Read By Schism Rent Asunder Online
Authors: David Weber
Staynair reached the sanctuary rail, unclipped the gate in itâprobably the first time in at least a decade that one of his acolytes hadn't performed that task for himâand stepped through it into the chancel itself. Merlin stopped at the rail, turning back to face the rest of the cathedral, but he also watched through the remotes his SNARCs had deployed throughout the enormous structure as Staynair genuflected to the enormous mosaics of Langhorne and Bédard, then stood to face the assembled congregation himself.
The bedlam faded slowly and unwillingly as the worshippers saw him standing there. The blood spray from his would-be killers showed dark across his vestments, and there was still blood on his face, as well, yet it was obvious that none of it was
his
blood, and several people cried out in relief as they realized that.
Relief, however, did nothing to cancel anger, and Merlin could feel the rage crouched in the hearts and minds of those hundreds of people as they realized how close to assassination their archbishop had truly come. There were more shouts, nowâshouts of more clearly articulated, more sharply directed, anger.
“My children!” Staynair said, pitching his own powerful voice to break through the gathering storm swell of vengeful outrage. “My children!”
His words rang out, cutting through the background noises, and quiet descended upon the cathedral once more. It wasn't
silence
âthere was still too much anger, too much shock, for thatâbut at least the noise level dropped, and Staynair raised his hands.
“My children,” he said in a marginally quieter voice, “this is a house of God. In this place, in this time, surely vengeance must be His, not ours.”
A fresh ripple went through the cathedral, as if the people listening to him couldn't quite believe what they'd just heard, and he shook his head sadly.
“Whatever others may believe, my children, God is a god of love,” he told them. “If justice must be dealt, then let it be dealt, but don't poison yourselves with vengeance. Surely it's tragic enough that three of God's children should already have died here in His house without the rest of them staining themselves with hatred!”
“But they tried to kill you!” someone, lost in the vast depths of the cathedral, shouted back, and Staynair nodded.
“They did,” he acknowledged, “and they have already paid the price for that.” The regret, the sadness, in his voice was completely genuine, Merlin realized. “The men who made that attempt are already dead, my son. So who would you have us take vengeance upon for their crime?”
“The Temple Loyalists!” someone else replied hotly, but Staynair shook his head once more.
“No,” he said firmly. “We know only that three men made this attempt. We know nothing as yet of who they were,
why
they attempted such a thing, or of whether or not they acted on their own. We know
nothing
about them, my children, not evenâwhatever some of you may thinkâthat they had any connection whatsoever with the Temple Loyalists here in Tellesberg. In the absence of that knowledge, there can be no justification for striking out at anyone, and even if there could, vengeance is not the proper province of any child of God, under any circumstances.
Justice
may be, but justice is the province of the Crown. We will leave justice to our King, confident in his ability to know and to do that which is right. We will
not
seek vengeance. We will
not
turn ourselves into something we would never wish to be.”
Voices murmured, some of them still with more than a hint of rebellion, yet no one dared to disagree with their archbishop.
“My children,” Staynair said more softly, “I know you're angry. I understand why. But this is a time for sorrow, not anger. Whatever you may think of the men who made this attempt today, they were still your fellow children of God. I have no doubt that they did what they did because of their own faith in God. I don't say I believe it truly was what God desired of them, but it was what they have been
told
God wants. Shall we condemn them for acting as their faith demanded, when our own faith has demanded that we turn our faces away from the Council of Vicars and the Temple? We may find it necessary to oppose men who believe as they believed. In the war which the Group of Four has declared against us, it may even be necessary for us to slay men who believe as they believed. But despite that grim necessity, never let yourselves forget that they who oppose you are just as human, just as much God's children, as you yourselves. What they do may be evil in our eyes, and wrong in God's eyes, but if you let yourselves be filled with hate, if you turn them into something less than human in order to make it easier to kill them, then you open
yourself
to the very evil which you have condemned in them.”
The murmuring voices had faded into stillness as he spoke, and he gazed out at them sadly.
“We live in a time when godly men and women must make
choices
, my children. I beg of you, as you love meâas you love yourselves, love your wives and husbands and children, as you love God Himselfâmake the
right
choices. Choose to do that which must be done, but do it without poisoning yourselves, your souls, or your ability to love one another.”
The silence was almost absolute now, and Staynair looked to where the stalled procession still clustered about the bodies. A half dozen of Merlin's fellow guardsmen had joined the procession. Now, as they stooped to lift and remove the bodies, Staynair beckoned to the acolytes and under-priests.
“Come,” he told them, standing before the congregation, splashed with the drying blood of the men who had attempted to kill him. “Come, we have a mass to celebrate, brethren.”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
“Maikel,” King Cayleb said very, very seriously, “you realize what they took advantage of when they planned this, don't you?”
“Of course I do, Your Majesty,” the archbishop replied serenely. They sat on the balcony of Cayleb's personal suite in the palace, looking out over the city in the golden light of early evening, and Merlin stood behind the king's chair. “But, to anticipate your argument, I'm far too old and set in my ways to start trying to change them now.”
“Maikel, they tried to
kill
you,” Cayleb said, sounding like someone trying very hard
not
to sound exasperated ⦠and failing.
“I know,” Staynair said in that same, serene tone.
“Well, exactly what do you think is going to happen to the Church of Charisâand this Kingdomâif the
next
time they try, they succeed?” Cayleb demanded.
“If that happens, you'll just have to choose my successor, Your Majesty. You'll find a complete list of nominees in my desk. Father Bryahn knows where to find it.”
“
Maikel!
