Harry Turtledove - Bridge of the Separator

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Bridge of the Separator
Table of Contents
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XIII
Bridge of the Separator
Harry Turtledove
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any
resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.
Copyright © 2005 by Harry Turtledove
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form.
A Baen Books Original
Baen Publishing Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY 10471
www.baen.com
ISBN-13: 978-1-4165-0918-9
ISBN-10: 1-4165-0918-6
Cover art by Tom Kidd
First printing, December 2005
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Turtledove, Harry.
Bridge of the Separator / Harry Turtledove.
p. cm.
ISBN-13: 978-1-4165-0918-9
ISBN-10: 1-4165-0918-6
1. Clergy--Fiction. 2. Refugees--Fiction. I. Title.
PS3570.U76B75 2005
813'.54--dc22
2005026424
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
Production & design by Windhaven Press, Auburn, NH (www.windhaven.com)
Printed in the United States of America
BAEN BOOKS by HARRY TURTLEDOVE
The Time of Troubles I
The Time of Troubles II
Bridge of the Separator
The War Between the Provinces series:
Sentry Peak
Marching Through Peachtree
Advance and Retreat
The Fox novels:
Wisdom of the Fox
Tale of the Fox
3 x T
Thessalonica
Alternate Generals, editor
Alternate Generals II, editor
Alternate Generals III, editor
The Enchanter Completed, editor
Down in the Bottomlands (with L. Sprague de Camp)
I
When a synod in Videssos the city named Rhavas prelate of Skopentzana, the priest thought he was
being sent into exile. Not only that, he thought it an insult to the imperial family, for wasn't his
grandmother sister to the grandfather of Maleinos II, Avtokrator of the Videssians? To put it mildly, he
didn't want to leave the imperial capital for the city in the far northeast of the Empire of Videssos.
Old Neboulos, the ecumenical patriarch of Videssos, finally had to take him aside and talk sense into
him. Gorgeous in a cloth-of-gold robe with Phos' sun picked out in shining blue silk on the left breast,
Neboulos sat Rhavas down in the study of the patriarchal residence, close by the High Temple. The
patriarch's long, bushy white beard wagged as he poured wine for both of them with his own hand.
"This is not exile," Neboulos insisted. "It is not—I swear it by the lord with the great and good mind. It is
opportunity."
"Easy for you to say," Rhavas insisted. "You don't have to go." He was in his mid-twenties then, but
remained unintimidated by Neboulos' rank and by his years. Rhavas was tall and thin, with a long, narrow
axe blade of a face, a dagger of a nose, and brilliant black eyes under elegant, aristocratic eyebrows. His
tonsure only made his forehead seem even higher than it would have anyway. He was one of the most
brilliant clerics, maybe the most brilliant, of his generation, and he knew it very well.
So did Neboulos, who made a placating gesture before lifting his silver goblet. "Drink, drink," the
patriarch urged.
With an angry gesture, Rhavas took hold of his goblet, which matched the other. Both were decorated
with reliefs of Phos, the god of light and goodness, triumphant over his eternal rival Skotos, who dwelt in
eternal ice and darkness and worked evil. Rhavas and Neboulos raised their hands in reverence and
intoned the good god's creed: "We bless thee, Phos, lord with the great and good mind, by thy grace our
protector, watchful beforehand that the great test of life may be decided in our favor."
Together, they spat in ritual rejection of Skotos. Only then could Rhavas drink. Not even his ferocious
temper kept him from noting that Neboulos had served him very fine wine.He wants to soften me, to
butter me up , the younger man thought savagely.Well, to the ice with me if I aim to let him .
"Opportunity?" Rhavas laced the word with scorn. "Where is there ever opportunity outside Videssos
the city?"
"By the good god, Rhavas, opportunity is where you find it." Neboulos sketched Phos' sun-circle above
his heart to show he was serious. "You were born here in the capital; perhaps this is not so plain to you.
