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Authors: Harry Turtledove

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BOOK: The Tale of Krispos
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“Holy sir, there is some truth in what you say,” he admitted. He leaned forward, as if he were in the marketplace of Imbros—back in the days when Imbros’ marketplace held life—haggling over the price of a shoat. “How can I hope to trust you, though, after you’ve betrayed me not once but twice?”

“Always an interesting question.” Gnatios sighed, spreading his hands in front of him. “Your Majesty, I have no good answer for it. I will say that I would be a better patriarch than the one you have now.”

“For as long as you take to decide someone else would make a better Emperor than the one you have now.”

Gnatios bowed his head. “An argument I cannot counter.”

“Here is what I will do, holy sir: from now on, you may come and go as you will, subject to the wishes of your abbot. I daresay you’ll need something in writing.” Krispos called for pen and parchment, wrote rapidly, signed and sealed the document, and handed it to Gnatios. “I hope you’ll overlook faults of style and grammar.”

“Your Majesty, for this document I would overlook a great deal,” Gnatios said. In one sentence, that summed up the difference between him and Pyrrhos. Pyrrhos never overlooked anything for any reason.

“If you find anything more in your histories, be sure to let me know at once,” Krispos said.

Gnatios understood the audience was over. He prostrated himself, rose, and started for the door. Barsymes met him there. The vestiarios asked, “Shall the Halogai accompany the holy sir back to his monastery?”

“No, let him go back by himself,” Krispos said. He succeeded in surprising his chamberlain, no easy feat. With a bow of acquiescence and an expression that spoke volumes, Barsymes led Gnatios toward the door of the imperial residence.

Krispos listened to the two sets of footsteps fading down the hall. He turned to Iakovitzes. “Well, what now?”

“Do you mean, what now as in giving Gnatios the High Temple back, or what now as in Harvas?” Iakovitzes wrote.

“I don’t know,” Krispos said, “and by the good god, I never expected the two questions to be wrapped up with each other.” He sighed. “Let’s talk about the patriarch first. Pyrrhos must go.” In the two weeks since Krispos went up into the imperial niche at the High Temple, two more fights had broken out there—both of them, fortunately, small.

Iakovitzes scribbled. “Aye, my dear cousin’s not the most yielding sort, is he? If you do want Gnatios back, maybe you can keep him in line by threatening to feed him to the Halogai the first time the word
treason
so much as tiptoes across the back of his twisty little mind.”

“Something to that.” Krispos remembered how Gnatios had cringed from a guardsman’s axe the night he seized the Empire. He looked down at the tablet in his lap, then admiringly over to Iakovitzes. “Do you know, I hear your voice whenever I read what you write. Your words on wax or parchment capture the very tone of your speech. Whenever I try to set thoughts down, they always seem so stiff and formal. How do you do it?”

“Genius,” Iakovitzes wrote. Krispos made as if to break the tablet over his head. The noble reclaimed it, then wrote a good deal more. He handed it to Krispos. “If you must have a long answer, for one thing, I came to writing earlier in life than you and have used it a good deal longer. For another, this
is
my voice now. Shall I be silent merely because I can no longer utter the more or less articulate croaks that most men use for speech?”

“I see the answer is no,” Krispos said, thinking that Iakovitzes was about as unyielding as his cousin Pyrrhos. Refusing to yield to adversity struck him as more admirable than refusing to yield to common sense. The thought of Iakovitzes’ adversity led to the one who had caused it. “Now, what of Harvas?”

Bright fear widened Iakovitzes’ eyes, then left them as he visibly took a grip on himself. He bent over the tablet, used the blunt end of his stylus to smooth down the wax and give himself room to write. At last he passed Krispos his words. “Fight him as best we can. What else is there? Now that we have some notion of what he is, perhaps the wizards will better be able to arm themselves against him.”

Krispos thumped himself on the forehead with the heel of his hand. “By the lord with the great and good mind, I haven’t any mind at all. Gnatios has to tell his tale to Trokoundos before the day is through.” He shouted for Barsymes again. The vestiarios transcribed his note and took it to a courier for delivery to Trokoundos.

