Imager’s Intrigue

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Imager’s Intrigue Page 32

by L. E. Modesitt


  “I don’t wish to intrude, but…might I call on you tomorrow?”

  Frydryk frowned.

  “I wish it were otherwise, but it may bear on your father’s death.”

  “Half past ninth glass at the town estate,” he finally said.

  “Thank you. If matters were not so urgent, I would not have pressed on you.”

  Alynkya looked to me, then reached out, took Frydryk’s hand, leaned toward him, and murmured something.

  Frydryk nodded, if almost imperceptibly. “I’m reminded that you have always been thoughtful in times like these, and for you to insist declares that urgency.” He offered a faint smile. “Tomorrow.”

  I inclined my head in reply and stepped away to allow those behind me a chance to offer their condolences. Baratyn had slipped away, and I finally located the duty coach that had brought me amid the forty or so lined up around the anomen and along the Boulevard D’Council.

  Ferlyn was in his study when I finally returned to the Collegium. Every digit of wall space in the tiny room was filled with bookcases, and every shelf was overflowing with either books or papers. There were even books stacked on the single windowsill.

  “I heard you were looking for me, sir.”

  “I was. I have a few questions where I thought the skill of a pattern-master might help.”

  “I think we often raise more questions than resolve any.”

  “That’s possible with anyone, but I’d still appreciate your thoughts.” I picked up the books piled on the single chair and stacked them on top of more books on the desk before sitting down. “You know the requirement for a High Holder to be the head of the Executive Council?”

  “How could I not? I assume you’re asking how many High Holders already do not meet the requirements set forth in the Council compact.”

  “Do you know?”

  Ferlyn shook his head. “No one knows for certain, because there’s always been a discrepancy in valuations between those High Holders like Suyrien and Ryel, who have manufactories and industrial facilities, and those like Haestyr and Haebyn, whose wealth lies in land and forests and other agricultural assets. Haestyr has been pressing for a strict interpretation of the original language, in which craft-related assets were valued at half those of land-related assets.”

  “Then, there’s something you should know.” I went on to explain about the change in valuations slipped through by Suyrien.

  When I finished, for the first time since I’d taken Dichartyn’s position, Ferlyn looked truly surprised. After a silence, he said, “It’s not surprising that he was shot. It might be surprising that he wasn’t shot earlier.”

  “Because the change in valuation will mean some High Holders won’t be able to retain their position and rights?”

  “There might be as many as fifty, and Quaelyn has calculated that there are presently 1,034 High Holders. Master Poincaryt knew about those calculations, but whether he told Maitre Dyana or Maitre Dichartyn, I don’t know. We did not tell anyone else—except you, now.”

  I had wondered about the issue of the number of High Holders for some time, but particularly after learning of Suyrien’s changes to the “reform” proposals. “Do you happen to know how many High Holders there were when the Council was formed?”

  “No one knows for certain. They probably didn’t then, either. From the documents we’ve searched, it appears that there were close to two thousand.”

  That explained, in some ways, why the High Holders had accepted the thousand holder threshold for the reduction of High Holder power. It had probably been a concession granted because none of them could have envisioned such a reduction in their numbers, even over the hundreds of years since then.

  “Does our Naval Command reflect the patterns of the past, or has it changed more toward the Ferran set of patterns?”

  Ferlyn blinked, obviously startled by the change in the subject matter of my questions.

  I waited.

  “We’ve talked in the past about the goals of warfare, and the patterns involved,” he began. “There are two key questions. The first is the overall mission of the Navy, and the second is what force and support structure will best accomplish that mission. Historically, the mission has been a dual one—to assure open and unrestricted trade, and to dominate the oceans in such a fashion that no other land can threaten our merchant and Naval vessels. The problem inherent in such a split mission is that it requires a larger navy than either part of that mission will alone…the Ferran mission is limited to restricting the influence and power of our fleets and ships. That means they attempt to develop vessels and weapons systems designed specifically for use against our warships, while we must also have capabilities they do not. For example, we have Naval marines for boarding, as well as high speed launches and gunboats…”

  I continued to wait, knowing that Ferlyn would eventually get to the point.