But I come from Resaina, in the westlands. I rose there. Had I not risen there, I would not sit here now."
He ran a hand down his glittering patriarchal vestments, which seemed out of place in the comfortably
shabby, scroll-filled study.
"Yes, yes," Rhavas said, still full of rage and impatience. "But Iam here. I can rise here. Does
Skopentzana have a decent library? Does it have a library at all? How am I supposed to study the good
god and his glory without the tools of scholarship?"
"Skopentzana will have books. Skopentzana is rich, rich in many things," Neboulos answered. "Among
the things it is rich in is the chance for you to administer a major temple. You will not findthat chance so
easy to come by here in the capital, no matter how high your blood is."
"Oh." Rhavas was suddenly thoughtful. Now he had to fight to hold on to his anger. And fight he did.
"Running a temple never did seem all that exciting to me. I'd sooner follow Phos than lead men."
"But, my dear . . ." For a moment, Neboulos seemed at a loss how to go on. He stroked his unkempt
white beard. That seemed to give him whatever he needed, for he went on, "As you see, I am old. I shall
not be patriarch much longer."
"Most holy sir, may you live a hundred and twenty years!" Rhavas exclaimed.
"You are kind to say such a thing. Believe me, I am grateful, but I shall not live a hundred and twenty
years. At my age, one does not commence a long exegesis on Phos' holy scriptures. I do not know who
will succeed me; that is for the synod and the Avtokrator to decide. But I have a good notion of who
may succeed my successor."
"You do? How?" To Rhavas, the patriarch's speech was as opaque as if he'd suddenly started using the
language of the sea-roving Haloga barbarians who dwelt beyond even distant Skopentzana.
Rhavas always remembered how Neboulos smiled at his naïveté. "Who? Why, you, of course." The
ecumenical patriarch's right forefinger was bent with age, but not too bent to point straight at Rhavas'
chest.
"Me?" Rhavas' voice rose to a startled squeak. "I never wanted to be patriarch. I never thought to be
patriarch. Why me?"
"Your modesty does you credit, holy sir." Neboulos chuckled rheumily. "Why you? You are a learned
man. You are a wise man. If you will forgive an old man's observation, you are wiser and more learned
than you have any business being at your age. That is one side of the goldpiece. The other side is, you
have a connection to the imperial family. The Avtokrator is likely to want a man who can run the temples
well and is not inclined to quarrel with him."
"He may not get what he wants." Rhavas had a prickly sense of honor and an even pricklier sense of
duty. "I will do what I find right and what I find proper, come what may."
"I understand," Neboulos said. "Blood calls to blood even so. My guess is, youwill be
patriarch—provided you do what you need to do before you don the golden robe. You must be watchful
beforehand that the great test is decided in your favor." He smiled at using the words of the creed in a
new context.
By contrast, Rhavas frowned. He suspected frivolity there. No matter what he suspected, he didn't let it
deter him from his main point: "Why send me to Skopentzana, then?"
"How can you hope to run all the temples if you have not shown you can run at least one?" Neboulos
replied. "There is the reason behind it—to let you run a temple and to teach you to run one. Having
proved you can do that, you will, I doubt not, be recalled to Videssos the city before too long. Someday,
you will plop your fundament onto this ratty old couch. When you do, I pray you, think of me every once
in a while."
For some little while, Rhavas didn't know what to say to that. At last, softly, he asked, "You believe in
your heart I should do this thing?"
Neboulos sketched the sun-circle once more. "By the lord with the great and good mind, my son, I do.
Videssos will have need of you in years to come. The faith will have need of you as well. I could
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
marvelous mosaic of Phos stern in judgment inside the dome was another.
Skopentzana's chief temple had no central dome. When Rhavas first saw it, he exclaimed, "It looks as if
someone used an upside-down ship for the roof!" Ships were on his mind then. He'd been seasick much
of the way up from Videssos the city, and the vessel that carried him on the last leg of the journey had to
outrace Haloga pirates to safety.
