Authors: Michael A Stackpole
soldier of himself the Naleni had created. While his spymaster had told him he was not
being played, and that it was good for Prince Cyron to underestimate him, being seen as a
child’s amusement rankled.
It was not this alone that consumed him or made his thoughts as dark as his capital city.
Upon his return he had called his chief ministers to him and demanded a full and forthright
accounting of the harvest. They were hesitant—so much so he had to explain that while
the sons and daughters of Deseirion would continue to enter the bureaucracy,
their
sons and daughters might not be among them. He did not elaborate, letting each man’s fears
spur him on to action.
The full report had been even more dire than Prince Cyron had suggested. While Pyrust
was forced to assume that the harvest had been underreported, even a generous estimate
of supplies would have his people eating rice they needed to be sprouting and planting
next spring. There was no way all of his people would survive without Naleni rice.
The ministers had even estimated a die-off of five to ten percent of the population. They
did allow as how it would mostly be the old and the very young, but they cast that in the
form of a tragedy. Even Cyron had seen it that way when he noted that Pyrust would not
starve, but his people would.
The Desei Prince chuckled, for neither his neighbor to his south nor even the Desei
bureaucrats understood the true joy of power and how it could be employed. If he deemed
it necessary, he could keep the children alive, and even the ancient ones. He would
simply order that food be given to them preferentially, and that if a child or elder died of
malnutrition, their families would be slain, their goods divided and their ancestors’ bones
scattered. He need not even carry out such a threat, but just spread the story of one or
two places where it happened, and gossips would carry it far and wide. Overnight the
reports would universally be attributed to a village or town a valley or two away, and
everyone would toe the line lest their village be hit next.
The thing of it was, however, Pyrust saw no difficulty in carrying out his order. He could
simply select a perfectly innocent family or two, accuse them of having a child die of
malnutrition, and destroy them. Aside from being a superior means of eliminating local
political troublemakers, a single true act was better than a hundred manufactured stories.
Still, the loss of five or even ten percent of his population, provided it was from the
unproductive margins of society, seemed more of a blessing than a tragedy. His people
were a herd that had overgrazed their range. A die-off was inevitable, and it would be the
weak who died. Those who survived would be stronger, and would not be bothered with
needing to care for the weak. The whole ordeal would make his nation stronger.
While he was fully prepared to accept this purge of his people, he resisted it for one
simple reason—he loathed situations that were forced upon him, by man or the gods. If he
could find a way to defy either, it pleased him. Immediately upon his return to Felarati, he
had put into place several plans that did begin to make a difference, both for the short
term and longer.
Delasonsa’s suggestion about making one military unit into two, and using the other to
train villagers into militia units had begun in earnest. Pyrust had ordered villages to
provide warriors for service in a local militia. He would feed those who joined, as well as
provide extra
quor
of rice for the villages from whence they came. Those shipments
would, of course, be delayed so the villages, which now had fewer mouths to feed, would
eat off supplies that should have been made available to the Crown. The soldiers would
be fed from the Naleni grain. Not only was there irony to that, but the golden rice from the
south provided more nutrition than that grown locally.
He would allow the militias a month’s training, then put them to work in the second part of
his plan. In response to hard times and tight markets, a system of smuggling and tax
avoidance always sprang up. He would move the militia into the bigger cities and use
them to hunt down and destroy the criminal element. They would liberate great stores of
hoarded grain, some of which they would be allowed to convey back home, giving the
militias combat experience as well as the joy of entering their villages as heroes. They
would be lauded as having performed a service for the Crown, which would make them
see themselves as part of the state. Once they began to identify with him and the nation,
they would be his to use.
Reports from the training fields suggested that perhaps as many as one in five of the
recruits might be talented enough to be trained as a warrior. This hardly surprised him,
both because levies were regularly called up and those who survived battle with little or no
training must have had some minor talent to begin with. As well, the tools used in cutting
and threshing were, in essence, swords and flails. A farmer’s normal activities honed skills
that were translatable into something Pyrust would find more useful. If the recruits
accepted the call to further training, he paid a bonus to their families, the village and the
village’s headman, which helped all of them to convince young men and women to accept
the honor of further training.
Most recently, his ministers reported Naleni displeasure with his troops’ continuing attacks
within Helosunde. The protests had come through the lowest diplomatic levels because
the Mountain Hawks’ attacks had all been in response to Helosundian raids. Because
those raids had been easy enough to provoke, and his response to them had been fierce,
neither Cyron nor his people were fooled. Still, he felt fairly certain that as much as he was
being admonished to stop all operations, so were the Helosundians, and that served his
purposes as well.
Pyrust closed his half hand over his goatee and tugged on it unconsciously. There had
been threats that rice shipments would be delayed or stopped, as Delasonsa had
predicted, but Pyrust knew he could not withdraw all pressure from Helosunde. Cyron
himself had said that he would willingly toss food to a wolf to keep him away from the
door.
If I do not show him fang, he will forget I am a wolf.
The Desei Prince crossed the creaking cedar floor, slid open the door to his tower’s
southern balcony, and passed out into the dusk. Already, Fryl—the large, white owl-
moon—had begun to rise from the sea. Its light revealed jagged silhouettes of the city’s
rooftops.
