Authors: Mercedes Lackey
“Oh,” the chirurgeon waved dissmissively. “They’re hardly important, things many educated people think are mostly delusional. Speaking mind-to-mind without the assistance of a teleson-spell; moving objects or even people with the power of the mind alone and no Portals involved; seeing and speaking with spirits of the dead; communicating directly with deities; seeing into the distance, the past, or the future without benefit of a mirror-spell; and imposing one’s will upon another.” He shrugged. “Most folk in the Empire are rather skeptical about those sorts of things. It is very easy to pretend to powers that are only in the mind, and thus very subjective.”
He’d been speaking in Hardornen, though whether it was out of politeness for the company or simply because he’d forgotten to switch back to the Imperial
tongue, Tremane couldn’t have said for certain. The locals, who had been listening to his speech with some interest, laughed uproariously at that last statement. The chirurgeon glared at them in annoyance.
“I fail to see what was so amusing,” he said acidly. “Perhaps you would care to enlighten me?”
“You people wouldn’t be so skeptical if you’d ever met a Herald out of Valdemar,” was the reply. “They don’t use your ‘real’ magic over there, or they didn’t until just lately.
Everything
they do is with mind-magic, and they think
yours
is poppycock and fakery.”
Affronted, the chirurgeon turned his attention back to his own underlings; the Hardornen builders and Tremane’s men got involved in a discussion of the best placements of “furnaces” and other devices to heat the barracks, and whether or not the walls really needed to be piled with earth. There seemed to be a brotherhood of builders, of stone and wood and metal, that transcended nationalities.
That left Tremane with an interesting tidbit to mull over. The Valdemarans did everything with mind-magic? That must have been where he’d first heard the term.
So Heralds must be the people born with these abilities; somehow they have a way of testing for them, I suppose. Then they get herded up the way the Karsites collect children with Mage-Talent, and sent off for training. Clever, to put them all in service to the Crown; the Empire could do with that policy regarding mages. And they aren’t used to using real magic; it’s new to them, so they don’t rely on it. Fascinating.
No wonder they weren’t having the kind of problems with the mage-storms that he was having! They simply didn’t have things that would be disrupted by the storms!
There are plenty of folk in the Empire who would call that a barbaric way of life—but they can heat their homes and move their goods and we can’t…. So who has the superior way of life now?
Heating homes … all very well to heat the barracks with cow dung, but what was he going to cook with?
“Wood,” he said aloud. “We have a problem; trees don’t grow as quickly as wheat, and I don’t intend to denude the countryside to keep my people warm if I can help it. Have any of you any suggestions?”
The Hardornens exchanged glances, and one of them finally spoke up. “Commander Tremane, you know as well as we do the state of things here. Half the people of Hardorn are gone. Whole villages are wiped out just because some lieutenant of Ancar got offended over something someone said, farms were abandoned when the last able-bodied person gave up or was carried off. We were going to suggest that once the harvest was over, your folk and ours go out together on foraging expeditions.”
He considered this for a moment. “Do I take it that there is a reasonable chance that such expeditions will be left alone by the—the loyal Hardornen forces?”
The man snorted. “The loyal Hardornen forces aren’t ‘forces’ at all. Most of them will be getting their harvests in,
if
they can. They’re battling time and weather just as we are, and they won’t have the extra men we will.”
He nodded; that confirmed his own ideas. “How is the harvest looking?” he asked, thinking that this man just might be honest enough to tell him.
“That’s another reason for foraging,” the fellow told him frankly. “The harvest isn’t bad, but some of us aren’t sure it will hold the town over the winter. Sandar wants to send out foraging parties to some of the farms that have been abandoned and see what we might be able to get out of the fields, or even the barns and silos.” He grinned. “There’s sure to be stuff good enough for your thatching straw, if nothing else.”
“You’d prefer to have some of my forces along, I take it.” He made that a statement; another bizarre killer-beast had been taken today, after it had attacked one of the harvesting parties. This time no one was killed, and only a few men were hurt, but no one was going to forget that these things were still out beyond the nearly-completed walls. “So what do my people get out of this?”
