The Complete Empire Trilogy (88 page)

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Authors: Raymond E. Feist

BOOK: The Complete Empire Trilogy
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The great hall held the damp in the mornings, and the old stone floor transmitted chill even through the soles of leather sandals. Crossing the echoing expanse of empty space, shuttered into gloom by closed screens, Kevin saw Nacoya awaiting on the dais and heard Lujan’s step enter from the passage behind. But the barbarian’s attention stayed riveted ahead where, even in the dimness, the sparkle of gold stood out, an unexpected and unnerving sight in a land where heavy metals were a rarity.

The messenger sat on a fine, threadworked cushion, and even his posture was imposing. He was a young man, powerfully muscled, and beautiful to look upon in a simple kilt of white cloth. Cross-gartered sandals hugged his dusty legs, and his skin sparkled with perspiration. Binding shoulder-length black hair from his brow was his badge of rank, a cloth in alternating bands of gold and white that sparkled and flashed through the shadows. The thread of the weave was metallic, true gold, the symbol of the Emperor of Tsuranuanni, whose bonded word he carried.

Upon Mara’s entrance, he rose from his seat and presented himself with a bow. The gesture denoted arrogance, for although he was a servant and she a noble Lady, his master’s word was the law of the land, to which all great houses must submit. The head badge made this man sacrosanct within the Empire. He could safely run through a battlefield, between warring houses, and no soldier would dare impede his passage, upon pain of the Emperor’s wrath. The messenger knelt with beautifully studied poise and presented a gilt-edged scroll, tied also with ribbons of gold, and sealed with the imprint of Ichindar.

Mara accepted the weighty missive, her hands looking fragile against the parchment. She broke the seal, unrolled the scroll, and began to read, while Lujan took his place on the side once occupied by Keyoke, and Nacoya visibly restrained herself from craning her neck to make out words over her mistress’s shoulder.

The document was not lengthy. Kevin, who was the tallest, could see that the sentences were brief. Yet Mara paused a lengthy interval before she raised her face and spoke.

‘Thank you. You may go,’ she said to the messenger. ‘My servants will see you refreshed and housed, if you wish to rest while my scribes take dictation and prepare my return message.’

The imperial messenger bowed and departed, the tap of his nail-studded sandals loud in the closed hall. The moment he passed beyond the doorway, Mara sank down upon the nearest empty cushion.

‘Tasaio’s hand is at last revealed,’ she said, and her voice sounded hollow and small.

Nacoya took the scroll and read its lines with a steadily deepening scowl. ‘The devil!’ she exclaimed when she finished.

‘Pretty Lady,’ Lujan interjected, ‘what are the Emperor’s wishes?’

It was Nacoya who answered, her aged voice like acid. ‘Orders, from the High Council. We must, with all haste, send our army to lend support to Lord Xacatecas in his war against the nomad raiders in Dustari. Lady Mara has been commanded to appear in person with a levy of four companies of troops, to be ready to depart within two months.’

Lujan’s eyebrows jerked up and froze. ‘Three companies would be too many,’ he said, and his hand tapped furiously on his sword hilt. ‘We’re going to have to buy favours of the cho-ja.’ His gaze shifted significantly to Kevin. ‘And you’re right, damn your barbarian ideas. Keyoke cannot be granted the luxury of dying, else the estate will be left stripped of its last experienced officer.’

‘That’s surely what Desio intends. We must balk him.’ Mara turned her head. Her eyes were black sparks, and her cheeks were flushed in shock as she voiced her orders. ‘Lujan, you are now promoted to the post of Force Commander. Take Kevin and go to Keyoke. Tell him I wish to appoint him as First Adviser for War, but will do so only with his permission.’ Her voice went distant with memory or maybe tears as she added, ‘He will think other warriors will ridicule him for carrying a crutch, but I will see his name is honoured. Remind him that Pape once found pride in wearing the black rag of the condemned.’

Lujan bowed, a suggestion of sorrow in his own stance. ‘I doubt Keyoke would leave us in such perilous straits, my Lady. But the gods might overrule his will. The wound in his abdomen is not the sort that a man is likely to recover from.’

Mara bit her lip. As if the words pained her, she said, ‘Then, with his permission, I will send runner slaves and messengers throughout the Empire, to seek a healing priest of Hantukama.’

