Storm Warning (31 page)

Read Storm Warning Online

Authors: Mercedes Lackey

He got to the door of the Council Chamber to find that he was actually the first one to arrive; there were only a pair of guards and a young page on duty.
Well, that was convenient. He would have a chance to impress, not only his master, but the other dignitaries, with the diligence of those from Karse. Anything that could show Karsites in a good light was definitely to be pursued.
He had the page inside the chamber show him where Ulrich’s seat was, and took the lesser one beside it. He opened his pouch and took out everything in it, sharpening his pens, making certain the ink was mixed, readying all his materials so that there would be no unseemly fumbling with pouch, pen, and papers when the meeting began.
Just as he completed his arrangements, the rest of those who were to attend the meeting began to filter in. He recognized all of the Councilors, of course, though they paid him no attention whatsoever.
Both
gryphons arrived with Firesong between them, and they took a place behind him, since they obviously would never fit at the table itself. The Shin’a’in envoy arrived as well, and with her, Ulrich.
Well,
that
was certainly interesting. Had Ulrich been engaged in a private discussion with her before this meeting? The way they were talking suggested that he had been. But Ulrich’s seat was at one end of the horseshoe-shaped table, and the Shin’a’in’s seat was at the other, next to Firesong.
Ah, I see—they have us grouped by geography—those who live near each other are seated next to each other. That’s useful, and practical as well.
Ulrich sat down next to Karal with a smile of approval for his preparations. Karal was not the only secretary attending this meeting, but he was clearly the best organized of the lot. The others were fumbling out their supplies and trying to be unobtrusive at the same time, and it wasn’t working.
The envoy from Rethwellan was supposed to sit next to Ulrich, but to Karal’s astonishment, which he quickly cloaked, it was the Prince-Consort who took the chair there. A solemn-faced young man in sober blue took the seat next to Daren’s, and prepared to take his own set of notes on behalf of the Prince.
So the Prince-Consort also plans to act as the Rethwellan envoy? That’s just a little irregular, isn’t it?
But no one else seemed to mind, and only the Shin’a’in envoy raised an eyebrow. On the other hand, Daren had once been his brother’s Lord Martial, and presumably could still speak with authority on military matters within Rethwellan. Perhaps he was the best choice for this meeting.
Eventually the Queen herself arrived with very little fanfare. Talia came quietly along behind her, and took up a special seat that Karal had
thought
was for the Prince Consort.
Evidently not.
He studied the Queen’s Own, wondering just what the basis for her position was here. Clearly she was some kind of advisor, but what did she do?
I’m going to have to ask someone some time soon.
These Valdemarans were so surprising that they might even tell him the truth!
When everyone attending the meeting was seated, and all the underlings had their papers and supplies in order, the Queen stood. Selenay wore only a circlet of gold on her head to denote her rank; otherwise her clothing was nothing more than a richer version of the Herald’s livery. That in itself was fascinating, because Solaris of all of the Sons of the Sun in living memory was doing precisely the same thing with
her
robes of office. She seldom wore the Crown of Prophecy except when the Voice was going to possess her; as for the rest, the sole symbol of her office was the special Sundisk pectoral that only the Son of the Sun wore, a neckpiece as ancient as Karse itself. Her robes were the same as any other Priest; save only that the cloth was a little softer, of a slightly finer weave. This was very effective, as it made her seem much more approachable than any of her predecessors. Had she taken her cue from the Queen of Valdemar, or had she contrived the notion herself?
“The forces of the Eastern Empire are currently not moving forward through Hardorn,” the Queen began, as soon as the murmur of talk was replaced by silence. It was odd, but she looked a lot calmer than Karal would have been in identical circumstances. He made note of that; impressions could be useful. “We have taken this opportunity to gather intelligence information, and we have called this Council to present it to the representatives of all of our allies at once. Much of this will be new even to me.”
Ah. So she isn’t using the royal plural; when she says “we, ” at least in this Council, she is talking about more people than just herself.
Also useful to know.
And with that, she sat down and gestured to the first of a series of underlings to come forward and make his report.
