Theodorus had gathered the men in a wide semicircle where the battle had raged, in the shadow of the great, moss-eaten boulder called the Giant’s Tear. The morning sun fell across the western ridge, its light slanting across the valley in pale, almost sacred columns, illuminating the motes of dust still hanging in the air.
The grim arithmetic of war was complete. The wounded had been tended to, the captives secured. The last of the salvaged Tatar steel had been stacked, and Leonidas was ready to depart at a moment’s notice to carry word to the capital of their victory. Now, all that remained was the reckoning.
“You have fought with honor,” Theodorus began, his voice quiet but carrying in the stillness. “You held the line when every instinct told you to break. You have won more than a battle today. You have won my respect.” He paused, letting the words settle on the exhausted, battered men. “Now, it is time I showed it.”
His gaze swept over them, and he began to recite the names of the fallen, each one a sharp, clean cut in the quiet air. “Kyriakos. Marios. Michail. Nikolaos. Petros…” He spoke the names of the ten who had perished, two during the night from their gruesome injuries, most of them on the eastern barricade where the fighting had been most savage. Ten men. Ten families now without a father, a brother, a son.
“And Georgios.”
The name landed like a physical blow. Christos, who had stood ramrod straight through the litany, seemed to shrink, his massive frame folding in on itself. His jaw clenched so hard a muscle feathered in his cheek, and he bowed his head, fighting a battle no shield could win. Leonidas escorted him away to a quiet corner.
“Their sacrifice is the ground upon which we stand today,” Theodorus continued, his voice taking on a raw, somber edge, trying to inspire a strength in his men he himself did not feel. Men had perished under his command. In none of his armchair historian fantasies had he ever considered the cost it would exact on him.
He felt the weight of their deaths, another burden to add to the tally. “We will carry that weight for the rest of our days, knowing they gave their lives so that we might keep ours.”
A profound, heavy silence descended, filled only by the whisper of the wind through the grass. Men stared at the blood-stained earth, lost in memories of the comrades who were no longer beside them.
“But we cannot live in the past,” Theodorus’s voice rose, sharpening into a commander’s steel, forcing the grief back. “We honor their memory not by dwelling on their deaths, but by living with purpose. By cherishing what they died to protect.” He pushed aside his own swirling doubts, the gnawing cost of command. There was no room for it here.
“Orestis,” he called out, his voice a clean, sharp crack. “Step forward.”
Surprised to be singled out, Orestis detached himself from the ranks. He walked with a new straightness in his spine, but his eyes were shadowed with a sleepless, penitent exhaustion. He had spent the night by Stefano’s bedside, praying for him. He stopped before his commander, his expression a mask of solemn duty.
“Kneel.”
Orestis obeyed without hesitation, sinking to one knee in the dirt.
“When I came to this fort,” Theodorus said, his voice a cold, dispassionate accounting, “You were a shell. You had abdicated your duty, closed your eyes to the suffering of your men. Your apathy nearly cost five of them their lives. Five lives. Five brothers. Five sons.”
The words were a public scourging. Orestis gritted his teeth, the shame a hot brand on his soul. “There is no excuse for what I did, Captain,” he said, his voice a low rasp, his head bowed so low his beard brushed the ground. “None.”
“I am reinstating you as Sergeant.”
Orestis’s head snapped up, his eyes wide with a shock so profound it bordered on pain. A wave of stunned murmurs rippled through the garrison. “What?” he breathed, the word a ghost of a sound.
“You, more than any man here, have earned this,” Theodorus stated, his voice ringing with absolute authority. “You tended to the sick when others were afraid. You stood on the wall and faced a charge that would have broken lesser men. When Stefanos was struck down, it was you who saved his life.” From the ranks, held up by his comrades, Stefanos watched, his left sleeve pinned empty to his tunic and his face pale from the blood loss. Although he no doubt felt the pang of loss for losing an arm, he wore a quiet, grateful smile, seeing Orestis praised so.
“You have saved the lives of your comrades, in the infirmary and on the battlefield,” Theodorus continued. Several of the men who had recovered from the flux nodded in grim, heartfelt agreement. “You have conducted yourself not with pride, but with humility.”
