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Lord of the Silent Kingdom

Page 49

by Glen Cook


  Hecht endured what he had to endure and gave the minimum in response to demands. The Archbishop went away thinking he had won several major points. In fact, Hecht had yielded little.

  He told Titus Consent, “That man must be beloved of God. He’s too stupid, venal, and opinionated to survive otherwise.”

  Farfog had been vigorously obnoxious from the moment he entered the White City. Local Brothen Episcopals fed him names where they wanted plunder or vengeance.

  It was one of the most interesting days Piper Hecht ever enjoyed. In the morning, while reviewing a force of two thousand moving west to add to pressure on the Khaurenesaine, he received word that his troops had engaged enemy mercenaries in a series of skirmishes and small battles and had overcome them in almost every instance. Numerous towns and fortresses had sent surrender offers as a result.

  More good news arrived early in the afternoon. Count Raymone Garete seemed inclined toward reason, suddenly. Having been apprised of his cousin’s situation. He was now willing to talk, though apparently unwilling to yield.

  Immediately afterward came news that Sublime V had gone to his reward. Brothe had begun the monthlong series of ceremonies and rituals that would end with a conclave to choose a successor. Hecht ordered the appropriate shows of mourning — but instructed his officers to avoid allowing their opponents any advantage from the news. “I want our men seen everywhere. In bigger groups. They’re to hit back hard at any provocation. I won’t let Castreresone fall apart now.” Yet it almost did.

  Archbishop Farfog responded to the news from Brothe by surrendering to his obsessions.

  First reports were confusing. No one was sure what was happening. Violence had erupted but was not directed at the soldiers. First guesses suggested factional fighting between the two strains of Chaldarean Episcopals. Hecht kept sending small bands to establish order. Each conflict extinguished seemed to spark two more somewhere else.

  Consent came to report. “It’s Farfog. Out to do all the damage he can before a new Patriarch shuts him down.”

  “He foresees a shift in the direction of the Church? Does he know something we don’t?”

  “Inside his idiot mind, maybe. In the real world? Who knows?”

  “It’ll be a month before we get a new Patriarch.”

  “Then we have a month, ourselves. Not so?” Hecht grinned. Exactly! He had that long to write whatever future he might inscribe.

  Madouc arrived. “Sir, you might want to go up on the wall. See if you’re inclined to intercede in what the Society is doing.”

  The view from the wall was a horror show. “How many?” Hecht demanded.

  A junior officer said, “Over three hundred, sir.” Hecht stared. Some wore the yellow tabards the Society forced on convicted heretics. But not many. He recognized men he had met since taking control of the city. Men who had been perfectly cooperative. Men who happened to have had money left after Castreresone paid its fines.

  “Madouc. Take Starven’s company and break that up.”

  “Sir? The Archbishop …”

  “I’ll deal with the Archbishop. Bring him.”

  Madouc did not save all the prisoners. The first score were given to the flames before the soldiers arrived. The more fanatic Society members resisted. The soldiers showed unprecedented restraint. Hecht watched Madouc and several of his lifeguards — all Brotherhood of War, the Captain-General suspected — take Archbishop Farfog into custody.

  The soldiers did not release the prisoners back into the wild. Some might well deserve execution. But not by Farfog’s brigands.

  Hecht returned to the keep to await his confrontation with the Church’s hellhound.

  Time passed.

  More time passed.

  “Somebody! It’s getting late. Where the devil is that idiot Farfog? Why isn’t he in here? He’s had time to go bald. Titus! Where are you, Titus Consent?”

  Consent did not materialize. Nor did Redfearn Bechter, nor Drago Prosek, nor any of the others whose presence around him could be taken for granted. Nervous, he pulled his weapons within reach.

  Madouc the lifeguard did materialize. Eventually. Twenty minutes after he should have done. He was bleeding. He had suffered a dozen wounds. More than one might qualify as mortal. He was going on by willpower and the insane sense of duty of a Brotherhood warrior.

  “Sir. We were ambushed. By local partisans. They killed the Society brothers. They were after the Archbishop. They cut him to pieces. They took his head with them.”

  “This isn’t good, Madouc. The Society …” But the Society might not be around much longer. Nor the crusader army and its Captain-General.

