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Authors: K. J. Parker

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“Something like that,” Vaatzes said. “But I’m happy to leave all that up to you.”

“Really?” Valens said. “Well, the way things are at the moment, money wouldn’t be a lot of use to you; there won’t be an awful
lot you can buy with it, and when we’re all living out of wagons and wheelbarrows, carting it around with you is likely to
be a nuisance. You’ll just have to trust me to make it up to you if and when life gets back to normal.”

Vaatzes shrugged. “Fine,” he said. “Right, I’ll go and make the list of things I need. When I’ve done that, who should I see?”

“A man called Ulpianus Macer,” Valens replied. “He’s my private secretary, practically runs the country. He’ll be round to
talk to you this evening, after dinner. Will that give you enough time?”

“Yes.”

“Excellent.” Valens thought for a moment. “You’ve already done the list, haven’t you?”

“I haven’t written it out yet.”

Valens looked at him for a moment. “Interesting,” he said, with a slight frown. “Tell me, are all Mezentines as scary as you,
or is that why they threw you out in the first place?”

Vaatzes’ expression didn’t change. “I’m not exactly a typical Mezentine,” he said. “Not for want of trying, but nobody’s perfect.
Is there anything else, or should I go now?”

Valens raised his hand. “Go,” he said. “Leave me to reflect on my own ignorance. It’s one of the few indulgences I have left
these days. And thank you,” he added. “I have no idea what you’re really up to, but I appear to be considerably in your debt.
That always makes me uncomfortable, so I hope you’ll forgive me if I sound a bit ungracious.”

Vaatzes grinned. “We don’t have graciousness where I come from,” he said.

After he’d gone, Valens sat down on the linen press and stared out of the window for a while. He had an uncomfortable feeling
that he’d just done something momentous and important, but whether it was a great leap forward or a bad mistake, he couldn’t
tell. So far, he believed, he’d coped reasonably well with having the Mezentines as his enemies. Having one as an ally, he
felt, was likely to be rather more complicated. He thought about what Orsea had said about Vaatzes, how tirelessly he’d worked,
his determination, his resourcefulness, his exceptional knowledge and skill. Thanks to Vaatzes, Orsea had said, for a while
they’d honestly believed they had a chance of beating the Perpetual Republic and saving Eremia. Orsea liked him and respected
him (he’d try not to hold that against him), and the man definitely had a knack for staying alive. There was also the fact
that, nominally at least, he was the cause of the war.

Valens frowned. For a moment, earlier that day, he’d seriously considered turning Orsea over to the Mezentines as a way of
saving his people. If the Mezentines were serious about why they’d started the war, perhaps there was someone else he could
betray instead of Orsea. The same reasoning applied. If the Mezentines were sick of the waste and loss of prestige and would
be prepared to go home in exchange for a way of saving face …

He got up and lay on the bed, staring at the tapestries on the opposite wall: the boar at bay, crowded in by the hounds, the
hunters bearing down on him. He understood perfectly why he couldn’t hand Orsea over to the enemy. Vaatzes, on the other hand,
was a stranger, a foreigner, an outsider; in the estimation of his own people (and, apparently, himself) a criminal. It was
Vaatzes, not Orsea, who had brought about the slaughter of thousands of Mezentine troops, and inflicted on the Republic the
worst defeat in its history. Valens was by no means sure what the Republic’s real reason for going to war had been. He most
certainly didn’t care, so long as the war could be persuaded to go away and leave him and his people alone. A lot had changed,
however, since the Mezentines invaded Eremia. He understood that wars grew and mutated, finding ways to stay alive; they hung
on with the grim tenacity of a weed growing in a crack in a wall, feeding on whatever nutrients their roots and tendrils could
find. The war might have started because one faction in the Mezentine government wanted the popularity of a quick, easy victory;
that possibility had been extinguished, but the war had not only survived but put on a tremendous spurt of growth; its original
sponsors didn’t dare end it without a redeeming victory, and other factions with other agendas were undoubtedly considering
the opportunities it offered, one of which was surely the Vadani silver mines. Very well; he considered the implications.
In all likelihood, the Mezentine opposition was making as much capital as it could out of the administration’s misfortunes,
but it would be political suicide for them to propose out loud that the Republic should cut its losses and admit defeat. Instead,
they would be eager to change the war, redefine its objectives, so that when they overthrew their opponents they’d be able
to win a quick victory, make good the financial losses, and if possible turn a profit. The original stated objective — the
extermination of the Eremian nation — had proved to be too awkward and expensive, but a loving and generous Providence had
intervened by taking away the wits of the Vadani duke, prompting him to interfere in a quarrel that was none of his business.
If the war stopped being about wiping out the Eremians and turned into a punitive crusade against the Vadani, all their troubles
would be over. They could have their victory simply by killing the stupid arrogant duke and slaughtering his army and a substantial
number of his people, and they would have the silver mines. Perfect.

