This is the first of a two-part story of blackmail and submission. Very much open to suggestions as to how part two should be concluded - enjoy!
*****
The palace sweltered under the ferocity of the noon Sun. The coming and going of harassed, glistening courtiers was watched dolefully by the three servants in the otherwise empty side chamber.
"Three days. I'm telling you, just three more days and this whole city will be decorated in barbarian heads on spikes. The army will
destroy
them," Maria was saying. She cast an angry glance out of the window that Elizabeth had taken to standing by and staring out of. Elizabeth did not seem reassured.
"Three days is a long time Maria! Who knows what will happen to us before the
Kommandair
gets here? You know what these people are like - the... things... they do to conquered cities..." She turned back to look out of the window.
"We are
not
a conquered city, Elizabeth," Maria retorted. "It takes more than a band of unwashed horsemen to conquer a city like Morgavia. I mean come on, they haven't even penetrated the inner walls yet - the old town is just fine. These stupid barbarians don't even have gunpowder. They're just... occupying. Temporarily. They wouldn't dare do anything more."
Elizabeth snorted in derision. She hadn't said anything, but everyone in the room knew her family had been forced to give quarters to some of the invaders yesterday, and she hadn't heard from them since the palace had been sealed off with them inside. Maria turned to Annabelle.
"What do you think Belle?" she asked. She had no easy answer to that. She couldn't deny feeling real terror when news of this approaching barbarian horse lord had reached the city, especially given that they were unusually undefended at the time - the army was warring against some foreign state or other (she could never remember their names). She's always assumed Morgavia was impregnable, but a day later the columns of muscular, swarthy horseman were riding down the Imperial Setway, and their leader was demanding the city's submission. It was hard to say what would happen next.
"I think... I think the Empress will know what to do. She'll keep us safe," she said at last. If they couldn't trust her, Isabella the First and Empress of all Morgavian dependancies, who could they trust? Maria said nothing. She knew Maria adored the Empress as much as she did - the three of them were Empress Isabella's personal handmaidens after all, and it just wasn't possible to serve the Empress in such close quarters without a real sense of adoration. But she knew Maria was a bit more reserved when it came to all that.
"The doors are opening!" cried Elizabeth in alarm. Maria didn't get up.
"Unless you hear the scrape of steel, which you don't, then it's not an attack. They must be sending a representative to surrender or something."
Belle had to admire Maria's cool in a situation like this. Nothing ever ruffled Maria - not even a barbarian occupation, it seemed. Smart, and beautiful - by far the prettiest of the three of them - it was no wonder she had risen to be such a senior servant in the palace. Everybody loved Maria - especially the men of the court.
And, it did indeed seem as though a representative of the horsemen had entered the palace. She could hear his gruff male tones from here - he seemed to have a pretty good grasp on the language.
"How is Donovan?" Maria asked Elizabeth. Belle had to admire her attempt to change the subject, but Elizabeth would not be so easily soothed.
"Hmm? Oh, fine I guess," she replied. It had been the talk of the servant's quarters for a brief afternoon last week when news of Elizabeth and the young guardsman's escapades in the bushes had spread, and it seemed they were still meeting regularly. Though she was often overshadowed by Maria, Elizabeth was a beautiful woman in her own right - she certainly didn't want for male attention. Belle had never quite mastered the art of drawing the male gaze. Next to the tanned skin and sultry eyes of Maria, Belle's tall frame and round figure didn't quite match up. She was what polite society called 'big boned' - not fat, exactly, but hardly petite.
Before Maria could press the point, a deep, musical horn rang through the palace.
"She's coming!" cried Belle. Maria got to her feet, and even Elizabeth left her sentry by the window to join her friends by the balcony. The Empress was coming.
Belle looked down at the small procession, and felt the familiar joy rise in her breast at the sight of Isabella. It instantly calmed her nerves. She looked so regal, so beautiful and resplendent as she made her way through the grand chamber. She carried herself with a dignity and authority that belied her delicate frame, and seemed to positively radiate reassurance to the unhappy palace. Belle had served the empress for six years now, since she was thirteen and the Empress herself was nineteen, and she never failed to have this effect.
Isabella made her way slowly toward the large doors at the end of the chamber, followed by two of her senior advisors. If they were there, it could only mean negotiations were underway. They were going to be OK...
"Do you really think she can save us from them?" asked Elizabeth.
"Yes," said Belle, with some confidence. Maria said nothing. "Don't you think so?"
"I guess," Maria answered. "I mean, sure sending so much of the army overseas wasn't a great move, but I'm sure she knows what she's doing." Belle stared at her reproachfully. "I'm just saying! I'm sure she had good reason to send them so far away. And besides, it's like I said -
they
're the ones who should be asking for mercy. The army won't be absent for much longer. They'd better toe the line, or in three days they'll all be on a bonfire."
Belle did not respond.
* * *
Isabella remained calm as she ascended the old stairway to what had once been a debating chamber, back in the days when Morgavia had been little more than a speck on the world stage, and diplomacy was of such little concern to its kings. Isabella was always calm - she was
good
at it.
"Their King is in the Blue Chamber, your excellency," said councillor Portilla, hiding his wheezing breath well.
"The man they call J'akart Jho is not a King, councillor," she corrected him, "but thank you. I will see him alone."
"Alone?" remarked councillor Grutte. "Your excellency..." Isabella gave the two old men a curt smile. She trusted their wisdom just as much now as she had at any time during her ten year reign, but she knew she was correct on this matter. The only way she could command the respect of this J'akkart Jho, the respect that any sovereign of Morgavia deserved, was to appear without her trusted councillors.
"I will deal with the horselord. Thank you gentlemen." The two men bowed and left, without voicing the concerns she was certain they must have. She had spent most of her reign reassuring men that she knew what she was doing. It had been much worse in the beginning. A girl of just sixteen coming to the throne, daughter of a much revered king who had made Morgavia a major player on the world stage - people were sure the city state would be a ruin by the end of the year. But she had shown them. There had been a plague of would-be 'councillors' and 'advisors' in the early days. Now the only ones who remained were good men, like councillor Grutte and councillor Portilla, who had proved themselves loyal and wise - and respectful.
To Isabella's irritation the horselord had seen fit to station his own guard outside the Blue Chamber - a big, muscular brute who didn't even have the deference to bow his head as she approached, but stared at her through his long braided hair. She ignored him, and entered the chamber.
"Empress Isabella the First," boomed the man's voice from within, "we meet at last." J'akkart Jho's voice was deep, but somewhat silky, in contrast with the raspy, guttral tones she had come to expect from the few of his kind she had met, and he masked his accent well. He rose from his seat and bowed in the proper way. She had to give him credit - he had even donned a set of Morgavian ceremonial robes, unlike the brute who was currently guarding the chamber.
"Lord J'akkart," replied the Empress, acknowledging the bow with a nod but otherwise remaining stiff and impassive. She tried to take the measure of her city's would-be conqueror. He was powerfully built, like all the rest of them - she'd never seen one of them below six feet, and this one must surely have been almost seven feet tall. But he didn't seem so keen to appear as an unthinking thug as the others did, and his hair wasn't shoulder length like the rest of them, but closely cropped. Perhaps he was trying to win her respect.
"
King
J'akkart, your highness," J'akkart corrected her. Isabella bristled - from what little they knew about these horse riding barbarians, it seemed that J'akkart's father was the one who started this ridiculous pretence of calling himself King, after he'd united a few of the smaller tribes. But it took more than that to make a king - no other civilised state had recognised the title. Isabella's own Father had made Morgavia's stance on this issue quite plain.