Five Hundred Years After (Phoenix Guards) (35 page)

BOOK: Five Hundred Years After (Phoenix Guards)
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“How, concern?”
“Exactly. And it is this concern which has led me to bespeak you and, what is more, to take you into my confidence, if you will allow me to do so.”
“Ah. You wish to take me into your confidence?”
“If I may, Captain.”
“Then let us take two steps out of the door, and if you will speak in a low voice, well, I do not believe that anything we say will be overheard.”
“It is good,” said Vernoi as he followed Khaavren’s advice, “that you are aware of the danger of being overheard—for much is overheard in the Palace,
and most of it is overheard only in part, which leads to rumors, many of which are wrong.”
“That is true,” said Khaavren. “We breathe rumors every day, forsooth, and catch whispers of the air.”
“Exactly. And, my dear Captain, some of these rumors are nothing short of terrifying to one in my position.”
“In your position?”
“Yes.”
“But, then, what is your position?”
“I should say, rather, in my wife’s condition.”
“Her—”
“She is with child, Captain.”
“How, she is with child? I give you joy, my lord, with all my heart!”
“Thank you, Captain.”
“But, these rumors—”
“Ah! Yes. I have heard rumors of possible disturbances in the city.”
“Oh, you have heard that?”
“Exactly. And, Captain, if anyone would know, it would be you, and I fear for my wife’s safety. I would not normally have such fears, Captain, for the Gods know there is nowhere a more deadly hand with a blade, or a woman more able to defend herself. Yet, she is not only with child, she is great with child, and may be taken to bed at any time. So, you perceive, if there is cause for fear, I wish to move her at once. Yet, I do not wish to disturb her with such a move if there is no reason. So, come, Captain, I trust you. Tell me what I ought to do.”
Khaavren looked into Vernoi’s honest face, and remembered the look of the empty encampment, and the orders he had given, and the broadsheets he had read, and even the faces he had seen as he traversed the streets.
Then he dropped his voice and said, “My lord, if you care for your wife and your unborn child, then lose not a moment, but send her out of the city at once.”
Vernoi looked at him solemnly, then bowed once and walked back into the Palace. He was running by the time he reached the door.
Which Treats of How Pel Treats Investigation,
How Mica Treats Srahi to Dinner,
How His Majesty Treats with His Advisers,
And How the Physicker Treats Wounds.
 
 
 
B
Y THE TIME KHAAVREN CAUGHT up with His Majesty, the Emperor had finished his supper, which Khaavren considered a stroke of luck; for the supper, and Her Majesty’s annoyance, would not have prevented Khaavren from causing himself to be announced at once, yet must have led to an unpleasantness that Khaavren would, to say the least, not have enjoyed—the more so because, after overhearing her conversation with Daro, he feared that he would have no small difficulty in restraining his tongue should the Consort direct any ironic words in his direction. We should add, however, that this reflection, involving as it did the concept of
supper
, did make Khaavren realize that he had not eaten that day, and he resolved to remedy this omission as soon as possible. His Majesty, escorted by the Consort and by Thack, was on his way to the baths when Khaavren found him.
The Emperor, upon hearing Khaavren’s gentle cough, turned, and cast his gaze over the Captain’s grim countenance, dust- and blood-covered clothing, pale complexion, and trembling posture. “Well, my dear Captain,” he said. “You seem to have met with some misfortune.”
The Consort, turning at the same time as the Emperor, also looked upon Khaavren’s worn visage and grim countenance, and she took a single step to the side, realizing, no doubt, that a matter of some urgency was about to be discussed, and that she should therefore stay out of the way; yet Noima was, for her own reasons, unwilling to allow whatever intelligence was to pass between Emperor and soldier to also pass out of range of her hearing.
Khaavren, we should add, paid no attention to the Consort except to bow to her before addressing His Majesty, which he did in these terms: “Yes, Sire, I have met with a most grievous misfortune.”
“And that is? If there is a question of misfortune, I wish to hear about it at once.”
“Sire, I have failed in the task you did me the honor to assign me.”
The Orb darkened, and with it, His Majesty’s countenance. “How, you failed, Captain?”
“It gives me pain to confess it, Sire.”
“And yet, you have never failed before to my mind.”
“Sire, everything that happens must, on some occasion, happen for the first time, and there is little that will never happen at all.”
“You are a philosopher, Captain?”