  “…do not have the range of information that you or Dichartyn possess, but from what I have seen, the recent requests from the Naval Command suggest a re-focusing on ships more capable of engaging the Ferran dreadnoughts…”

  When I finally left Ferlyn, more than a few thoughts, many of them conflicting, were swirling through my mind.

  36

  Vendrei morning I actually woke without a headache and with the feeling that, despite all the bruises, some of which were slightly sore to the touch, I might actually be nearing a full recovery. That assumed that I could anticipate troubles before they impacted me personally. Otherwise, I’d end up injured or worse once more. I did do a few more of the morning exercises, and they didn’t hurt all that much.

  After seeing Seliora and Diestrya off in the duty coach, I hurried to my study, getting there a quint before seventh glass, because I wanted to look over the recent reports to see if I’d overlooked anything about High Holder Ruelyr. I’d barely finished confirming that there weren’t any recent reports on Ruelyr when Ralyea arrived. He was the only one of the imagers whom I had not yet met since becoming his preceptor.

  Ralyea didn’t quite look at me as he came into the study. “Good morning, sir.”

  I laughed at the timidity of his presence and speech. Dichartyn’s notes had indicated that both were a problem. He appeared paralyzed at my reaction.

  “Ralyea…I don’t bite. I don’t even nip, and I’m not nearly so clever with words or arguments as Master Dichartyn was. What I’m interested in was what he was interested in. I want you to become the best imager that you can. Do you know what one of the first things he said to me was, years ago?”

  “No, sir.” His voice still trembled.

  “He told me that there were bold imagers and old imagers, but there were no bold old imagers. He was right. But that’s only half the story. The other half is that an excessively cautious imager accomplishes absolutely nothing.”

  The young third said nothing.

  “Have you ever watched a turtle walk, Ralyea?”

  He frowned. “Ah…yes, sir. Not in years, sir, I mean.”

  “Tell me. Can a turtle go anywhere by keeping its head inside its shell?”

  “No, sir.”

  “And what happens if a giant land lizard or a heron comes upon a turtle in the open, even inside its shell?”

  “Ah…”

  “Yes?”

  “It probably flips it over and kills it.”

  “On the other hand, what happens if the turtle hurries out of the open into shelter before any predators appear?” I smiled. “What’s the point of talking about turtles? As applied to you?”

  He didn’t answer, and I forced myself to wait, just looking at him.

  After what seemed a full quint, he finally stammered, “You’re…saying that even with shells…or shields…there’s a time to move…to act.”

  “And?”

  “Sometimes…doing nothing behind shields…” He looked at me.

  “Let me put it simply. Even a turtle has to stick its neck out to get anywhere. An imager who isn’
t willing to stick his neck out—cautiously, mind you—won’t get any place and will end up in as much trouble, if not more, than an excessively bold imager. Keep that in mind.”

  After that, we went over his assignments and readings, and I asked him to re-read the section of the history dealing with the events leading to the formation of the Collegium and the first Council. When he left, I almost felt as though I’d been doing manual labor, but I had half a glass to check the reports Kahlasa brought me after Ralyea left. There was nothing more on either Ruelyr or Johanyr.

  At least the walk across the quadrangle to the duty coach station refreshed me, even with the chill blustery wind.

  As I sat in the duty coach, headed northward on West River Road, I realized why Master Dichartyn had often been so hard to find—and I was far from doing all that I probably should have been. Ferlyn’s words, or their implications, still nagged at me. The drive took only slightly less than a glass, since the “L’Excelsis” estate of the Suyriens was three milles from Imagisle, although it was closer to one and a half as a raven flew, because both the road and the River Aluse wound their way north. Still, that was far closer than Suyrien’s main estate, some fifteen milles south of L’Excelsis, if also on the river.

