The Novels of the Jaran (163 page)

Read The Novels of the Jaran Online

Authors: Kate Elliott

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Epic, #Science Fiction, #Adventure

BOOK: The Novels of the Jaran
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Tess blinked. Cara arched her eyebrows. Marco frowned. Bakhtiian took it coolly enough. “I trust,” he replied, “that you had a fruitful expedition to Morava. My niece tells me that a party of khepelli traders traveled all the way in from the coast to meet you there.”

“Yes. I’ve managed to take one of their trading houses under my protection. With their help, I learned a few things that might be of interest to you as well, and might prove to be of benefit to both of us.”

“Charles,” began Tess. She looked white. She looked terrified.

“But,” said Charles, “I’d like to have a few words with Owen and Ginny first, and perhaps the rest of the afternoon with Cara. We’ll need some time to set up our camp as well. And tonight, a small celebration of our reunion.”

“Of course,” said Bakhtiian smoothly. “Children.” He rounded them up ruthlessly. David noticed for the first time the boy, Vasha, among their numbers. The child stuck next to Sonia Orzhekov’s daughter, Katerina, and he looked nervous. As well he might. What was he doing with the Orzhekov tribe? They trooped off, Bakhtiian herding them. A rider took his horse.

Tess lingered. “Charles!”

“I know what I’m doing.”

“Well, you’d better fill me in.”

“I will, Tess. I have quite a bit to say to you, in fact, and I’ll need you in on the council as well. Now go on.”

She hesitated. Then she looked at Cara, who had waited patiently through all this. Jo and Rajiv and Maggie had already retreated to the gear, sorting it out.

“It’s true,” said Cara quietly, not without humor, “that we might like a few moments to ourselves, little one.”

Tess threw up her hands in exasperation. “You aren’t going to do anything rash, are you?”

Charles blinked. “Do I ever?”

“You’re impossible. Hello, David.” Tess turned her back on her brother and came over to David, and kissed him.

“You’re looking well.”

“Thank you. I’m feeling well. You’re not looking bad yourself. Is it true that you and Dina—oh, never mind. I’m sorry I mentioned it. I don’t think Feodor Grekov is a good match for her, either. She doesn’t respect him.”

“Tess, I’d really prefer not to speak about it.”

“I’m sorry. Truly, I’m sorry, if you feel so strongly.” She rested a hand on his shoulder, companionably. “And I have a rather urgent request for you.”

“For me?”

“Is it remotely possible that you can design—I don’t know—within the limits of the interdiction, some kind of “decent plumbing? Something you can teach the army engineers to build at every campsite? Something better than a ditch? Something not too difficult to build, not too time-consuming, but, God, I want something like the Company’s necessary. I go over there every chance I get. And showers. Hot showers. Is there any chance you can devise—? It’s not that they’re dirty, the jaran. They’re not. They’re scrupulously clean in most ways. But still, the conditions …”

“And you pregnant.”

“Oh, tell me you understand.”

“Not about being pregnant, but I can sympathize.”

“Oh, David.” She hugged him, as well as she could given her girth. “You’re an angel.”

“I haven’t promised to do anything yet.”

“But you will. You have to. You’re an engineer, after all.”

At that inopportune moment, Cara paused beside them. “And that reminds me, David, I need a better sanitation system for the hospital. Surely between that brain of yours and your modeler you can design—”

“Oy vey.” David flung up his hands palm out as if they could ward him. “Let me breathe a moment. Let me set up the camp. Then I’ll see. Cara, why don’t you and Charles just go? I’ll supervise the camp setup.”

“Will you? Thank you, David. It
is
good to see you, you know. Charles and Marco are going over to the Company later, to give them the news about Hyacinth. I’ll see you tonight, then.” She and Charles left. Tess left. David got to work with the others, and with practiced ease, and the addition of Ursula, they set up the camp before nightfall.

After weeks journeying at an inhuman pace on horseback across the endless, changing landscape of Rhui, David found himself relieved to come to a temporary halt, even in the primitive conditions of a siege. Karkand rose before them, made tiny by distance, but real, there to be touched. The palace of Morava loomed in the back of his mind like an illusion, seen on the horizon, coming no closer.

“Here, you old slug,” said Maggie, jostling David where he sat, sore, tired, and grateful, in a chair, “help me hang lanterns all around here. Don’t forget that we’re having a party tonight.”