Karal took copious notes. The first was a basic report on how much territory the Empire had already annexed, and the current situation with what was left of a government in that portion of Hardorn still held by loyalists.
The news wasn’t good. The Empire held roughly half of Hardorn at this point. There was resistance, which became more organized with every passing day, but the question in the minds of those who had written this report was whether or not it would become well-organized enough in time to actually stop the Empire short of the Valdemar border.
“The current government consists of a Special Council,” the clerk read, as Karal wondered who had been intrepid enough to ferret out all this information. It
had
to have been obtained at firsthand. “There are thirty surviving nobles, the heads of the Guilds, and someone who claims that he speaks for all the mages who are left. It is the opinion of those who have watched this Special Council in action that they are still disordered and demoralized, and a single leader has yet to emerge from the chaos.”
The clerk presented his papers to the Queen and bowed himself out. She looked straight at Ulrich as she accepted them, but she waited until the clerk was gone before saying anything. “My Lord Ulrich,” Selenay said smoothly, “has your leader any interest in this situation while it remains on the opposite side of her borders?”
Karal fully expected Ulrich to say nothing, but once again, his master surprised him. “I would be lying, and we both know it, if I said that this was
not
a very tempting situation for us, your Highness,” he replied, just as smoothly. “The secular advisors to Her Holiness would like nothing better than to annex a bit of Hardorn while the situation is so very unstable, and they have, in fact, so advised her. We might already have done so—but for one insurmountable barrier.” He raised his eyebrow. “The Voice of Flame spoke through Her Holiness and made His Will quite plain, to the public in general, and again to Her Holiness in her private meditations. Vkandis Sunlord does not approve of the notion of increasing Karse beyond the present border, and will make His displeasure clear to anyone who flouts His holy Will. Since that displeasure has been known to be fatal, no one has suggested any more annexations.”
One of the Valdemar Councilors snorted in derision, but it was not Ulrich who answered that clear expression of disbelief.
“I do assure you, my lord,” the Shin’a’in envoy said, in a tone of voice that put frost on the rim of every glass in the room, “while deities are not known for personally manifesting Their wrath inside your realm, we who live outside are quite accustomed to hearing our gods
and
obeying them. It is more than faith that governs us, it is
fact.”
The Councilor in question flushed a painful scarlet and mumbled an apology in Ulrich’s direction. The Priest bowed slightly in acknowledgment and acceptance, and the Queen took the floor again.
“It is just as tempting for Valdemar to act during this period of confusion,” Selenay said gravely. “We are overcrowded with Hardornen refugees, for one thing. It would be very convenient for us to send them back into their own land again, under Valdemaran supervision. Sending military advisors, perhaps?”
The Councilor for the East asked for the floor. “We
have
been encouraging them to go back to Hardorn and take back their own land again, but it’s very difficult to convince them to do so when
we
can promise them no help. Ancar drained his land dry, and times would be very hard there without an army of occupation holding half the country. They simply cannot do anything against the Empire without substantial aid.”
“But if we offer them aid, we open up another bag of troubles entirely,” the Lord Marshal said instantly. “At the moment, Hardorn is still a buffer between us and the Empire, and the Emperor seems in no great hurry to take the rest of the country. If the Emperor decided that offering aid to Hardorn was a direct act of aggression, he
could
escalate his occupation in order to get at us. Frankly, he can move more troops and resources faster than we can respond. I don’t advise any kind of intervention, no matter what words or titles we cloak it in.” His mouth twitched in a grimace of chagrin. “I may be a military man, but I know my facts. Fact one—we don’t have the resources to take on the Empire. Fact two—we can’t afford to antagonize them. We have no choice.”
“What is the Empire doing right now?” Prince Daren asked. In answer, Selenay gestured to Kerowyn, who stood up with a sheaf of papers in her hand.
