Leo realised with a twinge of guilt that Rikke was probably among them. He wondered what she’d done after the ball last night. Probably sat on her own in the darkness, plotting his doom. He turned his eyes hastily forward, towards the magnificent standard flying at the very head of the column, its white horse rearing against a golden sun. Just the sight of it made the embers of Leo’s patriotic fervour flare back into life. A relic of a better time, when the Union was ruled by righteous warriors, not copper-counting cripples.
‘The Steadfast Standard,’ he murmured, in a voice hushed with awe.
Orso nodded. ‘The very piece of cloth that fluttered at the head of Casamir’s conquering armies.’
‘Without him there’d be no Angland at all. Now
‘Indeed.’ The crown prince sighed. ‘Makes one realise how terribly far the monarchy has fallen.’
‘I didn’t mean—’
‘Don’t worry,’ said Orso, with a sad little smile. He looked sad in general, considering this was all partly in his honour. ‘
‘Any good?’
‘I’m sure it’s less exhilarating than the original.’
Leo had to admit he quite liked the crown prince. He’d expected him to be a real wilting dandy and, yes, you wouldn’t have called him a man’s man, but there was no doubt he was a damn good-looking fellow, and he turned out to be really quite thoughtful and generous. A hard man to hate. Leo was learning that people and their reputations rarely had much in common. He found himself, ironically, joining the Arch Lector in trying to inflate Orso’s achievements.
‘You liberated Valbeck, Your Highness. Put down a bloody rebellion.’
‘I surrounded a city and had a very good breakfast, discussed terms and had a very good lunch, accepted a surrender and had a very good dinner, then found the majority of my prisoners already hanged when I got up the next morning. My own fault for being a late riser, I suppose.’
‘But you’re the heir to the throne—’
‘My parents might agree on nothing else, but they do agree on that. Being heir to the throne takes no effort, however. Believe me, I know. You, on the other hand, have risked your life.’ He waved a hand towards the scar on Leo’s face. ‘Covered with the red marks of bravery! My most serious wound was sustained when I struck my head getting out of bed dead drunk. The bleeding was quite spectacular, to be fair, but the glory was minimal.’
Leo’s eye was caught by a knot of dark-skinned beggars in the crowd. ‘Lot of
‘Troubles in the South. Refugees are pouring across the Circle Sea, seeking new lives.’
‘Fought a war against the Gurkish thirty years ago, didn’t we? You sure they can be trusted?’
‘Some can and some can’t, I would’ve thought. Just like Northmen. Just like anyone. And they’re not all from Gurkhul.’
‘Where, then?’
‘All across the South,’ said Orso. ‘Kadir, Taurish, Yashtavit, Dagoska. Dozens of languages. Dozens of cultures. And they’ve chosen to come here. Makes you proud, doesn’t it?’
‘If you say so.’ Leo knew nothing about those places except that he didn’t want the Union to become one of them. He took no pride in the watering down of his homeland’s character. ‘Don’t you worry there might be …’ Leo felt a need to lower his voice. ‘
‘I’m not sure cannibal sorcerers are one of our most pressing problems.’
‘Some of them can steal people’s faces. That’s what I heard.’ Leo craned around to frown at those Southerners again. ‘They can disguise themselves as anyone.’
‘Then wouldn’t a pale face make a better disguise than a dark?’
Leo frowned. He hadn’t actually thought of that. ‘Just … hardly feels like the Union’s the Union any more.’
‘Surely the great strength of the Union has always been its variety. That’s why they call it a Union.’
‘Huh,’ grunted Leo. Orso would think that. He was a half-Styrian mongrel himself. Something landed in his lap. A flower. Looking towards an upstairs window, he saw a group of smiling girls, tossing down more. He grinned and blew them a kiss. Seemed the only decent thing to do.
‘Adua appears to be enjoying you,’ said Orso. ‘How have you been enjoying it?’
‘Can’t say I take to the vapours. And the politics is pretty murky, too. Since the Closed Council didn’t help fight the war, I’d hoped they’d at least help pay for it.’
‘Easier to open a gate to hell, in my experience, than the king’s purse.’
‘A royal waste of my time. But, on the other hand … I met a woman. Never met one quite like her before.’