  The course of history hinged on the choice of Sublime V’s successor.

  The uprising in Castreresone lasted one evening and night and focused entirely on the Society for the Suppression of Sacrilege and Heresy.

  In a whisper next morning the Captain-General confided to his spy chief, “I’m not going to miss any of those villains.”

  “But Morcant Farfog’s murder …”

  “Will cause a lot of trouble. How much depends on our next Patriarch.”

  Hagan Brokke reclaimed his honor in a series of fierce little engagements that stripped Queen Isabeth and Duke Tormond of their mercenary strength. His light cavalry harassed Isabeth’s Direcians continuously, deliberately targeting one knight or noble at a time. Because they were who they were, each death or capture would have a significant impact in Direcia.

  The Queen of Navaya withdrew to the shadow of her brother’s capital city.

  From elation about events in the west Piper Hecht fell into a depression over news from the east. Count Raymone Garete had resumed his stubborn defiance, with a more punishing daily cost now that Bronte Doneto had gone. Piper Hecht reviewed the whys and wherefores. What strange, small change had reanimated the Count’s stubborn insolence?

  “Those prisoners Brokke brought in,” Titus Consent said. “Some got away, probably with help, while we were running in circles because of Farfog’s murder.”

  Hecht scowled. He grumbled a question about who he needed to have stoned or drowned.

  “That would be a waste of time and emotion. Focus on those who didn’t get away. Bernardin Amberchelle, for example.”

  “Tell me.”

  “Count Raymone’s cousin. The man we thought he wanted back when he showed a willingness to talk.

  But he’s gone back to being stubborn while Amberchelle is still down in the prison pens.”

  “Uhm? What changed?”

  ‘The old man and the girl who came with Amberchelle,” Consent said. “I’d bet she’s the fiancée we’ve heard about. An upcountry girl who stole Raymone’s heart. Socia something. Who is supposedly chaperoned by the Grand Masterest of all Maysalean Perfect Masters.”

  “And that would be the grayhair.” The Captain-General did not finish. “You exult over little triumphs while big defeats sneak up.”

  Patriarchal crusaders now owned the eastern half of the End of Connec — excepting only Antieux. They threatened Khaurene from three directions. Lesser forces, featuring impassioned Society brethren determined to see Archbishop Farfog’s great vision fulfilled, had begun probing the Altai, discovering the incredible mountaintop fortresses of the Maysalean heretics. And snow choked much of the rural world, not only in the Connec but in Tramaine, Ormienden, Grolsach, Arnhand, and even much of Firaldia. The Grail Empire was blanketed. Artecipea saw heavy, temporarily incapacitating snows for the first time since antiquity. The war there dwindled into the doldrums of winter. As did wars all round the Mother Sea.

  Wherever snow fell there arose dreadful rumors of Kharoulke the Windwalker, the god before gods from the age before antiquity. Kharoulke the Windwalker, before whom the great modern Instrumentalities must quail. But Kharoulke needed deep snow, deep ice, before he could supplant the gentler Instrumentalities of the present. Kharoulke needed millennial cold before he could rise above the vague lost deities who had supplanted
his kind — before being shoved aside by the powers of today.

  Those vague lost deities beloved of secret cults devoted to resurrecting the lost lord Instrumentalities of antiquity.

  18. Interlude at Runjan in the Reigenwald

  The Marquesa va Runjan’s sister the Empress insisted that she take up her rights in that remote town in the heart of the Empire’s wildest, most remote hill country. Helspeth could not refuse.

  The fury of the Council Advisory, of the Imperial court, of the Church, and especially of Empress Katrin herself could be described only as beyond reason. Nobody told the Princess Apparent how she had rendered herself criminal by opening that sealed mountain pass.

  Almost no one would speak to her, let alone explain. She was a pariah and it might be catching. She was a prisoner now, in all but name, confined to the crumbling hilltop tower overlooking Runjan. The village, in its prime, had produced barely enough turnips, cabbage, and grain to sustain itself, with a small charcoal-burning industry taking advantage of the surrounding forest. Runjan was no longer in its prime.

