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Authors: K. J. Parker

BOOK: Evil for Evil
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“I know,” Orsea went on. “Being under an obligation to someone like that; it throws everything out of true. It’s a bit like
owing your life to a man who’s been trying to seduce your wife. It beats me, I must admit. What would you do, in a situation
like that?”

If you were half a man, Valens thought; if you were only very slightly less pathetic, I’d take her away from you tomorrow,
even if it meant hiring murderers to cut your throat in the dark. I know: what about Daurenja? He would seem to have a knack
for that sort of thing. Instead, he said: “That’s an interesting one. I think what I’d do, if I was in your shoes, would be
to get out of this tent while you’re still capable of walking. Do you think you could manage that, or shall I get someone
to help you?”

Orsea smiled blandly at him, and he thought: sore losers are bad enough, but a sore winner’s insufferable. I don’t think I’ll
ever be able to forgive him for that; for being completely at my mercy, and in the right. “So what about Miel Ducas?” Orsea
said. “Are you going to let him go?”

“Only on the conditions stated,” Valens replied. “Otherwise he can stay where he is until the Mezentines come and slaughter
the lot of us.”

“I see.” Orsea turned to leave. “Thank you so much for your time.”

“My pleasure. Please give my regards to your wife.”

Which was, he reflected later, as he lay in the dark staring up, a bit like killing yourself to frame your enemy for murdering
you; a sort of bleak satisfaction; looked at objectively, though, not terribly clever.

The right thing to do. He could see it clearly in his mind; it was practically blinding him as it glowed in the dark. Arrest
Daurenja, let Ducas go, apologize to Orsea, never see or write to her again. The virtues and immediate reward of always doing
the right thing, as exemplified by Orsea Orseoli, Duke of the Eremians, that nearly extinct nation.

(My father would have Daurenja in here like a rat up a conduit; he’d give him his own knife for the job, probably sharpen
it himself, so as to be sure it was done properly. My father would have lost this war by now; except that he’d never have
let himself get involved in it.)

He yawned. He felt tired, but in no way able to sleep. Let’s just be grateful we’ve got the Mezentines, he thought. If I can
play for time just a little bit longer, they’ll exterminate us all and I won’t have to do anything, right or wrong.

He turned over onto his side, and it occurred to him to remember that his wife was dead; killed by the Mezentines, because
he’d been too stubborn and too proud to take her advice (which would have resulted in the deaths of about a fifth of his people;
slightly more than the Mezentines had killed in the battle, but there was still plenty of time and scope to make up the difference).
He knew he should be appalled by how little he cared about that. He thought: she couldn’t possibly love me now, love what
I’ve become because of all this. I’ve lost her as conclusively as though she’d been the one killed out there on the road,
instead of that poor, overeducated savage woman, who only wanted what was best for all of us.

(Wonderful epitaph for a wasted life, but a little bit too long to fit on a tombstone.)

Well: her death had made one significant difference. With her dead, the alliance with the Cure Hardy was certainly gone for
good; with it, the chance of escaping across the desert. No allies, no place to go; like Orsea, she’d been unbearable, hard
done by and right. And, like Orsea, he’d destroyed his people. The realization hit him like an arrow; not just routine early-hours-of-the-morning
depression, but a straight, clear look at the truth. They were finished. The clever idea hadn’t worked, and they were screwed.
And his biggest mistake: turning back on the hillside, instead of carrying on running away. It had been an easy mistake to
make: looking at heaps of the slaughtered enemy, his own forces in possession of the field, and mistaking it for victory.

He flipped over onto his back and stretched out his arms. His father used to have a saying — something he’d heard somewhere,
it was too clever for him to have made it up himself: giving up is a privilege only granted to the weak. Sometimes he assumed
it was just garbage, like most of the old fool’s pet maxims. At other times, like this one, it was the only truth that mattered.
Ah, but he had so many things to give up on, spoiled for choice, wallowing in opportunities. I could give up on myself, he
thought; then he realized, I’ve already done that. But I won’t give up on the Vadani, and I won’t give up on her. (Another
thing the old man had said: screw doing your very best;
succeed …
)

He was still awake when the first spikes of light poked through the seams of the tent flap. He yawned, stretched and covered
his face with both hands, running the tips of his fingers down the length of his nose. Another long day to look forward to.

