Pace, pace, back and forth. “No country in India—not all of us put together—can field an army which could defeat Malwa in the field. That task is for the Romans, led by Belisarius. But he, too, cannot do it alone. Belisarius can lance the asura, but only if the demon is hamstrung. And that, we can do. But the doing will be difficult, and bloody, and costly. It will require courage and tenacity, above all other things.”
He stopped, gazing down on Chola’s envoy. “When Shakuntala’s father, years ago, asked you for your help against Malwa, what did you do?” He waited for the answer. None came, beyond a head turned aside.
He looked upon Ganapati. “What did Kerala do?” he demanded. Ganapati, also, looked away.
Holkar’s bitter eyes scanned the envoys. Most looked aside; some bowed their heads; a few—those from distant southeast Asia—simply shrugged. Their help had not been asked by Shakuntala’s father.
But Holkar did not allow them that easy escape and, after a time, they looked away also. They knew the truth as well as he. Had Andhra asked, the answer would have been the same. No.
He flared his nostrils. “Power!” he snorted. “What you understand, diplomats, is how to manipulate power. You have no idea how to create it. Tonight, I will tell you. Or, rather—”
Again, he bowed to Irene. “I will simply repeat her words. Power comes from below, noble men of India. From that humble place, and no other. An empire, no matter how great—no matter how large its armies or well-equipped its arsenals—has no more power than the people upon whom it rests give to it. For it is they—not you—who must be willing to step forward and die, when the time comes. It is that low folk—not you—who have the courage to crawl upon a demon’s haunch and sever its tendons.”
He turned his back to them. Scornfully, over his shoulder: “While you, consulting your soothsayers and magicians, try to placate the beast in the hope it will dine elsewhere.”
His hands were still clasped behind his back. For a moment, they tightened, and his back stiffened.
“Do not forget, noble men of India, that I am also Maratha. I know my people, and you do not. You scorn them, for their loose ways and their polluted nature. But you are blind men, for all your learning. As the Kushan says, lost in illusion.”
He took a deep breath, and continued. “Today, Majarashtra trembles on the brink. Maratha sympathies are all with Shakuntala, and many of its best sons have come to her side. But most Maratha are still waiting. They will smuggle food, perhaps, or spy; or hide a refugee. But no more. Not yet. The heel of Malwa is upon their neck. The Vile One’s executioners have draped their towns with the bodies of rebels.”
Another deep breath; almost a great sigh. “It is not fear which holds them back, however, if you plunge into their hearts. It is simply doubt. They remember Andhra, true, and are loyal to that memory. But Andhra failed them once before. Who is to say it will not again?”
He turned his head to the northeast, peering intently at the walls of the chamber, as if he could see the Great Country beyond. “What they need,” he said softly, “is a pledge. A pledge that the dynasty they have supported will never abandon them. And what pledge could be greater—than for the Empress of Andhra to make the dynasty their own? No Maratha has ever sat upon a throne. A year from now, the child of Majarashtra’s greatest champion will be the dynasty.”
His own face—soft, gentle, scholarly—was now as hard a mask as that of the Kushan.
“It will be done,” he pronounced. “The empress, I am sure, will find her way to her duty. As will Rao.” Then, spinning around, he confronted the envoys again. “But it will be done properly.”
His smile, when it came, was as savage as Kungas’. “The empress will wed Rao in Deogiri, not here. She will dance her wedding dance in the Vile One’s face, in the midst of a siege. Hurling defiance before Malwa, for all to see. And you, noble men of India—you of Chola and Kerala and Tamraparni—will attend that wedding. And will provide the troops to escort her through the Vile One’s lines.”