Prince of Wrath (40 page)

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Authors: Tony Roberts

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Family Saga, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Epic, #Sagas

BOOK: Prince of Wrath
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Argan had to survive as he was the preference to the two, but again that was no guarantee he would survive, for brother had turned on brother before, and it wasn’t too much of a stretch of the imagination to think Istan could do the same. No, Astiras had to guide both his sons along a straighter path now. He had been away from them for far too long. Argan had to toughen up; Istan had to be disciplined. No more wet-nursing from hand-wringing weaklings – he would oversee their upbringing now.

Once he was in Zofela he could combine the military and political functions under one office, and leave the fiscal and social functions to Isbel and her administrators. Astiras had a definite course to take. Vosgaris would be his military staff officer, combining an army governor’s position with that of Army General for the Army of the East, a new post. Teduskis would be gradually eased out of any administrative function and ultimately retired. The political overseer would initially be someone from the Council, maybe someone from one of the noble Houses, as a bribe to that family to support the Koros. Both this man and Vosgaris would share an office, and another would house the fledgling fiscal and social officers, almost certainly Frendicus and Pepil. They had a huge amount of experience and it would keep them from possibly intriguing, something Astiras detested.

Zofela was also the forward army camp and supply base for the Kastanian forces in the south-eastern part of the empire, conveniently placed near the Mazag and Venn borders, so if either invaded they would have to take Zofela. It held up the imperial frontiers in that region and was therefore of vital strategic importance. Astiras knew what he was doing, and it was also co-incidental that his personal estates were close by. The gods were smiling down on him.

Except of course for Argan’s illness. He didn’t share Isbel’s continued blaming of Kerrin for the accident, for that was what it was, an accident. Boys would be boys and if Argan was to grow up as a brave warrior, he would have to take risks and face dangers. To cocoon him away from these would make him an overly cautious and unimaginative man, and one prone to looking to another for guidance and advice. All that anyone would get from courtiers would be sycophantic rubbish and scheming self-centred policies aimed at furthering the wealth and careers of said advisors. It had happened under the Duras and Fokis, and would happen again unless the empire was held together by a strong military leader. Astiras hated courtiers. He would, if he had the luxury of doing so, put them into the front line of the next battle and have them charge the enemy with the spears of his soldiers at their backs with orders to kill any who refused to charge or who turned to flee. However since these courtiers actually had a function he would find it difficult to keep the palace and administration going, and he was damned if he would do any of that! He was a soldier, not a scribe.

Argan had to pull through. His pale, wan features sent a shaft of pain into his heart. The boy deserved to live, to have the chance of growing up and becoming a fine general and prince of the empire. And, Astiras acknowledged it, he desperately needed good and loyal generals. There were generals a-plenty, but they were either getting too old, were members of disloyal or dubious Houses or were, frankly, incompetent. The emperor could only trust those bonded to the Koros such as Elas Pelgion. Amne had done her duty – or, rather, part of it – and now there was a man who could govern Frasia and run Kastan City, and lead the Capital Army, the third army of Kastania. If disaster happened east or west, at least there would now be a third force available to plug the gap.

The mounted archers had, according to Jorqel’s report, done an admirable job, but needed a few adjustments to make them even more effective. Once Deran Loshar was satisfied they were properly trained up, Elas would have them fully under his command to patrol Frasia or sort out any problem in the central area of the empire.

Astiras ran his finger along the road to Turslenka. Thetos Olskan would continue to run Makenia and maintain a garrison in his city, but it was only a garrison force and one not capable of marching out to deal with a full-scale invasion. The news that was coming to him from merchants entering Bragal was that Venn were preparing for war, supplying their forward garrison at Rhan with weapons, armour and equipment. If Venn did move on the empire, they could come from two directions.