“We find out just who’s left—after Ancar, the Empire, and the mage-storms,” the man said bluntly. “You get a census of who’s around here, and where. You know who’s got boys or men that might be tempted to make things difficult for your men in the name of Hardorn. Some of these farmers may have extra food to trade for. We find out what the storms have done to the land. If they’re changing animals, what else are they leaving behind? And when we find abandoned farms, deserted villages, your people can move in and tear down the buildings. At the worst, you’ve got fuel. At the best, you’ve got fuel and building supplies. And—well, Sandar may be hoping for too much, but he thinks if we find any camps of the men from our side, we might be able to persuade ‘em that you Imperials aren’t the devils they think you are. Maybe we can get you a truce, if nothing else.”
Tremane kept his face expressionless, his tone noncommittal. “I’ll think about it,” he said, and turned the subject back toward his barracks and the improvements the locals were suggesting.
But when everyone had cleared away, and he was back in his own room with another cozy fire going, he had to admit that the proposals didn’t sound bad.
Provided, of course, that this wasn’t just a way to lure him and his men out where the rebels could pick them off or ambush them.
Oddly enough, he didn’t think it was. The idea of harvesting abandoned fields, rounding up and butchering half-feral livestock, and tearing down vacant buildings was a good one. With locals as guides, he would not have to send out sweep searches for such places, and run the risk of incurring the wrath of farmers who had
not
abandoned their holdings.
“I never thought I’d find myself in a position like this,” he said aloud into the quiet night air.
His assignment had been to pacify Hardorn. He had never counted on his pacification force becoming the equivalent of the local government, yet that was precisely what was happening.
There would be no more battles; the worst he could
expect would be skirmishes against men who were increasingly short of supplies and resources. In any other circumstances he would have laughed at the idea he could trust the people of Shonar to make and hold a truce with their fellow Hardornens. He would
never
have believed the half-promises made to him tonight.
But although nothing had been stated openly and baldly, it was very clear to him that these people no longer regarded him and his men as the enemy. Instead, they represented the one source of safety and order in an increasingly disordered country. They looked at their own men, ragtag bands of “freedom fighters” who were ill-armed and untrained; they looked at the strange monsters created in the wake of the magestorms. They turned their eyes on the Imperial forces, well-armed, well-trained, and prepared to defend not only themselves, but the town of Shonar. It did not take a master scholar to figure the odds on which ones they would trust their safety to.
There would be no more reports to the Emperor; the agents still with Tremane would not take long to assess their own position here. Not that
his
ambitions regarding the Iron Throne were anywhere on his list of current priorities. No, he was past the point of thinking in terms of “acceptable losses.” There was no loss that was acceptable now, and any deaths in his ranks would be avenged swiftly and with finality.
Now came the time for concentration on the minutiae that would save them all; the heroes of the winter would be the best managers, not the best generals.
He had pestered his clerks until his office was stuffed with papers, box after box of them, rank after rank of dossiers. He had the equivalent of the sheaf of papers that followed every Imperial citizen through his life for every man in his forces, three copies. One set of files was arranged, not by military rank or specialty, but by civilian specialty; what the man had done or been trained as before he joined the army. The second set was arranged more conventionally, in alphabetical order within each company. The third set was arranged
by military specialty; all the scouts, all the infantry, all the cavalry, and so on.
Now, depending on what was needed, he could put his hands on the exact men with the precise skills that were required.
He did not believe that any other commander in the history of the Empire had ever done such a thing, not even when copying records had been a simple matter of a mage and a duplication-spell. Odd, considering what a bureaucracy the Empire was—but this was an innovation, and innovation was not encouraged in the Imperial Army.
For good or ill, he was in charge; Sandar’s deference to his authority and the attitude of his Council made that clear. It was the position he had aimed for, but the implication that it had been granted him meant he was now, effectively, the liege lord of Shonar, with all the responsibilities of that office toward “his” civilians.
Karal waited for Jarim to finish speaking, then got wearily to his cold, benumbed feet.
