Bragi went downstairs slowly. Ahring would need time. His bodyguard accompanied him. The man was jumpy. A lot of hard men would glare at them from the floor, and debate there sometimes involved the crash of swords.

Pandemonium. At least seventy of the eighty-one members, in cl.u.s.ters, were arguing, speculating, gesturing. Ragnarson didn"t ask for silence.

Word of his arrival gradually spread. The delegates slowly a.s.sumed their seats.

By then Ahring"s troops had begun to fill the shadows along the walls.

"Gentlemen," Ragnarson said, "I"ve asked you here to decide the fate of the State.



It will be a fateful decision. You"ll make it before you leave this hall. Gentlemen, the Queen is dead."

The uproar could have been that of the world"s record tavern brawl. Fights broke out. But legislative sessions were always tempestuous. The delegates hadn"t yet learned to do things in a polite, parliamentary manner.

The uproar crested again when the members became aware that the army had sealed them in. Ragnarson waited them out.

"When you"re ready to stop fooling around, let"s talk." They resumed their seats.

"Gentlemen, Her Majesty pa.s.sed on about forty hours ago. I was there. Doctor Wachtel attended her, but couldn"t save her." His emotion made itself felt. No one would accuse him of not feeling the loss. "Every attempt was made to prevent it. We even brought in a wizard, an expert in the life-magicks. He said she"s been doomed since the birth of her daughter. The breath of Shinsan touched her then. The poison caught up."

His listeners began murmuring.

"Wait! I want to talk about this woman. Some of you did everything you could to make her life miserable, to make her task impossible. She forgave you every time. And gave her life, in the end, to make Ravelin a fit place to live. She"s dead now. And the rest of us have come to the crossroads. If you think this"s a chance to start something, I"m telling you now. I won"t forgive. I am the army. I serve the Crown. I defend the Crown. Till someone wears it, I"ll punish rebellion mercilessly. If I have to, I"ll make Ravelin"s trees bend with a stinking harvest.

"Now, the business at hand."

Prataxis hustled his way in burdened with writing materials. He had run. Good.

Ahring and Blackfang would be sealing the city perimeter against unauthorized departures.

"My secretary will record all votes. He"ll publish them when we make the public announcement."

He grinned. That would give him an extra ten votes from fence-sitters. He should be able to aim a majority any direction."Our options are limited. There"s no heir. The scholars of h.e.l.lin Daimiel have suggested we dispense with the monarchy entirely, fashioning a republic like some towns in the Bedelian League. Personally, I don"t relish risking the national welfare on a social experiment.

"We could imitate other League towns and elect a Tyrant for a limited term. That would make transition smooth and swift, but the disadvantages are obvious.

"Third, we could maintain the monarchy by finding a Ring among the ruling Houses of other states. It"s the course I prefer. But it"ll take a while.

"Whichever, we need a Regent till a new head of state takes power.

"All right. The session is open for arguments from the floor. Mind your manners.

You"ll all get a say. Mr. Prataxis, handle the Chair."

Someone shouted, "You forgot a possibility. We could elect one of our own people Ring."

"Hear hear," the Nordmen minority chanted.

"Silence!" Prataxis bellowed. Ragnarson was startled by his volume.

"Let me speak to that, Derel."

"The Marshall has the floor."

""Hear hear" you shout, you Nordmen. But you can"t all be Ring. Look around. You see anybody you want telling you what to do?"

The point told. Each had, probably, considered himself the logical candidate.

Ravelin"s n.o.bles were never short on self-appreciation.

"Okay. Derel?"

"The commons delegate from Delhagen." "

"Sirs, I think the Barons missed the point of the suggestion. I meant the Marshall."

That precipitated another barroom round. Ragnarson himself denied any interest.

His denial was honest. He knew what trying to break this rebellious bronc of a kingdom had done to Fiana.

He understood the delegate"s motives. There was a special relationship between between himself and Delhagen and Sedlmayr, the city there. They operated almost as an autonomous republic federated with Ravelin, under a special charter he had urged on Fiana. In return the commons there had remained steadfastly Royalist during the civil war. Sedlmayr, with the similarly chartered "Sieges" of Breidenbach and Fahrig, were nicknamed "The Marshall"s Lap Dogs."

Ragnarson smiled gently. The man had made the suggestion so he could gradually back down. Relieved, some opponent would propose the Marshall as Regent instead.

And that task he would accept. He had, in reality, been Regent since Fiana"s seclusion. He could handle it. And a Regent could always get out.

Once, years ago, Haroun had tried to tempt him with a kingship. The notion had been more attractive then. But he had seen only the comforts visible from the remote perspective.

The moment gone, he fell asleep in his chair. It would be a long session. Nothing important would get said for hours.Raveliners were a stubborn lot. The arguing lasted four days. Weariness and hunger finally forced a compromise. The Thing named Ragnarson Regent by a fat majority- after every alternate avenue had been pursued to a dead end.

Ragnarson left the hall physically better than when he had entered. He had made a vacation of it, getting involved only when delegates threatened to brawl.

Vorgreberg anxiously awaited the session"s end, sure the news would be bad.

When it came out Kildragon and Altenkirk were on hand. Vorgreberg was secure.

