now?” he
asked.
Lanius beamed. “Good question! King Berto, who rules them nowadays, is
a peaceable fellow. He wants to be a holy man.”
“Like Arch-Hallow Anser?” Crex asked.
“Well... in a way,” Lanius said. Anser wasn’t particularly holy; he
just held a post that required the appearance of holiness from its
occupant. From everything Lanius had seen, King Berto was sincere in his
devotion to the gods. But how to explain that to a little boy? Not seeing
how he could, Lanius continued, “ Berto s father, King Dagipert, was more
interested in fighting than in praying.”
Crex frowned. “So if the next King of Thervingia would sooner fight
than pray, will we have wars with the Thervings all the time again?”
That was an even better question. “I hope we won’t,” Lanius answered.
“But both sides have to want peace for it to stick. Only one needs to want
a war.”
He waited to see what Crex would make of that. After another brief
pause, Crex asked, “When is Grandpa coming home?”
“I don’t know,” Lanius said, blinking at the effortless ease with which
children could change the subject. “When he’s taken Nishevatz, I
suppose.”
“I miss him,” Crex said. “If he were a king who liked to pray instead a
king who likes to fight, would he be home now?”
Maybe he hadn’t changed the subject after all. “I don’t know, son,”
Lanius said again. “He might have to go fight anyhow, because up in the
Chernagor country he’s fighting against the Banished One.”
“Oh,” Crex said. “All right.” And he went off to play without so much
as a backward glance at his father. He ought to know more about these things. He’ll be king one
day—
I
hope, Lanius thought. Crex needed to know about the different
bands of Menteshe, about all the Chernagor city-states and how they fit
together, about the Thervings, and about the barbarous folk who roamed
beyond the Bantian Mountains but might swarm over them to trouble either
Thervingia or Avornis itself. He needed to know about the Banished One,
too, however much Lanius wished he didn’t.
Right now, the only way for Crex to find out everything he needed to
know was to ask someone who already knew. The trouble was, nobody, not
even Lanius, knew offhand everything a King of Avornis might need to learn
about his kingdom’s neighbors.
“I ought to write it all down,” Lanius said. He nodded, pleased with
the idea. It would help Crex. He was sure of that. And it would give him
the excuse to go pawing through the archives to find out whatever he
didn’t already know about the foreigners his kingdom had to deal with.
He laughed at himself. As though he needed excuses to go pawing through
the archives! But now he would be doing it for a reason, not just for his
own amusement. Didn’t that count?
When he told Sosia what he had in mind, she didn’t seem to think so.
“Will I ever see you again?” she asked. “Or will you go into that nasty,
dusty room and disappear forever?”
“It’s not nasty,” Lanius said. He couldn’t deny the archives were
dusty. On the other hand, he had a few very pleasant memories of things
he’d done there, even if his wife didn’t need to hear about them.
Sosia’s shrug showed amused resignation. “Go on, then. At least when
you’re in there, I know what you’re doing.” Again, Lanius congratulated
himself for not telling her it wasn’t necessarily so.
He’d spent a lot of time going through the archives looking for what
they had to say about the Banished One and the Scepter of Mercy. Now he
was looking for some different things—for how his ancestors, and the kings
who’d ruled Avornis before his ancestors came to the throne, had dealt
with their neighbors.
He couldn’t keep from laughing at himself. Arch-Hallow Anser hunted
deer. So did Prince Ortalis, who would have hunted more tender game if he
could have gotten away with it.
And me? Lanius thought.
I
hunt pieces of parchment the mice haven’t nibbled too badly. He
knew Anser and Ortalis would both laugh at him if that thought occurred to
them. Why not beat them to the punch?
Before the end of his first hunting trip in the archives—no serving
girls along to act as beaters for the game he sought—he knew he would have
no trouble coming up with all he needed and more besides. Then he found a
new question. What would he do once he had everything he needed? He’d
written countless letters. This was the first time he’d tried writing a
book—he’d never begun the one on palace life.
What would he call it? The first thing that came to mind was
How to Be a King. He wondered if that was too simple. Would any
ambitious noble or officer think he could rule Avornis if he had the book?
Of course, the kingdom had seen plenty of would-be usurpers without it, so
how much would that matter? Would it matter at all? How to Be a King, then. It said what he wanted to say, and it
would do for now. If he got a better idea later, he could always change
it. The next question was, how to go about writing it? What did he need to
tell Crex, and how should he tell it? How could he make a book like that
interesting enough to tempt a prince who could do anything he wanted to go
on reading it?
He was, he realized, asking himself a lot of questions. As soon as the
thought crossed his mind, he laughed and clapped his hands. He got pen and
parchment. After inking the pen, he wrote,
What do you need to know, my son, to become the sort of king Avornis
should have? Having asked the question, he proceeded to answer it. He
asked another, more specific, question, and answered that, too. The answer
posed yet another question. He also answered that one.
The longer Lanius wrote, the more detailed the questions got, and the
more poking through the archives he had to do to answer them. Not many
days went by before he was trying to sort out the complicated history of
Avornan dealings with the individual Chernagor city-states, and doing his
best to give advice on how to play them off one against another.
He thought about having a scribe make a copy of that part of
How to Be a King so he could send it up to Grus in the Chernagor
country. He thought about it, but he didn’t do it. Grus was liable to
think he was interfering in the campaign—and Grus was also a pretty good
horseback diplomat, even if he didn’t care to spend days at a time digging
through the archives.
Lanius muttered. The older he got, the more complex his feelings toward
his father-in-law became. Grus had stolen most of the royal power. He’d
made Lanius marry his daughter. It hadn’t turned out to be an altogether
loveless marriage, but it wasn’t the one Lanius would have made if he’d
had a choice, either.
Set against that were all the things Grus might have done but hadn’t.
He might have taken Lanius’ head or packed him off to the Maze. He hadn’t.
He might have become a fearsome tyrant, slaughtering anyone who presumed
to disagree with him. Despite repeated revolts against his rule, he
hadn’t. And he might have lost big pieces of Avornis to the Thervings, to
the Menteshe, or to the Chernagor pirates. He hadn’t done that,
either.
He
had raised a worthless son, and he had fathered a bastard or two.
He had also done his best to keep Lanius too poor to cause trouble for
him. Set against that, he had gotten the Banished One’s notice. If the
Banished One took Grus seriously, Lanius didn’t see how he couldn’t. Grus gets the job done, Lanius thought reluctantly.
Whatever he needs to do, he usually manages to do it. The other
king had even found a way to keep nobles from turning Avornan peasants
into their personal retainers. That was a problem Lanius hadn’t even
noticed. Grus hadn’t just noticed it. He’d solved it.
“He’s still a usurper,” Lanius murmured. That was true. It was also
infuriating. But Grus could have been
so much worse. Admitting it was even more infuriating for
Lanius.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
Rain dripped from a sky the color of dirty wool. King Grus squelched
through the mud, heading from his pavilion toward the Avornan line around
Nishevatz. He could hardly see the walls of the city through the shifting
curtain of raindrops. Rain in the summertime came every now and again to
the city of Avornis; down in the south, it was rare, rare enough to be a
prodigy. Here in the Chernagor country, the weather did whatever it
pleased.
The mud tried to pull the boots right off Grus’ feet. Each step took an
effort. Every so often, he would pause to kick gobs of muck from his
boots, or to scrape them against rocks. He tried to imagine Lanius picking
his way through this dirt pudding of a landscape. The image refused to
form. There was more to Lanius than he’d thought when he first took the
throne; he was willing to admit that much. But the other king was
irrevocably a man of the palace. Put him in charge of a siege and he
wouldn’t know what to do. Each cat his own rat, Grus thought. He knew he would have as
much trouble in the archives as Lanius would here in front of Nishevatz.
In his own province, Lanius was perfectly capable. Grus remained convinced
that what
he did was more important for Avornis.
“Halt! Who comes!” A sentry who looked like a phantom called out the
challenge.
“Grus,” Grus answered.
That phantom came to attention. “Advance and be recognized, uh, Your
Majesty.” The king did. The sentry saluted. He wore a wool rain cape over
a helmet and chainmail. He’d smeared the armor with grease and tallow, so
that water beaded on it. Even so, when the weather finally dried—if it
ever did—he and all the other Avornan soldiers would have plenty of
polishing and scraping to do to keep rust from running rampant. With
another salute, the sentry said, “Pass on, Your Majesty.”
“I thank you.” Grus’ own helm and chainmail were gilded to mark his
rank. That made the iron resist rust better, but he would have to do some
polishing and scraping, too. He did not let servants tend to his armor,
but cared for it himself. It protected him. How better to make sure it was
as it should be than to tend it with his own eyes and hands?
Another sentry, alert as could be, challenged him. Again, Grus advanced
and was recognized. The sentry said, “Forgive me, Your Majesty, but where
are your bodyguards?”
“Back there somewhere,” Grus answered vaguely. He felt a small-boy
pride at escaping them.
The sentry clucked in disapproval. “You should let them keep an eye on
you. How will you stay safe if they don’t?”
“I can take care of myself,” Grus said. The sentry, being only a
sentry, didn’t presume to argue. Grus went on. The farther he went,
though, the more shame ate away at his pride. The man was right. He took
good care of his armor and forgot his bodyguards, who might prove at least
as important in keeping him alive.
Promising himself he wouldn’t do that anymore, he pressed on now. He
got away with it, too. When he found Hirundo, the general ordered half a
dozen men to form up around him. Grus didn’t quarrel. Hirundo wagged a
finger. “You’ve been naughty.”
“No doubt.” The king’s tone was dry—the only thing in the dripping
landscape that was. “What do you propose to do about it?”
“Why send you to bed without supper, Your Majesty,” Hirundo answered
with a grin. “Oh, and keep you safe, if I can, since you don’t seem very
interested in doing that for yourself.” Unlike the guard, he had rank
enough to point out Grus’ folly.
“Believe me, you’ve made your point,” Grus said. “I hope you’re not
going to turn into one of those tedious people who keep banging on tent
pegs after they’ve driven them into the ground.”
“Me? I wouldn’t dream of such a thing.” Hirundo was the picture of
soggy innocence. “I hope you’re not going to be one of those tedious tent
pegs that keep coming loose no matter how you bang on them.”
“Ha,” Grus said, and then, for good measure, “Ha, ha.” Hirundo bowed,
unabashed as usual. The king pointed in the general direction of
Nishevatz. “How would you like to try to attack the walls under cover of
this rain?”
“I will if you give the order, Your Majesty.” Hirundo turned serious on
the instant. “If you give me a choice, though, I’d rather not. Archery is
impossible in weather like this, and—”
“For us and for them,” Grus broke in.
“Oh, yes.” The general nodded. “But they don’t need to shoot much. They
can just drop things on our heads while we’re coming up the ladders. We
need archers more than they do, to keep their men on the walls busy
ducking while we’re coming up. And planting scaling ladders in gooey muck
isn’t really something I care to do, either.”
“Oh,” Grus said. “I see.” To his disappointment, he
did see. “You make more sense than I wish you did.”
“Sorry, Your Majesty,” Hirundo replied. “I’ll try not to let it happen
again.”
“A likely story,” Grus said. “All right, then. If you don’t want to
attack in a rainstorm, what about one of the fogs that come off the
Northern Sea? Do you think that would be any better?”
Now Hirundo paused to think it over. “It might,
yes, if you’ve given up on starving Vasilko out. Have you?”
“Summer’s moving along,” Grus said, which both did and did not answer
the question. He continued, “It won’t be easy for us to stay here through
the winter, and who knows how long Vasilko can hold out?”
“Something to that.” Hirundo sounded willing but not consumed by
enthusiasm. “Well, I suppose we could get ready to try. No telling when
another one of those fogs will roll in, you know. The more you want one,
the longer you’re likely to wait.”
“You’re probably right,” Grus agreed. “But let’s get ready. We’ll see
how hard they really want to fight for Vasilko.” He hoped the answer was
not very.
How do we keep the Chernagor pirates from descending on our
coasts? Lanius’ pen raced across the parchment. Since he’d started
writing
How to Be a King for Crex, he’d discovered he was good at posing
broad, sweeping questions. Coming up with answers for them seemed much
harder. He did his best here, as he’d done his best with every one of the
questions he’d asked himself. He wrote about keeping the Chernagor
city-states divided among themselves, about keeping trade with them strong
so they wouldn’t want to send out raiders, and about the tall-masted ships
Grus had ordered built to match those the men from the Chernagor country
used. His pen faltered as he tried to describe those ships. He’d ordered
them forth, but he’d never seen anything except river galleys and barges.
I’ll have to ask Grus more when he comes back from the north, he
thought, and scribbled a note on the parchment to remind himself to do
that.
Once the note was written, the king paused, nibbling on the end of the
reed pen. Some scribes used goose quills, but Lanius was better at cutting
reeds, and was also convinced they held more ink. Besides, nibbling the
end of a goose quill gave you nothing but a mouthful of soggy fluff.
After a few minutes of thought, he came up with another good, broad,
sweeping question, and wrote it down to make sure he didn’t forget it
before he could put it on parchment.
How do we deal with the thrall who may cross into Avornis from the
lands of the Menteshe, and with those we may find in the lands the
Menteshe rule?
He almost scratched out the last half of the question. It struck him as
optimism run wild. In the end, he left it there. He didn’t suppose he
would have if the nomads weren’t fighting one another, but the civil war
that had started among them after Prince Ulash died showed no signs of
slowing down.
With or without the second half, the question was plenty to keep him
thoughtful for some little while. What would Crex or some king who came
after him need to know? Lanius warned that, while some escaped thralls
came across the Stura seeking freedom, others remained under the Banished
One’s enchantments in spite of appearances to the contrary, and served as
the exiled god’s spies.
Or sometimes his assassins, Lanius thought with a shiver of
memory.
Lanius also warned Crex that spells for curing thralls were less
reliable than everyone wished they were.
Although, he wrote,
lately it does seem as though these charms are attended with more
success than was hitherto the case.
The king hoped that was true. He looked at what he’d written. He
decided he’d qualified it well enough. By the time Crex was old enough to
want to look at something like
How to Be a King, everyone would have a better idea of how
effective Pterocles’ spells really were.
After getting up and stretching, Lanius decided not to sit down again
and go back to the book just then. Instead, he stored the parchment and
pen and jar of ink in the cabinet he’d brought into the archives for them.
At first, he’d been nervous each time he turned away from the book,
wondering if he would be stubborn enough to come back to it later. By now,
he’d gotten far enough into it to have some confidence he would keep
returning and would, one day, finish, even if that day seemed a long way
off.
When he came out of the archives in his plain tunic and breeches,
several palace servants walked past without paying him the least
attention. That amused him.
Clothes make the man, he thought. Without them, he seemed just
another servant himself.
When Bubulcus hurried past, oblivious to the rank of the nondescript
fellow in the even more nondescript clothes, Lanius almost called him
back. Showing the toplofty servant he didn’t know everything there was to
know always tempted the king. But Lanius didn’t feel like listening to
Bubulcus’ whined excuses—or to his claims that of course he’d known who
Lanius was all along. Bubulcus, after all, had never made a mistake in his
life, certainly not in his own mind.
Otus, now, Otus was a different story. The former thrall liberated by
Pterocles’ magic seemed glad to be alive, glad to know he
was alive. If he made a mistake, he just laughed about it. And,
when Lanius came to his guarded room, he knew who the king was. Bowing
low, he murmured, “Your Majesty.”
“Hello, Otus,” Lanius said. “How are you today?”
The thrall straightened, a broad smile on his face. “I’m fine, thank
you. Couldn’t be better. Isn’t it a
good day?”
To Lanius, it seemed a day no different from any other. But then,
Lanius hadn’t lived almost his entire life under the shadow of thrall-dom.
To Otus, today
was different from most of the days he’d known, not least because
he knew it so much more completely. Lanius said, “I’ve got a question for
you.”
“Go ahead,” Otus said. If he noticed the guards who flanked King
Lanius, he gave no sign. Lanius still didn’t trust the magic that had
lifted the dark veil of thralldom. Did something of the Banished One lurk
beneath the freed thrall’s sunny exterior? There had been no sign of it,
but that didn’t mean it wasn’t there.
Besides Otus’ behavior, there was other evidence against any lingering
influence from the Banished One in him. The other thralls in the royal
palace had calmly and quietly killed themselves before Pterocles could try
his magic on them. Didn’t that argue that the Banished One feared its
power? Probably. But was he ruthless enough and far-seeing enough to
sacrifice a pair of thralls to leave his opponents thinking they’d gained
an advantage they didn’t really have? Again, probably. And so ...
bodyguards.
Lanius asked, “Do you really think we could free a lot of thralls using
the spells that freed you?” Otus was the only one here who knew from the
inside out what being a thrall was like. If his answer couldn’t be fully
trusted, it had to be considered.
“I sure hope so, Your Majesty,” Otus answered. Then he grinned
sheepishly. “But that wasn’t what you asked, was it?”
“Well, no,” Lanius admitted.
Otus screwed up his face into a parody of deep thought. He finally
shrugged and said, “I do think so. If it freed me, I expect it could free
anybody. I’m nothing special.”
“You are now,” Lanius told him. Otus laughed. The king was right. But
the former thrall also had a point. The longer he was free, the more
ordinary he seemed. These days, he sounded like anyone else—anyone from
the south, for he did keep his accent. When first coming out of the
shadows, he’d had only a thrall’s handful of words, and wouldn’t have
known what to do with more if he had owned them.
He truly must be cured, Lanius thought, but then, doubtfully,
mustn’t he?
Beloyuz came up to King Grus. He pointed toward the walls of
Nishevatz. Bowing, the Chernagor nobleman—the Chernagor whom Grus now
styled Prince of Nishevatz—asked, “Your Majesty, how long is this army
going to do nothing but sit in front of my city-state?”
Grus almost laughed in his face. He had to gnaw on the inside of his
lower lip to keep from doing just that. Call Beloyuz the Prince of
Nishevatz, and what did he do? Why, he started sounding just like Prince
Vsevolod. After a few heartbeats, when Grus was sure he wouldn’t say
anything outrageous or scandalous, he answered, “Well, Your Highness, we
are working on that. We’re not ready to move yet, but we are working on
it.”
He waited to see if that would satisfy Beloyuz. The Chernagor frowned.
He didn’t look as glum or disgusted as Vsevolod would have, but he didn’t
miss by much, either. Suspicion clogging his voice, he said, “You are not
just telling me this to make me go away and leave you alone?”
“By King Olor’s beard, Your Highness, I am not,” Grus said.
Now Beloyuz didn’t answer for a little while. “All right,” he said when
he did speak. “I believe you. For now, I believe you.” He bowed to Grus
once more and strode away.
With a sigh, Grus walked down to the seashore. Guards flanked him. His
shadow stretched out before him. It was longer than it would have been at
high summer, and got longer still every day. He understood Beloyuzs
worries, for the campaigning season was slipping away like grains of sand
through an hourglass. If Nishevatz didn’t fall on its own soon, he would
have to move against it—either move, or try to press on with the siege
through the winter, or give up and go back to Avornis. They were all
unappetizing choices.
The weather was as fine as he’d ever seen it up here in the north. He
muttered a curse at that, tasting the irony of it. He hadn’t been lying to
Beloyuz. He and Hirundo kept waiting for one of the famous fogs of the
land of the Chernagors to come rolling in to conceal an attack on the
walls. They waited and waited, while bright, clear day followed bright,
clear day. The Chernagor country would have been a much more pleasant
place if its summer days were like this all the time. Even so, Grus would
gladly have traded this weather for the more usual murk.
Shorebirds skittered along the beach. Some of them, little balls of
gray and white fluff, scooted on short legs right at the edge of the
lapping sea. They would poke their beaks down into the sandy mud, every
now and then coming away with a prize. Others, larger, waded on legs that
made them look as though they were on stilts. Those had longer bills, too,
some straight, some drooping down, and some, curiously, curving up.
Grus eyed those last birds and scratched his head, wondering what a
bill like that could be good for. He saw no use for it, but supposed it
had to have some, or the wading birds would have looked different.
Thanks to the clear weather, he could see a long way when he looked out
to the Northern Sea. He spied none of the great ships the other Chernagor
city-states had sent during the last siege of Nishevatz. They still feared
Pterocles’ sorcery.
That left Nishevatz to its own devices. Grus turned toward the gray
stone walls that had defied his army for so long. They remained as sturdy
as ever. Small in the distance, men moved along them. The Chernagors’
armor glinted in the unusually bright sunshine. How hard
would Vasilko’s soldiers fight if he assailed those walls? He
scowled. No sure way to know ahead of time. He would have to find out by
experiment. Not today, Grus thought. Today the Chernagors could see
whatever he did, just as he could watch them. If one of the swaddling fogs
this coast could breed ever came . . . then, maybe. But no, not today.
He and his guards weren’t the only men walking up the beach. That lean,
angular shape could only belong to Pterocles. The wizard waved as he
approached. “Good day, Your Majesty,” he called.
“Too good a day, maybe,” Grus answered. “We could do with a spell of
worse weather, if you want to know the truth.”
Pterocles only shrugged. “Beware of any man who calls himself a
weatherworker. He’s lying. No man can do much with the weather. It’s too
big for a mere man to change. The Banished One . . . the Banished One is
another story.”
Grus suddenly saw the cloudless sky in a whole new light. “Are you
saying the Banished One is to blame for this weather?” That gave him a
different and more urgent reason for wanting fog.
And his question worried Pterocles. “No, I don’t think so,” the wizard
answered after a long pause. “I believe I would feel it if he were
meddling with the weather, and I don’t. But he
could, if he chose to. An ordinary sorcerer? No.”
“All right. That eases my mind a bit.” Grus turned and looked toward
the south. His mind’s eye leaped across the land of the Chernagors and
across all of Avornis to the Menteshe country south of the Stura River. By
all the dispatches that came up from Avornis, Sanjar and Korkut were still
clawing away at each other. The princes to either side of what had been
Ulash’s realm were still tearing meat off its bones, too. By all the
signs, the Banished One’s attention remained focused on the strife among
the people who had chosen him for their overlord. They aren’t thralls, though. They’re men, Grus thought. They
might be the Banished One’s servants, but they weren’t his mindless
puppets, weren’t his slaves. They worshiped him, but they had their own
concerns, their own interests, as well. And, for the moment, those counted
for more among them.
