Yet she'd come to the conclusion that she dared not allow love to blind her any longer. The world was a larger, and a more complex, and an infinitely more dangerous place than even she had realized, and if she and her brother-her rightful prince, despite his youth-were to survive in it, she could cling to no illusions about who might be her enemies, who might claim to be her friends, and why. She knew Phylyp Ahzgood, the man her father had chosen as his children's guardian and adviser, had always seen the world-and her father-more clearly than she. And she suspected he'd been trying as gently as possible to train her eyes to see as his did.
I'll try, Phylyp, she thought now as the first heavy raindrops pattered against the stonework and splashed her cheeks. I'll try. I only hope we have the time for me to learn your lessons.
"Is she hanging out the window again, Tobys?" Phylyp Ahzgood, the Earl of `Coris, asked wryly.
"Couldn't say as how she's hanging out the window, My Lord," Tobys Raimair replied in a judicious tone. He stroked his walrus mustache thoughtfully, bald head gleaming in the lamplight. "Might be she's closed it by now. Might be she hasn't, too." He shrugged. "Girl misses the weather, if you'll pardon my saying so."
"I know she does," Coris said, and smiled sadly. "You should've seen her in Corisande, Tobys. I swear she spent every minute she could on horseback somewhere. Either that, or sailing in the bay. It used to drive Prince Hektor's guardsmen crazy trying to keep an eye on her!"
"Aye?" Raimair cocked his head, still stroking his mustache, then chuckled. "Aye, I can believe that. Wish to Langhorne she could do the same thing here, too!"
"You and I both," Coris said. "You and I both. But even if the King would let her, we couldn't, could we?"
"No, I don't suppose we could, My Lord," Raimair agreed heavily.
They looked at one another in silence for several seconds. It would have been difficult to imagine a greater contrast between two men. Coris was fair-haired, of no more than average build, possibly even a bit on the slender side, aristocratically groomed and dressed in the height of fashion. Raimair looked like exactly what he was: a veteran of thirty years' service in the Corisandian Army. Dark-eyed, powerfully built, plainly dressed, he was as tough in both mind and body as he looked. He was also, as Captain Zhoel Harys had said when he recommended Raimair to Coris as Irys' bodyguard, "good with his hands."
And large and sinewy hands they were, too, Coris thought approvingly.
"Pardon me for asking, My Lord, and if it's none of my affair, you've only to say so, but is it my imagination or are you feeling just a mite more nervous of late?"
"Odd, Tobys. I never realized you had an imagination."
"Oh, aye, I've an imagination, My Lord." Raimair smiled thinly. "And it's been whispering to me here lately." His smile disappeared. "I'm not so very happy about what I'm hearing out of ... places to the north, let's say."
Their eyes met. Then, after a moment, Coris nodded.
"Point taken," he said quietly. The Earl of Coris had learned long ago how risky it was to judge books by their covers. And he'd also learned long ago that a noncommissioned officer didn't serve as long as Raimair had without a brain that worked. Other people, including quite a few who should know better, forgot that all too often. They came to regard soldiers as little more than unthinking pawns, enforcers in uniform who were good for killing enemies and making certain one's own subjects were kept firmly in their places, but not for any tasks more mentally challenging than that. That blindness was a weakness Prince Hektor's spymaster had used to his advantage more than once, and he had no intention of forgetting that now.
"She's not discussed it with me, you understand, My Lord," Raimair said in an equally quiet voice, "but she's not so good as she thinks she is at hiding the way the wind's setting behind those eyes of hers. She's worried, and so are you, I think. So the thing that's working its way through my mind is whether or not the lads and I should be worried as well?"
"I wish I could answer that." Coris paused, gazing into the lamp flame and pursing his lips in thought for several seconds. Then he looked back at Raimair.
"She and the Prince are valuable game pieces, Tobys," he said. "You know that. But I've been receiving reports lately from home."
