
“I changed them,” Gaius countered.
“Not their shape or color,” Tavi explained. “Just… your eyes. They were yours. I’m not sure how I knew.”
“Instincts, I suppose,” Gaius mused. “Though I wish it weren’t. If you had some kind of innate talent we could define, perhaps we could teach your technique to the rest of the Cursors. It could prove extremely valuable.”
“I’ll work on it, sire,” Tavi said.
“Very well,” Gaius said. “I wanted to speak to you. I read your analysis of the reports you’ve been tracking.”
Tavi blinked. “Sire? I thought those were for Captain Miles. I’m surprised they reached you.”
“In general, they wouldn’t. If I tried to read every paper in the Citadel, I’d be smothered within a day,” Gaius said. “But Miles thought enough of your argument that he passed it on to me.”
Tavi took a deep breath. “Oh.”
“You make a convincing case that now is the time for action against the more ambitious High Lords.”
“Sire,” Tavi protested. “That wasn’t necessarily my position. Miles wanted me to write in opposition to his preferred strategies. I was just advocating it to help him find weaknesses in his own planning.”
“I’m aware,” Gaius said. “But that makes your conclusions no less credible.” He frowned, eyes on one of the plain bookcases. “I think you’re right. It’s time to make the High Lords dance to my tune for a change.”
Tavi frowned again. “But… sire, it could escalate into a real disaster.”
Gaius shook his head. “The escalation is coming regardless of what we do. Sooner or later, Kalare or Aquitaine will move on me in force. Best to move now, on my own schedule, rather than waiting for them to prepare.”
“Optionally, sire,” Tavi pointed out. “It could fall flat, too.”
Gaius shook his head, smiling. “It won’t.”
“How do you know?”
The First Lord bobbed an eyebrow. “Instinct.”
Tavi chuckled despite himself. “Aye, sire.” He straightened. “What are my orders?”