“I have an intelligence report on precisely that right here,” Kerowyn said, her voice carrying easily to all parts of the room. “In essence, they’ve stopped moving forward. My agents say that there is a new commander in charge of the entire operation, someone reporting directly to Emperor Charliss. This new commander seems to have decreed a halt to further conquest while he builds a supporting infrastructure behind his lines. How long that will take—I can’t tell you. They have more resources than we do, and anybody with a lot of resources can do quite a bit very quickly, barring bad luck and acts of nature or gods.”
“Granted.” Prince Daren nodded. “Then what happens?”
“Once that is in place,” Kerowyn continued, “chances are he will order another push forward, then halt to build, and repeat that pattern until he has the entire country. It’s my opinion that he’ll hold to that pattern as long as there is little or no organized resistance.”
“What will he do when he reaches the Valdemar border and the Karsite border?” the Guild representative, Lady Cathal, asked in a tone of quiet tension.
Kerowyn shrugged. “Frankly, he’s got a big enough army that if I were in his shoes, I wouldn’t stop. I’d keep right on going as long as losses were acceptable. And don’t ask me what ‘acceptable losses’ are for him; the entire population of all our peoples could be less than a regional garrison to them. I don’t know what counts as ‘acceptable,’ because he hasn’t yet met with any resistance that’s given him any palpable losses at all. I haven’t been able to see the conditions that make his commanders pull back. For Ancar,
any
losses were acceptable as long as he took ground. For us—we’re more inclined to retreat than lose lives. He could follow either pattern, but chances are he’ll be somewhere in the middle. I can tell you this; ‘acceptable losses’ will be a percentage of his troops, rather than a hard number. One percent of his strength is a lot more in real numbers of men than one percent of
ours.”
“And our land is worn out from the conflict with Ancar,” the Lord Marshal pointed out glumly. “We could mount some resistance, but how could it be enough to discourage an army like the Eastern Empire can field?”
“Karse is not in much better shape than Valdemar, although we took little direct damage,” Ulrich added. “Indirectly—we did lose troops to Ancar, and mages that we sent up here to you.”
“And speaking of mages,” Kerowyn put in, taking over the floor again, “the Empire seems to have mages that do things differently than ours do. Many of you have heard Elspeth describe how the Imperial Ambassador to Hardorn created a Gate without any physical counterpart, and our mages have all reacted to
that
bit of news with dropped jaws. Maybe these mages are better than ours, and maybe they aren’t. It hardly matters; they’re
different,
and that’s a problem. Vastly different approaches to mage-craft make it quite likely that they can hit us with something we would never expect in a hundred years.”
“And there are,” Firesong added smoothly, “many, many more mages in the Empire than the entire Alliance can currently supply. Again, that is a real fact. Herald Captain Kerowyn asked me to look at the section of her intelligence report that deals with magic. It is evident to me that much of Imperial infrastructure depends very heavily on mages. I would judge, from the descriptions in the report, that they use mages for communication, construction, and transportation, making their conventional supply-lines much different from what we would use. In layman’s terms, I believe that all of their supplies come from deep within the Empire itself by means of Gates. If they can afford to use mages for tasks where we would use carts, workers, and messengers, what kind of offensive magics can they muster?”
“I’m not sure I want to think about it,” someone muttered grimly, as shocked silence fell around the table.
Kerowyn is a good commander who does not shrink away from the truth, however unpleasant, Karal decided, and wrote exactly that down. She has a talent for stating baldly the things that no one else truly wants to consider.
Finally the Lord Patriarch cleared his throat, making no few of those sitting around the table start. “Well,” he said, unsteadily, “What
are
our options, with such a force levied against us? It begins to look as if the only one we have is to pray!”
The Shin’a’in envoy looked at Firesong, and he nodded, deferring to her. She stood up, took a pointer from a page, and went to the great map inlaid on the wall.
“The Shin’a’in and the Tayledras have agreed to establish safeholds in the west, in this line,” she said, pointing out a line that began at the southern rim of Lake Evendim and continued down to the Dhorisha Plains. “We will hold a safe path of retreat at all times, just as we did during the war with Ancar. We can also receive some of your Hardomen refugees that are willing to take a chance on making new homes in the west, and we hope that this will take some of the strain from the resources of Valdemar.”

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