big words Iakovitzes poured over the heads of the fanners.
He yawned. Seeing that, Omurtag grinned and winked. Iakovitzes, caught up now in the full flow of his rhetoric, never noticed.
The khagan waggled a finger. Krispos walked back over to him. Again Iakovitzes paid no attention, though Krispos felt the eyes of both priest and
'Here, lad,' Omurtag said—softly, so as not to disrupt Iakovitzes' speech. 'You take this, as a reminder of the day.' He handed Krispos the goldpiece Iakovitzes had given him to symbolize the Videssians' ransoming.
Behind Iakovitzes, the blue-robed priest of Phos jerked violently, as if a bee had stung him. He made the circular sun-sign over the left side of his breast. And Omurtag's own
Omurtag shoved the seer aside, so hard that the
He laughed uproariously at his own wit, loud enough to make Iakovitzes pause and glare at him before resuming his harangue. Krispos laughed, too. Past tunic and sandals—and now this coin—had never owned anything. And the idea of having a whole people was absurd, anyhow.
'Go on back to your mother and father,' Omurtag said when he had control of himself again. Krispos hopped down from the platform. He kept tight hold of the goldpiece Omurtag had given him.
'The sooner we're out of Kubrat and the faster we're back in civilization, the better,' Iakovitzes declared to whoever would listen. He pressed the pace back to Videssos harder than the Kubratoi had when they were taking the peasants away.
The redeemed Videssians did not leave by the same winding, narrow pass through which they had entered Kubrat. They used a wider, easier route some miles farther west. An old graveled highway ran down it, one that became broad and well maintained on the Videssian side of the mountains.
'You'd think the Kubrati road used to be part of this one here,' Krispos remarked.
Neither of his parents answered. They were too worn with walking and with keeping Evdokia on her feet to have energy left over for speculation.
But the priest who had gone to Kubrat with Iakovitzes heard. His name, Krispos had learned, was Pyrrhos. Ever since Omurtag gave the boy that goldpiece, Pyrrhos had been around a good deal, as if keeping an eye on him. Now, from muleback, the priest said, 'You speak the truth, lad. Once the road was one, for once the land was one. Once the whole world, near enough, was one.'
Krispos frowned. 'One world? Well, of course it is, sir priest. What else could it be?' Trudging along beside him, Phostis smiled; in that moment, son sounded very much like father.
'One world ruled by Videssos, I mean,' Pyrrhos said. 'But then, three hundred years ago, on account of the sins of the Videssian people, Phos suffered the wild Khamorth tribes to roll off the Pardrayan plain and rape away the great tracts of land that are now the khaganates of Thatagush, Khatrish—and Kubrat. Those lands remain rightfully ours. One day, when Phos the lord of the great and good mind judges us worthy, we shall reclaim them.' He sketched the sun-symbol over his heart.
Krispos walked a while in silence, thinking about what the priest had said. Three hundred years meant nothing to him; Pyrrhos might as well have said
Pyrrhos' long, narrow face grew even longer and narrower as his thin-lipped mouth pursed in disapproval. 'The same sins Skotos—' He spat in the roadway to show his hatred of the dark god. '—always sets forth as snares for mankind: the sin of division, from which sprang civil war; the sin of arrogance, which led the fools of that time to scorn the barbarians till too late; the sin of luxury, which made them cling to the great riches they had and not exert themselves to preserve those riches for future generations.'
At that, Krispos' father lifted his head. 'Reckon the sin of luxury's one we don't have to worry about here,' he said, 'seeing as I don't think there's above three people in this whole crowd with a second shirt to call their own.'
'You are better for it!' the priest exclaimed. 'Yet the sin of luxury lives on; doubt it not. In Videssos the city, scores of nobles have robes for each day of the year, sir, yet bend all their energy not to helping their neighbors who have less but rather only to acquiring more, more, and ever more. Their robes will not warm them against the chill of Skotos' ice.'
His sermon did not have the effect he'd hoped. 'A robe for each day of the year,' Krispos' father said in wonder. Scowling angrily, Pyrrhos rode off. Phostis turned to Krispos. 'How'd you like to have that many robes, son?'
'That sounds like too many to me,' Krispos said. 'But I would like a second shirt.'
'So would I, boy,' his father said, laughing. 'So would I.'
A day or so later, a company of Videssian troopers joined the returning peasants. Their chain-mail shirts jingled as they came up, an accompaniment to the heavy drumroll of their horses' hooves. Iakovitzes handed their leader a scroll. The captain read it, glanced at the farmers, and nodded. He gave Iakovitzes a formal salute, with clenched right fist over his heart.
Iakovitzes returned the salute, then rode south at a trot so fast it was almost a gallop. Pyrrhos left the peasants at the same time, but Iakovitzes' horse quickly outdistanced his mule. 'My lord, be so good as to wait for your servant,' Pyrrhos called after him.
Iakovitzes was so far ahead by then that Krispos, who was near the front of the band of peasants, could barely hear his reply: 'If you think I'll crawl to the city at the pace of a shambling mule, priest, you can bloody well think again!' The noble soon disappeared round a bend in the road. More sedately, Pyrrhos followed.
Later that day, a dirt track from the east ran into the highway. The Videssian captain halted the farmers while he checked the scroll Iakovitzes had given him. 'Fifteen here,' he told his soldiers. They counted off the fifteen men they saw, and in a moment fifteen families, escorted by three or four horsemen, headed down that track. The rest