A scout galloped back toward the Avornan army. His horse's flying hooves kicked up dust at every stride. Like the rest of the Avornan scouts, he rode a small, tireless mount of the sort the Menteshe bred. But he wore a surcoat over chainmail, not the boiled leather soaked in melted wax the nomads favored. And he shouted, "Your Majesty! Your Majesty!" in unaccented Avornan.
"Here I am," Grus called, as though the royal standards weren't enough to let the scout find him.
"They're coming, Your Majesty!" the man said, and pointed southward.
"Now it begins," Hirundo said quietly. Grus shook his head. "It began when we set out from the city of Avornis — or long before that, depending on how you look at things." He gave his attention back to the scout. "How many of them are there, and how soon will they hit us?"
"Enough to cause trouble," the scout answered — not a precise answer, but one that told the king what he needed to know. The man went on, "You should see their plume of dust in a little while." He patted the side of his horse's neck. The beast was lathered and blowing hard. "I almost killed Blaze here getting to you quick as I could."
"I'm glad you did, and I won't forget it," Grus said. "You've given us the time we need to shake out our battle line. Hirundo, if you'll do the honors…"
"Be glad to, Your Majesty," the general replied. He shouted commands to the trumpeters. They raised their horns to their mouths and blared out martial music. Not quite as smoothly as Grus would have liked, the army began to move from column into line of battle.
"Put a good screen of horse archers in front of the heavy cavalry," Grus said. "We don't want the Menteshe to find out we've got the lancers along till they can't get away from them."
Hirundo sent him an amused look. "I thought you asked me to do the honors." In spite of the teasing — which embarrassed Grus — he followed the king's orders.
"You'll want me here with you, Your Majesty?" Pterocles asked.
"Oh, yes." Grus nodded. "We're not on our home ground anymore. This is country where the Banished One has had his own way for a long time. I don't know whether the Menteshe wizards can do anything special here. If they try, though, you're our best hope to stop them."
"You may put too much confidence in me," Pterocles said. "I know these wizards can do one thing — if we lose, if they capture us, they can make us into thralls."
"Yes," Grus said tightly. "If we lose, they won't capture me." He'd made up his mind about that.
Pterocles said, "What I can do, I will do. You have my word."
"Good." Grus made sure his sword was loose in its sheath. The gray in his beard reminded him he wasn't a young man anymore. He'd never been especially eager to trade sword strokes with his foes. He could do it when he had to, and he'd always done it well enough, but it wasn't his notion of sport, the way it was for more than a few men. The older he got, the less enthusiastic a warrior he made, too.
After a while, more horns cried out, this time in warning. Men up ahead of Grus pointed toward the south. Peering through the dust his own soldiers had kicked up, he spied the unmistakable plume that meant another army was on the way.
Soon the Menteshe became visible through their cloud of dust. They were marvelous horsemen. They started riding as soon as they could stay in the saddle, and stayed in the saddle most of their lives. He wished his own cavalry could match them. That the Avornans couldn't was part of what made the nomads so dangerous.
The Menteshe started shooting as soon as they came into range, or even a little before. Avornan scouts sent arrows back. Men on both sides pitched from the saddle; horses fell to the ground. The scouts galloped back toward the main body of soldiers. Whooping, the Menteshe pursued them.
That was exactly what Grus and Hirundo wanted them to do. The king began to wonder just how much he wanted it when an arrow hissed past his ear. If the nomads could cause chaos in his army…
They thought they could. Like any soldiers worth their hire, the Menteshe were arrogant. Some of them, surely, had fought Avornans north of the Stura. They must have known their foes weren't cowards. But they must also have taken them for fools or madmen — how many years had it been since Avornans came to fight on this side of the river? Why wouldn't they break up and flee when peppered with arrows?
We'll show them why, Grus thought. He waved to Hirundo, who waved to the trumpeters. One of them fell silent in mid-call, choking on his own blood when an arrow pierced his throat. But the rest roared out the command the army had been waiting for. The archers screening the heavy horse drew aside to left and right. Grus and Hirundo both raised their right hands. They both dropped them at the same time. When they did, the horns cried out a new command. The lancers lowered their spears and charged.
