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Authors: Harry Turtledove

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BOOK: The Tale of Krispos
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After another try, he was able to put down the baby. Phostis promptly tried to roll off the bed. Krispos caught him again. “I told you not to do that,” he said. “Why don’t babies listen?”

“You’re very gentle with him,” Dara said. “I think that’s good, especially considering—” She let her voice trail away.

“Not much point to whacking him till he’s big enough to understand what he’s being whacked for,” Krispos said, deliberately choosing to misunderstand.
Considering he might be another man’s son,
Dara had started to say. She wondered, too, then. Phostis refused to give either of them much in the way of clues.

The baby tried to roll off the bed once more. This time he almost made it. Krispos snagged him by an ankle and dragged him back. “You’re not supposed to do that,” he said. Phostis laughed at him. He thought being rescued was a fine game.

“I’m glad you’ll be here the winter long,” Dara said. “He’ll get a chance to know you now. When you were out on campaign the whole summer, he’d forgotten you by the time you came back again.”

“I know.” Part of Krispos wanted to keep Phostis by him every hour of the day and night, to leave the child, if not Krispos himself, no doubt they were father and son. Another part of him wanted nothing to do with the boy. The result was an uneasy blend of feelings that grew only more complicated as day followed day.

The baby started to fuss, jamming fingers into his mouth. “He’s cutting a tooth, poor dear little one,” Dara said. “He’s probably getting hungry, too. I’ll ring for the wet nurse.” She tugged the green bell cord that rang back in the maidservants’ quarters.

A minute later someone tapped politely on the bedchamber door. When Krispos opened it, he found not the wet nurse but Barsymes standing there. The vestiarios bowed. “I have a letter for you.”

“Thank you, esteemed sir.” Krispos took the sealed parchment from him. Just then the wet nurse came bustling down the hall. She smiled at Krispos as she brushed past him and hurried over to the baby, who was still crying.

“Who sent the letter?” Dara asked as the wet nurse took Phostis from her.

Krispos did not need to open it to answer. He had recognized the seal, recognized the elegantly precise script that named him the addressee. “Tanilis,” he said. “You remember—Mavros’ mother.”

“Yes, of course.” Dara turned to the wet nurse. “Iliana, could you carry him someplace else for a bit, please?” Anthimos had been good at acting as if servants did not exist when that suited him. Dara had more trouble doing so, and Krispos more still—he’d had no servants till he was an adult. Iliana left; Barsymes, perfect servitor that he was, had already disappeared. Dara said, “Read it to me, will you?”

“Certainly.” Krispos broke the seal, slid off the ribbon around the letter, unrolled the parchment. “‘Tanilis to his imperial Majesty Krispos, Avtokrator of the Videssians: Greetings. I thank you for your sympathy. As you say, my son died as he lived, going straight ahead without hesitating to look to either side of the road.’”

The closeness of the image to the way Mavros’ army had actually been caught made Krispos pause and reminded him how Tanilis saw more than met the ordinary man’s eye. He collected himself and read on: “‘I have no doubt you did all you could to keep him from his folly, but no one, in the end, can be saved from himself and his will. Therein lies the deadly danger of Harvas Black-Robe, for, having known the good, he has forsaken it for evil. Would I were a man, to face him in the field, though I know he is mightier than I. But perhaps I shall meet him even so; Phos grant it may be. And may the good god bless you, your Empress, and your sons. Farewell.’”

Dara seized on one word of the letter. “Sons?”

Krispos checked. “So she wrote.”

Dara sketched the sun-circle over her heart. “She does see true, you say?”

“She always has.” Krispos reached out to set a hand on Dara’s belly. The child did not show yet, not even when she was naked, certainly not when she wore the warm robes approaching winter required. “What shall we name him?”

“You’re too practical for me—I hadn’t looked so far ahead.” As Dara frowned in thought, the faintest of lines came out on her forehead and at the corners of her mouth. They hadn’t been there when Krispos first came to the imperial residence as vestiarios. She was the same age as he, near enough; her aging, minor though it was, reminded him he also grew no younger. She said, “You named Phostis. If this truly is a son, shall we call him Evripos, after my father’s father?”

“Evripos.” Krispos plucked at his beard as he considered. “Good enough.”

“That’s settled, then. Another son.” Dara drew the sun-sign again. “A pity Mavros had none of his mother’s gift.” Her eyes went to the letter Krispos was still holding.

