Iorich by Steven Brust
Cover
Iorich
Iorich
IORICH
Iorich
BOOKS BY STEVEN BRUST
The Dragaeran Novels
Brokedown Palace
THE KHAAVREN ROMANCES
The Phoenix Guards
Five Hundred Years After
The Viscount of Adrilankha,
which comprises
The Paths of the Dead,
The Lord of Castle Black,
and
Sethra Lavode
THE VLAD TALTOS NOVELS
Jhereg
Orca
Yendi
Dragon
Teckla
Issola
Taltos
Dzur
Phoenix
Jhegaala
Athyra
Iorich
Other Novels
To Reign in Hell
The Sun, the Moon, and the Stars
Agyar
Cowboy Feng’s Space Bar and Grille
The Gypsy (with Megan Lindholm)
Freedom and Necessity (with Emma Bull)
Iorich
STEVEN BRUST
IORICH
A TOM DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK
NEW YORK
Iorich
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events
portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination
or are used fictitiously.
IORICH
Copyright © 2009 by Steven Brust
All rights reserved.
Edited by Teresa Nielsen Hayden
A Tor Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC
175 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10010
www.tor-forge.com
Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Brust, Steven, 1955–
Iorich / Steven Brust. — 1st ed.
p. cm.
“A Tom Doherty Associates book.”
ISBN 978-0-7653-1208-2
1. Taltos, Vlad (Fictitious character)—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3552.R84I57 2010
813'.54—dc22
2009040414
First Edition: January 2010
Printed in the United States of America
0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Iorich
For Meridel Bianca
Iorich
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks to Reesa Brown for potato pastries and other things too numerous to mention, and to Kit O’Connell for computer and research help. Anne K. G. Murphy provided some emacs help for which I remain grateful. Thanks to Brad Roberts and Thomas Bull for significant help in surviving until this was done. Finally, my thanks to Alexx Kay for continuity checking.
Iorich
Iorich
IORICH
Iorich
PROLOGUE
Even if things don’t work the way you’d planned, it’s good when you can take something useful away from the experience.
They jumped me just as I was entering a little village called Whitemill at the southern edge of the Pushta. They had concealed themselves behind the long, broken hedge that bordered the Whitemill Pike before it turned into the single road of the hamlet. It was a good place for an attack. The nearest dwelling was perhaps a quarter of a mile away, and night was just falling.
There were three of them: Dragaerans, two men and a woman, wearing the colors of no special House. They all carried swords and knives. And they knew their business: the key to convincing someone to give up his cash is to be fast and very, very aggressive; you do not stand there and explain to your client why he should do what you want, you try to get him into a position where, before he has time to think, much less respond, he is at your mercy and hoping that somehow he can get out of this alive. When he hands over his purse, he should be feeling grateful.
Rocza took the man on the right, Loiosh flew into the face of the woman. I drew and disarmed the one in front of me with a stop-cut to the wrist, then took one step in and hit him in the nose with the pommel of my rapier. I took another step in and kicked the side of his knee.
He went down and I put the point at his throat. I said, “Intent to rob, intent to assault, assault, and failing to be selective in your choice of victim. Bad day for you.”
He looked at me, wide-eyed.
I gave him a friendly suggestion: “Drop your purse.”
The other man had run off, Rocza flying after him; the woman was doing what I call the Loiosh dance—futilely swinging her sword at him while he kept swooping in at her face then back out of range. He could do that all day.
The guy on the ground got his purse untied, though his fingers fumbled. I knelt and picked it up, the point of my rapier never moving from his throat. I spoke to my familiar.
“Get Rocza back. Let the other one go.”
“She’s on it, Boss.”
She returned and landed next to my client’s head and hissed.
“As long as you don’t move, she won’t bite,” I said. He froze. I went to the woman, who was still flailing about, and now looking panicked. I said, “Drop it.”
She glanced at Loiosh, then at me, then at her friend on the ground. “What about—”
“He won’t hurt you if you drop your weapon. Neither will I.”
Her sword hit the ground, and Loiosh returned to my shoulder.
“Your purse,” I told her.
She had less trouble untying it than her friend. She held it out to me.
“Just drop it,” I said.
She was very obliging.
“Now get out of here. If I see you again, I’ll kill you. If you try to follow me, I will see you.”
She sounded calm enough. “How did you—?”
“Wonder about it,” I said.
“Not a bad day’s work, Boss.”
“Lucky you spotted them.”
“Right. It was luck. Heh.”
“May I stay and help my friend?”
“No,” I said. “He’ll be along presently. You can pick up your weapons once I’m out of sight. I won’t hurt him.”
He spoke for the first time. A very impressive and lengthy string of curses finishing with, “What do you call this?”
“A broken nose,” I said. I gave him a friendly smile he may not have appreciated.
The woman gave me a glare, then just turned and walked away. I picked up the purse.
“Beware of Easterners with jhereg,” I told the guy with the broken nose.
“———!” he said.
I nodded. “Even if things don’t work out the way you planned, it’s good when you can take something useful away from the experience.”
I continued into the village, which had its requisite inn. It was an ugly thing, two stories high and misshapen, as if bits and pieces had been added on at random. The room I entered was big and full of Teckla, who smelled of manure and sweat, mixing with the smells of fresh bread, roasted kethna, tobacco smoke, dreamgrass, and now and then a whiff of the harsh pungency of opium, indicating there must be one or two nobles in here, among all the Teckla. Then I noticed that there were also a few merchants there. Odd. I wondered about it—even in rural inns, there generally isn’t that much of a mix. The bar ran about half the length of the room, with ceramic and wooden mugs on shelves behind it. At one end of the bar was a large knife, just lying there—almost certainly the knife the innkeeper used to cut fruit to put in wine punch, but that’s the sort of thing an assassin notices.
I got a lot of looks because I was human and had a jhereg on each shoulder, but none of the looks were threatening because I had a sword at my side and a jhereg on each shoulder. I acquired a glass of wine and a quiet corner. I’d ask about a room later.
Conversation went on around me; I ignored it.
“Smells like real food, Boss.”
“Yep. Soon.”
“How long since we’ve had real food?”
“About a month. Soon.”
“How did we do?”
I set the wine down and checked the purses, using my body to hide them from curious eyes. “Not great, but, you know, it’s pure profit. Strange place.”
“They’re all talking to each other.”
“Yeah.”
It really was interesting—you don’t normally find an inn where merchants and peasants talk freely with each other, or noblemen and tradesmen; even in the East, where it was more common to see the mix of classes in the same inn, they didn’t talk to each other much. I didn’t even notice any special hostility between the two obvious aristocrats and the various Teckla. Odd. There was probably a story there.
Just because I was curious, I picked out a couple of merchants—both of them in the colors of the Tsalmoth—and bought them drinks. They gave me a suspicious look as I approached, but merchants are always aware they might be talking to a future customer, so they don’t want to give offense.
“Pardon my intrusion,” I said. “I’m Vlad.”
They gave me their names, but I don’t remember them; they sounded almost identical. Come to that, they looked pretty much the same, too—probably brothers. “I’m just curious,” I told them. “I’m not used to inns where there is such a mix.”
“A mix?” said the one whose name ended in the harder consonant.
“Teckla, merchants, noblemen, all in the same inn.”
“Oh.” He smiled a little. “We get along better around here than most places, probably.”
I nodded. “It seems odd.”
“It’s because we all hate the navy.”
“The navy?”
He nodded. That didn’t explain anything—Whitemill was hundreds of miles from the nearest port.
It took a few more questions, but it finally emerged that, for whatever reason, the Empire had given control of the local canals to the Imperial navy, instead of whatever engineering corps usually handled such things. It was something that had happened long ago, when the Orca were higher in the Cycle and so could exert more economic pressure, and it had never been revoked even during the Interregnum.
“The whole region lives off those canals, mostly for watering the fields.”
“And the navy doesn’t maintain them?”
“They do well enough, I suppose, when they need to.”
“I still don’t—”
“The navy,” he repeated. “They’re all Orca.”
“I know that.”
“Orca,” he repeated, as if I were missing something.
I glanced at one of the noblemen in the room, a woman having an animated conversation with the host; she wore the colors of the Tiassa. “So, the barons are Tiassa, but they need to deal with the Orca.”
He nodded. “And the Orca want to soak every copper penny they can from the place.”
“So everyone hates them more than they hate each other?”
He frowned. “We don’t hate each other.”
“Sorry,” I said. “It’s just a bit odd.”
“You’d understand if you’d ever irrigated on a navy canal, or shipped goods on a navy barge.”
“I already understand,” I said. “I know Orca.”
They both smiled, and offered to buy me a drink. I accepted. In case you don’t know, the House of the Orca is the House of sailors and naval warriors, which is well enough, but it’s mostly the House of bankers, and financiers. No one likes them; I don’t even think Orca like other Orca. We traded stories of Orca we had known and hated; they made a few polite probes about my history and business, but didn’t press when I steered the discussion elsewhere.
They filled me in on a few things I hadn’t heard about, having been away from “civilization” for a while: an uprising of a few minor lordlings in the northwest, which would increase demand for spun wool; the recent repeal of the chimney tax within the House of the Tsalmoth, which was only a grain in a hectare; the recent decision “by Charlsom over there, fortune smile on his loins” to permit taverns to sell their own locally made brews without surcharge; and the proposed Imperial land-use loan, which would obviously be a catastrophe for the peasants without helping the landlords, or be a disaster for the landlords without helping the peasants, or else have no effect on anything. It was all from the point of view of the small merchant, which would interest me more if I were one. I nodded and smiled a lot while my mind wandered.
The conversation in the room was a chattering hum—no discernible words, just a constant noise of voices of differing pitches and tones, punctuated by laughs and coughs. It’s always strange when you’re hearing someone speak in a tongue you don’t know, because names of people or places that you do know suddenly jump out. You hear, “blah blah blah Dragaera City blah blah,” and for just an instant you think you understand that language after all.
It was just like that when amid the chittering and buzzing of meaningless noise I suddenly heard, clear as a whistle, the words “Sethra Lavode.” I was instantly alert.
I shifted in my chair, but that didn’t help—the speaker was at a table just behind the two Tsalmoth. I looked at my drinking companions and said, “Do you know what they’re talking about?”
“Who?”
I gestured toward the table I’d overheard. “What they say startles me extremely, and I would admire to know if it’s true.”
Just so you don’t get the wrong idea—may the gods keep me from ever conveying a false impression—I hadn’t heard a thing except the words “Sethra Lavode.”
They listened for a moment—being a bit closer to the speaker—then nodded. “Oh, that. It’s true enough. My cousin is a post inspector, and told me while he was passing through on his way to Gatehall from Adrilankha.”
“Indeed,” I said, looking impressed.
“Everyone’s talking about it; I’m surprised you hadn’t heard.”
“Are there any more details?”
“No. Just the arrest.”
Arrest?
I said, “Forgive me, did I understand you correctly? Sethra Lavode is arrested?”
He shook his head. “No, no. It is said that she has agreed to be a witness.”
“For?”
“The accused, my lord. Aliera e’Kieron.”
“Aliera e’Kieron.”
He nodded.
“Arrested.”
He nodded again.
“For what, exactly?”
At that point, both of them spoke at once. It took a while to get the story out, but apparently Aliera had tried to kill the Empress, had loosed a demon in the House of the Dragon, and had attempted to betray the Empire to an Eastern army. I got the impression that this was a part of the story they weren’t sure of. But there seemed to be one thing they were sure of: “The trial starts next month.”
“Interesting indeed,” I said. “How far are we from the River?” In this part of the Empire, “the River” can only mean the Adrilankha River. My River.
“About two leagues. From here, there’s no need to take a navy barge if you’re going that way.”
“And the nearest dock?”
“Upriver half a mile.”
“My thanks,” I said, and put a couple of orbs on the table. “Have another round on me.”
I stood, turned on my heel, and crossed the room before they could start asking questions I didn’t want to answer.
I found the host and arranged to get a room for the night.
Well, well. Aliera, arrested. Now, that was interesting. She must have done something pretty remarkable for the Empress—a good friend of hers—to have permitted that to happen. Or caused it to happen?
I lay on my back on the hard but clean bed the inn provided; conversation drifted up from below and the wind made the trees outside hiss as I thought things over.
My first reaction had been to return to Adrilankha and see if I could help her. I could get there fast. Anyone in Adrilankha would take more than a month to reach me here, barring a teleport or access to a really efficient post system. But I was only a few days from Adrilankha; rivers work like that.
Very little reflection was required to realize how stupid that idea was—even Loiosh hadn’t felt the need to point it out. Adrilankha was the capital city, and the heart of the Empire, and the center of operations of a certain criminal organization that very much wanted me dead. I had spent several years now avoiding them—successfully, with one or two exceptions.
Returning would mean putting myself into their hands, an action for which Aliera herself would have nothing but scorn. And, in fact, whatever sort of trouble Aliera was in, there was unlikely to be anything I could do about it anyway.
A stupid idea, to be sure.
Three days later I stepped off a boat onto North Market Pier Number Four in Adrilankha, smelling like fish and looking for trouble.
Iorich
1
For a State to investigate the actions of its own military is, as no less than Lanya pointed out as far back as the Third Cycle, to either begin with a set of assumptions that will ultimately control the investigation, or to tangle one’s self hopelessly in contradiction before beginning. This report, then, will begin by stating those assumptions (see Part One).
The questions this committee was asked to address were as follows:
1. What were the facts in and around the events in the village of Tirma in the county of Shalomar involving Imperial troops on Lyorn 2 of Zerika 252?
2. Was there any moral or legal culpability attached to any Imperial representatives associated with the incident?
3. If so, who should be held to blame, for what, and how are the interests of justice best served in this matter?
4. Insofar as there was culpability, what steps might be taken in the future to prevent a repetition of any unfortunate or regrettable events . . .
I felt confident that the immediate dock area was safe, because I had sent Loiosh and Rocza ahead of me to look for anyone suspicious, and Loiosh is good at that sort of work. I’d come in on a boat filled with flour from the Pushta and fish from the river; though as I understood it, the main profit from the trip would come from the salt they’d bring back. Next to the dock was a small market area, where bakers would bid for the sacks of flour I’d slept among for the last couple of nights.
I brushed brown flour off my brown leathers, adjusted my cloak, and moved past the market, climbing the seemingly endless flight of concrete stairs that led up to street level. It was morning, and the streets were just starting to get busy. Loiosh and Rocza flew above me in wide circles, keeping watch.
Adrilankha.
My city.
River and ocean smells—entirely different—battled for attention, along with flour and refuse of various kinds. Tradesmen were setting up, Teckla were running errands, coins were already starting to clink all around me. This was my home, whether I liked it or not. In fact, I didn’t like it, at least at the moment; but it was still home.
As if to emphasize the point, I became aware once more of the Imperial Orb, now close enough that its effects penetrated the Phoenix Stone amulet I wore about my neck. Its presence in my mind was like a low shepherd’s pipe playing quietly over the next hill.
From here, it was only a couple of miles to the most northeastern entrance of the Imperial Palace; I didn’t think the Jhereg would be stupid enough to make a move on me once I was inside. Even the Jhereg Wing would be safe—the thought of going there just to taunt them was only briefly tempting.
“As stupid moves go, Boss, this one isn’t bad. I mean, comparatively.”
“Glad to hear it.”
“I knew you’d be relieved.”
Usually, if you’re a professional and you’re going to kill someone, it takes a while to set things up—you need to be sure of where to find your target, how you’re going to take him, all the escape routes, and so on. Arriving unexpectedly in town like this, I figured my chances of making it safely to the Palace were pretty good. And if anyone did try anything, it would be a clumsy, last-minute effort that I ought to be able to deflect.
That, at any rate, was my thinking. And, right or wrong, I did make it; taking the Street of the Issola to what is called the Imperial Wing, though in fact it is not a wing, but the heart of the Palace, to which the other wings are attached. Once inside, I had to ask directions a few times, but eventually managed to walk quite nearly all the way around the Imperial Wing. In fact, I’d entered rather close to the Iorich Wing, but the Jhereg Wing was in between, and walking in front of it didn’t feel like a smart move, so I took the long way.
The main entrance to the Iorich Wing from the Imperial Wing is through either of a pair of twin arches with no door. Above one arch is a representation of an empty hand, palm open like a porter expecting a gratuity; above the other is a hand holding an ax, like a porter mad at not getting one. These same symbols are on the opposite sides of the arch in the other order, so you can’t escape the ax. This would, no doubt, be a powerful statement if I knew what the images were supposed to symbolize. High above both of the arches is a representation of an iorich, its toothy snout curving back as if looking over its low shoulder. Given what the ugly thing is famous for, that is another bit of symbolism that doesn’t make sense to me. I could find out if I cared.
The Iorich like to make everything bigger than it has to be, I guess to make you feel smaller than you’d like to be. It was a long walk through a big, empty room where my footfalls echoed loudly. The walls were dark, only slightly lit by oddly shaped lamps hanging high overhead, and there were half a dozen marble statues—pure, white, gleaming marble, about twenty feet tall—depicting figures that I imagine were famous within the House.
Loiosh gave no signs of being impressed.
In front of me was a desk, elevated about two feet, with a square-shouldered middle-aged Dragaeran at it. Her straight hair glistened in the torchlight.
I went clack clack clack clack against the hard floor until I reached her; her eyes were slightly higher than mine. She glanced at the jhereg on my shoulders, and her lips tightened. She hesitated, I suppose trying to think if she could come up with a law against their being there. She finally gave up and said, “Name.”
Her voice and demeanor—brisk and slightly bored—went with the surroundings the way lemon juice goes with cream; she sounded more like an Imperial clerk in charge of tax rolls than a magistrate of the House of justicers. I said, “I want information about a case.”
“Name,” she repeated.
“Aliera e’Kieron, House of the Dragon.”
“Your name,” she said, with the air of someone trying very hard to be patient in spite of provocation.