Sunlight struck sparks from spearheads as they swung down to horizontal. Hunks of hard earth flew up from under horses' hooves when the chargers thundered ahead. They needed perhaps fifty yards to build up full momentum. They had all the space they needed, and a little more besides.
More than a little more would have been too much. If the Menteshe had had room to turn and flee, they would have done it. They saw nothing shameful in flight, and were past masters at shooting back over their shoulders as they fled. Here, though, they were storming forward themselves.
Grus heard their howls of dismay even above the drumroll of hoofbeats from his heavy horse. That was sweet music in his ears. Beside him, Hirundo's grin was like that of a fox spying an unguarded chicken coop. "By Olor's beard, let's see how they like that," the general said.
The Menteshe liked it not at all. They were at their best darting and stinging like wasps. In close combat against bigger men in stouter armor on heavier horses, they were like wasps smashed against a stone. Lances pierced them and lifted them out of the saddle. The Avornans' big warhorses overbore their plains ponies and sent them crashing to earth. Their slashing sabers would not bite on shields or chainmail. Some of their arrows struck home, but more glanced from helms and other ironwork. Down they went in windrows, the heart suddenly ripped from their battle line.
Those who could did flee then, as fast as their horses would carry them. And they did shoot back over their shoulders, and dropped several Avornans who pressed after them too hard. But Grus soon reined in the pursuit. He'd done what he wanted to do in the first encounter — he'd shown the Menteshe that fighting on their own side of the Stura didn't guarantee victory.
"Very neat," he said to Hirundo.
"Could have been worse," the general agreed. "That charge took them by surprise. Doing it once was easy. Twice won't be."
"Yes, that occurred to me, too," Grus said. "But we've got a victory to start with, and that was what we needed. We'll worry about everything else later."
Out on the battlefield, Avornan soldiers plundered the dead — and made sure those they plundered really were dead. Healers and wizards were doing what they could for wounded Avornans. Seeing the wizards at work made Grus look to Pterocles. The sorcerer said, "You must have caught the nomads napping with that charge, Your Majesty. They didn't have the chance to try any fancy spells against us."
"I'm not sorry," Grus said. By Pterocles' smile, neither was he. The king snapped his fingers and turned back to Hirundo. "Send out some men to tell our soldiers not to kill every single Menteshe they come across. We'll want to ask questions, and a man with a new mouth doesn't talk so well." He drew a finger across his throat to show what he meant.
"I'll see to it, Your Majesty," Hirundo promised.
"Good," Grus said. "If we can take one of their wizards alive, that will be better yet."
Hirundo looked dubious. "Will it? I think I'd rather find a scorpion in my boot."
"You can step on a scorpion," Grus said. "Our wizards can handle the Menteshe. Or if they can't, we had no business crossing the Stura in the first place."
Hirundo nodded. If he hadn't, Grus would have been more dangerous to him than either a scorpion or a Menteshe wizard. The king looked south. No Avornan army had come anywhere near Yozgat for four hundred years. No Avornan king had touched the Scepter of Mercy for that long or a little longer. What would taking it in his hands be like? He had no idea. Maybe Lanius did. Slowly, Grus shook his head. He didn't believe it, no matter how learned Lanius was. The other king would have read about what wielding the Scepter of Mercy was like, but Grus had the feeling that the difference between reading about it and doing it was as vast as the difference between reading about making love and doing that.
For some things, words were enough. Others required real experience. Grus craved real experience here.
Pouncer stared from Lanius to Collurio. They'd taken the moncat to an unfamiliar room. It didn't care. It yawned, exposing formidable fangs. Lanius started to laugh. "Nice to know we impress the miserable creature, isn't it?"
"Oh, yes," the animal trainer said. "Dogs are easier, no doubt about it. Dogs are eager to please. Cats please themselves. I see this is no ordinary cat, but it's not so very different, eh?"
"No. There are times I wish it were, but it isn't. You're right about that," Lanius said. "But I saw you could train ordinary cats, and I've already trained Pouncer a little."
