FORTUNE’S STROKE BY ERIC FLINT DAVID DRAKE

By sheer force of will, she jerked her mind back from that place in her heart. The fire was there, but it was banked for a time.

She shook her head, smiling.

“What is so amusing?” asked Kungas.

“I was just remembering the first time I met you. I thought you were quite ugly.”

His lips made the little movement which stood Kungas for a grin. “No longer, I hope?”

She gave no answer. But Kungas did not miss the little twitch of her hands. As if she, too, wanted to stroke and caress.

Irene cleared her throat. “There is news. News concerning Dadaji’s family. The location of his son has been found. The location where he was, I should say. It seems that several months ago Dadaji’s son was among a group of slaves who escaped from his master’s plantation in eastern India. The ringleader, apparently. Since then, according to the report, he has joined one of the rebel bands in the forest.”

Kungas smacked his hands together. For an instant, the mask vanished. His face shone with pure and unalloyed delight.

“How wonderful! Dadaji will be ecstatic!”

Irene raised a cautioning hand. “He is in great danger, Kungas, and there is nothing I can do to help him. The Malwa have been pouring troops into the forests, since they finally realized they can no longer dismiss the rebels as a handful of brigands.”

Kungas shrugged. “And so? The boy dies, arms in hand, fighting the asura who ravages his homeland. That is the worst. You think that would break Dadaji’s heart? You do not really understand him, Irene. Beneath that gentle scholar is a man of the Great Country. He will do the rites, weeping—while his heart sings with joy.”

Irene stared at him. Skeptically, at first. Then, with a nod, she deferred to his judgement. (And reveled, also, in that deferral.)

“There is more,” she added. “More than news.” She took a deep breath. “My spies found his wife, also. A slave in a nobleman’s kitchen, right in Kausambi itself. Following my instructions, they decided it would be possible to steal her away. In Malwa’s capital,” she snorted, half-chuckling, “noblemen do not guard their mansions too carefully.”

Kungas’ eyes widened. In another man, they would have been practically bulging.

Irene laughed. “Oh, yes. She is here, Kungas. In Suppara.” She nodded toward the door. “In this very house, in fact. My man has her downstairs, in the salon.”

Now, even Kungas’ legendary self-control was breaking. “Here?” he gasped. He stared at the door. Then, almost lunging, he began to move. “We must take her to him at once! He will be so—”

“Stop!”

Kungas staggered to a halt. For a moment, staring at Irene, he frowned with incomprehension. Then, his expression changed, as understanding came. Or so he thought.

“She has been disfigured,” he stated. “Dishonored, perhaps. You are afraid Dadaji will—”

Irene blew out a breath—half-laugh, half-surprise. “No—no.” She smiled reassuringly. “She is quite well, Kungas, according to my agent. Very tired, of course. He says she was asleep within seconds of reaching the couch. The journey was long and arduous, and her life as a slave was sheer toil. But she is well. As for the other—”

Irene waved her hand, as if calming an unsettled child. “My spy says she was not abused, not in that manner. Not even by her master. She was not a young woman, you know. Dadaji’s age.”

She looked away, her jaw tightening. “With so many young slaves to rape, after the conquest of Andhra, men simply beat her until she was an obedient drudge.” Her next words were cold, filled with the bitterness of centuries. Greek women had been raped, too, often enough. And listened to Greek men, and Greek poets, boasting of the Trojan women. “Not even Dadaji will count that as pollution.”

“That is not fair,” said Kungas harshly.

Irene took a deep breath, almost a shudder. “No, it is not,” she admitted. “Not with Dadaji, at least. Although—” She sighed, shaking her head. “How can any man as intelligent as he be so stupid?”

It only took Kungas a second, perhaps two, to finally understand her concern.

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