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Dream Finder Page 22


  Menedrion grunted a surly agreement.

  ‘Aaken’s told you the heart of it,’ Ibris went on quietly. ‘And I wanted to discuss it between ourselves before I consult the Cabinet and report to the Sened. I also want to talk to this envoy more informally. See if we can get a better idea of what they’re really up to. He might be more forthcoming in private. What he’s said so far seems to make precious little sense.’

  He frowned. ‘Arwain’s of the opinion that it’s some religious group that’s taken over and that they’re looking for a full-scale war – a crusade. It’s happened before, and this Grygyr’s obviously a fanatic. And he’s certainly been sent to provoke something. But I can’t see it being a crusade myself . . . it’s . . .’ He left the sentence unfinished.

  ‘Aaken thinks they’re just using the Whendreachi as an excuse to distract us while they pull off some other coup such as quietly annexing Meck,’ he went on. ‘Ciarll’s keeping quiet until he’s something to say, as usual. And I’m listening to all three – silence and all. Irfan, from the little you’ve heard, what do you think?’

  Menedrion did not speak at first.

  ‘What do you think?’ Ibris asked again.

  Menedrion shrugged, though not as a mark of indifference or ignorance, but because his body was still rebelling against being restrained from dealing out summary justice to these impudent upstarts who had arrived out of nowhere to insult his father and the city.

  ‘I don’t know,’ he said, looking up at the ceiling. ‘The whole thing sounds preposterous to me, but . . .’ He raised his hands to forestall any rebuke from his father. ‘Not being there of course, I’ve got no feeling for it. It could be anything. Certainly they’ve always had their eye on Meck. It would free them from the independents at Crowhell and they could use it for trade or as a base for a navy, or both. That’s why we’ve always kept such a large garrison there. Whendrak, I don’t know. It’s strategically vital for both of us, because of its location, but . . .’ He shook his head. ‘That’s why it’s neutral. They must know we’d fight them to the last man if they tried to move the army in, under whatever pretext. It would be a desperate affair. And these days I think we’d both end up having to fight the Whendreachi themselves. After the last time I doubt they’re going to allow their city to be used as a battleground again.’

  Feranc nodded slightly.

  ‘But we can talk about this until the Seren runs dry and be none the wiser,’ Menedrion went on. ‘We’ll have to question this . . . envoy . . . to find out what they’re up to. And then get up to Whendrak as soon as possible to see what’s really happening there.’

  Ibris was seemingly pleased. ‘That, we were just coming to when you arrived,’ he said. He motioned to Feranc who stood up and left the room quietly, then returned his gaze to Menedrion. ‘Put a chair there for him,’ he said, pointing some way in front of himself. ‘Then I want you to one side of him, but behind, so that he can’t see your face. And you too, Arwain, other side,’ he added, mindful that Menedrion should not consider himself demeaned in front of his half-brother. ‘Don’t speak, either of you. And don’t respond in any audible way to anything he says, however provocative. I can’t read him yet. We’re about evens on insults so far, so I’m not going to mention any of that and hope that our protection of him in the hall has perhaps had some beneficial effect on him.’

  Menedrion made a disparaging noise. ‘My men would soon get it out of him,’ he said grimly, standing up and moving his chair.

  Ibris shook his head. ‘I doubt it, Irfan,’ he said. ‘You forget what pride they take in their own personal courage and endurance. He could well die before he’d part with a secret. We never had much success with their spies in the field. Force won’t be the way. We’ll have to lure it out of him. And it may well lie in what he doesn’t say.’

  Menedrion looked doubtful, but did not argue.

  ‘Besides,’ Ibris went on. ‘We’ve accepted him publicly as an envoy now so we’ve got an obligation to look after him. Arwain thinks he’s come as a martyr anyway, though personally I doubt that, but whatever, we mustn’t turn him into one.’

  ‘Pity,’ Menedrion muttered.