  The iron industry had shrunk since Hansel’s death, there being less demand for weapons metal. If the smelters were closed there was little demand for charcoal.

  The tower had not been occupied since the last lord of Runjan passed on, childless, leaving the fief to his beloved Hansel. Its shutters were gone or broken. The drop gate could not be closed. Someone had taken the chain. There was no resident staff.

  Helspeth came with a party of eight. Two were cruel old women who hated her. They were determined to punish her. Nothing Helspeth did could ingratiate her. Not that she tried to win them over. She had to work to mask her loathing.

  The rest of the party were all one family. Harmer Schmitt. His wife Greta. Their daughter Grunhilde and three sons: Hansel, Fulk, and Fritz. The boys were named for Harmer’s favorite emperors, the girl for Greta’s great-aunt. Grunhilde was sixteen. And not attractive. The boys were sixteen, fourteen, and nine.

  Hansel was Grunhilde’s twin. Not identical, of course, but every bit as homely as his sister.

  The Schmitts were quietly sympathetic toward the Princess Apparent but dared not show it. It was a flawed sympathy, anyway, based more in dislike of the harpies assigned to be Helspeth’s warders: the Dowager Grafina Ilse-Janna fon Wistrcz, the harridan mother of the Graf fon Wistrcz, and Dame Karelina fon Tyre, spouse of the Grand Admiral. Neither woman ever liked Helspeth. Both hated her now. It was her fault they had to chaperone her here in her rustic hell. The women hated one another as well, and had done so for fifty years. Both were petty and spiteful and had been chosen because they could be counted on to take it out on Helspeth.

  Each had her own small household follow her. Just people enough to maintain her in reduced misery. The Schmitts were supposed to maintain Helspeth but often worked for her keepers instead. They put in long hours but failed to make the tower fit for human habitation. Then the heavy snows came. Never warm, never properly fed, Helspeth became gaunt, subject to fits of the shakes and prolonged periods of withdrawal.

  She did not expect to see the coming spring.

  She wrote letters to the Empress but they came out almost illegible. Not that there was any point to pleading. There was no one to carry the letters away. Even had she been able to get them past Tooth and Fang, as she thought of those horrid old women.

  She had felt alone and been afraid in Plemenza. But in Plemenza she had had Algres Drear. She had no bodyguards here, nor any patient ear to bend. Captain Drear had been sent east, to a garrison ever threatened by pagan savages. The other Braunsknechts had been scattered elsewhere. And the girl who was the author of their distress still did not grasp what she had done to earn such draconian retribution.

  Ferris Renfrow arrived during a snowstorm. He did nothing to conceal his horror. Saying little, he went out again. He returned with the entire population of Runjan. He started giving orders.

  Dame Karelina challenged him. “This isn’t any business of yours!” Voice heavy with scorn. Though her own antecedents were questionable.

  Renfrow stared into her eyes. She wavered, but only momentarily. She was the wife of the Grand Admiral.

  Renfrow said, “Pick up a tool and help. Or go away. If you insist on being part of the problem you’ll be corrected with the rest of the problem.”

  Dowager Grafina fon Wistrcz got hold of the Dame’s arm and dragged her away. Still within earshot, Ilse-Janna snarled, “Don’t cross Ferris Renfrow! Ever! No good comes to anyone who does that! No telling why he’s here. But he will go away.”

  Renfrow said, “He’ll go away. But he won’t forget what he’s seen.”

  The villagers got a blazing fire going. Greta Schmitt brought a blanket. She placed it around Helspeth’s shoulders, settled the girl close to the fire.

  Renfrow stalked around, tossing off orders. Villagers went to work improving and weatherproofing. A single hour’s work provided a dramatic improvement.

  “Schmitt. Show me the account books.” He knew exactly where the harridans would be vulnerable.

  Warmth penetrated Helspeth deeply enough for her shakes to subside into an intermittent problem. She surfaced in the present reality for moments at a time. She recognized Ferris Renfrow. And experienced a flood of joy and hope so profound that she plunged into unstoppable crying.

  “Schmitt’s woman. Stay close to the Princess.”

