Gold Throne in Shadow (16 page)

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Authors: M.C. Planck

BOOK: Gold Throne in Shadow
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“And most important, he is not immortal. He was an apprentice of the previous lord of the tower. In tried and true fashion, he murdered his rivals and then his master.” Fae had said that was an acceptable way to become a wizard. “It was the tael from the war ten years ago that made him a power and not merely a shadow hiding behind a reputation and a handful of magic looted from his predecessor.

“So you must trim your interactions with him to this pattern. He has true power, so do not be dismissive; but obsequiousness is not necessary or helpful. The promise of friendship may draw him to you against his will, but flattery will only make him suspicious. Though he will not be moved by charity, he can be impressed with hard bargaining.”

“I don't think I'm going to have any interactions with him.”

“Not unless you improve your social graces. I understand you paid a call on the Gold Curate? The rumors are amazing. Apparently you smashed down his door and walked away unscathed; yet the Gold Curate still lives. Do you know what that looks like?”

“Um. No?” Christopher had assumed that everyone else had seen the shame clinging to his shoulders.

“It looks like a superior chastising his recalcitrant servant.”

“What? Joadan threw me out!”

“Without murdering you? Even Faren would slay a Dark priest who broke into the Cathedral without a second thought. How utterly unlikely that a Gold would let you walk away from his house unharmed.”

“This is not going to look good for Joadan,” Christopher said.

“You think?” Lalania said, with wide eyes and an exaggerated tilt of her head. It was uncomfortably close to the way Joadan had looked at him.

“I mean, he was already talking about trouble at home. Some kind of schism. So if they think he's working with me, the Gold Throne is going to come down on him.”

“What do you know of schism?” she said rather more sharply than he would have expected.

“Joadan was apparently an enemy of Black Bart. He let me go because I was the one who killed him. Torme seems to think it means the Yellow Church is in some kind of conflict.”

“And indeed it is,” Lalania said. “Joadan, whom you have been sent to destroy, is the lighter side of that bronze coin. There is dark, and then there is Darkness. The Gold Throne is under a shadow. I came here and did what I did not for you but to see if the wizard cast that shadow and if Joadan was his tool. Now I find my suspicions a-jumble, and all because of you.”

“Why didn't you tell me this before?” Christopher asked.

The bard paused, and it occurred to Christopher that she did not, in fact, work for him. There was no particular reason she should share her secrets.

“An oversight,” she said, “and unworthy of our alliance. I won't let it happen again.”

“I don't understand what you mean. How can a whole Church be under a shadow?”

She paused again, considering her words, trying cover it up by adjusting her blouse. Which was an admittedly effective distraction.

“There are intrigues among the gods, just as among men. The Iron Throne, in particular, does not work by daylight. Instead it infiltrates other Churches, turning their priests one by one to the Black, until it inhabits the shell of the church like a rotting carcass under a carefully preserved skin.”

Christopher thought of Bart's priest and the black robes that had been hidden under his yellow cloak.

“That's not . . . good.”

“For once, you are a master of understatement. But I have had my fill of banality for now. I am going to take advantage of your wash-room, and quite possibly one or two of your young peacocks.”

“We saved you a room in the officers' quarters,” he hastened to tell her retreating back. She had just said that last part to tease him.

Probably.

In the morning he had other things to worry about. None of the men he had given leave had returned. Like with any dog that goes missing, he feared the worst, but resolved not to panic until he had at least checked the local pound.

He and Torme walked through the town until they found the jail, where he discovered his men lounging around, battered, bruised, and caged.

But not demoralized. They snapped to attention without a trace of shame when he stood outside their bars.

“What happened?” Christopher asked. He recognized a face in dismay. Charles, his quartermaster, still a short and skinny kid, was the one he'd thought of as a paragon of reason compared to the average teenager.

“What else? They got drunk and started a fight,” answered the jailor.

Christopher ignored him, frowning at Charles's black eye and split lip.

“It is true that we had plenty to drink, sir,” Charles said. “But we did not start any fights. We can't help that the local girls are interested in real men, not smelly simpletons.”

“You Darkling rat!” barked the jailor, and lunged at the bars, raising his club. The soldier didn't flinch.

“Please don't do that,” Christopher said to the jailor. The man immediately cowered, properly terrified of Christopher's rank. “Please don't do that, either,” Christopher sighed futilely. Fear he could evoke instantly. Understanding took time.

“If they really were just defending themselves, is it still a crime?” he asked the jailor.

“That's not my domain, Lord Curate. For that you must speak to the Captain.”

“Is it permissible for my assistant to see to their injuries?”

The jailor really wanted to say no, but in the face of Christopher's exalted rank, he wilted.

Christopher started to leave, but he didn't want to deal with the Captain without Torme at his side. Then he thought of something else he should do before that meeting.

“Where are the others?” he asked the jailor. “The ones my men fought?”

The jailor stared at him, carefully blank. “I would not know, Lord Curate. We were unable to identify any of them.”

While Christopher was busy fuming about the unequal treatment, Torme explained from inside the jail cell.

