The Tyrant by Eric Flint and David Drake

Chapter 9

Over the centuries, as the twelve villages which formed the original core of Vanbert had expanded to conquer half the world, the edifices of the Confederacy’s government had undergone their own massive expansion. Whether torn down and rebuilt, or swollen by modification and accretion, the complex of buildings and plazas had become something of a monstrosity itself.

So, at least, thought Demansk, as he worked his way across the Forum of the Virtuous Matrons toward the still-distant but imposing Council Hall. “Threaded his way” was perhaps a better description. The Forum was filled with a huge crowd, as always after rumors spread of a major oncoming shift in political power in the Council. Most of the mob were simply curious. A large number were street vendors. Still others were taking advantage of the traditional custom of allowing unlimited speech in the Forum to harangue the crowd from jury-rigged speakers’ pedestals. Others—

His sons were walking just behind him. He heard Olver whisper to the others: “Careful now; keep an eye out. Some of these fellows are not loitering.”

Demansk, as befitted his aloof dignity as a Justiciar, ignored the whisper. He ignored as well the temptation to place his hand on the battle-ax hanging from his waist. At the moment, the temptation was hard to resist. There were a lot of suspicious-looking men here and there in the crowd, under whose robes might be concealed any number of weapons.

The ax was a ceremonial weapon; sized more like a hatchet than an ax. Because of his status as a Justiciar, Demansk was allowed an ax rather than the long knife permitted to simple Councillors. But where most members of the Council carried elaborately carved and inlaid “weapons”—some of them even with silver blades—Demansk’s ax of office was perfectly functional. The blade was good steel, and sharpened to a working edge.

Still, he resisted the impulse. Dignity, manifesting itself among other ways in an apparent indifference to danger, was an essential ingredient for the “public aura” of a central Vanbert official. It was for that same reason that Demansk was unaccompanied by any bodyguards. His sons would have to do for that.

Which, when all was said and done, made the task of any would-be assassins quite difficult. All three of Demansk’s sons were strong and healthy men. His two oldest, Barrett and Olver, were also experienced soldiers. The youngest, Trae, had only limited experience in battle—a single skirmish against the pirate raid which had resulted in his sister’s abduction. But, perhaps oddly given his fascination with gadgetry and natural philosophy, Trae was actually the most athletic of the three. And if his combat experience was slight, the young man had never stinted on his training.

So Demansk was not surprised to see the subtle but careful way in which his sons shielded him as he made his way through the crowd. Nor was he surprised at the manner in which each of the three handled the task of moving people aside. Barrett, brusquely and rudely—he’d knocked down an old woman some fifty paces back; Olver, with his usual stolid firmness; Trae, as often as not, with a smile and a jest.

Another jest now, as he lifted (quite easily) a rather portly matron by the armpits and set her to one side. “Madame, you tempt me too much in my progress! For shame—here in the Forum!”

The matron’s squawk of protest choked off into a giggle. She waved the fan vigorously in front of her face, and returned Trae’s humor with gleaming eyes which were quite inappropriate for her respectable status. Despite himself, Demansk couldn’t entirely force down a smile.

The Forum of the Virtuous Matrons was named after one of the many episodes in Vanbert’s early history. The matrons of a small Vanbert village had committed suicide rather than be ravished by a band of raiders from a nearby tribe who had overcome their husbands on the field of battle.

So, at least, according to legend. Demansk had his doubts. The “field of battle” would have been a small meadow, filled for a time by sweaty, shouting pig farmers struggling with sweaty and shouting shepherds. As for the rest, who was to say?

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