“Aye. He never showed a sign of it that I saw. If he’d had it, he wouldn’t have gone out from the city. I know he didn’t fear for himself; he was wild to be a soldier when I met him.” Krispos smiled, remembering Mavros hacking at bushes as they rode from Tanilis’ villa into Opsikion. “But he never would have taken a whole army into danger.”

“No doubt you’re right.” Dara hesitated, then asked, “Have you thought about appointing a new Sevastos?”

“I expect I’ll get around to it one of these days.” The matter seemed less urgent to Krispos than it had when he’d named Mavros to the post. Now that no rebel was moving against him, he had less need to act in two places at the same time, and thus less need for so powerful a minister. Thinking out loud, he went on, “Most likely I’d pick Iakovitzes. He’s served me well and he knows both the city and the wider world.”

“Oh.” Dara nodded. “Yes, he would make a good choice.”

The words were commonplace. Something in the way she said them made him glance sharply at her. “Did you have someone else in mind?”

She was swarthy enough to make her flush hard to spot, but he saw it. Her voice became elaborately casual. “Not that so much, but my father was curious to learn if you were thinking of someone in particular.”

“Was he? He was curious to learn if I was thinking of him in particular, you mean.”

“Yes, I suppose I do.” That flush grew deeper. “I’m sure he meant nothing out of ordinary by asking.”

“No doubt. Tell him this for me, Dara: tell him I think he might make a good Sevastos, if only I could trust him with my back turned. As things are now, I don’t know that I can, and his sneaking questions through you doesn’t make me think any better of him. Or am I wrong to be on my guard?” Dara bit her lip. Krispos said, “Never mind. You don’t have to answer. That question puts you in an impossible spot.”

“You already know my father is an ambitious man,” Dara said. “I will pass on to him what you’ve told me.”

“I’d be grateful if you would.” Krispos let it go at that. Pushing Dara too hard was more likely to force her away than to bind her to him.

To give himself something impersonal to do, he read through Tanilis’ letter again. He wished she could face Harvas in the field. If anyone could best him, she might be that person. Not only would her gifts of foreknowledge warn her of his ploys, but the loss he’d inflicted on her would focus her sorcerous skill against him as a burning glass focused the rays of the sun.

Then Krispos put the letter aside. From what he’d seen thus far, unhappily, no Videssian wizard could face Harvas Black-Robe in the field. That left Krispos a cruel dilemma: how was he to overcome Harvas’ Halogai if the evil mage’s magic worked and his own did not?

Posing the question was easy. Finding an answer anywhere this side of catastrophe, up till now, had been impossible.

         

T
ROKOUNDOS LOOKED HARASSED. EVERY TIME KRISPOS HAD
seen him this fall and winter, he’d looked harassed. Krispos understood that. As much as he could afford to, he even sympathized with Trokoundos. He kept summoning the wizard to ask him about Harvas, and Trokoundos had no miracles to report.

“Your Majesty, ever since I returned from the campaign, the Sorcerers’ Collegium has hummed like a hive of bees, trying to unravel the secrets behind Harvas’ spells,” Trokoundos said. “I’ve had myself examined under sorcery and drugs to make sure my recall of what I witnessed was perfectly exact, in the hope that some other mage, given access to my observations, might find the answer that has eluded me. But—” He spread his hands.

“All your bees have made no honey,” Krispos finished for him.

“No, Your Majesty, we have not. We are used to reckoning ourselves the finest wizards in the world. Oh, maybe in Mashiz the King of Kings of Makuran has a stable to match us, but that a solitary barbarian mage should have the power to baffle us—” Trokoundos’ heavy-lidded eyes flashed angrily. Being beaten so ate at his pride.

“You have no idea, then, how he does what he does?” Krispos asked.

“I did not quite say that. What makes his magic effective is easy enough to divine. He is very strong. Strength may accrue to any man of any nation—even, perhaps, such strength as his. But he also possesses technique refined beyond any we can match here in Videssos the city. How he acquired that, and how we may meet it…well, an answer there will go far toward piecing the puzzle together. But we have none.”

Krispos said, “Not too long ago I got a note from our dear friend Gnatios. He claims he has your answers all tied up with a scarlet ribbon. Of course, he would claim dung was cherries if he thought he saw a copper’s worth of advantage in it.”

“He’s a trimmer, aye, but he’s no fool,” Trokoundos said seriously, echoing Iakovitzes. “What answer did he give? By the lord with the great and good mind, I’ll seize whatever I can find now.”

