"At the moment. Your orders might change. Anything else?"
He shrugged. "What?"
"Men the King trusted he sent on trade missions. With other assignments. He knew Kavelin's importance. Those men have continued reporting. For instance: Tamerice was in touch with the Wessons in Sedlmayr and Delhagen. Altea has considered annexing Dolusich, Vidusich, and Gaehle. Anstokin plans the same for the lower tier of provinces in Volstokin, all the way to the Galmiches—assuming we best Vodicka."
"One King always tries to profit from another's distress. The Sedlmayr matter is settled. Altea, I'm sure, prefers friendship and cooperation to war over wastelands. And Anstokin has a historical claim to most of those provinces."
"I was leading up to the fact that we have people in Itaskia. Our best. When your King stomps, the ground rocks throughout the west."
Ragnarson's immediate reaction was so what?Then he asked, "In whose party?" "Excuse me?"
"You suspect Itaskian intentions. I want to point out that we're split. Each party controls part of the government. The Grey-fells party is pro-El Murid. The other, intensely anti-El Murid. I wondered if your spies took that into account."
"Which line do you follow?"
"Greyfells and El Murid have been my enemies since the wars."
"I believe you, Colonel. But there's still Haroun bin Yousif. What does he want?"
"We're as close as men can be. But his mind is like one of those puzzle boxes where, when you finally get it open, all you've got is another box."
"But you've got an idea?"
"A guess. Based on geography. He's ready to go back to Hammad al Nakir. There's no better base than Kavelin. Al Rhemish is just over the Kapenrungs. If he could seize the holy places, he might manage a restoration. We only see the fanatics outside. Behind the Sahel, El Murid's support is far from unanimous."
"I see. A problem. But one that can be dealt with when the time comes. He won't have calculated Shinsan into his plans." She rose, returned to the window. "The city? Can it be pacified? The Siege?"
"Those are battles already in hand. I'm looking beyond, to Vodicka."
"Good. There's more to be said and asked, but later. I want you to rest now. That's an order. I want you fresh after the council. If I stay on..." She came to him, took his hands in hers, turned them palms up, studied them, then looked him in the eye. "I'd be in these hands. Be gentle."
iii) Confrontations
Ragnarson had the feeling that a long time had passed. He lay drifting on the edge of sleep, his conscience telling him he should be up and busy, but instead he continued wondering how much meaning he dared attach to the Queen's final words.
Came a knock. "Enter," he grumbled, rising to a sitting position. A lone candle illuminated his room.
Gjerdrum stuck his head in. "Sorry to wake you, Colonel. We've caught a vagrant. Hard to understand him, but I think he says he knows you."
"Eh? Fat man? Dark?"
"Looks like he used to be fat. But he's sick now. I'd say he's had a rough time for a couple months."
"Where is he? Let me get my pants on. How's the chances of me getting something new to wear?"
Gjerdrum glanced at the near-rags he was donning. "I'll try to find something."
"The Queen. How'd her council go?" "Still on."
"Lead away. Where's he at?" "Dungeon. We thought that'd be safest." It was Mocker. Mocker in pathetic shape. He snoozed on a straw-strewn floor.
"Open up," he told the turnkey. "Quietly. Don't wake him."
There had to be a trick. He could not welcome Mocker without one. He hunkered down and tickled the fat man's ear. He had grown an ugly, scraggly beard. This Ragnarson tweaked gently. "Wake up, darling," he said in a squeaky falsetto.
Mocker smiled, placed one hand over Ragnarson's. He frowned in consternation—then bounced up ready for a fight.
Bragi roared, rocked back on his heels. "Got you!" "Hai!" Mocker groaned in a weak imitation of his former self. "Greatest of great spies risks life and limb of very self-important self, endures months of incarceration, debilitation, and torture at behest of friend, weary unto death and on edge of pneumonia, with Volstokiners hordes pursuing, treks thirty miles godforsaken country after redoubtedly—redoubtably?—singlehandedly slaying arch-shaghun of Volstokin advisers, shaghun-general direct from councils at Al Rhemish, thereby saving bacon of ingrate associates Preshka and Kildragon, and am welcomed to saved city by dungeon-chucking natives too ignorant to recognize renowned self, there to be set upon by hairy Trolledyngjan of dubious masculinity and questionable morals. Woe! In whole universe is no justice. Very demons of despair pursue self through vale of tears called life..."
Ragnarson got lost in the twists and turns. "Rolf's here? In Kavelin?" If Rolf had joined Reskird, Elana might have too.
"Said same, no? Preshka, Rolf. Iwa Skolovdan. Former Guild Captain. Age thirty-six. Nineteen years service. Began with Lauder's Company..."
"All right. All right. Give me the part about the shaghun again."
Mocker regained his verve while he detailed his escape.
"Come on," said Ragnarson. "We'll clean you up and have the Royal physician look you over." On the way, Ragnarson bombarded his friend with questions. Each answer pleased him more than the last.
"Gjerdrum," he said, as they neared his room, "scare up the physician. Then have all officers assemble in the officers' mess. Have them bring maps of the area where Vodicka's camped. And I want my Marena Dimura there. Then meet me at the council chamber. How do I get there?"
"But you can't..."
"Watch me. I could care less about being respectful to a gang of lard-assed Nordmen hypocrites. Tell me."
Reluctantly, the youth gave directions.
"Carry out your orders. Wait. What the hell time is it, anyway?"
"Around midnight."
Ragnarson groaned. He had wasted eight hours sleeping.
Two palace guards blocked the council chamber door. "Announce me," he told the senior.
"Sorry, sir. Lord Lindwedel left instructions that they weren't to be disturbed for any reason."
"Eh? Why? What if something happened?"
The soldier shrugged. "I got the idea they were going to have it out with Her Majesty."
"Ah." The old snake had found out about Eanred.
"You'd better get out of the way." His cold determination made the younger guard gulp.
"No, sir," the senior said. "Not till my orders change." His knuckles whitened on the haft of his short ceremonial pike.
Bragi hit him with a left jab. His helmet clanged off the wall. Ragnarson snatched his pike, knocked the second soldier's feet from beneath him, rattled the first's brains again, then hit the door. It was neither locked nor barred. He crashed through.
Just in time.
Seven old Nordmen surrounded the Queen like lean gray wolves a terrified fawn. She had been weeping, was about to sign a document. The triumph on the ministers' faces, before they turned, told Ragnarson he had guessed right. They had bullied her into abdicating.
He took three swift steps, smashed the pike head down on the document. Hurling ministers aside, Bragi seized the document, flung it into a nearby fireplace.