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Now reading: Chapter 65: The Formal Envoy from Heir of Troy: The Third Son, a Historical novel by AshenVeil.

The Mycenaean ship was larger than it needed to be for its stated purpose.

Lysander noticed this from the harbor master’s office window before anyone had disembarked. A trading delegation did not require a trire escort. A trire escort said sothing that the cargo manifest did not — that whoever was on board was important enough to protect, or important enough to appear to need protection, which was a different kind of statent but arrived at the sa conclusion.

*He is not sending rchants,* Lysander thought. *He is sending a ssage in the shape of a man.*

He went down to et it.

---

The protocol was elaborate.

Elaborate in the specific way Mycenaean ceremony was elaborate — not decorative, functional. Every elent of the reception carried aning that both parties understood and were expected to perform correctly. The wrong gesture, the wrong spacing between attendants, the wrong timing of formal acknowledgnt — any of these could be read as insult or weakness or ignorance, and all three were worse than the others depending on who was reading them.

Lysander had spent six months learning Mycenaean protocol from Ampelos’s correspondence files in the second year. He had done it the way he did most things — thodically, without announcing it, on the basis that knowing sothing was always better than not knowing it even when you could not predict the specific use.

*Past was occasionally competent,* he thought. *Present is grateful.*

He stood in the correct position in the reception line — third from the right, which placed him in the visible range of the delegation without placing him in the space reserved for people whose rank made them the subject of the visit. He was supply overseer. He was not the subject. He was there to observe.

The advance official ca off the ship first — not the envoy, the man whose role was to confirm the reception was correctly arranged before the envoy disembarked. He walked the line with the manner of soone performing a function he had perford many tis and was performing correctly now without particular interest in the people he was evaluating.

He paused at Hector.

*Of course,* Lysander thought. *You always look at the soldier first.*

Hector received the look with the specific blankness he used for situations that required no expression — not hostility, not welco. The simple presence of a man who was there and knew why he was there and did not need the mont to be anything other than what it was.

The advance official moved on.

Then the envoy.

His na, Lysander had learned from the harbor intelligence, was Pelonides — a senior court official. Not a general, not a diplomat in the specialized sense. An administrator. A man who had the king’s confidence and the king’s instructions and the king’s authority to gather information and report back with accuracy.

*He is not here to negotiate,* Lysander thought. *He is here to count.*

Pelonides was perhaps fifty-five, with the bearing of soone who had survived multiple changes of political climate in Agamnon’s court by developing the most useful quality available in that environnt: invisibility. He did not look like a powerful man. He looked like a man who had learned to look like a man who was not powerful.

Lysander recognized the type imdiately.

*We are going to get along terribly,* he thought. *We are exactly the sa kind of person.*

---

The formal reception took three hours.

Three hours of the specific choreography of two courts performing mutual acknowledgnt — the correct phrases, the correct gifts, the correct order of introduction, the correct distribution of attention across the room so that no one was over-acknowledged or under-acknowledged in a way that would require later correction.

Priam was excellent at this.

Lysander had known this in the abstract — Priam was a king who had been receiving delegations for decades. Watching him do it was sothing else. The specific economy of his attention. The way he distributed it across the room without appearing to distribute it — appearing instead to be simply present, simply himself, while ensuring that every person in the room received exactly the amount of acknowledgnt their position required.

*He has been doing this since before I was born,* Lysander thought. *In this body or the other one.*

Hector stood to Priam’s right and said almost nothing. He did not need to. His presence in that position said everything about Troy’s military capacity and about the relationship between the king and his general — which was one of the things Pelonides had co to assess.

Lysander stood in his correct position and watched Pelonides.

Not obviously. He had learned from Fylon that the most useful observation happened when the subject did not know they were being observed. He kept his attention distributed the way Priam distributed his, appearing to be simply present while tracking what Pelonides looked at and what he looked at for longer than the situation required.

The harbor, through the reception room window. *Yes. The fleet.*

Hector, twice. *The military assessnt.*

The supply records visible on the side table — Lysander had left them there deliberately. The standard weekly summary, visible and unimportant, capable of confirming to a careful observer that Troy’s administrative machinery was running at normal capacity. *He noticed. Good.*

The delegation’s gift — carved bronze vessels, Mycenaean workmanship, the kind produced for diplomatic exchange rather than use. Priam received them correctly. Pelonides watched the receiving and noted sothing Lysander could not see but could infer: that Priam had received them without surprise, which ant Troy had intelligence about the delegation’s composition before it arrived, which ant Troy had sources.

*He is counting what we know about him,* Lysander thought. *While we count what he knows about us. This is the most expensive accounting exercise in the Aegean and everyone is smiling.*

---

After the reception there was a dinner.

Lysander sat at the lower end of the table — his position, correct and unremarkable. Far enough from Pelonides to make direct conversation impossible. Close enough to observe.

Pelonides ate carefully. The specific eating of a man who was performing the dinner rather than experiencing it, tracking the conversation at the upper end of the table while appearing engaged with the conversation near him.

The man beside Lysander was one of the junior delegation officials — young, probably twenty-five, with the eager quality of soone on his first significant foreign mission. He introduced himself. Lysander responded correctly.

Then the young man said: *"The harbor improvents — the barrier at the mouth. When were those constructed?"*

*And there it is,* Lysander thought.

He said: *"The harbor infrastructure has been developing over several years. The passage improvents were part of a broader supply network review."*

*"And the fleet. The coastal vessels — those are new designs?"*

*"Troy has been updating its mariti capacity as part of the regional comrcial developnt program."*

The young man smiled and asked sothing else.

Lysander answered each question with sothing that was true, specific enough to be credible, and useless as intelligence. He had a minor gift for this — the history lecturer’s ability to sound informative while saying nothing that could be used.

He watched Pelonides across the table.

Pelonides was doing the sa thing to whoever was sitting next to him.

*Sowhere in this room,* Lysander thought, *two separate intelligence operations are running simultaneously, both sides know it, neither side will acknowledge it, and we are all eating roasted lamb.*

*What a remarkable profession diplomacy is.*

---

After the dinner he found Arsini in the corridor outside the administrative wing.

She was moving quickly — sowhere she had needed to be and sowhere else she needed to go, the continuous motion of a person who had decided the day contained more things than hours and had made peace with this long ago.

She saw him and slowed slightly.

*"The delegation,"* she said. *"I saw the ship this morning."*

*"Yes."*

*"The trire escort."*

*"You noticed."*

*"A trading delegation does not need a trire."* She said it the way she said things she had already concluded. *"How long are they here."*

*"Three days. Possibly four."*

*"The school in the harbor district. The delegation will pass it on the standard tour route."*

*"Yes."*

*"Should I arrange for the session to be running when they pass."*

He looked at her.

*"Why."*

*"Because a city that educates its children is a city with a long planning horizon. A city with a long planning horizon believes it will exist long enough to benefit from that education. That is a different signal than the fleet or the harbor barrier."*

He thought about this for a mont.

She was doing political intelligence through school scheduling.

*"Yes,"* he said. *"Arrange it."*

She nodded and continued down the corridor.

He watched her go and thought: *she understood the purpose of the delegation, identified its intelligence objective, and proposed a counterasure — in the ti it took to have a corridor conversation.*

He was not sure whether this was remarkable or simply what happened when a person of her particular capability turned their attention to a new problem.

Probably both.

He went to find Hector to compare notes on what they had each observed at the dinner.

He picked up his shard.

One thousand and forty-one words.

*Keep going.*

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