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Authors: Harry Turtledove

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At last they settled on a hundred fifty pounds of gold: 10,800 goldpieces. “Excellent, Your Majesty,” Chihor-Vshnasp said when they reached agreement.

Krispos did not think it was excellent; he’d hoped to get away with something closer to a hundred twenty-five pounds. But Chihor-Vshnasp knew too well how badly he needed peace with Makuran. He said, “His puissant Majesty has an able servant in you.”

“You give me credit beyond my worth,” Chihor-Vshnasp said, but his voice had a purr in it, like a stroked cat’s.

“No indeed,” Krispos said. “I will order the gold sent out today.”

“And I shall inform his puissant Majesty that it has begun its journey to him.” Looking as pleased with himself as if the hundred fifty pounds of gold were going to him instead of his master, Chihor-Vshnasp made his elaborate farewells and departed.

“Barsymes!” Krispos called.

The vestiarios appeared in the doorway, prompt and punctual as usual. “How may I help you, Your Majesty?”

“What in Skotos’ cursed name does puissant mean?”

         

P
HOSTIS TODDLED OUT OF THE IMPERIAL RESIDENCE ON UNCERTAIN
legs. He blinked at the bright spring sunshine, then decided he liked it and smiled. One of the Halogai grinned and pointed. “The little Avtokrator, he has teeth!”

“Half a dozen of them,” Krispos agreed. “Another one’s on the way, too, so he’ll chew your greaves off if you let him get near you.”

The guardsmen drew back in mock fright, laughing all the while. Phostis charged toward the stairs. He’d only been able to walk without holding on to something for about a week, but he had the hang of it. Going down stairs was something else again. Phostis’ plan was to walk blithely off the first one he came to, just to see what would happen. Krispos caught him before he found out.

Far from feeling rescued, Phostis squirmed and kicked and squawked in Krispos’ arms. “Aren’t you the ungrateful one?” Krispos said as he carried the toddler to the bottom of the stairway. “Would you rather I’d let you smash your silly head?”

By all indications, Phostis would have preferred exactly that. When Krispos put him down at the base of the stairs, he refused to stay there. Instead, he started to climb back toward the top. He had to crawl to do it; the risers were too tall for him to raise his little legs from one to the next. Krispos followed close behind, in case ascent turned to sudden and unplanned descent. Phostis reached the top unscathed—then spun around and tried to jump down. Krispos caught him again.

In the entranceway to the residence, someone clapped. Krispos looked up and saw Dara. “Bravely done, Krispos,” she called, mischief in her voice. “You’ve saved the heir to the state.” The Halogai bowed as she came out into the sunshine. Now no robe, no matter how flowing, could conceal her swelling abdomen.

Krispos looked down at Phostis. “The heir to the state won’t live to inherit it unless somebody keeps an eye on him every minute of the day and night.” As soon as the words were out of his mouth, he wondered if Dara would take them the wrong way; he’d lived in Videssos the city too long to be unaware that plotting, even ahead of the races in the Amphitheater, was its favorite sport.

She only smiled and said, “Babies are like that.” She turned toward the sun and closed her eyes. “During the winter, you think it will never get warm and dry again. I’d like to be a lizard and just stand here and bask.” But after she’d basked for a minute or two, her smile faded. “I always used to wish winter would end as soon as it could. Now I half want it to last longer—the good weather means you’ll be going out on campaign, doesn’t it?”

“You know it does,” Krispos said. “Unless we get another rainstorm, the roads should be dry enough to travel by the end of the week.”

Dara nodded. “I know. Will you be angry if I tell you I’m worried?”

“No,” he answered after some thought. “I’m worried, too.” He looked north and east. He couldn’t see much, not with the cherry trees that surrounded the imperial residence in such riotous pink bloom, but he knew Harvas was there waiting for him. The knowledge was anything but reassuring.

“I wish you could stay here behind the safety of the city’s walls,” Dara said.

He remembered his awe on the day he first came to Videssos the city and saw its massive double ring of fortifications. Surely even Harvas could find no way to overthrow them. Then he remembered other things as well: Develtos, Imbros, and Trokoundos’ warning that he should meet Harvas as far from the city as he could. Trokoundos had a way of knowing what he was talking about.

“I don’t think there’s safety anywhere, not while Harvas is on the loose,” he said slowly. After a moment, Dara nodded again. He saw how much it cost her.

