'Tower on crest of ridge via FLIR. Got battlements!'
'Fuel, nine thousand. Throttle back on two, eighty percent. Okay, you've got an hour from my mark.'
'Got any candidates on IDAS?'
'Not a whisper. It's dead down there. Not even cell phone traffic. Why am I getting this itchy feeling between my shoulder blades?'
'Time check: three hours twenty-nine minutes to dawn. Altitude four one hundred, ground speed 145, visibility zero, six on FLIR. Stop worrying about MANPADs, number two.'
'Roger. Waypoint yankee two coming up, turning on zero two zero.'
'I'm still getting nothing, sir. Trying FM.'
'Use your judgment.'
'Fuel eighty six hundred. Throttle on eighty, inlet temperature three.'
'Quiet as the grave. Hey, some traffic on
'Waypoint yankee three coming up, turning on zero nine zero. Climb to flight level five zero.'
'Okay, that's enough. We're in class E airspace on the other side, so let's get out of here. ARMBAND?'
'Ready to roll whenever you call, captain.'
'Okay, we're going home. Prepare to translate on my mark-'
END TRANSCRIPT (Cockpit voice recorder)
10
A week had passed since the bizarre coronation ritual, and it had been a busy period. Miriam found herself at the center of a tornado of activity, with every hour accounted for. There were banquets with lord this and baron that, introductions until her cheeks ached from smiling and her right hand was red from scrubbing: Their kisses left her feeling unclean, compromised. The dressmakers had moved in, altering garments borrowed from some remnants of the royal wardrobe and fitting her for gowns and dresses suitable for a dowager queen-widow and a mother-to-be. Brill had found time, for a couple of hours every day, to bring a bottle of wine and sit with her while she explained the finer points of political and personal alliances; and Gerta engaged her in conversational hochsprache, nervous and halting at first, to polish her speech. (Which, with total immersion in a sea of servants, few of whom spoke English, was beginning to improve.)
Being Helge was becoming easier, she found. Practice had diminished the role to a set of manners and a half- understood language that she could summon up at need, rather than a claustrophobia-inducing caul. Perhaps she was getting used to it, or perhaps her mother's private crusade and promise of mutual support had given her the impulse she needed to make it work. Whatever the cause, the outcome was that whenever she paused to think about her position Miriam was startled by how smoothly her new life had locked in around her, and with how little friction. Perhaps all she'd needed all along was a key to the gilded cage, and the reassurance that people she could trust were minding the door.
It had not been Miriam's idea to put on the gilded robes of state today, to sit on an unpadded chair in a drafty hall and read aloud a variety of prearranged-bloodcurdling and inevitably fatal-sentences on assorted members of the nobility who had been unlucky enough to back the wrong horse. But it had shown up on her timetable for the week-and Brill, Riordan, and her mother had visited
'But I
'If they think you're a figurehead, they won't fear you,' Iris explained, with visibly fraying patience. 'And that'll breed trouble. People hereabouts aren't used to enlightened government. You need to stick some heads on spikes, Helge, to make the others keep a low profile. If you won't do it yourself, the council will have to do it for you. And everybody will whisper that it's because you're a weak woman who is just a figurehead.'
'There are a number of earls and barons who we definitely cannot trust,' Riordan added. 'Not to mention a duke or two. They're mortal enemies-they didn't act solely out of fear of Egon's displeasure-and we can't have a duke sitting in judgment over another duke. If you refuse to read their execution order we'll just have to poison them. It gets messy.'
'But if I start out by organizing a massacre, isn't that going to raise the stakes later? I thought we were agreed that reinforcing the rule of law was essential…'
'It's not a massacre if they get a fair trial first. So give them a fair trial and fill a gibbet or two with the worst cases, to make an example,' Iris suggested. 'Then offer clemency to the rest, on onerous terms. It worked for dad.'
'Really?' Miriam gave her mother a very old-fashioned look. 'Tell me more…'
Which had been the start of a slippery-slope argument. Miriam had fought a rearguard action, but Helge had ultimately conceded the necessity of applying these medieval standards of justice under the circumstances. Which was why she was sitting stiff as a board on a solid wooden throne, listening to advocates argue over a variety of unfortunate nobles, and trying not to fall asleep.
For a man with every reason to believe his fate was to be subjected to
'He says he thanks you for your hospitality but it is most unnecessary,' murmured Gerta.
'Tell him he's welcome, all the same.' Miriam waited while her assistant translated. 'And I view his position with sympathy.'
'Milady!' Gerta sounded confused. 'Are you sure?'
'Yes.' Miriam glared at her.
'Yes, milady.' Gerta addressed the duke; he seemed confused.
'Have another sweet,' Miriam offered the Duke of Niejwein by way of her translator.
It was, Olga had explained, the polite way to do business with noble prisoners: Offer them candied peel and a silk rope to sweeten the walk to the scaffold where, if his crimes were deemed minor, he could expect the relative mercy of a swift hanging. But Niejwein, for some reason, seemed not to have much of an appetite today. And after having sentenced two earls to death earlier in this session-in both cases they had massacred some of her distant relatives with more enthusiasm than was called for, and Riordan had been most insistent on the urgent need to hang them-she could see why. The earls and their retainers were hired thugs; but Niejwein, as head bean counter, had expedited Egon's reign of terror in a far deadlier way.
'We wanted to speak with you in private,' Miriam added, trying to ignore the small crowd of eavesdroppers. 'To discuss your future.'
Niejwein's short bark of laughter turned heads; more than one guard's hand hovered close by a weapon. 'I have no future,' Gerta translated.
'Not necessarily. You have no future without the grace and pardon of the crown, but you should not jump to conclusions about your ultimate fate.'
For the first time the Duke of Niejwein looked frightened. And for the first time Miriam, watching him, began to get an edgy feeling that she understood him.