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Through Wolf's Eyes
The launch of a compellingly original epic of
human and animal magic
Through Wolf’s Eyes
Jane Lindskold
Years ago Prince Barden disobeyed his
father’s orders and led a colonizing expedition beyond the
boundaries of Hawk Haven, across the mountains and into the
wilderness beyond. That was the last anyone heard of the prince and
his followers. Now there’s a problem: one of Barden’s
children, if found alive, could still inherit the throne. Earl
Kestrel, an ambitious noble, has mounted an expedition to find out
what became of the colonists—and, perhaps, persuade some of
them to come back. They don’t find Barden’s colony. Young Firekeeper,
a strange, feral young lady, finds them. She’s just the right
age to be one of Barden’s children, and her sole
possessions—aside from the crudely prepared furs she
wears—are some flint stones for striking fire and Prince
Barden’s own knife. Firekeeper only vaguely remembers a time when she didn’t
live with her “family,” a pack of royal wolves.
They’re bigger, stronger, and smarter than normal wolves, and
speak a language that Firekeeper has also learned as she’s
grown up with them. Now the wolves who lead her pack tell her
they’re sending her back to live among the humans. They
promised this to her mother long ago, and now they must honor their
promise—though if Firekeeper finds she doesn’t care for
the humans, they add, she can always just come home and be a wolf
again. But for now she has to give it a try. Thus it is that one fine morning Firekeeper walks into Earl
Kestrel’s encampment. She’s wary. They’re
astonished. They’d be even more astonished if they knew her
beloved best friend, the wolf called Blind Seer, sits watching, just
outside the clearing. He’s planning to come along with
Firekeeper, for the adventure and to keep her company. The men of the
expedition decide to call her Lady Blysse, after Barden’s young
daughter, and set out on the long journey back to Hawk
Haven. Firekeeper and Blind Seer will have much to contemplate in the
months to come. The process of learning to behave like a human will
turn out to be more complicated than she’d ever imagined.
Firekeeper/Blysse will find herself entangled in intrigues, plots
both foul and fair, as the long-smoldering question of royal
succession finally bursts into flame. And yet, while human ways may
be stranger than anything found in the forest, their infighting is
nothing Firekeeper hasn’t seen before…
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed
in this novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.
For Jim, with Love
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I’d like to thank several people for their help during the
development of this book. Christie Golden’s eloquent discussion
of some aspects of characterization remained with me as I developed
certain characters. Phyllis White of Flying Coyote Books supplied
numerous valuable references on wolves. Jim Moore was once again my
priceless first reader and constant sounding board. Kay McCauley, Jan
and Steve Stirling, David Weber and Sharon Rice-Weber never let me
give up. Sally Gwylan helped me to conquer time and error. Last, but
not at all least, Patrick and Teresa Nielsen Hayden provided
thoughtful encouragement and cogent editorial comments.
Special thanks go to Dr. Mark Anthony for fixing my shoulder and
to Candy Kitchen Wolf Ranch for giving me a chance to meet several
wolves up close and personal.
BOOK ONE
I
AAA-ROOO! AAA-ROOO! Distant, yet carrying, the
wolf’s howl broke the late-afternoon stillness.
In the depths of the forest, a young woman, as strong and supple
as the sound, rose noiselessly to her feet. With bloodstained
fingers, she pushed her short, dark brown hair away from her ears to
better hear the call. Aaa-rooo! Aaa-rooo!
It was a sentry howl, relayed from a great distance to the east.
The young woman understood its message more easily than she would
have understood any form of human speech. “Strangers! Strangers! Strangers!
Strange!”
The last lilt of inflection clarified the previous howls. Whatever
was coming from the east was not merely a trespasser—perhaps a
young wolf dispersing from his birth pack—but an unknown
quantity. But from the relay signal that preceded the call, the
strangers were far away.
The young woman felt a momentary flicker of curiosity. Hunger,
however, was more pressing. The cold times were not long past and her
memories of dark, freezing days, when even the stupid fish were
unreachable beneath the ice, were sharp.
She squatted again and continued skinning a still warm rabbit,
musing, not for the first time, how much more convenient it would be
if she could eat it as her kinfolk did: fur, bone, flesh, and guts
all in one luxurious mouthful.
AAA-ROOO! AAA-ROOO!
Derian Carter, the youngest member of Earl Kestrel’s
expedition, felt his shoulder jerked nearly out of its socket when
the wolf howl pierced the late-afternoon peace. The haunting sound
startled the sensitive chestnut mare he was unbridling nearly out of
her highly bred stockings.
“Easy, easy, Roanne,” he murmured mechanically, all
too aware that his own heart was racing. That wolf sounded close!
As Derian eased the mare’s headstall over ears that
couldn’t seem to decide whether to prick in alarm or flatten in
annoyance, he said in a voice he was pleased to discover remained
calm, almost nonchalant:
“That sounds like a big wolf out there, Race.”
Race Forester, the guide for Earl Kestrel’s expedition,
looked down his long nose at the younger man and chuckled. He was a
lean fellow with a strong, steady tread that spoke of long distances
traveled afoot and blond hair bleached so white by constant exposure
to the sun that he would look much the same at sixty as he did at
thirty.
“That it does, Derian.” Race stroked his short but
full beard as he glanced around their sheltered forest camp,
systematically noting the areas that would need to be secured now
that big predators were about. “Wolves always sound bigger when
you’re on their turf, rather than safe behind a city
wall.”
Derian swallowed a retort. In the weeks since Earl Kestrel’s
expedition had departed the capital of Hawk Haven, Race had rarely
missed an opportunity to remind the members (other than the earl
himself) that Race himself was the woodsman, while they were mere
city folk. Only the fact that Race’s contempt was so generally
administered had kept Derian from calling him out and showing him
that a city-bred man could know a thing or two.
Only that, Derian admitted honestly (though only to himself), and
the fact that Race would probably turn Derian into a smear on the
turf. Though Derian Carter was tall enough to need to duck his head
going through low doorways, muscular enough to handle the most
spirited horse or work from dawn to dusk loading and unloading wagons
at his father’s warehouses, there was something about Race
Forester’s sinewy form, about the way he carried his slighter
build, that made Derian doubt who would be the winner in a
hand-to-hand fight.
And, with another surge of honesty, Derian admitted that the
woodsman had earned the right to express his contempt. Race was good
at what he did—many said the best in both Hawk Haven and their
rival kingdom of Bright Bay. What was Derian Carter in comparison?
Well trained, but untried.
Derian would never have admitted that before they set
out—knowing himself good with a horse or an account book or
even with his fists— but a few things had been hammered into
his red head since they left the capital, things that hadn’t
been all that much fun to learn, and Derian didn’t plan on
forgetting them now.
So Derian swallowed his retort and continued removing the tack
from the six riding horses. To his right, burly Ox, his road-grown
beard incongruously black against pink, round cheeks, was heaving the
packs from the four mules. When another long, eerie wolfs howl caused
the nearest mule to kick back at the imagined danger, Ox blocked the
kick rather than dodging.
That block neatly summed up why Ox was a member of the expedition.
Even-tempered, like most big men who have never been forced to fight,
Ox had made his recent living in the Hawk Haven military. During the
current lull in hostilities, however, he had left the military to
serve as Earl Kestrel’s bodyguard.
Ox’s birth name, Derian had learned to his surprise, was
Malvin Hogge.
“But no one’s called me that since long before my hair
started receding,” he’d told Derian, rubbing ruefully
where his curly hairline was making an undignified and premature
retreat. “But I prefer the name that my buddies in Kestrel
Company gave me long ago and, strangely enough, no one ever calls me
‘Malvin’ twice.”
Unlike Derian, Ox felt no inordinate awe toward Race Forester,
aware that in his own way he was as valuable as the guide. How many
men could shift a battering ram by themselves or do the work of three
packers?
“Think that wolf wants us for dinner?” Ox asked Race
in his deep-voiced, ponderous way.
“Hardly,” the guide retorted scornfully.
“We’re too big a group and wolves, savage as they are,
are not stupid.”
“Well,” Ox replied, laughing at his own joke,
“you’d better tell the mules that. I don’t think
they understand.”
Sir Jared Surcliffe, a lesser member of Earl Kestrel’s own
family, but prouder of his recently acquired nickname
“Doc” than of any trace of noble blood, crossed to claim
the general provisions bundle. Like the earl he had black hair and
clear, grey eyes, but his height and build lacked the earl’s
seeming delicacy. There was strength in his long-fingered
hands—as Derian had learned when Jared stitched a cut in his
forearm a couple of weeks back. Derian recalled that Doc had won
honors in battle, so he must have other strengths as well.
“Valet has the fire started,” Jared said, an
upper-class accent giving his simple statement unwonted authority.
“I’ll start dinner. Race, shouldn’t you see if
there might be a fish or two in yonder brook? Earl Kestrel would
enjoy fresh trout with his dinner.”
Had anyone but Jared or the earl himself even hinted at giving the
guide orders, he might have found himself standing a late-night watch
on an anthill. Race Forester, though, for all his pride in his
skills, knew when he could—and could not—push his social
betters.
“Right,” he grunted, and departed, whistling for
Queenie, his bird dog. The red-spotted hound reluctantly abandoned
the station near the fire from which she’d been watching Earl
Kestrel’s man unpack the delicacies kept for the earl’s
own consumption.
When the wolf howled again, Derian wondered how much of
Queenie’s reluctance was due to leaving the food and how much
to the proximity of the big predator.
“They say that the wolves in the mountains are bigger than
anything found in settled lands,” Derian said, talking to
distract himself and feeling freer to speculate now that Race was
gone.
“They do,” Doc agreed, “but I’ve always
wondered, just who has seen these giant wolves? Few people have gone
beyond the foothills of the Iron Mountains—those mostly miners
and trappers. As far as I know, the only ones to have crossed the
range are Prince Barden and those who went with him.”
Derian finished currying Roanne and moved to the earl’s Coal
before answering.
“Maybe in the early days,” he hazarded, “when
the colonies were new. Maybe people saw the wolves then.”
“Possibly,” Jared said agreeably, shaping a journey
cake on its board. “And possibly it’s all
grandmother’s fire stories. Race is right. Wolves and other
night creatures do sound bigger when you’re camping.”
Conversation lagged as the members of the expedition hurried to
complete their chores before the last of the late-spring light faded.
Part of the reason Earl Kestrel had planned his journey for this time
of year was that the days would be growing longer, but after hours
spent riding on muddy trails, the evenings seemed brief enough.
Cool, too, Derian thought, blowing on his fingers as he measured
grain for the mules and horses. Winter may be gone, but she’s
not letting us forget her just yet.
Ox, who had finished putting up the tents and was now effortlessly
chopping wood, paused, his axe in the air.
“If you’re cold, Derian, you can help me chop this
wood. You know what they say, ‘Wood warms you twice: once in
the cutting, once in the burning.’ ”
Derian grinned at him. “No thanks. I’ve enough else to
finish. Do you think we’ll get snow tonight? The air almost has
the scent of it.”
Ox shrugged, measuring his answer out between the blows of his
axe. “The mountains do get snow, even this late in the season,
but I hope we’re not in for any. A blackberry winter’s
all we need.”
Derian frowned thoughtfully. “At home I’d say snow
would be a good thing for business. It’s easier to move goods
by sled and people by sleigh, but out here, on horseback… I
could do without the snow.”
“We won’t have snow,” announced Race,
re-entering the camp from the forest fringe. Three long, shining
river trout dangled from one hand. “The smoke’s rising
straight off the fires. Clear but cold tonight. Derian, you might
want to break out your spare blankets.”
Derian nodded. He’d slept cold one night out of a stubborn
desire to show himself as tough as the woodsman and had been stiff
and nearly useless the next morning. Earl Kestrel himself had chided
him for foolish pride.
“Our mission is too important to be trifled with,”
Kestrel had continued in his mincing way. “Mind that you listen
to Race Forester’s advice from here on.”
And Derian had nodded and apologized, but in his heart he
wondered. Just how important was this mission? King Tedric had seemed
content enough these dozen years not knowing his son’s fate.
And Prince Barden had shown no desire to contact the king.
Earl Kestrel had been the one to decide that knowing what had
happened to the disinherited prince was important—Kestrel said
for the realm, but Derian suspected that the information was
important mostly for how it would affect the earl’s private
ambitions.
The young woman was bathing when a thin, tail-chewed female informed
her that the One Male wanted her at the den. The messenger, a
yearling who had barely made it through her first winter, cringed and
groveled as she delivered her message.
“When shall I say you will come before him,
Firekeeper?” the she-wolf concluded, using the name most of the
wolves called the woman—a name indicating a measure of respect,
for even the Royal Wolves feared fire.
Firekeeper tossed a fat chub to the Whiner. She certainly
wasn’t going to have time to eat it, not if she must run all
the way to the den. Ah, well! She could catch more fish later.
“Tell him,” she said, considering, “I will be
there as fast as two feet can carry me.”
“Slow enough,” sneered the Whiner, emboldened as she
remembered how all but the fattest pups could outrun the two-legged
wolf.
Firekeeper snatched a stone from the bank and, swifter than even
the Whiner’s paranoia, threw it at the wolfs snout. “Ai-eee!”
“That might have been your skull,” the woman reminded
her. “Go, bone-chewer. My feet may be slow, but my belly is
full with the meat of my own hunting!”
A lip-curling snarl before the Whiner vanished into the brush
showed that the insult had gone home. Faintly, Firekeeper could hear
the retreat of her running paws.
Her own departure would be less swift. Bending at the waist, she
shook the water from her close-cropped hair, then smoothed the locks
down, pressing out more water as she did so.
Even before her hair had stopped dripping down her back,
Firekeeper had retrieved her most valuable possession from where she
had set it on a flat rock near the water. It was a fang made of some
hard, bright stone. With it, she could kill almost as neatly as a
young wolf, skin her prey, sharpen the ends of sticks, and perform
many other useful tasks. The One Male of her youngest memories had
given it to her when he knew he was going into his last winter.
“These are used by those such as yourself, Little
Two-legs,” he had said fondly, “since they lack teeth or
claws useful for hunting. I remember how they are used and can tutor
you some, but you will need to discover much for yourself.”
She had accepted the Fang and the leather Mouth in which it slept.
At first she had hung them from a thong about her neck, but later,
when she had learned more about their uses, she had contrived a way
to hang them from a belt around her waist. Only when she was bathing,
for the Fang hated water, did she take it off.
Now she held the tool in her teeth while she reached for the cured
hide she had hung in a tree lest those like the Whiner chew it to
shreds. Most hides she couldn’t care less about but this one,
taken from an elk killed for the purpose, was special.
Out of the center she had cut a hole for her head, wide enough not
to chafe her neck. The rest of the skin hung front and back,
protecting her most vulnerable parts. A belt made from strips of hide
kept the garment in place and she had trimmed away the parts that
interfered with free movement of her arms.
Some of the young wolves had laughed when she had contrived her
first hide, but she had disregarded their taunts. The wolves had fur
to protect themselves from brambles and sticks. She must borrow from
the more fortunate or be constantly bleeding from some scrape. An
extra skin was welcome, too, against the chill.
In the winter, she tied rabbit skins along her legs and arms with
the fur next to her flesh. The skins were awkward, often slipping or
falling off, but were still far better than frostbite.
Later in the year, when the days grew hotter and the hide
stifling, Firekeeper would wear only a shorter bit of leather around
her waist, relinquishing some protection for comfort.
Lastly, Firekeeper hung around her neck a small bag containing the
special stones with which she could strike fire. She valued these
less than the Fang, but without their power she could not have
survived this winter or others before it.
Faintly, Firekeeper remembered when she did not live this way,
when she wore something softer and more yielding than hides, when
winters were warmer. Almost, she thought, those memories were a
dream, but it was a dream that seemed strangely close as she ran to
where the One Male awaited her.
The one male was a big silver-grey wolf with a dark streak running
along his spine to the tip of his tail and a broad white ruff. He was
the third of that title Firekeeper could remember and had held the
post for only two years. His predecessor would have dominated the
pack longer except for a chance stumble in front of an elk during a
hunt in midwinter along an icy lakeshore.
The current One Male had been accepted by the One Female, who had
led the pack alone through the remainder of that winter until the
mating season early the following spring. Competition for her had
been fierce and one contender had been killed. A second chose exile
rather than live beneath his pack mate’s rule.
Yet the diminished pack had fared well, perhaps because of, rather
than despite, the losses. Fewer wolves meant fewer ways to split the
food. New pups had since grown to fill the gaps and the Ones reigned
over a fine pack eight adults strong—with a single strange,
two-legged, not-quite-wolf to round out the group.
