Read Servant of the Empire Online
Authors: Raymond E. Feist,Janny Wurts
Mara resisted an urge to rise and pace the flagstone walkway. ‘Clan Hunzan is radical in its thinking. Nothing they do would come as a surprise.’
Arakasi rounded off his report. ‘Little else is common knowledge, save that Netoha’s wife is a former slave.’
Mara raised her eyebrows, diverted from her troubles by interest.
But her Spy Master’s explanation dashed any hope she might hold for Kevin’s benefit. ‘Milamber freed all the slaves upon his estate before leaving Kelewan,’ Arakasi said. ‘As his status had yet to be called into doubt at the time, the act became as law. Even without slaves, Netoha has turned his small holdings to profit. Given his industry, he is a man who will likely continue to rise. He might someday become a powerful Lord.’
Mara seized upon the one point that mattered. ‘Then he could be open to a commercial transaction concerning this rift?’
‘Perhaps.’ Arakasi’s mood stayed guarded. ‘There is something else, mistress. A great deal is not clear to me, beyond the certainty that something vastly beyond the ordinary is in play. The renegade magician’s return has sparked much activity, all of it clandestine. There are disturbed patterns running through imperial circles – high officials in long conferences with scholars sworn to secrecy, and a lot of close-mouthed, nervous correspondence carried back and forth by the Light of Heaven’s personal messengers, none of it written, and all of it bonded by suicide oath,
according to court gossip. I shall endeavour to penetrate and discover the heart of this, but as the Assembly is involved …’ He shrugged again, to indicate the effort might not bear fruit.
Too concerned for her own difficulties, Mara forwent curiosity over the affairs of Great Ones. She dismissed her Spy Master with uncharacteristic abruptness, then called for a scribe, her intent being to send messages to Lord Netoha and to Fumita of the Assembly, offering generous terms for use of the rift gate into Midkemia.
Once her missives were dispatched by the guild of messengers, Kentosani held little to retain her. Mara opted for a swift return home, as much to avoid inopportune contact with other members of her clan as to assuage a sudden longing to spend time with Ayaki. The boy was growing so fast! He was halfway to becoming a man, she realized; she must speak to Keyoke soon about selecting a warrior to teach him weaponcraft, with his tenth birthday scarcely a half year off.
The return barge trip down the Gagajin passed without incident, but upon arrival at the border of her own estates, Mara’s worry lessened as she felt something of the familiar calm that came from the knowledge of being home. And yet, for the first time in her life, she felt gnawed from within by a sense of something missing. She pondered why as her bearers took her litter up the road to the estate house.
Yet the cause eluded her until the moment she set foot in her own front dooryard and accepted greetings from Lujan, Keyoke, and Nacoya. The house seemed suddenly insignificant. Mara felt a passing sadness that she no longer looked upon the home of her father as the grand and wonderful place it had seemed throughout her childhood. As Ruling Lady and Clan Warchief, she now saw only a spread of land that was difficult to defend, and a dwelling that was comfortably appointed, but lacking the grand presence and
State guest suites needful to a ruler of her status. For a moment Mara entertained the bitter thought that her most hated enemy should thrive in a place that was both the most defensible location in the Empire and the most beautiful.
As Mara crossed the threshold, Kevin in his customary place behind her, Nacoya pursued. Nettled that the mistress had returned only perfunctory salutations, the old woman nearly abandoned composure. ‘What has overcome you, Mara? Are you bereft of wits?’
The reprimand stung the Lady out of her thought. She spun to face her adviser, her frown an open warning. ‘What do you mean?’
‘This assumption of the Warchief’s staff.’ Nacoya wagged her finger, much as she had in her days as a children’s nurse. ‘Why didn’t you discuss your intentions before you acted?’
Mara stood firmly, her arms folded. ‘The idea never occurred to me, until I was halfway to Kentosani. When I left, I thought I could convince the clan to do as I asked, but upon the river I had time to think –’
‘I wish you had put the time to better use!’ the Acoma First Adviser cut in.
‘Nacoya!’ Mara’s eyes flashed rage. ‘I will not be scolded like a girl. What do you object to?’
