After hiding Janco's gifts deep in my uniform pocket, I went into Valek's
suite. He was working at his desk, but he looked up as soon as I entered the
room, giving me the impression that he had been waiting for me.
"Where have you been?" he asked.
"With Janco," I said. But I was wary. As long as I arrived at the scheduled
times during the day, Valek didn't ask about what I did with my free time.
"Doing what?" Valek demanded, standing with his hands on his hips.
The comical image of a jealous husband popped into my mind. I stifled a
smile. "Discussing fighting tactics."
"Oh." Valek relaxed his stance, but moved his arms awkwardly as if he felt
he had overreacted and was trying to cover it up. "Well, that's all right. But from
now on, I need to know where you are at all times, and I suggest you stay in the
castle and keep a low profile for a while. General Brazell's guards have set a
bounty on your head."
"A bounty?" Fear pulsed through my chest.
"It could be a rumor or just drunken soldiers' talk. But until they leave, I
want you protected." Valek's tone was firm, but then he added, "I don't want to
train another taster."
"I'll be careful."
"No. You'll be paranoid. You'll move in a crowd, keep to well-lit areas and
you'll make certain to have an escort with you whenever you're walking down
empty hallways late at night. Understood?"
"Yes, sir."
"Good. The Generals' brandy meeting is scheduled for tomorrow evening.
Each General will bring a bottle of his finest brandy to share as they discuss
Ixian business late into the night. You will be needed to taste the Commander's
drinks." Valek lifted a box of eight bottles from the floor. They clinked
musically as he set the carton on the table.
Pulling out a small drinking glass, he said, "I want you to sample each
brandy once tonight and at least twice tomorrow, so you know how each tastes
clean of poisons." He handed me the glass. "Each bottle is labeled according to
the type of brandy, and which General brings it."
I grabbed a decanter at random. It was General Dinno's cherry brandy made
in MD–8. Pouring a mouthful, I took a sip and rolled the liquid around my
tongue, attempting to commit the taste to memory before swallowing. The strong alcohol burned down my throat, leaving behind a small fire in my chest. My face
flushed with the heat.
"I suggest you use the 'slurp and spit' method so you don't get drunk,"
Valek said.
"Good point." I found another glass for spitting, and then worked my way
through the remainder of the bottles.
On the day of the meeting, I tasted each brandy twice more in Valek's suite,
and then tested myself with a third round. Only when I could pinpoint by taste
alone which cordial belonged to which General was I satisfied.
That night, I waited for Valek to escort me to the war room. He came
downstairs decked out in full dress uniform. Red braids draped his shoulders;
medals were lined up six deep over his left breast. He oozed dignity, a man of
stature. I would have been impressed, except for the uncomfortable and peevish
look he wore. A petulant child forced to wear his best clothes. I covered my
mouth, but was unable to block my laughter.
"Enough. I have to wear this damn thing once a year and, as far as I'm
concerned, it's one time too many." Valek tugged at his collar. "Ready?"
I joined him at the door. The uniform enhanced his athletic body, and my
thoughts drifted to how magnificent he would look with his uniform puddled
around his feet.
"You look stunning," I blurted. Mortified, I blushed as a rush of heat spread
through my body. I must have swallowed more brandy than I'd realized.
"Really?" Valek glanced down at his uniform. Then he set his shoulders
back and stopped yanking at his collar. His cross expression changed to a
thoughtful smile.
"Yes. You do," I said.
We arrived in the Commander's war room just as the Generals assembled.
The long, slender, stained-glass windows glowed with the weak light of the
setting sun. Servants scurried around the circular chamber, lighting lanterns and
arranging platters of food and drink. All military personnel were attired in their
dress uniforms. Medals and buttons sparkled. I knew only three Generals by
sight; the rest I deduced by the color of the diamonds on their otherwise black
uniforms. Scrutinizing their faces, I memorized their different features in case
Valek tested me later.
Brazell glared when I made eye contact. Adviser Mogkan stood next to
him, and I shivered as Mogkan's eyes slid over me with cunning appraisal.
