The Tyrant by Eric Flint and David Drake

Given the size of his fortune, after all, Toman Knecht could afford to do so. He was thought at the time to be the richest man in the world—even after he built and accoutered the villa—and probably was. Nor, since Toman’s death five years earlier, was there any sign that his family’s wealth had declined. His widow, Arsule, shared all of Toman’s extravagant tastes, true; but she also shared—even exceeded—his uncanny ability to amass and retain the wealth which made it possible. And she employed a financial adviser who was immensely capable, as Demansk well knew. His name was Prit Sallivar, and he was Demansk’s own financier as well.

Demansk sighed. That was part of the knot he was trying to untangle—or cut in half, to be precise.

Prit Sallivar, along with many others, occupied a gray area in Confederate society. Vanbert’s expansion had, over the past two centuries, produced a rather large class of wealthy men risen from the gentry—risen far above the gentry, measured simply in terms of money. But they were not part of the aristocracy, a fact which was driven home to them whenever, as the expression went, they “acted above their class.” Some of them could, given time and the expenditure of half their fortune, leverage their way into the nobility. Albrecht’s own grandfather had done so; effectively buying his grandsons—if not himself or his own sons—a seat in the Council by marrying a widow whose splendid title had been turned into a hollow shell by her former husband’s profligacy.

Yes, some did. And, as was the way of things, typically became the most ferocious defenders of aristocratic privilege thereafter. But most did not. There simply weren’t enough eligible marriage prospects; and, while the Council’s Registrar could usually be bribed, he did not come cheaply. “Buy a Registration” was another popular slang expression in the Confederacy, used whenever someone referred to a financial enterprise that was either beyond one’s wildest fancy or, if it wasn’t, would be flat-out ruinous.

Prit Sallivar himself had never bothered with the business. Though he resented the constant little humiliations visited upon him, he had never seen the logic of wasting his wealth in order to obtain a title. He simply kept his social contacts in the aristocracy—outside of business, where any number of noblemen were willing to allow him entry through the back door of their villas—to that relatively small layer of the nobility which had a relaxed attitude about “one’s station in life.”

Demansk himself was one such. But another—and by far the most prominent—was Arsule Knecht. In this, if not in their shared enthusiasm for art, she and her former husband were diametrically opposite. Toman had employed the best financiers in the Confederacy, Prit Sallivar among them, and had then treated them much like he treated his servants. After his death, Arsule had swung open the front door of their mansion, and invited them in.

Demansk had never attended the salons and soirees and art exhibitions for which Arsule Knecht had become famous—”notorious” was a better word, at least among the aristocracy. His own wife Druzla had been one of Arsule’s best friends, and would undoubtedly have enjoyed them. But Druzla had died two years before Toman, and Demansk had turned down all the subsequent invitations. Politely, but firmly. He didn’t much enjoy such things himself and since his own prestige in Vanbert society rested on the “traditional virtues,” he saw no point in eroding that position simply out of sentimentality.

“Traditional virtues,” he muttered under his breath. “I’m the toughest pig farmer in the land, and I can steal anybody’s pigs—and do it in broad daylight, which makes me a nobleman instead of a thief.”

Gods, I’ve gotten cynical. He could remember a time when he hadn’t been. A time when he’d spent months, as a boy, eagerly trotting alongside his beloved grandfather as the fierce old man went about his business. Which, needless to say, was the business of managing an estate in the countryside—except, in time of war, when the farmer turned into a soldier. And led his huge armies with the same skill and intentness that he managed his huge farm.

In truth, Verice Demansk had been brought up more by his grandfather than his father. His own father had been . . . of a different sort. “More modern,” as he would say, on the rare occasions when he tore himself away from the endless squabbling and scheming in the Council to pay a brief visit to the ancestral estate.

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