The emperor looked at the jagged edge of the mountains running along the current frontier. Bragal was protected in the extreme east by the Pindar Mountains, but there was a gap directly east of Makenia, and the old imperial road ran through this gap into Epros. Epros was supposedly Kastanian but it had thrown off imperial rule a few years ago and had gone its own way ever since then. The efforts to regain Bragal had meant there were no resources to take Epros back, and that was unlikely in the near future, too. Venn could move in and occupy it, and then march up the old road into Makenia, and Turslenka’s garrison was not strong enough to stop them. If that happened then Astiras would have to call upon Elas Pelgion to supply him with troops to supplement his available forces he would march down the Storma Valley to come to Turslenka’s aid. That was the worst case scenario.

The better of the two and the more likely was an invasion from Kral, to the south-east of Bragal. Kral was a rugged, mountainous region, rich in iron, gold and timber, but had only a few through-routes because of the mountains. Bandits and brigands were there in abundance, but Venn owned the region and had done so for a little while now. It had been imperial in times past, but Kastania no longer had the troops available to maintain it and it had slipped away as a result. Any Venn invasion would come from the supply point of Rhan and then cross the one route possible in northern central Kral and appear on the frontier of Bragal to the south-east of Zofela. If that happened Astiras could meet them head-on with his Army of the East.

He pondered on the likely composition of a Venn army. They had heavy cavalry a-plenty, mounted knights who were used as shock troops, and their backbone were spearmen, similar to Kastanian armies. What they had and Kastania did not were crossbowmen. They had a tradition of these, nasty units that caused havoc. Crossbows were slower to reload than the war bow imperial troops had, but they had greater penetrative power. Astiras sucked on his lower lip. Sometimes the weather helped; his archers could unstring their bows and hide the strings under their helmets or caps to keep them dry in times of rain, but the crossbow had no way of unstringing. If it rained the crossbow lost much of its potency.

Venn also had a large navy and it was almost certain that, should they move on Kastania, then their ships would sail into the Aester Sea to attack imperial shipping and block the trade routes. They would use their port at Irokon on the former Kastanian island of Cratia for basing their navy. The current imperial navy was hopelessly outnumbered and outclassed and unlikely to stop Venn from ruling the waves. The sooner Kastania found money to increase their navy the better.

The one thing that made him feel good was the alliance with Mazag. If Kastania were attacked Mazag would, according to the terms of the alliance, come to their aid. Astiras made a mental note to write a letter to General Polak in Bukrat when he got back to Zofela, advising him of the military build-up of Venn at Rhan.

He was pleased at the progress made since he had come to power but it was still far too slow. They needed to show their neighbours they were strong once more and not to be messed about with, but they were still terribly vulnerable in both east and west. He was happy to relinquish responsibility of the west to Jorqel, for he was certain his son would rule both Lodria and Bathenia competently, and he needed the practice for the day he ascended the throne.

It meant he could concentrate on the east and Astiras was convinced it was here that the biggest danger lay. Not the west where traditionally bad things had happened, but the east. He felt it in his bones. The Tybar had gone quiet since taking Imakum and word was they were busy subduing Taboz which was taking longer than expected. They clearly didn’t see Kastania as a threat any more. They had beaten the imperial forces repeatedly and were happily settling into the lands taken over the past fifteen years. That took time and while that was happening they would not be in any fit state to launch a military campaign against Kastania. Good. That gave them time to build their forces up to meet whatever threat came their way. The emperor reckoned it would be another ten years before the Tybar were able to move in their direction. By that time Jorqel may well be emperor and hopefully ready to meet them on equal terms. But that depended on the east being quiet, and it meant there was plenty of work to do for Astiras in Bragal.

What Kastania needed desperately now was ten years of peace, ten years during which time the finances could be brought up to something like a reasonable state and then some money could be spent on the army and navy. As it was, the situation was still fragile and the recent rebellion by the Duras showed that it wouldn’t take much to cause havoc by blocking just one or two supply points. They needed to keep the internal trade routes open and make more external ones available.