But you can’t operate in the Jhereg without knowing some of the basics of the Imperial justice system; no one but an idiot breaks a law without knowing that he’s doing it, and what he’s risking, and the best ways to reduce the risk. “I don’t choose to give it,” I said. “I want public information on the case of Aliera e’Kieron, whose name has been entered under Imperial Articles of Indictment for Felonious Conduct.” I paused. “Of course, if you wish, I can ask at the House of the Dragon, and explain that the House of the Iorich wasn’t willing to—”
I stopped because she was glaring and writing; continuing the battle after you’ve won just wastes energy. She handed me a piece of paper; I didn’t bother looking at it, because I don’t know the symbols the House of the Iorich uses instead of the perfectly reasonable writing the rest of us get by with.
“Room of the Dolphin, see the clerk. He will answer your questions. Good day.”
I walked down the hall. She hadn’t even addressed me as my lord. Once. My feelings were hurt.
I’d been in the Halls of the Iorich often enough to believe I could find my way around, but not often enough to actually do so. I saw a few Iorich as I walked—clerks, men-at-arms, and perhaps one was a magistrate—but I didn’t feel like risking a snub to ask any of them for directions. Nevertheless, after most of an hour, I managed to find the correct stairway to the correct hallway to the correct room. The man behind the desk inside—very young, an apprentice of some sort, no doubt—glanced up as I came in, smiled, frowned, then looked puzzled about just what sort of attitude he was supposed to adopt.
Before he could decide I gave him the paper. He glanced at it, and said, “Of course,” stood up, and vanished through a door on the far end of the room. He returned before I had time to decide if I should sit down at the chair opposite his desk. He had a fairly large sheaf of papers in his hand. The papers all had two holes on the top with pieces of white yarn running through them.
“Sit down, my lord,” he said, and I did. “Aliera e’Kieron,” he said.
I nodded.
“Arrested on the ninth day of the month of the Hawk of this year, charged with violation of Imperial Edict Folio ninety-one part thirty paragraphs one and two. Intent to Indict filed with Her Imperial Majesty the tenth day of the month of the Hawk of this year. Writ of felony placed before the Circle of Magistrates on—”
“Pardon me.”
He looked like a draft horse pulled to a stop just short of the barn door, but he managed, “Yes, my lord?”
“Would you mind telling me what Folio ninety-one. . . that is, what the charges are? I mean, in plain speech?”
“Oh. Use of Elder Sorcery.”
“Barlen’s crack,” I muttered. “Nice work, Aliera.”
“Your pardon, my lord?”
“Nothing, nothing. I was talking to myself. Who accused her?”
“Her Majesty.”
“Heh. Anything on how Her Majesty learned of the crime?”
“I’m not permitted to say, my lord.”
“All right. Go on, please.”
He did, but there was nothing useful in it, except that, yeah, she had been bound for judgment on a crime. A capital crime.
“Does she have an advocate?”
“She refused, my lord.”
I nodded. “Of course she did. Any friends of the defendant presented themselves yet?”
“I’m not permitted to say, my lord.”
I sighed. “Well, you may as well add me. Szurke, Count.”
“House?”
“Imperial.” I dug out the ring and showed it to him. He was very impressed and so on.
He made some notations, and pressed some seals onto a document, then said, “It is done, my lord. You wish to see the prisoner?”
“Yes.”
“If the prisoner should agree, where can you be reached?”
“Castle Black,” I said, hoping that was sufficient.
It was; he made a notation.
“Has she received any visitors so far?”
“I’m not permitted . . .” Then he shrugged and consulted another paper and said, “No.” I guess that one doesn’t matter so much.
I thanked him, and that concluded my business in the House of the Iorich.
And, having acquired the bare minimum of information—enough to know what I was dealing with—the next step was obvious: I stopped on the stairway, removed my amulet, and carefully made the teleport to the courtyard of Castle Black. I replaced the amulet around my neck and spent a moment taking in my surroundings. It had been years, but it still felt like home, in a different way than Adrilankha did. It’s hard to explain.
I tapped the hilt of Lady Teldra, wondering if somewhere down there she felt like she was home, too; but I didn’t feel a response. I think.
I didn’t approach the doors right away; I took a good look around. Around; not down. I knew what was down: a long drop and unforgiving stone. I wear an amulet that prevents sorcery from working on me, and sometime after I got it I came out here, to the courtyard, and it was only a day or two later that I realized I ought to have wondered whether the amulet would interfere with the spells that kept me up in the air. I mean, it was fine; whatever the nature of the courtyard, it doesn’t require sorcery to act on me directly. But I really should have thought about that before walking onto it, you know?
There were pairs of guards stationed at various points along the walls. Always pairs: one fighter, one sorcerer. So far as I know, they’ve never had anything to do since the Interregnum, but they’re always there. Cushy job, I suppose. But boring. Nice to know they still recognized me, though. At least, I assumed they recognized me, because otherwise they ought to have challenged me or something.
The walls were black; I could see the little veins of silver running through the ones nearest me. I turned, and the castle itself, also black, towered over me, the highest turrets were blurred and indistinct where they kissed the Enclouding. I lowered my eyes to the great double doors. How many times had I walked through them, to be greeted by Lady Teldra, followed by conversation deep or trivial, amusing or infuriating? Lady Teldra wouldn’t greet me this time.
When I’d had my moment of nostalgia, I walked up to the doors, which opened for me in their usual grandiose, overdramatic way. I’m a sucker for that stuff, though, so I liked it. I stepped inside, and before me was a white-haired Dragaeran gentleman, in a frilly white shirt with green tapered pants. I stared at him. Rudely, I suppose, though I didn’t think about it, and he didn’t act as if it were rude. He simply bowed and said, “I am Skifra, and I welcome you to Castle Black. Am I correct in that I have the honor to address my lord Morrolan’s excellent friend Lord Taltos?”
I returned his bow by way of assenting that he did, indeed, have that honor, such as it was.
He looked decidedly pleased and said, “If you would be so good as to follow me to the sitting room, I will inform His Lordship of your presence. May I get you wine?”
“That’d be great,” I said, following him to another room I knew well.
I sat in a chair that was too big for me and drank a decent red wine that was slightly chilled, just the way I like it. That implied a great deal, which I set aside for later ruminating.
I expected him to return in five minutes or so to bring me to Morrolan, but in just about two minutes, he himself appeared: Morrolan e’Drien, Lord of Castle Black, bearer of Blackwand, and, well, stuff like that. I recognized his footsteps—walking quickly—before the door opened, and I stood up.
“Vlad,” he said. “It’s been a while. A couple of years, anyway.” He gave Loiosh a quick smile; Loiosh fluffed himself on my shoulder and dipped his head in a sort of greeting. Morrolan said, “You heard about Aliera, then?”
I nodded. “I’ve been to the Iorich Wing, got my name added to the list—”
“List?”
“Friends of the defendant.”
“What does that do?”
“Lets you see her, if she agrees.”
“Oh, that’s why. . . all right. Let’s go up to the library.”
I followed him up the wide stairway, got reacquainted with the paintings, then down the hall, past the pair of huge tomes chained to pedestals (an expression of Morrolan’s sense of humor that I may explain some day) to another double door. Morrolan sure seems to like double doors a lot, for a skinny guy.
He shut the doors behind me, and we sat down in chairs that were like old friends, facing each other at an oblique angle, little tables by our right hands.
“It’s good to see you again, Vlad.” He poured himself something purplish-red from a cut-glass decanter. I still had my wine. “How have you been?”
“Same as always. Still kicking, still running.”
“Sounds unpleasant.”
“You get used to it.”
“Any stories worth telling?”
I shook my head. “Tell me about Aliera.” That’s me: straight to business.
“Right,” he said. He frowned into his wine. “I don’t know exactly. She was engaged in some experiments, and the Phoenix Guard appeared, asking to see her. I showed them down to—”
“Wait. This was here?”
“Yes, that’s right.”
“They arrested her here?”
He nodded. “She lives here, you know.”
“Uh, okay, go on.”
“That’s about all I know. They came in, got her, took her away.”
“You let them?”
He cocked his head at me. “You expected me to launch a rebellion against the Empire?”
I considered that. “Yes,” I said.
“I chose not to.”
I dropped it. “What have you learned since?”
“Very little. I couldn’t find out anything. They wouldn’t let me in to see her.”
“You need to go to the Iorich Wing and declare yourself a friend, then you can get some information, and if she approves it, you can get more, and you’ll be permitted to see her.”
“All right, I’ll do that.”
“Any idea why she refused an advocate?”
“None.”
“Well, you’re pretty damned helpful.”
He smirked. “It’s good to see you again, Vlad.”
“Mind if I ask what you have done?”
“I’ve spoken with Norathar and Sethra.”
“Oh,” I said. Yes, the Dragon Heir and the Enchantress of Dzur Mountain would be good people to start with. “Uh, have they been keeping you informed?”
“As much as you’d expect.”
“So: no.”
“Right.”
“She was arrested, ah, what was it? About two weeks ago?”
“A little more.”
I nodded. “Okay, we need to find her an advocate.”
“How do you know so much about this stuff, Vlad?”
I looked at him.
“Oh,” he said. “All right, but didn’t she refuse an advocate?”
“There may be a way to get one in to try to talk some sense into her.”
“How?”
“I’ve no idea. But advocates are clever bastards. I’d have been Starred otherwise.”
“Money isn’t a problem,” he said.
“No,” I agreed. “It isn’t.”
He nodded. “Are you hungry?”
I realized I was, and said so.
“Let’s go to the pantries and see what we can find.”
We found some sausages in the style of some Eastern kingdom: oily and biting, tasting of rosemary. With it was crusty bread in long, thin loaves and a wonderfully sharp cheese. There was also a jug of red wine that was probably too young but still had some body. We ate standing up in Morrolan’s pantry, passing the jug back and forth.
“Vlad, do you know what happens if she’s convicted?”
“My understanding—which isn’t perfect—is that either they execute her, or the Empress has to commute the sentence, which will raise havoc among the Houses.”
Morrolan nodded.
We walked back to the library, brushing crumbs off ourselves. “What are you going to do?” he asked me.
“I don’t know,” I said. “But it will probably involve killing someone.”
He chuckled. “It usually does.”
“Would Sethra know anything about this by now?”
“Only if she’s seen Aliera. I doubt she has.”
“Maybe I should go and see her.”
“Maybe.”
“Or else go straight to finding the advocate.”
He nodded and glanced at my hip. “How is Lady Teldra?”
I resisted the impulse to touch her. “I’m not sure how to answer that,” I said.
“Has there been . . . contact?”
I considered. “Not as such. Feelings, sometimes, perhaps.”
He nodded.
I said, “I know you two go back hundreds of years. I wish—”
“So do I.”
“She was more than just seneschal to you, wasn’t she?”
His jaw tightened a little. “I’m not sure how you mean that.”
“Sorry. None of my—”
“Once she stood guard over my body for nearly a week, keeping it alive, while my mind and my soul traveled to Deathgate Falls and fought a battle over the Paths of the Dead. Keeping it alive was neither easy nor pleasant, under the circumstances.”
“Um. Sounds like there’s a story there.”
He shrugged. “Ask the Empress; I’ve already said too much.”
“I won’t press it, then.”
“Where are you going next?”
“I guess I’d better try to find Aliera an advocate, unless you want to.”
“I’m willing, if you’ll tell me how.”
“I know what to look for, more or less. It’s easier if I just do it.”
“Unless,” he pointed out, “you get killed trying.”
“Yeah, that would slow it down. But if I stay in the Imperial Palace, I should be safe. And if I stay close to it, I’ll stay close to safe.”
“You know best.”
I wanted to note the time and date he’d said that. “They already know I’m in town, because I took the amulet off to get here. So they’ll know I’m in the Palace.” I shrugged. “Let them gnash their teeth. I know how to slip away when I need to.”
“Boss, you lie like an Issola.”
“That’s the nicest thing you’ve ever said to me.”
“All right,” said Morrolan. “I don’t know the Iorich Wing. Where should I set you down?”
“Anywhere in the Palace they permit it that isn’t the Dragon Wing or Jhereg Wing.”
He nodded. “Ready?”
I removed the amulet, put it in its pouch, sealed the pouch, and nodded.
He gestured, and time passed during which I was nowhere, then I was somewhere else. I took the amulet out again, put it on, and looked around. Imperial Wing; good enough.
It took me a good hour to find my way out of the Palace, mostly because I wanted to leave through the Iorich Wing, so I could cross to the House of the Iorich as quickly as possible. Yes, there’s a constant strain in knowing you’re being hunted, but even that is something you can get used to. You take sensible precautions, and minimize risk, and don’t let it get to you.
At least, that’s the theory.
The House of the Iorich (as opposed to the Iorich Wing of the Palace—just so you don’t get confused. I wouldn’t want you to get confused) was distinguished by a high door with a gilt arch, over which stood the representation of the House; this one, unlike the one in the Wing of the Palace, looking forward. The door was open. The two guards, in the colors of the Iorich, glanced at me but let me walk past without saying anything.
An elderly Dragaeran in a simple gown of brown and white approached me, gave her name (which I don’t remember), and asked how she could serve me. I told her I was in need of an advocate, and she said, speaking in very low tones even though no one else was around, that if I cared to tell her the general nature of the problem, she could perhaps recommend someone.
“Thank you,” I said. “That isn’t necessary, if you’d be so good as to tell me if Lady Ardwena is available.”
Her face closed up like the shutters of a house in the East, and she said, “Of course. Please come with me, and I’ll show you to a waiting room.”
I did and she did, with no further words being exchanged. I guess she knew what sort of clients Lady Ardwena took, and she didn’t approve. A blight on the House, I’ve no doubt.
The room was small and empty; it felt comfortable, though, lit with a pair of ornate oil lamps. While we waited, I exchanged remarks about the decor with Loiosh, who didn’t have much to say about it.
After about five minutes, she came in herself, stopping at the door, looking at me, then stepping in and closing it. I stood up and gave her a slight bow. “Lady Ardwena. It has been a few years.”
“I can do nothing for you,” she said. There was a lot of tension in her voice. I couldn’t blame her, but neither was I overwhelmed with sympathy.
“Just need some questions answered.”
“I shouldn’t even do that.”
She wouldn’t have put it that way if she’d intended not to; she wouldn’t even have seen me. I said, “It isn’t even about me. My problems aren’t legal.”
“No,” she said. “They aren’t. Who is it about?”
“Aliera e’Kieron.”
Her eyes widened a little. “You know her?”
Heh. And here I’d thought everyone knew that. “Yes. She needs an advocate. I need you to recommend one.”
“I’ve heard she’s refused advice.”
“Yes, that makes it harder.”
She nodded and fell silent for a bit. “I’ve heard of the matter, of course. Part thirty paragraphs one, two, and five, isn’t it?”
“Just one and two.”
She nodded. “They’re moving on it quickly.”
“Which means?”
“Which means that they don’t like their case, or else they need it prosecuted for political reasons, and the issue isn’t the issue, as it were.”
“That’s good to know.”
She chewed on her lower lip and sat down. I sat down too and waited while she thought.
“You’ll need someone who can handle a recalcitrant client, and someone who’s done a lot of work with Folio ninety-one. Imperial Edicts are different from both Codified Traditions and Statutes. They’re a bit like Ordinances except with the full force of the Imperium behind them, which makes them a bit of a niche. And then there’s the fact that the Empire is moving so quickly. . . all right.” She pulled out a stub of pencil and a tiny square of paper. “See him. If he won’t do it, maybe he’ll be able to recommend someone.”
“Thanks,” I said.
She stood up, nodded to me, and glided out. With the amount of money I’d given her over the years, I figured she owed me at least this much. She probably didn’t agree, but was afraid that I was in a position to make life difficult for her if she didn’t help me. And I was.
Iorich
2
By “The State” we mean that body that holds the monopoly on the use of violence within a geographic region and has the power and authority to determine how much and in what manner and under what circumstances this monopoly will be delegated, authorized, or commissioned to other bodies or individuals. This power is expressed and interpreted through the body’s various legal systems, coded or uncoded.
By this definition, (cf. Lanya), it is clear that to accept the existence of a State is to accept the monopoly on violence, and so too in reverse. The question, therefore, of the legitimacy of any act of violence by the State, whether deliberate or accidental, must first of all be determined according to:
1. The legitimacy of the State.
2. The legitimacy of the interests of the State in which the violence occurred.
3. The appropriateness or lack thereof of the particular acts of violence in serving those interests.
It is for this reason that, for example, any violence committed by a rebellious vassal is inherently illegitimate; any act of violence by agents of the State that are committed for personal motivations are considered criminal misappropriation of authority; and any act of violence that, in intent, fails to advance the cause of the State is considered negligent.
The committee began its investigation into the events in Tirma on this basis.
The name on the paper was Perisil. I’d never heard of him, but then, the only Iorich I’d ever heard of were those who were willing to take Jhereg as clients—a relatively low number.
I went and showed the name and got directions to a subbasement of the House, and from there to a narrow side passage that looked like an afterthought to the construction; it was meaner and the ceiling was lower and the lighting not so good. Here, unlike in the rest of the House, there were names over the doors. I wondered if somehow having your name over the door meant you were less important. In any case, it helped me find the right one.
I clapped and waited. After a while, I clapped again. I still heard nothing, but the door opened a little and a pair of odd violet eyes were peering at me, then at Loiosh and Rocza, then at me.
“Yes?” he said, or rather squeaked. His voice was high-pitched and small; I couldn’t imagine him arguing before the Court. I mean, do you want the Justicer laughing at your advocate? Well, I don’t know, maybe that would help.
“May I come in?”
He opened the door a bit more. He was only a little taller than Aliera, who was only a little taller than me. His shoulders were broad, and for a Dragaeran he’d have been called stocky. His dress was casual, to the point where the laces on his doublet were only loosely tied and his gloves were unevenly hanging on his belt. For an Iorich, that’s casual, okay? He said, “An Easterner. If you’re here on your own behalf, or one of your countrymen, I’ve never done anything with the Separation Laws, though I’ve looked through them of course.”
