“Are you not the most powerful man in this awful place—not Pope Redbeard, the Lord of the Christian Horde?” the Nomad demanded.
“Not really Lord as you understand it. You might think of my office as that of a high priest.”
Linkono limped up to stand beside the Nomad, facing him, and spoke in a voice surprisingly deep for so small a man. His Nomadic was heavily accented but understandable.
“Young man, why is this an ‘awful place’?”
Brownpony himself explained: “The Nomads say evil spirits come down from the mountains, especially the Old Zarks, and inhabit wombs. The belief explains why a Nomad woman sometimes gives birth to a glep baby.”
“I see. Well, young man, compare our Pope to your oldest Bear Spirit shaman. Neither he nor your sharf has to obey the other. The sharf in this place is Mayor Dion. But he just left here to go back to the war. His son takes his place. This, the Church, is like the Bear Spirit Council. There is nothing we can do for you here, my nephew, except pray.”
Linkono was smart enough not to say “my son” to a Nomad, but this Nomad did not like “nephew” either.
“My only uncle is Demon Light, gray runt. My name is Blue Lightning, and I am the eldest son of his eldest sister. We both witnessed Hadala’s crimes.”
“Surely you mean the crime against Cardinal Hadala!”
“I mean Hadala’s crimes, for which he was executed.”
The gnome’s jaw fell. “Crimes under what law? Nomad law?”
“The Treaty of the Sacred Mare. He violated it by bringing an army into our lands. Hadala violated the law and defied our sharf. By his order, his officers killed his own men. If Nyinden and the yellow warrior hadn’t put him to death, my uncle would have done it.”
“I had not thought of it in that way before,” Brownpony said. “He’s right, you know, Abra. Hadala clearly violated the Treaty.”
“Holy Father, I can’t believe what I’m hearing!”
Blue Lightning grabbed the small cardinal by the shoulders and shook him. “I can make war or peace, little man. My words are my uncle’s words. Perhaps we cannot bring war to you here in your evil mountains, but we can join the war against your men who fight south of the Nady Ann. Take me to the man who jails the victim instead of the criminal.”
Linkono limped toward the exit as fast as he could move, with the burly Nomad crowding his heels. When they were gone, Brownpony turned to his personal guard. “Axe, go with them, and take Jing and Qum-Do. Keep that Nomad out of trouble, and make sure Slojon has to look you in the face when he talks about Gai-See.” Then, to the Cardinal Penitentiary who was also his personal confessor, he said, “Go to the guests’ quarters, please, and tell Høngan Ösle Chür what has happened here. Blue Lightning does not realize that his Qæsach dri Vørdar is in town.”
In the administration building, Slojon haughtily dismissed the Nomad’s claim. The Nomad grabbed him by the ears and hauled him, squeaking in pain, across the desk. A sergeant drew a pistol, and instantly three swords were in the air.
“Drop it, or lose your head,” said Axe. The sergeant dropped it.
Eltür’s nephew now stood behind Slojon with his arm in a hammerlock and a knife held to his throat. He pushed him toward the door. “This fart is going to jail,” said the Nomad.
Slojon screamed as he felt his own blood running down his chest.
“Stop him, Wooshin! Stop him!”
“Only you can stop him, Messér. Take him to the jail in peace.”
“Brownpony is behind this!”
“No, the Pope is not! The man behind it is also behind you, right now. You did violate the Treaty, Messér.”
“All right, we’ll go to the jail.”
The trip to jail was halted by the sudden entrance of Høngan Ösle Chür and his two shamans. Blue Lightning took one look at him, gasped, and released the Mayor’s son. He made a sweeping kokai to the chosen one of the Day Maiden, Husband of the Prairies, then fell silent to await orders.
The Lord of the Hordes asked for an explanation of the problem. Blue Lightning spoke first, then Slojon and Axe. Then the Qæsach dri Vørdar told the Mayor’s son that he, Høngan Ösle Chür, ruled in favor of the Grasshopper claim and made the same threat to Slojon that Blue Lightning had made. The hordes would turn against New Jerusalem for breaking the Treaty, and might even carry the conflict into these feared mountains. The Jackrabbit would turn on the spooks in battle and kill Slojon’s father as well.
Thus it came about that the charges were dropped and Gai-See was released into the protective custody of Blue Lightning. Because the Nomad claimed plenipotentiary power to speak for his uncle, Brownpony invited him to attend the council of war, which had all but ended upon the departure of Dion, but was now renewed in the presence of the Grasshopper. The Pope dispatched a message to Bråm through the Nomad relay network to assure the sharf that Gai-See and Nyinden were free. He also thanked him for sending Blue Lightning, who added to the document his initials—Blacktooth had taught him to draw them—and peace was restored among the allies.
After his harsh beginning, Blue Lightning proved a well-rounded diplomat. In spite of his initial threat to abandon the alliance and join the other side, he brought intelligence gathered from several sources. On balance, the news was good, but there were things to worry about. Filpeo had new repeating arms now, but not yet enough of them to turn the outcome of any foreseeable battle. The countryside surrounding New Rome was by no means demilitarized, but the occupation forces there were thinned out by the withdrawal of troops being sent to the Province to halt the eastward advance of the armies of Önmu Kun and Mayor Dion. Sharf Bråm estimated that no more than seven hundred men, Texark cavalry and glep mercenaries, remained to block access to the gates of New Rome.
And there was trouble in the Valley. Texark recruiters had been ambushed and killed. “I wonder who could be doing that?” Quigler Durod asked innocently, provoking laughter. Everyone present knew that Tenesi agents disguised as gleps had crossed the Great River and infiltrated the Watchitah-Ol’zark region. Further recruiting in the Valley of the Misborn was inhibited, if not halted.
“If we don’t strike now,” Høngan said, “the Emperor’s firepower will increase rapidly. We will lose the advantage the Pope’s weapons have given us.”
Blue Lightning murmured assent. General Durod wanted to know if it was possible to use the Nomad relay network to contact his men in the Valley.
“If you have a secure cipher, maybe,” said Blue Lightning. “There is a risk of a messenger being caught. He must not know what your message is.”
Pope Amen came to a sudden decision. “We shall mount an expedition to capture New Rome, and do it as soon as possible, unless one of you disagrees.”
Nobody objected. After so many decades in exile, the Holy See was going home.
Pentecost came on May 14th in 3246, and Blacktooth had known for a week that Holy Madness and other important guests were in town to consult with the Pope, but the consultations were private and he was as ignorant as any local citizen of what happened behind the closed doors. Prior Cow wanted all eight of them to attend the Pontifical High Mass in the Pope’s log-and-stone cathedral, but Nimmy begged off. Instead, he attended Mass at their usual neighborhood Church, sang the Veni Creator Spiritus with the small choir, and assisted the priest in distributing the Eucharist to local spooks and their beautiful children.
Singing Cow found him sitting in the garden, trying to extract a still fluttering pigeon from the jaws of his growling glep cougar. Librada slashed his hand and clamped down on the bird. Nimmy gave up. “I think it’s about time for Librada to be librada,” he said to the prior.