Servant of the Empire (84 page)

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Authors: Raymond E. Feist,Janny Wurts

BOOK: Servant of the Empire
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Arakasi added, ‘As for the council, two attempts by Minwanabi to call a formal session have been openly rebuked by Ichindar. The Light of Heaven reiterates his command that the High Council is dissolved until he decides to recall it.’

Mara was silent a long time. ‘I know there is more to this than treason,’ she concluded at length. ‘Something else is at play. We have had attempts upon Warlord and Emperor before, but neither ever resulted in suspension of the High Council.’

‘Maybe this Emperor has more brains or more ambition than his predecessors,’ Kevin offered from his corner. ‘I’d stake my guess that he desires absolute rule.’

Mara shook her head. ‘To take over by these methods would court revolution. If Ichindar truly desired power, to turn the council to his bidding, he would make them his dogs. The imperial court can do many things, but it cannot govern the Empire. Our system is not like yours, Kevin, with both ruling lords and their servants all subject to a king.’ She made a frustrated gesture that showed such concepts were alien to her still.

‘The Great Freedom,’ Kevin recited. ‘The law that clearly
shows the relationship of each man to his master and his servant, so that no one can suffer unjust treatment.’

‘A polite fiction, I am certain,’ Mara interjected. ‘In any event, that’s not what I was speaking of; we do not have the system that allows for replacing a corrupt Lord with a noble one. If a Lord falls, his estate falls with him, and if enough of our number fall, the Empire itself must fail.’

Kevin shoved back sleep-tousled hair. ‘You’re saying the Empire doesn’t have the infrastructure to withstand so widespread a change. Tsurani nobles are too spoiled and self-indulgent to administer their own lands unless they’re also allowed to be absolute dictators. They won’t do it just because the Emperor tells them.’

Mara found Kevin’s comments rankling. ‘No. What I’m saying is that if the Light of Heaven thinks to turn a body of rulers into no more than clerks by whim, he’ll learn that ordering a thing is not the same as doing it, or seeing that others get it done.’

Kevin set his back against the wall and nonchalantly inspected his fingernails, which had dirt beneath the rims. ‘I can’t argue that with you.’

Uncertain why he should choose this moment to be difficult, Mara directed her attention to Arakasi. ‘I think we need to go to Kentosani.’

Suddenly still, a shape cut from shadow in his dark cloak, the Spy Master said, ‘Mistress, that may be dangerous.’

‘When hasn’t it been?’ Kevin questioned with a bite of sarcasm.

Mara waved a hand to silence him without even looking in his direction. ‘I must chance that the Emperor would have no argument with a meeting of Clan Hadama in the council chambers. And if some members of the Jade Eye Party are also in the city at the same time, and we choose to dine….’

But the social byplays of politics held no interest for Arakasi this day. ‘These are matters to discuss with your
hadonra and First Adviser, mistress,’ he interjected with the slightest trace of sharpness. ‘I must return to my agents and ensure that you are safe.’

Caught up in her own thoughts, Mara missed his abnormal abruptness. ‘Do so,’ she said in vague reference to words she had interpreted only by surface meaning. ‘But I will expect you at my quarters in the Holy City in one month’s time.’

‘Your will, mistress.’ Arakasi bowed with no trace of hesitation. As unobtrusively as he had entered, he slipped through the screen and vanished into the silvery afternoon drizzle. Still deep in thought, Mara allowed him time enough to leave unseen. Then she clapped for her runner and sent for her advisers.

The rain held almost everyone indoors, and within a few moments Nacoya, Keyoke, and Saric entered. Lujan arrived last, smelling of the oils used to preserve laminated armour. He had been in the barracks instructing young recruits, and his sandals added to the puddles left by Arakasi’s black cloak.

Without preamble, Mara said, ‘Nacoya, send messages to all the Ruling Lords of the Jade Eye Party, informing them that one month from this day we shall be in residence at our town house in the Holy City. The Acoma would be pleased to host each at a lunch or dinner … according to rank, of course.’ Almost without hesitation she added, ‘Send word to all members of Clan Hadama that a meeting will be held in the High Council hall in six weeks’ time.’