‘The offering such a priest will demand for healing will be great,’ Nacoya pointed out. ‘You may have to build a large shrine.’

Mara came close to losing her temper. ‘Then speak to Jican about rescuing the remnants of our silk from the mountains and getting it to market at Jamar! For we need our Keyoke alive, or all will be lost. We cannot afford to slight the Lord of the Xacatecas.’ Even for Kevin’s sake, this statement needed no elaboration. The promise of Lord Xacatecas’ alliance had held many enemies at bay; should the Acoma give a family that powerful any cause whatsoever for enmity, they would beg a swift ruin, engaged as they were in their blood feud with the Minwanabi. ‘The estate here must not be left in jeopardy,’ Mara finished.

‘Dustari is a trap,’ Nacoya said, voicing a point all except Kevin were aware of. ‘Tasaio will be there, and no move you or your four companies can make will not be anticipated in advance. You and the men you take with you will go the way of Lord Sezu, betrayed to your deaths on foreign soil.’

‘All the more reason why Keyoke must hold these lands secure for Ayaki,’ Mara finished. And the last high colour fled her face.

The imperial messenger departed with Mara’s written acquiescence to the High Council’s demands. After that, her household factors and advisers hurried off to initiate a frenzied list of preparations. Lujan detailed officers to make an inventory, then he and Kevin departed for Keyoke’s bedside, neither with enthusiasm.

Jican arrived as they departed, summoned from the needra fields by the runner slave.

‘I need a full accounting of Acoma assets,’ Mara demanded before the little man had entirely risen from his bow. ‘How many centis we have in cash, and how many more we might borrow. I need to know how many weapons our master armourers can turn out in two months, and how many more we might purchase.’

Jican’s brows went up. ‘Lady, did you not already decide
to send our new arms to the markets? We will need the sale to balance our deficit in the silk.’

Mara frowned and restrained a sharp impulse to snap. ‘Jican, that was yesterday. Today we must outfit four companies to relieve Lord Xacatecas in Dustari.’

The hadonra was adept at figures. ‘You’ll be bargaining for more warriors from the cho-ja, then,’ he surmised. His straight brows tightened into a frown. ‘We’ll have to sell off some prime stock from your needra herds.’

‘Do it,’ Mara said at once. ‘I’ll be with Ayaki. When you have the accounting complete, bring your slates to the nursery.’

‘Your will, Lady,’ said Jican unhappily. Wars were the perpetual ruin of good finance, and that Mara must indulge in one through the plotting of dangerous enemies made him frightened. So had great houses fallen in the past; and the disaster of Sezu’s betrayal and death had happened too recently for any servant on the estate not to feel the threat of annihilation. Word did not take long to spread among the servants, and in a household that was bustling with activity, the talk was ominously hushed.

Mara spent an hour with her son that seemed all too terribly brief. He would soon be five, and had a temper that occasionally burned to rages that defeated the skills of his nurses. Now, lying on his stomach with his ankles crossed in the air, playing at soldiers, he pushed his plumed officers to and fro and cried commands in a treble child’s voice. Mara watched him with a wrenching in her heart and tried to memorize the small face, shadowed by a fall of dark bangs. She clasped cold hands and wondered if she would live to see her child grow to manhood. That he very well might not was a possibility she forced out of her thoughts. She, who had come into power too young, burned with the wish that her son might have the chance to grow, and learn, and have years to be guided into preparedness for the ruling Lordship
that awaited him. She must live and return from the desert, and make sure that this became so.

Until Jican arrived with his figures, she prayed long and desperately to Chochocan. At her feet, Ayaki obliterated company upon company of Minwanabi enemies, while his mother racked her mind for solutions to impossible equations.

Jican arrived and presented his slates, their columns impeccably neat despite the haste in Mara’s command. The hadonra looked hollow-eyed and worn as he bowed. ‘Lady. I have done as you commanded. Here are three calculations on your liquid financial assets. One depends upon the remaining silk arriving safely to market. The other two include what you might spend comfortably, and what you might call on, with variable lists of consequences. If you go by the last slate, be warned. Your herds will take another four years to build back to their present levels of productivity.’