That had to infuriate the exiled god. So far, though, the Menteshe
seemed to be doing as they pleased in their wars, not as the Banished One
would have commanded. His eyes on them, he forgot about Nishevatz, about
Vasilko,
“If the Menteshe make peace, or if one of them wins outright. . .” Grus
began.
Pterocles nodded, following his thought perfectly. “If that happens,
the Banished One could well look this way again.”
“Frightening to think we depend on strife among our foes,” Grus
said.
“At least we have it,” Pterocles replied. “And since we have it, we’d
better make the most of it.”
“We will,” Grus said. “I don’t think we’re going to starve them out
before we start running low on food ourselves. I hoped we would, but it
doesn’t look that way. If we want Nishevatz, we’ll have to take it. I
intend to try to take it. But I need fog, to let me move men forward
without being seen.”
“If I could give it to you, I would,” Pterocles said. “Since I can’t,
I’ll hope with you that it comes soon.”
“When I didn’t want them, we had plenty of fogs,” Grus said. “Now that
I do, what do we get? Weather the city of Avornis wouldn’t be ashamed of.
The best weather I’ve ever seen in the Chernagor country, by the gods—the
best, and the worst.”
“The gods can give you fog, if they will,” Pterocles said.
“Yes. If they will.” Grus said no more than that. If the Banished One
had power over wind and weather, surely the gods in the heavens did, too.
Come on, Grus thought in their direction. It wasn’t a prayer—more
like an annoyed nudge.
You can make things harder for the Banished One.
Were they listening? Grus laughed at himself. How could he tell? If
they didn’t pay some attention to it, though, they could earn an
eternity’s worth of regrets. With the world in his hands, the Banished One
might find a way back to the heavens. Grus tried to see beyond the sky. He
couldn’t—he was only a man. But the gods could do whatever they pleased.
Olor could take six wives and still keep Quelea contented. If
that wasn’t a miracle, Grus didn’t know what would be.
If he didn’t believe in the power of the gods, what other power was
there left to believe in? That of the Banished One. Nobody could deny his
power. Yielding to it, worshiping it, was something else again.
“Fog,” Grus said. “We need fog.”
Fog filled the streets of the city of Avornis, rolling off the river,
sliding silently over the walls, muffling life in the capital. The silence
struck Lanius as almost eerie. Did the thick mist really swallow sound, or
was it so quiet because people didn’t care to go out and try to find their
way around in the murk? The question seemed easier to ask than to
answer.
When the king stepped out of the royal palace, it grew indistinct,
ghostly, behind him.
If I walk back toward it, he thought,
will it really be there? Or will it disappear or recede before me like
a will-o‘-the-wisp?
Lanius exhaled.. His own breath added to the fog swirling all around
him. From what he had read, such smothering, obliterating fogs were far
commoner in the land of the Chernagors than they were here. He hoped Grus
kept his army alert through them, and didn’t let Vasilko’s men launch a
surprise attack against the Avornan lines.
He walked a little farther from the palace. Even his footsteps seemed
sorter than they should have. Was that his imagination? He didn’t think
so, but he supposed it could have been.
“Your Majesty?” a guard called from behind him. The man sounded
anxious. When Lanius looked back, he saw why. Or, better, he didn’t see
why, for the guardsman had disappeared altogether. “Your Majesty?” the
fellow called again, something close to panic in his voice. “Where are
you, Your Majesty?”
“I’m here,” Lanius answered, and walked back toward the sound of the
guardsman’s voice. With each step, the royal palace became more decidedly
real. The king nodded to the worried bodyguard. “Thick out there today,
isn’t it?”
“Thick as porridge,” the guard said. “I’m glad you came back, Your
Majesty. I would have gone after you in another moment, and the mist might
have swallowed me whole. You never can tell.”
“No, I suppose not.” Lanius hid a smile. But it faded after a couple of
heartbeats. The Banished One could do things with the weather no ordinary
sorcerer could hope to match. If he had sent the fog, and if someone—or
something—lurked in it... Lanius’ shiver had nothing to do with
the clammy weather. By way of apology, he said, “I was foolish to wander
off in it myself.”
The guardsman nodded. He would never have presumed to criticize the
king. If the king criticized himself, the guard would not presume to
disagree.
Lanius went back inside the palace. His cheeks and beard were beaded
with moisture. He hadn’t noticed it in the fog, where everything was damp,
but he did once he came inside. He wiped his face with the sleeve of his
royal robe. A servant coming up the hallway sent him a scandalized stare.
His cheeks heated, as though he’d been caught picking his nose in
public. At least it wasn’t Bubulcus, the king thought. Bubulcus would
have made him feel guilty about it for the rest of his days.
“Your Majesty! Your Majesty!” That call echoing down the corridor came
not from a guardsman but from a maidservant.
“I’m here,” Lanius called back. “What’s gone wrong now?” By the shrill
note of hysteria in the woman’s voice, something certainly had.
She came around the corner and saw him. “Come quick, Your Majesty!”
“I’m coming,” Lanius said. “What is it?”
“It’s the prince,” she said. Terror gripped Lanius’ heart—had something
happened to Crex? Then the serving woman added, “He’s done something truly
dreadful this time,” and Lanius’ panic eased. Crex wasn’t old enough to do
anything dreadful enough to raise this kind of horror in a grown woman.
Which meant. . .
“Ortalis?”
“Yes, Your Majesty,” the woman said.
“Oh, by the gods!” Lanius said. “What has he done?”
Which serving girl has he outraged, and how badly? was what he
meant.
But this serving woman answered, “Why, he went and killed a man. Poor
Bubulcus.” She started to cry.
“Bubulcus!” Lanius exclaimed. “I was just thinking about him.”
“That’s all anybody will do from now on,” the serving woman said. “He
had a wife and children, too. Queen Queleas mercy on them, for they’ll
need it.”
“How did it happen?” Lanius asked in helpless astonishment. The woman
only shrugged. Lanius spread his hands. “You were going to take me to him.
You’d better do that.”
She did. They had to push through a growing crowd of servants to get to
Ortalis, who still stood over Bubulcus’ body. A whip lay on the floor
behind the prince. Blood soaked the servant’s tunic. It pooled beneath
him. His eyes stared up sightlessly. His mouth, Lanius was not surprised
to find, was open.
In character to the last, the king thought.
The bloody knife in Ortalis’ right hand was a small one, such as he
might have used for cutting up fruit. It had sufficed for nastier work as
well.
“What happened here?” Lanius demanded as he shoved his way to the front
of the crowd. “And put that cursed thing down, Ortalis,” he added sharply.
“You certainly don’t need it now.”
Grus’ son let the knife fall. “He insulted me,” he said in a distant—
almost a dazed—voice. “He insulted me, and I hit him, and he jeered at me
again—said his mother could hit harder than that. And the next thing I
knew . . . The next thing I knew, there he was on the floor.”
Lanius looked around. “Did anyone see this? Did anyone hear it?”
“I did, Your Majesty,” said a sweeper with a grizzled beard. “You know
how Bubulcus always likes—liked—to show how clever he was, to see how
close to the edge he could come.”
“Oh, yes,” Lanius said. “I had noticed that.”
“Well,” the sweeper said, “he sees that there whip in His Highness’
hand—”
“I’d just come in from a ride,” Ortalis said quickly.
“In this horrible fog?” Lanius said. He wished he had the words back as
soon as they were gone. He could guess what Ortalis had really been doing
with the whip.
With whom, and did she like it? he wondered, feeling a little
sick.
“Anyways,” the sweeper went on, “Bubulcus asks him if that’s the whip
he uses to hit little Princess Capella. And that’s when His Highness
smacked him.”
“I... see,” Lanius said slowly. Had he been in Ortalis’ boots, he
thought he would have hit Bubulcus for that, too. Using a whip on a
willing woman was one thing.
Limosa thinks Ortalis is wonderful, Lanius reminded himself,
gulping. Using the same whip on a baby girl was something else again. Not
even Ortalis would do such a thing— Lanius devoutly hoped.
If Ortalis had let it go there, Lanius didn’t see how anyone could have
said anything much. But Bubulcus had had to make one more crack, and then
. . . “After that,” the sweeper said, “His Highness punctured him right
and proper, he did.”
Chastising an offensive servant and killing him were also two different
things. Lanius’ sole relief was that Ortalis didn’t seem to have done it
for his own amusement. Again, killing in a fit of rage was different from
killing for the sport of it.
A servant who killed in a fit of rage would be punished. He might lose
his head. King Grus’ son, Lanius knew, wouldn’t lose his head for slaying
Bubulcus. But Ortalis shouldn’t get off scot-free, either. For all
Bubulcus’ faults—which Lanius knew as well as anybody—he hadn’t deserved
to die for a crude joke or two.
“Hear me, Ortalis,” Lanius said, his tone more for the benefit of the
murmuring servants than for his brother-in-law. “When you killed Bubulcus,
you went beyond what was proper.”
“So did he,” Ortalis muttered, but he didn’t try to deny that he’d
transgressed. That helped.
“Hear me,” Lanius repeated. “Because you went beyond what was proper, I
order you to settle on Bubulcus’ widow enough silver to let her and her
children live comfortably for the rest of their lives. That will repair
some of what you have done.”
He waited. Two things could go wrong with his judgment. Ortalis might
prove arrogant enough to reject it out of hand, or the servants might
decide it wasn’t enough.
Ortalis did some more muttering, but he finally said, “Oh, all right.
Fool should have known when to shut up, though.” That struck Lanius as the
most fitting epitaph Bubulcus would get.
The king’s gaze swung to the servants. None of them said anything right
away; they were gauging what he’d done. After a bit, one of the men said,
“I expect most of us wanted to pop Bubulcus one time or another.” Slowly,
one after another, they began to nod.
Lanius let out a small sigh. He seemed to have gotten away with it on
both counts. “Take the body away and clean up the mess,” he said. The
scarlet pool under Bubulcus’ corpse unpleasantly reminded him how much
blood a body held. “Let Bubulcus’ wife—his widow—know what happened. And
let her know Prince Ortalis will also pay for the funeral pyre.”
Ortalis stirred, but again did not protest. Most of the servants
drifted away. A few remained to carry out Lanius’ orders. One of them
said, “You took care of that pretty well, Your Majesty.” A couple of other
men nodded.
“My thanks,” Lanius said- “Some of these things, you only wish they
never would have happened in the first place.”
Even Ortalis nodded. “That’s true. If he’d just kept quiet. . .” He
still didn’t sound sorry Bubulcus was dead. Expecting him to was probably
asking too much. And the servants had seemed satisfied that he would pay
compensation. It could have turned out worse.
Then Lanius realized it wasn’t over yet.
I have to write Grus and let him know what his son’s done now. He
would almost rather have gone under a dentist’s forceps than set pen to
parchment for that. No help for it, though. Grus
would surely hear. Better he should hear from someone who had the
story straight.
Two men carried Bubulcus’ body away. Women went to work on the pool of
blood. Ortalis scowled at Lanius. “How much silver will you steal from me
to pay for that wretch’s worthless life?”
“However much it is, you can afford it better than he can afford what
you took from him.” Lanius sighed. “I know he could drive a man mad. More
than once, I almost sent him to the Maze. Now I wish I would have. In the
Maze, he’d still be breathing.”
“If he made
you angry, he was too big a fool to hope to live very long,”
Ortalis said. “You’re too soft for your own good.”
“Am I?” Lanius said.
His brother-in-law nodded. “You let the servants get away with
murder.” No, you’ve just gotten away with murder, Lanius thought. No
ordinary man would have come off so lightly. But Ortalis wasn’t an
ordinary man, not when it came to his family connections. That he’d paid
any price at all probably surprised the palace servants.
Grus’ son stooped and picked up the knife he’d used to stab Bubulcus.
“What will you do with that thing?” Lanius asked. If Ortalis wanted to
keep it for a souvenir, he would have to change his mind. The king made up
his mind to be very firm about that.
But Ortalis answered, “I’m going to throw it away. I’ve got no more use
for it now.” He strode down the hallway. Lanius stared after him. Ortalis
still didn’t see that he’d done much out of the ordinary. Lanius sighed
again. Bubulcus, could anyone have asked him, would have had a different
opinion.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
When Grus breathed in, he felt as though he’d fallen into a vat of cold
soup. The sky had gone from black to gray, but he still couldn’t see a
hand in front of his face. The fog felt as thick and smothering—though not
nearly as warm—as wool batting.
“Hirundo!” he called softly. “Are you there?”
“Right here, Your Majesty,” the general answered, almost at his elbow.
Grus had to lean forward and peer to see him at all. Chuckling, Hirundo
said, “Our prayers are answered, aren’t they?” “Too well, maybe,” Grus said. Hirundo laughed again, though
the king wasn’t at all sure he’d been joking. Fog was fog, and this was
excessive. It seemed like the boiled-down essence of every fog Grus had
ever seen in all his life. “By the gods, we’ll be lucky to find the walls
of Nishevatz, let alone storm them.”
“We may have fun finding them—true enough,” Hirundo said, though
fun was the last word Grus would have used. “But just think how
much fun Vasilko and the Chernagors will have trying to keep us out once
we do get up on the battlements. We’ll have a whole great lodgement before
they even realize we’re anywhere close by.”
“Gods grant it be so,” Grus said. He and the Avornan army had spent
weeks waiting through what passed for a heat wave in the Chernagor
country. Now the usual mists were back, with a vengeance. Grus hoped the
vengeance wouldn’t be excessive.
“Your Majesty?”
That was Pterocles’ voice. “I’m here,” Grus said, and the wizard
blundered forward until they bumped into each other. “Can you guide the
men to Nishevatz?” Grus asked. “And can you keep the Chernagors from
hearing them as they come?”
“Well, Your Majesty, if we all splash into the Northern Sea, you’ll
know something has gone wrong,” the wizard replied.
“Heh,” Grus said. “You
will be, able to do it?”
A glow that somehow pierced the fog where nothing else would
illuminated Pterocles’ hands. “I will.”
“Good.” Grus hesitated. “Uh—I hope the Chernagors on the walls won’t be
able to see your sorcery.”
“So do I,” Pterocles said cheerfully. “And yes, I just might be able to
muffle things, too.” Grus gave up. Either the wizard was teasing him or
the whole campaign would unravel in the next few minutes. Grus chose to
believe Pterocles was joking.
One way or the other, I’ll find out soon, the king thought.
“There’s the light.” At least a dozen Avornan officers, spying
Pterocles’ glowing hands, said the same thing at the same time. They all
sounded relieved, too, no matter how the fog muffled their voices.
“Let’s go,” Pterocles said. “Nishevatz is ... that way.” He pointed
with a gleaming forefinger. Grus wondered how he could have any idea of
the direction in which Nishevatz lay. Looking down, the king couldn’t even
see his own feet. As far as he could tell, he disappeared from the knees
down.
But Pterocles spoke with perfect confidence. And when he moved out in
the direction he thought right, the Avornan soldiers followed him. They
could see his hands through the fog. A party of men carrying a scaling
ladder almost ran over Grus. He heard no cries from the walls of the city.
Evidently, the Chernagors really couldn’t see Pterocles. Or maybe he’s going the wrong way. Grus wished that hadn’t
occurred to him. He was committed now. He had to rely on Pterocles. If,
for instance, the Banished One was fooling the wizard . . . Grus wished
that hadn’t occurred to him, too.
“Guards!” he called.
“Here, Your Majesty.” The answer came in a chorus from all around
him.
“Let’s go forward,” Grus said.
The guardsmen formed up in a tight knot, completely surrounding the
king. They seemed under the impression that if they didn’t, he would yank
out his sword and swarm up a scaling ladder ahead of every ordinary
Avornan soldier. He was glad they were under that impression. He’d done a
lot of fighting in his time. By now, though, he was coming up against
soldiers who weren’t just half his age but a third his age. He knew more
than a little pride that he could still hold his own when he had to, but
he wasn’t such an eager warrior anymore.
Not only the guards but Grus himself stumbled more than once on the way
to the walls of Nishevatz. They might see Pterocles’ sorcerously glowing
hands, but they couldn’t see rocks and holes in the ground under their own
feet. Low-voiced curses and occasional thumps from all around said they
weren’t the only ones with that trouble.
Grus craned his neck to one side, trying to listen for shouts of alarm
from Vasilko’s men. He still heard none. His hopes began to rise. Maybe
this would work after all. Maybe . . .
Then he did hear the unmistakable thud of a scaling ladder going up
against a wall. Soldiers rushed toward the top of the ladder. Someone up
on the wall called out in the Chernagor language—a challenge, Grus
supposed. Pterocles hadn’t managed to hide that noise. The answer came
back in the Chernagor tongue, for Hirundo had thought to put some of the
men who’d stayed loyal to Prince Vsevolod at the head of the storming
party.
Whatever the response meant, it quieted the defender who’d challenged.
That meant the Avornans got onto the wall without any trouble. Then more
shouts rang out, and the clash of blade on blade. But Grus knew Vasilko’s
men were in trouble. If the attackers managed to seize a portion of the
wall, they had an enormous advantage on the men trying to hold them
off.
“Up!” shouted officers at the base of the wall. “Up, up, up! Quick!
Quick!” They sounded like parents trying to keep unruly three-year-olds in
line. No child took seriously something said only once. Repeat it and it
might possibly sink in. Soldiers were often the same way.
Men cursed and grunted as they swarmed up toward the battlements of
Nishevatz. More curses and screams rang out up above on those battlements.
So did the sound of running feet as the Chernagors rushed to the
threatened part of the wall. Then frightened shouts came from another part
of the works around Nishevatz. Grus whooped. He knew what that had to
mean—the Avornans had gotten up there, too.
A body thudded to earth at the kings feet. It was a Chernagor; the
black-bearded officer had gear too fine for a common soldier. He writhed
feebly and moaned in pain. One of Grus’ guardsmen raised a spear to finish
the man off. “Wait,” Grus said. “Maybe the healers can save him. He’s no
danger to us, and we may learn something from him.”
The guard said, “Whatever you want, Your Majesty, but I don’t think
you’re doing him any favor by keeping him alive.”
Blood ran from the Chernagor’s mouth. One of his arms and both legs
splayed out at unnatural angles. Grus decided the guardsman was right. “Go
ahead,” he said. The Avornan drove the spear into the injured man’s
throat. It was over quickly after that.
Up on the wall, the Chernagors began to sound desperate, while the
Avornans’ shouts grew ever more excited. “We’re going into the city!”
someone yelled in Avornan. That was even better than a foothold on the
wall. If the Avornans could cut Vasilko’s men off from their last citadels
inside Nishevatz . . .
Grus felt his way to a scaling ladder. “I’m going up,” he told his
guards. “Some of you can go up before me if you like, but I’m going up
now.” He’d known the guards would protest, and they did. But the king
managed to have his way. Half a dozen guardsmen did precede him up the
wall, but he went.
Two Chernagors and an Avornan lay dead in a great pool of blood in
front of the top of the ladder. More bodies came into view through the fog
as Grus walked along the wall. All the Chernagors he saw were dead. Some
Avornans were only wounded. One or two of them gave him feeble cheers.
His guards were as nervous as a mother watching a child take its first
steps. “Be careful, Your Majesty!” they said, and, “Look out, Your
Majesty!” and any number of things intended to keep the king away from the
fighting.
“I do want to see what’s going on, as best I can with the fog,” he
said.
They didn’t want to listen to him. He hadn’t really thought they would.
Somewhere not far away, iron beat on iron—the Chernagors were still trying
to hold off the Avornans and even to drive them back. Grus’ bodyguards got
between him and the sound of fighting, as though the ring of sword against
sword were as deadly as point or edge.
In spite of the guardsmen, Grus saw a good deal. By now, long stretches
of the walls were in Avornan hands. The only Chernagors left in these
parts were dead, wounded, or disarmed and taken prisoner. The captives had
the stunned look of men for whom disaster had come from out of the
blue—or, here, out of the gray. One moment, they’d felt secure enough on
the works that had held out for so long. The next, they saw their comrades
bleeding while they themselves faced an uncertain fate. No wonder they
looked as though they’d just, and just barely, survived an earthquake.
And, as the day advanced toward midmorning, the sun finally began to
thin the fog—not to burn it off, but at least to thin it to the point
where Grus could see farther than his own knees. He got his first real
look inside Nishevatz. Most of the buildings had plastered fronts painted
in various bright colors and steeply pitched slate roofs to shed the
winter snow.
Parties of Avornans and Chernagors ran through the narrow, muddy
streets, pausing every so often to exchange sword strokes or shoot arrows.
Grus watched a shrieking Chernagor go down, beset by two Avornans who
thrust their blades into him again and again until at last he stopped
moving. It took a sickeningly long time.
One of the guardsmen pointed deeper into the city than Grus had been
looking. “See, Your Majesty?” the guard said in pleased tones. “There’s
the first fire. Now they’ll have to worry about putting that out along
with fighting us.”
“So they will,” Grus agreed. This was what he’d been trying to
accomplish for years. Now that he’d finally done it, he was reminded of
the cost. His soldiers and Vasilko’s weren’t the only actors in the drama.
Old men hobbled on sticks, trying to escape both foes and flames. Women
and children ran screaming through the streets, fearing what fate had in
store for them—and well they might.
A Chernagor archer saw Grus peering down from the wall. The man
set an arrow to his bowstring and let fly. The shaft hissed past
the king’s face. Before the Chernagor could shoot again, Grus’ guards
pulled him back from the edge of the wall. “You see, Your Majesty?” one of
them said. “It’s not safe up here.”
“Not safe anywhere,” Grus answered. He shook off the guards and peered
into Nishevatz again. “I wonder where Vasilko is and what he’s doing.”
“Quaking in his boots, most likely,” a guardsman said. “This place is
going to fall now, and he’s got to know it.” As though to prove his point,
what had to be a regiment’s worth of Avornans surged out from the wall,
driving the Chernagor who’d shot at Grus and his comrades back toward the
center of Nishevatz.
Another guard said, “They’re shouting your name, Your Majesty,”
“I hear them,” Grus said. When he first wore the crown, hearing
soldiers use his name as a battle cry had been thrilling. Now it was just
something that happened.
I’m getting old—
or older, anyhow, he thought.