His finger slowly crossed the Aester Sea. It came to rest just off the northern tip of Lodria where a small diamond-shaped island sat. Romos. Once a trading hub of Kastania, now a nest of slitherers. Pirates. Damn them all to eternal suffering. The routes to and from distant Zipria were constantly threatened by Romos and the ships by necessity sailed out wide from Efsia deep into the sea rather than taking the one they had traditionally in the past, the Romos Channel. To do so now was suicide; the narrow channel was infested with pirates and any ship was fair game. So ships had to sail longer and that increased costs. Even doing that was fraught with danger for the pirates sailed out far and wide to hunt easy targets.

He sucked in his breath and straightened. Too much had been allowed to drift into decay by complacent emperors and their courts. Nothing like that would happen with the Koros, he was determined on that. Giving the map one last look he walked up the four steps towards the door, allowing the guards to open it, and then he was marching rapidly down the passageway, escorted by his usual group of six well-armed men.

Vosgaris was still emotionally high from his time with Amne and was having difficulty in concentrating. His mind kept on wandering to her ample breasts and sweet mouth and the hope he could make love to her again. His mood was suddenly changed when Astiras barged into his cluttered office. “Captain, I want a full list of the personnel who are to come with us to Zofela.”

“Ah, just a moment, sire,” Vosgaris hurriedly sought for the list he’d been compiling. It lay underneath a scroll containing how many uniforms were being packed on the wagons. That was another logistical nightmare. He passed the list to the impatiently waiting emperor.

Astiras scanned it, trying to decipher the script. Vosgaris may be a decent planner but his writing was appalling. “What does this say, Captain?” he thrust the sheet at Vosgaris and rammed a stubby forefinger at a name.

“Ah, Alenna Duras, sire.”

Astiras glared at Vosgaris. “And what, pray tell me, is she doing here?”

Vosgaris stammered out the whole story about Alenna’s co-operation and her part in siding against her family and her subsequent ostracising. “Your son, the prince, sire, has given his word that she is not to be harmed.”

“Did he?” Astiras growled, his eyebrows meeting. “And why was I not informed?”

Vosgaris stood straight to attention. Behind the emperor two of his personal guards stood there, smirking at the captain’s discomfort. “Sire, with what has been going on recently, what with the wedding and the plot to kill the Princess, it sort of got forgotten.”

“’Sort of got forgotten’,” Astiras echoed slowly, fixing the captain with a very unfriendly stare. “A Duras in my palace, amongst my family, and it ‘sort of got forgotten’!”

“Sire, the Empress knew, as did Prince Jorqel, and Princess Amne. I am surprised none of them mentioned it to you.”

“As am I,” Astiras said. “I shall be having words about this. So, you are her guardian. Teach her well of the Koros ways, and don’t let her start on you with any Duras-type corruption, because I shall certainly hear of it and her head shall be separated from her neck.”

“Yes, sire, I shall remember that.”

“Perhaps it may be of use to inform her of that, or would you rather I tell her directly?”

Vosgaris swallowed. “Ah, no sire, I fear she may be terrified of you.”

“Good; then make sure she knows I am not best pleased with her being in my entourage. The best thing is for her to remain out of my way and behave herself.” He frowned at the rest of the names on the sheet. “Add one more name to it, Captain, which is why I am here in the first place. Fostan Anglis.”

“Fostan Anglis, very good sire.” Vosgaris looked at the emperor. “Isn’t he the second son of the Anglis family of Makenia? Made their fortune of marble?”

Astrias nodded. “You are right. You know them?”

“I know of them, sire. Is he here?”

“No, we’ll pick him up in Turslenka. He will be my political advisor once we get to Zofela, and he’ll be working in the same office with you.”

Vosgaris bowed. He knew little of this Fostan Anglis, except his name. Most members of a noble House in Kastan were aware of other families, if only to watch out for their political manoeuvrings. Alliances were made and broken between Houses as and when necessity dictated, although some Houses were traditional bed-partners and could normally be counted on to help each other when the need arose. The Anglis were a moderately wealthy family based in Makenia and were sometimes sought out to add their weight to political arguments. The one good thing as far as Astiras was concerned, was that the Anglis had not been in favour during the recent tenure of the Fokis-Duras emperors, so they might be useful allies.

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