by K. J. Parker
Poldarn nodded. ‘All straight lines,’ he said, ‘nothing curved. Looks good from a distance but I don’t think it’d suit me for very long. Now then,’ he went on, before the guard could answer, ‘maybe you can tell me something.’
‘I can try,’ the guard said cautiously.
‘Fine. I’m new in these parts, as you’ve probably guessed. Who’s a man called Tazencius?’
The guard looked puzzled, then laughed. ‘You’re serious? Guess you are new in town, at that. Tazencius was the prefect of Mael, right up to the beginning of last week. Why, what about him?’
‘I heard the name somewhere, that’s all,’ Poldarn replied. ‘Would you recognise him if you saw him?’
The guard nodded. ‘Of course. Anybody who goes to temple knows what Tazencius looks like. Smart, he always was. He had his stall built right under the skylight at the northern end of the transept so that during evensong, when it was his time to make the address, the light’d be coming through the window and catching him just right. Real impressive it was, even when you knew it was all put on.’
Poldarn smiled. ‘I can believe that,’ he said. ‘About medium height but looks taller, middle to late forties, touch of grey in the hair but one of those faces that doesn’t change much after about twenty-five; sharp nose and chin, big eyes like a horse—’
‘That’s him,’ the guard confirmed.
‘Ah, right.’ Poldarn thought for a moment. ‘So what happened last week?’
The guard grinned. ‘Wish I knew,’ he said. ‘The official line – well, first it was he’d been promoted and called back to Torcea; then it was recalled to Torcea, which isn’t quite the same thing as called back, and nothing about any promotion. Then there were all these rumours going around about how he’d been arrested – troop of cavalry sent specially from Boc to pick him up, only captured after desperate chase, running battle between his guards and the soldiers, you know how these things snowball. Then it was official that he was going back to Torcea to testify in front of some board of enquiry, which is just polite for “arrested”. Then we started hearing all kinds of wild stuff about a big conspiracy, some stuff about the royal chaplain, Cleapho – can’t see what he’d have to do with anything myself, but that’s what they were saying – and then you started hearing Feron Amathy all over the place – you know, the big bandit captain – and soon they were linking him with General Cronan, who supposedly hasn’t been seen or heard of in months. Last thing was that Tazencius had been rescued by the Amathy house, and either they’d got him back or he’d got away; nobody’s said he’s dead yet, which is odd, you usually get that when someone’s arrested. Anyway, you take your pick. Something’s been going on with him, but God only knows what.’
‘What do you think?’ Poldarn asked.
The guard pulled a face, presumably intended to convey thoughtfulness. ‘My guess is he ticked off the Guild once too often,’ he said. ‘He was always pulling their tail, after all. But this is a Guild town and Torcea’s a long way away. If the emperor’s whisked him away back to Torcea, it could be for his own good. After all, they’re family. Not that Tazencius was ever anybody back at the royal court,’ he added, ‘just some second cousin getting under people’s feet. He’d never have ended up out here if he mattered worth a damn. Come to think of it, I seem to remember something about there having been bad blood between him and Cronan years ago, before the Allectus business, even; if that’s true, he’s lucky he’s still alive.’
Poldarn nodded, as if turning it over in his mind. ‘So where would the emperor’s chaplain – Cleapho, did you say his name was? Where would he fit into all this?’
The guard shrugged. ‘No idea,’ he said. ‘I think that was just somebody’s imagination. Though I’ve heard it said that Cleapho’s quite a big man behind the scenes at court; used to be thick as thieves with the emperor’s brother, then switched sides after he lucked out and started running Cronan instead. Now if there really was anything going on with Tazencius and Cronan and the Amathy outfit, I suppose Cleapho might be in the middle of it somewhere.’ He grinned. ‘Who knows what the hell’s really going on?’ he said. ‘Who cares, come to that, so long as they don’t start another war.’
‘Quite,’ Poldarn said. ‘Only that might be on the cards sooner than you’d think, if you believe what they’re saying, about the god coming back and everything.’
‘That?’ The guard laughed. ‘You don’t believe in all that garbage, do you? Strictly for the woollybacks, that stuff.’