When Brazell and Reyad had performed their experiments on me, Mogkan had
always hovered nearby. His presence, sensed but unseen, had given me violent
nightmares. Brazell's usual advisers were missing; I wondered why he had brought Mogkan instead.
The Commander sat at the tip of the egg-shaped conference table. His
uniform was simple and elegant with real diamonds stitched onto his collar. The
Generals, flanked by their advisers, seated themselves around the rest of the
table. Valek's chair was to the Commander's right, and my stool was placed
behind them, against the only stone wall in the room. I knew the meeting would
last all night, and I was glad I would be able to rest my back. Another advantage
to my position was that I wasn't in direct sight of Brazell. Although I could
avoid seeing the poisonous looks he might flash my way, I couldn't hide from
Mogkan's pointed stares.
The Commander pounded a wooden gavel on the table. Silence fell.
"Before we launch into the scheduled topics," the Commander said, indicating
the detailed agenda which had been distributed earlier, "I have an important
announcement. I have appointed a new successor."
A murmur rippled through the war room as the Commander walked around
the table and handed a sealed envelope to each General. Inside the envelopes
were eight pieces to an encoded puzzle that would reveal the new successor's
name when deciphered by Valek's key.
Tension permeated the room. I felt it pressing against me like an overfilled
water-skin about to burst. A maelstrom of expressions, surprise, anger, concern
and contemplation crossed the Generals' faces. General Rasmussen of MD–7
whispered into his adviser's ear, the General's cheeks turning as red as his hair
and mustache. I leaned forward in my seat and saw Brazell struggle to keep his
face neutral as delight tweaked at his features.
Instead of erupting, the tension simmered, and leaked away as the
Commander ignored it by beginning the meeting. Items related to MD–1 were
the first order of business, to be followed by each district in order. As a bottle of
General Kitvivan's special white brandy slid around the table, the Generals
discussed snow cats and mining rights.
"Come on, Kit. Enough about the cats. Just feed them up on the pack ice
like we do, and they won't bother you," General Chenzo of MD–2 said in
exasperation, running a meaty hand through his moon-white hair. His full mane
stood out starkly against his tanned skin.
"Feed them so they'll get healthy and fat and start breeding like rabbits?
We'll go broke supplying the meat," Kitvivan shot back.
My interest in the proceedings waxed and waned depending on the subject.
After a while I began to feel light-headed and warm as the brandy influenced my
body, since protocol dictated that I swallow when tasting for the Commander.
The Generals voted on various topics, but the Commander held the final vote. Mostly he ruled in favor of the majority. No one ventured a complaint
when he didn't.
Commander Ambrose had lived in MD–3, scratching out a meager
existence with his family in the foothills of the Soul Mountains. Nestled between
the mountains and the ice pack, his home was atop a vast diamond mine. When
the rich find had been discovered, the King had claimed the diamonds, and
"allowed" the Commander's family to live there and work in the mines. He lost
many family members to cave-ins, and to the damp and dirty environment.
As a young man seething at the injustices of the monarchy, Ambrose
educated himself and began preaching about reform. His intelligence, bluntness
and pervasiveness gained him many loyal supporters.
My mind focused back on the meeting when the Generals reached issues
regarding MD–5. General Brazell caused a considerable stir. Instead of sliding
around his best brandy, he sent a silver tray containing what looked like small
brown stones. Valek handed one to me. It was a round drop of Brazell's Criollo.
Before protests about ignoring tradition could escalate, Brazell rose and
invited everyone to take a bite. After a brief moment of silence, exclamations of
delight filled the war room. The Criollo was filled with strawberry brandy. I
gave the Commander the all-clear sign so I could savor the rest of my morsel.
The combination of the sweet, nutty taste of the Criollo mixed with the smooth
texture of the brandy was divine. Rand would be upset that he hadn't thought of
mixing the two, I supposed, then regretted feeling sorry for Rand as I envisioned
his deceitful face.
After the praise died down, Brazell made the announcement that the
construction of his new factory was complete. Then he went on to more
mundane matters of how much wool had been sheared and the expected output
of the cotton plantations.