He paused again, and Raimair nodded.
"Aye, My Lord. I saw the dispatch from Earl Anvil Rock and this Regency Council when it arrived."
"I'm not talking about the Earl's official reports," Coris said softly. "He'll know as well as I do that any report he sends to Talkyra's going to be opened and read by at least one set of spies before it ever reaches me or the Princess. And don't forget-he's in the position of someone cooperating with the Charisians. Whether he's doing that willingly or only under duress, it's likely he'll bear that in mind whenever he drafts those reports he knows other people are going to read. The last thing he'd want would be for ... certain parties to decide he's cooperating with Charis because he wants to. I'm not saying he'd lie to me or to Princess Irys, but there are ways to tell the truth, and then there are ways to tell the truth. For that matter, simply leaving things out is often the best way of all to mislead someone."
"But the Earl's her cousin, My Lord." Raimair sounded troubled. "Are you thinking he'd be looking to feather his own nest at her expense? Hers and the boy's? I mean, the Prince's?"
"I think it's ... unlikely." Coris shrugged. "Anvil Rock was always sincerely attached to Prince Hektor and his children. I'm inclined to think he's doing the very best he can under the circumstances to look after Prince Daivyn's interests, and that's certainly the way his correspondence reads. Unfortunately, we're fourteen thousand miles as the wyvern flies from Manchyr, and a lot can change when a man finds himself sitting in a prince's chair, however he got there. That's why I left eyes and ears of my own behind to give me independent reports."
"And those would be the ones you're talking about now?" Raimair's eyes narrowed intently, and Coris nodded.
"They are. And they accord quite well with Earl Anvil Rock's, as a matter of fact. That's one of the things that worries me."
"Now you've gone and lost me, My Lord."
"I didn't mean to." Coris showed his teeth in a tight smile. "It's just that I'd rather hoped the Earl was putting a better face on things than circumstances really warranted. That there was more unrest-more resistance to the Charisians and, especially, to the 'Church of Charis'-than he's reported and that he was trying to cover his backside a bit in his dispatches to us here by understating it."
Raimair's eyebrows rose, and Coris shrugged.
"I don't want to hear about blood running in the streets any more than anyone else, Tobys. I'll admit a part of me would like to think Corisandians would be slow to accept foreign rulers they think had Prince Hektor assassinated, but I'd sooner not get anyone killed or any towns burned to the ground, either. You'll know better than I would how ugly suppressing rebellions can be."
Raimair nodded grimly, thinking about his previous prince's punitive campaigns to Zebediah, and Coris nodded back.
"Unfortunately, there are some people-the ones in the north you were just speaking of, for example-who aren't going to be happy to hear there's not widespread rebellion against Cayleb and Sharleyan. And they're going to be even less happy to hear the Reformists are making solid progress in the Church."
He paused again, unwilling even here, even with Raimair, to name specific names, but the ex-sergeant nodded once more.
"It's in my mind that those unhappy people will see any reports of cooperation and acceptance in Corisande as dangerous. They'll want as much as possible of the Charisians' manpower tied down back home, and any erosion of the Temple Loyalists' strength is going to be completely unacceptable to them. And there's not anyone they can reach in Corisande to change the way our people are beginning to think back home."
Raimair's eyes widened, then narrowed with sudden, grim understanding. He'd quietly assembled a tiny guard force-no more than fifteen men, plus himself-who were loyal not to King Zhames of Delferahk but to Princess Irys Daykyn and the Earl of Coris. He'd chosen them carefully, and the fact that Prince Hektor had established lavish accounts on the continents of Haven and Howard to support his espionage networks and that the Earl of Coris had access to them meant Raimair's men were quite comfortably paid. And not by King Zhames.
Or by Mother Church.