Although she remembered when both had been fat, blue-eyed,
round-bellied puppies, Firekeeper thought of both the One Male and
the One Female as older than herself. However, though the human had
more years than the wolves, the reality was that they were adults
while she, when judged by her abilities rather than her years, was a
pup. Indeed, she might always be a pup—a thing she regarded
with some dissatisfaction during rare, idle moments.
When she loped into the flat, bone-strewn area outside of the den,
the One Male was waiting for her. None of the rest of the pack was
visible.
The One Female was within the cave nearby, occupied with her
newborn pups. The day for them to be introduced to the rest of their
family was close and Firekeeper warmed in pleasant anticipation.
Already she knew that there were six pups, all apparently healthy,
but everything else about them was kept a guarded secret until the
great event of Emergence.
Seeing Firekeeper—though doubtless he had heard her
arrive—the One Male rose to his feet. She ran to within a few
paces, then dropped onto all fours. When he permitted her to
approach, she stroked her fingers along his jaw, mimicking a
puppy’s begging.
Tail wagging gently, the One Male drew his lips back from his
teeth as if regurgitating—though he did not actually do so. All
spare food these days went to the One Female and the pups.
Firekeeper, who had been made hungry by her swim followed by a swift
run, was rather sorry. Many times during the past winter meat had
been carried to her from a kill too distant for her to reach before
the scavengers would have stripped it.
“You summoned me, Father?” she asked, sitting back on
her haunches now that the greeting ritual had been completed.
The One Male wagged his tail, then sat beside her, tacitly
inviting her to throw an arm around him and scratch between his
ears.
“Yes, Little Two-legs, I did. Did you hear the message howl
some while ago?”
“Stranger! Stranger! Stranger! Strange!” she repeated
softly by way of answer. “From the east, I thought.”
“Yes, all the way from the gap in the mountains, not far
from where you came to us.”
Firekeeper nodded. She knew the place. There was good hunting in
those meadows come late summer when the young deer grew foolish and
their mothers careless. There was also a burned place, overgrown now,
but hiding black ash and hard-burnt wood beneath the vines and
grasses. Every year when the pack hunted in that region the Ones told
her how she had come from the burned place and reminded her of her
heritage.
“I remember the place,” Firekeeper answered, mostly
because she knew the One would want to hear confirmation, not because
she thought he needed it.
“The Strangers Strange are two-legs, like yourself,”
the One continued. “A falcon has been following them by day and
she relays through our scouts that the two-legs go to the Burnt
Place, seeking those who were there before I was born.”
“Oh!” Firekeeper gasped softly. Then a question drew a
line between her dark, dark eyes. “How does the falcon know
where they are going?”
“When this falcon was young she was taken from the air while
on migration,” the One explained. “I don’t know how
it was done, but the Mothers of her people say it was so and I
believe them.”
“Like knows like best,” Firekeeper said, repeating a
wolf proverb.
“Remember that,” the One Male said, then returned to
his explanation. “This falcon lived for a time with the
two-legs and hunted for them. During that time, she learned something
of their speech—far more than the few words they used to
address her. From their speech and from the direction they are
heading, she believes that these two-legs are not hunters come for a
short time to take furs.”
“The wrong time for that game, certainly,” Firekeeper
said. “Your coats are shedding now and make me
sneeze.”
“That is why those fingers of yours feel so good,” the
One Male admitted. “Pull out the mats as you find
them.”
“Only if you remember,” she teased with mock hauteur,
“not to bite off my hand!”
“I promise,” he said with sudden solemnity. “As
all of us have promised not to harm our strange little
sister.”
Made uneasy by this change of mood, Firekeeper occupied herself
tugging out a mat, worrying the undercoat loose with dexterous
ease.
“Why did you summon me to tell me of the two-legs?”
she asked at last. “I know less of them than the falcons do.
They are strangers to me. The wolves are my people.”
“Always,” the One Male promised her, “but since
before I was born each One has told those who may follow that there
is a trust held by our pack for you. When your people return, we have
sworn to bring you back to them. It is an ancient trust, given, so
our tales say, to your own mother.”
Firekeeper was silenced by astonishment. Then she blurted out
indignantly:
“I was never told of this!”
“You,” the One Male said gently, “have never
been considered old enough to know. Only those who may one day lead
the pack are told of this trust, so that they may vow to keep it in
their turn.”
The human admitted the justice of this, but hot tears of
frustration and anticipated grief burned in her eyes.
“What if I want nothing of this trust, given to a mother I
cannot remember?”
“You will always be a wolf, Firekeeper,” the One Male
said. “Meet the two-legs. Learn of them. If you do not care for
their ways, come back to the pack. A wise wolf,” he continued,
quoting another proverb, “scouts the prey, knows when to hunt,
when to stay away.”
“If I did less,” Firekeeper admitted, wiping the tears
away with the back of one hand, “I would be less than a wolf.
Let me begin by scouting the two-legs. When I have learned who leads,
who follows, then I will make myself known to them.”
“Wise,” the One Male said. “The thoughts of a
wolf and the courage as well.”
“Tell me where to find them,” Firekeeper said, rising.
“Call my coming to our kin along the trail that they may guide
and protect me.”
“I will…”
The One Male’s words were interrupted by a husky voice from
the den’s opening. An elegant head, pure silver, unmarred with
white or black, showed against the shadows.
“Go after tonight, Little Two-legs,” said the One
Female. “Tonight I will bring out your new brothers and sisters
so that you may know them and they you. Then, fully of the pack, you
may be heartened for your task.”
Overcome with joy, Firekeeper leapt straight into the air.
“Father, Mother, may I cry the pack together?”
“Do, Little Two-legs,” said the One Female.
“Loud and long, so that even the scouts come home. Call our
family together.”
“We pass through the gap tomorrow,” announced Race
Forester as they gathered round the fire after dinner that night.
“Then, we will need to slow our progress. Earl
Kestrel…” he dipped his head in respectful
acknowledgment, “has collected reports from the trappers and
peddlers who had contact with Prince Barden. They all agree that he
did not intend to go much further than the first good site beyond the
mountains. He wanted to be well away from settled lands, but I
suspect not so far that trade could not be established
later.”
Derian, full, warm, and pleasantly weary, asked, “But no one
has heard from him since he crossed the Iron Mountains?”
“No one who is admitting it,” said Earl Kestrel.
From where Derian sat, the earl was just a solid, hook-nosed
shadow. He was not a big man. Indeed, he was quite small, but as with
the kestrel of his house name, small did not mean weak or tame. The
furious lash of his tongue when he was roused was to be as feared as
another man’s fist—more so, to Derian’s way of
thinking. You could outrun a bully, but never escape the wrath of a
man of consequence.
He wondered, then, if that had not been precisely what Prince
Barden of the House of the Eagle had been trying to do when he left
Hawk Haven for the unsettled lands beyond the barrier of the Iron
Mountains.
Prince Barden had been a third child and, by all accounts, roundly
unhappy about being so. Although King Tedric had his heir and his
spare, he resisted having his youngest son attempt any independent
venture. Enough for the king that Barden learn to sit a horse, fight
well enough for his class, and perhaps dabble in some court
tasks.
Perhaps when Crown Prince Chalmer had married and fathered a child
or even when Princess Lovella was similarly settled, then Barden
might finally have been superfluous enough to be permitted his
freedom. Or maybe not even then. King Tedric was said to be a very
domineering father.
Ironically, because Prince Barden had been the least noticed and
least dominated by his father, he was the most like the king in
temperament. Prince Barden decided he would not see his life
frittered away while waiting for his siblings to marry (a task, to be
fair to them, made more difficult in that King Tedric wanted a hand
in that choosing as well), to breed heirs, for his father to die.
Thus, Prince Barden began quietly laying plans for a venture of which
his father was certain to disapprove.
Sometimes Derian wondered at the younger prince’s ambitions.
Himself an eldest son, Derian was all too aware of the pressure of
his parents’ hopes and expectations. How much easier life would
be if they would just leave him alone! Oh, they were loving and
kind—nothing like King Tedric—but sometimes Derian
thought he would rebel if he heard one more “Derian, have you
practiced your… handwriting, riding, fencing…”
The list was endless.
Even when he wasn’t being set to his books, there were
quizzes. “Quick, son, tell me whose crest that is!” Or
“Don’t hold your knife in that hand, Derian Carter. A
gentleman holds it like so.” Lately even his dancing, which had
made him the delight of the womenfolk since he was old enough to
leave the children’s circles, had come into question.
“Don’t skip so! More stately, more graceful!”
No doubt his parents had dreams of him rising into the lower ranks
of the nobility, perhaps by marriage to some impoverished
noble’s plain daughter! Derian groaned inwardly at the thought.
He fancied the baker’s pretty second daughter, the one with the
round cheeks and the saucy smile.
Maybe, now that he considered it, he was more like Prince Barden
than he had thought. Both of them had found their parents’
expectations a bit more than they could take, but the difference was
that Prince Barden had defied his father. Quietly and carefully he
had gathered a cadre of men and women who, like himself, longed for
more than what Hawk Haven and her endless sparring with Bright Bay
could offer.
Only after the expedition was planned, supplied (largely from King
Tedric’s own pocket—he didn’t believe it good
policy to stint too greatly on his children’s allowances), and
on its way did the king learn that Prince Barden, his wife, and his
little daughter had not stayed at their keep in the foothills of the
Iron Mountains, but had gone beyond the gap to the other side.
The steward of West Keep delivered the news himself, bringing with
him a letter from the prince. Barden’s plan had been well laid.
Almost every lesser guard, groom, gardener, cook, or maidservant at
the keep had been of his party. The steward, left with only his core
group, had not dared pursue them and leave his trust untended.
By the time King Tedric learned of Prince Barden’s
departure, attempting to drag him back would have been futile.
Instead, the king disowned his younger son, blotting his name from
the books and refusing to let it be spoken by any in court or
country. However, Derian knew, as did all the members of Earl
Kestrel’s expedition, that even in his fury the king had left
himself a loophole.
Lady Blysse, Barden’s daughter, had not been blotted from
the records. She, if the need arose, could be named to the
succession. Prince Barden could even be named her regent if her
grandfather so wished. In those long-ago days, it had not seemed
likely that King Tedric would ever so wish.
But things change, and those changes were why Derian Carter found
himself one of six select men seated around a fire, preparing to go
through a mountain pass where, to their best knowledge, no human had
gone for twelve long years.
He shuddered deliciously at the thought of the adventure before
them and turned his attention again to the informal conference around
the fire.
Earl Kestrel was finishing his diatribe against those who might
have defied King Tedric’s wrath and made profitable and secret
trade with Prince Barden’s group.
“It would be to their best interests,” he said,
“to never speak of their doings. Why risk royal
censure?”
“Why,” added his cousin Jared, “risk having to
share a closed market?”
“Indeed,” the earl agreed approvingly.
“Forester, as we move deeper into unknown territory,
Barden’s people may not take such care to hide traces of their
comings and goings. Keep a sharp eye out for them.”
“Ever, my lord,” answered Race promptly and humbly.
Then, “My lord, when we find them,” (he didn’t say
what he had said frequently to Derian and Ox, that he thought Barden
and his party all dead or fled to some foreign country), “how
shall we approach them?”
“We shall scout them,” Earl Kestrel said, “from
hiding if possible. When we have ascertained their numbers and
whether Prince Barden is among them I will choose the manner of my
approach. If we find an abandoned settlement, then we shall remain
long enough to discover whether Prince Barden and his people are dead
or if they have merely moved elsewhere.
“Any information,” he continued sanctimoniously,
“will be of help and comfort to the king in his
bereavement.” And you’ll find a way to turn it to your advantage,
Derian thought sardonically.
That there was an advantage to be gained Derian did not
doubt— neither had his father and mother. This was why they had
insisted on Derian’s accompanying Earl Kestrel as one of their
conditions for setting a good rate for pack mules, a couple of riding
horses, and a coach for the early stages of the journey.
As all Hawk Haven knew, King Tedric’s paranoia regarding
heirs had proven well founded. Crown Prince Chalmer had died as a
result of a questionable hunting accident. His sister, Lovella, the
new crown princess, had died some years later in a battle against
pirates. Neither had left legitimate issue. Prince Chalmer had been
unmarried. Princess Lovella had been careful not to make that
mistake, but she had delayed bearing a child until she felt she
wouldn’t be needed as a general.
Now, as King Tedric, still a fierce old eagle of a man, aged,
potential heirs buzzed about the throne. The genealogical picture was
so complex that Derian was still working out who had the best claim.
There was even a member of the royal family of Bright Bay with
factions agitating for King Tedric to name him heir.
All Derian was certain of was that Prince Barden, if reinstated to
his father’s favor, would have the best claim. Lady Blysse, who
would be about fifteen now, would have as good a claim as any and
better than many.
And certainly the lost prince or his lost daughter would need a
counselor. And who better than the kind and wise Earl Kestrel, who
had risked life and limb to bring father and daughter forth from
exile?
That night, a few hours before dawn, Firekeeper curled up among the
pups so that they would soak in her scent and know her even after an
absence. Perhaps it was the hot, round bodies clustered around her
own, perhaps the memories awakened by her talk with the One Male, but
she dreamed of fire. Kindled in a shallow pit ringed around with river rock and
bordered with cleared dirt. Her fingers ache a little from striking
together the special stones from the little bag the Ones have just
given her. Deep inside, she feels a shiver of fear as she tentatively
nurses the fire to life with gentle breath and offerings of
food. “That’s right,” says the One Female, her
tones level though her neck ruff is stiff with tension at remaining
so close to the flames. “Feed it little things first: a dry
leaf, a bit of grass, a twig. Only when it is stronger can it eat
bigger things.” “Yes, Mother. How do you know so much?” The One Female smiles, lips pulled back from teeth. “I
have watched such small fires being made, Little Two-legs. Only when
they are permitted to eat more than their fill do they grow
dangerous.” The pale new flames reach out greedily for a twig, lapping her
hand. She drops the twig and sucks on an injured finger. “It bit me, Mother!” “Tamara! Don’t put your hand in the fire,
sweetling! You’ll get burnt!” The voice is not the rumble of the wolf, thoughts
half-expressed by ears and posture rather than by sounds. These words
are all sound, the voice high but strong. The speaker is a two-legs,
towering far taller than any wolf. “I didn’t touch it, Mama. I was only
looking.” Orange and red, glowing warm and comforting where it is
contained within the hearth, the flames taste the bottom of the fat,
round-bellied black kettle hung over them. The air smells of burning
wood and simmering soup. “Good girl. We welcome fire into our homes but never
forget that it can be a dangerous guest…” Dangerous. Smoke so thick and choking that her eyes run with water.
Coughs rack her ribs. A band wraps around her, squeezing what little
air there is out of her. Vaguely she realizes that it is a broad,
muscular arm. Her father’s arm. He is crawling along the packed earth floor, keeping his head
and hers low. Moving slowly, so slowly, coughing with every breath.
The room in the cabin is hot and full of smoke. Something falls
behind them with a crash that reverberates even through the dirt
floor. “Donal!” Mama’s voice, shrill now with
panic. “Donal!” “Sar…” More a gasp than a word. Then
stronger, “Sarena!” A shadow seen through burning eyes, crouching, grabbing
her. “Donal! What…” She is being dragged again, more quickly now. “My legs, a beam… when I went for the
child.” “I’ll get her out, come back for
you!” “No! Get clear.” “I’ll come back.” Outside, clearer air, but still so full of smoke. She is
weeping now, tears washing her eyes so that she can see. Mama has
brought her outside of the wooden palisade that surrounds
Bardenville. Looking back she can see that all the buildings are
aflame. Where are the people? “Wait here, Tamara.” Mama coughs. “I’m
going to get Papa.” She can’t do anything but wait, her legs are so weak.
Though the air outside is clearer, she can barely breathe, but she
struggles to reassure her mother. “I’ll wait, Mama.” Mama turns. Even smudged with soot, coughing and limping, she
is graceful. Tamara watches through bleared eyes as Mama goes into
the burning thing that was once a cabin. Where are the people? Where is Barden? Where is Carpenter who
made her a doll? Where is Blysse who plays with her? Where
is… Something large comes out of the forest behind her. A wolf.