“Yes, Sire, or a soldier, if it please you; ’tis hard enough to choose between them.”
“How so? Please explain, for you perceive these observations interest me exceedingly.”
“The soldier thinks with his sword, the philosopher kills with his pen, yet each is ruthless enough.”
“Well, I understand what you are saying.”
“In fact, Sire, I am saying that, to-day, Your Majesty would have been better off with a philosopher who could ride and fence, rather than a soldier with a ready wit.”
“You say that because, there being an occasion for everything, on this occasion you have failed.”
“Yes, Sire.”
His Majesty sighed, as if attempting to calm himself, although the Orb remained a dark and brooding red. “Tell me how it happened.”
“Sire, my thought was to proceed alone to effect Adron’s arrest.”
“Alone? And why alone, Captain?”
“Because, Sire, he is surrounded by an army.”
“Well, of this I am aware. And so?”
“Sire, it seemed to me that, should he wish to do battle, all of my battalion together would be insufficient, and if he did not, well, I would not require anyone else.”
“Well, I understand. Then I take it that he did not choose to be arrested?”
“He did not, Sire. He posted soldiers at the entrance to his camp, and they prevented me from passing.”
“They prevented you?”
“Effectively, Sire.”
“How many?”
“They numbered three.”
“Well, I can hardly fault you for failing to defeat three of Lord Adron’s best soldiery. And yet, it seems that if you had brought a good company, matters might have fallen out differently.”
“That may be true, Sire. And yet, if I may be permitted to disagree with my
sovereign, His Highness was expecting me to appear with support, and had posted the three Dragonlords there only to give warning—Your Majesty may recall that the Breath of Fire Battalion, above all else, is skilled in moving and attacking quickly. Moreover—”
“Yes? Moreover?”
“Your Majesty did me the honor to say that I could not be expected to defeat three of His Highness’s soldiers.”
“Yes, and if I did?”
“Alas, Sire, if my only goal was the defeat of these soldiers, I should feel naught but triumph.”
“How is that?”
“Well, Sire, I still live, and they—”
“Yes, and they?”
“They do not.”
“How, you killed all three of them?”
“I had that honor, Sire. Yet, in the course of the discussion, which I assure Your Majesty grew tolerably warm, they wounded me so that for several moments I knew nothing, and were it not for a friend who came to my aid as I lay on the ground, I do not doubt that I should still be there, dead or alive, as chance would have it.”
“I see.” His Majesty sighed once more. “So, we have been checked, and Adron is a rebel.”
“Yes, Sire, Adron is a rebel. And it is true that we have been checked, although—”
“Yes?”
“I have only failed for the moment—the final throw has not yet been played.”
“Indeed, Captain? Please expand on this statement, for you perceive I find it of great interest.”
“Sire, Adron has left with his entire battalion, and, moreover, I was, as I have had the honor to explain, attacked as I attempted to carry out Your Majesty’s order. What I have not yet told Your Majesty is that I was given, in his name, a message to deliver to Your Majesty.”
“A message?”
“Yes, Sire.”
“And the message takes what form?”
“Sire, His Highness will submit to arrest, he says, when he is offered an apology from Your Majesty for the insult he pretends you have done his daughter by having her rooms searched and her property seized.”
The Orb darkened still further, and Khaavren noticed that the Consort, who had been listening intently to the conversation, took half a step backward
and quickly drew in her breath, while simultaneously covering her lips with her fingers, as if she had committed an indiscretion at dinner.
“That is what he said?” demanded the Emperor, with a certain tone of amazed disbelief.
“His very words, Sire, as they were relayed to me by the impudent soldiers who then proceeded to so effectually puncture my epidermis, though not without cost to themselves.”
“Yes? And yet?”
“Sire, as Your Majesty has done me the honor to say, this is nothing short of rebellion; hence, it would seem appropriate to engage the Warlord, and to call out Imperial Troops. That is why I say the game is not yet over.”
His Majesty pondered this for some few moments, while the Orb returned to a calmer hue. Then he said, “Give me your opinion, Captain: Does Adron think he can survive against the military might of the Empire?”
“Sire, His Highness is a military genius, and, moreover, a powerful sorcerer. I do not know what would be the final result of such a decision on Your Majesty’s part, yet I cannot but believe Your Majesty would be unwilling to permit him to escape Imperial justice. He may well know this; in fact, he probably does. Perhaps it is to him a matter of principle, or perhaps he is merely stubborn, or perhaps he expects rescue from some source of which we are not aware, or perhaps he merely has such confidence in himself and his troops that he believes he can defeat the Empire. I do not know. And yet—”
“Yes? And yet?”
