It hurt him as badly as it had being stabbed, that one time outside Vek. He could not have felt much worse if the bolt had simply run him through. He wasn’t going to die, though, and in a little while he would be ready to stand up and walk around. And then he would want some answers.
Out on the field, the battle ground towards its predetermined ending. The double line of snapbows that Pravoc fielded ripped into the heavy Tyrshaani infantry, butchering them in their uncomprehending hundreds. Predictably, as the scales tipped, the Fly-kinden rose up in a great cloud and simply vanished away, fleeing for either the city or the wilderness, depending on their faith in the victors. A few were bold enough to put a final arrow of farewell into some Tyrshaani officer or other that they had reserved particular contempt for. Meanwhile the orthopters had started preliminary bombing runs against the Tyrshaan gatehouse, on the assumption that the city would require a little extra persuasion to open up.
*
Colonel Pravoc’s entry into the governor’s palace in Tyrshaan went unopposed. By that time the controlling elements of the Wasp garrison had been almost completely obliterated, and to the Tyrshaani themselves it meant nothing which slavemasters held their leash. The surviving Bee-kinden soldiers surrendered in good order, laying down their weapons and sitting down outside the walls of their own city, while tearing off the blue sashes that had never been more than empty symbols – Vargen’s illusion of autonomy. Wasps being what they were, there were a few incidents of revenge killing, just as there was some looting once the Imperial forces got inside. It was all within the tolerated bounds of military discipline, and Pravoc’s orders were for the city to be left intact and simply returned to the Imperial fold.
In the governor’s own war room he found Vargen, already doubled in stiff rigour over the table, scattered markers and tiles oddly mirroring the fate of Vargen’s own crushed army. The man’s face was purple and twisted, his tongue protruding and his eyes wide.
There was a pair of Fly-kinden waiting there for Pravoc, one in the drab of a servant, the other dressed in Imperial black and gold, and not a blue sash in sight. Pravoc raised his eyebrows at them, seeking explanations.
‘When it became clear that his cause was lost,’ said the better-dressed of the Flies, ‘Governor Vargen took poison. Tragic.’
Pravoc, seeing the outraged and horrified expression on the dead man’s face, wondered if Vargen had known that was what he was doing, when he had taken the wine. He noted the Fly’s careful use of the word ‘governor’ rather than ‘general’.
‘Who are you?’ he demanded.
‘My name is te Pelli. I am a factor of the Consortium out of Shalk,’ the Fly replied, his face displaying nothing more than polite deference. ‘I wanted to be the first to assure you that we of Shalk were only yoked to Vargen’s schemes through threat of force.’
Pravoc sniffed. He had no illusions about how little a threat would have been necessary, nonetheless it suited him well enough if the Fly-kinden were happy to do his job for him. The faster he could report an unequivocal victory, the higher he would rise in the eyes of his masters.
Thalric found him there later, after the ex-governor’s body had been removed, along with the poisoned wine.
‘What happened to you?’ Pravoc asked, and then added, ‘Regent,’ a moment later. ‘Get caught up in the fighting? Unwise.’
‘It came looking for me.’ Thalric studied the man’s narrow face and found it devoid of anything meaningful. ‘Some assassins tried to kill me.’ As he said it, he found the words sounding petty in his own ears. Had he still been Major Thalric of the Rekef it would have been a reasonable thing to say. It would have been the preface to organizing a plan of action, a counterplot, a piece of espionage. Thalric the Regent was not free to pursue such courses, and so it came out sounding like a whine for attention, a demand that something be done.
Pravoc’s change of expression, however slight, conveyed the same opinion. ‘Makes sense. Vargen was against the Empress and you’re her man here. Makes sense that he might try to remove you.’ He left a measured pause. ‘But you came through all right, I see, Regent.’
