out mountain itself, pavilions and gardens and the Golden Tower adorning its summit like a crown. High, arched galleries opened out along its precipitous flanks from the labyrinthine halls and chambers within, and the only entrance was the Water Gate somewhere out of sight beneath them on the western side. To the rear, where the long promontory had once sloped down into the mountains to the north, a single mighty fosse had been cut away from one river gorge across to the other. Avanthar had defied all besiegers since before the Priestkings of Engsvan hla Ganga, before the arrogant masters of the First Imperium, before the ravaging Dragon Warriors from out of the northwest, and, indeed, who knew how many aeons before that. There were no records of the building of Avanthar. This Emperor or that had added to it, dug another gallery (though now the architects warned against this), and embellished it with ever-greater wealth and the spoils of captive nations. Yet no one knew who had created it.

Avanthar was unique; it was Avanthar.

A slight, elderly man sat upon a mat beside one of the casements. Harsan did not know him, but the pearl- grey mantle and ornate canonicals of a priest of Thumis were familiar. A complex headdress of opals, moonstones, and slate-hued plumes lay upon the mosaic floor beside him, obviously too heavy and uncomfortable to be worn once one had escaped the solemnities of the Hall of the Petal Throne.

“Greetings, priest Harsan. I am Durugen hiNashomai.”

Harsan knew the High Adept of his temple by name. He made obeisance as Zaren had taught him so long ago in the Monastery school. He had never imagined he would have a chance to use this bit of etiquette!

“Don’t bother. Your bow is three decades out of date. And we don’t require the Engsvanyali salutations any more.” The High Adept chuckled.

He motioned to a mat beside him. It lay upon a dais two finger-breadths lower than his own, as was proper. A plate of Mash-f ruit and spice-scented Dlel — fruit glimmered next to him, their vivid yellows and blues reduced to pallid white and sooty black by the moonless darkness. He reached to select a Dlel-fr uit with a sure, delicate hand.

Harsan looked about for Tlayesha, but Taluvaz and Mirure had steered her off to another of the arched window-alcoves overlooking the river. Prince Eselne sprawled against the scalloped stone railing. The two of them were alone with Lord Durugen.

“What Clan have you selected for yourself, priest Harsan?”

“I–I do not yet know, my Lord.-The Grey Cloak, if they’ll have me. Or the Scroll of Wisdom.”

“Either would be pleased to take you, a contributor to knowledge, indeed a hero of the Empire! The epic- singers are already scribbling verses in praise of your deeds!” Lord Durugen’s tone was faintly ironic. Harsan could not see whether he was smiling.

“Sir, I do not mean to push-to force myself upon anyone-” He really meant that. At first he had tried hard to convince his comrades and his rescuers that he was no hero, no Hrugga, no Warrior of the Age. Taluvaz and Mirure had been no help, and Tlayesha had been entirely too worshipful, as behooved a pretty girl whose mate has just unearthed the sensation of the century and set all of the sages and sorcerers by their ears! His story had been politely heard, but his protests were taken as no more than youthful humility-true or false, who cared? He suspected that much of this acclaim was motivated by politics rather than otherwise. Somebody-Prince Eselne, the Imperium, the hierarchy of Lord Thumis-needed a hero, and he had happened along to play the part. It all left a rather dark taste in his mouth.

“The Grey Cloak will take him in all right, eh mighty Prince?” Lord Durugen grinned over at Eselne. “They’ll make him a clan-brother. Ai, they’ll drum up a proper genealogy for him and give him the pick of their lineage- names! Not strictly ‘historical,’ perhaps, but satisfying, very satisfying, to everybody concerned. This Harsan is now famous-he can be Harsan hi — anybody-he-chooses. He’ll have to fight off their clan-daughters with a quarterstaff!”

“Whatever my father commands is-or rather, becomes-the will of the Gods,” Prince Eselne said. He, too, seemed amused.

“ ‘Noble acts raise even the lowest soul to become divine,’ ” Lord Durugen quoted piously from the Scrolls of Pavar. He sighed and settled himself against the parapet. “What a kettle of stew you have overturned, boy!”

Harsan was taken aback. “Holy Pontiff?”