The office behind him was tiny and square, mostly taken up by a wooden desk that looked old and well-used; it had grooves and scratches here and there, and it just barely left room for a couple of chairs that were ugly and metal. There were white spaces on the wall where some pictures or something had once hung, and there was some sort of framed official document hanging prominently above and behind his chair. I said, “You were recommended to me by Lady Ardwena. My name is Vladimir Taltos. I’m here on behalf of Aliera e’Kieron.”
“Oh. Come in, then.” He stepped out of my way. He looked at Loiosh and Rocza again. “Interesting pets you have.”
“Thank him for me, Boss. I always love hearing my pets complimented.”
I ignored Loiosh and stepped inside. “New office for you?” I said.
He nodded. “Just recently permitted into the House from an outside office.” Then he stopped halfway into his chair. “How did you know that?”
He sat behind the desk. I sat in one of the chairs. It was ugly, but at least it was uncomfortable. “Aliera,” I prompted.
“Lady Ardwena for Aliera e’Kieron,” he repeated. “That’s an interesting juxtaposition. But then, I think I’ve heard of you.”
I made a sort of noise that could mean anything and let him talk. All the advocates I’ve ever met are perfectly willing to talk from Homeday to Northport. The best of them are willing to listen, too.
He nodded as if to some inner voice. “You have paperwork?”
“None,” I said.
“Oh. Are you registered as a friend?”
“Yes, but not confirmed.”
“Hmmm,” he said. “She doesn’t want to see her friends, and doesn’t want an advocate.”
“Well, you know Dragonlords.”
“Not many, not well. I’ve never had one as a client.”
“Dragonlords think there are two ways to solve any problem, and the first is killing somebody.”
He nodded. “The second?”
“Most of them never need to come up with one.”
He folded his arms and sat back. “Tough situation,” he said. “Do you have money?”
“Yes.”
He named a figure that was a substantial percentage of what I used to charge to kill someone. I borrowed his pen and ink and blotter and I wrote out a draft on my bank and passed it over. He studied it carefully, blew on it, then set it aside and nodded.
“Where can you be reached?”
“Castle Black.”
“I know the place,” he said. He steepled his fingers and stared at nothing for a bit. “Am I correct that you don’t know why she refuses an advocate or to see anyone?”
“I can speculate,” I said, “knowing Aliera.”
“She’s outraged, offended, and more full of pride than her father was before he destroyed the world?”
“Oh, you know her?”
“Heard of her, of course.”
“Dragons,” I said.
“Indeed.”
“Can you explain the laws that apply here?”
“There isn’t much to explain. Elder Sorcery is forbidden by Imperial Edict.”
“Yeah, what does that mean?”
“That it isn’t a Codified Tradition. Codified Traditions are more fun.”
“Fun?”
“For an advocate. With a traditional, we can always find interesting ways to reinterpret the tradition, or find an historical context for its creation that has changed, or question how it was codified. That sort of thing is always fun. Me, I work mostly with Edicts.”
“Oh. Why?”
“I don’t know. I fell into it, I suppose. It suits me, though. If I were a Dragon, I’d say it was because they’re more of a challenge. In fact, I suppose what I enjoy isn’t the interpretation of the law as much as establishing and arguing about the facts. Most of the law involves detail work and subtleties of interpretation. Edicts are yes or no, did or didn’t.”
In this case: did, I thought. “That this was an Edict means what, exactly?”
“It means it was explicitly declared by an Emperor at some point. Like a Statute, only with the force of the Empire behind it. That one in particular is about as old as the Empire.”
“What does it mean for us? In a practical sense.”
“It means there’s no way to attack the law itself; the only questions are: did she do it, and if so, how harsh should the sentence be.”
“Can’t get anywhere on the interpretation?”
“How can you when the Empress can just consult the Orb and ask?”
“Oh, right. Death is the maximum sentence?”
“Yes.”
“You have to admit, Boss; it would be funny if Aliera ended up on the Star before you did.”
“Yeah, I’ll just laugh myself sick over that one, Loiosh.”
“What is the minimum?”
“The minimum? I suppose the minimum would be the Empress saying, ‘Don’t do that anymore.’ ”
“I see. And what would you expect?”
“No way to tell. The Empress knows Aliera, doesn’t she?”
“Yes.”
He shook his head. “If they’re friends, it will be harder for the Empress to be lenient.”
I nodded. Politics.
He said, “It’s going to be difficult if I can’t get her cooperation, you know.”
“I know. I think I can get you her cooperation, if I can manage to get in to see her.”
He brushed his hair back. “I might be able to manage that.”
“I’m listening.”
“I’m not saying anything yet. Let me give it some thought.” I was good with that. He could do as much thinking as he wanted. His voice didn’t seem as odd after you’d been listening to it for a while.
After a moment, he said, as if to himself, “Yes, that should work.”
“Hmmm?”
“One option is to petition, in your name, to have her declared incompetent to manage her affairs.”
I laughed. “Oh, she’ll love that!”
“No doubt.”
“I’ll testify, Boss. I’ve been saying for years—”
“Shut up.”
“Think they’ll go for it?”
He frowned. “Go for it?”
“I mean, will you be able to convince the Empire that she’s incompetent.”
“Oh, of course not. That isn’t the point. The point is to convince her to accept an advocate. If she won’t in the dispute with the Empire, she might to prove she isn’t mad. If not, it might convince her to be willing to see you, and give you a chance to talk her into accepting counsel.”
“Ah. Yes, that might work. Or it might just make her more stubborn. She’ll see through it, of course.” I considered. “It’s hard to know how she’ll jump.”
“Hmmm. There’s another thing I might try first. It would be quicker, at any rate.”
“If it’s also less likely to get me killed, that would be good, too. What is it?”
“Procedural complaint to the Empire. If we start out attacking, we can always back off; if we start on the defensive, it’s harder to change direction.” He drummed his fingers on the desktop. Then he nodded. “Yes, I’ll try that first. I should be able to get the petition written up and submitted in an hour. We might get results by the end of the day.”
“They don’t waste time.”
“Not with this. For whatever reason, they’re in a hurry with this case.”
“Um, yeah,” I said. “So it seems. Why is that?”
“Good question. If you want to do something useful, find out.”
“What makes you think I’d be able to do that?”
“I recognized your name.”
“Oh. I’m famous.”
“If you wish.”
“Can you tell me where to start looking?”
“You could ask the Empress.”
“Okay.”
His eyebrows rose a fraction of an inch. “I wasn’t serious.”
“Oh?”
“You know the Empress?”
“We’ve spoken.”
“Well, if you think you can get her tell you anything, I won’t stop you.”
“All right,” I said. “If that doesn’t work?”
“Lord Delwick, of my House, might be able to tell you some things, if he’s willing to talk to you. He’s our Imperial Representative.”
“Okay,” I said. “A word of advice: Don’t do anything to mess up his relationship with the Empire. The House hates that.”
“So I’ve heard,” he said.
“All right, I’ll get started, then.”
He opened up a desk drawer, dug around for a while, and then handed me what looked like a copper coin with the Iorich insignia. “Show him this, and tell him I sent you.”
I accepted it, put it in my pouch, and said, “I’ll check back with you from time to time.”
“Of course.”
I stood and gave him a bow, which he acknowledged with gesture of his head, then I let myself out.
I made my way back to the entryway of the House without too much effort, assisted by Loiosh, who has a pretty good memory for twists and turns.
I sent him and Rocza out ahead of me to spot any assassins lurking in the area, was told there weren’t any, and made a brisk walk across the way to the entrance of the Palace. I went as straight through as the twists of the Wing would permit, and out into the Imperial Wing.
Wherever you are in the Imperial Wing (all right, wherever I’ve been) you’ll see pages and messengers scurrying around, all with the Phoenix badge, usually carrying a green folder, though sometimes it will be a gold one, and occasionally something other than a folder. I always resent them, because they give the impression they know their way around the place, which is obviously impossible. Doors, corridors, stairways are everywhere, and going off at absurd angles as if designed by a madman. You have no choice but to ask directions of someone, usually a guardsman, who will of course let you know exactly what they think of Easterners who can’t find their way around.
It’s annoying.
To the left, however, finding one of the rooms where the Empress is available to courtiers is one of the easier tasks, and after only a couple of minor humiliations I arrived outside that wide, open, chairless room called the Imperial Audience Chamber or something like that, but informally known among the Jhereg as Asskiss Alley.
There were big double doors there, with a pair of guards outside of them, and a well-dressed man who could have been a relative of Lady Teldra—when she was alive—standing at his ease with a half smile on his face. I wanted to touch Lady Teldra’s hilt, but restrained myself. Instead, I placed myself before this worthy and bowed like I meant it.
“Vladimir Taltos, House Jhereg, and Count of Szurke, at your service.”
He returned my bow exactly. “Harnwood,” he said, “House of the Issola, at yours, my lord.”
“I’m afraid I don’t know the procedure”—he gave me an encouraging smile—“but I would have words with Her Majesty, who may wish to see me.”
If the request was surprising, he gave no indication. “Of course, my lord. If you will come with me into the waiting room, I will inquire.”
He led me to an empty room painted yellow, with half a dozen comfortable chairs, also yellow. They probably called it the “yellow room.” They’re creative that way. He gave me another smile, a bow, and closed the door behind him.
I sat and waited, thinking about how long it had been since I’d eaten.
I hate waiting.
I hate being hungry.
I shifted in the chair and chatted with Loiosh about our previous encounter with Her Majesty—she had granted me an Imperial title because of accidental services rendered. I suspect she knew they were accidental, but felt like rewarding me for her own reasons. I happened to know she had an Easterner as a lover, maybe that had something to do with it. Loiosh made a few other suggestions for reasons, some of which were probably treasonous.
Or maybe not. I’ve heard that in some Eastern kingdoms it is a capital crime to fail to treat the king with proper respect, but I had no idea if that was true in the Empire. I imagined that I could ask Perisil, and get an answer much longer than I wanted that would come out to: sometimes. Imperial law seems to work like that.
This close to the Orb, I could easily feel my link to it, and knew when an hour had passed.
A little later, Harnwood returned with profuse apologies, a bottle of wine, some dried fruit, and word that Her Majesty begged me to be patient, because she did wish to speak with me. My heart quickened a bit when I heard that; isn’t that odd? I’d known Morrolan e’Drien, and Sethra Lavode, and had even been face-to-face with Verra, the Demon Goddess, and yet I still felt a thrill go through me that this woman wanted to talk to me. Strange. I guess it shows what conditioning can do.
Harnwood left, and I drank the wine because I was thirsty and ate the fruit because it gave me something to do and because I was feeling half-starved. Loiosh ate some for the same reasons (dried fruit not being a favorite of his); Rocza seemed to have no problems with dried fruit.
Then I waited some more.
It was most of another hour before Harnwood came back, looking even more apologetic and saying, “She will see you now, Lord Szurke.”
That was interesting. She would see Lord Szurke, not Lord Taltos. I didn’t know what the significance of that was, but I was pretty sure there was significance. That’s the trouble with the Court, you know: Everything is significant but they don’t tell you exactly why, or how, or what it means until you’re swimming in it. Maybe in my next life I’ll be a Lyorn and be taught all that stuff or an Issola and know it instinctively. More likely not, though.
I stood up, discovering that sitting there for most of two hours had made my body stiff. I wondered if I was getting old.
I followed Harnwood out and down the hall, where we went past the door he’d been stationed outside of, then turned left, through a doorway, and into a much smaller hallway that ended in a flight of eight stairs—two few for it to be a stairway up to the next floor. I don’t know; I never did figure that out. But at the top was a door that was standing open, and past it was a long, narrow room with a few stuffed chairs set haphazardly about. At the far end was Her Majesty, speaking quietly with a man in the colors of the Iorich and a woman in the colors of the Dragon. As I entered, all three glanced up at me, with uniform lacks of expression.
The Orb as it circled the Empress’s head was a light green, which should have told me something about her mood, but it didn’t. She turned to the two she’d been speaking with and said, “Leave us now. I wish to speak to this gentleman.”
They gave her a deep bow, me a rather shallower one, backed up, and left by a door at the far end.
The Empress sat in a chair and motioned me to stand in front of her. I made an obeisance and waited, not entirely sure of the etiquette, and wishing I had Lady Teldra in the flesh, as it were, to tell me what I was supposed to do. Zerika didn’t look as if I’d violated any sort of protocol. I reflected that the Empire did things rather more simply than these things were done in the East.
“Taltos Vladimir,” she said, a smile flicking over her lips. She still looked impossibly young to be an Empress, but looks are deceiving. “What happened to your hand?”
I glanced at my left hand, missing the least finger. “A minor insect bite followed by a major infection,” I said. I forced myself to not glance at the Orb while I said it; the Orb, I’ve been told, only detects falsehood when asked to do so, and even then it can sometimes be beaten, as I’ve reason to know.
She said, “You couldn’t cure it with your arts?”
I touched the amulet hanging about my neck. “I’m not sure how much Your Majesty knows of—”
“Oh, of course,” she said. “I had forgotten.”
“It is kind of Your Majesty to remember at all.”
“Yes. I am the personification of kindness, as well as mercy and justice, which as you know always match steps. What brings you back to the City, under the circumstances?”
Okay, well, she knew about the “circumstances.” I was only surprised that she cared enough to, and I wondered why.
“Aliera is a friend of mine,” I said.
“And mine,” she snapped.
I almost jumped. It isn’t good when the Empress is mad at you—ask anyone. I said, “Well, naturally, I wanted to see her.”
She seemed to relax a little, and nodded.
“And help her if I can,” I added. “I trust you have no objections?”
“That depends,” she said carefully, “on just exactly what you mean by ‘helping’ her.”
“I had in mind hiring an advocate, to start with.”
She nodded. “I would have no objection to that, of course.”
“Perhaps Your Majesty would be willing to tell me something.”
“Perhaps.”
“It may be my imagination, but it seems that the prosecution of Aliera is, ah, being expedited. If that’s true, then—”
“It isn’t,” she said. She was terse. She was glaring. She was lying. It’s something to make an Empress lie to you, isn’t it?
I nodded. “As Your Majesty says.”
She glared and I stared at a place on the wall above and behind her right ear. The Orb had turned a sort of orangish, reddish color. I waited. This isn’t one of those situations where I need to explain why I kept my mouth shut.
At length, she gestured toward a chair. “Sit,” she said.
“I thank Your Maj—”
“Oh, shut up.”
I sat down. The chair was comfortable; I was not.
She let out a long breath. “Well,” she said. “Now we have quite the situation here.”
One thing I’d hoped to find a way to say to her was, “Look, you’ve known for years that Aliera and Morrolan dabbled in Elder Sorcery. Why is it such a big deal now all of a sudden?” I was now convinced there was going to be no way to ask it at all. The Orb circled her head, its color gradually fading back to a sick shade of green. It must be annoying to be unable to conceal your feelings.
“Was the Orb designed to display the Imperial mood, or is it a by-product of something else?”
She pretended not to hear the question. “Who have you hired as an advocate?”
“His name is Perisil.”
“I don’t know him. Will he manage to get you in to see her?”
“I hope so.”
“Let her know that if she confesses, she’ll be shown mercy.”
I started to reply, then recast it in terms I hoped more suitable for the Imperial presence: “Is Your Majesty pleased to jest?”
She sighed. “No, but I see your point.”
I was trying to imagine Aliera e’Kieron begging for mercy of anyone for any reason, and my mind just wouldn’t accept it.
She said, “I should have mentioned it before, but I’m glad you’re not—that is, I’m glad you’re still alive.”
“Me too. I mean, I thank Your Majesty.”
“Who have you seen since you’ve back in town?”
“Morrolan, that’s all.”
“Has he, ah, said anything?”
“You mean, made disloyal remarks about his sovereign? No.”
“I could put the Orb over you and make you repeat that.”
“Must be nice to be able to do that whenever you want, Majesty.”
“Not as nice as you’d think.”
I cleared my throat. “With all due respect, Your Maj—”
“Oh, stuff your respect. What is it?”
“Someone in my position is hardly likely to overflow with sympathy for someone in yours.”
“I wasn’t asking for sympathy,” said Her Majesty.
“No, I suppose not.”
“And you know whose fault your predicament is.”
“Yes. Can the same be said for yours?”
“Not without exploring metaphysics, which I haven’t the patience for just now.”
I smiled a little. “I can imagine Your Majesty in the library of Castle Black furiously arguing metaphysics with Morrolan.”
“So can I,” she said, granting me a brief smile.
It was like half the time I was being invited to talk with Zerika, and half the time to speak with the Empress. It was hard to keep up with.
I said, “It must be a difficult position.”
“I said I wasn’t asking for sympathy.”
“Sorry.”
She sighed. “Yes, it is. Between jailing a friend and violence in the—” She broke off and shook her head. “Well, I knew what I was getting into when I took the Orb.”
Neither of us mentioned that at the time she had taken the Orb there was, quite literally, no one else to do it. I said, “You know I’m still willing to serve Your Majesty.”
“Are you?”
“Yes.”
“As long as it doesn’t mean a disservice to your friends, as usual?” She sounded a little scornful.
“Yes,” I said, not letting her know that her tone had stung a bit.
“I’m afraid,” she said, “that this is an occasion when you’re going to have to choose whom to help.”
“Eh. Between my friends and the Empire? I’m sorry, that isn’t that hard a choice. Can you give me enough of an idea of what’s going on that I can at least understand why it has to be that way?”
After a moment, she said, “Do you know, Vlad, that from the best knowledge we have, it seems almost certain that at least five of the original sixteen tribes practiced human sacrifice?”
“I had not been aware—”
“There are many who assume that because we have evidence from the five, it is safe to make assumptions about the other eleven. I don’t know if they’re right, but I can’t prove them wrong.”
I cleared my throat, just as if I had something to say to that. She looked at me expectantly, so I had to come up with something. “Um, how did they choose the lucky person?”
“Different ways for different tribes. Captives in battle, selected for special honor, punishment, reward, auguries.”
“When did it stop?”
“When the Empire was formed. It was made illegal. That was the first Imperial Edict.”
“An act of kindness from your ancestor. Good way to start.”
