a place of learning.
Adrian shrugged, sighed, and walked around the statue to the row of legal case-scrolls he knew resided there. Then he stopped, turned on his heel and came again, coughing and clearing his throat.
Lady Tinia Redvers was composed and cool when he appeared for the second time, her long clinging silk gown-itself a violation of every sumptuary law the Confederacy Council had ever passed-draped as decorously as anything that sheer could be. She was a woman of about thirty-five, with a figure that would be plainly fat in another decade but was now on the ample side of superb, and a mass of black ringlets piled high on her head; she had the good taste to avoid more than a gold armring in the shape of a snake and ruby eardrops. The full-lipped features were amused as he bowed.
'Ah, the little Emerald. . my bodyguard's brother, aren't you?'
'I have that honor, most excellent lady,' Adrian said, straightening.
Esmond was standing by the couch now, at a creditable parade rest; he was dressed in a studded belt of black leather, a breechclout of the same, high-strapped sandals and a sword and dagger; the hilts were rich with gold and sapphires, but the edges were functional enough. His long blond hair was tousled, and there was a red mark at the base of his neck. Adrian lifted a brow a fractional inch, enough for a grin between the brothers. He lifted it a bit more at Esmond's look of well-hidden throttled fury.
'With you guarding us in the courts, and Esmondi's sword, my husband and I are
Two maids in long plain gowns-plain Western Isle cotton that would have bought two good riding velipads- came from somewhere they'd been discreetly waiting. Lady Redvers swept away in a waft of lilac scent.
Adrian calmly walked along the row of scrolls and found
'Bit distracting, all that perfume,' he said after a moment. 'And are there foundation garments under that sheer silk? I find it hard to believe they stay up like that naturally.'
He looked up sharply at his brother's growl. 'Something's wrong,' he said, a statement rather than a question.
'Of course something's wrong,' Esmond growled, flushing and rubbing at his neck. 'I didn't come here to be a he-whore, for one thing.'
'No, you came to be a weapons trainer,' Adrian said. 'Maybe you can teach our esteemed patron to use his double chin to throttle his opponents.'
'Wilder Redvers would fall down with an apoplexy if he ran three times around a training track, much less fought a bout in armor,' Esmond said bitterly. 'It's the
Adrian grinned. 'Come now, it's not as if she was eighty-and
His smile died as Esmond looked around, making a careful sweep of the nearby parts of the library. 'Brother, that isn't why I asked you to meet me here-
'
'Because Redvers isn't going to sit and wait for the man with the dagger,' Esmond said bluntly. 'Listen.' His voice dropped to a whisper. 'This morning. .'
* * *
'Admit the Emerald,' a voice said from beyond the doorway.
The guards weren't Redvers family slaves, Esmond saw. They were Confed Army veterans, grizzled stocky men with legs and arms like knotted trees. Not the smooth athlete's muscle Esmond wore, but perfectly servicable. . and the assegais that glittered in their hands had seen plenty of use.
'Sort of a tall, tow-haired one, looks like a pansy with a sword, sir?' one of the veterans said, grinning and leaning on his shield. 'Give us a kiss, pretty boy.'
'Admit him, I said, you oaf!'
'Shall we take his sword, sir?'
'Admit him!'
The veterans straightened to a braced attention. 'Sir, yessir!' the other barked. They slapped the blades of their assegais across the bosses of their shields. 'Pass, Emerald!'
Esmond straightened his shoulders and walked through the fretted-bronze doors. He'd never been in to Redvers private apartments; they were less gaudy than he'd expected. . although that was probably his wife's taste. High coffered ceilings, decent murals-by an Emerald artist, of course-and geometric-pattern floors. Pillars gave out onto balconies overlooking a courtyard of rosebushes and palms, with fountains in the shape of seagods. A dozen silk-cushioned couches of silver-inlaid bronze surrounded a table with cherries, figs, and ewers of wine; a dozen Confederate nobles lounged at their ease. The only thing missing was the bodyslaves who should have been hovering behind the couches, ready to fill cups or fan away a fly or run an errand.
The Emerald brought a fist to his chest and bowed. 'Lord,' he said, suddenly conscious of his native accent. 'You summoned me?'
His eyes flicked across the assembled nobility. A good ten or twelve million arnkets around the low table. . but at least twice that in debts. Young Mark Silva, who'd managed to assemble the slowest stable of racing velipads in Vanbert, and bet the family estates on them. Johun Audsley, a famous general and famously bitter former associate of Ark Marcomann, an even more famous general who'd died in retirement and not left a thing to his right-hand man. Tows Annersun, who'd run for every elective office and managed to offend so many highly-placed people that he'd won none of them, despite a fortune in bribes and games and free wine. . and his esteemed patron Wilder Redvers himself, ex-governor of Solinga Province for the Confederacy, extortionist and thug. A fleshy balding man just on the wrong side of fifty; muscled like a bull greatbeast when he was young, and now with a great sagging belly and wobbly undersides to his arms.
He'd also spent every penny he'd wrung out of his province on trying to be elected Speaker of the Popular Assembly, one of the two magistrates who ruled the Confederacy, as much as anyone did. Virtually every well- established noble family in and around the city must have thrown their influence and clientage against him, for him to have lost after spending
And without the opportunities of a Speaker, he was doomed. If his creditors didn't get him, the lawsuits of the provincials would-they'd be able to attract more than enough patrons in the capital, anxious to bring Redvers down and feed on the estates that would go on the block.
'Do sit down, over there, Esmondi,' Redvers said. 'Pour me some wine, and yourself, my boy.'
'We've brought you here to discuss a little matter of politics,' the Confederate noble said.
Esmond managed not to choke on the wine. Politics were for Confederate citizens-
The others murmured among themselves, nibbling on little pastries rich with nuts and creamed bananas, sipping at their wine.