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Bunch, Chris.
Seer King.
The Seer King.
ONE.
Exile.
The Seer King, Emperor Laish Tenedos, is dead. A courier brought the word this morning, and the prison warden declared a holiday.
I suppose I should not have called him that, but rather the Prisoner Tenedos, just as I am no longer Damastes a Cimabue, no longer Damastes the Fair as some called me in the silken pavilions of Nicias, no longer First Tribune a Cimabue, Baron Damastes of Ghazi, but merely the Prisoner Damastes.
I knew what tidings the ship bore, even before it docked from its gay buntings and the cheers of my guards as they read the signal flags.
They say the emperor died of natural causes, that his heart failed. Perhaps. But it would have taken only one enemy among his guards to cast a sorcerous spell, slip a bit of poison into his mat, or arrange a simple fall when he took his long walks along the coast, as I do, staring off toward the gray horizon, hoping for, but never being granted, the slightest glimpse of the great country of Numantia he brought to greatness and then sent down into ruin.
Sergeant Perak, who heads my guard detail, a man I have grown fond of in the year since my captivity began, said he believes the official tale, but it wasn't disease, but the malaise of exile that sent him to his grave. A broken heart, a romantic might have put it.
But he said this very quietly, after making sure no one might overhear him. It would not do for a jailer to show the slightest warmth toward his prisoner, nor toward the cause the prisoner vowed to serve until death.
At even-meal I noted the garrison's officers looking at me. I knew what they were wondering: How much longer would I be permitted to live?
I am, I suppose, the only tribune left of the Emperor Tene-dos's great army, saveHerne, who betrayed us, and Linerges, who Iunderstand was able to flee abroad. The only other ranking survivor might be Yonge, who vanished long ago into the crags of theBorder States.
Perhaps I too will have a convenient accident, or sickness.
It matters not.
I have seen, and done, as much as one man should be permitted. I've cut my way through battlefields where the blood lapped around my horse's fetlocks.
I've loved well twice and been betrayed once. Both those I loved are dead now, as is the part of me that loved them.
I've sat at the head of an army, a thousand thousand men who cheered and charged into certain death and their return to the Wheel on my command.
I've seen the greatest cities of Maisir and Numantia, from Kallio to the jungle borderlands, roar up in flames, flames I ordered to be set.
I've seen battlegrounds torn by demons called by the most evil and powerful wizards, demons who broke a column of charging cavalry when they appeared, ripped a company of spearmen apart with their talons, or sent them screaming away in madness.
I have eaten from golden plates, surrounded by silk and gentle music.
That is the one side.
There is the other: *
I've stumbled, bleeding, from the field of war, gut-sick as I saw our banners trampled and torn by the enemy triumphant.
I've s.n.a.t.c.hed a half-burned potato from a low fire and gnawed at it, the best and only meal I'd had for close on a week.
I've screamed on a witch's pallet, while she muttered words and taped dressings around my wounds, and then spent weeks wishing for the softness of death in a recovery tent.
Yet I am not old. I am not yet forty. All that has happened came in less than fifteen years.
Fifteen years, given a few months each way, since I first met the seer named Tenedos, facing death in a deadly mountain pa.s.s of theBorderStates.
Fifteen years, when I rode behind the emperor, his aide, cavalry commander, and then tribune, holding close my family's faith-WeHold True -although I now realize that loyalty was felt by only one of us.
He and I were the only two who were there at the beginning-and the end.
Our enemies would have said there were three: Laish Tenedos.
Myself.
And Death, the dark manifestation of the great G.o.ddess Saionji, creator, destroyer, skull-grin tight through the folds of her cloak, swords held high, pale horse nickering, eager to strike again.
Now there are but two of us.
Myself and Death.
My last friend.
TWO.
The Seer Tenedos.
My doom, and that of all Numantia, was sealed on the day I scored five goals at rol. This may sound like a joke-how could a hors.e.m.e.n's game make Saionji rip our lands apart, casting millions back on the Wheel to await rebirth?
But there is no joke, nor was there on the day of my disgrace. The Seventeenth Ureyan Lancers took their sport most seriously.