“Not kindness, so much. She’d spoken to the gods, and knew the gods were either indifferent or hostile to the practice. So call it practicality. I bring it up because—” She stopped, and looked blank for a moment, the Orb pulsing blue over her head. “I’m sorry, it seems I must go run an Empire.”
I stood. “Thank you for seeing me.” I made as good an obeisance as I could; which isn’t too bad, I’m told.
“It is always a pleasure, Count Szurke.”
I backed away a few steps (there is a correct number of steps, but I didn’t know it), and turned away. She said, “Oh, and thank you, Vlad.”
“For—?”
“The documents on making paper. I’m told they’re valuable.”
“Oh, right. I’d forgotten about—how did you know they came from me?”
She smiled. “Until now, I didn’t.”
The mention of making paper brought back a complex set of memories and partial memories that I didn’t especially feel like dwelling on just then; but it was good of her to mention it. I gave her what I hoped was a friendly smile over my shoulder and took myself out of the room.
Iorich
3
Q: Please state your name, your House, and your city of residence.
A: Dornin e’Lanya, House of the Dragon, Brickerstown.
Q: Rank and position?
A: Sergeant, Imperial Army, Second Army, Fourth Legion, Company D.
Q: What were your orders on the second day of the month of the Lyorn of this year?
A: We were to escort a supply train from Norest to Swordrock. On that day, we were passing through Tirma, in the duchy of Carver.
Q: And what had you heard about Tirma?
A: We knew the entire duchy was in rebellion.
Empress: Did you know this officially, or through rumor?
A: It was common knowledge, Your Majesty.
Q: Answer Her Majesty’s question, Sergeant.
A: We were never informed officially.
Orb shows falsehood
Q: Would you care to reconsider that answer, Sergeant Dornin?
A: No, my lord. That is my answer.
Q: Had anything unusual happened that day before you reached Tirma?
A: There were the usual problems with the wagon train, but no attacks or incidents.
Q: Describe what happened when you entered Tirma.
A: We were set on by a mob that was trying to take away the wagons, and we defended ourselves.
Q: While you were in Tirma, were you or your command involved in any fighting or violence that did not involve defending yourselves against an attack?
A: We were not.
Orb shows falsehood
Q: Would you care to reconsider your answer?
A: I would not.
Q: Are you aware of the penalties for lying beneath the Orb?
A: I am.
I went back down the half-flight of stairs, down the hall, and stopped, trying to remember the name I’d been given.
“Delwick.”
“I knew that.”
“Right.”
“Okay, I was about to remember.”
“Right.”
“Shut up.”
I found my way back to where Harnwood still waited. He smiled as if he were glad to see me. I bowed as precisely as I could manage—not that he’d let me know if I missed my mark—and said, “Pardon me, do you know a Lord Delwick?”
“Of course, my lord. Shall I take you to where he is?”
“If you’d be so kind.”
He would, in fact, be so kind. He exchanged a few words with the guard stationed by the door, and gestured with his hand that I was to fall into step with him. I did so. Having known Lady Teldra so long—in the flesh, I mean—I wasn’t surprised that he made it seem effortless to shorten his strides to match my puny human ones.
I won’t try to describe the turnings we took, nor the stairs we went up only to go down another. I will mention one extremely wide hallway with what looked like gold trimming over ivory, and hung with the psiprints of some of the oddest-looking people I’ve ever seen, all of them looking enough like Daymar to convince me they were Hawklords, and all of them staring out with the same expression: as if they were saying, “Just what manner of beast are you, anyway, and do you mind of if I study you for a while?”
We walked into a perfectly square room around the size of my old flat off Lower Kieron Road—it was a pretty big flat. The room was empty. Harnwood said, “This is where the various representatives sometimes gather to speak informally.”
“Should I wait here?”
“No, we can find Lord Delwick’s offices.”
I was glad the room was empty. Meeting the Jhereg representative would have been awkward. We passed through it to a door at the other end, and stepped into a hallway. He nodded to the right. “That way, following it around to the right, you’ll come back to the Imperial Audience Chamber, on the other side. Unfortunately, this is the fastest way without going through the Chamber, which is inappropriate.”
“I understand,” I lied.
He pretended to believe me and we turned left. There were a few doors on the right, and farther up the hallway split, but before that point he stopped outside one of the doors and clapped. There was the symbol of the Iorich above it. By then I hadn’t eaten anything except a little dried fruit in about three years, and I was in a wretched mood. I resolved not to take it out on Lord Delwick.
“I can’t wait—”
“Don’t.”
Rocza gave a little shiver that I’m pretty sure was laughter.
The door opened, and an elderly Dragaeran with severe eyebrows and thin lips was looking at us, with the smile of the diplomatist—that is, a smile that means nothing.
“Well met, Delwick.”
“And you, Harnwood.” He looked an inquiry at me.
“This is Lord Taltos, of House Jhereg, and he wishes a few words with you.”
“Of course,” he said. “Please come in and sit down.” If he’d ever heard of me, he concealed it well.
Harnwood took his leave amid the usual polite noises and gestures all around, after which I accompanied Delwick into his room—or actually suite, because there were a couple of doors that presumably went to his private quarters or something. It was nice enough: a thick purple carpet of the sort that comes from Keresh or thereabouts, with complex interlocking patterns that took longer to make than a human usually lives. There was no desk, which somehow struck me as significant; there were just several stuffed chairs with tables next to them, as if to say, “We’re only having a little chat here, nothing to worry about.”
Heh.
He pointed to a chair, excused himself, and went through one of the doors, returning in a moment with a plate of biscuits and cheese. I could have kissed him.
I said, “I hope you don’t mind if I feed a bit to my friends here.”
“Of course not, my lord.”
I fed them, and myself, trying not to appear greedy, but also not worrying about it too much; there are times when the Dragaeran prejudices about humans can work for us. I didn’t eat enough to be satisfied, but a few biscuits with even an excessively subtle (read: bland) cheese helped. He ate a few as well to keep company with me, as it were, while he waited for me to state my business.
I found the coin Perisil had given me, and showed it.
“Hmmm,” he said. “All right.” He looked up at me and nodded. “Very well.” He sat back. “Tell me about it.”
“Why is the prosecution of Aliera e’Kieron happening so quickly?”
He nodded a little. “I’ve wondered myself. So then, you have an advocate for her?”
“Perisil,” I said.
“Hmmm. I’m afraid I don’t recognize the name.”
“He has a basement office.”
“Where?”
“In the House.”
“Ah, I see.”
It seemed that the best advocates had quarters outside of the House. Maybe that should have shaken my confidence in Perisil, but I trusted his advice, and I’d liked him, and Loiosh hadn’t made any especially nasty comments on him.
“I asked Her Majesty, and—”
“Pardon?”
“I asked Her Majesty about it, and she wouldn’t answer.”
Delwick caught himself and stopped staring. “I see.”
“I hope my effort doesn’t make your task more difficult.”
He smiled politely. “We shall see,” he said.
“So, you’ll look into it?”
“Of course.” He seemed genuinely startled that I’d even ask. Those little coins must have some serious authority. In which case, why did an advocate with offices in the basement of the House have one to throw around, or choose to use it on me?
Later. Note it, and set it aside.
“How shall I reach you?”
“Either through Perisil, or at Castle Black.”
“Castle Black? Lord Mordran?”
“Morrolan.”
“Of course. All right. You’ll be hearing from me.”
“Thank you,” I said, standing. “Ah . . .”
“Yes?”
“Is there anywhere to eat here, in the Palace? I mean, for those of us who don’t work here?”
He smiled. “Scores. The nearest is just out my door to the right, follow the jog to the right, down the stairs, first left.”
“Thank you,” I said, meaning it.
He nodded as if he couldn’t tell the difference. I suppose if you hang around the Court long enough, you lose your ability to detect sincerity.
There was, indeed, food after a fashion; a room with space enough for a battalion held about four people, like a lonely jisweed on a rocky hill, and they were eating something dispensed by a tiny old Chreotha who seemed to be half asleep. I had unidentifiable soup that was too salty, yesterday’s bread, and something that had once been roast beef. I had water because I didn’t trust her wine. She charged too much. I couldn’t figure why the place seemed so empty.
Loiosh didn’t much like the stuff either, but he and Rocza ate it happily enough. Well, so did I, come to think of it. To be fair, it was, by this time, mid-afternoon; I imagined around lunchtime the place would be busier, and maybe the food fresher.
I finished up and left with a glare at the merchant—I won’t call her a cook—that she missed entirely, and headed back to see my advocate. Aliera’s advocate. The advocate.
At this point, I wish to make the observation that I had been spending the last several years wearing my feet out walking about the countryside, and I’ve known villages separated by mountain, river, and forest that weren’t as far apart as a place within the Imperial Palace and another within the House of the Iorich located next to it. Loiosh says I’m speaking figuratively, and he may be right, but I wouldn’t bet against the house on it.
I did get there eventually, and, wonder of wonders, he was still there, the door open, looking like he never moved. Maybe he didn’t; maybe he had flunkies to do all his running around. I used to have flunkies to do all my running around. I liked it.
I walked in and before I could ask him anything he said, “It’s all set up. Would you like to visit Aliera?”
Now that, as it happened, wasn’t as easy a question as it might have sounded. But after hesitating only a moment I said, “Sure. The worst she can do is kill me.”
That earned me an inquiring look which I ignored. “Are you coming along?” I asked him.
“No, you have to convince her to see me.”
“Okay. How did you work it?”
“Her alleged refusal to see either a friend or an advocate could have indicated deliberate isolation on the part of the Empire with the cooperation of the Justicers.”
I stared. “You think so?”
“I said it could.”
“Oh. But you don’t really think so?”
“I am most certainly not going to answer that, and don’t ask it again.”
“Oh. All right. But they believed it?”
“They believed I had grounds for an investigation.”
“Ah. All right.”
He nodded. “Now, go and see her.”
“Um. Where? How?”
“Up one level, follow wrongwise until—here, I’ll write out the directions; they’re a bit involved.”
They were. His scripting was painfully neat and precise, though he’d been fast enough writing it out. And I must have looked like an idiot, walking down the hall with two jhereg on my shoulders repeatedly stopping and reading the note and looking around. But those I passed were either as polite as Issola or as oblivious as Athyra, and eventually I got there: a pair of marble pillars guarded a pair of tall, wide doors engraved so splendidly with cavorting iorich that you might not notice the doors were bound in iron. You should go see them someday; cavorting iorich aren’t something one sees depicted every day, and for good reason. Before them were four guards who looked like they had no sense of humor, and a corporal whose job it was to find out if you had good reason for wanting them open.
I convinced him by showing him that same coin I’d used before, and there was a “clang” followed by invisible servants pulling invisible ropes and the doors opened for me. Morrolan worked things better.
It was a little odd to walk through those portals. For one thing, the other side was more what I was used to; I’d been there before, and a cold shiver went through me as I set foot on the plain stone floors. I’m not going to talk about the last time I was in the Iorich dungeons. And I’m certainly not going to talk about the time before that.
Just inside was a guard station, like a small hut with glass windows inside the wide corridor. There were a couple of couches there, I guess for them to sleep, and a table where the sergeant sat. There was a thick leather-bound book in front of him. He said, “Your business?”
“To see Aliera e’Kieron, by request of her advocate.”
“Name?”
“Mine, or the advocate’s?”
“Yours.”
“Szurke.”
“Seal?”
I dug it out and showed it to him. He nodded. “I was told you’d be by. You must either leave your weapons here, or sign and seal these documents and take an oath promising—”
“I know. I’ll sign the documents and take the oath.”
He nodded, and we went through the procedure that permitted me to keep Lady Teldra, whom I was not about to give up. When everything was finally done, he said, “Limper, show him to number eight.”
The woman who stood up and gestured to me was a bit short and had a pale complexion and showed no signs of limping; no doubt there was a story there.
One thing about the dungeons is that unlike the rest of the Iorich Wing, they were pretty simple: a big square of doors, guard stations at all four corners, stairways in the middle. It might involve a lot of walking, but you wouldn’t get lost.
We took a stairway up. I’d never gone up from the main level before. The first thing I noticed was that the cells, though still made of the same iron-bound wood, were much farther apart than the ones I’d had residence in. And they had clapper ropes, for all love.
Limper used the rope, then dug out a key and used that without waiting for a response. I guess they felt that the occupants of these elite cells deserved warning about visitors, but still didn’t get a choice about whether they were admitted. That made me feel a little better.
She opened the door and said, “You have an hour. If you want to leave sooner, pull the knob attached to the inside of the door.” I stepped inside and the door closed behind me with a thud. I heard the bolt slide into place while I looked around.
When I was growing up, the flat where my father and I lived was a great deal smaller than the “cell” Aliera was in, and considerably less luxurious. The floor was thick Serioli carpet, with wavy patterns and hard-angled lines all formed out of dots. The furnishings were all of the same blond hardwood, and the light was from a chandelier with enough candles to have illuminated about fifty of the kind of cells I’d stayed in. I refer, of course, only to the room I could see; there were at least two doors leading off to other rooms. Maybe one was a privy, and it was only a two-room suite.
I didn’t see Aliera at first; she was lounging on a long couch that her plain, black military garb blended into; although I really ought to have seen the sparks shooting from her eyes as she gave me the sort of kind, friendly, welcoming look I expected.
“What, by the thorns in Barlen’s ass, do you want?”
“Can we just let that oath stay unexamined, Boss?”
“It’s already gone, Loiosh.”
It was, too; because while I was still searching for an answer, she said, “I didn’t give you permission to visit.”
“Your advocate arranged it.”
“I don’t have an advocate.”
“Turns out you do.”
“Indeed?” she said in a tone that would have put a layer of frost on Wynak’s burning private parts.
“Some legal trick involved. I don’t understand that stuff.”
“And I have no say in the matter?”
“You had no say in being put here,” I said, shrugging.
“Very well,” she said. “Since they have taken Pathfinder from me, if he dares show his face, I shall have to see what I can do with my bare hands.”
I nodded. “I knew you’d show sense.”
She glared. “Do you know why I don’t kill you right now?”
“Yes,” I said. “Because to do so, you’d have to stand up. Once entering the Iorich dungeons, you are cut off from the Orb, and so you can’t levitate, so I’d see how short you really are, and you couldn’t take the humiliation. Going to offer me something to drink?” Just so you know, it had been years since she’d done that levitating bit; I just said it to annoy her.
She gestured with her head. “On the buffet. Help yourself.”
I did, to a hard cider that was pretty good, though it wanted to be colder. I took a chair across from her and smiled pleasantly into her glare.
“So,” I said. “What’s new?”
Her response was more martial than ladylike.
“Yes,” I said. “That part I sort of picked up on. But I was wondering about the details.”
“Details.” She said it like the word tasted bad.
“You were arrested,” I said, “for the illegal study and practice—”
She had some suggestions about what I could do with my summary of her case.
I was coming to the conclusion that she wasn’t in the best of moods for conversation. I sipped some cider, let it roll around on my tongue, and looked around the room. She even had windows. They had bars on them, but they were real windows. When I was in “Jhereg storage” I didn’t have any windows. And they had done something that prevented psychic communication, though I’d still been able to talk to Loiosh, which put me in a better position than most.
“There is, I think, more going on here than just the violation of a law.”
She stared at me.
I said, “You’ve been doing this for years, and everyone knows it. Why arrest you for it now? There has to be something political going on.”
“You think?”
I said, “Just catching myself up out loud.”
“Fine. Can you do it elsewhere? If there is anyone I want to see right now, it isn’t you.”
“Who is it?”
“Pathfinder.”
“Oh. Well, yes.” I could imagine one missing one’s Great Weapon. I touched the hilt of Lady Teldra.
“Please leave,” she said.
“Naw,” I said.
She glared.
I said, “I need to get the details if I’m going to do anything about it. And I am going to do something about it.”
“Why?” She pretty much spat the word.
“Don’t be stupid,” I said. “You know why. To gain the moral high ground on you. It’s what I live for. Just the idea of you owing me—”
“Oh, shut up.”
I did, and took the opportunity to ponder. I needed another way in. Once, years ago, I’d seen the room in Castle Black where the Necromancer lived, if it could be called a room. It could hardly be called a closet. There was space for her to stand, and that was it. I couldn’t help but comment on how small it was, and she looked puzzled for a moment, then said, “Oh, but you only perceive three dimensions, don’t you?” Yes, I’m afraid that’s all I perceive. And my usual way of perceiving wasn’t going to convince Aliera to tell me what was going on.
“What are they feeding you here?”
She looked at me.
I said, “When I was here, I got this sort of soup with a few bread crusts floating in it. I think they may have waved a chicken at it. I was just wondering if they were treating you any better.”
“When were you here?”
“A few times. Not here, exactly. Same building, different suite. Mine wasn’t so well appointed.”
“What, that gives you moral superiority?”
“No, I get my moral superiority from having been guilty of what they arrested me for, and walking out free a bit later.”
She sniffed.
I said, “Well, a kind of moral superiority anyway.”
She muttered something about Jhereg. I imagine it wasn’t complimentary.
“But then,” I said, “you’re guilty too. Technically, anyway. So I guess—”
“You know so much about it, don’t you?”
I got one of those quick flashes of memory you get, this one of me lying on my back, unable to move, while bits and pieces of the world turned into something that ought not to exist. “Not so much,” I said, “but more than I should.”
“I’ll agree with that.”
“The point is, what would make the Empress suddenly decide that a law she was turning a blind eye to was now—”
“Ask her.”
“She probably won’t answer me,” I said.
“And you think I will?”
“Why not?”
“I assume the question is rhetorical,” said Aliera.
She looked away and I waited. I had some more cider. I love having a drink in my hand, because it gives me something to do while I’m waiting, and because I look really good holding it, shifting from foot to foot, like the waiter when the customer can’t decide between the shrimp soufflé and the lamb Fenarian. Okay, maybe I don’t look so good after all. I went over and sat down in a chair facing her, and took another sip. Much better.
“Yes,” she said.
“Excuse me?”
