A full-command gathering was slated for the very night the
Luckily, Smiley’s was now unoccupied, as Surly’s burgeoning agency had long since outgrown its limited quarters and had moved its operations to an undisclosed location among the warehouses along the waterfront, so Dancer had to unlock the doors to the bar and light the lamps along the walls in the abandoned common room. Kellanved walked up the stairs as if nothing had changed. Sighing, Dancer picked up a lamp and followed.
He found the mage slumped behind his desk, chin in both fists, staring at nothing. The fellow had barely said two words since leaving the field of flints, and Dancer was becoming rather worried. ‘So it didn’t pan out,’ he offered as he lit three more lamps. ‘Not everything’s going to work out. Look at Heng.’
‘Yes,’ the mage murmured, his eyes slit. ‘I haven’t finished with Heng.’
‘Let’s not get ahead of ourselves, shall we? What’s the plan?’
‘The plan?’ Kellanved echoed, distracted. ‘Plan for what?’
‘The plan for Nap,’ Dancer answered, rather tersely. ‘The topic of the night.’
‘Ah.’ The mage shrugged dismissively. ‘As before, I suppose. It doesn’t matter.’
Dancer studied him for a time: chin in fists and elbows on the desk, he looked like a sulking child. Yet Dancer knew this was much worse – the mood was one of those black pools of melancholia that could swallow a man. It was strange; the fellow could be so driven at times, yet one setback and he was utterly dejected. Bickering, however, would only make things worse, so he clenched his teeth and nodded. ‘Very well. As before then. You haven’t eaten in ages – are you hungry?’
Kellanved shook his head and let go a deep sigh.
Dancer pushed from the wall. ‘Well I am. I’m going to see if Surly’s left us anything here.’
The mage merely waved him off.
The kitchens, unfortunately, had been emptied. Dancer emerged to find the Dal Hon swordsman in the common room. ‘Dassem!’
The swordsman opened his mouth to answer, but paused, frowning his uncertainty. ‘Just what,’ he asked, ‘do I call you?’
‘Dancer will do.’
‘No title?’
‘Gods no.’ Dancer invited him up the stairs. ‘And what have you been busy with?’
‘Training the troops. Your marines.’
‘Marines?’
The lad pushed open the door to the offices. ‘Yes. They all fight at sea, and can double as sailors, and vice versa. Therefore, marines.’ He bowed to Kellanved. ‘Magister.’
The mage did not answer; he was playing with something on his desk.
‘Training in what style?’ Dancer asked.
‘Shortsword, shield and spear.’
Dancer was surprised. ‘Like the old legion?’
‘Exactly.’
‘But cavalry dominates the field from Quon to Gris. Infantry is an afterthought.’
‘These days, yes. But that’s not how it used to be. A well organized and disciplined infantry can repulse a horse charge. Cavalry used to have a very minor role in war.’
‘War,’ Dancer echoed, with some distaste. And yet, he supposed, that was what this was about, after all.
Tayschrenn entered, then peered about looking rather perplexed. Dancer realized that the only chair in the room was the one under Kellanved’s bum.
Well, perhaps it would help shorten the meeting.
Surly and Cartheron entered, with nods all round. The Napans, the Kartoolian mage and Dassem all looked to Kellanved, but the wizened mock-old mage didn’t raise his head from the object he was turning on the desk.
After a few uncomfortable moments Dancer cleared his throat and addressed Surly. ‘We are secure here?’ She nodded. He looked at Tayschrenn. ‘Any active Warren magics?’ The mage shook his head. ‘Very well. Cartheron, when can we move against Nap?’
The fellow looked to the ceiling and scratched his unshaven jaw. ‘Dawn of the third day from now.’
‘How many ships?’ Dassem asked.
Their High Fist blew out a breath. ‘Some forty. All we can scrape together.’
The swordsman eyed Surly. ‘And is that a credible threat?’
Her habitual stern expression soured even more. ‘Not really. It’s not enough.’
Arms crossed, his back against a wall, Tayschrenn leaned forward. ‘Are you saying they will see through it?’
‘They will wonder why we would be so … hasty, and foolish …’
Dancer looked at Kellanved.
The mage rubbed his eyes and let out a long-suffering sigh. ‘Yes, yes. They will see a foolish inexperienced ruler throwing away his forces in an ill-considered attack. Very well.’ He waved his hands as if to shoo them from the room. ‘Go on – go ahead.’
Surly crossed her arms. ‘There is still the matter of who goes.’
Kellanved’s beady eyes slit almost closed. ‘Meaning …?’
She pointed a finger. ‘
He slumped back in his chair, appalled. ‘Really? I’ll have you know I have important matters to pursue. Research into forbidden secrets. Lost artefacts. Mysterious … things.’