Military District 5 produced and dyed all the thread for Ixia, and then sent it
to General Franis's MD–3 to be woven into fabric. Franis nodded his head in
concern as he wrote down the figures Brazell quoted. He was the youngest of the
Generals, and had the habit of tracing the purple diamonds on his uniform with a
finger whenever he was concentrating.
I dozed on my stool as fuzzy thoughts gathered like storm clouds in my
mind. Strange dreams about brandy, border patrols and permits swirled like
snowflakes. Then the images turned bright and sharp as a picture of a young
woman dressed in white hunting furs snapped into my mind.
She held a bloody spear high in the air in celebration. A dead snow cat lay
at her feet. She slammed the tip of her weapon into the pack ice and drew a
knife. Cutting a slash in the cat's fur, she used a cup to collect the blood that spilled out.
She exalted as she drank, scarlet rivulets spilling down her chin. I heard her
thoughts clearly in my mind. "No one has managed this feat," she thought. "No
one but I!" she shouted over the snow. Her exhilaration filled my heart. "Proof
that I am a strong cunning hunter. Proof that my manhood was taken from me.
Proof that I am a man. Men will not rule me any longer," she cried. "Become the
snow cat to live with snow cats, become a man to live with men."
The hunter turned her face. At first, I took her to be the Commander's
sister. They shared the same thin delicate features and black hair. She wore
power and confidence like a cloak. Peering at my dreaming self, her gold
almond-shaped eyes drove through me like a lightning strike. Sudden
recognition that shewasthe Commander jerked me awake. My heart pounded and
my head thumped and I realized I was staring directly into Mogkan's searing
gaze. He smiled with satisfaction.
The Commander's reason for hating magicians was as clear to me as glass.
He was a she, but with the utter conviction that she should have been born a
man. That cruel fate had chosen to burden him with a mutation that he had to
overcome. And the Commander feared that a magician might pull this secret
from his mind. Pure foolishness, I thought, shaking my head to dismiss the
whole crazy notion. Just because I had dreamed about a woman didn't mean that
the Commander was one. It was absolute nonsense. Or was it?
Rubbing my eyes, I glanced around to see if anyone else had noticed that I
had fallen asleep. The Commander stared off into the distance, and Valek sat
stiff and alert, scanning the room, seeking something or someone. General Tesso
had the floor.
Valek pulled his gaze back to the Commander, and bumped his arm in
alarm. "What's going on?" he whispered urgently. "Where were you?"
"Just remembering a time long ago," the Commander said in a wistful
voice. "More enjoyable than listening to General Tesso's excruciatingly detailed
report on the corn harvest in MD–4."
I studied the Commander's features, trying to superimpose the woman from
my dream. They matched, but that meant nothing. Dreams twisted reality and it
was easy to envision the Commander killing a snow cat.
The rest of the meeting continued without incident, and I dozed on my stool
from time to time, untroubled by strange dreams. When the Commander
pounded his gavel, I was awake in an instant.
"Last item, gentlemen," the Commander announced. "A Sitian delegation
has requested a meeting."
The room erupted with voices. Arguments sprang to life as if the Generals were picking up an old debate right where they had left off. They discussed trade
treaties, and quarreled about attacking Sitia. Instead of trading for goods, why
not take them? they argued. They wanted to expand their districts and gain more
men and resources, ceasing all worries about Sitia attempting to attack Ixia.
The Commander sat in silence and let the flow of advice wash over him.
The Generals settled enough to proclaim their beliefs about allowing the Sitians
to come. The four northern Generals (Kitvivan, Chenzo, Franis and Dinno)
didn't want to meet with the delegation, while the four southern Generals (Tesso,
Rasmussen, Hazal and Brazell) favored a summit with the Sitians.
The Commander shook his head. "I acknowledge your opinions about Sitia,
but the southerners would rather trade with us than attack us. We have more men
and metal. A fact they are well aware of. To attack Sitia we would expend many
lives and large sums of money. And for what? Their luxury items aren't worth
the cost. I'm content with Ixia. We have cured the land of the King's disease.
Perhaps my successor will want more. You'll have to wait until then."