"It can be done, yes," Collurio said. "It takes longer, though, and it's not so easy. It's not so reliable. A cat does what it wants, not what you want."
"Really? I'd never noticed that," Lanius said.
Collurio gave him an odd look. Then, realizing the king was joking, the trainer smiled. He said, "You can get cats to do what you want. You just have to make sure it's what they want, too. For instance…"
Standing there beside him on a sturdy base was a pole as thick as his arm and about as tall as he was. He showed Pouncer a scrap of meat, then ostentatiously put it on the pole's flat top. As the moncat swarmed up the pole, claws digging into the wood, Collurio loudly clapped his hands. Pouncer flinched, but went on climbing. The beast perched at the top of the pole to eat its treat.
Collurio waited till it had finished, then lifted it and set it on the floor again. He produced another bit of meat and put it on top of the pole. As Pouncer climbed, Collurio clapped his hands once more.
"That didn't scare him as much as the first time," Lanius said.
"No, it didn't," Collurio agreed as Pouncer captured the prize and gobbled it up. "After we do it a few more times, it won't frighten him at all. And pretty soon he'll get the idea that when I clap my hands he's supposed to go up the pole, because something good will be waiting for him when he does."
"And he'll go on up even if it's not," Lanius said.
"Yes, he will," the animal trainer said. "You don't want to make him do that too often, though, or he'll get confused. Keep things as simple as you can with beasts." He chuckled. "Come to that, keep things as simple as you can with people, too."
Lanius started to say something pleasant and nearly meaningless. Then he stopped and thought about it for a little while. He set a hand on Collurio's shoulder. "Do you know, that's some of the best advice I ever heard."
"Thank you, Your Majesty." This time, Collurio's chuckle sounded distinctly wry. "It's easy to say. Lots of things are easy to say. Doing it… Well, if doing it were easier, then everybody would, don't you think?"
"I'm sure of it," Lanius replied. "And speaking of things that are easy to say but not so easy to do, I haven't found what I was looking for in the archives yet, either."
"I'm sure you will," Collurio said. Lanius wished he were sure he would. The trainer went on, "Meanwhile, we'll do as much as we can without it, that's all."
He didn't fuss. He didn't complain. Lanius admired his attitude. Then the king realized Collurio was getting paid — and getting the prestige of working in the palace — regardless of whether that misplaced document ever turned up. That being so, why should he fuss or complain? Lanius kept things simple, though, by pretending not to notice that. He said, "Very good. Do you want to give Pouncer some more work on this trick?"
"Yes, we can do it a few more times," Collurio answered. "After that, he'll start to fill up. Then he won't care about the signals we give him. You don't want that to happen when you're training an animal, either."
Pouncer went up the pole to get some scraps of meat. He went once on the strength of Collurio's handclap alone. And he climbed it once all by himself, just to see if he could find a treat at the top. Lanius laughed at that. He scratched the moncat behind the ears. "Hello, there. You're a fuzzy optimist, aren't you?" Pouncer gave back a rusty purr.
"He is an optimist," Collurio said. "He's a clever optimist, too — you were right about that. He learns very fast. He's quicker to see things and understand things than a dog is, no doubt about it."
"I should hope so." Lanius scratched Pouncer again, or tried to — the moncat snapped at him. The king wasn't especially surprised. He didn't push his luck. Instead, he said, "He's also much more charming than a dog. You can see that for yourself."
"Charming." Collurio eyed the moncat, which remained perched on top of the pole. Pouncer stared right back, as though to say, Well? Come on, cough up the meat. You think I climbed all the way up here for the fun of it? Collurio wagged a finger at the beast. "You get treats when we say you get them, not whenever you want them. That's one more thing you have to learn."
Moncats had hands, too. Pouncer pointed back with a clawed forefinger. Even the beast's severe expression mimicked the trainer's. Lanius snorted. "This is a ridiculous creature," he said.
"Yes, Your Majesty." But Collurio kept on eyeing Pouncer. "He knows what he's doing, though, or some of it. He… really is quicker than a dog, isn't he?" He acted as though he expected the moncat to answer for itself.