“Goddess in Heaven.” David dragged himself up. Maggie paused to rub his shoulders, and he sighed and drooped.

“Now don’t you sit down again, or I’ll stop.”

“Don’t stop. Why the actors? All that noise.”

“Who knows what lurks in the heart of Charles? You, better than I. He has a position as prince to maintain, you know. Aren’t princes meant to give parties? I don’t know.”

“It’s true Charles is often at his best in a crowd. Better than me, certainly.”

“You shy thing.” She removed her hands from his back. “Here, now, give me a hand.”

“Mags, you’re an angel. Remind me never to ride that far that fast again. In fact, remind me never to travel any distance in anything other than a skimmer or a shuttle, would you?”

She snorted. “What, you didn’t think it was romantic?”

“Not to my thighs and my rump it wasn’t.” They lit and hung lanterns at the four corners of the awning that thrust out in front of Charles’s tent. Rajiv emerged from his tent and helped them. Jo and Ursula had gone to the hospital camp with the new equipment for Cara. As evening fell, Charles returned from his peregrinations, alone.

“Well?” asked David. “Did you give Owen and Ginny the news? How did they take it?”

“They were relieved. Owen said, ‘perhaps he’ll be a better actor for the experience.’”

“No! He would. The man’s a lunatic.”

“Oh, I don’t know. He’s not unlike me.”

“Or Cara, or any of you obsessive types. Where’s Marco?”

Charles shrugged. “Marco seemed distracted. I’m not sure whether we’ll see him again tonight or not”

“What, already off tomming it?”

“David, this time I’m beginning to wonder if there’s more to it than that.”

“What? You’re not serious?”

But David could see that Charles was, indeed, serious. David followed him inside his tent, where he removed two bottles of whiskey from his precious horde. Only one bottle remained. “I don’t know. Help me keep an eye on him, will you?”

David simply grunted in reply, too astonished by the thought of Marco seriously distracted by a woman to think of any words to express himself with. The tent flap swept aside behind them, and Tess and Cara walked in.

“So it’s true?” Tess was saying to Cara in Anglais. “I’m not surprised, I suppose, but still, to have it confirmed by your tests…”

“To have what confirmed?” asked Charles, turning around.

Cara glanced at Tess, as if for her permission to speak, but Tess went on. “The boy, Vasha. He’s Ilya’s illegitimate son by a woman he knew years ago. Cara has confirmed it by comparing VNTR regions.”

“Vasha!” David gaped. “So that’s why he looked like Dina. But, Tess, I saw him with the other Orzhekov children—”

“Well, of course, I took him in! Poor child. His mother is dead and his relatives didn’t want him, which is no surprise, considering what a disgrace it is to have no father.”

“But he has a—”

“Not by their laws. But because I adopted him as my son, then Ilya, who’s his biological father, becomes his accepted father because Ilya is my husband.” Then she hesitated. “Wasn’t it the right thing to do?”

“I think so,” said Cara firmly.

Charles thought about it for a while. “For the boy, certainly, I should think. Can he inherit?”

“Only through my line.”

“Ah. Of course.”

“But you know, Charles, the jaran have changed already, in little ways, since I’ve come to them. Who knows where it will stop? He’s a very intense boy. Quiet, but that may just be the way he learned to survive. Time will tell how ambitious he is.”

“But what about your child, Tess?” David asked.

She blinked at him. A moment later understanding flooded her features, and she chuckled. “What? I need to protect my children’s inheritance rights by murdering him? How very Byzantine of you, David.” She hesitated, appeared about to say something more, then did not.

But, of course, Tess’s children had three inheritances to choose from: Rhui, Earth, and the Empire. Although their ability to inherit Charles’s position was problematic, to say the least. Tess caught his eye and for that instant they spoke without words. David did not envy her her dilemma and yet he could not feel sorry for her either, not really, since she had not only chosen her own fate but seemed content with it.

She turned to Charles. “What happened at Morava?”

Charles unfolded a canvas chair. “Sit down. David, can you go outside and head off any inquiries for—what?—ten minutes? I want Tess and Cara to hear the basics now, so they can think about it before our council. Which I’d like to hold—oh, not tomorrow. The day after.”

David nodded and retreated. He paused by the entrance to listen.

