Ecumene (No OP/ NO Harem/ No MS/ Isekai)

Part 1 The fugitives Chapter 1
* * *​

The typical view formed by a pleiad of prominent minds of the so-called "Old School" categorically emphasizes the role of the individual in history. This approach seems to us to be too narrow, like a flashlight beam, it brightly highlights certain elements leaving others in darkness. But who would risk denying the historical role of, say, Prince Gaiot or the Wartensleben sisters? Therefore, those who say: here were people whose actions and unbridled ambitions destroyed the world.

We also rightly point out that the catalyst was the objective process of state development, the absolutist tendencies of gathering the Ecumene under the banner of imperial power. And, as a natural reaction - the confrontation of the aristocracy, which felt a direct and clear threat to its position from the House of Gotdua. Yes, the Aleinsae family was the most radical, but did it create a contradiction and tension that could not be eliminated within the power paradigm of the era?

And now let us ask ourselves - what role did the long-term crisis of the petty nobility play in the general events? The ambitions of the Bonoms, of course, acted like a torch, but the spark fell on dry fuel, which became thousands and thousands of lovags, frels, impoverished horsemen, and sergeants. Those who, on the one hand, were obliged to bear the costly duties of the military class, i.e. needed a constant source of income. On the other hand, they became victims of a consistent and extremely aggressive policy of land concentration in the hands of Ishpans and Gastalds. Let us imagine that the Aleinsae family abandoned their plans, choosing a different measure of debt collection. How long could it have lasted and to what consequences would the further ruin, the declassification of the petty nobility, "the bones and muscles of war", have led?

Note that not mentioned here (so far, about them ahead) is the peasantry, which was even more severely pressed than the horsemen, as well as the Church of the Pantocrator, humiliated, robbed, and crying out for justice and vengeance.

Finally, in recent years we have witnessed the emergence of several extremely curious studies on the urban environment and its influence on the Dark Ages. The introduction of previously unknown sources reveals a picture of a ruthless struggle, devoid of even the shadow of compromise, between the small merchants and the guilds of honorable negociants and the craft councils, these forerunners of the manufactory revolution, and the workshops, which at the time in question were becoming the stronghold of conservative production, in the broad sense of "antiquity," based, among other things, on the established practice of weak central authority. The new researchers show by numerous examples that the heart of the turmoil certainly beat in the cities, from where the marching columns of infantry came, weapons and armor were forged, and where the assizes of the new law were born. And this, too, is the truth.

Thus, the story of the Tribulation, the End of Times, or, as contemporaries, the Deadly Age, more often called it, is like a gemstone with a complex cut. Each side refracts the light differently but is all part of the whole. The foundation of the universal calamity was long and painstakingly laid by the mutual clash of interests of guilds, classes, estates, workshops, and other social groups. Those who made decisions and carried them out, those who fought and fled from war, the brave and the victims of unrestrained violence, prominent personalities, and the "dumb majority" - all of them wove the fabric of History from the many disparate threads of their destinies. And in the end, no witness to those events - the strongest of the strong, the noblest of the noble - could say that the Tribulation had bypassed them.

However, no matter how much we agree with the predetermination of the overarching crisis, with the fact that the avalanche hanging over the Empire was doomed to descend sooner or later - the question always remains: who threw the first pebble?...? And, what is no less curious - how did these people perceive their place and role in the terrifying and majestic cycle of events?

The demise of the Third Empire in the letters and memoirs of the participants


Chalatenayo Chair in Chronicle History, 12.19.19.1.8,

II edition, by the Tla-Temohua Working Group

My son, if you are reading these lines, it means that the One has considered my life complete, and the executors have fulfilled their will by giving you this archive. And you are certainly at a loss to guess why your father, who was stingy with letters during his lifetime, entrusts you with so much beyond that.

I'll try to answer that.

Once, in the darkest hour of a long winter night, I remembered Her... The woman with hair the color of evil flames, who had so many names. I dreamt of her, and the image of the Red Queen was alive and vivid as if it hadn't been decades since I'd last seen her. Everything seemed so visible, so clear... She looked at me silently, smiling faintly, the edges of her lips, that famous and terrible smile of a creature that knows immeasurably more than mortal man. The smile of a demigod or, closer to the truth, a demon, who looks at everything and everyone a little apart, aloof. Not downwardly, but rather in the wise sadness of one who sees many roads closed to humans.

I woke up and could find no more peace. Until dawn, the cup of wine and the woolen blanket were my comforts. And they also reminded me that I was old. I was very, very old... And then the bitterness of regret seized my soul. How many stories I had written down in my time, how many ballads and tales I had preserved for those who come after us to rekindle the fire. Parchment, wax tablets, papyrus, and paper, all have my pen known... But for the story of Destruction, I have found neither inspiration nor ink. I have not written a line about the Destroyers, but I have lived through them all, and they have all become shadows in my memory. The weak, false memory of an ordinary man whose fingers can hardly hold a pen, and whose life, by God's will, may be cut short at any moment.

So I decided. I should devote the rest of my days to finally capturing my memories as far as possible. After much hesitation, I realized it was not my age or health to start a great chronicle with a prologue and a moral. So it was decided that I would dedicate each day to an event. One memory, one letter, a fragment of the past, resurrected under the slow pen of a broken old man, whose conscience is burdened with indelible sins.

So I entrust you with my memory and my words. I will give an account to the Judge of all Judges of what I have done, and even more of what I have allowed to happen by inaction....

Logically, I should begin this story with the story of the first time I saw Them. But the mind persistently retrieves something else from the dusty closets of memory. Yes. Other things. Not so much the events as their moods, their ominous reflections, like the dance of fiery reflections on the polished steel of a blade.

The first spring of Emperor Ottovio Gotdua-Aleinsae's reign was rainy and cold. Outwardly, it seemed the turmoil that had barely ignited in Milvesse had subsided, like a spark in the night, a brief flare of weak fire in the darkness. The Imperial power stood firm, the mounted companies and mercenary Highland regiments were as numerous and brave as ever, and the Court treasury had enough money to pay the troops. The lords in power were more zealous than usual in their feuds, but there was nothing out of the ordinary in this, for what year was without small wars of the powerful?

And still, the worry hung over the wet earth where the grain was rotting, promising sure hunger. A comet rose in the sky, its brightness defying the moon, and the monsters of the old world reappeared in the forests, prowling the streets of villages and towns in search of human flesh. Hyenas became especially ferocious, and more than one noble lord laid down his head, deciding to hunt at a bad hour, and wild pigs, as if they had learned the habits of the long-dead wolf tribe, began to gather in predatory packs, dangerous even for mounted warriors.

The old men said among themselves that not a single myaurs had been born since the coming of winter and that the year had begun with bad omens, and after the old men the superstitious whispers were taken up by the young. They said that the Emperor was young and weak. Instead of taking care of the affairs of the Ecumene, he spent his days in unrestrained debauchery shameful even for a man whose hair was covered with gray, let alone a young man of thirteen. The Council of Regents rules in place of the Emperor, enriching only the cursed Isle of Salt Blood. That the young Artigo of the Gotdua family is alive, hiding from his many enemies, and that some have called him an impostor while others look back and pray for the true Emperor's salvation from the wiles of the wicked and the perjurers.

As is customary on the threshold of troubled times, the people waited for the Messenger and the Prophet, and some of them were said to have seen them. It was also said, and this was the truth, which I can testify for myself, that the coinage continued to grow lighter, and the silver in the penny was now hardly two-thirds of its weight as against eight-tenths of its old weight. But that is only half the trouble, for even bad, worthless money has become rare, so that, as in the old days, various people and gentlemen and merchants exchange things for other things and written promises, and the ringing of noble metal does not please the purses for months.

Many things were said in that foul, cruel spring. Many rumors, of course, were figments of superstitious fancy. And some were true.

Gaval Sentrai-Poton-Batleau.

The first letter to my son, of the dreams of the past, the due and the harsh spring of the First Year


* * *​

Do I want to come back?

The spray ran down his face like tears. Or drops of blood. You can choose the symbolism of any taste if you want. Curzio, like many of the Island's aristocrats, had been fond of poetry in his youth, and not unreasonably believed that he had attained some art in composing metaphors.

However... no. The saltless fresh water seemed sweet and without bitterness, there were no tears or blood.

Do I want to go home? repeated Curzio's silent question. And where is there now a place I could call home...?

As has long been the custom, there is only one city on Salt Island. Their names are the same - Saltoluchard - and therein lies a dark play on words, for "salt" is the same as "blood," sharing a common root. Other places are called "settlements", even if they are larger than another royal capital. And, crucially, the island aristocracy are not landowners. None of them carry the prefix "ausf" so coveted by mainland nobility. A member of the Aleinsae family has the right to own anything, including people, but cannot call his own, much less inherit a single scrap of land outside the family estate. The Sacred Island that was created directly by the left and right hands of Isten and Erdeg can only belong to the Family. It is a wise charter, it has, among other things, allowed Aleinsae to walk a hard path, saving and growing while others lost and spent. But, good and gracious gods, so often do ancient laws get in the way! And so pleasant it is to feel oneself away from strict regulations, even if the price is a disgrace.

Curzio slouched on a rock, watching the storm gather. The leaden water was a ferocious beast against the old breakwater topped by the abandoned lighthouse. Fountains of gray-black water roared up to the sky where the sun was breaking through the torn clouds. There was a rumble so loud you could recite classical chants, and at a distance of two outstretched arms, nothing could be heard anymore. The fury of the sea assaulted the sullen resilience of the rock as it had for millennia before and would continue for millennia afterward. Spring had been early and very cold this year, and considering the continent's winter had been almost snowless, it boded well for famine. Another "empty" year... The island would not starve, but on the "flat earth", it looked like they would soon start carrying old people out into the cold and killing newborns.

Such is life...

The approaching storm filled Curzio's soul with resigned sadness, and at such times the islander wished he had a small grove at home, something deciduous, with dense crowns. So that he could sit in the semi-darkness, or perhaps lie down on a dense carpet of fallen leaves, breathing in the damp, clean smell of the forest, thinking about sad and spiritually uplifting things.

Empty dreams... Nothing grows on salty soil bigger than yellow shrubs, stunted spruces, and inedible rosehips, which can crack even granite with their roots. Everything else has to be planted in special tubs or tubs with enriched soil. A good way to unobtrusively demonstrate wealth, but philosophical thoughts avoid a well-kept order.

Well, the more precious will be the memories of the time a member of the Privy Council will spend here, not far from the capital and very far from home.

Curzio sighed, wiped his face, wet from splashing, and looked back, glancing lazily around the small manor. On the one hand, it was time to return to the warmth and dryness of home, on the other hand, Curzio liked to watch the riot of the elements. It helped in resolving difficult issues and unpleasant situations. At a critical moment, the islander imagined himself as a terrifying wave that destroys everything in its path, destroys the wood of ships, and scatters the stones of houses carelessly brought closer to the sea. A wave that takes everything away, leaving only a bare shore, not because of cruelty, but because it embodies the natural course of things.

A servant came hurrying from the house, his thin legs in tight stockings moving swiftly, slipping on the winding path lined with flat stones. Curzio sighed again, anticipating the appearance of some new concern, unnecessary and untimely, otherwise the housekeeper would not have dared to disturb his master's contemplative peace. Though, on the other hand, concerns are possibilities. And the Two are witnesses, the possibility of anything now would come in handy for a disgraced member of the Council.

"Ha," Curzio exhaled softly under his breath as he noticed the other man striding behind the hurrying housekeeper.

For a moment it seemed to the islander that his life must have come to an end, for a special executor, whose hand had been directed by the Privy Council, had come to the house. But before Curzio could even flinch, he recognized the heavy, heavy-looking figure, who tread lightly on the wet stones, as if he had been accustomed since childhood to walking indirect paths among the steep cliffs.

Curzio stood up, neither quickly nor slowly, just enough to show that he was honoring his guest, but not in a subservient hurry. He habitually and imperceptibly assessed how he looked from the outside, whether the embroidered cloth was not too wet, whether the lacquered hair had not lost its noble shape. He sent the servant away with a careless wave of his hand before he could utter a word. Judging by the guest's clothes, the visit was purely informal, and Curzio emphasized at once that he understood and accepted it, speaking one-on-one, without intermediaries or witnesses.

"Honorable," the islander greeted the mountain prince. "I am extremely glad of your visit. The doors of my house are always open to you."

Gaiot, the chief of the Court Guard, indicated a ceremonial bow, quite deep for those who declare "We bow only to the Moon and the Mountains!". Touching the heart area with the fingers of his left hand, he uttered the words of the ancient greeting in a deep, well-pitched voice, almost devoid of barbaric accent:

"I come in peace, and I expect to meet in thy house, son of worthy parents of Aleinsae-Malt-Monwusen."

For a moment Curzio pondered how the remark should be understood. Either the prince was emphasizing his interlocutor's rather low position in such an unobtrusive way, or he was simply unaware of some nuances of island life. Finally, he decided the second one should be true, at least temporarily. From the outside, the short delay was unnoticeable and looked quite natural. The islander bowed in return with the words:

"According to our tradition, a storm portends a good deed with a good outcome. The Two are in favor of this meeting."

As if to accompany the nobleman's speech, another wave crashed with a deafening crash against the lighthouse tower. The shaking of the stone seemed to echo even in the soft goatskin soles. The guest smiled faintly.

"We have no seas, and inclement weather looks different on the mountain lakes," the Highlander said, standing beside him so that the tall Curzio was level with the barbarian prince's shoulder. "But there is a similar belief about an alliance made on a mountaintop under the eight evil winds, the light of the moon, and the watch of the spirits. We resort to it when we confirm by bloody oath the alliances of tukhums, or when we assemble khaseh to march as a single army to a great war."

"And you, too... resorted?"

"Me too."

Again Curzio hesitated for a moment, wondering what his guest was trying to say by openly commemorating the old beliefs. Everyone knew that the mountain savages were pagans for the most part, though outwardly they followed the rules of belief in One or Two. Everyone also knew this was strongly disapproved of outside the Pillars of the Earth, that is, the middle mountains. Perhaps the Prince's words meant something. Perhaps not. The barbarians were always difficult to deal with, often their guilelessness looked so straightforward as to give the impression of the most sophisticated intrigue, and at times the Stone Men were more flexible than the invertebrate snakes of the ocean depths.

"Then, if you're not in a hurry, let's look at the wind, sky, and water," Curzio suggested neutrally. "It is alien to both of us, and at the same time it reminds us, as I see it, of our native land."

"I agree," the prince shook his chin ceremoniously.

And now the two men froze, looking at the storm. Curzio counted the beats of his heart, waiting long enough to create the illusion of being involved in something intimate on the one hand, and on the other not to tire his interlocutor by waiting too long. And at the same time, he amused himself with the thought of whether the guest was not busy with the same thing. Prince Gaiot was known as a man completely devoid of pity, wonderfully fierce, but intelligent on the verge of wisdom.

When the gusts of fierce wind took on a cold sharpness like icy blades, Curzio realized that now his hair would fall apart despite the water-resistant varnish, and decided to end his admiration of nature.

Gotta order a wig, he thought, and said aloud:

Please be my guest. Hot wine with herbs will warm us up and keep us from catching colds."

"And again I agree," the prince muttered. "It is truly said that your wisdom is rivaled only by your sweet talk!"

Curzio smiled demurely, wondering again if he was being joked at by the savage, who looked like a dull-faced shopkeeper in a plain and ugly dress, who hung a thick silver chain over his shoulder for some reason.

"Spring this year promises to be harsh," the prince suggested, noisily sipping from his goblet.

Curzio nodded in agreement and took a sip of the wine, thick with the flavor of blood from the veins of a freshly killed animal. The flavor was, to put it bluntly, bad, but it was the sort of stuff the Highlanders valued, considered a man's drink, and the islander saw no point in transferring refined drinks to someone who wouldn't appreciate the subtle bouquet anyway.

The room in the house occupied by Curzio during his stay in Milvess was decorated with ancient traditions. In fact, it was more like a tower, with a very high ceiling on the first level and a spiral staircase with no railing running up the walls to the second level, where the library and study were located. The furniture is mostly shelves with scrolls and some curiosities memorable to the owner. The stone floor is decorated with intricate mosaics imitating the cut of a giant oak tree. Only a very wealthy man could afford such decoration, and Curzio reminded himself again that he should make inquiries as to who it was and where it had gone during the fall events. More importantly, whether there were any living relatives. It would be embarrassing if someone showed up with a claim, or even for satisfaction.

Although there was a table and chairs, the master did not sit down, and the prince followed suit. Curzio, in the same motion, as if shaking drops of water off his fingertips, sent away the servant who was about to pour wine from a silver jug into his guest's cup. The two men were left alone. The islander had brought servants from his homeland, and he could be sure no one's ears were overhearing.

"What is this?" Gaiot asked, looking at the rack of strange things that looked alien and mysterious amidst the discreet luxury of the house.

Curzio couldn't hold back a slight grimace. He was uncomfortable that someone had noticed objects that the owner himself had forgotten about, and his clothes were clinging to his body with moisture, making him uncomfortable. The prince, dressed in a jacket and thick pants of oiled leather, apparently did not feel any hardship.

"It's the source of many of my family's misfortunes," Curzio finally said.

"May I have a look?" The prince showed good manners, and the master of the house appreciated it.

Curzio picked up one of the objects, the one that interested the Highlander. Something that looked like the splinter of an oar slightly shorter than a man's arm. The dark wood seemed polished and heavy, like iron. The smooth surface bore the marks of mysterious writing, smoothed by time and thousands of touches. On either side of the flattened body were rows of recesses, several of them containing remnants of a material that looked like hardened resin. From one hole protruded a kind of glass tooth, glossy black, like the waves of a freshwater sea on a stormy day. The islander touched the tooth with the tip of his little finger, remembering that the chipped stone would be sharper than any razor, even those sharpened by engraving needles.

Curzio silently held the "paddle" to the Highlander, and the latter examined the artifact closely.

"It looks like someone wanted to make a sword without a grain of metal, not even copper," the prince suggested. "And that was in a very hot land. The cutting edge of such glass is of little use against quilted armor. And even on chain mail and plate armor, it would crumble like ordinary glass. But it will cut bare flesh to the bone."

"My great-great-grandfather thought so," Curzio agreed. "I must say in the old days, the Malts were very rich, with their wharf, warehouse, trading flag, and a good share in the Arsenal."

"Oh," Gaiot expressed the surprise befitting the moment.

"Yes. But the patriarch, whose name is forgotten by posterity, was carried away by some idea...."

Curzio remembered the delight with which he had first touched the oddity many years ago, not yet knowing the connection between the Malt family and the useless piece of wood.

"He had trade with the northeast, among other things. He shipped salt and iron there. Back walrus teeth, purple from the bones of ocean creatures. Wordless and loyal mercenaries from the savages there, who still fight with copper and bone. From the savages, he heard stories of the bodies of strange men and shipwrecks that the angry waves brought from time to time. Some of the objects ended up in the Malts' collection. They must have been enchanted and poisoned his great-great-grandfather's mind, so he decided somewhere in the world there were other inhabited lands beyond the Oikumene."

The prince could not resist and snorted, Curzio did not even wrinkle his nose at such a blatant display of disrespect, he understood the Highlander perfectly well. The islander took the baton from his guest's hands, and put it back on the rack, next to the head of a child's rocking toy in the form of a horse. He covered it with a cloth as if the very sight of the old thing distressed his host.

"The forefather's reasoning, it must be said, seemed reasonable at first glance. The debris and corpses were carried by the cold current that circles the north of the Ecumene. So, if we go in the opposite direction along the same current, we will find the source. The same mysterious lands where bronze-skinned people, who know no metal and build rafts, live."

"Well..." the prince hesitated. "Yes, it sounds reasonable. It seems to be..."

"In the end, great-great-grandfather invested all the family's wealth in organizing the expedition. Galleys were not suitable for such a long voyage, so he outfitted only sailing multimasted ships, which cost a fortune. With pilot shamans from wild northerners, two dozen ships moved into the endless ocean ..."

Curzio was silent for a moment. Then he came to the table and splashed the wine generously, refilling the bowl so that the dark liquid stopped flush with the edges of the thin gold wire. When the islander took a sip, the savage wine poured down his throat like blood stripped of hops. Curzio realized with detached surprise that the old tale was hurting again, as it had when the young Cazzi had learned why the name Malt was held in pitying contempt by the other Aleinsaes.

"I suppose this story doesn't have a happy ending," the prince suggested tactfully, deciding that the pause was dragging on.

"Alas, yes," Curzio woke up and drowned his grimace in another sip of wine. "In fact, that was the end of the story. The fleet was gone, the waves hadn't brought back even a broken sliver. But the four generations now had something to do, rebuilding the power of the family."

//"And it still didn't work, even after the double surname became a triple surname, incorporating mainland Monwoosen..."

However, the islander only thought the latter, keeping the thought safely behind tightly clenched teeth.

"And the other... items? The rest of the collection?"

"Long sold out, along with other valuables," the islander said indifferently. "Normally, risky investments can be claimed a year after deposit, but given the peculiar conditions, the Merchant Council set a moratorium of three years. And extended it to five. Eventually, however, it became clear that no one would return, much less bring back ships loaded with silver, gold, and other valuables. Then the partners, who had invested in the expedition and the construction of ships under the guarantee of the Maltese name, came to demand their shares back. This sword club is the last thing left. They gave good money for it, but my great-grandfather commanded that it should always be kept in the family as a reminder of prudent caution."

"I understand. He was a wise man."

"Yes. You have those who want the weird and useless offered to find the "fifth kingdom." We're sent to find the "Maltese fleet."

"Why did you tell me this story?" The prince asked the question bluntly.

"You asked," the islander smiled slightly. "Everyone on Saltoluchard knows it. There's no harm in it for me, but I think you were interested."

"I did. But I didn't ask for such details. And you didn't enjoy those memories," Gaiot said shrewdly. "Then why?"

Curzio adjusted the collar of the blue half-circle around his broad, manly shoulders, hardly worthy of a refined aristocrat.

"To create a mood of confidence," said the owner of the forcibly seized house bluntly. "You're too busy to pay a non-committal visit to a disgraced member of the Council. You want something, and you want it badly and without delay. But you're troubled by doubt. I've tried to break the ice a little. I hope enough for you to state the matter plainly."

"Clever," Gaiot bowed his head showing understanding and restrained approval. "I see the rumors about you are true."

"And what do they say about me?" Curzio inquired.

"Depends on the storyteller."

"Let's do it this way, retell the most vigorous characterization," Curzio asked. "And let's get down to business."

"The most vigorous?"

"Rude. Boorish. Angry. I collect them, you might say," the host explained.

"Well..." the prince frowned, recalling or imitating a recall. "It sounded roughly like a slippery rascal who would squeeze into an asshole without a drop of oil and pour a handful of his crappy salt in there."

"Oh, that's interesting, I've never heard that before. I'll keep that in mind. So?"

"For starters, perhaps you have something more... pleasant?" At the prompting of events, Gaiot looked down at the wine bowl and grimaced in genuine disgust.

"I thought you lived by the precepts of your forefathers," Curzio said, genuinely surprised. "Do not covet the fruit of the sweet vine, for heat breeds weakness and all that."

"Yes, the forefathers bequeathed their descendants to wear skins crafted by the hands of hard-working women, to devour raw hearts torn from the chests of their enemies. To smash skulls with clubs without spilling blood on sacred mountains. And to wash twice in life, at birth, and after death, because all misery is from promiscuity. But I still prefer to wear good clothes, kill with sharp steel, and take a bath at least once a week. And drink proper wines, not fermented goat's piss. I suspect my worthy ancestors would do the same if they had the money."

"We'll have something more appropriate for the moment," Curzio smiled and rang a small bell. "Then we can talk about things that matter. I understand that you... we're having some difficulties, and will probably need some help?"

"Help, advice, maybe something more significant," the prince immediately adopted the strict and direct tone of business people, "For example, your library. But first I would like to talk about the family traditions of Saltoluchard. Otherwise, I am afraid, in the very near future our difficulties will increase manifold."

Waiting for the change of wines, Gaiot sipped half a cup at once, squinting with pleasure.

"That's another thing," he summarized.

"I'm all ears," Curzio reminded him.

"So. The Council of Regents treats the Emperor like... it's strange..." Gaiot wiggled his fingers, as if knitting the words as if they were yarn. Curzio remained silent, not intending to make it easy for him by prompting him.

" It's... indifference. They look at the boy as if he were a hunting falcon. The only thing they want is his signatures on edicts and a speedy conception of an heir. It looks..."

"Strange?" This time Curzio decided to help a little.

"Disgusting and wrong," the prince exhaled with unconcealed anger.

"Why?" Curzio's words were not condemning or threatening, only genuinely curious.

"We on our Pillars, in general, spit on the lords of the "flat earth," the prince honestly informed. "But for others, the Emperor is the ruler of the world, the blood of the sovereign flows in his veins. He is a nobleman of all nobles, responsible before the gods for the well-being of the Ecumene."

Curzio politely pretended not to notice the "gods," and that his interlocutor was clearly not referring to Two.

"One may not believe in the tales of the monks, but at least the honor of the class demands respect for the supreme suzerain!"

The prince unable to contain himself, slammed his fist on the rack so the scrolls bounced and the wood creaked pitifully.

"Respect, damn it! Because if everyone sees you disrespecting the one above you, the lower ones stop respecting you too! And Milvesse is already full of rumors that the Regents do not respectfully request an audience, but summon the Emperor as if he were a servant or a secretary. That the boy is in unutterable grief and weeps for the injustice of his advisers, and his tears cry out to Pantocrator and will bring the wrath of the Lord upon all men. That the young Emperor does not dry out, starting the day with a bottle of fortified wine, and prefers a man's embrace to a woman's!"

"Is that so?" Curzio raised an eyebrow.

"Of course not!" the prince shouted. "Thank the gods, he only has a boner for a woman's ass. But the boy is timid and cowardly, like a girl who's had an engraving of a cock put into her prayer book. And no wonder, at thirteen! And your counselors demand he make a child with that ugly mare as soon as possible. But with that kind of pressure, I fear they'd rather make him completely infirm. Even Shotan had questions, and this ghoul seemed to have been born tired of life, unable to wonder."

Curzio kept a look of restrained interest on his face and thought to himself that the word "ghoul" sounded funny in the mouth of one who adhered strictly to the ancient custom of the Highlanders to kill on the spot anyone who took prisoners or did not hurry to burn down the enemy's house.

"Wartensleben told the regents that they would lead Milvesse into a new turmoil," continued Gaiot. "But his words sounded like the voice of a shrieking man in the middle of the ocean. Is this your custom? Or is there something we don't know about your customs? It's no problem to bleed the capital, but why go to all this trouble?"

Curzio strode along the wall, fleetingly running his palm over the smooth rung of the stairs. The pale face of the island killer expressed nothing, hiding the intense work of thought. This conversation was not treason, Curzio had been removed from the Court and matters of the Empire's governance, but not struck from the lists of the Privy Council. The recluse was not under house arrest, and technically the nobleman of the Maltese family remained in service.

Technically...

In practice, however, there were many nuances to consider, and some of them could lead to a soft handkerchief around the neck, the traditional way of the Aleinsae chiefs to demonstrate their categorical distrust and unwillingness to continue the existence of the offender.

"What I am about to tell you is not really a secret," Curzio said when the prince had finally decided that the visit had been a waste of time. "Anyone who has done business with us for any length of time, who has seen what is hidden behind the dusty stones of the walls of the houses of Salt Island, knows it. But still--" Curzio made a vague figure with his fingers as if turning a key in an invisible chink. "You must not publicize my words. Some things by nature like silence. And if you refer to me in conversation with outsiders... I shall be... very unhappy about it."

"Well, someone less intelligent than I would have heard in your words the shadow of a threat, that is, an unequivocal insult," the prince returned the islander's feeble smile. "It is good that I have a sophisticated ear that distinguishes a threat from a friendly request."

The host and guest exchanged luscious smiles again. Curzio didn't like the remark about "request," but there was nothing to quibble with. Technically, the Highlander had shown impeccable courtesy.

"The thing is, my friend, Ottovio means eighth in the old dialects," the islander began. "And that has some curious implications....."

* * *​
 
Chapter 2
* * *​

"For great events and people invariably abound in witnesses. All of them, undoubtedly, had premonitions, expectations, and knowledge of the past and future, and experienced mystical insights. All of them immediately and unreservedly felt the importance of the historical moment and the greatness of the participants, which they did not fail to report verbosely and eloquently orally and in writing, especially in petitions for rewards and inherited privileges. There was no shortage of those who carried the sword for Ranjan the Guardian, fed arrows to Gamilla cyn Ferna, sharpened the blade of the Devil's Hel, and suggested particularly good rhymes to me. It's funny, considering that Plague entrusted his sword only to his faithful servant, the Gravedigger of Knights and the Mistress of Arrows did not allow anyone to even touch their murderous accessories, and I'll keep silent about myself, so as not to turn this letter into a pathetic tale about the envy of ill-wishers, which made me quite tired and poisoned my life.

In fact, for what it is all about... Many people have left memoirs about Her, and those chronicles do not shine with variety. The authors, with very few exceptions, repeat about the deadly shadow that stood behind Her left shoulder, about amazing signs, about how at first sight they felt the great purpose of Hel.

I can responsibly write that these, God forbid, "witnesses" are ungodly liars. She was completely... ordinary. So much so that it's odd, given the events that followed. A young woman, somewhat taller and stronger than usual, but within reason. She kept a reserved, at times timid demeanor. She was beyond the control of sorcery, astrological science, and even simple fortune-telling. Her gaze did not burn with otherworldly coldness, and her speeches were neither deep nor significant, Hel seemed to measure every phrase, every act on invisible scales, avoiding rashness. In general, neither word nor deed She did not differ from, say, a knight's daughter, who in the absence of a son received education as heiress and defender of the family name. Except that... With long communication began to seem: Hel was a little out of this world, like a figure cut out of paper that lies on top of the engraving - part of the composition, but not the drawing. It was as if this woman were looking at all of us through an invisible glass, refracting light in a strange and unfathomable way. It was as if Hel knew something we had long forgotten or perhaps had not yet recognized. And this indeed seemed ominous, but, I repeat, this side of her nature was revealed only to the closest companions.

However, it is fair to say that I might have missed some aspects, for our first meeting took place under peculiar circumstances"

Gaval Sentrai-Poton-Batleau.

"Third letter to my son, about the first meeting and the consequences of excessive gambling"


* * *​

It was cold and harsh. Although autumn was getting ready to show its bastard snout, winter, which had already come into strong force, was already ruling on the pass. Winter colded and powdered the black earth and gray stone with snow, and rumbled between the rocks with a penetrating wind, which, like a vampire, imperceptibly sucked the warmth through cloaks and woolen jackets. Here, amid the mountains, the sky seemed surprisingly clear, surprisingly transparent, and the stars shone like diamond dust - you would not find such things in the valleys and even more so in the cities. But the impression was spoiled by the red color that flooded the celestial hemisphere. In the sunlight, the glow of the ominous comet was almost imperceptible, but when the moon rose, its silvery light seemed to intensify the bloody colors.

"Like a city on fire," Cadfal thought aloud and shivered, then added. "And a big one at that."

Elena looked at the huge peaks that seemed so close. Her vision was deceived by the clear air, lack of landmarks, and perspective. The southern end of the mountain massif that rose in the center of the Ecumene began almost immediately with giants akin to Elbrus. Without an intermediate link in the form of hills and other terrain of moderate height.

Ranjan adjusted the collar of his cloak and the thick scarf beneath it and lifted his head, his eyes fixed on the road through the pass. In Elena's opinion, it was time to set up camp and organize an overnight stay, for there was half a watch before dark, it was a couple of hours, just enough time to set up camp and stock up on fuel. The mountains had become very dangerous in recent months, there were rumors of all sorts of undead that crawled out of the bottomless holes under the purple rays of the sun of the dead. Then again, there was always the risk of running into the locals, who had gone mad without bread on their Pillars.

"We'll go on," the Brether decided and moved the belt that crossed his broad chest at an angle. "Over there, the rocky ridge will keep out the wind."

"Yes, it's a good place," agreed Rapist, who had been silent all day. "I'll go and have a look."

He quickened his step, overtook the column of six men with three horses, and lurched forward. Elena thought again that the redeemer's form was not the same as his content. Rapist looked like a typical Japanese grandpa who had given his life and health to his favorite company, an old man ready to crumble from his own decrepitude at any moment. But the funny grandfather was indefatigable and enduring, like a terminator. When Elena felt that she was ready to collapse from fatigue, Rapist was walking briskly in small, but frequent steps, holding the usual spear on his shoulder. It was the habit of many years of traveling on foot that did him in.

Cadfal was second to his companion in endurance, but not by much. The cold also seemed to have no power over the Redeemers, and they often hung leather shoes around their necks to preserve them and walked in something like slippers woven of bald and straw. Such shoes did not last more than a day, but they could always be bought very cheaply from any peasant or, at worst, made by oneself. Elena tried once to walk in such clogs and failed; she needed a special "gentle" step, otherwise, the straw slippers would fall apart in an hour's walk or even faster.

There was little snow on the pass. It was blown away by a wicked wind so there was no need to push through the drifts. Elena looked at the horse carrying Artigo. The animal seemed more alert and cheerful than the rider. The boy had either dozed off in the saddle or had completely withdrawn into himself. This state of mind was becoming more and more frequent, and it bothered the adults, but, there were no teachers among them. And there was plenty to do besides education, to be honest.

"He's coming back," Cadfal commented, looking at the figure of Rapist walking in the opposite direction. Ranjan silently adjusted the belt that held the scabbard behind his back. The long hilt of the tournament sword pointed askew into the purple sky above his left ear.

"He must have found something," Grimal thought aloud, not moving away from the horses with the load.

"It doesn't seem dangerous," Cadfal said, but he swung his club as if to stretch his joints just in case.

Rapist was in no hurry at all, gliding over the dry, crumbly snow with smooth steps. Elena, who also carried a short sword behind her back, glanced at Ranjan, unbuckled the brass buckle of her belt, removed the scabbard, and checked the blade as it came out. The cold steel was tight, she had to make a few vigorous movements, like a cyclist with a pump. Artigo didn't lift his head, pecking his thoroughbred nose in time with the horse's stride.

"There's a fool over there," said Rapist, waving his hand as the small group moved. "He's freezing. The woman with him is not much smarter, if any."

"Are they not dangerous?" Ranjan inquired suspiciously.

"I don't think so," Rapist shrugged his skinny shoulders. "Stupid, but harmless. I think."

Elena had learned to read the Brether's impenetrable face more or less over the past weeks. Obviously, at that moment Ranjan was besieged by unpleasant thoughts of ambushes, insidious setups, and other road hazards. Rapist apparently realized the same thing as Elena, so he added:

"There's no place to set up an ambush."

