by K. J. Parker
“Oh,” Daurenja said. “It’s you.”
“Yes.”
He paused, licked his lips like a cat. “I gather you’ve been given a command.”
“That’s right.”
Daurenja frowned. “Congratulations,” he said. “Was there anything you wanted?”
Miel looked at him, but it was like trying to see through mist. “I just thought I’d let you know I haven’t forgotten about you.”
“I should think not. People tell me I’m a memorable character. Rather a mixed blessing, but on balance I’d rather be notorious than a nonentity. If that’s all, you’ll have to excuse me. I’m rather busy.”
He moved, but Miel put a hand on his arm. “I guess you should know,” he said, “I’m filing a formal request with Duke Valens to be recognised as the official representative of the Eremian government in exile, now that Duke Orsea’s dead. There’s nobody left except me, you see, and somebody’s got to do it.”
Daurenja frowned. “What about the duchess?”
“Remarried,” he replied. “Under the Act of Settlement, if she marries a foreign head of state, she forfeits her rights as trustee of the succession. That means we have to fall back on the heirs in the third degree, which in this case means the head of the Ducas family. Me.”
Daurenja looked genuinely interested. “Does that make you the duke?” he asked.
“The proper term is Lord Protector,” he replied, “meaning I’m responsible for safeguarding Eremian interests while the dukedom is in abeyance. There can’t be another duke until all of the former duchess’s sisters have officially passed the age of childbearing; after that, there’s a complicated formula for working out which of their children is the rightful heir. Since we don’t know what’s become of any of them, it’s all a bit academic anyway. Meanwhile, there’s just me.”
“Fascinating,” Daurenja said. “I’ve always had a soft spot for that sort of thing: genealogy and heraldry and rights of succession to thrones that don’t actually exist any more. I once met a man who told me he was the rightful king of Palaeochora, which is the old name for what’s now Mezentia. He had letters and charters and all manner of old documents to prove it. Not much practical value, of course, unless there’s money involved.”
“No money,” Miel said. “Just obligations.”
Daurenja grinned. “Isn’t that exactly like life,” he said. “Well, nice to see you again. I really must get on now, though. Ever such a lot to be done.”
Miel didn’t move. “Once Valens has given me official status,” he said, “I intend to prosecute you for the murder of Framain’s son. I thought I ought to warn you, so you’ll have time to prepare your defence.”
“No defence.” Daurenja shook his head. “I confess, I did it, I’m guilty. It’s a pity you’re not actually the duke, otherwise you could issue a full pardon. Though if you’re effectively the government of Eremia, I suppose it’d be valid. Especially if Valens confirms it. I’ll have to talk to him about it. I think it’d be nice to get that business cleared up and out of the way.” He smiled. “Is Framain still hanging round the camp, or is he back at Civitas Vadanis? I’d really like to do something for him, and his daughter. God only knows what they’re doing for a living these days, now they haven’t even got the pottery factory any more.” He lifted Miel’s hand gently off his arm. “Justice is all very well, but I believe in making amends. Practical help, instead of empty vengeance. I mean, revenge is fine, but it doesn’t put food on the table, and isn’t that all that really matters, in the long run?” He paused, and maybe he glanced down at Miel’s boots; it was hard to tell. “After all, we’ve all done bad things at some time or other, because we’ve had to. Getting sanctimonious about it just makes things worse, if you ask me. Show a little remorse, make things better for anybody you’ve harmed in the past, do the decent thing and what more can anybody ask of you?” He reached out and pushed open the shed door. “Take care of yourself,” he said. “There’s a nasty rumour going round that the Eremian contingent’s generally regarded as expendable, because the duke’s promised your land to the Aram Chantat after the war; the more of you get killed, the fewer people he’ll have to evict. It’s not how I’d want to do things, but I don’t suppose he’s got any choice in the matter.”