From the outset, Raimair's primary attention had been focused on the Delferahkans and any threat from the Charisians who'd assassinated Prince Hektor and his older son. Over the last couple of months, he'd begun to entertain a few doubts of his own about exactly who had assassinated whom, yet he'd never put together what Coris seemed to be suggesting now. But for all her youth, Princess Irys had a sometimes dismayingly sharp brain. The ex-sergeant never doubted for a moment that she'd already considered what he was considering now, whether she wanted to admit it even to herself or not.
And that would explain a lot about the brooding darkness he'd sensed within her, especially since the Grand Inquisitor had begun his purge of the vicarate and the episcopate.
"It would be an awful shame if something were to happen to Prince Daivyn that led to all that rebellion back in Corisande after all, wouldn't it, My Lord?" he asked softly, and Coris nodded.
"It would indeed," he agreed. "So perhaps you had better have a word with the lads, Tobys. Tell them it's especially important to be on the watch for any Charisian assassins just now. Or, for that matter"-he looked into Raimair's eyes once more-"anyone else's assassins."
.III.
King's Harbor Citadel, Helen Island, Howell Bay, Kingdom of Old Charis Admiral Sir Domynyk Staynair, Baron Rock Point, stood gazing out a familiar window at an incredibly crowded anchorage. His own flagship lay well out on the seventeen mile stretch of King's Harbor Bay, but dozens of other galleons were moored literally side-by-side all along the waterfront. Others lay to anchors and buoys while flotillas of small craft wended their way through the press.
From this high in the Citadel they looked like toy boats, growing smaller as the eye moved farther and farther away from the wharves and piers, and he'd never in his wildest imagination dreamed he might see that many warships anchored here.
They'd arrived over the last several weeks in fits and starts as the men who had originally crewed them were taken ashore or moved to one of the old ships which had been converted into prison hulks to accommodate them. Under other circumstances, in another war, those men probably would have been paroled and repatriated to the Temple Lands and the Harchong Empire. In these circumstances, in this war, that was out of the question, and so the Kingdom of Old Charis had been forced to find places to put them.
Finding places to safely confine and guard upward of sixty thousand men, more than a few of whom were religious zealots perfectly prepared to die for what they believed God wanted of them, was a serious challenge. Safeholdian wars never produced POWs on a scale like that, and no realm had ever been prepared to accommodate them. The sheer expense of feeding that many prisoners, far less maintaining security and hopefully seeing to it that their living conditions were at least bearable, was one reason the practice of paroling honorably surrendered enemies was so universal. Perhaps Charis should have foreseen something like this, but it hadn't occurred to any of the native Safeholdians to even think about it. Nor, for that matter, had it occurred to Merlin Athrawes.
Rock Point had been inclined, when he first recognized the magnitude of the problem, to think Merlin should have seen it coming. After all, unlike Rock Point, Nimue Alban had been born and raised in the Terran Federation. She'd grown up learning about the long and bloody history of a planet called Old Terra, where prisoner hauls like this one had once been almost routine. But that was the point, he'd realized. It had been history to her ... and there'd been no surrenders, no POWs, in the only war Nimue had actually fought, which explained why Merlin hadn't anticipated the problem either.
Oh, quit bitching, Rock Point told himself now. The problem you've got is one hell of a lot better than the alternative would've been!
Which was undoubtedly true, however inconvenient things might seem at the moment.
Most of the ships closer to shore still flew the imperial Charisian flag above the green, scepter-badged banner of the Church of God Awaiting. A handful still showed red and green banners with the crossed scepter and saber of the Harchong Empire, instead, but most of those were moored farther out, or in one of the other anchorages. King's Harbor was more concerned with the ships which had been fully armed, and surveyors and petty officers swarmed over those vessels like locusts. Their reports would tell Rock Point how quickly the prize vessels could be put into Charisian service ... assuming he could find crews for them, of course.
And with Bryahn Lock Island's death, that decision would be his, at least until Cayleb could get home.
An embarrassment of riches, that's what it is, he thought. Thank God the Church doesn't have them anymore, but what the hell am I going to do with all of them?
