The Acoma were technically members of a minor political party, the Jade Eye, but the connection had lapsed since Lord Sezu’s rule. Mara had little to do with party politics, being far too consumed by the need to preserve her house from obliteration. But with all the Empire now cast into upheaval, no tie was too tenuous to ignore.
Mara threaded her way past Lord Inrodaka, and the Lord of the Ekamchi’s fat second son, and a cousin of the Lord of the Kehotara, who conferred together in whispers and cast her cold glances. Finding two other members of the Jade Eye Party beyond them, Mara approached and began a conversation that devolved from lists of sad condolences. The dead and those abandoned beyond the rift seemed to haunt by their absence. Yet life in Tsuranuanni did not retreat from losses. Around the hall, members of the High Council explored byplays behind faqades of polite conversation, and all the while they played, once more, the Great Game.
Lightning rent the sky, flashing silver-white on the great house of the Minwanabi. Seated at his lap desk, pen in hand, with fresh ink by his elbow, Incomo reviewed the documents arrayed before him, ignoring the sound of driving rain from outside. He was never a fast thinker, and now his shock and disbelief would not leave him. The events surrounding the Emperor’s betrayal still seemed the uneasy aftermath of a nightmare. That Desio was dead was undoubted. Three witnesses reported seeing’him go down with arrows in his throat and chest — his cousin Jeshurado already dead at his feet. No friend or retainer had been near enough to rescue the Lord’s body from the chaos before the magical rift closed, forever sealing Kelewan from Midkemia.
Incomo pressed dry palms to his temples and inhaled a breath of damp air. Desio of the Minwanabi rested with his ancestors, if indeed a man’s spirit could cross the unknowable gulf between worlds. The rites had been said in the Minwanabi sacred glade by a hastily summoned priest, and runners departed with the news. All that remained to be done was await the new Lord’s return from the outpost in the western isles.
At that moment the screen at the First Adviser’s back slipped open. Warm, damp air swept through the room, ruffling the parchment and spattering a fall of wind-borne drops across the floor. ‘I left orders not to be disturbed,’ Incomo snapped.
A dry, incisive voice said, ‘Then pardon the interruption, First Adviser. But time passes, and there is much to be done.’
Incomo started and spun around. He saw a warrior, backlit by a white flash of lightning, step through the doorway. Water streamed off his battle armour and slicked his officer’s plume into spikes. Light-footed, lithe, and almost without sound, the man reached the circle of radiance cast by the room’s single lamp. He swept off his helm. Shadows circled his honey-coloured eyes, and wet hair clung to his neck.
Incomo dropped his quill and bowed from the waist in obeisance. ‘Tasaio!’
Tasaio looked Incomo in the eyes for a silent moment and then said slowly, ‘I’ll forgive the familiarity this time, First Adviser. Never again.’
Incomo shoved his lap desk aside, spilling quill and parchment, and nearly upsetting the inkwell. He unfolded gaunt legs and stiffly touched his forehead to the floor. ‘My Lord.’
The boom of the storm filled silence while Tasaio looked keenly around the room. He did not grant Incomo permission to rise, but studied the painted images of birds, the worn sleeping mat, and lastly, most leisurely of all, the prostrate elder on the carpet. ‘Yes. Tasaio. Lord of the Minwanabi.’
At last given leave to sit upright, Incomo said, ‘How did you—’
The new master interrupted in a tone that was faintly derisive. ‘Incomo! Did you think yourself the only one with agents in this house? My cousin commanded my loyalty, but never my respect. Never would I dishonour the Minwanabi name, but in my position only a fool would have left cousin Desio unobserved.’
Tasaio smoothed back drenched bangs, then adjusted the set of his sword belt. ‘Since the moment I set foot on that cursed island, I kept one boat in readiness, manned and provisioned to leave. Day or night, if the call came, the lines need only be cast off. On the instant of my cousin’s death, those loyal to me sent word to the Outpost Isles.’ Tasaio shrugged, scattering droplets in the lamplight. ‘I took a boat to Nar and commandeered the first ship. When is the High Council to elect a new Warlord?’
Eyes fixed on the runnels of rainwater that threatened his sleeping mat, Incomo reordered his thoughts. ‘Word came only this morning. The Light of Heaven has called the High Council into session, to meet three days from now.’
In almost silken calm, Tasaio said, ‘You would have let me miss that meeting, Incomo?’
Wet pillows quite abruptly ceased to matter. ‘My Lord!’ Again Incomo pressed his forehead to the floor. ‘Desio’s end was most sudden. Our swiftest messenger departed within the hour, with orders to choose the fastest boat. I humbly submit that I did my best. Do not fault a servant’s limits, when my Lord has been clever beyond the expected call of duty.’