Temar changed, delighted to be free of the constricting coat. Mistal dragged a faded blue jerkin over his own plain breeches and locked Temar’s elegant tailoring and borrowed jewellery safely away. He looked at Temar’s sapphire signet. “What about that ring?”
“This I always wear,” said Temar firmly. “Anyone who wants it is welcome to try taking it.”
“It’s your coin to toss.” Mistal looked a little uncertain.
“Shall we go?” Temar nodded towards the door or window, whichever it was.
“I’m hungry.” Mistal locked his door securely and led Temar down into the street. “Can you eat common food like sausage, Esquire?”
Temar laughed. “I have eaten whatever mercenaries can trap in the woods for the last year. Sausage would be a rare treat.”
“Smoked or plain?” Mistal spat the leaf he’d been chewing into the gutter before crossing the busy road. An old woman sat beneath a rack hung with sausages tied in circles, as wrinkled as if she’d been smoked over a long fire herself.
“Plain.” Temar accepted a plump sausage glistening with oil and bit into it cautiously, rewarded with a pungent mouthful redolent of pepper, savory and rue. “This is what you call plain?”
Mistal paid the woman before tearing a small loaf apart. “You’ve got to have a few spices to liven up a sausage.” He handed Temar half the bread. “Do you like it?”
Temar nodded, mouth full. Mistal’s face cleared and they both ate hungrily as they walked rapidly through the bustling city.
“This is better than wasting my time in that tedious courtroom,” Temar said with feeling.
“Enjoy your freedom while you can,” advised Mistal. “You’ll be spending long enough in the courts for the next few seasons, until those arguments are settled.”
“Me?” Temar frowned. “Messire D’Olbriot’s trials are nothing to do with me.”
“I must have misunderstood.” Mistal looked sharply at Temar. “Rysh said you weren’t stupid.”
“Then tell me what I am failing to see, Master Advocate,” retorted Temar, stung.
Mistal wiped greasy hands on the front of his jerkin. “Rysh told me about this colony of yours, said you’d been attacked from some northern islands?”
“The Elietimm.” Temar shivered with sudden revulsion. “They’ll destroy Kel Ar’Ayen given half a chance.”
“But you’ve wizards to hold them off, haven’t you?” Mistal demanded. “Fire and flood to scorch or drown them? That’s what Ryshad was saying. Well, if you think these northern islanders are a threat, they’re nothing compared to the people setting their advocates against you back there.” Mistal waved an airy hand somewhere in the direction of the courts. “It’s a different kind of danger, but it’s just as real for your colony. Your little settlement can’t survive without trading for the things you can’t make for yourself. Without a market for your goods you won’t have the coin to buy them either. If you’re to expand from whatever scant land you hold, you need new blood. But you need the authority to control who comes and who settles, otherwise you’ll find competing townships springing up all along your coast before the turn of the year. If that happens, Elietimm assault will be the least of your worries.” Mistal’s lawyerly delivery in his casual dress struck Temar as incongruous, but his words were too serious for laughter.
“If the Emperor upholds your rights, then every House must respect them. More than that, Tormalin will consider the colony as part of itself and thus something we’ll all defend against greedy Lescari or Dalasorians.”
“The Sieur D’Olbriot supports our rights,” said Temar slowly. “And he has the Emperor’s ear.”
“For the moment.” Mistal looked stern. “That influence lasts only so long as D’Olbriot is a Name other Houses can respect. If D’Olbriot’s discredited, if these accusations of bad faith are upheld, then the Emperor won’t hear the Sieur. He can’t afford to, for the sake of his own credibility. Imperial authority is only effective as long as all the Names consent to obey it.”
“That much I do understand,” Temar replied crisply. “I was there when Nemith the Last’s insanities alienated every House in the Old Empire.”
“Which precipitated the Chaos,” nodded Mistal without missing a step.
“The collapse of aetheric magic caused that,” Temar contradicted him with growing irritation. “Why will Burquest not mention the part Artifice played in the discovery of the colony? Listening to him you would think we had been merely mislaid for a few years, not cut off by generations of enchantment!”
“Because that would almost certainly lose him the argument,” retorted Mistal. “No one would want to believe him.”
“Your courts take no account of the truth?” Temar was getting really cross.
“All too often the truth’s whatever people want to make it.” Mistal shrugged. “You and Ryshad, the Sieur, even Master Burquest, you all understand the aetheric aspects of your story, but there’s neither time nor opportunity to convince people who’ve grown up with different history. Bringing aetheric magic into legal argument can only cause confusion. Worse, you risk getting tarred with the same brush as wizards, and no one in their right minds trusts a mage the moment they’re out of sight.”
Mistal stopped to point an emphatic finger at Temar. “As far as the world and his wife is concerned, Nemith the Last’s bad governance caused the Names to turn their backs on him, and that’s what caused the Chaos. Which is something no Emperor will ever risk happening again. Even the hint of a decision threatening the unity of the nobility will be enough to see the House of Tadriol lose the Imperial throne. Tadriol won’t back D’Olbriot against all the other Names, whatever the truth of the matter. He can’t afford to. That’s what’s at stake back there in the law courts, my friend. If Burquest can defend D’Olbriot’s position, then the Emperor can continue to take the Sieur’s advice and support your claims against all the other Houses who want their turn at the well. If not, Tadriol will drop D’Olbriot like a hot brick. If that happens, Kellarin will be a prize for the first House who can seize it and you’ll be nowhere in the hunt. Until you’ve established a Name for yourself and you’ve got some judgements in the courts to back your claims, the House of D’Alsennin lives or dies with D’Olbriot.”
“Then I should look beyond D’Olbriot walls?” Temar looked uncertainly at Mistal. “Make some contacts of my own?”
“How?” the advocate demanded. “How will you know who to trust? How will you know if you’re offered good coin or Lescari lead? Tell me, will you draw up contracts under Toremal or Relshazri law codes? Will you apply the same scales of premiums as Inglis, or adopt Zyoutessela equivalent compensations?”
Temar gaped for a moment before responding angrily. “When I know what those things might be, I will be able to decide.”
“But what if I’m a merchant only here for Festival and I want an answer now?” countered Mistal. “If you go off to find out what I’m talking about, I’ll likely use my money on established trades offering a safer return, Aldabreshin spices, Gidestan metals, Dalasorian hides. Whatever you’re offering from Kellarin has to be something special to convince anyone to risk their gold across the open ocean.”
“The Sieur D’Olbriot thinks we have excellent prospects for trade,” said Temar stiffly.
Mistal nodded ready agreement. “With his Name to back you, most certainly. There’ll be half a hundred merchants in Toremal ready to give you the benefit of their considerable doubts just because they trust D’Olbriot. But if the House is discredited in the courts, they won’t touch you with someone else’s gloves on.”
Temar relieved his feelings by kicking a loose cobble with an angry boot. They were walking briskly through a distinctly down-at-heel area of the town now.