He also heard shouts of “ Vasilko!” He wondered whether Vsevolod’s son
still enjoyed hearing soldiers shouting his name. With a little luck, that
wouldn’t matter much longer.
“Where can we get into the city from the wall?” Grus asked his
guardsmen. That made them look unhappy all over again, but they couldn’t
very well pretend they hadn’t heard him, however much they might have
wanted to. Instead, they fussed all the way to a staircase and all the way
down. Even after Grus came down inside Nishevatz, his bodyguards still
grumbled and fumed.
Avornan soldiers with spears led out long columns of Chernagor
prisoners—grim-faced men who tramped along with empty hands raised high
over their heads or tied behind their backs. Somewhere not far away, women
wailed. Grus winced, knowing they were all too likely to have reason to
wail. His own men were only . . . men, a lot of them no better than they
had to be.
“Where is the prince’s palace?” he asked. “Chances are, that’s where
Vasilko will make his stand.” He stopped and snapped his fingers. “Wait—I
have a map of the town as it was, anyhow.” Maybe Lanius’ gift would do him
some good after all.
A captain said, “I don’t know if we can get anywhere in Nishevatz very
easily. Do you see? The fire is starting to take hold.”
So it was. Grus wondered if anyone in Nishevatz would ever see clearly
again. Even as the fog thinned and the sun struggled to break through,
thick clouds of black smoke began filling the streets of the city. A
building fell down with a rending crash. New flames leaped up from the
ruins. How long before most of Nishevatz was gutted? If it was, would
Beloyuz thank him? He doubted that. If Beloyuz proved like most princes,
he would stay grateful until Vasilko was dead or captive, and not much
longer.
Grus suddenly stared. Was that part of the fire coming his way through
the smoke and fog all on its own? A moment later, he realized it was
Pterocles, whose hands still glowed brightly. “You can take off your spell
now,” the king called.
The wizard looked down at himself. “Oh,” he said sheepishly. “I forgot
all about that.” He muttered in a low voice. His hands once more became no
more than ordinary flesh and blood.
“Can you lead me past the worst of the fires to Vasilkos stronghold?”
Grus asked.
“If someone will tell me where Vasilkos stronghold is, I’ll try to take
you there,” Pterocles answered.
That proved more complicated than Grus had expected. None of the
Avornans nearby had been inside Nishevatz until that morning. None of the
Chernagor captives seemed willing to understand Avornan. At last, the
Avornans rounded up a noble named Pozvizd, who had escaped with Vsevolod
and Beloyuz. He understood Avornan—after a fashion. “Yes, I take you,” he
said, and started off at a brisk pace. Grus, Pterocles, and a host of
guardsmen followed in his wake.
If he’d known just where he was going, all would have been well. But he
promptly got lost. Smoke and fire confused him. No doubt,
so did being away from Nishevatz for several years. And when he
did know the way for a brief stretch, he often couldn’t use what he knew
because of battling Chernagors and Avornans.
“We get there,” he said over his shoulder. “Soon or late, we get
there.”
“Huzzah,” Grus said. “If we can, I’d like to get there before everyone
involved in the fighting dies of old age.”
Several of his guards grinned. Pterocles giggled, which was most
unprofessional of him. And Pozvizd either hadn’t heard all of that or
didn’t understand all of it, for he just kept smiling back over his
shoulder and saying, “We get there. Yes, we get there soon.”
And after a while—not soon enough to suit Grus, but not quite slowly
enough to drive him altogether mad—they did get there. Most of Nishevatz
had its own look, different from anything Grus would have seen in Avornis.
When he came to Vasilkos stronghold, though, he felt a distinct shock of
recognition. This building, plainly, had begun life as an Avornan noble’s
home. The lines were unmistakable, undeniable—and it was right where the
map Lanius had given him said the city governor’s residence should be.
But, just as plainly, it had been serving different needs for a long, long
time.
Heavy iron grills covered all the windows. Thick ironbound gates warded
the entranceways. Towers full of archers rose from the roofs. “We’ll have
to knock it down with catapults or burn it down,” Grus said in dismay.
“Just taking it won’t be too easy.”
From inside, someone was shouting furiously. Pozvizd pointed. “That
Vasilko,” he said. “He yell for more soldiers. He say, somebody pay, he
not get more.”
“I hope he’ll be the one who pays,” Grus said.
Another voice came from the residence-turned-citadel—one not as loud,
but full of authority. Pterocles stiffened. “That is a wizard,” he said.
“I know the serpent by its fangs. That man has power—some of his own, and
some he can call upon from . . . elsewhere.” The Banished One. He means the Banished One, even if he doesn’t
care to say the name, Grus thought. Quietly, he asked, “Can you meet
him?”
Pterocles shrugged. “We’ll find out, won’t we? Right now, he hardly
seems aware of me. He’s worried about how to keep Nishevatz from
falling.”
“A little late for that, wouldn’t you say?” Grus asked.
“I think so,” Pterocles answered, “but I know more about what’s going
on inside the city than ... he does.” The wizard stiffened. He pointed to
a second-story window. “There he is!”
He didn’t mean the Banished One now. He meant the Chernagor wizard.
Grus couldn’t have told the sorcerer from any other Chernagor—a burly,
bearded man in a mailshirt. He wasn’t even sure he was looking in the
right window. But Pterocles seemed very sure. He flung up an arm and
gasped out a counterspell.
“Are you all right?” Grus asked.
“He’s strong,” the wizard answered. “He’s very strong. And he’s drawing
on more power than he owns. It’s . . . him, sure enough.”
“Him? Oh,” Grus said. Pterocles had confused him for a moment. The
Banished One hadn’t paid much attention to the siege of Nishevatz. The
civil war between Korkut and Sanjar had kept him occupied closer to home.
How much could he do, intervening at the last minute?
We’re going to find out, Grus thought.
Pterocles staggered, as though someone had hit him hard. He used
another counterspell. This one sounded more potent—or more desperate—than
the first. If he could do nothing but defend . . . How long until he
couldn’t defend anymore, until the Chernagor sorcerer, aided by power from
the Banished One, emptied and crushed him yet again?
“Hang on,” Grus said. “I’ll find a way out of this for you.”
“How do you propose to manage that?” Pterocles panted. “Will you call
down the gods from the heavens to fight on my side?”
“No, but I’ll come up with something else,” Grus said. The wizard
snorted, obviously not believing a word of that. For a moment, Grus didn’t
know what he could do to make good on his promise. Then he shouted for a
squadron of archers. He pointed to the window where the Chernagor wizard
looked out. “Kill me that man!” he said. “Second story, third window from
the left.”
The bowmen didn’t ask questions. They just said, “Yes, Your Majesty,”
took arrows from their quivers, and let fly. Not content with one shot
apiece, they kept at it, sending scores of shafts at the window. A man
with even an ordinary sense of self-preservation would have moved away
from his dangerous position as soon as the arrows started flying. Infused
with force from the Banished One, Vasilko’s sorcerer stayed where he was.
To him, destroying Pterocles must have seemed more important than anything
else, even life itself.
But then he staggered back not because he wanted to but because he had
to. A pair of arrows had struck him in the chest, less than a hands
breadth apart. “Well done!” Grus shouted. “You’ll all have a reward for
that!”
Pterocles, who had been bending like a sapling in a gale, suddenly
straightened. “He stopped, Your Majesty,” the wizard said, more than a
little amazement in his voice. “He just. . . stopped. How did you do that?
You’re no sorcerer.”
“Maybe not, but I know one magic trick,” Grus replied. “Shoot a man a
couple of times, and he’s a lot less interested in wizardry than he was
before.”
Pterocles took a moment to think that over and, very visibly, to gather
strength. “I see,” he said at last. “That’s—a less elegant solution than I
would have come up with, I think.” Lanius would have said the same thing, Grus thought.
Some people are perfectionists. As for me. . . “I don’t care
whether it’s elegant or not. All I care about is whether it works, and you
can’t very well argue about that.”
“No, Your Majesty, that’s true.” Pterocles seemed to realize something
more might be called for. “And thank you.”
“You’re welcome,” the king answered. “I presume that was Vasilko’s best
wizard. Now we have to find out whether he has any others the Banished One
wants to try to use.”
“Yes.” Pterocles looked as though he wished Grus hadn’t thought of
that.
Meanwhile, though, more and more Avornan soldiers flooded into the
square around the building Vasilko was using for a citadel. Grus didn’t
think it could hold out too much longer. Even with the additions and
improvements the Chernagors had made to it, it hadn’t been built as a
fortress. Sooner or later, the Avornans would find a way to break in or to
set it afire—and that would be the end for Prince Vsevolod’s unloving and
unloved son.
But then the entrance to the stronghold flew open. Out burst a swarm of
Chernagors. They were roaring like lions, some wordlessly, others bawling
out Prince Vasilko’s name. The Avornans rushed to meet them. Vasilko must
have seen the same thing Grus had—his citadel would not hold. Since it
would not, why not sally forth to conquer or die?
That made a certain amount of sense in the abstract. Grus had perhaps
half a dozen heartbeats to think of it in the abstract. Then he realized
that swarm of Chernagors, Prince Vasilko at their head, was rushing
straight toward him. If he went down under their swords and spears, he
wouldn’t much care what happened in the rest of the fight for Nishevatz.
No, that wasn’t true—if he went down, he wouldn’t care at all.
“Rally to me!” he shouted to the Avornans in the square. “Rally to me
and throw them back. We can do it!” He pulled his sword from its
scabbard.
So did Pterocles beside him. The wizard probably had only the vaguest
idea what to do with an unsorcerous weapon. Eyeing the Chernagors and how
young and fresh and fierce they looked, Grus remembered every one of his
own years, too.
How long can I last against an onslaught like this?
He didn’t have to find out on the instant, for his guardsmen sprang out
in front of him and took the brunt of the Chernagor onslaught. Several of
them fell, but they also brought down even more of Vasilko’s men. Yet
still more Chernagors pushed forward. Yelling and cursing, the surviving
bodyguards met them head-on. By then, Grus was in the fight, too, slashing
at a Chernagor who had more ferocity than skill.
The king’s blade bit. The Chernagor reeled back with a shriek,
clutching a gashed forearm. Grus knew a certain somber pride. He could
still hold his own against a younger foe. For a while he could, anyhow.
But the younger men could keep on going long after he flagged.
“Vasilko!” roared the Chernagors.
“Grus!” the royal guardsmen shouted back. Pterocles took a roundhouse
swipe at one of Vasilko’s men. He missed. But then he tackled the
Chernagor. Grus’ sword came down on the man’s neck. Blood fountained. The
Chernagors body convulsed, then went limp.
“Are you all right?” Grus asked Pterocles, hauling him to his feet.
“I—think so,” the wizard answered shakily. Then they were both fighting
for their lives, too busy and too desperate to talk.
More Avornan soldiers rushed up to reinforce the bodyguards. The
archers who’d hit the Chernagor wizard poured volley after volley into
Vasilkos henchmen. The Chernagors had few archers with whom to reply.
Those whistling shafts tore the heart out of their charge. Their shouts
changed to cries of despair as they realized they weren’t going to be able
to break free.
There was Vasilko himself, swinging a two-handed sword as though it
were a willow wand. He spotted Grus and hacked his way toward him. “I may
die,” Vsevolod’s son shouted in Avornan, “but I’ll make the Fallen Star a
present of your soul!”
“By the gods in the heavens, you won’t!” Grus rushed toward Vasilko.
Only later did he wonder whether that was a good idea. At the time, he
didn’t seem able to do anything else.
Vasilkos first cut almost knocked Grus’ sword out of his hand. Vsevolod
had been a big, strong man, and his son was no smaller, but the power
Vasilko displayed hardly seemed natural. The Banished One had lent the
Chernagor wizard one kind of strength. Could he give Vasilko a different
sort? Grus had no idea whether that was possible, but he thought so by the
way the usurping prince handled his big, heavy blade.
Grus managed to beat the slash aside, and answered with a cut of his
own. Vasilko parried with contemptuous ease; by the way he handled it,
that two-handed sword might have weighed nothing at all. His next attack
again jolted Grus from both speed and power.
Am I getting old that fast? the king wondered.
“Steal my throne, will you?” Vasilko shouted. Even his voice seemed
louder and deeper than a man’s voice had any business being.
“You stole it to begin with,” Grus panted.
Vasilko showered him with what had to be curses in the Chernagor
language. He swung his sword again with that same superhuman strength.
Grus’ blade went flying. Vasilko roared in triumph. He brought up the
two-handed sword to finish the king. Grus leaped close and seized his
right wrist with both hands. It was like grappling with a bronze statue
that had come to ferocious, malevolent life. He knew he wouldn’t be able
to hold on long, and knew he would be sorry when he could hold on no
more.
Then Pterocles pointed his index finger at Vasilko and shouted out a
hasty spell. Vasilko shouted, too, in shock and fury. All of a sudden, his
voice was no more than a man’s. All of a sudden, the wrist Grus fought
desperately to hold might have been made from flesh and blood, not animate
metal.
Pterocles grabbed Vasilko around the knees. The usurping Prince of
Nishevatz fell to the cobbles. Grus hadn’t been sure Vasilko could fall.
He kicked the Chernagor in the head. When Vasilko kept on wrestling with
Pterocles after Grus kicked him the first time, he did it again. Pain shot
through his foot. Bleeding from the temple and the nose, Vasilko groaned
and went limp.
“Thanks again, Your Majesty,” Pterocles said, scrambling to his
feet.
“Thank
you,” Grus answered. “I thought I was gone there. What did you
do?”
“Blocked the extra strength the Banished One was feeding Vasilko,” the
wizard said. “Let’s get him tied up—or chained, better still. I don’t know
how long the spell will hold. I wasn’t sure it would hold at all, but I
thought I’d better try it.” He looked down at Vasilko. “Scrambling his
brains there will probably stretch it out a bit.”
“Good!” Grus exclaimed. “He was going to do worse than that to me. Now
let’s see what the rest of these bastards feel like doing.”
With their leader captive, most of the Chernagors who’d sallied from
the citadel threw down their weapons and raised their hands in surrender.
A stubborn handful fought to the end. They shouted something in their own
language, over and over again.
Before long, Grus found a Chernagor who admitted to speaking Avornan.
“What are they yelling about?” he asked.
“They cry for Fallen Star,” the Chernagor answered. “You know who is
Fallen Star?”
“Oh, yes. I know who the Fallen Star is,” Grus said grimly. “The
Menteshe give the Banished One that name, too. But the Menteshe have
always followed him. You Chernagors know the worship of the gods in the
heavens.”
The prisoner shrugged. “Fallen Star is strong power. We stay with
strong power.”
“Not strong enough,” Grus said. The Chernagor shrugged again. Grus
pointed at him. “If the Banished One is so strong and the gods in the
heavens are so weak, how did we take Nishevatz?”
“Luck,” the Chernagor said with another shrug. Grus almost hit him.
There were none so stubborn as those who would not see. But then the king
saw how troubled the man who had followed Vasilko looked. Maybe the
Chernagor wouldn’t admit it, but Grus thought his question had struck
home.
He jerked a thumb at the guards who’d brought the prisoner before him.
“Take this fellow away and put him back with his friends,” The Avornans
led off the Chernagor, none too gently. Grus hoped the captive would
infect his countrymen with doubt.
Hirundo came up to Grus and saluted. “Well, Your Majesty, we’ve got
this town,” he said, and paused to dab at a cut on his cheeks with a rag
as grimy as the hand that held it. Looking around, he made a sour face.
“Now that I’m actually inside, I’m not so sure why we ever wanted it in
the first place.”
“We wanted it because the Banished One had it, and because he could
make a nuisance of himself if he hung on to it. Now we’ve got it, and
we’ve got Vasilko”—the king pointed to the deposed usurper, who wore
enough chains to hold down a horse—“and I may have a broken toe.”
“A broken toe? I don’t follow,” Hirundo said. “And what’s Vasilko’s
problem? He looks like he can’t tell yesterday from turnips.”
Vasilko had regained consciousness, but he did indeed look as though he
didn’t know what to do with it now that he had it. “Maybe I kicked him in
the head too hard,” Grus answered. “That’s how I hurt my toe, too—kicking
him in the head.”
“Well, if you had to do it, you did it for a good reason,” Hirundo
observed.
“Easy for you to say,” Grus snapped. “And do you know what the healers
will do for me? Not a thing, that’s what. I broke a toe once, years ago,
trying to walk through a door instead of a doorway. They told me, ‘If we
put a splint on it, it will heal in six weeks. If we don’t, it will take a
month and a half And so they didn’t—and they won’t.”
“Lucky you,” Hirundo said, still with something less than perfect
sympathy.
Aside from his toe, Grus did feel pretty lucky. The Avornans had taken
Nishevatz, and hadn’t suffered too badly doing it. The Banished One would
be cast out here. And, looking at Vasilko, Grus thought his wits remained
too scrambled to do him much good.
The king waved to Pterocles. “Any sign the Banished One is trying to
feed strength into this fellow again?”
“Let me check,” the wizard answered. What followed wasn’t exactly a
spell. It seemed more as though Pterocles were listening intently than
anything else. After a bit, he shook his head. “No, Your Majesty. If the
Banished One is doing that, I can’t tell he’s doing it, and believe me, I
would be able to.”
“I have to believe you,” Grus said. He glanced toward Vasilko again. If
Vsevolod’s son had any more working brains than a thrall right now, Grus
would have been amazed. “I have to believe you, and I do.” He turned back
to Hirundo. “Where’s Beloyuz? Prince Beloyuz, I ought to say?”
“He’s somewhere in Nishevatz,” the general answered. “I know he came up
a ladder. What happened to him afterwards, I couldn’t tell you.”
“We’d better find him. It’s time for him to start
being the prince, if you know what I mean,” Grus said. “I hope
nothing’s happened to him. That would be bad for us—as far as the
Chernagors who stayed with Vsevolod go, he’s far and away the best of the
lot. He’s one of the younger ones, and he’s one of the more sensible ones,
too.”
“I’ll take care of it.” Hirundo started shouting for soldiers. They
came running. He ordered them to fan out through Nishevatz calling
Beloyuz’s name. The general also made sure they knew what the Chernagor
nobleman looked like. Turning to Grus, he said, “For all we know, every
fifth man in Nishevatz is named Beloyuz. We don’t want a crowd of them; we
want one in particular.”
“True,” Grus said. There weren’t a whole flock of Avornans who bore his
name, but he was sure there were some. The same could easily hold true for
the Chernagor.
Escorted by one of Hirundo’s soldiers, Beloyuz strode into the square
by the citadel about half an hour later. The new Prince of Nishevatz’s
face was as soot-streaked as anyone else’s. But the tracks of Beloyuz’s
tears cut cleanly through the filth. “My poor city!” he cried to Grus.
“Did you have to do this to take it?”
“It’s war, Your Highness,” Grus said. “Haven’t you ever seen a sack
before? It could have been a lot worse, believe me.”
Beloyuz didn’t answer, not directly. Instead, he threw his arms wide
and wailed, “But this is Nishevatz!”
Grus put an arm around his shoulder. “It’s the way I’d feel if someone
sacked the city of Avornis. But you can set this to rights. Believe me,
you can. Most of the city is still standing, and most of the people are
still breathing. In five years or so, no one who comes here a stranger
will have any idea what Nishevatz went through.”
“Easy enough for you to say,” Beloyuz retorted, as Grus had to Hirundo.
“You are not the one who will have to rebuild this city.”
“No, not this city,” Grus replied. “But what do you think I’ll be doing
down in southern Avornis? The Menteshe have sacked a lot of towns there,
and what they’ve done to the farmlands makes the way we behaved here look
like a kiss on the cheek. You’re not the only one with worries like this,
Your Highness.”
Beloyuz grunted. He cared nothing for cities in southern Avornis. In
that, he was much like the late, not particularly lamented (at least by
Grus) Prince Vsevolod. He said, “And what of Durdevatz and Ravno? When
they see how weak we are, they will want to steal our lands.”
“Well, do you want me to leave an Avornan garrison behind?” Grus asked.
Beloyuz quickly shook his head. “I didn’t think so,” Grus told him. “If I
did leave one, people would say I wanted to steal your lands, and I
don’t.”
“Why did I let you talk me into being prince?” Beloyuz said.
“Someone has to. Who would be better? Vsevolod’s dead.” Grus wasn’t at
all convinced Vsevolod had been better, but passed over that in silence.
He pointed to Vasilko instead. “Him?” Beloyuz shook his head again. “Do
you have anyone else in mind?” Grus asked. Another headshake from the
Chernagor. Grus spread his hands. “Well, then, Your Highness—welcome to
the job.”
“I’ll try.” Beloyuz very visibly gathered himself. He might have been
taking the weight of the world on his shoulders. “Yes, I’ll try.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
King Lanius was gnawing the meat off a goose drumstick when he almost
choked. “Are you all right?” Sosia asked. “I think so,” he replied once he
could speak again. He tried to snap his fingers in annoyance, but they
were too greasy. Muttering, he wiped his hands on a napkin—he did remember
not to use the tablecloth, which would have been the style in his
grandfather’s day, or his own clothes, which would have been the style in
his grandfather’s grandfather’s day. He sipped from his wine cup—his voice
needed more lubricating even if his 6ngers didn’t. “The only problem is,
I’m an idiot.”
“Oh.” Sosia eyed him. “Well, I could have told you that.”
“Thank you, sweetheart.” Lanius gave her a seated bow. He waited.
Nothing more happened. He muttered again, then broke down and said,
“Aren’t you going to ask me why I’m an idiot?”
His wife shrugged. “I hadn’t intended to. But all right—how were you an
idiot this time?” Her tone said she knew how he’d been an idiot before,
and with which serving girls.
“It’s not like that.” Lanius hid his own smile. Sosia still hadn’t
found out about Flammea.
“In that case, maybe I really am interested,” Sosia said.
“Thank you,” Lanius repeated. By the elegant way she inclined her head,
her family might have been royal much longer than his. Now he did smile.
That struck him funny. Sosia laughed at him. In a couple of heartbeats, he
was laughing, too.
“Tell me,” the queen said.
“Do you remember the old parchments the envoy from Durdevatz brought me
as a gift when he came down here last summer?”