“Are you awake?”

He started, lost his balance and slid off the bed onto his knee. “I’m sorry,” she said quickly, “I didn’t mean to —”

“That’s all right,” he mumbled, “that’s fine. What are you doing here?”

He scrambled into a sitting position, his back to the bed, and looked up at her. She was wrapped in an old blanket, so all
he could see was her head and her feet. “I wanted to talk to you,” she said. “If it’s not a good time …”

“No, it’s fine.” Without turning his back on her, he slithered up against the bed until he was sitting on it. “There’s a chair
behind you. Sit down.”

She already had. “I hope it’s all right,” she said. “Only …”

“Orsea sent you.”

He didn’t know why he’d said it, because obviously he’d done no such thing. “No, of course not,” she said. “But he came back
to our tent last night looking like death on legs. He wouldn’t tell me where he’d been until I lost my temper with him.” She
was looking straight at him. “What did you say to him? He’s practically suicidal.”

Valens sighed. “I was as unpleasant to him as I could possibly be. False modesty aside, when it comes to being thoroughly
obnoxious, I’m pretty much the state of the art. Oh, and I hit him. No, I tell a lie. It was the other one I hit, that Ducas
fellow. They’re pretty much interchangeable, anyhow.”

“That’s not true.” Her voice was very calm. “Orsea said it was Miel you fell out over.”

Valens laughed. “You could say that,” he replied. “But it was just an excuse, as far as I was concerned. You don’t need me
to tell you why your husband and I don’t get on well.”

She nodded precisely; a small, sharp movement. “It was Miel I wanted to talk to you about.”

“Really?” He shrugged. “Fire away.”

“I want you to let him go.”

“Fine. He can go.”

“Without that ridiculous condition you wanted Orsea to agree to.”

“Sure.” He made a vague gesture of submission. “He’s free to go and do whatever he likes. Hold on a moment and I’ll put it
in writing.” He leaned across and drew the writing desk toward himself. “You can take it with you if you like.”

“You’re giving in, then? You’ve changed your mind?”

“Yes. What does it look like?”

“Why?”

He gave her a what-a-stupid-question smile. “Because you asked me to, of course.”

She frowned. “Would you do anything I asked you to?”

“Yes.” He said it without thinking. “Yes,” he repeated firmly, “I’m pretty sure I would.”

“If I asked you to leave me alone and never talk or write to me again?”

“Definitely.” He looked at her. “Are you? Asking me that, I mean.”

“No.”

“Good.” He looked past her. “So why are you so concerned about the Ducas’ welfare?”

She shrugged. “I’ve known him for a long time; all my life, really. If my father hadn’t died so suddenly, I’d almost certainly
have married Miel Ducas instead of Orsea.”

“I see. Would you have liked that?”

She nodded. “It’d have been very comfortable,” she said. “A bit like leaving home and moving into the house next door. I don’t
love him, of course.”

“No,” Valens said, “I don’t suppose you do. So, if not him …”

“Orsea.” She looked down at her feet. “You know that.”

“Yes. Just Orsea?”

“No. But enough.”

“How much is enough?”

“As much as it takes.”

Valens nodded. “All right,” he said. “Though I must confess, it beats me how anybody could love someone like him; not excluding
his mother, his old nurse and his dog. He’s an idiot.”

“No.” There wasn’t any anger in her voice. “He isn’t, actually.”

“Oh really.” Valens jumped up. “Here’s a man who wakes up one morning. What’m I going to do today? he says. Here’s an idea:
why not invade the Perpetual Republic for no perceptible reason and start a war that fucks up the entire world?” He waved
his hands, an exaggerated gesture. “If you say he’s not an idiot, he’s not one. Now all we’ve got to do is call in all the
dictionaries in the world and change the definition of idiot to mean somebody with a fucking clue.”

Now she was standing up as well. Her front foot was pointed toward the tent doorway, implying that she was about to leave.
“Does that mean you’ve changed your mind about Miel Ducas?”

“No, of course not,” he snapped. “And sit down, for crying out loud. I’m sorry,” he added quietly. “All that was just showing
off.”

“I know.” She sat down. “And you know you’re wrong about Orsea. He’s not stupid, just weak; and unbelievably unlucky. Though
I’ve always tended to assume the two go together somehow.”

