The Tale of Krispos (85 page)

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Authors: Harry Turtledove

BOOK: The Tale of Krispos
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“Oh.” Krispos resumed: “‘As you are scion of a noble house yourself, most holy sir, I am confident you will agree with me and will seize the opportunity to expound this position to the people when the proper circumstances arise. What with the uncertainty and danger of the campaign upon which Krispos has embarked, that moment may come at any time.’” He stopped again.

Trokoundos said, “Nothing treasonous so far—quite. He could as well be worrying about what happens if you die in battle as over anything else.”

“So he could. But he sends himself to the ice with his next five words. Listen: “‘It might even be hastened.’”

“Aye, that’s treason,” Trokoundos said flatly. “What will you do about it?”

Krispos had been thinking about that from the instant he’d learned Rhisoulphos was corresponding with Gnatios. Now he answered, “First, I want you to seal the letter up again.” He handed it to Trokoundos.

“Of course, Your Majesty.” Trokoundos rerolled the letter and put the ribbon around it once more. His left hand shaped a quick pass; he spoke a low-voiced word of command. The ribbon changed place on the parchment. “I’ve returned it to its exact previous position, Your Majesty, so the restored wax will fit over it perfectly.”

Without waiting for Krispos’ nod, the mage held the letter upright. The ribbon did not stir; evidently the minor magic held it where it belonged. Trokoundos began the chant he had used before to remove the sealing wax. This time, though, his fingers fluttered downward in his passes rather than up toward the ceiling of the imperial tent.

Again Krispos missed the transfer of wax from one parchment to the other. One instant it was on the roll that stood on his desk; the next, back on Rhisoulphos’ letter. With a bow Trokoundos returned the letter to Krispos.

“Thanks.” Krispos went back outside. The courier was waiting with no sign of impatience; the sorcery could not have taken long. Krispos gave him the letter. “Everything’s fine,” he said, smiling. “Go on and deliver this to the patriarch; he’ll be glad to have it.”

The courier saluted. “Just as you say, Your Majesty.” He clucked to his horse and dug in his heels. With a small snort, the animal trotted away.

Krispos turned to Vagn. “Can you find me, hmm, half a dozen of your countrymen? I need quiet men, men who can not only keep their mouths shut but also move quietly.”

“I bring them, Majesty,” Vagn said at once.

Trokoundos sent Krispos a curious look. He ignored it. A few minutes later Vagn returned with six more burly blond northerners. For all their bulk, they moved like hunting cats. Krispos held the tent flap open. “Brave sirs, come in. I have a task for you—”

         

K
RISPOS WOKE AT SUNRISE EVERY DAY
.
MAYBE I’D BE ABLE TO
sleep late if my great-great-grandfather were the one who’d come off the farm,
he thought as he put his feet on the ground. He listened to the camp stirring to life.

He was just buckling on his sword belt when shouts of alarm cut through the usual morning drone of chattering men, clanking mail, and bubbling cookpots. He stuck his head outside, savoring a long breath of cool, fresh air; soon enough the day would turn hot and sticky. “What’s going on?” he asked Narvikka, who was standing morning guard duty.

“Majesty, the noble Rhisoulphos seems to have disappeared,” the Haloga answered.

“Disappeared? What do you mean, disappeared?”

“He is not in his tent, Majesty, not anywhere about the camp,” Narvikka said stolidly.

“That’s terrible news. What could have happened to him?” Since Narvikka only shrugged a musical chain mail shrug, Krispos hurried over to Rhisoulphos’ tent, which lay not far away. The tent was surrounded by men and officers, all of them agitated. Krispos strode up to Rhisoulphos’ second-in-command. “What’s happened, excellent Bagradas?”

“Your Majesty!” Bagradas saluted. He was a short, pudgy man of about forty who looked and often acted more like a dressmaker than a soldier. Krispos knew he was one of the two or three best swordsmen in the imperial army. That did not keep him from wringing his hands now. “Your wife the lady Empress’ father has been stolen away from us, whether by wicked men or dark sorcery I cannot say.”

“Can Harvas’ magic have reached into our camp? May Phos prevent it!” Krispos drew the sun-circle over his heart.

So did Bagradas. “Truly I hope not, Your Majesty. I am inclined to say not, for the sentry who guarded Rhisoulphos’ tent was found unconscious this morning by his relief. Magic might have dealt with the general, but would it have needed to lay low his guard as well? That seems more like the work of ordinary men.”

“You reason like a priest explaining Phos’ holy scriptures,” Krispos said. A broad, pleased grin spread across Bagradas’ face. Krispos went on, “Take me to this sentry.”