What Mama and Papa call a Royal Wolf, though Tamara doesn’t
know why. The wolf licks her in greeting, whines. Tamara points to the burning cabin. “Mama
…” The wolf barks sharply. A second wolf, then two more, come out
of the forest. Clearly they fear the fire, but they run into the
burning settlement. One even runs into the cabin, comes out dragging
something that is screaming in raw pain. Tamara’s eyes flood. She hears shriller screaming and
realizes it is her own voice out of control, belonging it seems to
someone other than herself. She can’t stop screaming and all
around there are sparks, flames, smoke, and a terrible
smell. She screams and…
Firekeeper awoke, the scream still in her throat, the pups
stirring nervously around her. Beyond them, a large white shape rose.
The One Female nudged Firekeeper fully awake, lapping her face with
her tongue.
“Awake, Little Two-legs. The dawn is becoming day. Your
journey is before you.”
II
GETTING THROUGH THE IRON MOUNTAIN GAP the next day
proved only nearly impossible. There was nothing like a traveled
path—certainly a blow to Earl Kestrel’s conjectures about
renegade peddlers—but there was a fairly well used game
trail.
“Elk,” Race proclaimed. “Moose. Certainly
creatures larger than deer. They may summer across the pass and then
come east in the winter.”
“Delighting our huntsmen to no end,” said Sir Jared
Surcliffe. “Why do you say they come east in the
winter?”
“Just a guess,” the guide admitted. “Ocean and
mountains both moderate the weather. My thought was that our winters
may be milder because we are walled in by mountains on the
west.”
Derian, recalling some pretty nasty winter storms, bit back a
sarcastic comment. He had his hands full with two of the pack mules,
stubborn beasts who refused to follow unless dragged. His booted feet
ached, and he cursed the boulders and loose rocks that made following
the straightest route a fool’s dream.
“Must have been tough going for Prince Barden’s
group,” Jared continued. Still mounted, he was leading
Derian’s Roanne. “They didn’t have just a few
horses and mules. From what the steward reported to King Tedric, they
pretty much stripped the manor of its livestock.”
“It was the prince’s property,” Earl Kestrel
reminded them with gentle firmness. “West Keep was one of the
estates his father had given to him.”
Derian grinned despite his weariness. It was to the earl’s
advantage to make certain that all of them remained sympathetic
toward a man who was—realistically seen—at the very least
a rebel and perhaps even a traitor.
Not for the first time he wondered just how much King Tedric would
welcome back his third child. For some moon-spans now rumors had been
flying around the capital that the king was considering putting off
Queen Elexa, who was well past childbearing years, and taking a new
bride in an attempt to get another heir.
Of course, that would likely anger the queen’s Wellward
relatives, for she had been, by all accounts, a blameless wife.
They paused an hour or so later so that Race and Ox could clear a
path through some growth that moose or elk would likely view as a
pleasant snack. Derian trudged down to the nearest brook and hauled
water back to the horses and mules.
“A little, not too much,” he cautioned Valet, who
silently came to help him.
Valet was a small, agile man who, from what Derian had observed,
must be made entirely out of iron wire. Equally talented at handling
a tea service or a hawk, versed in both etiquette and his
temperamental master’s moods, he had held up well through the
long, muddy springtide journey.
This had come as a surprise to Derian, who had expected, upon
first meeting Valet, that the little man would collapse as soon as
the going got rough. Who would expect hardiness from a fellow who
made his final duty of every evening putting hot coals into a
travelling iron and pressing his master’s shirts and
trousers?
But Valet had proven Derian wrong. When Derian had shared his
surprise with Ox, the bodyguard had told him that Valet accompanied
Earl Kestrel everywhere, even into battle. Certainly, Derian would
never have learned this from Valet himself. The man rarely spoke
three words unless directly addressed.
Even now, though he must have known not to overwater a hot horse,
Valet said nothing in reproof (as Derian himself might have), but
merely nodded.
As dusk was fading into full dark, the expedition emerged from the
pass and onto something like level ground. The light was almost, but
not quite, too poor to make camp, a thing for which Derian’s
aching body was eternally grateful. A cold meal, then sleeping
wrapped in a bedroll on lumpy ground, would have been more than he
could have borne. Every part of him cried out for hot food, hot water
in which to soak his feet, and the relative comfort of a proper
tent.
Of course, these things must wait until after the horses and mules
were tended, after he had fetched water for all the camp, after he
had unpacked the bedrolls, the horse feed, and the party’s
personal kits.
He couldn’t even feel sorry for himself while he worked, for
no one else was resting, not even the earl. The nobleman, between
mouthfuls of sauteed pigeon with wild mushrooms and lightly braised
greens, was estimating how long they could remain away from
civilization without replenishing their supplies.
Although Derian had no desire to seem less willing than any of the
rest, he was grateful beyond words when, after a meal of journey cake
and hard cheese followed by a withered apple for dessert, Jared
Surcliffe ordered Derian to remove his boots.
“As you wish, Doc,” Derian agreed, “but who will
do the cleaning up?”
“Race can handle it,” Jared replied bluntly.
“I’ve watched you limping from midday on. He’s more
accustomed to tromping about over rough ground.”
Race, complimented, accepted the menial chore without protest.
“I wanted to set some fish traps in any case,” he said,
gathering up the pots and cups.
The lonely howl of a wolf, answered by a fainter, second cry,
silenced for a moment the singing of the night peepers and shriller
chirps of the insects. The humans froze in visceral, instinctive
fear.
“Take Ox with you,” the earl commanded.
Race nodded and the two men departed.
“Think they’ll be all right, Doc?” Derian asked
nervously as Jared helped him off with his boots.
“I’m more worried about your feet than I am about
wolves,” the other man replied. “Race and Ox are big men.
The wolves should find much easier hunting this time of
year.”
“The horses don’t like all that howling much,”
Derian said, talking to keep his mind off the sting of hot water on
his feet. “But that just makes sense. Wolves probably see the
horses as an easy dinner.”
“That’s something to remember,” Doc agreed.
“Whoever’s on watch should keep a close eye on horses and
mules alike.”
A few minutes later, he lifted Derian’s feet from the water,
inspected them, then smeared some ointment on the blisters.
“We’ll probably stay in this camp until we locate
Prince Barden,” Doc said. “I’m going to suggest to
Earl Kestrel that you take camp watch so you can wear soft shoes and
let these blisters heal.”
“Thanks,” Derian said, not bothering to mask his
relief.
“My pleasure.” Doc grinned. “I had the privilege
of staying on horseback most of the day rather than picking along the
ground dragging a string of mules. You and Ox took most of the
punishment there.”
“Ox seems fine,” Derian commented enviously.
“He’s an old campaigner and knows how to pamper his
feet,” Doc replied. “You should consult him before we
continue.”
“I will.”
They sat in companionable silence for a long moment.
“Doc, do you think we’ll find the prince?
Honestly?”
Jared shook his head, but his words belied the gesture.
“We’ll find something—the earl insists.”
Later, almost too tired to sleep, dismissed from guard duty for
this night, Derian lay in the tent he shared with Ox and listened to
the night sounds above the other man’s breathing. Deep in his
heart, he began to suspect that they would find no one. Nothing in
the surrounding wilderness spoke with a human voice.
A howl sounded and was answered by a chorus which continued even
as Derian slipped into exhausted rest.
Firekeeper swallowed a hurried meal of lightly grilled brook trout
while listening to the Ones’ parting advice.
“We have sent the pack ahead to hunt for you,” the One
Female said, her silver fur glinting in the morning light.
“This way you will not be delayed along the trail.”
“But, Mother,” the young woman protested, “you
and the pups will go hungry!”
“The One Male will hunt for us,” the One Female
reassured her, “and we have kept the Whiner near to mind the
pups so I can hunt as well. If you are worried about us, remember,
the faster you make your trail, the faster the others can
return.”
Firekeeper nodded.
“Blind Seer waits where the two-legs are,” the One
Male added. “He learned of their coming from a Cousin wolf who
came in panic before them. Blind Seer crossed through the gap to
watch the two-legs’ coming and send word ahead. He will remain
with you. The falcon should be with him, though by now she may have
departed to report to the Mothers of her aerie.”
“Good.”
The young woman dropped to her knees to rub her face in each
puppy’s fuzzy coat. They looked more like little bears now than
wolves: muzzles short, ears small and round. Their blue eyes were
still cloudy.
“I’ll miss you all,” she said, embracing the
Ones and punching the Whiner, who had emerged from behind a rock,
lightly on one shoulder.
“Sing your news,” the One Male reminded her,
“and it will reach our ears.”
Firekeeper promised to do so. Then, after extinguishing her fire,
she departed. As morning passed into bright daylight, daylight into
afternoon, noon into evening, she ran east, her gait the steady
mile-eating jog of a wolf. When she grew tired, she slowed, walking a
hundred paces, jogging a hundred. When even this became onerous, she
climbed into the boughs of some spreading forest giant, an oak or
maple by choice, and napped.
As promised, her brothers and sisters met her along the way,
telling her how winter had reshaped the trails, feeding her if she
was hungry, showing her the closest fresh water.
By night, she had met up with Blind Seer. This young, powerful
male, some three years old, had been named for his eyes, which never
changed from puppy blue to the more usual yellow-brown. For a time,
the wolves had thought his vision damaged and had philosophically
accepted that he would be among those pups who did not survive their
first year.
Blind Seer had surprised them all by demonstrating evidence of
sight as sharp as any wolfs. His baby fur had grown out into a
classic grey coat shading to ghostly silver at the tips and touched
with reddish brown around his face. Content to remain with the pack
his first two summers, this spring he was showing restlessness.
Firekeeper knew that the Ones fully expected Blind Seer to
disperse this spring, seeking territory and perhaps a mate of his
own. The knowledge had saddened her, since Blind Seer had been one of
her favorites since he was a pup. Perhaps the fact that he, like her,
was marked by a difference had drawn her to him. Perhaps it was that
he had never lost a puppyish curiosity about what lay over the next
hill.
Now she must face that, different as he seemed, Blind Seer
belonged to the way of the wolf in a fashion that she never could. He
would follow it and she would go on, as ever, somewhat apart from
those she loved best.
The thought sobered her mind even as her long day’s journey
had made her limbs weary. She was glad that Blind Seer had enough to
say for them both.
“The two-legs crossed through the gap today,” he
reported, leading her to a sheltered place where she might kindle a
fire and soften the rabbit he had caught for her over the flames.
“What a trial they had of it!”
“Tell,” she prompted. “Can we look at them
tonight?”
“Better if not,” he said. “They have gathered
themselves into a circle and they have beasts with them who grow
nervous when I close. They have a creature with them, a bitch, but of
a breed I’ve never dreamed existed!”
“Oh?”
“Smaller even than the Cousins,” Blind Seer said,
chewing on the rabbit fur and viscera she had tossed to him.
“Her fur is lighter than even the One Female’s: white as
a rabbit’s winter coat, but spotted fawn-like with fox-red. She
is a weird parody of wolf or fox, but there’s no doubt that she
knows when I prowl about.”
“I’d like to see this creature.”
“Not tonight. If you wish to study the two-legs, it is best
that we do not spook them while they are weary.”
“Weary from crossing the gap,” Firekeeper asked,
“or do they sleep as birds do, simply because the sun has
set?”
“Weary from the crossing,” Blind Seer replied.
“Even before dawn, they started taking down their dens, making
their food. They sear their meat as you do, over fire, but take much
more time about it.”
Firekeeper cut off a haunch of still pink rabbit meat and began
eating, leaving the rest over the fire.
“Tell on,” she prompted.
“The two-legs have courage, I’ll grant them
that,” Blind Seer said, “and even some wisdom, but no
great forest lore. The most skilled of them went ahead and marked a
trail. The rest followed, bringing with them the beasts.”
“This spotted fox?”
“Not that,” Blind Seer replied impatiently. “She
went with the scout and shivered when the wind brought her my scent.
Other beasts. Large ones built like elk in some ways, but with manes
and tails of long, soft hair—rather like yours is when you have
not cropped it short.”
Firekeeper, who found the constantly changing length of her hair a
nuisance, nodded.
“Why do they herd these elk? It seems a great deal of
trouble to go to for fresh meat.”
“They don’t eat them—at least from what
I’ve seen. They sit on them or put their belongings on their
backs. These two-legs carry more with them than a raven or jay hides
in its nest.”
Firekeeper, remembering how she needed the Fang, the stones, the
hides, just to stay alive, sighed.
“I will enjoy looking on these things of the
two-legs,” she said. “Tell more.”
“There is not much more to tell. They sleep now, but one of
their pack remains awake to guard the rest. If trouble is
suspected—as I tested last night—they make a great clamor
and all wake.”
“Let them sleep,” Firekeeper said. “We will look
on them come morning.”
She finished her meal and waded into a shockingly cold stream to
wash clean. Then Blind Seer mouthed her arm affectionately.
“You will need to rest, sweet Firekeeper, but come with me
first. Let us sing home the news of your safe arrival. I have found a
rise from which the sound carries far.”
Firekeeper went with him, refreshed, fed, and excited. They raised
their voices in chorus, heard their howls augmented by the Cousins
who marked this region for their own, and, after a time, heard a
faint reply to the west.
Even when the message had been passed on, they continued singing,
enjoying the sound of their voices intertwined in friendship and in
love.
Upon waking the next morning, Derian was pleased to find that the
blisters on his feet had ceased to throb. Still, he was relieved to
learn that he had drawn camp duty and so would be able to trade
riding boots for soft leather slippers.
“Did you hear those wolves howling last night?” he
asked as he stirred the morning porridge, adding bits of dried apple
and peach to the glutinous mass.
“Who couldn’t? None of us are deaf,” replied
Race sarcastically. “The monsters must have been readying
themselves for a slaughter. I’ll bet Prince Barden lost his
flocks within the first winter. These woods are full of the thieving
brutes.”
“My brother was given to the Wolf Society when he was
born,” commented Ox, “but even he prefers to appreciate
wolves from a distance. Such cunning and ferocity is admirable in
symbols perhaps, but I don’t want to find them on my
doorstep.”
Over oat porridge and strong mint tea, they traded tales of wolf
predation. Race began with the story of the Mad Wolf of Garwood. Doc
countered with the story of a wolf pack that wiped out a village one
winter when Hawk Haven was but a portion of the larger colony of
Gildcrest. Everyone had at least one such story to relate and the
telling fired the blood for the day’s work.
Eventually, however, Earl Kestrel began briefing them on the
activities planned for the day.
“We will search in two teams. I will take Ox. Race, you will
take Jared. As we have seen no sign of Prince Barden and his people
to the east, I will go further north; you shall go to the west. Based
on your report yestere’en, there is a river to the south. Let
us wait to ford that until we must.”
Race nodded and the earl continued:
“Derian and Valet will mind the camp. This is a good time to
attend to the minor repairs we have been postponing. Furthermore, the
horses can use a rest.”
“How far from this base camp do you want us to go, my
lord?” asked Race.
“You must return here by evening. We will each carry hunting
horns. Three short blasts will signal a return to camp. Two a request
for aid. Remember, if at all possible, save first contact for me. Are
there any questions?”
Five heads shook a negative.
“Get ready, then. Valet has made up packets of cold food for
the midday meal. If you have anything to be repaired, give it to
Derian.”
A few moments later, in their shared tent, Derian accepted from Ox
some leggings that needed mending.
“Earl Kestrel isn’t wasting any time, is he?” he
commented. “Yesterday we slogged across a pass still spotted
with snow. Today he orders a full day’s search, even though a
holiday would be a fair reward.”
“You forget,” Ox replied, checking the edge on the axe
he carried with him as both weapon and tool, “that our time
here is limited. Even if Race succeeds in augmenting our supplies by
hunting and fishing, we need fodder for the horses. It’s too
early in the year for them to do much grazing.”
“I haven’t forgotten,” Derian protested.
“Remember, my folks own stables in three towns!”
“I know,” Ox said mildly. “I simply didn’t
know that you did.”
When the others had departed, leaving behind enough chores to
occupy Derian and Valet for a week, Derian sighed, regretting now
that his blistered feet kept him out of the adventure. Then, sitting
cross-legged on the ground, he took a torn shirt into his lap and
doggedly began to sew.
From the concealment of thick shrub growth atop a rise overlooking
the two-legs’ camp, Firekeeper studied the occupants. The
animals amazed her, but her response to their keepers mingled
astonishment and admiration.
“They are so noisy,” she said to Blind Seer, watching
one of their number go to a stream for water. “Yet so
bold!”
Blind Seer snorted. “What do they know to fear? The
red-spotted white animal sees more than any of them, but they ignore
her. Did you see their One kick at her when she tried to tell him we
were watching?”
“I did,” Firekeeper agreed. “I am not certain,
though, that he is the One. The other one, smaller, with the hooked
nose and silver-shot black hair, they all seem to defer to
him.”
