“Ah,” Caria said. “And how is His Majesty?”
“His physician is… concerned, my lady,” Ehren said. “But of course, he is handling the matter of the defense of the Realm quite well.”
Her voice gained the faintest hint of a sharp edge. “Of course he is. Duty before all.” She stepped aside from the cabinet, then turned to walk out of the First Lord’s chambers.
Ehren hurried over to liquor cabinet and found its door unlatched.
That meant nothing, in itself-but Ehren knew Gaius. He was not the sort of man to leave doors unlatched behind him. He opened the cabinet and found the various bottles inside standing in neat rows-except for one. The full bottle of the First Lord’s tonic was askew, and the cork that sealed it was improperly seated.
But who would have tampered with the First Lord’s…
Ehren turned and was across the room in several long strides, seizing Lady Caria’s wrist, and spinning her toward him. He dug his fingers into her wrist, twisting, and a small glass vial fell from her fingers and to the floor. Ehren released her and snatched it up.
“How
Ehren managed to fall correctly, or he might have broken something on the marble floor. Even so, the fury- assisted blow had driven the breath from his lungs.
“How dare you lay a
Ehren knew that his life was in very real danger, but he could barely move his arms and legs. “The First Lord,” he wheezed, “is expecting me with his medicine.”
Caria’s eyes flicked down to his chest and back up to his face. Her expression twisted in something like frustration, and she clenched her fist, snuffing the fire that had sprung there.
Ehren glanced down as well. The silver coin on his necklace, the unofficial sign of a Cursor working personally for the First Lord, had fallen free of his tunic.
“I suppose it hardly matters now,” Caria said, her tone positively vicious. She turned with haughty deliberation and began walking away again.
Ehren looked down at the vial in his hand. It was stoppered tightly, with perhaps half a fingertip’s width of grey-white powder at the bottom. Poison, almost certainly.
“Why?” he croaked. “Why do this now, of all times?”
Caria paused at the doorway and looked back over her shoulder, a small smile on her lips. “Habit,” she murmured in a velvet voice.
Then she left.
“Helatin,” Sireos said in a firm tone of voice. The physician sat at a table in an antechamber next to Gaius’s command center, a dozen glass vials of colored liquid in wire racks in front of him, along with the now-empty vial Ehren had taken from Caria. “More specifically, refined helatin.”
Ehren shook his head. “I don’t understand. I thought that was a medication.”
“Medicine and poison are separated by quantity and timing,” Sireos responded. “Helatin is a stimulant, in small quantities. It’s part of his tonic, in fact. The body can process a small amount without harm. Larger amounts, though…” He shook his head.
“This would have killed him?” Ehren asked.
“Not at all,” Sireos said. “At least, not alone. Helatin taken in larger amounts is deposited in the brain, the spine, and the bones. And it stays there.”
Ehren breathed out slowly over a sick sensation in his stomach. “It accumulates over time.”
“And degrades the body’s ability to restore itself,” Sireos said, nodding. “Eventually to the point where-”
“Where organs begin dying,” Ehren said bitterly.
Sireos spread his hands and said nothing.
“What can be done?”
“I believe the penalty for poisoning is death by hanging,” Sireos responded. “Of course, that’s always been after a trial before a committee appointed by the Senate.”
Ehren blinked at the physician. “What happened to ‘first, do no harm’?”
“I love life,” Sireos said, his eyes hard. “I do not revere it. Caria was once my student at the academy. She used that knowledge to hurt another human being, and has earned the retribution of the law. I’d tie the rope.”
“But that won’t help Gaius,” Ehren said.
Sireos shook his head. “The damage helatin does takes years to build up, and it is subtle. I’d have to have been looking for it specifically, and unfortunately the poison’s effects look a great deal like the effects of simple age.”
“Wouldn’t Gaius have noticed it?” Ehren asked.
“Because he’s grown old before, and should know what it feels like?” The physician shook his head. “Part of what the helatin did would have reduced Gaius’s ability to detect it for himself. Even if he was a young man, the best we could hope for would be to manage it. As things are…”
“Habit,” Ehren said bitterly. “How long has it been going on?”
“Six years, at the least,” Sireos said. “Given the idiocy of that business in Kalare, I’m frankly surprised that he’s alive right now, much less on his feet.”
“For some reason,” Gaius said quietly, “I find it comforting to know that growing old isn’t this painful for everyone.”
Ehren looked up to see the First Lord standing in the doorway. He coughed, a wheezing sound, and pressed his hand to his chest with a grimace. “In my tonic, you say?”
Sireos nodded. “I’m sorry, Sextus.”
Gaius took this news without expression. “How much time did she take from me, do you think?”
“There’s no way to be sure.”
“There seldom is,” Gaius said, his voice slightly harder. “How long, Sireos?”
“Five years. Maybe ten.” The physician shrugged.
A small smile quirked the corners of the First Lord’s mouth. “Well. I suppose that makes the two of us even, then.”
Ehren turned to him. “Sire…”
Gaius waved a hand. “I’ve taken as much from her, and better years, at that. She was a child, caught up in games she had no way to understand or avoid. I’m not willing to waste what time remains to me on the matter.”
“Sire. This is
“No, Sir Ehren. This is a footnote. There is no time for arrests, investigations, and trials.” Gaius reached out to a weapons stand that was set up beside the door and buckled on his sword belt. “I’m afraid the Vord have arrived.”
Gaius stood on the broad balcony, looking down as the Vord came for Alera Imperia. At his murmured word, the edges of the balcony had become one enormous windcrafting, focusing the view into a greatly magnified image whenever one stood at the rail and looked down. All Ehren needed to do was stand at the railing and stare at a particular portion of the lower city, and his view of it would suddenly rush forward, showing him the outer walls, more than a mile away, in crystalline clarity.
It was a little disconcerting, and gave him an odd, spinning sense of vertigo.
If there was a future.
“Ah, I thought so,” Gaius said. “Look.”
Ehren came to the First Lord’s side and stared in the direction he indicated-south, over the plains surrounding the capital. The Vord had crested the most distant ridge that could be seen from the Citadel in a solid black line, like a living shadow that rolled steadily forward. Most of the ground troops were the four-legged creatures that they had seen before, but for every dozen or so of them, there walked a single creature shaped something like an enormous