Ranjan glanced to the right. There was not exactly a chasm, but a slope so steep, that only a ninja or a highlander could hang on. He looked to the left, where the slope was a little more gentle, but still sloping, overgrown with gnarled trees, which were greedily digging their roots into the soil, which was slightly inferior in hardness to the stone. He glanced ahead and stepped resolutely forward. Elena followed him, neither concealing her sword nor her determination to use it. On a sparsely traveled road, showing a willingness to fight back was more useful than appearing to be a benevolent traveler. It was safer.

A little higher up, the road, or rather a wide path - barely enough for two horses - made a turn and formed a sort of platform, partially sheltered from the wind by a rocky ledge. Judging by the traces of old campfires and the trees cut down around it, the travelers had long appreciated the convenience of the bend, sleeping here regularly.

"A fool indeed," Cadfal reported rather loudly, looking at the pair stomping around one of the black spots as if the long-ago-cooled coals could warm them.

Elena raised her eyebrows in silence, even Artigo came out of his catatonia, staring blankly at the oncoming travelers. One of them was a man, completely naked except for a filthy rag that symbolically covered his loins and equally symbolic leather boots. Symbolic, because there were no more rips and holes in the shoes than leather. Elena wrinkled her nose, imagining what the "fool's" feet had become without socks, and shirts in boots freezing cold. The "fool" was, as might be expected of a man in his condition, blue, miserable, shivering, and his toes no longer unbent, curled up like a bird's feet.

The polar nudist was accompanied by a woman, no less colorful in her own way. She wore much more clothes and, in fact, she was well equipped for the weather, though without frills. Elena would have given the woman about twenty years of age, hardly more, but her eyes were much older, very attentive, hard, and as suspicious as Ranjan's. Her face was rather pretty, but her lower jaw seemed a little wide. Most notable was a tattoo done in pale blue ink. It depicted an intricate pattern that began at her right temple and took up part of her forehead, covered her lower eyelid, and went down her cheek and jaw to her neck. Elena, who had more or less picked up some criminal wisdom in Milvess, noticed at once that the quality of the tattoo was at least two levels above a typical painting. Here a real master with real ink had had a hand in it, and such work was not cheap.

In her hands the tattooed woman held a thing quite suitable for the city, rather even for the estate of a noble landowner, but completely out of place in the wild places where wolves are not to be found solely because the classical hounds died out centuries ago. It was a small bullet crossbow with a screw tension. The crossbow of very high quality, one could say exquisite work, lay in the owner's hands confidently, with a seeming carelessness characteristic of a professional. It looked like a toy, but Elena knew that a lead bullet at close range could bruise or break a rib even through clothing, and if it hit her forehead, it could kill her.

For some time the two groups of different sizes stared at each other in silence and hostility. The nudist was clearly freezing. He froze in a ridiculous pose, clasping his hands on his chest in an attempt to keep warm. The tips of his nose, ears, and other protruding parts of his body were already turning white. The crossbowwoman was sullenly assessing which of the newcomers seemed more dangerous.

"Dumbass," Cadfal said loudly and without anger, realizing his unique talent for defusing any tension with a few unexpected phrases. "Who does that? You should put your hands to your balls, where the most gut heat is concentrated, and it cools down later than anything else. And fingers should be heated and protected to the last."

The naked man looked wildly at the redeemer, tapped his teeth, and suddenly followed the wise advice. Ranjan glanced silently at the others, then up at the sky, where the huge pre-sunset moon reflected the bloody light of the comet as if painted in red watercolor. The wind had died down, only occasionally blowing against their faces, nibbling at them with a chill.

"Halt," the brether finally commanded and then added tiredly. "Give this outcast a blanket."

The crossbow woman stared into the ruthier's face and after a long pause, she lowered her weapon unsteadily, as if by force.

"Good evening," she said in a slightly husky, low voice.

"Yeah," Cadfal said. "Good day to you, too."

"I have a crow," the tattooed Amazon said suddenly. "Shot it this morning," she said, moving her shoulder to reveal a leather-strapped travel bag, skinny and unburdened. "Cold, but not yet icy."

"Crow, that's good!" Cadfal rejoiced and slapped the bag that hung on the rope that replaced the redeemer's belt. "And we have flour and salt. We'll boil a bird with sourdough and go to sleep quite well-fed."

The crossbowman stood in a tense pose of readiness for a few more moments, then exhaled and discharged her weapon, carefully lowering the leather bowstring. Elena slid the blade into its scabbard, realizing there would be no bloodshed today.

It was not the first and, alas, most likely not the last night in the open air, which fell to the share of a small detachment, so everyone already knew what to do and who should do it. They prepared for the camp quickly and thoroughly. Elena was busy with the child, Grimal was saddling and unloading the horses, muttering that they had enough food left for a couple of days. In the meantime, he unwrapped and threw the largest and warmest blanket to the cold sufferer. The redeemers laid down their weapons, drew axes from their saddlebags, and set out to get fuel for the night. Ranjan climbed a rocky ledge, looking around and wondering how to go on. His beard and mustache were beginning to be overtaken by a thick stubble, and his razor set had been exchanged for a bag of flour in the last village they encountered, so he looked like a wandering homeless man rather than a Mephistophelean character.

The trees rattled under the pressure of the iron. Artigo looked at Elena in silence, and the woman regretted once again - probably for the thousandth time - that she had no idea how to deal with children. Although common sense suggested that traditional pedagogy would have failed here - the nobility's offspring were not like the ordinary ones, and the son of the highest aristocracy seemed like an alien from another planet.

"Where did you come from, you miserable creature?" Cadfal inquired casually. "Are you a devil-worshipper? I hear they freeze themselves to death, preparing for the hells, where it's cold."

"Gaval byr-byr-byr," the nudist said suddenly and almost audibly, swallowing his last name. He warmed up a little, stopped gnashing his teeth like a wind-up lizard, and looked at the company with a mixture of hope and apprehension in his eyes. "Minstrel and storyteller. At your service-m-m-m... Br-r-r-r."

The end of the sentence was again blurred by a bout of violent shivering. Cadfal grunted and went into the semi-darkness for more twigs. The rapist had brought a whole tree, uprooted either by the wind or by the fallen earth from the slope. It was a long way to go for fuel, so the harvesting process was slow. Ranjan had seen enough, jumped down gently, and busied himself with Artigo and the fire. The Brether never took off his sword. Elena, taking advantage of the switch, joined the redeemers. A little later, the crossbowwoman also took care of the timber, so the work went on quickly, the redeemers chopped, the women hauled. The sun had gone down, but the red moon and the glow of the bloody sky gave good illumination so they could not get lost or break their legs, though it was eerie to wander in the purple-red half-darkness.

"I don't understand," said Rapist, dropping his axe and wiping the sweat from his wrinkled forehead. "How is it that they haven't cut it all down? It's cold, the wood grows slow and shallow. And the people are wandering."

"This is where the traders usually go," the crossbowwoman said suddenly. "They count the distances so they don't spend the night here. It's not a good place. They say sometimes the storm gets so bad that men and oxen are blown into the abyss. And if it is impossible to pass the mountain pass in a day, they take a stock of burning stone to burn fire till morning like in a forge."

"Not a good place?" Cadfal clarified. "Eating someone, I suppose?"

The woman shrugged in silence and the conversation stopped. Everyone wanted to warm up quickly by the good fire, so they did not waste time on further discussions. The rather thin and crooked trunks did not make a good trough, but warmth until morning and the opportunity to cook something hot for the travelers were assured.

While the skinny crow was plucked and cooked (Elena noted that the bird had been killed by a single hit to the head), the restless Cadfal entertained everyone with a story about how in his region crows were salted, served in taverns, and generally kept alive for a long time by biting the artery. In the end, the phlegmatic and silent Grimal couldn't stand it any longer, with difficulty suppressing a gagging urge and categorically demanding the storyteller to shut up.

"Fuck you," said the redeemer good-naturedly. "Throw me the salts, please."

Rapist silently handed over a clay pot with salt, and dinner was ready. The broth of the bird was not very rich, the broth was empty and was only symbolically enough to eat. But it was possible to save the rest of the provisions for another evening.

Far away in the distance, some vocalized creatures of unknown origin were howling in a wistful chorus. The icy wind - the constant companion of mountain roads - as if having mercy on the travelers, suddenly subsided, reduced to a tolerable draught. It was good, even very good, Elena seriously supposed that one or two more such overnight stays in the open air and someone would catch inflammation of something pulmonary. And there was simply nothing to treat pneumonia or bronchitis. To make matters worse, Elena felt mild, yet barely noticeable attacks of tugging pain in her lower abdomen, a sure harbinger of periods.

Artigo silently munched the liquid and empty soup with a silver spoon. For the first few days of his forced journey, the young Gotdua had defiantly turned his nose up at the food of normal people. Ranjan was nervous about it, but Elena, appealing to her experience as a medical doctor, categorically stated that a) a few days of fasting would not harm the child; b) no man had ever starved himself to death in front of a bowl of food. And so it was. On the third day, the boy chewed barley bread, on the fourth day he ate a couple of spoonfuls of millet porridge, and then he ate equally with everyone else, albeit with the look of a counterfeiter who was presented with a cup of molten lead.

The horses snorted quietly, munching a ration of straw with a sprinkling of rye flour. It was wasteful feeding, but the travelers had little oats, and without horses, the road in poorly inhabited areas could easily be fatal.

"Who are you?" Ranjan asked coldly and succinctly when the first hunger had been satisfied. "From where?"

"I'm Gaval byr-byr-byr," the ennobled nudist repeated. Now Elena suspected he was deliberately pronouncing his surname as unintelligible as possible. "I wander. I sing. I tell edifying and highly moral stories with morals and instructive admonitions."

Now that the sufferer had warmed up and lost the blue-white color of frozen chicken, he appeared quite young and quite handsome. Seventeen or eighteen years old, very much like the actor - Elena had forgotten his name - who had played Ichthyander in a Soviet movie. His facial features seemed asymmetrical, but just enough to attract attention but not repel it. Her eyes glittered like gems in the firelight, and her gaze seemed surprisingly open, on the verge of gullibility. In her previous life, Elena would have called him a "Bishōnen," but now she noted that women must like a guy madly regardless of age. Girls - by virtue of objective beauty, mature - by his seeming fragility, the charm of rapidly passing youth.

"Gamilla cyn Ferna," the crossbowwoman said curtly.

Oh, a noble lady, Elena thought. She might not be lying, given the quality of the painting. On the other hand, she'd never heard of noblemen, no matter how thinly-born, painting themselves, even if it was expensive. Ranjan looked thoughtfully at the tattoo, at the crossbow, at the tattoo again, and said with sudden respect:

"My respects, mistress of arrows."

The woman nodded with an expression of sorrow or irritation on her face. Then, obviously, through sheer force, she said:

"Alas, no mistress anymore...."

Elena looked at her companions, realizing she was missing something quite obvious to everyone else, but remained silent, deciding she would find out later.

"Robbed?" Cadfal asked ironically, looking at Ichthyander. "Or did you gamble?"

He sniffed, pulled his hand out from under the blanket, and rubbed the tip of his frostbitten nose.

"He gambled," Gamilla said annoyingly in his place. "Completely."

"It's foolish to sit to a game on the road," the redeemer grinned, wiping his club with a woolen cloth as if it needed cleaning. "The surest way to go around the world without pants. And you, my dear, who are you to him, may I ask?"

"Mistress of Arrows" measured Cadfal with a grim and long look, but answered nonetheless:

"I'm a security guard. On contract."

"It doesn't look like it," the square redeemer grinned. "If we hadn't gotten there, your wards could have been baiting crows. They like cold meat. Tap, tap. Beak, beak."

The narrator of edifying and moral stories muttered something from the depths of the blanket, seeming to agree with the very low assessment of the guard's professional qualities. After that, the crossbow woman couldn't stand it and vigorously, angrily blurted out:

"I'm paid for protection. I'm protecting. If the employer's dumb as a log, and gambles away his money, that's his business. I don't get paid to bring a fool to his senses."

Elena noted that the woman spoke like an educated person, with good diction and unmistakably constructing long phrases. The prefix "cyn" seemed to be well deserved.

Now all the men looked at Gaval as if he were an idiot. Gaval was silent, but the female guard was seriously annoyed.

"He'll be lucky," she blurted out. "I've said three times, drop it, go away, but no! First the bag, then the horse, then the clothes. And the lyre last."

"But it's the Galleys," Gaval squeaked. "It's not a simple Dice, you can't cheat! There's no sleight of hand, only strength of mind....."

Gamilla spat in a manly way, trying to avoid the fire, and remained silent, but her gruff face expressed everything she thought about her employer's mental abilities.

"Why didn't you leave him?" Rapist was practically interested. "It's easier to go broke than to make money with a guy like that."

"I got paid for protection. A week in advance. I'm protecting," Gamilla cut him off flatly. "As long as the employer is alive."

"I see. Where were you stripped and undressed?" Ranjan asked. "I wouldn't want to meet such... masters of the game."

"They're far ahead," the tattooed Mistress of Arrows curled her pale lips. "They'd go even faster with an extra horse. We couldn't catch them, even if we wanted to."

Elena noted it gracefully, as if carelessly inserting we, but remained silent. In a difficult journey people usually get together, and why not, if the "mistress" would continue to be so clever in shooting crows for soup? And on the plain, the paths would naturally separate.

There was silence, interrupted by the crackling of burning branches, the rustle of the wind, and a distant howl. There was a lot of resin in the mountain flora, so the wood burned hot and long. Rapist took a small cauldron and went to fetch some clean snow to heat more water. Elena tried to remember a scientific explanation for why you can't quench your thirst with snow, but nothing came to mind. You can't, that's all. The yellow glow and dancing shadows colored Ranjan's grim face like a two-colored mask. On nights the brether usually stood on the first, longest guard. Artigo, as usual, crawled silently under Elena's blanket, warmed himself, and sniffled.

The cold air of the highlands unpleasantly dried her nasopharynx. Elena thought everyone here needed a bath or at least a wipe, washing at good laundresses, at the worst frying clothes and equipment, or they could even get lice. So, listening to the distant howling of unidentifiable creatures, feeling an empty stomach and shots of tugging pain in her stomach, she fell asleep.

* * *​

"Galleys" is actually a Viking game called "Daldosa," but depicts a boarding party rather than a friendly competition between oarsmen.
 
Chapter 3
* * *

It was early in the mountains. Elena was the last one on duty, that is, she was the first to get up. Before waking her colleagues, she revitalized the fire with a generous pile of twigs, melted snow for drinking people and horses, as well as wiping her face with a wet cloth. Chewing on a lump of tar to replace toothpaste, the camp duty officer stood for a while on a high rock, just like Ranjan the night before, looking at the majestic mountains and thinking about life. The moon's disk, a giant mirror for a bloody comet, was creeping out of the sky so the air lost its red tint and the world turned yellowish-gray.

The Ecumene used a calendar tied to the agricultural cycle of the three fields, for nineteen months of twenty days each, and the time count did not correlate directly with the terrestrial one. However, by the combination of natural and weather conditions, Elena decided that the coup in the capital had taken place around the end of October, and now, accordingly, December and the solstice were approaching.

After crossing the sea-lake, the travelers were faced with a choice: what, in fact, to do next? The Redeemers didn't really care, they were following Hel, refusing to tell who had obliged them to such service and why. Hel didn't know the geography of the inhabited world well, and Grimal was following his master, so the burden of choice fell to Ranjan. The swordsman made the seemingly strange decision to head southwest, skirting the edge of the middle mountains. Strange because every step brought the fugitives closer to the island of Saltoluchard and its ruling family, who had a vested interest in the death of Artigo Gotdua. But it was logical in its own way because with communication carried out by pigeons, crows, and messengers on horseback (and only exceptionally by magic), proximity to cities and busy roads matters, not a conventional geographic point. In such a context, the swordsman's decision was adequate; Ranjan wanted to get lost far away from the capital in a "gray" zone at the intersection of the borders of three huge regions at once, where the concept of "organized authority" remained extremely conventional even in times of peace.

The plan had a good chance of success, but, alas, like any plan, it faced problems of realization. The nomadic life required money, preferably a better season, not the eve of a harsh winter. In addition, heralds with promises of benefits and rewards for any information about the whereabouts of the lost prince, began to get into the remote rural areas, forcing the fugitives to go even farther away. So the first part of the idea - to promptly throw off the tail of the pursuers - succeeded, but the future was gaping with uncertainty....

There was still a quarter of the crow's chowder left in the cauldron; the broth was frozen, of course, so Elena melted it as well. At the sound of burning coals and the clinking of metal, Rapist awoke. He, as usual in silence, wiped his face with snow and got into his camping bag. What was interesting was that on the trek, the Redeemers didn't bother with special prayers, didn't perform rituals, and would have been indistinguishable from vagrants in general, if not for the emphasized poverty combined with good weapons. Rapist took out some dried fish and began pounding them with the handle of his knife, knocking off the scales, making them a little more chewable. After soaking the dried flesh, the redeemer tore it into individual fibers and threw it into the cauldron, mixing the fish with bird bones. Gastronomic horror, Elena thought, but protein is protein. We'll be fed, we won't die, or something like that.

Artigo woke up and sat up as usual, his eyes glistening between his cap and scarf. The nine-year-old boy, torn away from the comforts of palace life, acted like a man who had completely left the mortal world. On the one hand, it was convenient, the boy did not cause any trouble on the road. However... Elena suspected that the little heir of the giant empire was not quite sane before. Now - after the death of his mother, the meeting with the underground monster, the blood, and the murders he had witnessed - young Gotdua looked more and more like an autist. And, saddest of all, there was no time or energy to deal with the bastard's state of mind in any way. Or was it not a bastard?

"Good morning, honorable companions!" cheerfully proclaimed Gaval with an incomprehensible surname. His companion, however, was much more cautious and wary, despite the separation of dinner and lodging. Gamilla's left hand was always close to her hunting dagger with its blade half broken off.

Gaval, Gamilla, Elena thought, then Grimal. It's like a parade of G's and al's.

The camp was coming to life. Ranjan was rolling up the blankets stretched around the fire for the night as screens to reflect the heat. As she poured the clean snow into the wok, Elena thought she needed to improve her legal literacy. Is it possible to call "bastard" a child, secretly conceived by a nobless fighter with good genetics and the physiognomy of not yet-drunk Athos? And God knows... Meanwhile, the aforementioned fighter had finished with the blankets, and now he took out stale cakes and smeared them with butter from a pot with a leather cover and a string. It was going to be a hard day, and it would be desirable to pass the cursed pass before sunset, so they planned to walk without stopping during the day and compensated for the absence of lunch with breakfast.

To pass through the mountain and snow zone. And finally, get washed up. To hell with meningitis, bronchitis, and cardiac arrest, Elena was ready to splash in an icy stream.

They ate quickly and gathered vigorously. Gaval grew gloomy, and in the end, moved by mercy, the redeemers quickly assembled a more or less suitable traveling kit from the assorted items.

"You'll work it off with stories," Cadfal promised, and the storyteller nodded happily.

The healer and Grimal put Artigo on the horse, and the servant threw a plaid over the boy's cloak and fastened it with a bone buckle. Now the lord of the world looked like a round bundle of rags that could be rolled in any direction. But he wasn't cold. Elena threw a double sack over her shoulder, which looked like a pillowcase cut in the middle, and fastened a belt loop under her arm so it turned out a kind of one-armed knapsack made of coarse burlap. I'll have to make a pioga when the group gets to the forests. Elena touched the waist belt and the waxed tube that held the diploma of the Guild of Physicians and Apothecaries. A most valuable item and an insurance policy in case of a free voyage.

"Just so there's no admonition or moralizing," Cadfal specified the cultural program, pouring the rest of the boiled water from the kettle into glass flasks. He was always thirsty at altitude, probably because of the dry air. "Only merry tales of heroes and deeds!"

"And also about love," Grimal said, wrapping the hiking roll in a piece of bearskin and tying it with a rope with a copper ring to secure the knot. "A noble one."

At the word 'love', Ranjan shrugged his shoulders in annoyance, but kept silent, adjusting his long scabbard behind his back.

"He knows how to talk about love," Gamilla hummed, the woman was going through the lead balls in her belt pouch. Elena thought again, looking at it, that she should make pockets fashionable, following the example of Don Rumata, who was unknown here.

"Can I tell stories with tragic endings?" asked Gaval, twisting the issued chaperon from hood to cap.

"You can," Cadfal agreed after a moment's thought and added sternly. "But no obscenity."

About light and lofty feelings," Rapist clarified.

Gaval was a little confused by such an order, but the wandering minstrel accepted the challenge.

"Let's go," Ranjan said, and the united group trotted off in a column one at a time.

The way turned out to be unexpectedly easy, so much so that Elena was even a little afraid of this ease as if fate had not decided to compensate with new trials. First of all, the path was now mostly downhill, the ascents were not frequent and did not last long. Secondly, the wind was not too fierce, in general, it was warmer than during the previous week. Thirdly, the stony, twisted road was almost free of snow. We walked briskly, not stopping under the light of the sandy sun.

At the edges of the trail, there was sometimes useless trash, shards, horses, and other bones. Twice there were dead men, naked, frozen, and nibbled by small predators. The sight of the dead was reassuring. There were no visible wounds on their bodies, so they had not been killed by bandits but had been mowed down by more natural causes.

Toward noon they made a short halt, only to water the horses. Gaval dutifully worked on the feeding with cheerful songs and tales, at the risk of tearing his throat. Elena decided that the handsome fellow was hardly a real singer, his voice and confidence were lacking. More likely just a townie with a good memory who'd picked up some scattered cultural baggage. But why not? In hard times, everyone earns what they can.

"You promised me a mentor," she reminded Ranjan quietly, ensuring no one else could hear them.

"I promised," Brether agreed.

"And where is he?"

Ranjan looked left and right, showing the flawed idea of searching for a swordsman on a mountain path. But still, he added:

"He'll show up."

"Are you sure?"

"Yes."

"When?"

"When the time is right. Soon."

Elena looked at her companion carefully, noting the sunken eyes with dark circles. Ranjan's eyes were dark circles and sunken, dark circles. Ranjan had lost a lot of weight in the past couple of weeks, the nights outdoors, chronic sleep deprivation, and heavy thoughts had taken their toll on the usually dapper-looking Brether. The woman said nothing more, moving to the rear of the column, closer to the silent Artigo.

As the day wore on and Gaval chattered, the crossbowwoman shot two more birds of a breed unknown to Elena, a little smaller than crows, but good enough for soup. The wanderers' cooperation was paying off. Toward evening the harsh nature began to lose its winter severity. The snow was decreasing, dry grass was increasing, and the plain with hills of hills could be seen far ahead. The landscape reminded her of the North Caucasus or Scotland. Cautious twilight was approaching.

"Well done," Cadfal thought aloud. "I thought we'd reach the plain in three passes. Or even four."

Gaval took off his shoes and inspected them critically, the day's travel had destroyed them completely. The minstrel sighed heavily and threw the shoes into the distance.

"What a fool," Grimal commented. "You could have used it for leather patches. Or sell it."

"A townie," Cadfal answered in place of the poet. "Doesn't know the rule of the palm."

"What rule?" Gaval with the unpronounceable last name didn't seem to really know.

"If there's anything left even a palm-sized piece, it's still useful. A piece of wood, a hide, a piece of cloth, a knife scrap, anything. The rule of the palm."

"Аh..." Gaval looked thoughtfully in the direction he'd thrown his boots. From the look on his face, the minstrel was struggling with greed and coolness. Coolness won.

"How did I manage to get hired by such a fool," muttered Gamilla quietly.

"I release you from service," the minstrel said in a high-pitched voice. "Woman, you no longer have to risk your life alongside me!"

"Yeah, and I suppose you want your money back for the service?" snorted the crossbowwoman. "For the three remaining days?"

"Well... yes," the poet said confusedly.

Gamilla ignored her employer's remark with splendid disdain, showing how futile his efforts were to escape from the bonds of mutual responsibility.

Elena sucked in a breath of air. The dryness of the highlands had softened, and it wouldn't be long before it rained.

"Aren't you hot?" she asked Artigo. He heard the second time and shook his head, saying no.

You should find some toys, Elena thought. Good question, what do princes play with? If they play at all... There were different rumors about the life of Bonoms, all quite bizarre.

The road stretched in not-too-steep curves, the horses' hooves stomping over the cold earth in a steady, soothing rhythm. The sun was moving toward sunset, and the purple colors were beginning to push the yellowness out of the sky again. The travelers had not met a soul the whole day, which was understandable - the "passenger traffic" had stopped until spring.

Cadfal was muttering to himself, thinking how to prepare the birds for the night before in a clever and tasty way. Grimal answered him, showing a great knowledge of travel gastronomy. The two men quickly concluded that if there was clay or mud at the campsite, the crows could be baked in clay without special tricks. And if not...

"Smoke," Rapist interrupted, squinting his already narrow eyes. The old man seemed farsighted, so he saw like an eagle. "Straight ahead."

"Yeah, maybe the ones who outplayed... him?" The crossbow woman also squinted her eyes and twisted the screw of the ballester. To avoid stretching the string, Gamilla kept the weapon ready, but not cocked. Grimal hummed and pulled out a rope sling. Curiously, the Brether's servant had never used a long blade.

"The place is inhabited," Cadfal pointed out. "The road is traveled, though not often. There's a fork in the road ahead, and trash on the side of the road. Some villagers, I suppose."

"A tavern, perhaps?" Gaval hoped as if the minstrel had money.

The travelers briefly discussed how to proceed. There were three options. The first was to make a detour, avoiding the suspicious smoke. The second was to camp for the next night, and approach the source of the smoke at dawn (or bypass it again, just in case). The third - to step towards fate, expecting to find a warm place to sleep, maybe even under a roof. They decided to go.

Although it would have been more logical to find an inn or even an inn for those who had passed the pass, the travelers finally saw a dilapidated castle. It had been a good castle in its time (and, by all appearances, a very long time ago), albeit a small one - single dwelling tower like a chess rook, and several outbuildings surrounded by a wall. But whether the fortification was stormed more than once, or over the years it was dismantled for building stone from time to time, or probably both. In general, what remained of the once powerful structure was a crooked tower and a couple of houses that looked more like cattle yards or vegetable bases. The locals were actively engaged in vegetable gardening, and the castle smelled of turnips, acorn bread, something sauerkraut, and boiled cabbage, an invariable companion of rural kitchens of any wealth.

"Wait here," Ranjan ordered curtly and went forward to where several men of about the same ragged appearance were waiting for him at the empty archway without a gate. They had abandoned their simple chores and gathered in a tight group. The gender diversity was created by one fragile girl who would have looked like a common peasant girl if not for her hands, which were too white and smooth for a commoner. Helena had long ago noticed that a country girl could look as young as she wanted, but her hands would almost always be old-looking, disfigured by hard work. City women aged quickly, too, but not so terribly.

"Won't we be beaten?" Gaval asked anxiously.

The newcomers and the locals were about fifty meters apart. Ranjan was talking to the leader, and the conversation seemed peaceful, but anything could happen on the road, so everyone was wary and eyed each other with undisguised suspicion.

"They shouldn't," Gamilla reasoned, not in a hurry to unload the ballester.

Elena only smiled wryly, she supposed that Brether, Cadfal, and Rapist could each take out the locals in one without much effort. However, God knows what amazing talents the Castlemen might be hiding, not to mention a couple of possible archers, so the woman took a step back and readied her scabbard.

Finally, Ranjan turned around and waved his hand, saying the consensus had been reached.

"No, they won't," said Cadfal respectfully. "And cabbage at bedtime is very good for the stomach."

"Yeah," Grimal snorted gloomily, taking advantage of his master's absence. "In the morning, it'll be good to shit....."

He looked back at the young emperor, grimaced, and smacked his lips.

The family of the castle owners consisted of an elderly but still sturdy Frels and his daughter, a pale, thin girl of about fourteen. "Frels" followed the "Baron" and was considered the first rung on the ladder of the real nobility. Anything below that was considered despicable trash. Apparently, this family was poor and worked almost side by side with the peasants to whom they rented the ancestral land. However, this fact was not noticed by the guests in a friendly and tactful manner. The hosts were not to say that they were happy about the guests, but they accepted them cordially, partly out of hospitality, partly in the expectation of good conversation and news. As it turned out, rumors about the change of power had reached here without any details, and the provincial nobles were eager for details.

The tower itself had apparently not been inhabited for a long time and had been used as a representative and protective - in case of emergency. The visitors were accommodated in the lord's house, where there was not even a fireplace, it was replaced by a universal hemispherical stove made of stones and clay in the center of the hall. However, the travelers finally warmed up and washed themselves, even if with barely warm water. They were not the only guests of the house. A lone traveler, a typical Highlander, dressed as an ordinary mercenary in search of work, had already settled here. He seemed to be wounded in the leg and lay mostly silent on a pile of straw. The Highlander didn't ask for help, so everyone ignored him amicably (and politely).

The host and his daughter served the guests personally, and again everyone pretended that this was a great favor and a sign of respect on the part of the hosts, and not the lack of servants. The hosts, in their turn, accepted the silver coin from Ranjan with dignity. God forbid, not payment, but honest unselfish gratitude. And after supper the Brether finally satisfied Frels's longing for news, referring very carefully and regularly to fictitious descriptors and narrators, lest, God forbid, he be mistaken for an eyewitness. Elena, however, was once more absorbed in thought.

She had heard many times in different variations that the petty nobility was going through bad times, everywhere and not for the first year, not even for a decade. Apparently, Marx's thesis about the accumulation and concentration of capital worked perfectly here. Rich landowners became richer and richer, multiplying their holdings, buying out, or even taking land from their less fortunate colleagues. And the "horsemen" of the simpler ones were in need, their ancestral lands were mortgaged and then sold off. In the best case, the impoverished knight found himself in the position of a Lovag, that is, actually a mercenary, who had symbolic land ownership - just to be listed in the estate - and lived off the bread allowance of the magnate, doing the will of the lord. But this was at the best. The rest fell lower and lower, turning into real ruthiers, sergeants, or even just bandits and other declassed element. A good, big war, i.e. looting and extensive redistribution of property on the scale of at least a kingdom, could fix or at least mitigate the situation globally, but there had been no such war for almost a century and was not expected to happen.

But to hear is one thing, but to see with one's own eyes is quite another. The old Frels was a true knight, the representative of a family with a pedigree of three centuries longer than that of another count. However, the only difference with the peasants was the coat of arms on his belt. The knight dressed like a commoner, ate like a commoner, worked like a commoner. And was clearly in dire need, dressing in pride instead of the rich dress.

While Elena thought about Marxism and political economy, the men delved into conversations about masculinity, that is, the military. Frels talked about the coming trouble.

The annual military review of the district was to be held in the spring. A traditional occasion for decent people to gather and settle matters, from engagements and amateur tournaments to duels of honor. Most importantly, cavalrymen must demonstrate the equipment and skills appropriate to their position. After all, if you can not serve according to the status - you can not be a nobleman. In the past year, the event was hard, not easy, with some excesses, which Frels did not want to talk about. And the coming one promised disaster. Too much debt, too little money, too expensive equipment. It was coming to the point that the small nobles would not be able to go out en masse "mounted, armed, armored", that is, there would be a question of exclusion from the class lists. Frels himself, despite his poor situation, for some reason was not afraid of this, but he felt pity for his neighbors in a friendly way.

Word by word, it turns out that among the newcomers, few people realize how much it costs to be a knight.

"Well, let's do the math," the old Frels even pulled up the sleeves of his worn jacket with numerous drawstrings for emphasis. "Full plate armor, well, is a count's shtick. We'll have it simpler. Iron hat, quilted under-armor with absorbent cotton, no rags. Brigandine or chain mail," he curved his fingers so as not to miss anything. "Gloves at least. A shield, if the armor is thin. Spears, suitable against horse and footmen, three if ordinary, six if southern by custom drilled in the middle for ease. An axe or clave, and also a mace or pole-axe. A quilted blanket for the horse. A saddle, if good, is a fifth of the cost of the horse, or even more expensive, but without it, you can not, the spear requires it. A servant to clean weapons and armor, wash clothes, and all that. And companions to equip, at least one, preferably two. Even if you count coin to coin it's sixteen kilograms of silver."

Elena quickly recalculated the weight of the precious metal into silver coins, transferred it into her allowance as the prison medic, and couldn't hold back an exclamation of amazement. She had, of course, imagined that horse warrior's equipment was expensive, but she realized the scale of the financial disaster only now. The sum, to put it bluntly, was impressive.

"A lot," said Gaval, his handsome, unshaven face squinting in a dreamy grimace, as the self-proclaimed singer seemed to be spending a fortune in his mind.

"What about saving?"

"It is possible to put it down to half if the need arises, but that would be... a "donkey knight" of sorts."

Frels grimaced and shook his head. Judging by his face, seven or eight kilograms of good silver was a pauper's sum, which could only be enough for a gopnik with a stick.

"How about a count-style gear? Or higher?" Elena, who was interested in military math, was persistent."

Frels scratched the back of his head in some confusion, but recited from memory:

"It is written in the Assizes about gendarmes as follows. Let every soldier be armed with a good cuirass, a sword, greaves, and a helmet with a visor, and it is good if the helmet is trimmed with silver. We will not speak of spears, for they must be, as well as pageboys to carry the warrior's equipment. You should also have at least three horses for yourself, your page, and your battle companion. It would be better to have four or five horses each, one for battle, one to replace him, one for daily travel, and two for luggage. And for the companion... the companion..."

He faltered and moved his lips as if remembering, but then Rapist, clearly familiar with the subject, suddenly spoke up:

"The companion should have a helmet unadorned with silver, a short sword or dagger, and an axe or similar implement. The same equipment should be bought for at least two mounted warriors, for it is not proper for a man of the spear to go into battle with only a chosen companion at his side. If from the armor warriors can wear only a chain mail, it is necessary to attach a corset made of iron plates sewn on a leather or woven base."

Elena hid a smile in her raised collar; she had long ago realized that the samurai spearman had been a nobleman and a mounted warrior in his past life. And, judging by the long quotation, given without a single hitch, not a commoner at all.

"Oh, what a sound," Cadfal said dreamily. "Music to the ears. Silver trimmed... at least three horses... people live!"

"That's right," Frels agreed. "In the end, a good armor with weapons and other equipment... a chest for armor... 48 kilos of silver comes out."

"Is that all of it?" Elena clarified just in case.

"Oh, no, of course not," smiled the owner sadly. "Horses are counted separately."

"And how much does a horse cost nowadays?" Rapist was practically interested. "I remember a good one used to go for 4 kilos of silver."