With his ribs pulsing in pain, his arm bound up, Thalric felt unexpectedly lost for options. The Rekef man he once was would have accepted none of it. With the threat of the entire secret service behind him, he would have ensured that colonels, even generals, would gabble out anything they knew, rather than offer cool insolence. The Regent, though … he felt, as Regent, that he should have more respect from this brusque soldier, and at the same time the thought made him sick of himself. Respect for what? Earned how?
‘I survived,’ he said, turning to go. As he reached the doorway he stopped. ‘I was surprised there were none of your men at hand, Colonel. When the attack occurred the camp all around me seemed quite deserted.’ He turned, but surprised no admission of guilt, no new expression at all, on Pravoc’s face.
‘I was fighting a battle,’ Pravoc said firmly. ‘If you’d asked me for bodyguards, I’d have found them. Complain to the Empress if you want.’
Thalric’s smile in response was thin. He appreciated this man’s confidence in his own abilities, in his refusal to bow to such an empty thing as the Regent of the Empire, but also he did not trust Pravoc at all. For a Rekef man, trust came hard and often never.
‘The Empress shall know that you have done your work here adequately,’ Thalric declared blandly. ‘What else is relevant?’
He made sure that his gait revealed nothing of the stabbing pains in his side, where the snapbow bolt had been within three layers of silk of killing him. Someone out there knew now that he had fought off three men and was still alive to complain of it.
Let them worry, he thought.
Ten
Thalric had decided against returning home with the army. Even an Imperial army with a mechanized baggage train moved at a snail’s pace. Besides, he was expected to return with it, and at this juncture he did not feel like doing anything that was too obviously expected. The fewer opportunities he gave his hidden enemies, the better.
So he commandeered an automotive. What was the point of being Regent of the Empire unless you could do that? He knew it to be an empty honour, but that was not general knowledge. His two-man crew of driver and engineer/artillerist were more than happy to break away from the plodding convoy and make best speed along the dusty roads leading north to Sonn. What Colonel Pravoc thought of it, Thalric did not attempt to find out.
Sonn was one of the earliest conquests of Alvdan the First, one of the linchpins of the Empire. It had been conquered by force but the Beetle-kinden residents had soon seen the benefits of Imperial rule, and the place was now the heart of the Consortium of the Honest, the mercantile arm of the Imperial administration. The Beetle-kinden traders, slavers, shippers and bankers had soon made themselves an indispensable part of the Empire, and their kinden had proven the very best of second-class citizens.
Changes were happening in Sonn, and changes for the better, as far as the locals were concerned. Thalric had heard how the city was being expanded, with factories and foundries being thrown up as fast as was humanly possible. The loss of Szar, as a manufacturing base, had been a blow to the military and industrial capability of the Empire, but the Beetles of Sonn were quite willing to make themselves more essential. Even forewarned, the bustle of the place surprised Thalric. There were acres of scaffolding and part-completed buildings lining the road. The Beetles had planned to expand their city by almost as much again, and this addition would all be factories. In a year’s time, Thalric guessed, you would barely be able to see the sky for all the smoke generated. It would be like a new Helleron, he thought.
When he disembarked, he realized why. The place was seething with artificers already installing the factory machines, the boilers and steam-powered toolbenches and assembly lines. Many were local people but many more were not. Thalric had travelled enough to recognize Helleren men and women. They had come here in their droves, wearin
g their scuffed leather and canvas, to sell their expertise to an Empire that only last year had claimed conquest of their native city. Helleron was now proudly neutral again, and no hard feelings, so tramp artificers were flooding in to help the Empire rebuild its losses and to take Imperial coin in exchange for the uncertainties of working for such a belligerent employer. The Helleren were good at what they did, better than any of their Imperial counterparts. They swallowed their pride and doubled their fees, and there were so many of them in Sonn that there was talk of building a railroad.
Thalric had heard that the late General Malkan of the Seventh Army had conquered Helleron single-handed merely with a threat. When the Empire turned its attention west again, he reckoned that the reconquest could probably be effected by letter.