He shook his head and turned back from the window to the two officers he'd actually come here to see.
Commodore Sir Ahlfryd Hyndryk, Baron Seamount, stood before one of the slate sheets which covered his office's walls. As always, the cuffs of his sky-blue uniform tunic were dusted with chalk and the fingers of his good hand were stained with ink. The short, plump Seamount was about as far removed from the popular imagination's image of a sea officer as it would be possible to get, yet his fertile brain and driving energy were one of the primary reasons all those prize ships were anchored in King's Harbor this sunny summer afternoon.
The rail-thin, black-haired commander standing respectfully to one side was at least ten or twelve years younger than Seamount. He radiated all the intensity and energy people tended not to notice just at first in his superior officer, and his left hand was heavily bandaged.
"It's good to see you, Ahlfryd," Rock Point said. "I apologize for not getting out here sooner, but-"
He shrugged, and Seamount nodded.
"I understand, Sir. You've had a lot to do."
The commodore's eyes dropped to the enormous rottweiler lying quietly beside his desk. Rock Point had inherited the acting rank of high admiral from Bryahn Lock Island, but Seamount had inherited Keelhaul. Frankly, the commodore was more than a little surprised the big, boisterous dog had survived his master's death. For the first couple of five-days, he'd been afraid Keelhaul was going to grieve himself to death, and he still hadn't fully regained the exuberance which had always been so much a part of him.
"Yes, I have." Rock Point inhaled deeply, then crossed to one of the office's armchairs. His peg leg thumped on the stone floor, the sound quite different from the sound his remaining shoe made, and he seated himself with a sigh of relief.
"Yes, I have," he repeated, "but I've finally managed to steal a couple of days away from all the reams of paperwork. So why don't the two of you dazzle me with what you've been up to while I've been away?"
"I don't know if 'dazzle' is exactly the right word, Sir," Seamount replied with a smile. "I do think you're going to be impressed, though. Pleased, too, I hope."
"I'm always impressed by your little surprises, Ahlfryd," Rock Point said dryly. "Of course, sometimes I'm not so sure I'm going to survive them."
"We'll try to get you back to Destroyer undamaged, Sir."
"I'm vastly reassured. Now, about those surprises?"
"Well, there are several of them, actually, Sir."
Seamount crossed to the slate wall and reached for a piece of chalk. Rock Point watched him a bit warily. The commodore was a compulsive sketcher who had a tendency to illustrate his points enthusiastically.
"First, Sir, as you ... suggested last time you were both here," Seamount continued, "I've had Commander Mahndrayn and the Experimental Board finishing up the work on the rifled artillery pieces. Master Howsmyn's provided us with the first three wire wound pieces, and they've performed admirably. They're only twelve-pounders-although the shot weight's actually closer to twenty-four pounds, given how much longer it is in proportion to its diameter-but as proof of the concept, they've been completely satisfactory. Master Howsmyn is confident he could go to production on much heavier weapons if and when you and Their Majesties should determine the time is right."
"That's excellent news, Ahlfryd!" Rock Point's smile of pleasure was completely genuine, even though he'd already known what Seamount was going to report. Ehdwyrd Howsmyn had kept him fully informed. Unfortunately, Seamount wasn't part of the inner circle, which meant explaining how Rock Point could have come by his knowledge would have been a trifle difficult.
"I'm not sure how our sudden acquisition of so many galleons is going to affect that decision," he continued. "On the one hand, we've already revealed the existence of the shell-firing smoothbores, and I'm sure that bastard Clyntahn is going to provide dispensations right and left while the Church works on duplicating them. I still don't see the additional theoretical range being all that valuable in a sea fight, what with the ships' relative motion, but I'm beginning to think that if Ehdwyrd has the capacity available it might not be a bad idea to begin manufacturing and stockpiling the rifled pieces. That way they'd be available quickly if and when, as you say, we decide to shift over to them."