In fact, as he found out later, he wasn't so far wrong. One of the inspirations for the temple was a
Haloga longhouse, and longhouses often were roofed with ships too decrepit to put to sea. It made for a
different sort of building and, in some ways, a different sort of service. In the High Temple, the altar was
at the very center of things, under the dome, with worshipers all around in equal numbers. Here there
were worshipers in front and behind, but very few to the sides. The priests who served the altar
necessarily adapted to the shape of the building they used.
On the day when Rhavas' life changed forever, he was standing in the central square, between the
eparch's residence and the temple. Statues of locally famous Videssians crowded the square. Largest
was a great bronze of the Avtokrator Stavrakios, the great conqueror of two centuries before.
Surrounding him in bronze and marble and the local golden sandstone were lesser figures. They all
seemed to look to him for permission to stand there. It was an illusion, but an effective one.
Rhavas happened to be looking up at Stavrakios, too. Even with a pigeon dropping on his nose, the old
Avtokrator looked like a tough customer. By everything Rhavas knew of him, he had been a tough
customer. He'd made both the Halogai and the Makuraners fear him, no mean feat when they dwelt at
opposite ends of the Empire.
A pretty woman leading a toddler dropped Rhavas a curtsy. "Good morning, very holy sir," she
murmured.
"And a good morning to you. May Phos bless you on it," Rhavas answered gravely. The woman walked
on. He eyed her with the same careful consideration he'd given to Stavrakios' statue. Phos' priesthood
was celibate. Some priests, being men like any others, flouted the rule. Rhavas scorned them. Some kept
it, though it ate into their flesh like the iron shackles around the ankles of slaves and convicts condemned
to the mines. Rhavas pitied them. He usually wore the shackles of celibacy lightly, even proudly. Every so
often, though . . .
His mouth was never wide, nor particularly generous. Now it narrowed to a thin, hard line. He
deliberately turned his back on the woman and her little girl. Out of sight . . . Out of sight did not mean
out of mind, not here, however much Rhavas wished it would. Though he looked at the woman no more,
he saw her perhaps more plainly than ever.
He knew sin in others. Part of his peculiar sort of pride was to know it in himself as well. He sketched
Phos' sun-circle above his heart and murmured prayers against the weakness of his flesh. Despite those
fervent prayers, the memory of the woman's smile and soft voice lingered.
And then, in an odd way, the good god heard his prayers and answered them. Up from the southern
gate, the gate farthest from the river, came a dispatch rider on a horse he lashed into a gallop, though it
wasn't far from foundering. "Out of my way! Out of my way, curse you!" the rider shouted at anyone in
his path. He flicked his whip not only at the poor horse but also at anyone who did not move out of the
way fast enough to suit him. Cries of rage and pain rose up in his wake.
Here was something out of the ordinary. Rhavas forgot about the pretty woman as he stared at the
dispatch rider thundering across the square. The man leaped down from the horse and tossed the reins to
one of the startled sentries in front of the eparch's residence. Then, still on the dead run, he dashed inside.
Out of the ordinary indeed, and not a good omen, not at all. Something somewhere in the Empire must
have gone badly wrong. Frowning, Rhavas hurried toward the residence. The sentries, even the man
holding the lathered horse's reins, bowed low as he came up. "Very holy sir," they chorused.
The horse's sides heaved. Its nostrils glowed red as coals. Over its panting, Rhavas asked, "Did the
courier say anything before he went inside?"
"Only that he had to see the eparch right away," one of the soldiers answered. Like his comrades, he
wore a conical helmet with a bar nasal, a mailshirt, and baggy wool trousers tucked into stout boots that
rose almost to his knees. He held a grounded pike in his right hand; a sword in a worn leather sheath
hung from his belt.
