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He got up from the bench on which he sat. "Let us be off, lord," he said. "If
you will be so kind as to show me to the stables "
"Certainly, although I would like the chance to ready a pack-horse before we
set out," Abivard answered. "Strongholds, even villages, are few and far
between up here in the northwest, and the land from one to the next often bad.
If anything should go wrong, which the God prevent, I'd sooner not be stuck in
the desert without any supplies at all. That's how vultures grow fat."
The messenger muttered under his breath but had to nod. Servants carried sacks
of pocket bread and lamb sausage rich with garlic and mint and cardamom and
skins of rough-edged red wine out to the stables, where grooms lashed them
aboard a big gelding with good endurance.
A couple of hours before sunset, Sharbaraz's man swung up onto his horse with
very visible relief. Abivard mounted, too, and put the packhorse on a long
leather lead. With the messenger, he rode out of Vek Rud stronghold, down the
knob on which it sat, and away toward the southeast.
* * *
As Abivard had predicted, the journey to Mashiz went far more smoothly than it
had when he had set out for the capital with Sharbaraz two years before. Not
only did no one take up arms against him as he traveled, but lesser nobles
went out of their way to offer hospitality as extravagant as they could
afford. Being brother-in-law to the King of Kings had its advantages.
So did the warrant Sharbaraz's man flourished whenever occasion arose. Not
only did it entitle him and Abivard to fresh horses at their stops, but to
victuals on demand. The bread and meat and wine Abivard had packed back at Vek
Rud stronghold stayed all but untouched.
"I don't care," he said when the messenger remarked on that. "Who knows what
might have happened if we didn't have them with us?"
"Something to that," the fellow admitted. "Things you get ready for have a way
of not going wrong. It's the ones you don't look for that give you trouble."
Sharbaraz's rebellious army had swung south around the Dilbat Mountains and
then up through the desert toward Mashiz. Because the realm was at peace and
the season approaching summer, Abivard and Sharbaraz's man traversed the
passes through the mountains instead.
Abivard had thought he was used to high country. He had grown up atop a knob,
after all, and he had scaled Nalgis Crag, which was a most impressive piece of
stone all by itself. But looking up to steep mountains on either side of him
reminded him of his insignificance in the grand scheme of things more
forcefully even than the immense emptiness of the Pardrayan plain.
Fortresses in the passes could have held up an army indefinitely, both by
their own strength and with the avalanches they could have unleashed against
hostile troops. Seeing the gray stone piles and the heaped boulders, Abivard
understood why Sharbaraz had never once considered forcing his way through the
shorter route. He would not have reached Mashiz.
As things were, though, the officers who commanded the forts vied with one
another to honor the brother-in-law of the King of Kings. The men struck him
as being as much courtiers as soldiers, but the garrisons they commanded
looked like good troops.
And then, early one morning, he and the messenger came round a last bend in
the road and there, laid out before them as if through some great artist's
brush, sat Mashiz, with the river valleys of the land of the Thousand Cities
serving as distant backdrop. Abivard studied the scene for a long time. He had
seen and even entered Mashiz from the east, but the capital of the realm took
on a whole new aspect when viewed from the other direction.
"This is how it must have looked to our ancestors the God only knows how many
years ago, when they first came off the high plateau of Makuran and saw the
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land they would make their own," he said.
The messenger shrugged. "I don't know anything about that, lord. I'm glad to
see Mashiz again because I'm coming home to my wife and son."
"You took me away from mine," Abivard said, although not in real reproof: the
man was but obeying the command of Sharbaraz King of Kings. "Lead me to the
palace now, so I can learn the King of Kings' wishes and go back to my home
once more."
In many ways, this was the first good look he had had at Mashiz. When he had
entered it with Sharbaraz, he had been too busy fighting for his life to pay
much attention to his surroundings, and then, just as he reached the palace,
sorcerous darkness had swallowed the city. Now he took it all in: merchants
and whores, servants of the God and horse traders, drunkards and servitors,
farmers selling lettuces, farmers buying copper trinkets, singers, dancers,
beggars, two men with picks stolidly knocking down a mud-brick wall, women
hawking caged songbirds, and a thousand more besides. The noise was
overwhelming, both in volume and variety.
Without the messenger to guide him, he would soon have been hopelessly lost.
Streets writhed and twisted and doubled back on themselves, but Sharbaraz's
man unerringly picked his way through the maze and toward the palace. At the
gates, he turned Abivard over to a plump, beardless flunky and rode away.
At first Abivard thought the functionary was a man, although he had never seen
a man without a beard. Then he thought the person was a woman, for the voice
with which he was addressed seemed too high and smooth to belong to a man. But
he had trouble imagining a woman in such a prominent position at the court of
the King of Kings.
Then he realized he was dealing with a eunuch. He felt like a country bumpkin,
unused to the sophisticated ways of the capital. As the courtier guided him to
the throne room, though, he wondered what the fellow thought of his own state.
Sophistication had its prices, too.
"Great and magnificent lord, I shall be beside you as you are presented to
Sharbaraz King of Kings, may his years be many and his realm increase," the
eunuch said. "At my signal, thus " He touched Abivard on the arm. " you are to
prostrate yourself before him."
"As you say," Abivard agreed. Being brother-in-law to the King of Kings did
not excuse him from any of the formalities of court ceremonial. If anything,
it made his punctiliousness in observing those formalities more important than
it would have been for someone of less exalted rank.
His feet glided soundlessly over thick wool carpets beautifully dyed and
elaborately woven: carpets too fine to be walked upon anywhere save in the
palace of the King of Kings. The torches that lit the hallways were of
sandalwood; their sweet smoke filled the air. He had put on his best caftan to
enter Mashiz, but felt woefully underdressed all the same.
"We approach the throne room," the eunuch murmured in his strange, sexually
ambiguous voice. "Walk beside me, as I told you, and be ready for my signal."
Courtiers, ministers, generals, and high nobles from the Seven Clans filled
the throne room. Abivard felt their eyes on him and did his best to bear up
under the scrutiny. He looked straight ahead and tried not to notice the
grandees staring at him, studying him, taking his measure. They had to be
wondering, What is this backwoods noble like?
Holding his own eyes on the throne helped him keep his composure. It was not,
he saw, a single seat, but two. There sat Sharbaraz, unmistakable in his
gorgeous robes and crown, but who was that beside him? The throne room was
very long. Abivard had advanced halfway toward the high seats when he suddenly
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