Is Mercado here yet?”
“He awaits us within. He is not happy, Golophin, and neither am I.” Admiral Rovero was a burly, heavily bearded man whose face spoke of long years of exposure to the elements. His eyes seemed permanently slitted against some contrary wind and when he spoke only one corner of his mouth opened, the lips remaining obstinately shut on the other side. It was as if he were making some sardonic aside to an invisible listener at his elbow. The voice which issued from his lopsided mouth was deep enough to rattle glass.
“Who is happy in these times, Jaime? Come, let’s go in.”
They left the small anteroom and went through a pair of thick double doors which led to the state apartments of the Admiral of the Fleet. The short day was already winding down towards a winter twilight, as grey and cheerless as a northern sea, but there was a fire burning in the vast fireplace which occupied one wall. It made the daylight beyond the balcony screens seem blue and threw the far end of the long room into shadow.
The rams from fourteen Astaran galleys were set in the stone near the ceiling like the trophy heads of a hunter; they testified to the years of naval rivalry with Astarac. The curved scimitars of corsairs and Sea-Merduks crisscrossed the walls in patterns of flickering steel, and immensely detailed models of ships stood on stone pedestals below them. On the walls also, vellum maps of the Hebrian coast, the Malacar Straits and the Levangore hung like pale tapestries between the weapons. The room was a lesson in Hebrian naval history.
Another man stood with his back to the fire so that the flames threw his shadow across the flagged floor like a cape. He turned his head as Admiral Rovero and the old mage entered and Golophin saw the familiar shine of silver from the battered face.
“Good to see you again, General,” he said.
General Mercado bowed. His visage was something of a marvel, created by Golophin himself. As a colonel in the bodyguard of Bleyn the Pious, he had taken a scimitar blow in the face. The blade had slashed away his nose, his cheekbone and part of his temple. Golophin had been on hand to save his sight and his life, and he had grafted a mask of silver on the injury. One half of Mercado’s face was thus the bearded countenance of a veteran soldier, the other was an inhuman façade of glittering metal from which a bloodshot eye glared, lidless and tearless, but sustained by pure theurgy, a spell of permanence whose casting had cost Golophin the last of the scanty hair on his scalp. That had been twenty years ago.
“Have a seat, Golophin,” the General said. The metal half of his face made his voice resound oddly, as though he were speaking from out of a tin cup.
“You’ve heard the rumours, I suppose,” the old mage said, seating himself comfortably not far from the fire and rummaging through his robes for his tobacco pouch.
“Not rumours, not any more. The Papal bull of excommunication arrived two days ago. Rovero and I have been summoned to the palace tomorrow to view it and reconsider our positions.”
“So the pair of you will walk tamely into the palace.”
The human part of Mercado’s face quirked upwards in a smile. “Not tamely, no. I intend to take an honour guard of two hundred arquebusiers, and Rovero will have a hundred marines. It will be public, no chance of a dagger in the back.”
Golophin thumbed leaf into the bowl of his long-stemmed pipe. “It is not my place to preach to you about security,” he conceded. “What will you do if you are satisfied the bull is genuine?”
Mercado paused. He and Rovero looked at one another. “First tell us what you have to say on the matter.”
“Then your minds are not made up?”
“Damn it, Golophin, stop playing games!” Admiral Rovero burst out. “What of Abeleyn? Where is he and how does he fare?”
The old wizard lit his pipe with a spill caught from the flames of the fire. He puffed in silence for a few
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