Sosia shrugged again. “I didn’t, not until you reminded me. Playing
around with those old things is your sport, not mine.” Quickly, she added,
“But its a better sport than playing around with young things, by the
gods.” Lanius made a face at her; he would have guessed she’d say that.
She made one right back at him. “What about these precious parchments,
then?”
“They may
be precious parchments, for all I know. I was so excited to get
them, and then I put them away to go through them in a little while . . .
and here it is more than a year later, and I haven’t done it. That’s why
I’m an idiot.”
“Oh.” Sosia thought that over, then shrugged. “Well, you’ve had reasons
for being one that I’ve liked less, I will say.”
“Yes, I thought you would.” Lanius made another face at her. She
laughed again, so she wasn’t too peeved. Sure enough, she hadn’t found out
about Flammea.
Lanius almost charged away from the supper table to look at the
documents from Durdevatz. He was halfway out of his seat before he
realized that would be rude. Besides, the light was beginning to fail, and
trying to read faded ink by lamplight was a lot less enjoyable than, say,
trying to seduce a maidservant. Tomorrow morning would do.
When the morning came, he found himself busy with moncats and monkeys
and a squabble between two nobles down in the south. He forgot the
parchments again, at least until noon. Then he went into the archives to
look at them. He was sure he remembered where they were, and he was
usually good about such things. Not this time. He confidently went to
where he thought he’d put the gift from Durdevatz, only to find the
parchments weren’t there. Some of the things he said then would have made
a guardsman blush, or more likely blanch.
Cursing didn’t help in any real way, even if it did make him feel
better. Once he stopped filling the air with sparks, he had to go poking
around if he wanted to find the missing parchments. They were bound to be
somewhere in the archives. No one would have stolen them. He was sure of
that. He was the only person in the city of Avornis who thought they were
worth anything.
If they weren’t where he thought he’d put them, where were they likely
to be? He looked around the hall, trying to think back more than a year.
He’d come in, he’d had the parchments in his hand . . . and what had he
done with them?
Good question. He wished he had a good answer for it.
After some more curses—these less spirited than the ones that had gone
before—he started looking. If he hadn’t put them where he thought, what
was the next most likely place?
He was on his way over to it when something interrupted him. Ancient
parchments—even ancient parchments from up in the Chernagor country—were
unlikely to say, “Mrowr?”
“Oh, by the gods!” Lanius threw his hands in the air and fought down a
strong urge to scream. “I haven’t got time to deal with you right now,
Pouncer!”
“Mrowr?” the moncat said again. It didn’t care where the king had put
the documents from Durdevatz. It had gotten out of its room again, and had
probably also paid a call on the kitchens. The cooks had stopped up the
one hole in the wall, but the moncat had found another. It
liked visiting the kitchens—all sorts of interesting things were
there. Who was going to deal with it if the king didn’t? Nobody, and
Lanius knew it only too well.
These days, though, he had a weapon he hadn’t used before. Because he’d
thought he knew where the parchments were, he was wearing a robe instead
of the grubby clothes he often put on to dig through the archives, but he
didn’t care. He lay down on the dusty floor and started thumping his chest
with his right hand.
“Mrowr!” Pouncer came running. Lanius had trained the moncat to know
what that sound meant—
if I get up onto him, he’ll give me something good to eat. That
was what Pouncer had to be thinking. The moncat was carrying a big, heavy
silver spoon. Sure enough, the archives hadn’t been its first stop on its
latest jaunt through the spaces between the palace’s walls.
“You’ve stolen something expensive this time. Congratulations,” Lanius
said, stroking Pouncer under the chin and by the whiskers. Pouncer closed
its eyes and stretched out its neck and rewarded him with a feline smile
and a deep, rumbling purr. The moncat didn’t even seem offended that he
hadn’t fed it anything.
He stood up, carefully cradling the animal in his arms. Pouncer kept
acting remarkably happy. Lanius carried the moncat out of the archives and
down the hall to the chamber where it lived—until it felt like escaping,
anyhow. Pouncer didn’t fuss until he took the silver spoon away from it.
Even then, it didn’t fuss too much. By now, it was used to and probably
resigned to his taking prizes away from it.
Once Pouncer was back with the other moncats, Lanius brought the spoon
to the kitchens. “You didn’t steal that yourself, Your Majesty!” Quiscula
exclaimed when she saw what he carried. “That miserable creature’s been
here again, and nobody even knew it.”
“Pouncer doesn’t think it’s a miserable creature,” Lanius told the
pudgy cook.
“Talented would probably be a better word.”
“Talented, foof!” Quiscula said. “Plenty of thieves on two legs are
talented, too, and what happens to them when they get caught? Not half
what they deserve, a lot of the time.”
“Thieves who go on two legs know the difference between right and
wrong,” Lanius said. “The moncat doesn’t.” He paused. “I don’t think it
does, anyhow.”
“A likely story,” Quiscula said. “It’s a wicked beast, and you can’t
tell me any different, so don’t waste your breath trying.”
“I wouldn’t think of it.” Lanius held out the spoon. “Here. Take charge
of this until Pouncer decides to steal it again.”
“Oh, you’re too generous to me, Your Majesty!” Quiscula played the
coquette so well, she and Lanius both started laughing. She accepted the
spoon from the king.
Lanius started back toward the archives, wondering if he would ever get
to look for those parchments. Everything seemed to be conspiring against
him. And everything, today, included Princess Limosa, who was carrying her
baby down the corridor. “Hello, Your Majesty,” Limosa said. “Isn’t Capella
the sweetest little thing you ever saw?”
“Well. . .” Lanius wondered how to answer that and stay truthful and
polite at the same time. Truth won. He said, “If you don’t count Crex and
Pitta, yes.”
Limosa stared at him, then giggled. “All right, that’s fair enough. Who
doesn’t think their children are the most wonderful ones in the
world?”
“I can’t think of anybody,” Lanius said. “That’s what keeps us from
feeding our children to the hunting hounds, I suppose.”
Limosa’s eyes got even wider than they had been before. She hugged
Capella a little tighter and hurried away as though she feared Lanius had
some dreadful, contagious disease. He wondered why. He hadn’t said he
wanted to feed Capella—or any other children—to hunting hounds. He sighed.
Some people just didn’t listen.
He’d just started searching through the spots likeliest to hold the
missing documents when somebody began banging on the door to the archives.
The king said something pungent. The servants knew they weren’t supposed
to do things like that. Bubulcus, the one who’d been most likely to
“forget” such warnings, was dead. Either someone was making a dreadful
mistake or something dreadful, something he really needed to know about,
had just happened. Adding a few more choice phrases under his breath, he
went to see who was bothering him in his sanctum.
“Sosia!” he said in astonishment. “What are you doing here? What’s
going on?”
“I was going to ask you the same question,” his wife answered. “What on
earth did you say to Limosa? Queen Quelea’s mercy, it’s frightened the
life out of her, whatever it was.”
“Oh, by the gods!” Lanius clapped a hand to his forehead in
exasperation altogether unfeigned. “She really
doesn’t listen.” He spelled out exactly what he’d said to
Limosa.
Even before he got halfway through, one of Sosia’s eyebrows started
climbing. Lanius had seen that expression more often on Grus than on his
wife. He liked it no better on her. Once he’d finished, she said, “Well, I
don’t blame Limosa a bit. Poor thing! Hunting dogs, indeed! You should be
ashamed of yourself.”
“You weren’t listening, either,” Lanius complained. “I didn’t say that
was what we did with children. I didn’t say it was what we should do. I
said it was what we would do if the people who had them didn’t think they
were wonderful. Don’t you see the difference?”
“What I see is that nobody’s got any business talking about feeding
babies to any hounds.” Sosia spoke with impressive certainty. “And that
goes double for talking about babies and hounds to somebody who’s just had
one. Had a baby, I mean.” She wagged a finger at him. “You’re not going to
make me sound foolish. This is important.”
“I wasn’t. This is already nothing but foolishness,” Lanius said.
“It certainly is—
your foolishness. Next time you see Limosa, you apologize to her,
do you hear me?” Sosia didn’t wait for an answer. She stared past Lanius
into the cavernous archives. “So this is where you spend all your time. I
feel as though I’m looking at the other woman.”
“Don’t be silly,” Lanius said, although that comparison made much more
sense to him than the other one had. “And I still don’t see why you want
me to apologize to Limosa when I didn’t say anything bad to begin
with.”
“Yes, you did. You’re just too—too logical to know it.” Sosia turned
her back and stalked off. Over her shoulder, she added, “And if you think
people run on logic all the time, you’d better think again.”
“I don’t think anything of the sort. People cured me of it a long time
ago,” Lanius said plaintively. Sosia didn’t even slow down. She went
around a corner and disappeared. The king almost chased after her to go on
explaining. But he realized—logically—that it wouldn’t do him any good,
and so he stayed where he was.
When he could no longer hear Sosia’s angry footsteps, he shut the door
to the archives once more. For good measure, he barred it behind him. Then
he went back to looking for the parchments from Durdevatz.
He searched on and off for four days, and finally found them by
accident. If he had told Sosia about that, she would either have laughed
at him or rolled her eyes in despair. He’d forgotten he’d put the
parchments in a stout wooden box to keep them safe. How many times had he
walked past it without paying it any mind? More than he wanted to think
about—he was sure of that. If he hadn’t barked his knuckles on a corner of
the box, he might never have found the documents at all.
That moment of sudden, unexpected pain made him take a long,
reproachful look at the box. When he recognized it, he still felt
reproachful—self-reproachful. After all that searching—and after its
ludicrous end—he was almost afraid to look at the parchments. If they
turned out to be worthless or dull, how could he stand it?
Of course, if he didn’t look at them, why had he gone to all the
trouble of finding them? After rubbing his hand, he carried the box over
to the table where he’d written most of
How to Be a King. When he opened the box, he started to laugh.
The Chernagors had made him happy with some of the cheapest presents ever
given to a King of Avornis—a pair of moncats, a pair of monkeys, and a
pile of documents dug out of a decrepit cathedral. For all he knew,
merchants in the north country laughed whenever they heard his name.
He didn’t care. Happiness and having enough money weren’t the same
thing. He’d been happy enough even at times when Grus squeezed him
hardest. That money and happiness weren’t the same thing didn’t mean
happiness had nothing to do with money. Lanius’ intuition, though, didn’t
reach that far.
The first few parchments he unrolled and read had to do with the
cathedral, not with anything that went on inside it. They included a
letter from the yellow-robed high-hallow then presiding in the building
asking a long-dead King of Avornis for funds to repair it and add to its
mosaic decoration. The letter had come to the capital and gone back to
what was then Argithea, not Durdevatz, with the king’s scribbled comment
and signature below it.
We are not made of silver, the sovereign had written.
If the projects are worthy, surely your townsfolk will support them.
If they are not, all the silver in the world will not make them
so.
Lanius studied that with considerable admiration, “I couldn’t have put
it better myself,” he murmured. He studied the response until he’d
memorized it. He could think of so many places to use it. ...
Other documents told him more about the history of Argithea than he’d
ever known before. Some of them talked about the Chernagors as sea
raiders. Up until then, he’d seen only a couple of parchments like that.
They proved Argithea hadn’t been the first town along the coast of the
Northern Sea to fall to the Chernagors. Lanius tried to remember whether
he’d known that before. Try as he would, he couldn’t be sure.
More appeals—for money and for aid—to the capital followed, from the
city governor and from the high-ranking priest at the cathedral. Only one
of them had any sort of reply.
A relieving force is on the way, the answer said.
Hold out until it arrives.
There were no more letters in Avornan after the date of that one. The
messenger bringing the answer must have managed to slip through the
besieging Chernagors; Lanius had read elsewhere that they hadn’t been
polished at the art of taking cities. Polished or not, though, they’d
surely taken Argithea before the promised relieving force arrived. They
must have kept the Avornans from recapturing the town, too. From then on,
the history of Argithea ended and that of Durdevatz began.
One parchment still sat at the bottom of the box. Lanius pulled it out
as much from a sense of duty as for any other reason. Since he was going
through the documents, he thought he ought to go through all of them. He
didn’t expect anything more interesting or exciting than what he’d already
found.
But the first sentence caught and held his eye.
I
wonder why I have written this, it said,
when no one is ever likely to read it, or to understand it if he
does. After that, he couldn’t have stopped reading for anything. The
author was a black-robed priest named Xenops. He had been consecrated the
year before the Chernagors took Argithea out of the Kingdom of Avornis,
and had stayed on at the cathedral under the town’s new masters for the
next fifty years and more.
“Olor’s beard!” Lanius whispered. “This shows how Durdevatz passed from
one world to the other.” He’d never imagined seeing such a document. In
their early years in these parts, the Chernagors hadn’t written in Avornan
or their own language or any other. And he had not thought any Avomans
left behind in the north had set down what they’d seen and heard and felt.
No such chronicles existed in the royal archives—he was sure of that. A
moment later, he shook his head. One did now.
Xenops had caught moments in the transition from the old way of life to
the new. He’d mocked the crude coins the Chernagors began to mint a
generation after the fall of Argithea.
Next to those of Avornis, they are ugly and irregular, he’d
written.
But new coins of Avornis come seldom if at all, while so many old ones
are hoarded against hard times. Even these ugly things may be better than
none.
Later, he’d noted the demise of Avornan in the market square.
Besides me, only a few old grannies use it as a birthspeech
nowadays, he said.
Some of the younger folk can speak it after a fashion, but they prefer
the conquerors’ barbarous jargon. Soon, only those who need Avornan in
trade will know it at all.
Once, earlier, some of the Avornans left in the city had plotted to
rejoin it to the kingdom from which it had been torn. The Chernagors
discovered the plot and bloodily put it down.
But none of them so much as looked toward me, Xenops wrote.
Had they done so, they might have been surprised. I have been for so
long invisible to the new lords of this town, though, that they cannot see
me at all. Well, I know their deeds, regardless of whether they know
mine.
That was interesting, to say the least. How deep in the conspiracy had
Xenops been? Had he quietly started it and managed to survive unnoticed
when it fell to pieces? The only evidence Lanius had—the only evidence he
would ever have—lay before him now, and the priest did not go into detail.
If someone had found and read his chronicle while he still lived in
Durdevatz, he had said enough to hang himself, so why not more? Lanius
knew he would never find out.
A chilling passage began,
He calls himself a spark from the Fallen Star. Xenops went on to
record how an emissary from the Banished One had come to Durdevatz even
that long ago. He’d made a mistake—he’d gotten angry when the Chernagors
didn’t fall down on their knees before him right away.
I
advised the lords of the Chernagors that such a one was not to be
trusted, as he had shown by his own speech and deeds, Xenops wrote.
They were persuaded, and sent him away unsuccessful.
How much did Avornis owe to this altogether unknown priest? If the
Chernagors had fallen under the sway of the Banished One centuries
earlier, how would the other city-states—how would Avornis— have fared?
Not well, not when Avornis might have been trapped between the Banished
Ones backers to north and south.
“Thank you, Xenops,” Lanius murmured. “You’ll get your due centuries
later than you should have, but you’ll have it.” He could think of several
passages in
How to Be a King he would need to revise.
At the end of the long roll of parchment, Xenops wrote,
Now, as I say, I am old. I have heard that the old always remember the
time of their youth as the sweet summer of the world. I dare say it is
true. But who could blame me for having that feeling myself? Before the
barbarians came, Argithea was part of a wider world. Now it is alone, and
I rarely hear what passes beyond its walls. The Chernagors do not even
keep its name, but use some vile appellation of their own. Their speech
drives out Avornan; even I have had to acquire it, however reluctantly I
cough out its gutturals. The tongue I learned in my cradle gutters toward
extinction. When I am gone—
which will not be long—
who here will know, much less care, what I have set down in this
scroll? No one, I fear me—
no one at all. If the gods be kind, let it pass through time until it
comes into the hands of someone who will care for it in the reading as I
have in the writing. King Olor, Queen Quelea, grant this your servants
final prayer.
Tears stung Lanius’ eyes. “The gods heard you,” he whispered, though
Xenops, of course, could not hear him. But how many centuries had Olor and
Quelea taken to deliver the priest’s manuscript into the hands of someone
who could appreciate it as it deserved? If they were going to answer
Xenops’ last request, couldn’t they have done it sooner? Evidently
not.
Was a prayer answered centuries after it was made truly answered at
all? In one sense, Lanius supposed so. But the way the gods had chosen to
respond did poor Xenops no good at all.
Lanius looked again at the long-dead priest’s closing words. No, Xenops
hadn’t expected anyone in his lifetime could make sense of what he’d
written. He’d merely hoped someone would someday. On reflection, the gods
had given him what he’d asked for. Even so, Lanius would have
been surprised if Xenops had thought his chronicle would have to wait so
very long to find an audience.
But then, for all Xenops knew, the scroll might have stayed unread
until time had its way with it. The priest must have thought that likely,
as a matter of fact, for Avornan was a dying language in the town that had
become Durdevatz. And, except among traders who used it for dealing with
the Avornans farther south but not among themselves, it had died there.
Yes, its getting here
was a miracle, even if a slow one.
“A slow miracle.” Lanius spoke the words aloud, liking the way they
felt in his mouth. But the Banished One could also work what men called
miracles when he intervened in the world’s affairs, and he didn’t wait
centuries to do it. There were times when he waited, and wasted, not a
moment.
The gods had exiled him to the material world. In a way, that made it
his. Could they really do much to counter his grip on things
here? If they couldn’t, who could? Ordinary people? He had far more power
than they did, as Lanius knew all too well. Yet somehow the Banished One
had failed to sweep everything before him. Maybe that was a portent. Maybe
it just meant the Banished One hadn’t triumphed. Time was on his
side.
But he still feared Lanius and Grus and Pterocles—and Alca as well, the
king remembered. Lanius only wished he knew what he could do to deserve
even more of the Banished One’s distrust.
For a while, nothing occurred to him. Having the exiled god notice him
at all was something of a compliment, even if one that he could often do
without. Then Lanius nodded to himself. If he—or rather, if Avornis’
wizards—could begin liberating thralls in large numbers, the Banished One
would surely pay heed.
What would he do then? Lanius didn’t know. He couldn’t begin to guess.
One thing he did know, though, was that he would dearly love to find
out.
Hisardzik sat at the end of a long spit of land jutting out into the
Northern Sea. Besieging Nishevatz had been anything but easy. Besieging
this Chernagor city-state would have been harder still, for the defenders
had to hold only a short length of wall against their foes. King Grus, a
longtime naval officer, knew he could have made the Chernagors’ work more
difficult with a fleet, but they had a fleet of their own. Their ships
were tied up at quays beyond the reach of any catapult.
Fortunately, however, it did not look as though it would come to
fighting. Prince Lazutin, the lord of Hisardzik, not only spoke to Grus
from the wall of his city, he came forth from a postern gate to meet the
King of Avornis. Lazutin was in his midthirties, slim by Chernagor
standards, with a sharp nose and clever, foxy features. He denied speaking
Avornan, and brought along an interpreter. Grus suspected he knew more
than he let on, for he listened with alert attention whenever any Avornan
spoke around him.
Grus did his best to sound severe, saying, “You fell into bad company,
Your Highness, when you chose Vasilko’s side.”
Lazutin spoke volubly in the Chernagor tongue after that was translated
for him. The interpreter, a pudgy man named Sverki, said, “He says, Your
Majesty, it was one of those things. It was political. It was not
personal.”
“Men who get killed die just as dead either way,” Grus said.
“You have shown you are stronger than Vasilko,” Lazutin said. Sverki
did such a good job of echoing his master’s inflections, Grus soon forgot
he was there. Through him, the Prince of Hisardzik went on, “You have
shown the gods in the heavens are stronger than the Banished One. This
also is worth knowing.”
Grus had an Avornan who understood the Chernagor speech listening to
the conversation to make sure Sverki did not twist what Lazutin said or
what Grus himself said to Lazutin. The king glanced over to him now. The
Avornan nodded, which meant Lazutin really had spoken of the Banished One,
and not of the Fallen Star. Grus took that for a good sign.
He said, “You should have known that anyhow, Your Highness.”
Prince Lazutin shrugged delicately. “Some things are more readily
accepted with proof. A man may say this or that, but what he says and what
is are often not the same. Or have you found otherwise?” He arched an
eyebrow, as though daring Grus to tell him he had.
And Grus couldn’t, and knew it. “We are not dealing with men here,” he
said. “We are dealing with those who are more than men.”
“The same also applies,” Lazutin answered. “It applies even more, I
would say, for those who are more than men make claims that are more than
claims, if you take my meaning. The only way to be sure who is believable
is to see who prevails when one is measured against another.” Here’s a cool customer, Grus thought. “And now you have seen?”
he asked.
“Oh, yes. Now I have seen.” Even speaking a language Grus didn’t
understand, Prince Lazutin fairly radiated sincerity.
In light of the games Lazutin had played, that made Grus less inclined
to trust him, not more. “Since you’ve seen, what do you propose to do
about it?” the king said.
“Ah ... do about it?” If doing anything about it had occurred to the
Prince of Hisardzik, he concealed it very well.
But Grus nodded. “Yes, do about it. Ships from Hisardzik raided the
coast of Avornis. Hisardzik sided with Vasilko and against me. Do you
think you can get away with that and not pay a price?”
By the look on Lazutin’s face, he’d thought exactly that. He didn’t
much take to the idea of discovering he might be mistaken, either. “If you
think you can take my city as you took Nishevatz, Your Majesty, you had
better think again.”
“Not this late in the year, certainly, Your Highness,” Grus replied in
silky tones, and Lazutin looked smug. But then Grus went on, “But if I
turned my men loose and did a proper job of ravaging your fields, you
would have a lean time of it this winter.”
By the way Prince Lazutin bared his teeth, that had hit home. “You
might tempt me to go back to the Banished One, you know,” he observed.
Yes, he was a cool customer. “I’ll take the chance,” Grus said, “for
you’ve seen the true gods are stronger. You would do better to show you
are sorry because you made a mistake before than you would to go back to
it.”
“Would I?” Lazutin said bleakly. Grus nodded. The Prince of Hisardzik
scowled at him. “How sorry would you expect me to show I am?”
“Fifty thousand pieces of silver, or the equivalent weight,” Grus
answered, “and another fifty thousand a year for the next ten years.”