“The question was rhetorical.”
“Oh.” Then, “Mine wasn’t.”
She settled back a little onto the couch. I let the silence continue to see if she’d finally say something. She did. “I don’t know.” She sounded quiet, reflective. It was unusual for her. I kept my mouth shut, sort of in honor of the novelty and to see if anything else would emerge.
“It isn’t that simple,” she said, as if I’d been the other party in whatever internal dialogue was going on.
“Explain, then.”
“You keep wanting to make it friendship versus politics.”
I nodded to indicate that I had no idea what she was talking about.
“But it’s never that clear-cut. It’s all about how bad this would be, and what are the chances of that happening, and how sure are you that this or that will or won’t work.”
I nodded again. Having Aliera e’Kieron in an expansive mood was too good a chance to mess up by speaking.
“But she wouldn’t have done it unless—” She broke off and glared at me.
“Unless what?” I said.
“Just shut up.”
“Don’t feel like it,” I said. “Will you talk to an advocate?”
“Why?”
“So they don’t, I don’t know, kill you or something?”
“You think I care about that?”
“I seem to recall you fighting once as if you did. Maybe you were faking it, though.”
“You know damned well that’s different.”
“You know I’ve always had trouble seeing fine distinctions.”
“You’ve always had trouble seeing anything that wasn’t of immediate practical value.”
“You say that like there’s something wrong with it.”
She made a sound of disgust.
“All right,” I said. “Now probably isn’t the time for philosophy. Will you talk to an advocate?”
“No,” she said.
I took it as equivocal.
“Afraid you might be found innocent?”
She looked at me, then looked off. “Go away.” Ambiguous.
“Sure. Meanwhile, what do you know or suspect that would have led to this, ah, situation, that you don’t want revealed?”
“I’m not going to tell you anything, Vlad. Leave me alone.”
It was hard to know how to react when she was being so hesitant about her wishes.
“You’ve been arrested for reasons of State,” I said as if I were sure. “You may not know what they are, but you know that’s what it is. And you’re afraid that if you defend yourself it will interfere with whatever the Empress is doing.”
“Drop dead.”
“It must not have occurred to you that the Empress is counting on you to defend yourself, otherwise she’d never have used this device to accomplish whatever she’s trying to accomplish.”
She looked at me, and there was a flicker of interest in her eyes. “How would you know?”
“She told me. She all but told me, by what she wouldn’t tell me.”
“You spoke to her?”
“I can do that. I have an Imperial title, you know.”
“And she said—”
“I got the feeling there were a lot of things going on she couldn’t tell me.”
“You got the feeling.”
“Right.”
“So you’re guessing.”
“Less than certainty, more than guesswork.”
She made a general sound of disgust.
I waited. Dragonlords are much too stubborn to be convinced of anything by argument, so the trick to dealing with them is to avoid saying something that will get you killed until they come around to your opinion on their own. This is more true of Aliera than most.
She said, “If Her Majesty had not wished for my conviction, she wouldn’t have begun the arrest proceedings.”
“Uh huh,” I said.
Those were the last words spoken for some few minutes. Spoken aloud, I mean; Loiosh spoke a bit into my mind, mostly making observations about Aliera’s character. I’d heard them before. I’d said them before.
“I wish to reemphasize the one important thing,” I said eventually.
“What. Is. That?”
“If you don’t have an advocate, it’ll be pretty obvious to everyone that you’re deliberately sacrificing yourself. If you are deliberately sacrificing yourself, that is liable to undo a great deal of what the Empress is trying to accomplish.”
She stared at me. I think she knew I was just trying to maneuver her into doing what I wanted; the trouble was that it was a valid argument. Eventually she said, “Is the advocate any good?”
“How would I know?” I said. “Probably not.”
She glared. “All right. I’ll see him.”
“I’ll let him know.”
“Get out of here.”
That time I did.
Iorich
4
Lady Otria e’Terics reported that, while no weapons were found on the scene, save those in use by the Imperial army and so marked, and three personal, unmarked weapons claimed by same, there were several implements in or near the cottage that could have been utilized as weapons. See list Appendix 12. Upon being asked if there was evidence that they had been so utilized, Lady Otria e’Terics declined to answer. See Deposition 9.
There’s an inn called Dancer’s Rest not far from the Iorich Wing. It’s one of those places where they figure if they fill the courtyard with marble statues and fountains and flowers that are blooming off-season, they can charge two orbs a night for a nine-copper room. It works, I guess. At least, I paid it. Some of the statues were pretty. And, you know, when you’ve been away from civilization for a while, you value a nine-copper room at any price.
It had the other advantage that, by Jhereg custom, anyone staying there was considered at home. In theory, I should be safe there. In practice, since one of the things the Jhereg wanted me for was breaking a rule like that, I probably shouldn’t bet my soul on it.
It cost another orb to have food sent up to my room, which had a window from which I could see the upper reaches of the Iorich and the Chreotha Wings, the first with its signature bell tower, the latter with its massive wall of bas-relief jungle plants. I could see them well, because the window was glass. That’s the sort of thing you get for two orbs a night.
The bed was considerably softer than the ground I’d gotten used to sleeping on, and there was even enough room to turn with my arms stretched out. That’s the thing about rooms near the Palace: They’re small; probably designed to make the Palace seem bigger, I don’t know.
“You ever planning to fall asleep, Boss?”
“The walls are too thick. It’s too quiet. I’m used to things chittering and rustling all night.”
He didn’t answer, and somewhere in there I fell asleep and had a confusing dream about thick walls that were in between me and something I wanted, I don’t remember what, and I kept trying to dig through them with the dull edge of a knife. Why the dull edge? How should I know; I was only a spectator.
I woke late the next morning, feeling pretty good. Loiosh and Rocza scouted the area, decided it was safe, and I went out looking for klava. Found some. Drank it. Was happy. I also picked up a warm sweet bun stuffed with kethna, and it was good too. Then, with Loiosh and Rocza taking precautions for me, I made my way back to the Iorich Wing.
The advocate’s door was closed and there was a note pinned to it with the initial V in tight, careful script. I took down the note and unfolded it to read, “Running an errand; wait in my office.”
I shrugged and reached for the door handle, and Loiosh said, “Boss!”
I froze. “What is it?”
“I don’t know.”
My hand brushed Lady Teldra’s hilt, but I didn’t draw. Pulling a Morganti weapon in the House of the Iorich is the sort of thing that gets you talked about, and I wasn’t going to do it if I didn’t have to.
“Something about that note bothers me.”
“If you tell me you’ve suddenly turned into a handwriting expert—”
He didn’t answer; I could feel him thinking, or at least doing something with his mind, probing or sensing in a way that I couldn’t feel. I waited. I hoped no one walked by, because I’d either kill him or feel like an idiot for standing outside of this door not moving. I studied the note again. Was it the same handwriting I’d seen from Perisil? Pretty close. I started to pull out the directions he’d written out for me to compare the writing, but Loiosh spoke before I could.
“There’s someone inside.”
“Okay.”
“It isn’t him.”
“Okay. Anyone else around?”
“A few of the other offices have people in them.”
“Send Rocza ahead.”
She left my shoulder almost before the words were out of my metaphorical mouth. I turned and walked back the way I’d come—not too fast, not too slow, trying to stay alert for any sound, any flicker of movement. It’s the sort of experience that wakes up every particle of your body. If it weren’t for the thrill of the thing, I’d just as soon skip it completely.
“She says it’s clear ahead, Boss.”
The hallway was much, much longer than it had been two minutes before when I was going the other way, and my footsteps were much louder. Two Justicers were walking slowly toward me, deep in conversation, and I gave them an extra look even though I could tell they weren’t Jhereg from the frankly curious glance they gave me. I could feel Loiosh watching them until they were well past.
I reached the stairway at the far end of the hallway with Rocza still scouting ahead. On the main floor I could relax a little; there were uniformed armsmen there, and a few more people as well as more open space; it was a bad place for an assassin to make a move.
The same elderly woman was in the same place near the door. Next to her was a Chreotha with a cart selling food of some sort. I bought a hot and flaky pastry filled with garlicky potato. I stood off to the side eating and thinking.
I fed the remainders to the jhereg; people around pretended not to notice. Lady Teldra would have been proud of them.
I brushed crumbs off my fingers.
“Okay, Boss. Now where?”
“Somewhere safe.”
“Yeah, like I said.”
“This is pretty safe, but I think after standing here six or seven hours I’ll start to feel silly.”
“When has that—”
“Of course, it might be fun to stand here until the assassin gives up and leaves, and then give him a big smile as he goes by.”
“Sure, Boss. Whatever floats your castle.”
“The other idea is not to do that.” I reviewed a list of more practical possibilities, then approached the woman behind the desk with a short bow. “Is there a common waiting area?”
She frowned. “If you wish to see an advocate, they each have offices.”
“Yes,” I said. “I’d rather wait elsewhere, if you don’t mind.”
She looked like she wanted to ask why, but only gestured to her right, saying, “Fourth door on the right. It should be open.”
“Can a note be delivered to Lord Perisil?”
She frowned again. “Would that be High Counsel Perisil?”
“Yes,” I said, while the ghost of Lady Teldra probably tsked at me for not knowing the proper title and at her for correcting me.
The clerk was kind enough to let me use a piece of coarse paper and a cheap pencil. I wrote a short note and handed it over, not even bothering to fold it. “I do not know the customs of your House,” I said. “I trust this will go to his hand, and nowhere else?”
“That is correct,” she said, a bit contemptuously. She probably hated her job, sitting there hour after hour sending people one way or another. I wondered how long she’d been doing it. Since the Interregnum ended, to look at her.
She took the note and put it casually on her desk under what looked like a piece of polished stone. I turned away from her slowly, scanning the room: A few people, mostly Iorich, were passing by on business of their own. The jhereg got some curious glances.
The place she’d directed me to was big and comfortable, mostly done in a pale blue that was probably calculated to make me feel something or other.
“You know, Boss, for someone who hates waiting—”
“Oh, shut up.”
Not that he wasn’t right. I found a chair against a wall because all of the chairs were against a wall. I stretched my legs out, closed my eyes, and tried to relax. Somewhere below me, there was a Jhereg expecting me to walk into Perisil’s office so I could be killed. Was Perisil in on it? Unlikely. The Jhereg don’t like to use advocates for illegal stuff; and besides, if he’d been in on it the note wouldn’t have looked funny.
Here’s the thing: Anyone can be shined. That’s just how it is. If you want someone bad enough, you can get him. But if he knows you’re after him, he can pretty much keep out of trouble as long as he stays alert. Which makes the question simple: How long can someone stay alert, always watching alleyways, aware of anyone who is carefully not looking at you, keeping an eye out for a good place to make a move. How long can you keep that up?
For most people, the answer is: hours, maybe a day or two.
But it turns out that you can do it a lot longer if you have a pair of jhereg taking shifts for you.
Did that mean I was safe? Not hardly. Sooner or later they were bound to get me. But thanks to Loiosh and Rocza, I had a pretty reasonable chance of making it later rather than sooner as long as I didn’t do too many stupid things.
I know what you’re thinking, and you’re wrong; I’ve gone for months without doing anything stupid. Did I just survive this time because the assassin got sloppy? Maybe. I’d like to think that if it were me I’d have been more careful with the note. Perhaps not, though. No one can do everything perfectly; mistakes happen. But we’re assassins: when we make mistakes, people live.
From time to time someone would come into the room, wait for a while, be met by someone, and leave. I guess I was there for a couple of hours before Perisil came in. He nodded to me, and said, “You could have waited in my office.”
I stood up, nodded, and followed him back down the stairs. We didn’t see anyone in the long hallway. He walked in, took a seat behind his desk, and gave me a questioning look. I decided it was a safe bet that if there’d been an assassin standing there holding a knife, he’d have reacted somehow, so I went in after him and took a seat.
“Want to explain?” he said.
“Explain what?”
“Never mind, then.”
“You saw Aliera?”
“Just got back. She’s very, ah, proud,” he said.
“If you aren’t stating the obvious, then I’m missing the point.”
“I’m stating the obvious.”
“All right.”
“Mostly.” He sat down behind the desk as if he’d just been through a battle. It was a very familiar motion, although when I sat down like that, the battle had usually been more physical.
“Want to tell me about it?” I said.
“I got her to agree to let me defend her.”
“Well done.”
“But she won’t cooperate in the endeavor.”
“That would be a problem.”
“Yes.”
“So, what are you going to do?”
“Think about it.”
“I’ve tried that with Aliera.”
“Not much luck?”
“She isn’t subject to what passes for logical thought in most people.”
He nodded. “I’ll see what I can come up with. Have you learned anything?”
“The Empress was hit with some sort of disaster that reflects badly on her.”
“With whom?”
“Knowing the Empress, probably history. She’s never seemed to care much about public opinion.”
“Can you be more specific?”
“Not very. Not yet.”
“You think it might be Tirma?”
“Maybe. Hard to say, since this is the first I’ve ever heard of Tirma.”
“Oh. That’s right, you’ve been out of the city, haven’t you?”
“Yes. I only heard about Aliera’s arrest by a fluke.”
“Tirma is a village in the far northwest. There was some unrest there, and a request for Imperial troops. No one knows what happened, but some peasants were slaughtered.”
“Innocent ones?”
“Some say.”
“I’ll bet Kelly has a lot to say on the subject.”
“Who?”
“Never mind. How does arresting Aliera help? A distraction?”
“Maybe.”
He looked like he was thinking, so I let him alone. After a minute or two he said, “The bigger question is, how does Aliera think it helps?”
“Yeah,” I said. “Assuming all our speculations are right.”
“We have to find out for sure.”
“You’re telling me that’s my job.”
“I’m saying I expect your help.”
I grunted. “I guess that’s fair.”
He nodded.
I suppose I could have told him that the Jhereg already knew I was back in town, and it wouldn’t be safe for me to go sniffing around places. But then what? I mean, it had to be done.
“Sure, Boss. But do you have to be the one to do it?”
“Seems like.”
“Why?”
“No one else is.”
“Right, Boss. Why?”
“Oh.”
“. . .and until then, I’m not going to be able to—”
“Sorry, I was distracted. Start over?”
He gave me an odd look. “I was saying that I need something I can take to a Justicer.”
“What do you mean, take to a Justicer?”
“I mean sending a Petition of Release, or make a case for Dishonorable Prosecution.”
“Dishonorable Prosecution? They have that?”
“It’s in the books.”
“How many times has it been brought?”
“Successfully?”
“At all.”
“Twenty-seven.”
“Successfully?”
“Never.”
“You’d bring that against the Empress?”
“Against the Empire, but, in effect, yes.”
“Forget it. Aliera will never permit it.”
He nodded as if he’d come to the same conclusion. “Probably true, but I want to have it there anyway.”
“Whatever you think,” I said.
“What I think is that this is very odd.”
“Seems like it to me, too. The Empress prosecuting a friend isn’t—”
“No, that’s not what’s odd; Emperors do what they have to do, and being a friend to an Emperor sometimes means losing your head. It’s always been like that.”
“All right, then. What’s odd?”
“The law they’re prosecuting her with. It isn’t intended to be used against high nobles whose House is near the top of the Cycle.”
“Ah, you’ll have to explain that.”
“What’s to explain?”
“Some laws apply to high nobles, and some not?”
“How else?”
“Um. I don’t know. I hadn’t thought about it.”
“To prosecute a noble under the Code, you have to get a majority vote of the princes. The princes aren’t going to vote against a noble when the House is powerful without a more compelling case than this is.”
“So this is a waste of time?”
“No, no—you misunderstand. That’s under the Code. This is an Imperial Edict, which means the Empress and the High Justicer make the decision. That’s why they can get a conviction.”
“Well then, what’s—”
“But using the Edicts against a noble, at a time when you couldn’t get a conviction, is going to raise quite a stink among the princes. The High Justicer has to know that, and so does the Empress.”
“Would they let that interfere with justice?”
“Are you being funny?”
“Yes.”
“Eh. I guess it was a little funny at that. But, you know, there is making the law, and enforcing the law, and interpreting the law, and they all mix up together, and it’s people who do those things, and the people all mix up together. You can’t separate them.”
“It’d be interesting to try.”
He waved it aside. “The point is, this will create lots of bad feelings among those who matter. And bad feelings are bad statesmanship, and the Empress isn’t known for bad statesmanship.”
“Um. Okay, I think I get the idea. What’s your conclusion?”
“My conclusion is that I want to know what’s going on. I’ll look at it from my end, you look at it from yours.”
“All right.”
“Do you know how you’re going to start?”
“Of course not.”
He nodded like he’d have been surprised to get any other answer. “Are you open to suggestions?”
“Sure.”
“Stay away from the Empress.”
“That part is easy. I don’t have that much call to see her, you know. But that only tells me what not to do.”
“I’m sure we can find more things for you not to do if we put our minds to it.”
“See, Boss? He does have a sense of humor.”
“Such as it is.” Aloud, I said, “You need something that will provide a legal angle for Aliera.”
He nodded.
“Yeah, well, I know about as much about the law as you know about—that is, I don’t know much about the law.”
“You don’t need to. Find out why they’re prosecuting Aliera, and be able to prove it.”
“Prove it. What does that mean, exactly?”
“Find people who saw or heard things, and will swear to it beneath the Orb.”
“Oh, and where would I—oh.”
“Right. But stay away from the Empress.”
“Great. And what will you be doing?”
“Same as you, only to different people. And I’ll be reviewing the laws, and looking through decisions and case histories. You aren’t going to be too useful for that part.”
“I imagine not.” I stood and headed out.
Let me explain again something I’ve already mentioned: The way an assassin operates involves picking a time and a place, setting up whatever is necessary (which usually means making sure you have a good edge on your knife), and striking. If for some reason things go wrong—like, say, the guy gets suspicious about the handwriting of a note—then you go back and start over. All of which means that no one was going to be making a move on me for a day at least. Which means I should have been able to relax as I left the waiting room and headed toward the Palace.
Yeah, well, you try it sometime and see how relaxed you are.