Phostis wiggled in his arms. He set the boy down. A Haloga took out his dagger, undid the sheath from his belt, and tossed it near Phostis. Gold inlays ornamented the sheath. Their glitter drew Phostis, who picked it up and started chewing on it.

“It’s brass and leather,” Krispos told him. “You won’t like it.” A moment later Phostis made a ghastly face and took the sheath out of his mouth. A moment after that, he started gnawing on it again.

From behind Dara, Barsymes said, “Here are some proper toys.” He rolled a little wooden wagon to Phostis. Inside it were two cleverly carved horses. Phostis picked them up, then threw them aside. He raised the wagon to his mouth and began to chew on a wheel.

“Stick him by a river, he’ll cut down trees like a beaver,” a Haloga said. Everyone laughed except Barsymes, who let out an indignant sniff.

Krispos watched Phostis playing in the sunshine. He suddenly bent down to run a hand through the little boy’s thick black hair. He saw Dara’s eyes widen with surprise; he seldom showed Phostis physical affection. But he knew beyond any possible doubt that, even if Phostis happened to be Anthimos’ son rather than his own, he would far, far sooner, see him ruling the Empire of Videssos than Harvas Black-Robe.

Chapter
IX

T
HE IMPERIAL ARMY WAS LIKE A CITY ON THE MARCH. AS FAR
as Krispos could see in any direction were horses and helmets and spearpoints and wagons. They overflowed the road and moved northward on either side. Yet even in the midst of so many armed men, Krispos did not feel altogether secure. He had gone north with an army before and come back defeated.

“What are our chances, Trokoundos?” he asked, anxious to be reassured.

The wizard’s lips twitched; Krispos had asked the same question less than an hour before. As he had before, Trokoundos answered: “Were no magic to be used by either side, Majesty. I could hope to ascertain that for you. As it is, spells yet to be cast befog any magic I might use. I assure you, though, Harvas enters this campaign as blind as we do.”

Krispos wondered how true that was. Harvas might have no sorcerous foretelling, but he’d lived as long as five or six ordinary men. On how much of that vast experience could he draw, to scent what his foes would do next?

“Will we have enough mages to hold him in check?”

“There, Your Majesty, I can be less certain,” Trokoundos said. “By the lord with the great and good mind, though, we now have a better notion of how to try to cope with him, thanks to the researches of Gnatios.”

“Thanks to Gnatios,” Krispos repeated, not altogether happily. Now instead of a patriarch who backed him absolutely but thought nothing of setting the whole Empire ablaze for the sake of perfect orthodoxy, he had once more a patriarch who was theologically moderate but not to be trusted out of sight—or in it, for that matter. He hoped the trade would prove worthwhile.

Trokoundos continued, “When I faced Harvas last year, I took him for a barbarian wizard, puissant but—why are you laughing, Your Majesty?”

“Never mind,” Krispos said, laughing still. “Go on, please.”

“Ahem. Well, as I say, I reckoned Harvas Black-Robe to be powerful but unschooled. Now I know this is not the case—just the reverse obtains, in fact. Having now, thanks to Gnatios, a better notion of the sort of magic he employs, and having also with me more—and more potent—colleagues, I do possess some hope that we shall be able to defend against his onslaughts.”

All the finest mages of the Sorcerers’ Collegium rode with the army. If Trokoundos could but hope to withstand Harvas by their combined efforts, that in itself spoke volumes about the evil wizard’s strength. They were not volumes Krispos cared to read. He said, “Can we sorcerously strike back at the northerners who follow Harvas?”

“Your Majesty, we will try,” Trokoundos said. “The good god willing, we will distract Harvas from the magics he might otherwise hurl at us. Past that, I have no great hope. Because battle so inflames men’s passions, magic more readily slips aside from them then and is more easily countered. That is why battle magic succeeds so seldom…save Harvas’.” Krispos wished the wizard had not tacked on that codicil.

Rhisoulphos rode by at a fast trot. “Why aren’t you with your regiment?” Krispos called.

His father-in-law reined in and looked around, as if wondering who presumed to address him with such familiarity. His face cleared when he saw Krispos. “Greetings, Your Majesty,” he said, saluting. “I just gave a courier a note to a friend in the city, and now I am indeed returning to my men. By your leave…” He waited for Krispos’ nod, then dug his heels into his horse’s flanks and urged the animal on again.