Frels answered readily, and it seemed that the aged knight was hungry for a conversation with a knowledgeable man. From the dialog, Elena understood that nowadays the cost of a good war horse is about five kilograms of silver, and it is possible to get cheaper, but either you have to look for it, or the animal is flawed or just aged. For this money a medicine woman could rent not even a room, but a whole floor in a good house for a year, on full board with daily chicken on the table, beef and mutton on weekends and holidays, a laundress, as well as a place in the stables. An elite destrier, on which a gendarme in full plate armor was not ashamed to sit, went for thirty kilos, or even half a centner. A "premium" beast of war costs about seventy, and in exceptional cases, for dukes and kings to a hundred.

"Yeah..." Elena stretched out. "The life of a knight is hard."

She was still trying to work out the warrior value system in her head and realize how a man could pay a centner of moon metal (or appropriately ten kilos of gold) for the privilege of a good fight and get punched in the face, way even through a silver-trimmed visor.

"But it's a one-time expense," Elena said. "The armor lasts a long time, right?"

"It does," Frels agreed meekly. "But horses grow old, die and perish, and equipment wears out. And if you lie down in a fight, you lose everything at once, and you have to pay the ransom. Of course, there are warriors from whom the earth has never knocked the spirit out, but I have not met such men. Everyone's been out of the saddle at least once. And it is a great favor if the suzerain ransoms you from captivity... but he may not, he has his own expenses."

Well, now the nature of the class disaster was becoming more or less obvious. Even if one spends sums of this order not regularly, but as the ammunition wears out, it still hurts. And then the mechanism of typical usury is surely unfolding: borrow, trouble, borrow again, work for interest, debt bondage, and eventually "your point goes to the audience". The joke was silly, but it stuck in my soul after little Lena brought it home from the street and got a good thrashing. Apparently, the global process has been developing for a long time and has now entered the final stage, when class impoverishment has taken on the character of an avalanche.
Шутка про очко

T. N. Once upon a time, there was a game where the audience played against the team in the studio. When the audience won, the presenter would say - your point goes to the audience. But over time, the word "point" came to have another slang meaning - arsehole. So the phrase took on a completely different context.


"I wonder why the owner of the ruined castle is so calm...? Frels didn't look like a man willing to spend even four kilograms of silver. But he wasn't afraid of a spring parade. I don't understand."

"That is why it is necessary to fight on foot," said the mountaineer, who had been silent until then. His voice was hoarse, and unpleasant, as if from a chronically cold throat. "It will be more reliable. And cheaper."

"If you're on foot, you're not a knight," Cadfal said. "It's a mess, not a knight."

"Well, well," the Highlander grinned, not offended, but still with some hidden irony. "There are no diplomas, no villages, no estate."

"It is so, good sir," said the elder knight with dignity. "A mounted warrior is the salt of the earth, the bone of the army. And he needs a lot of things for food and equipment. And the foot soldiers..."

He frowned, but kept silent, either not wanting to offend the sickly guest, or, indeed, Frels had not found a single kind word for the foot soldiers. The Highlander smiled, as if he had something to say, which was extremely offensive, but also kept silent. Rapist and the knight went deep into discussion of some weapon nuances. In the warmth and with a belly full of cabbage soup she wanted to doze off. In the light of the stove, shadows raced across the face of the Frels' daughter, who was husking peas like a common cook.

"Hey, buddy?" the nameless Highlander called softly.

"My name isn't "Hey," Elena corrected him. "And I'm not your buddy."

She was amazed at herself: the phrase had slipped through like soapy, completely natural. The habit of weighing every word and not letting a drop of disrespect slip had become second nature. Here a man is the way he holds himself and behaves.

"I'm sorry," the man held his hands palms up as if to emphasize his peacefulness. "I didn't mean to."

"What do you mean?"

She didn't look in the Brether's direction but felt him tighten and tense. The proximity of one of the best swordsmen in the inhabited world was at times very reassuring and comforting. Elena wasn't fooled, Ranjan was only interested in her medical talents and the two skilled warriors accompanied the devilish Hel. But the symbiosis temporarily suited both parties, except that the woman had not yet waited for the promised swordsmanship lessons.

"I heard you could heal, didn't you?"

Elena had absolutely no recollection of such a conversation but decided there was no point in denying it.

"I can blow and apply plantain," she said gruffly.

"Oh, I see. My leg hurts," the Highlander grumbled.

"Bruised? Cut?"

Elena felt a pang of shame at her lazy reluctance to see what had happened to said leg. But on the other hand, she hadn't taken a hippopotamus oath, nor had she taken any other oath. She had a right not to rush with a lancet to every sufferer.

"Arrow," the wounded man grumbled even more sourly. "I was wading through the undergrowth, trying to cut the road. And there was a trap with a crossbow ... It's a small one, put on a fox, but it's nasty. And a nasty arrow, the tip was split, and the shaft was either broken or sawed. It broke. The tip was stuck, you can't get it out without a piece of meat."

On the Wastelands didn't use such things, they used normal tips, leaf-shaped or faceted. So Elena had no idea how to carry the "mean" arrows, which she did not fail to mention. The Highlander became sad. The crossbowman listened to the conversation, interested in the mention of arrows. Ranjan, on the other hand, relaxed, and laid his head down on the tightly rolled blanket. Artigo crawled under his side like an ordinary peasant child, staring silently at the fire, the walls, and the people around him.

Sad, Elena thought, so sad... A father who will never be able to tell his son about his fatherhood. A son, guarded by his father's love, who would never know it, believing he was accompanied by an ordinary ruthier mercenary.

"It's a pity," the Highlander sighed and asked hopefully. "Maybe you'd like to take a look? You can cut what you need," he slapped the skinny wallet on his belt. "I don't have much money, I won't lie, but I know prices. I have enough for it," he was silent for a while and confessed. "I'm afraid the burn will spread. Iron in a wound begins to ooze poison, everyone knows that."

"You should pour fortified wine on it," said Gaval, who had ears as big as a cat's, in a solid voice. "It leaches poisons from wounds. Or vodka."

Elena could hardly keep from smiling, remembering who had brought the tradition of sanitizing with strong alcohol into this world. How long had it been since then... not months, but full years? She wanted to see Sharley and even Santeli, just a little. She wondered how they were. Are they alive?

The Highlander looked at her with hope. Elena thought for a moment and took pity on the poor man, not forgetting the money:

"We'll take a look tomorrow morning."

She raised her hand, pre-empting an objection, and clarified:

"If you haven't died before, you'll survive one night. To cut I need good light and a steady hand. Also clean rags, boiling water and the like. I'll be ready at dawn and do what I can."

"Good!" The Highlander visibly cheered up. "I will not forget the good!"

"You'd better not forget the money," Gamilla said turning to Elena. "I didn't use such arrows and didn't pull them out. It's not worthy."

She added a peculiar Southern slang that could be translated as "not worthy". And Elena made a second note to herself to clarify (later) who the "master of the arrow" was, what was the meaning of the tattoo, and why everyone, from brethers to knights, treated the crossbowwoman with respect.

"But I saw them being pulled out," Gamilla continued, and Elena propped herself up on an elbow, listening very carefully.

"It requires a willow stick...."

Gamilla briefly but clearly described the simple device of driving an arrow into the wound to cover the jagged edges, then tying it to the shaft and pulling it out. The shot man did not hold back a toothy grin, obviously he had a vivid imagination and visualized the procedure. Elena listened attentively, memorizing the science and after a short thought decided:

"Let's try it. Tomorrow, in the light."

* * *

In listing ammunition, I relied mainly on the Burgundian ordinances of the mid-15th century. With the cost being more complicated, it should be understood that prices jumped wildly depending on the region and time. But in general, the equipment of a conventional "common European" knight costs in the range of 10-40 kilograms of silver.
 
Chapter 4
* * *

"We always want our enemies to be worse than us. We must feel the undeniable righteousness and moral superiority of our cause, the natural justice of our victory, and, of course, of the actions that led to this victory. It is necessary that any baseness created by our henchmen should appear as an act, if not of mercy and virtue, at least of dignity. And truly happy is the one whose enemies really correspond to the demonic image that we paint in thought and speech, for ourselves and others"

Gaval Sentry-Poton-Batleau.

"Sixth letter to my son, which contains a philosophical reflection on the ephemeral nature of evil."


* * *

Unlike Flessa, who lived closer to the Court, Duke Wartensleben had settled in the capital and rented a house separate from Milvess. Rather not a house, but an estate outside the city walls. This choice had both advantages and disadvantages. One thing he could not take away was that the place was well suited for a meeting that no outsider should know about. The four aristocrats could be almost certain that their private meeting would remain a secret. Almost, for only sunrise and sunset are inevitable and predictable.

The floor of carefully fitted stone slabs was polished to a mirror-like sheen. It reflected four blurred figures, like picturesque sketches that had been generously splashed with water. The circular room was meant for dinner parties and dinners, but the current owner was extremely abstemious about food and had turned the room into a large study for work. The choice was a good one; the semicircular wall with its large windows faced the sunny side so you could read and write there from dusk to dawn without lighting lamps or candles.

"Thank you, good Duke, for your honor and hospitality," Curzio said, placing a box in the center of the round table, simple, uncarved, and unadorned, but with a good lock. Judging by its shape and the distinctive marks on the smooth wood, it was a secret drawer for valuables. They were built into bureaus and desks so that the owner, and only the owner, would always have easy access to important documents.

"Blessed be this house," Prince Gayot said, sitting comfortably in a wooden chair. "And its generous, hospitable host."

Count Shotan limited himself to a silent bow.

"Thank you, dear guests," Duke Wartensleben said grouchily, glancing at the box. "It is an honor for me and my humble house to have you under this roof. Taste the wine, I hope it is not too bitter and will not offend your refined taste."

In the Duke's mouth, the ritual phrase sounded in a peculiarly emasculated, lifeless way. The footmen had been ordered not to even approach the hall; not a single word spoken here was intended for outside ears. So the glasses and small jugs of wine were filled in advance and stood in bowls of crushed ice.

Curzio took the invitation and sipped, noting that the green wine was good, very good, but could be a little better. He took another sip, envying Wartensleben fiercely. Where did the old man get such exquisite glassware? There was enough glass in the world, masters of fine work with it - too, but beautiful, openwork glasses from the ducal table were unique and worthy of the imperial banquet. Looking at such exquisite things, one is forced to believe the tales of a pact with the devil, because without the help of the Dark Jeweler, it is impossible to get so pure - without a single bubble and the smallest flaw - glass mass and so skillfully dissolve the salts of gold and lead in it, creating a unique play of light.

The duke refrained from wine and, as usual, with his chronic melancholic expression, stuck his nose into the spice bottle that hung from his thin neck with its many flabby wrinkles. Looking at Wartensleben Curzio thought vindictively that Udolar had changed a lot in the past year. Very much, perhaps. Majestic old age was receding, giving way to decrepit infirmity. Back in the spring, the Duke could be seen in armor on the battlefield, albeit with some effort. Not now; Wartensleben would probably collapse under the weight of a gorget, let alone a cuirass. Obviously, the hour when the old man will go to hell is not far off, because no matter how lightly his sins are measured, it is impossible to balance them. Wartensleben will die, and Curzio will still enjoy life and wine, albeit of unsophisticated silver. Though precious dishes could be bought back... Footmen are usually inclined to sell off the possessions of deceased lords.

Well, Curzio thought, let's hope Wartensleben's mind is in better condition than his worn-out body.

The duke sneezed, wiped his long, pigmented nose, and let go of the pepper bottle, letting the precious vessel hang on the gold chain. Udolar looked at Curzio, literally slid a fleeting glance, and the islander immediately drew himself up and set the glass aside. Wartensleben's eyes were clear and attentive beyond his years. No aging spots, no livid pupils, the bright points of his pupils looked at the world with the squint of an experienced predator.

"If I may be so curious," Curzio launched a trial balloon. "How is your dear daughter's health?"

He deliberately did not specify which daughter, so as to leave the conversation room for development and maneuvering. The aristocrats gathered here were too different in everything, from their backgrounds to temperaments. They did not trust each other and preferred to listen more than talk. It was necessary to move this ice floe somehow, to let the swift current melt the cold matter.

"Thank you, not bad," the duke nodded with a casual graciousness but did not pursue the subject further. Wartensleben's voice was the same as his appearance, muffled, with an aging rattle.

Curzio held back a wry grimace and looked around the gathering once more.

An outside observer would be surprised at the choice of company. Curzio is an emissary of Saltoluchard, disgraced and dismissed by the Council of Regents, but who has retained both his mental acuity and some connections. Prince Gaiot - Chief of the Court Guard (but not of the Emperor's person) and of the regiment of Highland infantry at Milvesse. "Soldier" Count Shotan, commander and owner of the finest mounted company in the East, which handled special affairs in the interests of the Island and the Regents. Duke Wartensleben, a personage in every way powerful and influential. The four men were different, but they shared one thing in common: their initial hopes for more than they had received in the coup.

The Count sat down, took a sip from his glass, and put his foot on his leg as if he were a shopkeeper. However, even this rough, almost peasant gesture looked stylish and arrogant in his performance. Shotan was one of those people the Pantocrator had endowed with excess in everything.

"We should have met at the hunting lodge," he said, and those were the first words spoken by the 'soldier count' since the greeting. "As I suggested. Even before the evening, everyone in Milvess would know that certain individuals had met behind the scenes, without proper company, servants, wine, games, or women."

Curzio noted that the Count had listed women last. A small thing, but such seemingly insignificant trifles paint the image of a man.

"A meeting is not a complot," smiled the prince sparingly. "Men of honor have many reasons to meet."

"Shall I tell you how few such occasions there really are?" returned the Count's even more laconic smile.

"And that's right," the prince marked the salute with his glass as if recognizing the truth of his interlocutor's words.

Oh, Isthen and Erdeg, fathers of the world and time, how much easier it is to discuss purely business matters with their own, Curzio thought wistfully. The centuries-old tradition and etiquette of the Isles turn the conversation into a clearly regulated action, where each participant knows his place, and any word can be stated. Mainlanders are fidgety, undisciplined, and most importantly, completely unable to listen to anyone but themselves. But, alas, as they say in their homeland, we have to mold from the clay that claymores bring.

"Gentlemen," Curzio, as mediator, gently took the reins in his own hands, which outwardly seemed pampered and unresponsive. "Be indulgent of my provinciality, and I will allow myself to speak bluntly."

"Oh, come on, honorable," said the Prince, waving his hand. "Who among us here is not a provincial?"

The Duke thrust up his chin haughtily, and the Count barely perceptibly moved his sculpted perfect jaw, which was shaved to the purity and smoothness of marble.

"Gentlemen," snorted Prince Gaiot, whose attention was not unaware of his interlocutors' obvious displeasure. "Well, by God, or gods, as you like," he bowed slightly toward the bigot Curzio. "My family, two generations ago, considered it a feat to sack the village of a nobleman from the plains. The Duchy of Malersyde would have gone to pay the debts that my ancestors had generously accumulated and inherited. If its present owner had been afraid to get his hands dirty in other people's blood. And you, my dear Count, as I recall, despised the fate of a magnate and landowner, swearing an oath to live only from a knight's lance. Because three family villages for a second son is a joke."

"Four villages," Shotan corrected with an impenetrable face. "And I was the third son."

The prince paused as if to give his companions a chance to consider what they had heard, not for too long, however. Curzio kept a stony face, but in his heart, he recognized the Prince's diplomatic skill, which made him seem like a dumb butcher. Gaiot began the enumeration with himself so that the truth did not sting the aristocrats' painful ego too much or cause instant rejection. Shotan seemed to accept it with restrained irony, though it was from him that Curzio had expected the most nervous reaction.

"Each of us has a long line of ancestors behind us, but they only gave us opportunities. We made ourselves. And that is why we understand better than most that there is nothing in the world that cannot be lost."

The Prince took a noisy breath. Curzio was torn between the desire to applaud and to poison Gayot. To poison, because the prince had, with splendid disregard, broken the entire plan of the conversation the two of them had so carefully thought out. To applaud, because, to all appearances, the Highlander's vigorous and demonstratively frank speech had been much more effective in the end.

"Let the mannered degenerates of the Primators weave the lace of words. We are men of action," Gayot concluded. "So let's get down to business."

The Count silently corrected a long lacquered strand that had been delicately and deliberately dislodged from his hair. He adjusted the lace lapel of his sleeve so that the openwork edge reached to the middle of his hand and not a hair further. He remarked politely but coldly:

"I appreciate the candor. I appreciate your sense of humor, it's... straightforward and therefore quite original. But I don't see what we're talking about here."

"That's good," said the Prince, not embarrassed. "And the point is simple. My friends, there is a possibility of losing everything. Or, at least, a lot."

In the silence that ensued, there were a few claps - the Duke of Wartensleben applauded sparingly.

"Brilliant speech," he said. "Well, I can't speak for your friends, but you've got my attention. For now, anyway."

The prince glanced silently at the islander as if to say, I pass the torch.

"Deeds are worth more than words," Curzio said, accepting the message. "But recorded words are sometimes worth more than deeds. Gentlemen, may I draw your attention to..."

Curzio took a small key on a steel chain from his neck and opened the box. He took out a stack of identical sheets of paper, evenly trimmed and of very good quality. The yellowish surface was covered with small letters and numbers, from edge to edge, almost without margins. The handwriting on all the sheets was the same.

"Please."

"What is this? The count asked emotionlessly, not even making an attempt to pick up a single sheet. The duke cocked an eyebrow at him and seemed to be interested.

These are copies of certain documents and reports which are now before your Treasury and our Councils. In particular the Coin Council and the Gold and Silver Council. I suppose you know that the head of the latter came to the capital yesterday to do some auditing and settle the painful issues of payment of the most "hot" bills.

"I am only interested in bills as long as they are paid," said the count, with the same indifference. "The Crown has no debts to me or my company."

"They will," Curzio promised briefly, bored with the ostentatious decadence of a mercenary who thought himself an aristocrat of the highest order. "And it says where they'll come from."

He placed a separate sheet in front of the Count, and almost added "if you can read." Shotan pressed his lips together, pale and sharply defined like a statue's, but he took the sheet. And the duke pulled from the folds of his white robe a monocle on a handle made of the precious bone of a northern sea beast.

Silence reigned in the office for several minutes, interrupted only by a faint, barely perceptible rustling. Despite his reputation for writing with a blade on the bodies of his enemies, Shotan read surprisingly fluently, and he knew how to work with documents. In a barely perceptible moment, the "soldier count's" attitude toward what he had written down changed. He straightened a little and pressed his lips together. Curzio refrained from smiling, though the temptation was great. The islander even knew at which line the Shotan had changed from squeamish listener to attentive participant.

"It's more than interesting, I won't hide it. But some of the numbers need to be checked," Wartensleben said at last, placing his monocle on the table lined with the finest hematite tiles.

"Alas, these papers must stay with me," Curzio said with an ostentatious regret. "I had to work hard to get copies, for my influence is not what it used to be."

He met the Duke and Count's somewhat surprised gaze with a straightforward, impenetrable smile. He added:

"We agreed to call things by their proper names, didn't we? There's no shame in pointing out the obvious."

"Yes, indeed," Wartensleben agreed.

"And that's why I'll probably destroy these copies after our conversation. Ashes don't give away secrets."

"I see. Then..." The duke pulled a small notebook with a lead pencil in the binding from an inner pocket of his robe. "Would you mind if I made some notes in my own hand and on my own paper?"

"Not at all."

Count Shotan stood up soft and springy, like a hyena, well-fed enough not to lunge at others, but not so well that the heaviness in his belly took away even a modicum of his predatory agility. Curzio thought only now that Shotan's face was perfectly clean, not a single scar, not even a slight dash. Either the rumors of his exploits were lies, or the Count had sold his soul for invulnerability, or he was simply a great fighter with any weapon. Shotan silently took a glass of wine from the cup scattering crystals of melted ice, but he barely took a sip.

"All right," said the Count. "Since we are speaking frankly, as fighting comrades, marauders gorging on sour wine from a stolen keg... I'll be blunt. I'm interested. It was clear that the Council of Regents was not doing so well, but I did not realize that... so much."

"Yeah," the duke flipped a page in his notebook. "In the old days, thirty years ago, I would have wrung my hands and cried out, "Lord, save us and have mercy on us. Now I'll just ask: How did you get things so far out of hand?"

Count Shotan did not sit down, leaning his shoulder against the carved panel and crossing his arms over his chest. But he was listening, and he seemed to be listening intently.

"Our problems turned out to be... somewhat deeper than expected," with those words Curzio spread his long loose sleeves and inhaled, preparing his lungs and throat for a not-too-short monologue.

The Count and Duke (and a little earlier the Prince) did not possess all the information about the state of affairs in the Ecumene, but by virtue of their position, they knew much more than an ordinary burgher or even an official. The unknown could speculate, relying on rumors, reports of spies, and other sources. What they really lacked was generalization, what distant Hel would have called a "comprehensive, systematic view." It was this view that Curzio was now giving his vis-a-vis, backing up his words with secret reports and financial summaries.

Long ago, the Empire was not only called, but was actually an "empire", where the law was unified on eight sides of the world, and the word of the Emperor, spoken in the morning, even before sunset became binding in the farthest corners of the world. The four main provinces were called "kingdoms" symbolically, as an echo of ancient times, when emperors had gathered the world power, bending the stiff necks of independent lords under their knees and abolishing the old orders. But that great country perished, and the "kingdoms" became kingdoms again, generally living their own lives, subject to the capital in limited matters, and not always.

The Tetrarch kings accepted the change of the Emperor with understanding and approval, they didn't even have to buy them dearly - nobody liked the young Gothdua's pretensions to unity of power. It was enough for the royal courts that everything would go back to the old order. But... people always want more. When it became clear that the new branch of the dynasty was not holding onto the throne so tightly, the local authorities began to show their teeth.

The Aleinsae family had invested a great deal of money in preparing the conspiracy, including providing it with armed force. It was necessary to multiply the forces of the Imperial Court and buy their loyalty. To strengthen the military presence in the major cities, to stomp out any defiance of the new branch of the Gotdua Dynasty. But this great strain of power was intended to be temporary, and once the goals were achieved, of course, the grip had to be loosened. Gently, finger by finger, but remove the steel gauntlet from the financial veins of the Empire. And the expenses for the men of war were to be included in the total bill, which the Aleynsees intended to collect from the Crown, in a kinship way, managing the treasury directly.

Now the beautiful plan has broken down, shattered by a confluence of circumstances no one could have foreseen.

"Artigo Gotdua," Shotan said, and the words fell as heavy as a stone in a pond.

Curzio spread his legs wide and crossed his arms over his chest, clearly preparing to rebuke, but the count raised his palm in a gesture of peace, and it was unexpected. So much so that Curzio stammered and almost choked on the harsh words that were about to come out.

"Yes, I know you had nothing to do with it," said Shotan, sharply and angrily. "I also know that you did not support this course of action afterward, and that is why you are in disgrace. My anger is not directed at you."

Curzio silently bowed his head, slightly to the side, so that it didn't look like a bow, but rather a polite acknowledgment.

"Damn it, how could Artigo Sr. and Malissa be allowed to enjoy such freedom!" The Count bellowed, peering out from behind his armor of aristocratic coldness for a moment like a grinning marauder from a burning house. "One phrase would have been enough and my men would have apprehended them, all three of them. How could you be so stupid?!"

"It's not stupidity," Curzio sighed. "It is the problem with any complex plan. There are too many people who must do too many interlocking things, often without realizing it. Our emissaries blocked every possible escape route for the Gotdua-Pievielles, and they found another one that no one could have foreseen. Just as no one foresaw that the parents would be willing to sacrifice themselves."

"And now the damned boy is wandering the hell knows where, in the empire of de facto dual power, fortunately, not everyone has realized it yet. The nobility's feuds and border conflicts have increased manifold. The empire is shaking at the seams. Every lousy baron thinks he's the master of life."

Curzio, who in the confused ranking system of the Aleinse family bore the old Imperial title "ali-ishpan," corresponding just to the baron, pressed his lips together, but did not confront him and said:

"That's true. But unfortunately, that's only half the trouble."

He put his hand into the box again, and then Wartensleben exhaustively confirmed his reputation as one of the cleverest men in Ecumene. He did so with a single word, but he put a depth of meaning into it with the skill of a man who had spent decades mastering the science of speechmaking.

"Bread?"

"Yes, bread. One year of famine meant nothing on the scale of the Ecumene, as well as two in a row. Even perennial famines, which sometimes happened, were usually limited to one region. Some people died, some got rich or went bankrupt, but the vast and conventionally unified market somehow allowed manipulating supplies to compensate for the shortage. The Emperor's mission - the most important one, on which the authority of imperial power stood - was to take emergency measures in case of a great famine, which occurred once every ten or twelve years."

"Here are the bulletins from the bread merchants," Curzio shook the sheet of paper slightly and placed it in the center of the table. "Prices and stock for the main cities and royal capitals for ten years. And this," the next paper lay next to the first. "Expectations for the coming year."

"Do we have such a service?" wondered the count.

"No, but the Island collects data year-round. Saltoluchard is, among other things, the largest carrier of grain by sea. To maximize profits, we must always know where it's expensive and where it's cheap. Where to buy and where to sell."

"I see."

"The last six years had been difficult, but tolerable. Every kingdom had at least two skinny years in a row, but they did not overlap, and the late Gotdua did well."

"Isn't that how you bought some of the support of the mainland merchants and aristocracy?" Shotan grinned sardonically. "The magnates of the Golden Belt, to whom hard prices, the obligation to stockpile a share of bread, and the capital's comites were like a knife in the heart?"

"I will refrain from commenting," Curzio said gloomily. "Shall I continue?"

"Yes," the count grumbled and finished with an obvious effort. "If you please, I'm listening attentively."

"But now all the information flowing to the Grain and Wine Council is literally screaming: there will be no bread next year. Not anywhere."

"Confirmed," the Duke pointed with his pencil to the islander's papers. "As the owner of the seaside town and port. Yesterday I received a letter from my youngest daughter. She runs the family business in Malersyde and writes that there is no bread for sale in the entire sunset part of the Ecumene, north or south. At any price."

"I saw Flessa..." Shotan glanced at Gayot, and both shook their heads as if remembering something. "A very resolute and sensible girl, despite her young age. Did she not dare to confiscate?"

"She's dared," the duke grinned with restrained pride. "Even to the point of taking hostages from merchant families."

"And? It didn't work?"

"Not this time."

"I'm sorry, I don't believe it. That's impossible."

"I would agree with you," the duke was not offended at all, and this best demonstrated the significance of the situation. "As practice shows, a rope around the neck makes merchants give up even five times the profit. But here we are talking about such sums that the Guilds of Bread Merchants make any sacrifices. They are ready to burn warehouses and abandon residences, but not to sell grain, holding the goods until summer."

"So..." Shotan crossed the fingers of both hands and moved away from the carved panel. "What kind of markup are we talking about? Tenfold?"

"You don't understand, my dear," Curzio explained patiently. "In the spring, everyone will understand what only a limited number of people, including those here, know now. The harvest is gone. Everywhere. There will be no bread. Nowhere. And grain will lose its price as some established equivalent of a commodity. The seller will be able to demand anything. Exchange by weight of grain for silver. Wives and children sold into slavery. Anything."

Shotan sighed, shaking his head as if his neck muscles and shoulders were stiff.

"Yes," he said after a moment's silence. "You have decided to kill the Emperor at a bad time."

"It wasn't my idea," Curzio said grudgingly. "I was in favor of slowly strangling young Gotdua with a noose of debt. Yes, it would take many years, and the money would be paid back to us, most likely by the deceased's son, maybe even grandson. But Aleinsae could afford the luxury of taking their time. I was in the minority, however, alas. To be fair, no one could have foreseen such a fall and winter. Little snow, lots of rain, bare ground where grain either rots or freezes without a blanket of snow. And so it is all over the Ecumene."

"I'll tell Flessa to drown all the astrologers in Malersyde," Wartensleben muttered, making a quick note in his book. "They're no good at all if only they'd predicted something accurately once... worse than magicians."

"You're right," Curzio agreed. "But I think it would be better to pay them to predict things that are useful to the lord. It doesn't cost too much, and it's very timely."

"Or so," the duke muttered.

"Let's clarify," Count Shotan's face seemed to be a motionless mask. "So, as I understand it, the Great Famine is inevitable. The Empire is teetering on the brink of Global Turmoil. If the Council of Regents reduces the army to its former size, we'll have a civil war, just like in the days of the kings' rule. If it doesn't, we'll have the same war trying to raise money to support it. There is still a possibility to release the servants before the summer and thus save at least a third of the costs, but this is not a solution, because it will not be possible to collect soldiers afterward. Have I missed anything?"

"Alas, no."

"And now we come to the most interesting part," Wartensleben grinned wickedly. "How much money are we talking about? Would you be so kind as to give me the last of your documents? If my eyesight is correct, I see a notation for the next year. I presume it's a schedule of planned expenditures?"

"It's correct," Curzio agreed, honoring the wish.

"So sweet," Wartensleben murmured, running his eyes over the finely written sheet, then handed it to the count. Shotan read much longer, moving his lips slightly, and then literally threw the paper across the table.

"A million," the duke hummed, tapping a simple rhythm with his pencil. "And as far as I can tell, there's no such sum in the treasury. I'm sure there isn't."

Gayot covered his face with a broad palm without rings or even the silk ribbons customary for Highlanders, and hid an ironic smile in his hand, recalling a conversation that had taken place a few days earlier in Curzio's house. Then the Prince said the same words but with a different tone.

* * *

"A million?!" Gaiot was silent, fighting the urge to bite his lip childishly. "That can't be."

"Alas," Curzio pursed his lips. "Maybe. Pay attention to these lines, they are underlined in red. There are currently two and a half thousand gendarmes in the custody of the imperial crown. Each receives an annual salary of between fifty and one hundred gold measures, totaling one hundred and eighty thousand. Ten thousand other cavalry with an annual salary of twenty to thirty-five merks per rider, totaling two hundred and fifty thousand. Highland infantry - nine thousand, annual allowance of fifteen merks and additional bonuses for tukhums, a total of one hundred and fifty thousand. Ordinary infantry and special guards - twenty-five thousand, maintenance from two to seven gold pieces, a total of one hundred and thirty thousand. The total is just over seven hundred thousand gold coins a year. Adjusting for the inevitable theft and unplanned spending, a million. That's the cost of Aleinsae's power over the Ecumene."

"But this is an inconceivable amount!" The prince shook his head. "It is as if we were fighting to the death."

"And you thought coups are cheap?"

"No, of course not, but it turns out that you have planned for the next year the preservation and multiplication of the armed force. Why? Doesn't Saltoluchard have any money to spend? It's already done!"

"As if you were against military spending?" Curzio smiled ironically.

"I absolutely love military spending!" Gayot was about to raise his voice, but he came to his senses and lowered his voice. "There's nothing like a fair sum of money for good infantry work. But... how much did the treasury spend before?"

"Including the Emperor's personal income from the fair, the imperial treasury spent about four hundred and fifty thousand merks in a year."

"Half a million gold," Gaiot repeated. "And that's for everything from the postal service to the upkeep of His Majesty's residences."

"Yes, that's it."

"And you say that the Island Treasurers intend to spend twice as much next year on the army alone? I've never been a tax collector, but it's clear even to me that such a sum is impossible to raise. And that means someone is not going to get paid."

"Exactly."

* * *

"So someone will not be paid," the count said in a dry, unpleasant voice, and the duke smiled even more broadly, trying not to be seen. But the next remark came not from Curzio, as might have been expected, but from the Duke. He filled in another page of the little book, raised his pencil like a pointer, and sharply blurted out, no longer caring about decorum:

"And I warned... I told!"

"You did." Curzio agreed.

"You didn't listen!" Wartensleben threw.

"They didn't listen," Curzio emphasized the word 'they' with a clear intonation. "And I tried to persuade them until the last moment. But the Privy Council had its own way."

Wartensleben threw a pencil on the table, expressing in one gesture the depth of the rage that gripped the duke. Curzio, not allowing the conversation to degenerate into an exchange of heated remarks, stepped into the geometric center of the disposition, drawing everyone's attention.

"Gentlemen, that's actually why we've gathered this little..." Curzio allowed himself an ironic smile. "...сomplot. Because, as my dear friend, Mr. Gayot, has rightly pointed out, we are the kind of people who are used to taking fate by the throat. And it may well turn out that fate will take us by the throat. And we would do well to prevent it."

"Is it easier to beat the father together?" Wartensleben joked glumly and plebeianly.

"Yes."

"So, Saltoluchard and the Court should somehow miraculously find a million gold pieces," stated Shotan. "Right?"

"A million and a half," Curzio clarified. "After all, the Court is not exempt from current expenses."

"It won't work," Wartensleben said, uncorking the bottle of pepper again to clear his lungs. "After all, we'd have to pay Gotdua's existing debts. And if the merchant guilds can be shown the dick, then the banking houses of the primators to say "to whom I owe, I forgive from the bottom of my heart" will not work. The upper aristocracy is neutral, but only as long as theAleinsae pay at least the interest. And given that it's going to be a very difficult year, they'll be stealing and attributing as if it were the last day, no matter how much you hang them with. Two million, and that's on the low end."

Curzio bowed his head silently, saying it was so. He thought that the Duke had weakened in his body, but his mind was still sharp. Udolar could prove to be a most useful ally. Or vice versa. However, that would be decided in the near future, perhaps now, in this hall.

"Well..." Wartensleben took a deep drag from the bottle, and exchanged glances with Shotan. "I'll check your numbers, but in general the picture matches what I see. Thank you for filling in some of the white spots, for example, I was sure that there were far fewer gendarmes on the payroll. The mountain infantry, on the contrary, is at least twelve thousand."

"We had hoped for fifteen," Curzio admitted. "It would have solved a lot of problems and saved on cavalry. The Pillars' pikemen and halberdiers are disciplined, organized, and most importantly, they can't be outbid. And the most expensive infantryman is cheaper than the cheapest cavalryman. A very good investment of military capital. But unfortunately, the Pillars got bogged down in their own infighting, so only nine thousand could be hired. Eighteen regiments and 27 separate units without their own banners."

Shotan curled his lips in disdain but decided that this was not the moment to demonstrate the opinion of a born knight and commander of knights about dirty footsoldiers. Noticing the friendly glances of all present, Prince Gayot shrugged and said:

What can be done, not everyone likes the order, when the hirer makes a contract with the tukhum, and already the union of clans provides the regiment. Many would like to sell the force outright, like regular mercenaries. It will take... some time to sensitize those "many". And troops.

"Well, they'd sell it," the duke grumbled. As people do. Here's the regiment, here's the money, why make it so complicated?

