Fire Sea by Weis, Margaret

“His wife, though, is another matter.”

The Lord High Chancellor appeared grave. “I am afraid so, Your Majesty. Duchess Jera is extremely intelligent.”

“And her father, deuce take him, continues to be a confounded nuisance.”

“But that is all he is these cycles, Sire. Banishing him to the Old Provinces was a stroke of genius. The earl must do everything in his power merely to survive. He is too weak to cause trouble.”

‘A stroke of genius for which we have you to thank, Pons. Oh, yes, we remember. You needn’t keep reminding us of it. And that old man may be struggling to survive but he has enough breath left in him to continue to speak out against us.”

“But who is listening? Your subjects are loyal. They love Your Majesty.. ”

“Stop it, Pons. We get enough of that muck shoveled over our feet from everyone else around here. We expect some sense from you.”

The Lord High Chancellor bowed, grateful for the dynast’s good opinion; knowing, however, that the flower of royalty would cease to grow unless it was nurtured by the aforementioned muck.

The dynast had withdrawn his attention from his minister. Rising from the throne made of gold and diamonds and the other precious minerals that were so abundant in this world, His Majesty took a turn or two around the large gold-and-silver-inlaid dais. Pacing was a habit of the dynast’s; he claimed that movement aided his thought processes. Often the dynast completely discomfited those presenting suits to him by leaping up from the throne and circling it several times before returning to it to pronounce judgment.

At least it kept the courtiers on their toes, Pons reflected with some amusement. Whenever His Majesty rose to his feet, everyone in the court was expected to cease conversation and perform the ritual, reverent obeisance. Courtiers were forever called on to cease their conversation, fold their hands in their sleeves, and bow with heads practically to the floor whenever His Majesty took it into his head to walk out a problem.

Pacing was just one of the dynast’s many little eccentricities, the most notable of these being a love of tournament combat and an addiction to the game of rune-bone. Any of the new dead who had been at all proficient in either game during their lives were brought to the palace, where they performed no other service except to offer His Majesty sparring partners during the waking half of the cycle or play at rune-bone with His Majesty far into the sleeping half. Such peculiarities led many to misjudge the dynast, considering him nothing but a shallow-minded gamester. Pons, having seen those many fall, was not among them. His respect for and his fear of His Dynastic Majesty were both deep and well founded.

Pons waited, therefore, in respectful silence for His Majesty to deign to notice him. The matter was obviously serious. The dynast devoted five complete revolutions around the dais to it, his head bowed, hands clasped behind his back.

In his mid-fifties, Kleitus XIV was a well-formed, muscular man of striking appearance whose beauty, when young, had been highly praised in poetry and song. He had aged well and would, as the saying went, make a handsome corpse. A powerful necromancer himself, he had many long years left to stave off that fate.

At last His Majesty ceased his heavy tread. His black fur robes, treated with purple dye to imbue them with the royal hue, rustled softly as he once again settled himself into his throne.

“Death’s Gate,” he muttered, tapping a ring on the arm of the throne. Gold against gold, it gave out a musical, metallic note.

“That’s the reason.”

“Perhaps Your Majesty worries needlessly. As the duke writes, they could have come here by chance—”

“Chance! Next you will be talking of ‘luck’ Pons. You sound like an inept rune-bone player. Strategy, tactics—that’s what wins the game. No, you mark our words. They have come here in search of Death’s Gate, like so many others before them.”

“Let them go, then, Majesty. We have dealt with such madmen before. Good riddance to bad rubbish—”

Kleitus frowned, shook his head. “Not this time. Not these people. We dare not.”

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