"Not a word more than that, the miserable dog," another sentry added irately. He was a swarthy man
with a wide forehead, a narrow chin, and sharp cheekbones: a typical Videssian, in other words. His
indignation at the courier's silence was also typical. Rhavas had preached sermons on the Videssian love
for gossip. He feared they didn't strike home as well as some of his other sermons. He might as well have
preached against eating. Lust for gossip and news was as much a part of the Videssian character as a
craving for good food.
Embarrassment suddenly heated Rhavas' cheeks and his ears and the shaven crown of his head.Why,
here I am, guilty of the very sin I've thundered against from the pulpit , he thought. He promised
himself penitential prayers before an image of the good god. Even as he made the promise, though, he
wondered whether carrying it out would suffice to uproot the sin he'd found inside his own bosom. He
hoped and doubted at the same time.
Stiffly, he said, "If the most honorable Zautzes learns anything I should know, I hope he will do me the
courtesy of calling on me at my residence."
"I'm sure he will, very holy sir," one of the sentries said.
Rhavas was also sure of it. The civil administration and the temples stood shoulder to shoulder in ruling
the Empire. And even if they hadn't . . . Even if they hadn't, Zautzes would have been a fool not to
consult the man who was not only prelate of Skopentzana but also the Avtokrator's cousin. Rhavas had
no great love for Zautzes; the man was a lecher, and also overfond of wine, at least by the prelate's
austere standards. But no one could ever accuse the eparch of being a fool.
Turning, Rhavas went back toward the temple. This time, he strolled instead of striding. As if he were a
traveler from afar, he stopped dead and admired each statue in turn. He lingered longest at the great
bronze of Stavrakios. He remembered doing the same thing when he first came to Skopentzana all those
years earlier. He really had been a traveler from afar then. No more.
This time, his dawdling had method in it. The square couldn't have been more than a bowshot wide.
Even so, Rhavas hadn't completely crossed it before someone shouted out his name from the direction of
the eparch's residence. He turned, as if in surprise.
There stood Zautzes himself, waving and doing everything this side of jumping up and down to catch his
notice. Gravely, Rhavas waved back. Zautzes hurried toward him. The eparch always put Rhavas in
mind of a frog. He was short and squat. He had a wide face, a broad mouth, a receding chin, and eyes
that threatened to bulge out of his head.
Frogs, however, did not commonly wear fur-edged silk robes shot through with gold and silver threads.
Nor did frogs wear boots trimmed with red. Those boots symbolized Zautzes' own connection with the
Avtokrator. Only the ruler himself was allowed a pair all of red.
The two leaders of Skopentzana bowed to each other. "Very holy sir," Zautzes said, his voice a gravelly
bass.
"Most honorable sir." Rhavas' voice was only slightly higher, but much smoother.
"You will know a courier has come to me with news. You will also know he came with, ah, a certain
amount of urgency." Zautzes even blinked like a frog. The motion was slow and deliberate and involved
his whole face.
"I had gathered something to that effect, yes." Rhavas was not about to let the eparch win a battle of
understatements. "Of course, if it's none of my business I'll just go back to the temple and find out about
it from my cook or the cleaning woman."
That made Zautzes blink again, even more extravagantly than before. "Well, very holy sir, it does have
somewhat to do with you. Yes, somewhat, by Phaos." The eparch was from these parts, and
pronounced the good god's name in the old-fashioned, two-syllable way. In the capital, they'd clipped it
down to one. Zautzes gathered himself. "D'you know Stylianos, the grand domestikos?"
"I met him a few times when he came into Videssos the city, but he was usually on campaign even then,"
Rhavas answered. "I can't say I know him well, though. Why do you ask? Has something happened to
him? I hope not."
He meant that. Stylianos was a good general, probably the best grand domestikos the Empire had had in
at least a hundred years. His forays onto the Pardrayan plains had warned the Khamorth nomads that
their raids into imperial territory would not be tolerated. Few Videssian commanders had ever hit back
effectively at the plainsmen. Stylianos made a welcome exception.