“The Curate only wishes to heal your fellow citizens, Squire. He has no desire to punish.”

The jailor did not look convinced. “All the same, Pater, we cannot give what we do not have.”

Torme came out of the cell while guards locked it behind him. “I doubt it is necessary, my lord. These men have only bumps and bruises.” Christopher could see he hadn't bothered to heal any of the men. Torme didn't consider mere pain worth worrying about. But then, neither did the men.

“So there were no weapons involved?” Christopher asked.

“No, sir,” Charles answered. “They apparently felt outnumbering us three to one was sufficient.”

If his men had really faced such odds and come out with so little damage, they were tougher than he had thought. On the other hand, bar fights were mostly about spirit, not skill. He could see how his men would have had a huge advantage over the ordinary peasant. He could also see how so much arrogance would be insufferable to the locals.

On the way to the Captain, he asked Torme about it. “Do you think they are innocent? Did they really not start the fight? They seem awfully cocky.”

“They did not need to start a fight,” Torme answered. “They were doomed from the moment they walked into the tavern. They hold their heads like lords, the girls react accordingly, and the men react to that.”

Christopher's concerns about what the rest of the Kingdom would think caught fire and burned.

“We've got to get them to stop that. We can't afford the attention right now.”

Torme shook his head. “You cannot. It is no longer in your power to take away the pride you have given them.”

No
, Christopher thought,
and I wouldn't if I could
.

“Then what do we do?”

Torme responded like the soldier he had been.

“More discipline.”

The Captain was not in his office. Rather than wander around the city at random looking for him, Christopher decided to go back to his barracks. Torme volunteered to wait. It seemed unfair, but Torme assured him that was what assistants were for.

He spent the day drilling with the troops, trying to keep them occupied. They built an obstacle course and had races through it, with the natural enthusiasm of young men sparked by Christopher's promise of a gold coin to the winner. He was defeated in his purpose, though, when a squad ganged up under their junior officer, each individual throwing away his chance on the course to hold back the faster runners, while their corporal surged ahead. The sign of cooperation was welcome; the corporal's promise to spend the gold on drinks for his squad as soon as they were allowed out on the town was not.

Torme returned at nightfall, and Christopher had to order him to eat something before issuing his report.

“The Captain invites you to join him at The Hanging Tree, a local tavern.” Efficient as always, he already had directions and led Christopher through the town, the darkness reduced to a comfortable dim by the plethora of magic streetlamps.

So Christopher would finally get to see the nightlife of a medieval town. In the village, it consisted of men sitting around drinking and discussing the weather, every bit as exciting as an English pub. Not something to write home about. On the other hand, he hoped it wouldn't be a seedy, smoky bar with topless dancers and the reek of sweat and alcohol.

His hopes were dashed.

The outside of the tavern was his first warning. The windows in the huge stone building were boarded shut, muffling the sounds of voices and music. The bouncers at the door were his second warning. Large, beefy, wearing executioner's hoods, black leather pants, vests, gloves, and armed with wooden clubs.

They asked for Christopher's sword. He had it half off before Torme stopped him.

“You are ranked. You do not disarm for anyone.”

Torme threw the bouncers a glare, and they stepped aside.

The door led to a large, open room, ringed by a balcony, with flickering light-stones hanging from the ceiling. There was a small orchestra on one side, but without electronic amplification it could barely be heard over the din of drunken laughing and shouts. Scantily clad women, or in some cases unclad, floated about, advertising their services.

More annoying from Christopher's perspective was the smoke. It wasn't tobacco, which didn't surprise him—he had not seen any New World crops here—but it was just as unpleasant. Not as thick, but twice as cloying, it made the air feel heavy. The source seemed to be a myriad of hand-carved pipes, which were being passed around at some of the tables.

The Captain was in the center of the room, at the edge of a large table, a mug in one hand and a woman in the other. The small crowd around him were cheering and jeering at a man with three oddly shaped blocks in his hand.

Christopher did not identify them as dice until the man threw them on the table. They weren't cubes, and they didn't seem to have any symbols he could recognize painted on them. They weren't even all the same shape.

A shout went up from the crowd, and the man hung his head in defeat. The croupier raked gold coins from his side of the table to the Captain's side.

“Ah, Curate. Welcome to our table, and many thanks for leaving the door on its hinges.” The Captain greeted him with alcohol-fueled camaraderie and a crude smirk. “Would you care to wager on a throw?”

“I'm afraid not,” Christopher said, striving for politeness. “I have no idea what the game is.”

“You've never played
Dragons, Knights, and Angels
?”

“No,” Christopher confessed, “I've never even heard of it.”

“Did they raise you in a monastery?” laughed the Captain. His crowd laughed with him.

“No, it's just personal.” He'd never understood the point of gambling. If you couldn't control or at least influence the outcome, why bother?

The Captain, like all bullies, moved on to an easier target.

“What about you, Pater? You have the look of a man who appreciates a good wager.” The Captain pushed the dice toward Torme, who was careful not to touch them.

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