The Tyrant by Eric Flint and David Drake

Certainly in this instance. Demansk really had no legitimate reason to visit the Confederate forces maintaining the siege of Preble. Jeschonyk’s enemies, with Speaker of the Assembly Albrecht leading the pack, had bayed for his dismissal after the initial disasters at Preble the previous year, and his replacement by Albrecht himself. Demansk had been dismissed from his command along with Jeschonyk. Partly because he was seen as Jeschonyk’s loyal subordinate, which, in truth, he had been. But mostly because Albrecht wanted no independent top officer on his staff to share the credit for breaking Preble’s rebellion—especially not one as famously competent as Demansk. Albrecht wanted no one beside him when he rode in the chariot at the triumph. Or even whispers that someone should have been riding beside him.

Neither Demansk nor Jeschonyk had made more than a token protest. Jeschonyk, because the old man had become weary in the course of the strenuous siege; Demansk, because his mind had already begun turning to a much more ambitious goal than breaking a single city’s rebellion. A goal, and a scheme, which being forced to remain at the site of a long siege would severely hamper—as Albrecht was about to discover himself.

“That’s the one good old custom, if nothing else,” he said, “which still remains intact.” He bestowed a stern look upon his sleeping grandson and wagged his finger. “Don’t forget it, lad! The commander of an army on campaign must remain in the field with his troops until the victory is won.

“Which,” he added cheerily, “is still a long way down the road at Preble. Ha! That arrogant bastard!” Somewhere in Demansk’s soul, Albrecht’s derisive remarks of the year before still rankled. “He’s found out, hasn’t he now, just how tough a siege can be against a determined opponent.”

The unheeding, sleeping babe was now subjected to finger-wagging from his mother. “And don’t think you’ll be able to bribe your way out of it, either, you little rascal! Desertion is desertion. No amount of bribes will keep you from the executioner’s blade. Not even if you’ve got Albrecht’s fortune. Forget the blade, for that matter. Nobleman or not, you’ll be fit onto a commoner’s stake.”

She raised her head and studied her father, seated upright on a stool across from her. The room they were in, where Demansk had found her upon his return, was Helga’s weaving room. Other than the loom and the small divan on which she was perched, the only piece of furniture available had been her knitting stool. But Helga’s father, unlike many such men in the elite of the Confederacy, had not hesitated to use it. Stools not much different, after all—except for the lack of fancy carving and inlaid precious stones—had been his customary seating while on campaign.

“Trae?” she asked.

“He’s in. All the way, and with full knowledge. So is that tame pirate of his, Sharlz Thicelt.”

Helga frowned. Demansk knew that she was less willing than he was to trust any Islander. Which, given her own personal experiences with the breed, was hardly surprising. But Demansk, in this if not in most things, was more broad-minded than his daughter. And he understood, in a way that she did not and probably never would, the manner in which the concept of “manhood” worked its way through the peculiar customs and habits of the Islesmen.

They were an odd folk, to Confederates—as notorious for their double-dealing in politics as they were for their brigandage.

Well, not that exactly, Demansk admitted. Confederate politics can be just as treacherous. It’s the way the Islesmen acknowledge it openly, as if treason were simply a wager rather than a sin. The way they deride an executed schemer for his lack of wits rather than his lack of morals.

He thought about it for a moment. And I can’t honestly say, any longer, that their way is worse than ours. At least they’re not hypocrites.

He had waited enough time to allow Helga to make any open protest, but she hadn’t. Rebellious the girl might be, but she was still smart enough not to quarrel with her father over matters of tactics.

“That’s that, then,” he said. “You’ll be getting a new subordinate of your own, by the way. Jessep Yunkers. He’ll be in command of your escort.” Demansk conveniently skipped over the awkwardness of explaining that the name would mean nothing to her, since it had meant nothing to him either until a few days ago. “I don’t believe you ever met him. Before he got badly injured at Preble, he was the First Spear of my First Regiment. A very good man.”

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