FORTUNE’S STROKE BY ERIC FLINT DAVID DRAKE

“I can’t simply let Rao be destroyed!” snapped the empress. She glared angrily at the two Maratha cavalry generals.

Shakuntala’s chief adviser, Dadaji Holkar, intervened. As always, the scholarly peshwa—”premier,” Irene translated the term—spoke softly and calmly. And, as always, his tone calmed the empress.

Although, thought Irene, his words did not.

“There is the other alternative, Your Majesty.”

Holkar’s statement seemed to strike Shakuntala like a blow, or a reprimand. The young empress’ face grew pinched, and Irene thought she almost recoiled.

Holkar’s lips tightened, for a moment. To Irene, his eyes seemed sad.

Sad, but determined.

“If we insist, as a condition to the marriage,” he continued, “I am quite certain that the Cholas will send an army. A large enough army to relieve Deogiri, without requiring us to abandon Suppara.”

Holkar glanced quickly at Kungas. “At the time, I thought Kungas was unwise, to urge you to decline the offer of marriage from the Prince of Tamraparni. But his advice proved correct. The Cholas did make a better offer.”

His gaze returned to the empress. Still sad, but still determined.

“As you know,” he stated, gently but emphatically. “I read you the text of their offer last week. You said that you wanted to think about it. I suggest that the time for thinking is over.”

Again, Holkar glanced at Kungas. More of a lingering look, actually. Irene, watching, was puzzled by Holkar’s stare. It seemed more one of anger—irritation, perhaps, and apprehensiveness—than admiration and approval. And she noticed that the empress herself was staring at Kungas rather oddly. Almost as if she were beseeching him.

For his part, Kungas returned their gazes with nothing beyond masklike imperturbability.

Something’s going on here, thought Irene.

As other advisers began speaking, also urging the marriage on the empress, Irene’s quick mind flitted over the situation. She knew of the Chola king’s offer of his oldest son in marriage to Shakuntala. Irene had learned about it almost as soon as Shakuntala herself. The Greek spymaster had begun creating her own network of informants from the moment she arrived in India. But Irene had simply filed the information away for later consideration.

Irene had realized, weeks ago, that the subject of Shakuntala’s possible dynastic marriage was a source of considerable tension in the palace. Such a marriage would produce an immediate improvement in the position of the young empress. Yet, she was obviously unhappy at the prospect, and avoided the subject whenever her advisers raised it.

At first, Irene had ascribed Shakuntala’s hesitation to the natural reluctance of a strong-willed female ruler to give up any portion of her power and independence. (An attitude which Irene, given her own temperament and personality, understood perfectly.) As the weeks passed, however, Irene had decided that more was involved.

The young empress never discussed the subject, except in political and military terms, but Irene suspected that her feelings on Deogiri were personal as well. Deogiri—and, more specifically, the man who was in command of the rebel forces there.

Irene had never met Raghunath Rao, no more than she had Kungas. But Belisarius had spoken about him many times, also—and at even greater length than on the subject of Kungas. To her astonishment, Irene had eventually realized that Belisarius was a bit in awe of the man—an attitude which she had never seen the Roman general take toward anyone else in the world.

Raghunath Rao. She rolled the glamorous, exotic-sounding name over a silent tongue, her mind only half-following the enthusiastic jabberings of the junior advisers. (Every one of whom, she noted, agreed with the peshwa Dadaji Holkar. But Kungas had not spoken yet.)

The Panther of Majarashtra. The Wind of the Great Country. The national hero of the Marathas, and a legend throughout all of India. The only man who ever fought the Rajput king Rana Sanga to a draw, after an entire day spent in single combat.

Raghunath Rao. One of India’s greatest assassins, among other things. The man who slaughtered—single-handedly, no less—two dozen of her captors in the Vile One’s palace in order to rescue Shakuntala from captivity, after Belisarius, through a ruse, saw to the removal of Kungas and her Kushan guards.

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