He abandoned his automotive at Sonn, leaving the crew to enjoy some leave in the city until Pravoc’s army caught up. As of a month before, there was a rail-line from Sonn to Capitas. It was ridiculous of course. The new peace with the Lowlands was making the Empire strong enough that the next war, when it came, would be over in tendays.
By train he travelled to Capitas wearing anonymous Imperial armour, just a soldier engaged on official business. This anonymity served a purpose, but he was surprised to find what a weight it lifted from him. For such an empty honour, the title of Regent was a heavy thing to bear.
The weight of it came back to him once the outskirts of Capitas began passing by on either side. The rail depot was located in view of the great ziggurat of the Imperial palace. The sight of it made his stomach twitch.
Someone tried to have me killed.
Just seeing the palace, and what it represented, he could barely think about the assassination. There are worse things in life than being killed.
They had put up a gilded statue of Alvdan the Second before the gates of the palace. It was interesting, in Thalric’s opinion, how the glitter of the gold distracted from the fundamentally mediocre workmanship. He passed it quickly, because the really clever statue was inside. The grand entrance hall of the Imperial palace had once been darker, all guards and armour and the iron fist of power. The Empress had since ordered two more windows to be sunk through the stone, so it was now as bright and airy as a garden when the sun came from the right quarter. At its heart the first thing every visitor, general, dignitary or ambassador saw was the statue.
The likeness of Seda was stylized but unmistakable. The sculptor genius had eloquently portrayed her determination, her youth, her femininity. It showed her with a spear held proudly in one hand, a shield in the other, representing the hope of the Empire. Her image was at the centre, but kneeling, and around and behind her stood her people. They stood tall, protecting her without overshadowing her, and they were cast in the same heroic manner – blocky, larger than life, projecting loyalty and fervour. There was a soldier in the armour of the Light Airborne, an artificer with his toolstrip, a Consortium factor with his scales and quill. The fourth figure was still being chiselled out of the stone, and Thalric wondered who he would be. A Rekef agent? An aviator? He would stand with the same pride and passion as the others, one hand raised, palm outwards, at the world in defiance and a threat of power. The whole piece was a work of art and even Thalric, cynical as he had become, felt his heart swell with pride when he saw it. Pride at being Wasp-kinden, the superior race.
In this statue, he could look on the face of Seda and not quail. Now he braced himself for the real thing.
The style at the Imperial court was currently for robes, or for tunics with long sleeves that hung uselessly behind the arms like limp wings. Thalric, however, dressed like a military man of high station, in white tunic and a cloak edged with black and gold. It was a kind of desperate defiance, his private little rebellion that he knew would be overlooked.
Alvdan had kept his throne room empty, that was another thing. He had held his councils and conferences, but afterwards the great room had lain empty save for dusting servants. Seda kept a proper court, however. It was part of the strategy she had devised.
By that strategy, she had made them love her. That was her own genius, of which the sculpture was just part. The Wasp-kinden were ruled by men, had been led by men always. On her accession, even with the support of many of their leaders, Seda had been hard pressed to prevent anarchy. If she had merely relied on her own right to autocratic power, issued orders and demanded obedience, she would quickly have fallen. They would have torn her apart in the streets.
She had made them love her. She had assumed the traditional role of a Wasp woman, meek and subservient and weak, and made something of it. She did not demand servitude from her men, she begged their protection. She made them see her as vulnerable, as the last faint hope of the honoured Imperial bloodline that only they could save. She wooed them with her needs, her inabilities. She was the Bride of the Empire, and each one of them, in his way, was her guardian and partner. She made each man believe that by serving her he was personally saving the Empire. In flaunting her weakness, in inviting their support, she got them to do anything she wanted, and made them love her in the bargain.
They fell over each other to display to her their loyalty, their strength. She juggled them like an expert and they never ever realized. Thalric, from his privileged vantage point, had seen it all. He might have found it amusing had he not known.
As he walked in, heads turned. They were all here, three score of them and more: military officers, Consortium factors, scions of wealthy families. Each day they came to the palace and huddled and talked and schemed against one another, and waited. They waited Her Imperial Majesty’s pleasure. They waited for her to make her appearance, so that they could prove themselves to her.