"I've always thought so," Lanius answered. "But you're right that he's more difficult than a dog, too. Moncats… are what they are. You can't make them into something they're not."
"Maybe we can persuade this one that he wants to go where we want to take him," Collurio said.
Lanius nodded. "That's what I'm hoping for."
In all his years, in all he'd done, Grus hadn't found a pleasure finer than watching freed thralls begin to discover they were full-fledged human beings after all. Watching children grow up was the only thing he'd ever known that even came close. But children found out what they were, grew into what they were, much more gradually. Thralls were kept artificially childlike — artificially beastlike, really — their whole lives long. Seeing them blossom once taken from the dark shadows of the sorcery that had unnaturally trapped them was like seeing children spring to adulthood all at once.
Seeing them throw off thralldom also reassured the king that Pterocles and the other wizards really did know what they were doing. He'd had faith in Pterocles, much less in the others, who hadn't been tested. Now he'd seen that they could do what Pterocles had said they could. That was a relief.
Watching Otus with the newly reawakened thralls wasn't the least fascinating thing Grus had ever run across, either. He might have been big brother or kindly uncle to them. He knew the road they were on because he'd walked it himself. He was quick to give them a word when they needed one but didn't know what it was, and to show them such things as washing themselves and the filthy rags they wore.
"So many of them have lived this way for so long," he told Grus one evening. "So many of them lived out their whole lives without ever knowing there could be anything better. That's wrong, Your Majesty!" He wasn't a very big man or a very tough-looking one, but fury blazed from his eyes — eyes that had been as dull as a cow's till Pterocles lifted the spell of thralldom from them.
"We're doing what we can," Grus answered, munching on flatbread, hard cheese, and onions — campaign food. "Till we had this magic, there wasn't much we could do. If we came south of the Stura without it, we would have ended up as thralls ourselves. More than one Avornan army did. That's why we stopped trying to fight the Menteshe down here."
"I understand your reasons," Otus said. "I can't tell you I like them."
Not many of Grus' subjects would have spoken so freely. Maybe Otus didn't realize how much deference he owed a king. Or maybe he would have behaved this way even if he'd grown up in Avornis and never had his spirit darkened.
He paused to gnaw off a bite of chewy flatbread. "Even the food tastes better now!" he exclaimed. "Being a thrall stood between me and all my senses."
"Maybe this is just better than what you ate while you were a thrall," Grus suggested.
"Oh, that, too," Otus said. "But the days seem brighter. Birdcalls have music in them — they're not just noise. I used to ignore stinks. Now I can't. And when I'm with a woman… That's better, too." He sighed. "If we find my woman down here…"
He had a lady friend back in the palace. The freedom to be a man and not a thrall could make life more complicated, too. Grus didn't tell him so. He'd have to find that out for himself. The king did ask, "Where is the village you came from? If we can, we'll free it."
Otus jumped to his feet so he could bow very low. "You are kinder to me than I deserve, Your Majesty! My village is west of here. I know now that it lies toward the sea. When I was the way I was before, I did not even know there was such a thing as the sea."
"I said we'd free it if we could, remember," Grus warned. "I don't know that we'll have soldiers going over there any time real soon." He doubted the Avornans would — not unless the Menteshe attacked from that direction and made him respond. But he didn't have the heart to crush Otus' hopes.
The ex-thrall nodded. "I understand that, too, Your Majesty. You will do what you need to do before you do what you want to do, yes?"
"Yes," Grus said, glad Otus had taken it so well.
When they set out again the next morning, Grus noticed that the Argolid Mountains to the south reared higher in the sky than they had when he'd first crossed the Stura. The jagged peaks showed more brown and green and less purple haze of distance than they had, too. Long ago, Avornan rule had run almost to their foothills. That was before the Menteshe spilled through the passes and swallowed a third of the kingdom.
Somewhere in those mountains, the Banished One was supposed to have his abode. Did he dwell in the mountains because they were closer to the heavens? Or was that where he'd fallen to earth, somehow leaving him unable to go anywhere else? Maybe the Menteshe knew. No Avornan did.