Why am I doing this? No one is going to pay any attention
. His face felt stiff and frozen as he addressed people that were not even looking at him—except for Firesong, Darkwind, and the Valdemaran Heralds, who at least pretended to listen.
I’m doing this because they’re going to overlook the most significant statement in that spy report that Kerowyn read us, that’s why. Jarim has already tried to bury it in rhetoric.
“Herald Captain Kerowyn, I believe that you said in your report that the Imperial forces seem to be cooperating with and protecting the civilians of the Hardornen city of Shonar, and that the citizens of Shonar do not seem to be under any duress and are, in fact, cooperating with the Imperials. Did I misunderstand that report, or do I grasp the facts correctly?”
“That was the report from one of my operatives, yes,” Kerowyn acknowledged. “Mind you, he got his information on Shonar only at secondhand. None of our operatives have penetrated that far personally.”
“Nevertheless, the evidence is that the Imperials have been accepted as the authority for these people in and around Shonar. They are certainly acting in a protective manner.” He swallowed and said the unthinkable.
This is it.
They’re going to think that I’m quite mad now. Or that I’m a coward. “Given the appalling conditions in Hardorn, and given the fact that we know
because of the reports from the Herald Captain’s operatives that the mage-storms are causing more havoc on top of an already unstable and precarious situation, I believe we ought to leave the Imperial forces alone. Harassing them in any way would be counterproductive for the citizens of Hardorn.” Well enough, he had said that before. But now he would go completely out on a limb. “My personal recommendation is that we at least
consider
opening negotiations with them so that we can give some aid to Hardorn without that aid being read as an attack.”
Jarim predictably exploded; Talia interrupted his tirade before it began, as she stood up and repeated what Karal had said. “The envoy from Karse recommends that we at least discuss the possibility of opening negotiations with the Imperials,” she said. “Doing so would give us an opportunity to render some aid to the people of Hardorn, and would certainly allow us to insert operatives in as far as Shonar. On purely humanitarian grounds, I second the envoy’s suggestion and advise that we talk about this.”
Although no one except Talia and Jarim had paid any attention to what Karal had said, when Talia repeated it, in practically the same words, the rest of the Grand Council suddenly took notice, and a real discussion erupted.
Jarim took no part in the talk but, instead, continued to glare at Karal from across the table. Karal just sank his head into his hand and listened to the argument and counterargument.
I’ve made my contribution; nothing else I say will matter until it all comes to a vote
.
None of this was new. Despite the early apology from the Shin’a’in envoy and the outward appearance of tolerance, Jarim’s hostility had not abated and had become increasingly personal. Karal was not sure why. Perhaps someone had convinced him that the Karsites and Querna had not gotten along, although the reverse was actually true. He had admired the Shin’a’in Querna. Ulrich had considered her a friend on the personal level. If Jarim knew any of this, he did not seem to believe it.
Maybe he just resents the fact that An’desha, Darkwind, Talia, Elspeth, and the gryphons like me and they don’t much care for him. Or maybe he’s just a fanatic.
And despite the fact that Karal made it a point never to speak up in the Grand Council sessions unless he had something of substance to contribute, no one ever paid any attention to what he said except Jarim, and Jarim paid attention only so he could immediately belittle it. In fact, Talia had taken to repeating what he said almost verbatim so that it would at least be brought up for serious consideration.
Was it just that he was so young? He’d tried everything save cosmetics and coloring his hair gray to make himself look older. He’d tried a dignified manner and cultivating a deep and booming voice; he’d tried wearing a stark black set of full formal Sun-priest robes. A more elaborate costume had been suggested to him, but he’d felt so ridiculous in it that he hadn’t dared try it in public.
I felt like a walking shrine. Or an actor done up for a miracle-play.
He was grateful to Talia for her assistance, but this was no way for him to conduct his office. Before long, this kind of situation would affect not only how he was treated in this room, but how he was treated outside it. What little authority he had with his own people, the Karsites here in Valdemar, would soon be eroded by the fact that no one respected him in the Grand Council meetings.