  Elsewhere, Dame fon Tyre tried to bully her own small household into evicting Ferris Renfrow from the tower. She refused to hear warnings from the Dowager Grafina. Her people did not. They knew the Renfrow reputation. That had been dark and deadly since long before the accession of Emperor Johannes.

  The Grand Admiral’s wife had lived fifty-eight sheltered years. She had known little but her own indulgences until Empress Katrin, in a moment of high pique, rid herself of an annoyance by ordering the woman to Runjan to babysit her sister. Making Runjan a cauldron of rustic exile.

  In one day’s time Renfrow’s will made the ground floor of the tower over into what it should have become with Helspeth’s arrival. Helspeth stopped shaking before the villagers went away. She regained her composure. Softly voiced, she told Renfrow, “Thank you.”

  “You’re welcome, Princess. You are the heir of empire. What they were doing is unconscionable.” He said no more. Helspeth began to understand how deep her danger had been. And might be once Renfrow went away again.

  Renfrow told her, “You won’t be comfortable, here. You can’t be the Helspeth Ege you were before your brother died. But no one will try to make you die by natural causes anymore, either.”

  Helspeth lost control of her bladder.

  Renfrow told her, “I promised your father.”

  She pulled the blanket around her again and stared into the flames, wanting to go away again. Hansel Schmitt brought more wood. He seemed obsequious. The way people do who want not to be noticed by someone held in high terror.

  “Helspeth. Listen. You must pay attention. Your life could depend on you actually hearing me.”

  Greta Schmitt brought hot broth. Helspeth responded to the aroma with more enthusiasm than she did Ferris Renfrow’s voice. Renfrow said, “I’ll take some of that myself.”

  The Schmitt woman’s lips tightened and lost color but she held Ferris Renfrow in no less high terror than did her son. When she brought the broth for Renfrow he slipped her a small purse. “Tell no one. Use it on the Princess’s behalf. And keep a close account. You may keep a fourth for yourself.” He looked her straight in the eye. “Tell no one. Not either of those hags. Not your husband. Not the Princess herself.

  Understand?” Greta nodded.

  In a voice barely audible, Helspeth told Renfrow, “I’m listening. Thank you. For coming.”

  “I repay my debts. And I do what serves the Empire. Letting the heir to the ermine be murdered by neglect is not in that interest.”

  Helspeth eased her grip on her blanket. The ache went out of her fingers almost immedi
ately. The fire had begun to have an effect. At last.

  “Listen closely. Your life will improve going forward. But you must not attract attention. Be pliant. Do as you’re told. Offer no offense, however unreasonable the dons at Alten Weinberg become. Be your sister’s strongest supporter, regardless of your private opinion. Her reign won’t be one of the memorable ones. Unless she surrenders to the Council Advisory or she goes completely mad. Which could happen.”

  She murmured, “Greta put something in the broth.”

  “Are you listening?”

  “I’m listening.”

  “Good. I’m hoping you’ve learned something. The lesson being that a princess’s actions directly impact many other people.”

  Tears slid from the corners of Helspeth’s eyes as Renfrow reviewed the current situation of her Braunsknecht lifeguards and Lady Hilda Daedal, whose husband had required her to go into a convent.

  “This doesn’t make sense. I didn’t do anything wrong.”

  “Why are you here, then?”

  “But …”

  “You knew you’d irritate people in Alten Weinberg. Admit it. You could’ve saved everyone misery by staying in Plemenza while your hired men dealt with the monster. They would’ve censured you for employing foreigners but you’d still be there. However, you wanted to tweak their noses. In fact, you scared hell out of powerful people who saw way too much Johannes Blackboots in Hansel’s youngest daughter.”

  “I know, Ferris. I know. I’ve thought about that so much.”

  “On the good news side, you won’t be marrying anytime soon. If that’s a positive.”

  “I’m not going to get married, ever.”

  Renfrow smiled. “As may be. But one more reason you’re in bad odor is, your adventure cheapened you as marriage bait. Every court in the Chaldarean world was interested. Your portrait was making a progression from capital to capital. You were quickening hearts. Then word went out that you’d gone off into the wilderness for a month with a band of common soldiers.”

  Helspeth sighed and drew her blanket around her tighter. Renfrow was getting excited. She had not recovered enough to handle the pressure.

 

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