For a moment, Nanda Lal almost raised his voice, calling on the five assassins who waited outside the tent to come in and kill Toramana on the spot. But he managed to restrain himself. Barely.
Barely—and for two reasons. Only the second being that he was also intrigued by the possibilities which Toramana’s unexpected acuity opened up.
The first reason for his restraint was even simpler. In addition to Nanda Lal’s five assassins, there were dozens of soldiers within a few steps of the tent’s entrance. Ye-tai, in the main, but with no small sprinkling of Rajputs among them. All of whom—so much had already become obvious to Nanda Lal—were as tightly bound to their commander Toramana as any of the soldiers of the splendid army from which they were temporarily detached were bound to Lord Damodara and Rana Sanga.
In short, this was the only army of the Malwa Empire where the work of assassins would surely be repaid, within a minute, by the work of enraged soldiers. Nanda Lal’s assassins could kill Toramana, of that the spymaster had no doubt at all, even if the impressive-looking young warrior-general took two or three of them with him into the afterlife. But only if Nanda Lal was prepared to have his own hacked-apart body lying next to Toramana’s a few seconds later.
And that, in a nutshell, is the entire problem. The empire cannot afford to lose this magnificent army. But can we afford to have them at all? If this razor-sharp sword ever turns in our grasp . . .
Long seconds of silence had gone by. Throughout, Toramana’s eyes had never left those of Nanda Lal. Now, still without showing a trace of anxiety—emotion of any kind—the young Ye-tai general once again made that economical shrug.
“You are worrying too much, I think. Were his beloved wife to die, for whatever reason short of Malwa involvement, Rana Sanga would have all the more reason to weld himself to the dynasty.” In some subtle way, the next words came with a slight emphasis. “For all his martial prowess, you know, he is not given to subtlety.”
Translation: I might have my doubts about “unfortunate circumstances,” but Sanga would not.
Nanda Lal reviewed in his mind all he knew about the Rajput king, and decided the Ye-tai’s assessment was accurate. That still left Damodara . . .
As if he were a mind-reader, Toramana spoke again.
“As for Lord Damodara, his gratitude at the emperor’s generosity in providing his own family with a palace in the capital—safe from Roman assassins, and almost on the emperor’s own doorstep—has also welded him completely to the dynasty. Not, in my opinion, that there was any reason to doubt his loyalty at all.”
Nanda Lal discounted the last sentence immediately. Pure diplomacy, that was. The operative sentence was the first. Translation: so long as Damodara’s family is held hostage by the emperor, Damodara will remain obedient.
Again, Nanda Lal reviewed the assessment; and, again, decided the Ye-tai was correct. For all his brilliance, Damodara had never once shown any inclination toward boundless ambition. Some ambition, of course—but enough to cast a death sentence on his wife and children? And parents?
No. I have seen him playing with his children myself, in days past when his family visited the capital. He is a doting father and, by all my spies’ accounts, a loving husband as well as a devoted son.
“Good enough,” stated the spymaster. The two words were abrupt, almost harsh. But not as harsh as the next: “That leaves you.”
For the first time since he’d invited Nanda Lal and the priest into the pavilion, Toramana’s face showed an expression. Humor, in the main, alloyed with a touch of irony.
“Me?” The word was almost a bark. “Do you know my clan status within the Ye-tai, Lord?”
Nanda Lal nodded; then, extended his thick hand and waggled it a bit. “Middling. Not high; not low.”
“More low than high, I think,” countered Toramana. The Ye-tai general cocked his head a little and gave Nanda Lal an inquisitive look. “A question, Lord. What is the chance that I would ever be offered a marriage with a lady of the Malwa clan?”