If it hadn't been for those five goals, the adjutant's pride, his lying, and my subsequent disgrace, another officer might have been sent toSulemPa.s.s,one with less to lose, and Laish Tenedos might have died with a hillman's spear through his throat, and the years of b.l.o.o.d.y war and dark magic might never have happened.
I was the newest officer of the regiment, having been given my sash of rank not many months earlier.
I'd sought frontier duty, wanting to fight instead of drill endlessly on parade grounds, and had been lucky enough to be chosen to be a column commander with the elite Lancers, as my first posting.
My downfall was ironic, because I had been most careful, as I'll tell later, to avoid the usual blunderings and stupidities of a junior legate. In fact, I'd been successful enough in a*
patrol against a wizard-bandit to be complimented by Domina Herstal, the regimental commander, only days before the rol match brought me down.
Rol is a simple game played on horseback across a wide, flat field. At either end is a netted enclosure, a foot wide by a foot high. There are five men to a side, and they attempt, using a mallet with a handle as tall as a man, called a hammer, to drive a wooden ball about the size of a large man's fist into the goal.
The game is played to ten points. It was a game I was particularly fond of, since it called for the best in both man and horse, and I was quite good at it-at the lycee I'd ridden forward on the Senior Team.
The regiment was, as I said, very keen on sport, particularly the adjutant, Captain of the Lower Half, Banim Lanett. Perhaps I should explain just what an adjutant is and does, because someone of his comparatively low rank should not be able to ruin anyone, even a junior legate.
An adjutant is the grease a regiment's wheels turn on. The unit commander, Domina Herstal, might walk out on the parade ground one morning and wonder if the stones bordering the field would look better stained yellow instead of white. Captain Lanett would nod, say "What an interesting idea, Domina," and as soon as the regimental commander was out of hearing would bellow for the troop guide and within minutes barracks would be rousted and details of men told off for painting, so when the domina came out for noon a.s.sembly, the area would be marked with tawny rocks as if a wizard had wiggled his wand. The domina would never inquire as to the circ.u.mstances, and the subject would never be brought up again unless the work had been done unsatisfactorily or the domina changed his mind once more.
Captain Lanett was a competent soldier with but one failing, although at the time I thought him a deceitful, lying b.a.s.t.a.r.d I'd call out if the army did not sensibly forbid dueling a higher-ranking officer.
His failing isn't that uncommon, either, and can be found almost anywhere in civilian life as well as the military: a sin-
gle weakness that hews a deep canyon through a man's honor. For some it is women, for some it is pride, for some it is gaming. Captain Lanett's failing was his love of sport, more precisely rol. Off the field, he was a model of rect.i.tude, but once mounted, hammer in hand, he would do anything to win a match, including spearing an opponent if a weapon had been given him and the referees' backs were turned.
The game was a match between the regiment's troops, and I was determined my Cheetah Troop would carry the day. I had been picked to ride forward, the position most likely to score, and things were going very well. I'd driven two goals in during the first quarter and heard cheering from the twenty-five men of my column. The match had swayed back and forth down the field, a grand melee, until, in the final quarter, I'd picked up another two goals and the score was tied, -both. We were on the defense, and I was trying to hold back the other side's halfback and back, my pony skittering from side to side of the gra.s.sy ground.
Captain Lanett came pelting down on our goal, tapping the wood ahead of him, about to let fly, and I was at full gallop trying to catch him. My mount was slightly faster, and I cut in from his blind side, and slashed, backhanding the ball away from him toward his goal. I heard the captain shout, but paid no mind, wheeling my pony and driving back toward the ball. Behind me came the thunder of the captain's horse, but I paid no mind, with an eternity to strike, that one-foot-wide goal yawning as wide as an elephant trap, and I snapped my mallet back and smashed the ball directly into the center of the net, and I bellowed victory, and there came another shout from behind.
I pulled my horse up, and turned. The adjutant had reined in, and had one hand clasped to his leg.
"You son of a b.i.t.c.h," he shouted. "You fouled me back there, and now again! I'll have your a.s.s for this!"
He turned in his saddle and shouted to the referees, "Judges! This man struck me twice, and I wish penalty!"
The stands were shouting, some for victory, some wonder- *
ing what madness the officers had come up with this time, but the two lance-majors chosen to referee the match said nothing. Slowly they rode forward, and the other players rode up with them.
"Sir," one of them began, "I saw nothing."
