He dropped the hand and shrugged. “I can’t promise that none of their properties would be damaged or taken. In war . . .”
“Who knows?” Thicelt completed the thought. “Property can always be replaced. Especially when one of the family members is a ‘Special Attendant.’ ”
He nodded his head. The gesture had a very formal aura. “It is done, Justiciar Demansk. A bargain, and an honest one.”
“And what about me, Father?” asked Trae. “What do you plan for me?” His youthful face was creased with confusion. “And what is all this business about, anyway?”
* * *
Demansk spent the rest of the evening explaining. Trae and Thicelt were his only companions through that long discussion, and Demansk decided to allow Thicelt to remain for all of it. He had known from the beginning that he was taking a risk by employing Thicelt. He had done so because he needed the finest admiral he could get his hands on. And he was quite certain that the canny King of the Isles had chosen his very best captain to command the steam ram.
Still, it was a risk. With what he learned in the course of that evening’s discussion, Thicelt could sell the information to any one of Demansk’s enemies—and come out of the sale a rich man as well as a free one.
But risks have to be taken, at times. And Demansk had always been of the philosophy that there was no point in postponing them. Eventually, he would have had to tell Thicelt, anyway. And there was simply no way to keep under close guard a man whom he intended to load with so much power and authority as well as responsibility. So . . . may as well find out quickly.
By the end of the evening, however, Demansk’s lurking fears were allayed. Thicelt, clearly enough, was the kind of man who enjoyed a genuine challenge. No one simply seeking to gain information for a later betrayal would have pitched into the discussion and the planning so eagerly—not to mention advancing so many excellent suggestions himself. Demansk suspected that the man’s insistence on his piratical nature was due more to Islander custom than anything else. A role, as it were, rather than the man himself.
As a servant led him to the sleeping chamber where he would spend the night, after the discussion was over, Demansk found himself thinking about that “role.” Not so much Thicelt’s alone, as those of millions of men. When all was said and done, what Demansk planned to carry out was a gigantic “mixing of roles.”
All of the Confederacy’s decay, he thought, could in the end be reduced to that. The great realm forged by Vanbert had settled into layers, like sludge rotting in a pool. It was time to “mix it up.” Break classes as well as nations, and churn new life into the mix.
And so it begins, he thought, as he lay down on the couch and closed his eyes. Verice Demansk, the head of one of Vanbert’s oldest and most illustrious families, was already “mixing it up.” It was not an accident, he now realized, that outside of his immediate family the first recruits to his conspiracy were a former peasant and a pirate.
He chewed on the thought for a while. Then, fell to sleep much more easily than he would have suspected. And why not? His own ancestors had been peasants; and pirates, too, for that matter. “Land pirates,” of course. Vanberts were not natural seamen.
Chapter 7
“I can’t stay long,” he told Helga. “I’ve got to get back to the capital in time for the Council session, and I’ve got to visit the siege of Preble along the way.”
Helga looked down at the baby nestled in her lap. “Are you listening?” she demanded. “No, you’re sleeping—lazy little sot! When your grandfather’s giving you such excellent lessons in duplicity!
“This is lesson Number 64, too,” she added, clucking her tongue with motherly distress. ” ‘How To Appear Deeply Concerned By Grave Matters of State.’ You’ll never be a successful politician without it.”
Demansk’s lips quirked. As much as Helga’s tongue often annoyed him, he had long ago decided that, on balance, it probably also helped keep him sane. Unseemly as her sarcasm might be—her own father!—it was usually right on target.