Lazutin turned purple. He said several things in the Chernagor language
that Sverki didn’t translate. The Avornan who spoke the northern tongue
stirred, but Grus declined to look his way. Finally, through Sverki,
Lazutin sputtered, “This is an outrage! A robbery!”
“I’d sooner think of it as paying for the damage your pirates did, with
interest to remind you those games can be expensive,” Grus said.
Lazutin promptly proved he was a prince of merchants and a merchant
prince—he started haggling with Grus over how much he would have to pay
and for how long. Grus let him dicker the settlement down to a first
payment of forty thousand plus thirty-five thousand a year for eight
years. He was willing not to take all of Lazutin’s pride. This way, the
prince could go back to his people and tell them he’d gotten something
from the hard-hearted King of Avornis.
Grus did say, “We’ll leave your lands as soon as we receive the first
payment.”
“Why am I not surprised?” Lazutin said. After a moment, he chuckled
ruefully. “You’re wasted on the Avornans, Your Majesty. Do you know that?
You should have been born a Chernagor.”
“A pleasant compliment,” said Grus, who supposed Lazutin had meant it
that way. “I am what I am, though.”
And what I am right now is the fellow holding the whip hand.
“So you are,” Lazutin said sourly. “What you are now is a nuisance to
Hisardsik.”
“What you were before was a nuisance to Avornis,” Grus replied. “Do you
think the one has nothing to do with the other?”
Prince Lazutin plainly thought just that. Why shouldn’t he have been
able to do as he pleased without worrying about consequences? What pirate
ever needed to have such worries? After he sailed away, what could the
folk whose coasts he had raided do? Here, it turned out the Avornans could
do more than he had dreamed.
“The sooner we have the payment, the sooner we’ll leave your land,”
Grus said pointedly, “and the sooner you can start the harvest.”
Fury filled Lazutin’s face. But it was impotent fury, for his warriors
were shut up inside Hisardzik. They could stand siege, yes, but they could
not break out. If Grus felt like burning the countryside instead of trying
to break into the city, what could they do about it? Nothing, as their
prince knew.
“You’ll have it,” Lazutin said. Then he turned his back and stalked off
to Hisardzik. Sverki the interpreter stalked after him, mimicking his walk
as expertly as he had conveyed his tone.
“He doesn’t love you. He’s not going to, either,” Hirundo said.
“I don’t care if he loves me or not,” Grus said. “I want him to take me
seriously. By Olor’s beard, he’ll do that from now on.”
“Oh, darling!” The general sounded like a breathless young girl. “Tell
me you—you take me seriously!”
Grus couldn’t take him seriously. Laughing, he made as though to throw
something at him. Hirundo ducked. “Miserable troublemaker,” Grus said. By
the way Hirundo bowed, it might have been highest praise.
But Grus stopped laughing when he read the letter from King Lanius
that had caught up with his army on the march between Nishevatz and
Hisardzik. Lanius sounded as dispassionate as any man could about what had
happened between Ortalis and Bubulcus. However dispassionate he sounded,
that made the servant no less dead. The penalty Lanius had imposed on
Ortalis struck Grus as adequate, but only barely.
After rereading Lanius’ letter several times, Grus sighed. Yes, Ortalis
had been provoked. But striking a man in a fit of fury and killing one
were far different things. Ortalis had always had a temper. Every so
often, it got away from him. This time, he’d done something
irrevocable. What am I going to do with him? Grus wondered. For a long
time, he’d thought Ortalis would outgrow his vicious streak, and ignored
it. That hadn’t worked. Then he’d tried to punish his son harshly enough
to drive it out of him, and that hadn’t worked, either. What was left? The
only thing he could see was accepting that Ortalis was as he was and
trying to minimize the damage he did.
“A fine thing for my son,” Grus muttered.
When Grus took the Avornan throne, he had assumed Ortalis would succeed
him on it, with Lanius remaining in the background to give the new rulers
a whiff of respectability. What else was a legitimate son for? But he’d
begun to wonder some time before. His son-in-law seemed more capable than
he had expected, and Ortalis . . . Ortalis kept doing things where damage
needed minimizing.
He read Lanius’ letter one more time. The king from the ancient dynasty
really had done as much as he could. If his account was to be believed,
the servants despised Ortalis now only a little more than they had before.
Considering what might have been, that amounted to a triumph of sorts.
Grus hadn’t imagined he could feel a certain debt toward his son-in-law,
but he did.
Prince Lazutin made the payment of forty thousand pieces of silver the
day after he agreed to it with Grus. The prince did not accompany the men
bringing out the sacks of silver coins. The interpreter, Sverki, did.
“Tell His Highness I thank him for this,” Grus said (after he’d had a few
of the sacks opened to make sure they really did hold silver and not, say,
scrap iron).
“You are most welcome, I am sure,” Sverki said, sounding and acting
like Lazutin even when the Prince of Hisardzik wasn’t there.
“I look forward to receiving the rest of the payments, too,” Grus
said.
“I am sure you do,” Sverki replied. Something in his tone made Grus
look up sharply. He sounded and acted a little too much like Lazutin,
perhaps. If the interpreter here was any guide to what the prince felt,
Grus got the idea he would be wise not to hold his breath waiting for
future payments to come down to the city of Avornis.
What could he do about that? He said, “If the payments do not come,
Hisardzik will not trade with Avornis, and we may call on you up here
again. Make sure your principal understands that.”
Sverki looked as mutinous as Lazutin would have, too. “I will,” he said
sulkily. Grus hid a smile. He’d gotten his message across.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
Lanius stared at Otus’ guardsman. “You’re joking,” he said. “By the
gods, Your Majesty, I’m not,” the soldier replied. “He’s sweet on Calypte.
Can’t argue with his taste, either. Nice-looking girl.”
“Yes.” Lanius had noticed her once or twice himself. That the thrall’s
eye—the ex-thrall’s eye—might fall on her had never crossed his mind. He
said, “But Otus has a woman down south of the Stura.”
The guardsman shrugged. “I don’t know anything about that. But even if
he does, it wouldn’t be the first time a fellow far from home finds
himself a new friend.”
“True.” Lanius had found himself a few new friends without going far
from home. He asked, “Does Calypte realize this? If she does, what does
she think?”
“She thinks he’s sweet.” By the way the guard said the word, he might
have been giving an exact quote. “Most of the serving girls in the palace
think Otus is sweet, I suppose on account of he looks but doesn’t touch
very much.”
“Is that what it is?” Lanius said.
“Part of it, anyway, I expect,” the guard answered. “Me, I feel ‘em
when I feel like it. Sometimes they hit me, sometimes they enjoy it. You
roll the dice and you see what happens.”
“Do you?” Lanius murmured. He’d never been that cavalier. He could have
been. How many women would haul off and hit the King of Avornis? He
shrugged. Most of the time, he hadn’t tried to find out. “How serious is
Otus?” he asked now. “Is he like a mooncalf youth? Does he just want to go
to bed with her? Or is he after something more? If he is, could she
be?”
With a laugh, the guard said, “By the gods, Your Majesty, you sure ask
a lot of questions, don’t you?”
“Why, of course,” Lanius answered in some surprise. “How would I find
out if I didn’t?” That was another question. Before Otus’ guard could
realize as much, the king said, “Take me to him. I’ll see what he has to
say.”
“Come along with me, then, Your Majesty,” the guard said.
When Lanius walked into Otus’ little room, the ex-thrall bowed low.
“Hello, Your Majesty,” he said. “How are you today?” He was scrupulously
polite. Only that lingering old-fashioned southern accent spoke of his
origins. “What can I do for you?”
“I’m fine, thanks,” Lanius replied. “I came by because I wondered how
you were getting along.”
“Me? Well enough.” Otus laughed. “I’ve got plenty to eat. No one has
given me much work to do. I even get to be clean. I remember what things
were like on the other side of the river. Most ways, I’m as happy as a cow
in clover.”
“Most ways?” There was the opening Lanius had been looking for. “How
aren’t you happy? How can we make you happy?”
“Well, there is a girl here I’ve set my eye on.” Otus was very direct.
Maybe that sprang from his years as a thrall, when he couldn’t have hidden
anything and didn’t have anything worth hiding. Or maybe it was simply
part of his nature. Lanius didn’t care to guess. Otus went on, “I don’t
know if she wants anything to do with me.” He sighed. “If I had my own
woman here—if she was cured, I mean—I wouldn’t look twice at anybody else,
but I’m lonesome.”
“I understand,” Lanius said. “Have you tried finding out what this girl
thinks of you?”
“Oh, yes.” The ex-thrall nodded. “But it’s hard to tell, if you know
what I mean. She doesn’t come right out and say what she wants. She makes
me guess.” He sent Lanius a wide-eyed, guileless smile. “Is this what it’s
like when everybody is awake inside all the time?”
“It can be,” Lanius said. “Are things more complicated than you’re used
to?”
“Complicated! That’s the word!” Otus nodded again, more emphatically
this rime. “I should say so! What can I do?”
“Keep trying to find out. That’s about all I can tell you,” Lanius
answered. “No, one thing more—I hope you have good luck.”
“Thank you, Your Majesty.” Suddenly, Otus looked sly. “Can I tell her
you hope I have good luck? If she hears that, maybe it will help me have
the luck I want to have.”
Lanius said, “You can if you want to. I hope it does.” When he left the
ex-thrall’s chamber, he told the guards, “If he needs privacy, give him
enough. Make sure he can’t go wandering through the palace without being
watched—that, yes. But you don’t need to stay in the same room with
him.”
The guards smiled and nodded. One of them said, “Curse me if I’d want
company then—except the girl, of course.”
“Yes. Except the girl. That’s what I meant,” the king said.
“Are you sure it’s safe, Your Majesty?” a guardsman asked.
“No, I’m not sure,” Lanius answered. “But I think so. Pterocles likely
did cure him of being a thrall. And if the wizard didn’t, I
expect the lot of you will be able to keep Otus from doing too much
harm.”
The soldiers nodded. By their confidence, they expected the same thing.
The man who’d first spoken with the king grinned and said, “There’s one
thing more. We know Otus wants to be alone with Calypte, not if she wants
to be alone with him.”
“True enough. We don’t,” Lanius said. “But I’ll tell you this much— I
think Otus has earned the chance to find out. Don’t you?” The guardsmen
looked at one another as they considered. Then, in better unison than
they’d shown a moment earlier, they nodded once more.
King Grus had overthrown Prince Vasilko and reverence for the Banished
One in Nishevatz. He’d persuaded Prince Lazutin in Hisardzik that backing
the Banished One and joining in attacks against Avornis wasn’t the
smartest thing Lazutin could have done—persuaded him expensively, a way a
man who was a merchant when he couldn’t get away with piracy would
remember. Now Grus led the Avornan army east toward Jobuka, which had also
joined in raids along the Avornan coast. He wanted all the Chernagors to
learn they could not hairy their southern neighbor with impunity.
As the army moved east, Grus kept a wary eye on the weather and on the
crops ripening in the fields. When the harvest was done, the army wouldn’t
be able to live off the land anymore and he would have to go home, and he
wanted to remind not only Jobuka but also Hrvace, which lay farther east
still, of his existence.
Ravno, which ruled the land between Hisardzik and Jobuka, was
unfriendly to both of them, and had not sent ships to join the raiders
who’d ravaged the eastern coast of Avornis. Grus ordered his men not to
plunder the countryside as they traveled through Ravno’s territory. In
gratitude, Prince Osen, who ruled the city-state, sent supply wagons to
the Avornan army. Along with the wagons still coming up from Avornis
itself, they kept Grus’ men well supplied with grain.
“I know what we ought to do,” Hirundo said as the army encamped one
evening. The setting sun streaked his gilded helmet and mailshirt with
blood. “We ought to set up as bakers.”
“As bakers?” Grus echoed, eyeing the grizzled streaks in the general’s
beard. They’d both been young officers when they first met, Hirundo the
younger. Hirundo was still younger than Grus, of course, but neither of
them was a young man anymore.
Where did all the years go? Grus wondered. Wherever they were, he
wouldn’t get them back.
Hirundo, meanwhile, bubbled with enthusiasm. “Yes, bakers, by Olor’s
beard. We’ve got all this wheat. We can bake bread and sell it cheaper
than anybody in the Chernagor city-states. We’ll outdicker all the
merchants, leave ‘em gnashing their teeth, and go home rich.” He beamed at
Grus.
Grus smiled back. You couldn’t help smiling when Hirundo beamed. “Do
you know what?” Grus said. Still beaming, Hirundo shook his head. “You’re
out of your mind,” Grus told him.
With a bow, the general said, “Why, thank you very much, Your Majesty.”
Grus threw his hands in the air. Some days, you were going to lose if you
argued with Hirundo.
Jobuka wasn’t as strongly situated as either Nishevatz or Hisardzik. To
make up for that, the Avornans who’d built the town and the Chernagors
who’d held it for centuries had lavished endless ingenuity on its walls. A
wide, fetid moat kept would-be attackers from even reaching those walls
until they had drained it, and the defenders could punish them while they
were working on that. Grus would not have wanted to try to storm the
town.
But, as at Hisardzik, he didn’t have to. He needed to appear, to scare
the city-state’s army inside the walls, and then to position himself to
devastate the countryside if Prince Gleb paid him no attention. That all
proved surprisingly easy. If the Chernagors didn’t care to meet his men in
the open field—and they made it very plain they didn’t—what choice did
they have but falling back into their fortress? None Grus could see. And
once they did fall back, that left the countryside wide open.
Instead of starting to burn and plunder right away, Grus sent a man
under a flag of truce up to the moat—the drawbridge over it that led to
the main gate had been raised. The herald bawled out that Grus wanted to
speak with Prince Gleb, who led Jobuka, and that he wouldn’t stay patient
forever if Gleb chose not to speak to him. That done, the Avornan tramped
back to the army.
Gleb came out the next day, also under a flag of truce. He didn’t lower
the drawbridge, but emerged from a postern gate and crossed the moat in a
small boat. One guard accompanied him. “He is a symbol only,” the Prince
of Jobuka said in good Avornan. “I know I could not bring enough men to
keep me safe in your midst.”
“He is welcome, as you are welcome,” Grus replied, trying to size Gleb
up. The prince was older than Lazutin, older than Vasilko—
not as old as I am, Grus thought sadly. Gleb looked much more
ordinary than the clever, saturnine Lazutin. His beard needing combing and
his nose, though large, had no particular shape. His eyebrows were dark
and luxuriant.
He brought them down into a frown now. “What are you doing on my land?”
he demanded. “You have no business here, curse it.”
“What were your ships doing raiding my coast a few years ago?” Grus
asked in turn.
“That’s different,” Gleb said.
“Yes, it is, by the gods, and I know how,” Grus said. “The difference
is, you never thought I’d come here to pay you back.”
Gleb scowled. He didn’t try to deny it, from which Grus concluded that
he couldn’t. All he said was, “Well, now that you
are here, what do I have to do to get rid of you?”
“Wait.” Grus held up a hand. “Don’t go so fast. We’re not done with
this bit yet. What were your men doing helping Vasilko against Prince
Vsevolod? What were they doing helping the Banished One against the gods
in the heavens? Do you still bend the knee to the Banished One, Your
Highness?”
“I never did.” Gleb sounded indignant.
“No? Then what were you doing helping Vasilko? I already asked you
once, and you didn’t answer.”
“What was I doing? You Avornans invaded the land of the Chernagors.
What was I supposed to do, let you have your way here? If I could hurt
you, I would.”
Now Grus was the one who scowled. He’d had Chernagors tell him that
before. He could understand it, even believe it. But it also made such a
handy excuse. “And you’re telling me you had no idea Vasilko had abandoned
the gods in the heavens, and that the Banished One backed him? Do you
expect me to believe you?”
“I don’t care what you believe,” Gleb said.
“No?” Grus said. “Are you sure of that? Are you very sure? Because if
you are, I
am going to ravage your countryside. Being a friend to other
Chernagors is one thing. Being a friend to the Banished One is something
else again.”
Prince Gleb opened his mouth. Then he closed it again without saying
anything. After an obvious pause for thought, he tried again. “I told you
once, I do not worship the Banished One. I give reverence to King Olor and
Queen Quelea and the rest of the gods in the heavens. I always have. So
have my people.”
Maybe he was telling the truth. Maybe. Grus said, “Whether that’s so or
not, you are still going to pay for raiding our coasts. You don’t care for
Avornis in the Chernagor country. We don’t like Chernagors plundering
Avornis.”
Again, Gleb started to speak. Grus could make a good guess about what
he was going to say—something like,
Well, what makes you any better than we are? But the answer to
that was so obvious, Gleb again fell silent. An Avornan army camped
outside of Jobuka gave Grus a potent argument. The Chernagor prince’s sour
stare said he knew as much. Sullenly, he asked, “How much are you going to
squeeze out of me?”
Grus told him the same thing as he’d told Prince Lazutin. He wondered
how Gleb would go about haggling. The only thing he was sure of was that
Gleb would.
Sure enough, the Prince of Jobuka exclaimed, “Letting you loose on the
countryside would be cheaper!”
“Well, that can be arranged, Your Highness,” Grus said with a bow. He
called for Hirundo. When the general arrived, the king said, “If you’d be
kind enough to give the orders turning our soldiers loose . . .”
“Certainly, Your Majesty.” Hirundo turned to leave once more. Where
Prince Gleb could see him, he was all brisk business.
He’d taken only a couple of steps before Gleb said, “Wait!” Hirundo
paused, looking back toward the king.
“Why should he wait?” Grus asked. “You told us what your choice was,
Your Highness. We’re willing to give you what you say you want. Carry on,
Hirundo.”
“Wait!” Gleb said again, more urgently—almost frantically—this time.
Again, Hirundo paused. Grus waved him on. Prince Gleb threw his hands in
the air. “Stop, curse you! I was wrong. I’d rather pay.”
“The full sum?” Grus demanded. Now that he had Gleb over a barrel—one
the Prince of Jobuka had brought out himself and then fallen over—he
intended to take full advantage of it.
“Yes, the full sum,” Gleb said. “Just leave the crops alone!”
What did that say? That his storehouses were almost empty? Grus
wouldn’t have been surprised. “Bring out the silver by this hour
tomorrow,” the king told Gleb. “Otherwise . . .”
“I understood you,” Gleb said sourly. “You don’t need to worry about
that, Your Majesty. I understood you very well.”
Having made the promise to pay, he kept it. Grus checked the silver
even more closely than he had the money he’d gotten from Prince Lazutin.
All of it proved good. He doubted any of the Chernagors would pay when he
didn’t have an army at their doorstep, but he didn’t intend to lose a lot
of sleep over it. He’d squeezed them plenty hard as things were. He left
the encampment near the formidable walls of Jobuka and marched his army
south.
“Are we heading for home, Your Majesty?” Hirundo asked in some
surprise. “I thought we’d pay a call on Hrvace, too.”
“We will,” Grus said.
“But. . .” Hirundo pointed west. “It’s that way.”
“Thank you so very much,” Grus said, and the general winced. The king
went on, “Before I turn west, I want to get Jobuka under the horizon. If
Gleb sees me going that way, he’s liable to send a ship to Hrvace. It,
could get there before we do, and that could let Prince Tvorimir set up an
ambush.”
Hirundo bowed in the saddle. “Well, I can’t very well tell you you’re
wrong, because you’re right. The only thing I will say is, Gleb’s liable
to send that ship anyway. We ought to be ready for trouble.”
“So we should,” Grus said. “I trust you’ll make sure we are?”
“You’re a trusting soul, aren’t you?” the general replied.
King Grus laughed out loud at that. Maybe some Kings of Avornis had
been trusting souls. Lanius was a dedicated antiquarian. He might know of
one or two. Grus couldn’t think of any. If a trusting soul had somehow
mounted the Avornan throne, he wouldn’t have lasted long.
Lanius knew he went to the archives like a lover to his beloved—the
figure of speech Sosia had used held some truth. He would never have used
it around her himself. It was too likely to stir up her suspicions.
Working on
How to Be a King gave him a perfect excuse for poking through
ancient documents. He laughed at himself.
Oh, yes, I really need an excuse to get dusty.
He was looking for documents dealing with Thervingia during his fathers
reign and the early years of his own—the days when King Dagipert had ruled
the kingdom to the west, and when Dagipert had threatened to rule Avornis
as well. For the moment, Lanius wrote,
Avornans do not often think of Thervingia. It is a quiet, peaceful
land, not one to cause trouble or alarm here. But this has not always been
so, nor is there any guarantee that it shall always be so. Time may reveal
Thervingia once more as a frightful danger. This being so, my beloved son,
you should know as much as possible about the bygone days when Thervingia
threatened our very dynasty.
To Crex, those days would seem as distant as the time before the
Menteshe seized the Scepter of Mercy. They were beyond his memory, and all
times before one’s own memory ran together. But Lanius remembered them
well, and hoped to give his son some hints about how to deal with
Thervingia if it turned troublesome again.
Knowing how to deal with the Thervings meant knowing how Avornis had
dealt with them in days gone by. So Lanius told himself, anyhow. It gave
him a splendid excuse for going through the archives and reading old
parchments.
How
had his father and Grus dealt with Dagipert? Carefully, it
seemed. Reading the letters Mergus and Grus and Arch-Hallow Bucco had
exchanged with the King of Thervingia, it struck Lanius that Dagipert had
had the upper hand more often than not. That wasn’t the way Lanius
remembered things, but he’d been young and hadn’t been encouraged to worry
about affairs of state. He’d assumed everything was all right, and in the
end he hadn’t been wrong. But the road to the end had been rockier than he
realized.
He started to write advice for how to deal with the Thervings when they
had a strong king, then realized that was foolish. When Thervingia had a
weak king, it wasn’t dangerous to Avornis. He was glad he’d avoided making
a fresh muddle in the text. One of these days, a secretary would make a
fair copy of this manuscript so Crex—and maybe others who came after
Crex—could read it. Even without a new muddle, Lanius pitied that
secretary. His own script was spidery, and the manuscript marred by
scratch-outs, arrows sending what was written here to be placed there,
words and sometimes sentences squeezed in between lines, and every other
flaw that annoyed him when someone else committed it.
After putting down on parchment what was, in his judgment, the best way
to keep Thervingia from causing trouble, he read over what he had written.