In which case, Valens concluded, it was essential that the current Mezentine government didn’t fall; because they must be
well aware that their only chance of survival lay in achieving something that could be made to look like the accomplishment
of their original objective in the brief space of time remaining to them before their political enemies brought them down.
The pretext for the war had been Vaatzes’ defection; if they had Vaatzes, and could point to the blackened ruins of Civitas
Eremiae, they stood a chance of persuading their constituents that they had done what they had set out to do. Handing over
Orsea might just achieve the same result; giving them Orsea
and
Vaatzes would almost certainly do the trick. Vaatzes on his own — well, what mattered to Valens wasn’t saving the Mezentine
government but striking a deal that would satisfy them. What mattered wasn’t whether Vaatzes’ head would be enough to rescue
them, but persuading them that it might be. Could he do that? He considered his own abilities, and decided that he probably
could. At the very least, it was worth a try.

Well, then; problem solved.

He poured himself a glass of wine, looked at it and poured it back into the jug. Wherever you went in the castle, there were
jugs and decanters, glasses, cups and mugs; wine, both domestic and imported, mead, cider, perry; the simple fact was that
he didn’t like the stuff and never had. He didn’t like the way it tasted, and he hated the way it fogged up his mind. His
father had always said he couldn’t think without a few drinks inside him, and that was probably true.

Problem solved, indeed. He sat down again and thought about Vaatzes’ visit. Sealing up the mines would deprive the Mezentine
opposition of their motive for taking over the war (assuming that they knew about it, and of course they would, if their spies
were earning their pay). Understandable, therefore, that Vaatzes should want to see to it that the job was done properly,
which meant doing it himself. Vadani engineers, given the job of half sealing the mines, might well err on the side of caution,
with the result that the resourceful Mezentines would be able to get past their attempts at sabotage. On that level, Vaatzes’
offer of help was reasonable enough. It was, of course, also just a pretext. It had been enough to get him an audience with
the gullible Vadani duke (a clever fellow, but not nearly as clever as he thought he was) and an opportunity to make himself
indispensable by pointing out the inadequacy of the duchy’s materiel resources and taking responsibility for putting matters
in order. Basically the same as he’d done in Eremia: giving the Republic’s enemies the technological secrets they’d gone to
war to keep control of. Once the Vadani accepted Vaatzes’ help, simply handing Vaatzes back would no longer be good enough,
since the damage would’ve been done. Clever man; problem not solved.

In which case, it was just as well that Valens had figured out what Vaatzes was up to before it was too late. All the more
reason, therefore, to make a deal and hand him over now, while there was still time.

He thought about his reaction to that. Long ago, one of his father’s huntsmen had taught him that the one thing a hunter should
never do is get angry with the quarry. It would be inexcusable to blame a living thing for doing anything it possibly could
to avoid being caught and killed. Feeling angry, or hurt or betrayed, because Vaatzes was trying to manipulate him was therefore
out of the question. Instead, when you recognize the trick the quarry is playing on you, the proper reaction is to be glad
of the insight you’ve gained into the way its mind works, because of course you can’t hope to hunt something successfully
unless you understand it first; and understanding comes from forgiveness, just as forgiveness comes from love.

Problem, then, still solved. What he should do now was write two letters: one to the Mezentines, proposing the deal, one to
the guard captain, ordering Vaatzes’ immediate arrest. Two letters to save his people from the consequences of his own stupidity.
He ought to do it. He ought to do it right away.