“Because I-I have nothing to be proud of Captain, I nearly killed them. It is only right that I give my life for them.” Orestis stammered, flabbergasted by everyone’s warm expressions and the sudden honour he was being bestowed.
“A man who cannot face his own weakness is not fit to lead,” Theodorus cut him off, his voice imperious, his posture radiating a wisdom far beyond his years. “A man who can… he is the only one who is.” He placed a hand on the kneeling man’s shoulder.
“Rise, Sergeant Orestis.”
Orestis rose, stumbling as if the weight of the honor was too much to bear. A sob tore from his throat, and he covered his face with his hands, his body shaking with an emotion too powerful to contain. “Thank you, Captain… thank you…”
The formal ranks dissolved. Men surged forward, clapping the weeping sergeant on the back, their voices a rough chorus of congratulations. Orestis hugged them, his grip crushing, his apology a broken whisper. “I’m sorry… I promise, I will be better.”
“You don’t have to apologize,” a quiet voice said. Stefanos stood before him, his gaze clear and steady. “And you don’t have to be better.” A slow, genuine smile spread across his own tear-streaked face. “You’ve already done enough.”
As the emotional tide of Orestis’s reinstatement receded, a quiet, profound peace filled it in its wake. Theodorus raised a hand, and a respectful silence fell once more over the assembled men.
“A commander cannot lead alone,” he declared, his voice ringing with purpose. “He requires strong hands to enforce his will and guide his men. Today, one hand has been restored to its rightful place.” His gaze fell upon the stoic, half-Tatar veteran who stood with his arms crossed, observing the ceremony with a professional stillness. “Stratiotes Nikos. Step forward.”
Nikos’s impassive mask fractured for a heartbeat, his eyes widening in surprise. He moved with a stiff, precise gait and came to a halt before his commander.
“Throughout these past weeks, and in the crucible of this battle, you have been a rock,” Theodorus stated. “Your calm in the face of chaos, your unwavering discipline, your keen eye… these are the qualities of a leader. A second hand is needed to steady our course. By the authority granted to me by the Megas Doux, I hereby promote you to the rank of Sergeant.”
This time, the cheer was not one of emotional relief, but of gruff, heartfelt approval. The men surged forward again, surrounding the stoic new sergeant. The celebration was different - less a weeping embrace and more a barrage of rough, affectionate pats on the back and shoulders. Nikos, caught in the center of the jubilant mob, looked profoundly uncomfortable, but a rare, small smile touched his lips.
Theodorus let the moment of camaraderie linger, then clapped his hands sharply. “The celebration is over. Gather your supplies and fetch the hostages. We ride for Probatofrourio.”
As the men moved to obey, a grim-faced figure with a poorly shaven stubble approached. Theodorus recognized him at once: Andreas, one of Iohannes’s personal guards, the man he had privately nicknamed ‘Grim’. He who had once barred the study door with contemptuous authority now offered a deep, precise bow.
“Captain Theodorus,” he said, his voice imbued with an awe that bordered on reverence. The change was stark. “We will head for Lord Iohannes’s estate to inform him of the victory. He will be relieved to hear of it.”
“Godspeed, Andreas,” Theodorus replied, his tone formal. “I trust you to ensure the hunters are also returned home, safe and with the spoils they are owed.”
The square-jawed man gave a single, sharp nod of assent and strode off, his voice already barking commands as he organized his own small detachment for the journey home.
In a secluded corner of the clearing, away from the bonfire’s raucous cheer, two giants nursed their ale. The distant sounds of celebration were a world away from the somber quiet that had settled between them.
“I was a fool,” Christos said, his voice a low rasp that did nothing to disturb the dour mood. He stared up at the clear, star-dusted sky where carrion birds circled on the high thermals, waiting for their feast.
Sergeant Leonidas said nothing, merely pushing his own half-full cup toward Christos. The gesture was a question, an invitation.
“When it was over… I was happy,” Christos confessed, his gaze falling to his own hands. They were massive, bruised things, tools of death that had been powerless to save his friend. “I felt the thrill of it. The glory. All I could think about was the next fight.” He clenched his fists until the knuckles turned white. “I was a fool.”