Captain Aureolus of the duke’s general staff left the Aram Chantat pavilion after the briefing was over and went back to his tent. He sat down on the rickety chair and pulled the rickety table towards him. Farmhouses, he thought; here we are in the recently deserted Eremian countryside, scores of farms within a day’s ride. It wouldn’t be all that big a deal to send out a half-squadron with a couple of carts to round up some decent chairs and tables that didn’t wobble like exotic dancers every time you breathed.
His job was to assign the various tasks on the agreed schedule of actions to the units best suited to undertake them. Not the hardest job in the world. He dipped a pen in the black oak-gall ink and drew a line down a sheet of paper to form two columns; at the top of one he drew a little sun, on the other side a little skull and crossbones. On the Sun side he jotted down the nice, easy tasks. On the Death’s Head side went the rotten jobs. Then he took a new pen, dipped it in the green ink, to represent Vadani forces, and wrote the name and number of a unit and a commanding officer next to each Sun-side entry. A third pen went in the red ink, to represent the Free Eremians assigned to operations on the Death’s Head side.
(Nobody had told him to do it that way. Nobody had needed to. You didn’t have to teach a baby how to breathe, either.)
He assigned the Death’s Head missions in reverse order of hopelessness and danger. When he came to the third from last, he paused, consulted his roster, gazette and army lists, then carefully wrote in: Fourth Eremian light cavalry, Major Miel Ducas commanding.
He paused. The name was vaguely familiar, but he couldn’t remember why. Not that it mattered; the fourth Eremian light was an experienced unit, made up of pre-war regulars and men who’d seen action during the brief resistance. If they encountered enemy forces in the course of their reconnaissance, they’d put up a good fight. If they lost… they were Eremians, no doubt pleased to have the opportunity to give their lives for their horribly abused country.
There was also a bottle of blue ink, to signify Aram Chantat. He had specific orders not to use it unless explicitly told to do so.
A shadow fell on the page, and he couldn’t read the words. He looked up, and saw him, whatever his name was: the duke’s Mezentine engineer’s assistant, the murderer, the freak. He was standing perfectly still, and Aureolus knew at once that he was one of those people who have the knack of reading upside down.
He didn’t like it. Nobody knew for sure what the freak’s rank, status or authority were. He was a civilian, but he reported directly to Vaatzes and the duke, nobody else. The general consensus was: if he gives you an order, better obey it just in case.
“Can I help you?” he said.
The freak nodded. “Let me see that.”
Aureolus could feel trouble coming on, the way some people can sense an approaching thunderstorm when the sky’s still blue. “I’m not sure I can do that,” he said. “I’ll need to see some kind of—”
“No.” The freak reached for the paper, his thin, bony wrist emerging from the sleeve of his coat like a tortoise’s neck from under its shell. The fingers tightened on the page, and Aureolus knew that if he tried to snatch it away, the paper would tear. It was an example of intuitive tactical thinking on a level Aureolus knew he’d never aspire to. In passing, he noticed that the freak chewed his fingernails.
“Fine,” he said. “If anyone asks, I’ll say you assured me you had clearance.”
The freak wasn’t listening. In fact, Aureolus realised, as far as the freak was concerned, he no longer existed. Galling, but on balance he preferred it that way.
“Just a moment,” the freak said, and the skin on his fishbelly forehead tightened. “This entry here.” He put the paper on
the table; left hand pinning it down, right forefinger pointing to a name. “Pen.”
Aureolus said: “What’s the problem?”
The freak reached across him, so that the elbow of his sleeve brushed Aureolus’ mouth. The coat, he observed, was best-quality Mezentine cloth, last year’s fashionable cut, indescribably filthy with mud, oil and dried blood. He took the red-ink pen, crossed out an entry, paused for a moment, and wrote something in over the top in tiny, neat, spiky letters.
“What do you think you’re… ?” Aureolus started to say; then the freak looked at him, and the words evaporated, like water on a stovetop. Carefully the freak replaced the pen.
“You made a careless mistake,” the freak said pleasantly. “Lucky for you I was here to correct it. You could’ve been in so much trouble.”
