"I can't believe all this has been going on and nobody's even talking about it in the city," said Nafai. "I really don't have my ears plugged with mud, and I haven't heard anything about us building wagons for Potokgavan."
Elemak shook his head. "It's a secret. Or it was, till Father brought it up before the entire clan council."
"You mean somebody was doing this and the clan council didn't even know?"
"It was a secret? said Elemak. "How many times do I have to say it?"
"So somebody was going to do this thing in the name of Basilica and the Palwashantu clan, and nobody in the clan council or the city council was going to be consulted about it?"
Issib laughed ruefully. "When you put it that way, it sounds pretty strange, doesn't it."
"It doesn't sound strange at all," said Elemak. "I can see that you're already with Roptat's party."
"Who's Roptat?"
Issib answered, "He's a Palwashantu, Elya's age is all, who's been using this war talk to build up his reputation as a prophet. Not like Father, he doesn't have visions from the Oversoul, he just writes prophecies that read like a shark tearing your leg off. And he keeps saying the same things that you just said."
"You mean this secret plan is so well known that there's already a party led by this Roptat trying to block it?"
"It wasn't that secret," said Ekmak. "There's no plot. There's no conspiracy. There's just some good people trying to do something that's in Basilica's vital interest, and some traitors doing everything they can to stop it."
Clearly Elemak had a one-sided view of things. Nafai had to offer another point of view. "Or maybe it's some greedy profiteers putting our city in a terribly dangerous situation so they can get rich, and some good people are trying to save the city by stopping them. I'm just suggesting this as a possibility."
Elemak was furious. "The people working on this project are already so rich that they hardly need any more money," he said. "And what I don't get is how a fourteen-year-old scholar who's never had to do a man's work in his life suddenly has opinions about political issues that he didn't even know existed until ten minutes ago."
"I was just asking a question," said Nafai. "I wasn't accusing you of anything."
"Well of course you weren't accusing me? said Elemak. "I'm not part of the project anyway."
"Of course not," said Nafai. "It's a secret project."
"I should have beaten the teeth out of your mouth this morning," said Elemak.
Why did it always come down to threats? "Do you beat the teeth out of the mouth of everybody who asks you questions you don't have any good answers for?"
"Never before," said Elemak, getting up. "But now I'm going to make up for all those missed opportunities."
"Stop it!" shouted Issib. "Don't we have enough problems?"
Elemak hesitated, then sat back down. "I shouldn't let him get to me."
Nafai breathed again. He hadn't noticed that he wasn't breathing.
"He's a child, what does he know?" said Elemak. "Father's the one who should know better. He's making a lot of people very angry. Some very dangerous people."
"You mean they're threatening him?" asked Nafai.
"Nobody threatens," said Elemak. "That would be crude. They're just... concerned about Father."
"But if everybody's laughing at Father, why should they care what he says? It sounds like it's this Roptat they ought to be worried about."
"It's the vision thing," said Elemak. "The Oversoul. Most men don't take it all that seriously, but the women... the city council... your mother isn't helping things."
"Or she is helping things, depending on which side you're on."
"Right," said Elemak. He got up from the table, but this time he wasn't threatening. "I can see which side you're on, Nyef, and I can only warn you that if Father has his way, we'll end up in Gorayni chains."
"Why are you so sure?" asked Nafai. "The Oversoul give you a vision or something?"
"I'm sure, my little half friend, because I understand things. When you grow up, you might actually come to know what that means. But I doubt it." Elemak walked out of the kitchen.
Issib sighed. "Does anybody actually like anybody else in this family?"
Nafai's food was overcooked, but he didn't care. He was trembling so violently that he could hardly carry his tray to the table.
"Why are you shaking?"
"I don't know," said Nafai. "Maybe I'm afraid."
"Of Elemak?"
"Why should I be afraid of him?" said Nafai. "Just because he could break my neck with his elbow."
"Then why do you keep provoking him?"
"Maybe I'm also afraid for him."
"Why?"
"Don't you think it's funny, Issib? Elya can sit here and talk about Father being in danger from powerful people-and yet his solution for it isn't to denounce those dangerous people, it's to try to get Father to stop talking."
"Nobody's being rational."
"I actually do understand politics," said Nafai. "I study history all the time. I left my class behind years ago. I know something about how wars start and who wins them. And this is the stupidest plan I've ever heard. Potokgavan has no chance of holding this area and no compelling reason to try. All that will happen is they'll send an army, provoke the Gorayni into attacking, and then they'll realize they can't win and go home to their floodplain where the Wetheads can't touch them, leaving us to bear the brunt of the Gorayni wrath. Building war wagons for them is so obviously going to lead to disaster that only a person completely blinded by greed could possibly support it. And if the Oversoul is telling Father to oppose the building of wagons, then the Oversoul is right."
"I'm sure the Oversoul is relieved to have your approval."
"Anything I can do to help."
"Nafai, you're fourteen."
"So?"
"Elemak doesn't want to hear that kind of thing from you."
"Neither do you, right?"
"I'm really tired. It's been a long day." Issib floated out of the kitchen.
Nafai finally started to eat. To his disgust he had no appetite, even though he knew he was still hungry. Must eat, can't eat. Forget it. He flushed the food down the drain and put the plate in the cleaning rack.
He walked out into the courtyard, heading for his room. The night air was chilly already-they were close enough to the desert to get sharp fells in temperature when the sun was down. He was still trembling. He didn't know why. It wasn't because of Father's vision of the destruction of the world, and it wasn't because of the war that would probably come to Basilica if they went ahead with the idiotic alliance with Potokgavan. Those were dangers, yes, but distant ones. And it wasn't because of Elemak's threats of violence, he'd lived with those all his life.
It wasn't until he was lying on his mat, still shaking even though his room was not cold, that he finally realized what was bothering him. Elemak had mentioned that Gaballufix was involved in negotiating the price with the Potoku. Obviously this whole plan had Gaballufix's support-who else but the clan chief would think he could commit the Palwashantu to such a dangerous course of action without even consulting the council? And so it was reasonable to suppose that when Elya warned about the dangerous enemies Father was making, it was Gaballufix he was referring to.
Gaballufix, whose house Elemak secretly visited today.