Krispos followed him with his eyes. Rhisoulphos did not look back. He rode as if in a competition of horsemanship, without a single wasted motion. “He’s so smooth,” Krispos said, as much to himself as to Trokoundos. “He rides smoothly, he talks smoothly, he has smooth good looks and smooth good sense.”

“But you don’t like him,” Trokoundos said. It was not a question.

“No, I don’t. I want to. I ought to. He’s Dara’s father, after all. But with so much smoothness on the top of him, who can be sure what’s underneath? Petronas guessed wrong and paid for it, too.”

“Set next to Harvas—”

“Every other worry is a small one. I know. But I have to keep an eye on the small things, too, for fear they’ll grow while my back was turned. I wonder who he was writing to. You know, Trokoundos, what I really need is a spell that would give me eyes all around my head and let me stay awake day and night both. Then I’d sleep better—except I wouldn’t sleep, would I?” Krispos stopped. “I’ve confused myself.”

Trokoundos smiled. “Never mind, Your Majesty. No wizard can give you what you asked for, so there’s no point in fretting over it.”

“I suppose not. Fretting over Rhisoulphos, though, is something else again.” Krispos looked ahead once more, but the general had vanished—smoothly—among the swarms of riders heading north.

The army did not cover much more ground in a day than a walking man might have. When the troopers moved, they set a decent pace. But getting them moving each morning and getting them into camp every night ate away at the time they were able to spend on the road. That had also been true of the forces Krispos led against Petronas and against Harvas the summer before, but to a lesser degree. One of the things a huge army meant was huge inefficiency.

“That’s just the way it goes,” Mammianos said when Krispos complained. “We can’t move out in the morning till the slowest soldiers are ready to go. If we let quicker regiments just rush on ahead, after a few days we’d have men strung out over fifty miles. The whole point of a big army is to be able to use all the troops you’ve brought along.”

“Supplies—” Krispos said, as if it were a complete sentence.

Mammianos clapped him on the shoulder. “Majesty, unless we crawl north on our hands and knees, we’ll manage. The quartermasters know how fast—how slow, if you like—we travel. They’ve had practice keeping armies this size in bread, I promise you.”

Krispos let himself be reassured. The Videssian bureaucracy had kept the Empire running throughout Anthimos’ antic reign and through worse reigns than his in the past. Avtokrators came, ruled, and were gone; the gray, efficient stewards, secretaries, and logothetes went on forever. The army quartermasters belonged to the same breed.

He wondered what would happen if one day an Emperor died and no one succeeded him. He suspected the bureaucrats would go on ruling competently if unspectacularly…at least until some important paper needed signing. Then, for want of a signature, the whole state would come crashing down. He chuckled softly, pleased at his foolish conceit.

The next day the army rode past the field when Harvas’ raiders had beaten and killed Mavros. The mass graves Krispos’ men had dug afterward still scarred the earth. Now new grass, green and hopeful, was spreading over the squares of raw dirt. Krispos pointed to it. “Like the grass, may our victory spring from their defeat.”

“From your lips to the ear of Phos,” Trokoundos said, sketching the sun-sign with his right hand. He sent Krispos a sly look. “I hadn’t thought Your Majesty had so much of a poet in him.”

“Poet?” Krispos snorted. “I’m no poet, just a farmer—well, a man who used to be a farmer. The grass will grow tall over those graves, with the bodies of so many brave men manuring the fields.”

The mage nodded soberly. “That’s a less pleasing image, but I daresay a truer one.”

They camped three or four miles past the battlefield, far enough, Krispos hoped, to keep the troopers from brooding on it. As was his habit each evening, Krispos wrote a brief note to Iakovitzes detailing the day’s progress. When he was done, he called for a courier.

A rider came trotting up to the imperial tent hardly a minute later. He saluted Krispos and said, “All right, Your Majesty, let’s have yours, too, and I’ll be off for the city.”

He sat his horse with a let’s-get-on-with-it, don’t-waste-my-time attitude that made Krispos smile. That attitude and the blithe cheek of his words left Krispos certain he was a city man himself. “Mine, too, is it, eh? Well, sir, with whose letter is mine lucky enough to travel?”

“It’s all in the family, you might say, Your Majesty: yours and your father-in-law’s will go together, both in the same pouch.”

“Will they?” Krispos raised an eyebrow. He knew his use of the gesture did not have the flair that Chihor-Vshnasp, say, put into it, but it got the job done. “And to whom is the eminent Rhisoulphos writing?”

