Ylo blinked at her and spoke for the first time. “Food? Oh, Gods, food!”
Eshiala forced out the question, dreading all possible answers. “Where is my husband?”
He peered around to locate the voice.
“Wait!” Hardgraa barked. He grabbed Ukka’s shoulders and lifted her to her feet. “You go to your room now and stay there! Is that clear?”
“The duke—”
“Go away! Stay away!”
Later still . . . Eshiala lying in bed staring at the darkness.
Dead?
She was a widow. She was dowager impress.
The two-year-old in the corner was Impress Uomaya I of Pandemia.
The day dawned hot and sunny, but Eshiala felt she was moving in a thick fog. The same conversations seemed to take place over and over, always accompanied by cautious glancings around to make sure there were no servants within earshot.
Ylo slept on upstairs and could almost be dismissed as a nightmare that had not happened.
Mistress Ukka jabbered and giggled without ceasing, prattling to all the bewildered domestics that the duke had returned, just as the Voices had said he would. Eigaze trailed after her, explaining that the old woman was hallucinating, repeating the agreed story about Sir Yyan, a friend who had dropped in unexpectedly. There was no Duke Yllipo, just a chance resemblance to someone Mistress Ukka had known in her youth.
The pastry cook gave notice.
Even Eigaze could not find a bright side to look on. The proconsul seemed to have aged twenty years. He was haggard and his hands trembled. He made the same speech several times, as if the words were going around and around in his head and he had forgotten he had already spoken them aloud. “Prince Emthoro, ma’am. The Law of Succession states that the next in line is regent during a minority. We shall have to get word to the prince somehow.”
By the third repetition, Eshiala had her response prepared. “But we don’t know whether he’s at court or not. And the Impire seems to be running itself without Shandie. You’ve been to Faintown. You haven’t heard any rumors of vanished imperors, have you? The Covin must have bewitched the court somehow, mustn’t it? And the army. And the government. They must all believe that Shandie’s still there and in charge, mustn’t they? Emthoro will be as convinced as anyone. How can he ever believe us?”
The bent old man just shook his head like a turtle in despair.
Eshiala herself was haunted by lost futures. She could not stay much longer at Yewdark. Shandie would not be coming to take her back to court. She most certainly could not risk returning to her parents at Thumble. There was no way out.
Hardgraa was another sort of ghost, dark and implacable. He hardly spoke at all, and when he did he had no need to repeat himself. “He went with Shandie as bodyguard. Either he betrayed him or he just ran away and left him. I don’t believe his story yet and when he does tell me the truth, I will kill him.”
“If he betrayed Shandie, why would he come back here?” she demanded.
Hardgraa raked her with a glare of naked suspicion. “You tell me, ma’am!”
Evening came at last and they gathered for dinner, all five together. The world seemed to steady and clear.
4
Ylo came in, hobbling and leaning on a cane, with Mistress Ukka fawning all around him, babbling and gibbering. He was still haggard, but his marathon sleep had restored his spirits and his old air of mischief. His face was thinner than Eshiala remembered it, and he needed a haircut. He was weatherbeaten and lean and more startlingly good-looking than ever. The Gods should never make a man so beautiful. He regarded his audience with an amused disdain, especially Hardgraa.
They could not wait until dinner was over, their need to talk was urgent and yet they must fit the conversation into the gaps when the servants were out of earshot—or speak in code.
“I told you everything,” Ylo insisted. “We did what we said. I won’t say where the others went, but . . . Yshan . . . and I set off for . . . the faun’s house. He’d agreed, and told us of a shortcut, at a place called Kinvale. So we headed across Julgistro, staying off the main highways, of course.”
“Tell me some details,” Hardgraa growled. He was sending whole courses back untouched. He still wore his sword, as he had all day.
Ylo shrugged. “Nothing much to tell. We had a little trouble at the beginning, but nothing important.”
“What sort of trouble?”
“Nothing important. Apart from that, we had a good ride. In an odd way, I think we were both enjoying ourselves. It was a vacation.”