Nacoya paused in the act of straightening a drooping hairpin. ‘Mistress, many of the Hadama Clan were allied with Axantucar. They will have little inclination to return so soon to Kentosani, despite your request.’

Mara turned a hard glance toward her First Adviser. ‘Then make it clear: this is not a request. It is a demand.’

On the point of argument, Nacoya gauged the look in her
mistress’s eyes. She reconsidered, nodded once, and with poor grace said, ‘Your will, mistress.’

From his corner upon the sleeping mat in Mara’s study, Kevin regarded the evening’s exchanges with a growing sense of disquiet. Something in Mara had changed, he intuited, though he could not put his finger on precisely what. Certain only that a distance had grown up between them, despite his best efforts at patience, he regarded the cold, remote look on the face of his Lady and decided. Whatever the resolve behind her thoughts, this time he was unsure that he wanted any part of knowing it. The game was no game, not in any sense he could understand. And by now familiar enough with the politics of Tsuranuanni, he could sense when events led to danger. Changes, he had learned, did not occur in this land except through bloodshed, and the fall of yet another Warlord promised the direst of trouble.

The rain beat on the rooftree, and darkness fell, and though the air remained every bit as humid and close as before, Kevin found he had lost all inclination to sleep.

The storm passed, and while clouds on the horizon proclaimed the approach of showers later, the day blazed brilliantly. Mara stood in the hot sun, her bearing erect and her expression unreadable. Lined up before her on the expanse of the practice field stood her entire garrison, every fighting man wearing Acoma colours. The only absent warriors were those assigned to far holdings in distant cities and the current patrol on duty along the perimeter of the estate itself.

At her right stood Nacoya, looking tiny under the weight of a formal robe. Her diminutive height was emphasized by the wand tipped with a fan of shatra tail feathers, official token of her office as First Adviser. Behind her and to the left stood Keyoke, Saric, and Lujan, also wearing formal garb. The lacquered dress armour, the jewels, and the shell inlay
on the officers’ staves glittered blindingly in the morning light.

Squinting against the sunlight scintillating on polished armour, Kevin regarded the scene from inside the house, his vantage point a window seat in the large hall where Mara held court. Ayaki stood with his elbows propped on the cushion by the Midkemian’s knees. Behind the young master, with a pot of wax and a polishing cloth dangling forgotten from his hands, stood the elderly house slave, Mintai, who was assigned this chamber’s upkeep. The old man enjoyed the free moment that such ceremony brought, this being one of the rare times he could lapse into idleness without fear of reprimand.

Mara had started off giving awards and promotions, then had gone on to accept the oath of loyalty of an even dozen young warriors called to Acoma service. Once the new recruits completed their final bows and stepped back to take places in the ranks, she addressed her army as a whole.

‘Now have the Acoma grown in strength to match their honour. Kenji, Sujanra!’ As the officers who were named stepped forward, Mara accepted two tall, green-dyed plumes from Keyoke. ‘These men are elevated to the rank of Force Leader!’ she announced to her companies, and as the two men bowed before her, she affixed the badges of their new rank to their helms.

Kevin dug Ayaki in the ribs. ‘What’s a Force Leader? I thought I knew all your ranks.’

‘Tasaio of the Minwanabi has four of them,’ the boy said unhelpfully.

The Midkemian’s blue eyes fixed in turn upon the house slave, and, flattered to be consulted as an authority, Mintai flourished his polishing rag toward the expanse of Mara’s army. ‘It is an assignment made sometimes when a force is too large for one commander. These will now be subofficers to Force Commander Lujan, and each will command a
company.’ A puzzled look crossed his face. ‘This must mean she’s dividing the army.’

Kevin waited for Mintai to qualify, then belatedly realized when no explanation followed that the old man must be a bit simple. ‘What’s that mean?’ he prompted.

He received a Tsurani shrug. ‘Perhaps the mistress wishes to call more soldiers to her service.’

‘So we can beat Tasaio,’ Ayaki broke in. He made a noise in his throat that was his idea of the sound a man might make while dying, then grinned brightly.