“Just let me look and I’ll tell you.” Like any man from Videssos the city, the courier took it for granted that he knew things lesser mortals didn’t. He opened his leather dispatch pouch and drew out a roll of parchment sealed with enough wax to keep a poor family in candles for a month. He had to turn it between his fingers to find out where the address was. “Here we go, Your Majesty. It’s to the most holy patriarch Gnatios, it is. Least-ways, I think he’s most holy patriarch this week, unless you made him into a monk again while I wasn’t looking, or maybe into a prawn salad.”

“A prawn salad? He’ll end up wishing he was a prawn salad when I get through with him.” Maybe Rhisoulphos was writing to Gnatios for enlightenment on an abstruse theological point or for some other innocuous reason. Krispos didn’t believe it, not for a minute. The two of them were both intriguers, and he the logical person against whom they would intrigue. He plucked at his beard as he thought, then turned to one of the Halogai who stood guard in front of his tent. “Vagn, fetch me Trokoundos, right away.”

“The mage, Majesty? Aye, I bring him.”

Trokoundos was picking at his teeth with a fingernail as he followed Vagn to the imperial tent. “What’s toward, Your Majesty?”

“This fellow”—Krispos pointed to the courier—“is carrying a letter from the excellent Rhisoulphos to the most holy patriarch Gnatios.”

“Is he indeed?” No one had to draw pictures for Trokoundos. “Are you curious about what’s in that letter?”

“You might say so, yes.” Krispos held out a hand. The courier was not a man to be caught napping. With a flourish, he gave Krispos Rhisoulphos’ letter. Krispos passed it to Trokoundos. “As you see, it’s sealed tighter than a winter grain pit. Can you get it open and then shut again without breaking the seals?”

“Hmm. An interesting question. Do you know, sometimes these small conjurations are harder than the more grandiose ones? I’m certain I can get the wax off and on again, but the first method that springs to mind would surely ruin the writing it shelters—not what you have in mind, unless I miss my guess. Let me think…”

He proceeded to do just that, quite intensely, for the next couple of minutes. Once he brightened, then shook his head and sank back into his study. At last he nodded.

“You can do it, then?” Krispos said.

“I believe so, Your Majesty. Not a major magic, but one that will draw upon the laws of similarity and contagion both, and nearly at the same time. I presume privacy would be a valuable adjunct to this undertaking?”

“What? Oh, yes; of course.” Krispos held the tent flap open with his own hands, then followed Trokoundos inside.

The wizard said, “You must have some parchment in here, yes?” Laughing, Krispos pointed to the portable desk where he’d just finished his note to Iakovitzes. Several other sheets still curled over one another. Trokoundos nodded. “Excellent.” He took one, rolling it into a cylinder of about the same diameter as the sealed letter from Rhisoulphos to Gnatios. Then he touched the two of them together and squinted at the place where their ends joined. “I’ll use the law of similarity in two aspects,” he explained. “First in that parchment is similar to parchment, and second in that these are two similar cylinders. Now just a dab of paste to let this one hold its shape—can’t use ribbon, don’t you know, for it wouldn’t be in precisely the right place.”

Krispos didn’t know, but he’d already seen that Trokoundos liked to lecture as he worked. The mage set his new parchment cylinder upright on the desk. “By the law of contagion, things once in contact continue to influence each other after that contact ends. Thus—” He held the letter upright in one hand and made slow passes over it with the other, chanting all the while.

Sudden as a blink, the sealing wax disappeared. Trokoundos pointed to the parchment cylinder he’d made. “You did it!” Krispos exclaimed—that new cylinder wore a wax coat now. Every daub and spatter that had been on the letter was there.

“So I did,” Trokoundos said with a touch of smugness. “I had to make certain my cylinder was no wider than the one Rhisoulphos made of his letter. That was most important, for otherwise the wax would have cracked as it tried to form itself around my piece of parchment.”

He went on explaining, but Krispos had stopped listening. He held out his hand for the letter. Trokoundos gave it to him. He slid off the ribbon, unrolled the document, and read: “‘Rhisoulphos to the most holy ecumenical patriarch Gnatios: Greetings. As I said in my last letter, I think it self-evident that Videssos would best be ruled by a man whose blood is of the best, not by a parvenu, no matter how energetic.’” He paused. “What’s a parvenu?”

“Somebody able who just came off a farm himself, instead of having a great-great-grandfather who did it for him,” Trokoundos said.

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