"But that lowers the price," the prince explained patiently. "Besides, the right order guarantees to the employer that our infantry will not run away from the battlefield. After all, the deserters will not be able to return home to their families, there will be shame and dishonor waiting for them. That's the stability you're paying for, isn't it?"

Shotan tapped his fingernail on the glass, which was almost empty of wine. The thin glass tinkled melodiously, attracting attention.

"It's very interesting," said the Count. "And I must apologize most sincerely to you, dear ..."

Shotan inclined his head toward Curzio, and the islander noted that the high-ranking mercenary had not mentioned his title. Perhaps he remembered his remark about lousy barons and decided not to make it worse.

"I can easily imagine how any of you could be threatened by all of this," continued Shotan. "But I am not a landowner. I have no property to be destroyed by war and turmoil. On the contrary, the more war, the more work and money for the cavalry. So... I am waiting for the continuation."

"Yes, we're distracted again," Wartensleben decided. "So what do you have to offer us? Why this extensive and informative excursion into the coming troubles and budgetary policies of the Regents' Council?"

Curzio felt himself the center of attention again. Shotan was no longer looking at him with arrogant disdain, and the Duke was keenly interested. Half the job was done. But half the work was still to come.

"And here, gentlemen," said the islander. "A word or two should be said about my family, the young Emperor Ottovio, and the means with which the empty treasury of the Empire will have to be filled...."

* * *

The Ecumene lies in the southern hemisphere, so its geography is "inverted" relative to ours, with the southern tip closer to the pole. But the north is washed by cold and fast currents, despite its proximity to the equator. Therefore, the warmest and most fertile region is the middle of the continent, separated by a mass of mountains. It is called the "golden belt" - after the color of ripe grain.

Comite - a commissar and a special bailiff. In this case, a controller who was to organize purchases and keep an eye on the "hunger warehouses" from which interest-free loans of grain were given to peasants in case of famine.
 
Chapter 5
* * *

A cold, damp wind had risen in the morning. The not-so-distant pass was covered with a whitish haze, and Elena thought Pantocrator was on the fugitives' side in every way. If the company stayed there even a day longer, the day's journey would easily turn into a week. A snowstorm combined with running out of supplies and general fatigue... You can wish it on your enemy, but not on yourself. It seems that the fugitives had skipped just at the last moment before the snowfall that would make the main trails impassable until spring, so if anyone was following their tracks, they weren't now.

As she washed her face with cold water, the woman looked up at the frowning sky, as if the all-seeing eye of Pantocrator might be watching her. Her threadbare shirt fluttered in the wind like a sail, but it had been tight a month ago. Well, at least here it is not necessary to watch overweight and diet. In the Ecumene it takes a lot of effort to get fat, not the opposite.

Wiping herself with the towel, which was as thin and sparse as gauze from wear and tear and time, Elena caught the attentive, albeit fearful, gaze of the Frels' daughter. The girl was looking mostly at her guest's hair. Elena hummed, thinking that she really did seem strange. The black dye was starting to come off, revealing a dark red natural color. The traveler looked like a feather raven, but the appearance was the last thing the healer cared about right now.

The girl wasn't overly pretty, but she was surprisingly sweet. Probably, she had never seen independent, short-haired sisters by gender and perceived Elena as a marvel. The healer couldn't resist a little hooliganism and winked at her daughter, who danced, clutched the basket with onions to her chest, which had to be taken to the dry cellar for the winter. She turned around and ran, only to see her mother's boots, which had been worn out to a pale pale color and were probably her mother's.

The father, ignoring the woman, was tapping with a tool that looked like an axe with the blade turned ninety degrees. Frels, with two peasants, was chopping cabbage into halves for pickling for the winter. There was not enough salt, so they soured the cabbage by pouring rye flour with a little rock salt over the chopped pieces. Judging by the filling wooden troughs, at least this house would not starve in the spring. The cabbage was oozing with juice and a distinctive odor.

Breakfast was heated in a cauldron. For lunch, in honor of the guests (and obviously expecting to get another coin) they prepared a royal dish - yurma - chicken boiled in fish broth, by the standards of local poverty it was equal to a lamb cooked in exquisite gravy. Elena could already feel her stomach rumbling in anticipation of the treat. Then a stab of pain cut into the rumbling.

"Damn..." the woman hissed, bending down and putting a palm to her stomach.

Such bad timing! Thank God, they were in a settled and moderately warm region, where they could stock up and wash hygienic rags. She wanted to swear, to curse Mother Nature and all the gods in bulk for having designed female anatomy so badly. Or physiology...

She straightened up, picked up a jug of water, and went to wash Artigo. The pain seemed to be easing, but she couldn't walk easily, her knees bent like wood on nails. Nearby, Cadfal was praying, seemingly for the first time since the redeemers had entered the life of Elena, still called Lunna. The square-haired brother spread out a tiny mat and was making bows as if he were a Muslim. Beside him, the Rapist was making strange passes, something subtly reminiscent of Chinese wu-shu, and also of the skeletal breathing techniques of the late Draughtsman. Elena had noticed something like this a couple of times before and kept forgetting to ask whether it was a cunning prayer or church gymnastics.

Artigo was sitting under Grimal's care on a large stone with a blanket carefully placed on it. Ranjan was dragging sawed wood from the shed to the old stump, intending to chop it. The minstrel was haggling fiercely with the peasant, who scratched the back of his head, shuffled from foot to foot, and generally seemed a simple-minded respecter, but judging from the tension of the negotiations, he understood his interest well.

"Lift your head," Elena said to the prince, surprised at how harsh and unfriendly the words sounded. "Please."

The boy obediently carried out the instruction. Grimal realized that Artigo was in the right hands and went about his business.

"Here," the Frels' daughter, who had stealthily approached, shyly held out a tiny curl of soap, clearly cut from a larger bar.

"Thank you," she said sincerely. She only now noticed that the girl had a plentiful scattering of freckles despite the dark hair she'd been born with. A rare combination.

Artigo was silent and squinting as Elena wiped his face with a wet towel. The woman, on impulse, ruffled the boy's hair, and he flinched as if he'd been struck.

"Hey, what are you up to?" Elena didn't understand, staring into the guy's wildly dilated pupils.

Artigo froze, tense as a crossbow and stiffening at the same time. It was as if every muscle in his body had tensed to the limit. His lips trembled and his face paled. Elena looked at the hand, then at the disheveled head, and began to realize something. Apparently, this was some incredibly rude invasion of 'personal space' or a violation of the etiquette hammered into Artigo's head since infancy. Or maybe both at once.

"I'm sorry," Elena muttered, feeling like a fool in the land of the crazy.

The boy looked up at her, unblinking, like a porcelain-faced doll. Elena knelt so that the roles were reversed. The hard ground chilled her joints unpleasantly, her stomach tugged, and the medicine woman refrained from grimacing in pain with great effort. But her gut told her that a very significant moment was coming. Elena had done something important and wrong. Maybe related to etiquette, maybe wrapped up in the personal cockroaches in the prince's head, but if she let everything go to the brakes now, "it" would remain as a nail hammered into the relationship.

"If I put out my hand to you, can you touch it?" She asked, thinking if it wasn't clear it was best to take the easiest way.

He was silent for a moment, then nodded slowly, as if overcome by tension. Elena also slowly stretched out her hand, imagining she wanted to pet a street and frightened cat. A calm, very friendly motion, nothing that could be construed as a threat. Artigo's fingers were trembling and cold. After waiting a moment, Elena "made tactile contact", that is, still slowly and gently squeezed her palm. The medic's hand was not large, but Artigo's paw sank almost entirely into it. The axe clattered loudly as the Brether began chopping. The prince flinched, glancing around nervously.

"I am from very far away places," Elena said quietly and slowly. "I have learned some of your rules, but there are many things I don't know yet. If I do something wrong, it's because I don't know how it should be."

He shook his head again, seeming a little more confident and relaxed, but it could have been that. Good, communication seemed to be getting better. Medicine and psychology... that's what she should have learned, but who knew? She doesn't get to choose her destiny. For some reason, she remembered a humorous story about a bookworm who spent his whole life preparing to get to comrade Stalin in the forty-first year, filling his memory with countless knowledge about the preparation for the Great Patriotic War but ended up in the ranks of the French at Austerlitz.

"Where I come from..."

...there are no nobles, and children grow up normally... No, of course, she can't say that.

"...there were no such noble persons. We keep it simple. I did what I'm used to."

She thought for a moment and added:

"Sorry... Yes, I know you should be called. Your Majesty. But, uh."

"Highness."

"What?"

In fact, she heard perfectly well but jumped at the seeming opportunity to talk the young autistic man down a little more.

"Your Imperial Majesty, that is the correct address to the emperor," the prince said very clearly, with excellent diction as if he had been practicing for hours. His speech contrasted strikingly with his one-syllable lines, perhaps for the first time in the whole time of his escape the guy said something longer than a couple of words. Elena was ready to smile - there was contact! - but the next phrase threw her into a stupor.

"But you're from a dirty, lowly background and probably didn't know it."

Oh, you little scoundrel, Elena thought, feeling herself grow fierce. Dirty origins, huh? You owe me your life twice over. She wanted to slap Artigo, but then the split log cracked particularly loudly, and Helena came to her senses. No, it was necessary to be calm and tolerant...

"I'm not Emperor... yet," Artigo didn't notice the change in the woman's attitude and continued his reasoning. "I should have been addressed as "Your Grace" before. But that's no good either because my parents have left the world and now I'm the first in the family," the boy swallowed the heavy thought and returned to his businesslike tone. "Therefore, the most correct is 'Your Highness'. Yes..."

He thought for a moment and finished confidently:

"Yes, that's the most correct. Address me as "Your Highness." And tell the others to keep proper order. Besides, that ruthier and his servant must no longer dress and undress me so rudely. I'm used to being treated differently. And the food. I want different food. I must be served first, and the others may eat after I have tasted the food."

"Is that all?" The healer asked stupidly, mechanically counting the number of times the young aristocrat repeated 'must'.

"Yes. I'll wish for the rest in due course."

Elena stared at the boy, dazed, and saw that there was not a shred of pretension in his demeanor. God knows what the reason was but the prince's noble arrogance and absolute certainty that everyone owed him by nature was like a switch on a switch.

"Why don't you take it easy?" Pantin, who was nearby, suggested. Elena didn't even look at him, staring unkindly into the prince's dark pupils. Perhaps she should have kept silent, softened, corrected, and shown understanding. Perhaps. she should have. But Elena didn't want to, and there were many reasons, all woven together like a bundle of wire under a blacksmith's hammer.

"First of all, we're hiding. We're hiding so you don't get killed, you fool," she said quietly and clearly. "We're passing you off as a common city boy. And calling you 'Your Highness' is a sure way to get everyone killed. You first."

The boy swallowed but didn't look away.

"Second..."

Elena felt like she was getting carried away, but she couldn't stop and didn't really want to. Pantin shook his head reproachfully, refrained from commenting, and left for the Frels' daughter. She, along with Gamilla and the minstrel, was just helping a wounded Highlander to crawl out into the light of day.

"Second, we're the only thing between you and death. Your..."

She almost said "father" and stumbled at the last moment.

"Your savior sacrificed a lot to keep you alive. And will sacrifice a lot more. That deserves at least a modicum of respect and gratitude. So put the fuse on and act like a human being, not a highborn pig. Do you understand?"

She was ready for the hysterics, the foot-stomping, the other excesses of a spoiled brat, but nothing happened. Artigo bowed his head and settled down, his eyes faded, his pupils unfocused, staring through Elena into the endless distance. The prince looked like a doll with some of the air drained out of it in a couple of seconds.

"Get up and let's go," the woman demanded sharply, without sentimentality. "We need to wash you properly."

Artigo swallowed and shuddered, he remained silent, not even a sniffle. He remained silent while Elena washed him in the old bathing chamber, which looked more like a shower stall made of gray boards, grayed by time and woodworm. The washerwoman had expected to see signs of beatings on the prince's lean body, like Flessa's, which would explain the boy's lethargy and apparent inadequacy. But no, if he had been punished for instilling the rules of class behavior it was rare and not severe.

"Master!" called from the side of the house the Highlander. "It's time to heal me!"

"Wait," Elena cut him off. "You see, I'm busy. I'll be right there."

Pantin, as was his custom, reappeared out of nowhere, handing Elena a washed shirt and pants for the boy.

"I asked to heat water to treat," the man reported. "The cauldron is just hot and a smaller cauldron with boiling water, right?"

"Yes, that's right," Elena nodded, tying the laces on the child's shirt. Artigo didn't know how to handle them, he'd hardly ever dressed himself, and it was easier to tie them herself than to wait for the boy's awkward fingers to do the difficult task.

"And I also diluted salt, not too fine, rock salt, one part salt to ten parts water," Pantin finished his report.

"That's right, too," the medic agreed, tightening the last knot. Artigo stared at a single point on the wooden wall, doing nothing but following the washerwoman's instructions.

Gaval and Grimal helped the would-be patient shave and vigorously discussed the comet.

"It's a sorcerous serpent with a tail of fire!" interpreted the Brether's squire. "It was sent for our grave sins, and portends horrors, calamities, pestilence, pestilence, and dancing skeletons! But there is still a chance for people to come to their senses and not to sin, there is!"

It was strange, Elena thought. The dragon figure was virtually absent from local legends. Sometimes there is something conventionally similar, but strictly in the second or third plan. Instead of fire-breathing reptiloids, heroic knights barked devils and ice demons. Further proof that the world of the Ecumene was not populated by natives of Earth. I guess...

"It is not a dragon, but a heavenly body of mysterious but airy nature," Gaval said. "Otherwise it would have fallen from the sky to the earth long ago. And it passes through the sky every century and a half, as it has been written about in clever books for a long time. Every time it passes, the lowly plebs get excited, waiting for the end of days and God's punishment."

"Damn!" the god-fearing servant was furious. "It just so happened that...."

He stopped talking abruptly, glanced at the boy, and even slapped his jaw as if closing his lips tightly. Gaval looked at his suddenly surrendered opponent with a perplexed look, and shrugged his skinny shoulders.

Elena felt a burning shame for the breakdown and resentment at herself for the pedagogical blunder, which, by all accounts, was catastrophic. After the fact, it was clear that Artigo had tried to communicate in a human way, he just didn't know it was possible to talk in any other way. He should have kept the conversation going, built up the trust that had barely budged, and begun to prepare the prince for another life in tiny steps. And now it was too late. Apparently, it is.

Does she even want any of this? That's a good question.

"Is everything alright?" Ranjan asked loudly. Frels' daughter handed him a clay mug of pea beer, and with his shirt unbuttoned and his cleaver on his shoulder, the still unshaven swordsman looked like a rough pirate.

"Yes," Elena answered briefly, glancing at the washed and changed Artigo.

Ranjan shook his head feebly, barely perceptible, and a flicker of pain flashed in the depths of his dark eyes. It flashed and vanished without a trace. Brether sighed and said:

"Let's go to breakfast."

But Elena postponed breakfast so she could perform the surgery on an empty stomach and a steady hand. Then again, if the patient died or bled out under the scalpel, she'd have something to eat for the stress. Gaval retreated, claiming he couldn't stand blood. The minstrel managed to trade the plaid for a musical instrument, a crude but functional wooden plank about the size of two palms with metal brackets. Standing behind a crooked fence, he practiced, playing short and simple tunes

"You've lost your fucking mind, asshole," Cadfal said without anger as he passed by. "You're giving away other people's stuff?"

"I'll play and drink the payoff in the first town," Gaval promised confidently. "And then I'll buy something decent. I mean the instrument," he hastened to clarify.

"Watch it," the redeemer promised in an unkind and yet very firm manner. "Or we'll sell you. There will always be buyers for such a sweet boy."

Cadfal stared at the speechless minstrel for a few seconds, then snorted, unable to hold back his laughter, and slapped Gaval on the shoulder with a thud that would have driven him into the ground.

"Don't be afraid!" The cubic baton-bearer laughed heartily. "I was joking."

He grew sharply serious and promised confidentially, leaning close to the minstrel's ear:

"But if you don't pay up, we'll sell you anyway."

And went off to the cabbage choppers, leaving Gaval agonizingly wondering how much of the joke was real.

"You are jolly people," said the Highlander, curving his lips in a painful grimace. He sat down on the stump where Artigo had sat and stretched out his leg with a low hiss.

"Yes, we're not complaining," Elena said, checking water, clean rags, and a pot of boiling water for disinfecting the instruments. There was still grape alcohol in the Vietnamese footlocker, but the medic tried not to waste scarce medicines, remembering that they would not be replenished for a long time.

"Bite your belt," advised Gamilla as a volunteer assistant.

"Huh," the Highlander muttered inarticulately.

"Well, that's up to you," Elena shrugged, unwinding the blood-stained bandage.

The medic was prepared for festering and other effects, but the wound was clean, with moderate inflammation and swelling. The wound was exactly as described by the wounded man: a tip on a broken shaft just above the knee. Elena, out of pure vindictiveness - remembering the rude "hey" - wiggled the fragment, causing the wounded man to grind his teeth.

"Well, let's get started," he pulled out the shtick Pantin had carved. The Highlander rolled his eyes and turned white.

"How about some wine?" He asked, instantly losing his arrogance and pathos. "It's... for courage and to quench pain. A big glass."

"You can," Elena agreed. "But beware, it will make your veins expand and you'll bleed more. If anything goes wrong, you could bleed scarlet.

The Highlander thought for a while, and when Elena was about to ask the locals for wine, he shook his head.

"Cut it like this. I can take it."

In the dim sunlight, he appeared quite young, but his face was battered by life. Elena guessed him to be between twenty-five and thirty, hardly older. His nose was very distinctive, powerful, hunchbacked, and broken at the bridge of the nose, making it look like a parrot's beak. The left ear had been flattened into a pancake by a long-ago blow, no pigtails, and the head was shaved, so that several scars were visible. The man wore a northern beard, the same one Santeli had grown on his cheeks, but his neck was overgrown. The black growth was already silvery with threads of early gray. He was also dressed in a mix of continental "fashion", without a sash. On his belly, horizontally, he carried in a wooden scabbard a large, typically mountain dagger with a hilt in the form of the letter "H".

"What's the name?" The woman asked, righting her scalpel on the finest-grained stone, wetting the surface with water.

She waited again for some pretentious name.

"Maryadek of Kerazetov"

"Looking for luck on the plains?" Elena didn't really wait for an answer. She rather took her time as she prepared herself. She washed the wet stone dust off the small blade and watered the wound with a thin trickle from a pitcher of warm water, washing away the blood clots.

I thought all of you guys were hired for good silver. Take off your shoe or you'll bleed into it.

"I'm sick of the mountains," said Maryadek with unexpected candor. "I am tired of sheep and grandfather's halberds. I am tired of clans, tukhums, and elders. Tired of the fact you have not learned your name yet, and your wife has been picked up long ago and you already owe her family a ransom. Tired that you can serve only in a regiment, and you get a quarter of the salary, and the rest is sent to the tukhum. Tired that where your brother's and matchmaker's head lies, yours should lie there too, though you've seen them at the bottom, goat-breeders. So I've decided that's enough. My fate is in my hands."

Elena didn't understand about the bottom at first, then remembered that the Highlanders didn't practice the usual burial or burning of the dead. If possible, they decapitated the dead, boiled the skull down to the bare bones to put it in the ancestral crypt, and threw the body into the river - let it be carried as far away as possible by the swift current. It was quietly said that all the participants had to drink from the cauldron with a boiled head.

"All right, let's get started," Elena decided.

Maryadek let out a florid, vigorous curse and gritted his teeth, preparing for the pain.

"What am I supposed to do?" Gamilla asked.

"Tie the cord here and hold it here," the medic pointed and made the first incision to widen the wound a bit and insert the shtick more securely.

Maryadek blasphemously vowed to find the bastard who had set the self-shooter on alert and stick the tip in his ass, but the Highlander held his ground well, his leg steady. Pantin was washing off the blood running in scarlet streams down his hairy leg, the crossbow woman was helping quite deftly and, it seemed, she was studying. There was the smell of a fire, burnt porridge for breakfast, as well as tasty chicken and fish broth from the yurma stewing in the oven. The peasants continued to work with cabbage, now there were more women among them. In all, a dozen or so peasants were working on the fermentation. Frels's daughter served them with diluted beer and fed them fried chickens that roamed about, pecking at everything. The birds were athletic, fit, and twice as small as the birds on earth. The guests were served breakfast on a table dragged out of the house into the courtyard so they wouldn't have to breathe the fumes inside. Ranjan asked for directions, and Frels drew a tentative map with charcoal on the tabletop.

The surgery did not take much time, and the device justified itself, although careful work with a scalpel would have led to the same result.

"As a souvenir," Elena handed the Highlander, white as chalk, a black bifurcated tip. "They say you can make a talisman for good luck."

"I s-s-sell it," promised Mariadek. "And I'll drink the money. I'll drink the money for the bastard to die."

"Then give it to me," Gamilla took the iron from the wounded man's weak fingers without hesitation. "It will be used as payment. We'll sell it ourselves."

Elena wanted to make a caustic joke about the self-appointed treasurer but was too busy with post-op processing.

"So..." she wondered aloud. "Will they let you rest here?"

"They will. They won't be happy, but the master honors the old statutes and won't throw a sick man out."

"Then I won't sew it now. It could fester under the suture. Without me or another good healer, the wound cannot be cleaned so the leg can be sawed off at once."

The patient swallowed noisily and with a jerky movement wiped the profuse sweat from his forehead.

"We'll des... wash off the poison now, and I'll bandage it clean. You'll change the bandage once a day, only boiled and with washed hands only. With soap. I'll show you how. You got it?"

Maryadek nodded.

"If there is no pus after three days, you can rinse again and then sew it up. And to boil everything again before sewing. If there is pus, open the wound, so that everything flows out freely, twice a day wash with saline solution. It'll drain for a couple of weeks and then it'll go away. You'll have a scar."

" And if it doesn't?"

"Then you can look for a saw."

Elena picked up a pot of strong saline, which she intended to use instead of alcohol for the final disinfection.

"This is going to hurt."

"That's news," Maryadek said through gritted teeth, clenching his eyes.

Finished, Elena thoroughly washed the tool and her hands.

"Five pennies."

"I will," muttered the exhausted Highlander. "I'll rest a little and I'll cut it out."

"What?"

"I don't have that much in my purse. Too much. There's a stash in my belt."

"I see."

Elena left the patient to lie down and began to stow the medical kit. Gamilla had gone somewhere, probably to check on Gaval, whom the crossbowwoman had contracted to guard for another day or two.

"Take a sip," Pantin handed her a flask of real silver, roughly made, but capacious. Elena took a sip, and it was not alcohol, as one might expect, but a sweet brew flavored with licorice and rose hips.

"Thank you," the woman thanked, returning the flask.

"You're welcome," Pantin replied, screwing on the cap in the form of a jester's hat.

"I'm tired," Elena complained, stretching out her arms, scrutinizing her fingers with their nails trimmed almost to the root. - I want a manicure, moisturizer, peeling scrub, and cuticle oil. And I want normal pads instead of asshole panties. I would kill for pads. But I don't have them, and I never will.

"It must be tough."

"I'm used to it."

When she said that, Elena realized with horrifying clarity that it was true - she was used to it. The benefits of her native world seemed too distant and unfulfilled, like a fairy tale about amazing countries that were not on any map and where she would never get to visit...

"It was in vain," Pantin shook his head reproachfully.

"What?" the woman looked at him, frowning as if she couldn't remember something important.

"Mean words spoken to young Artigo. They were in vain."

"Maybe," Elena shook her head oddly, rubbing her temple, trying to remember when she'd ever called the prince's name. "Maybe... He..."

"You've been unfair."

"Really?" the woman asked sarcastically, her tone clearly reading, What's it to you?

"Yes," Pantin ignored the sarcasm and spoke with the same wise sadness. "You are tired. You are tired of running. You are tired of being afraid. You are tired of experiencing your imperfection. Getting rid of the tiredness or, at least, alleviating it is a reasonable and understandable desire. But to share them with another man, to dump half of your burden on him without consent... To make him suffer with you... There was no wisdom or dignity in that.

"He's a petty and disgusting freak," Elena said bluntly what she'd been thinking until now. "A nobleman incapable of gratitude."

She was silent for a moment, and then she spoke out sharply with a determination that she was afraid of a moment later:

"I don't need it I would have kept them, but Ranjan promised....."

She faltered again. Something was wrong here... an intrusive thought was beneath the lid of her skull like a faint, barely perceptible buzzing mosquito that didn't sting and kept her awake.

Maybe. But is it his fault? The boy had been raised from the time he was young to know that there were superior people, real people, only worthy of that name. And everyone else. He doesn't know how to communicate with those he's used to thinking of as lower than himself. He doesn't even realize that you can be spoken to as equals. Not yet. At heart, he is still a little aristocrat, equal to kings, surrounded by servants and waiting for his torment to end.

"Well, he's in for a nasty surprise," Elena snorted and asked bluntly. "Is that my concern?" and then answered herself. "Not at all. He's only alive because his father....."

She fell silent under the calm gaze of gray eyes.

Gray eyes.

Eye.

Elena looked at Pantin once more, the tired sadness on her face replaced by immense surprise, then horror on the verge of panic, the woman in one cohesive movement stepped to the side and snatched the knife.

"Who are you?!" She blurted out, clutching the hilt.

Pantin, warming the water. Pantin helps with firewood and cooking. Pantin cutting the horn for the operation. Pantin, bringing clothes for Artigo. Now, focusing her attention on the stranger, holding it in her memory, Elena could see that the not-young and gray-haired man had been with them for a long time, starting from... here the memory was failing. The man had just appeared, had been around for a while, and it seemed perfectly natural, and as soon as she looked away, the stranger was immediately forgotten.

Rapist's spear glinted with a tip, and Cadfal raised his club above his head, ready to pound the intruder into the ground.

"Answer me!" Elena's voice trembled as if she were about to become hysterical. Now the woman saw the stranger's eyes, which were like the eyesores of a blind man. The light gray whites turned into irises of irregular shape, devoid of pupils, but the alien saw, apparently, perfectly well. Elena had seen similar eyes before, only the colors were different. Her hands shook treacherously, and the pain in her stomach intensified as if a rusty needle had poked her bladder.

"I'm Pantin," Pantin grinned weakly. "I've told you that."

Who knows how it would have ended, Elena was teetering on the brink of hysterics, ready to either flee or attack, but at that second Ranjan came between her and Pantin. Brether bent to one knee before the intruder, holding his sword at the base of the blade, hilt up, like a crucifix.

"Mentor," the Brether mumbled briefly with a reverence that Elena had never seen from him before and had never even imagined such a thing was possible.

"Potter, son of a potter," Pantin bowed his head. "You called me."

"Yes, I did."

"Well, I'm here."

"I have an apprentice for you."

"I see. Let's say it's not the best possible."

Elena gulped.

"Eyes..." she squeezed out. "Your eyes..."

"Hello, Hel," the one who called himself Pantin showed a faint smile on his unseasonably tanned face. "And also Lunna, Wandera... Maybe it would be better to call you by your real name?"

"You don't know it," the woman snarled. The slaughter seemed to be postponed. The stranger, though he had eyes similar to the bloodshot eyes of a black creature, didn't seem intent on attacking. Who was it? A hunch fluttered its wings like a butterfly, very close by.

"I know it," the gray-eyed man smiled a little wider. "You're the one who doesn't know it. Or did you really think your name was Elena?"

He snapped his fingers sharply as if switching the conversation to another channel.

"I'm not the one you need to worry about right now," the stranger said.

He pointed away, to where there seemed to be nothing but a gray and dreary plain of hills. Elena took another step back, then two, remembering how fast the infernal witch had moved. Only then did she turn in a quarter turn, her gaze slanting, watching.

A small cavalcade of about a dozen horses and a half was coming from behind the nearest hill. There were no wagons or foot escorts, but a two-tailed flag fluttered angrily in the wind over the riders' heads.

"Your worries are over there," Pantin lowered his hand.

* * *
The musical instrument is called a kalimba:


View: https://youtu.be/XzSeCOOlGis
 
Chapter 6
* * *

Elena assumed that a small war was about to break out, a robbery, a raid, or something similar. In a world where any man with a weapon was a priori a threat, a few horsemen were cause for alarm. But judging by Frels' reaction, nothing really scary has happened. Not yet, anyway...

The riders were approaching at a leisurely trot, the breeze fluttering the ensign, its design already visible: a rectangle in a frame with an emblem, plus two very long tails with abstract embroidery. Elena was unfamiliar with the symbolism, of course, but judging by the "tower" crown with simple teeth, the baron had come here, probably with an entourage.

Elena thought for a moment and stepped stealthily behind Pantin's back, glad that the sword was still in the house. If it came to a fight, there would be someone to act as a striking force, no need to provoke the wild and surely aggressive men by the sight of a woman with a weapon. She lowered her eyes, folded her hands on her belly, and slouched, taking on the most harmless and gray appearance.

"Such a luck, such a luck," Cadfal thought aloud. "Well, Pantocrator will measure it according to his craft."

The cavalcade came closer. No one drew swords, the riders had no normal spears at all, only djerids, which could be thrown and thrust at light infantry, mostly in pursuit. Hence, a fight was not expected, obviously, a courtesy visit was in order. Though... looking obliquely at Frels, Elena thought it was unlikely. The knight's sour expression, which he didn't even try to hide, reliably indicated that the guests were not only uninvited but also unpleasant.

The Redeemers maneuvered stealthily and deftly, and Elena found herself in the "box", covered from three sides. Grimal just as deftly covered Artigo, and Gamilla stepped resolutely in front of the minstrel, not so much placing her palm on the hilt of her dagger as holding it close. Obviously, the woman was going to fulfill her duties as a bodyguard within her paid term faithfully. While this quiet and seemingly disorderly swarming was going on, the cavalrymen came very close.

"Peace be upon this house!" The leader proclaimed loudly. His horse, as if to make an end to his short speech, thumped his hoof on a pebble. "May the Pantocrator bless the hosts and all the good people who have gathered within its walls."

The Baron looked simple and, one might say, "homely". He wore no special signs or jewelry, not even a chain. He was quite young, with a classic "potty" haircut two fingers above his ears, without tails or braids, with very thin whiskers, more like cat whiskers. His face was even pleasant in its way, his gaze intelligent and attentive. The rider didn't shine with metal armor or at least chain mail but wore a gray jacket like a fleece jacket, with patches of thicker fabric on the collar and cuffs. Judging by the way the jacket fit, it was a lightweight brigandine, so the rider was not careless. And the buttons! Elena noticed that the Baron used buttons instead of laces in his clothes, and this already made the woman favorably inclined to him.

His companions looked much the same, well-built, well-dressed (for a remote province), not openly belligerent, but far from unarmed. Except, perhaps, for one. This one was trailing behind and was equipped as if he were planning to go on a crusade right now. Even to the medic's not-too-skillful eye, the cavalryman was extremely militant. He wore chain mail with plate inserts, a good helmet with a visor (though not silver-plated), and mitten gloves without separate fingers. A triangular shield at the saddle, a spear painted with spiral stripes in three colors. In contrast to the other warriors, it seemed that this was not a man, but a self-propelled showcase of knightly ammunition. Only the shield was strange - bare waxed leather on a wooden base, not a single stroke, not even a tiny emblem. Elena furtively looked around and noticed that Frels, seeing the "exhibitionist" turned pale, and even shuddered a little.

The pause dragged on awkwardly. The peasants had gone somewhere, leaving their rudimentary tools behind. The cabbage was dripping in the troughs. At last, Frels stepped forward and, with obvious dislike but a polite quarter bow, said:

"Greetings, Your Grace, Mr. Bonald of Ashey."

Yes, that's right, Baron, that's how they're addressed. It's almost like "Donald," except it's on the second syllable.

The freckled daughter of Frels froze, clutching the basket with white fingers. Mr. Bonald waited a few moments as if to emphasize that he was in charge and he determined the course of events. Then, with smooth, deliberately slow movements, he threw his leg over the saddle and jumped off the horse, whose reins were immediately taken over by one of his companions.

The Baron's sharp, attentive gaze scanned the redeemers and Ranjan with an invisible beam; the alien looked at Gamilla with curiosity; the minstrel, dressed as a scarecrow, smiled contemptuously. The Baron didn't seem to notice Helena at all, which was for the best; the social mimicry seemed to have succeeded.

Grimal, taking advantage of the moment, grabbed Artigo in his arms and carried him into the house, covering him with himself. The Baron glanced at the servant, and Elena did not like that glance. It was too attentive and sharp, and she could read in it the work of thought: why a child of a not peasant appearance was here, why the child was being taken away in a hurry, what he had to do with the motley company. Ranjan noticed it, too, but it would have taken a few weeks of talking to the Brether, as Elena had, to read the shadow of anxiety and discontent in the coldly inexpressive face.

Elena was expecting a firm handshake, but the gentlemen embraced, obviously out of necessity, clapping each other on the backs and indicating kind kisses, as brothers in class should. The kisses, of course, were of the air. Frels strained to taste the meager refreshment, but the Baron politely declined, referring to business, hurried and urgent, because a good feast means first of all a decent conversation, and what kind of conversation is short? Another time, by all means.

Bonald was good with his tongue. He had taken no lessons in Rhetoric, but he had practiced his speeches long enough to make the words fly out like arrows from an excellent archer. The cavalrymen partially dismounted but did not cross the invisible line, the conventional traverse through the lord. Judging by the insignia and patches, three or four of them were minor knights, the rest were typical sergeants. There was no obvious aggression, but such a fit retinue in itself inspired wary respect.

"My honorable sir, I see that you are blessed with a duty of hospitality. But let me take a moment of your time," asked Bonald of Ashey, very courteously. He did not even carry a sword, but instead a dagger with a triangular blade, very broad at the base, as wide as the palm of his hand, hanging from his belt.

Frels again, as if with difficulty, tore his gaze away from the dressed-up cavalryman and concentrated on the polite interlocutor.

"Yes," he said absentmindedly. "I'll allow it... Of course, I'll allow it."

"A tournament sword," the Baron noticed that Ranjan was still holding the weapon. "A rare blade in our land. Would you be willing to identify yourself?"

"My name is Dotta," Ranjan said grimly, making a rather deft and courtly bow. "Dotta from the North. I do not have the honor of bearing a noble surname."

"A nobleman's weapon," his grace raised an eyebrow. "And a very expensive one at that."

"The Assizes do not prohibit commoners from owning expensive weapons," Ranjan bowed again. "This is a gift."

"A valuable gift," Bonald continued to frown, and the unspoken but clearly implied "too valuable" hung in the air.