“Cha! Do not pretend ignorance, young man! Already our delegates are sharpening their tongues for a battle over the custody of your fine black globes and polished silver devices-oh, and your Man of Gold, of course! That too. Now as a priest of Thumis upon an authorised mission, you are the logical claimant; we, the Temple of Thumis, are thus the proper owners. Prince Eselne here thinks otherwise. He, acting for the Imperium-or mayhap for the Temple of Lord Karakan, or possibly for his friends in the Miltary Party-would have his own scholars retain your booty in the Palace of the Realm in Purdimal.” He cackled. “Even the Temple of Sarku has had the amazing nerve to claim that what you did was done in service to them!”

“Next we shall hear demands from that grease-tongued Livyani,” the Prince growled.

“Then it begins all over again,” Harsan muttered glumly.

“Thus it has always been, ever since the Gods fought amongst themselves at the Battle of Dormoron Plain. There can be no real progress-the establishment of ‘noble action’-until we ourselves alter our own natures; that is why the Lords of Stability provide a better goal and a greater challenge than do the Lords of Change.” Lord Durugen inspected a slice of Mash-fmit, and, gratified, popped it into his mouth. “Whatever the disposition- and it may take years-the whole affair redounds to the credit of Prince Eselne here. Not, you understand, to that of Prince Surundano, the erstwhile protege of our own Temple of Thumis. Had you come to us in Purdimal, boy, we might have had the Hmelu by a different leg!”

“There were reasons, great Lord,” Harsan began, a trifle lamely.

“Reasons?” the old man snapped. “What ‘reasons’ could possibly take precedence over your own Temple? Because of you, Prince Eselne and his Military Party fly up like pretty Sahulen-birds into the favour of our divine Emperor’s eye, and poor Surundano gets not even a straw of the credit!”

“A straw? Cha, a dollop of bird-dung upon the pate is all he deserves,” observed Prince Eselne wryly. “Advise your clerkly little Surundano to give up the ‘Gold’ and leave the rest to me! With the aid of the three champions allowed me in the Kolumejalim, I shall become Emperor as surely as Lord Karakan’s sword is sharp! You know that brother Rereshqala is near to resigning his claim. I can marry Ma’in Kruthai-or slay her in the contests if she stays stubborn. Mridobu is no problem: a master of ink and paper, intrigues and officials, but without substance-a fine lack of nobility. Dhich’une, for reasons unknown, has gone off to sulk in the City of Sarku. He sees no one but his own priests and sorcerers, and it may be that will pass up the Golden Tower for a lifetime of worm-kissing and smelly rituals with his Undead catamites.”

“And Mirusiya?”

Eselne looked down, his handsome features lost in shadow. “You have found the one jewel in the chaff, my Lord. He and I may have to have it out one day, though some say he is too much the man of action to want to live mewed up in the Golden Tower with the Servitors of Silence and a gaggle of concubines. As for me, I have been trained all my life for just that fate, and I am ready for it when the time comes.” He rubbed his cheek thoughtfully. “Yes, I may offer Mirusiya the rule of Yan Kor and the northlands once we have taken them-my father has at last given permission for him to take a major army and advance up through the Pass of Skulls to invest Sunraya, you know. Mirusiya may like that.”

Lord Durugen felt about on the mat for a knife to peel another Mash-imii. “What of this priest Harsan here, then? Now that you have glorified him and well nigh turned his head around with all these dignities-taking credit for yourself, naturally-we would have him back. He is of the Temple of Thumis and rightfully belongs to us.”

“So that you can use him as your claimant in the matter of the artifacts? La, dear Lord Durugen!”

“Just as you would employ him as your instrument, if he were added to your staff! Ohe, Prince Eselne!”

Harsan could endure no more.

Slowly, but with increasing vehemence, he said, “And what if I do neither? What if I resign from this game of Den-denV' He warmed to his words. “What if I refuse to bear witness or play the advocate for either of you?”

They both stared at him as though he were an Akho, “the Embracer of Ships,” risen up out of the stone flagging.

“What, then-?” Lord Durugen put down the little knife. “My Lords, I am a scholar, a student of languages and wisdom. I am no politician, no hero, no courtier to mince about palaces, no barrister to slice arguments and pare clauses!” “There, now, young man,” Lord Durugen soothed. “You shall not be forgotten! You shall have access to the things you discovered-perhaps be made Chief Examiner in charge of them-”

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