Leonidas regarded him with the flat, weary eyes of a man who had seen too many battles. “We all are, in the beginning.” He poured a slow, steady stream of ale into his own cup, the sound loud in the stillness. “Some come for coin, some for status. I joined the military because I had no choice. I remember praying for war, for a chance to prove myself.” He took a slow, thoughtful sip, his expression grim. “Then I saw my first friend fall. And I learned. War isn't glory, boy. It’s just pain.”
“Then why?” Christos asked, his voice raw, searching. “Why do you still fight?”
“To protect those who can’t,” Leonidas said, his voice dropping to a low, resolute growl. His sharp gaze bored into Christos’s. “To make sure that the people back in the villages never have to feel this. The only man who should hold a sword is the one who understands its weight.”
“What does that mean?”
A bitter, lopsided smile twisted Leonidas’s lips. He raised his cup, the metal glinting in the firelight, and clinked it against Christos’s.
“To Georgios,” he said simply.
Christos met his sergeant’s gaze, a flicker of understanding passing between them. “To Georgios,” he echoed quietly. They downed their cups in one long, solemn draught.
A frantic cry cut through the clearing, shattering their quiet. “Christos! Christos, where are you?!”
Agape burst into the open field, her hair wild, her face a mask of desperate relief as she scanned the celebrating soldiers. Behind her, Stratos and Despina hurried to keep pace. Christos scrambled to his feet, a dark flush rising on his bruised cheeks.
Leonidas let out a low, derisive snort, a ghost of amusement flickering in his weary eyes.
“Go on,” he grunted, giving Christos a rough shove. “Your damsel awaits.”
She saw him then, standing near the fire with the giant sergeant, his face a swollen ruin, his tunic stained with sweat and blood. He was alive. The thought was a physical blow, and she ran, her feet flying over the blood-soaked earth, the warnings of her father fading behind her.
Christos turned at the sound of her frantic approach, his eyes widening just as she crashed into him. It wasn't a hug; it was a collision, a desperate, frantic attempt to confirm he was real, solid, and breathing. She buried her face in the rough wool of his tunic, her arms like iron bands around his waist, inhaling the scent of woodsmoke, sweat, and something sharp and metallic that could only be blood.
The relief lasted for a single, shuddering heartbeat, then it curdled into a hot, blinding rage. She shoved him back, her small fists thudding against the hard leather of his brigandine. “You fool!” she shrieked, hitting him again. “You reckless, stupid, pig-headed oaf! You could have died!”
A raw, cracked bark of a laugh tore from Christos’s throat, a sound that was half-sob, half-mirth. The absurdity of it all - the battle, the survival, her fury - was too much.
Her anger collapsed as quickly as it had flared, replaced by a fresh wave of terror. Her hands flew over him, fluttering from a fresh cut on his cheek to the dark, ugly bruises blooming on his neck. “Are you hurt? Gods, look at your face! Did they… are you alright?”
“I’m fine, Agape,” he said, his voice a low rasp. He caught her frantic hands in his own, his grip surprisingly gentle. “Just… bruised.” He looked past her to where Stratos was now approaching, a look of profound, weary gratitude on his face.
“The villagers? Are they safe?” Agape asked him frantically.
“Yes,” he breathed, the word a prayer. “They’re safe. We won.”
The fight went out of her, and she sagged against him, her forehead resting on his chest. The world narrowed to the sound of their ragged breathing. He tilted her chin up, and their eyes met. The kiss wasn’t gentle; it was desperate, a confirmation of life, tasting of ale, grime, and the impossible, undeniable fact of their survival.
“Stratiotes Christos.”
The voice was a clean, sharp sound that cut through the intimate moment like a shard of glass. It was devoid of warmth or judgment; it was simply the voice of command.
They broke apart, flustered. Theodorus stood a few paces away, his face impassive in the shadows, his dark eyes missing nothing. Christos’s back went ramrod straight.
“Captain!” Christos snapped back to attention, his face flushing a dark, mottled crimson. He gestured awkwardly toward the woman still clinging to his arm. “This is… this is Agape.”
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Agape, looking utterly out of place amidst the carnage, executed a clumsy, bobbing curtsy. “My lord Captain,” she said, her voice a nervous tremor. “Christos has told me a great deal about you.”
