Februaren turned sideways. The air whooshed into the space he had vacated. But then he popped right back, four feet from where he had been before. “Piper, the communication pendant. You haven’t used it for a while. Do you remember how? In case…” He stopped. Consent showed signs of shaking his torpor.
“I must have lost it. I have no idea when. Last time I…”
He did remember. During his sordid encounter with Empress Katrin in the Krulik and Sneigon falcon manufactory she had insisted that he get rid of the pendant. It kept hitting her in the back of the neck.
“I’d forgotten all about it.”
“And yet you’ve made it through everything. Maybe you are beloved of the gods. What about your amulet? Have you lost that, too?”
“No. Right here.” Hecht raised his left hand, squeezed his left wrist. He forgot the amulet most of the time, too. But not lately. “It’s been driving me crazy. It itches all the time.”
The old man’s gaze was, suddenly, so intense that Hecht took a surprised step back. “What?” Hecht said.
“The god hunt might get off to a slow start. If it does, your sister might turn up here. Don’t expect her to be in a good mood if she does.”
The Ninth Unknown rotated again.
Consent had recovered enough to understand what he was seeing. “Boss, I don’t know if I can handle this.”
“You get used to it. The hard part is remembering not to talk about it around people who don’t need to know.”
“Nobody would believe me, anyway.”
Hecht thought Titus might be surprised.
* * *
Algres Drear and a dozen Braunsknechts turned up to take the Commander of the Righteous to see the Empress. Hecht’s staff were nervous but he was confident of his safety.
Lila had been hard at work eavesdropping. She had had a good time, with no trouble. Only Ferris Renfrow was a problem. Hecht had told her to stay away from him.
She had not done so, of course. Her ration of youthful over-confidence had been well fertilized by her Construct-supported skills.
Renfrow taught her a lesson Hecht did not hear of till much later. Lila spent a few hours inside a soundproof, lightless quiet room in such perfect repair that she was unable to transit out.
Hecht’s past visits to Helspeth had taken place at the Ege family mansion or other private venues. Seldom had many others been present. This visit was supposed to take place in the privy audience of the Imperial Palace, the official residence of the Grail Emperors. He found people in the halls and grand ballroom. Scores of them. With servants and guards, maybe hundreds. At least a score were Braunsknechts, big, hard men dedicated to protecting the Imperial person. They wore excellent armor, carried excellent weapons, and, Hecht noted, each bore a brace of handheld firepowder arms. They looked like they might be asked to break a siege at any moment.
Hecht asked Drear, “Is the mood here as crazy as it seems?”
“It’s worse. What happened to Katrin was the last thing anyone expected. The Empire was resigned to an inauspicious reign. Important men had their appointments and expected to milk them once the war in Firaldia sputtered to an end.”
“What?”
“Those wars always did. Even when Johannes was successful, something always happened. Something happened this time, too, but you were ahead of it. So Alten Weinberg is in chaos. Nobody had warning enough to pick sides and decide on a preferred form of obstructionism.”
Hecht grunted. He studied the people around him, saw more resentment and calculation than inclination to build a better future. “The Righteous have acquired new tools for handling deliberate obstructionism.”
Drear did not respond. The set of his shoulders said he thought Hecht was posturing.
Hecht said, “I’m sure it won’t be long till someone earns a demonstration.”
“Commander, what you’ll face here will be petty. Mostly trivia like jealousy over your access to the Empress.”
Access was always invaluable around a court. It was coin-or the lack thereof-in a political sense. The Council Advisory had profited immensely by controlling access during the reigns of Katrin and Lothar.
“You see a lot of Helspeth, Captain. Is she talking major changes?”
“She’ll let you know what’s on her mind.” Stated sharply.
Constant stares from palace denizens. Hecht pictured hungry lizards with long tongues darting.
He shuddered. Creepy. They had the eyes of lizards, too.
He considered each face, sure he smelled their hidden thoughts.
He smelled coffee as he approached the privy audience.
Three people waited with the Empress, who had taken steps to appear Imperial. There was the inevitable Lady Hilda, the Graf fon Rhejm, and Archbishop Brion of Urenge, the latter not in his ceremonial apparel. Lady Hilda was occupied with the coffee. Empress Katrin’s uncle seemed older and more massive than Hecht remembered. He had the eyes of a raptor. The Archbishop had the eyes of a vulture. But that was not fair. Hecht did not know the man. He had a better reputation than most of his peers. No scandal attached to his name.
Both men had appointments for private visits.
Captain Drear joined them. Drear seldom strayed far from his Empress.
Hecht performed the obeisances due the Imperial personage, did the same for the Archbishop, then accepted coffee from Lady Hilda, who delivered the wondrous beverage in a beer mug accompanied by a flirtatious flutter of lashes. He smiled back and would have winked if unsmiling eyes had not been watching.
The dignity of her new estate had possessed Helspeth already. She perched on her audience throne quite regally. She rose, stepped down to greet Hecht, let him kiss her massive Imperial signet ring. She chose to wear that where married women wore a wedding band. A statement? In a faint whisper she said, “I’m desperately trying not to giggle.”
He lifted his gaze.
The magic was still there. Whatever else she might be, she remained the woman who liquefied his spine and turned his knees to butter.
He recognized the same response in her. He did not trust his mouth with words.
Helspeth stepped back. “Let’s all sit and enjoy our coffee.”
A sizable table had been brought in for the purpose. Helspeth assumed the seat of honor, assisted by Captain Drear, who took station behind her right shoulder. Lady Hilda guided Hecht to the far end of the table, facing the Empress. After pouring coffee she took station behind his right shoulder. Archbishop Brion and the Graf fon Rhejm settled on the long sides of the table, nearer Helspeth, the Archbishop taking precedence to her right. Neither he nor the Graf said anything.
“So here we are,” Helspeth said. “Where I never expected to be, nor am I yet sure I belong. Commander of the Righteous. You saw what happened with Katrin. Tell us. Spare me no detail.”
He told it, sparing Helspeth the more sordid details. He would take those into the Night unshared with anyone.
“Thank you, Commander. Much as I hated to listen, I had to hear that. So: where do we go from here?”
That sounded rehearsed. Hecht did not respond. His silence did not disappoint her.
She continued, “There will be changes. Fewer and smaller than some fear, not as many or as large as others hope. I mean to step back from Katrin’s romance with Brothe. My policies will more closely align with those of my father. But I do intend to fulfill Katrin’s promise to liberate the Holy Lands.”
Helspeth reminisced about her father’s hope to take the crusader mantle, which was where Katrin had gotten the idea.
“We’re capable financially. Commander Hecht’s recent campaign, though costly, did not strain the treasury. And we can count on considerable external support. The Church has wanted a new crusade since the Battle of the Well of Days. Commander, go on doing what you would have done if misfortune hadn’t overtaken my sister.”