"I'm a paid guard, Your Grace. I met a gentleman who was badly hurt by adverse circumstances and the road. I helped him, and he saw fit to repay me with arms."

"And what was the name of that generous gentleman?"

Frels pressed his lips together unhappily, but kept his mouth shut; he did not like the interrogation of his guests, but the Baron had not yet overstepped some bounds.

"Arpheus."

"Just Arpheus?" Bonald squinted.

"He did not give his full name, and I did not ask. If a worthy gentleman considers it necessary to remain incognito, it is not proper to encroach on his intention."

"Good words," Bonald approved. "And what is this service? Or is that also a secret?"

"No, Your Grace. I found him, wounded, bleeding on the road. I warmed him by making a fire, sharing supplies, and bandaging his wounds. Then I helped him get to town and find a good healer. He felt obliged and gave me a sword."

"On the Northern Road, I suppose?"

"Yes."

"What selflessness," the Baron said sarcastically. "Rare honesty these days. I'd rather believe the story of a robbed corpse. Or a dagger stabbed in the back."

"Yes, unfortunately, it happens these days," Ranjan bowed his head, perhaps to let the long strands hide the expression on Brether's face.

The Highlander, leaning against the fence, was quietly wrapping up the bandage as if everything that was happening did not concern the wounded man at all. The Baron turned his head to him and suddenly said with a wicked grin:

"Rumor had it that in the forest to the East of here, they set off crossbows for a poacher. He was a cunning bastard, he avoided all the traps. But he didn't run away from the crossbow. I bet if you unwound the rag, the wound would be very noticeable."

Elena lowered her head so no one would notice the crooked grin. She'd assumed something like that. Hunters would set reliable, proven snares, not a complicated self-shooter with an expensive arrow.

"I fell, and stumbled over a knife," Maryadek said with suitable gloom. After a moment's thought, he added. "Your Grace."

"I would ask you not to make an interrogation," said Frels with a very marked uncertainty, and Helena only now remembered that she had not heard his name the day before. "They are my guests, and I have seen no bad deeds from them and heard no bad words. From here on, and until duty calls them onward, they are under my roof and protection."

"Oh, my good friend, they're not under the roof," the Baron smiled. It was a nasty smile, not a good one, but somehow Elena didn't feel threatened or truly endangered. It was as if his grace was playing a performance for a single audience.

"So custom and the letter of the law would have been followed exactly."

"The letter, but not the spirit. So, still..."

"Have it your way," Bonald waved his hands, saying, "I can't refuse."

A cunning crook, Elena thought, cunning and sharp-tongued. He had a knack for twisting everything with bare words as if it were not Frels in his right to give shelter to a guest against whom there was no clear evidence, and the baron was making leniency by backing down. A dangerous man. It's a good thing Grimal has already disappeared into the house, carrying Artigo away. Though... perhaps just the opposite, it might have aroused interest and suspicion, but what's done is done.

"I must confess that I am short and on business," the baron said in a sort of bourgeois tone, without any pleasantries. He stood up so that he was not face to face, but rather side by side with Frels, somewhat more trusting.

"What do you want?" Frels asked as bluntly. You could sculpt or paint an allegorical figure of a troubled nymph from his daughter. Elena would have bet that what was on the girl's face was in the old landowner's soul. But why...? What was the point of this performance? And why is Frels squinting so uncertainly, anxiously at the dressed-up horseman? And the latter, it seems, in his turn, is somehow worried about something, in any case, clearly avoiding a direct look, now and then nervously pulling the reins, making the horse anxious, beating his hoof and snorting.

"I wanted to make sure that your wealth was up to par," the Baron said bluntly as if he'd hit a chink in the wood with an axe. "As a good neighbor, and as a head lord, of course."

Frels gasped with indignation, but Bonald took the initiative and wrought iron words like a water hammer.

"Time passes quickly. Winter days are short, nights are long, and spring creeps up unnoticed. I don't see any good horses..." The Baron glanced at the skeleton-shaped structure blowing in from all sides of the world. That must have been the stables. "To be honest I don't see even one horse in there. I also doubt if there's a sturdy chain mail with a brass plaque of honorable Guild, a spear, a shield, a saddle, and all the other essentials waiting for you in the house."

Such a golden tongue, Elena admired involuntarily. Or, perhaps, he often repeats the same thing. It seems that right now before her eyes the drama of petty chivalry was being played out. And, she guessed, it would be clear why Frels was so calm when it came to the spring review. The Baron had noted the absence of property correctly.

Frels turned and took a step back as if being side by side with the baron was a real pain. He straightened like the shaft of a pike and set his left foot back as if preparing for a dash. All uncertainty flew away like cobwebs in the wind.

"It is not for you to count my horses!" The old warrior shouted, his courtesy at once abandoned. "It is not for you to look in my chests!"

"That's true," said Bonald. "But I'll have to answer to His Lordship! The time of long peace is coming to an end. Not today or tomorrow the Earl will ask: Heir to the name of Ashey, where is my troop and the good men in it? It is time to defend our ancient privileges, for our old rivals are eager to overturn the boundary markers. What shall I tell him?"

"What to say to the Earl is your concern!" growled Frels, resolute and vigorous. "Our ancestors made the rules, and they made them wisely. What was right for them is right for us! My service this year is done, and all my days are counted properly. Until the snow melts next year, I'm free from obligation! When it's time for the review, we'll talk then. In the meantime."

Elena noted that when it came to the review, the knight's voice trembled slightly, just a little, but still. The baron seemed to notice it, too, his plain, but not unpleasant face twisted into a grin.

"In the meantime, get out!" Frels clenched his fists.

"You receive your guests unkindly," Bonald folded his arms across his chest and put his foot back. "Not according to the old customs, not according to honor and rank."

"When a guest forgets about decorum, he is shown the door!" The knight was not in debt.

It seemed as if Bonald would grind his teeth to the gums at that very minute, the insult was serious, Elena could almost hear the grinding of enamel, but the Baron held back, smiled forcedly, and said:

"Let's leave the bickering aside. If I did not show the appropriate courtesy and overstepped some boundaries in the heat of the moment, it is the fault of hot-headedness, not the desire to offend."

Bonald's companions looked at each other, apparently not quite sure how to proceed. The Baron was clearly avoiding an admission of guilt, much less an open apology, but Frels didn't seem inclined to fight to the bitter end either. Perhaps the potential for negotiation had not yet been exhausted. Pantin gently stroked his short beard, squinted a little with a look of sorrow, but somehow abstracted, as if he regretted in general the wickedness of the human race. His absolutely white mustache and beard seemed even lighter against the background of his tanned face. And no one seemed to be confused by the sight of his inhuman eyes, though the medicine woman doubted that strangers even noticed the sorcerer. Why, with such abilities, would he even take up a sword? There was something wrong with these warrior-mages.

"My friend," said Bonald, making another run. "Should we resist the inevitable?"

Frels looked the way there was no doubt that if he had a sword, the fight would probably have started by now. But the knight was silent and seemed to be listening, even though it seemed as if smoke and sparks were coming out of his ears.

You're not such a good negotiator, Elena concluded, glancing at the baron furtively. You should have gone in from afar, more gently, and, of course, without witnesses. And here is a serious talk, and in front of observers. It's a miracle that it has not escalated into a scandal. Although... maybe that was the plan. Yes, it was certainly not her place to criticize a stranger for lack of diplomatic skills.

While Elena was experiencing a pang of shame at the memory of Artigo's recent education, the situation was heating up again. The healer listened to the Baron's soft, almost cordial suggestion, but Frels' reaction was immediate.

"Are you out of your mind?!" literally roared the old warrior. "We have never served as Ruthiers, and we never will!"

"Not Ruthiers. The fate of a Lóvag is also honorable and thus can be saved..." Bonald protested, trying to save the day, but it was too late. Frels was as furious as a haystack full of hay when a torch was thrown into it.

"Lovagh, ruthier, what difference does it make!" Frels, crimson with exertion, shouted in such a way that he looked as if he were about to have a stroke. "'Even a Betyar! It's all the same! This is my land, seventeen generations have fought for it and fallen ashes into it!"

"You will keep your fief," the Baron made one last attempt. His retinue pulled together, and those who had dismounted stood shoulder to shoulder, the mounted men did something, Elena, being a very bad rider, didn't understand what, but the horses were also alert, shaking their hooves.

"Yes, not all of it, but enough for your children to keep the title. I don't need to ruin you, I need to..."

"You filthy bastard!" Frels shouted, shaking his fists. "You're going to take my domain, leave me a shred of it so I can barely turn on my heel! And turn me into a mercenary! Now, remember, that ain't gonna happen! You came to me like a snake, sneaking in with words of friendship, and you wanted to shame me in front of my family, guests, and servants!"

"You have no servants," laughed the Baron insultingly and with evident superiority, throwing aside the now useless restraint.

"But I have what you, your children, and your children's children will never have!" Frels growled, raising a clenched fist, not to threaten a beating, but rather to signify the weight of his words. The contemptuous grin left the baron's face at once, and Bonald seemed to understand what the knight intended to say next.

"I have honor," Frels said in a loud, deliberate voice. "My lineage, stretching across three centuries without interruption. I live in the past and the future, as an heir and father. I am a nobleman by land and blood, that is what you will never have. Asha of the rope-men who bought a pedigree wife and a place in someone else's antechamber for thieving gold. Barons of the inkwell!"

Bonald turned pale and reflexively grasped the hilt of his dagger, while Frels grinned wildly and spread his arms as if offering himself as a sacrifice. The daughter cried out and rushed to her father, but Gamilla intercepted her, throwing her into the minstrel's arms to stop the freckled girl from doing anything foolish.

"What, are you going to kill me?" Frels laughed.

"Oh, no," the Baron's handsome face twisted in a grimace, and he struggled to hold himself together, but he did. "I won't even challenge you to a duel of honor, my good man. You don't want to give a part of it away while keeping the core? Then you lose everything."

"I cannot be taken out of my class," said Frels haughtily. "You can't gather thirteen noble men to take the sin of misjudgment upon their souls. And the military gathering is not until spring. I shall be ready for it."

"And you think your scheme will succeed?" Bonald laughed without hiding his mockery. "Oh, Pantocrator, so naive....."

He cut short his laughter, at once, as if he had slammed the iron-clad lid of a chest.

"Collect silver, buy a full set of equipment, and pass it to each other one by one, passing the inspection. Changing the harness and cape, repainting the shield, good idea."

Now Frels turned pale. He took a step back as if shielding himself from the murderous words.

"Hey!" the Baron waved without deference or even looking back.

Slowly, as if the rider's hand were not firm, the horse came out, carrying the very same well-equipped soldier. The cavalryman turned away, looked pointedly away, and generally showed a full picture of a guilty conscience.

"Bone of the earth, salt of the army," said the Highlander, but without much sarcasm. "Well, everything is clear now."

"How could it be..." With these words Frels stepped forward, looking upward. The woman couldn't see his face, but judging by his figure, the old man was already crushed by the realization of the disaster, but still frantically hoping for a miracle.

"How could... like this? Did you really sell us out?"

"Oh, no," the Baron answered in place of the silent rider. "He didn't sell you. He robbed you. He bought ammunition and a horse with all the money you had collected. And then he ran away. Well..." Now Bonald looked around. "Not too far, really. Now, he was ashamed of his unworthy behavior and wished he hadn't hung himself from the first tree."

"You can't..."

"Of course I can. He's not even a squire. I'll go through the rest of you who were involved in this fraud, show him to everyone, and then I'll hang him up...."

The rider who had stolen the horse and armor was the third person who had changed color during the not-too-long conversation, becoming white, but if the Baron and Frels were pale with rage, this poor man was painted with horror.

"... Or not," Bonald added. "We'll see. Depends on his willingness to testify for the truth. "Now get out."

Obeying the new gesture, the traitor pulled on the reins, forcing the horse to stagger back to the background. The baron's retinue now grinned openly, triumphant. Gaval released the dark-haired daughter of Frels; the girl was in no hurry to flee, broken and humiliated by the bad news.

"I..." Frels pressed his lips together. For a moment it even seemed that he was ready to make peace in the light of, so to speak, newly discovered circumstances. But the pride of a nobleman of blood and land prevailed.

"You'll get nothing," the old man said with iron determination, his hands behind his back. "Nothing. In the spring, I will march in front of my peers, on horseback and properly armed. You will be shamed."

Cadfal snorted angrily and clenched his wand with both hands, the hard fibers seeming to creak. It was unclear what had hurt the redeemer so much.

"By spring, you'll have at best re-mortgaged everything you can and put together an incomplete set with a skinny nag," the Baron commented mockingly. Evidently, Bonald had given up trying to come to an agreement and was now scoffing openly. "And I, in the sight of men of honor, will accuse all of you."

The face of the thieving horseman beneath the retracted visor reflected incredible relief.

"The buyer, the seller, and one of your four will probably agree to testify against the others. That'll be enough for a nobleman's Apella."

"Thirteen worthy men," I had to give Frels credit for holding his ground. "They'll dismiss the testimony of the nobodies and the threatened accusation. Apella will not take your side. I am a nobleman, and you are a hyena picking up scraps."

"It will, it will," the Baron smirked. "There's nothing in the book that says an Apella can't be made up of Lovags. And you could be a part of it if you were a little smarter. As it is, you won't be a man of honor before the first haymaking."

"I'll always be him!" Frels growled, pounding his fist on his chest. "Honor cannot be given or taken away at the stroke of a quill. And if you manage to buy an Apella, there is still the Court! The Court will protect my rights."

"What a Court?" The "inky" nobleman laughed heartily, sincerely. "Justiciars and judges are now playing the game, dividing property and power while Milvess is shaky. Justice can be obtained, but it must be paid for. I have what it takes to buy myself some justice. Do you?"

"I'll complain," Frels didn't give up. "I will go to..."

"And where will you go?" the baron interrupted him, no longer embarrassed. "The Emperor is far away, he can't see from the throne. The king-tetrarch has his own concerns, he can't stop the vendetta of Ayme-Dorbo and the one-eyed whore Carnavon, so look, the royal capital will burn. What does he have to do with the vain concerns of our wilderness? The Regency Council has sold out to the islanders, let them not come to us with their capitularies. The Earl loves and appreciates me. He needs order and an army in constant service, I give them, regularly and effectively. I am needed and useful to everyone, and you are a proud beggar."

Frels moved his lips as if reciting incredibly sophisticated insults and arguments to himself, but he only spoke aloud:

"Get out."

"Whatever you say," agreed the Baron and ordered his men. "Mount up, we're leaving. But remember..." Bonald turned his whole body toward Frels again. "I came to you with an open heart and an honest offer, and you spit in them. I allowed you to still call yourself a man of honor. In return, you have insulted and humiliated me before my companions, as well as before the unbred and alien people."

"Get out," the Frels repeated, sounding devastated and clearly having lost all his anger.

"But I am kind," the Baron grinned, ignoring the demand, feeling the force. "I will allow you to atone for the sin of hubris. Now we'll ride off into the sunset to visit the next man on the list of swindlers. On horseback, of course, but without haste. Find a nag, if there are any left on this farm. Maybe there's a mule. No mule, get on a donkey, or run very fast. If you catch up with us by mid-day watch, I'll let you stay a lovag and even own this ruin called a castle. If you're done before sundown, I'll let you stay as a tenant, albeit a penniless one. And I'll even marry off your daughter in a more favorable marriage, for I am kind! The Aimee-Dorbo have made it a good custom to marry their archers and guards to maidens of good families but without much ambition. It is not good for a wife to have great ambition."

The daughter squeaked pitifully, and Gaval hugged her again, pulling her tighter.

The Baron glanced at the house where Grimal and Artigo had hidden. He lingered for a moment, as if pondering, and Elena realized clearly that if Bonald said anything, did anything, or gave even the slightest excuse to Ranjan, that word or action would be the last in the life of the "inky". And then it would be a fight to the last man, because the retinue had to avenge their patron, and the travelers, in turn, could not let the witnesses out alive.

It was all right. In one motion the Baron flew up into the saddle; for a few moments it seemed as if he would spit one last time, but no, he restrained himself from the plebeian gesture. The riders moved on, pulling into a column of two. Frels stood looking down at his feet for a while, his shoulders slumping. The daughter finally broke free and ran up to hug her father, saying something unintelligible. They both hugged each other tightly and joylessly and shuffled toward the house, paying no attention to the people around them.

"It's all right," Cadfal said, surprisingly angry. "But we must not linger here. Let's get on our way."

"But what about..." Gaval said, but the crossbowwoman slapped him on the wrist and shouted something about an ass that should be held in check.

"Do we not..." Elena murmured, more automatically than at a call of the soul. "No way...?"

"No way," Pantin said gloomily.

"But we..."

"We will leave, one way or another. And they," Pantin pointed towards the house. "Will remain. Alone with the consequences of our intercession."

"Like we're running," the woman said angrily.

"It is," the gray-eyed man said gravely. "And you must run very fast. The county is small, but the roads are bad. We must go South, to the border of the realm."

Ranjan slid his sword into its scabbard with a clatter and strode sprawlingly toward the house, obviously to check on Artigo.

"Take me away from here," the Highlander asked in a surprisingly polite manner, pulling himself up on a fence post. "I won't be a burden."

"You can barely walk," Elena grimaced.

"I'll make a crutch," suggested Maryadek, firmly standing on his healthy leg. "You won't be able to walk very fast with your luggage and the child, I'll catch up with you. There's no way I can stay here."

"And why do we need you?" Rapist asked abruptly. "A one-legged poacher?"

"I'm a crippled fighter now, but still a fighter. Half a warrior is better than no warrior. I also know how to set traps and get food in the woods. It's a bad hunt here, the animals have been killed, but the little things are still caught who haven't laid down till spring."

"Pack up," Rapist said laconically, curiously, without the slightest interest in his companions' opinions and with Cadfal's acquiescence. "I'll help you with the crutch, but you'll have to walk with it yourself, we don't wait for stragglers."

"You'll give the healer all the money. The money in the belt, too," Gamilla, as it turned out, was monitoring the situation well and hearing everything she needed to.

"Then at least let me ride a horse from time to time," the Highlander muttered, but without pressure. From the look of him, he would have agreed to pay with his clothes, if they would have taken him with them and let him warm himself by the fire under guard.

* * *

"It was wrong that we didn't help," Elena muttered under her breath. She was ashamed, and though common sense told her that there was nothing she could do about it, it didn't stop her from feeling ashamed.

They packed quickly and left without delay. Ranjan silently placed two more coins on the table. Frels thanked him with a nod, and that was the end of the farewell. The travelers had brought with them vegetables for the journey and cooked chicken so that the food crisis was postponed for a few days.

"We should have..." the woman repeated.

It sounded pathetic and useless, like a promise to beat everyone up after a lost fight. Cadfal heard Elena and acted unexpectedly. The Redeemer pulled in his cheeks, moved his jaws as if sucking out all the moisture he could gather, then spat on the curb and cursed quietly.

"What are you about?" Elena didn't understand.

"Nob-i-i-ility," the redeemer stretched out with incredible contempt. And spat again with the words. "Poor Frels, the soul is torn with grief. Bastard..."

"What's the matter with you?!" The healer said sharply.

"She doesn't understand," said Rapist, walking as usual in small and frequent steps, his shoelaces tied with laces dangling from his chest. "Brother, she had not encountered knights or cultivated cropland. She really doesn't understand."

Cadfal moved his jaws as if about to spit a third time, but held back. And asked:

"A poor knight, eagle-eyed, heart forged of solid nobility, right? That's what it looks like from the outside, right?"

"Well... yes," in the soul of the medicine woman fought two feelings, on the one hand, natural indignation, on the other suspicion that here not everything is not so obvious, otherwise straight as a spear redeemer would not sneer.

"Nobility!" snorted Cadfal. "But tell me, Hel... you've seen their household, haven't you?"

"Yes."

"Do you think it will yield sixteen kilograms of silver a year in net profit?"

"Well..." Elena thought for a moment. Thanks to the Milves School of life, she was able to estimate the profitability of urban trades. But agriculture...

"I'll give you a hint. No way. Eight kilos, maybe. If it's a good year. The winter will be warm and snowy. And only if everything the land gives is converted into money, not a penny to feed the villagers."

An understanding dawned in Elena's head of what the Redeemer was leading to, but so far it was weak, like a spark in the night. Such a rotten spark, more like a will-o'-the-wisp among the swamps.

"And tell me, master of knife and potion, do you think the noble Frels will spare at least a pot of silver to feed their own? Or will he squeeze every last drop out of them, every last bulb and apple, in order to equip himself for the inspection properly? To pay a little of the debts he would now go deeper into?"

"But there are rules, laws. There are no serfs here!" Elena tried to argue.

"La-a-a-w?" Cadfal said snidely. "You saw him this morning. In all its glory, from all sides. Didn't you like the fat face of justice?"

Elena swallowed and lowered her eyes to her feet, to the trampled ground of the road.

"Well, what about Frels," said Cadfal, who was getting angry. "Will he exchange his three hundred years of noble lineage for the full stomachs of the filthy peasant? Or would he not? Or would he starve them to death, but find the silver?"

Elena was silent. Her stomach hurt, and her soul felt disgusting as if a bucket of sewage had been splashed.

"You are silent," the redeemer stated sadly and without any triumph. "And tell me then, what difference does it make for the poor fellows that now they are picking at the cold earth with wooden hoes, who will skin them in the spring, a worthy Frels or an unworthy Baron? Both need the same thing. Exactly the same thing."

"The Baron is better," Gamilla suddenly said. "He has a lot of tenants and farm laborers. He doesn't have to struggle for every penny. He can afford not to rob everyone so that there is little left. Not out of kindness, but to gain a little fat, he can cut it off next year. But the Frels have no reason to think about future years, they will come when they come, but the estate must be preserved now."

Rapist, without stopping, tapped the shaft of his spear, as if to make a point and agree.

"It's just that one of them wasn't too turntable," Cadfal rounded off the thought. "And that's why poor, unfortunate, he has to eat with the filthy crowd, an orphan, his daughter is shoveling chicken shit with her white, lordly hands. And the other is a little more cunning and meaner, on a good horse and with a retinue on the mountains and hills. But if fate had turned a little differently, you wouldn't have noticed the difference. The Baron would be proud and honest, and Frels would be choking on his three hundred years of pedigree...".

"Enough," Rapist asked softly and forcefully. "Enough."

"Enough is enough," Cadfal still spat once more.

"You from the peasants." it dawned on Elena. "He," she pointed to the old spearman. "Is a knight. But you don't. You saw it all yourself, right? From below... from the bottom?"

Cadfal remained silent, but that silence was more eloquent than any words.

"Enough," Rapist asked softly, more like gently commanded. "Many different words have been said today. And after long speeches, it is best to be silent."

He gripped his spear more comfortably and walked faster. Cadfal sped up, too, moving with surprising agility for his cubic form. The Highlander's stick clattered behind him, and he was indeed keeping pace.

Again the journey, again the wandering, Elena thought. Again a life in danger, complete uncertainty ahead. But now Pantin was with them, mysterious, frightening, and, it must be assumed, there would be a heart-to-heart talk in the evening. What interested the woman most was what Pantin had said, "Did you think your name was Elena?". For she knew quite clearly that she had never revealed her earthly name to anyone here.

* * *
 
Chapter 7
* * *
"We, cronies, friends, servants of Artigo the Indomitable and Ottovio the Valiant, those who had ignited the War of Wrath, we hated each other, fiercely, overpoweringly. But, amazingly, that same hatred brought us closer together. To destroy the enemy, we had to know his strengths and weaknesses, to know him better than a moneylender, who lends gold and studies his future debtor. And knowledge leads to understanding. And, in the end, the sworn enemy became closer and more understandable than another comrade-in-arms.

My friends and my enemies have long since rested in their graves... those fortunate enough to have found a grave or crypt for a skull with God-fearing engraving. But in my memory, they are all but silent shadows now. Shadows that wait patiently beyond the brink of death to finally welcome the last soldier of long-dead armies into their ranks"

Gaval Sentry-Poton-Batleau.


"A ninth letter to my son, about our enemies and hatred."
* * *

"Wine?" Curzio was rather performing the ritual than asking, but the sudden answer confused him a little.

"Water," Yulo, the head of the Council of Gold and Silver, said dryly and coldly, like a killer winter wind.

"Please," Curzio thanked himself for his foresight and moderation. He drank little wine, preferring southern beer and pure water, so a carafe of water from the deep well was always within reach.

The islander's tableware was inferior to Wartensleben's, of course, but it was also worthy of dignitaries, so there was no shame in handing Yulo an exquisite silver-braided glass. The woman took a slow and shallow sip, staring at Curzio with a heavy and impenetrable gaze. It looked truly evil and creepy, considering the woman's right eye was wide open and the left one was covered by turtle eyelids, and visibly squinted. Yulo changed her habits and instead of a huge wig, with no less huge ribbon, she cut her hair almost bald, leaving only a short hedgehog. In public, the defiant hairstyle was concealed by a dainty cap, but now, in the afternoon sunlight, the first gray of her head was silvery.

Why doesn't she fix her face with magic, Curzio thought? Yes, it's not cheap, to put it bluntly, not more than ten mages in the entire Ecumene can do it. But someone of her level could afford it. And, obeying a certain naiveté, the islander decided to break the long-standing tradition, as well as the pre-checked plan of heavy conversation. Curzio smiled slightly and asked bluntly:

"Do you speak now as the head of your Council, as the extraordinary envoy of Saltoluchard, or as an old friend of mine?"

"Frankly," Yulo said with the same dryness as before, blinking her heavy eyelids like a wise turtle of the open sea. "And blunt. Not like you."

"Alas," Curzio replied with the same smile. "Perhaps I've been on the mainland too long and have been in contact with the people of the Great Land."

"Yes. It has spoiled your manners," Yulo agreed, tapping the tip of her long fingernail against the giant pearls gathered in an elaborate necklace.

Curzio suddenly remembered that such curiosities were only obtained in very deep crevices, where predatory octopuses lived, and there was even an unspoken knowledge that each silver ball was paid for with the lives of at least three divers. In other words, Yulo has worn at least three dozen dead men around her long, graceful neck. This echoes the continental aristocracy's custom of wearing clothes made from the yarn of man-eating spiders.

"Count me in three roles at once," she continued, folding her arms across her stomach, covering the gold buckle of her woven belt.

"It would be necessary to specify which spiritual substance prevails," Curzio remarked. "But that would probably be unnecessary."

"Exactly. But since we've accepted the decline of your manners as fact, I think I'll allow myself the luxury of-" Yulo wiggled her fingers in the air, as if selecting the right word from the dust dancing in the yellow light. "Straightness."

She stood up, rustling the precious fabric of her continental-style dress tailored in a straight silhouette, with no fancy bows or wide skirts that looked like loose sails. She approached a tall floor-to-ceiling glass window that spanned the entire wall of the large room. Curzio stood a little behind; he already knew he could see Yulo.

The Emperor had five residences traditionally named after the colors of the rainbow, and it was believed that the Lord of the World alternated between them according to mood, season, and general hardships. From Red - for festivities and days of general prosperity - to Purple intended to govern the realm in times of great calamity and war. Only three - Yellow, Green, and Blue - were actually used, the rest having been given over to archives and other auxiliary services of the Court for many years. One had become the center of the postal service, and the other had not long ago burned to the ground, reducing to ashes the account books of the great fairs of Milvess and the registry of the Crown's forests.

The young Emperor had chosen the Blue Palace as his residence for the time being, formally for the winter and in fulfillment of the mourning for his predecessor who had died prematurely. In fact, it was more of a house arrest, so the boy would not interfere with serious business and would be somewhere out of the way, but at the same time close to Milvess, in easy reach of couriers with papers for the highest approval and lordship's signature. The Blue Palace was smaller than the rest and looked more like some primator's manor house in a dense park. It was considered a "mournful" place, but Curzio liked it - relatively sparse, quiet, and a real forest around, though not a forest. Among other things, there was a good training ground with a small arena and a crossbow range. All the body arts could be practiced here, from horse racing to wrestling. But right now, the excellent destrier was bored, digging the sand of the arena with his hoof. The guards froze, halberds pointed toward the sky. On a green rectangle planted with a special "everlasting" grass, two figures were converging and diverging in a foot sword fight. The thick yet transparent glass muffled the clang of metal, so the fight was silent. It was obvious, however, that the smaller figure was very poor with his weapons, but he was trying hard.

Yulo watched the contraction and said without turning around:

"So? I'm ready to hear you out. And mind you, I'm not waiting for your excuses, I'm inviting you to speak up. Appreciate that and don't abuse the last few drops of my trust."

Curzio took a step back, hands behind his back. At such moments, the deliberate pretentiousness and uncomfortableness of Saltoluchard's ceremonial dress were particularly acute. It looked silly, too, considering that the woman was dressed in continental fashion.

"You know... It's funny," the man said. Curzio knew he was running on waves that weren't even covered in ice, but he decided: in this case, he could take a risk like Prince Gayot. If they expect one thing from you, do another, but carefully, without overdoing it.

"What's so funny about this?" the woman asked without turning around.

"How many years have passed…" Curzio said thoughtfully. "Once upon a time, a boy and a girl, and then a young man and a young woman dreamed. Alone, unwanted, outcasts in their own families. And where did those dreams lead? To the capital of the world. I would say it is poetic."

Yulo turned a quarter turn and measured Curzio with a stern look, in which there was irony bordering on sarcasm.

"My friend, you were the outcast. And I was just an ugly child, the result of five generations of cousin and second cousin blood. And it was you who dreamed, I only listened, because you were the only one who was kind to the long-necked, slant-eyed freak. On the other hand, the slant-eyed ugly woman was the only one who was friends with the young and beggarly Malt...."

She sighed, this time with a sincerity that God knows was feigned or genuine.

"Well, I'll take that as a successful bow on the nostalgia string. I will not be merciful, but I will listen to whatever you have to say. But don't waste my time."

Yulo sighed again and took a step towards her interlocutor.

"Curtz, why are you so stupid?" she asked, almost like a real person. "Everything was going so well... A couple more years and you would have become my assistant, the second man in the Council of Gold. And then... who knows... A woman could never be a Doge, but you could. And the two of us."

She waved her hands eloquently. Curzio sadly repeated her gesture and said:

"Because sometimes you should stick your principles where the toilet rags are. And sometimes you don't. I made a choice then, and maybe Two guided me."

"I'm listening. What kind of pathetic conspiracy have you organized?"

The woman's face turned into an inexpressive mask, her eyes frozen like painted balls of marble. It became clear that the string of sad nostalgia had frozen, and it was time to talk strictly business.

"This is not a conspiracy," Curzio said seriously and judiciously. "It is rather an association of intelligent and caring people who want to look into the future. To anticipate it, and if possible to sculpt it, like sculptors."

"Pretentious. So far you have only angered a worthy teacher, whom, by the way, we sent from the far south, the best of the best. He's about to challenge the boorish earl to a duel of honor."

Curzio snorted sincerely, not holding back a smile.

"A false god to help him," the man said cheerfully. "If you value this mentor, you'd better talk him out of it. Shotan will use his right to choose the weapon and kill the fool."

"Yes?.." Yulo thought for a moment. "You seem to appreciate this upstart."

"Ancestral precepts," Curzio said meaningfully. "To know the usefulness of every tool, to consider it, and to use it for good. You may have noticed that our... miserable conspiracy has brought together a very interesting circle of people. But before I turn to it, I will allow myself to ask a question."

"Ask."

"How much money is in Saltoluchard's coffers? At the moment."

"Curtz, are you crazy?" Yulo asked in no uncertain terms. "I remind you that you are in disgrace and, given your recent behavior, you have a good chance of coming home with a scarf around your neck."

"Formally, I am still a member of the Privy Council, albeit as a special counselor. No one has relieved me of my duties and rights. They have been enumerated quite clearly. I could ask such questions, at my own risk, with the expectation that their validity would be approved after the Council... or its representatives."

"That's clever," the woman agreed. With a barely audible rustle of her dress, she walked to the back of the room and gracefully lowered herself onto a banquette chair. In front of Yulo thus appeared a graceful table with a board for playing "Galleys", a very popular accessory this year. Milvess was quick to adopt the habits of his new hosts, from clothing and viands to fashionable trinkets.

"Well, ask," the woman allowed. "With full understanding of the possible consequences."

"Honorable Madam, head of the Council of Gold and Silver, how much of the yellow and red metal is now stored in the cellars of Saltoluchard?"

"Two hundred and thirty-nine full 'dry' barrels," Yulo answered without delay.

Curzio closed his eyes for a moment, translating the pure weight of the noble metal into standard "good" coins, then swallowed, the only thing that gave away his feelings. But that didn't escape Yulo's gaze.

"Yes," she replied briefly to the unspoken question. "The treasury is a little... overstretched."

"Half a million gold," Curzio said, more to himself. "I thought we had at least a million. At least. So Rule of Five is broken, then?"

"Formally broken," Yulo said with the coldness of strict knowledge. "We have about eighteen percent of the world's gold under our thumb."

Curzio poured a glass of water, masking a moment of confusion behind the natural movement. Of course, Yulo understood his interlocutor's maneuver perfectly, smiling sarcastically.

"Well," Curzio said, taking a tiny sip. "I guess that's even better."

Yulo raised an eyebrow over her bulging eye, the left, squinting, remained motionless, as if her entire orbit was paralyzed.

"I see," Curzio rubbed his palms together like a potter preparing to put his fingers on a lump of clay. Or a masseur warming cold hands.

"The motives are really very simple," he said with the same businesslike manner and sat opposite Yulo so the Galley board was between the two interlocutors.

"By the way... funny," grinned the man, unfolding a board in the shape of two ships tied together by their sides. "We see this game as a friendly competition between oarsmen who jump from oar to oar. The mainlanders have turned it into a violent boarding game. Does that speak to their inferiority and malice, or to our reputation in their eyes?"

Yulo remained silent, hypnotizing the man with an unblinking stare.

"So," Curzio picked up a palm full of chips and placed one on the table. "One. The change of power has not gone smoothly, the swamp of the mainland nobility has been stirred up from the bottom to the top. That's a problem and a costly one at that."

Yulo smiled very softly at the outsider. Curzio was not an outsider, so he placed the next checker a little faster.

"Second. Famine is coming. More like the Famine," he emphasized the capital letter. "And I suppose the first problem is that the "famine" warehouses are empty, aren't they? They're probably being emptied by now, and what's left will be looted by spring. The committees are not doing their duties because they are afraid to pressure the highborns and merchant guilds into an unstable situation. If the next "eye and hand" of the imperial crown gets a hint about how easy it is these days to get poisoned by stale mutton or fall on his own dagger a few times, who will protect him? No one. Am I right?"

Yulo was silent, but that silence was quite... eloquent, shall we say.