The First Adviser bowed precisely to the correct degree, which meant she was not cowed. In tones near to scorn she said, ‘I beg your pardon, Lady. But since you have compelled Clan Hadama to recognize your primacy, you have also forced public notice that you are now a power to be contended with.’
Caught off guard, Mara tried to wave the matter off. ‘Nothing has changed, save –’
Nacoya put her old hands firmly upon Mara’s shoulders and looked her mistress in the eyes. ‘Much has changed. Before, you were seen as a resourceful girl, who could escape traps and strengthen her house and defend herself. Even
after Jingu’s death, the mighty of the Empire could cast your success off as luck. But now, by making others relinquish honours, you announce to the world that you are a threat! Tasaio
must
act. And he must do so soon. The longer he waits, the more his allies and vassals will come to doubt his resolve. Before, he might remain content to wait for a clear opportunity; now he must do something. You have made him desperate.’
Mara felt a sudden current of cold. With certainty she knew Nacoya was correct in her appraisal. Made nervous as fresh worries tangled with others arising from her trade difficulties, she closed her eyes a moment. ‘You are right.’ Smiling thinly in chagrin, she regained her poise and added, ‘I have acted precipitately and … well, the best that can be done is to hold council with my staff as soon as I have refreshed myself. We must … make plans.’
Nacoya nodded grumpy approval. As Kevin escorted Mara to her quarters, the old woman fretted, not only because Mara acted without thought, but also because she looked tired, truly bone-tired. As many years as Nacoya had served, she had never known the daughter of her heart to appear so worn.
The Acoma First Adviser sighed and shook her head. The Acoma ministers could meet and talk all they liked; plans might be made and acted upon, but truly, what could be done to ensure Acoma security and prosperity that had not been tried already? Feeling her age, and the ache in every joint that suffered from arthritis, the old woman shuffled slowly down the corridor. Every day since the Lord Sezu had died and left his holdings to his daughter, Nacoya had known fear that her beloved Mara might become a casualty of the Great Game. Yet the Lady had proven herself a capable, cunning player. Why, then, should the fear be worse today, or was it just an aged woman’s bones protesting a life of long service? Nacoya shivered, though
the afternoon was warm. At every step she took, she seemed to feel the earth of her own grave beneath the soles of her feet.
Word returned from Ontoset. Mara read the message twice, a stormy frown on her face. Restraining a vicious urge to tear something, she hurled the parchment onto her writing desk. The move was entirely unexpected. But Netoha had refused her very generous fees for the use of the rift on his lands.
‘It makes no sense!’ Mara exploded aloud, and in the corner of her study, Arakasi raised one eyebrow.
Dressed as a gardener, the Spy Master contemplated the edge on the small sickle he had been using to prune kekali bushes. He still insisted on keeping his return to the estate a secret, for his suspicions concerning Tasaio’s penetration of Mara’s security were far from laid to rest. The mistress might not wish to talk the matter through, her mind being diverted by other things, but Arakasi had his own worries. He currently spent as much time investigating servants and slaves upon the Acoma estates as he did conducting the business his mistress required of him. Only Nacoya knew of his concerns, as the old woman was above suspicion.
Arakasi tested the edge on the laminated tool with his finger, and assumed a posture that would appear to an onlooker as if the Lady berated a servant for carelessness. ‘Mistress, I have discovered little about this man, Netoha. His motives are not public. He must have cogent reasons for refusing your offer; obviously, he cannot do business across the rift himself, because of your trading rights. Yet I cannot tell you what his reasons may be.’
Mara tugged at a tight hairpin in frustration. Her message to Fumita of the Assembly had been returned unopened, so her last recourse to gain her trade concessions was this Netoha. Although Arakasi did not care to be pressured, she
said, ‘Can you get someone close to the Chichimechas to discover what these reasons may be?’
‘I can but attempt to, Lady.’ Trying hard not to look harried, Arakasi added, ‘It is unlikely we shall learn anything new, but I can have someone exchange gossip with the house and field servants. Netoha’s workers are largely barbarians –’
Mara broke in, ‘Midkemians?’