Mara flipped through the slates, then unhesitatingly selected the final one. She glanced down at Ayaki, who watched her with liquid dark eyes. ‘The needra are replaceable,’ she pointed out, and briskly sent her servants to fetch retinue and litter. ‘I’ll be visiting the cho-ja Queen for the rest of the afternoon.’

‘Can I come?’ Ayaki shouted, springing up and scattering toy warriors in a bounding rush toward his mother.

She reached out and ruffled his hair with the hand clutching the slate. ‘No, son. Not this time.’

The boy scowled, but did not talk back. At last his nurse was succeeding in teaching him the manners his dead father had never acquired. ‘Kevin will take you for a wagon ride,’ she consoled, then remembered: Lujan and her barbarian had not reported back from Keyoke’s chamber. ‘If he has time for you,’ she amended to the son who tugged at her elbow. She cupped his tiny face gently in her hand. ‘And if
you allow the bath maid to wash the fruit juice off your chin.’ She gave his face a playful shake.

Ayaki’s scowl deepened. He rubbed his soiled mouth, made a sound through his lips, and said, ‘Yes, Mother. But when I am Ruling Lord, I shall keep my chin sticky if I please.’

Mara gave an exasperated glance toward heaven, then disentangled her sleeve from her son. It smelled of jomach and cho-ja-made candy. ‘Boy, if you do not worry first about the lessons of growing up, there will be no estate for you to manage.’

A servant appeared at the doorway. ‘Lady? Your litter awaits.’

Mara bent and kissed Ayaki, and came away with the taste of the candy. The mishap did not irritate her. All too soon she would be breathing and tasting the dust of the southern deserts, and home would be an ocean’s width away.

Although many times a haven in times of trouble, with its cool dimness the cho-ja hive for once brought no comfort. Mara knotted sweating fingers under the sleeves of her overrobe. An unfamiliar officer accompanied her where once Keyoke would have walked, half a pace to her rear, exchanging greetings and courtesies with the hive’s Force Commander, Lax’l. The warrior, Murnachi, had never fought with a company of cho-ja. Although he was honoured to be asked to accompany his mistress on this important mission to the Queen, his stiffness denoted his discomfort and desire to be returned to the open air as soon as possible.

Mara made her way through the tunnels leading to the Queen’s chamber, by now a familiar route. But this was no social visit, and instead of her customary small gift, the servant who followed her escort carried a slate that listed all of the Acoma cash assets.

She had not attempted to bargain with a cho-ja Queen since her negotiation for the hive that had settled permanently on her estates. Now that she had need, she had no clue as to how she would be received, particularly on the heels of the news that two thirds of the new silk shipment had been lost to Minwanabi attack. The sweat on Mara’s hands went from cold to hot. No past experience in her memory foretold how the Queen would react.

The corridor widened into the antechamber before the throne room; too late now to turn back, Mara reflected, as the cho-ja worker who escorted her small party rushed ahead to announce her presence. Mara continued on, into the warm vastness of the Queen’s cavern, lit day and night under the blue-violet light cast by cho-ja globes suspended from brackets set in the massive vaults of stone ceiling. Like an island surrounded by polished floor, a pile of cushions awaited her, with a low table bearing cups and a steaming pot of chocha. Yet Mara did not step forward to sit and take refreshment and exchange gossip, as was usual. Instead she performed the bow one ruler of equal rank might make before another to the enormous presence of the cho-ja Queen, who reared up in massive height, attended by a scurry of workers. Her midsection was surrounded by screens, behind which the breeders and rirari laboured continually over the eggs that ensured the continuity of the hive.

Well accustomed to such activity by now, Mara felt no need to stare. She straightened from her bow, alerted by the cant of the Queen’s head that the cho-ja ruler was aware something grave was afoot. Mara composed herself. ‘Ruling Lady of the hive, I regret to inform you that trouble has been visited upon the Acoma by its enemy, House Minwanabi.’ Here Mara paused, waiting out of courtesy for some sign from the Queen to continue.

Except for the bustle of the breeding attendants, which
never ceased, there came no move within the chamber. Ranks of warriors and workers might march past in the corridor beyond the antechamber, but those who squatted on their forelimbs in the Queen’s presence remained as still as statues.

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