Loiosh was pretty tense too, either because he sensed that I was, or because he knew what was going on. It’s pretty crazy, that feeling of walking through a big, wide corridor, your boots echoing, almost no one in sight, thinking you’re safe, but feeling anything but. I stopped just inside the door to cross the wide pavement to the Iorich Wing, and let Loiosh and Rocza explore carefully. The trees that dotted the pavement were too thin for anyone to hide behind, but I studied them anyway.
I kept an even walking pace across the long, long, long paved promenade between the House of the Iorich and the Palace.
“Boss, no one is going to make a move in the middle of the day, out in the open, in front of the Imperial Palace.”
“Who are you trying to convince?”
“Me, of course.”
“Just checking.”
“But you have to figure you’re being watched.”
“I know.”
I got inside, and started toward the Imperial Wing. I had the idea that it would be fun to count the number of disdainful looks I got on the way, but I forgot to actually do it. I’m still not sure how I got lost; I thought I had the route memorized. I wasn’t even aware of having gone wrong until I stepped into a large open area I hadn’t realized existed, and heard the drone of voices and saw strange and wondrous things: a shoemaker’s shop, a tailor’s, a wine seller’s, a sorcerer’s supply, a silversmith. The ceiling, if you can call it that, was high and domed, and somehow the dome’s silvery white color made it seem even higher.
“Boss, there’s a whole town here.”
“I think I should have gone up that flight of stairs I went down.”
“Or maybe down the one you went up?”
“This is a whole city.”
“There’s probably an inn with better food than that place yesterday.”
“I can always count on you to get right to the important stuff.”
“The important stuff is finding your way back to where you want to be.”
“The important stuff is not to get killed. This is a good place to shine someone up.”
“Oh,” he said. And, “It is, isn’t it?”
“It’s still too soon for them to have set anything up, but—”
“We’re watching, Boss.”
I tried to be inconspicuous—which I’m not bad at, by the way, even with a pair of jhereg on my shoulders—and looked for someone to ask directions of.
A girl who was too young to work for the Jhereg came along, carrying a box full of something that steamed. Probably someone’s lunch that I was going to make cold.
“I beg your pardon, lady,” I said. Teckla especially like being called “lady” when they’re too young to be. “Can you tell me how to get out of here?”
She stopped. “Out of where?”
“To the Palace.”
“You’re in the Palace, sir.” Her tone said she thought I was deranged or else stupid.
“The Imperial Wing.”
“Oh.” She gestured with her chin. “That way until you see the three pillars, then left to the wide stairway, and up. You’ll be right there.”
“You have my thanks.”
There were streets, buildings, pushcarts with food, and I think I even saw a beggar. What I didn’t see were three pillars, until I finally noticed what looked like an inn in miniature—chairs and tables set in a small courtyard near a long bar—that spread beneath a hanging sign showing three pillars. Yeah, all right.
After that it was easy enough to find the stairway (I climbed a lot of stairs, but not as many as it seemed I should have climbed to get above that domed ceiling; there’s some weird geometry with that place), and a bit later I found a page in Tiassa livery who was kind enough to point me in the right direction. Ten minutes or so later I was once more in an area that looked familiar—for the symbols of the Imperial Phoenix that marked every door, if for no other reason.
It was the middle of the day, and it was busy—Phoenix Guards looking impassive, advisers looking serious, adjutants looking important, courtiers looking courtly, and all of them moving past me like I was standing in the middle of a stream that flowed around me as if I were of no interest, and it might sweep me off if it felt inclined. I looked for someone who wasn’t in a hurry, because rushing down a hallway filled with teeming functionaries isn’t the best way to have a conversation.
After about fifteen minutes, I gave up and started drifting along in what I was pretty sure was the direction of the throne room.
“Not to make you nervous or anything, Boss, but someone who could nail you here, right in the Imperial Wing, would earn himself quite the reputation.”
“Yeah.”
The hallways of the Imperial Wing near the throne room are wide and tall and copper-colored, and you can’t imagine there being a time of day or night when they aren’t full of people scurrying about looking important. Here and there were wide archways or narrow doors, and from time to time someone will vanish into one or pop out and enter the flow. I didn’t go out of my way to call attention to myself, but I didn’t try to fit in, either, because that would have involved becoming part of the constant movement, and I wanted to take some time to just observe.
Eventually I found a place I recognized—I’d eaten there yesterday. I didn’t care to make that mistake again, but a number of others weren’t so particular: this time the place was doing a pretty good business. There was a low, steady hum of voices punctuated by metal trays and utensils.
I stood off the side for a while and just watched. On the other side, all alone at a table, there was a Dragaeran of middle years—say a thousand or so—who had the pale complexion and round face of the House of the Teckla. I studied him for a moment; he was drinking slowly, and seemed relaxed and maybe lost in thought. I approached and said, “Mind if I join you?”
He jumped a bit and started to rise, took in my mustache, the jhereg on my shoulders, and my sword. He hesitated and frowned; I gestured to him to remain sitting to make it easy for him. Teckla are never exactly sure whether they are above or below a nobleman who happens to be an Easterner—we throw off all of their calculations just by existing.
“By all means, my l . . . ah, sir.”
“Thanks,” I pulled up a chair. “I’ll buy you another of whatever you have there, if you don’t mind. What does the yellow armband signify?”
He had light brown hair peeking out from under a hat that was too tall and not wide enough to look anything but absurd. He glanced at the armband as if he didn’t realize it was there, then said, “Oh, I’m a message-runner.”
“For whom?”
“For hire, sir. Did you wish a message sent somewhere within the Palace? If it is outside the Palace itself, I have to charge more, because I pass it on to—”
“No, no. I was just curious about what it meant.”
He nodded, held up his mug, and gestured in the direction of a young Chreotha who seemed to be working for the older woman who was still there, only now much more awake.
“I’m Vlad,” I said. “Baronet of this, Imperial Count of that, but skip all that.” He wouldn’t, of course. He’d be incapable of skipping it.
“I’m Poncer,” he said.
“Well met.”
He gave Loiosh and Rocza a look, but then his drink arrived—it smelled like the sort of dark beer that makes me hate beer—and that distracted him.
“What can I do for you, sir?” he asked after a swallow.
“Tell me what you know.”
“Sir?”
I smiled. “Do you need to be anywhere for the next couple of hours?”
“Well, I should look for work—”
“How much do you earn?”
“Three pennies within the Imperial Wing. If I have to—”
I gave him an imperial.
He stared at it, then at me, then back to it, then he took it and put into a pouch at his side.
I now had his attention.
Iorich
5
The orders from the Warlord to General Lady Fardra e’Baritt were not put in specific terms (see Appendix 2), but did include the phrase “minimal damage to property and non-combatants in the region is a priority second only to suppression of the disorders.” One question before this committee, then, is to consider what “minimal” means in this context, and who is a non-combatant, and who can reasonably be assumed to be a non-combatant by individual soldiers of various ranks and responsibilities in high-risk areas.
“You see people,” I told him.
“My lord?”
I’m not completely sure how much the titles and how much the imperial had to do with me becoming “my lord.” I said, “I’m trying to learn my way around this place, and who’s who, so I don’t make a fool of myself when I meet strangers.”
He nodded as if it were a great idea, and he was just the man for the job.
“Who do you want to know about first?” He had a serious, business-like expression. I avoided laughing in his face because it would have been unproductive, not to mention rude.
“Who is close to Her Majesty?”
“Close?” he said, as if I’d mentioned something scandalous.
“Who does she listen to?”
“Oh,” he said, and looked thoughtful again. “Well, first, there’s Lady Mifaant.”
“Who is she?”
“An Issola. She doesn’t have, ah, an office or anything. I mean, there’s no name for it. But she’s Her Majesty’s, um, I don’t know the word. The person the Empress goes to when something is bothering her.”
“Confidant? Best friend?”
Something about that bothered him—like, I don’t know, maybe the Empress isn’t supposed to have friends—but he finally gave a hesitant nod.
“Who else?”
“Nerulan, of course. Her physicker.”
I nodded.
“And her, well—” He hesitated, and turned a little red.
“Hmmm?”
“You know.”
“I don’t, actually. Unless you mean she has a lover.”
He nodded once, watching me carefully, as if for a clue as to what sort of expression he should have.
“Who is he? Or she?”
“He. He’s, um, he’s . . .” His voice trailed off and looked a little desperate.
“An Easterner?” I said. In fact, I knew very well, but the less I admitted to knowing, the more he’d tell me.
He nodded.
“Yeah,” I said. “I’d heard rumors. What’s his name?”
“Laszló,” he said. I nodded. Poncer dropped his voice and said, “He’s a witch.”
“Well,” I said. “Interesting.”
And it was.
“He’s been alive for, well, longer than they’re supposed to live, anyway.” He looked at me, reddened again, and became very interested in his drink.
I gave him what I calculated to be a friendly, reassuring chuckle. “What does he look like?”
He frowned. “Like you,” he said. “His skin is your color, and he has hair growing like you have, above his lip. More hair, though, and curlier.”
“I take it he’s usually surrounded by courtiers?”
“They try,” he said.
“Yeah, they would.”
“He tries to stay away from them, though.”
“I don’t blame him. So, how do I manage to talk to him?”
“Um,” he said. I think the question startled him. Gossip was one thing; actually using the gossip seemed to make him uncomfortable. I waited.
“I don’t know,” he said. “I can’t think of any way.”
I waited some more.
“It won’t help,” he said, “but there are rumors . . .”
“Yes?”
“There are rumors that he knows the Enchantress of Dzur Mountain.”
I didn’t have to pretend to look startled.
“Easy, Boss. ‘Rumors,’ remember?”
“But still—”
“And if she knew him, why didn’t she ever mention it?”
“Oh, come on, Loiosh. She’s Sethra.”
“That’s good to know,” I told Poncer. “Who else sees the Empress? Does she have a Prime Minister?”
“No,” he said. “Well, some say she does, but it’s secret.”
“She must have advisers she consults regularly.”
“The Warlord, for anything about the army. And the Lady of the Chairs for anything to do with the Council of Princes. And then for finances and stuff—”
“The Warlord.”
He nodded.
“I thought the Warlord was under arrest.”
“The new Warlord.”
“Who is the new Warlord?”
“Her Highness Norathar,” he said.
I stared at him. After a moment, I said, “I thought she was Dragon Heir.”
“She’s both.”
“Interesting. And they see each other often?”
“I don’t know.”
“Who is Lady of the Chairs?”
“Lord Avissa.”
“House?”
“Issola. The Lady of the Chairs is always an Issola.”
“Oh. Of course.” I almost touched the hilt of Lady Teldra, but I didn’t want to make Poncer any more nervous than I had to.
We talked a little longer about inconsequential things, and I bought him another beer, dodged a few polite questions, and took my leave. I’m much better at getting information from Teckla than I used to be, thanks to a ghost and a knife, in that order. Long story, never mind.
Norathar and Sethra. Yeah, I shouldn’t be surprised that two of the Empress’s secret confidants were people I knew. Aliera herself was a third, for that matter. I had surrounded myself with those types by a complex process that had started years ago when a minor button-man started skimming from me. And no, I’m not about to give you any more details. Get over it.
I thought about walking to the Dragon Wing and seeing if I could have a long chat with Norathar e’Lanya, the Warlord and Dragon Heir. Once, she’d been a Jhereg assassin. She’d worked with the Easterner who became my wife.
My son would be about eight now. The last time I’d seen him, he’d been four. A lot goes on in those four years. By now—
No.
I stood still in a hallway deep in the heart of the Palace that controlled the mighty Empire of Dragaerans, letting humanity (to use the term loosely) flow around me, and tried to convince myself to attend to business. Seeing Cawti and my son would make me miserable and put them in danger. So, naturally, it was exactly what I wanted to do.
Cawti had named him Vlad Norathar.
I suddenly had the feeling that if I met with Norathar—I mean, the Warlord—I’d smack her on the side of the head. Probably best not to talk to her just now.
“Boss?”
“Mmmm?”
“We should visit Sethra.”
“I know.”
“You don’t want to?”
“Partly that. Partly, I don’t want the whole Jhereg knowing I went there. Castle Black is one thing, but Dzur Mountain—”
“You think you’d be in danger in Dzur Mountain?”
“No, not danger. I just don’t feel comfortable having the Jhereg know I’m there; at least right away.”
“Oh.”
“Maybe there’s a way. . . okay, let’s do it.”
“Uh, how, Boss?”
“How what? How do we get there? I have a clever and devious plan.”
“Oh, great.”
I worked my way around to the Athyra Wing and, eventually, out into the world. It was bright out there, making me think of the East where there’s no overcast to protect you from the Furnace. I blinked and waited for my eyes to adjust.
The Athyra Wing is usually pretty quiet and today was no exception; that meant that just in case there were any assassins who’d been following me waiting for an opportunity, I’d see them—pardon me, Loiosh would see them in plenty of time. I set out on the Street of the Athyra, turning to pass the obsidian monolith (oh, yes, we’re so impressive) of the House of the Athyra on my right, continuing just a few score of yards beyond it to Mawg Way. “Mawg,” I was once told, means “merchant” in some disused language that goes back to before there were any such things as merchants. That makes you wonder, you know? I mean, “mawg.” An ugly word. Where did they get “merchant” out of that? Maybe there are people who study things like that. If so, they’re probably Athyra.
A few doors down, on the left side, was a windowless cottage built of round stones. It had a thick door bound in iron strips; the door was standing open. Above the doorway was a particularly detailed sign in which an Athyra was flying over a map of the Empire.
“Boss, you aren’t serious.”
“Why not?”
“Ever heard of the Left Hand of the Jhereg, Boss? You know, the sorceresses?”
“Sounds familiar.”
“Boss, the Left Hand doesn’t like you. And even if they did, the Jhereg could hire one of them to watch places like this. As soon as you teleport, a sorcerer can. . . what are you laughing about?”
“Just watch me, Loiosh.”
I went in. The entry room was just big enough, and held a door opposite. A young lady of the House of the Athyra sat in a wooden chair facing the door, looking serious and mystical and very business-like: she may as well have had “apprentice” stenciled on her forehead.
She looked me over, decided on just how noble I was (I was an Easterner, but I dared to wear a sword openly), and inclined her head slightly. “Yes, sir?”
“How much is a teleport?”
“One imperial, to a known location.”
“How much to have the sorcerer come to me?”
“My lord? Oh, you mean to teleport from somewhere else? Two imperials, if it’s within the city.”
“And how much to have it done surreptitiously, and untraceably? And add in a short-term spell to make me sorcerously invisible.”
“How short-term?”
“A minute. Half a minute.”
“Ten.”
“That’s fine. My name is Vladimir Taltos, I’ll be going to Dzur Mountain, and I wish to have a sorcerer meet me in the Temple of Verra on Waterhill in South Adrilankha.”
Her nose wrinkled and she hesitated, looking for an excuse to say no. Eventually she said, “I’ll have to ask.”
“I’ll wait here,” I said.
She gave me a suspicious look before going through the door. It isn’t like there was anything in the room to steal. She returned a moment later, asked for my name again. This time she wrote it on a small slab of some sort, and nodded. “She will meet you.”
“Want the money now?”
“If you please.”
I put two five-imperial coins into her hand and sketched a bow. I opened the door, standing far enough to the side not to be open to anything unpleasant that might shoot through it, but not so far as to make it obvious what I was doing. Loiosh flew out; I’d have loved to see the look on the apprentice’s face, but my back was to her. Loiosh said it was safe, so I stepped out onto the street.
Crowded streets make it harder to set something up reliably, but easier to get the drop on your target, and easier to get away safely afterward. Empty streets, of course, have the opposite problems. I compromised and took a mix of both, making my way to the Chain Bridge and so across to South Adrilankha.
“So, Loiosh, you get it?”
“I know what you’re thinking—the Jhereg won’t go after you in a temple.”
“Right.”
“But you still have to get to the temple.”
“I have complete confidence in you.”
One thing that cannot be done psychically is mutter, but Loiosh took a pretty good run at it.
There are scores of shrines to Verra in the city, and several temples to her in South Adrilankha. The one I’d chosen was a low stonework affair, set back from the road, with a flagstone walk flanked by scrawny trees. Moreover, it was in a neighborhood with a lot of space between the houses. Put it all together, and there were no good places for assassins to hide. Even Loiosh grudgingly agreed, after a few minutes flying around, that I could go ahead and venture up to the doors—after that, he made no guarantees.
Opening the door was scary. I didn’t care how stupid I looked; I listened, stood to the side, and was moving when I flung it open.
No one was there. Yeah, I looked stupid. I might have gotten some funny glances from people passing on the street, but I didn’t wait around to see, I just stepped inside.
It was a single room, with a black altar opposite the door, about ten paces from me. I knew from memory that there were small holes cut into the altar for candles, though I couldn’t see them from here. Beyond that, the place was utterly bare. The priest here believed that one should bring nothing to the Goddess but the desire to serve, or something like that. I don’t remember exactly how he’d put it; it was years ago. Services here were held two or three times a week, I forget the times and dates, and on the obvious feast days.
I positioned myself behind the altar and waited for the sorcerer—or an assassin, if I’d misjudged the Jhereg. Sorry, don’t mean to be mysterious. There are rules to how we operate: you don’t kill someone in front of his family, you don’t mess with him in his home, you don’t touch him in a temple or at a shrine.
The thing is, all of these rules have, at one time or another, been violated; one reason I was in trouble with the Jhereg was for violating one of them. I’d had a bad day that day. The point is, I was calculating on them following the rules, at least this time, and for a while. If I was wrong, things were liable to get exciting.
I got to be nervous for about twenty minutes before the sorceress showed up. No assassins came with her. Score one for me. She had the dark complexion of the Athyra but her hair was such a light brown it was almost blond, producing a slightly startling effect. There was a vague look in her eyes that was common if not universal among Athyra.
She gave the place a half-interested and disdainful look, then nodded at me. “Lord Taltos?” she said.
I nodded.
“Dzur Mountain,” she said. “Untraceable, with a brief lingering cloud.”