“…and we do have the resources. We have Rhui entire.”

“But the interdiction?”

“Will hold. It could take decades for us to process the information and to put a plan into place. The underlying structure, the foundation, has to be as strong as—as bedrock. It has to be invulnerable. So in a sense, Rhui is safer this way—”

“For now.”

“How long do you really think the interdiction can stay in place? I can only hold off the inevitable for so long.”

“No, you’re right. I’m just being selfish. What about the dates on the Mushai, again? My God, Charles, I realize now that I must have learned simply one line of their language, that I was learning—what?—the male language, or something. It’s like turning a corner in a hallway only to find that you’ve stepped into a whole ’nother world. Don’t you realize that I’m perfectly placed to learn both the male and the female side, if that is in fact how their culture is structured?”

“Oh, yes,” said Charles in his cool voice. “I realize it.”

David slipped outside. Almost ran into Bakhtiian, who stood a meter from the entrance, listening. David choked back an exclamation.

“I beg your pardon,” said Bakhtiian in a tone so colorless that a Chapalii lord would have been envious of it. “Is Tess—?” Then he hesitated, because if one listened, one could hear her voice as she spoke with Charles. But, of course, she spoke in a language Bakhtiian did not understand. “I hope,” he added, looking David straight in the face, “that you will find time to attend me in the morning. I have some requests to make of you.”

“Of course. If you’ll excuse me.” David retreated as quickly as he could. Goddess, what did Bakhtiian want of him? Was he still holding a grudge against him because he thought David had slept with his wife? And yet, faced with such an order—even though it was phrased as a request—David dared not disobey.

The actors arrived in a flurry of sound and movement. David retreated into the safety of their company, but he was sorry to note that Diana had not come over for the party. The evening passed in a blur of conversation, and he went to bed early.

In the morning, a young jaran rider waited at the edge of the encampment. Bakhtiian had, quite kindly, sent an escort.

“Mags, you
will
come with me.”

“I will?”

“Yes, you will. I need a witness. I’m not going over alone.”

“Oh, here,” said Ursula, coming up. “I’ll come with you, David. You’re looking a little ashen about the gills. What’s wrong?”

“Nothing!” David cast a last, hopeless glance at Maggie and allowed himself to be escorted away by Ursula and the jaran soldier. The soldier remained respectfully quiet on the long walk, but his presence allowed them to pass right through the rings of guards, straight to the awning under which Bakhtiian sat. David found himself ushered to the front immediately and was, for once, glad of Ursula’s companionship.

“Ah.” Bakhtiian beckoned David forward. Reluctantly, David went, keeping one eye on Ursula to see what she did and the other on Bakhtiian’s sheathed saber. Tess was nowhere in sight. “Please. Sit down. You’re an engineer, Tess tells me.”

David cleared his throat. “Ah. Yes. I am.” Ursula settled down beside David as if she were used to sitting in on Bakhtiian’s councils.

“We have a need for engineers. Siege engineers. Perhaps you’ll agree to ride out with me and survey the city. Any suggestions you have would be welcomed.” Without more invitation than that, he rose and beckoned to his guard. Horses arrived, led by soldiers. David saw some khaja prisoners—or at least he assumed they were prisoners—mounted as well; presumably these were other engineers, culled from the ranks of the conquered. David felt compelled by events and by Bakhtiian’s proximity to go along. Ursula did not hesitate.

“This is a wonderful opportunity,” she said in a low voice to David as they mounted. “You have an entire city to experiment on. Von Clausewitz says that ‘critical examination is not merely the appreciation of those means which have been actually employed, but also of all possible means, which therefore must be suggested in the first place.’”

“Ursula!” He was appalled. “There are people in that city. I don’t think Charles meant his interdiction to hold only for them and not for the jaran as well.”

“Oh, David, be reasonable. The city is besieged anyway. The war is already here.”

“That doesn’t make it right.”

“Well, then, your contribution might save lives on both sides. If the jaran attack is effective enough, and swift enough, perhaps the khaja will surrender to save themselves.”

“If that will indeed save them.”

“You forget that I’ve been traveling with the army. Overall, the jaran are merciful to those who surrender.”

“Are they now? I wonder what your conception of mercy is. I saw how devastated the lands were, behind us.”

“That was Yaroslav Sakhalin’s doing. Most of it, anyway.”

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