| Peté
A brief clatter could be heard in the middle of the Empereur’s suite. The sound of dice might seem out of place in this gilded chamber, draped with ermine-trimmed tapestries covering immense bookcases, decorated with occasional ceremonial swords and armor, and floored with a great slab of malachite.
“Six!” excitedly said young Meneldur Mondros Quarrovth Tar-Ilium, seven year old heir to the throne. Peté smiled gleefully as Meneldur moved his Top Hat space by space, “One, two, three, four, five....” Meneldur paused. “Six.” He looked sheepishly at his father.
“I believe I hold Park Street, son.” Peté said with an indulgent smile.
“Yeah dad... How much?” the son uttered apprehensively.
“Eleven Hundred marches.”
“Oh no, I have to more-gouge-”
“That’s mortgage, son.” Peté interrupted.
“more-gage something... okay, ...”
Peté grinned as little Meneldur carefully counted out 140 monopoly marches and then put together a great big stack. “Here you go papa,” Meneldur handed the stack to Peté and pouted.
Soon, Meneldur clacks his piece (a billy goat, though the game designer thinks it’s a dog) once, twice... thrice, and looks down.
“Now, son, was that what you rolled?”
“No papa,” Meneldur replied quietly.
“What did you roll?” the amused Patriarch inquired.
“A two.”
“Is it fair to pretend it was something else?”
“No. But you’re big!”
“So?”
“You, you knew I’d land on those houses!”
“No, I didn’t. But I knew you could. That’s why I agreed to the trade.”
“But you didn’t tell me those blue ones were so expendive!”
“That’s expensive, son. And if you’re making a deal with somebody, you have to judge it for yourself.”
Just then, the engrossed Empereur and his son were interrupted by the doors swinging open and a clerk stumbling in. “Your Majesty!” | Fredrika
“We’ve all had to deal with our housefoxes leaving their excrement on the floor - the cleanup, the smell, the wasted time - it can be excruciating! No more with our patented ‘Teach Your Fox to Toilet’ system...” Gothren circled the ad with a thick black pen. It was a little expensive, but it would certainly be worth it in the long run from all the carpet cleaning expenses at home. Suddenly the light illuminating his Fox Fancy magazine was covered. He looked up to see a clerk standing in front of him, holding a portfolio.
“The Empeuress wishes to see me.” he said to Gothren. He looked over to the door he had been tasked to sit next to, closed his magazine deliberately, and set it on the floor.
“She’s...” A muffled moan emanated from the wall behind him. “bathing. She doesn’t want to be disturbed.” The clerk adjusted his tie awkwardly.
“But she set up an appointment. I’m representing Mr. Laroth, the architect? Our offices were contacted to -
“Yes, yes, the expansion of Their Majesties Pelagis residence. I know. But irregardless - “
“It’s ‘regardless’. Just ‘regardless’. And I don’t see what the problem is, serjo. She scheduled this meeting herself.”
“Regardless of whether or not she scheduled this meeting herself, she is now presently indisposed! Do you not understand the words I’m saying to you?”
“I think this is all a big misunderstanding. I mean if you’d just let me go in and talk to Her Majesty I’m sure you’d see she just wants to... keep our meeting secret! So she told you she was taking a bath. See? Now if you’ll excuse me - “ The clerk began to reach for the door but Gothren quickly caught his arm in his hand.
“You will never work for anyone again. You are not to enter that suite.” A silence hung over the corridor as the two men stared at each other, the clerk’s arm still firmly in Gothren’s grip. It seemed to last for hours until it was ended by a high-pitched scream from the room. The clerk again adjusted his tie nervously as Gothren relaxed his grip.
“I’m sorry for the inconvenience, serjo.” the clerk mumbled.
“No inconvenience.” said Gothren. The clerk hurried away as he reopened his Fox Fancy magazine.
|
Peté’s smiling eyes swiftly turned lividly cold. He spoke in a strangely crystal clear whisper. “I am not to be disturbed during these evenings but for nuclear war or another such imminent threat to this palace. Why are you here?”
