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‘Get some rest, flight lieutenant,’ Urtica ordered, resuming an illusion of calm. ‘Soon I’ll be expecting you and your fellows to fly out from the city with instructions for reorganizing every soldier we can spare. Soon, everyone available will be marching eastwards for a concerted attack on those Varltung bastard tribes. There’ll be no prisoners taken – I want every adult male on that island killed, every boy decapitated. Towns to be burned to the ground. So go rest now. Tomorrow is going to be a busy day for you.’

Yes, chancellor. The bird-soldier pushed himself fully upright, then staggered out of the room.

As soon as he had gone Urtica hurled the poker across the chamber. Two servants came in to investigate, but Urtica dismissed them with insults.

This military loss was almost as embarrassing as losing Imperial territory. What would people think of him – and of the Empire he now piloted?

Just at that moment, in the midst of his paranoia, Councillor Delboitta entered the room. In her skinny old hands was a document that might at least relieve his stress temporarily. He studied her gaunt features, those prominent cheekbones, highlighted by the fire light. A few strands of grey hair tinged her otherwise black hair.

‘Chancellor Urtica.’ She spoke in a crisp, precise way, a woman who made you listen carefully to every syllable. She had heaved the Quercus wood door shut behind her, leaving the two of them in total privacy. ‘Magus Urtica – may I call you so here?’

‘Yes, but only quietly,’ Urtica said. ‘Even the walls have ears – this is a government building after all…’

She was a handsome woman of nearly fifty years whose husband, also an Ovinist, had died three years ago.

‘What d’you have for me, then?’ He guided her to the table. ‘Some oysters?’

‘Thank you, but I’ve just eaten.’ She unrolled the parchment well away from the food, then held it in place with a couple of wine glasses. They both leaned in close, little telltale suggestions in their breathing. So he hoped.

She indicated first the ancient runework inscribed on the document, and the correct stamps to indicate the authenticity of it. It was an order, ultimately, that would confirm the ascension of Urtica to Emperor. It made Rika out to be a mass murderer. This would then be delivered to the starving refugees in the form of largesse. They would hopefully die in large numbers, and cease to be a damn burden. All traces of Imperial failures: gone.

‘Perfect,’ Urtica breathed, allowing his gaze to drift down the ancient letter-craft, the runes and seals so true to the Villjamur standard legal documents that it seemed impossible to know it was forged.

‘When will you get their names on this?’ Councillor Delboitta looked up at him wide-eyed, as if she worshipped him and would do anything for him – or at least he liked to believe that.

Urtica wanted as few people as possible knowing he would forge the signature himself, but she was Ovinist. She was on his side. ‘I’ll add their signatures on this before the sun sets tomorrow. I’ve been spending some time studying their handwriting, so it shouldn’t take too long. Then I’ll present it to the Council.’ Urtica’s pride swelled at his own ingenuity.

‘And you’re sure the Council will accept such a claim?’ Delboitta’s eyes positively glistened as she gazed intently into his face.

He knew of the secret numbers of Ovinists in influential positions. There were enough politicians who were promised positions of power, enough men and women seduced by rewards to commit to his schemes; guards were under his influence, Inquisition officers freely accepted his coin, and where cash hadn’t done the trick, he’d lined up plenty of Caveside gangs to intimidate anyone who might get in his way and give them something to think about. Everything was in place.

After taking supreme office he would initiate his schemes, an inchoation for more aggressive politics. Control over the means of production would be given to only the most profitable landowners. Slavery would be extended for greater productivity. Those at the very top would be rewarded handsomely. The Empire’s wealth would flourish.

‘I have made more than enough preparations…’ He trailed off, remembering his military defeat. He would divulge that in time, and ascertain a way to blame it on the Empress’s strategies. ‘And then we’ll arrest them, the Empress and her sister,’ he said. ‘Perhaps best at the Snow Ball, so that every gossiping bitch and bastard inside this building will immediately start spreading the news. I want her deposed quickly and… well, I see myself as a likely elected candidate to replace her, don’t you think?’

Delboitta grinned her agreement with impeccable teeth. She then reached up, caressing his cheek, followed her hands with her lips. ‘Does this mean,’ she whispered, moving her palm to his groin, ‘that you’ll let me please you, Emperor Urtica?’

For a moment he couldn’t work out which was the bigger turn-on: her suggestion, or his future title.

THIRTY-THREE

‘Who are you, really?’ Eir whispered, her hands on Randur’s hips.

They were rehearsing a slow dance that evening, the Yunduk, and the only communication so far between them had been Randur whispering softly in her ear to correct her posture. No music this evening to accompany them, but they now understood the rhythms by heart, a liquid grace in every step. They were practising in one of the many unused corners of Balmacara, a disused chamber long forgotten by most of the inquisitive courtiers.

The more reticent he was, the more she wanted to know, the more she needed to understand him. After years spent in isolation among Imperial tutors and the urgent whispers of guardsmen, this islander had burst into her existence and already shown her more of life than she had ever known. Even his most casual comments suggested an exotic origin, his very presence spoke of some other place, a region perhaps physical or possibly mental, it didn’t matter, just that it was somewhere not bound by stone and ice like her childhood environment.

And she had seen beneath the veneer of his arrogance.

‘I thought we’d been through this stuff already.’

Her fingers tightened, gripping his waist. ‘We have, and yet we haven’t. I want to know who you actually are, Randur Estevu.’

‘You’d only be disappointed,’ he suggested dismissively.

‘I’m not so sure I could be. I find your efforts on behalf of your mother are very honourable.’

‘I’d rather not talk about that.’

‘Tell me,’ Eir changed the subject, ‘instead of just sleeping around, have you ever actually been in love?’

He stared down at her, and by his hesitation she knew that he was surprised.

She continued, ‘What I mean is, in love with anyone other than yourself.’

He laughed, drew their bodies even closer so that they were touching at the waist for the next dance sequence. Their steps flowed smoothly, beginning to be expressive of new depths, and wherever his feet went she was there with him, in unison, in perfect time.

‘No,’ he replied. ‘Being in love hasn’t really been my style. I never really cared much for the girls on Folke anyway. To begin with, they were all a little unclean for my liking.’

‘You’ve very high standards for someone coming from such a poor region.’

‘Wasn’t always like that,’ he grunted, and she felt a sudden guilt that she had labelled him in such a way.

After a moment’s consideration she said, ‘I thought as much. Your manners are far too good, for one thing. You eat well. And I’ve noticed how you always let a lady step in front of you when proceeding down corridors.’

‘That’s not always for their benefit,’ he smirked.

‘Randur, come on, be serious.’

‘Sorry.’ He grinned. ‘We were once a very wealthy family, before the Empire really took a grip on our island. The one thing I’ve learned is that opportunity is linked to wealth in Jamur territories. Whoever owns the most resources has the most power and influence and opportunity, and that’s just not how life should be. You – you can do anything you could think of in these halls. But back then we once had servants and all that, then we lost our land – my mother never really told me how, but we lost it anyway. Everything was gone; but she brought me up well. She brought me up rather strictly, perhaps. My father, you see, died before I ever got to know him, and I had a couple of sisters, but we were never that close. So everything was up to my mother.’ After a pause, he added, ‘I owe her a lot.’