Tigana by Guy Kay (novel24 txt) 📕
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- Author: Guy Kay
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She smiled radiantly at him and allowed him to touch her hand. ‘My dear Neso, how kind of you to lie so skilfully to an ageing woman.’
She rather liked saying that sort of thing: for, as Scelto had shrewdly observed once, if she was old, what did that make Solores?
Neso hastened to offer all the emphatic, predictable denials. He praised her gown and the vairstone, noting with a courtier’s eye and tongue how exquisitely the stones of her chalice echoed her colours that day. Then, lowering his voice towards an unearned intimacy he asked her for the eighth time at least if she happened to have heard anything further about the planned disposition of that very trivial office of Taxing Master in north Asoli.
It was, in fact, a lucrative position. The incumbent had made his fortune, or enough for his own purposes evidently, and was returning to Ygrath in a few weeks. Dianora hated that sort of graft and she had even been bold enough to say so to Brandin once. A little amused— which had irritated her—he had prosaically pointed out how difficult it was to get men to serve in places as devoid of attraction as the north of Asoli without offering them a chance at modest wealth.
His grey eyes beneath the thick dark eyebrows had rested upon her as she’d wrestled and then finally come to terms with the depressing truth inherent in this. She’d finally looked up and nodded a reluctant agreement. Which made him burst into laughter.
‘I am so relieved,’ chuckled Brandin of Ygrath, ‘that my clumsy reasoning and government meet with your approval.’ She had gone red to the roots of her hair, but then, catching his mood, had laughed herself at the absurdity of her presumption. That had been several years ago.
Now all she did was try, discreetly, to see that positions such as this one did not go to the most transparently greedy of the motley crew of petty Ygrathen courtiers from whom Brandin had to choose. Neso, she had resolved, was not getting this posting if she could help it. The problem was that d’Eymon seemed, for inscrutable reasons of his own, to be favouring Neso’s appointment. She’d already asked Scelto to see if he could find out why.
Now she let her smile fade to an earnestly benevolent look of concern as she gazed at the sleek, plump Ygrathen. Lowering her voice but without leaning towards him she murmured, ‘I am doing what I can. You should know that there seems to be some opposition.’
Neso’s eyes narrowed on the far side of the curl of smoke rising from her khav. With practised subtlety they flicked past her right shoulder to where she knew d’Eymon would still be standing by the King’s door. Neso looked back at her, eyebrows raised very slightly.
Dianora gave a small, apologetic shrug. ‘Have you a . . . suggestion?’ Neso asked, his brow furrowed with anxiety.
‘I’d start by smiling a little,’ she said with deliberate tartness. There was no point in intriguing in such a way that the whole court knew of it.
Neso forced an immediate laugh and then applauded stagily as if she’d offered an irresistible witticism.
‘Forgive me,’ he said, smiling as ordered. ‘This matters a great deal to me.’
It matters a great deal more to the people of Asoli, you greedy bloodleech, Dianora thought. She laid a hand lightly on Neso’s puffed sleeve.
‘I know it does,’ she said kindly. ‘I will do what I can. If circumstances . . . allow me to.’
Neso, whatever he was, was no stranger to this sort of thing. Once more the false laugh greeted her non-existent jest. ‘I hope to be able to assist the circumstances,’ he murmured.
She smiled again and withdrew her hand. It was enough. Scelto was going to receive some more money that afternoon. She hoped it would come to a decent part of the vairstone’s cost. As for d’Eymon, she would probably end up talking directly to him later in the week. Or as directly as discussions ever got with that man.
Sipping at her khav she moved on. People came up to her wherever she went. It was bad politics in Brandin’s court not to be on good terms with Dianora di Certando. Conversing absently and inconsequentially she kept an ear pitched for the discreet raps of the Herald’s staff that would be Brandin’s sole announcement. Rhun, she noted, was making faces at himself in one of the mirrors and laughing at the effect. He was in high humour, which was a good sign. Turning the other way she suddenly noticed a face she liked. One that was undeniably central to her own history.
It could be said, in many ways, to have been the Governor’s own fault. So anxious was he to assuage the evident frustration of Rhamanus, captain of that year’s Tribute Ship, that he ordered the Certandan serving-girl—who had apologized so very charmingly after the spilled-wine incident some time ago—to bring rather more of The Queen’s best vintages than were entirely good for any of them at the table.
Rhamanus, young enough to still be ambitious, old enough to feel his chances slipping away, had made some pointedly acid remarks earlier in the day on board the river galley about the state of affairs in Stevanien and its environs. So much of a backwater, so desultory in its collection of duties and taxes, he murmured a little too casually, that he wasn’t even sure if the galley run upriver in spring was worthwhile . . . under the present administrative circumstances.
The Governor, long past the point of ambition but needing a few more years here skimming his share of border
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