  The “smaller” L’Excelsis estate was located on a hill overlooking the river. Surprisingly, to me, the walls were less than three yards in height, and there was but a single guard in the gate house, who opened the gates and waved the gray Collegium coach through for the drive to the mansion—not quite a chateau, since it was a comparatively modest two-story gray stone structure on the hillcrest a mere hundred yards from end to end. The trim was crimson, and the roof tiles well-kept but weathered slate.

  A single footman stepped out from the portico to greet me, and Frydryk was waiting in the hexagonal foyer.

  I inclined my head to him. “I’m sorry to intrude at this time, but I’m afraid that your father’s death will not be the only one if we can’t track down those responsible quickly.”

  “I understand.” He gestured to the door on his left, then turned.

  I followed him into a study whose front windows, their pale blue hangings drawn back, overlooked the River Aluse and its gray swirling waters. Floor-to-ceiling bookcases covered the inside wall facing the windows. A small writing desk was set before the windows, with three yards of polished parquet flooring between the desk chair and a circular table with four chairs.

  Frydryk took the chair facing the windows. I took the one to his right.

  “What would you like to know?” he asked.

  “Several things. First, when we had dinner with you and Kandryl, you alluded to why your father had paid a visit to High Holder Ruelyr. I’d appreciate it very much if you’d expand on that. You’d mentioned his problems with low justice, but it wasn’t just that, was it?”

  “It is a High Holder matter, Rhenn.”

  “Was it about the elveweed traced to his lands? And the fact that his lands were so heavily mortgaged that he had no other way to meet the banque’s terms but to accept a questionable lease and turn the other eye?” The last part was only a guess, but I couldn’t see any other reason for a High Holder to get involved…except by ignorance or stupidity.

  “I shouldn’t say. Really.”

  I smiled pleasantly. “There’s already an investigation under way, and possibly a justiciary inquiry, you know. It will come out, and you wouldn’t want more holders or factors to die when everyone will know before long anyway. Was he gaoling tenants under low justice to keep them from reporting the elveweed?”

  “Father didn’t know. He had heard that Ruelyr, and some others, had been incarcerating malefactors longer than they should have. He wanted to find out more.”

  “Did he?”

  “He didn’t say much when he came back, except that he couldn’t help Ruelyr any more. He was worried. He said that Ruelyr blamed him for his troubles. Father didn’t say why. He only said that Ruelyr was living in the past, and that he wouldn’t listen. He told me to avoid him because Ruelyr’s actions would bring him down, sooner or later.”

  “He didn’t say any more than that?”

  Frydryk shook his head.

  “Isn’t most of Ruelyr’s worth tied up in land?”

  Frydryk nodded. “He has a few manufactories, but they’re really just to supply his lands.”

  “What does Alynkya think about him?”

  “Ah…I haven’t asked her.”

  “You should ask her…about many things. Women often see what we miss. Her eyes may be the only pair besides your own that you can trust.” I paused, then asked, “How are the shipworks doing?”

  Frydryk blinked, as if disconcerted by the apparent change of subject. “We’re doing well enough with building merchanters and the like. We’re finishing up a fast frigate for the Naval Command in a few weeks, but it will be the last, until…” He shrugged.

  “Despite your father’s position, he had great difficulty in persuading the rest of the Council of the need for more modern vessels. That’s what I understood.”

  “That’s true enough. Father even agreed to a fixed-price contract for the first fast battlecruiser. We would have lost tens of thousands of golds on it, and the Council still wouldn’t agree.”

  That was something I hadn’t known. “Who was the most opposed to the contract?”

  “Councilor Glendyl, in spite of all he said in public.” A touch of bitterness shaded his words.

  “Wouldn’t he have supplied all the engines and boilers?”

  “He had a contract with father, splitting the profits.”

  “And he would have shared in the losses?”

