Sire El said, "He may be forgotten, but his errors should not be."
Grunts of affirmation. "Forget the man; remember the folly so as not to repeat it."
Dagon was not entirely sure how one could repeat the specifics of Neen's folly, but he let a low rumble build in his throat, his consent to the proposal.
"He is forgotten, then," Faleen said some time later, once it was clear that nobody objected.
That small measure passed quickly. What to do with Ushen Brae now that so much had changed took somewhat longer to work through. They turned the issue over for some time, exploring the possibilities, the problems, the likelihood of salvaging something of the once so very prosperous trade. The Auldek were abandoning Ushen Brae as they spoke. They would leave the continent peopled with many of their former-and infertile-slaves. Do they find a way to return to the old order? Or must they create a new one? Let the quota in Ushen Brae die out? Or offer them trade instead? Perhaps they would like slaves of their own. So many questions.
The same in regard to the Known World. Would the Auldek conquer? Likely so. Many of them walked with a hundred souls beneath their skin. A hundred deaths at their disposal. How could weak Acacians stand before them? The fragile coalition of the Akaran Empire would shatter when such a threat approached.
"The bitch with her plan to end the quota," Sire Revek said. "Does she really mean it?"
There were moments that Dagon disliked the shared communion of the council. One could not lie. The others could even have measured the beating of his heart or felt the sweat on his palms if they wished. They would sense that he did not like calling Queen Corinn "the bitch," but they would also forgive him. After all, he did the work few of them did, out among the peasants, so much of his life in service to them all. Considering that leaguemen never told peasants the truth about anything, their complete openness with one another had an ironic quality.
"Yes, Chairman, she likely does mean it at the moment," Dagon answered. "She is an Akaran, after all. She remains victim of notions of glory and benevolence, especially during times of stress. Not the substance of benevolence, of course-the show. That's what pumps her blood. She may abolish the quota now, resume it later. She may see that the trade is simply no longer viable. In a great many ways she is right about that."
"She has no creativity," a voice in the third row said. "There is always a way to exploit for gain."
"We see that, yes," Grau said. "The peasant folk rarely do."
Many voices climbed over one another in anxious agreement with the chief elder.
"But the bitch has finally consented to release the vintage," Revek said. "Within a few weeks the entire Known World will be addicted to it. Will that not unite them?"
"It will. It will," Sire Nathos said, speaking about his area of expertise, "but I don't think that it matters. United they may just fall faster. Let them line up to get cut down. Better that than that they splinter and hide in the various provinces. Either way, I would not bet on their chances. And we need not. If the Auldek prevail, who is to say we can't do business with them? When the Known World is populated with Auldek and their newborn children-babies for the first time in hundreds of years-what will the Auldek wish for?"
"Peace."
"Stability."
Nathos nodded. "They'll begin to fear death again. They'll want sedate, docile servants with no rebellion in them. They'll want to grow rich as they dream of their children's lives. We will have them in our power just as much as we had the Acacians."
Faleen asked, "And if, by some strange turn of events, the bitch beats them back?"
"I rather hope she doesn't," Nathos admitted. "That seems… boring. But if that happens, she'll have a newly addicted, certainly battered, nation to rebuild. She has no idea how completely we own her."
"And she still does not know what happens when one stops drinking the vintage?"
"No. No, she let that go untested."
Sire Grau chuckled. "So we have them forever. Oh, my brothers, isn't commerce wonderful? My mood is rising. What else have we to consider?"
Sire El reiterated an idea he had proposed before. Perhaps the time when they need fear their own military might was behind them. They should enlarge the Ishtat Inspectorate. If they could not sell quota slaves as regularly, they could train them instead. They were already doing this on a small scale, and the first young soldiers bred on the Outer Isles had successfully joined the ranks of the Ishtat, without mishap.
Several from the inner circle, including Faleen, grumbled against this. "We should be wary lest we make ourselves like the peasants," Faleen said. "I want no army to rebel against us, no kings or queens or senators."
"I did not propose kings or queens or senators," El snapped. "I propose that we make use of a means of production we have gone to great expense to establish. The plantations exist. They produce souls, bodies. We must find something to do with the product, lest it all go to rot."
"Either the bitch or the Auldek or the quota slaves in Ushen Brae may one day turn against us," Sire Lethel said, speaking with unusual boldness from the second circle. "Who knows what the future holds? It may be that we don't just need to protect our products and wealth. Who is to say we won't need to fight for our very existence?"
They lay pondering this for a time, and then slowly, one by one, they gave their consent. The conversation continued. Eventually, as the entire group slowed with shared fatigue, Faleen, with Grau's approval, recounted the consensus. Sire El could build his army. On one of the small isles, another leagueman would oversee the production of concubines, quality ones who would be as much spies and assassins as they were lovers. Still others would follow the Auldek's progress, corresponding with them just enough to let them understand the league might yet be their friend.
And finally they came to where they began. The confusion that was Ushen Brae. Sire Faleen himself would journey across to oversee the exploitation of the Aklun relics, which some were already searching for. Another should venture farther, right across to the mainland itself. The slaves being abandoned there could not be allowed to run amok.
"Who will take up this responsibility?"
The response was immediate, uncharacteristically swift. "I will." Again, that voice from the second row.
"Sire Lethel?" Faleen asked. "These are affairs of the real world, you understand? Among the peasants. There is risk-"
"And there is joy in taking risk," Lethel said. "My cousin enjoyed risk. I do as well."
"Will you err as your cousin did?"
"No," Lethel said. "I will not. I believe he should be forgotten, but I would not have my family forgotten. I will succeed where he did not. I swear it. If I cannot, I will arrange to have my own head set rolling."
"Do any object?" Faleen asked.
For a time a murmur of discussion swept around the rings, but it was not true objection. Few would want the task, Dagon knew. Why should they? Few of these men are like me, Dagon thought, or like Neen. Perhaps this Lethel is a person of promise. He let these thoughts slip away almost as quickly as he formed them.
Still, it alarmed him when El spoke his name. "Dagon, you must return swiftly."
Reminded of it, fatigue wrung his body anew. He had arrived just an hour before the meeting. Now, likely, they would turn him back toward Acacia in the morn. He felt a hard elbow of annoyance press his ribs, but he breathed through it and asked, "Have we any particular message for the queen?"