“True,” Blind Seer admitted, “but how could he
defeat even the next smallest in a fight? Certainly he couldn’t
defeat the huge one.”
“Maybe they are not a full pack,” Firekeeper
speculated. “They are all males and how could a pack survive
without females?”
“All male?” asked the wolf in astonishment. “How
can you tell? They smell of smoke and sweat to me.”
“Not by scent,” the woman admitted. “I could be
wrong, but it seems that I remember ways of telling.”
“She is right,” came a shrill voice from above them.
“Males all.”
The speaker was the peregrine falcon, Elation, who had been
introduced to Firekeeper soon after sunrise. Elation was a beautiful
example of her kind, compact of body, with plumage of a deep
blue-grey. Her head was capped with feathers the color of slate and
her white throat and underbody were marked with darker bars. Brown
eyes ringed with bright yellow missed nothing.
“If you say so,” Blind Seer said, immediately
deferring to the bird’s greater experience, “then it must
be so, but I’d prefer to be able to trust my nose.”
Ignoring the conversation between falcon and wolf, Firekeeper
studied the six gathered below, feeling memories stirring and teasing
just beyond what she could grasp.
The men possessed a certain degree of grace, neither toppling over
nor lumbering like bears as they made their way about on two legs.
Firekeeper knew this was how she herself moved, had even glimpsed her
reflection and studied the distorted image of her shadow, but seeing
others move this way was a revelation. Before she had always felt
vaguely like a freak. Now she felt justified in her choice.
Already Firekeeper had observed many things she planned to adapt
to her use. All of the men wore their hair caught behind their heads
with a thong—a thing much more convenient than her own short
cropping with its heritage of odd-length ends that dangled in her
eyes.
The hides they wore were different, too. She didn’t think
that all their clothing was made from leather, though leather was
amply represented. Magpie-like, she wanted to steal some for her own
use.
When four of the two-legs left the camp, Blind Seer and Elation
followed to learn where they went. Firekeeper remained behind,
studying the two remaining.
One was quite tall, the other among the smallest of the group.
Neither openly deferred to the other, so she guessed that they were
of similar rank within their pack. Wolf-like, she dismissed the
smaller one as less important and gave most of her attention to the
bigger and stronger.
This one was the second largest of the two-legs, smaller only than
the one who towered over the rest as the Royal Wolves did over the
Cousins.
A passing thought distracted Firekeeper. Could the two-legs be
like the forest-dwellers, each with two kinds? Could the huge man be,
in fact, the master of the rest?
After some consideration, she dismissed the idea. The big man had
deferred quite openly to several of the others. A Royal Wolf, even a
lesser one like herself, would never do so before even the strongest
of Cousins. If the two-legs had a Royal kind, it was not represented
among those here.
Or they all could be of the Royal kind…
She shook her head as if chasing a fly from her ear. Too much
guessing. Too little that was certain. As the Ones taught the pups
when hunting, guesses were no replacement for knowledge.
Firekeeper returned her unruly attention to the man below.
He was tall enough to reach effortlessly into the lower limbs of
the tree from which the two-legs had hung their food. He was strong
enough to control the elk-with-long-hair, even though they outmassed
him. After a time, she sorted his attire from himself and could
better see what he looked like.
His hair was reddish, the color of a fox’s pelt or an oak
leaf in autumn. Loosed from its thong, it hung straight, going past
his shoulders by perhaps the breadth of two fingers. It was cut so
neatly that when it was tied back not a strand strayed from its
bonds.
What she could see of Fox Hair’s skin seemed lighter than
her own, redder as well. His eyes were light, but not blue. At this
distance she could not tell precisely what color they were. From the
way he moved, the little extra motions he made, the fluidity of his
limbs, she guessed that he was young compared with some of the
others.
Fox Hair was injured as well, walking as if he had thorns in his
feet but not the wit to pull them out.
The smaller man was colored in shades of brown like a rabbit or a
deer. Unlike the red-haired man, he had a thin strip of hair growing
between his nose and his upper lip. It seemed to bother him, for as
he went about the camp doing incomprehensible things with other
incomprehensible things, he often pulled at it with his fingers.
So much! And so much unknowable! Firekeeper watched, fascination
turning into frustration. In the late afternoon, the other four
two-legs returned and more than ever she was certain that the little
hawk-nosed man with black and white hair was the One among them.
Blind Seer came and flopped beside her, his flanks heaving with
laughter.
“They went hither and yon, over hills and around trees.
I’ll give it to the tawny-furred one. He knows something of the
forest, but he’d know more if he’d heed his red-and-white
spotted pack mate. She saw me time and again—when I let her!
From her scent, she’s of our kind in the same way the foxes are
and she had wit enough to stay clear of me!”
Firekeeper listened patiently to her brother’s boasting.
“Did they find what they seek?”
“No, but Tawny came close. If he goes west again tomorrow,
he will find it.”
“Hawk Nose is their leader,” Firekeeper said. “I
am certain of it now. Elation, what did he find?”
“Less than he knew,” came the screeched reply.
“Time and again, he stopped to study the trunk of a tree or a
stump or a pile of rocks. He had the giant collect some things that
interested him.”
“My two looked at such things as well,” Blind Seer
admitted. “I think they look for sign of their missing kin.
Tell me, falcon, do two-legs do things to trees?”
“Even as your sister does,” Elation agreed,
“though she is less obvious about her comings and goings.
Two-legs cut down trees, pile up stones, make lairs from these things
or feed wood to their hungry fires.”
“Then these two-legs should be able to find sign of where my
ancestors found Firekeeper.”
“If the signs are not too old.”
Blind Seer turned to Firekeeper. “Will you talk with them
tonight?”
“No!” the young woman replied, suddenly panicked.
“They are still too strange. Let me follow their movements for
a bit longer.”
“Well enough,” he soothed. “I have not had this
much fun since we raced with the young bucks of the Royal Elk for
sport.”
Firekeeper rose to her feet, aware that she was hungry and very
bored from a day spent mostly sitting still.
“Come, dear heart. Hunt with me. Dusk is falling and I have
no desire to watch shadows by firelight.”
Blind Seer howled in anticipation. “And you,
falcon?”
“I have dined on mice and young rabbits, today,”
Elation said, preening her wing feathers. “I will watch the
two-legs until darkness falls. Then I will sleep.”
Firekeeper stretched, shaking the numbness from her limbs.
Growling low in her throat, she flung herself on Blind Seer. They
wrestled for a brief time; then, wild-eyed and excited, they chased
each other down the hill.
“Wolves!” said the falcon to herself. “May as
well try to understand a storm cloud.”
When morning came, the two-legs began taking down their dens and
loading things onto their animals.
“Perhaps Tawny is more clever than I thought,” Blind
Seer admitted. “Look, he goes ahead with Spots and Mountain to
mark a trail.”
“He marks it,” Firekeeper said when they had followed
Tawny for a ways, “as a bear or mountain lion does, by
stripping the good bark from a tree.”
“Such marks do last,” Blind Seer said, “longer
than our scent posts, especially when the rain comes. I wonder if he
found such marks during yesterday’s hunt?”
“He did! Look!” Firekeeper exclaimed, moving to
investigate a tree trunk when Tawny and Mountain were safely past.
“Here is such a mark, greyed now by weather, but
clear.”
“Then he reads a trail,” Blind Seer said, “and
the others will follow his marking. Why doesn’t he trust them
to see the old trail or the marks of his passage? The last alone
would sing to me at least until the next rain.”
Firekeeper shrugged. “They are deaf and blind and dead of
nose as you have said many times before.”
She didn’t add that she had long been aware that her senses
were less keen than those of the wolves. Her upright manner of travel
and a sharper sense for color had provided her with some
compensation. Now she was beginning to wonder if her senses were to
those of the two-legs as the wolves’ were to hers.
Her head hurt a little at the consideration and she distracted
herself by concentrating on the problem at hand.
“Do we follow the larger pack,” she said, “or
these two?”
“Why not both?” Blind Seer laughed. “Elation has
stayed with the larger pack, but she can come ahead if we go back. At
the pace these move, you and I can dance around them as we dance
around a crippled doe.”
“True,” she admitted. “First then, let us go
with these. I wish to see if I can learn more of these signs they are
using to find their way.”
They did so, learning of piled cairns of rock, appreciating
Tawny’s skill when he located a pouch of slim sticks with sharp
points where it had been cached in a tree.
“He is not such a fool as I thought,” Blind Seer said
again. “Without scent or sight to guide him, he found that
thing.”
Firekeeper nodded. “He is searching for things he knows may
be,” she hazarded, “the way in winter we know that fish
sleep beneath the ice or deer hide in their secret yards. He seeks a
possibility and sometimes he finds it.”
“It excites him,” Blind Seer said. “Look how he
marks that tree with his scent and cuts the bark away from
another.”
“At this pace, they will reach the Burnt Place when the sun
is at peak or soon after,” Firekeeper said. “Let us go
back and watch the others.”
Blind Seer agreed and they ran swiftly, ignoring the scolding of
squirrels and the frightened flight of a doe and fawn. Wolves needed
to eat either frequently or heavily, but when something interested
them, they could forget hunger. Firekeeper possessed less stamina
than her kin, but she had long ago learned to ignore her
belly’s plaints.
They found the larger, slower-moving group by following the reek
of the not-quite-elk. As the wolves slowed, so as not to startle
their subjects, the falcon called greeting.
“How goes it with Tawny and Mountain?”
“Well enough,” Firekeeper answered. “And
these?”
“Slow! So slow!” the great bird shrieked. “These
men are like ants though, steady.”
“We will watch here if you wish to hunt.”
“Good! Then I fly ahead to see what the others
do.”
Firekeeper was far less bored by the two-legs’ slow progress
than Elation had been. Other than young possums clinging to their
mothers, she had never seen one creature riding another.
“Most other animals,” she commented to Blind Seer,
“carry their babies in their mouths. Two-legs sit on these elk
as if on a rock.”
“They go more slowly than they would on their own
feet,” Blind Seer added. “I wonder why they
bother?”
Firekeeper shrugged. “Another mystery.”
The sun was slightly past midday when a bleating bellow, rather
like that of a moose but not quite so, called out from the west. The
sound stirred great excitement among the two-legs, who had persisted
in their steady progress, even eating their food while perched upon
the backs of the not-elks.
Hawk Nose, the One of the two-legs, took a curving thing the color
of antler from where it had hung on his belt and, putting it to his
lips, made an answering sound.
“He blows into it!” Firekeeper said, amazed and
laughing. “Look how his cheeks round out beneath their hair! He
looks like a bullfrog courting in the spring!”
Blind Seer laughed with her, then added, “So these two-legs
howl, too, in their fashion. The thing he puts to his mouth makes a
fair cry.”
“Just as the Fang gives me teeth like a wolf,”
Firekeeper thought aloud, “this thing gives Hawk Nose the lungs
of a moose. Are all their things ways of being more than they could
be alone?”
“Two-legs,” her brother replied teasingly, “are
weak, hairless creatures with flat teeth, no strength, and little
wit. This, though, I have known long before seeing these, eh,
Firekeeper?”
Accustomed to such jests, Firekeeper sprang on him, forgetting
stealth in the joy of the puppy game. Only when they heard the shrill
huffs and screams of the not-elk, the shouts of the two-legs, did
they think about the consequences of their actions.
“Oh, well,” said Blind Seer, mouthing her arm
affectionately as they sat up on the leafy ground. “We have
frightened them. Let us hunt, then go ahead to where they go. There
is no need for this slow progress when we know the trail’s
end.”
“I agree,” Firekeeper said. “The not-elk have
our scent now and the two-legs will move more slowly if their pack
mates are afraid. I want to see what will happen when they find the
Burnt Place.”
“The beasts are quiet now,” Blind Seer observed.
“Then away with us.”
They melted silently into the brush and were well away before
Jared Surcliffe, coming with great trepidation to investigate the
commotion, found their watching place and gathered from a low-slung
briar a grey hank of wolfs fur.
DERIAN CARTER WAS IRRATIONALLY RELIEVED when they caught up with Ox
and Race. Irrational because this glade was no safer than any other
place, but relieved nonetheless because his nerves were still on edge
from the ferocious snarling and growling that had broken the woodland
peace a few hours before.
Not that he was afraid of the wolves—or whatever the noise
had been. In fact, he’d been amusing himself by imagining his
return home wearing a wolf-skin cloak. “This?”
he’d say to Heather, the baker’s daughter. “Oh, I
slew it when it attacked the horses. Mad as the Ravening Beast of
Garwood, so our guide said. It had been trailing us for days.
We’d hear it howling at night, slavering for our flesh
…”
He had the story all scripted out, so carefully refined that
sometimes he had to remind himself that the encounter hadn’t
taken place. Still, he’d been glad enough when the earl had
decided to increase their pace.
Earl Kestrel’s reason for wanting speed hadn’t been
fear. It had been eagerness. Race’s horn blast had signaled
that he and Ox had found something. It couldn’t be the
prince’s settlement—in that case, signaling was strictly
forbidden lest it ruin the earl’s opportunities for an
advantageous approach—but it was something.
Now Derian looked around the open meadow wondering just what Race
Forester had found and what it would mean to their quest. However,
until the horses and mules were untacked and groomed, he
wouldn’t be free to join the conference.
As a compromise between duty and curiosity, Derian moved to where
he could eavesdrop.
“Yes, Race,” Earl Kestrel was saying. “Evidently
there was a settlement of some size here. Now that you point it out,
I see where the palisade must have been. Those mounds of vines and
suchlike, those must have been buildings.”
“Yes, my lord,” Race replied. “Fire did for the
place pretty thoroughly, but until we do some digging we can’t
tell if the fire came before or after the people left.”
“How can we tell?” called Ox from where he was helping
Valet pitch the earl’s tent.
“By what’s left behind,” Race said. “If we
find most of their goods or bones, then we must face that the fire
happened when they were here. Graves, too. Survivors would have
buried their dead before moving on or left some sort of
marker.”
“To do less,” Jared agreed from where he was tending
the cook fire, “would be an insult to the spirits of the
departed.”
Derian nodded thoughtful agreement. Ancestors were the means by
which the living petitioned the natural world. Even if the dead had
no blood kin among the living, they still would be the ancestors of
the settlement group, meant to be revered even as Hawk Haven still
shared with King Tedric and his family reverence for the spirit of
Zorana Shield, who had won the kingdom its freedom following the
Years of Abandonment.
Since the discussion had become general, he asked:
“Will we start looking for signs while we still have
light?”
“No, Derian,” Earl Kestrel replied. “Long enough
has passed for vines and young trees to sprout from the houses.
Almost certainly, the settlers dug cellars and wells. We do not want
to stumble into these in twilight. Tether the horses well away from
the ruins of the palisade and check for anything that might harm
them.”
“Yes, sir. And, my lord?”
“Yes?”
“If we’re going to remain here some days, we should
make a corral for the horses and mules. Pickets can be ripped up when
the ground is soft like this and I dislike the idea of tying them
when there are wolves about.”
“Good thought. Will hobbles do?”
“For some, perhaps, but not all.”
“Very well. Tomorrow, you can begin constructing a corral. I
want Ox for the excavation.”
“Yes, my lord.”
Mentally, Derian kicked himself for making more work; then he
kicked himself again for acting like a child. Taking care of the
mounts and pack animals was his responsibility and he had done a good
job so far, hadn’t lost a single beast. Let the earl and the
others dig through the ruins and make the great discoveries.
Suddenly he cheered up.
That way they’d be the ones to disturb any angry
spirits.
THE morning after their arrival at the Burnt Place, the two-legs
began rooting about like young beavers with an undammed stream or
bears scenting a honeycomb in a hollow tree.
Firekeeper had admired how quickly they had rebuilt their portable
dens and created a little nesting place for themselves at the edge of
the meadow. However, when Fox Hair began his day felling small trees
and piling them on each other, she was completely puzzled.
Elation clarified his actions for her.
“They plan to stay awhile,” she shrieked. Then more
calmly, “The fallen trees will cage their riding beasts so they
do not stray. Fox Hair is their keeper.”
“Oh.” Firekeeper was confused; then she thought of an
analogy. “Just as a young wolf acts as nursemaid to the pups. I
understand. I did think he was junior among them, for all that he is
so big.”
“And the others,” Blind Seer asked with a lazy yawn,
“those who root in the heart of the Burnt Place. What are they
making?”
“Nothing,” Firekeeper replied with certainty.
“They are looking for traces of those who once denned there.
Didn’t Elation tell us that they sought them?”
“True enough.” Blind Seer yawned again. “I will
sleep while they dig. Wake me if you have need.”
