surprised by the lavish beauty of the palace, but beneath it all was the comparative austerity of the court. The exorbitant taxes Charles drained from the land were for war, not pleasure. Men dressed simply, and the king himself counted only on the power of his presence to command respect. He was as burning with energy as usual and welcomed Giuliano with an instant recollection of exactly who he was.
"Ah! Returned again, Dandolo," he said enthusiastically. "Come to see how our preparations for the crusade are progressing?"
"Yes, sire," Giuliano answered, investing his expression with far more eagerness than he felt.
"Well, my friend..." Charles slapped him on the back. "All goes very well. All Europe is stirring to the call. We are about to unite Christendom. Can you see it, Dandolo? One army under God."
There was only one possible answer. "I can see it in my mind," he replied. "I look for the day when it is more than a vision, an army in the flesh."
"More than the flesh," Charles corrected him, looking at him sideways with sudden acute perception. "We need it in the steel and the wood, the wine, the salt, and the bread. We need it in the will and the courage, and in the gold, do we not?"
"We need all those things," Giuliano agreed. "But we need them supplied willingly, and not at a price we cannot pay. The cause is to win back the Holy Land for Christendom, not to enrich every merchant and shipbuilder in Europe-except justly, of course!"
Charles roared with laughter. "Ever the careful diplomat, eh? What you mean is that Venice will not promise anything until they see which way everyone else jumps. Don't be too cautious, or you'll invest too late. Anyone can tell you are traders, not soldiers." It was said with a smile, but it was an insult nevertheless.
"I am a sailor, sire," he replied. "I am for God, adventure, and profit. No man who will face the sea deserves to be called a coward."
Charles spread his arms wide. "You are right, Dandolo. I take it back. And any man who trusts the sea is a fool. You are more interesting than I thought. Come and dine with me. Come!" He held out his hand, then turned and led the way, certain that Giuliano would follow.
Every time Charles invited him to join in a game of chance, Giuliano accepted. Apart from the fact that one did not easily refuse a king, even if one was not his subject, he needed to be in Charles's company to make any judgment as to his immediate intentions. Everyone knew what they were eventually, he had made no secret of it, but the timing was of intense importance to Venice.
When they played at dice or cards, Charles was highly competitive, but Giuliano learned easily that although he did not like to be beaten, he resented even more bitterly being condescended to. Giuliano needed all his wits to play well and still lose. Once or twice he failed and won. He waited with muscles clenched, ready to defend himself, but after a moment's prickling silence, Charles swore briefly and with considerable inventiveness, then demanded a further game, at which Giuliano made absolutely certain he lost.
The word Byzantium awoke a fire in Charles's eyes, as if some legendary treasure had been named. Giuliano saw his hands tighten and the muscles in his thick wrists knot as if to grasp something precious yet infinitely elusive.
It was at sea a few days after that that Charles's more contemplative nature asserted itself. He was less sure of his own skills on the water and took some care not to attempt anything where it was possible he might fail. Giuliano twice saw him move to begin and then change his mind. It was more revealing than he could have known. He was still the younger brother, unwanted, afraid of failure, not confident enough to shrug it away. He needed to be seen to succeed every time.
Yet he had no hesitation in allowing the helmsman to take the boat through heavier seas, close in past jagged rocks of a promontory with the surge roaring past it. It was failure Charles feared, not death.
Giuliano felt a sudden understanding for him, born after his father's death and unloved by his mother. His oldest brother had been king of France and perceived by many as a saint. What was there left for a man of hunger and passion to do except demand attention by