eyebrows rose, genuine surprise tingeing his expression. “He told you about Durante and Ferruccio?”
“He didn’t mention names. Just that there have always been three candidates for the crown, with you topping the list.”
His face settled back into that knowing expression. “Did he tell you why I topped the list?”
“Just that you, as impossible as it sounds, are less problematic, that you hate him and Castaldini less.”
He shook his head in a mixture of irony and something that looked like grudging admiration, even fondness. “That old fox. Always telling enough truth to make his logic irrefutable, hiding enough to make himself too noble to be denied. So he kept his accounts in the present, didn’t say why only I was considered worthy. Until I blew it big time, that is.”
She sat up. “My conspiracy theory centers are all ears.”
He laughed, lay back on the couch. She didn’t follow, somehow. “It’s not a conspiracy, it’s worse. It’s something far more petty. And far more damaging. You know it well. It goes by many names. Tradition, conservatism, ancestry, blood-lines. All I have on those two men is an accident of birth that made me eligible and eliminated them from the running.”
Suddenly something clicked. “Durante? As in Durante D’Agostino, King Benedetto’s estranged eldest son?”
He nodded.
“Whoa. The current king’s son. The cardinal no-no.”
He gave a vicious snort. “And even in their hour of need, the old farts can’t bring themselves to overlook the letter of a law that should have expired when the need for it did.”
“In their defense, that law has made Castaldini one of the most stable kingdoms in the world.”
“And the most stagnant.”
“And you took advantage of that law yourself,” she retorted. “Seems you always thought Durante—your best friend—as good a candidate as you, yet you didn’t make a peep about changing the law to give him an equal playing field.”
He sat up again, his eyes spitting emerald fire. “And I’m ashamed that I didn’t. I’m even more ashamed that I saw the error of my ways only when I had no choice anymore. But now that I have the choice again, I’m making up for being a party to such a backward practice. I’m daring them to really let the best man win.”
“I do believe that’s who they believe you are.”
“I’m only the best man because I’ll be more acceptable to the masses, who’ve been indoctrinated to accept only the old laws.”
“Isn’t that a huge factor to consider? Don’t you factor in popularity and acceptability when assigning your CEOs?”
“If I ever take the crown, it would be to move Castaldini to the point where laws that no longer suit the times are phased out. I would start by seeing to it that the people come to decide who’s best for Castaldini without ticking off a list of criteria topped by an outdated, demeaning and just plain prejudiced birth requirement.”
She gaped at him as everything he’d said slotted in place. And she exclaimed, “You’re a social reformer and a modernizer!”
“You say this with the same revulsion you’d say ‘a womanizer.’”
“It’s not revulsion. It’s realization. I’m shocked. I was led to believe you were revolutionary, but not in that sense.”
“In what sense, then?”
“In the establishment-destroying, eco-depleting sense.”
“And you believed that?”
“Why not? You’re ruthless in your takeovers and your enterprises are sprouting mega-size urban developments.”
“So? My conquests are prospering. Go check with my longest-term ones and ask if they’d change a thing. As for developments, I build those where it suits the social and ecological climate, and after careful consideration of all ramifications. I don’t go around haphazardly overdeveloping land and exhausting resources.”
She somehow believed every word, no need to check. She should have let it rest, but she found herself adding, “And why should your