Before Grus' army had gone very far, it came upon a battlefield where the nomads had fought one another a year or two before. The bones of men and horses lay bleaching in the sun. Not much more than bones remained. As always happened, the winners — whichever side had won — had plundered the bodies of the fallen. Grus spied one skull with an arrow still sticking up from it. No need to wonder how that man had died.
Hirundo said, "The more they kill each other, the fewer left to fight us."
"That thought had crossed my mind, yes," Grus said.
Toward evening, scouts brought a lone Menteshe to the king. "He came up to us with a flag of truce, Your Majesty," one of them said. "He claims he's an ambassador from Prince Sanjar."
"Does he?" Grus eyed the nomad — a swarthy, bearded, hook-nosed man in a leather jacket, breeches, and boots. The Avornan scouts now held whatever weapons he'd carried, most likely one of the deadly Menteshe bows and a saber and dagger for close work. "Go on," Grus told him. "I'm listening."
"I am Qizil son of Qilich, Your Majesty," the Menteshe said in gutturally accented Avornan. "You will know, of course, that Prince Sanjar is the rightful heir and successor to his mighty father, Prince Ulash."
"I've heard that said, yes," Grus replied. Prince Korkut, of course, made exactly the same claim. Korkut was older, Sanjar the son of Ulash's favorite concubine. Neither could bend the knee to the other now, not without putting his own head on the block right afterwards.
"It is the truth," Qizil declared. "Prince Sanjar wishes to join you to help cast out the vile usurper. He will reward you well for your services."
Till Sanjar and Korkut went to war with each other, no Avornan had ever heard any Menteshe talk like that. The nomads always wanted to take, never to give. Now, voice studiously neutral, Grus said, "He will?" Qizil nodded emphatically. The king asked, "What will he give?"
Qizil son of Qilich swept out his arms in a grand, even theatrical, gesture. "Why, whatever your heart desires. Gold? It is yours. Herds of cattle and sheep out to the horizon? They are yours. Fine horses? We have a great plenty. Pretty women? Take them as well, and use them as you would." In a few words, he outlined the nomads' notion of the good life.
"Let him give me the Scepter of Mercy with his own hands," Grus said. "Then I will believe he is serious, not just telling lies to help himself."
Qizil's eyes went very wide. Whatever he'd expected the King of Avornis to ask for, that caught him by surprise. "Your Majesty is joking," he blurted.
"I have never been more serious in my life." Grus meant every word of that. If he could win the Scepter of Mercy by allying himself with Sanjar, he would do it. If he could win it by allying with Korkut, he would do that, too. And if winning it meant standing aloof from both of them, he would do that.
"It is impossible," Qizil said.
Grus folded his arms across his chest. "Then we have no more to say to each other, do we? The scouts will take you out beyond our lines. My compliments to your master, but there will be no alliance."
"You do not understand," Qizil said urgently. "The prince cannot give you what he does not have. The Scepter of Mercy is in Yozgat, and Korkut holds it."
The king had known where the Scepter was, of course. Yozgat still lay far to the south. He hadn't been sure which unloving half brother controlled what had been Ulash's capital. Some of the prisoners he'd taken claimed one did, some the other. But if Sanjar's envoy admitted Korkut held it…
"If you aid my master, we can speak of this again after he has triumphed," Qizil suggested.
"No," Grus said. "This is a price he would have to pay in advance. Once he'd won the war, he would surely try to do me out of it."
Qizil made elaborate promises that Sanjar was the very image of honesty. The more he promised, the less Grus believed him. "I'm sorry," the king said at last, which seemed more polite than saying he was bored. "I don't think we have anything to talk about. As I told you, you have a safe-conduct till you're outside of our lines. If things change farther south, maybe Prince Sanjar will talk to me again."
"If things change farther south, the prince will not need to talk to you," Qizil said venomously. "He will drive you from this country like the dog you are."
That sounded more like the Menteshe Grus was familiar with. "I love you, too," he said, and had the small satisfaction of startling Sanjar's emissary again. Qizil sprang up onto his pony's back. He rode away at such a pace, the Avornan scouts had a hard time staying with him. He was so angry, he might have forgotten his weapons.
