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The Tyrant by Eric Flint and David Drake

Demansk sighed, then rubbed his face wearily. “I don’t doubt it, Kall. The answer is still ‘no.’ Some crimes simply can’t be done in the name of expediency. In the end, my reputation for being good for my word is worth far more than any clever maneuver would bring us.”

“I agree,” said Sharlz Thicelt. Sallivar and Oppricht gave the islander a look which was half startlement, half outrage. This—from a pirate?!

Thicelt grinned. “Take the advice of an experienced robber on this. Honor is more important to thieves than anyone, for the good and simple reason that they do not have recourse to the law.”

He shook his head with vigor, causing his heavy gold earrings to flop about alarmingly. Fortunately, Thicelt’s earlobes were built on the same massive scale as his nose. “Let the suspicion spread that Triumvir Demansk is dishonest as well as ruthless, and you will turn every possible neutral into an enemy—and half your allies into neutrals. He who would be a tyrant must first of all be trusted. Trusted to keep his word as much as trusted to break your neck if you oppose him.”

“Well said, Sharlz.” This came from Forent Nappur. Oddly enough, in the months they had worked together, the former Islander pirate and the former eastern-province common soldier had become quite good friends. The friendship was all the more odd in that it had begun with a ferocious brawl in a tavern, precipitated by an exchange of racial insults. The giant Forent had won the brawl, of course. But he’d carried a good set of bruises himself, for a number of days afterward.

Demansk was not quite sure how to account for it. To some degree, it was simply the mutual respect of low-class men who had tested each other’s manhood and not found it wanting. But he suspected—feared, almost—that it derived mainly from the fact that these two were really the most ruthless of his close advisers, and had formed a natural alliance.

The most ruthless, by far—despite the fact that, as again here, their advice was usually less outwardly cold-blooded than the advice Demansk got from his more cultured and upper-class lieutenants.

But that was, ultimately, the problem. Or, it would be better to say, simply the reality. However much they might be adherents to Demansk’s project, such men as Prit Sallivar and Kall Oppricht—even the Emerald Jonthen Tittle—were very much “men of the established order.” All of them were wealthy, highly educated, born into good families. They could understand, abstractly, the seething fury at the injustices of Confederate society which bubbled silently in the depths of the poor millions of that society. But they didn’t really feel it.

Neither did Demansk himself, for that matter. He was smart enough, however, to recognize its existence. And he knew, without a doubt, that neither Sharlz Thicelt nor Forent Nappur would blink an eye at the complete destruction of much of what the others still held dear. Either Thicelt or Nappur would torch a nobleman’s mansion in an instant—any nobleman’s, Vanbert or Emerald or Islander—without caring in the least that an excellent library or collection of artwork was going up in flames along with it.

Why should they? Neither one of them had ever been invited to partake of those pleasures of noble society. Thicelt had gone to sea as a destitute waif in the streets of Chalice at the age of six. At the same age, Nappur had been working in the fields of the hardscrabble east.

That was largely what made them so useful to Demansk, of course. Thicelt and Nappur could gain the allegiance and trust of men whom the others could barely even talk to. Such men as Nappur’s network of enforcers and spies among common soldiers, who had by now imposed a subtle but iron clamp over the army. Or Thicelt’s equivalent network among the sailors of the huge fleet which would transport that army to the Western Isles.

Still, they were a bit scary. Demansk was glad that both of them tended, on a personal level, to be rather phlegmatic in temperament. Even, in the case of Thicelt, flamboyantly good-humored.

It was time to bring this matter to a close. Only the Emerald had not spoken. Demansk looked at him, cocking an inquisitive eyebrow.

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Categories: David Drake
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