  Frydryk shook his head. “He would have broken even. Father would have taken the losses.” He paused. “Just on the first ship. That was so the Council could see how much better it was.”

  “What did Glendyl say?”

  “He said that he’d be Namer-cursed if he’d forgo a profit because the Council was too stupid to do what was right. He told father that he and the other High Holders either had to change the way Solidar was governed or that the realities of modern technology would take care of it, one way or another.”

  “That sounds like a threat of sorts.”

  “Father just laughed afterwards. He said that Glendyl understood golds, but not people, and that was why he accomplished so little in the Council.”

  “Whereas Caartyl understands people, but not golds?”

  “I suppose you could put it that way.”

  “Have you ever spent much time with either Glendyl or Caartyl?”

  “No. I’ve exchanged pleasantries. That’s about it.”

  “Did your father ever deal with Sea-Marshal Geuffryt?”

  “I don’t know. He never mentioned that name.”

  “Juniae D’Shendael?”

  Frydryk raised his eyebrows. “It wasn’t a good idea even to mention her name around father.”

  From what I’d heard, I wasn’t surprised.

  Abruptly, he looked at me, then frowned.

  “What is it?” I asked.

  “I hesitate to say this, but…. Rhenn, do you know how many High Holders aren’t…how should I put it…extraordinarily effusive when your name is mentioned?”

  I managed a wry smile. “Besides you, Kandryl, Alynkya, and Iryela…I’d be amazed if any were even politely effusive.”

  “Father alluded to matters…”

  “Your father was a thoughtful High Holder, especially in considering the interests of all the people of Solidar. Intelligent as most High Holders are, few approach his breadth of understanding.” I was probably overstating the case, but, if Suyrien hadn’t told his sons, except indirectly, how Kandryl had come to be Ryel D’Alte, I wasn’t about to. In such matters, I trusted Suyrien’s judgment about other High Holders. Unhappily, it meant that the Collegium would have more High Holder resentments to deal with because I was more visible and more senior.

  I didn’t want to press Frydryk,
nor to answer his implied question, and I replied by saying, “There were some High Holder matters that affected the Collegium, and some of them weren’t pleased with the way I was involved. Your father felt that I’d done the best I could, given the situation. He was always fair-minded that way.”

  “Yes, he was.”

  “Did he ever mention Glendyl being pressured by Haebyn?”

  “The only thing I can recall along those lines was when he said Glendyl didn’t understand that Solidar wasn’t Ferrum, and that he’d have to learn to deal with Haebyn and the others.”

  I asked a few more questions, and when it was clear that I wasn’t learning any more, I stood and thanked him, profusely, and then departed.

  By the time I got back to Imagisle and my study, it was second glass.

  Schorzat appeared before I had my winter cloak off and hung up.

  “Rhenn, after we talked about Geuffryt last week, I got to thinking. I remembered that Maitre Poincaryt had mentioned something about him, and I dug out my notes. It’s not much, but I thought you’d like to know. This was two years ago, at a reception here in L’Excelsis. Maitre Poincaryt didn’t say where, even when I asked him. Geuffryt was talking to the top Sea-Marshal—Valeun. He only said a few words before Valeun glared at him.” Schorzat smiled.

  “They must have been interesting words.”

  “Geuffryt said something to the effect that he was tired of High Holder control and stupidity because they didn’t understand either war or economics, and that the Collegium didn’t help matters. Valeun said maybe three words. Geuffryt turned pale and left the reception right then.”

  “I didn’t see anything about that in the files.”

  “Maitre Poincaryt mentioned it to me when Maitre Dichartyn was out of town on an inspection trip. I told Maitre Dichartyn, but I didn’t give him a written report.”

  “I appreciate your tracking that down. Thank you. Have you or Kahlasa found out anything about barges?”

  “We probably won’t get a report on them until Lundi.”

  When Schorzat left, I thought about what he’d told me. By themselves, Geuffryt’s words meant little, but I had the feeling there well might be more.

 

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