A thin, sharp smile that didn't reach his eyes touched Theodorus’s lips. He looked past her, his gaze landing on Christos with unnerving weight. “Only good things, I trust?”
“Of course, Captain,” Christos stammered, a nervous laugh escaping him. “Only your… finest qualities.”
A genuine, short laugh escaped Theodorus then, breaking the tension. “May I have a word with the Stratiotes? Alone.” It was a question that was not a question. Agape gave Christos’s hand one last, desperate squeeze and retreated to her father’s side, her worried eyes never leaving him.
The moment she was gone, the commander’s fleeting amusement vanished. “Your charge on the eastern barricade was reckless,” he stated, his voice flat. “But it was also decisive. You arrived at the precise moment their line was about to break. Your presence saved men who were about to die. And you had every right not to be there at the fight.”
“I don’t feel like a hero, Captain,” Christos mumbled, the fire of victory draining out of him, leaving only the cold ash of grief. He looked down at the dirt. “I wasn't fast enough for Georgios.”
Theodorus was silent for a long moment, allowing the raw pain of the admission to hang in the air between them. “There are no heroes in war, Christos,” he said at last, his voice quiet, stripped of all artifice. “Not really. There are only men who die, and men who must live with the things they did to survive.” He paused, his gaze intense. “I think you should join the army. Permanently.”
Christos’s head snapped up, not believing what he was hearing.
“The Principality needs men who can fight,” Theodorus continued, his voice a low, compelling murmur. “But more than that, it needs good men who are not afraid of the dark corners of the world. Men who understand the cost.” He took a step closer, his slight frame seeming to cast a long shadow. “You have a good heart, Christos. One war will try to kill. I won’t offer you soothing platitudes. It is a miserable life. You will see more friends die.”
He let the brutal truth land. “You can forget this conversation ever happened,” he said, his tone soft. “You’ve done what you set out to do. You’ve changed. You’ve proved others wrong. You can have a life. A good life.” He glanced at the distant figure of Agape before he took hold of Christos’s shoulder and squeezed. “But if you don’t want to spend the rest of your days haunted by what might have been, cursing yourself for being weak and not enough, there is only one thing you can do.”
He turned, leaving Christos alone in the gathering twilight, his final words echoing in the sudden, profound silence.
“
Prove yourself wrong
.”
As the last of the supplies were loaded, the entire village of Kerasia seemed to pour into the clearing. They came not just to watch, but to give thanks, pressing forward with offerings—a warm loaf of bread for a soldier’s pack, a string of dried herbs, a child shyly tucking a wildflower into the mane of a warhorse.
When the column finally began to move, a raw, heartfelt roar went up from the villagers. It was a sound of profound, gut-wrenching relief, a celebration for the battered, unlikely heroes who had stood between their homes and annihilation.
“May God’s own shield protect you!” a woman cried out.
“You are welcome in our homes always!” shouted another.
“Captain Theodorus! Our savior! Be safe!”
Theodorus, seated stiffly on Boudicca, endured the adoration with a thin, forced smile. This was the part of war the histories never captured - the messy, emotional, deeply uncomfortable gratitude of those you had saved. He was a strategist, not a saint. With a single, curt nod to the crowd that was both a thank you and a dismissal, he spurred his horse forward, eager to escape the fanfare.
Standing apart from the crowd, Christos watched them go. Agape was at his side, her hand gripping his tightly, as if she feared he might be swept away with them. He watched the column of weary men, their bodies battered and scarred, but their backs straight with a hard-won pride. In this singular moment, they were no longer a mob of farmers. They were an army.
Christos watched them go, his eyes fervent with purpose and a decision on his hands. Maybe he’d like to learn what it meant to know the true weight of a sword.
Bruised-purple clouds, heavy with the threat of mid-September rain, crept over Mangup, heralding the rise of a weak dawn. A sickly, jaundiced light filtered into Panagiotis Papadopolis’s office, coating its bare stone walls. The air was chilled by the cold eastern wind, warmed only by a single, sputtering brazier, the only furnishing besides the massive oak desk and his personal wine cabinet.