“I will,” she promised, her gaze drawn irresistibly
back to the two-legs.
Today Firekeeper climbed a towering evergreen which oozed strongly
scented sap onto her hands and feet. She would have preferred an oak
or maple, but their pale green, still growing leaves offered little
concealment.
Hidden by the thick, dark green needles, Firekeeper had a clear
view of all that went on below. Elation perched nearby.
Sometimes the falcon was able to clarify some incomprehensible
behavior; sometimes she admitted herself as confused as the wolf.
Sometimes, when the scene below became tedious, she dozed or hunted
mice.
Even though the two-legs kept watch around them, they never looked
up, never saw the watchers. Firekeeper didn’t hold this against
them. When she remained still there was nothing to be seen. When she
climbed higher or lower, she was careful to wiggle the branches no
more than a squirrel might. Moreover, there was a stream between her
tree and the Burnt Place. As none of the two-legs or their animals
had crossed this natural barrier, none caught her scent on the
ground.
That night she climbed down to join Blind Seer, careful this time
to keep their greetings relatively quiet. The two-legs had gathered
round their fire and she could hear the rise and fall of their voices
as they discussed something—quite likely the results of their
day’s hunting.
She wished she could understand them, but the sounds they made
meant less to her than the hoots of the owls awakening for the night
or the sleepy chirps of the day birds settling in to sleep.
By the time darkness fell that night, all the expedition was subdued
and depressed. Race had pulled out his flute, planning to play for
them as he had many nights along the trail, but the instrument
dangled unused between his fingers. Even one day’s excavation
had provided evidence that at least some of Prince Barden’s
expedition, if not all, had died in this place.
“Human bones,” Ox said heavily. “No doubt about
it. Even if there was doubt, little things confirm that the
settlement wasn’t systematically evacuated.”
“Little things?” Derian asked. He didn’t
remember ever seeing the big man so depressed.
“Pots scattered where they fell,” Ox explained,
“a tool kit, a sword with bits of the scabbard burnt hard
around it. Things they would have taken with them if they were merely
resettling elsewhere.”
Race glanced at Earl Kestrel. “We could do some systematic
salvage work here.”
“Looting, you mean!” the nobleman said sharply.
“No! There will be nothing of the kind. Cousin Jared, to what
society did your parents give you when you were born?”
“The Eagle,” Jared replied uncomfortably.
Derian wondered at Doc’s apparent embarrassment, then
realized that by giving their son to the society patronized by the
royal house, Jared Surcliffe’s parents had been openly
soliciting royal favor. That would be an embarrassment for a man who
took such obvious delight in making his way through his own
skills.
“I thought that was what I recalled.” Earl Kestrel
nodded somberly, apparently immune to his relative’s
embarrassment. “Eagle joins heaven and earth with his flight;
therefore you will take charge of the funeral rites for those who
died here. Also, if anyone can be identified, you will keep records
of the proof.”
Doc lowered his head in acquiescence, but there was a frown
visible on his lips.
No wonder, Derian thought. What the earl means is: “You
will do your best to discover if Prince Barden is among the
dead.” How does he expect Doc to learn that from old charred
bones?
Surcliffe voiced some of the same doubt. “I will try,
cousin, but unless the body was miraculously preserved or wears on
its bones some bit of jewelry or insignia that has survived the fire,
the best I can do is count skulls and pieces of skulls and hope to
guess how many died here.”
“Very well,” Earl Kestrel said heavily. “Men,
retrieve not only bones but also anything that might have belonged to
the owner.”
Race Forester was obviously unhappy about this situation. “I
didn’t hire on to dig up people’s bones,” he
muttered, almost, but not quite, mutinous.
“I hired you to help me find the missing prince,”
Kestrel replied sharply, “but if you are afraid of digging, you
can do Derian’s work with nice horses and keeping the camp.
Derian, consider yourself reassigned!”
“Yes, my lord!”
“I didn’t say…” Race Forester began to
protest, but a sharp glance from the earl’s pale grey eyes
silenced him. Disappointment or perhaps sorrow had set the
nobleman’s usually short temper smoldering. Instead, Race
swallowed whatever he had planned to say and occupied himself by
taking his flute out and cleaning the stops.
Derian Carter whistled a light air as he fetched the water that
night, his previous fear of ancestral spirits quieted by his tacit
promotion. Tomorrow Race Forester would haul and carry!
Firekeeper watched the next day as the two-legs turned most of their
efforts to excavating the burned-out ruins. Even a steady drizzle
that transformed soot and dirt to tacky mud didn’t stop
them.
“They work like a pregnant mother searching for a perfect
den site,” commented Blind Seer when he awakened from one of
his frequent naps. “Do you think they’re
whelping?”
“Idiot,” she said fondly, tossing a few twigs down at
him. “They’re carrying out the bones of the ones who died
in the fire. Heads interest them especially.”
“ ‘One head, one kill,’ ” quoted Blind
Seer. “How better to tell if they have found all their missing
ones? How soon till they find your head, sweet Firekeeper?”
“All in my time,” she temporized. “Whenever I
think I understand them, they do something strange. Today Fox Hair is
certainly over Tawny. I heard no sound of fighting. Why then the
change?”
“Perhaps they fought while we were out hunting.” Blind
Seer dismissed the question for something more immediate.
“I’m hungry, tired of eating rabbit. The wind is ripe
with the scent of some spring-mad buck. Will you hunt with me or must
you stay to see each bone taken from the soil?”
Firekeeper considered. “I’ll hunt. Elation, will you
tell me if they depart from here?”
“One or all?” the bird asked.
“All or mostly all,” the young woman replied.
“One or two may go hunt for the rest.”
When she and Blind Seer returned, full of the flesh of a foolish
buck who had cracked his foreleg while fighting his reflection, more
skulls and pieces of skulls were laid out in neat ranks. Many were
broken, but the two-legs who was their keeper sat fitting broken
pieces together into an approximation of a whole.
“Strange,” said Firekeeper, “many of the bones
must have been burnt entirely. Why do they keep at this crazy
hunt?”
“Because,” Elation said, swiveling her head so that
one golden-ringed eye pinned Firekeeper securely, “from knowing
how many are certainly dead they can estimate how many may be dead.
It is not unlike judging a wolf pack from two of its
members.”
“They must know by now,” Blind Seer said, licking a
trace of deer blood from one paw, “that all or nearly all died
here. Firekeeper, you will need to find courage to speak with them
before they go back across the mountains.”
“I will,” she promised, “I will.”
But that night, as she and Blind Seer sang home the news of the
two-legs and of their own doings, Firekeeper wondered how she could
ever dare to approach the strangers.
Derian woke up feeling like the aftermath of a New Beer festival. As
he struggled awake, he felt vaguely surprised that his mouth was not
foul, nor his limbs heavy.
Then he remembered. This hangover was spiritual, not physical, the
result of a day spent grubbing in the burned ruins of peoples’
homes, bringing out their bones and their belongings, ending any hope
that Prince Barden’s expedition had survived.
Breakfast that morning was a subdued meal, but at least Earl
Kestrel had joined them. The night before he had attended the
ceremony for the dead that Jared had improvised, then had retired to
his tent. Valet had come over to the main fire a few minutes later
and requested silence for his master.
“His youngest sister, you may recall, was Prince
Barden’s wife,” he said before departing.
“I had forgotten,” Derian had whispered, appalled that
he had thought the earl’s mood only disappointed ambition,
“if I ever knew.”
Ox and Race nodded agreement. Doc sighed.
“Eirene,” he had said as if the name itself were a
prayer. “Never beautiful, but gentle and sweet. Brave beneath
her quiet demeanor. King Tedric didn’t care who his youngest
son married as long as the bride was from one of the Great
Houses.”
“So Prince Barden married for love?” Derian had asked
softly.
“Yes,” Doc had replied, wiping his eyes with the back
of his hand. “He did. I’m for bed.”
All had nodded. No one felt much like talking in any case. They
had performed the evening chores with a minimum of discussion and
each had retired to his own tent. Ox had fallen asleep with the ease
of an old campaigner, but Derian had heard him muttering in his
sleep.
Derian himself had lain awake for some hours watching the shadows
against the canvas, trying to imagine what might have happened to all
those people. His mind was so populated with horrors that the nightly
wolf concert had seemed like a familiar, almost pleasant
thing—that is, until he began to imagine wolves dragging
roasted corpses from the burned buildings and feasting on the charred
flesh.
This morning, however, Earl Kestrel did not mention his
sister’s death and no one had the courage to offer him
sympathy. Instead they listened alertly when, after putting aside his
porridge bowl, Earl Kestrel began the morning conference.
“Does anyone have a theory about what happened here? I would
like to be able to make a full report to the king.” Poor fellow, Derianthought with surprised sympathy.
Not only does he share our common horror and the loss of his little
sister, but also he has to face telling King Tedric his son is surely
dead.
Race Forester offered tentatively, “A fire in the night,
I’d say. I’d swear that two of those I uncovered were
lying down, peaceful-seeming.”
“No one bore weapons,” Ox agreed quietly. Soot he
hadn’t washed away the night before blended in with his scruffy
beard, making his face unusually dark. “But how could such a
fire start if everyone was asleep?”
“Coals poorly banked, a spark in a chimney, a candle
guttering out on a bedside table, a pipe left smoldering,” Doc
shrugged. “These things and their like have happened
before.”
“But how did they sleep through it all!” Derian
protested, his own voice as shrill as that of the hawk whose cries
they had heard periodically over these past days.
“Smoke,” said Ox. “Smoke is more dangerous than
fire and it rises. Families asleep in the lofts and attics of their
cottages might breathe in their deaths without knowing.”
“If they trusted themselves to the protection of their
palisade,” Race said, his voice hoarse, “the fire could
have gotten out of control before anyone knew. My lord!” he
appealed to the earl, his eyes wide. “Pray tell me that we are
not going to spend today as we did yesterday!”
“We are,” Earl Kestrel replied, his gaze stern.
“I owe the king a full report. You, as yesterday, will tend the
camp.”
Race sulked, mutiny in his eyes. “It isn’t right to so
disturb the dead!”
‘It is not right,“ the earl said in measured tones,
”to leave them without their rituals.“
So passed another day of soot, of painful discovery, of sweaty,
back-breaking labor. The only relief was that it was no longer
raining.
At the end of the day, Derian was so heartsick he didn’t
protest when Race shoved a pail at him and demanded that he fetch
water from the stream.
Instead he staggered down the newly broken footpath, hardly seeing
the ground beneath his feet for the more vivid reality in his memory:
a wedding bowl, the names of husband and wife still readable despite
the cracking; a tin horse, twisted, but twin to one he had bought his
little brother for Summer Festival; buttons lined in a row, though
the shirt they closed was ash; a stone inkwell.
And, of course, the bones of the dead.
The stream water was icy cold, fed with runoff from the not too
distant mountains. On impulse, Derian thrust his head beneath a
little waterfall that interrupted the stream’s course. Shedding
his clothing as if he could shed the visions with it, he waded into
the water, dunking his head again and again, scrubbing the soot from
his skin with handfuls of sand.
He could feel his lips turning blue as he pulled himself onto the
bank, but his mind was his own again. He could even grin, imagining
the expressions on the others’ faces when he came into camp
stark naked, buckets of water slung from the yoke over his shoulders
and his damp clothing in his hands.
Derian was adjusting the yoke on his bare neck when he saw the
impossible thing. Across the water, a few yards upstream from the
waterfall, was a broad patch of sand, deposited, no doubt, when the
waters ran higher.
In the sand, as clear as daylight, was the solid imprint of a
small human foot. Next to it, as if the two had walked side by side,
were the equally real prints of an improbably large wolf.
III
Firekeeper slipped away in the confusion following
Fox Hair’s discovery of her footprint in the sand. Blind Seer
ran with her, but Elation remained faithfully watching the
two-legs.
“I have been as stupid as an unweaned pup!” Firekeeper
admonished herself aloud. “I knew that they read trails with
their eyes, if not with their noses.”
“One footprint will not lead them to you,” Blind Seer
said calmly. “Your trail went from sandbank into the stream,
onto a rock, across a pebbled shore, and then up into the tree
branches. They may find where the evergreen bled upon you, but its
boughs sweep low enough that they may not even look.”
Firekeeper scowled, slowed her run to a trot, then stopped
completely, leaning her back against a smooth birch trunk.
“As I have planned how I will meet them,” she said
thoughtfully, “all my dreams have held them ignorant of my
existence. This is an adjustment.”
“ ‘When the calf bolts right,’ ” Blind
Seer quoted, “ ‘it is foolish to run left.’
”
“I know,” she said, her scowl lightening only some.
“Don’t you realize I’m scared?”
“Scared?” The wolf cocked his head to one side,
perking his ears inquiringly. “Of the two-legs?”
“Not of them, of what meeting with them will mean.”
Firekeeper slid down against the tree until she sat on the leaf mold
beneath. “All my life, but for shadows I recall only in dreams,
I have been a wolf. I knew I was different from my brothers and
sisters, but living day-to-day filled my head. I could ignore the
differences if I choose.”
“And you so chose,” Blind Seer said,
understanding.
“Yes. Now these,” she gestured wildly back to where
the two-legs have their camp, “come and my life will never be
the same. If I speak with them or if I do not, if I travel with them
or if I do not: any choice reshapes the world I have known. Never,
never again will I be only a wolf.”
Blind Seer scratched vigorously behind one ear. “Then speak
with them. What does it matter that they have seen one footprint? I
call it a good thing, for your coming when they have believed all
their people dead will be a relief.”
“I hope so,” she breathed softly. “By the blood
that runs through my body, I hope so.”
Initially, Derian’s claim was dismissed as a prank. Only when
he convinced Ox to go look for himself and Ox called Race and the two
men confirmed that the footprint was both real and too small to
belong to any of their number, only then did the others begin to
share his excitement.
“Why would I lie?” Derian said indignantly when they
had regathered around the fire.
“No reason.” Jared Surcliffe shrugged apologetically.
“Our disappointment spoke, not any disbelief in you. After so
much pain, so much work for nothing, it was easier to believe you
were suddenly given to boyish pranks than to feel hope awaken once
more.”
Ox grunted agreement. Race nodded. Valet gave a ghost of a smile,
and Earl Kestrel, seated on his canvas camp chair, simply brooded
over the implications of the discovery. That was all the apology
Derian was likely to get, but it warmed him strangely. He’d
started out this journey the youngest and most untried. Now they gave
him no more consideration than they would to any man.
After a time, the earl cleared his throat and said, “Of
course, Derian’s discovery changes everything. In the morning,
we must begin searching. Race, you are the most skilled in woodcraft.
Who would you assign to the search?”
“You, my lord, and Sir Jared know something of tracking, but
the one I would choose…”
Derian straightened, hoping that Race saw some promise in him.
“… is your valet. I’ve watched him. He misses
nothing.”
Valet blinked, then refilled his master’s teacup before
reseating himself and continuing to darn a holed sock.
“He does that,” Earl Kestrel said with the closest
thing to affection Derian had heard in his dry tones. “You may
have him if you wish.”
“My lord!” Valet said in protest, alarm widening his
brown eyes.
“My comfort can wait,” the earl insisted. “Come
dawn, the four of us will divide the search under Race’s
direction. Derian and Ox will tend the camp and, if their other
duties permit, continue excavating the ruins of the
settlement.”
Murmured agreement was almost drowned out by the now nightly
chorus of wolf howls.
“Poor lost soul,” Jared said softly, “out there
alone with the wolves on his trail.”
“I could fair hire out as a tailor when this journey’s
done,” grumbled Derian, as he took up yet another pair of
riding breeches and settled his palm shield into place.
“Derian Tailor doesn’t sound bad,” Ox replied.
He set aside the burned roof beam he’d been shifting and wiped
his forehead with his hand, leaving a large black streak on the pink
skin. “Though I myself would go for Saddler or Sailmaker.
You’re working leather now and, by my way of seeing things,
those are more interesting jobs than making shirts and
breeches.”
Derian glanced at Ox and confirmed that the big man was teasing
him.
“Well, you would…”
His ready retort stuck in his throat for, across the meadow,
something—someone—was emerging from the forest.
His first impression was of woodland shadows come to life, for the
figure was all browns and blacks. Then it resolved into a person clad
in a rough cape of poorly tanned leather; a knife hung from an
equally crude belt.
“Ox,” Derian hissed softly. “Move slowly. Look
to the west.”
His caution was merited, for when the big man started to turn, the
person moved slightly, poised now to flee.
“Great Boar,” Ox whispered. “We’ve found
him!”
