Storm Warning - Mercedes Lackey [101]
The clerk presented his papers to the Queen and bowed himself out. She looked straight at Ulrich as she accepted them, but she waited until the clerk was gone before saying anything. “My Lord Ulrich,” Selenay said smoothly, “has your leader any interest in this situation while it remains on the opposite side of her borders?”
Karal fully expected Ulrich to say nothing, but once again, his master surprised him. “I would be lying, and we both know it, if I said that this was not a very tempting situation for us, your Highness,” he replied, just as smoothly. “The secular advisors to Her Holiness would like nothing better than to annex a bit of Hardorn while the situation is so very unstable, and they have, in fact, so advised her. We might already have done so—but for one insurmountable barrier.” He raised his eyebrow. “The Voice of Flame spoke through Her Holiness and made His Will quite plain, to the public in general, and again to Her Holiness in her private meditations. Vkandis Sunlord does not approve of the notion of increasing Karse beyond the present border, and will make His displeasure clear to anyone who flouts His holy Will. Since that displeasure has been known to be fatal, no one has suggested any more annexations.”
One of the Valdemar Councilors snorted in derision, but it was not Ulrich who answered that clear expression of disbelief.
“I do assure you, my lord,” the Shin’a’in envoy said, in a tone of voice that put frost on the rim of every glass in the room, “while deities are not known for personally manifesting Their wrath inside your realm, we who live outside are quite accustomed to hearing our gods and obeying them. It is more than faith that governs us, it is fact.”
The Councilor in question flushed a painful scarlet and mumbled an apology in Ulrich’s direction. The Priest bowed slightly in acknowledgment and acceptance, and the Queen took the floor again.
“It is just as tempting for Valdemar to act during this period of confusion,” Selenay said gravely. “We are overcrowded with Hardornen refugees, for one thing. It would be very convenient for us to send them back into their own land again, under Valdemaran supervision. Sending military advisors, perhaps?”
The Councilor for the East asked for the floor. “We have been encouraging them to go back to Hardorn and take back their own land again, but it’s very difficult to convince them to do so when we can promise them no help. Ancar drained his land dry, and times would be very hard there without an army of occupation holding half the country. They simply cannot do anything against the Empire without substantial aid.”
“But if we offer them aid, we open up another bag of troubles entirely,” the Lord Marshal said instantly. “At the moment, Hardorn is still a buffer between us and the Empire, and the Emperor seems in no great hurry to take the rest of the country. If the Emperor decided that offering aid to Hardorn was a direct act of aggression, he could escalate his occupation in order to get at us. Frankly, he can move more troops and resources faster than we can respond. I don’t advise any kind of intervention, no matter what words or titles we cloak it in.” His mouth twitched in a grimace of chagrin. “I may be a military man, but I know my facts. Fact one—we don’t have the resources to take on the Empire. Fact two—we can’t afford to antagonize them. We have no choice.”
“What is the Empire doing right now?” Prince Daren asked. In answer, Selenay gestured to Kerowyn, who stood up with a sheaf of papers in her hand.
“I have an intelligence report on precisely that right here,” Kerowyn said, her voice carrying easily to all parts of the room. “In essence, they’ve stopped moving forward. My agents say that there is a new commander in charge of the entire operation, someone reporting directly to Emperor Charliss. This new commander