Called to account, p.1

Called to Account, page 1

 

Called to Account
Select Voice:
Brian (uk)
Emma (uk)  
Amy (uk)
Eric (us)
Ivy (us)
Joey (us)
Salli (us)  
Justin (us)
Jennifer (us)  
Kimberly (us)  
Kendra (us)
Russell (au)
Nicole (au)



Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  
Called to Account


  Called to Account

  A Novel of Epic Banking

  This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.

  CALLED TO ACCOUNT

  First edition. July 24, 2024.

  Copyright © 2024 J.S. Mawdsley.

  Written by J.S. Mawdsley.

  Also by J.S. Mawdsley

  Of Duty and Silver

  The Queen's Tower

  For Her Own Good

  Royal Obligation

  Reunion Vale

  The Last Bright Angel

  Of Duty and Silver: The Complete Series

  Reign of the Eagle

  Black Eagle Rising

  Siege of Kings

  Unspeakably Wooed

  When You Are King

  Old Habits Die Hard

  A Troubled Peace

  Reign of the Eagle: Complete Series

  The Moiriad

  A Sorceress Born

  A Sorceress Made

  Years of Exile

  Called to Account

  Standalone

  A Fatal Humor

  One False Step: And Other Stories of Myrcia

  Above His Station: And Other Stories of Myrcia

  Every Count Votes

  A Fine Distinction: And Other Stories of Myrcia

  The Changing of the Guard: And Other Stories of Myrcia

  The Metal of Victory

  The Web in the Palace: And Other Stories of Myrcia

  Gilding the Lily: And Other Stories of Myrcia

  The Night Nothing Happened: And Other Stories of Myrcia

  A Glass of Sand and Stars

  The Romance of the Viscount: And Other Stories of Myrcia

  The Consolation Prize: And Other Stories of Myrcia

  Red Sand Girl

  The Art of the Future: And Other Stories of Myrcia

  Girls' Night Out: And Other Stories of Myrcia

  Watch for more at J.S. Mawdsley’s site.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Also By J.S. Mawdsley

  MAPS

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Sign up for J.S. Mawdsley's Mailing List

  Also By J.S. Mawdsley

  About the Author

  MAPS

  Presidium to Newshire

  NEWSHIRE TO LOSHADNAROD

  Chapter 1

  Fall-Winter, 365 M.E.

  The front lobby was the pride of the Procellus Bank. Even compared to the other great financial institutions of the Empire, it looked unusually impressive. From the gilded mosaic to the marble columns soaring on either side to the dome overhead, lit by skylights, with its depiction of Pecunius, god of commerce, dispensing his bounty on merchants, it gave the bank a solid, reassuring quality. A sea captain or silk trader who walked through the doors would receive a clear message: “You can safely leave your money here. We’re not going anywhere.”

  The brass and gilding and acres of polished walnut spoke words of reassurance to prospective borrowers, as well. They said, “You can trust us. We’ve got plenty of money.” The people who worked here weren’t like the sharks who circled in the back rooms of taverns and inns down by the waterfront. If you didn’t repay a loan from this bank, they didn’t send hulking men to break your kneecaps. They sent lawyers. So perhaps the opulence of the front lobby held a warning, as well.

  Quintus sat behind one of the larger desks, off to the left side as one entered the lobby. He kept his desk obsessively neat, as required by Mr. Megalos, the branch director, but with his ink and quills in easy reach, and the long rolls of parchment, too, on which he could draw up the terms of loans. Somebody had worked out precise formulae for interest rates and payment periods, and a fat book, chained to a brass rail on his desk, contained them all.

  Not that he had much occasion for checking the book or writing out formal loan documents. In his five months as a junior loan officer with the Procellus Bank of Presidium, he had only been permitted to lend out money twice. Every other time, the word had come down from the managers above that either the loan was bad, or it was too important to be entrusted to someone as new to the job as Quintus.

  And yet, he continued to hope. He thought of his job as a noble calling—helping people achieve their dreams. A bank, he thought, was fundamentally in the business of making people happy.

  On this particular day in late September, the Friday before the Equinox, he glanced up from his desk to see a small blonde woman approaching over the gleaming mosaic floor. She looked very pretty, with wide green eyes and a dimpled smile. She wore a somewhat faded black wool dress and an embroidered headscarf, and he knew, even before she opened her mouth, that she was a Myrcian refugee. There had been an increasing number of these unfortunate souls in Presidium over the summer, ever since the assassination of the Myrcian king had plunged that country back into civil war. The Proconsul of Presidium had set up charities to help them, but Quintus felt people should do more.

  “I was told you’re the person I should talk to about getting a loan,” the pretty woman said. She gave her name as Lady Dagra Yates. The way she emphasized the “Lady,” along with the color of her dress, told Quintus her unfortunate husband was no longer among the living. Poor woman—widowed and friendless in a foreign city.

  He told her to have a seat in the little hard-backed chair across the desk from him. “Now, what precisely do you want the loan for, and how much would you require?”