But Rhavas didn't care for the way Zautzes stared at him: as if he were a fly to be snapped up with a
flick of the tongue. The eparch said, "Something's happened to him, all right, very holy sir. He's
proclaimed himself Avtokrator of the Videssians, and he's moving against the city." To Videssians from
one end of the Empire to the other, the great imperial capital wasthe city.
"Phos!" Rhavas muttered, and sketched the sun-circle over his heart. "Maleinos will not take that lying
down, most honorable sir. He will fight to hold the throne, and fight with everything that's in him. You
asked if I knew Stylianos, and I don't, not well. But I know my cousin. I know what he will do."
Bitterness filled his voice: "He raised Stylianos up to be grand domestikos. Is this the thanks he gets?"
"So it would seem," Zautzes said, an answer whose breathtaking cynicism left even the sardonic Rhavas
at a loss. Into the prelate's silence, Zautzes went on, "It's been a while since the Empire's last civil war.
I'm afraid we've got a new one on our hands."
"I'm afraid you're right," Rhavas said. "For that alone, Stylianos will be damned to Skotos' eternal ice."
Now Zautzes was the one who didn't respond right away. Rhavas raised an eyebrow. In a very soft
voice, he asked, "Or do you disagree, most honorable sir? Maleinos raised you up, too, you know."
"I want peace in the Empire," Zautzes said. "Whoever can give me that, I'm for."
That was an answer that was not an answer. Rhavas' tone grew sharper: "If the would-be usurper comes
to Skopentzana, will this city welcome him or close its gates against him?"
"You would do better to ask Himerios than me." Zautzes sounded sullen, resenting being put on the spot.
Rhavas grunted. The garrison Himerios commanded was intended to protect Skopentzana from Haloga
pirate ships rowing up the Anazarbos. It wasn't very big; the blond barbarians hadn't been troublesome
lately. And Himerios had always seemed content enough with little to do and scant resources with which
to do it. Now . . .
Now Rhavas and Zautzes might not be the most important, most powerful men in Skopentzana after all.
That role might belong to the garrison commander. Rhavas nodded briskly to the eparch. "No doubt
you're right, most honorable sir. I had better do that."
Zautzes looked no happier. Rhavas had a hard time blaming him. The eparch had to go on running
Skopentzana as if nothing were wrong. He had to collect the head tax and the hearth tax as usual. He had
to see that justice was done, that the city's walls and public buildings were repaired . . . and that whoever
won the civil war wouldn't think he'd backed the other side.
With a curt bow, Rhavas turned away. He didn't want Zautzes to see how worried he was. Most
prelates throughout the Empire would be making the same calculations as the local eparchs. Rhavas
didn't have that burden—or was it a luxury? Stylianos would assume he was loyal to his cousin, the
Avtokrator, and the rebel would be right.
Out of the corner of his eye, Rhavas saw Zautzes waddle back toward his residence. That gave the
prelate the privacy he needed to swear under his breath. Maleinos had proved himself a reasonably good
Avtokrator, and a reasonably able one as well. Rhavas wouldn't have worried about most rebels; he
would have been confident his cousin could put them down in short order.
Stylianos? Stylianos was a different story.
A man with the broad shoulders, heat-reddened face, and battered hands of a blacksmith came up to
Rhavas. "Is something wrong, very holy sir?" he asked. "You look like you just watched an oxcart run
over your pup."
Rhavas looked at him—looked through him. The blacksmith's face got redder yet.It isn't his fault , the
prelate reminded himself, trying to be charitable. Charity didn't come easy, not now. "I'm afraid, my good
man, that it's nowhere near so trivial as that."
The blacksmith walked off scratching his head.