I nodded again.
She looked like she might be considering offering me advice on going there, but she must have decided not to, and just said, “Are you ready?”
I pulled the amulet from around my neck and put it away, thus, no doubt, alerting a dozen or so Jhereg sorcerers. “Ready,” I said.
She didn’t even gesture, as far as I could see; for an instant the room seemed about to spin, but then it went through a familiar slow fade, going through all the colors from white to almost-white; interminable seconds went by when I was in two places at once, and I could feel myself pushing air out of the way. In that time, it suddenly hit me that she might have been bribed, and be delivering me to an assassin. In that empty, lingering time-space, I became so convinced of it that I was already reaching for a dagger when the world settled down to a familiar place on the lower slopes of Dzur Mountain.
My first reaction was relief, my second was annoyance. Yeah, this place was familiar—I knew how to reach Sethra’s home from this spot: it involved climbing more stairs than ought to exist in the world. I wondered if the sorceress had brought me to this entrance deliberately. I still wonder.
I replaced the amulet then entered through a wooden door that wasn’t nearly as flimsy as it appeared. You don’t clap when entering Dzur Mountain—depending on which door you use, at any rate. I’ve wondered about that, and I think it’s because in some way the mountain itself isn’t her home, only the parts of it that she claimed as her residence; and so I passed through the first door into the mountain, and started climbing stairs. It seemed much louder this time, my feet on the stone stairway made echoes and echoes of echoes; my memory was doing the same thing.
You don’t need to hear about it; it was a long, long way up. Partway up, I passed the place where Morrolan and I had almost slaughtered each other; it bothered me a little that I couldn’t identify the exact spot.
Eventually I reached the top, clapped, and opened the door without waiting for a reply. Her residence doesn’t seem all that big once you’re aware of the size of the mountain; but then there’s probably a lot I haven’t seen. And, at her age, I imagine she needs lots of space to store stuff she’s accumulated.
I wandered a bit, hoping to run into her, or her servant, or someone. The halls—dark stone here, pale wood there—all echoed strangely and gave me the sudden feeling that Dzur Mountain was deserted. It wasn’t, actually—I came across her in one of the smaller sitting rooms that she put here and there. She was drinking a glass of wine and reading a thick, heavy book with a cover I couldn’t see. She wore a black garment that seemed to wrap around her, pinned with a gold or copper bracelet at the left arm, and looping through a jeweled necklace high on her chest, with another loop on her right hip with similar jewels. She said, “Hello, Vlad,” without looking up. I took that as a cue to stand there like an idiot, so I did, and presently she marked the book with something that looked like it had silver tracings on it and gave me a nod. “I’ve been expecting you.”
“It takes a while for word to reach the outlands. That’s a nice dress you’re wearing. Are those sapphires on the necklace?”
“A gift from the Necromancer. Have a seat. Tukko will bring you wine.”
I sat in a chair that faced her at a slight angle. “And I will drink it. Good. We have a plan.”
A courtesy smile came and went.
Tukko showed up with wine and a scowl. The wine was less offensive; a strongly flavored red that should have had some heavily spiced meat to go with it, but I didn’t complain. I sipped, nodded, and said, “So, what can you tell me?”
“I was going to ask you that.”
“Heh. I just came in from out of town.”
“Yes, and found an advocate, got Aliera to accept him—which ought to rate you as a master sorcerer—and you’ve been snooping around the Imperial Palace since then. So—what can you tell me?” She smiled sweetly.
I stared at her, remembering things about her I sometimes forget. Then I said, “If you were trying to impress me, it worked.”
“Permit me my small pleasures.”
“I’d never think of denying them to you,” I said. “All right. In brief, the Empress seems to be prosecuting Aliera to distract attention from some massacre in some little town no one cares about. The mystery is that she picked Aliera, who I’ve always figured was a close friend. The charge, as far as I can tell, is nonsense.”
She nodded slowly. “It isn’t as if the Empress hasn’t known about Aliera’s studies for years.”
“Right.”
“When you spoke to Her Majesty, what was the Orb doing?”
“Eh? Floating over her head.”
“I mean, what color was it?”
“Green at first. Orange when I annoyed her. It turned blue around the end of the conversation. She said she had to go do something.”
“What shade of blue?”
“Um, shade?”
“Did it seem cold, icy?”
“Sorry, I don’t have that good a memory for colors.”
“All right,” she said.
“Can you explain—?”
“Not really. Just trying to learn everything I can. I wish I’d been there.”
“Yes. That brings up another interesting point.” I cleared my throat. “Why weren’t you?”
“Beg pardon?”
“That’s what I really wanted to ask you. Why is this my job?”
She frowned. “No one is forcing you—”
“That’s not my point. Aliera has friends coming out her—Aliera has a lot of friends. Most of them are more influential than an ex-Jhereg Easterner on the run. What’s going on here?”
She looked away from me. When everything in Sethra’s home is very quiet, there is a soft, continuous sound, as of air slowly moving down a tunnel. It seemed to me I’d noticed it or almost noticed it before.
Finally she said, “You’ve spent a day or two with the Justicers now. What do you think?”
That didn’t seem to have anything to do with my question, but I’ve known Sethra long enough to know that not every change of subject is a change of subject.
“They’re pretty obsessive,” I said.
“About what?”
“About the law, and its quirky little ins and outs.”
“And what do you think about the law?”
“Most of my thoughts about the law involve ways to circumvent it,” I said.
She smiled. “I always knew you had the makings of an Emperor.”
“Eh?”
She waved it aside. “What are all those laws for?”
“Oh, come on, Sethra. I know better than to try to answer a question like that, from you of all people.”
“Fair point.” She frowned and fell into thought for a moment. Then she said, “Some people think the law is about protection—you have the Imperial Guard and the local constabulary to make sure the innocents are protected. Others think it is about justice—making sure no one can do anything bad without getting what he deserves. Still others see it as revenge: giving peace to the victim by hurting the perpetrator.”
She stopped. I waited.
“The House of the Iorich is near the bottom of the Cycle right now,” she said.
I nodded. I always forgot about that stuff. Well, I mean, obviously since I’m unlikely to live long enough to see the Cycle move even once, whereas a Dragaeran might live to see it shift two or three times. And then there’s Sethra; we won’t talk about her.
“Okay, I trust that ties into this somehow?”
She nodded. “The Iorich is the House of justice.”
“Yes, I know. The courts, the advocates, the law-scribes, all of that.”
She shook her head. “That isn’t justice; that’s the law.”
“If you’re telling me that the law has nothing to do with justice, you aren’t giving me any new information.”
“What I’m telling you is that sometimes it does.”
“Um. That would be when the Iorich are near the top of the Cycle?”
She nodded.
“Okay. And what happens the rest of the time?”
“What passes for justice is the result of machinations among the nobles.”
“That sounded like it should have made sense.”
She chuckled and Tukko appeared with a small glass of something clear. She threw it down like a soldier and nodded. “I know what you mean.”
“Maybe you could—”
“The Empire perpetuates itself. It protects the nobles who support it, and the machinery of state it needs to keep itself going. Anyone who threatens those things gets ground up.”
“Except during an Iorich reign?”
She nodded.
“The Iorich reign must be an interesting time.”
“Follows the Jhereg, you know.”
“Oh, right. So they have plenty to keep themselves busy.”
She nodded.
“So then,” I said. “What did Aliera do that threatened the Empire?”
“Nothing,” she said.
“Nothing?”
“Wrong place at the wrong time, if you want to call it that. Or, she was convenient. Or something.”
“Sethra, are you drunk?”
“A little.”
Okay. Well. This was a new one for me. I wasn’t exactly sure how to deal with it. The most powerful sorceress in the world: sloshed. Aren’t there laws against that sort of thing?
“Sethra, are you saying that to defend Aliera is to attack the Empire?”
“I thought that was obvious.”
Maybe I should get drunk, too.
“And that’s why none of Aliera’s friends will step in?”
“She’s pretty much forbidden it.”
“Morrolan must be about ready to burst.”
“He’s not doing well.”
I nodded. “So that’s where I come in. But, okay, I still don’t see why the Empress chose Aliera to do this to.”
“Who would you suggest?”
“Sethra, there must be hundreds, thousands of people who are violating some law that can be used to distract attention from whatever the Empress wants people not to notice.”
“Not really,” she said. She drew her finger through a spot in the air in front of her, and a small slash of white light remained. “Aliera is widely known, even among the Teckla, as witness the fact that you heard about it from wherever you were.” She made another slash next to the first. “She is widely known to be a friend of the Empress.” She made a third slash—I need to learn how to do that. “It’s common knowledge that the Empire turns a blind eye to her activities. Who else can all that be said of?”
I felt myself scowling. “Yeah, all right. So it’s on me. How do I do it?”
“I understand the advocate you found is very good. Rely on him.”
“He is?”
“Within his specialty.”
“That’s good to know. He’s got me—you know what he’s got me doing.”
“Yes. It seems wise.”
“I’m going to have to speak to Norathar.”
“Oh,” she said. Then, “Oh.”
“Yeah.”
“All right,” she said after a moment. “I’ll arrange it.”
“Thank you.”
I drank some more wine without tasting it. We sat there until the comfortable silence became uncomfortable. Then I said, “Sethra, who else are you?”
“Hmmm?”
“I mean, you must have other, ah, identities, besides—”
“Oh. No one you’ve ever met. Or heard of, I imagine.”
“It must be difficult.”
“Sometimes. Sometimes it’s the only fun I ever have.”
I nodded. I wanted to ask her about some of the other people she was, but it was pretty obvious she didn’t want to talk about it, so I finished my wine and fell silent.
A little later she said, “Norathar has agreed to see you.”
“When?”
“Now, if it’s convenient.”
“Convenient,” I said. “Heh. All right. Later, I’d like. . .”
She frowned. “What?”
“Nothing. I’m going to see Norathar. After that, I think I’d like some food.”
She looked away. “Valabar’s is watched constantly.”
“So I’d assumed. I was thinking about somewhere safer. Like, say, the Punctured Lung.”
“I’m afraid I don’t know it,” she said.
“Sorry, Jhereg slang. The Punctured Jug.”
“Ah. Yes, by Clover Ring.”
“It’s Jhereg owned, so it’s safe. Niscan used to eat there when half the city was walking around with embalming oil for him.”
She nodded. “As long as it’s safe. I wouldn’t want anything to happen to you.”
“Kind of you to say.” I stood up and nodded.
“I’ll do the teleport,” she said.
How do you ask the Enchantress of Dzur Mountain if she’s too drunk to manage a teleport safely? Answer: You don’t.
“Thanks,” I told her.
Iorich
INTERLUDE: MEMORY
It came back sharp and clear, all the edges distinct, the colors vivid, even the sounds echoing in my ears. I had stood there, looking at where she lived then, and unable to speak. I had just finished proving I wasn’t a hero. Kragar came along that time, to provide moral support or something, but had waited a bit down the street so I could meet the boy by myself first.
She invited me in.
“Where is—?”
“It’s his nap time.”
“Oh.”
“He’ll be up again in a bit.”
We sat and talked about nothing for a while. Then there was a sound in the next room like a cat whose tail has been stepped on, and my heart did a thing.
“I’ll be right back,” said Cawti.
Across from me was psiprint of Noish-pa, looking haughty and forbidding, which shows you how false psiprints can be. It was a long two or three minutes before she returned.
A toddler toddled behind her. He wore short pants and a gray frock, and his dark hair was neatly brushed. His eyes were huge and reminded me of Cawti’s. She said, “Vlad, this is your father.”
The boy stared at me for a moment, then turned and pressed himself against Cawti’s legs. She gave me an apologetic smile. “He’s bashful around strangers,” she said. I nodded. “Just ignore him,” she said. “He’ll come around.”
Ignore him. Yeah. “All right,” I said.
“Come on, Vlad. Shall we find your turtle?”
He nodded into her knees. She took his hand and led him over to a long, reddish wooden box under the window. I knew that box; it had once held weapons. Now, it seems, it held a cloth turtle stuffed with I know not what.
I expected him to hug it, but he didn’t; he walked into a corner, sat down, and began studying it. Cawti sat on the edge of a short couch I didn’t recognize and picked up her glass. We watched him.
“What’s he doing?” I asked in a low tone.
“Figuring out how it’s put together,” she said.
“Oh. Is it that difficult?”
“It’s a sort of puzzle. The cloth folds over in certain ways to make a turtle, and if you unfold it right you get something else. The first one was a lyorn, the second a dayocat. I don’t know what this one is. I guess we’ll find out.”
I smiled. “He solved the first two?”
“Quick.”
I smiled more. “Where did you find the toy?”
“A little girl makes them, and brings them around. I don’t know why, but she seems harmless.”
“A little girl? Does she have a name?”
“Devera.”
I nodded.
“Do you know her?” she asked.
“Um. Yes and no. But you’re right; she wouldn’t hurt him.”
That seemed to satisfy Cawti. We watched my son a little more. If he was aware that we were watching him, he chose to ignore it. It was hard to talk about him as if he weren’t there. Probably a bad idea, too.
Vlad Norathar walked over to his mother and presented her with an object. “That’s very good,” she said. “Do you know what it is?”
“It’s a horse,” he explained.
She nodded. “Show your father.”
He turned and gave me an evaluating look; I wished I could have decided what expression to have on my face. I settled on trying to look interested but not demanding, and it must have worked because he marched over and showed me the horse.
“That’s very good,” I said. “But the turtle must be pretty crunched inside it.”
He frowned and considered that. “You’re silly,” he explained.
I’d never been called silly before; I wasn’t sure how I felt about it. Good, I think.
He tucked the horse’s ears back in and out a few times, satisfying himself that he had the secret, then he went over and sat on the box and set about turning it into a turtle again. Cawti and I watched him.
“He’s very bright,” I said.
She smiled.
We watched Vlad Norathar a little longer. With no warning, he turned to me and said, “I have a hawk.”
“I’d like to see it,” I said.
He dug in the box and came out with a porcelain figure about a foot high, and very lifelike. He walked over and handed it to me without hesitation. I studied it carefully. At last I said, “This is the bird that is called a vahndoor in the language of our ancestors.”
He studied me. “Are you being silly?”
“Not this time,” I said. “There are lots of languages. People speak different.”
“Why?”
“Now that is a fine question. Maybe because they invented talking in different places, or else moved away from each other so far that they started talking differently. In this language, the one we’re speaking, there is only one word for all sorts of birds of prey. In Fenarian, each sort of bird has its own name.”
“Does each bird have its own name too?”
“If someone names it.”
“Don’t they name themselves?”
“No, they don’t. Well, maybe they do, come to think of it. I’m not sure.”
“What sort of bird is that?”
“Okay, now I’m insulted.”
“It isn’t a bird, it’s a jhereg. A sort of flying reptile that eats dead things and makes sarcastic comments.”
“What does that mean?”
Me and my big mouth.
“It means sometimes he says things he doesn’t mean because he thinks they’re funny.”
“He talks?”
“Into my mind.”
“What’s he saying now?”
“He isn’t saying anything just this minute.”
“Does he like me?”
“How would I know? I haven’t tasted him.”
“Don’t.”
“Sorry, Boss.”
“You can touch him if you wish.”
“What is that, punishment?”
“Yes.”
He shook his head furiously, his eyes wide. I smiled. “It’s all right.” I went back to studying his hawk. I handed it back to him. He took it and brought it over to Cawti, and spent some time studying Rocza, perched on her shoulder. After a moment, Rocza stretched her neck out toward him and lowered her head. He hesitated, then reached out a finger and touched her head as if it were a hot stove. When she didn’t move, he stroked the top of her head once.
“I’m trying to figure out if I should be jealous,” said Loiosh.
“Let me know when you’ve decided.”
“I want one of my own,” announced Vlad Norathar.
I looked at Cawti, who looked back at me and shrugged. “These are very special animals,” she said. “You have to study a long time to be able to have one.”
He looked stubborn.
“If you want one,” she continued, “we’ll start you on the training.”
He looked at her and nodded once, then went back to his box of toys. Was he too young to start training as a witch? Maybe. It wasn’t my decision.
“You’re looking good,” I said.
“Thank you.”
Vlad Norathar turned around from the box and said, “Why aren’t you living with us?”
I met his eyes, which was more difficult than a lot of other eyes I’ve had to meet. “There are people who want to kill me. If I stay here, they’ll find me.”
“Oh,” he said. He considered it carefully. “Why don’t you kill them instead?”
I stroked the hilt of Lady Teldra inside my cloak and said, “You know, I’ve asked myself that same question.”
Cawti said, “You can’t always solve problems by killing someone. In fact, as your father can testify, most of the time killing someone just makes things worse.”
“That,” I said, “is unfortunately true. But, hey, it’s a living.”
“Your father is teasing,” said Cawti.
I nodded. “I do that sometimes.”
“Why?” said Vlad Norathar.
“Another good question,” I said.
“I could answer it,” said Cawti. “But I shan’t.”
“Probably best.”
He looked puzzled for a moment, but let it go—a trait that he’d certainly find very useful later in life. He said, “Why do they want to kill you?”
I started to say something about breaking the rules, but Cawti cut me off with, “He was saving my life.” Was there an edge of bitterness when she said it, or was it purely my imagination?
“He did?”
“Yes,” she said.
“They want to kill him for that?”
“Yes.”
Vlad Norathar said, “That isn’t fair.”
“No,” said Cawti. “It isn’t.”
I resisted the urge to make some trite remark about how life wasn’t fair, and instead let the kid think about it.
He pulled a lyorn out of the box, held it in one hand with the horse in the other and studied them carefully. Then he put the horse down and began playing with the lyorn’s horn, pushing it in and out. It seemed to me he was still thinking about our conversation, but maybe that was my imagination.
I said, “Kragar would like to meet him, too.”
She frowned. “I have no objection, but another time would be better.”
“All right.”
I stood up. “I should be going.”
Cawti nodded. “Say good-bye to your father, Vlad.”
He got bashful again and hid his face. Cawti gave me an apologetic smile and the two of them walked me to the door. Rocza rubbed Cawti’s face then flew over to my left shoulder.