"Third," the wooden circle clattered to the polished tabletop. "To hold on to power, to keep the Empire from collapsing into separate kingdoms, to somehow organize the distribution of bread, you need troops. Numerous troops must be well paid or they will be overbought for bread and gold. You need an army. And there is one."

Curzio shook his fist thoughtfully with the clenched chips, as if to give the woman time to think about what she had heard, then put out a fourth checker.

"But there is no money to pay them."

Curzio, in turn, raised an eyebrow at Yulo.

"It all sounds pretty reasonable so far," she agreed.

"Then let's continue."

A new chip has been added to the overall lineup.

"Fifth. Our ancestral home will not pay. Even if the Council decided to break the rules there would be no money to cover the shortfall. And then there's six. I remember a conversation not so long ago about the universe going up in flames. Judging by the fuss we're all making here, the obvious must have become clear - now is not the time to be hiding out across the Strait. Is it? If the continent doesn't keep up its supply of bread and ship's timber, the Aleinsae family will lose a lot of its luster. We can't survive on fish, the sea around the Island has been devastated by centuries of unrestricted fishing."

And again Yulo remained eloquently silent.

"Seven. The Primators are lying in wait to see how it all ends. The "old" aristocracy demonstrates that it does not deny, but does not accept the new power unconditionally. Thus, they are pushing us to pay our old debts. It's a hook from which, unfortunately, we can't get off," Curzio continued to lay out the rounds. "The conclusion is simple and obvious: we must get the money. At any price. And it must be planned for several years at once. So no one-time levies will help. We must raise taxes. But if the Court and the Council of Regents simply send out an imperial edict to the towns and cities to raise the old taxes and introduce new ones, the Ecumene will immediately explode into a general revolt. And our great army will drown in it like a grain of sand in the sea."

Yulo gave silent and slow applause, her squinted eye almost so that the head of the Council of Gold and Silver now seemed like a wise and sinister frog. Curzio tossed the ninth and final chip, caught it, and put it in with the others, closing the row.

"Which means you'll be calling the Senate. And quickly, very quickly. You need to gather them, explain what's going on, work with the elected representatives, distribute threats and bribes with all generosity, and get united consent, at least nominal. And approve the new taxes by the votes of all the classes."

"The last time the Senate met was more than two centuries ago," Yulo said with a vague intonation that didn't sound like denial, anyway. "And even then, it sounded like a travesty."

"So this will be the first real convocation since the Disaster," Curzio summarized. "God willing, it will be a year. And even then we'll have to delay the soldiers' salaries."

"You're out of chips," the woman remarked.

"Yes, indeed," Curzio agreed. "But there were still some clever thoughts in store. Do I interest you? Shall I continue?"

"Please. I still don't see the connection between the possible convening of the Senate and your dubious machinations. It seems more like trying to pull fish out of other people's nets in a storm. And rest assured, dozens of denunciations are already flying to the Council."

"In the hour when the Aleinsae must unite in the face of danger," Curzio said, eagerly. "The prodigal son is conspiring behind the Regents' backs."

"That's right."

"In fact, they are wrong. You are mistaken," clarified the suspected conspirator. "My considerations are purely practical and noble."

"Wow, what an original combination," the woman marveled. "Nobility and practicality combine like water and oil. Or are you an alchemist who found a way to combine the incongruous?"

"Yes," the man waved his hands. "I'm a wizard. Look."

He stood up and walked around, gesturing as he went.

"Getting the Senate together is not easy. Getting it to come to a common decision is doubly difficult, and since we're talking about taxes, it's easier to get the moon out of the sky. The main obstacle is our reputation. After everything that's happened, it won't be easy to convince everyone that the Board of Regents wants money for the greater good, not to fill the coffers of the Island. Especially since that's exactly what the Board wants, among other things. And that's where we need the Emperor."

"We have one."

"No, we have a puppet that everyone is already openly saying is a puppet on strings strung from fishing line. We have a boy who has not yet hated the Regents solely by virtue of God's handiwork. We have an eighth son who can't do anything and primarily can't look, talk, or just walk like the Emperor, Lord of the World."

"So what?"

"You will ask and demand money for the good of the Empire and the Ecumene because these entities are inseparable... for the Great Land, but we will modestly keep silent about such a small thing. So we have to show the Emperor not from afar like a rag doll on a stick. He will have to communicate with the elected, give them some guarantees, and promise them privileges, after all, symbolizes power. And what if the guy suddenly complains, or at least blabs someone about his dissatisfaction with his position? If he just happens to be insecure, timid, and fearful? If he ends up openly resenting it?"

"That wouldn't be good," Yulo agreed.

"But that's where this is headed. You've locked Ottovio in the farthest residence, cut him off from all matters of Imperial governance. You've taught him things he has no interest in. You treat him like a petty nobleman of Saltoluchard. Whether you hide him from the Senate or show him as he is neither is good enough."

"But then you come on deck with daggers in your teeth?"

"Yes. Count Shotan. An example to poor nobles who dream of earning privilege and wealth through service. And by serving the Empire, not the tetrarchs and dukes ready to tear the Ecumene apart. Prince Gayot will please the lower classes because a Highlander is as savage as an ordinary shopkeeper or craftsman. Duke Wartensleben. An honorable and respected representative of the Bonoms. And at last, I, the humble son of Saltoluchard, known to all for my moderate views and kindly disposition toward the Great Land."

"It's like a fabulous entourage. The epitome of all virtues."

"Yes. We are wise educators who stand behind a young, but smart, strong, skilled in martial arts and sciences ruler. Who can go to a tournament and discuss difficult issues with his elected officials. For example, how to limit the interest on loans. Whether it is possible to replace "personal" taxes with levies on "smokes". How to curb the payoffs and ensure that the money collected for "famine" needs does not end up in the coffers of thieves. And so on. In our hands, Ottovio will become..."

"Stubborn," the woman finished in his place. "Arrogant. Uncontrollable. I mean a true emperor. We might have to negotiate with him, persuade him, justify him. Why should we?"

"The Aleinsae family is like a man who stands on two ice floes and can't decide which one to choose. But the ice is breaking up, and fast. The Council and the Doge want to do business according to the old ways, but they want the gold to pour into their coffers in a new way. That's not going to work. Or we stick to the old ways and keep our defenses against the world, milking gold and silver out of it. In this case, Ottovio, according to tradition, should be content to live in a good house, have servants, respect, and eat meat every day, not salted fish. Or we rule the Empire directly, but then we should act imperial. Like real rulers. And Ottovio is no longer the eighth son of a useless branch of the Aleinsae, but the leader and ruler of a united world. Primators, bonomes, lower classes, capital, merchant guilds, workshops, they look at us and see insanely rich, but still provincial nobles who walk out of rank. And soon they may realize that our ambitions are beyond us. This cannot be allowed to happen. We need a strong and intelligent Emperor, who will not grit his teeth in hatred at the word - Saltoluchard."

"And you will ascend to the imperial throne, having recouped all your losses."

"I am modest," Curzio said. "I am content with little. The opportunity to be a discreet counselor, a link between the Great Land and the Island, would suit me just fine."

The Head of Saltoluchard's treasury drank half the glass leisurely, savoring the taste of pure water. It was hard to get such water on the Island, and no matter how much it was purified, the liquid still tasted faintly of sea salt or was completely tasteless.

"I see your point," Yulo said, but she didn't sound approved. "By the way," she changed the subject abruptly. "How do you intend to instill in him an interest in the sciences? To speak freely with the negociants, to convince them of the necessity of new taxes, it is not enough to read Kleken of Rovia, although it is very useful. You must know their trade, books of account and money."

"Oh..." this time Curzio's smile promised a fascinating riddle. "I think we'll be able to interest Ottovio in a matter that at first glance seems boring, one might even say dreary."

Yulo looked at her interlocutor long and carefully, then suddenly hummed understandingly.

"So that's who you bought the emergency magical transfer for....."

* * *

"Now it's time to devote some time to books."

"Udolar-" Ottovio paused and corrected himself. "Your Grace. Or is it Lordship?"

"Your Lordship. But if you wish to emphasize respect for the interlocutor, to distinguish him from the others, and also to show his adherence to antiquity, you can say: "Most Serene and Powerful Sovereign".

Udolar caught himself looking at the young Emperor with an almost fatherly gentleness. I'm getting old, the Duke thought, or maybe it's the habit of living in a cage with spiders. After communicating with predatory creatures, who have only faces from people, it is enough to look at an ordinary good man, and the soul becomes softer than wax.

It was common knowledge that the Aleinsae were very reluctant to dilute the thick ichor of the Lords of the Waves with the watery red water of the mainlanders. That is, they practiced close marriages, much closer than the Church of Pantocrator allowed. This is how the property and purity of blood of one of the oldest families of the Ecumene were protected. But everything has its price, and over the centuries of such practice, the Aleynsee's chosenness began to be clearly reflected on their faces. And not just their faces. It was whispered that in the noble houses of the Island, nearly half of the babies were born dead or died in the first days of life, while on the continent death took no more than a third of the motherless newborns and only one in five in wealthy families.

Ottovio, however, had been spared the harsh fate, probably because of the healthier blood of the side branch of Gotdua. The fourteen-year-old was unusually swarthy, but his hair was a rare shade of gold and dark red, and his eyebrows seemed almost white. His face was clean, and his gray eyes showed a natural intelligence that had not been sharpened by elaborate exercises. His nose seemed a little wide but within normal limits.

His wife will be unhappy, the Duke thought. If a drop of masculinity (as the bloody but skillful bastard Shotan was doing) were to be poured into this vessel, the first beauties of Milvess would mercilessly poison each other in the struggle for the ruler's favorable attention, and not only for profit.

But there is still a lot of work to be done to make that happen.

"You have such a strange double name in the Great Land," complained the young emperor.

"It has been so for a long time, my lord," explained Wartensleben, with a casual air. "In the Old Empire, there was originally no rank system of nobility. There were commoners, men of honor, and mages. That was the end of the division of society. Over time, however, everything became more complicated, and different kingdoms were formed differently. The Emperors sought to introduce a single statute but did not dare to abolish the established traditions. As a result, I am at once duke, nador and gastald. And dear Count Shotan is also a gastald, but a fo-ishpan. Lovag is a lowland warrior nobleman, but at the same time "Lovari" is also called a baroness, in memory of the times of the Calamity, when wives and daughters, left without husbands and fathers, themselves defended their possessions like real warriors."

"Difficult," Ottovio repeated with wistful hopelessness.

"Yes, that's true," the Duke didn't argue. "But you will have to learn these nuances, my lord. Them, and much more."

Ottovio looked up at the word "have to," but he remained silent, listening. He was used to the Duke's speeches being useful and reasonable.

"Great kingdoms are assembled by the swords of warriors. But they are held and preserved by the power of the quill and the spreadsheet. My lord, you stand on the shoulders of the Titans who united the Ecumene, but what has been gathered can always be destroyed. You are to rule the realm in difficult times. You must face them head-on."

Wartensleben took a breath watching the young man's reaction carefully. Ottovio listened, even though he did not like the concept of the Emperor-accountant.

"However, your new tutor will tell it better than I can," the duke smiled modestly.

"Okay," Ottovio snorted with undisguised irritation. "Where is that ... tutor?"

Wartensleben did not resort to the bell and clapped his hands loudly. The soft sound echoed through the enfilade of rooms in the palace, echoing off the carved panels, crystal, and precious furniture made of black oak that had long since disappeared. As if a continuation of the echo, heels clacked and a tall figure stepped into the library. Ottovio paid no attention to her at first, gazing longingly at the ceiling cabinets and the old-style record racks made of many meters of papyrus ribbons. The Emperor was horrified at the thought of having to leaf through all of this and, god forbid, memorize it. It was much more interesting to learn the wisdom of arms from a militant count... Then Ottovio did not see who had entered, for he stood in the doorway, behind which a glassed-in gallery opened and the afternoon sun shone, but the library had no windows, only clusters of magic lamps under the ceiling - the sunlight was harmful to old incunabula and papyrus.

"Your Imperial Majesty."

Hearing the soft female voice, Ottovio froze with his mouth open involuntarily.

"Let me introduce you to my eldest daughter," the Duke bowed graciously. "Biel ausf Wartensleben. She is so skillful in various sciences that she has earned the nickname of the Hermit from her admiring subjects."

"It is a great honor for me to be presented to His Majesty," with these words Biel Wartensleben stepped into the light of the lamps, and Ottovio with difficulty picked up his jaw.

The Marquesa was not beautiful. She was past the age of youth, some would even call her aging. But there was a strange combination of breed in Biel. A fusion of health, bodily and mental, majestic dignity, and a pride that did not turn to hubris. Her posture would have been the envy of a trained guard of the sovereign's body. Her dark dress was surprising in its deliberate simplicity and high collar with silver buttons instead of deep necklines in clouds of lace. The woman wore only red gold earrings and a thin arm bracelet with the Wartensleben coat of arms. Her face was perhaps a little pale and overly broad, and her eyelids somewhat puffy, but this was offset by the soft light of the lamps and the large, impenetrably dark eyes.

In general, the eighth son, frankly speaking, not spoiled by female attention, saw with his own eyes the quintessence of the concept of "high style".

Ottovio swallowed and pulled himself up as straight as he could. He swallowed again, trying to moisten his dry throat. He realized that if he tried to say anything now, it would only come out as pathetic, unworthy of the Emperor's bleating and wheezing. Biel smiled, and it was a surprisingly soft, friendly smile, and he wanted to wrap himself in it like a warm blanket, to drown in it like... like a mother's love, which gives everything without asking anything in return. Ottovio realized at once that he did not need to be ashamed of his imperfection, that this woman would not ridicule him behind his back or even think a bad thought.

"I-" He coughed, clearing his throat. "I am pleased to welcome..." He hesitated for a moment, remembering the duke's recent words. "You... Most Serene and Powerful Sovereign."

"Oh, you are courteous and familiar with the old ways," Biel stepped closer and curtsied impeccably. "I ask you to do me the honor of showing me the treasures of this library. I have dreamed of seeing them ever since I learned to read."

"Yes, certainly, certainly," Ottovio agreed hastily and held out his hand. "Let me show you... This... this... this..."

"The Parthid scrolls," the well-hidden fire of eager curiosity flickered in the woman's eyes. - Long ago, important records were written on sheets of papyrus, then glued together to make scrolls up to ten feet long.

"Oh, yes, yes, yes," Ottovio agreed quickly. "Here, let's have a look..."

"By the way, that's interesting," Biel let the hurried young man lead her toward the rows of racks with huge rolls in lacquered cases. "In the days of the Old Empire, scribes were not supposed to sit. All records were made standing up, which is why they're so hard to make out... Sometimes impossible."

The woman sighed with unconcealed regret, and the Emperor could hardly refrain from promising to make all the scribes of Milves parse the old letters day and night. Biel, as if imperceptibly, very naturally turned the conversation from the papyrus to the subject of Parthides and Diabalus, that is, the legislation of the Ecumene and its dual nature, the combination of the norms of the Old and Modern Empire. Wartensleben smiled inconspicuously and went out just as inconspicuously, intending to inform the unexpected allies that the problem of the young Emperor's fascination with the sciences was no longer a problem.

* * *

"Well..."

Yulo suddenly smiled, without the previous arrogant superiority or pity, with understanding and even a touch of approval.

"It could work. But!" she held up two fingers sternly "No kids! Not a shadow of a possible scandal! We need a speedy engagement, and that's out of the question. The dynasty should be nailed to the throne tighter and the heirs are the best nails. So the mourning will not last a day longer than decency dictates. Then the engagement, again as short as it can be. And children. Many children without stopping."

Curzio endured the image of the imperturbable schemer to the end, like a perfect actor, but in his heart, he rejoiced. Yulo's last sentences indicated that she was interested in the plan and that the island emissary had received approval to try.

"That's unlikely," Curzio shook his head. "If Ottovio even moves a finger in the wrong direction, he'll be left without an arm. In the figurative sense, of course. Wrong family, wrong woman."

"Ah," she nodded understandingly. "The beauty of an unattainable ideal. The desire to earn attention and approval in the only way possible, that is, through diligent study."

"And a real aristocrat who will teach a guy to at least not stutter in the presence of women of the appropriate circle."

"It's risky. But..." Yulo paused, very long, deliberately ominous, calculating the prospects again or keeping Curzio on the hook for fun and edification. "Try it out. Write your thoughts on the parchment, and I'll pass them on to the Council. We'll consider what might come of it."

* * *
 
Chapter 8
Chapter 8

* * *

They left quickly, to the clatter of Maryadek's hastily made but working crutch. The rested and fed horses walked briskly. Of the company, which had grown to ten people, Elena felt the worst and made an epic effort to keep up. Every step was accompanied by a sharp pain in the lower abdomen, which then went somewhere to the left so that the medic entertained gloomy speculations: was it a prelude to inflammation of the appendix or a problem with the pancreas? It was the first time the regurgitation had been so severe that it made me think that perhaps my health was beginning to end. Not to say that the local life beat the woman too cruelly, especially in comparison with some patients from the city crime, looking at which Elena sometimes wondered "he can be killed at all?". But she'd had her share of trouble starting with a broken arm, which, after fleeing the capital predicted the weather like a perfect barometer.

So, in misery as well as bitter self-pity, Elena measured step by step, trying not to stumble and move in a common rhythm.

The landscape around didn't change, it was still the same "Scotland" with hills, only in the dull gray-yellow colors of a snowless winter—or very late fall, as you might see. The mountains melted behind us into a whitish haze and stretched an endless ribbon of moderately winding road ahead. The traffic was brisk by the standards of the season, and every hour there was a wagon or foot. There were hardly any singles, but mostly groups of apparent refugees or migrants, gloomy, tired men pulling their meager loads with expressions of sullen doom or, on the contrary, determination on their faces. The small caravan looked rich and well-armed compared to most of the people they met, so they were eyed warily and sighed with relief when the groups dispersed. There were almost no merchants, and if there were any, they were all of a piece, with empty wagons, guards, and the fearful faces of men who had sold out and were now shaking their coffers in anticipation of the moment when the coins would finally find their way into a sturdy chest.

Gaval hummed softly, something rhythmic that set the pace well. Pantin walked along with the others, and now the woman finally looked at him calmly and carefully, but she recognized nothing new. The warrior-mage was dressed as an ordinary traveler, only without a cloak and hat, which seemed surprisingly out of season. Over his shoulders, he carried a basket with rope straps that looked like an assault backpack. But most importantly, Pantin had no weapons, only a tiny knife on his belt with a blade no longer than a finger. If it were not for his eyes, which were painfully reminiscent of the infernal eyes of Elena's worst enemy, he would have been no different from an ordinary but bad-headed traveler who was not afraid of catching a cold in the wind, or of catching a chill in his kidneys on the cold ground.

The only really interesting event worth mentioning was the encounter with the "goose train". A large flock of two hundred or so well-fed, fat, fat birds were on their way to their final resting place, and the interesting thing was that each had leather shoes with straps hanging from its feet. Mariadek explained that the true delicacy "pig" geese were found in only a dozen places in the entire Oikumene and for some reason did not breed outside them. Therefore, for sale, flocks have to be driven sometimes for three months, thoroughly, with breaks and additional fattening at the place of arrival. And to make sure the birds arrive in one piece, they are often even shoeed. Judging by the five armed thugs of the criminal species, breeding special geese was a very lucrative occupation.

"Maybe I should sign up as a goose, too." Gaval grinned bitterly, improvising a sad melody on a music board. "They even give them clogs..."

By evening, a larger settlement appeared ahead. It was the kind of town that usually grew where a couple of not-very-important, but more or less busy roads intersected, and where there was a trade of some kind that lured merchants at least within the county. This town of three dozen houses was fed by barrel-makers and other spoon-cutters, and it was clearly doing well. At the sight of the smoke from the chimneys, the company cheered up, hoping for a night's lodging under a roof and a meal from a real stove.

In such small villages, there might or might not be an inn, and in the latter case one could find lodging in a "drinking hut" or in larger houses whose owners rented barns, cells, and often their beds for a reasonable fee. So the " magnificent ten," as the healer called her, made her way to the center of the town, to the Church of the One, accompanied by curiosity and stares.

Gaval shared grandiose plans intending to dazzle the peasants and townspeople with sweet-sounding singing. Having practiced on a spiritless and iron-eared audience, he was now, ready to enchant even an angel of heaven. Cadfal approved of the bold intention, mindful of the debt he owed. Gamilla smiled feebly with a great note of ironic doubt but kept her skepticism to herself. It seemed this day was the last of Gaval's payday, but the crossbowwoman's future plans remained vague. The Highlander was tapping his crutch hard and busily, he was clearly tired, to the point of cold sweat on his forehead and graying face, but he wasn't going to give up. Elena made a mental note to remember to check the bandage and the condition of the wound.

It smelled of shavings, cheap varnish, coal, and tar. The streets were moderately clean, almost free of mud and the ankle-deep puddles obligatory for a normal village. Wooden-clay houses of one, rarely two stories (if we count large attics as an independent level) stood almost level and did not sink into the ground so that the roof began at the level of the pedestrian's eyes.

All in all, the town of barrels and spoons Elena would have even liked it if she hadn't been tormented by the suffering of her body.

The center of the settlement was already occupied by two groups at once. The first one seemed harmless, they were traveling circus performers, and they were clearly of a reduced number. Only Pantocrator knew what they hoped to find here, as usually with the onset of cold weather not only agricultural but also cultural life ceased. Wandering musicians and other people of creative crafts finished their "tour" at the end of the fall fairs and tried to spend the winter at the lords' courts or in larger towns. There they fed themselves by performing in taverns and various neighborhoods so the program would not get boring. But these must have had some misfortune that did not allow to curtail the tour in time. The troupe had a clown, an acrobat, two old wagons pulled by equally old, sad mules... and that was it. The city public showed no interest in the horse-drawn circus, either the program had shrunk to utter obscenity, or all the performances had already been held here so the solvent demand for spectacles had exhausted itself.

However, the circus performers were neither interesting nor dangerous to the fugitives. The second group turned out to be much more unpleasant. It was a dozen armed men under a flag with an eight-pointed star on a red background. Elena knew this combination, the star symbolized the Empire as a whole, or rather the unity of the Emperor's power on eight sides of the world, and meant that its bearers were doing the sovereign's work. Judging by the absence of personal ensigns, there were no noblemen in the squad, but the soldiers seemed to be well-armed, almost at the level of sergeants. Apparently mercenaries in the Imperial service. Unfortunately, the wanderers noticed the flag too late, so it was too late to turn away and go around the town.

Ranjan commanded a halt and gave Grimal an imperceptible sign. The servant immediately threw Artigo off the horse and wrapped the child in the most shabby and untidy plaid. The redeemers, as usual, moved unnoticed and harmoniously closer to Elena, insuring her from the vicissitudes of life, Elena, in her turn, took the already practiced look of a slouching and unattractive figure, who stupidly stared at her feet, indifferent to the world around her.

Ranjan, outwardly unarmed and benevolent, made his way toward the armed men, who at the moment had fully occupied the only inn with stables and were nailing some kind of charter right to the wall of the church. Elena first thought he was a fool, then thought some more and decided it made sense. A rather large gathering, which at the sight of the sovereign's men hurries to get away, arouses suspicion and a logical question: what are they so afraid of?

Brether started a conversation with the leader, who was wary at least at first. Word by word, and although the conversation was inaudible, it was clear that it would be peaceful. The commander and the Brether shook hands and exchanged courteous bows. Ranjan, trying his best to walk carelessly, with deliberate slowness, returned to his men, took the horse under the reins, and quietly, almost without moving his lips, commanded:

"Let's go."

Gaval, of course, not realizing the importance of the moment, opened his mouth to resist, but he looked into Brether's eyes and was instantly silent. Gamilla put a hand on his shoulder and steered him on a new course, silently, unemotional, taking the new introduction for granted. Definitely, Elena liked the tattooed crossbow-woman more and more. She could sense in the mistress of arrows the calm confidence of a person who was not looking for adventures, but if it was not possible to miss it, she acted coolly and reasonably. She wished to know more about Gamilla because such composure is forged only in the forge of rich experience.

Maryadek, too, had gotten it right, seemingly even relieved. He probably didn't want to meet with imperial servants as much as Ranjan did. Anyway, the small caravan moved through the town square (too loud a name for an asphalt-strewn patch of land). The sovereign's men finally lost interest in the wandering company, and the most vocal one took a wooden board, similar to a gingerbread stamp, and, climbing on the saddle with his legs, began to read out an announcement from the wooden board. Everything that was going on bore the stamp of a dull bureaucracy, which was as boring to the performers themselves as unleavened tortillas on a long march.

Elena heard the first words and felt a cold and alive frog settle in her stomach. The vocalized fighter promised a reward for Artigo's Gotdua-Pilvae.

It was not news or something incredible. The travelers had met such heralds before, but now they could sense a much more thorough organization of the process. A short speech, obviously compiled according to some methodology, explained the essence of the problem in simple and understandable language: insidious scoundrels kidnapped the beloved cousin of His Imperial Majesty to villainously kill him according to the property of immoral and vicious natures. So a royal reward awaits the finder. The speech was accompanied by a fairly accurate description of Artigo and Ranjan, but - thank Pantocrator - the other companions were unknown to the enemy. The text was accompanied by drawings of the beloved brother and the villainous kidnapper, again depicted quite close to reality. The carver had done his best.

Elena mechanically moved her feet, feeling a chill in the back of her neck, like a student who knew only half of the exam questions and had to rely only on the luck of the ticket. Whether it would pass or not. It was only now the healer realized how ill-timed and foolish they had come to the town. Artigo was unrecognizable in a cocoon of dirty clothes, but Ranjan was too conspicuous. But the general negligence of the imperial servants and Ranjan's bearded appearance must have saved him from misfortune. The soldiers didn't give a damn about the town, its inhabitants, the travelers they encountered, or, it seemed, their job in general, and the brether with the sunken cheeks and unshaven stubble had changed drastically since the day he'd fled Milvess. They were not recognized.

When the town was behind them, Elena exhaled noisily. Curiously enough, Maryadek exhaled noisily after her, making her think that poaching wasn't the only thing he'd done in these parts. Gaval began to whine and complain about the stony-hearted companions who kept him from earning all the money of the town. Gamilla gave a short bellow, explaining to the minstrel in simple words that wherever any flag and men with weapons appeared, it was easy to sing for nothing, or even to pay the audience for their attention. Gaval hesitated and fell silent. Elena had more respect for the crossbowwoman, and at the same time, she wondered what interest she had in keeping incognito. Positive, the company was well organized, all dark personalities with very suspicious pasts and dubious presents.

We didn't go too far from the town, though; evening was already creeping up, with a winter's early sunset, and a nasty wind was picking up. They stopped at the nearest fork, habitually organizing the camp while it was light. Fuel was a problem at once - the area was inhabited, it was forbidden to cut the thin forest, and there were no traders of oil shale in the vicinity. The travelers scattered far away in search of dead wood, and Elena took a knife and approached Ranjan with the words:

"Sit."

To the silent question she answered, softly, for his ears only:

"We're idiots. We should have realized it sooner. You're too conspicuous. You should have cut your hair a long time ago. I'll cut your hair, then I'll make a turban. No one will recognize you. Just look down."

Ranjan thought for a moment and objected, but weakly, more for the sake of order, clearly realizing the extent of the stupidity:

"I'll look like a bandit. With that stubble."

"The main thing is not to brether," the barber exhaustively closed the question, and the process began.

While the branches were being gathered and the shearing was in progress, two creaky wagons of traveling circus performers passed by. They were ordinary wagons with canvas roofs on semicircular arches. Above the trailing wagon protruded the tin pipe of a traveling stove. It seemed that the micro-troupe had intended to stop here, perhaps they too were uncomfortable in the company of soldiers, but seeing the competition decided not to get involved. The wagons creaked along. Elena caught herself she only gave the random people she met an indifferent glance. In her former life, she would have felt very sorry - to the point of tears - for the circus performers, who must have been in dire need, with no chance to improve their plight even a little during the cold season. There was something to do in the present besides regretting other people's fate, for her own was not illusorily at stake. Elena tightened her lips and worked the knife faster.

The cut hair had been burned off for some old belief. Freed from the shoulder-length strands without a single gray hair, the swordsman did seem a different man. Less stern and much younger. The long hair added five or seven if not ten, years to his appearance, and the short hair made him younger.

"That's good," Elena summarized, taking a step back and admiring the work of her hands.

The general opinion was expressed by Gamilla diplomatically saying:

"Well... there are people like that too."

Ranjan couldn't assess the quality of his work because he didn't have a mirror, and it was too cloudy to look in a bowl of water. So the Brether groped his head with a tactile examination, sighed heavily, and remained silent, resigned to the inevitable.

"Let's go," Pantin said, who was, as usual, very close by, silent and unnoticed.

The crimson comet, though it illuminated the sky, didn't look as impressive as it did in the mountains, where the bloody glow played on the snowy peaks. The reddish moon rose higher and higher, and Elena, though she didn't believe in any of the local deities, shuddered. It all looked too ominous, because if you wanted to believe in bad omens, the birth of headless calves, the end of the world, and other scary things, you would have to believe in bad omens. However, the concept of the Last Judgment in the church of Pantokrator seems to be absent... We should find out. Any religion, one way or another, promises some kind of finale for everything.

The woman and the supposed mage walked further down the road, more like a path, leaving the soft noise of the camp behind them. Cadfal and Maryadek were arguing vigorously, though angrily, over how to use the meager fuel. It was late in the evening, but the huge moon rarely made it pitch black in Ecumene, and the light of the comet made the coming night as white as in St. Petersburg, only darker and gloomier.

"Do you know who I am?" Elena decided it was not appropriate for her to play the modest and virtuous maiden who couldn't speak first. Besides, the woman was overwhelmed with questions.

"Yes," Pantin said laconically.

"And who are you?"

"Warrior-mage," came the equally short answer. "But you already know that."

Elena sighed, trying to figure out what to ask next. She'd assumed Ranjan would find some special mentor, but this... The woman opened her mouth, and closed it mutely, like a beached fish. She couldn't breathe, a viscous lump coming up to her throat, blocking her breath. She stumbled, staggering. The pain in her stomach became unbearable, spreading lower and wider like trickles of liquid lead. Elena puckered her lips and clenched her jaw, waiting out the spasm, but Pantin smiled weakly and touched her shoulder with two fingers.

And there was no pain.

"Wow!" said the woman, just to express her emotions. Just now it had seemed to her that it would be easier to die than to live like this. Just then... and now the agonizing malaise was gone. The weakness remained, but the pain was gone. Apparently, that's what real sorcery looked like.

"Is it a miracle?"

"No," Pantin replied very seriously. "It's a trick. Unfortunately not a long one. But at least you'll sleep well tonight."

"Would it be possible to repeat it?" Elena's voice trembled, giving off a desperate hope.

"Yes. Not soon though," Pantin seemed genuinely sad about it.

"Can you teach me magic?"

"No. You can't be taught magical practices."

"But why?"

"You can't," Pantin said, then relented and clarified. "There is very little magic left in the world. The only people who can learn magic are those gifted by birth and predisposed to the art. You are not one of them. It's like teaching painting to a blind man."

Oh, if you only knew... Elena thought but decided not to share some details of her life in Ecumene.

"Okay... How many of you are like that?" she continued.

"Very little. It used to be more."

"What happened?"

Pantin sighed, looking up at the cloudy sky with sparse clouds that darkened like ink blots. Either he had expected more from the healer or he was just melancholy.

"I take it you've already met... her?"

"She tried to kill me. Once for sure. I'm not sure about the second one, but I think it was her, too. She couldn't kill me, but she killed people close to me. They died badly."

"And you want revenge?"

"I want to survive. I'm afraid I can't survive a third encounter. And, yes, revenge. And to find out who's behind it all. She's being guided by someone, and she mentioned something about being allowed to do something special to me eventually."

The conversation was developing in a confused way but the atmosphere was favorable. Her thoughts were confused and jumped from one thing to another.

"If you can... that sort of thing, why do you need blades?" she asked. "Why would a sorcerer fight with a sword?"

"Many have asked that question," Pantin tweaked his beard. "Many... The answer is not simple. You have to understand what magic is and how it works... or rather worked. It's a long story, so I'll tell you this. A magician is capable of many things... was. However, not always, not everywhere. There were times when you had to work with a blade. So some sought to master both arts."

"Draf... my mentor said it was hard and the adepts were struck dumb."

"He was right. Mastering blade skill and magic in equal measure was incredibly difficult. It required the mental discipline of an ascetic saint. Decades of torturous exercise. And, how shall I put it... a pact with forces immeasurably greater than man."

Sell your soul to Satan, Elena's mind was spinning, but the woman remained silent, turning to listen.

"If this is neglected, a man's soul ... becomes distorted. He is struck with madness, but not like the usual wretches chained in asylums. It's more like a darkness that poisons the mind one drop at a time. It awakens the darkest, meanest, most unmanly things hidden at the bottom of the mind. And once the darkness has touched a person, it cannot be reversed."

"That... woman..." Elena jerked her head, shivering, remembering the devilish fire in the black witch's eyes. "She had seemed insane, but she had acted rationally."

"The development of this calamity can be delayed. You can even turn it to your advantage. But the remedies... let me put it this way, the cure is as bad as the disease, if not worse."

"Ah..."

Pantin gestured for her to stop.

"That's enough. If you have any sense at all, you'll know what I mean. If you don't, it's all the more meaningless. Will you continue to listen?"

"Yes!"

"When the old world ended, the art of combining the incompatible was lost. All those who have tried to follow two paths at once since then have met the same end. And very quickly. Except for her."

"She managed to... find the cure that is worse than the disease?"

"That's right. Eventually, the darkness will consume her soul as well. But that won't happen today or tomorrow or a year from now. So I'd say the idea of preparing for the meeting is pretty reasonable."

Then a thought occurred to Elena that made her shudder, not for the first time that day.

"But that means you...you...."

She stopped short.

"Yes. I saw the demise of the old world," Pantin confirmed calmly and without any pretense."

"How old are you," the woman muttered, trying to calculate in her mind. The cataclysm had happened four or five centuries ago, and the warrior-mage had hardly been a young man at its beginning. That is, this nice-looking, intelligent, and good-looking man walking on her left side, was at least half a thousand years old... Ten ordinary lives, more likely more. Fucking hell, as Grandpa would say.

"I'm old," Pantin grinned into his mustache. "Older than I'd like."

"So," Elena rubbed her temples, getting her thoughts in order. "Where did we start... Aha! So you know who I am?"

"I already said, I know," Pantin repeated patiently.

"And... who? I'm the chosen one?"

Elena faltered, realizing how stupid that sounded. Stamp of stamps, cliché of clichés, Hollywood at its worst.

