Traveling openly in the Renewal, Isokasios went off to visit Romezan the next morning. Rhegorios stood with Maniakes at the foot of the piers in the palace quarter, watching the imperial flagship glide over the waters of the Cattle Crossing, oars rising and falling in smooth unison.
Rhegorios said, «When I get over there, I'll feel as if the reconquest of the westlands has started.»
«You can feel any number of different things,» Maniakes replied. «If feeling them made them real, life would be easier.»
«Ah, wouldn't it?» his cousin agreed. «And if what we felt about Tzikas could make him feel what we feel he ought to feel…»
«I dare you to say that again,» Maniakes broke in. «In fact, I defy you to say that again.»
Rhegorios started to, but tripped on his tongue before he made it through. Unlike Isokasios, he was of rank exalted enough to be rude to the Avtokrator. Both men laughed.
Maniakes, though, soon grew serious. «If we do manage to drive a wedge between Sharbaraz and his field army, we also need to figure out how we can take best advantage of that.» He listened to his own words, then shook his head in bemusement. «By the good god, I sound like poor Likinios.» He sketched the sun-circle over his heart to avert any possible omen connecting his fate to that which his unfortunate predecessor had suffered.
His cousin also made the sun-sign. «You're right,» he said. His eyes narrowed in thought. «Maybe I will be the first step in taking back the westlands—taking them back without losing a man.»
«You're right with me,» Maniakes said. «I don't know if that will work; I don't know what Abivard will choose to do. But we have our best chance now. Which reminds me—I ought to have our army ready to move whenever it needs to. The Makuraners may take more convincing than words can give.»
«They always have up till now, that's certain,» Rhegorios said.
«That's another reason I need to go over to Across.» Maniakes grimaced, annoyed at his cousin for making a connection he hadn't seen himself.
The Renewal brought Isokasios back, with the sun not far past noon. The messenger said, «Your Majesty, you and Romezan have a bargain. When I said his Highness—» He glanced over to Romezan. «—would come to Across to guarantee his safety, he looked at me as if I'd started speaking the Haloga language. I needed a little while to convince him I meant it.»
Maniakes turned to Rhegorios. «There. You see? Romezan thinks you're crazy, too.» Rhegorios laughed at him.
Isokasios went on, «Once Romezan understood you were serious, he swore by his heathen God that no harm would come to the Sevastos in Across, so long as no harm came to him in Videssos the city. And he said he'd sail back here on the Renewal as soon as the Sevastos got there.»
«He won't wait long, then,» Rhegorios said. «I'm ready now, which means Romezan will be here this afternoon.» He grinned at Maniakes. «And won't he have himself a surprise when he gets here?»
The Avtokrator embraced his cousin. «I still wish you weren't going. The lord with the great and good mind go with you.» He and Rhegorios—and Isokasios, too—sketched Phos' sun-circle above their hearts.
Watching the Renewal glide west over the Cattle Crossing with Isokasios on board had been easy enough. Watching the dromon sail west with Rhegorios on board was something else entirely. Had Maniakes not had such a desperate need to see Romezan, he would not have let his cousin go. Had he not had desperate needs of one sort of another, he would not have done a lot of the things he had done since the ecumenical patriarch set the crown on his head. He was sick of acting from desperation rather than desire.
When the Renewal came back toward the imperial city, Maniakes shaded his eyes with his hand, half hoping he would see Rhegorios in the bow, a sign Romezan had decided not to keep the bargain, after all. He didn't see his cousin. He did see a large caftan-clad man who did not look familiar, though the Avtokrator might nave seen him on one battlefield or another.
Sailors made the Renewal fast to a wharf. Abivard came up beside Maniakes. «They're very quick and smooth at what they do,» he remarked. «They put me in mind of well-trained troops– which in their own way I suppose they are.»
«Etzilios would think so,» Maniakes agreed absently. He waited for the sailors to run the gangplank out between the dromon and the shore. Romezan came across it first. When he did, Maniakes could see why his countrymen called him the wild boar of Makuran: he was not only tall but, unusual for a Makuraner, thick through the shoulders as well. He had a fierce, handsome, forward-thrusting face, with his mustache and the tip of his beard waxed to sharp points.
Politely, he prostrated himself before Maniakes, then kissed Abivard on the cheek, acknowledging the marshal's higher rank: no small concession for a noble of the Seven Clans to yield to a man raised over him from the lower nobility. «Lord,» he said to Abivard before turning to Maniakes, whom he addressed in the Makuraner tongue: «Majesty, you've made my curiosity itch as much as a flea in my drawers would do for my bum. What can be so important that you'd use your cousin as surety for my safe return? The sooner I know, the happier I'll be.»
Having at last lured Romezan over the Cattle Crossing, the Avtokrator now temporized. «Come to my residence,» he said. «What you need to learn is there, and I have food and wine waiting, too.»
«To the Void with food and wine,» growled Romezan, who would have been blunt-spoken as a Videssian and made a truly startling Makuraner. Had Maniakes' Haloga guardsmen understood his tongue, they would have reckoned him a kindred spirit.
Once back at the residence, though, he did accept wine and honey cakes, and greeted Symvatios and the elder Maniakes with the respect their years deserved. To the latter, he said, «When I was first going to war, you taught me Videssians are enemies not to be despised.»
«I wish you'd remembered the lesson better in later years,» Maniakes' father answered, at which Romezan loosed a deep, rolling chortle.
The Makuraner general soon grew restless again. He prowled along the corridors of the residence nodding approval at the hunting mosaics on the floor and the trophies of victories past. Maniakes and Abivard accompanied him, the Avtokrator answering questions as they walked. When Maniakes judged the time ripe, he handed Romezan Sharbaraz' altered orders. «Here,» he said without preamble. «What do you plan to do about this?»
IX
Romezan read through the entire document with the headlong intensity he seemed to give to everything. He kept his face as still as he could, but the more he read, the higher his eyebrows rose. «By the God,» he said when he was through. He looked up at Maniakes. «Majesty, I crave pardon for doubting you. You were right. This is something I had to see.»
«Now you have seen it,» Abivard said before the Avtokrator could reply. «What do you plan to do about it?» His voice had an edge that required no pretense; Sharbaraz truly had ordered his execution.
«I'm not going to yank out my sword on the spot and carve slices off you, if that's what you mean,» Romezan answered. «If this is real, Sharbaraz has fallen over the edge.» His gaze sharpened, as if, on horseback, he had spotted a new target for his lance. «Is this real, or is it some clever forgery the Videssians have cooked up?»
He spoke without regard for Maniakes, who stood only a couple of feet away from him. Maniakes was better at holding his features quiet than the Makuraner. Behind the stillness, he was laughing. The only true answer to Romezan's question was both; part of the parchment was real, part clever forgery, though Abivard had had as much to do with that as any Videssian.
«It's real,» Abivard said, playing the part that benefited Videssos because it also benefited him. «My mages have shown that's so—it's why I summoned them to this side of the Cattle Crossing.»