That accomplished, Krispos leaned back on the couch. He had the battered feeling of a man to whom too much had happened too fast. If Harvas or Rhavas or whatever his proper name was had been perfecting his dark sorcery over half a dozen men’s lives, no wonder he’d overcome a mere mortal like Trokoundos.

“To the ice with Harvas or Rhavas or whatever his proper name is,” he muttered.

“What about Pyrrhos?” Iakovitzes wrote.

“You like to poke people with pointy sticks, just to see them jump,” Krispos said. Iakovitzes’ look of shocked indignation might have convinced someone who hadn’t met him more than half a minute before. Krispos went on, “I don’t wish the ice for Pyrrhos. I just wish he’d go back to his monastery and keep quiet. I’m not even likely to get that, worse luck. He won’t bend, the stiff-necked old—”

Krispos stopped. His mouth hung open. His eyes went wide. “What are you gawping at?” Iakovitzes wrote. “It had better be Phos’ holy light, to account for that idiotic expression you’re wearing.”

“It’s the next best thing,” Krispos assured him. He raised his voice: “Barsymes! Are you still there? Ah, good. I want you to draft me a note to the most holy patriarch Pyrrhos. Here’s what you need to say—”

         

B
ARSYMES STUCK HIS HEAD INTO THE AUDIENCE CHAMBER. “THE
most holy patriarch Pyrrhos is here to see you, Your Majesty.”

“Good. He should be done to a turn by now.” Krispos had put off four days of increasingly urgent requests from the patriarch for an audience. He turned to Iakovitzes, Mammianos, and Rhisoulphos. “Excellent and eminent sirs, I ask you to bear careful witness to what takes place here today, so that you may take oath on it at need.”

The three nobles nodded, formally and solemnly. Mammianos said, “This had better work.”

“The beauty of it is, I’m no worse off if it doesn’t,” Krispos answered. “Now to business. I hear Pyrrhos coming.”

The patriarch prostrated himself with his usual punctiliousness. He glanced at the three high-ranking men who sat to Krispos’ left, but only for a moment. His eyes sparked as he swung them back to Krispos. “Your Majesty, I must vehemently protest this recent decision of yours.” He drew out the note Krispos had sent him.

“Oh? Why is that, most holy sir?”

Pyrrhos’ jaw set. He knew when he was being toyed with. With luck, he did not know why. He ground out, “Because, Your Majesty, you have restored to the monk Gnatios—the treacherous, wicked monk Gnatios—as much liberty as is enjoyed by the other brethren of the monastery dedicated to the sacred memory of the holy Skirios. Moreover, you have done so without consulting me.” Plainer than words, his face said what he would have answered had Krispos consulted him.

“The monk Gnatios did a great service for me and for the Empire,” Krispos said. “Because of that, I’ve decided to overlook his past failings.”


I
haven’t,” Pyrrhos said. “This interference in the internal affairs of the temples is unwarranted and intolerable.”

“In this special case, I judged not. And let me remind you that the Avtokrator is Avtokrator over all the Empire, cities and farms and temples alike. Most holy sir, I have the right if I choose to use it, and I choose to use it here.”

“Intolerable,” Pyrrhos repeated. He drew himself up. “Your Majesty, if you persist in you pernicious course, I have no choice but to submit to you my resignation in protest thereof.”

Off to Krispos’ left, someone sighed softly. He thought it was Rhisoulphos. It was all the applause he would ever get, but it was more than enough. “I’m sorry to hear that from you, most holy sir,” he said to Pyrrhos. Just by a hair’s breath, the patriarch began to relax. But Krispos was not finished. “I accept your resignation. These gentlemen will attest you offered it of your own free will, with no coercion whatsoever.”

Iakovitzes, Mammianos, and Rhisoulphos nodded, formally and solemnly.

“You—planned this,” Pyrrhos said in a ghastly voice. He saw everything, too late.

“I did not urge you to resign,” Krispos pointed out. “You did it yourself. Now that you have done it, Barsymes will prepare a document for you to sign.”

“And if I refuse to set my signature upon it?”

“Then you have resigned even so. As I said, holy sir”—Pyrrhos scowled at the abrupt devaluation of his title—“you resigned of your own accord, in front of witnesses. That may be smoothest all around. I would have removed you if you insisted on staying on—you promised to practice theological economy and tolerate what you could, but none of your sermons has shown even one drop of tolerance.”