Loyal troops were poised at the kingdom"s heart, ready to smash rebellion anywhere.

FOURTEEN: Lady of Mystery

"Show him in," Ragnarson told Prataxis. He rose, extended his hand. "Colonel.

Sorry I took so long with the Thing."

"I understand," Oryon replied. "Congratulations."

"Save it for a year. Probably be sorry I took the job. I wanted to talk about Balfour. My people came up with something."

"Oh?"

Ragnarson hoped Oryon"s response would betray something about Guild thinking. He related the tale Valther had told. "Will you want Captain Jokai"s body?"

"I"d have to ask High Crag. What the h.e.l.l was Balfour doing in Uhlmansiek? His log says he was taking the week to go hunting around Lake Berberich. Something"s going on here. And I don"t like it."

"I"ve been saying that for a long time. Any idea why he"d kidnap my friend?"

"No. This Rico creature.... The whole thing baffles me. I"ll ask High Crag, of course."

"I still won"t renew the commission."

Oryon"s thick lips stretched in a grin. "I noticed the guards at the Treasury."

"I get some strange ideas sometimes."

Oryon shook his head. "Wish I could understand why you"re scared of us. Maybe I could change your mind."

"Wish / understood it. Just an intuition, I guess. Victory Day is coming up, by the way."

"My staff is planning the evacuation. We"ll move out come sunrise Victory Day. We expect to be out of Kavelin within five days. Because of the confinement to barracks, I haven"t informed High Crag or made transit arrangements. I doubt there"ll be any problems."

"Good enough. We"ll put on a going-away party for your boys."

"Can"t b.i.t.c.h about that."

"Don"t want any hard feelings."

"Keep me posted about Balfour. Or our agent after I leave.""Will do. Thanks for coming." He followed Oryon to the door. "Derel, want to find that woman for me? The one who wants to see me?"

"All right."

Ragnarson selected one of the mountain of requests that already had appeared on his desk. Everything held in abeyance during the Queen"s indisposition was breaking loose.

Every special interest was trying to get his attention first. "Hey, Derel. Get me a big box."

"Sir?"

"So I can file the stuff I want to "put aside for further consideration." Like this one. Guy wants me to come to the opening of his alehouse."

"Sir? If I might? Act on ones like that if you have time. Chuck the ones where some Nordmen insists on his right to collect ford tolls. Giving breaks to important people and cronies is a deathtrap. It"s Wessons like that soldier-turned-innkeeper who are your power base. Keep them on your side. I"ll get that woman. Half an hour?"

He took ten minutes. The word had reached her. He encountered her downstairs.

"Marshall? The lady."

"Thank you, Derel." He rose, considered her. She wore traditional desert costume.

Dark almond eyes peered over her veil. There were crow"s feet at their corners, though cunningly hidden. She was older than she liked.

"Madam. Please be seated. Kaf? I"m sure Derel could scare some up."

"No. Nothing is necessary." She spoke a heavily accented Itaskian of the Lower Silverbind.

"What can I do for you? My secretary says you hinted it has to do with Haroun bin Yousif."

A sad little laugh stirred her veil. "Excuse me for staring. It has been so long.... Yes. Haroun. He is my husband."

Ragnarson settled into his chair. "I never heard of any wife."

"It is one of the unhappy secrets of our lives. But it is true. Twenty-three years.... It seems an eternity. Most of that I was wife in name only. I did not see him for years at a time."

Ragnarson"s skepticism was obvious. She responded by dropping her veil. It was an act which, in her culture, was considered incredibly daring. Women of Hammad al Nakir, once married, would rather have paraded nude than reveal their naked faces.

Ragnarson was impressed. He didn"t have Derel throw her out.

"You do not recognize me still?"

"Should I? I never met a woman with a claim on Haroun."

"Time changes us. I forget that I"m no longer the child you met. She was fourteen. Life has not been easy. Always his men run-when they do not ride the desert to murder my father"s men."

Ragnarson still didn"t understand."But you must remember! The day the fat man brought me to your camp in Altea?

When I was so much trouble you pulled up my skirts and paddled me in front of your men?

And then Haroun came. He scared me so much I never said another word."

Why couldn"t women just say things straight out? He tried to remember Mocker dragging a tart into some wartime camp....

"G.o.ds! You"re Yasmid? El Murid"s daughter? Married to Haroun?" He strangled a laugh. "You think I"ll swallow that?"

"So! You call me a liar? You had my skirts up. You saw." She bent and raised her skirts.

Ragnarson remembered the winestain birthmark shaped like a six-fingered baby hand.

"And this!" Angrily, she bared small, weary b.r.e.a.s.t.s. Over her heart lay the Harish tattoo worn by El Murid"s chosen.

"All right. You"re Yasmid."

Incredible. The daughter of El Murid, missing twenty years, appearing here. As Haroun"s wife.

The marriage was the sort of thing Haroun would do to drive little knives into his enemy"s heart. Why hadn"t he ballyhooed it over half the continent?

"I did not expect you to be easily convinced. I made that my first task. I brought these." She showed him jewelry only Haroun could have given her and letters he couldn"t read because they were in the script of Hammad al Nakir, but which bore Haroun"s King Without a Throne seal.

© 2024 www.topnovel.cc