Bagradas led him through the crowd. The officer’s rank and shouts were not enough to clear a path. But when Krispos raised his voice, men stumbled backward out of the way. Bagradas said, “Your Majesty, this is the file closer Nogeto, who had the late-night duty outside the eminent Rhisoulphos’ tent.”

Nogeto drew himself to stiff, indeed trembling, attention. “Tell me what happened to you last night, soldier,” Krispos said.

“Majesty, begging your pardon, but everybody’s been asking me that, and may the ice take me if I
know
what happened to me. One minute I was standing here not thinking real hard, the way you do when it’s late and you know nothing’s going to go wrong. Only it did. Next thing I knew I was lying on the ground with my relief shaking me awake. And his eminence the general was gone.”

“Did somebody sap you?”

“No, Majesty.” Nogeto emphatically shook his head. “I’ve been sapped before, and I know what it’s like. I don’t feel like I’m fixing to die now, the way I would be. I just feel like I went to sleep and then got woke up. Only I couldn’t have. By the good god, I didn’t.” The guard’s eyes widened with fear. Sentries who fell asleep at their posts earned the sword and the chopping block.

“He’s always been a good soldier, Your Majesty,” Bagradas put in. “He’d not have been chosen to guard the general’s tent if he weren’t.”

“Is there any reason to think you didn’t just fall asleep when you were, ah, not thinking real hard, soldier?” Krispos asked sternly.

Nogeto said, “Majesty, for whatever you think it’s worth, just before I—” He changed tack. “Just before whatever happened happened, I mean, I thought I felt—oh, I don’t know; I thought I felt a cobweb blow across my face. I thought I’d picked up my hand to brush it away, but—oh, I don’t know.”

Krispos glanced at Bagradas. “He’s not making it up as he stands here, Your Majesty,” the officer said. “He said as much before you came.”

“Will you let a wizard examine you to learn if you speak truly?” Krispos asked Nogeto. The sentry nodded without hesitation. Krispos told Bagradas, “Take him to Trokoundos. If he’s not lying”—Krispos pursed his lips, made a wry face—“well, we’ll just have to look in some other direction, that’s all.”

“Aye, Your Majesty. Who could have done such a vicious, evil deed?”

“Maybe Nogeto will be able to give us a clue once Trokoundos works on him,” Krispos said. “Meanwhile, we have to go on as best we can. Excellent Bagradas, do you feel you can lead this regiment until Rhisoulphos turns up again, whenever that may be?”

“Me, Your Majesty? Oh, you’re far too generous.” Bagradas realized he might have affected too much humility, for he quickly added, “If you feel I can handle the command, I am honored to accept.”

“I’m sure you’ll lead bravely, excellent Bagradas. Good; I’m glad that much is settled, then.” Krispos turned to go, then stopped, as with an afterthought. “Bagradas, you know my father-in-law and I worked closely together. He was helping to manage some rather delicate business for me in the city. Now that he’s disappeared, I’ll have to deal with it myself. Can you make sure any letters he gets are sent straight on to me before they’re unsealed?”

“I’ll see to it, Your Majesty,” Bagradas promised. He spun on his heel and set hands on hips as he glared at the gaggle of men still milling around Rhisoulphos’ tent. “Come on, come on, you lugs!” he shouted. “We still have to ride today, whether the eminent sir is here or not.
Get
cracking,
if
you please!”

The men moved smartly to obey. Krispos nodded to himself; Rhisoulphos had been a canny soldier, but the regiment would not suffer under its new leader.

The army moved out a few minutes later than it might have, but not enough to upset even the veteran underofficers who were responsible for keeping their units in good order. Krispos rode Progress up and down the long line of march. Wherever he went, the troopers were buzzing about Rhisoulphos’ disappearance. Some thought Bagradas had got rid of his commander; others blamed sorcery; others, not surprisingly, were lewd. “He’ll be back in a couple of days, all sleepy and with his breeches unbuttoned,” one fellow guessed.

“Oh, go on, Dertallos, you’ve just saying what you’d do in his sandals,” a mate replied.

“If I were in his sandals right now, I wouldn’t be wearing sandals, if you know what I mean,” Dertallos said. Half a dozen voices barked deep male laughter.

One slow mile followed another. Halfway through the day, Krispos reported that Nogeto had been telling the truth. “He was drugged somehow, poor sod,” the wizard said.

“How very strange,” Krispos answered. “All right, then; let him return to duty.”