"I'll look into that, Sir," Seamount said, chalk clacking as he turned to make a note to himself on the waiting slate. "It'll probably mean he needs to further increase his wire-drawing capacity, as well, so the additional leadtime would almost certainly be a good thing."
Rock Point nodded, and Seamount nodded back.
"Second," he continued, "at that same meeting you suggested Commander Mahndrayn give some thought to the best way to protect a ship from shellfire. He's done that, and discussed it with Sir Dustyn Olyvyr, as well. We don't have anything like a finished plan yet, but a few things have become evident to us."
"Such as?" Rock Point prompted, and Seamount gestured for Mahndrayn to take over.
"Well," the commander said in the soft, surprisingly melodious tenor which always sounded just a bit odd to Rock Point coming out of someone who seemed so intense, "the first thing we realized was that wooden armor simply won't work, Sir. We can make the ships' scantlings thicker, but even if they're too thick for a shell to actually smash through them, we can't make them thick enough to guarantee it won't penetrate into them before it detonates. If that happens, it would be almost as bad as no 'armor' at all. It could even be worse, given the fire hazard and how much worse the splinters would be. Another objection to wood is its weight. It's a lot more massive for the same strength than iron, and the more we looked at it, the more obvious it became that iron armor that prevented shells from penetrating at all or actually broke them up on impact was the only practical answer."
"Practical?" Rock Point asked with a faint smile, and Mahndrayn chuckled sourly.
"Within limits, Sir. Within limits." The commander shrugged. "Actually, Master Howsmyn seems to feel that with his new smelting processes and the heavier hammer and rolling mills those 'accumulators' of his make possible he probably can provide iron plate to us in useful thicknesses and dimensions within the next six months to a year. He's not sure about quantities yet, but my observation's been that every one of his estimates for increased productivity has erred on the side of conservatism. And one thing's certain-we haven't seen any evidence that anyone on the other side would be in a position to match his production for years to come."
"That's true enough," Rock Point conceded. In fact, it was even truer than Mahndrayn realized, although that didn't mean enough small foundries couldn't produce at least some useful quantities of armor, even using old-fashioned muscle power to hammer out the plates.
"Assuming Master Howsmyn can manufacture the plate, and that we can come up with a satisfactory way of securing it to the hull, there are still going to be weight considerations," Mahndrayn continued. "Iron gives better protection than wood, but building in enough protection out of anything to stop shellfire is going to drive up displacements. That's one of the problems I've been discussing with Sir Dustyn.
"I understand Doctor Mahklyn at the College is also working with Sir Dustyn on mathematical ways to predict displacements and sail power and stability. I'm afraid I'm not too well informed on that, and neither is Sir Dustyn, for that matter. He's a practical designer of the old school, but he's at least willing to give Doctor Mahklyn's formulas a try once they're finished. In the meantime, though, it's obvious hull strength is already becoming an issue in our current designs. There's simply an upper limit on the practical dimensions and weights which can be constructed out of a material like wood, and we're approaching them rapidly. Sir Dustyn's been working on several ways to reinforce the hull's longitudinal strength, including diagonal planking and angled trusses between frames, but the most effective one he's come up with uses iron. Basically, he's boring holes in the ships' frames, then using long iron bolts between adjacent frames to stiffen the hull. Obviously, he hasn't had very long to observe the approach's success at sea, but so far he says it looks very promising.
"When I approached him about the notion of hanging iron armor on the outside of the ship, however, he told me immediately that he didn't think a wooden hull was going to be very practical. I'd already expected that response, so I asked him what he thought about going to a ship that was wooden-planked but iron-framed. Frankly, I expected him to think the notion was preposterous, but it turns out he'd already been thinking in that direction, himself. In fact, his suggestion was that we should think about building the entire ship out of iron."
