To King Snorri the Magnificent
Monarque puissant et type impressionnant:
You may wonder why I greet you in French, but if you recall, French is really the new Latin, and we should probably all get to like speaking it. I blame Charlemagne. Perhaps we make Danish the language of choice, although we’ll always make sure our bathrooms are labeled in German, since the German tourists won’t know where the jakes are, otherwise.
I write you this cold day of October from Croatia, where you have sent me to examine the great general Mislav of those impetuous Byzantines. Noting for the moment, my liege, and if you’ll curb your royal impatience if I diverge from the subject at hand, it is not for nothing that in future centuries I am sure “Byzantine” will become synonymous with “confusing.”
As you have tasked me with the important task of discovering Mislav’s weaknesses and flaws, I now report to you the success of this conceit. First, we took a good look around the court. This fellow Mislav enjoys a hard castle. Not a rush in the joint, and if he managed to pillage any carpets from Turkey, he didn’t bring them to Croatia. And why would he? This place is a pit. The Croatians are a surly lot, bitter and angry about the invasions they’ve experienced a dozen times in so many years. You’d think they’d figure out a way to profit from this - maybe Gojslav’s Used Armor Supplies and Discount Leeches and Medicine (Licensed by Galen).
And there wasn’t a young page in the place. No, this wasn’t like your son Erik’s castle, where the soft boys all wear silk bloomers and lounge about on pillows fanning themselves. Er, that is, not to imply that your son Erik isn’t the manliest man ever to roam Scandinavia! God forbid, your grace, that I should think of anything else, and know that every son and daughter his suffering wife Ingrid produces is shot from his cannon, if you’ll excuse my new-fangled terminology.
Regardless, perhaps this fellow Mislav was smart enough to send away temptation. So we dressed Ragnar, the dwarf changeling, in soft clothing and gave him a haircut with bowl #5, and boy did he look sharp. If I was a priest, I’d have to jump in the moat to keep myself from acting on my urges. Ragnar minced through the palace, and would you believe it, my liege, this Mislav didn’t bat an eyelid.
Unfortunately, Ragnar did gain the attention of a scurrilous local fellow, Ratimir the Inquisitioner, who has taken poor Ragnar in for some inquisitional instruction. I am informed that Ratimir likes to stroke Ragnar’s chin and call him “Svetislava,” and sometimes Ragnar says it hurts when he makes water. You should see the two of them coo endearments at each other in Latin! Well, they like to say in Croatia, “If strokes are good to give, they are good to receive.” Hahahaha! Croats are such kidders. Then they kill you. But no matter.
I then decided to see if he’d murdered anyone. Did any nobles disappear lately? Anyone over for dinner suddenly keel over while ingesting the “mushrooms”? It was here I felt my first gains, and suffered my biggest setback, for it turns out that thirty-five nobles had met their end at his tables. Further examination revealed that the eggplant used in the moussaka had gone a little too purple, and it was just an unfortunate incident at dinner. Apparently, the head cook, a fellow named Drzislav, manages to poison a few people every other dinner. I noted that Mislav gets his food from a different source, but we might want to look into hiring Drzislav to do some state dinners when the French come to visit in Stockholm.
Incidentally, I’ve been really enjoying the local reading material. Have you read “The Vinodol Codex?” I simply cannot put it down. These Croatians really know how to write a thriller.
I took a look at Mislav’s books, after a healthy bribe to his clerk. Apparently the man is an utter amateur, for there isn’t a single thing out of place. This reads nothing like your books, my liege, where everyone has their hand in the pot. Just kidding, my liege, just kidding.
I was able to poke around (a Ragnar joke, my liege, get it, poke? That’s inquisitional humor, your majesty) Mislav’s quarters, and there were no barnyard animals in palatial rooms with abused looks upon their faces.
I have concluded, thus, that Mislav is the worst kind of general: Competent, brave, and really dull.
I await your posting to a new place. My hopes are that you will send me back to Saxonia, for I have a fondness for beer and bratwurst, and the food here makes my gout so much worse, even if Drzislav makes a pretty tasty pork half shanks Podravina style. Ragnar, the midget dwarf, will probably remain here, as he tells me he is considering taking holy orders and becoming a choir boy for the inquisition. I’m proud of him, your grace, I always thought he would be misshapen monster with no career, but here he lands himself a Grand Inquisitioner. He says he even gets to wear Ratimir’s obnoxiously large green hat when they play their little game of confessor. Guess who is the penitent in the game?
Written this 25th day of October, in the year of Lord 1351, from Croatia.
Ole the spy
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