"Maybe," Pantin shrugged.

They had stopped and were now talking, facing each other. The light of the campfire was dancing yellow, and the shadows of the companions moved around them, seeming to be ghosts.

"I don't get it."

"I know who you were. But I don't know what you'll become. Or rather, I see different paths, none of them predetermined. Stein's Paradox... though you still don't know what that means."

"Can you speak more clearly?"

"And I'd pray if I were you, begging all the gods to rescue you from the Chosen One's fate, if it does catch up with you," Pantin said, ignoring the request.

"Why?"

"Elena, Hel, Lunna, Teina...."

The woman shuddered - Pantin knew the second name unknown in Ecumene. How?! For a moment it seemed to the medicine woman that her interlocutor almost called the fifth name, but the five-hundred-year-old man held back and continued as if nothing had happened:

"Someone who wears so many disguises must be smart enough to know the answer. And you know it, but you're afraid to tell yourself. Well, if you're so weak, I can speak for you..."

"No!" Elena blurted out.

"Really?" Pantin arched a whitish eyebrow and strode leisurely back toward the camp, Elena following him.

"Really," the young woman lowered her head.

"So tell me."

Elena remained silent.

"Tell me," Pantin did not raise his voice, but struck like a whip. Sharply, demandingly, painfully.

"Because being chosen isn't adventure or apple pies," Elena said dully, without raising her head. "It's my... friend who was killed while defending me. It's a woman and a girl..."

She sobbed, feeling like she was at an appointment with a psychiatrist who was turning her soul inside out, bringing to the surface memories that hurt like jagged arrows.

"It's my broken arm, rags instead of pads... though you still don't know what that means. It's fear. The daily fear that she'll find me, catch me."

Elena sniffled and quickly wiped her eyes with her sleeve in the vain hope that maybe the old man hadn't seen her tears. She straightened in a pathetic attempt to maintain her dignity, at least she thought it looked pathetic.

"I don't know what scares me more. That next time no one will protect me or someone will come between us again. Again."

"I understand."

Elena glanced askew at the warrior, expecting a sneer, but Pantin still maintained absolute seriousness.

"Well, we've had a hectic conversation," he summarized. "But interesting, that's for sure."

"You're not going to tell me who I really am?" Elena asked without much hope.

"No. It's premature."

"Or maybe it's time."

"No. Hel. I guess I'll call you like the others. It sounds pretentious, but it's as good a name as any," Pantin looked up at the sky again. "You don't need to know that."

Elena felt a twinge of rage. So many days and nights, so many... yes no longer months, but real years, she wondered why she was here. Was it a cosmic accident or some kind of predestination, what did everything mean at all, what was the meaning of what was happening!? And here's the old prick pacing around, obviously knows what's going on, but he's silent! And there's no power to make him reveal the secret in any way. Elena clenched her fists and teeth, realizing that now was not the moment to show her temper. She could even beat up a normal man with the help of the Draftsman's science, but if this cloudy-eyed devil had trained Ranjan and was even remotely equal to the red-eyed creature, it would be better to ignore him. The feeling of powerlessness burned like boiling water.

"Don't be angry," Pantin shook his head, seeming to read his companion like an open book. "It's for your own good."

"Yeah," Elena muttered through gritted teeth, holding back tears of anger again.

Although they were walking at a leisurely pace, the fire was much closer, smelling of the chicken they had taken from Frels.

"That's right. You see, knowledge changes a person. Any kind of knowledge. It inspires thoughts and actions that would not otherwise be conceived and performed. And actions have consequences. That is, knowledge always burdens a person with some kind of responsibility. You don't need that right now. We will have something to do, you will have an opportunity to think and do necessary things that you can do. There's a time and a place for everything else."

Elena sighed, rubbing her chilled fingers. Pantin's words, as befitted a master of arcane knowledge, seemed vague on the one hand, puzzling more than they revealed. On the other, however, they had a definite meaning. It was like the Oracle's speeches in "The Matrix", as if they were nonsense, or not, depending on how you looked at it.

"There is no spoon," the woman muttered, irrationally hoping that the world around her would dissipate, disappear, and she would return home. Having grown more than two years older on the calendar and much, much older in her soul.

But, of course, nothing happened, and the world remained where it was before.

"Will you teach me?" Elena finally asked.

"Yes."

"Will this be enough to fight back?"

"Most likely not."

Then what was the point of it, the woman wanted to ask and remained silent, knowing the answer.

"When do we start?"

"Now."

Not that Elena was expecting anything different, but... really, though, why not now, under the blood moon, in the cold wind? She was so eager to find a mentor, and here he was. And, it must be said, for all the abstruse, confused speech, Pantin was much more pleasant to talk to than the late Figueredo.

"I'll go get my sword."

"No need. You won't need the sword."

"...?"

Pantin stopped and looked at Elena with a long look as if measuring her with a laser scanner from head to toe and back. Strangely, the witch's red eyes glowed in the darkness, while the old magician's gray eyes, on the contrary, seemed to absorb the light falling on them completely.

"Draftsman, Draftsman," he muttered. "Typical of the master's misfortune, he taught you not what you really needed, but what he knew best. That is Brether weapons. A dagger, that's right, that's good. But you should have added a pole to it, not a lightweight city blade. With your height and strength, it's possible to master it in a moderate amount of time. And who can hit and stab with a pole, he can handle a staff, a spear, a galley sword, and even a poleax, if he has the chance to take it in his hands. A good spearsman is not easily wounded by a swordsman. However..."

Pantin repeated the assessment procedure, Elena felt like she was stripped naked and at the endoscopist's appointment, who was shining a flashlight through the entire womb from the inside.

"But perhaps…" Pantin continued mysteriously. "Perhaps, yes. It's even better that way. However, we won't start with a sword or even a stick. Let's start…"

But at that moment the warrior was interrupted by a loud cry from the camp.

"Hey..." Ranjan suddenly asked, looking around frantically. "Where is the boy?"

He carefully avoided calling Artigo by his first name, and demanded that the others do the same. It was a reasonable precaution considering how many outsiders there were in the squad.

The travelers looked around with the characteristic expressions of people who had been taken by surprise by an obvious but unanswered question. The evening revelers, as Gaval had quietly nicknamed them, quickly approached the fire. Pantin looked quite normal, but Elena seemed pale and lost, though she moved much more nimbly than before and no longer wriggled with every step.

"You missed it, you bastard! Asleep!" Ranjan kicked Grimal, who had indeed dozed for a few minutes near the warm fire. The servant jumped on the spot, twisting his head around frantically and not realizing what had happened. Elena was surprised - it was the first time in her memory that a brether had ever raised his voice, much less struck a loyal companion.

"They stole him," Ranjan whispered with undisguised horror.

"No," Pantin said clearly and calmly. "They couldn't have sneaked up on us. He left on his own, quietly, while we were gathering brushwood."

"Where to!" The Brether growled, twisting on the spot like a dog surrounded by enemies and unable to decide who to chew on first.

The answer came to everyone's mind, seemingly at the same time. A heavy, unpleasant silence hung over the camp. Ranjan staggered as if from a sudden weakness in his legs, covering his eyes with the palm of his hand. Elena felt a sting of grim satisfaction with shame. Artigo had done exactly what one would expect of a minor aristocrat. An ungrateful little brute for going into the rat trap on his own. Maybe that's where he should go.

"M-m-master," Grimal mumbled with quivering lips, but Ranjan wasn't listening. Or maybe he didn't hear him. Elena had seen the Brether's face once before, cold and detached, like a plaster mask. It was the night they had fled Milvess, and Ranjan had been betrayed by his mercenaries. That night was the first time she'd seen what high-class Bretherism was like when performed by a true master.

While Elena thought, Ranjan silently unfastened the straps on one of the bags he'd never unpacked before. A sort of anatomical cuirass from antiquity was revealed, but the armor was not metallic, but brown and translucent, as if made of bottle glass. Brether pulled the cuirass on with a speed that only long years of practice could achieve. He hung his long sword scabbard behind his back, slipped the bridle on quickly and confidently, and then, wasting no time with the saddle, jumped onto the horse. Elena expected the swordsman to make some kind of speech, like asking to accompany and help. But Ranjan slapped the animal's rump with force, tapped his heels against its flanks, and the horse spurred the Brether toward the town, into the approaching twilight.

"Someone's going to get hurt," Cadfal decided without a shadow of mockery or irony.

"I'm sure. But the forces are unequal," Rapist shook his head. "It was a little easier underground."

"Maybe he'll catch up with your boy," Maryadek suggested, without much faith.

The sound of hooves died away in the distance.

"Won't you help him?" Elena asked Pantin.

"No."

"Why?"

"I can't. I don't raise my hand against people."

Elena expected any answer except this, the simplest, most artless, and absurd. She swallowed and looked into the incoming gloom, where the mounted swordsman had galloped off. And then suddenly she realized that everyone was looking at her, that is, absolutely everyone. They look with expectation as if she were the person who decides and tells others what to do.

* * *

Goose shoeing is a very real practice from English history. But in reality, it was used to transport turkeys, which were an expensive delicacy.

The galley sword is the analog of "our" two-handed sword of the classic kind. In the Ecumene, it evolved along the path of the boarding weapons of the elite fighters of Saltoluchard, which allowed them to fight on a tight deck, quickly changing the distance, using all the possibilities of a multi-purpose blade. And then the art went to the masses, performing well on the city streets as well. And it is not fantastic, if you believe, for example, Senichev, the classic two-handed sword was repeatedly and successfully used in naval battles.
 
Chapter 9
Chapter 9

* * *

The newfound companions frightened me. Of course, I made a great effort to conceal this sad fact, but in my heart, I was torn between two extremes. On the one hand, it was nice to feel... protected. Following in the rearguard of the "Little Funny Army" I was not afraid of oncoming thieves, I was sure that I would not be robbed or stripped naked by the next profit-seekers, taking advantage of the fact that the Law remained somewhere far away. At a time when life was becoming easier and cheaper than the lightest, most worthless coin, this was worth a lot, so I was willing to tolerate a lot of things, including ridicule. Give credit to my companions, generally harmless, though often quite vicious. Still, the Funny Army frightened me and sometimes gave me outright terror, bordering on the desire to run as far away as possible, without a backward glance.

So ironic... Could I have guessed then that my personal body count would end up longer than that of all those who had gathered that fall in the little group of homeless wanderers? But I will not go ahead, for every story has its time and turn.

I distinctly remember the day, or rather night, and the hour when I first experienced that feeling of panic and fear of my comrades-in-arms. And at the same time, I realized that the act of killing is a diabolical and always unequal bargain. A ruthless bargain, according to which, when you take a weapon and take someone's life, you pay for it with your soul

Gaval Sentry-Poton-Batleau.

"The Twelfth Letter to My Son, About Cruelty and Murder"


* * *

The town emerged from the twilight like a phantom. There was no real (and ill-gotten) wealth that was the source of the nightly festivities and revelry, so the townspeople went to bed early, with the sunset, saving candles and lamp oil. No one met Brether or tried to stop him. Some kind of life was only in the town square, torches burning there and movement in the shadows. Ranjan jumped off his horse and slung the reins over the nearest fence. If the Brether survived, the cattle wouldn't last long, and if not, it wouldn't matter who was tied where. The resin cuirass was almost unrestrictive and fit comfortably, and now all that remained was to ensure its durability matched the armor master's praise. Of course, he would not want to test it on himself. Ranjan had intended to give the armor to Hel, but it didn't work out.

He walked down the dark street toward the light, rotating his fists as he went warming his ligaments. Too bad there wasn't time to prepare, to warm up his muscles and tendons. God forbid that the leader of the Imperial Watch should decide to break off at once, in the dead of night, in order to transport the precious booty to a more suitable place without delay. It would be hard to catch up on a packhorse. And they may have, and most likely do have, orders not to deliver the precious prize. Winter is harsh, and children are weak, especially those from noble families. He drank cold water, ate stale bread, and died of inability to digest the coarse food of the common people.

Ranjan walked treading softly and quickly, thinking how soon he would be recognized without his long hair and in the purple half-darkness. Brether made no plans, knowing from personal and extensive experience that things would go wrong, so he had to rely on improvisation.

And luck. Or rather, God's favor.

Brether had never been a fanatic of the faith, and frankly, he did not share the belief that the Father of Swords watched over everyone who stepped onto the thorny path of the Grande Arts. Ranjan knew, of course, that Pantocrator knew everything and everyone, but the Brether had seen too much to believe in the power of prayers and supplications to the Almighty. Now, however, walking towards the imminent battle, he prayed. To himself, sparingly, choosing non-canonical, simple words.

God help him. Save him. Let me keep him safe. He's just a child I must save. We don't need an imperial inheritance or kingdoms. Just let him live!

He was not expected. The seven men near the stables surrounded Artigo, who seemed very small against the armed warriors. The young emperor said something quickly, waving his hands like a commoner's boy, and the sentries listened. Apparently, Artigo had succeeded in capturing their attention. This was bad. Ranjan held out a faint hope that he might be able to convince the warriors that the boy had lost his mind. No, it wouldn't work, so the fight was imminent.

Brether made a quick calculation of the odds in his mind as he walked. Seven fighters, that's a lot, even though one seemed to be a woman. Not good. All the enemies are on foot, the horses are in the stables, that's neither bad nor good. A rider is not easy to fight, but a horse is vulnerable if you don't aim to save a valuable animal. The warriors are armored and armed. Apparently, they have not had time to undress before dinner. Or perhaps they really intended to travel at night, "by lanternlight". That's too bad. Perhaps the most unpleasant situation for a Brether is to fight against a more or less well-organized group, equipped in military style. If they were ordinary urban assassins, Ranjan would have gone into battle without fear, but as it was, there was a good chance that he would be buried. At least they weren't wearing helmets. A few servants were looking out of the stables. Yes, they were going to hit the road after all.

Brether grinned wryly and withdrew his scabbard as he walked. The sword echoed with its familiar weight as if to encourage him. Yes, Pantocrator had a peculiar sense of humor: if the boy had delayed a little longer, he would have missed the imperial bailiffs. And someone might have survived.

Artigo was the first to notice him and predictably shrieked. Ranjan smiled bitterly, feeling like a needle stabbed into his heart. Silently he quickened his steps, drawing his sword, the long blade rustling faintly as it left the wooden scabbard covered in patent leather.

"It's him! It's him! He's got me!" shouted Artigo, grabbing a woman by the leg, a stern aunt with a scar on her face and wearing good chainmail. "Don't give me away! I want to go home, I want to go to the palace!!! Don't let them take me, take me back! Take me back!"

Son, what are you doing…

Ranjan tossed the scabbard aside and gripped the hilt with both hands. He often started a fight by throwing the scabbard at someone's face, it was a nice distraction, but he decided not to risk it now. There are too many enemies with too good iron on them. The sword must not lose a moment. Brether didn't hope that the enemies would get confused. That would be too good and it really didn't happen that way. The Imperial Watch commander gave a few short orders as the swordsman crossed the small square. From the looks of it, the company was really good, and militant, and everyone understood each other halfheartedly. God would not give an easy victory.

In the semi-darkness Ranjan's anatomical cuirass was almost invisible under his clothes, but Brether hoped that the armor would not have to prove its quality. No one tried to negotiate or at least exchange a few phrases with the sudden guest, it was clear to each of the opposing sides that talking was useless and someone was about to die. One man was going to get the boy back at any cost, the others had already realized that they had gold and inherited nobility in their hands, maybe even with the prefix "ausf". A comfortable life for generations to come.

Ranjan took a quick step, almost a run, and changed direction as if intending to attack from the flank. The opponents lined up coherently in battle order. Two of the largest in front, holding heavy "toothy" cleavers, designed to tear the quilts, and with luck, even the chain mail. The three in the second line are lightly armed but with shields. Farther back, a woman plus the last member of the team, seemingly the most harmless, apparently a real scribe. And, of course, Artigo.

No one was fooled by Brether's maneuvers. No one broke formation. Ranjan hadn't really counted on it, but it would be nice to scatter the enemy and kill them one by one. Well, there was no harm in dreaming! Brether gritted his teeth and launched a frontal attack, trying not to think about how slim the chances of breaking through the armed and ready-to-fight-back six were.

At this point, he was lucky. The right thing for a patrol to do would have been to immediately take up the defense, forcing a lone attacker to attack in an extremely disadvantageous situation. The commander, judging by their actions, had ordered it, but the first rank suddenly decided to stand out. Apparently, this pair was lower in status and position than the others, so the men wanted to kill a dangerous villain single-handedly in order to make it look like a great feat and the basis for a special award. They stepped forward and to the sides simultaneously, taking the enemy in their pincers, preparing to strike coherently, one on the right and one on the left. Such an attack would have killed an ordinary soldier, or even a brether, on the spot.

But Ranjan was not ordinary.

With a zigzag movement, literally hopping on one leg from side to side, the Brether confused his opponents, breaking their attack pattern. One hesitated, choosing the right moment to strike, while the other decided to strike downwards. The commander fiercely barked the order to return, his voice filled with rage, but for a few moments, the first ranks became a barrier to his colleagues. The Brether took advantage of those seconds.

With a swift step, his feet barely off the trampled earth, Ranjan drew close to his left opponent and brought his cleaver to bear on the base of his blade. The steel rattled, scattering a wreath of sparks, and Ranjan, crouching like a spring to soften his defenses, straightened like a snake in a dash, throwing the enemy's cleaver away, and kicking his opponent in the groin. The soldier backed away, bending down, and was struck on the top of the head with the tip of his tournament sword. It was not fatal, but the soldier was out of the fight for a minute or two falling to his knees with a white twisted face. A long sword certainly isn't that heavy, but it's not light either, especially guided by strong hands. Even with a helmet on brains shake, and even more so without one. There was a killing blow needed here, and Brether made it, but it was faint, and Ranjan suddenly attacked the second fighter.

It was a tricky one. It would hardly work against a fellow professional but the swordsman had expected that a professional mercenary, accustomed to riding combat, was not well versed in the science of freeing himself from grabs. And so it came to pass. Brether entered the "circle of death", almost close to the enemy, tied the enemy's blade with his own, taking it aside. With his left hand, he intercepted the cleaver and palms of the enemy behind a short garde, twisted, completely opening the enemy. In general, the technique was similar to the one that the swordsman used to disarm the traitor in the dungeons of Milvess, only instead of levering his blade this time he used his bare hand. Instead of stabbing his opponent in the eye with his blade Ranjan swiftly struck his opponent in the teeth with the headband of his tournament sword. He stepped back and struck again with the very end of the faceted blade, aiming at his neck. It hit.

The case started, against expectations, well. There were already five enemies. If you don't count the scribe, there were four. The one hit in the head fell to his knees, swaying, disoriented, ruffling his blood-soaked hair with trembling fingers. The man wounded in the neck snorted and howled, trying to clamp the artery, but to no avail. His own heart betrayed him, pushing another portion of red liquid between his weakening fingers with each beat so the guard had only minutes to live. Luck! But Brether realized that his luck lasted only until the first mistake, the first missed blow. And even if four or five men could make a great number of such blows, at least one of them would find its target.

The trio of the second line attacked nicely, in contrast to their predecessors, to whom the guards paid no attention. Victory first, then everything else. The woman stayed with Artigo. A loud screech rang in the semi-darkness, some latecomers to the town had seen the slaughter and reacted accordingly. The drinking house, where it seemed someone was still there, rumbled, and lights began to flicker on in the small windows of the surrounding houses, awake owners pulling coals from the hearths to light a candle or a grease-soaked leather cord. Pigs, common and sentinel, grunted, but the fighting men paid no attention to this, rattling their iron to death. Everything that did not concern the battle was now over the moon.

The trio was advancing, wanting to envelop the Brether in a semicircle and finish him off with simultaneous blows from different sides while Ranjan tried to outmaneuver them by breaking through the formation or bypassing them. None of them were successful, but the swordsman had to retreat, threatening the trio with quick lunges. Sweat was already pouring down their faces in angry grimaces, and the leather and links of their armor creaked. Ranjan did not allow himself to be surrounded, but it was not easy. He was still strong enough to breathe, but the Brether could feel that his sword was getting heavier, and the breathlessness was about to touch his chest with suffocating fingers.

Ranjan could easily take out any of the three one-on-one, two would have to be fought, but with a more or less predictable outcome, but all at once, it was already dangerous. And the shields were very much in the way. Ranjan missed the swing of the axe after all. The well-sharpened blade tore through his left sleeve and cut through muscle. It was a light wound. The kind of wound that wouldn't even need stitching and would heal itself, albeit with an ugly scar, but the swordsman was out of rhythm. The leader, sensing the weakening of the enemy, rushed into the attack, like a knight of honor against a line of spades, without looking back. He swung his one-handed sword and shield with surprising dexterity, much better than a regular sergeant, apparently having taken fencing lessons. And he played a combination not at all soldierly, not every duelist would dare to play such a feint. He knocked Ranjan's sword to the side and downward with a "mill wheel" technique, hit his right arm with the edge of his shield, preventing him from raising his sword in a block, and stabbed him in the head, swinging almost from his ear.

Ranjan took advantage of the commander twisting his shield and sword around to open up hard, leaving his body unprotected. His hands released the long blade from its connection to the shield, and the steel strip struck his opponent's chest, but weakly, too weakly. The chainmail hidden beneath the gambeson not even clanking in response. Brether was forced to retreat again, bells rattling in his skull, sticky blood pouring from his right eye, and weakness spreading through his left arm like poison. And the enemy pressed on, gaining confidence. Ranjan estimated that he had five or six steps back, then he would be pinned to the wall, and then, accordingly, he would die.

It's funny... to go through so many fights, to defeat the strongest, to earn the self-explanatory nickname "Plague" - and all this to be slaughtered by a common mercenary in the godforsaken wilderness, and then buried in some pit, well, if not just thrown into a ditch. An ugly and ignominious end. The wicked Draftsman would have a couple of maxims about it and of course a remark about the harsh Art, which always takes what is due.

But behind the backs of his enemies, Brether saw the boy, frozen, clinging to the guard. He did not realize that he had come to his death and that he had led the only protector in the whole world to death. The child would not see the dawn in any case, no matter what the watch's orders were, they would kill Artigo now, and they would not risk it. In case some other saviors showed up.

A swing, another swing. One of the "toothy" finally went into the next world, the other tried to get up from his knees but fell time after time. The opponents still fought in silence, only heavy breathing came out of their throats, steel rang, and goatskin soles clattered on the hard ground. Time was now the faithful handmaiden of the sentries, every moment, every drop of blood lost, every step taken, was turned against the Brether. Shield plus sword, shield plus broad saber, shield plus axe. And four steps to the wall, no, it was already three. It was impossible to break the well-coordinated formation of the opponents. The shields and the group working together gave too great an advantage.

Two steps.

And Ranjan realized it was time to take his chances, relying on luck. The sword in his hands drew a devious curve, the brether won a step by swinging forward, and then Ranjan attacked the saber-wielding soldier who had taken center stage. The soldier was good and fast, but spread his saber and shield too wide, acting them not coherently, but one at a time - strike-defense - in an easily guessed rhythm. The point of the tournament sword found a gap and jabbed under his arm, between the shoulder pad and the brigandine. At the same instant, the Brether received a powerful blow to his side from the left and behind. The axe easily shredded the leather jacket and split the resin armor, hitting the lower rib or under it.

Ranjan felt as if he'd been stabbed in the kidney with an armor-piercing dagger of last hope, the force of the blow nearly dropping the swordsman to his knees, cold sweat beading all over his body in a split second, as if his skin were a sponge. Only years of experience and a duty stronger than death kept the Brether on his feet. He turned his body and took the sword of the enemy leader on his chest. His ribs crackled, but the flash of new pain was lost amid the liquid fire that flooded his kidney area. The resin cuirass received a second breach, but held the blade, missing it by no more than two or three fingers.

Growling with pain and hatred, but not losing his saving composure, Brether swung a swinging blow at the face of the man still twitching his axe, trying to pull out the weapon stuck in the tar. He struck with the flat of the blade with no desire to hurt, only to stun, to take him out of the game for a few moments, or, God forbid, the blade would get stuck. While the axe-bearer was trying to keep his balance, waving his freed weapon around, Brether struck the wounded saber-bearer, again with the flat and again in the head! Then the tournament sword fell on the ringleader, this one successfully covered by his shield. And again in the same rhythm, in the same order. Each attack at breakneck speed forced his opponents to defend, to lose momentum, to retreat at least a quarter of a step. Ranjan was not trying to kill, only to force his opponents to open a semicircle, lose coherence, let them smell their own blood, and let fear seep into their minds.

On the fourth series of blows, when his lungs were already burning with fire and fatigue hung on his arms like shackles, Ranjan broke his rhythm and, marking a false blow to the axe-wielding fighter's head, quickly crouched down, and then in a clear, practiced downward motion from top to bottom, chopped his foot full length between the bones, from base to toe. A simple, unsophisticated blow, designed for an unarmored or ordinary foot soldier in three-quarter armor. The sentinel had no sabatons or even heavy cavalry boots, and the blade went through the thick leather of his shoe like a shawl of fine linen. The soldier shrieked, staggered, dropped the axe, and the weapon hung on the leather loop at his wrist.

Nineteen people... Vincent killed nineteen people in one night, and I can't handle six.

Bitterness and a false sense of insolvency as a fighter kept Brether on his feet, but Ranjan could feel the warm blood soaking the clothes beneath his cuirass. His lower back was no longer hot, but instead, a cold numbness spread up and down his body, turning his muscles into a limp jelly. His gut told him that the swordsman had maybe a minute more, maybe even less. Then the blood loss and pain would take its toll, and the first wounded man was still up, staggering, about to join the fray. Ranjan jabbed his sword into the saber-wielder's face, forcing him to retreat, and gained enough space to drive the commander away again.

An anonymous citizen came out into the street, shrieking, seeing the scene of the massacre, the shriek surprisingly harmonious with the scream of the one who had been stabbed in the leg. Pigs squealed all over the town. Someone for some reason, started ringing the bell at the big well, where water was taken for horses and extinguishing fires. Shutters clanged alarmingly. The townspeople were mostly in a hurry not to go out into the street but rather to barricade themselves.

Two blows on the commander, a sharp turn to the wounded saber bearer, a stab in the head, near the ear, where the neck begins. The enemy was already struggling to stay on his feet, tried to shield himself with his shield, crouching, and did not keep his balance, the crouch turned into a fall. The soldier flopped awkwardly as if sitting on the heel of his right foot in a flamboyant bow. From this position, he was unable to get up quickly or reach the brether, and the swordsman finally focused on the enemy superior, sidestepping him from the side of the shield.

Now all four of them were stretched out in an irregular line: the axe-wielding fighter, who bounced awkwardly on his healthy leg; the concussed saber-wielder; the commander; and finally the brether. Scarlet stains covered his clothes and armor generously, and in the light of the comet and the lone lantern, the blood seemed black as tar. The Brether's cuirass crunched glassily with every movement, apparently because the breaches had caused cracks to scatter across the plates, and the armor now held only on a cloth base. As the armor master who had sold the armor had honestly warned, it could take a good beating but if it was broken, the hole could not be fixed. It's no big deal, the main thing is that it should last till the end of the battle. The item has already paid its price with more than enough.

The commander closed well. The Brether pierced his defenses twice, but the blade only knocked the brass ringing out of his armor. On the third, Brether's sword struck his shoulderplate and broke with a clear crystal clink. The swordsman was left with a fragment no more than an elbow long.

Ranjan howled in frustration and the feeling that Pantocrator was lavishing him with a generous hand of bad luck for his sins, alternating successes with unbelievable failures. Swords of such quality do not break just like that, or rather, almost never break, they are made to pierce a knight's armor, and the chance of losing the weapon so ridiculously and accidentally is negligible. Yet it happened. But a good warrior differs from a bad one in that he fights until the last moment and the outcome is certain - victory or death. And Ranjan was a very good fighter.

There was indeed a hitch in his murderously precise movements, but it was almost imperceptible, at least his opponents were unable to take advantage of it. Brether stepped toward the saber-wielder, who was still trying to awkwardly stand up, and swung his sword at the base of his neck, half a finger above the brigandine, taking advantage of the fact that the sentinel was not wearing a gorget. The sword stuck, but the brether wasted no time in trying to pull the splinter out. The next step back Ranjan found himself face to face with the wielder of the axe. This time the Brether stabbed his opponent in the eye with his spread fingers and pushed him in the chest with both hands, toppling him onto his back like a drunkard who had drunk cheap wine. The chopped foot made it impossible for the man to get up on his own.

The commander was steady on his feet, but his shield arm hung limp, the shard of his sword stuck in the metal of his shoulder plate. The sentinel gritted his teeth and turned to the Brether's left side, ready to take the blows on his immobilized arm - better to lose a limb, even if it was at the shoulder than his life. The commander stood beside his dying colleague to prevent the mad swordsman from hell from picking up the fallen saber.

Ranjan bowed his head, glaring bull-like at his opponent, catching his breath. The traitorous weakness was already in his shoulder girdle, his mouth was acidic, and nausea was at the back of his throat. The red moon seemed obscured by a cloud, but Brether knew from experience it was the blood loss that was making his eyes dark. The broken cuirass was pressing on his chest like an instrument of torture that flattens its victim with a wooden plank with weights.

One could have suggested that they disperse, moreover, now the sentries might have agreed. But Ranjan was afraid that even the shortest phrase would betray his sad state of mind. No, the opponents had to be killed or put to flight, there was no third. Brether pulled a dagger from his boot and cast a leering glance at the quartet near the stables. The scribe and the woman didn't seem to be going into battle - thank God! Artigo shouted and cried, and the stunned big man picked up his cleaver, but he was either hesitant or overcome by a bout of nausea. Behind him snorting blood from his broken nose, the "axe" wailed, fiddled, and creaked with iron. Brether turned sideways, so that he could see all the participants in the ferocious fight, and attacked the commander.

He was expecting something traditional, "swordsmanship" and could have expected success. But the Brether didn't feint or weave a clever web of lunges, instead Ranjan threw a dagger at his opponent's head. The man deflected the iron with his sword losing a moment, and the Brether was already lunging at the leader's feet like a fairground wrestler. The commander was good, very good, he managed to strike downward with the hilt of his sword, but with a weak swing, and he did not hit the head. Feeling a new flare of pain under his shoulder blade, Ranjan caught his opponent's front leg and threw him to the ground with a powerful jerk that knocked the air out of his lungs with a shrill sob. The Brether crawled away on all fours and picked up his saber, arming himself again. But the commander did not get up, apparently, he had hit his head too hard.

Ranjan stood up, leaning on the enemy's blade as if it were a stick, no longer caring about the sharpening. Roughly, dirty, he finished off the two wounded men, giving them credit in his mind at least. No one asked for mercy, and everyone fought to the end. In the cold air hung the heavy odor of spilled blood, underfoot there was a crunching sound as the ground had not yet frozen to mud. The pigs continued to squeal. Artigo sobbed hysterically, clutching at the guard's leg, and the scribe ran down the street toward the far gate, not even trying to get his horse out of the stable.

The big man remained between Ranjan, Artigo, and the guard. He staggered, bloodshot eyes bulging, stooping like an oceanic, multi-legged beast called a crab. It seems that Ranjan's kick had not been in vain. But the soldier was stubborn and still dangerous. Ranjan lost another half a minute or so, confusing his opponent with a web of false swings and jabs, hiding one real one among them. It's no good trying to fend off a heavy blade when you're dizzy and your opponent is faster and more lightly armed. Ranjan poked the soldier in the groin, between his breastplate and his dapper codpiece, which was trimmed at the edge of the flap with copper nails. He waited until the big man fell to his knees a second time and finished him off with a blow from top to bottom of the neck, like an executioner. The saber was mediocrely sharpened, so the blade fractured the cervical vertebrae rather than chopped them.

Brether gripped the weapon tighter, and rolled his shoulders, trying to break the shackles of weakness. The blood that had soaked his jacket had already begun to cool, drawing additional heat and strength. Ranjan strode forward, intent on finishing the job. Brether had nothing against the girl's flight, but she had decided to fight in the manner of her valiant comrades. As the Brether strode toward her on woozy, wobbly legs, the woman literally ripped the boy from her, pushed him behind her, and crouched, holding with both hands a cleaver almost as long and large as the Brether's trophy saber. Ranjan thought belatedly that he should have brought a shield or a second sword along with the saber, and then he would have had a better chance. Now, soberly assessing his condition, he gave himself three chances out of five, maybe even. If the damned aunt had weapons on the level of her comrades-in-arms.

"Go away, I'm not after you," Ranjan grumbled, each word forced through his throat with effort, scratching and grating. Brether could barely feel his legs anymore and knew that when the fire of battle died down in his blood, he would likely have to scream in pain. If he stayed alive, of course.

"Go away," Ranjan repeated. His greatest fear was that the woman would try to close with the boy, but the sentinel was either confused and didn't think about it, or she had a strong notion of honor, which was rare among mercenaries, even if they were in the sovereign's service. Or maybe she was frantically hoping to be rewarded for a live one.

"Get out of here," Brether almost begged, feeling as if he were about to fall. Weakness spilled down his left leg like the urine of an incontinent old man, inexorable and unstoppable so that no amount of willpower could help. Against this background, the wound in his chest felt like a slight abrasion, though it was clearly something a good surgeon would have stitched up. His left arm was ineffective because of the axe cut.

The woman stepped forward with her bloodless lips clenched stubbornly, her cleaver held firmly, properly, her elbow at her side, so as to be less tired. Her left arm stretched forward and slightly to the side, intending to take the blows on the gauntlet. It was strange that, clearly being brave, she had held back from fighting before. Either she was following orders or she didn't want to share the glory and rewards with her colleagues. On the other hand, motives are not important, the important thing is that she didn't interfere.

Ranjan had to stand up straight, distributing his weight equally on both legs. The Brether revised the odds, giving her three successes out of five instead of the previous two.

They exchanged a couple of tentative blows, and the sentinel grew bolder, realizing that the fearsome swordsman was no longer so fearsome and barely on his feet. The woman attacked with quick steps and bounced, not even trying to hit particularly hard, just exhausting the Brether even more. The blades clashed with a tinny clang, and Ranjan noted distantly that the woman's cleaver was too heavy for full fencing, a pure weapon of war for a direct strike without frills, so the swing was slow and the defense weak. But that was enough for Brether for now.

The moment the sentinel, daring to sidestep him, forcing him to wiggle his woozy legs, the bowstring of pig entrails clicked loudly, and a ball of lead flew from the darkness into the woman's head. She lost her balance, swung her cleaver at random, and Ranjan, with the practiced precision of a spring-loaded automaton, slashed her leg just above the knee and, on the rise of the blade, caught the wrist of her armed hand with the point of the blade, tearing the leather glove on the inside of her wrist.

