An Oblique Approach by David Drake and Eric Flint

The general had been almost certain within two hours, actually. After the usual meaningless amenities during the meal, the wine was poured, and Venandakatra had immediately launched into the subject of Eon’s amatory exploits. “Trying to pry out secrets,” he’d said, one gay blade to another. But it was soon obvious there were no secrets he didn’t know. Except one, which he knew, but misinterpreted exactly as Belisarius had thought he would.

As Ousanas said: Catch the prey by reading its soul.

“Ah, that explains it,” said Venandakatra. He giggled. “I had wondered why he chose only Maratha bitches to accompany him on this trip. After” —another giggle— “sampling all the many Indian varieties in Bharakuccha.”

Belisarius could not manage a giggle, but he thought his coarse guffaw was quite good enough.

“It’s the truth. He loves conquered women. The more recently conquered, the better. They’re the most submissive, you see, and that’s his taste.” Another guffaw, with a drooling trickle of wine down his chin thrown in for good measure. “Why, his soldiers told me that when they conquered Hymria, the kid—he was only seventeen, mind you—had an entire—”

Here followed an utterly implausible tale, to any but Venandakatra. Implausible, at least, in its gross brutality; its portrayal of Eon’s stamina was remotely conceivable, in light of his performance in Bharakuccha. Which Venandakatra obviously knew, in detail. As Belisarius had foreseen, the Malwa lord’s spies had interrogated the women who shared the prince’s bed. All except the Maratha women, of course.

Still, Venandakatra almost smelled out the falsehood. Almost.

“It’s odd, though,” the Vile One remarked casually, after he stopped cackling over the story, “but I didn’t get the impression—I know nothing myself, you understand, but rumors concerning foreigners always spread—that any of the women who passed through his chambers had been particularly badly beaten. Except by his cock!”

Another round of giggles and guffaws.

Belisarius shrugged. “Well, as I understand it from his adviser, the lad felt under certain constraints. He is in a foreign land.” The general waved his hand airily. “There are laws, after all.”

He gulped down some more wine.

“So,” he burped, “the boy finally got frustrated and ordered his men to find him some outright slaves.” Another burp. “Slaves can be treated anyway their master chooses, in any country.”

(That was a lie. It was not true in most civilized realms of Belisarius’ acquaintance, not in modern times. It was certainly not true under Roman law. But he did not think that Venandakatra would know otherwise. Slaves, and their legal rights, were far beneath the great lord’s contempt. In any country—certainly in his own.)

“True, true.” A sly, leering glance. “Rumor has it, in fact, that one of his Maratha slaves fell afoul of her new master.”

Belisarius controlled his emotions, and the expression on his face. It was not difficult to control his disgust, or his contempt. He had plenty of experience doing that, after all these weeks—months!—in Venandakatra’s company. But he had a difficult time controlling his shame.

For a moment, his eyes wandered, scanning the rich tapestries which covered the silk walls of the pavilion. His gaze settled on the candelabra resting at the center of the table. For all its golden glitter, and the superb craftsmanship of the design, he thought the piece was utterly grotesque. A depiction of some dancing god, leering, priap erect, with candles rising from the silver skulls cupped in the deity’s four hands.

He tore his eyes away from the thing and looked back at Venandakatra. He even managed a leer of his own.

The memory still burned, of the time he had sent the hostel proprietor into the girl’s room, on some trumped-up pretext. He had instructed the Maratha woman tending her to allow the proprietor to enter (which she had done, reluctantly—she was a slave, after all). But he hadn’t warned Eon in advance, because he knew the prince would have barred the way.

It worked, of course. The proprietor saw the girl, and judging from the contempt on his face as he left, knew what he saw. Or thought he did. Venandakatra obviously placed the interpretation I hoped for on it, after he had the man interrogated.

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