If someone who really faced trouble from the Thervings read this, would it
do him any good? Lanius found himself shrugging. He really didn’t know. He
didn’t suppose it would hurt. That would have to do.
When he left the archives, he went to the moncats’ room. Several of the
beasts came up to him in search of handouts. Like any cats, they liked him
better when he had presents than when he didn’t. “Sorry,” he said. “I
didn’t stop in the kitchens.”
They kept sending him slit-eyed, reproachful stares. He perched on a
stool and watched them. After a little while, they seemed to forget he was
there, and went back to scrambling on their framework of boards and
branches, to eating from the bowls of meat that were always there for
them, and to snuggling up not far from the braziers that kept their
chamber warm. They were less sensitive to cold than his mustachioed
monkeys, but they still enjoyed the heat from the braziers. He paid more
attention to the moncats than to the monkeys these days, probably because
the moncats got into more mischief.
He looked around for Pouncer. He at least half expected not to find the
moncat. Would it be off in the kitchen stealing spoons, or had it gone off
to the archives to hunt mice while he came here? But no, Pouncer lolled by
a brazier, not quite asleep but not inclined to do much more than loll,
either.
“You are a nuisance,” Lanius told the moncat. “You’re worse than a
nuisance—you’re a pest.”
Praise of that sort seemed to be what Pouncer wanted most. The moncat
rolled and stretched, all without going any farther from the warmth.
Lanius laughed. Pouncer would be charming for as long as it cared to be,
and not a heartbeat longer. Then it would go back to being a pest
again.
He watched Pouncer. Pouncer watched him. After watching for a while,
Pouncer decided it didn’t want to stay by the brazier anymore. It
scrambled up the framework of boards and branches Lanius had had made so
the moncats could feel more as though they were living in the forest. Two
other moncats higher up on the framework squared off against each other,
snarling and hissing. As usually happened, one of them intimidated the
other, which backed down. Sometimes, though, they would fight.
When Lanius looked back to see what Pouncer was up to, he frowned and
scratched his head. Where was the moncat?-He couldn’t find it.
He looked up and down the frame. He looked back toward the brazier. He
looked all around the moncats’ chamber. Then, for good measure, he looked
again. He rubbed his eyes and looked for a third time.
Pouncer had disappeared.
Lanius got up and examined the part of the frame where Pouncer had been
the last time he paid any attention to the moncat. He also examined the
wall behind the frame. It looked like the brickwork that made up much of
the rest of the palace. As far as the king could tell, Pouncer might have
dug a hole, jumped into it, and pulled the hole in after itself. How long did I take my eye off Pouncer to watch the other
beasts? Lanius wondered. Half a minute? A minute? Maybe even a minute
and a half? No more than that, surely. How far could an unwatched moncat
go in, at most, a minute and a half?
Far enough, evidently.
“Cursed thing,” Lanius said. If he had been paying attention, he would
finally have found out Pouncer’s secret. Instead, the moncat had
outsmarted him. He could almost hear Bubulcus’ mocking voice.
Which is hardly a surprise to anyone who knows them both, the
servant would say.
But Bubulcus was dead. Remembering that brought Lanius up as sharply as
seeing—or rather, not seeing—Pouncer vanish. The servant had mocked once
too often, and paid too high a price.
Where was Pouncer now? Somewhere in the spaces between the walls,
heading for—where? The kitchens? The archives? Someplace else, a spot
known only to the moncat? How did the beast find its way in what had to be
absolute darkness? Smell? Hearing? Touch?
Those were all wonderful questions. Lanius had less trouble coming up
with them than he’d had finding questions to answer for
How to Be a King. He’d replied to those questions. These? No.
Staying here until Pouncer reappeared might give him at least some of
the answers he wanted so badly. Of course, the moncat, left to its own
devices, might not come back for days—might not, in fact, come back at
all. Put a servant in here to watch? Keep sending in servants in shirts
until Pouncer returned? Lanius shook his head. Opening and closing the
door so often would only give the rest of the moncats chances to escape.
And how much attention would servants pay if they did come in and watch?
Not enough, probably.
What to do, then? Lanius let out a few soft curses, just enough to make
some of the moncats look his way again. This was one of the rare times
when he wished he took the field. He was convinced the curses of fighting
soldiers had an unmatched sonorous magnificence.
As things were, once he got done swearing the best thing he could think
to do was leave the moncats’ room. Sooner or later, Pouncer would turn up
somewhere. Then the beast would go back in here . . . and then, sooner or
later, it would escape again. And maybe, with a little luck, I’ll get to see it escaping next
time, Lanius thought.
The road to Hrvace, the easternmost of the Chernagor city-states that
had joined Nishevatz in harrying Avornis, would have been as good as any
Grus had seen in the north country. He wouldn’t have had to worry about
ambushes or anything else while traveling it. It would have been, if a
driving rainstorm from off the Northern Sea hadn’t turned it into a
bottomless ribbon of mud. As things were, horses sank to their bellies,
wagons to their hubs or deeper. Moving forward at all became a desperate
struggle. Moving forward in a hurry—the very idea was laughable.
But Grus knew he had to move forward in a hurry if he wanted to punish
Hrvace for what it had done. That same rain was ruining the last of the
harvest hereabouts. Living off the land wouldn’t be easy. Living off the
land would, in fact, be just as hard as moving forward in a hurry.
“We have to,” Grus said.
“Your Majesty, I don’t work miracles,” Hirundo replied, more than a
little testily. “And if my horse goes down into the mud all the way to its
nose so it drowns, I won’t go forward one bit, let alone fast.” “You don’t work miracles,” Grus said. He raised his voice and
shouted for Pterocles. The rain drowned his voice as effectively as mud
would have drowned Hirundo’s horse. He shouted again, louder.
Eventually, Pterocles heard him. Even more eventually, the wizard
fought his way to the king’s side. “What do you need, Your Majesty?”
Pterocles asked.
Grus looked up into the weeping heavens, and got a faceful of rain for
doing it. “Can you make this stop?” he inquired.
Pterocles shook his head. Water dripped from the end of his nose and
from his beard. “Not me, Your Majesty, and any other wizard who says he
can is lying through his teeth. Wizards aren’t weatherworkers. Men aren’t
strong enough to do anything about rain or wind or sun. The Banished One
could, but I don’t suppose you’d want to ask him.”
“No,” Grus said. “I don’t suppose I would. Is he aiming this weather at
us, or is it just a storm?”
“I think it’s just a storm,” Pterocles replied. “It doesn’t feel like
anything but natural weather.”
“All right,” Grus said, though it wasn’t. He murmured a prayer to the
gods in the heavens. They surely had some control over the weather—if they
chose to do anything about it. But how interested in the material world
were they? Natural or not, this rain helped nobody but the Banished
One. Didn’t Olor and Quelea and the rest see as much?
Regardless of what Olor and Quelea and the other gods in the heavens
saw, the rain kept falling. It didn’t get lighter. If anything, it got
worse. Grus kept the army moving west for as long as he could. But
movement was at best a crawl. What should have taken a quarter of an hour
took a quarter of a day.
At last, Hirundo said, “Your Majesty, may I tell you something
obvious?”
“Go ahead,” Grus said.
“Your Majesty, this is more trouble than it’s worth,” the general said.
“Gods only know how long we’re going to need to get to Hrvace. Once we’re
there, how are we going to feed ourselves? We won’t be able to live off
the country, and supply wagons will have a demon of a time getting
through. The Chernagors inside the walls will laugh their heads off when
they see us.”
He was right. King Grus knew that all too well. Even though he knew it,
he resisted acting on what he knew. Angrily, he asked, “What do you want
me to do? Turn around and go back to the city of Avornis?”
Grus hoped that would make Hirundo say something like,
No, of course not, Your Majesty. Instead, the general nodded
emphatically. “Yes, that’s just what I want you to do,” he said. “If you
ask me, it’s the only sensible thing we
can do.”
“But—” Grus still fought the idea. “If we do that, then the Banished
One still has a toehold in the Chernagor country.”
“Maybe,” Hirundo said. “But maybe not, too. Lazutin and Gleb swore up
and down they didn’t have much to do with him—certainly not directly. We
don’t really
know he had a toehold anywhere but Nishevatz.”
“Tempting to believe that,” Grus said. “I’m almost afraid to, though,
just because it’s so tempting.”
“Well, look at it this way,” Hirundo said. “Suppose we go on to Hrvace
and sit outside it and get weaker and hungrier by the day. We can’t
threaten to ravage the countryside, because the storms already done most
of that. Suppose the Chernagors come out when they see how weak we are.
Suppose they smash us. Don’t you think
that would do the Banished One some good?”
Grus tried not to think how much good that would do the Banished One.
He tried . . . and he failed. He sighed. “All right. You’ve made your
point,” he said, and sighed again. “We’ll go home.”
“King Olor be praised!” Hirundo exclaimed. “You won’t regret this.”
“I already regret it,” Grus answered. “But I’m liable to regret pushing
ahead even more. And so ... and so we’ll go home.” He spent the next few
minutes cursing the weather as comprehensively as he knew how.
Hirundo had heard a good deal. He’d sometimes been known to say a good
deal. His eyes grew wide even so. “That’s. . . impressive, Your Majesty,”
he said when Grus finally ran down.
The king chuckled self-consciously. “Only goes to show you can take the
old river rat away from the river, but you can’t get the river out of the
river rat.”
“You’ll have to teach me some of that one of these days, you old river
rat,” Hirundo said. “But meanwhile—”
“Yes. Meanwhile,” Grus said. “Go ahead. Give the orders. Turn us south.
You’ve won.”
“It’s not me. Its the stinking weather,” Hirundo said. He did give the
necessary orders. He gave them with great assurance and without the
slightest pause for thought. He had been planning those orders for a long
time, and he’d gotten them right.
The army obeyed them with alacrity, too. A lot of the soldiers must
have been thinking about going home. As soon as they had a chance to put
their desires into action, they made the most of it. They could go no
faster traveling south than they had traveling west, but they were much
happier stuck in the mud while homeward bound than they had been on their
way to attack Hrvace.
Even the weather seemed to think turning south was a good idea. Two
days after Grus reluctantly decided to abandon his campaign in the land of
the Chernagors, the rain stopped and the sun came out again. It shone as
brightly as it had in the middle of summer, Grus said several more things
Hirundo hadn’t heard before. He said them with great feeling, too. The
road remained muddy, and would for several more days. Even so, there was
mud, and then there was
mud, soupy ooze without a trace of bottom anywhere.
There was one more thing, too. “You know what would happen if I tried
to use this good weather and went east again, don’t you?” Grus asked
Hirundo.
The general nodded. “Sure I do, Your Majesty. It would start raining
again. And it wouldn’t stop until we all grew fins.”
“That’s right. That’s just exactly right.” Grus waved his hands. All
around him, the landscape gently steamed as the warm sun began drying up
the rain that had already fallen. “But Pterocles tells me it’s just an
ordinary storm. The Banished One has nothing to do with it, he says. By
Olor’s beard, if he doesn’t know, who’s likely to?”
“Nobody,” Hirundo said.
“Nobody,” Grus agreed sadly. “No matter how hard a time I have
believing it, it’s only a what-do-you-call-it. A coincidence, that’s what
I’m trying to say.”
“Pterocles usually knows what he’s talking about, sure enough,” Hirundo
said. “When it comes to magic, I usually don’t, any more than Pterocles
knows how to drive home a cavalry charge.”
“He was brave inside Nishevatz,” Grus said.
“Oh, I wouldn’t be afraid to try a spell—not afraid like that, anyway,”
Hirundo said. “That doesn’t mean a spell I tried would work. I haven’t got
the training, and I haven’t got the talent.”
“Neither have I.” The king looked warily up at the sun. It smiled back,
for all the world—
for all the world, indeed, Grus thought—as though it had never
gone away and never would. But he knew better. He wouldn’t be able to
trust it until the coming spring—and not even then, if he had to campaign
in the Chernagor country.
For now ... for now, he was going home. If he hadn’t done everything
he’d wanted to, he had managed most of it. That wouldn’t have impressed
the gods in the heavens. In the world where mere mortals had to live, it
wasn’t bad at all. Plenty had tried more and accomplished less. So Grus
told himself, anyway.
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
King Lanius waited outside the brown stone walls of the city of Avornis
as King Grus brought the army back to the capital. The whole royal family
had come out to see Grus off. Lanius was there by himself to welcome the
other king and the army back. King Grus waved from horseback. Lanius
solemnly waved back.
“Welcome home,” he called.
“By Olor’s beard, it’s good to be back,” Grus answered.
“Congratulations on driving the Banished One from Nishevatz, and from
the land of the Chernagors.” Lanius did not mind praising Grus for
that.
“I thank you,” the other king replied. “I’m not sure we drove him out
of the Chernagor country altogether, but we did weaken his hold there.” He
had a strong streak of honesty in him—except, perhaps, when he was talking
to his wife about other women (but how many men had that particular streak
of honesty in them?).
Grus guided his horse away from the rest of the army and over beside
Lanius. He always joked about what a bad rider he was, but he handled the
animal perfectly well. Lanius wished he were as smooth. Grus reviewed the
soldiers as they rode and marched past and into the city. The men were
hard and scrawny and scraggly-bearded. Some of them limped; others showed
fresh scars on faces or forearms.
One of the foot soldiers waved to Grus and called, “We earned our pay
this time, didn’t we, Your Majesty?”
“I’d say you did, Buteo,” Grus answered. The soldiers face stretched to
hold a pleased smile. He waved again, and kept looking back over his
shoulder until the gateway hid him.
“You know him?” Lanius asked. “Was he one of your guards up there?”
“Buteo? No, just a soldier,” Grus said. “He’s brave, but not too smart.
He’ll never even make sergeant, not if he lives to be a hundred. But he’s
a good man at your back in a scrap.”
“Is he?” Lanius said. Grus nodded. Lanius asked, “How many soldiers do
you know by name—and by what they can do, the way you did with him?”
“I never thought about it.” Now Grus did. “I can’t tell you exactly,”
he said at last. “But I’ve got some notion of who about every other man
is. Something like that. I know more about some—a lot more about some—and
not so much about others.”
Lanius believed him. Lanius didn’t see how he could do anything else;
Grus radiated conviction. “How do you manage that?” Lanius asked. “I
couldn’t begin to, not to save my life.”
“How do you remember all the things you find in the archives? How do
you put them together in interesting patterns?” Grus returned, “/couldn’t
do that.”
“But knowing people, knowing how they work—that’s more important.”
Lanius was sure it was more important, not least because he couldn’t do it
himself. “I wish I were better at it.”
“You’ve done all right, seems to me,” Grus said. “If you hadn’t, more
people would have taken advantage of you by now.”
“You did,” Lanius said. It was the first thing that came into his mind,
and he brought it out with less bitterness than he would have
expected.
It still made Grus give him a sharp look. “I wouldn’t be where I am if
your mother hadn’t tried to kill me by sorcery,” the other king said. Grus
barked laughter. “I wouldn’t be where I am if she’d done it, either.”
“Well, no,” Lanius admitted. Over the years, Grus had done any number
of things he didn’t like. Lanius could hardly deny that Grus might have
done far worse than he had. It was funny, if you looked at it the right
way. He had to like Grus to a certain degree, because he couldn’t dislike
him as much as he might have.
“How’s my daughter?” Grus asked—a question any father-in-law might ask
of a son-in-law.
“She’s fine,” Lanius said. By and large, it was true. If Sosia
sometimes had reason to throw things at him, that was none of Grus’
business. And it wasn’t as though Estrilda didn’t sometimes have reason to
throw things at Grus.
“And what about Ortalis?” Grus said. “That was some nasty news you sent
me about him and the servant.”
Carefully, Lanius said, “You will know that Ortalis and I don’t always
get along as well as we might.” Grus nodded. Lanius went on, “Even I will
say it wasn’t altogether Ortalis’ fault. Bubulcus provoked him—provoked
him outrageously. Something should have happened to Bubulcus. What did
happen, though, shouldn’t have.”
“That’s about how it seemed to me from your letter,” Grus agreed. “At
least he didn’t do it for sport. That was what I was afraid of.”
“Oh, yes.” Lanius didn’t try to pretend he misunderstood. “That was
what I was afraid of, too. I don’t know what I would have done then.” He
gnawed on the inside of his lower lip. He was glad he hadn’t had to find
out.
To his relief, Grus let it go there. He said, “And I’ve got a new
granddaughter?”
“That’s right.” Lanius felt guarded there, too. If Capella had been a
boy, what
would that have done to the succession in Grus’ eyes? “Limosa
thinks she’s the most wonderful baby in the world. I’d make a couple of
exceptions myself.”
King Grus chuckled. “Yes, I can see how you might.” But the older man’s
grin slipped. “Limosa.” He said the name of Ortalis’ wife as though it
tasted bad. “He finally found somebody who likes the welts he gives her.”
Grus made as though to spit in disgust, then—barely— thought better of
it.
“She loves him,” Lanius said, which didn’t contradict Grus.
“Does that make it better or worse?” the other king asked.
Lanius thought it over. “I don’t know,” he said at last. “Do you?”
“What I know is ... more about Ortalis than I wish I did,” Grus
said—not a direct answer to what Lanius had said, but not an evasion,
either.
The last soldiers passed into the city of Avornis. They were happy to
be home, looking forward to beds in their barracks, to wine, and to women.
What went on in the palace meant nothing to them. If they had to go fight,
they would. Until then, they’d enjoy themselves.
Not for the first time, Lanius found himself jealous of men who could
live for the moment. He sometimes wished he could do the same, without
worrying about what would happen next. He laughed at himself. Given the
nature he’d been born with, he might as well have wished for the moon
while he was at it.
Even though Grus had lived softer in the field than his soldiers had,
he was glad to return to the comforts of the palace. He was older than his
soldiers, too, and needed to live softer. So he told himself, anyhow.
Estrilda greeted him cautiously, the way she did whenever he came back
from campaign. Her look plainly said she wondered what he’d been up to in
the land of the Chernagors. This time, he could look her straight in the
eye, for he’d been up to very little. For one thing, the Chernagor women
hadn’t much appealed to him. For another, he’d reached the age where
conquests of that sort were less urgent than they had been in earlier
years. That didn’t mean he didn’t enjoy them when they happened—Estrilda
evidently hadn’t yet found out about his bastard boy by Alauda, for which
he was duly grateful—but he didn’t go after them as energetically as he
might have when he was younger.
Still somewhat suspicious, Estrilda said, “You were away for a long
time.”
“So I was,” Grus said. “There was a lot to do, and doing it wasn’t
easy. If you paid any attention to my dispatches, you’d know that.”
“Not everything you do ends up in your dispatches,” his wife answered.
“I’ve seen that.”
He wanted to tell her she was wrong, or at least foolish, but she would
know he was lying if he did. All he did do was shrug and say, “Not this
time.” If Estrilda felt like quarreling, she would.
She didn’t. “It’s good to have you back,” she said.
“It’s good to be back,” Grus said. “If I had to right now, I do believe
I’d kill for a hot bath.”
He soaked in a copper tub for more than an hour, scrubbing away the
grime of the campaign and simply luxuriating in the water. Whenever it
began to cool down, servants drained some and fetched in more jars of hot
water from the kitchens. The king hated to get out. After scrubbing, he
leaned his head back in the tub, wondering if he could fall asleep there.
Not quite, he discovered, though he did come close.
After the bath, supper. He’d had his fill of seafood up in the
Chernagor country. Roast goose stuffed with bread crumbs and dried apples
stuck to the ribs. He’d drunk a lot of ale in the north—better that than
water, which often brought disease—but sweet wine was better. And, after
that, lying down in his own bed might have been best of all.
Estrilda lay down beside him. She had, he noticed, put on fresh
perfume. He’d thought he would go straight to sleep. As things turned out,
he didn’t. But when his eyes did close, he slept very soundly.
He woke up in the morning feeling, if not younger than the day before,
then at least oiled and repaired. Now that he was back, he had to get on
top of things again. Otherwise, who was the real king? Was he? Or was
Lanius?
Before any of that, though, he saw his grandchildren. Crex and Pitta
both wondered why he hadn’t brought them any presents from the Chernagor
country. “Sorry, my dears,” he said. “I was worried about bringing me
back. I didn’t worry much about presents.” He had tribute from Hisardzik
and Jobuka, but he didn’t think silver coins with the faces of
shaggy-bearded princes on them would fascinate children.
Capella didn’t ask for presents. She waved her arms and legs in
Limosa’s arms and smiled up toothlessly at the king. “She’s a pretty
child, Your Highness,” Grus said.
“Thank you, Your Majesty,” Limosa answered politely. “I wish her other
grandfather could see her, too.”
“I’m sorry,” Grus said. “I
am sorry, but Petrosus isn’t coming out of the Maze.”
“Even if he isn’t why your son and I got married?” Limosa said. “Even
if we got married because—” She didn’t go on. She turned red and looked
down at her baby.
Grus had a pretty good idea of what she would have said. It made him
want to blush, too, even if he hadn’t actually heard it. He was afraid she
would show him her back. To his relief, she didn’t. He gathered himself.
“Even then,” he told her. “If your father wasn’t plotting that, he was
plotting something else. He’ll stay where he is.”
“Yes, Your Majesty,” Limosa whispered. She took Capella away, as though
that was the only way she could find to punish Grus. And so it probably
was.
Ortalis didn’t come to pay his respects. Grus sent a servant after him.
When the king finally saw his son, he said, “Well, now that you’ve finally
done it, how does it feel to kill a man?”
“I knew you were going to bother me about that,” Ortalis said sullenly.
“I knew it. And I didn’t even enjoy sticking the knife in him. It just. .
. happened, that’s all. I wish it hadn’t. But he got me angry, and then he
said something really foul, and—” He shrugged.
Eyeing him, Grus decided it could easily have been worse. Ortalis
wasn’t consumed by remorse, but at least he had some idea of what it was.
Grus said, “You should have just punched him.”
“I suppose so,” his son said. “His woman and her brats are taken care
of. Lanius made sure of that. Can I go now, or do you want to yell at me
some more? I don’t kill servants for fun.”