Before him lay a proposal from his aide, Zeno. The script was a model of neat, concise penmanship, as always. The contents, however, were a disgrace. The initial draft for the state-funded privateers was finally complete, and Panagiotis had the dishonour of authorizing it. It was, Panagiotis thought with a grim certainty, one of the most foolish plans he’d seen in recent times.
The Principality was already bleeding from a dozen cuts: Genoese tariffs strangling the south, Crimean raids harrying the north, and the Sultan’s tribute a constant drain across the sea. Now, they would indebt themselves further for a phantom fleet manned by coin-sworn pirates in a pointless strike against Genoa.
His hand, a limb of muscle and calloused skin more suited to a sword hilt than a quill, gripped the pen. With a hasty scrawl that was less a signature and more a mark of surrender, he authorized the folly. He stamped the parchment with the state seal, then shoved it to the far edge of the desk, as if the distance could lessen the stupidity it contained.
Three sharp knocks echoed from the study’s iron-rimmed door.
An important messenger.
Panagiotis eased back into his wooden armrest, letting the rough, wooden spine of his chair dig into his own. The discomfort was a familiar anchor, a sensation he cultivated. Comfort was a luxury for merchants and priests. Hard decisions demanded a hard seat. He allowed himself a single, steadying breath to clear his mind, to become the unfeeling instrument the state required.
“What is it?” He rumbled, mind focused and honed in on the current task, any extraneous and unnecessary thoughts expelled from his mind.
“Sergeant Leonidas, my lord. He brings an urgent missive from Probatofrourio.”
Konstantinos’s boy?
He’d granted the ignoble fort to the ambitious boy to place him away from the capital to a post no one wanted to volunteer for. He knew the situation there was dastardly and that it would come under heavy strain from the Crimeans. He had needed someone who wouldn’t abandon his post at the first sight of a Tatar raid and was capable enough to put things in order at the fort. He reasoned the boy had a vested interest in protecting his home in the north.
“Send him in.” As the guard’s footsteps receded, Panagiotis methodically squared the few papers on his desk, his mind thrumming a steady beat as he catalogued all the necessary facts.
Buying supplies from his own pocket for the garrison, incredibly modest resupply requests, and impressive infrastructure projects with little to no support from Mangup. Probatofrourios’s s had been each more bewildering than the last. The boy was working some kind of miracle up there on the frontier.
He was also pushing his luck. Panagiotis, of course, was perfectly aware that the boy was extracting extra tribute from crown lands and organizing an informal self-defense pact. He was straining the liberties afforded to a simple border commander.
The heavy, deliberate tread of hobnailed boots on stone announced the sergeant’s approach. Leonidas was his main informant on the Probatofrourio Fort, and he had been heaping a wave of praise on his newly minted Captain. The same sharp knocks on wood preceded his entrance.
“Enter.” Panagiotis commanded. Leonidas appeared in the doorway, a stout man whose frame filled the door almost completely. His cuirass was scuffed and travel-stained, his face a mask of dust, but his salute was crisp and his green eyes were sharp.
Panagiotis gave a slight, almost imperceptible nod to the guard who had announced the sergeant. The man melted back into the shadows of the hall, leaving them in privacy.
“.” he said simply. Extensive speeches and flowery language only wasted time. And time was a precious commodity he had little of.
“A Crimean raiding party, one hundred strong, has struck our northern territories.” The Sergeant’s words were blunt, dispensing with any preamble. The news landed like a stone, and Panagiotis’s mouth thinned into a severe line. It was yet another blow to start what was sure to be a miserable day. “Captain Theodorus believes their objective was a punitive expedition deep into the Theodoran heartland, not merely a raid on the outlying hamlets."
“
Was
?” Panagiotis's gaze honed in on the Sergeant, catching the use of the past tense instantly.
“Yes, Doux,” A smile, tight with pride, touched Sergeant Leonidas’s lips. His hand delved into a deep pocket of his traveling cloak. "We intercepted and repelled them at the village of Kerasia." He produced a dark, furred pennant and a folded vellum envelope, placing them firmly on the polished wood of Panagiotis's desk. “We lost ten men, the raiders lost as many as forty, not counting those we took captive. A third of their force managed to flee into the woods. No civilian casualties have been ed so far.”