“Or he us,” Derian replied in equally soft tones.
“What do we do?”
“I frighten even those who know me,” Ox said,
“on account of my size. You handle him and I’ll hunker
down and keep my movements slow.”
Derian nodded, wishing for a moment that Earl Kestrel were there,
then with a startling insight glad that he was not. The severe earl
with his sharp commands and ordered plans would only frighten this
shy creature away.
Carefully, Derian set his sewing aside and rose to greet the
newcomer.
“Hello,” he said, speaking in the gentle tones he
reserved for a frightened horse. “Welcome.”
The person showed no sign of understanding, but he didn’t
bolt. Encouraged, Derian deliberately extended his arms, palms
upward, showing that he bore no weapons.
The newcomer mimicked the gesture and for the first time Derian
saw that the deeply tanned arms and legs were silvered with countless
scars, some just lines, others puckered and seamed. Pity now mingled
with his excitement.
“He’s been badly used,” Derian said softly to
Ox.
“He…” Ox paused, carefully lowering his voice,
though excitement vibrated in every note. “He! I think
it’s a she, Derian. Look more closely.”
Derian did so and for the first time noticed the visitor’s
nearly hairless arms and legs, the smooth curve of the throat. Either
this was a young boy or a woman.
“If you say so,” he said uncertainly.
“It’s hard to tell. That cape is so heavy it hides the
body.”
The person now took a few hesitant steps closer. Her gait was
light and graceful; her bare legs rippled with muscle.
Derian, well aware that the woman could vanish into the forest
without warning, matched her approach step by step. Compared with how
she moved, his dancer’s gait seemed awkward and clumsy.
She stopped at two arm-lengths’ distance, studying him with
intelligent eyes. Her nostrils widened and fluttered slightly as if
she was taking in his scent as well as his appearance.
Derian halted when she did, studying the stranger as she did him.
She was of fair height, taller than Earl Kestrel, but then he was
short for a man. Her exposed skin was so deeply tanned and weathered
that he could not guess what its original color might be, but he
guessed from the lack of freckles that she was not as fair as, say,
himself or Ox.
He would bet that her dark brown hair had been cut with the knife
that hung from her belt. That and a pouch around her neck seemed to
be her only belongings—unless one counted the rough hide
garment. Wildness emanated from her like a wind from an approaching
storm, but her gaze showed rational judgment.
“She’s no village idiot,” he said to Ox.
“Careful what you say,” Ox cautioned. “Who is to
say she won’t understand?”
Derian was curiously certain that she did not understand, but he
nodded.
After more scrutiny, the woman stepped closer. This time Derian
held his ground, unwilling to press her. His skin thrilled as she
raised a callused hand and touched first his cheek, then his hair,
then the fabric of his woolen shirt.
The feel of the last delighted her. Her expression brightened into
a wide, unfeigned, childlike smile. For the first time, she seemed
human rather than something of the woodlands given form. Derian
smiled in return.
This startled her, but only for a moment. She kept her place and
continued her tactile investigation. Derian covered his vague
embarrassment by saying to Ox:
“She is definitely female. I got a good glimpse of her
breasts just now. Small, though. Young, maybe.”
Ox grunted agreement. “I’d guess she’s been
watching us, maybe since we came here. She seems curious but not
amazed, like she’s confirming things she already
knew.”
The woman turned her head at the sound of Ox’s voice and
studied him, but made no effort to go closer. A faint smile shaped
her lips as she compared his height with Derian’s. Then she
touched Derian’s cleanshaven cheek and frowned.
With a swift gesture, she mimed the line of Ox’s beard, then
touched Derian’s cheek again.
“She wants to know why you have a beard,” Derian
interpreted in delighted wonder, “and I do not.”
He considered how to answer, then mimed removing his knife from
its sheath and putting the edge to his face.
The woman started back, considered, then tilted her head in what
was clearly an interrogative gesture. Derian repeated the motions.
She smiled and mimed taking out her own knife and chopping at a lock
of hair that hung close to her eyes.
“That’s it,” Derian replied. “You cut your
hair and I shave my face.”
She was kneeling down, perhaps to examine his slippers, when
something made her jump up and back in one fluid motion. Then,
silently as she had arrived, she vanished back into the woods.
Only after she was gone did Derian notice that the horses were
casually sniffing the air. A few moments later, moving with a
woodsman’s stealth and grace, Race Forester, followed by the
even more cautious Valet, emerged from the forest.
“No luck,” he called. “Any word from the
others?”
Ox found his voice before Derian did. “No, but she’s
been here, right here with us. She heard you coming and vanished like
a dream.”
Firekeeper, crouched over a kill she was sharing with Blind Seer,
spoke for the first time since she had fled the two-legs’
camp.
“I couldn’t bear it!” she cried. “I was
doing well dealing with one, knowing the second was there, but when I
heard the others returning, I couldn’t bear the thought of
being beneath so many eyes. Now I know how a fawn must feel when the
full pack cries the hunt.”
“The full pack would never hunt a fawn,” Blind Seer
said practically, “but I understand you. Still, dear heart, I
think you have done well.”
“I ran,” she said bluntly.
“So, go back.”
“Not now, not tonight. Tonight I want to sing my story home
to the Ones, run for a time in the enfolding arms of the dark, sleep
through daylight for a change instead of crouching in a tree like a
squirrel.”
“Who’s stopping you?” Blind Seer asked, chewing
on the gristle end of a bone.
She grinned at him, punched him in the shoulder, then grabbed at
the bone. He slashed at her, raising a slight blood trail on the skin
of her arm, but she had pulled the bone from between his paws.
Leaping to her feet, she raised it over her head, wiggling her hips
in a puppy frolic.
“Got it! Got it! Slow slug!”
He growled at her, crouched to spring. She kicked him in the nose;
he knocked her from her feet. She brought the bone down on his
head— hard. He barked in mock anger. She rolled clear. He leapt
on her. Together they wrestled, the bone forgotten, the night mad in
their veins.
Tension ebbed as Firekeeper played with the blue-eyed wolf. She
simply couldn’t afford the indulgence and come close to holding
her own. Blind Seer’s furiously wagging tail proved too much
temptation for her. She grabbed it, pulled. He howled in surprise.
She rolled back, belly up, throat exposed, laughing,
laughing…
“I do love you!” she said when she had her breath
again. “Why wasn’t I born truly a wolf?”
After Derian and ox finished their report, Earl Kestrel half-rose
from his seat and bellowed, “You had her and you let her get
away!”
“As soon try to grasp water,” Ox said bluntly.
“But Derian said that she came close enough to touch
him!” The earl’s tone was not in the least
conciliatory.
“She did at that,” the bodyguard agreed, “but
still there would have been no holding her, even if we’d had
more than a moment’s warning of her flight. I’ve never
seen any person move so fast.”
The earl was still glowering, but he fell silent long enough for
Jared Surcliffe to ask:
“How old would you guess she was?”
Derian spread his hands and shrugged. “Hard to say. Not old.
I’d say young.”
“Young as in thirty,” Doc pressed, “or young as
in eighteen?”
“Eighteen,” Derian said promptly, “and maybe
younger than that. She was female, but didn’t have much in the
way of breasts.”
He’d already explained, glad that the darkness hid his
blush, how he’d come to be sure that the visitor was
female.
“If my records are correct,” Earl Kestrel said
ponderously, “there were two young girls with Prince
Barden’s expedition. One was Lady Blysse. The other was the
daughter of two of the prince’s associates. I have her name
written down somewhere. Of course, there could have been others. Or
the young woman you saw could have been a child born after they were
settled here.”
“My lord,” Race offered haughtily, still indignant,
for the earl had yelled at him for scaring the visitor away,
“from what we’ve seen of the ruins the fire happened ten
or so years ago. There are saplings growing out of the burned houses
that are eight years old. The extent of vine coverage speaks for a
long passage of time as well.”
“Would you say,” Earl Kestrel asked Derian,
“that young woman you saw was as young as eight?”
“Definitely not, my lord. She had breasts, small as they
were. I don’t want to be accused of raising hopes, sir, but she
could have been right about the age of your niece, the Lady
Blysse.”
“Dark hair, dark eyes?”
“Yes, sir. That is, her hair was not quite as dark as yours
or your cousins‘.” Before your hair started turning white that is, Derian
added mentally. A small grin at the corner of Ox’s mouth told
him that his friend was sharing the thought.
“Prince Barden,” Jared said with infinite caution,
“had dark brown hair. Eirene’s hair, however, was pale
blond and the child, as I recall her, took after her
mother.”
“Children often darken with age.” Earl Kestrel
dismissed the difficulty with a casual wave of his hand. “And
this young woman has probably not bathed except by
accident.”
Derian was offended, as if the visitor were his personal creation
rather than his accidental discovery.
“She smelled clean to me, my lord, slightly of sweat and
there was definitely the stink of the hide she wore about her, but
she looked as if she knew how to wash.”
Earl Kestrel shrugged. “Good. It would be a great
embarrassment to bring King Tedric his granddaughter and have her
ignorant of bathing.” So that’s how it’s going to be, Derian thought. We
have found Lady Blysse wandering wild in the forest. Now we will
restore her to her family. To the king and the Kestrels.
Thinking of the lively curiosity in the dark eyes, he felt oddly
sad and suddenly immeasurably older. For the first time, he
understood just how politics used some men and women—and how it
consumed still others.
“If she lost her parents when she was young,” Doc
mused, thinking aloud, “it may explain why she did not speak to
Derian and Ox. She may have forgotten how to talk. Such has happened
to hermits or shipwreck survivors who are alone for a long
time.”
“If so,” again the earl dismissed the difficulty as
trivial, “she can be taught to speak again when we have her in
our keeping.”
“And how,” Race asked deliberately, “shall we
catch this wild child? If she is so wood wise, we could search until
winter comes and never find her. I could set snares for her perhaps
or dig a pit trap…”
Earl Kestrel frowned, considering. A voice so rarely heard as to
be almost a stranger’s spoke from the shadows at the edge of
the fire.
“If my lord would permit,” Valet said, lifting his
traveling iron from the shirt he had been pressing, “I have a
suggestion.”
“Speak,” the earl commanded, as surprised as the rest
of them.
“It would be impolitic to have Lady Blysse tell her
grandfather that she had been trapped or snared or handled in any
rough fashion. I suggest that we convince her to trust us. Derian
Carter said that she admired his shirt, did she not?”
“She did,” Derian agreed, leaning forward with
eagerness, grateful beyond belief that Valet, at least, seemed to see
their quarry as worthy of human consideration.
“We have spare clothing among us,” Valet continued,
tactfully avoiding direct mention that his master possessed three
changes of clothing to each one carried by the other members of the
expedition. “Make her a gift of a shirt. A man’s wool
shirt with a long tail would cover as much as the hide Derian
described.”
“Yes! Let her be clothed from my wardrobe,” Earl
Kestrel proclaimed, apparently mentally drafting a portion of the
speech he would make before the king. “Moreover, since she is
timid, let the four of us depart at dawn, even as we did today.
Perhaps if Derian and Ox alone are in the camp, she could be lured
close once more.”
“Depart?” Race asked. “Where to?”
“Perhaps there are other survivors,” the earl said.
“We can look for sign of them. Certainly we could hunt and so
augment our larder. It is early for the fattest meat, but surely a
man with your talent can find something worth hunting.”
A slightly mocking note in his voice revealed that Earl Kestrel
had been well aware of the guide’s tendency to flaunt his
skills.
Race nodded, reluctant to be away from where the real hunt would
be going on, but acknowledging the wisdom of his patron’s plan.
Besides, he couldn’t have won an argument on this point in any
case.
Earl Kestrel rubbed his hands together in satisfaction.
“Our plan is ready, then. I suggest that all but the first
watch get some rest. Tomorrow will be a long and busy day for us
all.”
Derian, who had the first watch, began his slow perimeter patrol.
When he passed the place where the wild visitor had first emerged
from the woods he felt a thrill of anticipation. Would she return
tomorrow? Would he be able to convince her to stay?
In the darkness he heard a chorus of wolf howls and knew that
somehow they held the answer to his questions in their clear,
lonesome cries.
Firekeeper’s courage had returned to her by the middle of the
next morning. A full belly and a warm spring day didn’t hurt
either. This combination, which tended to make the wolves want to
nap, had always stirred her desire to explore.
“Sleep then, Brother,” she said, stroking Blind
Seer’s flank. He looked particularly handsome, for she had
pulled out all the clumps of shedding fur. “I will go and visit
the two-legs again. Elation said that all but Fox Hair and Mountain
have gone hunting.”
“Will you come back when they sleep?” the wolf asked
without opening his blue eyes.
“I will, but I hope my courage does not fail me and I can
remain long enough to look closely at the others when they return
from hunting.”
“Good. I will sleep then but not so deeply that I will fail
to hear your call if they give you any trouble.”
Firekeeper ruffled his fur and departed. She made a fast trail
going to the two-legs’ camp, aware that she felt a strange
anticipation. This is like but not like finding the first strawberries in
the spring, she thought. Like but not like returning to a sheltered
place in winter and knowing that I can make a fire and get warm. I
don’t think I have ever felt like this before. It is
interesting and not unpleasant.
When she reached the trees curtaining the edge of the Burnt Place,
Firekeeper exchanged greetings with Elation, then made certain all
was safe before going out into the open.
All seemed much as it had the day before. Fox Hair was seated on
the ground doing something with one of their soft hides. Mountain was
shifting burned wood, bringing out things from time to time and
setting them on a cleared space.
There were fewer bones now, she noticed. Most of those that were
not burned entirely must have been found by now. She wondered, as she
never had wondered before, what those other things might be. She
herself had found odd things in the grass when the Ones had brought
her here each year, but never before had she wondered about what they
were.
Almost as if her impulse guided her feet, she emerged from the
forest and trotted over to the heap of rubble. Mountain saw her,
swallowed a shout, then held completely still. Fox Hair looked up
from what he was doing and, as on the day before, rose very
slowly.
He smiled at her. She was fairly certain, at least, that this was
a smile, not a baring of fangs. Since she had no idea what her own
smile looked like, she couldn’t be completely certain, but Fox
Hair did nothing aggressive so she decided the expression must be a
smile.
Again he held out his arms, twisted them so the palms were
upraised and open. She imitated the gesture. They stood like this for
the long circuit of a robin’s song; then Fox Hair lowered his
arms slowly.
He said something to Mountain, who answered him in what Firekeeper
was certain was a deliberately hushed voice. Nothing they said made
any sense, but there was intelligent purpose behind the sounds.
Now Fox Hair crouched and lifted something from the ground near
him. Dangling it between two hands, he held it out to her. The wind
caught it, making it flap, but Firekeeper stopped herself in
mid-bolt. This flapping thing had offered her no harm!
Seeing that she had been startled, Fox Hair carefully spread the
thing flat on the ground between them. He said something, plucking at
the soft hide he wore, then pointing to the thing on the grass.
Cautiously, Firekeeper extended her hand and touched the thing,
feeling the same delightful softness that had met her hand the day
before.
Again Fox Hair pointed to his upper body, then, in response to
something said by Mountain, he tugged his garment clear from his
body.
The skin below, she noted, was lighter than that on his face. It
was also rippling with cold, as if the warm spring air were as chill
as that of midwinter. But these were things she noted in passing.
With deliberate motions, Fox Hair was showing her how his garment
dropped over his head, rested on his shoulders, fell down over the
torso…
She yelped in pleased comprehension. Two quick tugs on her belt
freed her from her own cumbersome hide. The Fang’s Mouth held
between her teeth, she bent and lifted the soft thing from the grass.
Finding the opening at the bottom proved a bit difficult, for the
soft stuff clung together, but she growled at Fox Hair when he moved
as if to take it from her.
Once she found the hole at the bottom, she groped and located the
hole at the top. There were holes for the arms as well. After some
fumbling and getting tangled and nearly panicking and nearly having
to drop the Mouth so her head would go through the head hole, she
pushed head and neck and arms all through their appropriate
openings.
The garment was light, surprisingly warm, and slightly prickly,
like the leaves of a mullein plant in late summer. It felt infinitely
better against her skin than the hide had done. Over the animal
smell, it was scented with lavender and thyme.
Fox Hair extended an arm toward her and she backed and growled.
This was hers now. She was not going to let him take it away. He
lowered his arm quickly and she saw that he held a thin strip of
hide, much like the one at his own waist. Understanding suddenly that
he had been offering her a belt, she snatched it from him.
As she looped it about her waist, threading it first through the
Mouth as she had learned to do long ago and finding the task much
easier with this even piece of leather, she noticed that Fox Hair was
staring first at her, then at his hand as if amazed that she had
taken the belt so easily.
