Chapter 4
preferences o put it mildly, not going to be co acknoence of his middle son.
For more ten years t on t iently trying to train Gianno to succeed ime aeri—making it clear to everyone t son in line to . For over a decade tomasso simply did not exist he Sandreni Palace.
t certainly did elseher provinces as well.
For reasons t to eclipse te nobility t Astibar still told sales about, even them had been dead four hundred years.
o a certain degree, succeeded.
Certainly t;raidquot; on temple of Morian t Ember Nigo linger a o perspective, as hen) of sacrilegious debauchery.
t on ionsionso impact upon ever since t morning in tra to speak to or even acknoate functions. If tomasso learned somet Sandre sen enougimes—old one of ts togetomasso also kne t it mattered, really.
S for ill o t morning of oion betheir middle child.
Greater romantics t o t, as tigogetaliatory aftermat poisoning, sful hope by dying.
Bot so.
In fact, it al efficiency of brougomasso and Sandre to a certain very late-nigalk during t al, irredeemable, inescapable stupidity of Gianno dAstibar bar Sandre, titular o ttered fortunes of their family.
And to tter trut all denial, t s ed in t generation, y and perception, y to cloak s and discern tever of suco , to to tomasso.
o be spoken, let alone ibar or anywhe Palm.
In t inomasso ainly no evening road Sandre ravel—t one of truest measures of tature as a ruler of men er nig