Rock Point's eyes widened, and this time his surprise was genuine. Not at the notion of iron or steel-hulled vessels, but at the discovery that Sir Dustyn Olyvyr was already thinking in that direction.
"I can see where that would offer some advantages," he said after a moment. "But I can see a few drawbacks, too. For example, you can repair a wooden hull almost anywhere. A shattered iron frame member would be just a bit more difficult for the carpenters to fix! And then there's the question of whether or not even Master Howsmyn could produce iron in quantities like that."
"Oh, I agree entirely, Sir. I was impressed by the audacity of the suggestion, though, and the more I've thought about it, the more I have to say I believe the advantages would vastly outweigh the drawbacks-assuming, as you say, Master Howsmyn could produce the iron we needed. That's for the future, however. For the immediate future, the best we're going to be able to do is go to composite building techniques, with iron frames and wooden planking. And the truth is that that'll still give us significant advantages over all-wooden construction."
"I can see that. At the same time, I'd be very reluctant to simply scrap all the ships we've already built-not to mention the ones we've just captured-and start over with an entirely new construction technique."
"Yes, Sir. As an intermediate step, we've been looking at the possibility of cutting an existing galleon down by a full deck. We'd sacrifice the spar deck armament and completely remove the forecastle and quarterdeck. That should save us enough weight to allow the construction of an iron casemate to protect the broadside guns. We'd only have a single armed deck, but the guns would be much better protected. And we've also been considering that with shell-firing weapons we could reduce the number of broadside guns and actually increase the destructiveness of the armament. Our present thinking is that we might completely remove the current krakens and all the carronades from a ship like Destroyer, say, and replace them with half as many weapons with an eight- or nine-inch bore. The smaller gun would fire a solid rifled shot somewhere around a hundred and eighty to two hundred pounds. The shell would probably be about half that, allowing for the bursting charge. In an emergency, it could fire a sixty-eight-pound round shot, which would still be more destructive than just about anything else currently at sea."
"Rate of fire would drop significantly with that many fewer guns," Rock Point pointed out, and Mahndrayn nodded.
"Absolutely, Sir. On the other hand, each hit would be enormously more destructive. It takes dozens of hits, sometimes hundreds, to drive a galleon out of action with solid shot. A handful of hundred-pound exploding shells would be more than enough to do the job, and just to indicate how the weapons would scale, a rifled thirty-pounder's shot would weigh about ninety pounds, which would give you a shell weight of only forty-five or so, so you can see the advantage the larger gun has. Of course, the smoothbore thirty-pounder's shell is only around twenty-five pounds, and its bursting charge is proportionately lighter, as well. And if both sides start armoring their vessels with iron, anything much lighter than eight inches probably won't penetrate, anyway."
"That sounds logical enough," Rock Point acknowledged. "We'll have to think about it, of course. Fortunately it's not a decision we're going to have to make anytime soon."
"I'm afraid we might have to make it sooner than you may be thinking, Sir," Seamount put in. Rock Point looked at him, and the commodore shrugged. "You're talking about the possibility of beginning production and stockpiling weapons, Sir," he reminded his superior. "If we're going to do that, we're going to have to decide which weapons to build, first."
"Now that, Ahlfryd, is a very good point," Rock Point agreed. "Very well, I'll be thinking about it, and I'll discuss it with the Emperor as soon as possible."
"Thank you, Sir." Seamount smiled. "In the meantime, we have a few other thoughts that should be more immediately applicable to our needs."
"You do?"
"Yes. You may have noticed Commander Mahndrayn's hand, Sir?"
"You mean that fathom of gauze wrapped around it?" Rock Point asked dryly.
"Exactly, Sir." Seamount held up his own left hand, which had been mangled by an explosion many years before. "I think Urvyn was trying to do me one better. Unfortunately, he failed. All of his fingers are still intact ... more or less."
"I'm relieved to hear it. Exactly what bearing does that have on our present discussion, however?"