“Good. While you’re at it, I want you to find out whatever you can about the master farrier and his staff. And that veteran squad from the fifth cohort.”
“I already did that last,” Tavi said. “They’re aphrodin addicts. They’ve been buying it at the bordello in the camp.”
Magnus hissed through his teeth. “Addicts can still be spies. Find out who deals with them there. Whom they talk to.”
Tavi coughed. “That’s really more in Max’s traditional waters than mine.”
“Great furies, man. I’m not letting Maximus anywhere near an aphrodin den at a time like this. He’ll get himself killed.”
“Sir, Max likes to chase the ladies and drink, and furies know how well I know it. Sometimes he’ll drink laced wine. But he isn’t… that doesn’t control him.”
“It’s got nothing to do with whether or not he’s able to control himself,” Magnus said. “But it will be far too easy for someone to arrange an accident for him if he’s lying drugged and besotted in a pleasure den when he should be watching for a knife in the back.”
“From his stepmother?”
“Careful,” Magnus said, looking around. “Has Max ever spoken to you of his family?”
“No,” Tavi said. “But I always thought the scars on his back said plenty about them.”
Magnus shook his head. “Maximus is the illegitimate, publicly acknowledged son of High Lord Antillus. The High Lord married three years after Maximus was born, a political arrangement.”
“Lady Antillus,” Tavi said.
“And Crassus was the product of their union,” Magnus said.
Tavi frowned. “She thinks Max is a threat to Crassus?”
“Maximus is popular in the northern Legions and with at least one other High Lord. He’s a powerfully gifted furycrafter, he may one day be one of the finest swordsmen in Aleran history, and he made a great many friends at the Academy.”
“Uh,” Tavi said. “He was friendly. I don’t know if most of those who spent time with him would count as ‘friends,’ per se.”
“You’d be surprised how many times alliances have been forged between former casual lovers,” Magnus replied. “More to the point, he is known to be friendly with the First Lord’s page, among others, and has a widely known defiant streak when it comes to authority.”
“Max doesn’t want to be a High Lord,” Tavi said. “He’d run screaming within half an hour. He knows it.”
“And yet,” Magnus said, “he has made allies. He has a power base of influence among several Legions, and with several Lords-including those in the personal retinue of Gaius himself. Forget your personal knowledge of him and think of it in terms of an exercise, lad. What if he decided that he did want it?”
Tavi wanted to protest, but he ran through the angles in his mind, playing things out in numerous possibilities directed by logic, instinct, and the examples of history, as he had been taught by the Cursors.
“He could do it,” Tavi said quietly. “If something happened to Crassus, Max would be the only reasonable choice. Even if it didn’t, if Antillus’s Legions favored Max over his little brother, if he had support from other High Lords and the First Lord, that would be the end of the matter, practically speaking. It wouldn’t even be particularly difficult for him.”
“Precisely.”
“But he doesn’t want that, Maestro. I know him.”
“You do,” Magnus said. “But his stepmother doesn’t. And this isn’t young Antillar’s first accident.” As he finished the sentence, they completed their brief circuit of the interior of the practice field, returning to the infirmary. They were in time to see Lady Antillus and Crassus cross the practice track and walk toward the infirmary tent.
“Max is afraid of her,” Tavi murmured.
“She’s had a lifetime to teach him fear,” Magnus said, nodding. “And she’s deadly clever, lad. Powerful, wicked, devious. Several disturbing fates have befallen her foes, and not a shred of evidence has been found, not a drop of blood stained her hands. There are few in the Realm as dangerous as she.”
“She looks familiar,” Tavi said quietly. “Like someone I should know.”
Magnus nodded and said, “There are many who say her nephew Brencis is almost a mirror image of her.”
Tavi clenched his teeth. “Kalarus.”
“Mmmm,” Magnus said, nodding. “Lord Kalare’s youngest sister-and only surviving sibling. “
Tavi shook his head. “And Max’s father married her?”
“As I said. A political marriage.” Magnus watched them approaching. “I doubt Lord Antillus likes her any better than Max does. And now, young Scipio, I’m off to attend to the captain and do a great many other things. I think you should entertain the Lady and her son until Maximus gains his feet and can face her in the open, in front of witnesses.”
Tavi grimaced. “I’m not good at smiles and charm.”
“Now, now. You’re a loyal servant of the Realm, Scipio. I’m sure you’ll manage.” Magnus smiled at him, but whispered, “Be careful.” Then he saluted Tavi and vanished into the normal, bustling industry of the Legion camp.
Tavi watched him go for a second and turned his gaze to Lady Antillus and her son. She wore the sky-blue on deep blue of the city of Antillus. Max had once remarked that the city colors had been chosen based on what shade the skin of one’s… well, parts, assumed when exposed to the weather in winter and autumn, respectively. From a purely aesthetic perspective, the dress flattered her face, her hair, her figure in every measurable sense. Tavi thought that the blue made her skin look too pale, somehow, as though it was a covering for a mannequin rather than for a human being.
She was speaking quietly, emphatically, to Crassus. Her son was dressed in the brown training tunic of the Legion, though he wore his armor over it-a mark of respect for someone new to the Legions. Only the most solid and promising recruits wore steel before the recruits were issued it generally. Or the most well connected ones, Tavi supposed. Though he could hardly cast stones on that account, all things considered. Crassus was scowling, an expression that made his face look more petulant than formidable.
“I don’t understand why we can’t just get it over with,” he was saying.
“Darling child, you have the judgment of a goat,” Lady Antillus snapped back. “I have some experience in these matters. One cannot rush them.” She put her hand on her son’s arm, a motion that silenced him, as Tavi approached.
“Good afternoon, Your Grace,” Tavi said, bowing to Lady Antillus, combining it smoothly with a salute. He nodded to Crassus. “Sir Knight.”
Crassus saluted Tavi, fist thumping against his breastplate. “Subtribune.”
Lady Antillus bowed her head very slightly to Tavi, giving him a flinty look.
“I’ve been meaning to ask you, Your Grace,” Tavi said. “I am told that the training regimen of our novice Knights has been, ah, taxing on those involved. I thought that we might find a way to add more milk or cheese to the younger Knights’ rations if they’ve been breaking bones a bit too often.”
“It probably isn’t a terrible idea,” Lady Antillus allowed, though the words seemed to come out reluctantly.
“We’d be grateful for the gesture, sir,” Crassus said, his tone respectful, carefully neutral.
“You’ll be glad to know that Maximus is recovering well,” Tavi said, smiling politely. “In fact, he was rising to dress a few moments ago.”
Lady Antillus looked past Tavi to the tent, frowning. “Was he? Did he seem himself?”
“As far as I could tell, Your Grace,” Tavi said. “I believe that the captain intended to check on him as well.”
Her tone turned flat, and she dropped even the pretense of being polite. “Did he.”
“He takes the well-being of his men very seriously,” Tavi said, trying to sound cheerfully oblivious to her reaction.
“Like a mother cares for her son, I suppose?” she muttered. She glanced at Crassus. “Perhaps we should go in immediate-”