"Pardon me," Ragnarson said. "You needn't reveal yourself. You think Habibullah had Mocker kidnapped because Mocker embarrassed your father? Because of it Haroun plans to start fighting again?"
"One operation. One planned for years. All or nothing. He thinks the tribes will rise to support him."
"Yes. So. But El Murid doesn't have Mocker. And Haroun knows it. The Marena Dimura down there are his spies."
"I'll tell you what I know. Some men killed Habibullah's men. They handed the fat man over to a man in black. Haroun believed the killers went into the north to hide."
"Wait. The man in black. Tell me about him."
"The Marena Dimura say he was tall and thin. He wore a mask."
"Mask?"
"A metal mask. Maybe gold. With jewels. Like those creatures on the walls of the temples in the jungle cities. The killers were afraid of him."
Ragnarson buried his face in his hands.
"Haroun has vanished. I fear he will try to murder my father so there'll be confusion when he invades Hammad al Nakir. I came here because I hoped you could do something."
"What?"
"Stop him."
"I don't understand."
"I love my father. He was a good father. He's a good man. He means no evil...."
"Nearly a million people died during the wars."
"My father didn't do that. He didn't want it. That was the fault of men like Nassef. His generals were brigands."
Ragnarson didn't contradict her. She was partly right. But her father had given the order to convert the west, and to slay anyone who didn't accept his faith.
"What could I do? I don't know where Haroun is. I've only seen him once in the last ten years."
She wept. "The Fates are cruel. Why do the men I love spend their lives trying to kill each other?
"I shouldn't have come. I should have known it was useless. All that planning, that trouble getting away, hiding from Haroun's men..... All for nothing."
"Maybe not. There's a possibility.....The old story of the enemy of my enemy."
"Excuse me?"
"There's a greater enemy. One your husband and your father could agree to be more dangerous than one another."
"You're being mysterious."
"I hate naming the name. I've seen the men in black before. I've fought them. They call themselves Tervola."
The color left Yasmid's face. "Shinsan! No."
"Who would impersonate a Tervola?" But then, why would Shinsan grab Mocker? What was the connection between Balfour and Shinsan? Did that permeate the Guild? And this Willis Northen, who used a Marena Dimura name, was a Kaveliner Wesson..... Had Shinsan penetrated Kavelin?
"Derel!"
But Prataxis was gone. Ragnarson wrote names. Oryon. Valther. Mist. Trebilcock. It was time he found out if Michael had learned anything.
"Does anybody know where Haroun went?"
"No. He just disappeared. He didn't even tell Beloul or Rahman. He does that. Everybody complains. He promises, but keeps doing it. I think he will try to get my father."
"If I could contact him, this war might be averted. Your father. Would he listen to you?"
"Yes."
How confident she was after all these years. "He's changed. He's a fat old man now. They say he's crazy."
"I know. People come from the desert to Haroun. They all say that. They say he's betraying the ideals he seized the Peacock Throne for.... Men like Nassef changed him."
"Nassef died a long time ago. I killed him."
"A bandit named Nassef is dead. But there are more Nassefs. They have walled my father off and taken control."
"He still has his voice. The Faithful would support him if he spoke publicly. Disharhun is coming, isn't it?"
Disharhun was the week of High Holy Days celebrated in Hammad al Nakir. Pilgrims went to Al Rhemish to hear El Murid speak.
Ragnarson was thinking only of Kavelin. If Haroun launched an incursion from Kavelin and Tamerice, and failed, El Murid would have a legitimate case for counteraction. It might initiate a new round of wars.
"Don't I have trouble enough?" he muttered. "Haroun, Haroun, maybe I should've cut your throat years ago."
He still considered Haroun a friend. But he had never really liked the man much. A paradox.
Haroun had always been too self-involved.
"Marshall?"
"Derel? Just a minute." To Yasmid, "Will you reveal yourself?"
She replaced her veil. "I'll decide after I see him."
Bragi went to the door. "Ah. Ambassador. Glad you could come."
"I need to speak with you, too, Marshall. Our intelli-gence...."
"Excuse me. Derel, send for Valther, his wife, and Colonel Oryon."
"He just...."
"I know. Something came up. On Balfour. I need to see him again. And see if anybody knows where Trebilcock is."
"On my way." Prataxis wasn't pleased. His own work suffered more anymore while he handled tasks Gjerdrum should have done.
"Thank you, Ambassador. Come in."
Habibullah cast a suspicious glance at the woman.
"Yes. That bandit bin Yousif...."
"I know. And you know why, too, don't you?"
"What?"
"There's an interesting story going around. About a man who paid to have a friend of mine kidnapped. Who also happens to be a friend of the bandit you mentioned."
Habibullah refused to react.
"You've probably heard the story yourself. Especially the part about the kidnappers failing to deliver their goods." He retold Yasmid's tale.
"Where did you hear this fairy tale?"
"Several sources. Today, from this lady."
Habibullah eyed her again. "Why would Shinsan kidnap a fat fakir?"
"Good question. I've even wondered why El Murid's agents would try it."
Habibullah started to make excuses.
"Yes, I know. But these days we're pretending to have forgiven and forgotten. Doesn't El Murid say that to forgive is divine?"
"What the fat man did was a crime against God Himself...."
"No, Habibullah."
The ambassador turned.
Yasmid said, "You hate him because he made a fool of you." To Ragnarson, "The men of my people can forgive a wound, an insult, a murder. Habibullah has. But he can't forget the pain of being made a fool before his friends in the Invincibles. No. Habibullah, admit it. He told you those stories and showed you those tricks, and you believed he was your friend. You spoke for him to me. And he tricked you. That's why you risked another war to get him."
"Who are you? Marshall?"
Ragnarson smiled, licked his lips. "Mr. Habibullah, I think you suspect already."
Yasmid dropped her veil.
Habibullah stared. And it wasn't her boldness that astonished him. "No. This's some trick, Marshall. Have you leagued with the minions of Hell? You call up the dead to mock me?"
"I think Habibullah was in love with me. I didn't realize it then. I think a lot of them were."
"My Lady."
Ragnarson gaped as Habibullah knelt, head bowed, and extended his arms, wrists crossed. It was an ultimate gesture, the surrender to slavery.
Ragnarson could no longer doubt her genuineness.
"Rise, Habibullah." She replaced her veil.
"What would My Lady have of me?"
"Speak honestly with the Marshall."
"I've gotten what I needed. Except this: Can you escort the lady to her father? More successfully than you did my friend?"
Habibullah became El Murid's ambassador once more. "Why?"
"I've got no use for your boss. I wouldn't shed a tear if somebody stuck a knife in his gizzard. The world would be better off. That's why I don't bother bin Yousif any more than I have to to keep the peace with Hammad al Nakir.
"But that peace is critical to me now, with Shinsan sticking its nose into Kavelin. I'm grasping at straws. I need my flanks free. Yasmid implies that she'll be the go-between in arranging a truce between her father and her husband."