Arakasi nodded. ‘The renegade magician, Milamber, freed all his countrymen before leaving, and this Netoha employs them as workers. I would say from reports out of Ontoset that they do well enough as farmers. In any event, these are likely to be more garrulous than our own slaves, so getting information shouldn’t prove difficult. If, that is, they know anything worth hearing.’
Aware of Nacoya’s taut stillness at her elbow, Mara turned to the next issue at hand. ‘What of Minwanabi?’
Arakasi’s hands stilled on the sickle. ‘I worry, mistress, precisely because I have nothing to report. Tasaio conducts the business of his household much as you do your own, but with nothing that I would account extraordinarily significant.’ The Spy Master exchanged glances with Mara’s First Adviser. ‘This goes against expectations. Upon hearing of your rise to the primacy of the clan, Tasaio should have been moved to act at once. But instead …’ Arakasi glanced about, then said, ‘One other thing: the Minwanabi have begun a primitive spy network and are attempting to insinuate agents into several locations throughout the Empire. They are not hard to spot, since Incomo, the Minwanabi First Adviser, proceeds in a heavy-handed manner. I have men watching his men and am reasonably certain we can infiltrate his ring soon. That will give us a secondary access to his household and affairs, and when this is accomplished I shall feel reassured. Yet I dare not proceed too quickly. The whole operation may be an elaborate ploy to draw us out.’
And yet, Mara sensed, that would not be Tasaio’s style. The subtleties in his nature tended toward cruelty, and his tactics to military violence. Involved in deep thoughts once again, she absently waved dismissal to her Spy Master. She did not notice him leaving, and had forgotten Nacoya was in the room until the old woman spoke.
‘I feel a chill in my bones, daughter.’
Mara started slightly. ‘What worries you, Nacoya?’
‘Minwanabi plots. You rely too much on Arakasi’s informants. They may be well placed, but they are not everywhere. They are not at Tasaio’s side when he squats or when he lies atop his wife, and you must believe that this is a man who plots murder even while relieving himself or taking a woman to his bed.’
Mara found nothing humorous in the images, for Nacoya spoke truth. Arakasi’s agents might have ferreted out nothing overtly threatening toward her house, but the reports were disturbing nonetheless. Tasaio ruled his household with a wayward, cunning viciousness. His abuses were those that tormented the mind and heart, and yet, where a sworn enemy was concerned, Mara knew there was no blood in the Empire he would rather spill than her own, and her young son Ayaki’s.
The year passed.
Distracted with worry over continuing trade difficulties and Tasaio’s apparent lack of activity, Mara waited as the rainy season came and went. Needra calves were weaned from their mothers, and the little bulls charged around the meadow; when they were sufficiently grown, the herdsmen picked out those that were gelded and those that were to be used for breeding. Crops were planted and harvested and an uncertain peace held sway. Days slipped by without any resolution to Mara’s uncertainty. A thousand responses to a thousand possible assaults were discussed and discarded, and no Minwanabi threat materialized. A thousand moves in the Game of the Council were planned, but the Emperor did not relent in his edict against the High Council.
Seated in her study in the cooler hours of early morning, and clad in a loose, short robe, Mara studied the slates and parchments Jican had left for her. Since her frustrating setback in Kentosani, Acoma fortunes were improving. Her assumption of the position of Clan Warchief had precipitated no disasters. Gradually, the herds were recovering from the outlays made necessary from the Dustari campaign; the silk trade at last was flourishing. Although Nacoya seized every opportunity to nag that her mistress was neglecting the matter of marriage, Mara refused to be moved. With Tasaio consolidating his power as Lord of the Minwanabi, even someone from a family as favourably placed these days as was Hokanu’s would be foolish to agree to a union until the issue between Minwanabi and Acoma had been decided. Except for Xacatecas and, less
dependably, Anasati, alliances with the Acoma had become tentative. Mara sighed and pushed back a fallen lock of hair. Not yet strong enough to initiate the first overture, she had grown practised at waiting.
A soft tap at the screen disturbed her.
Mara gestured for the servant hovering beyond the door to enter.