For a stunned moment, Panagiotis didn't move. His carefully cultivated façade broke slightly, his eyes widening a fraction as he reached for the pennant, feeling its rough texture. It was braided horsehair; there was no doubt about it, this was a Crimean military standard, handed only to those of a high enough rank. His fingers traced the crude stitching, then froze. Woven into the dark fabric was a mark he knew intimately: a golden Tamga. This banner belonged to the Giray crest, the Khan’s own lineage.
Leonidas’s observing gaze didn’t miss the subtle hesitation. He didn’t know the banner's specific meaning, but he had rarely seen the Doux betray any reaction at all.
“This…came from one of the fallen warriors?” Panagiotis asked, his voice calm, but his mind racing. It proved that the Khan’s own warriors participated in it. Direct proof that he sanctioned the raid. More than that, though, it was a powerful bargaining chip.
“One of their leaders, we presume,” Leonidas answered somberly.
Panagiotis steepled his fingers, bringing them to his lips to hide his grim visage. “Explain what happened,” He commanded, his voice ringing with iron. “I want to know everything.”
As Leonidas excused himself from the Doux’s office, the last rays of orange light had disappeared from the study’s single window. Panagiotis’s mind roiled with the Sergeant’s , and with the astonishing contents of the letter he’d since read. He had known the boy was smart and industrious. But this…he would have never expected he’d manage to beat back a force of 100 of the Khanate’s finest with little more than peasant levies, a couple of wagons, and daring ingenuity.
He rose and turned to the burgeoning sky. Outside, the cloud cover had broken, revealing the upper outline of a bright shining sun. Perhaps there was a flicker of hope in the gloom that marred his Principality.
“Gennadios.” He called, his voice firm.
A shadow detached itself from the doorframe without making a sound in the span of a single breath. “Panagiotis.” The name was a harsh rasp, forced from a ruined throat. Scar tissue pulled one eye permanently shut, giving his bodyguard a grim visage that was a fitting backdrop against his half-burned scalp.
“Go to the Prince,” Panagiotis said, his gaze still fixed on the horizon. “Tell him I request an immediate audience.”
“Private or public?” Gennadios rasped.
Panagiotis's fingers tightened on the coarse horsehair pennant in his hand. “Private.”
Pain and misery were a horseman’s greatest companions, and Nur Devlet had embraced them fully. He hadn’t allowed himself the comfort of a fire, not because it could be used to be tracked by his pursuers, although that was certainly on his mind, but because his penance would come from suffering and action, not useless luxuries. Every moment wasted on searching for firewood was a moment he was further from the Khanate, and from his revenge.
He forced down a strip of raw horseflesh with avarice, relishing in its coppery, disgusting taste. This, too, was penance. His horse, a magnificent stallion from the Khanate’s finest stock, had carried him since his first command. It had been as much a part of him as a limb, but it had predictably been maimed during the escape through the woods, and without him, Nur felt disabled. In the wilderness, survival makes savages of all men, and the choice had been brutal, but simple. Nur was accustomed to making difficult choices in hard situations.
A memory of the defeat - the utter annihilation - made him grit his teeth. The thought of Mustafa, left behind to be kill- He tore at the bloody meat with his teeth, silencing the thought before it could fully form. There was no room for grief, only for the two cold companions he had chosen for himself in the vacuum left by the ones that had perished.
He kicked dirt over the meagre signs of his pitiful campsite, barely more than a bedroll and a leather sack wet with fresh meat. He didn’t need to dress himself or fetch his sword. He was already armed and armored; he had not slept otherwise for days, always with a blade in hand and one eye half open.
He resumed his trek at a punishing pace, laughing at the irony of how a day’s trot through clear roads had become half a week of grueling torment through the mountainous wilderness. He had shunned the main roads, navigating by the sun on a northward course. By his reckoning, he had crossed into the Khanate’s lands yesterday, but this desolate southern expanse was devoid of the herds and patrols he might find further in.
The journey had honed his thoughts in the wake of the battle. Its isolation had given him plenty of time to nurse both his wounds and his thoughts. Nurse them into a cold, hard hatred. These cattle herders would pay for what they had taken from him. His prestige, his men, his honour,
his friends
…they would pay them all back a hundredfold.
