and back.” And a few cups might loosen Ghort’s tongue.
* * *
“Damn, man!” Ghort said as soon as he walked in. “You look like shit on a stick. You need to get more sleep.”
“Put the wine on the desk, Cederig. And stand by. Pinkus, I’ll be getting all the rest I can stand starting real soon.”
“You know what’s up.”
“Of course I do.”
“Consent’s still got eyes in Brothe.”
“That, too. More importantly, several Principatés aren’t happy about Doneto taking over. Some hoped I would overrule the election.”
“Care to name names?”
“I don’t think so.”
“What do you think?”
“I’m not some old-time legionary commander who wants to control who gets to be the next Emperor.”
“Yeah. The boss figured you’d see it that way. I meant, what’s your opinion? About Doneto.”
“He’s the best man available. But I wish he wasn’t nuts about the Connec.”
“Yeah. I don’t know for sure but I got a notion your Count Raymone won’t get no joy out of him.”
“Raymone will have plans in place. Doneto should let the old grievances go. He’s supposed to be everybody’s Patriarch.”
“Told him that myself. I don’t think he was listening. Hey. Pipe. No hard feelings?” Ghort was well into his first bottle. He had begun to slur.
“No reason. You didn’t fire me. Actually, I might’ve quit if I hadn’t been fired. I’ve had about all of this that I can stand. I couldn’t work for a busybody like him. I want a boss who tells me what he wants, then gets out of the way and lets me do it.”
“That scares the busybodies. Makes them afraid they might get run over themselves.”
Hecht understood that. He had dealt with it most of his adult life. It was the reason he had been sent west. Gordimer was afraid of getting trampled. “The problem is, those men see the world in the mirror of themselves.”
“Huh?”
“They’re scared because they know what they’d do in my place. Which means that they start from a different notion of honor.”
“Gotcha. But, hey, Pipe, you can’t never claim you don’t pull a slick once in a while your own self. Damn, this grape juice is fine.”
“Me? A fast one?”
“I ain’t as dumb as I look. You knew the change was coming. You jumped in on them crusaders anyways.”
“I did. Yes.” Hecht grinned.
“Doneto ain’t gonna like that.”
“What’s he going to do? Fire me?”
“That’s rich. I don’t know. He can be a vindictive prick. Like what he figures on doing to Count Raymone and Antieux.”
“Which would be?”
“I don’t know, Pipe. Not yet. But I ain’t gonna be nowhere near that berg when it happens. I don’t want to be remembered for what I’m scared is gonna happen.”
“In that case, I regret being so effective against the revenants.”
“Thanks, buddy. That’s all I need. Them goddamned spook demons traipsin’ round behind me, kicking my ass every time I bend over.”
“It would keep you humble.”
“This stuff right here keeps me from gettin’ bigger than myself.” Ghort took a long draw of wine, stared at his feet for a dozen seconds. “An’ I keep wonderin’ how long it’ll be before he fires me.”
“Look at it this way. Who could possibly replace Pinkus Ghort?”
“A good question, Pipe. A fine question. But you gotta remember, Doneto has got some huge blind spots. That might be one of them.”
“When do you plan to take charge?”
“Officially? When the Interregnum is up. If you want to work it that way. Otherwise, anytime after my core staff gets here.”
“You going to fire my guys, too?”
“Have to. Most of them. What I was told. I figure they wouldn’t stay on, no how. The Brotherhood ones is all gonna report back to the Castella. That Addam Hauf is a ball of fire. The rest are loyal to you. According to Doneto. My first job will be to vet all the officers, to see which ones need to go and which ones are loyal to the Church or their pay.”
“Too bad. This was an effective force. It won’t be anymore.”
Ghort shrugged. “Way of the world, Pipe. Sad way of the world. I need a place to lie down. This shit was just too damned good.” He put the wine bottle aside. Empty.
* * *
The Captain-General did what he could to hamstring a new crusade against the Connec. Falcons disappeared. Firepowder, likewise. Titus Consent’s records, and those of the quartermasters, turned sloppy, incomplete, and confused. Hecht suffered considerable guilt. Which he handled by telling himself Pinkus Ghort would still get paid. He would just have to work harder to