“All right,” Grus said, and Ortalis left. Grus sighed. Considering what
Ortalis did do for fun, was it any wonder that Grus had wondered? He
didn’t think so. Business, the king thought. If he was going to pick business,
he wanted to pick interesting business to start with. He went to the
chamber where Otus the former thrall dwelt. “Sorry, Your Majesty,” a guard
said. “He’s not here right now.”
“Where is he?” Grus asked.
“He’s got a lady friend. He’s with her,” the guard answered.
“At this hour of the morning?” Grus exclaimed. The guard smirked and
nodded. Grus said, “If I were wearing a hat, I’d take it off to him. Shall
I wait until he’s, ah, finished?”
“I can fetch him, if you like,” the guardsman said.
“No, never mind,” Grus said. “I’ll come back and visit him later. He
wouldn’t thank me for interrupting him, would he?”
“I don’t know about that, Your Majesty, but /wouldn’t,” the guard
replied, chuckling at his own cleverness.
“All right, then. I’ll try again in an hour or so,” Grus said, and
left.
When he came back, the guard nodded to him. “He’s here now, Your
Majesty,” the fellow said. “He’s waiting for you.”
“Your Majesty!” Otus said when Grus walked into his chamber. “It is
good to see you again.”
“Good to see you,” Grus answered. “I’m more pleased than I can tell you
at how well you’re doing.” That was the truth. Only Otus’ southern accent
and a certain slight hesitation in his speech said that he had been a
thrall. He looked bright and alert and altogether like a normal man. He
evidently acted like a normal man, too. “Who’s your, ah, friend?” Grus
asked.
“Her name is Calypte, Your Majesty.” Otus seemed less happy than Grus
had thought he might. “She is very sweet. And yet. . . You know I have a
woman down in the south, a woman who is still a thrall?”
“Yes, I know that.” The king nodded.
Otus sighed. “I do her wrong when I do this. I understand that. But I
am here, and she is there—and she is hardly more than a brute beast. I
loved her when I was a beast myself. I might love her if she were a beast
no more. Your Majesty, so many thralls down there! Save them!”
Otus’ appeal didn’t surprise Grus. The power with which the ex-thrall
phrased it did. “I’ll do what I can,” the king answered. “I don’t know how
much that will be. It will depend on the civil war among the Menteshe, and
on how well wizards besides Pterocles can learn to cure thralls.” And if they truly can, he thought. He didn’t say that to Otus,
who seemed normal enough. If Otus hadn’t seemed normal, Grus wouldn’t have
thought of campaigning south of the Stura at all.
“You could make beasts into men.” If the former thrall wasn’t cured, he
sounded as though he was. “Who but the gods could ever do that until now?
You would be remembered forever.”
Grus laughed. “Are you sure you weren’t born a courtier?”
“I’m sure, Your Majesty,” Otus said. “Courtiers tell lies. I’m too
stupid to do that. I tell you the truth.”
“I’m going to tell you the truth, too,” Grus said. “I want to fight
south of the Stura. I don’t know if I can. It’s dangerous for Avornan
kings to go over the frontier. There have been whole armies that never
came back. I want to cure thralls. I don’t want to see free men taken down
into thralldom.”
“You wouldn’t!” Otus exclaimed. “Look at me. I’m free. I’m cured. Whatever the Banished One can do, he can’t make me back into what
was.”
From what Lanius wrote, Otus bad always insisted on that. The trouble
was, he would have insisted on it as vehemently if it were a lie as he
would have if it were true. Grus didn’t know how to judge which it was. He
didn’t know what to do, either.
“I already told you—I’ll decide what to do come spring,” he said after
some thought. “If the Menteshe have a prince by then and they’re solidly
behind him, I may have to sit tight. If they don’t... If they don’t, well,
I’ll figure out what to do next then, that’s all.”
“You ought to be ready to move, whether you do or not,” Otus
remarked.
That held a good deal of truth. “I already have soldiers in the south,”
Grus said. “There’s one other thing I need to check up on before I make up
my mind.”
“What’s that?” Otus asked.
Grus didn’t answer, not directly. Instead, he chatted for a little
while longer and then took his leave. He went to a small audience chamber
and told a servant, “Find the serving girl named Calypte and tell her I’d
like to talk with her, please.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” The servant dipped his head and hurried off.
Calypte came into the room less than a quarter of an hour later. Until
then, Grus couldn’t have matched her name with her face. She was in her
late twenties, short, a little on the plump side, with a round face, very
white teeth, and dark eyes that sparkled. She wore a leaf-green dress and
had tied a red kerchief over her black hair and under her chin. Dropping
Grus a curtsy, she said, “What is it, Your Majesty?” She sounded nervous.
Grus didn’t suppose he could blame her. She had to think she was either in
trouble or that he was about to try to seduce her.
He said, “You’re . . . friends with Otus, aren’t you?”
“Yes, I am.” Now that she knew where the ground lay, her nerves
vanished. She stuck out her chin. “Why shouldn’t I be?” A feisty little thing, Grus thought, and hid a smile. “No
reason at all,” he answered. “I just wanted to ask you a couple of
questions about him.”
“Why?” Calypte demanded. “What business is it of anybody except him and
me?”
“It’s also the kingdom’s business, I’m afraid,” Grus said. “You haven’t
forgotten he used to be a thrall, have you?”
“Oh.” The maidservant’s face clouded. “If you really want to know, I
had forgotten until you reminded me. He doesn’t act like a
thrall—or the way I suppose a thrall would act. He just acts like—a man.”
She looked down at the mosaics on the floor and turned pink. Grus got the
idea Otus had acted very much like a man earlier in the morning.
This time, he didn’t try to hide his smile. He said, “I don’t want to
know about any of that. It isn’t any of my business—you’re right. What I
want to know is, have you ever seen any places where he doesn’t act just
like a man, where being a thrall left him different?”
Calypte thought that over. She didn’t need long. When she was done, she
shook her head. A black curl popped free. Tucking it back under the
kerchief, she said, “No, I don’t think so. He hasn’t been in the palace
for years, the way most people I know have, so there are things he doesn’t
understand right away, but anybody new here is like that.”
“Are you sure?” Grus asked. “It could be more important than you
know.”
“I’m not a witch or anything, Your Majesty,” Calypte answered. “I can’t
cast a spell or do things like that. But from what I know, he’s as much of
a man as a man could be.”
She was right. Pterocles could make tests she couldn’t even imagine.
But the wizard would have admitted—
had admitted—he couldn’t be altogether sure of the answers he
got, not when he was measuring himself against the strength and subtlety
of the Banished One. But the tests Calypte applied (not that she would
have called them such) were ones that, by the very nature of things,
Pterocles was not equipped to administer.
Grus found himself smiling again. “Fair enough,” he said. “You can go.
And the next time you see Otus, you can tell him from me that I think he’s
a lucky fellow.”
The serving girl smiled, too. “I’ll do better than that. I’ll show
him.” And, by the way her hips swayed when she left the audience chamber,
she would do a good, careful, thorough job of showing him, too.
Leaves blazed gold and maroon and scarlet. When the wind blew through
the trees, it swirled them off branches and sent them dancing like bits of
flame. Lanius admired the autumn. “This is reason to come out to the woods
all by itself,” he said.
Arch-Hallow Anser and Prince Ortalis both laughed at the king. “This is
pretty enough,” Anser said, “but the reason to come out here is the
hunting.”
“That’s right,” Ortalis said, not that Lanius had expected him to say
anything else. Anser came hunting because he enjoyed it. Ortalis came
hunting because he enjoyed hunting, too, but in a different way. Lanius
was glad to have Ortalis hunt, because he might do something worse if he
didn’t. And you—
why do you come hunting? the king wondered. He didn’t take
pleasure in it, the way Anser did. He didn’t need it, crave it, the way
Ortalis did. But every so often Anser looked as though he would curl up
and die of disappointment if he heard “No” one more time, and Anser was
too nice a fellow to disappoint.
Smiling, the arch-hallow said, “Maybe you’ll kill something this
time.”
“Maybe I will,” Lanius said. “Maybe a stag will die laughing at how
badly I shoot.” Anser laughed, whether a stag would or not. Lanius managed
a wry smile at his own ineptitude. He wasn’t much of a bowman. He knew
that. But he also used his bad archery as an excuse not to have to kill
anything. He didn’t think either Anser or Ortalis had ever figured that
out. He hoped not, anyway.
“Think of venison,” Ortalis said lovingly. “Think of a roasted haunch,
or of chunks of venison stewed for a nice long time in wine and herbs,
until all the gamy taste goes away. Doesn’t it make your mouth water?”
Lanius nodded, because it did. He loved eating meat. Killing it himself
had always been a different story. He recognized the inconsistency, and
had no idea what to do about it.
One of Anser’s beaters nodded to the arch-hallow. “We’re off,” he said.
He and his comrades disappeared into the woods.
“They’re better hunters than any of us,” Lanius said.
“I don’t know about that,” Ortalis said. Anser didn’t look convinced,
either. They both enjoyed hunting for its own sake, which Lanius didn’t.
Ortalis added, “The two of us could come out here without beaters, because
we can find game on our own. Some people I could name, though ...”
“If that’s what’s bothering you—” Lanius began.
“What? You think you could do your own stalking?” Ortalis broke in.
“Don’t make me laugh.” That wasn’t what Lanius had started to say. He’d
been about to tell Grus’ legitimate son and his bastard that he couldn’t
have cared less about finding game on his own, that he came hunting for
the sake of their company (especially Anser’s, though he wouldn’t have
said that) and to get out to the forest and away from the palace. Maybe it
was just as well Oitalis had interrupted him.
Something up in a tree chirped. Peering through the branches, Lanius
got a glimpse of a plump brown bird with a striped belly. “Thrush,” Anser
said without even looking toward it. “They fly south for the winter every
year about this time.”
“Do they?” Lanius said. The arch-hallow nodded. Lanius still knew less
about birds than he wished he did. He knew less than he wished he did
about a lot of things. Not enough hours in the day, not enough days in the
year to learn as much as he could about all the things he wanted to
know.
“They’re tasty baked in a pie,” Ortalis said. Anser nodded again. This
time, so did Lanius. Pies and stews full of songbirds were some of his
favorite dishes. Again, though, he didn’t care to hunt thrushes
himself.
A rabbit bounded by and disappeared into the undergrowth. Anser started
to set an arrow to his bowstring, then checked the motion and laughed at
himself. “Not much point to shooting at rabbits,” he said. “You only waste
your arrows that way. If you want rabbits in your stew instead of
songbirds, you go after them with dogs and nets.”
“Then you whack them over the head with a club,” Ortalis said. “That
way, you don’t hurt the pelts.”
“I see,” Lanius said. He wondered what he really saw. What Ortalis said
made perfect sense. Did the prince really sound as though he enjoyed the
idea of whacking rabbits over the head with a club, or was Lanius only
hearing what he expected to hear? The king couldn’t be sure, and decided
he had to give his brother-in-law the benefit of the doubt.
“Come on,” Anser said. “There’s a clearing not far from here. If we
post ourselves at the edge of it, we’ll get good shots.”
He glided down a game track as smoothly and silently as any of the men
who served him, the men who looked so much like poachers. Lanius was sure
he could find his own game if he had to. Ortalis did his best to move the
same way, but wasn’t as good at it. Lanius tried not to trip over his own
feet and not to step on too many twigs. Anser winced only once, so he
supposed he wasn’t doing too bad a job.
The three high-ranking hunters had their usual low-voiced argument
about who would shoot first. Lanius resigned himself to looking foolish in
front of Grus’ sons. He’d done it before.
You could try to kill a deer, he said to himself, and then shook
his head. That wasn’t why he came out here.
A frightened stag bounded into the clearing. “Good luck, Your Majesty,”
Anser whispered.
“Try to frighten it, anyhow, Your Majesty,” Ortalis whispered—a
reasonable estimate of Lanius’ talents.
Since the shot was fairly long, the king didn’t worry much about taking
aim, good, bad, or otherwise. He pointed the bow in the general direction
of the stag and let fly. Even as he did so, the stag bounded forward.
Anser and Ortalis sighed together. So did Lanius, with something
approaching relief. This time, at least, he had a good enough excuse for
missing.
If the stag had stood still, the arrow would have flown past in front
of h. As things were, the shaft caught the animal just behind the left
shoulder. The deer took four or five staggering steps, then fell on its
side, kicking feebly. As Lanius stared in dismay, the kicking stopped and
the stag lay still.
“Well shot, by Olor’s beard!” Anser cried. “Oh, well shot!” Ortalis
whooped and pounded Lanius on the back. The king’s guards whooped,
too.
He’d missed again, but he was the only one who knew it. This time, he’d
missed at missing. Lanius gulped. He didn’t want to look at the animal
he’d just killed.
But his ordeal, evidently, hadn’t ended. “Now you get to learn how to
butcher the beast,” Ortalis said. “I wondered if you ever would.”
“Butcher it?” Lanius gulped. “That. . . isn’t what I had in mind.” He
turned toward Anser for support.
The arch-hallow let him down. “It’s part of the job,” Anser said. “You
ought to know what to do and how to do it. You don’t need to cut its
throat; it’s plainly dead. That was as clean a kill as the one Ortalis had
a while ago.”
“Huzzah,” Lanius said in a hollow voice. Anser and Ortalis clucked in
disapproval and dismay when they discovered he had no knife on his belt.
They would have sounded the same way if he’d gotten up in the morning and
forgotten to put on his breeches. Ortalis drew his own knife and handed it
to the king hilt first. He moved slowly and carefully as he did it,
mindful of Lanius’ bodyguards. The edge of the blade, lovingly honed and
polished, glittered in the sunlight.
“Here’s what you do,” Anser said. Following his instructions, Lanius
did it. He kept his breakfast down, but had no idea how.
“If you want to start a little fire and roast the mountain oysters,
they’re mighty good eating,” a guard said helpfully. “Same with a chunk of
liver when it’s all nice and fresh, though it won’t keep more than a few
hours.”
Lanius knew no more about starting a fire than about butchery. Anser
took care of that. The guard skewered the mountain oysters on a stick and
roasted them over the flames. When they were done, he handed Lanius the
stick. The king wanted to throw it away. But the guardsman waited
expectantly, and both Anser and Ortalis seemed to think he’d done Lanius a
favor. With a silent sigh, Lanius ate.
“Well?” the guard said. “You won’t get anything like that back at the
palace.”
That was true. “Not bad,” Lanius said. The men around him laughed, so
he must have sounded surprised.
Ortalis stooped and cut a bloody slice from the stag’s liver. He
skewered it and toasted it over the fire. “Here,” he said as he thrust the
stick at Lanius. “Best eating in the world.”
It wasn’t—not to the king, anyhow. “Needs salt,” Lanius declared. To
his amazement, not only Anser but also two of the guards carried little
vials of salt in their belt pouches. They all offered it to him. “Thank
you,” he said, and flavored the meat. It still wouldn’t have been his
first choice, but it was tasty. He nodded to the other men. “Anyone who
wants a slice can help himself.”
Several of them did. The speed with which the liver disappeared told
him what a delicacy they thought it. One of them poked at the deer’s heart
with his knife and looked a question at Lanius. He nodded again. The
guards sliced up the heart and roasted it, too.
“Mighty kind of you to share like this, Your Majesty,” one of them
said, his mouth full.
“My pleasure,” Lanius answered. The kidneys also went. He said,
“Venison in the palace tonight.”
“Your turn next,” Anser said to his half brother. “Think you can match
the king’s shot?”
“I don’t know.” Ortalis sent Lanius a sidelong glance. “But then,
seeing the way he usually shoots, I don’t know if he can match it,
either.”
Lanius was sure he couldn’t. “Show some respect for your sovereign,
there,” he said haughtily. In a slightly different tone, the retort would
have frozen Ortalis. As it was, Grus’ legitimate son laughed out loud. So
did Anser and the guards. Lanius found himself laughing, too. He still
cared nothing for the hunt as a chance to stalk and kill animals. For the
hunt as a chance to enjoy himself. . . that was another story.
Ortalis not only didn’t make a clean kill when he got a shot at a deer,
he missed as badly as Lanius usually did. The deer sprang away. “What
happened there?” Anser asked.
“A black fly bit me in the back of the neck just as I loosed,” Ortalis
answered. “You try holding steady when somebody sticks a red-hot pin in
you.” He rubbed at the wounded area.
“Well, it’s an excuse, anyhow,” Anser drawled. Ortalis made a rude
noise and an even ruder gesture. The Arch-Hallow of Avornis returned the
gesture. It wasn’t one Lanius would have looked for from a holy man, but
Anser hardly even pretended to be any such thing.
And he shot a bow better than well enough. He hit a stag when his turn
came to shoot first. The deer fled, but not too far; the trail of blood it
left made it easy to track. It was down by the time the hunters caught up
with it. Anser had a knife on
his belt. He stooped beside the stag and cut its throat.
“Your turn for the, uh, oysters,” Lanius said.
“Good.” Anser beamed. “I like ‘em. You won’t see me turn green, the way
you did before you tasted them.”
“Oh.” Lanius hadn’t known it had shown.
Anser, meanwhile, was grubbing in the dirt by the dead stag. He proudly
displayed some mushrooms. “I’ll toast these with a piece of liver. Not
with the mountain oysters—those are so good, I’ll eat them by themselves.”
And, not much later, he did.
Lanius took better care to miss the next time he got a shot. He did,
and the stag ran off into the woods. Anser and Ortalis teased him harder
than they would have before he’d made a kill.
He teased back. That was the biggest part of the reason he came hunting
at all. And yet, after he’d shot the stag, his conscience troubled him
much less than he’d expected. One of these days, he might even try to hit
something when he shot.
CHAPTER THIRTY
King Grus sat on the Diamond Throne, staring down at the ambassadors
from Hrvace. The Chernagors looked up at him in turn. “Well?” Grus said in
a voice colder than the autumn wind that howled outside the palace. “What
have you got to say for yourselves? What have you got to say for your
prince?”
The Chernagors eyed one another. Even the Avornan courtiers in the
throne room muttered back and forth. Grus knew why. He wasn’t following
the formulas Kings of Avornis used with envoys from the Chernagor
city-states. He didn’t care. Unlike Lanius, he cared nothing for ceremony
for its own sake. He wasn’t sure the polite formulas applied to a
city-state with which Avornis was practically at war, anyhow.
“Your Majesty, I am Bonyak, ambassador from Prince Tvorimir of Hrvace,”
said one of the Chernagors—the one with the fanciest embroidery on his
tunic. He did his best to stay close to the formula, continuing, “I bring
you Tvorimir’s greetings, as well as those of all the other Chernagor
princes.”
“By the gods, I’ve already dealt with the other Chernagor princes,”
Grus growled. “I would have dealt with Tvorimir, too, if it hadn’t decided
to rain cats and dogs up there. Do you also bring me greetings from the
Banished One?”
“No, Your Majesty,” Bonyak replied. “I bring you assurances from Prince
Tvorimir that he has nothing to do with the Banished One, and that he has
never had anything to do with him.”
“Oh? And will Tvorimir tell me his ships weren’t part of the fleet that
raided my coast? How much nerve does he have?”
Bonyak’s smile was an odd blend of wolf and sheep. “Prince Tvorimir
does not deny that his ships raided your coast. But he told me to tell
you—he told me to remind you—that a Chernagor does not need to go on his
knees to the Banished One to smell the sweet scent of plunder.”
“Sweet, is it?” Grus had to work not to laugh. When Bonyak solemnly
nodded, the king had to work even harder. He said, “And you would know
this from personal experience, would you?”
“Oh, yes,” Prince Tvorimir’s ambassador assured him. Hastily, the
Chernagor added, “Though I have never plundered the coast of Avornis, of
course.”
“Of course.” Grus’ voice was dry, so very dry that it made Bonyak look
more sheepish than ever. But Grus grudged him a nod. “It could be. And I
suppose that what Prince Tvorimir says could be, too. Why has he sent you
down here to the city of Avornis?”
“Why? To make amends for our raids, Your Majesty.” Bonyak gestured to
his henchmen. “We have gifts for the kingdom, and we also have gifts for
you.”
“Wait.” Now Grus nodded to a courtier who’d been waiting down below the
Diamond Throne. The man had remained discreetly out of sight behind a
stout pillar, so Grus could have failed to call on him without
embarrassing the Chernagors. But, since Bonyak seemed conciliatory . . .
“First, Your Excellency, I have presents for you and your men.”
The courtier doled out leather sacks from a tray. Bonyak hefted the one
the Avornan gave him. He nodded, for it had the right weight. He also
looked relieved—Grus was steering the ceremony back into the lines it
should take.
“My thanks, Your Majesty,” the ambassador said. “My very great thanks
indeed. Now shall we give our gifts in return?”
“If you would be so kind,” Grus answered.
Bonyak nudged the flunkies, who were busy feeling the weight of their
own sacks. They set one heavy, metal-bound wooden chest after another in
front of the Diamond Throne. “These are for Avornis, Your Majesty,” Bonyak
said. Courtiers leaned forward, waiting for him to open one of the boxes,
their faces full of avid curiosity.
At Bonyak’s nod, one of the men who followed him undid the hasp on the
topmost chest and opened it. “Fifty thousand pieces of silver, from Prince
Tvorimir to Avornis,” Bonyak said. “His Highness will also make an
agreement like the ones the princes of Hisardzik and Jobuka made with your
kingdom not long ago.”
“Will he?” Grus said. Bonyak nodded again. The Avornan courtiers
murmured among themselves. The present wasn’t very interesting— they’d
seen plenty of silver themselves—but the news that came with it was good.
Grus nodded back. “I am pleased to accept this silver for the kingdom,” he
declared in loud, formal tones. “Never let it be said that I did not seek
peace between Avornis and the Chernagor city-states.”
“Prince Tvorimir has this same thought,” Bonyak said.
Of course he does—
for the time being, Grus thought.
I’ve made him afraid of me. The Chernagor ambassador went on,
“Prince Tvorimir also sends you a personal gift, a gift from him to you,
not from Hrvace to Avornis.”
As Bonyak had before, he gestured to the burly, bearded men who
accompanied him. One of them came forward with an enormous earthenware
jug, which he set beside the chests of silver pieces. Bonyak said, “This
is a special kind of liquor, which we have in trade from an island far out
in the Northern Sea. It is stronger than any ale or wine, strong enough so
that it burns the gullet a little on the way down.”