She grinned at him. Clearly he had never dined with wolves! Only
the fastest and fiercest ate from a kill. Even the meat of her own
hunting would be stolen if she wasn’t careful. She’d
learned that young enough.
Fox Hair answered her smile, but she thought there was something
of fear and uneasiness in the tang of his sweat.
WHEN the rest of the expedition returned later that afternoon, Derian
was pleased to see that their wild visitor, although clearly nervous,
didn’t flee.
Lightly balanced on the balls of her feet, ready to run if
anything startled her, she watched the four men file into the camp.
Race carried a couple of rabbits, Valet a string of brook trout. When
they passed her, Derian noticed again how she sniffed the air, taking
in their scents.
Clad in her new shirt and nothing else (he couldn’t help but
remember his embarrassment when she had stripped right in front of
both him and Ox) the young woman looked more like an untidy
curly-haired urchin than the wild thing who had first come into their
camp. With that strange surge of possessiveness, Derian realized that
he was glad that Earl Kestrel’s first sight of her would be
this way, rather than draped in that awkward hide. He would treat her
better, maybe even respect her a little.
“How long has she been here?” the earl asked, studying
the woman speculatively.
“Since midmorning, sir.”
“And has she spoken?”
“No. We’ve tried talking to her, but she only makes
sounds—whines and growls.” That had been both
disappointing and a bit frightening. Derian brightened.
“She’s a wonderful mimic, though. We’ve been
communicating a little by signs.”
“Communicating?” The aristocratic brow arched.
“Like about the shirt,” Derian replied, “and we
offered her something to eat.”
“Ah!”
“She eats like a wild animal,” Derian admitted.
“I’ve seen neater pigs.”
“Mm.”
Earl Kestrel’s attention was only partially on the
conversation. His gaze never left the woman; however, as hers never
left him, the clinical investigation seemed less rude. She had taken
a position a few steps from the center of the camp, carefully leaving
a line of escape open behind her.
Kestrel bowed to her. The woman did not respond in kind. Indeed,
Derian fancied she looked vaguely disdainful. Kestrel may have
reached something of the same conclusion, for he frowned.
The other three men also had been studying the visitor but more
covertly, aware of the penalties for usurping the earl’s
rights. Derian heard Race comment softly to Ox:
“She doesn’t look much like a noblewoman. Acts like
one though. There’s not a humble bone in that body.”
Ox chuckled softly. “I’d noticed that
myself.”
“She’s healthy-looking,” Doc said,
“despite all the scars. She has a fresh cut on her arm, but it
shows no sign of festering. Someone’s taught her basic
hygiene.”
“She is cleaner than I’d expected,” Race
admitted.
“I’d love a chance to examine her,” Jared said,
raising his voice slightly to include Derian in the implied question.
“We might get a better idea of her age then. From what I can
see from here, she’s not overfed, not precisely undernourished,
but there’s little fat on her.”
Derian, keeping his own voice soft, said, “She’s very
cautious about letting anyone close. I don’t think it’s
fear of being touched as much as fear of being trapped.”
Ox nodded agreement. “She was interested in touching us: my
beard, Derian’s hair, the fabrics of our clothing, but she
wouldn’t accept anything but the lightest pat in return. Even
then, you could tell she was letting us out of good
manners.”
“Interesting,” Earl Kestrel said. “Very well,
Jared, your examination will need to wait until she trusts us more.
She has accepted clothing and food, so we are well on the way. I will
not have these advances damaged.”
As if, Derian thought indignantly, you had anything to do with
those advances.
“Secondly,” Earl Kestrel continued, “we cannot
go about simply referring to this young woman as ‘she.’
There are very good odds that she is Lady Blysse. Address her
accordingly.”
“ ‘Lady Blysse,’ ” Doc offered, the
slightest of grins on his lips, “is a bit of a mouthful for
daily use. Given her father’s standing with the king and her
own probable age at the time of the fire, she was most likely merely
called ‘Blysse.’ I suggest we do the same.”
Earl Kestrel, who had been a stickler for protocol even on the
trail, glowered at his cousin and Doc hastened to clarify.
“I mean no disrespect, Norvin,” he said, emphasizing
his own point by using the earl’s given name rather than his
title, “but if we hope to awaken her memories of herself and of
language, we don’t want our first lesson to be too
complicated.”
Norvin Norwood, Earl Kestrel, nodded. “I concede the point,
Jared. She will be addressed as Blysse.”
The young woman had listened to this byplay with apparent
interest, but showed no recognition of the name. Derian sighed. As
ever, Earl Kestrel had his own best interests at heart.
“She looks well in that shirt,” Jared said. “Is
the hide you said she was wearing anywhere about? I would like to
examine the tailoring. It might give us a clue as to whether she has
a companion or two hidden away.”
“I set it over there,” Derian said. “I thought
she might want it,” (he remembered the rapidity with which she
had snatched the belt from his hand), “but she lost interest in
it as soon as she had figured out how the shirt went on.”
Doc crossed to examine the hide. Blysse’s jet-black gaze
followed his movements, but, though she seemed completely absorbed in
watching Doc, when the earl took a step toward her, she sprang back
without turning her head, without even apparent volition.
“Like an animal,” Race muttered. Then, “My lord,
I’ll go get these fish ready for the fire.”
“Go,” Earl Kestrel dismissed him. “The rest of
you may go about your tasks as well, but do not come near Blysse. Do
not make any loud noises or sudden motions. We wish her to feel
safe.”
Everyone murmured acknowledgment.
The earl continued, “Derian Carter, come stand next to me. I
have noticed that she uses you as a touchstone. If we are together,
she may be willing to approach me.”
Derian did so, almost hating himself for the subliminal thrill he
received from standing shoulder to shoulder with a nobleman. Always
before this, in small ways and subtle, the earl had kept his distance
from the commoners in his expedition.
Blysse didn’t seem to notice, but by now Derian was certain
that she missed little.
“What are your conclusions about her attire?” Earl
Kestrel asked Doc impatiently, for his cousin was staring at Blysse
rather than continuing his examination of the hide.
“She could have done the work herself,” Doc said, his
deliberately soft tone almost idle but holding beneath it a
suppressed excitement. “It is the most simple of constructions,
rather like the dresses young girls make for their dolls. The
hide—it’s elk, by the way, and I wonder how she killed an
elk—has been tanned, though badly. It is in one piece; nothing
has been stitched on. A hole has been cut in the center rather larger
than her head—I expect she didn’t like how the rough
leather chafed her neck. The rest has been trimmed so that the
movement of her arms would be unimpeded.
“This belt,” he lifted a twisted piece of leather,
“must have closed it somewhat at the sides, if
poorly.”
“That’s right, Doc,” Derian confirmed.
“Derian,” Jared asked, the quiet excitement now rising
into his voice, “did you give Blysse anything other than the
shirt and belt?”
“No, Doc.”
“Not the knife?”
“No. She had it with her. Never even put it down. Held it in
her teeth while she was changing.”
Both Doc and the earl glanced at him when he said that, but
mercifully, this once Derian didn’t blush.
“So you haven’t gotten a good look at it,” Doc
continued. “Then you probably didn’t notice that, worn as
the sheath is, it is of superlative construction, hardened leather
with metal reinforcement. Stamped onto it, I believe, is the crest of
the royal house.”
“Oh?” Earl Kestrel’s grey eyes shone as he
understood the drift of his cousin’s thoughts. “I cannot
see it from here. Is there anything else?”
“Yes,” Doc said. “Set into the pommel is what
looks like a cabochon gem, a garnet, I’d guess, though
it’s too filthy for me to be certain. I’m certain
I’ve seen the like before, when hunting with Prince
Barden.”
Suddenly Derian looked at his discovery with new eyes. Until this
moment, he hadn’t believed in the earl’s dreams, but now
it seemed quite possible that this dark-eyed lady of the forest might
well be the heir to the throne of Hawk Haven.
IV
Firekeeper had slipped away to spend the good night
with Blind Seer, but before dawn pinked the sky, she crept back
again, so silently that even the spotted not-wolf didn’t note
her return. Lifting the edge of the shelter the two-legs had given
her, she crawled back inside and sat on the soft things they had
heaped as a sleeping place for her.
She was full from hunting, weary from running, howling, and
wrestling with her pack mate. In the dim light that penetrated her
lair she saw that her new garment was covered with tiny twigs, bits
of leaf, and other forest matter. Fastidious as any wolf, she
stripped the shirt off and was pulling the mess from the fabric when
sleep took her. “One character, one sound,” a pleasant, melodious
female voice says. “Put them together and the words will talk
to you.” Tamara looks down at the slate uncertainly. Sweet Eirene has
made marks there with a bit of chalk. Tamara recognizes some of the
marks, but fitting them together into sounds still bothers her. She
feels hot and foolish as she tries, her lips fat and heavy. Her only
comfort is that Blysse seems no more enthusiastic than she. “Mama,” Blysse demands, “we want to go
outside, Tamara and me.” Outside! Sunlight dappling through the trees. Springtime
flowers scenting the air. “Tamara and I.” Sweet Eirene corrects her daughter
patiently. She shifts baby Clive to one arm, opens her blouse to
nurse him. “After you have sounded out what is written on the
slates you may go out.” Tamara looks through the open window with longing, but
reluctantly obeys the woman. At least Sweet Eirene keeps her deals,
not like some of the other grownups, who seem to believe that the
little girls have no more memory than chickens. Blysse, though as willful as any doted-upon child, seems to
know that this is not a time to argue with her mother. Mumbling their
attempts to each other, the girls bend their heads, one fair, one
dark, over their slates. “Dog and Hog run with Frog,” Blysse announces
after a few minutes. Sweet Eirene smiles at her daughter. “Very good, Blysse.
Now, Tamara, what does your slate say?” “The big pig can dig,” Tamara sounds out
carefully, wondering why anyone would want to know something so
stupid. “Very good, Tamara.” Sweet Eirene offers Clive her
other nipple. “Since both of you girls have worked so hard, you
may have two strawberries each from the bowl in the
pantry.” “Thank you, Mama.” Blysse says, hopping down from
her chair and running with pattering steps to open the pantry
door. “Thank you, ma’am,” Tamara echoes, taking
the berries Blysse thrusts at her with pink-stained fingers. The strawberries are still sweet in her mouth. She sits on the
ground outside Blysse’s cabin, playing dolls with her friend.
Distantly, she hears Barden come inside from the fields. The prince’s boots thump solidly against the new plank
floor. A scraping sound is the slate being pushed to one side. A
clunk is his heavy pottery tumbler being set on the table. “It’s a beautiful day, Eirene,” he says.
“Too beautiful to sit indoors and tutor little
girls.” “They need to learn how to read, Barden,” Sweet
Eirene replies. Her voice twangs a little under its gentle melody.
They argue about this frequently. “Let them play,” the prince urges.
“There’s no need to force them along. We have few enough
books and they’re only four years old.” “Blysse will be five in a few moon-spans. At her age, I
could cross-stitch my alphabet. She can barely recite the
letters!” “She can lead a horse, feed a chicken, and tell a weed
from a seedling.” Barden’s tone is affectionate.
“Her education must needs be different from that of a lady of
Kestrel.” “Maybe.” Sweet Eirene’s voice is no longer
so sweet. She sounds determined. “Barden, I swear that these
children will not grow up like wild animals!” Wild animals, animals, animals… The words echo through Tamara’s head and she is kneeling
on the ground next to her mother. Mama holds a furry grey ball in her
lap. It stares fuzzily at Tamara from cloudy blue eyes. “Careful, Tamara,” Mama says when Tamara reaches
to touch the puppy. “This is a wild animal, not one of your
toys.” Tamara pats the wolf puppy very, very carefully. “Wild,
Mama? It doesn’t seem wild. What is wild?” “Wild is not obeying humans,” Mama says after a
moment. “Wild is that.” “Wild,” Tamara tries the word out. “Wild.
Wild wolf. Will the wild wolf bite me?” “If you poke it or hurt it or tease it,” Mama
says, “and well it should. But its mother might bite you even
faster.” Tamara senses rather than hears the she-wolf emerging from the
brush. Her grey head is taller than Tamara’s dark one. Her
yellow-brown eyes study the girl; then her fanged mouth opens in a
panting smile. “Wild,” Tamara says, putting out her hand to pat
the wolf. “Wild.” She throws back her head and pipes a thin howl. Wild.
Firekeeper awakened slowly from her dream, feeling it clinging to
corners of her mind dense as fog and just as impossible to grasp. The
garment Fox Hair had given her was draped across her thighs,
puppy-fur soft.
Suddenly she was homesick. Confused and forlorn, she didn’t
know who she was homesick for. Her pack? Mama? Blysse?
The loud clang of the iron pot being slung over the campfire
brought her fully awake. Gratefully Firekeeper pushed homesickness
away with anticipation and curiosity.
From outside her shelter, she heard Fox Hair calling in a low
voice, “Blysse? Blysse?”
This word was followed by other sounds that almost, coming as they
did on the heels of her dream, made sense. So Firekeeper yapped a
greeting and pushed her way outside. Fox Hair smiled greeting in
return. Then, to her astonishment, his face turned as red as the
setting sun.
Derian’s pleasure at learning the wild woman had not fled in
the night vanished in a wash of embarrassment when he realized that
she had emerged from the tent completely naked. The wool shirt,
incomprehensibly covered with bits of bracken, trailed from her left
hand. She grasped her sheathed knife in the right.
Moreover, she was staring at him in astonishment, as if he, not
she, were displaying himself naked before a company of the opposite
sex. Dropping the shirt, she reached out and touched his cheek. Only
when he felt the coolness of her fingers did he realize that he must
be blushing furiously.
Frozen in shock, he regained control of his limbs only when he
heard Doc comment dryly:
“Well, from what I see, I’d concur with the estimate
of her age as somewhere between twelve and fifteen. She’s thin
as a rail, poor child. No wonder she doesn’t have much up
top.”
Derian bent and picked up the discarded shirt, not caring this
once if his sudden movement frightened Blysse. His fingers were
touching the cloth when he felt it snatched from beneath them.
The woman was glowering at him, holding the shirt close to her.
When he straightened, she fixed him with her dark gaze. Then, clearly
and distinctly, she growled.
Behind him Derian heard murmurs of astonishment as the other men
registered her speed and agility. Then Ox said calmly:
“Well, Derian, she may not want to wear it now, but
I’d say that she plans on keeping that shirt.”
Coming to himself, Earl Kestrel snapped, “Stop staring at
Lady Blysse, all of you! Get on with your chores! Derian Carter, try
to convince her to re-don her garb. Then I want to speak with
you.”
Derian convinced Blysse to dress, helped by the fact that she
obviously had intended to do so in any case. With some effort he
convinced her to remain with Ox.
Seeing her safe, Derian reluctantly crossed toward the
earl’s tent. He glanced behind him to check on Blysse and saw
her standing behind Ox’s bulk, peering out to watch the others
as they prepared breakfast and fed the horses.
When Derian reached the area marked out as Earl Kestrel’s
own, Valet glanced up from the quail eggs he was scrambling for the
earl’s breakfast to give Derian an encouraging nod. Even so,
Derian didn’t feel any braver as he announced himself and
obeyed the earl’s invitation to enter.
Earl Kestrel’s tent was larger than the one Derian shared
with Ox. It had straight sides and a peaked roof, rather like a small
house, whereas the other members of the expedition slept in simple
triangular shelters. When Derian entered, he found Earl Kestrel
seated on a campstool, making notes in a leather-bound book resting
on a collapsible table.
“Be seated while I finish this,” Kestrel ordered
curtly.
Derian balanced on a second campstool, his hands folded stiffly on
his knees. After an eon or so, the earl blotted his ink, sanded the
page, and turned to Derian.
“We have a serious problem,” he said bluntly,
“with the Lady Blysse. We may have located her, but ten years
of living like a wild animal have made her unfit for civilized
company. At first I intended to head back to Eagle’s Nest as
soon as we could regroup. Now I see this would be unwise. I want
Blysse to be presented to the king as a human being— one who
has suffered trials, surely, but as a human being. If we go back now,
even with the weeks we must spend on the road, she will still be
little more than a freak.”
Derian had expected to be reprimanded for staring at the naked
woman, for not keeping the woman covered, for something he’d
done wrong. These confidences startled him so that all he could do
was nod.
“Last night I consulted with both my valet and with my
cousin,” the earl continued. “They advise that you would
be the best choice for the girl’s tutor.”
“Me?”
“Yes. Thus far, she trusts you more than she does any of us.