Instead, he refilled the wine glass, pulled a face and drank the sour, dusty-tasting stuff down like medicine. It didn’t make
him feel any better, but he acknowledged the slight fuzziness it produced in his mind. Lots of things wrong with alcohol,
but it has one redeeming virtue; it makes you stupid, and there are times when you need to be too stupid to do the intelligent
thing.

He looked at the empty glass, then reached for an apple to take the taste away. In five days’ time he’d be up to his eyes
in savages; pleasant thought. The Cure Hardy; last time he’d had any dealings with them, he’d spent a certain degree of time
and effort trying to understand them a little better. He’d ground a few insights out of them before having them killed, which
he’d had to do because they were raiding his territory and harming his people. Now, here they were again. He had no idea what
they wanted. He yawned.

Someone knocked at the door, and he groaned. He had the option, of course, of simply not being there. Let them knock until
their knuckles started to ache, and then they’d go away again.

“Come in,” he said.

As it turned out, it was only Macer, with some letters for him to sign. He nodded, and Macer put them down in front of him.
The tradition was that letters needing a signature came in on a half-inch-thick sheet of glass; something flat to rest on
in an uncertain world. “Do I need to read any of these?” he asked.

Macer shook his head. “Requisitions, mostly,” he said. “And you’re authorizing payments to a couple of merchants — hay, oats,
stuff for the carthorses — and there’s a warrant for some character called Jarnac Ducas.”

“Oh, him.” Valens nodded. “Wasn’t life so much simpler when the Eremians were our enemies? You’d think that now there’re so
many fewer of them, they’d be less of a nuisance. Other way about, apparently.” He signed a letter and Macer took it from
him for sanding and blotting. “While I think of it,” he went on, “the Mezentine, Ziani Vaatzes. I want you to go and see him,
directly after dinner.”

“Right,” Macer said. “What about?”

Suddenly, Valens grinned. “Good question,” he replied. “You’re either going to make sure he gets anything he wants in the
whole wide world, or you’re going to have him arrested. Maybe both, and in no particular order, I haven’t decided yet.” He
noticed Macer noticing the used wine glass; that obvious, then. He pulled himself together a little. “Vaatzes will hand you
a list,” he said. “All sorts of expensive things we haven’t got; most of them you won’t even have heard of, probably. Find
out what they are, where you get them from and how much they cost. Then see me. If Vaatzes tells you to do anything for him,
tell him yes, you’ll see to it right away, then report back to me. Also, I want details of everywhere he goes and everyone
he talks to.”

“Understood,” Macer said. “Actually, I’ve been doing that for the last couple of weeks. I’ve got a list right here, if it’s
of any use to you.”

“Really?” Valens frowned. “Well done. All right, let’s see it.”

Macer never went anywhere without a battered pigskin folder stuffed with tatty scraps of paper. He opened it, leafed through,
took out a scruffy little corner of four-times-erased parchment. Macer’s family had been government clerks for six generations.

“Thanks,” Valens said, as he glanced at the list. “Who the hell is Henida Eiconodoulus?”

“Merchant Adventurer,” Macer replied immediately. “Big woman, wears a red dress. Used to be in the salt business. There’s
nothing against her.”

Valens shrugged. “Maybe he just likes big women,” he replied. “This is quite a list. Macer, you annoying bastard, why do you
have to write everything so bloody small?”

“Saves on paper.”

“Of course.” Valens squinted. “Let me guess,” he said. “Milo Calceus and Naeus Faber are blacksmiths, right?”

“He’s been to see all the blacksmiths in the city,” Macer replied. “Most of them before I started making the list.”

“Figures. Hello.” Valens’ frown deepened. “Some familiar names here.”

“Quite. And before you ask, he met with them outside the castle, on their own time. Of course, he could just have been finding
out about protocol and etiquette and so forth; which knife to use for which course, and who you’re supposed to stand up for
when they walk into a room.”

“That’s possible, certainly.” Valens stopped. “This one here,” he said. “You sure?”

“Yes,” Macer said, his tone of voice perfectly neutral. “Actually, that’s why I started keeping the list.”

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