“He
gave
none,” Krispos said. “He just claimed he had one. As best I could tell, his main aim was escaping the monastery. He thinks I forget the trouble he’s caused me. If he hadn’t got Petronas loose, I could have turned on Harvas close to half a year sooner.”

“Would you have won on account of that?” Trokoundos asked.

“Up till this instant I’d thought so,” Krispos answered. “If I couldn’t beat him then with the full power of Videssos behind me, how may I hope to next spring? Or are you telling me I shouldn’t go forth at all? Should I wait here in the city and stand siege?”

“No. Better to meet Harvas as far from Videssos the city as you may. How much good did walls do either Develtos or Imbros?”

“None at all.” Krispos started to say something more, then stopped, appalled, and stared at Trokoundos. Videssos the city’s walls were incomparably greater than those of the two provincial towns. Imagining them breached was almost more than Krispos could do. That was not quite the mental image that dismayed him. Winter was the quiet time of year on the farm, the time when people would do minor repairs and get ready for the busyness that would return with spring. In his mind’s eye he saw Harvas’ Halogai sitting round their hearths, some with skins of ale, others with their feet up, and every last one of them sharpening stakes, sharpening stakes, sharpening stakes…Of itself, his anus tightened.

“What is it, Your Majesty?” Trokoundos asked. “For a moment there you looked—frightened and frightening at the same time.”

“I believe it.” Krispos was glad he’d had no mirror in which to watch his features change. “This I vow, Trokoundos: we’ll meet Harvas as far from Videssos the city as we can.”

         

P
ROGRESS PACED DOWN MIDDLE STREET AT A SLOW WALK. BESIDE
the big bay gelding, eight servants tramped along with the imperial litter. Their breath, the horse’s, and Krispos’ rose in white, steaming clouds at every exhalation.

The city was white, too, white with new-fallen snow. Over his imperial robes, Krispos wore a coat of soft, supple otter furs. He still shivered; he’d lost track of his nose a while before. Dara had a brazier inside the litter. Krispos hoped it did her some good.

Only the Haloga guardsmen who marched ahead of and behind Krispos and his lady literally took winter in their stride. Marched, indeed, was not the right word: they strutted, their heads thrown back, chests thrust forward, backs as resolutely straight as the columns that supported the colonnades running along either side of Middle Street. Their breath fairly burst from their nostrils; they took in great gulps of the air Krispos reluctantly sipped. This was the climate they were made for.

Narvikka turned his head back. “W’at a fine morning!” he boomed. The rest of the northerners nodded. Some of them wore braids like Vagn’s, tied tight with crimson cords; these bobbed like horses’ tails to emphasize their agreement. Krispos shivered again. Inside the litter, Dara sneezed. He didn’t like that. With her pregnant, he wanted nothing out of the ordinary.

The small procession turned north off Middle Street toward the High Temple. When they arrived, one of the Halogai held Progress’ head while Krispos dismounted. The litter-bearers and all but two of the guardsmen stayed outside with the horse. The pair who accompanied Krispos and Dara into the temple had diced for the privilege—and lost. Halogai cared nothing for hymns and prayers to Phos.

A priest bowed low when he saw Krispos. “Will you sit close by the altar as usual, Your Majesty?” he asked.

“No,” Krispos answered. “Today I think I’ll hear the service from the imperial niche.”

“As you will, of course, Your Majesty.” The priest could not keep a note of surprise from his voice, but recovered quickly. Bowing again, he said, “The stairway is at the far end of the narthex there.”

“Yes, I know. Thank you, holy sir.” One Haloga fell in in front of Krispos and Dara, the other behind them. Both guards held axes at the ready, though the service was still an hour away and the narthex deserted but for themselves, the Avtokrator and Empress, and a few priests.

As she went up the stairs, Dara complained, “I’d much rather stay down on the main level. Inside the niche, you have trouble seeing out through the grillwork, you’re too far away anyhow, and half the time you can’t hear what the patriarch is saying.”

“I know.” Krispos climbed the last stair and walked forward into the imperial niche. The blond oak benches there were bedecked with even more precious stones than those on which less exalted worshipers sat. Mother-of-pearl and gleaming silver ornamented the floral-patterned grillwork. Krispos stood by it for a moment. He said, “I can see well enough, and Pyrrhos is loud enough so I won’t have trouble hearing him. I want to find out what goes on when I’m not at the temple, the kind of things Pyrrhos says when I’m not here to listen.”

BOOK: The Tale of Krispos
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