‘Maybe.’ Poldarn shrugged the subject away. ‘Just out of interest,’ he said, ‘is there any chance of getting something to eat?’
‘At this time?’ The guard stared at him for a moment. ‘Sorry, I forgot, you’re from out of town. No food or drink after sundown; it’s the law.’
‘You’re joking.’
‘No I’m not,’ the guard replied, and Poldarn could see him consciously not taking offence. ‘This is a Guild town, remember. Late-night eating and drinking leads to drunks fighting in the streets. We don’t hold with that kind of thing in Mael.’
Poldarn breathed in, then out again. ‘Fair enough,’ he said, ‘only I haven’t eaten anything since this time yesterday. Nobody would know.’
‘Don’t you believe it,’ the guard replied. ‘Thirty days in the lock-up if you’re caught, doesn’t matter who you are. You’re better off going to sleep and dreaming about breakfast.’
So Poldarn went to sleep; and perhaps because he was hungry, or because the guard had suggested it to him—
—He was sitting at the head of a table in a large tent, looking at the plate that someone had just put in front of him. A thick slab of bacon, old, cold and shiny; a narrow, deep wedge of hard, almost translucent yellow cheese; something else, either a piece of bread or a bit of broken grindstone, he couldn’t be sure which; a small apple, with a skin like an old man’s cheeks.
‘Oh, for crying out loud,’ he heard himself say. ‘Hisco, this isn’t fit for pigs.’
‘With respect—’ Hisco was the man standing behind him, who’d just put down the plate. ‘With respect, that’s all there is, and you’re lucky to have that.’
‘Hisco, you sound like my mother. What happened to all that white cream cheese we took out of that village down the valley?’
Hisco, still unseen, clicked his tongue. ‘It’d gone bad,’ he said, ‘so I slung it out. I’d rather starve than be poisoned, thanks very much.’
‘Hisco, it’s supposed to taste like that, it’s a fucking delicacy . . . You know how much you’d pay for a pound of that stuff in Weal Bohec?’
‘The men wouldn’t touch it,’ Hisco replied. ‘Talking of which, that’s the last of the bacon. Tomorrow it’ll be oatmeal and dried fish. You may want to think about that.’
He turned round in his chair, but Hisco had gone; the tent flap swished behind him. ‘Bloody cook,’ he said bitterly. ‘Dumps a thousand quarters’ worth of Mausandy cheese and threatens me with oatmeal. I ought to stick his head up on a pike.’
‘It’d be good for morale,’ a man three places down from him replied. ‘But he was right about the cheese. We thought something had died in the wagons.’
‘Barbarians. Oh well, I suppose we’d better eat this, or we’ll never hear the last of it.’ He pulled his napkin out of the ring – dark rosewood, carved in relief with a design of two crows holding something in their beaks; the carving was too worn for him to be able to make out the details. ‘Somebody tell me there’s some beer left, or I’ll burst into tears.’
Someone else passed him a tall silver jug; it matched the long-stemmed goblets and the side plates. All solid silver, every inch embossed and gadrooned. He took a sip and nearly spat it out.
‘That does it,’ he said. ‘Cold greasy bacon I can live with, but this is beyond a joke. Get me the map, someone.’
They were all dressed in the most dazzling array of silks, brocades, velvets, linens that you’d ever hope to see outside the imperial court; the
effect was spoiled slightly by the characteristic red-brown half-moons left behind by rusty chainmail after a week of continuous wear. Someone reached under the table and produced a bronze tube, two feet long by six inches wide. He fished inside it and pulled out the map.
‘Right,’ he said, ‘we’re here. There’s the river and there’s the mountains – no, that’s wrong, they’re further away than that. This map’s useless.’
Someone laughed. ‘Imperial survey,’ he said. ‘In cases where the terrain doesn’t agree with the map, standing orders state that the terrain must be in error.’
He clicked his tongue. ‘Tell me about it,’ he said. ‘All right; ignoring the fact that the mountains have been sleepwalking, there’s a village about half a day downstream, between this wood here – oh, for pity’s sake, there isn’t a wood there, we’d have seen it.’
