‘But you’re the heir to the throne—’
‘My parents might agree on nothing else, but they do agree on that. Being heir to the throne takes no effort, however. Believe me, I know. You, on the other hand, have risked your life.’ He waved a hand towards the scar on Leo’s face. ‘Covered with the red marks of bravery! My most serious wound was sustained when I struck my head getting out of bed dead drunk. The bleeding was quite spectacular, to be fair, but the glory was minimal.’
Leo’s eye was caught by a knot of dark-skinned beggars in the crowd. ‘Lot of brown faces around,’ he said, frowning.
‘Troubles in the South. Refugees are pouring across the Circle Sea, seeking new lives.’
‘Fought a war against the Gurkish thirty years ago, didn’t we? You sure they can be trusted?’
‘Some can and some can’t, I would’ve thought. Just like Northmen. Just like anyone. And they’re not all from Gurkhul.’
‘Where, then?’
‘All across the South,’ said Orso. ‘Kadir, Taurish, Yashtavit, Dagoska. Dozens of languages. Dozens of cultures. And they’ve chosen to come here. Makes you proud, doesn’t it?’
‘If you say so.’ Leo knew nothing about those places except that he didn’t want the Union to become one of them. He took no pride in the watering down of his homeland’s character. ‘Don’t you worry there might be …’ Leo felt a need to lower his voice. ‘Eaters among them?’
‘I’m not sure cannibal sorcerers are one of our most pressing problems.’
‘Some of them can steal people’s faces. That’s what I heard.’ Leo craned around to frown at those Southerners again. ‘They can disguise themselves as anyone.’
‘Then wouldn’t a pale face make a better disguise than a dark?’
Leo frowned. He hadn’t actually thought of that. ‘Just … hardly feels like the Union’s the Union any more.’
‘Surely the great strength of the Union has always been its variety. That’s why they call it a Union.’
‘Huh,’ grunted Leo. Orso would think that. He was a half-Styrian mongrel himself. Something landed in his lap. A flower. Looking towards an upstairs window, he saw a group of smiling girls, tossing down more. He grinned and blew them a kiss. Seemed the only decent thing to do.
‘Adua appears to be enjoying you,’ said Orso. ‘How have you been enjoying it?’
‘Can’t say I take to the vapours. And the politics is pretty murky, too. Since the Closed Council didn’t help fight the war, I’d hoped they’d at least help pay for it.’
‘Easier to open a gate to hell, in my experience, than the king’s purse.’
‘A royal waste of my time. But, on the other hand … I met a woman. Never met one quite like her before.’
Orso gave a sharp little laugh. ‘Fancy that. So did I.’
‘Beautiful. Clever. Sharp as a dagger and fierce as a tiger.’
Another laugh. ‘Fancy that. So did I.’
‘But so poised, so elegant … every inch the lady.’
Orso laughed louder than ever. ‘Well, there we differ. Does your paragon of womanhood have a name?’
Leo cleared his throat. ‘Reckon I’d better not say.’
‘Went further than just a meeting, then?’
‘She took me to …’ No, no, that sounded too weak. ‘I met her, I should say, at the office of some writer.’ The prince’s face gave an ugly twitch. Even less keen on books than Leo was, maybe. ‘But … she didn’t invite me to read, if you take my meaning.’
‘I think I can deduce it.’ Orso’s voice sounded strangled, but Leo had never been much good at finding the hidden meaning in things. He was a straightforward fellow. So he carried on. Straightforwardly. Was that a word?
‘A night of passion … with a beautiful and mysterious older woman.’
‘Surely every young man’s dream,’ grated Orso.
‘Yes, except …’ Leo wasn’t sure if he should say more. But Orso was a man of the world. Infamously so. Maybe he could help make sense of it? ‘If the story got out, people might think I made use of her, but … I’ve a feeling she made use of me.’
‘We all want to be wanted,’ growled Orso, eyes fixed ahead.
‘The way she looked at me.’ As if he was her next meal. ‘The way she touched me.’ With no gentleness and no doubts. ‘The way she spoke to me.’ Knowing just what she wanted and not caring a damn for what he might. The thought was making him stiff in his dress trousers. ‘It was just like …’
His eyes went wide. Bloody hell, it was just the way his mother talked to him! That thought made his trousers droop even more quickly than they’d risen. Could it be … deep down … he liked being spoken to that way?
‘You know,’ said Orso, checking his mount, ‘I really shouldn’t be here.’
‘What?’
‘You deserve it. I don’t.’ Orso clapped him on the arm and, without waiting for a reply, pulled his horse to the side and began to drop back.
Till then there’d been the odd false note in the applause. Boos, mocking calls of, ‘Young lamb,’ even outright screeches of, ‘Murderer!’ But when Orso left, he took all criticism with him, and with Leo leading the parade alone, riding beneath the Steadfast Standard just as Casamir himself might’ve, the cheering was twice as loud. The flower petals fell in fountains. Urchins pointed fingers, eyes wide in dirt-smudged faces. There goes the Young Lion, saviour of the Union!
Leo smiled. It wasn’t hard to do. Orso was right, after all. He did deserve the glory.
How many people can say they won a war single-handed?
Everyone had cheered for Leo dan Brock, up on his own at the front of the parade, a famous hero from head to toe. Things quietened down a lot as the great men of the Open Council followed.
‘That’s fucking Isher,’ growled Broad as he rode past with his chin in the air, great gilded cloak spread out across the hindquarters of his prancing horse. ‘The one who stole our land. Looks like he’s done all right out of it, the—’
‘Let it go.’ Liddy’s hand was gentle on the back of his. Gentle but firm. ‘Your anger won’t hurt him any, but it could hurt us.’
‘Aye,’ said Broad, taking a hard breath. ‘You’re right.’ It had hurt them enough already.
Fur-trimmed worthies followed the lords, trying to steal a piece of glory they’d had no part in winning. Next came the officers, and Broad turned his head and spat. After what he’d been through in Styria, he liked those bastards no better than the lords.
‘There’s Orso!’ called a child up on shoulders.
‘Why’s he back here?’
‘Shamed to show his face beside a real hero,’ someone grumbled.
Broad saw him, now. Sat on a fine grey in this loose, relaxed way like he didn’t know what guilt was, an odd little smirk at the corner of his mouth as he chatted to some old soldier in a fine fur hat.
‘Shame!’ someone roared. ‘Down wi’ the crown prince!’ A tall man with a thick black beard, standing on tiptoe to shout over the heads of those in front. Folk frowned around at him but he’d the light of madness in his eyes and didn’t back down a step. ‘Murderer!’
Liddy shook her head. ‘Damn fool will only cause trouble.’
‘Got a point, though,’ muttered Broad. ‘Orso is a bloody murderer.’
‘Didn’t Valbeck teach you any lessons at all, Gunnar? You can have a point and still keep it to yourself.’
‘Two hundred good men and women he hanged as traitors,’ grumbled Broad.
‘They were traitors,’ said May, jaw tight. ‘That’s just a fact.’
Broad didn’t like hearing it, specially from his own daughter. ‘We could argue that case, I reckon.’ Though arguing with May never got him anywhere he wanted to go. ‘Truth is, Leo dan Brock fought in a war. Orso just sat in a tent and lied.’