“Does it indeed?” Grus said, his voice as neutral as he could make
it.
Bonyak understood what he wasn’t saying. “I will gladly drink of this,
Your Majesty. And let your wizards test it, if you think I have taken an
antidote,” the envoy said. “By the gods in the heavens, may my head answer
if it is poison.”
He did drink, and with every sign of enjoyment. “I will make a magical
test anyhow,” Grus replied, “and if it is poison, your head
will answer. For now, you and your comrades are dismissed.”
Bowing, the Chernagors departed from the throne room. Grus summoned
Pterocles and explained what he wanted. The wizard looked intrigued.
“Liquor that isn’t wine or ale? How interesting! I suppose it isn’t mead,
either, for mead’s no stronger than either of the others. Yes, I can test
it against poisons.” He dipped out a little of the liquid from the mug,
then poured it over an amethyst. Neither the stone nor the liquor showed
any change. Pterocles added a couple of sprigs of herbs to the dipper.
“Cinquefoil and vervain,” he explained to Grus. “They’re sovereign against
noxious things.” He murmured a charm, waited, and then shrugged. “All
seems as it should, Your Majesty. There is one other test to make, of
course.” He fished the herbs out of the dipper.
“What’s that?” the king asked.
“A very basic one.” Pterocles grinned. He raised the dipper to his lips
and drank what was in it. He coughed as he swallowed. “Whew! That’s strong
as a demon—your Chernagor wasn’t joking.” He paused, considering. “Can’t
complain about the way it warms me up inside, though, I wonder how the
people the Chernagors got it from made it.”
“Ask Bonyak—not that he’ll tell you even if he knows,” Grus said.
“Well, if it hasn’t turned you inside out and upside down, why don’t you
let me have a taste, too?”
“I don’t know. Why don’t I?” Pterocles filled the dipper again and
handed it to him.
Grus took it. He sniffed. The stuff smelled more like wine than
anything else, though less fruity. He sipped cautiously. When he
swallowed, he could feel the heat sliding down to his stomach. It spread
out from there. “Not bad,” he said after the same sort of pause for
thought as Pterocles had used. “A mug’s worth would be plenty to get you
drunk.”
Pterocles eyed the jug. “I’d say a mug’s worth would be enough to get
you dead—but what a way to go.”
“If you were going to make something like this, how would you do it?”
Grus asked.
The wizard laughed. “If I knew the answer to that, I’d already be doing
it. Some things you can concentrate by boiling. But when you boil wine,
you make it weaker than it was before, not stronger. I don’t know why. But
it is so—I know that.”
“Maybe you need to save what’s boiling away instead of what’s left in
the pot, then,” Grus said with a laugh of his own.
“Who knows? Maybe I do.” Pterocles kept on smiling. “I don’t know how
I’d do that, though,”
“I was only joking,” Grus said. “Probably nothing to it.”
Lanius’ head felt as though some demented smith with a heavy hammer
were using it for an anvil. Pterocles insisted the liquor Prince Tvorimir
gave to King Grus wasn’t poisoned. But Lanius had poisoned himself with it
the night before. His father-in-law had warned him a little would get him
drunk. Lanius hated to admit it, bur his father-in-law had been right and
more than right.
And because Grus had been so right, Lanius faced the moncats’ room with
a wince. The warmth and the smells—especially the smells— were not what he
wanted with a tender head. But he had never trusted the servants to take
care of the animals. If they didn’t do the work, that meant he had to.
Despite the wince, he opened the door, went in, and quickly closed it
behind him.
It was as bad as he’d thought it would be. His stomach twisted. He
almost had to leave very abruptly. After one gulp, though, he brought
things under control again and got to work. Cleaning the moncats’ sandbox
was a job nasty enough as things were, and seemed even worse when he was
nauseated himself. He was glad the animals used a sandbox like ordinary
cats; if they’d done what they wanted wherever they wanted, they would
have been much harder to keep.
After he took care of that, he went to the kitchens to get them some
meat. The fat cook named Cucullatus grinned at him and said, “Haven’t seen
that funny animal of yours for a while now. Did you chain it up?”
“No, but I’m tempted to,” he answered. “Pouncer makes me suspicious
when it’s being good—it’s probably up to something.” Cucullatus laughed a
sour laugh.
Lanius went back to the moncats’ room with the meat. The animals
swarmed around his feet, rubbing and purring and acting for all the world
as though they really were lovable creatures and not furry opportunists.
He knew better. They were as heartless and self-centered as any of his
courtiers.
Before dumping most of the food in their dishes, he doled out treats to
one moncat or another. He was busy doing that when he noticed Pouncer
wasn’t begging there with the rest of the moncats. He looked around the
room—and didn’t see it.
“Oh, by the gods, where has the stupid creature gone now?” he
exclaimed. But the problem wasn’t that Pouncer was stupid—the problem was
that the moncat was too smart for its own good.
The two places where Lanius knew the moncat went were the kitchens and
the archives. Pouncer hadn’t gone to the kitchens lately. Did that mean it
was likely to make an appearance there now, or that it would keep on
staying away? The king pondered. Trying to think like a Chernagor was hard
enough. Trying to think like a moncat? He wanted to throw up his hands at
the mere idea.
But he had to decide. Kitchens or archives? He took some scraps of meat
and hurried off toward the room where he’d spent so much happy time. If
Pouncer did show up there, he wanted to kick the moncat for disturbing his
peace of mind.
He still didn’t know how Pouncer got into the archives, any more than
he knew how the miserable beast escaped from its room. Instead of
contentedly pawing through parchments, he had to poke around in dark
corners where Pouncer was likely to come forth. Wherever the moncat did
emerge, it always looked enormously pleased with itself. Lanius couldn’t
decide whether that amused him or infuriated him.
“Pouncer?” he called. “Are you there, Pouncer, you stinking, mangy
creature?” Pouncer was as fastidious as any other moncat, and didn’t
stink. The beast’s luxuriant fur proved it wasn’t mangy. Lanius slandered
it anyhow. Why not? It was no more likely to pay attention to anything he
said to or about it than any other moncat, either.
It did, however, pay attention to food. Lanius lay down on his back on
the least dusty stretch of floor he could find. He thumped on his chest.
If Pouncer was anywhere close by, that noise ought to attract the moncat.
It would do its trick, climb up on his chest, and win its tasty reward. It
would ... if it was close enough to hear.
“Mrowr?” The meow, though muffled, made Lanius want to cheer. It also
made him proud—in a peculiar way. Here he was, congratulating himself for
. . . what? For beating the Menteshe? For finding something important
about the Chernagors in the archives? No. What had he done to win those
congratulations? He’d outthought a moncat.
Of course, what was the alternative? As far as he could see, it was
not outthinking a moncat. And how proud would he have been of
that?
“Mrowr?” Pouncers meow definitely sounded strange, as though the moncat
were behind something that deadened the noise ... or as though it had
something in its mouth.
And so it did, as Lanius discovered when the moncat came toward him. A
rat’s tail dangled from one side of Pouncer’s jaws, the rat’s snout from
the other. As it had been trained to do, Pouncer climbed up onto the
king’s chest. The moncat dropped the rat right there.
“Thank you so much!” Lanius exclaimed. He didn’t want to grab the rat
even to throw it away. And Pouncer, naturally, was convinced it had done
him not only a favor but an honor by presenting him with its kill. Pouncer
was also convinced it deserved a treat from his hands—it had gotten up on
his chest the way it was supposed to.
He gave the moncat a scrap of meat. Pouncer purred and ate it.
Then Pouncer picked up the rat again, walked farther up Lanius’ chest
with it, and, still purring all the while, almost dropped it on his
face.
“If you think you’re trying to train me to eat that, you’d better think
again,” the king told the moncat.
“Mrowr,” Pouncer answered, in tones that could only mean,
Why aren’t you picking this up now that I’ve given it to you?
“Sorry,” said Lanius, who was anything but. When he sat up, the rat
rolled away from where Pouncer had put it and fell on the floor. With
another meow, this one of dismay, the moncat dove after it. The king
grabbed the animal. The moncat grabbed the rat. “Mutton’s not good enough
for you, eh?” Lanius demanded. This time, Pouncer didn’t say anything. The
moncat held the rat in both clawed hands and daintily nibbled at its
tail.
Lanius didn’t try to take away its prize. Pouncer was less likely to
kick or scratch or bite as long as it had the rat. That remained true even
after the chunk of meat the king had fed it.
And yet, even though Pouncer had caught the rat on its own, it hadn’t
declined to clamber up onto him for the little bit of mutton. He’d trained
it to do that, and it had.
“Not much of a trick,” Lanius told the moncat. Pouncer didn’t even
pretend to pay attention. The rat’s tail was much more interesting, to say
nothing of tasty. The king went on, “Of course, I’m not much of an animal
trainer, either. I wonder what someone who really knows what he’s doing
could teach you.”
“Mrowr,” Pouncer said, as though doubting whether anybody—Lanius
included—could teach it anything.
How much
could a moncat learn? Suppose a skilled trainer really went to
work with the beasts. What could he teach them? Would it be worth doing,
or would Grus grumble that Lanius was wasting money? Grus often grumbled
about money he wasn’t spending himself. Still, it might be amusing.
Or, just possibly, it might be more than amusing. Lanius stopped short
and stared at Pouncer. “Could you learn something like that?” he said.
“Are you smart enough? Could you stay interested long enough?”
With the rat’s tail, now gnawed down to the bone here and there,
dangling from the corners of Pouncer’s mouth, the moncat didn’t look smart
enough for anything. Even so, Lanius eyed it in a way he never had
before.
He put it back in its room, knowing it probably wouldn’t stay there
long. Then he went looking for King Grus, which wasn’t something he did
very often. He found the other king closeted with General Hirundo. They
were hashing out the campaign in the Chernagor country over mugs of wine.
“Hello, Your Majesty,” Grus said, courteous as usual. “Would you care to
join me?”
“As a matter of fact, Your Majesty, I’d like to talk to you in private
for a little while, if I could,” Lanius answered.
Grus’ gaze sharpened. Lanius didn’t call him
Your Majesty every day, or every month, either. The older man
rose. “If you’ll excuse us, Hirundo . . .” he said.
“Certainly, Your Majesty. I can tell when I’m not wanted.” The general
bowed and left. Had he spoken in a different tone of voice, he would have
thought himself mortally insulted, and an uprising would have followed in
short order. As things were, he just sounded amused.
After Hirundo closed the door behind him, Grus turned back to Lanius.
“All right, Your Majesty. If you wanted my attention, you’ve got it. What
can I do for you?”
Lanius shook his head. “No, it’s what I can do for you.” Honesty
compelled him to add, “Or it may be what I can do for you, anyhow.” He set
out the idea he’d had a little while earlier.
The other king stared at him, then started to laugh. Lanius scowled. He
hated to be laughed at. Grus held up a hand. “No, no, no. By the gods,
Your Majesty, it’s not you.”
“What is it, then?” Lanius asked stiffly.
“It’s the idea,” Grus said. “It’s not you.” It’s my idea, Lanius thought, still offended. “What’s wrong
with it?”
“Why—” Grus started to be glib, but caught himself. He did some
thinking, then admitted, “I don’t know that anything’s wrong with it. It’s
still funny, though.”
When Lanius went to bed that night, the Banished One appeared to him in
a dream. Before that cold, beautiful, inhuman gaze, the king felt less
than a moncat himself. The Banished One always raised that feeling in him,
but never more than tonight. Those eyes seemed to pierce the very center
of his soul. “You are plotting against me,” the Banished One said.
“We are enemies,” Lanius said. “You have always plotted against
Avornis.”
“You deserve whatever happens to you,” the Banished One replied. “You
deserve worse than what has happened to you. You deserve it, and I intend
to give it to you. But if you plot and scheme against me, your days will
be even shorter than they would otherwise, and even more full of pain and
grief. Do you doubt me? You had better not doubt me, you puling little
wretch of a man.”
“I have never doubted you,” Lanius told him. “You need not worry about
that.”
The Banished One laughed. His laughter flayed, even in a dream. “I,
worry over what a sorry mortal does? Your life at best is no more than a
sneeze. If you think you worry me, you exaggerate your importance in the
grand scheme of things.”
Even in a dream, Lanius’ logical faculties still worked—after a
fashion. “In that case,” he asked, “why do you bother appearing to
me?”
“You exaggerate your importance,” the Banished One repeated. “A flea
bite annoys a man without worrying him. But when the man crushes the flea,
though he worries not a bit, the flea is but a smear. And so shall you be,
and sooner than you think.”
“Sometimes the flea hops away,” Lanius said.
“That is because there is very little difference between a man and a
flea,” the Banished One retorted. “But between a man and me—you shall see
what the difference is between a man and me. Oh, yes—you shall see.” As he
had once before, years earlier, he made as though to reach out for
Lanius.
In the nick of time—in the very nick of time—the king fought himself
awake. He sat bolt upright in his bed, his heart pounding. “Are you all
right?” Sosia asked sleepily.
“Bad dream. Just a bad dream,” Lanius answered, his voice shaking. A
bad dream it was.
Just a bad dream? Oh, no. He knew better than that.
In the nick of time—in the very nick of time—the king fought himself
awake. Grus sat bolt upright in bed, his heart pounding. “Are you all
right?” Estrilda asked sleepily.
“Bad dream. Just a bad dream,” Grus answered, his voice shaking. A bad
dream it
was. Just a bad dream? Oh, no. He knew better than that. The
Banished One had been on the very point of seizing him when he escaped
back into the world of mundane reality. And if the Banished One’s hands
had touched him, as they’d been on the point of doing . . .
He didn’t know what would have happened then. He didn’t know, and he
never, ever wanted to find out.
Little by little, his thudding heart and gasping breath slowed toward
normal. The Banished One had come too close to scaring him to death
without touching him. But Grus had also learned more from that horrid
nighttime visitation than the Banished One might have intended.
Fortified by the thought the exiled god had never come to him more than
once of a night, he lay down and tried to go back to sleep. Try as he
would, though, he couldn’t sleep anymore. He let out a small sigh of
frustration. The dream the exiled god had sent remained burned on his
memory, as those dreams always did. He wished he could forget them, the
way he forgot dreams of the ordinary sort. But no. Whatever else the
Banished One was, he was nothing of the ordinary sort.
Estrilda muttered to herself and went back to sleep. Grus wished again
that he could do the same. Whatever he wished, more sleep eluded him. He
waited until he was sure his wife was well under, then poked his feet into
slippers, pulled a cloak on over his nightshirt, and left the royal
bedchamber. The guardsmen in the corridor came to stiff attention. “As you
were,” Grus told them, and they relaxed.
Torches in sconces on the wall guttered and crackled. Quite a few had
burned out. Why not? At this hour of the night, hardly anyone was
stirring. No need for much light. Grus walked down the hall. He was and
was not surprised when another guarded door opened. Out came Lanius,
wearing the same sort of irregular outfit as Grus had on.
After telling his own guards to stand at ease, Lanius looked up and
down the corridor. He seemed . . . surprised and not surprised to discover
Grus also up and about. “Hello, Your Majesty,” Grus said. “You, too?”
“Yes, me, too . . . Your Majesty,” Lanius answered. Grus nodded to
himself. Whenever Lanius deigned to use his title, the other king took
things very seriously indeed. As though to prove the point, Lanius
gestured courteously. “Shall we walk?”
“I think maybe we’d better,” Grus said.
Behind them, guardsmen muttered among themselves. The soldiers no doubt
wondered how both kings had happened to wake up at the same time. Grus
wished he wondered, too. But he had no doubts whatsoever.
Neither did Lanius. The younger king said, “The Banished One knows we
have something in mind.”
“He certainly does,” Grus agreed.
“Good,” Lanius said. “Next spring—”
Grus held up a hand. “Maybe next spring. Maybe the spring after that,
or the spring after
that. As long as the Menteshe want to keep doing part of our job
for us, I won’t complain a bit.”
“Well, no. Neither will I,” Lanius said. “We ought to use however much
time we have wisely. I wish we could lay our hands on some more ordinary
thralls.”
“So do I,” Grus said. “But we’d have to cross the Stura to do it, and I
don’t want to do that while the Menteshe are still in the middle of their
civil war.”
“I suppose you’re right.” Lanius sounded regretful but not mutinous.
“Pterocles should start teaching other wizards the spell he’s worked out.
When we do go south of the Stura, we’ll need it.”
“We’d better need it,” Grus said, and Lanius nodded. Grus went on, “I
have had work for Pterocles up in the Chernagor country, you
know.”
“Oh, yes.” Lanius did not seem in a quarrelsome mood. After facing up
to the Banished One, mere mortals seldom felt like fighting among
themselves. The younger king continued, “But he’s not up in the Chernagor
country now. And he can teach more wizards here in the capital than
anywhere else in Avornis.”
“More of everything here in the capital than anywhere else in Avornis,”
Grus said.
Lanius nodded again. This time, he followed the nod with a yawn. “I
think I can sleep again,” he said.
“Do you?” Grus looked inside himself. After a moment, he gave Lanius a
sad little shrug. “Well, Your Majesty, I’m jealous, because I don’t. I’m
afraid I’m up for the rest of the night.”
“Sorry to hear that.” Lanius yawned again. He turned around. “If you’ll
excuse me—”
“Good night,” Grus told him. “Don’t snore so loud, you wake up my
daughter.” Laughing, Lanius headed back to his bedchamber.
Grus wandered down the hallway. The soft leather soles of his slippers
scuffed over the floor’s mosaic tiles. How many times had he walked along
here, not noticing the hunting scenes over which so many craftsmen had
worked so hard and so long? Tonight, he noticed. Tonight, he had nothing
to distract him.
Another man’s footsteps came from around a corner. Grus realized he had
not even an eating knife on his belt. Had the Banished One come to Otus as
he’d come to the two kings? Was the thrall on the prowl? Would his guards
let him go because they thought him cured?
Did he have murder on his mind? Did he have a mind, or was he but a
reflection of the Banished One’s will?
The other man came into sight. For a moment, in the dim torchlight,
Grus thought it
was Otus. Then he saw with his eyes, not his late-night fears.
“Hello, Pterocles,” he called. “What are you doing up at this ghastly
hour?”
“Your Majesty?” Pterocles sounded as surprised and alarmed as Grus had
felt. “I could ask you the same question, you know.”
“Well, so you could,” Grus said. “I couldn’t sleep. I ... had a bad
dream.”
He knew Pterocles had dreamed of the Banished One. That the Banished
One took Pterocles seriously enough to send him a dream was one reason he
was chief wizard in Avornis these days. As far as the king knew, though,
the Banished One had visited Pterocles only once in the night.
Until tonight. The wizard jerked as though Grus had poked him with a
pin. “Why, so did I, Your Majesty.” Pterocles nodded jerkily. “So did
I.”
“One of—those dreams?” Grus asked.
Pterocles nodded again. “Oh, yes, Your Majesty. One of—those dreams.”
He mimicked Grus’ tone very well. “I haven’t had one of— those dreams for
years now. I wouldn’t have been sorry not to have this one, either.”
“I believe you,” Grus said. “Nobody wants a visit from the Banished
One.” There. He’d said it. The ceiling didn’t fall in on him. The name
didn’t even raise any particular echoes—except in his own mind. Gathering
himself, he went on, “It’s an honor of sorts, though, if you look at it
the right way.”
“An honor?” Pterocles frowned. “I’m not sure I see ... Oh. Wait. Maybe I
do.”
Now King Grus was the one who nodded. “That’s what I meant, all right.
Most people never have to worry about seeing the Banished One looking out
of their dreams. He never needs to notice them. If he notices you, it’s a
sign you’ve done something, or you’re going to do something, to worry
him.”
“He visited both of us tonight, then?” the wizard asked.
“That’s right.” Grus gave him another nod. “And he visited King Lanius,
too.”
“Did he?” Pterocles said. “Do you know why he visited the, uh, other
king?”
Grus smiled a slightly sour smile. Even after he and Lanius had shared
the throne for a good many years, people still found the arrangement
awkward every now and again. He chuckled. He still found it awkward every
now and again himself. But that was neither here nor there. He told
Pterocles why he thought the Banished One had paid the nighttime call.
“Really?” Pterocles said when he was done. “You surprise me, Your
Majesty. When was the last time the Banished One sent three people dreams
at the same time?” Pterocles wondered.
“I don’t know,” Grus said. “I don’t know if he’s ever done anything
like that before. Interesting, isn’t it?”
“It could be.” Pterocles cocked his head to one side as he considered.
“Yes, it could be.”
“That’s what I thought,” Grus said. “And so I don’t mind wandering the
hallways here in the wee small hours of the night quite as much as I would
if I’d gotten out of bed with a headache or a sour stomach.”
Pterocles grunted. Then he yawned. “It could be so, Your Majesty. But
whether it’s so or not, I’m still sleepy. If you don’t mind, I think I’m
going to try to go back to bed.”
“King Lanius did the same thing. I envied him, and I envy you, too,”
Grus said. “Maybe I’ll nap in the afternoon, but I can’t sleep more
tonight. I’m sure of that.”
“I’m off, then.” Pterocles sketched a salute to Grus, turned around,
and went back the way he had come.
Grus wandered the hallways aimlessly—or maybe not so aimlessly, for he
ended up at the entrance to the palace. The guards there needed a
heartbeat or two to recognize him. When they did, they sprang to attention
all the more rigid for being embarrassed. His wave told them they could
relax. He walked out into the night.
It was cold on the palace steps, but not cold enough to drive him back
inside. When he looked to the east, he saw a faint grayness that said
sunrise was coming. He stood and waited, watching the gray spread up the
dome of the sky, watching the stars fade and then disappear, watching pink
and gold follow the gray. All around him, the bricks and stone and slate
roof tiles of the city of Avornis took on solid shape and then, a little
at a time, color as well.
Lanius had had an idea that worried the Banished One. The more Grus
thought about that, the better he liked it.
A new day dawned.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA:
Chernenko, Dan.
The chernagor pirates / Dan Chernenko. p. cm.—(The scepter of mercy,
bk. 2)
ISBN 0-451-45956-3
I. Title. II. Series: Chernenko, Dan. Scepter of mercy ; bk. 2.
PS3603.H48C48 2004
813,6—dc22
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