Valens leaned forward, cupped his chin in his hands. “I think he makes his own bad luck.”

“No.” She was correcting him, like a teacher. “Not all the time. Besides, all his mistakes and his errors of judgment stem
from one piece of really bad luck that simply wasn’t his fault.”

“Really? What was that?”

She smiled weakly. “Marrying me.” She shifted her head slightly, asking him not to interrupt. “If he hadn’t married me, he
wouldn’t have become the duke. It’s only because of me that he’s been in a position to make the mistakes. If he’d married
anybody else in the world, he’d have gone through life perfectly happy as a minor nobleman, getting things more or less right,
and there’d never have been a war or anything. Besides,” she added, “I should never have married him; only I didn’t know him
well enough at the time to realize what a mistake I was making.”

Valens frowned. “I thought you said —”

“I love him? Yes, I do. Practically at first sight. But he’s never really loved me; or at least, he loves me because I’m there,
if you see what I mean. Because I’m his wife, and he knows that loving your wife is the right thing to do.” She grinned. “What
I mean is, if he was married to someone else, he wouldn’t leave her and run off with me. He wouldn’t — what’s the quotation?
You’re the one who knows these things. He wouldn’t count the world well lost for my sake.”

Valens looked at her. “Actually,” he said, “I don’t know quotations. I have to look them up.”

“Oh. I assumed …” She shrugged. “Anyway, you see what I mean. If it was a choice between me and doing the right thing, I wouldn’t
stand a chance.”

“I see.” He frowned. “And that’s your definition of true love?”

“I suppose so. Like, for example …” She was looking over his shoulder. “Like doing something really bad and terrible, because
you realize you simply don’t have a choice: leaving your husband, for instance. Or starting a war. Sorry,” she added. “Did
I just make a joke or something?”

Valens shook his head. “I was just reminded of something I read recently. Actually it was that bloody stupid deposition the
Ducas made me look at; you heard about that? It’s something that Daurenja’s supposed to have said, in his confession. He said:
love has always been my undoing.”

She looked at him. “He’s supposed to be a murderer, isn’t he?”

“I’m sure he is,” Valens replied. “And a very useful engineer. I’m just picturing him standing up in court and saying: I did
something really bad and terrible, but I realized I simply didn’t have a choice. So: fine, I say, case dismissed. Is that
how it should be?”

“I don’t know,” she replied. “I’ve never done anything like that.”

He breathed out slowly. “Really?” he said. “What about writing to me? Wasn’t that bad enough, considering how it ended?”

“No.” Her eyes were cold and bright. “I can’t be blamed because somebody turned me into a weapon.” She studied him for a moment,
then said: “You can’t blame me for the war.”

Valens winced, as though she’d hit him. “Well, no,” he said. “Personally, I tend to think the Mezentines —”

“You know what I mean.”

“So I should just have sat quietly at home and let them kill you?” He shook his head, as though conceding that he was deliberately
dodging the point. “That’s what Orsea would have done, of course.”

“Yes,” she said. “Because Orsea would never be in love with someone else’s wife.”

He shook his head again. “Come on,” he said, “you can do better than that. What did you say just now? The world well lost
for love? Actually,” he added, “I do know that one. Pasier, the fifth Eclogue. But only because they made me read it when
I was a kid.”

“You don’t like Pasier?”

“Too soppy. His heroines sit around waiting to be rescued, you can practically see them tapping their feet impatiently, wondering
where the hero’s got to. And then the hero dies tragically, and they’re all upset and miserable. Anybody with half a brain
could’ve seen it’d all end in tears; and all the heroine need have done was pack a few things in a bag, wait till dark and
slip out through the back door, instead of making some poor fool of a hero come and fetch her. Besides, how could a hero give
a damn about somebody so completely insipid?”

She looked at him. “You don’t like Pasier.”

“No. I think his heroines are bitches and his heroes deserve everything they get. Which explains,” he added, “why I don’t
go in much for self-pity, either. I have no sympathy for stupid people.”

What was she thinking? The writer of the letters whose words he knew by heart had told him everything about herself. He had
explored her mind like a scholar, like a pilgrim. The girl he’d spoken to once when he was seventeen was so well known to
him that he could have told you without having to think what she would be likely to do or say in any possible circumstance.
The woman sitting in front of him was different. He hardly knew her.

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