”
“Calmly, Your Majesty,” Staynair said with a small smile. “I truly realize what you're saying. And I'm not trying to minimize the impact my death would have on our efforts to defy the Grand Vicar and the Group of Four. Nor, for that matter, am I unaware of the way in which my death at the hands of real or supposed Temple Loyalists would inflame public opinion. Nonetheless, I'm a priest before I'm a politician. Even before I'm an archbishop. I serve God; I don't ask Him to serve
me
, and I refuse to live my life in fear of my enemies. Moreover, I refuse to allow my enemiesâor my friendsâto
believe
I live in fear of them. This is a time for boldness, Cayleb, not for timidity. You've grasped that well enough in your own case. Now you have to understand that it applies to
my
case, as well.”
“That's all very well and good, Your Eminence,” Merlin put in respectfully. “For that matter, I don't disagree with you. But there
is
one distinction between you and the King.”
“And that âdistinction' is precisely what,
Seijin
Merlin?” Staynair asked.
“His Majesty is constantly and openly surrounded by bodyguards,” Merlin replied. “It may be time for him to take risks, even bold ones, but reaching him with an assassination attempt would be extraordinarily difficult. I leave it to you to ⦠evaluate just how difficult it would be to reach you. Again.”
“As always, you make a valid point,” Staynair conceded. “It doesn't change my own reasoning, however. And I might also point out that outside the cathedral during services, I'm constantly protected by the Archbishop's Guard, myself.”
“Which doesn't address Merlin's point at all,” Cayleb said sternly. He sat back in his chair, glowering at his archbishop. “I'm strongly inclined to
order
you to change your procedures.”
“I earnestly hope you'll be able to resist that temptation, Your Majesty. It would grieve me deeply to disobey a royal command.”
“And you would, too,” Cayleb growled. “That's the only reason I'm still âinclined' to give you the order instead of just going ahead and doing it!”
“It's not my intention to make problems for you, Your Majesty. It
is
my intention to discharge my pastoral duties in the fashion in which I believe God expects me to discharge them. I recognize the risks involved. I simply refuse to allow them to tempt me into being less of God's priest than He demands.”
Cayleb's expression turned even more sour, and his nostrils flared. But then he shook his head.
“All right.
All right!
” He threw up his hands. “You know you're being an idiot.
I
know you're being an idiot. But if I can't stop you, I can't. The one thing I
am
going to do, however, is to take a few precautions of my own.”
“Such as, Your Majesty?” Staynair asked a trifle warily.
“First, I'm placing a permanent guard around the cathedral,” Cayleb said grimly. “I may not be able to stop people from smuggling daggers into mass with them, but I can damned well keep anyone from smuggling in a barrel or two of gunpowder when no one's looking!”
Staynair looked a bit unhappy, but he nodded in acquiescence.
“And, second, Maikelâand I warn you now, I'll entertain no arguments from you on this pointâI'm placing a couple of General Chermyn's scout-snipers inside the cathedral itself.”
The archbishop seemed to stiffen, but Cayleb stuck a finger under the older man's nose and shook it.
“I told you I'm not listening to any arguments,” he said sternly, “and I'm not. I'll keep them as much out of sight as I can, probably in one of the upper balconies. But they're
going
to be there, Maikel. They won't be
seijins
, of course, so don't expect them to duplicate Merlin's little feat without managing to kill any innocent bystanders, but at least they'll be there just in case.”
For a long, tense moment it looked as if Staynair were going to argue, anyway. Then his shoulders slumped slightly, and he sighed.
“Very well, Cayleb,” he said. “If you truly insist.”
“I do.”
Cayleb's voice, like his expression, was unyielding, and Merlin agreed with him. Of course, it was unlikely, to say the least, that two or three marksmenâor even a dozen of themâcould have prevented this morning's assassination attempt from succeeding. Only Merlin's enhanced reaction speed and the fact that he'd seeded the cathedral with remote sensors had let
him
realize what was happening in time to do anything about it. Marksmen limited to their natural senses and reflexes were unlikely, to say the least, to duplicate his accomplishment.
On the other hand
, he told himself grimly,
there are a few additional precautions
I
can take. And His Eminence Archbishop Too-Stubborn-for-His-Own-Good isn't going to be able to do anything about them, either, because unlike Cayleb, I have absolutely no intention of discussing them with him in the first place!
He allowed no sign of his thoughts to show in his own expression, despite a certain sense of satisfaction at having found a way around Staynair's stubbornness. Owl was already redeploying and beefing up the sensor net inside and around Tellesberg Cathedral. King Cayleb's guardsmen might not be able to tell which of the archbishop's parishioners had decided to attend mass tastefully accoutered with the latest thing in hidden daggers, but Owl's sensors certainly could. And one Merlin Athrawes would have absolutely no hesitation about confronting anyone who'd absentmindedly brought one along.
That was the easy part, but he had no intention of stopping there.
Owl was already busy duplicating Staynair's vestments on a stitch-by-stitch, gem-by-gem basis. When he was done, it would be literally impossible for even Staynair to tell the difference between the AI's handiwork and the originals. Even any tiny, darned spots would be exactly duplicated. But unlike the originals, the copies would be made of the latest in antiballistic fabrics, seeded with nanotech which would literally transform any portion of their surface into plate armor in the face of
any
impact. And once his vestments had been replaced, it would be time to start on his regular cassocks, as well. Owl ought to have the entire project finished by the end of the current five-day.
And
then
, Your Eminence, the
next
son-of-a-bitch who tries to stick a knife into you is going to find himself confronted with a “miracle” Clyntahn and his friends will find difficult to explain away
, Merlin thought coldly.
Of course, I doubt that the son-of-a-bitch in question will live long enough to realize just how surprised he really is
.
Which suited Merlin Athrawes just fine.
JULY, YEAR OF GOD 892