The clerk, Nalmen Hlaarovth, turned white and stepped back outside. He thought, briefly, about running from the palace and hoping that his king would never find him. His pride, taught to him by his parents over many years, would not allow him to simply run, though. Then again, his parents never had to deal with the rage of Peté Tar-Ilium when his family time was interrupted. Nalmen thought to himself as he paced the hall outside the recreation room. How did he not notice the time of the evening? Would he lose his job? How would he explain why he interrupted family time for such a trivial matter? His thoughts were interrupted, though, by the opening of a door. Meneldur walked out with a smile on his face, and Peté rubbed the child’s black hair before sending him away. He turned to the clerk with an irate expression that promised nothing good.
“Now... What was so important?” the Empereur asked so quietly that the ticking of the grandfather clock seemed like thunder.
“I... “ Nalmen looked away briefly. “Her Honor, Councillor Silvtroth, said to me that Her Majesty’s friend came to her asking about why she voted for you to be placed onto the throne.”
Peté snorted. “Ah. This time I will forgive you. But remember never to interrupt me when I am with my children.” He paused, and grinned a pained grin, “He asked? No offer of money or... favours?”
Nalmen couldn’t help but let out a sigh of relief. “No, Your Majesty. He just asked. I don’t think Mr. Quarrovth would bribe someone, especially not someone on your gift-list. And Her Honor certainly didn’t mention doing anything...untoward with him.”
The pained expression gone from the Empereur’s face, he concluded the conversation. “Thank you for keeping me informed. Would you get me Minister Moomintroth please on your way out? He has an appointment.”
Marcica breathed a sigh of relief. He had been hiding out of sight against a wall, and with the conversation ended he finally had a chance to finish his escape from the royal apartments. However, it seemed that as soon as he stepped into the dim light of an electric sconce he stepped into the Empeurer’s line of sight.
“Ah, just the man I wanted to see. Marcica Quarrovth. Come in, come in.” Peté grinned like the proverbial canary-consuming cat, and pointed towards the chamber he was still standing outside. Marcica’s heart pounded and his stomach dropped. Running was obviously out of the question; the only choice was to follow his monarch’s “humble request”. He had certainly talked his way out of things before, and it’s not like the outlander king could see the fingernail scratches on Marcica’s back.
“I wanted to apologize for my brusque behavior with you the other day.” Peté continued, grinning even wider, “It was not right of me to be so … impolite.” Sneering, he finished his thought, “Over such an insult one could challenge me to a Duel, were it not illegal now.”
“As it... very well should be,
serjo.” Marcica replied, puzzled. “I hope mature men like yourself and I could avoid such violent confrontations.”
“Oh indeed,” Peté smirked, “It’s best if we didn’t confront each other. It would seem that you seek to confront me. I’m sure you heard Hlaarovth’s little message. One might think you were..." the Empereur paused, leaning the slightest bit forward, "Up to something.”
Marcica’s stomach dropped even further than it had before. Now it was somewhere around the kneecap, and felt just as squished as one might expect it to be.
Pleased with the younger man’s apparent discomfort, the Empereur continued, “Luckily for you, you would have no luck in your pursuit of a conflict. There’s nothing to find. Perhaps you’d be better off using your, ah, detective skills,” the disfiguring smirk on the dunedain man’s face becoming more evident still, “Finding greedy little rats like soon to be ex-Defense Minister Moomintroth. So rest assured that I understand that I slighted you that day, that I am sorry for it, and that you need not fear the Empereur will manhandle you again.”
Marcica swallowed. He wanted to fly into a rage at this s’wit but now his stomach acid was dissolving his kneecaps and making his legs weak. He mumbled a “Yes, Your Majesty.” and hurried away, trying to ignore Peté’s condescending “Now there’s a good sport!”