As he crested the final ridge, the fortress of Chufut-Kale rose before him - a monstrous plateau of rock and ramparts against the heavy sky. The sight solidified the hatred that had been his only fuel. Gazing upon the grim fortress, Nur Devlet swore a silent oath. He would return, and he would raze their miserable little fiefdom to the ground.
He would repay them in the only currencies he had left. In pain and misery.
"The Doux has approved the privateer initiative." Arsinoe’s voice was as smooth as the fine silk of her gown. “Capable ship captains have already been selected and letters of Marque are being issued as we speak.” She stood bathed in the sunlight pouring into the loggia, a resplendent figure framed against the verdant vineyards of the Makris main compound. Everything in the nestled valley that stretched as far as the eye could see was his.
"At last." Philemon savored the words as much as the cool grape a female attendant placed between his lips. He lounged on his reclining chair, surrounded by his most loyal servants, their presence as comfortable and unobtrusive as the furniture. “Panagiotis delayed for as long as he could, but his hand was finally forced.” A devious smile blossomed on his face at the thought of the dour Doux fuming as he signed the document.
“Now our own plans can begin with haste, your excellency.” His man, Lustinianos, occupied an adjacent sofa. His thick fingers plucked another wedge of aged cheese from a platter, adding to the prodigious bulk straining his tunic. The man never could show restraint in the finer aspects of life. “Principe Alexios grows impatient with his station. This new proposal has emboldened him, and he seeks more.”
“He will learn patience, then.” Philemon’s eyes narrowed, the lazy indulgence vanishing. “He would do well to remember which hand feeds him before he considers biting it. He is in no position to make demands.”
“Of course, my Liege. He wouldn’t dare.” Lustinianos’s jowls quivered with his emphatic nod. Wiping his greasy fingers on his thigh, he turned his attention to the servant girl refilling his wine, pulling her onto his lap with a possessive grunt.
Philemon averted his gaze from the sordid display, looking out once more upon the valley. The vineyards were the lifeblood of his family, a humble enterprise he had nurtured into an empire of sweet wine and rich land. But the profits, the true fortune they represented, were siphoned away by the Genoese. For all his wealth, his hands were tied by enterprising middlemen he could never seem to shake. They had been a problem that had plagued his nights for years, a constant drain on his coffers and a galling insult to his power.
Over the years, he had struggled against the problem, finagling extra concessions from the court, expanding his estates, branching out to other avenues of revenue. But the main problem always circled back to the stranglehold the Genoese held over them. How could trade flourish and his coffers fill when they were being bled dry?
It had been a problem that had kept Philemon awake many a night. But, after years of struggle, a solution - elegant and ruthless - had presented itself. It arrived now, in the form of a high, silken voice at his back.
“My Excelency,” the voice came from his back, high-pitched and silken.
"Markos." Philemon’s acknowledgement was permission to approach. Golden white locks framed high cheekbones and an upturned nose, his pale complexion lending him the air of a masculine Aphrodite. Beauty, Philemon thought, was one of the highest qualities a person could have, and one he sought to cultivate among his household.
"The Griffon has sent word."
The air in the idyllic villa seemed to crystallize. Philemon’s languid grace vanished, replaced by the stillness of a predator on a moment’s notice. "Leave us," he commanded, his voice cold iron. The attendants evaporated without a sound. That was another quality he cultivated ardently in his household: loyalty. With a groan of effort and the muffled giggle of his companion, Lustinianos disentangled himself from the sofa and lumbered out.
When they were alone, Philemon leaned forward, the bubbling pools and sun-drenched marble of his palace forgotten. "What did he say?"
Markos allowed a small, knowing smile. "The pieces are in play. We are ready to proceed."
Adrenaline surged through Philemon, his hand tightening on his silver goblet until his knuckles were white. Finally, after years of struggle, he could see his own path to greatness spread out before him. He just had to take the final few leaps to get there.
Others would be trampled beneath his feet, but that was the nature of the game. In the end, he would come out on top. And that was all that mattered.
End of Volume 1: “From the Ashes.”
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