I turned and walked back to where Kragar waited.
Iorich
6
Lukka, I just had a talk with Nurik, and it was made pretty clear that we’re supposed to dump this all on the lowest ranks we think we can get away with. I told him if he wanted that sort of game played, he’d have to get someone else to run the thing, because I won’t go there. If I resign, you’re the obvious choice to take over, so think hard about how you’ll handle this. I know what sort of pressures N. can bring, so if you go with it, I’ll stay mute, but it’s worth considering. I know Papacat and the new Warlord do not favor any such arrangement, and you should remember that HM is, so far as I know, not in on it either; I think she wants the investigation to be forthright, mostly because she wants to know if it’s all her fault. I’d tell her if I knew. Maybe in another week, if I’m still running this thing. But if you want a career, you can’t ignore N., you know it and I know it. Anyway, give it some thought.
—Private note in the handwriting of Desaniek
(not authenticated)
I ducked into the doorway in front of me without waiting to figure out where it went. I was in a narrow hallway with a flight of stairs at the end. I went up without stopping, swallowing the acidic panic that comes with only having one direction to go when you know someone is after you. If Sethra had been sober, she’d have thought of that, dammit.
There was a door at the end of the hallway. I opened it without clapping, my right hand brushing the hilt of Lady Teldra.
The Warlord seemed to have been napping; her head snapped forward and she stared at me. If she’d gone for a weapon, which wouldn’t have been all that unthinkable, there would suddenly have been a lot more people than the Jhereg looking for me—or else no one at all.
She blinked a couple of times as I caught the door and shut my breath, or whatever I did.
“Vlad,” she said.
I stood there, trying to neither pant nor shake. “Hi there,” I said.
Her office was tiny; just enough room for her, a chair, and a small table. There was another door to her left.
“I must have dozed off,” she said. “Sorry.”
“It’s nothing. As you see, I came in anyway.”
“Shall we find somewhere more comfortable to talk?”
“I don’t mind standing. Thanks for seeing me, by the way.”
She nodded and looked up at me—an unusual experience for both of us. “Last I heard,” I said, “you were Dragon Heir. I guess congratulations are in order.”
She gave something that could have been a laugh. “I guess.”
“Are you addressed as Warlord, or as Your Highness now?”
“Depends on the subject.”
“Is there a story there? I mean, in how it is that you happened to become Warlord?”
“Not one I’m inclined to talk about.”
“Is your becoming Warlord related?”
“To what?”
“Eh, I thought you knew why I was here.”
“Sethra said you wanted to see me about Aliera.”
“Yes.”
“To that.”
“What is it you wanted to see me about exactly?”
“Aliera’s situation.”
She hadn’t answered my question. Just wanted to let you know I caught that. Can’t get one past me.
“I’m not sure how much I can tell you,” she said.
“Lack of knowledge, or are there things you aren’t permitted to say?”
“Both. And maybe things I could say but choose not to.”
“Yeah,” I said. “Well, I’ll ask, you tell me what you can.”
“It isn’t that I don’t care about Aliera,” she said.
I nodded, feeling suddenly uncomfortable. It wasn’t like Norathar to feel she had to justify herself to me. I leaned against a wall, trying to look relaxed. When she didn’t say anything, I cleared my throat and said, “In my own way, I have some understanding of duty.”
She nodded, staring past me.
“So, what happened?”
She blinked and seemed to come back from wherever she was.
“Aliera was caught practicing Elder Sorcery, which is illegal. For good reason, by the way. It was used to destroy the Empire. By Aliera’s father. The Empire frowns on being destroyed. It tends not to like things that can do that.”
“Yeah, I know. That adds a certain—uh. Wait. How much of this is because of her father?”
“I don’t know. That’s probably what made her the perfect—I mean, that may be why. . .”
She trailed off.
I should have thought of that sooner.
“And how does she—I mean the Empress—feel about it?”
“Beg pardon?”
“She’s Aliera’s friend. How does she—?”
“You know I can’t give you personal details about Her Majesty.”
Since it was exactly the personal details I was looking for, it was a little sad to hear that. “All right,” I said. “Did you hear about Aliera’s arrest before it happened?”
“I don’t understand.” She was giving me a suspicious look, as if I might be mocking her but she wasn’t sure.
“Oh,” I said. “You were given the order.”
She nodded.
“I don’t know how these things work, but that seems unusual. I mean, arresting criminals isn’t what I think of as the Warlord’s job.”
“It usually isn’t,” she said. Her lips were pressed tightly together.
“But—?”
“With someone like Aliera, I can’t see it happening any other way. She wasn’t going to dispatch a, a constable to do it.”
“It would be disrespectful to her position.”
She nodded. I need to work harder on communicating irony.
I said, “Who carried out the arrest?”
“I did.”
I grunted. “Must have been fun.”
She gave me a look.
“Sorry,” I said. “Was she surprised?”
“Is this necessary?”
“I want to know if she had any warning.”
“Oh. Yes, she was surprised. She thought I was joking. She said—”
The wall over her head was blank, a pasty color. She should put something there. I resolved not to tell her that.
“Sorry,” she said.
“How long was it from the time you were given the order until the arrest?”
“Ten minutes.”
“Had you expected the order?”
She studied me carefully. “No,” she said. “I was told I was now Warlord, and ordered to arrest Aliera, and to deliver the communication relieving her of her position.”
I tried to imagine that scene, but I couldn’t do it. I was glad I hadn’t been there to see it.
“Had you expected something like this to happen?”
“What do you mean?”
“Aliera was arrested to distract attention from something the Empress doesn’t want people thinking about. Had you expected—”
“That’s your theory,” she said, as if refuting it.
“Uh, yeah. That’s my theory. Had you been expecting Zerika—”
“Her Majesty.”
“—Her Majesty to do something like this?”
“I don’t concede your premise,” she said.
“Um. Okay.” I looked around the room. Maybe one of the walls had secret writing that would tell me how to pull the information I needed from Norathar. Nope, guess not. “I’d have thought the Warlord would have a bigger office.”
“This isn’t the office, it’s more of a private retreat. The office is through there.” She indicated the door to her left.
“Is this a temporary position for you?”
An eyebrow went up. “Well, it certainly won’t last longer than the next Dragon Reign.”
“I meant more temporary than that.”
“I don’t know.”
“How did it happen in the first place?”
“How did what happen?”
“The incident that started it all. You’re the Warlord now, you must have access to—”
“I can’t discuss that.”
“I don’t mean the details.”
“Then what? Getting philosophical on me?”
“Sarcasm aside, yes.”
“Are you serious?”
“Yes.”
“How does it happen? I’m told you served in the army, in wartime, in the line.”
“Briefly.”
“In combat.”
“Briefly.”
“And you need to ask how something like that happens?”
“I’m not sure what you mean.”
She shook her head. “Pay no mind. If that’s all, Lord Szurke, I’m rather busy.”
I wondered if “Lord Szurke” were intended as a cut, and if so what the insult was supposed to be. “I’ll try to be brief,” I said.
She did the lip thing again. “Very well.”
“If I can’t ask about the Empress, I’ll ask about you.”
“Hmmm?”
“What are you hoping will happen?”
“I have no hope.” Nor much inflection in her voice, either.
“Things were easier in the Jhereg, weren’t they?”
She looked up at me, eyes narrowed; then she shrugged. “Different, anyway.”
“Generally, the only ones who get it are those who deserve it.”
“And not all of them,” she said.
“Fair point.”
“What else?”
I hesitated. “Does it seem odd to you that this law is being used against someone in Aliera’s position?”
She shrugged. “There’s been talk about that at Court. I don’t pay much attention.”
“So you can’t explain it?”
“If I have any guesses, I don’t care to share them with you.”
“Norathar, are we enemies all of a sudden?”
“I serve the Empire. That means I serve the Empress.”
“You didn’t answer my question.”
Her fingers rolled on the tabletop. “No,” she said. “We aren’t enemies.”
“Good, then—”
“We’re opponents.”
“Um,” I explained. “I’m trying to get Aliera out of this mess. Aren’t you her friend?”
“If you can find a way to do that without unacceptable consequences, I’ll be glad to work with you.”
“That’s exactly what I’m hoping you’ll help me find.”
“I know.”
“Norathar, you aren’t giving me a lot of help here.”
“Is there a reason why I should?”
“I don’t know. Old times’ sake? I mean, my son is named after you.”
She looked down and drew a circle with her finger on the table. I did the same thing, back when I had a desk; it was a little strange seeing her do it. She said, “Cawti would like to see you.”
After a bit, I managed, “Are you sure?”
“No,” she said. “But she said so.”
“When?”
“Yesterday.”
“She knows I’m in town?”
“Evidently.”
After a bit she said, “Will you see her?”
“Yes,” I said. “If I can do so without getting her killed.”
“I think she can look after herself, don’t you?”
“You think so? Against the Jhereg? If they decide to take after her to get at me? Not to mention the Bitch Patrol, who developed a sudden interest in her activities a few years ago, and who don’t like me much.”
“They guaranteed to leave her alone. And they’ve done so.”
I nodded. “So far.”
She scowled. “If they don’t—”
“What will you do? Bring the House of the Dragon against them? Or the Empire?”
“I’ll bring me against them.”
I nodded. “And the Jhereg quakes in fear.”
“You, least of all, should mock me.”
I clenched my teeth and nodded again. “I’ll go see her,” I said.
That marked the end of the interview. I gave her a bow that I tried to make devoid of irony and started to leave the way I came, only she stopped me.
“Use the other door. You can get into the Palace that way; the way you’re going leads outside.”
“Thanks,” I said. “Nice to know you haven’t forgotten some things.”
“There are things you don’t forget,” said Her Highness.
I went out the way she indicated, got lost in the Dragon Wing, got lost in the Palace, and eventually made my way onto the streets of the City, where I hailed the fourth closed footcab to come by, and gave directions to the Punctured Jug in the Summergate section of Adrilankha. Loiosh and Rocza flew above the cab, watching and complaining.
This was a place I’d been to a few times. I’d heard a few different stories about who actually owned it. It was variously put as (1) belonging to everyone on the Council, operating through shells; (2) belonging to a guy with no ties to the Organization, but lots of pull at Court; or (3) owned jointly by the Council, so there’d always be a safe meeting place. Whichever; it was one of a dozen or so places in the City where you could eat without worrying about unpleasantness, no matter who was after you.
Of course, walking out the door afterward was your problem.
There’s an L-shaped bar running the length of the wall to the right and continuing to the far wall. The rest of the room is filled with chairs and a score of tables almost big enough for two people, all of which have four chairs in front of them; you usually end up holding your plate on your lap and keeping just your drink on the table. A row of small windows high on the wall lets in a token amount of light. The rest is provided by two massive candelabra behind the bar, and I imagine those who work there acquire a good number of head-bumps as well as a few odd burns until they get to know the place.
It was the middle of the day and not very crowded; about a third of the tables were occupied, mostly with the Chreotha and Jhegaala tradesmen that you’d think comprised most of the population of the City if your eyes pass over the innumerable Teckla. A hooded woman in dark clothing, with nothing to indicate her House, sat alone at a table near the door. I sat down opposite her; Rocza turned around on my shoulder to watch the door.
“Hello, Kiera. I hope you weren’t waiting long.”
She raised her head and her lips quirked. “What are you drinking?”
“Here? Something white and inoffensive. I don’t trust them.”
“You’re a snob.”
“Yes. But I’ll pay; this is my meeting. Are we eating?”
“Nothing for me.”
That was a shame. This was one of the few Dragaeran places that had good food—a specialty called “cure” which involved meat covered in a spicy-sweet sauce. Other places made it, but here they’d been using the same oven for more than eight hundred years; it’s hard to compete with something like that. But it was my meeting, and she wasn’t eating, so neither would I. Lady Teldra would have approved.
Kiera got the attention of a middle-aged Teckla with extraordinarily thick eyebrows and a slack mouth, who tightened up his mouth long enough to nod at the order. A guy with almost no chin and wearing Jhereg colors came in and took a seat where he could ostentatiously watch me. I ignored him; Kiera kept an eye on him without discernible expression. “Is he the only Jhereg in the place, Loiosh?”
“At the moment. Give it two minutes. They’ll be coming in the windows.”
“I don’t doubt it a bit.”
The wine arrived; it was as inoffensive as the Teckla who delivered it.
Kiera nodded her thanks. “It’s been years,” she lied. “I trust I find you well?”
“My ass is smaller and my feet are flatter, but I’m all right other than that.”
“And your purse? Is that flatter and smaller as well?”
“No, it’s all right. I still have most of what I got for Laris.”
She looked mildly startled. In this light, her eyes seemed almost gray, and her complexion nearly as dark as mine. She always seemed a little smaller than she was. “When I heard you wanted to meet me, I assumed you wanted something stolen. Is it information, then?”
“No, you were right. Well, both, really. I want something stolen. But not for recompense.”
“Ah. Of course.” She looked interested. “Tell me more.”
“How long has it been since you broke into the Imperial Palace?”
“Oh,” she said. She fell silent, her eyes lidded. Then, “Are you sure you want a thief, and not a spy?”
“I want a spy,” I said. “But I don’t know any I can use right now.”
“They’re different skills, you know.”
“I know.”
She nodded. “Go on, then.”
“There must be wonderful amounts of paperwork associated with Aliera’s prosecution.”
“Boxes, I’m sure. Stealing them will be less of a problem than transporting them. Not to mention that someone will notice they’re missing.”
“I don’t need all of them. Just one.”
“Which?”
“That’s the kicker. I don’t know.”
She gave me the eyebrow and waited for me to continue.
“Somewhere,” I said, “among the earliest papers associated with the case—maybe the very earliest—I’m hoping there will be something that will tell us how it started. I want to know who thought of arresting Aliera, or how the idea came up, or how hard it was to talk the Empress into it, and who objected and why, and—”
“Why should such a thing exist?”
“Because—okay, look: I won’t claim to know the Empress. We aren’t buddies. But I’ve met her, talked to her, and been there when Aliera and Morrolan and Sethra talked about her.”
She nodded. “Go on.”
“It wouldn’t have crossed her mind to solve her problem by ordering the arrest of a friend. I don’t think it would have crossed her mind to solve her problem by ordering an arrest.”
Kiera chewed her lip, then nodded. “I can see that. All right.”
“So someone else came up with the idea. I want to know who it was.”
“You think that will be in one of the papers in her case files?”
“I’m hoping to find something to point me in the right direction. I’m not expecting a complete answer, just a hint about where to look.”
“You do want a spy.”
“Yes. Know any?”
“A few. But this sounds like a challenge. I’d like to try it.”
“Good! How much?”
“Two thousand. What, too much?”
“No, no. Just startled me. But for what I’m asking, pretty reasonable.” I pulled out bank draft and a pencil, wrote a little, and handed it to her.
“I suppose you’re in a hurry?”
“Hard to say. Aliera’s in prison, so maybe she is.”
She nodded. “I’ll see what I can do. I’m looking forward to this.” She grinned the unique Kiera grin that brought back some memories and drove out certain others.
We drank our wine quietly; there was a low hum of conversation around us. The door opened again behind me, and an inoffensive-looking fellow in Jhereg colors came in and took a table against the far wall. He leaned against the wall, stretched out his legs, and looked at me.
“Think the Jhereg knows I’m here?”
“Possibly,” she said. “Do you have a plan for getting out?”
“Not a plan as such. I mean, I can run a lot faster than you’d think.”
“Somehow, I don’t think you’d have come here if that was the best you had.”
I shrugged. “I can always teleport to Castle Black. It isn’t officially safe, but the Jhereg isn’t going to mess with a Dragon.”
She nodded. “But they’ll know where you are, and they’ll be watching for when you leave.”
“Yeah. I’ve gotten kind of used to that, though.”
“If you’d prefer, I have another idea.”
“Let’s hear it.”
She told me. I laughed. Loiosh laughed.
I removed Lady Teldra’s sheath from my belt and slipped it into my cloak. “Do it,” I said.
She was quiet for a moment while she psychically spoke with a mutual friend, or maybe acquaintance. At one point she looked at me and said, “Where do you want to end up?”
I considered a few things, then told her. She nodded and again got that blank look. Eventually she focused on me and said, “It’s all set.” Then we drank wine and got a bit caught up on little things that couldn’t matter to anyone else.
Presently, the door opened behind me. Kiera focused over my shoulder and I turned my head. They were both women, nearly identical in appearance, both wearing the black and silver of the House of the Dragon and the gold uniform half-cloak of the Phoenix Guards.
They took two steps forward until they were directly behind me, and one of them said, “Count Vladimir Taltos of Szurke? Please surrender your weapon and come with us.”
I could feel everyone in the restaurant staring at us. I didn’t look, but I could imagine the carefully expressionless faces of the two Jhereg. I gave the guards a big smile.
“Of course,” I said. I removed my sword belt and passed it back to them, then stood up slowly, my hands well clear of my body.
“It was a pleasure, Kiera. Until next time.”
“Be well, Vlad.”
I turned and gave my captors a nod. “I’m at your service.”
They escorted me out, one on either side, and directly into a prison coach. The driver and another guard were already in position. Loiosh and Rocza launched themselves from my shoulders, which the guards pretended not to notice; I guess they’d been informed that something like that might happen. I didn’t spot any assassins, but I wasn’t looking that hard, either. The guards climbed in, one next to me, the other opposite. The door closed, and the lock snicked, and there was the shifting of the coach as the sideman took his position next to the driver. Then the coach started moving and the Dragonlord opposite me handed me my weapon back.
“I trust that went as requested?”
“Yes,” I said. “My thanks.”
She shrugged. “Orders are orders. I don’t need to understand them.”
That was my invitation to explain what this was all about; I declined.
We rattled off. I couldn’t see where we were, but Loiosh kept me informed. Not speaking with my “captors” became uncomfortable, so I leaned my head back and closed my eyes. That lasted until the first jolt cracked the back of my head against the hard wood of the coach. After that I stared straight ahead, and just waited.