  At this point, generally, merchants and traders would produce some sort of written prospectus showing their business plan. But Lady Dagra smiled and said, “Oh, I suppose I could start a bakery. How much money would that take, do you think?”

  He adjusted his spectacles. “It’s...um, not exactly my area of expertise.” He tried prompting her. “But you’ve got to rent a building, yes? And then buy supplies...salt and flour and yeast and what-have-you, right?”

  Her face fell. “Oh, I suppose so. It’s just...Mr., um...I’m sorry, what’s your name again?”

  “Quintus,” he said. “I’m Quintus Verrus. If you need me, be sure to ask for ‘Quintus,’ because my brother Lucius works here, too.” He pointed across the lobby to the junior floor manager’s desk, where Lucius sat scowling at his account books.

  “Mr. Quintus Verrus, then,” said Lady Dagra. “You have to understand that we’ve been through the Void and back, me and my two children and my sister, ever since...,” her eyes glistened, “ever since my dear Wyatt was killed by those horrid Sigors.”

  She told him how she had learned of her husband’s death in battle, and she hinted at a narrow and dangerous escape for her family through Odeland and Denizvatan.

  “By the time we reached Priena,” she said, “we didn’t even have money left for the ship, so Caitlin and I—that’s my younger sister—had to work for three weeks at a laundry.” She said this in the same tone of voice that someone might use to say, “I had to go diving in a privy pit.” She held up her hands, red, raw, and cracked, as proof of her story.

  He handed her a handkerchief to dry her eyes and said, “I’ll see what I can do.”

  Then he opened the big, chained book to the section called, “Commodatum et Creditum,” pulled out a blank sheet of parchment, and started filling out her application for her. He put down her name and age (21—a year older than he was) and the names of her two children (Anita and Clayton). After some quick math in his head, based on his knowledge of rents in the city and the cash flow of your average baker, he settled on 50 aurei as the amount of money necessary. For collateral, he put down, “future earnings,” and for her work experience he wrote, “laundress in Priena, Denizvatan.”

  “And what did you do in Myrcia before you...um, left?” he asked.

  “I was at court,” Lady Dagra said, with a touch of bitterness. “My Wyatt was a gentleman of the king’s bedchamber and a knight. He commanded a brigade at the end, and we should have had a new estate in the Crown Lands, but then he was killed, and his brigade was wiped out, and I had to come here.”

  Under “Occupation,” Quintus wrote, “homemaker.”

  “This will take at least a day or two,” he told her. “It’s Friday, so hopefully we’ll know by sometime early next week.”

  She gave him the name of her inn, and he promised to send her word when her application had been reviewed.

  “Do you think I stand a good chance of getting the loan?” she asked, with a watery, hopeful smile.

&n bsp; Quintus wanted to say “Yes,” but he hated to lie, and he didn’t want to give this woman false hope. “I will do my best to make the case to my manager,” he said. His manager being his older brother, Lucius.

  Quintus adjusted his spectacles and watched her leave, admiring her figure, with his heart full of a mixture of pity and other, somewhat baser emotions. Only after she was out the door did he realize she’d taken his handkerchief.

  “Ah well,” he thought. “That’s what a handkerchief is for.”

  When he handed her application over to Lucius, his brother took less than a second to find the crucial flaw. Lucius was remarkably good at doing that.

  “No collateral of any kind,” he said. “Former homemaker. We might as well take the 50 aurei and dump them in the harbor.”

  “She really needs help,” said Quintus.

  “Perhaps, but that’s not our job,” said Lucius. He ran a hand over his prematurely-balding head. “For the last time, Quintus, this isn’t a damned charity.”

  Lucius said that a lot, whenever Quintus dared to suggest that profitability shouldn’t be the sole concern of the Procellus Bank. He’d said it a lot more since Quintus had been promoted to junior loan officer. It sometimes seemed as if Lucius didn’t really want the bank to give money to anyone, ever.

  “It’s not charity,” Quintus insisted. “She’s proposing to start a business.”

  “A business,” Lucius said, “in which she has no experience at all.”

  Quintus pointed at the parchment. “She’s a former homemaker. Surely she has some sort of experience baking things.”

  Lucius rolled his eyes. “That’s like saying anyone who ever loaned money to a friend can run a bank.” He pulled out a bottle of red ink and reached for his quill. All he had to do was write the word, “Negavit,” and poor Lady Dagra would lose her dream of a bakery. Her poor children would be out on the street, and she and her little sister might be forced to do something desperate to survive.

  “Wait.” Quintus put a hand on Lucius’s arm to stop him from reaching the quill. “Can we go ask Mr. Megalos?”

  “We can,” said Lucius, “but you know what he’ll say.”

  Quintus did. The branch director liked to tell anyone who would listen that his family had fled to Presidium a century earlier from the wars in Thessalia, and that if the Megalos clan could make it on their own, without charity, then these newcomers from Myrcia could do the same thing, by the gods.

  But the alternative was to let Lucius reject the loan on the spot. And who knew? Perhaps their director would be in a generous mood today.