  ‘Irfan,’ Ibris said, affecting not to hear the comment. ‘I’m holding you responsible for his safety and his well-being. He and his men will be treated as honoured guests and given every comfort. Believe me, that kind of treatment will unsettle them as much as any amount of beating.’ He leaned forward purposefully. ‘And make it clear to some of your noisier cronies that if they start talking about summary justice for these men, they’ll get it themselves, parentage and patronage notwithstanding.’

  ‘Yes, father,’ Menedrion said flatly. ‘And what would you like me to do if he decides to attack you here and now?’

  Ibris’s eyes flashed momentarily at Menedrion’s tone. ‘You heard me, Irfan,’ he said. ‘He’s not to be hurt. I don’t want him clubbed and stabbed whatever he does. If needs be, use your garotte to immobilize him. There’s nothing like a shortage of air for making people change their minds.’

  Menedrion raised his eyebrows. ‘And that’s the other reason you want me sitting behind him,’ he said.

  Ibris’s face abruptly wrinkled into a smile and then he chuckled. ‘There’s some hope for you yet, Irfan,’ he said. The tension between father and son evaporated as they shared a brief moment of dark, family, humour.

  Menedrion dropped a chair into position for the envoy, then settled back into his own. Arwain sat down next to him on the opposite side of the envoy’s chair. Almost immediately, Ciarll Feranc returned, accompanying Grygyr Ast-Darvad. Once again, Arwain was impressed by the presence of the man as he strode into the room, though, oddly, in these more intimate surroundings he seemed smaller, less confident. He sensed too that the envoy was subtly wary of his companion. Immediately, Arwain’s mind went back to the meeting in the hall when Feranc had moved to intercept the envoy and with a few soft words and his calm unsettling gaze had held him in thrall.

  Despite almost certainly possessing considerable fighting skills, some depth in the man instinctively knew Feranc as his master, Arwain decided. The envoy had already lost any future combat with the Duke’s bodyguard. There would be no trouble at this meeting.

  Arwain found the realization chilling, though whether it was a new measure of himself or of Feranc he could not have said. He knew however that it was some quality in his training that had given him the insight and he congratulated himself on his assessment of the situation. Then, remembering another attribute of his training, he immediately reminded himself that he could be wrong and that the envoy was carrying his sword and knife again. He cast another quick glance at his half-brother.

  Ibris had charged him with the quelling of the envoy if need arose, but Arwain suspected that, for all his fighting ability, Menedrion would scarcely have begun to move before Feranc would have finished the work himself. He found confirmation of this in the relatively casual manner in which his father had delegated the task.

  With the exception of the Duke, they had all stood up when the envoy entered the room. Arwain noticed with some slight amusement that although Menedrion managed to keep his feelings from his face as the envoy passed him, he gave up the effort as soon as the man sat down, and his expression became one of undisguised hostility.

  Two of a kind, Arwain thought, looking back to the envoy. They would have to come to sword strokes before any mastership was acknowledged there.

  Yet somehow Menedrion was not himself. His dark, ferocious anger was muted in some way, as if part of his attention were elsewhere. Briefly Arwain found his own attention clouding with the strange events of the previous night. His awakening, apparently as Menedrion. So vivid. So intense. And the beating of the girl. He looked down at his hands. Was it Menedrion who had beaten her, or was it him doing what he thought Menedrion would do in such circumstances? No answer came.

  And then the terrible truth of it all struck him fully for the first time. The trut
h that the chase through the cellar, Drayner’s curt dismissal of his questions, and the day’s bizarre events had enabled him to avoid facing squarely. The truth that it had actually happened! Arwain felt his mind beginning to teeter towards whirling uncertainty. Slowly, deliberately, he took control of his breathing and forced himself back to the present. Whatever had happened last night would have to wait yet further before he could ponder it carefully.

  ‘Grygyr,’ his father was saying. ‘I hope the quarters we’ve provided are to your satisfaction . . .’

  ‘A prison is a prison be it stone or silk,’ Grygyr retorted before Ibris could finish. ‘My message is delivered. I have nothing more to say. As envoy I should not have been detained thus, it is in breach of the treaty.’

  Menedrion’s jaw tightened, but he did not speak.

