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Chulderic peered sideways at me. “What do you think? He was wild with delight. As soon as he heard what Ban had come to tell him, he sent for me. We were going back to Ganis at once, he told me, as quickly as we could, and we would live there from now on. I would be his Master-at-Arms there, he promised me then, in complete charge of the entire force of men he would be raising immediately to take with him.

“Before we left for Ganis, your father sat down and wrote a letter to Germanus in Auxerre, explaining what was happening and where he was going and why, and telling the legate that we would be extending our northward journey to swing wide of our route and call in at Auxerre in passing. He then asked the noble legate to mediate for him in the matter of the legacy left him by his late father, by contacting the various people involved as custodians of his wealth and requesting that they sell everything that could be sold, as quickly and as prudently as possible, and that they forward the funds in care of Germanus in Auxerre. In the meantime, he hoped Germanus might arrange to advance him some money against future revenues and that he would also agree to use those funds and his military contacts to conscript a force of not less than one hundred men, all cavalry, and more if he could find qualified men in sufficient numbers, and have them ready to accompany us when we left Auxerre to ride on to Ganis.

“Your father had no idea then of how much money was involved in his father’s legacy, and I doubt if he ever really came to grips with his own sudden wealth. Germanus told me later that the expenses he incurred on behalf of your grandfather Garth and the fortification of Ganis involved enormous sums, paid for, in the main, by what was realized in the first few years from massive sales of his properties in Rome and Constantinople. Much of that money was shipped directly from Rome to Gaul by sea, then made its way from the coast to Auxerre, and from there to Ganis, in wagon loads disguised as normal military goods being transported under escort. Your father kept the money in his own treasury after that, and used it as he needed it, to purchase arms and men and horses and the like. I remember, though, when I first heard about it—the amounts involved, I mean—the number of wooden chests of gold coin and silver ingots and jewels and the way they were transported clear across Gaul in ordinary wagons, I was flabbergasted. I simply could not visualize the bulk of the treasure.”

I sat blinking at that, entranced by the image he had conjured, trying in vain to imagine the size and amount of treasure involved and to see it, in my mind’s eye, filling the vast underground chamber of my father’s treasury, awash in a sea of gold and brilliant colors as the flickering light of torches reflected from the heaps of gold and jewels.

“What happened to it, Magister, all that money?”

“Clodas took it, along with everything else.”

“Clodas. Someday I will kill Clodas of Ganis.”

“Aye, mayhap you will. No one will blame you, I know that. He owes you more than one life. Besides, his treasury is yours by right.”

I felt myself frowning now. “Clodas of Ganis. The King said Clodas wasn’t always known by that name. But last night King Ban called you Chulderic of Ganis. Is that correct? Is that truly where you are from?”

The Master-at-Arms barked deep in his throat, and it might have been a laugh, although it might as easily have been a cough. “No, lad. I’m from Ostia, the port of Rome,” he growled. “I had never heard of Ganis until Ban mentioned it, and I didn’t get that name until I came here with you, ten years ago. Chulderic’s a common name in these parts and there were already four Chulderics here when I arrived. Each of them was known by the name of the place he came from, and one of them was already from Ostia, another from Rome. So I became Chulderic of Ganis.”

“What did you do in Ostia, Magister?”

“What did I do in Ostia?” He made a formless, grunting sound deep in his chest. “No one has ever asked me that before. What did I do in Ostia? I should know, I was there for years … . I survived, I suppose, and that, considering who I was and where I found myself, was an achievement. I grew up there, fighting for every scrap of food I ate and fighting even harder simply to live when there was nothing to eat … . I was an orphan and a thief, forced to live by my wits, and they served me well, since I am still here to speak of it. I had no family … and no memories of anyone, from my earliest days … . I lived on the streets, alone, sleeping in doorways most of the time, for as long as I can remember, and the one vision I had that kept me alive throughout that entire time was an image of myself as a soldier. I don’t know how or when it began, but I grew up dreaming of being a soldier—not a mere warrior, mark you, but a uniformed Roman soldier, a legionary—because soldiers, to me, were always self-sufficient and dependent upon no man for their food. They were tall and strong and confident, and they had fine weapons and they were clean and wore warm clothing and well-made armor and everyone knew who they were and what they were. I never met a single one, mind you, who showed me any kindness, but somehow, among them all, they saved my life.

“I was fourteen when I first tried to enlist, and they laughed at me because I was a small, undernourished, and skinny fourteen. I was so furious that I wept. I tried seven more times after that—seven times in two years—and they turned me away each time. But then they took me in the next time, on my ninth attempt, with no hesitation. I suppose I had grown old enough by then to look my age.”

He glanced across to where I sat watching him, and sniffed. “Now I’m a Master-at-Arms, so who would guess I ever was a thief?”

There was nothing I could say to that, and I only had the vaguest suspicion that there might be a grin hiding underneath his scowl, so I sat mute for a spell, then changed the topic.

“Why did Clodas of Ganis kill my parents, Magister, and how was he able to do so?”

Chulderic stiffened as though I had slapped him, and then his shoulders slumped forward. “Why and how are two different matters, boy. I’ve been thinking of that, and wondering about it, for ten years now. He killed them because they were there and they had what he wanted. This is a creature born to kill, this Clodas. He is depraved … evil. And yet he hides the evil effortlessly, with an almost supernatural ability to dissemble, to appear to be what he is not. Easy for me now to say what I know to be true, that he is without a man’s emotions, empty of mercy or compassion, incapable of love or sympathy or sorrow. But this was not the face he showed to us who thought we were his friends. From us, he concealed every inkling of his true nature—from us men, at least, because I seem to recall that most women disliked him and distrusted him instinctively. I suppose that makes men more gullible and foolish than women. It’s certainly true that he was able to gull all of us who knew him. Jesu! It makes me sick when I recall how much we trusted him … and honored him, for that matter. But then, truth to tell, none of us could even imagine the depths of treachery and depravity that existed within him while he was making us all love and admire him.”

The old man stared out across the scene in front of us. “Believe me, lad, he was a piece of work … the kind of man to make you doubt every notion you ever had of what is admirable or honorable or worthy of trust.

“How did he do it? Within the six months following your father’s arrival, he and King Garth visited every town, every fort, and every settlement, no matter how poor or insignificant, in the Ganis federation, and that is how your father first met Clodas, on one of those journeys. In those days, Clodas was not known to anyone as Clodas of Ganis. If anything, he would have been Clodas of Rich Vale, but even that would have been ludicrous. His station was far more humble back then. His father, Dagobert, was the chief magistrate and nominal ruler of the district called Rich Vale, one of the larger fiefs of Ganis which lay far to the southeast of Garth’s own lands. But Dagobert was an administrative ruler, more of a public official than a leader in any military sense. He was also some kind of cousin to King Garth, a relative by blood, but I know not how close, although I believe someone once told me that Garth’s grandsire had been a brother to Dagobert’s grandmother, or perhaps his great-grandmother.