Scouts rode well in advance of the main imperial army. With them rode wizards, not the journeymen who had accompanied Krispos’ last northern foray but masters for the Sorcerers’ Collegium. If they could not sniff out a trap, no one could. If no one could, Krispos was uneasily aware, that trap would close on his army. And who then would defend Videssos the city, his wife, his heir, and his son to be? No one. He knew that all too well.

The farther north the army traveled, the fewer the farms Krispos saw being worked. That tore at him. Next to harvesttime, spring should have been the busiest season of the year, with men and oxen in the fields plowing, planting, and watering. But what was the point, when raiders might sweep down at any moment? Many little farming villages stood deserted, their former inhabitants fled to ground they hoped safer. If somehow he beat Harvas, Krispos knew he would have to import peasants to replace the ones who had run away or been slain. Otherwise the whole land would start to go back to wilderness.

As the Paristrian Mountains climbed higher into the northern sky, men began to peer suspiciously at every clump of brush, every stand of elms they passed. Krispos had known that same feeling the summer before as he approached Imbros: wondering how and where Harvas would strike. Now that he neared Imbros again, he knew it again, doubly strong.

About two days south of the murdered city, a scout came galloping back to Krispos. The fellow saluted and said, “Majesty, one of the wizards thinks he senses something up ahead. He can’t tell what, he’s not even sure it’s there, but—maybe something.” The scout looked irked at having to report what likely was just a mage’s vagary.

The most Krispos hoped for, though, was detecting Harvas’ snares at all. Expecting them to announce themselves with bells and whistles was too much to ask. He turned to the army musicians. “Play
Form line of battle,
then
Hold in place.
We’ll see what’s gong on up ahead.” As the music rang out and the soldiers began to move, Krispos reflected that he’d be wasting a good part of a day’s travel if the wizard had discovered nothing more than his overactive imagination. But better that than ignoring a true warning and throwing away his army.

He touched Progress’ flanks with his heels, urging the horse forward. Soon he had pressed ahead of the main body of soldiery. A few other riders advanced with him—wizards all. They knew what a halt had to mean. Trokoundos waved from atop a gray that trotted with a dancer’s grace. Krispos waved back.

He reined Progress in close behind a knot of scouts and sorcerers. To his untrained senses, the country ahead looked no different from that through which the army had been traveling: fields—too many of them untended—punctuated by stands of oak, maple, elm, and fir. Shadows raced over them, keeping time with the fluffy clouds that drifted across the sky. It all seemed too lovely, too peaceful, to have anything to do with Harvas.

“What’s wrong?” Krispos asked.

One of the sorcerers, a young, gangly man whose thin beard imperfectly covered his acne scars, bowed and said, “Your Majesty, I’m called Zaidas. I feel—not a wrongness ahead, nor even a lack of rightness, but rather—oh, how best to say it?—an absence of both rightness and wrongness, which could be unusual.” He cracked his knuckles and peered nervously at the innocent-appearing countryside.

“If you don’t sense anything, who knows what’s hiding there? Is that what you’re saying?” Krispos asked. Zaidas nodded. Krispos turned to the other mages. “Do you also feel this, ah, absence?”

“No, Majesty,” one of them said. “That does not mean it is not there, though. Despite his youth, Zaidas has great and unusual sensitivity, which is the reason we bade him accompany us. What he perceives, or fails to perceive, may well be genuine.” Zaidas’ larynx bobbed up and down as he shot his colleague a grateful glance.

Krispos made a sour face. “‘May well be’ cuts no ice, sorcerous sirs. I could starve, hunting a grouse that may well be there. How do we find out?”

Trokoundos strolled up just then to join the discussion. “We find out by testing. Is it not so, brothers?” The other wizards nodded. Trokoundos went on, “The lord with the great and good mind willing, we may even surprise Harvas, who should be confident we’ve noticed nothing.”

Trokoundos was an able mage, but no general. “If he’s there, he’ll know we’ve noticed,” Krispos said. “We don’t form line of battle every time a rabbit hops across the road. What we have to find out is, what is our line of battle moving toward?”

“You’re right, of course, Your Majesty.” Trokoundos shook his head in chagrin, then began a technical discussion with the rest of the wizards that lost Krispos by the fourth sentence. He was beginning to wonder if they would spend the whole morning chattering at one another when Trokoundos seemed to remember he was there. The mage said, “Your Majesty, a number of spells could create the illusion of normality ahead. We think one is more likely, given that Harvas could both pervert and amplify its power through blood sacrifice. We will try to break through it now, assuming it to be the one we guess.”

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