* * *
Himerios didn't boast anything fancy enough to be called a residence. He lived in an ordinary house, one
just like the others along its street. Its ground floor was built of the local golden sandstone, its upper story
of timber now pale with years of weathering. The only opening in the ground floor was the doorway, and
the door, of thick planks reinforced with iron, could have done duty in a fortress. The upper story
boasted a couple of windows with stout wooden shutters that could be closed tight against the biting cold
of winter. As usual in Skopentzana, the slates on the roof were steeply pitched, so snow would slide off
instead of sticking.
Rhavas knocked on that formidable door. Two boys kicking a ball back and forth in the narrow, muddy
street gave him an odd look; it wasn't the sort of neighborhood where priests appeared every day. A
scrawny stray dog rooting through rubbish paid no attention to him. He preferred the dog's attitude.
When no one answered, Rhavas knocked again, harder. This time, the door creaked open. There stood
Himerios, who stared with even more surprise than the boys showed. "Very holy sir!" the garrison
commander exclaimed. "To what do I owe the honor of this visit?" He didn't say,What do you want
from me? but that had to be what he meant.
"May I come in?" Rhavas asked.
"Well, yes, of course." Himerios stood aside to let Rhavas do so. The garrison commander was as tall
and lean as Zautzes was short and squat. He even overtopped Rhavas, who was far from small, by a
finger's breadth or two. He had a long, angular face, with a sharp nose and a mole on his right cheek just
above his neatly trimmed fringe of lightly frosted beard.
Several stools and a table furnished the front room, along with one wooden chair near the hearth.
Himerios waved Rhavas to the chair. Rhavas shook his head. He perched on a stool instead; the chair
was plainly Himerios' special place. Sure enough, the officer—who wore a loose wool tunic over baggy
breeches tucked into boots like most men in this cold northern city—sat down there.
"Ingegerd!" he called back to the kitchen. "The prelate's come to pay a call. Fetch us some wine and
honey cakes, please."
"Yes, I will do that," his wife answered. Her name said she came from the Haloga country. So did the
sonorously musical accent that flavored her Videssian.
She brought out the refreshments on a wooden tray a couple of minutes later. She was almost as tall as
Rhavas herself, and exotically beautiful: fair-haired, fair-skinned, with granite cheekbones and chin and
with eyes bluer than the sky above Skopentzana. No matter how resigned to celibacy Rhavas was, his
own eyes followed her emphatically curved shape as she served him and Himerios.
"Very holy sir," she murmured, and sketched the sun-sign. Unlike most Halogai, she'd given up the fierce
gods of her homeland for the lord with the great and good mind.
After raising his hands to the heavens and spitting in ritual rejection of Skotos, Rhavas sipped the wine. It
was sweet and strong and good—and he needed bracing. He took a bite from a honey cake. It was rich
with walnuts and butter. He'd had to get used to that last; in Videssos the city, which favored olive oil
instead, using butter branded one a barbarian. The stuff did stay fresh better here than down in the
capital.
Himerios also ate and drank. So did Ingegerd, who'd sat down on a stool after setting the tray on the
table. Haloga women had a reputation for forwardness of both the good and the bad sort; she evidently
lived up to it. Rhavas clucked, but only to himself. Though her forwardness bent custom, it broke no
religious law.
"Well, very holy sir, what's on your mind?" Himerios asked, setting his pewter goblet on his knee.
Before answering, Rhavas glanced toward Ingegerd. She looked back steadily, her sculptured features
all serious attention. Himerios still gave no sign of sending her away. However strange it seemed to the
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BridgeoftheSeparatorTableofContentsIIIIIIIVVVIVIIVIIIIXXXIXIIXIIIBridgeoftheSeparatorHarryTurtledoveThisisaworkoffiction.Allthecharactersandeventsportrayedinthisbookarefictional,andanyresemblancetorealpeopleorincidentsispurelycoincidental.Copyright©2005byHarryTurtledoveAllrightsreserved,includingthe...

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