Fog had risen to nibble at the wharves in Swellside. A thick tentacle stole its way up the
sluggish Black River, while other small feelers filled streets and alleys. Yellow lights
burned in windows and atop streetlamps, but the mist soon muted them. Only
the
gyanri
lights on the largest trio of bridges over the river held the fog at bay. They glowed like sapphires, and the pattern in which they had been arranged revealed to him
the constellation Shiri—the hawk.
Pyrust’s hands emerged from beneath his cloak as he leaned on the stone balustrade.
Black stone had been used to shape the tower, for it hid the dirt and grime of the city.
Likewise it contrasted sharply with the white towers of Moriande, mocking them. Felarati
defied and challenged Moriande, as it had for ages, though seldom had the south felt any
real threat.
Deseirion had always been a frontier province in the Empire. Its only worth, initially, had
been as a place to stage troops to slow down barbarians. The early Emperors had created
a string of fortresses to garrison troops, and slowly towns had grown up around them.
Felarati had been the largest of these and the most vital, since supplies passed through it,
up the Black River and its tributaries to the other fortresses.
A plague among the Turasynd killed enough of them to minimize their power for several
centuries before the Time of Black Ice. Imperial interest in Deseirion waned as peace and
prosperity waxed. Imperial support withered, but instead of retreat, the bold souls who had
come to make Deseirion their home decided to stay. Prospectors found deposits of iron,
copper, tin, and coal. The mineral wealth gave rise to foundries, with iron, bronze, and
steel flowing south in return for gold and rice. Existence in Deseirion was not soft as it was
in the south, but the Desei reveled in it.
The Emperors and other nobles also used Deseirion as a dumping place for obstreperous
offspring and rebel generals. The Desei took these outcasts to their hearts, training them
and molding them to survive in the unforgiving north. The people of the frontier knew they
needed to be more united than the decadent provinces to the south. If they were not the
strongest and purest of the Imperial people, the barbarians would come through and
destroy the Empire.
When the Empress left to fight the Turasynd, leading them into Ixyll, she drew her last
troops from the Desei. She gave control of the province to a small but clever man who
kept Desei from Helosundian conquest by constant reports of pitched battles in which his
people were the only thing that stopped hordes from pouring over the Black River. Though
these battles were as mythical as the Mountains of Ice, his Helosundian counterpart—a
cousin who was a grand warrior but stupid enough that he had trouble discerning day from
night—prepared his nation for invasion and never furthered his ambition.
And when the Cataclysm came, it wiped out ambition along with much of the population.
Since that time, Deseirion had changed dynasties every ninety to hundred and twenty
years. As always, the perception in the outlying areas was that city life had softened the
Prince into a southerner. Pyrust’s father knew that this fate would destroy his dynasty, so
he launched the attack on Helosunde. Not only did the successful invasion make pride
burn hotter and deeper in the hearts of his countrymen, but being constantly caught
between Turasynd and Helosundian threats meant they had little time to think about
weakness in Felarati.
Pyrust chuckled and looked at his maimed hand, corpse-white against the cold, black
stone. Those missing fingers had proven how hard he could be. While the hawk remained
the symbol of Deseirion, his personal flags had two feathers clipped from the hawk’s left
wing. Four of his best units claimed to have his finger bones in their headquarters, where
they were revered and worshiped much as the bones of great warriors were.
Felarati, the Dark City, spread out before him. Factories and forges belched black clouds
full of red sparks into the air. Their foul stink permeated everything, muting even the finest
of scents from the south. It poisoned the air, tainted the food, and soured the wine. It
tainted the snow that fell, and made the Black River even darker as it entered the sea.
Pyrust saw no virtue in this state of his city, but neither did he see a way to get away from
it. Out there in the factories,
gyanridin
worked on their inventions. Perhaps one of a
hundred
gyanrigot
devices would actually work, and one of a hundred of those might be
useful. He had reviewed plans for everything from riverboats that would row themselves to
giant tripod figures that could carry troops, batter down city walls, and resist every attack.
Neither of those plans had come to fruition yet, but they would.
If I can afford to continue financing them.
Deseirion had spirit the way Nalenyr had gold, but it did not spend as easily or go as far. He had plenty of people traveling to the west to
bring back
thaumston
to power the devices, but the west was not kind, and the supplies
returning to the capital were both scant and costly.
The Prince caught the scrape of boot on stone and knew it well. He also knew he’d not
have heard it, save that Delasonsa wished to announce her presence. He did not turn to
face her but shifted to lean on his elbows. “What do you have for me, Mother of
Shadows?”
The crone remained in her hooded cloak and back in the dim recesses of the doorway.
“Many things, my Prince. Our whispering campaign among the Helosundians is working.
They believe you will be forced to draw your troops back, and they are massing to punish
you. They wish to celebrate the New Year’s Festival in Meleswin. They will attack and
slaughter anyone we leave behind, then sack the city.”
“This is very good to know. This gives us two months to train more soldiers and organize
its reconquest. I will lead the counterattack. I want you to determine who will be leading
the Helosundians into Meleswin. On the eve of our attack, I will want the more popular of
the leaders murdered, with blame falling to one of the others. I want them at each other’s
throats. You’ll also make certain that the stores of
wyrlu
and rice beer are quite potent, so their troops will not be.”
“Of course, my lord.” She paused, drawing in a wheezing breath. “I could arrange a plague
as well, or a fungus in grain to drive them mad.”
“No, it must be their own folly and factional disarray that allows us to smash them. It will
weaken their alliances. And it needs to be a military victory, else Cyron will forget we are