Kevin poked the boy in the ribs again, and the sound effects dissolved into laughter. ‘How many men exactly are in a company?’ he demanded of Mintai.

The old slave repeated his shrug. ‘Many. It is all to a Lord’s liking. There is no fixed rule of quantity.’

But Kevin’s curiosity was only whetted by vagueness. ‘Then how many men answer to the Patrol Leader?’

‘A patrol, obviously, barbarian.’ Mintai showed signs of wanting to return to his polishing. The outworlder might be his Lady’s lover, but he was due no respect for asking silly questions.

Predictably, the barbarian missed the cues that his interest had become a bother. ‘Let me ask in a different way. How many men usually in a patrol?’

Mintai pursed his lips and refused answer, but now Ayaki was eager to show off. ‘Usually a dozen, sometimes twenty, never less than eight.’

That a nine-year-old could keep such a nonsensical system straight was just another anomaly on this crazy world. Kevin scratched his head and tried to make order out of chaos. ‘About ten, say. Now, how many Patrol Leaders does a Strike Leader command?’

‘Sometimes five, other times as many as ten to each company,’ Ayaki declared.

‘You don’t need to shout like you’re on a battle field,’
Kevin reprimanded, and tried, despite several retaliatory pokes in his own ribs, to figure in his head. ‘So each Strike Leader can command as few as forty men and as many as two hundred.’ He blinked as he looked back into the hot sun, where the newly promoted officers arose and resumed their places. ‘Then how many Strike Leaders do you need before you split your forces like this?’

Ayaki was laughing too hard to answer; Mintai tired of the window and scooped a dollop of wax onto his polishing cloth. As if the floorboards might vanish from under his feet for lack of attention, he knelt and began vigorously to rub. ‘I don’t know. How many men does our Lady command now? I think from the extra help in the kitchen this last two years it must be close to two thousand – we have twenty or twenty-two Strike Leaders, or so I heard Kenji boasting. Now let me do my work, before my back gets whipped.’

The threat was pretence; Mintai was a household fixture, and too well liked by the overseer to receive much more than a scolding. Kevin fended off Ayaki’s boisterous play and calculated. Most of the garrison rotated, spending part of the month in barracks near the house, so they could be with wives and children. The rest were housed in small huts near various points along the perimeter of the estate, or were out protecting caravans or river barges bearing Acoma goods to distant markets. It would be hard to judge, precisely, but the slave’s estimate could be accurate. Mara might well command as many as two thousand warriors. Kevin whistled low in appreciation. From gossip he knew how small a garrison she had inherited when she first assumed her ruler’s mantle, something like thirty-five men. Now her forces were growing to rival those of the very strongest of families in the Empire.

A pity, he thought, that the location of her estate was so poorly suited for defence.

But the disquieting thought followed naturally, that
perhaps the Lady did not amass her military might for protection only.

A cloud crossed the sun, harbinger of the first afternoon shower. The ceremony on the practice field was ending, square after square of green-armoured warriors facing about and marching at Lujan’s command. Mara and her advisers made their way toward the estate house. Suddenly anxious to meet her, Kevin suggested that Ayaki go to the kitchen and bother the cooks, who were making fresh thyza bread, by the smell riding the breeze. The perpetually hungry boy needed little persuasion, and by taking shortcuts through the courtyards, Kevin managed to be waiting for the Lady as she entered her private quarters. He preempted one of the maids and helped her out of her heavy robe. She allowed him, still and silent, and less responsive than usual to his touch.

Keeping his tone light, Kevin said, ‘Do we marshal for war, my Lady?’

Mara smiled without humour. ‘Perhaps. If my clansmen show sense, we do not, but if they prove recalcitrant, I need this show of force. It will not take long for word to travel the river that the Acoma garrison has grown to the point of needing two Force Leaders.’ She shed a heavy collection of jade bangles and dropped them into an open coffer. Her set of matching hairpins followed with a chiming cascade of sound as each was tossed in with the rest. ‘No one need know our companies are fewer than before.’

The empty robe was surrendered to the maids to freshen and hang; Kevin regarded his Lady’s naked back and sighed as she covered herself with a light, indoor lounging robe. ‘The game continues?’

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