WITH THE LIGHTNINGS BY DAVID DRAKE

Hogg was neither fish nor fowl: no rich man’s sophisticated valet, but not a sailor either. Hogg was a countryman in his early fifties, balding and cherubic to look at. He’d been Daniel’s watcher as an infant and his servant in later years.

Hogg had taught Daniel the history and legends of the Leary family; had guided him through every copse and ravine of the vast Bantry estate; and had spanked the boy with a hand hard enough to drive nails the day Daniel struck his mother in a six-year-old’s tantrum.

Mistress Leary had never known about the spanking. She’d have dismissed Hogg in a heartbeat if she’d learned, despite Hogg’s long service with the family. Daniel had been aware of that; but there were matters for mothers, and other matters that men settled among themselves.

Daniel apologized to both of them, mother and servant, for behaving in an unworthy fashion. Looking back on it, he thought that afternoon had been his making as a man.

Hoggs had been retainers of the Learys of Bantry for as far back as the parish records ran. Mostly Hoggs appeared in those records as smugglers and poachers; in that, too, Daniel’s servant ran true to type. Daniel hadn’t asked how Hogg came by the jitney, because he was pretty sure he didn’t want to know.

The Hajas guards ignored the Cinnabar lieutenant while they argued about a professional handball match. Daniel didn’t suppose he looked like an assassin, but the guards’ lackadaisical attitude disturbed him as a military professional. The folk guarding the Senate House in Xenos were polite, but strangers didn’t enter the building without someone to vouch for them.

The Elector’s Palace was the seat of government as well as a residence and function hall. Inevitably there were more bureaucrats than space for them. A dozen desks were set against the inside of the staircases sweeping up both sides of a vast oval entryway. Clerks—very junior clerks if their cheap clothing was anything to go by—hunched there over papers or, in a few cases, electronic data terminals.

The vestibule was a bedlam of strange dialects and Universal spoken with a Kostroman accent. Folk passed up and down the stairs, talking in voices that echoed from the domed ceiling two flights above. Daniel had been raised in a great household, had lived in a dormitory at Navy School, and had served in warships whose large crews meant each rating shared a bunk with a rating of the other division. This cacophony had a feel of home; he smiled broadly again.

One of the desks in the vestibule faced outward so the man seated at the terminal there could also keep an eye on his fellows. He was gray and thin; pinned at his throat was a short satin shoulder wrap in the Hajas colors. Daniel doubted the fellow’s title was anything so exalted as “office manager,” but he clearly had authority over this assemblage of clerks mostly half his age.

Daniel slipped a coin from a purse that was extremely flat already and held it in his palm as he approached the senior clerk’s desk. The fellow was keying in numbers with his right hand while his left tilted a sheet of handwritten paper to catch light from the electric sconce attached to the balustrade above him.

“Sir!” Daniel said cheerfully, noting the surprise in the eyes of a man who probably hadn’t been addressed by a stranger at any time in the past week. “I wonder if one of your underlings can guide me to where I want to go? I could wander all day in a building so impressive as this.”

He brought the coin out in a trick Hogg had taught him, walking it between his knuckles without ever touching it with a fingertip. It was Cinnabar money, a five-florin piece: clear plastic with a gold inner layer that danced and winked in the ill-lit vestibule. In the country five florins was a day’s wage; in Xenos it would buy a meal without wine. A Kostroman would lose part of the value in changing it, but Cinnabar coinage was flashier and more impressive than the local scrip.

“What?” said the clerk. “Well, an usher . . .”

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