A murmur rippled through the Generals. Brazell nodded in agreement, with
his thin lips anchored in a predator's smile.
"I have already agreed to meet with the southern contingent," the
Commander continued. "They're due to arrive in four days. You have until then
to express your specific concerns to me before departing for your home districts.
Meeting adjourned." The bang from the Commander's gavel echoed throughout
the dead silent room.
The Commander rose and with his bodyguards and Valek close behind, he
prepared to leave. Valek gestured for me to join them. I lurched to my feet. The
full effect of the brandy I had consumed washed over me. Giddy, I followed the
others from the room. An explosion of sound slipped through the door just
before it closed behind us.
"That should stir things up a bit," the Commander said with a wan smile.
"I would advise against vacationing in MD-8 this year," Valek said
sarcastically. "The way Dinno reacted to your announcement about the southern
delegation I would expect him to pepper your beach house with sand spiders."
Valek shivered. "A horribly painful way to die."
My skin crawled too, thinking of the lethal spiders the size of small dogs.
Our procession continued in silence for a while as we headed back to the
Commander's suite. My gait was unsteady. The stone walls blurred past me, as if
they were moving and I was the one standing still.
Outside the Commander's suite, Valek said, "I'd watch out for Rasmussen
too. He didn't take the news of the change in your successor well."
The Commander opened his door. I stole a quick glance inside his suite.
The same plain utilitarian style that decorated his office and the rest of the castle
was present. What had I expected? Maybe a splash of color, or something a bit
more feminine? I gave my head a little shake to banish such absurd thoughts.
The motion made my head spin, and I had to put a hand to the wall to keep
myself from stumbling.
"I watch out for everyone, Valek. You know that," the Commander said
before shutting the door behind him.
Upon entering our suite, Valek stripped off his uniform jacket and threw it
on the couch. He pointed to a chair and said, "Sit. We need to talk."
I plopped into the chair and dangled a leg over the armrest, watching Valek
pace the room in his sleeveless undershirt and formfitting black pants. Imagining
my hands helping to ease the tension in the long ropy muscles of his arms almost
started a giggling fit. Brandy flowed through my blood, quickening my pulse.
"Two things were very wrong tonight," Valek said.
"Oh, come on. I just dozed for a minute," I said in my defense.
Valek shot me a quizzical look. "No, no. You did fine. I meant about the
meeting; the Generals." He continued to pace. "First, Brazell seemed unusually
happy about the change in successor and the Sitian delegation. He's always
wanted a trade treaty, but he typically exercises a more cautious approach. And
second, there was a magician in the room."
"What?" My breath locked. Had I been discovered?
"Magic. Very subtle, from a trained professional. I only felt it once, a brief
touch, but I couldn't pinpoint the source. But the magician had to be in the room,
or I wouldn't have felt it."
"When?"
"During Tesso's long-winded dissertation about corn." Valek's posture had
relaxed a little, as if the act of talking out a problem helped him deal with it.
"About the same time your snoring could be heard halfway across the room."
"Ha," I said rather loud. "You were so stiff at that meeting I thought rigor
mortis had set in."
Valek snorted with amusement. "I doubt you could have looked any better
sitting in that uncomfortable dress uniform all night. I imagine Dilana sprayed
on extra starch with malicious glee."
Then he grew serious again. "Do you know Adviser Mogkan? He eyed you
most of the evening."
"I know of him. He was Reyad's primary adviser. They also hunted
together."
"What's he like?" Valek asked.
"Same kind of vermin as Reyad and Nix," I said. The words poured off my lips. I slapped both hands over my mouth, but it was too late.
Valek studied me for a moment. Then he said, "There were a number of
new advisers at the meeting. I guess I'll have to check them out one by one. It
seems we have a new southern spy with magic abilities." He sighed. "It never
ends." He dropped onto the edge of the couch as weariness settled on him like a
coating of dust.
"If it did, you'd be out of a job." Before I could stop myself, I squeezed
behind Valek and started to massage his shoulders. The alcohol had taken
complete command of my movements, and the tiny sober section of my brain
could do nothing but yell useless admonishments.