There were some there, especially towards the far end of the room with its seven thrones, who were not Wasp-kinden. There had already been a few when Thalric had gone off on campaign but there were more now. They were some of Seda’s more select advisers. His heart sank further on seeing them, and that was not because these lesser races now had the ear of the Empress: it was what they represented.
‘My Lord Regent,’ said a clipped voice.
Thalric turned to see a broad-shouldered Wasp of about his own years, a man with a soldier’s physique. He was wearing his fashionable garments with neither panache nor awkwardness. They hung off him as if draped on a mannequin.
‘General Brugan,’ Thalric acknowledged. ‘I trust you are well?’
‘When the Empire is well, I am well,’ Brugan confirmed. As the Lord General of the Rekef he was the most powerful man in the Empire, and one that even Thalric had a wary respect for. It was no secret that his support had turned the balance of power in favour of Seda, nor a secret that he had murdered his chief rival over the late Emperor’s dead body. He was ruthless and intelligent and ambitious, therefore a model Imperial general.
‘The Empress has been missing you,’ he said blandly. Brugan was not one to be misled by Seda’s public face. He surely must know as well as Thalric the true woman behind it. ‘Also, when your official duties permit, I have some news of an old friend. I’d appreciate your views.’
‘As you wish, General,’ Thalric said. Brugan was one of the few people he was both careful and also happy to oblige. The man was good at his job and good for the Empire.
Thalric passed on towards the top end of the hall, towards the clustering robes. He noticed a nod in his direction from the absurdly tall, hunchbacked figure of Gjegevey, but Thalric ignored the grey-skinned, long-faced creature. The old slave was a favourite of the Empress’s now, one of her inner council, and it was people such as he who were the problem. Beyond Gjegevey stood a Grasshopper-kinden, in a robe of pale lemon, whom he did not recognize, but saw as another slave risen above his station. Beyond that …
‘You,’ he began, before deciding whether he should. ‘Moth-kinden.’
The grey-clad shape turned, and Thalric was surprised to see a Wasp face looking out from within the cowl.
‘Alas no, although t
he mistake is understandable.’ The man was short and balding, but a Wasp nonetheless.
Thalric stared at him. ‘Who are you?’
‘You are the RegentThalric,’ the man replied. ‘I recognize you from the portrait in Her Majesty’s chambers. My name is Tegrec. I am the Tharen ambassador, for my crimes.’
It took Thalric a moment to connect name and place. The result was displeasing to him. ‘Weren’t you a traitor?’ he asked, his voice loud enough for a few people to look round.
Tegrec only smiled his implacable smile. ‘Weren’t you, O Regent?’ he asked, so that nobody else heard. Thalric looked on him without love, seeing behind him two other grey-robed figures, real Moth-kinden this time.
‘What’s brought you – and them – here?’ Thalric asked bluntly.
‘Times change, O Regent,’ Tegrec said mildly. ‘I am here for Tharn, and the Moth-kinden thereof. The war is now over between my birthplace and my adopted kinden.’
‘Is that so?’
The ambassador’s face was all sly knowledge. ‘It is true that the Moths managed to drive out the occupying Imperial force, but only at great cost. Current conditions now suggest that a more open relationship with the Empire will be beneficial to us all. The Empress herself has expressed a personal interest.’
‘Of course she has.’ Thalric’s tone was bleak.
‘Her Majesty has pronounced herself especially pleased with our gifts.’ Tegrec made a grand gesture towards the head of the hall like a magician and, like magic indeed, the doors opened at that exact moment and the Empress made her entrance.
She had an honour guard, he noticed. Thalric felt weak. It had been a concern of hers, before he left, that she ought to have an honour guard, but how could she have trusted one? There were too many throughout the Empire who wanted to see a man on the throne. It seemed the problem had been solved, and he now understood Tegrec’s gift. The Moths of Tharn had been clever.
The Scarab Path Page 12