
command you. However proud you may be, I am still your superior in matters ecclesiastical. But I do not
command here. I beg."
Rhavas bent his head. "So be it, then. Let the good god's will be done."
* * *
Fifteen years went by. After a few of them, Neboulos passed from this world, his spirit walking the
narrow Bridge of the Separator to see whether it gained Phos' heaven or fell down, down, down to
Skotos' eternal ice. His successor, a certain Kameniates, was translated to Videssos the city from the
westlands town of Amorion, where he had been prelate.
So far as Rhavas knew, Kameniates remained in good health. That perturbed the prelate of
Skopentzana much less than it would have when he first came to the far northeast of the Empire. He had
made his peace with this, his new hometown. It was not Videssos the city. Nothing else in the Empire,
nothing else in the world—not even Mashiz, the capital of Videssos' western rival, Makuran—came
close to Videssos the city.
But Skopentzana was itself. Before coming here, Rhavas would have denied that any place outside the
imperial city could have an identity of its own, a character of its own. Everything beyond the great,
unconquerable walls was simply . . . the provinces, as far as he was concerned. The provinces were a
dreary place where nothing interesting ever happened, where no one had or wanted to have a new
thought, and where shepherds were likely to get to know their ewes altogether too well.
He had learned better now. Skopentzana had a lively life of the mind, though not exactly of the sort he
had known in Videssos the city. Here, they thought men from the capital provincial because those men
knew nothing of what went on in Halogaland to the north or among the Khamorth nomads on the vast
plains of Pardraya to the west. Even poetry was different here. Imitating Haloga models, it gave more
weight to alliteration and assonance, less to rhyme, than verse did in the capital. Rhavas had tried his
hand at the local style a few times, and won praise from men whose judgment he respected.
He hadn't expected that when he came. He also hadn't expected that Skopentzana would be beautiful.
But beautiful it was, though beautiful in ways that had nothing to do with the majesty of the capital's seven
hills. The River Anazarbos ran singing to the sea past this city. Every other poem in these parts talked
about the river and its banks of golden sand. Rhavas would have got sick of the poetry if it didn't tell the
truth. There were times when he got sick of the poetry anyway, but that was only because he had too
much of the critic in him.
Dark woods of fir and spruce, winters that came early and lingered late, long misty days of summer
when it seemed as if the sun would never set . . . The sunlight had a peculiarly rich tone in the north, one
made more intense by the yellow sandstone from which so much of Skopentzana was built. Rhavas had
to get used to the steep pitch of the roofs. As soon as he saw snow slide down them, he understood.
He also had to get used to preaching in the temple that, with the city eparch's residence, formed two
sides of Skopentzana's central square. Most temples throughout the Empire, from what he had heard,
modeled themselves after the magnificent High Temple in the capital. He'd expected one more provincial
copy here, and braced himself to judge it by how nearly it approached its prototype.
What he hadn't expected was that the chief temple in Skopentzana was as old as the High Temple, and
as different from it as bread and beer. (He'd had to get used to beer, too, as wine was an expensive
import in these parts where grapes wouldn't grow. He learned to drink the bitter brew. He never learned
to like it.) The High Temple's great dome mounted on pendentives was a wonder of the world. The