  Ibris opened his hands in concession. ‘The treaty is a man-made thing, and thus flawed, Grygyr,’ he said. ‘It states that I may not detain you, but demands also that I ensure your safety. The two requirements conflict in this instance and I must decide which is the lesser breach.’ He leaned back in his chair.

  ‘As I told you before, it’s a considerable tribute to your . . . skill . . . that you managed to reach here unharmed, but news of your presence will be across the city by now and I wouldn’t guarantee you safe conduct across the palace square without substantial protection. You saw in the hall how heated some people can become.’ The envoy opened his mouth to speak, but Ibris continued. ‘So, while my officers are making preparations to escort you safely back to the border, I must perforce imprison you, as it were, though I’d rather you thought of yourself as an honoured guest briefly detained at a friend’s by, say, bad weather, a lame horse . . .’ He smiled broadly.

  Arwain could feel the envoy struggling against his father’s affability.

  ‘Also,’ Ibris went on. ‘I have to consider my reply to your government’s message and I’d like to use this . . . unavoidable delay . . . as an opportunity to discuss this Whendrak problem with you in further detail. Away from the public gaze where we can debate ideas more freely. Men among men. Not politicians, looking over our shoulders.’

  ‘I have nothing to debate with you, Ibris,’ Grygyr replied tersely. ‘The Handira’s message was quite clear. Restrain your people in Whendrak and restore the rights of our citizens there immediately or we shall do it for you.’

  Arwain glanced at Menedrion again. He was sitting quite still, but his eyes were boring into the back of the envoy and his hands were gripping the arms of his chair so tightly that they looked as though they would crush the very wood.

  Ibris looked concerned. ‘Grygyr,’ he began, almost fatherly. ‘This is the first news we’ve heard of any serious problems in Whendrak. It concerns us obviously. Whendrak is important to both of us. It can’t be denied that they’re a quarrelsome people, but they’re not stupid. I’m sure a small delegation as provided for in the treaty will be able to help them resolve any problems they might have.’

  The envoy did not reply.

  Ibris went on. ‘Grygyr, Whendrak is neutral. And anyone choosing to live there renounces his own nationality. Neither you nor we have “people” there. And if Bethlar intervenes there then it will be an overt act of war, and we shall have to move against you. That’s a treaty obligation. From there there’s no telling where the conflict will end. As envoy, you’re no mere messenger, you have both the authority and the responsibility to discuss this matter. Silence won’t suffice.’

  But silence filled the room as he finished.

  Ibris shook his head. ‘I know there’s little love lost between our peoples, but I’ve dealt with many Bethlarii in my time and none went lightly to war.’

  ‘My people are returning to the true way,’ Grygyr said.

  Ibris’s expression urged him on, but the envoy offered no amplification of this remark.

  There was audible concern in Ibris’s voice when he spoke again. ‘Your people too, have always recognized, eventually, the futility of continued conflict. We are both strong, for all our different ways, and neither can defeat the other utterly without suffering irreparable hurt in the process; destruction of the land and the farming patterns; crop failures and famine; disruption of trade and commerce, destitution; banditry; plague even. The battlefield is the way of degradation and folly, a way utterly bereft of reason.’

  The envoy straightened at this remark.

  ‘War is necessary for the reforging of a nation, and the battlefield is where men are tested and purified,’ he said, his rough voice strident. ‘The weak are weeded out and cast aside and the followers of the true way attain glory and honour.’

  ‘And death,’ Ibris said quietly.

  The envoy sneered dismissively. ‘And immortality,’ he said, leaning forward. ‘Their names will ring down through history in song and saga and their spirits will fight forever in the ranks of the army of Ar-Hyrdyn, and carouse in his Golden Hall.’

  The silence that now descended on the room was cold.

  ‘The priests of Ar-Hyrdyn were ever prodigal with the lives of your young men,’ Ibris said softly after a long pause. ‘Should they send your army forth again then Ar-Hyrdyn can look to a great increase in the ranks of his spirit warriors.’

  A knowing smile passed over Grygyr’s face, but he did not speak.

  Ibris looked at him enigmatically for a long moment, then he nodded slowly.