For some reason, Aureolus felt he shouldn’t look down and see what had been changed. “You’ve got the authority to do that, have you?” he said.
The freak grinned. “Do what?”
Rumour had it that this man was guilty of murder and rape; that when his victim’s father was captured by the Mezentines, he’d broken into their camp, killed half a dozen guards with his bare hands and rescued him. Since then, he’d disobeyed the duke’s direct orders to assume command of a mission, turned a potentially disastrous ambush into a victory; and before that, when the duke’s hunting party was attacked on his wedding day, something about saving the duchess’s life; which duchess he wasn’t quite sure, but that wasn’t the point.
The freak was grinning contemptuously at him. “Thank you for your time,” he said.
Aureolus felt his fist tighten, realised that the freak had seen it and now there was an almost hopeful look in his eyes: go on, they were saying, take a swing at me, I want to fight, I enjoy it. Aureolus froze. He’d fought in nine pitched battles and two dozen skirmishes in his time, been wounded twice, honestly believed he was a brave man. Now, though, he was scared. The feeling reminded him of watching dogs, the way the underdog backs down when the pack leader growls. He realised he wasn’t brave at all.
The freak broke eye contact, turned away and left the tent. When Aureolus was sure he’d gone, he looked to see what had been changed. A line through the fourth Eremian light cavalry and Major Ducas; in their place, the seventh Eremians and Colonel Pardas.
He thought about that. Really, it didn’t matter. The seventh were practically indistinguishable from the fourth, and he’d never heard of Pardas, but presumably he had to be reasonably competent or he wouldn’t have been given the seventh to command. Then a wave of relief swept over him, making his knees tremble and his bladder ache.
God only knows what all that was about, he thought, but it’s nothing to do with me.
He filled in the last two remaining assignments. To be on the safe side, he didn’t use the fourth Eremians at all. Big army, plenty of other suitable units.
He made a fair copy, without the excessively frivolous sun and skull column headings. Then, just in case there was a problem, he burned the sheet of paper the freak had written on.
Later that day, he came back from the latrine to find the hated regulation-issue chair and table gone, and a solid Eremian rustic stool and small farmhouse table in their place. He made a point of not asking anyone if they knew where they’d come from.
At the next weekly briefing in the Aram Chantat pavilion, Valens reported the findings of the intelligence-gathering exercises agreed on at the previous meeting. As anticipated, the enemy had made various attempts to secure concealed defensive positions on the hog’s-back ridge in front of the City. Predictably, these positions had consisted of hastily excavated and fortified artillery emplacements, mounting between twelve and twenty scorpions, supported by a platoon of heavy infantry and a company of archers. All the emplacements had been successfully taken, and it was encouraging to note that all of them were manned by Mezentine citizens rather than mercenaries or Cure Doce. The artillery had inflicted casualties, units of the Eremian second and seventh light cavalry coming under particularly heavy fire and losing a considerable number of men (their gallantry and sacrifice was duly noted in the minutes, using the usual form of words); the enemy archers too had proved unexpectedly effective. In hand-to-hand combat, however, the Mezentines had proved to be completely ineffectual, in spite of their best-quality arms and equipment. Accordingly, Valens felt able to describe the operations as a success. Not only was the hog’s back now firmly under allied control; the principal objective, testing the enemy’s ability to fight at close quarters, had been achieved, and the result was extremely encouraging. Naturally, it was safe to assume that the enemy would learn from the encounter and step up the combat training of their citizen levies. With only books to learn from, however, it was unlikely they’d be able to make any significant difference in the time available to them. Meanwhile, he felt confident that it was now safe to occupy the hog’s back, prepare siege lines and deploy the first consignment of artillery. The siege of Mezentia (he allowed himself to indulge in a little melodrama at this point) was about to begin.