"Too bad," Hirundo remarked. "That would have made things a lot easier."
"Well, so it would," Grus said. "I had to try. All right — he told me no. Now we go on the way we would have before."
"So Korkut holds Yozgat," Hirundo said musingly. "If he sends someone to you to ask for help against Sanjar…"
"Yes, that could be interesting," Grus agreed. "Both of them have sent envoys up to the city of Avornis, so I suppose it could happen. I'll know the right thing to ask if it does, anyhow."
"What will you do if Korkut says he'll send you the Scepter?" Hirundo asked.
Faint, was what crossed Grus' mind. "The first thing I'd do is make sure he sent me the real Scepter of Mercy and not a clever counterfeit," he said, and Hirundo nodded. The king went on, "If it was the real Scepter… If it was, I do believe I'd take it and go back to Avornis. It means more to me — and to the kingdom — than anything else down here."
"Even freeing the thralls?" Hirundo asked slyly.
Grus looked around. When he didn't see Otus, he nodded. "Even that. If we have the Scepter of Mercy, we can worry about everything else later." I think we can. I hope we can. How do I know for sure, when no King of Avornis has tried to wield it for all these years? He blinked when he realized he didn't know. What he had to go on was Lanius' certainty. No matter how fine a scholar the other king had proved himself, was that really enough? All at once, Grus wondered.
With a laugh, Hirundo said, "The Banished One wouldn't be very happy if Korkut sent you the Scepter to win his civil war."
He could speak lightly of the Banished One. The exiled god had never appeared in his dreams. He didn't know — literally didn't know — how lucky he was. Grus, who did, said only, "No, he wouldn't." His doubts left him. The Banished One wouldn't worry about losing the Scepter of Mercy if it weren't a weighty weapon against him.
Hirundo stared south. The dust Qizil and the Avornan scouts had kicked up as they rode away still hung in the air. "For now, I guess you're right — the only thing we can do is go on," the general said.
'There's nothing else to do," Grus said.
Lanius had a reputation as a man interested in everything. The reputation held a lot of truth, as he knew better than anyone else. It also came in handy in some unexpected ways. He knew that better than anyone else, too.
Had, say, King Grus poked his nose into one of the little rooms in the palace that held bed linens, any servant who came down the corridor and saw him would have been astonished. Gossip about Grus' odd behavior would have flashed from one end of the palace to the other before an hour went by.
But it wasn't odd for Lanius to go into a room like that. He poked around in the kitchens, and in the archives, and anywhere else that suited his fancy. A servant who saw him opening one of those doors would just shrug and go about his business. It had happened before, plenty of times.
No servants were coming down the corridor now. That did make things simpler. Lanius opened the door to the storeroom, and quietly closed it behind him. He smiled to smell the spicy scent of the cedar shelves on which the linens rested. The cedar was said to help hold moths at bay.
And he smelled another sweet scent — a woman's perfume.
"Why, hello, Your Majesty," Oissa said, as though they'd met there by chance.
"Hello, sweetheart," Lanius said, and took her in his arms. The serving girl was short and round, with curly, light brown hair, big gray eyes, cheeks always rosy even though she didn't seem to use rouge, and a dark beauty mark by the side of her mouth. She tilted her face up for a kiss. Lanius was glad to oblige.
They met when and where they could. The floor of the storeroom wasn't the best place for such things, but it was better than a few they'd tried. Lanius didn't think Oissa was in love with him. He didn't think he was in love with her, either. He hadn't made that mistake since his first affair with a maidservant. He enjoyed what they did together even so. He tried his best to make sure Oissa did, too; he'd always thought it was better when his partner also took pleasure.
Afterwards, they both dressed quickly. "These to remember the day," Lanius said, and gave her a pair of gold hoops to wear in her ears.
"Thank you, Your Majesty," she said. "You didn't have to do that, though."
"I didn't do it because I had to. I did it because I wanted to," Lanius answered. He thought she meant what she'd said. She wasn't greedy or pushy. He didn't care for people who were. Nothing would make him break off a liaison faster than someone pushing him for presents.
