VARNA Chapter 17
- "Welcome home, Consul Kormis." said Sanatha. She sat on her throne, with two empty seats beside her - mine, and Saska's. She wasn't alone, though. Shel, her hulking half-orc bodyguard, stood close by.
Sanatha and I had arranged a small subterfuge for this audience. She met our visitor alone, while I stayed nearby, out of sight, but easily able to hear whatever was said.
- "Thank you, Lady." said our representative in Galtin's Port. "It is good to be back, even for a short time."
We'd met Kormis during our grand tour, when Sanatha and I, with Hurmas, Sezima and Durgat, had travelled to Galtin's Port aboard Captain Urbo's ship. Kormis had arranged a luncheon for us, so that we could meet a few of the city's prominent figures.
Kormis himself, though, I barely remembered. He was one of those smiling, unctuous people who make themselves useful without leaving any sort of lasting impression. But I was very interested to hear what he would say.
- "You have news for us, I believe." said Sanatha.
- "Indeed I do, Lady. Good news: the pirate Yavantay is dead. Stabbed to death, I am told. No doubt it was one of his many creditors. Borrowing large sums, in Galtin's Port, can be very dangerous."
- "Did you see the body?"
- "No, Lady. But I have it on good authority that he is indeed dead."
- "Did you have a hand in the matter, Kormis?" asked my sister.
- "Oh - no, Lady. I... I do not have the means, or the ability to arrange such a thing."
- "I see." said Sanatha. "And... was there anything else?"
- "Oh - yes, Lady. Varnan ships are once again welcome in Galtin's Port. The High Watchman has assured me that our captains and crews will be in no danger whatsoever."
- "That's nice."
- "Eh? Ah - yes. It's very nice, Lady. It should help to restore prosperity in Varna. Trade with Galtin's Port is essential."
- "Did you have any luck locating the man Gedere?" asked Sanatha.
- "Ah. No, Lady. As I said before, I lack the means to carry out a search of that kind. I made inquiries with the proper authorities, but... he has yet to be seen. I can, of course, continue to seek out sources of information regarding his whereabouts, if he is indeed in the city."
That was my cue. I walked towards the dais, as if I had just entered the room.
- "Here's my brother." said Sanatha.
- "My Lord." said Kormis, bowing.
- "What's the news?" I said, loudly.
- "Yavantay is dead, our ships are welcome in Galtin's Port, and Kormis can't find Gedere." said my sister. She turned her head to look at the consul. "Is that about right?"
Kormis looked distinctly uncomfortable. He'd been told that Sanatha was the reasonable one, the kinder of the two rulers. But he'd apparently failed to impress her, and now the Witch King, the Great Ogre himself was present.
- "As... as I was trying to explain to the Lady..."
- "I heard. You lack the means." I said. "But if that's the case, Kormis, why are you our Consul in Galtin's Port?"
- "My Lord?"
- "I understand why you didn't take sides, during our civil war." I said. "You'd only met a few of us. I don't blame you for staying... neutral."
- "But then a clear winner emerged." said Sanatha. "My brother and me. Yet you remained in Galtin's Port. Can you explain that, Kormis?"
He couldn't. Like a fish out of water, he could only move his lips, and try to suck in air.
- "You could have come home, to warn us of what was being plotted and organized. You could have written to us. Or you could have gone out on a limb, and tried to strike a blow for Varna. The death of Yavantay, or Beksha, before the invasion began, might have been of tremendous value."
- "My Lord! I... I simply don't have the means to..."
- "To write a letter?" said Sanatha.
- "No. I mean - the situation was... very fluid."
Sanatha raised one hand, and began writing in the air. "My Lord, My Lady." she said. "The situation is very fluid."
Kormis didn't know where to turn.
- "One last chance, consul." I said. "Is there anything you would like to tell us?"
- "My Lord... I don't know what to say. Matters in Galtin's Port are very... convoluted."
- "Last chance." I repeated.
- "Lord, we have so little sway in the great city. It's a nuanced balancing act, at best..."
- "So nuanced that you couldn't discover that Gedere is living in an inn called the Harp?"
Kormis had no more to say after that. In his own mind, he hadn't betrayed us, even while he knew very well that he hadn't lifted a finger to help us. The news of Yavantay's death had reached us a month ago.
Sanatha agreed with me, in this case: we had Kormis beheaded. That left us looking for a new consul in Galtin's Port.
Together, we interviewed a promising candidate.
- "We know you're more than capable." I said. "The question is, do you want the job?"
- "For how long?" asked Captain Albo.
- "Five years? After four, you can let us know if you'd like to come home, or stay longer."
- "Can I take a few members of my former crew?" he asked.
***
We received word that another Portoan delegation would be making their way to Elmina. They gave us plenty of warning that they were coming: six months' notice, in fact.
These emissaries, though, were not concerned with trade, or with marriages of alliance. There was little doubt about the purpose of their visit, either; they were coming to see me. Why else would three Magisters of the Topaz Order travel all the way from Portoa, except to see the Witch King?
- "They're here to find out if you've gone mad." said Glasha.
She was right. According to the precepts of the Topaz Order, which we'd learned from Durgulel as children, it was dangerous for a person to dabble in more than two Schools of Magic. One was difficult enough; two could strain the mage's mind and body. Any more than that, and the practitioner risked a plunge into total insanity.
From the perspective of these venerable scholars of Magic, I must have appeared, from a distance, to be a prime candidate for this condition. Now they were coming to verify their diagnosis at close range.
Sanatha seemed to be more worried about it than I was.
- "What do we do?" she asked. "How do we prepare?"
- "We don't do anything." I told her. "You only have to be your normal gracious self; I can play the cranky old curmudgeon."
- "Old?" scoffed Saska, with a roll of her eyes. She was pregnant again - a state of affairs which neither of us had planned, but which she accepted with good humour.
'As long as you're not expecting annual children for the next decade', she'd said.
Glasha was still concerned. "We mustn't take this too lightly. These are powerful mages - and they may have made up their minds before they even left Portoa."
- "You're right." I told her - in private. "I don't want San or Saska worrying about it, though."
- "You have to tell your sister." she said.
We took precautions, including looking up the members of the delegation, and learning everything about them that we could.
The representatives of the Topaz Order travelled in style. They came with twenty armed guards, and an equal number of servants, and several boatloads of luggage. Clothing? Scholarly texts? There was no way of knowing.