"Nor did I, Captain," said the other.
"Then you're d.a.m.ned blind! I say this man fouled me! Are you accusing me of lying?"
"Legate?" one of the lance-majors said.
Perhaps I could have phrased my reply more politely, but Iknew I hadn't touched him-in both cases my stroke would have been put off, and I certainly would have felt the blow up the shaft of my hammer.
"The h.e.l.ls I did," I said, my face no doubt reddening in anger. "The captain is mistaken! He must have struck himself by accident, turning to come after me!"
"I did not, Legate," and Captain Lanett's voice was as cold as a mountain stream. "Are you saying I am the liar?"
I started to say what I believed, but caught myself just in time. "I do no such thing, sir," and I put emphasis on the word. "I know what I did, and I expect every man on this field knows as well."
The adjutant stared at me, and when he did I swear the shouts of the regiment went mute. He said nothing, but wheeled his horse and rode off toward the stables.
Cheetah Troop had, indeed, taken the day. But the last few seconds had soured that victory. The men of my column congratulated me, but even their praise was muted. It took only seconds for everyone in the Seventeenth Lancers to know what had happened: The regimental adjutant, a man of probity and respect, had accused the newest officer, an unknown legate from a forgotten district, of illegal play and the G.o.ds-d.a.m.ned boy had the gall to deny it.
I hoped the incident would be forgotten or at least ignored, and avoided the mess that night. But it was clear by the next morning that my "fouling" of Captain Lanett was the sensation of the hour, and it would be some time before it was forgotten.
Lanett made it worse by refusing to look at or speak to me save when duty directly called, and so the incident grew.
I felt I was in disgrace such as no officer had ever known and, worse, was being treated as unjustly as any man the G.o.ds wished to test for moral righteousness. A thousand plans and plots ran across my mind, from the hope that my family's hearth-G.o.dTanismight reach out and twist Lanett's soul to make him tell the truth, or that the adjutant might be savaged by the next boar he attempted to spear, and even far less honorable thoughts in the deep of night involving cleverly arranged "accidents."
It might seem these events are absurd, taken far beyond proportion, which is true. But such affairs of honor are quite common when soldiers are at peace, their minds not fully occupied with their trade. But on the other hand it's not that foolisli-would a merchant hire a young clerk whom another respected colleague has falsely accused of theft?
A soldier, really, has only one possession besides his life, and that is his honor.
I knew not what I could do.
The solution was time, I now realize. Sooner or later another scandal would appear, and mine would move into the background. If I did nothing foolish like desert or strike my superior, there would inevitably come a backswell of support, especially if I carried myself well and gave no cause whatsoever for reproach.
But that is not what happened.
Less than two weeks later, just at the end of the Tune of Heat, I was in the riding ring with my column, putting them through yet another round of mounted drill, when I was summoned to the domina's office.
I was worried-thus far the regiment's commander had appeared to take no notice of what had happened at the rol match, and I was trying to convince myself he hadn't learned of the event But now ...
junior legates arenever called before the domina, except in the event of complete disaster.
I hurriedly changed into my best uniform, and went to the*
regimental headquarters. The regimental guide, Evatt, ushered me directly into Domina Herstal's office, and I saw real trouble coming.
There was only one man in the office: Captain Lanett. He sat at the domina's table, a great slab of cunningly worked teak, and appeared intent on some papers in front of him.
I smashed my fist against my chest in salute and stood at rigid attention. After a long moment, he deigned to look up.
"Legate Damastes a Cimabue," he began, without preamble, "you are being detached."
I hope I managed to keep an impa.s.sive face, but I doubt it s.h.i.t-no doubt I was being sent to some a.s.signment in limbo, caring for the widows and orphans of lances who'd fallen in the line of duty, or elephant handlers' school or something else guaranteed to end my career. The b.a.s.t.a.r.d adjutant would not let go.
"Sir!" was all I said, however, in spite of my anger and churning guts.
"Do you wish to know where?"
"If the captain wishes to tell me."
"It's a plum a.s.signment," Lanett said, and a smile, not friendly, came and went on his thin lips.
"Something most officers would die for."
I'll interject a rule here that holds true in all walks of life: The more a task is praised by the one giving it, the more likely it is to be dangerous, thankless, pointless, or all three.