He didn’t know what else he could do. If an enemy, either of him personally or of Karse, had
wanted
to undermine his authority, they could not have organized anything more effective than what his own youth and perceived inexperience was doing.
Could it be Jarim’s doing? I can’t see how. The only reason anyone listens to him is because he shouts louder than I do.
His insides were nothing but one twisted, snarled knot, and had been that way for days. He had been living on herb tea and plain bread, for nothing else would
stay in his stomach for long.
I’d be drinking myself to sleep, if I didn’t know that the liquor would only come right back up after I drank it
, he thought glumly. He’d tried sending word of his difficulties back to Karse, but all he got in return were reassuring messages full of platitudes. It was as if Solaris or her advisers weren’t even reading the pleas he’d been sending—or were ignoring the content as the vaporings of an inexperienced and homesick boy.
I am homesick, but only because I can’t get anything done here. I’d happily go back to being a secretary, even under an unpleasant and unfriendly master.
If he couldn’t even get his own people to listen to what he was saying, what hope did he have of convincing anyone here?
He needed authority, and not even his own countrymen were going to exert themselves to see that he got it.
I want to go home. I want to bury myself in books. I’m
not
important; I’ve done everything I needed to here. Anyone Solaris could assign here would be better than me
.
He closed his eyes as his stomach cramped, grimacing and quickly covering it.
Karse would have been better off if Altra had protected Ulrich instead of me
, he thought, clenching his jaw to control his expression.
Before long, I will be doing my land great harm by remaining in this office, because disregard for me will become disregard for Karse.
He had begged, pleaded for someone to be sent to relieve him, citing that very thing, but his pleas had been ignored. Why? He had no idea.
If it had not been for Florian, Natoli, and An’desha, he would have thrown himself into the river days ago. All three of them kept encouraging him—though the one creature who might have been able to help him was conspicuous by his absence. Altra had not put in a single appearance in all that time. Karal was beginning to wonder if he had somehow offended the Firecat. Or worse, offended Vkandis Sunlord.
Perhaps he has deserted me. Perhaps Vkandis no longer favors me. Perhaps He has abandoned me for the same reason that Jarim hates me—because I see no reason to waste time, resources, and lives in persecuting the Imperials. Aren’t the mage-storms punishment enough? Must vengeance go on forever? Perhaps He thinks so.
That only depressed him further, and his stomach and throat knotted more tightly.
Why was he continuing in this farce? The only reason why he didn’t get up and walk out now was that he was just too tired.
Perhaps tomorrow I simply won’t get out of bed. I’ll cancel everything. I’ll tell the servants I’m too ill to get up. The results of the day will be exactly the same….
But he knew he wouldn’t do that. It wasn’t in his nature.
I wish I really was ill; I wish I could break a leg or an arm or something, so I’d have an excuse not to get up. I wish I was really, seriously ill, perhaps with pneumonia, so they’d give me drugs to make me sleep, and I wouldn’t have to think about any of this
.
What a fine pass he’d come to, when he would rather be seriously injured or sick than have to face his duty and his work!
He was supposed to join An’desha and Natoli and go to the Compass Rose as soon as the meeting was over, but he didn’t have the heart for it now.
I can’t face the others tonight. I’m no kind of company. I’ll just crawl off to my room and see if I can’t catch up on some of my correspondence. I can try one more letter to Solaris
….
Maybe this was his punishment for not taking care of Ulrich as he had promised. Perhaps Solaris had decided that he should suffer for not keeping his promise. If so, it was certainly working.
Finally the debate wound down to a close, concluding, as he had hoped, that there was nothing to be gained by harassing the Imperials, and that the innocent civilians of Shonar could be harmed in the process. The group was split equally on the subject of
opening negotiations, with himself, Talia, and Darkwind conspicuously on the side of negotiating and Jarim, Kerowyn, and Elspeth the leaders against. Finally, the session came to an end, and he was free to stand up with the others and trail out. He waited for everyone except the most minor of secretaries to precede him, hoping that no one would notice whether or not he had left the room; right now, he didn’t want to talk to anyone, not even for idle small talk. His robes seemed to weigh down his shoulders like slabs of stone as he finally stood and collected his notes and his gear. He stowed them all in the leather pouch he had carried as Ulrich’s secretary. His neck ached, and there were places beneath both shoulder blades that were so knotted it felt as if he was being stabbed there with a dull pick.
