the issue had finally come up. She'd already given it quite a bit of thought herself, in fact.
'You understand that I do not share your interest in territorial and material matters?'
Mindaug's pointed teeth showed again. 'You're not
She laughed. 'Point taken. Nevertheless—'
He was shaking his head. 'I'm well aware that your ambitions and mine are different. All the more reason, it seems to me, that there needn't be any clash between us. Even if . . . how to say it? Even if—'
'Even if you were residing in the Carpathians instead of Vilna—and trying to subvert my great-great-nephew and assume the throne of Hungary, instead of Jagiellon's.'
'That's putting it bluntly. But . . . yes.'
He waited, his face impassive.
Elizabeth thought a moment further, then shrugged. 'I can't say I have any particular attachment to Emeric. He's easier to manipulate than you would be, but on the other hand . . .'
Mindaug finished the thought for her. 'I'm smarter than he is. Which means I'd cause fewer messes for you to have to manipulate me out of.' He left unspoken the obvious final clause:
But Elizabeth was not worried about that. And the more she thought about it, the more she could see a number of advantages to having Mindaug—if necessary, which she still didn't think it would be—taking asylum and refuge with her.
'Done, then. That
'Needless to say. I assure you, Elizabeth, that I'd much prefer to remain in Vilna, if at all possible. If nothing else, I'm too old to take any pleasure at the thought of a frantic race to get out of Lithuania ahead of Jagiellon's wrath.'
'
For the first time, he laughed himself. 'No chance of that, Elizabeth! It's why I approached you in the first place. A mere Grand Duke, even one as capable and vicious as Jagiellon, I would have been confident of handling on my own.'
He glanced aside, as if looking over his shoulder. 'I simply prefer to avoid the name, that's all. The Black Brain is near to me, and it never pays to do anything to tingle its attention. Speaking of which . . .' His hands began moving. 'I think it's time to end this discussion.'
Within seconds, his image had faded away.
PART XI
Diego sighed. 'It is fairly certain that whoever the Satanist is—whoever
Francis nodded. 'And venturing beyond the physical, here, where we are denied the protection of one of the wards, is nearly impossible.'
Eneko Lopez went to a cupboard in the back of the chapel. 'So. I think we should investigate this.' He produced the dried-out bundle of herbs and other unpleasantness that someone had once tried to use as a curse on Maria Verrier.
'But it is a fake,' protested Diego.
'I know,' said Eneko. 'But let us consider the very nature of Satan-worship. Its essence is to recruit more souls. Unlike demons who are content to devour, devils accumulate—and use their acolytes to accumulate. And whoever did this is ripe for accumulation. They—or parts of their coven—may already be drawn into this.' He held up the bundle, a bit gingerly. 'Here, we have physical traces. With some risks, we can use these to divine where they came from. And once we have that, we may catch some trace of our other tormentor. Or tormentors.'
* * *
By the time that the afternoon sun was sinking, the priests knew more about the 'curse.' One of the things they knew was that the maker knew absolutely nothing about how to stop themselves being traced by magic. The priests, patiently, set a watch on the suspected house. Curfew or no curfew.
It was after the midnight bell that they saw the various 'visitors' arrive. Then the priests calmly went down the street and waited for the Knights' patrol.
'Just what are you doing out here, Father Lopez?' asked
'We need some Venetian soldiers, too,
'To do what?' asked Wellmann.
'God's work, Brother.'