‘Old map,’ the other man replied. ‘Probably the wood’s been felled for charcoal long since.’
‘Yes, maybe. According to this map, there’s a village. It’s a good step out of our way, but there’s nothing else this side of the river; and I don’t see why we can’t cut back up the other side of this combe here and get back on the road that way. Assuming the village is there, of course. If it isn’t, we’ll be in big trouble, since at best we’ll lose a day and a half.’
‘There’s still the oatmeal,’ someone put in. ‘Sure, we’ll get a bit of attitude, but we won’t starve.’
He scowled. ‘Besco, Besco, you don’t command the loyalty and love of an army by feeding them oatmeal. No, the question is whether we can trust this stupid map. What d’you reckon?’
Silence. Then the man at the other end of the table, who hadn’t spoken yet, put down his cup. ‘Should be all right, Feron,’ he said. ‘Those maps were originally drawn for the revenue, remember. They may get the hills and rivers wrong, but they’re usually pretty careful about marking the taxpayers. The only problem would be if Allectus has been there before us.’
He rubbed his chin. ‘That’s a good point, Mashant,’ he said. ‘Hadn’t thought of that. Still, it’s unlikely. We’ve got him figured as crossing the river much further up; he’ll have filled his boots at Josequin, so he won’t need to go stocking up in the villages.’
Mashant shrugged. ‘I suppose not,’ he said. ‘Anyway, I don’t think we’ve got much choice in the matter. If we’re down to the oatmeal already, we’ll just have to risk it.’
‘It’ll be all right,’ he said cheerfully.
Mashant laughed. ‘I’ll say this for you, Feron,’ he said, ‘nobody could ever say you aren’t decisive.’
After he’d choked down the bacon and cheese (he couldn’t face the bread or the poisonous beer), he took another look at the map, with nobody peering over his shoulder. Things were starting to fall apart, mostly because he still hadn’t heard from either Allectus or Cronan. It was enough to make a man paranoid; what if they’d figured out what he was up to, and were deliberately letting him kick his heels and starve while they patched up their differences before coming after him? Absurd, of course; that would be making the fatal mistake of assuming your enemies think the way you do. But it was enough to drive a man crazy, marking time like this, knowing he was down to his last few days’ supplies (and the fact that nobody else seemed to have noticed that before today was hardly reassuring; the deadheads who were supposed to be running the commissary were in for a nasty surprise when the crisis was over and he had a bit of time again).
He scowled at the map, picked off a bit of frayed vellum from the edge. He really did have better things to do right now than go raiding villages for food. Quite apart from the detour, the loss of position, the risk of something going wrong, someone getting away, he didn’t like the thought of doing something like this with not one but two imperial armies breathing down his neck. True, the armies were fighting each other, but they were still imperials, and both Cronan and Allectus were dutiful, honourable men, just the sort who’d leave their own war hanging in order to go chasing off after a party of raiders, if they heard there was one operating nearby . . .
It was cold, in spite of the two heaped-up braziers; he rubbed his cheeks with his palms to warm them. Part of him couldn’t really believe that neither Cronan nor Allectus had yet figured out that half the attacks attributed to the raiders were the work of the Amathy house – how could they get to command armies and still be that naive? But they were imperials, Torceans, southerners; things were different down there – not better, he was sure of that, but the treachery took different forms, was played to different rules, some of which, no doubt, he’d be too naive to spot if he ever crossed the bay. No chance of that, if he had anything to do with it.
He was just rolling the map up again and thinking vague, disjointed thoughts about a variety of issues when the tent flap was folded back and a man put his head through it. ‘Letter,’ he said.
He looked round. ‘Fine, thanks,’ he said, making a point of keeping the excitement out of his voice. ‘Just put it down on the chair, I’ll deal with it in a minute.’
The head looked embarrassed. ‘Sorry,’ it said, ‘but the courier says he’s got to give it to you personally; orders and so forth. We tried to take it off him, but . . .’
He noticed that the head had a swollen lower lip. He managed not to smile. ‘All right,’ he said. ‘Show him in.’
‘You sure?’ the guard asked. ‘I mean—’
‘You mean he could be an assassin pretending to be a courier.’ He grinned. ‘Don’t worry about it, I could use the practice.’