  All the way up the long marble stairs and down the long blue carpet to the iron-studded black door, Lucius kept muttering under his breath. Quintus only caught a few words, like “irresponsible,” “need to grow up,” and “childish,” but those were enough to give him the general tenor of the monologue.

  The director, a round little man with a pointed black beard, sat behind a huge, marble-topped desk at the far end of the giant office. Cushioned leather chairs and thick rugs were arranged artfully around the room, with orchids on brass stands near the window, and a pair of huge, painted Thessalian vases.

  “What is it?” demanded Mr. Megalos, without looking up from the set of enormous ledgers before him.

  Quintus turned to Lucius, who merely motioned for him to hurry up.

  “Sir, I’d like approval for a loan,” said Quintus.

  The little Thessalian man looked up, frowning, and pulled on the end of his beard. “Did Lucius already tell you ‘no’?”

  Another look at Lucius, silently pleading.

  His brother sighed and said, “I hadn’t quite made a final determination yet, sir.”

  “It’s a refugee widow, sir,” Quintus went on. “She’s a very hard worker.” He didn’t know that for certain, but he was willing to give her the benefit of the doubt. “She worked in a laundry in Priena to get money to feed her children.”

  Mr. Megalos sat up a little straighter. “So, she wants to open a laundry?”

  “Um...a bakery, sir.” Quintus walked up to the desk and set the application on top of the giant ledgers.

  It took the director even less time to spot the flaw than it had taken Lucius. “No collateral. No experience. No detailed plan to build the business. We might as well drop the 50 aurei down the privy.” He reached for his quill, and Quintus didn’t dare grab his arm to stop him from writing the dreaded word of rejection.

  “Could I...perhaps work with her to improve the application?” asked Quintus.

  “You can do whatever you like in your free time,” said Mr. Megalos. “But while you’re here, you’ll confine yourself to making loans that might have a prayer of being repaid.” He nodded to Lucius. “I want you to keep a closer eye on your brother. He’s not making satisfactory progress.” A scowl at Quintus. “Not satisfactory at all. You’re on probation, young man. I’ll expect a report by the Solstice from your brother showing that you’ve figured out how to do your job. Otherwise, you can go home to...wherever it is that the two of you are from.”

  “Albus Magnus,” said Quintus, miserably.

  “I don’t actually care,” said the director. “Now get back to work. Both of you.”

  Neither of them spoke on the long, mortified walk downstairs, until they got to the main lobby again, and Lucius said, quietly, “I told you so.”

  Chapter 2

  Please note that both you and your witnesses must sign and seal the third, fifth, and sixth pages. If you do not have the required number of witnesses, please stop by our offices during normal business hours, and we will be happy to provide some.

  Moira flipped through the stack of rich, heavy parchment and saw the indicated lines and the helpful little penciled circles to show where the seals were supposed to be affixed. Everything seemed perfectly clear, as her attorney had promised it would be. All she needed were a few seals and signatures, and she would be Miss Moira Jean Darrow again, and no longer Countess Moira Lepida Faustina.

  She stood and walked to the window of her little office, looking out over the straits through the drizzle. The office wasn’t much to speak of, but it had an incredible view. First the palace grounds, then the mansions of the patricians, sleek and gray in the rain, and the shops and marketplaces, and finally the big warehouses of the docks. Out in the harbor and the straits themselves, nearly lost in the fog, hundreds of ships rode at anchor or sailed back and forth—fishing boats and big, hulking merchantmen and long, low, sleek naval galleys.

  The only reason she worked here, in this office, the local headquarters of her Prefecturate of Correspondence and Communications, was her relationship with Faustinus. Or at least that was how it had started.

  She loved the work. No matter what, she would still keep her job as Prefect. Nothing could possibly induce her to give that up. And she enjoyed working with Faustinus, even now. The divorce, like their previous break-ups, was entirely amicable. As she told herself frequently, the only thing that upset her about the whole business was the sad realization that marriage had been such a stupid blunder.

  When she had simply been his mistress, they could both come and go as they pleased. And when their respective jobs had kept them apart for months, they could agree to see other people for a while, with no insult intended, and with the clear understanding that neither would be averse to resuming the affair in the future.

  But marriage had made it official. Marriage had tied them together, like drowning sailors tangled in sinking wreckage, and it had been a terrible, terrible mistake, even if they were still friends in the aftermath. She didn’t blame him. She didn’t even blame herself, really. But she did wish they had thought the whole business through more carefully before they had done it.

  “Did you finish with this, yet, ma’am?”

  Moira kept staring out the window, but she knew the voice of Lily Serrana, her Vice-Tribune, second-in-command, and all-purpose secretary. Lily clearly meant the divorce papers.

  A slight pause, and then, with a tiny sigh, “Ah, not yet, then. I’ll put this away. Gina’s here with the morning messages.”

  Moira turned now, and Lily gave her an all-too-knowing look with her big blue eyes. She gave no sign of a rebuke, but Moira knew Lily was thinking it.

 

Add Fast Bookmark
Load Fast Bookmark
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Scroll Up
Turn Navi On
Scroll
Turn Navi On
183