'True enough, your Majesty, and wise, too.'

'Ha!' Krispos said. 'If you're a farmer, it's something you'd better know.'

'As may be,' Zaidas answered. 'I wasn't going to go on with flattery, believe me. I was just going to say I didn't see how your principle, though admirable, applies in this case.'

'Someone's magic is keeping you from learning where Phostis is—am I right?' Krispos didn't wait for Zaidas' nod; he knew he was right. He continued, 'Instead of looking for the lad for the moment, can you use your magic to learn what sort of sorcery shields him from you? If you can find out who's helping to conceal Phostis, that will tell us something we hadn't known and may help our physical search. Well? Can it be done?'

Zaidas hesitated thoughtfully. At last he said, 'The art of magecraft lost a great one when you were born without the talent, your Majesty. Your mind, if you will forgive a crude comparison, is as twisty as a couple of mating eels.'

'That's what comes of sitting on the imperial throne,' Krispos answered. 'Either it twists you or it breaks you. Does the idea have merit, then?'

'It ... may,' Zaidas said. 'It certainly is a procedure I had not considered. I would not promise results, not before trial and not out here away from the resources of the Sorcerers' Collegium. If it works, it will require sorcery of the most delicate sort, for I would not want to alert my quarry to his being scrutinized in this fashion.'

'No, that wouldn't do.' Krispos reached out and set a hand on Zaidas' arm for a moment. 'If you think this worth pursuing, eminent and sorcerous sir, then do what you can. I have faith in your ability—'

'More than I do, right now,' Zaidas said, but Krispos neither believed him nor thought he believed himself.

The Avtokrator said, 'If the idea turns out not to work, we're no worse off: am I right?'

'I think so, your Majesty,' the wizard answered. 'Let me explore what I have here and the techniques I might use. I'm sorry I can't give you a quick answer as to the practicability of your scheme, but it really does require more contemplation and research. I promise I'll inform you as soon as I either see a way to attempt it or discover I have not the skill, knowledge, or tools to undertake it.'

'I couldn't ask for more.' Halfway through the sentence, Krispos found himself talking to Zaidas' back. The mage had swung his horse away. When he got hold of an idea, he worried it between his teeth—and ceased to worry about protocol or even politeness. In Krispos' mind, his long record of success would have justified far worse lapses of behavior than that.

The Avtokrator soon forced magical schemes and even worry about Phostis to the back of his mind. Early that afternoon, the imperial army rode into Harasos, which let him see firsthand the devastation the Thanasioi had worked on the supply dumps there. In spite of himself, he was impressed. They'd done a job that would have warmed the heart of the most exacting military professional.

Of course, the local quartermasters had made matters easier for them, too. Probably because the warehouses inside the shabby little town's shabby little wall were inadequate, sacks of grain and stacks of cut firewood had been stored outside. Burned black smears on the ground and a lingering smell of smoke showed where they'd rested.

Next to the black smears was an enormous purple one. The broken crockery still in the middle of it said it had been the army's wine ration. Now the men would be reduced to drinking water before long, which would increase both grumbling and diarrhea.

Krispos clicked his tongue between his teeth, sorrowing at the waste. The country hereabouts was not rich; collecting this surplus had taken years of patient effort. It might have seen the district through a famine or. as here, kept the army going without its having to forage on the countryside.

Sarkis rode up and looked over the damage with Krispos.

The cavalry general pointed to what had been a corral. 'See? They had beeves waiting for us, too.'

'So they did.' Krispos sighed. 'Now the Thanasioi will eat their share of them.'

'I thought they had scruples against feasting on meat,' Sarkis said.

'That's right, so they do. Well, they've slaughtered some—' The Avtokrator wrinkled his nose at the stench from the bloated carcasses inside the ruined fence. '—and driven off the rest. We'll have no use from them, that's certain.'

'Aye. Too bad.' By his tone, Sarkis worried more about filling his own ample belly than the effect of the raid on the army as a whole.

'We'll be able to bring in a certain amount of food by sea at Nakoleia,' Krispos said. 'By the good god, though, that'll be a long supply line for us to maintain. Will your men be able to protect the wagons as they make their way toward us?'

'Some will get through, your Majesty. Odds are most will get through. If they hit us, though, we'll lose some,' Sarkis answered. 'And we'll lose men guarding those wagons, too. They'll be gone from your fighting force as sure as if the rebels shot 'em all in the throat.'

'Yes, that's true, too. Rude of you to remind me of it, though.' Krispos knew how big a force he could bring to bear against the Thanasioi; he'd campaigned enough to make a good estimate of how many men Sarkis would have to pull from that force to protect the supply line against raiders. Less certain was how many warriors the rebels could array in line of battle. When he'd set out from Videssos the city, he'd thought he had enough men to win a quick victory. That looked a lot less likely now.

Sarkis said, 'A pity the wars can't be easy all the time, eh, your Majesty?'

'Maybe it's just as well,' Krispos answered. Sarkis raised a bushy, gray-flecked eyebrow. Krispos explained. 'If they were easy, I'd be tempted to fight more often. Who needs that?'

'Aye, something to what you say.'

Krispos raised his eyes from the ruined supply dump to the sky. He gauged the weather with skill honed by years on a farm, when the difference between getting through a winter and facing hunger often rode on deciding just when to start bringing in the crops. He didn't like what his senses told him now. The wind had shifted so it was coming out of the northwest; clouds began piling up, thick and black, along the horizon there.

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