Pyrrhos said, “I see everything now. You will replace me with that panderer to evil, Gnatios. Without your knowing it, the dark god has taken hold of your heart.”

Krispos leaned forward and spat on the floor. “That to the dark god! Look at your cousin here, holy sir. Remember what Harvas Black-Robe did to him. Would he fall into any trap Skotos might lay?”

“Were it baited with a pretty boy, he might,” Pyrrhos said.

Iakovitzes used a two-fingered gesture common on the streets of Videssos the city. Pyrrhos gasped. Krispos wondered when that gesture had last been aimed at a patriarch—no, an ex-patriarch, he amended. Iakovitzes wrote furiously and passed his tablet to Rhisoulphos. Rhisoulphos read it: “‘Cousin, the only bait you need is the hope of tormenting everyone who disagrees with you. Are you sure you have not swallowed it?’”

“I know I believe the truth; thus anyone who holds otherwise embraces falsehood,” Pyrrhos said, “I see now that that includes those here. Majesty, you may ban me from preaching in the High Temple, but I shall take my message to the streets of the city—”

Now Krispos knew Pyrrhos was no intriguer. A man wiser in the ways of stirring up strife would never have warned what he planned to do. Krispos said, “If what you believe is the truth, holy sir, and if I have fallen into evil, how do you explain the vision that bade you help me like a son?”

Pyrrhos opened his mouth, then closed it again. Rhisoulphos leaned over to whisper to Krispos, “If nothing else, Your Majesty, you’ve confused him.”

Grateful even for so much, Krispos nodded. He told Pyrrhos, “Holy sir, I’m going to give you an honor guard of Halogai to escort you to the monastery of the holy Skirios. If you do decide to yell something foolish to the people in the street, they’ll do what they have to, to keep you quiet.” Pyrrhos could not terrify the heathen northerners with threats of Skotos’ ice.

He could not be intimidated, either. “Let them do as they will.”

“The monastery of the holy Skirios, eh?” Mammianos said. One eyelid rose, then fell. “I’m sure the holy sir and Gnatios will have a good deal to say to each other.”

Having planted his barb, the fat general leaned back to enjoy it. Pyrrhos did not disappoint him. The cleric’s glare was as cold and withering as the fiercest of ice storms. Mammianos affected not to notice it. He went on, “Of course, Gnatios will have the blue boots back soon enough.”

“The good god shall judge between us in the world to come,” Pyrrhos said. “I rest content with that.” He turned to Krispos. “Phos shall judge you, as well, Your Majesty.”

“I know,” Krispos answered. “Unlike you, holy sir, I’m far from sure of my answers. I do the best I can, even so.”

Pyrrhos surprised him by bowing. “So the good god would expect of you. May your judgment be better in other instances than it is with me. Now summon your northerners, if you feel you must. Wherever you send me, I shall continue to praise Phos’ holy name.” He sketched the sun-circle over his heart.

In an abstract way, Krispos respected Pyrrhos’ sincere piety. He did not let that respect blind him. When Pyrrhos departed from the imperial residence, he did so under guard. Iakovitzes nodded approval. “Just because someone sounds humble is no sure reason to trust him,” he wrote.

“From what I’ve seen at the throne, there’s no sure reason to trust anyone.”

To his secret dismay, both Rhisoulphos and Mammianos nodded at that. Iakovitzes wrote, “You’re learning.” Krispos supposed he was, but did not care for the lessons his office taught him.

F
OR THE FIRST TIME SINCE HARVAS’ MAGIC TURNED BACK THE
imperial army on the borders of Kubrat, Trokoundos seemed something more than gloomy. “I hope you intend to reward Gnatios for what he ferreted out,” he told Krispos. “Without it, we’d still be stumbling around like so many blind men.”

“I have a reward in mind, yes,” Krispos said; at that moment, a synod of prelates and abbots was contemplating Gnatios’ name for the patriarchate once more, along with those of two other men whom the assembled clerics knew they had better ignore. “Now that you know more of Harvas, will he be easier to defeat?”

BOOK: The Tale of Krispos
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