  ‘I will ask you and your companions to accept our silken cell for a night, perhaps two, Grygyr,’ he said, smiling broadly, as if nothing had happened. ‘Then, my son, Menedrion, will escort you back to the border stone at Whendrak. As you’ll appreciate, I must report our meeting to the Sened and the Gythrin-Dy, and discuss our reply to your message. But I’ll ensure that you have it before you leave our dominion. Thank you for your good offices, envoy. The commander will escort you back to your quarters now. Please tell any of the servants there if you require anything.’

  He gave a wave of his hand to indicate that the audience was over, and the envoy stood up awkwardly. He looked around uncertainly for a moment, until Feranc extended a hand towards the door, then, almost in spite of himself, he bowed curtly to Ibris and strode out of the room with Feranc at his heels.

  As the door closed behind him, Ibris extended a hand towards Menedrion to forestall the inevitable outburst.

  ‘Not until he’s well out of earshot,’ the gesture said.

  Its effect was short-lived, but Menedrion’s explosion, when it came, was not what had been expected. It was a mixture of amusement and bewilderment.

  ‘I can’t believe it,’ he said, standing up. ‘The man’s a lunatic. It’d be a shame to hang him. We should put him on display in the market square.’ He looked at his father, grinning broadly. ‘Are you sure his documents were in order?’

  Ibris nodded, unaffected by Menedrion’s humour. ‘The seal’s genuine,’ he said, answering the question seriously. ‘Though the signature’s illegible.’

  Feranc returned and Menedrion sat down again. ‘I’m not surprised it’s illegible,’ he said. ‘It was probably written by Ar-Hyrdyn himself while he was possessing the body of a temple cat. What do you think, Ciarll?’

  ‘I think we’ve got a very serious problem,’ Feranc replied blandly.

  Menedrion’s eyes widened in surprise and he appealed to his father. ‘From the village idiot and his army?’ he said. ‘Do I have to look after him, father? What if he thinks he’s Ar-Hyrdyn’s crow in the night and tries to fly off the palace roof?’ He flapped his elbows and his laughter rose to fill the room. But while Arwain smiled and Aaken tried not to, Ibris remained unmoved.

  Eventually, foundering against Ibris’s silence, Menedrion’s humour died down.

  ‘I’m sorry,’ he said. ‘I was quite prepared to thrash the arrogant bastard for his manners alone. But all that nonsense. He’s cracked. It’s ridiculous.’

  ‘Would that it were,’ Ibris said quietly. ‘I’d rather join in your mirth than face the re
ality, but I’m afraid that Arwain’s guess earlier may be nearer the mark. It seems that that grotesque religion of theirs has risen to some dominance again. He grimaced and slapped the arms of his chair angrily. ‘The black, demented bigotry of it all,’ he said bitterly. ‘The waste. And the arrogance of the man. He probably didn’t care whether he got killed or not. He’d walked right through our domain undetected and publicly spat in our face. That was his message: utter contempt for the treaty, the peace, his life. And I took it and smiled!’ It was the first time he had revealed any part of his inner feelings since the envoy had arrived.

  No one spoke.

  Then, he rested his head on his hand and, for an instant, looked very old.

  ‘Ciarll,’ he said after a moment. ‘Your opinion.’

  ‘Provisionally as yours, sire,’ Feranc replied, carefully omitting Arwain’s contribution. ‘Whatever the reason, it seems that some of them at least have turned to their ancient creed again and we can probably look for widespread border provocations with a serious risk that they’ll develop into a full-scale war.’

  ‘Never!’ Menedrion declared, scornfully. ‘Fancy gods or not, no one’s that crazy. Ever since I could handle a sword they’ve been pushing here, pushing there, plotting this, plotting that. Always manoeuvring for some advantage or other. And we’ve always sent them home with their tails between their legs whenever they went too far. They wouldn’t dare attempt anything like a full-scale war. It’s unthinkable. Besides, those days were dying out even before Viernce. A permanent state of war, with regular winter training and summer campaigns, almost permanent mobilization, turning the land into an armed camp? No one in his right mind wants anything like that.’

  He looked around for support, but doubt hung thick in the air.