“If it is a matter of confidence in his troops, well, I do myself the honor to believe that we have today somewhat shaken this confidence.”
“Yes, I believe you are right.” The Emperor considered for another moment, then said, “You are exactly right about one thing at least, my Captain. He will not be allowed to engage in such blatant rebellion while I still have the power to bring him to Imperial Justice.”
The Emperor waved to a servant, who attended him at once. “Find Jurabin and Rollondar, and have them meet me and Lord Khaavren in the Seven Room in an hour.”
The servant bowed and hurried off on his errand. The Emperor turned to his wife and said, “My dear, I’m afraid—”
“Your Majesty need say no more,” said the Consort. “I understand entirely, and I shall not look for you until you have appeared.”
The Emperor pressed her hand, after which she departed down the corridor. As she left, His Majesty looked at Khaavren, frowned, and said, “But, Captain, are you in any condition to sit through such a discussion as we must have? You are wounded, are you not?”
“Yes, Sire, though not grievously. If I may have leave to find something to
eat, I believe I will recover sufficient strength to survive two words of conversation on so vital a matter as we are facing, for, if we are to plan a campaign, there are things I must say that will not wait.”
“Let it be so,” said His Majesty.
Khaavren bowed, and hurried off as quickly as his condition permitted to find victuals with which to repair his long abstinence. He made his way to His Majesty’s kitchen, a prodigious affair taking up three floors in back of the Imperial Wing. Here, after searching for only a few minutes, he found a servant, and, after making a few discreet inquiries, Khaavren was shown where to find bread and cheese, of which he availed himself with a fine passion.
“The bread,” he remarked after swallowing the first bite, “is famous, warm as it is, though I admit that the color surprises me, and the cheese produces a sting upon the back of the tongue that I find quite pleasing.”
“I am glad the food pleases you, my lord,” said the pastry chef, who had done himself the honor of serving Khaavren personally, “for the bread is of my own fashioning, and uses, in proportions which are my particular secret, rednuts which have been ground to a powder mixed with the wheat flour; it is these that account for the color, as well as for the texture. As to the cheese, I can claim no credit save for selecting it. It comes from the vassals of Lord Dunn, and—my lord? Are you well? You seem pale and are pitching most alarmingly, and I beg you to—hullo? My lord? Help, someone! Help! The Captain has been taken ill!”
We cannot but think that the reader’s imagination will adequately supply the confusion and consternation caused by Khaavren’s unceremonious collapse—the running of messengers in search of His Majesty’s physicker, the excitement in Khaavren’s offices caused by subordinates desperate to learn their Captain’s condition, the annoyance of His Majesty who had counted upon the Tiassa’s cool head and long experience in deciding how best to face the crisis brought about by Adron’s abrupt rebellion. We will not, therefore, dwell on these matters, but will, instead, turn the reader’s attention to certain events of which he must otherwise remain ignorant—that is, to our old friend Pel, who was, just as Khaavren was being carried to a chamber commanded by the physicker, emerging from the Underside in the company of Tazendra.
“And yet,” said Tazendra as they walked toward the Palace at a speed that seemed entirely out of character for Pel, who was dressed again in his cavalier’s costume, “I do not comprehend why our errand has such urgency.”
“How, you do not?” said Pel, glancing at her in surprise without breaking stride.
“None in the world, I assure you.”
“And yet, you were standing next to me when we entered the murchin-shop—”
“How, a murchin-shop? Is that what it was?”
“What you had thought it was, Tazendra?”
“Why, I hadn’t any of my own thoughts; it was not, you perceive, my shop.”
“Well, that is true,” said Pel. “Nevertheless, you were there—”
“Oh, I do not deny that.”
“—and you stood next to me while the shopmaster explained about the deceased assassin, whose name appears to have been Chalar—”
“Certainly, I heard that.”
“—and where he might be found—”
“That puzzled me, because, he being dead—”
“—you perceive we followed on his trail—”
“—it follows that where he was could not be of interest to us—”
“—finding at last a place he has been known to frequent—”
“—and, in fact, we never
did
find him—”
“—where we also learned with whom he has been seen—”

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