He coughed once or twice. No, that wasn't quite true. Sosia finding out about an affair could make him break it off in nothing flat. He was reasonably, or even more than reasonably, discreet, and he tried to pick partners who wouldn't blab. It didn't always work. He didn't like remembering what happened when it didn't.
This dalliance wasn't going anywhere. Even if his wife didn't learn of it, Oissa would find someone she wanted to marry, or else Lanius would tire of her. But it was pleasant. He enjoyed the variety. What point to being a king if he couldn't enjoy himself once in a while?
After a last kiss, he slipped out of the little room. No servants were walking along the corridor. Lanius nodded to himself. No scandal this time — not even a raised eyebrow.
Had things been different, Grus might have gotten furious at him for being unfaithful to his daughter. But Grus had been known to enjoy himself every once in a while even before he became a king; Arch-Hallow Anser was living proof of that. And he hadn't stopped after he wore a crown. He was hardly one to tell Lanius what to do and what not to.
Lanius hoped everything down in the south was still going well. Grus' letters were encouraging, but they took longer to come back to the city of Avornis than Lanius would have liked. He knew the Avornans were over the Stura and disenchanting thralls. That they'd done so much was reason enough to celebrate. But Lanius wanted them to push on to Yozgat. Like Grus, he cared more about the Scepter of Mercy than anything else.
He could have known more, of course, if he'd campaigned with Grus. He shook his head at the mere idea. The one battlefield he'd seen was plenty to persuade him he never wanted to see another. Listening to vultures and ravens and carrion crows quarreling over corpses, watching them peck at dead men's eyes and tongues and other dainties, smelling the outhouse and butcher's-shop reek, hearing dying men groan and wounded men shriek… No, once was enough for a lifetime.
He supposed he ought to be grateful to Grus for going on campaign. The other king had already usurped half — more than half — the throne. He couldn't want anything else. If Lanius had had to send out generals to do his fighting for him, he would always have been as afraid of great victories as of great defeats. A great victory was liable to make a general think he deserved a higher station. Since only one higher station was available, that wouldn't have been good for Lanius. He didn't think many usurpers would have worked out the arrangement Grus had.
While he mused on bad usurpers and worse ones, his feet, almost by themselves, took him to the archives. He went inside eagerly enough. The smile on his face had only so much to do with the hope of finding that missing traveler's tale. As he had with other women before her, he'd brought Oissa here once or twice. It was quiet; it was peaceful; they were unlikely to be disturbed — and they hadn't been, at least not by anyone banging on the door. It was also dusty, here, though, and sneezing at the wrong time had put him off his stride and made Oissa laugh, which put her off hers.
"Business," Lanius reminded himself. The smile didn't want to go away, though. He let it stay. Why not?
Even smiling, he did want to look for that missing tale. What annoyed him most was that he usually had a good memory for where he'd put things. Not this time, though. Most of his pride revolved around his wits. When they let him down, he felt he'd failed in some fundamental fashion. It rarely happened, and was all the more troubling because of that.
"It has to be here," he said. Although true, that didn't help much. No one knew better than he how vast — and how disorganized — the archives were.
He pawed through crates and barrels and plucked documents off shelves. He had to look at each parchment or sheet of paper separately, because things got stored all higgledy-piggledy. A paper from his reign could lie next to or on top of a parchment centuries old. Before long, his smile faded. If he wasn't lucky, he'd be here forever, or half an hour longer.
That less than delightful thought had hardly crossed his mind before he let out a shout of triumph that came echoing back from the ceiling. There it was! He swore under his breath. That crate looked familiar — now. Not so long before, he'd moved it to get at some other documents, and forgotten he'd done it,
Lanius started to take the traveler's tale to a secretary who could make a fair copy. He hadn't gotten to the doorway before he stopped and shook his head. The fewer people who knew anything about what he had in mind, the better. I'll make the fair copy myself, he decided. Now he found himself nodding. Yes, that would be better, no doubt about it.
Before long, he would put carpenters and masons to work. But they wouldn't know why they were doing what they were doing. And what they didn't know, nobody could find out from them… not even the Banished One.