The woman took a step backward, looking around in shock, a trickle of dark blood snaking down her face. Then the sentinel ran, awkwardly, staggering and limping. Artigo screamed again, desperately reaching out his arms to follow her. Ranjan let out a long, long exhale and leaned on his saber, now with both hands. He grinned crookedly, thinking he was alive again.

Again...

A horse rode past, ridden by Hel with Hel's ineptitude. Cadfal followed, holding his executioner's club on his shoulder. Gamilla emerged from the darkness, cocking the ballester. The mechanism allows her to do so on the move. Behind the crossbowman's back, some other shadows flickered, apparently other companions. They seemed determined to finish what Ranjan had failed to do, that is, to break the watch and bring back the young fugitive. In a neighboring street a woman's cry of "Ai-yi-yi-yi-yi! Killed, all killed, completely killed, honest people, good people, what is this doing?!!!"

"Give me your hand," Pantin said imperiously, holding out his own. Ranjan ashamed of his weakness accepted the help leaning heavily on his former mentor and counting the damage. A split forehead, a cut hand, a stab wound in the chest - it was nothing to worry about, requiring only a needle and thread and fortified wine to burn off the poison that iron and steel exude. A chopped lumbar wound, on the other hand, could easily cripple a Brether. At least a cripple. Every Brether knew that it was possible to survive even if the liver was severed, it would take a miracle, but it happened. But if the axe really hit or at least knocked out a kidney, it was bad, really bad. One could only hope that the cuirass was strong, Hel is a really good healer, and Patin's self-restraint in magic only applies to killing other people. A little healing magic would be very welcome right now.

"That didn't turn out well," Ranjan exhaled. He felt even more disgusted. What had happened to his former dexterity of body and speech? In the past, beautiful words had come out of his mouth, crowned fights with dignity, been repeated by many mouths, and gone to the people. But now Ranjan felt nothing but pain, fatigue, and disappointment - in everything. He looked at the boy, curled up on the ground by the stable. Artigo was howling like a wounded animal, on one note, covering his head with his hands. It seemed the child had wet himself.

"Stupid," said the brether. "So stupid…"

It seemed to him that his body suddenly became very light, just like a feather. Breter flew up above the ground with the power of his mind, not realizing that he was actually falling backward. Muffled, distant voices sounded.

Put it down

This is Pantin. But who are they putting? And where?

We need more fire

And this is Hel. Her voice is unmistakable, a little low for a woman, but without the masculine notes. Very memorable because it lacks any accent, pleasant, at times it seems that when the medicine woman speaks, she sings without stanzas or rhymes. But why is Hel here, since she was riding a horse? Or was that not her...

Cut the belts

Oh, no shit! Without that plate, he would've been chopped up to my abdomen from the inside out.

Good armor, not steel, of course, but excellent for secret wear. Too bad it can't be repaired.


It hurts. Now it really hurt. Ranjan would have cried if he could have, but he could no longer feel his body, and it was as if tendons had been cut in all his parts.

The bleeding won't stop. I'll try to make a tight bandage.

Someone is bleeding... Who?

Shut this bastard up!

They were talking about my son, Ranjan realized. He wanted to say that they were bastards themselves, that it wasn't the kid's fault, and that he would kill them all if they didn't stop insulting him, but he didn't, falling into a final and blessed faint.

The Brether's last thought was a surprisingly sensible and clear one: that, if he looked at it dispassionately, the fight was worthy of a real, good legend about one man slaying many. Not as loud, of course, as the Moon Reaper's revenge on the dastardly Bonom, but worthy enough. But he who was called Plague would not be proud of that fight and would refrain from telling about it.

Then there was only darkness and peace.

"God be merciful," Gaval whispered, looking around frantically. "God... What are we going to do now?"

He looked at Gamilla like a starving man looking at a millet cake. Desperately hopeful and understanding at the same time. The paid bodyguarding time was over, and the minstrel had no more coin. So the crossbowwoman owed him nothing more.

"What to do," repeated Gaval, who had already seen in his mind's eye a wheel for breaking joints, a boiling cauldron, hooks for hanging by the ribs, a pole with nails, and other tools of the executioner's trade. The minstrel did not remember exactly what the punishment was for those accomplices against the imperial authority but was rightly of the opinion that the noose was not the answer.

Gamilla exhaled, watching the steam dissipate in the cold air, and shook her head, trying not to look in the direction of the elderly spearman who was nonchalantly wiping blood from his weapon with a scrap of someone else's cloak. She said nothing in response.

"We must run," summed up the Highlander, limping with a crutch stick. On his weathered, nasal face he could clearly read the realization that Maryadek was not just a poacher, but a participant in a crime against the Empire. And judges were unlikely to scrutinize the nuances to determine the exact degree of guilt and complicity.

* * *

Two (three) chances out of five" - in non-lethal fights between swordsmen there are usually five "rounds", accordingly the chances in a fight to the death and the quality of the fighters have also long been calculated on a five-point scale.
 
Chapter 10 New
Chapter 10

* * *

Shotan, Curzio, and Duke Wartensleben listened quietly, without attracting attention, to the soft voices coming through the ajar door of the Blue Palace library. Although the house had dozens of beautiful rooms and halls, the library had spontaneously become Emperor Ottovio's classroom. And, it must be said, the lord of the world gave himself to the study of the sciences with great zeal. Biel Wartensleben adhered to the concept of practical training without taking time away from pressing problems. So now the Marquess was discussing with Ottovio a difficult task - the legal aspects of convening the future Senate and tax projects. Thus, the young emperor was getting not abstract knowledge, but actual understanding - how the legal system of the Empire, which was confusingly complicated, was organized.

The current problem was that any attempts to introduce new taxes were easily parried by the appeal "this is not in the old ways, our fathers and grandfathers did not know such taxes!". That is, it was not enough just to unroll scrolls with placards. To approve them with the consent of all estates it was necessary to formalize the new levies as the old ones, only slightly modified. The most promising way was the way of "collecting gifts", that is, from a purely legal point of view, not the taxable population paid the statutory to the imperial treasury, and grateful subjects collecting gifts personally to the lord of Ecumene. It was already right, "in the old way" and in accordance with the millennial tradition. And the fact that the gifts were fixed and regular, well, it happened, it happens. After all, why shouldn't the emperor use his personal savings for public needs? But here lurked the next problem. It was necessary to somehow formalize class control over the expenditure of those very "gifts", and in an impeccably tactful and correct form. So that the procedure in no way looked like an impudent search of the lord's personal coffer (being such a search in its actual content).

Curzio smiled faintly, imagining what it looked like from the outside. The three noble persons eavesdropping under the door like insignificant servants. No, of course, there was nothing special or even more shameful here, the Court had seen such things, because to be near a high-born person at the right moment was a great art and a great luck. But still... funny.

Meanwhile, the conversation between mentor and pupil had taken a bizarre turn to a topic that had not originally been part of the lesson, and Ottovio suddenly asked, "What was a nobleman to the people of the mainland? What is the essence of nobility? The question sounded silly, but it was not silly. The island boy had touched upon a very painful topic that had plagued the Bonoms for many decades.

On Saltoluchard it was simple: there was a single Family, within which everything was organized and regulated, everyone had a place, and everyone was in his or her place. In the rest of the Oikumene, however, things were more complicated. As the world recovered from the collapse and social relations multiplied, the competition between the nobility of the "sword" and "inkwell" intensified. But more importantly, a conceptual question opened up here. If, say, a true baron and an anoble baron are formally equal, if yesterday's merchant can claim identity with a nobleman, whose family can be traced back to the times of the Old Empire, is not someone else equal to a born aristocrat? A shop foreman, for example. A respected townsman. A peasant, finally! Is a diploma with a seal really the only thing that distinguishes a true man of honor from a low-born wretch with a tight purse?

Shotan pressed his lips together, wondering how Wartensleben's eldest daughter would answer a difficult question that had plagued the real aristocracy for at least a century. However, the duke showed signs that it was better to leave, and the count tacitly agreed. Indeed, let all sorts of mutts guard the door, real nobles do not belong to it. You should live in such a way that the monarchs themselves call you.

"So," Curzio poured the pink wine into the glasses.

The Blue Palace did not have an overabundance of servants, and the wing was cleared of all intruders during study hours. Ottovio had not yet developed the useful habit of concentrating on mental work, and he found himself distracted, so his self-proclaimed mentors decided that no occasion meant no distraction.

Shotan sipped his drink, counting the number of rooms separating their small study from the library. The layout was old and enfiladed, so in the event of an attack, the enemy would have to walk through a straight line of chambers under a crossbow and magical fire. Magic was a problem nowadays, but there were plenty of good crossbows. Especially after craftsmen learned to make "puffed" shoulders, as well as to cut out of hard metal gears for rack and pinion mechanisms. As a result, even wealthy citizens could afford powerful and at the same time compact weapons and the "masters of arrows" from the south lost their monopoly on the refined art of crossbow shooting. Although, of course, whoever has the opportunity to choose will always hire a man with a blue tattoo on his face rather than an ordinary ruthier.

"Well," Wartensleben said with his usual caution. "I'd say things are going... pretty well so far," the duke thought for a moment and then admitted. "I thought it would be worse."

"Yes," agreed Shotan. "I will disclose that I also shared your skepticism. But the measure of every work is its completion and its result. So we still have to wait for the deserved fruits."

The Count sighed, took a sip, and added with unusual sincerity:

"It remains to be seen when success will knock on our doors."

"Well, that'll be easy," Wartensleben indicated a feeble grin. "There's a very good signal."

"Yes?" Shotan raised an eyebrow.

"That's right," Curzio interjected. "May I try to guess?" He turned to the Duke.

Wartensleben, staring bilefully into the untouched glass with the look of someone dying of thirst in the middle of the desert, only nodded.

"It will be obvious that we are on the road to success when another petitioner or complainer brings his complaint not to the Council, but to us," Curzio said very seriously. "When I or one of you gentlemen is handed a scroll with a petition and offered... let us say, a modest thanks for the petition, then it will be clear that we are on the right track. And if it is repeated a dozen times, if middle-class nobles begin to seek our friendship, hoping to be presented to His Majesty... Then we can say that we have succeeded."

Wartensleben silently saluted his glass, recognizing the justice of what he had heard.

"Reasonable," agreed Shotan. "Then we should continue to work in the agreed direction."

"And your turn will come soon, my good friend," Curzio raised the vessel on its long stem. "By the way, the matter with this idiot is settled."

"So I don't have to kill him?" Shotan clarified without a trace of pretense.

"No," Curzio grinned. "He was rewarded and sent away."

"That's good news," the duke said, touching his lips to the wine, but no more than that. Wartensleben had been suffering from liver cramps for three days, and the wine made the pain worse. The duke did not want to show weakness in front of his fellow conspirators, so he suffered in silence pretending that the wine was not refined enough for his noble person.

"Yes. The Privy Council looks at all this with distrust," Curzio said. "But for now they will not prevent us. The time seems long at first glance, but the task is great, and not a single day must be wasted."

"Nice," said Shotan, smiling at a recent memory. "Nice..."

* * *

A few days earlier, the Count had walked leisurely but purposefully to the arena where a very expensive and generous tutor was attempting to teach the Emperor the wisdom of mounted combat.

The Count carried a naked sword of a strange kind in his hands, holding it under its broad hilt, so that the blade rested on his breast and shoulder, almost touching the point of his ear. Behind Shotan were three hasty gendarmes, ready at any moment to carry out the orders of their commander and patron without hesitation or delay. Shotan and the master had already clashed once before in a fierce pique and were separated, one might say, "at the very edges". This time the Count was going to finish the matter without leaving any ambiguities. He walked under the unusually warm, almost spring sun and, smiling relaxedly, thought how everything would end.

There were many sins attributed to Shotan, and most of the rumors were true in one way or another. Only one accusation, that of his love for murder, remained completely false. In fact, the "soldier count" did not feel anything special about the process of taking a life. Shotan perceived it as an ordinary action, which had a cause and effect and was not too pleasing to Pantocrator, so it had to be done for the sake of achieving some kind of profit. Now the captain of the cavalry company envisioned the possibility that the visiting dandy would decide to test his fate and die as a result. And... that was it. Just one possibility out of many.

As usual, the site, covered with the best river sand, was cordoned off by guards. Prince Guyot knew the matter well and was anxious that Ottovio should be under guard at all times, except on special occasions. The Count, with a careless gesture, ordered his escort to halt at a distance so as not to make the guards nervous. One armed man in close proximity to the regal body would suffice.

It didn't take supernatural insight to realize from afar that the lesson was a failure, just like all the previous ones. It was predictable and logical. Horses and carriages were not in use on Saltoluchard. Bonomes traveled on stretchers, and it was one of the few opportunities to publicly show their wealth to the city and the world, because the labor of porters is expensive, in addition, according to tradition, they should be beautifully and again expensively dressed at the expense of the owner. Knights in their usual form were also rare on the island. A man should show his valor on the deck of a galley, with sword or coin scales, as the case may be. And to ride a horse with a spear is foolishness and pampering, and disproportionately expensive. That's why the island nobles were not good riders.

Shotan himself thought it was simple: at first, it had been too expensive for the islanders to have horses, for the stony land was chronically short of food for humans, and even less so for the voracious creatures. Then, as the centuries passed, forced frugality became a virtue and a carefully preserved tradition. But the Count kept this opinion to himself, believing that not every thought that could be spoken should be spoken.

In general, the young emperor, arriving in the capital, did not know how not only to ride a horse but even properly hold a saddle. This was no secret to his subjects and, of course, did not add to the sympathy of the pillars of society, as well as the noble youth. The problem was recognized and even corrected, but from what Shotan had seen with his own eyes, the cure was more of a poison.

The count nodded and greeted the commander of the infantry battalion, who looked very much like a prince, probably some relative... Though all Highlanders are in one way or another similar in appearance, with their stupid pigtails and no less stupid knots on their bellies. The commander could have been ignored, especially since the knight did not have the slightest respect for the Peshtsy. But the Count believed it was not worth multiplying ill-wishers unnecessarily, so he was polite to the extent that the infantry was not subjected to outright humiliation.

The Count pretended not to notice the slanting glances of the guards sliding on the blade in the nobleman's hands and stepping onto the sand of the arena. He did not go far, however. Shotan was among those who were allowed to approach the Emperor's body not just with weapons, but with a naked blade. However, one could understand the guards, too, considering how Ottovio's predecessor was rumored to have left this world. Hiding an ironic smile at the corners of his lips, Shotan looked on the 'lesson'.

What can one say... the emperor's destrier was magnificent. A marvelous beast of the purest blood, the product of centuries of painstaking crossbreeding. Horse breeding was perhaps the only trade that survived the Cataclysm almost unscathed. Sages and mages swore that today's knights mounted the exact same horses as the great heroes of antiquity, steeped in the memory of the ages. Shotan felt a prick of black envy as he looked at the red-haired beauty. The Count was not poor but could not afford such a beast. It was unlikely that the entire Ecumene would be able to gather a full dozen equal to this destrier. Well, in this case, Saltoluchard had been generous. And the sadder was the picture unfolding around the marvelous horse.

"No, no, no!" said, literally shouted the mentor. "Your position is not the right one!"

The palpable accent and word placement indicated a native of the Southwest generally recognized as the best horseman as well as the master of mounted combat.

Ottovio hunched in his saddle like a peasant on a nag, not the lord of the world on a magnificent horse. The emperor's face was a picture of universal longing and despondency. The horse was breathing heavily and looked tired. On the moving muzzle beneath the gold embroidered headpiece was an expression remarkably similar to Ottovio's grimace. The Count glanced at the nearby keeper of the palace stables, and the two connoisseurs shook their heads sadly, understanding each other without words.

"Only a turn!" the mentor fervently argued. "No leaning! If you bend, you make the horse strain too much, and the animal gets tired much faster. And in battle or in a gallop you can fall out of the saddle. You control the horse by turning the seat and forcing the spine of the horse to bend in the right direction!"

Ottovio tried honestly to follow the instructions but to no avail. The horse blasted the sand uselessly with his hoofs, squinted his dark eyes sadly, and wagged his long tail irritably. It was obvious that the emperor was languishing in anticipation when the torture of riding would finally end, and he could return to reading the old papyrus in the company of Biel ausf Wartensleben.

Marquise Wartensleben ...

What a woman, Shotan thought. How did the old fox from Malersyde do it? His son was a freak, but he had three daughters by different wives, none of them like the others, and all of them beautiful. Maybe it's time for the Count to get married. He wonders what the Duke would say to a request for Biel's hand in marriage.

"Left hand, left hand!" No longer shy, the mentor shouted. "Don't pull! You can't pull the reins like that! You're tearing the animal's lips, it's not a plow!"

Shotan sighed, thinking that the islanders were idiots after all. Yes, they had chests full of gold (though not so full now), and they could make money by turning anything, including hopes, dreams, and other ephemeral entities, into coins. But the degenerates, who pride themselves on their ancient and ridiculous clothes along with equally ridiculous hairstyles, did not have the imperial mindset of a jeweler's grain. For the last few weeks the islanders - the members of the Council of Regents and the emissaries scurrying between the capital and the Island - had seemed to the Count like children who had borrowed a rich toy from their strict parents, but did not know what to do with it. Their actions were generally correct, and the captain could not deny it. The Saltoluchardians were trying to clean up the Court's tangled bookkeeping, to update the lists of lands, name privileges, forest registers, and other property. But they were doing it without due deference and the right attitude, like true merchants.

And now... Yes, the eighth son rides like a sack of rotten rutabagas, but he is the Emperor, and the humiliation is public. Of course, there is no one here but the guards and the Highlanders are strangers in Milvesse, they are not in the mood to talk too much. And yet... They are men who drink in the taverns and, when drunk, boast like all men. Many have constant mistresses with whom their tongues are loosened, some owe moneylenders and pay with snitching. Everything that happens here is bound to spill out in rumors into the quiet offices of the Bonoms, and then onto the dirty streets of Milvess.

The mentor in the meantime, was trying to instill in his mentee the knowledge of how to defend his horse against enemy attacks. Shotan caught the Guard commander's gaze, displeased and even partly guilty. The Highlander was uncomfortable to see a dandy raising his voice at his lord, the Guardsman tried to look away so as not to see the shameful picture, but then he remembered his duty and the need to supervise. Ottovio pined even more, the mentor infuriated at his apprentice's stupidity.

You can't do that. No, absolutely not, the Count thought, and although he had originally intended to wait until the lesson was over, he decided that some things were better done sooner rather than later. Shotan moved towards the center of the arena, wasting no time in sighing or any of the other rituals people used to encourage themselves before taking decisive action. He literally felt the guards' hands tense, gripping the shortened halberds, more like long poleaxes, tighter. The Count didn't look back, but he knew that his small retinue had in turn adjusted their belts and scabbards, ready to come to his aid at any moment.

"Never, never, remember it, under no circumstances should you let go of the reins," the instructor calmed down a little and did not shout any more. Then he made an expressive speech concerning the defense of the horse in a cavalry fight, where not only lances but also shorter weapons were used.

"Your Imperial Majesty," Shotan came closer and made a perfect bow, keeping his sword in his hand. The captain spoke the full title with emphasized respect as if he wanted to emphasize the contrast between himself and the stranger. The Emperor responded with a look of gratitude, while the dandy was completely "missing the point," puffed up with insulted pride.

"Count, it is good to see you," said the Emperor, sincerely pleased.

"Leave us alone, please!" The teacher's words sounded almost like an order, which surprised Shotan a little. "Wait for your turn to show the techniques of your low art."

Shotan was even more surprised and looked around to see if the assassins were creeping up behind him. In any case, he would have used such defiant words only to provoke and then kill. The Master misinterpreted the gesture as a sign of uncertainty, and continued like a true primator:

"Yes, yes, please move aside!"

"I don't see any reason for that," the Shotan said with a slight curve of his pale lips. "I have come to teach His Majesty another useful lesson, and I intend to do so. You, on the other hand, should leave immediately."

"This is not for you to decide!" The tutor mixed up the order of words again trying to make the phrase sound as pompous and important as possible. "You must wait your turn, and from now on be more courteous! My science is the pinnacle of excellence for every warrior and is always first in line. To other things, you should devote your leisure hours."

He asked for it, the count smiled in his heart. But he said aloud, maintaining his typical look of a revived statue without a single emotion on his handsome face:

"Yes, I thought so, too, until I was knocked out of my saddle at a nameless village. Afterward, I was surrounded by men with clubs and axes, despicable but numerous. It was because I was foolish at the time..." Shotan paused deliberately to emphasize what followed. "...like you. And followed advice as stupid... as yours. But fortunately, I had the time and wisdom to overcome this vice."

The Count turned his whole body toward the Emperor, from whom the longing and sadness had fled like powder in the wind. Shotan now addressed Ottovio defiantly.

"Forgive me the sin of impatience, Your Majesty, for I have taken the liberty of interrupting your study. But my motive was purely loyalty. Loyalty has to point out a mistake to one's lord so that it does not grow into an ulcer."

"How dare you..." said the master, whom the Count almost felt sorry for. Indeed, in such a situation one should either take up the sword at once or demonstrate the wonders of rhetoric, beautifully parrying impudent words. The visiting - and very expensive - tutor was definitely not a master of either.

Where did the islanders get this dummy?..

"I dare," Shotan interrupted him. "Anyone who has ever been in a real attack, who has seen a line of spades in front of him, knows that the first thing to protect is the horse's head. Destrii are strong and mighty, they die hard in battle and take pain easily. But as soon as a horse receives a tangible blow to the head, it refuses to move forward, whether in column or in formation. And the infantry know this very well."

Shotan made a half-turn as if appealing to the guardsmen who cordoned off the arena. The silent Highlanders with halberds and capes in the colors of the House of Gotdua bowed their heads in agreement. They, in general, despised the Count just as the Count despised them - here, another dressed and powdered knight like a girl, who puffs and flaunts himself while on horseback and looking down on the world. But as soon as he gets out of the saddle, having received a halberd on his face, he immediately loses his gloss and beauty, crying like the same girl, begging the angry pikers to take him prisoner instead of killing him on the spot. But the noble dandy with the stone face and the strange sword spoke his mind.

"Moreover, it is not in every skirmish that a knight seeks to keep the enemy's horse unharmed," continued Shotan, preventing the master from intervening. "And there are those who dare to aim at the animal, risking an unanswered blow from the rider, relying on armor alone. That is why a warrior must protect his faithful four-legged companion, and above all his head."

The count took another step forward, looking up at the emperor from below.

"Your Majesty, this teacher is stupid and ignorant. Cast him away. To learn the science of war, you need not someone dressed up and can fill a large room with beautiful certificates of fictitious merit. but one who knows how terrible the fourth horn sounds to a horseman. How teeth grind when the faceted tip hits the helmet, how the air is knocked out of the chest by the impact with the ground."

"The fourth horn?" Ottovio clarified. "I don't understand..."

"I teach great warriors! Those who never lose a stirrup, let alone a saddle!" Shotan realized what he had long suspected: he was no combat master A true fighter would have challenged the Count with any weapon right here and now. He was most likely an ordinary Voltigeur who had slipped a recommendation to the right man when the islanders needed to find a mentor for Ottovio. And a fool, too, to interrupt the Emperor so aggressively.

The Count, no longer trying to be courtly, grinned in a frankly mocking grin and said, minting his words like the strokes of a claw:

"There is no warrior who has not lost his stirrups. Even the greatest of the great have tasted their blood on their tongue from bruised lungs. Whoever claims otherwise has never known real combat."

"And... you too?" Ottovio asked, not believing his ears.

"Of course," Shotan smiled modestly. "And more than once. The dignity of a true warrior is not in never falling under an enemy's attack, for that is impossible. It is to get up every time."

The Count turned to the master and ordered coldly, as to a random person who is only admitted to a noble body by misunderstanding:

"Please leave. Your advice is bad and you are no longer needed here."

The tutor was a nobleman, which implied a bright, accentuated, on the verge of morbid imagination sense of aristocratic dignity and paranoid readiness to defend his honor at any moment. But the Count did not behave like a man, but rather like an element that could not be counteracted, and the equestrian teacher trembled, not understanding how one should behave in such a situation.

"I-" He swallowed nervously. "I'll complain to the Council..."

"Then I'll be clearer," said Shotan. "Get out. Or, if my actions offend you...."

The Count retreated a few paces but left his sword on his shoulder for the time being. Shotan's pause, however, was itself exhaustive and frank. The mentor crumpled, looking around, realizing he would find no sympathy, much less support, here. He turned and walked away, throwing angry glances over his shoulder, alternating with inarticulate hisses.

"Your Majesty," Shotan bowed in a half bow as if making a point of separating the sad events that had offended the ruler's eyes and ears a few minutes ago. The Count deliberately omitted "Imperial," experimenting to see if some intimacy and familiarity, was acceptable between the Emperor and his mentor.

"I apologize if my assertiveness offended your ears."

"Never mind..." Ottovio did not seem to understand how to react to such aggressiveness in the presence of suzerain. But apparently, the joy of deliverance won out. The servant readily held up Ottovio's strive, and the emperor jumped to the sand. Not too deftly, without proper practice, but not hopelessly so.

"If it pleases Your Majesty," Shotan bowed his head. "I will select a few warriors from my company who will be honored to be your assistants. And I'll be glad to share some practical knowledge of mounted combat myself."

Ottovio glanced toward the Count's minions and shuddered faintly. Shotan usually took with him the most ghastly and beastlike of fighters, whose extensive experience of war and vice was written on their faces like a criminal's testimony in a court book. While the servants were taking the horse to the stall, the Emperor took off his gloves and slipped them behind his belt, stepping closer to the Count.

"I don't like horses," Ottovio said softly. "Why learn something you'll never use? Emperors don't lead armies into battle."

"Yes, that is so," agreed Shotan, and Ottovio looked at his interlocutor with bewilderment. The emperor waited for the count to argue, defending the perfection and necessity of a truly chivalrous occupation.

"The ruler's weapons are the word and the inkwell," continued Shotan. "But first a nobleman must be good in the saddle. Besides, we cannot predict our fate. Who knows where and when we will have to fight for our lives?"

Shotan thought about hinting to Ottovio that he might end up like the previous Gotdua but decided that would be inappropriate. But judging by the grim expression on his face, the emperor was thinking of something similar.

"What does the fourth horn mean?" The emperor asked.

"The mounted attack takes place at four signals. First, the cavalry march at a step, "boot to boot". Then the bugle trumpets for the first time, and the troop moves to a trot, gradually accelerating. At the second signal, the riders accelerate, rising to a "long" trot. The third horn is the order to gallop. When the trumpet calls for the fourth time, the knights tilt their lances and aim at their opponents. Usually, this happens forty or fifty paces before the enemy formation. Earlier is not possible, the shaft retains flexibility and if you lower it too early, the tip will begin to wriggle like a witch's kettle in the cauldron. After that, it is impossible to stop the attack. Therefore, the fourth horn symbolizes inevitability. When it is sounded, the knight either wins or loses, the third is not given."

"That's interesting," Ottovio said thoughtfully, clutching his knitted belt with its gilded buckle. "I didn't know. And your cavalrymen can't stop after the fourth horn either?"

Shotan smiled modestly and replied laconically, feeling unaccustomed pride, unaccustomed because he was bragging about his personal successes in front of what was essentially a boy.

"Mine can. But I have the best company in the eight corners of the world. There are no others like this."

"And did you have to...cancel the push?"

"It's happened. It's a good way to disperse a low-spirited opponent without too many casualties. Actually, open combat doesn't happen very often. Rarely, in fact. Usually, when two squads converge, whether mounted or on foot, you can see who is worth what. The weaker side retreats or starts bargaining. A fight is rare, and a hard fight, even to the death, is even rarer."

"Have you ever had to fight like that?"

"Yes."

When he said that, Shotan felt the painful sting in his right leg again. The limb had long ago been repaired by the best magicians, the bones mended, the scars smoothed. It cost the young viscount everything: his horse, his armor, even the Pantocrator symbol made of cheap copper - a gift from his mother - and two loyal servants whom Shotan had sold to wealthier cavalrymen. The magicians had done their job perfectly. But as soon as he thought of the old case, the pain returned, as if only yesterday a man's club had fallen on the hip of the young, overconfident knight, shattering both his youth and his overconfidence.

Ottovio lowered his head, staring into the sand.

"Maybe I can add some variety to your teaching," Shotan suggested modestly.

"In what way?" The emperor asked absent-mindedly, still thinking about his thoughts.

"With this simple tool," Shotan showed the sword he had brought, a strange weapon that Ottovio had never seen before.

The sword had a very long hilt and a simple cross-shaped guard devoid of rings and hooks. It continued with a leaf-shaped blade without a dol, unusually short relative to the hilt. It seemed that someone tried to combine a "galley" sword, a shovel, and an oar. It was not clear what this thing could be used for.

"What an amazing... device," Ottovio puckered his lips.

"Very practical," Shotan said. "It's shorter than a galley sword, the blade is the same length as the hilt, but the weight and balance are exactly the same as the real thing."

"Then why not use a normal weapon?"

"Here, the shape of the blade promotes an accurate understanding of how not to hit flat, which is the bane of long sword owners. With this, you'll learn how to chop properly faster. It's also useful to have a deadly weapon that looks ridiculously harmless. I've known masters who went out in search of a fight with only a wooden sword or cleaver, or even an ordinary stick. They seemed weak, but those tempted by their powerlessness were surprised."

"Hmmm..." Ottovio was still looking at the 'paddle' skeptically. "I'll be honest, I think I'm even less enthusiastic about swords than horses."

Shotan noted that the young man's speech had improved, becoming... richer. That's what a few days of relaxed conversation with the right person meant. Still, this Biele... what a woman! What beautiful skin she has. Clear, smooth, amazing texture. Perfect material, the cut on such a one goes sculpturally clear, and the scars are as even and thin as drawn in ink.

Out loud, the count said:

"And let me tell you, it's a waste. A big sword is a good sword in itself. It is suitable for the field, the crowded street, and even the rickety deck. Once the fighter has mastered this weapon, he will be able to fight effortlessly with a pole, a city spear, or a shorter, lighter sword. In addition, regular exercise makes the muscles dense and rounded, allowing you to retain bodily strength for many years. Those who properly exercise with it, always have healthy joints, such masters bypass the scourge of old people - a painful lower back. And adepts of the long blade never complain of male impotence."

Shotan lowered his sword and turned the hilt toward the emperor.

"Take it," the Count asked. "Take it tight. Feel its power."

Ottovio gave a slight grimace of disdain but held out his hand. The Highlanders on guard tensed perceptibly, more out of habit than actual danger.

"Imagine how much work went into this creation," Shotan said with a soft smile, and he looked as if he were in a completely different place, far away from here.

"First, the mining masters explored the veins with the best iron and extracted it from the womb of the Pillars. For only there is the best metal in the Oikumene. Often the miners had to fight demons and creatures that could still be found deep underground. The particles of precious metal were then melted down and turned into ingots of steel. They were scorched by the heat of the blast furnaces, in which a part of the infernal flames burned, they were crushed by water hammers, forging the basis for the future sword. Then the best blacksmiths, who take only gold as payment, turned the iron strip into a real blade. They hardened it, giving it diamond hardness while keeping it flexible. Then the grinders polished the sword to the point where you can look into it like a mirror."

Ottovio raised the blade with a look as if he could actually feel the awesome power of the masterful workmanship encased in the metal.

"This weapon is a fusion of wealth and power," continued Shotan. "The labor of many people whose skills have been honed over decades. The hope and pride of a shameless work. And that power now belongs to you alone. Only to you."

Ottovio gripped the practice sword tighter and raised it upright, catching the polished plane in the dim rays of the midday sun. Softly and almost timidly, he said, more like an eighth son than an Emperor:

"Teach me."

Shotan took a step back and bowed with the words:

"I would be honored, Your Imperial Majesty."

* * *

"Nice," Shotan repeated, squinting like a ferret that had stolen meat from the master's table.

"And now, honorable ones," Curzio rubbed his hands together. "Allow me to propose another idea for your consideration."

"You live in remarkable times," Wartensleben said, still grouchy. Curzio held back a smile as he watched the acrimonious old man try not to show his bodily ailments.

"Yes, interesting times. Useful ideas multiply like weeds in an uncultivated field."

"It's a good idea," Curzio said very seriously, and the angry old man fell silent.

"Which one?" Shotan asked, still smiling.

"The emperor needs companions."

"The Emperor already has companions," the Duke immediately joined the opposition. "That's us!"

"Absolutely," Curzio agreed at once. "Flawless, the best of the best! And efforts should be made to keep it that way. But he needs a combat retinue."

"Uh..." Wartensleben muttered. "You don't mean the Getaires, do you?"

"Exactly," Curzio bowed his head.

"What is it about?" Shotan asked. "I remember it was something from ancient history, but my education was... rather sketchy."

"Young nobles who will become His Majesty's companions, special assistants, bodyguards, and so on," Curzio noticed the squeamish grimace on Shotan's face and clarified. "The poor and beggars, of course. Those who have nothing to look forward to under the present circumstances. Those who can only get something from the Emperor's hands. Of course, we'll choose them carefully, collecting on each...."

Curzio wiggled his fingers, trying to remember if there was a counterpart to the word "dossier" in mainland dialects

"We understand," Wartensleben answered for both himself and the Count. "The boys must understand that their loyalty is divided in two."

"Yes."

Shotan ran his fingertips over his face, fixing a stray curl.

"Getaires..." he repeated as if tasting the word for flavor. "The Emperor's personal axe which does not obey the Council of Regents. Or rather, it may not obey... It won't be easy. Your..." the Count emphasized the word clearly, addressing Curzio."They won't like it."

"They would not like it if we recruited young men from the families of high Bonoms, much less Primators. It would be interpreted as an attack on the exclusive representation of the Council, a desire to bring the nobility of Milvess to our side. And no one is interested in the petty nobility."

Wartensleben grinned, and his teeth snapped like the fangs of a hyena.

"Meanwhile, they will be trained by experienced warriors from the company of the gracious captain?" the Duke clarified. "The ones who can make even a lousy peasant into a good warrior in a matter of months?"

"Exactly," Curzio grinned. "Cheap, promiscuous youths and mercenaries. What could be more boring and harmless?"

The three noblemen smiled silently at each other, and these smiles would have made an experienced physiognomist tremble. But there were no witnesses to the conversation, so there was no one to tremble.

* * *

It has to be said that Shotan is not lying at all. The classical two-handed sword is indeed an excellent training tool and provides a good base for using other weapons. That is why it was in use until the XVII century inclusive, although the age of the small sword had already come.

About the joints - also true, I was acquainted with a man who quite successfully bought his lower back problems by exercising with montante.
 
Back
Top