“That doesn’t ring true!”
“It is true, though,” Ylo said without losing his easy smile. ”He had no army to worry about, only one companion. It was a tough ride with no posts to help, and a physical challenge. You know, he relaxed in a way I’ve never seen him do . . .” He chuckled, but his unfathomable dark gaze moved to Eshiala and they were not smiling. “We became friends.”
She started. Obviously that remark was meant to mean more than it seemed to, but she could not decide between the possibilities.
Hardgraa had flushed. “I don’t believe you!”
“It’s true, though—fetch a sorcerer. Unexpected in Yshan, I agree. Near Rivermead we came on the trail of a legion on the move. Dust cloud one day, then it rained and we saw the tracks. The locals confirmed it. He couldn’t rest until he’d found out what was going on, so we followed.” Ylo sighed and resumed his meal.
As a hovering footman was removing his plate, Hardgraa barked, “And then goblins?” Cutlery jangled on china. “Goblins. Suddenly the bushes were stiff with them. Arrows going by like mosquitoes.” Ylo’s smile faded away. ”I looked back and saw him go down. The horse fell.”
“So you don’t really know he’s dead!” Hardgraa had been repeating that refrain at every opportunity.
“I hope he was dead.” Ylo seemed intent on cutting his meat. ”With djinns or dwarves or even gnomes, I would hope he survived.”
The proconsul’s voice was a ghostly tremor. “Would even goblins kill such a prisoner?”
No, Eshiala thought, they would not kill the imperor himself. Tell me so!
Ylo paused, fork halfway to mouth. “He had no identification on him, sir. As far as I know, in twenty years they have never returned a captive alive.”
Eshiala clenched her fists till they hurt. Please, Gods, let him have died at once!
“And you have absolutely no evidence!” Hardgraa barked.
Ylo chewed for a moment with a hurt expression. “I will have. The news will be here any day now. Go into Faintown and—”
“I’m not letting you out of my sight!”
Ylo shrugged and accepted a refill of his wineglass. “Even if some raiding band got over the pass, what then?” the centurion demanded.
The contemptuous smile returned. “Oh, this was no raiding band! We were days away from Pondague. At least one legion was marching. The next day the wind changed, and I smelled smoke for two days after that. The night sky was aglow. This is the millennium! This is the Gods in Wrath!”
“And no Shandie!” Ionfeu moaned, forgetting the eavesdroppers.
“And no wardens,” Ylo responded. The other men both flinched.
“But it was not the goblins who injured you?” Eigaze asked hurriedly, hauling the conversation onto safer ground. Ylo glanced thoughtfully at Eshiala before he answered. She sensed devilry coming.
“No, Aunt. I rode like a dervish down the Great West Way. My troubles began at Woggle. You know it?”
“Of course.”
“The Warlock’s Rest? Dangerous place!”
“Dangerous? Why, we’ve stayed there lots of times!”
“Don’t. I advise against it.”
“But what happened?”
“I got rolled by a whore,” Ylo said blandly.
The countess’s fat cheeks turned scarlet with shock, and crockery rattled at the serving trolley.
Eshiala suspected that the vulgarity was intended for her, although she did not know why. She never could predict Ylo.
“Now I know you’re lying,” Hardgraa snarled. “Those girls are employed by the management.”
Ylo beamed blissfully, as if springing a trap. “This one was freelancing. Charming young miss. She put something in my wine, I think. And she cleaned me out totally. I came to with a head like a butter churn and nary a kerchief to tie around me.”
“You should have complained to the innkeepers. They guard their reputation very closely.” But Hardgraa had merely tightened the noose.
“I was about to, dramatically toga’ed in a bed sheet. At the bottom of the stairs, I almost ran into an old friend of mine, Centurion Hithi. Legate Hithi of the Vth, he is now.” Ylo raised his raven eyebrows in mockery. ”Family influence, of course. Fortunately he didn’t see me. I departed by the window.”