At that moment, he was perfectly well aware that he would have exchanged his lot in life for that of the lowest servant in Vkandis’ temple. He’d gladly be a horseboy in the Temple stables. He’d cheerfully tend the Temple pigsty. He’d scrub the floors for the most ill-tempered priest in Karse….
But it seemed that his misery had not yet reached its nadir, for Jarim was waiting for him just outside the door of the Council Chamber, and there were several other members of the Grand Council loitering conspicuously in the hallway. It was very clear to him at that moment that Jarim wanted a confrontation, and these jackals were waiting avidly for some entertainment.
The best way to avoid that is to avoid the confrontation. It takes two to argue, and I’m not going to give him the opportunity
. He tried to ignore Jarim, keeping his eyes down and his face without expression as he attempted to ease past the Shin’a’in, but Jarim reached out and seized his arm before he could get out of the way.
“And where do you think you are going, traitor?” Jarim asked loudly, as he tried to pull loose without turning it into a physical fight. “Can’t wait to get back
to your kennel, dog, and howl to your Imperial masters? So eager to let them know the good news? And what bone will they toss to you for ensuring their safety? Land? Gold? Some of their magics, maybe? Not content with what your God can give you anymore? Is it so easy to betray your old master?” Jarim spat—not into his face, but at his feet. “Did you serve him only to get a chance to betray him, dog?”
Karal had expected an attack, but not this one—and not so vehemently. He froze, half paralyzed and quite unable to form anything coherent; he had no reply at all to Jarim’s accusations. His head came up and he stared into Jarim’s angry face, thunderstruck, and cold all over. He couldn’t speak, he couldn’t even think clearly. What demon possessed the man to make him so obsessed and so certain that Karal was a traitor, that Karal would have betrayed the one man in the world he had thought of as his second father?
Jarim snarled angrily at his silence; but when Karal didn’t move, his grip loosened just enough that Karal was able to pull himself free. Karal’s paralysis lifted, and he jerked his sleeve and arm out of Jarim’s hand so violently that he staggered half a dozen paces down the hallway.
Then he stood there for a moment, chilled to the bone, staring back at Jarim and the Council members gathered beside him. Karal’s mouth worked, but not his voice. Not even a whisper emerged—which might have been just as well, since whatever he might have said would have been incomprehensible babbling.
He backed up a pace instead, then another—then turned abruptly and fled, robes flying, back to his suite.
He knew that his silence in the face of Jarim’s incredible accusation had only confirmed his guilt in the eyes of the onlookers. He was certain that by day’s end, the rumor would spread everywhere that he had been working all along for the Empire; that he had survived the attack on Ulrich because he had been meant to by his Imperial masters. And he had no way, none whatsoever, to prove that the accusation was false.
Florian found him in the dead and deserted gardens, long past sunset. His suite had not been the refuge he had thought it, for the moment he reached its doors, it had occurred to him that Jarim knew where it was, and could very easily find him here. And if the Shin’a’in was as fanatical as he seemed to be, Jarim might well decide to deal with a traitor in Shin’a’in fashion; quickly and decisively, at the point of a hunting knife. Granted the murder of another envoy would cause him a certain amount of difficulty—unless he managed to convince everyone that he had proof of Karal’s guilt. He just might manufacture that “proof,” knowing that with Karal dead there would be no way to refute it.
So he had paused just long enough to snatch up his warmest cloak, a hat and long scarf, and a pair of mittens. Then he had fled to the gardens, in the hope of finding some peace there until Jarim’s temper should cool. And in the somewhat desperate hope that something, anything, would occur to him to help him defend himself against his accuser. He found a secluded bench and sagged down on it, an anonymous form in a dark, hooded cloak, huddled in such a way as to discourage anyone thinking of approaching him.