9
A woman was howling. She’d been doing it for over an hour (no consideration for people trying to sleep). He couldn’t help listening, with a sort of revolted fascination. From time to time she’d subside, just long enough to catch her breath and rest her lungs and throat, and then she’d be off again, building up to a hysterical peak that was both embarrassing and disturbing to hear. Apparently she’d been told that her husband had been killed by the savages, out on the downs, so presumably he’d belonged to one of the levy units. He’d heard the neighbours talking, raising their voices to make themselves heard over the godawful racket: how she’d never seemed particularly fond of him while he was alive, how they’d quarrelled all the time, said all kinds of things behind each other’s backs. The shock, someone said. Being left alone in the world with two small kids, someone else suggested; and that made more sense, in his opinion. He could see how she could work herself up to that pitch of frenzy if she was mourning for herself, rather than him.
When she finally arrived, the woman was still bellowing away, but he had no trouble hearing the grating sound of her fingernails on the doorpost. He stayed where he was, and waited. Her head appeared round the door, squinting in the dark he’d long since grown used to. “Where are you?” she said.
“You’re late.”
She nodded. “There’s a crowd in the street, I had to be careful. What’s going on up there?”
“A war widow, I believe,” he said. “Did you bring the food?”
She handed over a basket, covered with a cloth. He grabbed at it, snatched the cloth away, tried not to pull a face. She must have seen something, though, because she said, “It was all I could get.”
“It’s fine,” he said.
“Everything’s so expensive now, with the war.”
“I said it’s fine, thank you.” The ends of two loaves, some scraps of cold chicken, white with congealed grease. He knew she could do better than that, but it wasn’t worth making an issue out of it and provoking a sulking war. “I know how hard it must be,” he said carefully. “It’s wrong of me to impose on you like this.”
Something in his voice had snagged her suspicions. Her eyes were tighter, and her mouth was hardening. “It’s all right,” she said. “Tomorrow I’ll try and bring some cold beef. That’s what we’re having tonight. A friend of Falier’s brought some in to the factory, he’s got a friend who works on the carts. He thinks he might be able to get other stuff, too, but what with the savages blocking the roads…”
He withdrew, letting her babble; it gave him time to think. When she paused for breath, he said: “Did you go and see the man I told you about?”
Briefly, guilt; then the shield came up. “I’m sorry,” she said, “I haven’t had time. It’s difficult.”
That told him she hadn’t tried. “Do you think you could go and see him tomorrow?”
“I’ll try.”
Mea
ning no. “Please do,” he said. “It’s quite important. They’re saying the savages have reached the downs; that’s what that woman’s making that noise for, her husband was killed in the fighting.” He let the fact of a death hang in the air for a moment. Death by association. “It won’t be long before they shut the gates,” he said. “I’ve got to get out before then. You do see that, don’t you?”
She didn’t reply. She had that advantage. Silence was her way of falling back behind an unapproachable guard, forcing her opponent into an inadvisable attack.
“If I’m trapped in the City,” he explained patiently, though of course she knew it all already, “sooner or later they’ll find me. And when they find me, I’ll be killed. Psellus will have me locked up in a cell, and then one morning, early, they’ll come and take me out into the small courtyard behind the chapterhouse, and they’ll put a rope round my neck, and that’ll be that.” He paused, but she was still in a posture of defence. “You don’t want that to happen, do you?”
Or he could have hit her; the effect would have been the same. “They won’t find you. They must think you’ve already gone. I haven’t heard anybody say they’ve been looking.”
He didn’t bother to reply to that. “The man I told you about can get me out, quietly and safely,” he said. “Once I’m outside, I can go where I’ll be protected. It won’t be for long,” he added quickly, following up. “In fact, the sooner I leave, the sooner this whole stupid mess can be sorted out, the sooner I can come back, and then we can be together at last. Really together.” He was able to say it as though he meant it, because he could remember the tone of voice he’d used when it did mean something, the precise level of controlled feeling. It worked; he’d got through. He followed up again. “That is what you want, isn’t it?”
“Of course it is.” Her voice betrayed her, finally. “Are you sure it’s what you want? Really?”