But he wasn’t an assassin, just a very thorough, dedicated courier, the kind that costs an obscene amount of money and is worth every quarter. And it was the letter he’d been waiting for.
‘It’s all right,’ he told the guards, who were standing nervously at the back of the tent, their hands on their sword hilts. ‘Thank you,’ he said to the courier. ‘Go and get a beer, then come back. There’ll be a reply.’
The letter was, typically, short and to the point; Cleapho, touched by the Divine, to Feron Amathy, merchant; greetings, good health &c.
Concerning the small point of doctrine you queried at our last meeting; the Desert school, and Thauscus in particular, held the view that the rising sun conveyed more blessings on the observer than the setting sun, since it was hotter, having come straight from the divine forge, and more malleable, having not yet been quenched in the sea. Both the Desert school and the Ascetics held that it was inadvisable to wait until noon to look directly at the sun, and the latter party attributed great virtues to observation carried out just after sunrise, at the point when the sun’s heat dries up the morning dew. I trust that this clarifies the matter to your satisfaction.
He grinned; Cleapho had a nice way of putting things, for a Torcean. And it was the answer he’d wanted: side with Cronan against Allectus and do it soon, before Allectus had a chance to get established north of the Mahec. He scouted around for his inkwell and pen and a piece of paper, and wrote:Feron Amathy, merchant venturer, to Cleapho, touched by the Divine; greetings, good health &c.
Thauscus is, of course, an excellent authority, and your point about the Ascetics is well made. I seem to remember something in Pevannio’s commentary about the moment just before the sun breaks through the clouds being the most auspicious time for reading auguries and casting lots; do you think that might have any bearing on the matter?
He sprinkled sand and sealed it up, called for the guard—
‘Wake up.’ The guard was standing over him, calling him. ‘It’s after sun-up, for God’s sake, you should be on the road by now.’
‘What?’ Poldarn rolled over. ‘Oh, right. Sorry, I was having a dream—’
The guard scowled at him. ‘Do it on your own time,’ he said. ‘Cunier Mohac wants that reply on its way as soon as possible. You’ve missed breakfast,’ he added with a definite touch of malice.
‘Have I? Damn.’ Poldarn yawned. ‘No chance the kitchen could put me up something for
the road, is there? Or would that be against the law too?’
The guard shrugged. ‘I’ll ask,’ he said, ‘no promises. Depends on whether they’ve thrown the scraps out for the crows yet. I told the stables to get your horse ready, there may just be time. It’ll be bread and cold bacon if they can manage it, maybe a slice of cheese if you’re lucky.’
‘That’ll do,’ Poldarn said. ‘I’m not fussy.’
Chapter Twelve
‘Terrible,’ said Falx Roisin, looking up from the column of figures he was working on. ‘He’d been with the house sixteen years. I’ll miss him.’ He frowned, and drew a little line on the ledger to mark where he’d got up to in the sum. ‘And you’re sure it was just bandits? ’
‘That’s right,’ Poldarn replied. ‘As soon as they attacked, I ran for it, and they didn’t seem at all interested in me.’
Falx Roisin nodded. ‘It was the right thing to do,’ he said. ‘The letter was far more important than the cargo – that’s what insurance is for, after all, though in this case . . . It just strikes me as odd that they didn’t actually take anything.’
Poldarn shrugged. ‘Maybe they decided they didn’t want twelve barrels of copper rivets,’ he said.
‘Maybe. But they’re worth good money, there’s a shortage. Of course, they may not have known that.’ Falx Roisin rubbed the tip of his nose with the palm of his hand, an indication of serious thought. ‘Now if they’d hit you on the way back, they’d have got a nice sum in cash and twenty bales of best Mahec valley wool. That’s good,’ he added, ‘implies they don’t have a source of information inside the house. At least, not this particular outfit. No way of knowing how many gangs there are working that stretch of road.’ He glanced down at his figures, then looked up again. ‘Mind you,’ he said, ‘it’s also possible they thought Gatto was the courier, not you. Anyway, no use crying over spilt milk, as my mother used to say.’