You are closer to her age. Moreover, you are educated, unlike Race
and Ox. Jared and I should return to our homes, at least briefly.
Therefore, we cannot teach her.”
“Valet?” Derian offered tentatively.
“She does not seem to respect Valet,” Earl Kestrel
said. “He is very good at what he does, but he himself has
noted that he lacks the force of personality to impress
her.”
“Oh.”
“I am offering you an important job, a great opportunity to
serve both my house and the throne.”
Derian bit his lip, reviewing his options. Could he really
civilize this wild woman? What would be the penalty for failure? He
was certain that he was still considering when he heard his own voice
saying:
“Yes. I would like to try teaching her, sir.”
“Good!” The earl briskly rubbed his hands together.
“I always knew you had potential as an aide. As you may be
aware, after Prince Barden departed, his father sold his
property.”
“Departed.” Was disinherited, you mean, Derian
thought, some of his usual sardonic humor returning to him now that
the worst shock had passed.
“I purchased West Keep—the place from which Prince
Barden departed into the wilds,” Earl Kestrel continued.
“It should make a fit place for Barden’s daughter, my
niece, to begin her education. I will speak to Race Forester about
his remaining in my employ and staying there to support you. The rest
of us will depart, but I will expect regular reports from
you.”
“How delivered, sir?” Derian asked, his head
swimming.
“I will send a courier. He will take your first report and
leave a covey of homing pigeons with you. Hopefully, that will
suffice.”
“Yes, sir.”
Earl Kestrel kept talking, but Derian heard little of what he
said. He knew he would regret his inattention later, but for now only
one refrain kept going through his head.
What have I gotten myself into?
Firekeeper spent an exciting but nerve-tightening day among the
two-legs. Three or four times she ate their food, finding it
overcooked and full of the taste of strange plants. It was warming,
though, with a warmth that stayed like sunlight in her belly.
When Fox Hair observed her pulling the leaves out of her soft
shirt, he brought her another set of garments. This time there were
two parts: one to be worn on her lower body and another for the
top.
As easily as a mockingbird mimics sounds, Fox Hair communicated
with Firekeeper by acting out what he wanted her to know. In this way
he showed her that the one part went over the soft shirt, the other
over her lower parts.
Thinking the stuff these garments was made from smelled familiar,
Firekeeper chewed the material and found that it was indeed leather,
but leather that had been made soft and supple, as if the animal were
still wearing its hide.
Initially, she wore the clothing in the fashion that Fox Hair had
suggested, but she found the combination of two tops along with the
bottoms stifling. As much as she liked the soft top, she found the
leather one stronger and less likely to accumulate leaf matter. The
bottoms protected her legs and rear far better than her hide had ever
done, though she missed the feeling of the wind against her skin.
Firekeeper compromised by wearing the leather top and bottoms,
setting the soft top aside for another time. When the little brown
man made as if to touch the soft top, she growled.
She might not be using it that moment, but she wasn’t going
to give it up!
During the brightest part of the day, Firekeeper slept for a
while, leaving her rested and clearheaded when night fell and the
two-legs went into their shelters to sleep. Shedding her new attire,
since she was not quite comfortable in it, she slipped out to meet
Blind Seer.
They romped for a time, celebrating their reunion with such
enthusiasm that she was slightly bruised and soundly scratched. When
they had stretched out on some young grass, Firekeeper with her head
pillowed on her brother’s flank, the wolf sighed.
“What troubles you, Blue Eyes?”
“Elation said that the two-legs plan to depart tomorrow.
Tawny has pulled his fish traps from the water and taken down his
snares. There are other signs the falcon sees. Although they mean
nothing to me, I believe her.”
Firekeeper’s heart started beating far too fast.
“Tomorrow?”
“Probably as soon as there is light.” The wolf thumped
his tail on the ground. “Do you go with them?”
It was far to soon to make such a decision, but in her belly
Firekeeper knew that the decision was already made.
“I will.”
“Across the mountains?”
“Let us see how they treat me in the days it takes to reach
the mountains,” she temporized.
“But if they treat you well?”
She sighed. “Then I go.”
Sitting up, she rubbed the wolf behind his ears.
“I could miss you, Sister,” Blind Seer said at last,
“but Mother and Father reminded us that all wolves feel the
urge to disperse from the pack. Why should our two-legged sister be
different?”
“Could miss me?” she said, teasing to lighten this
serious moment.
“Could, if I were parting from you,” he replied,
“but I think I will go with you to see what lies over the
mountain. It is long since any but the winged members of the Royal
kind went there. Now that the two-legs have come here, why
shouldn’t I go there?”
Firekeeper howled her delight, thumping Blind Seer so hard that he
leapt up and trotted out of range.
“Easy, Sister! Easy!” he protested.
“You’re not a tiny pup anymore. There’s strength in
those funny hands of yours.”
“Will you come meet the two-legs, then?” she asked
eagerly.
“Not yet,” he replied cautiously. “Their beasts
fear me as we fear fire. Let them grow a bit accustomed to my scent.
We should learn, too, if the two-legs also fear wolves. The Cousins
who have crossed the mountains don’t speak well of
them.”
“True.” She smiled, though, too happy at the knowledge
that he would be nearby to worry yet about how the two-legs would
take to him. “Have you told the Ones what you will
do?”
“How could I?” he replied. “I didn’t know
until you made your own choice.”
“Then let us sing our news to the pack,” she said.
“The Ones will want to know that we are both
departing.”
Trotting side by side, they went to a rise from which their voices
would carry far. Two voices began a song that became a chorus as it
was relayed through trees whose branches reached as if to brush the
stars.
“Easy, NOW! Easy, Roanne!” Derian jerked the mare’s
headstall, but still she danced nervously away from Blysse.
The woman, clad in leather vest and riding breeches, stood
barefoot, watching the horse’s antics in evident amusement.
“Problem, Derian?” Earl Kestrel asked from where he
stood a polite distance away.
“Yes, sir. I’d thought to have Lady Blysse ride my
horse while I rode one of the pack animals. We can spare one since
we’ve used so much of the fodder they were carrying. Roanne
won’t go near Blysse, though.”
Exasperated, he punctuated his reply by loosing the mare into the
corral, where she promptly trotted to the far side of the enclosure,
shuddering her skin as if it were crawling with flies.
“None of the other horses will either,” Derian
continued. “They’re scared stiff of Blysse.”
The earl thoughtfully stroked his beard with one forefinger.
“Interesting,” he said. “Well, then, until we
get a horse accustomed to her, she will have to walk.”
He looked as if he was considering declaring that everyone else
must walk as well, but self-interest came to the fore.
“Perhaps your horse will grow easier around Blysse if you
are in the saddle and she walks alongside.”
“Perhaps,” Derian agreed doubtfully.
“In any case, how does Blysse seem to take to the idea of
riding?”
“Well enough.” Derian gestured to where he had flung a
saddle across a fallen tree trunk. “I showed her the basics
there and she took to them
[ MISSING SECTION ]
“Brace the bodies of his friends and comrades, perhaps the
body of his lady wife.”
The earl’s voice broke there and Derian liked him better for
it. Even in the midst of constructing a pedigree for the foundling, a
pedigree on which rested Kestrel’s own ambitions for
advancement, the man couldn’t quite subdue his own sorrow at
the loss of his sister.
Suspicious then that he was too gullible, that the catch in the
earl’s voice had just been good theater, Derian glanced at the
nobleman, but the tightness around Norvin Norwood’s eyes and
mouth was genuine. His voice, though, when he spoke again, had
returned to his control:
“Prince Barden holds in one of his great hands a small one,
that of his small daughter, Blysse. Terrified and confused by the
changes the night has wrought, still the little girl tries to be
brave for her father’s sake. He, in turn, takes courage from
the child’s need for him.
“After foraging among the ruins for the basic necessities of
existence, the prince leads his daughter into the forest. There is no
benefit to staying near, yet Barden cannot bear to take himself too
far away from this accidental funeral pyre. If he departs, who will
make the offerings to the spirits of the dead?
“So he remains and builds a small shelter in which he raises
his daughter, letting her help him forage and hunt for what they need
to survive in the wilds. Certainly, he made no more permanent
provisions for the future. Doubtless, when the traditional two years
of sacrifices for the dead were ended, Prince Barden planned to
return to his father’s kingdom. Once there, if only for his
small daughter’s sake, he would beg forgiveness for his
rashness and ask to be taken back into the fold.
“However, before those two years can pass, something happens
to him. Perhaps the heat of the fires that Prince Barden certainly
challenged when attempting to save his people seared his lungs.
Perhaps he broke a limb or caught an illness while hunting in the
freezing cold of winter for food for his daughter. Perhaps it was
simply the final stroke of the ill luck that had dogged his young
life. For whatever reason, when the two years had passed, the prince
was too weak to make the onerous journey across the mountains.
Instead, he put his full energies into teaching his daughter what she
would need to survive.
“At last, his strength failing him, Prince Barden strapped
his own knife about young Blysse’s waist, rested her small but
strong hand on the polished garnet on the pommel, made her swear to
fight to survive even when he had passed on. Taking her to the ruins,
he consigned her care to the ancestral spirits to whom he had so
devotedly sacrificed. Shortly thereafter, he joined them.
“Perhaps Blysse buried him in the ruins near those he had
loved. Perhaps, trembling with grief, she was forced to leave his
body to the ministry of the wild creatures. However, like her father,
she remained close by the familiar places. There, nearly wild, we
found her, and so we return her to the embrace of her
grandfather.”
Earl Kestrel paused, one hand holding Coal’s reins, the
other lightly stroking his lip, his gaze keenly observing the
reaction of his listeners. Jared Surcliffe was the first to speak.
His voice was a bit hoarse, as if he had been holding back tears.
“That’s a good explanation, cousin,” he said
slowly. “It explains much of what has puzzled me: how the girl
survived; why she stayed near to this place; why, even if someone had
lived to care for her when she was small, didn’t that same
person take her home to Hawk Haven.”
Earl Kestrel bowed his head in gracious acknowledgment of the
praise.
“I like the touch about the prince giving his daughter his
own knife,” Race Forester said, his envy forgotten under the
story’s spell. “It rings true. A royal prince would have
done something just like that.”
Derian nodded, but as he glanced at the dark-haired figure
trotting alongside his horse, her eyes alive with curiosity, he
wondered. It could have been just like that, but was it?
He wondered if they would ever know and realized with a shiver
that discovering the truth was up to him, for if the woman remained a
creature of the wilds, the truth would never be known.
The two-legs stopped traveling toward the mountains long before
Firekeeper was at all tired. Still, she was glad for the break, glad
for an opportunity to assess what she had learned.
Fox Hair had clearly been made her nursemaid, a role that was
apparently a promotion among the two-legs, for it was evident to her
that Tawny resented him greatly.
She was rather pleased for Fox Hair, nonetheless. He was amusing
and willing to make great efforts in order to befriend her.
After a day of watching the two-legs interact from within their
midst, she was certain that they could talk as well as any wolf.
Unlike wolves, however, they mostly used their mouths, a thing she
found limiting. How could you tell someone to keep away from your
food when your own mouth was full?
While the two-legs were lighting their fire and taking all the
things off the not-elk that they had put on them with such effort a
short time before, Fox Hair motioned Firekeeper to join him by the
fire. Although she disliked how the smoke dulled her sense of smell,
Firekeeper came over and seated herself on a rock upwind.
While busily washing some vegetables in a container of water, Fox
Hair chattered squirrel-like at Mountain, who was setting up one of
the shelters. Feeling left out when Fox Hair stopped, Firekeeper
attempted to mimic his final string of sounds.
She was a good mimic. So long ago that she did not remember the
learning, she had discovered that imitating various bird and animal
calls could bring her prey to her, rather than forcing her to seek it
over great distances.
Hearing her imitate him now, Fox Hair’s eyes widened in an
expression she recognized as surprise. In a sharp tone, he said
something to her. She did her best to make the same noises back at
him.
Hearing her, Mountain laughed and said something to Fox Hair. She
mimicked him as well, pitching her voice lower, though she could not
reach his great, thunder-deep rumbles.
Fox Hair nodded at this, reached up, and pulled at his mouth in
what Firekeeper was certain was a gesture of thought. Two-legs pulled
at their mouths a great deal. Those who grew hair there often
fingered it or tugged at it.
She wondered if her own inability to grow hair on her face would
be a handicap among two-legs, perhaps one as great as not having
fangs had proved to be among wolves. If so, she supposed, she could
fasten another creature’s hair there, just as her Fang had
compensated for her other natural shortcomings. However, she hoped
that since Fox Hair cut the hair from his face she would be spared
this.
Letting his hand drop into his lap, Fox Hair picked up one of the
plant roots that he had been washing a moment before.
Slowly and carefully, he said: “Potato.”
Firekeeper imitated him perfectly. Fox Hair smiled, picked up
another root, this one long and orange.
“Carrot.”
She imitated him.
“Onion.”
A dozen items later, he began to repeat. Soon she had all the
words and could, when Fox Hair pointed to one or another of the
items, match word to thing.
Fox Hair grinned his delight. Hawk Nose, who had been watching
from a distance, came over and tested her himself.
Firekeeper went through the routine again, aware that impressing
this two-legged One was important. Hawk Nose nodded at her when she
had finished, then said something rapidly to Fox Hair. Fox Hair
replied. His tones, Firekeeper noted, were more measured than when he
spoke with Mountain. She wondered if cadence indicated something,
perhaps relative standing within the pack.
After they had eaten, Fox Hair drew Firekeeper off to the side and
continued teaching her sounds. By full dark, she had learned several
dozen more, knew that the not-elk were horses, that the cringing
spotted kin-creature was a dog, that the shelters were tents.
She was a little puzzled to find that the same word applied to the
small shelters such as the one in which she slept and the larger one
in which Hawk Nose slept. They were so different in shape and
purpose— Hawk Nose spent much time in his doing more than
sleeping—that she thought his should have a different word.
More interesting was learning that the two-legs had names for
themselves. Fox Hair was called Derian. Mountain was Ox.
Derian seemed uncertain what to name Hawk Nose. He tried various
sounds. Then he shrugged and shook his head, dismissing them all.
Firekeeper was fascinated and more than a little confused.
Despite her pleasure in discovering that one could communicate
with two-legs, when she heard Blind Seer call, she was eager to leave
and join him.
She rose, turning toward the forest. Fox Hair/Derian stood as
well, his expression anxious. Blind Seer howled again. “Come, Firekeeper! I’m lonely!”
Firekeeper smiled and started to walk toward the forest. Derian,
to her surprise, for he had never before laid even a finger on her
without permission, put his hand on her arm.
She stopped, stared at him, and, seeing concern evident on his
features, did not strike him. Perhaps two-legs, like wolves, touched
for other reasons than to attack.
Fox Hair gestured in the direction of Blind Seer’s cry.
“Wolf,” he said.
Blind Seer howled again.
“Wolf,” Derian repeated anxiously.
Firekeeper gently pushed his hand from her arm and moved swiftly
away. Before she stepped into the darkness of the trees, she turned
to Fox Hair and nodded.
“Wolf,” she agreed, and slipped into the night.
V
“But this can’t go on!” exclaimed
Race Forester, eyes ablaze.
“Tomorrow we cross the gap; a day or two thereafter
we’re in populated lands. What happens then when Lady Blysse
slips off into the night and runs about in the darkness?”
There was a sneer in his voice when he said “Lady,” a
sneer just this side of unforgivable cheek, but Earl Kestrel chose to
overlook that insolence. No matter how rudely phrased, Race’s
point was reasonable.
Each night since they had broken camp at the ruins of Bardenville,
Blysse had left her tent and vanished into the night. What she did
then, no one knew, but she returned each day shortly before dawn.
They had made slower progress on their return east to civilization
than they had on the way out. The first day Earl Kestrel had called
halt after a half-day’s travel, worried that the young woman
would not have the stamina to pace the horses any longer. He might
also have been prompted by the steady drizzle that had begun with
first light and had never ceased—unless turning into
intermittent sleet could be considered ceasing.
The second day their start had been late, for the camp had
remained on alert for many hours after Blysse had left Derian’s
side, in answer, it almost seemed, to a howl of a wolf in the
darkness beyond. Only on her return had Earl Kestrel fallen into a
restful sleep. The third day had been something of a repetition of
the second, though Earl Kestrel had permitted Valet to convince him
that wakeful watchfulness would do nothing to bring the girl back,
that indeed it might do the opposite.
The end of this fourth day of travel found them at the lower
reaches of the gap. Tomorrow they would attempt the crossing, a long,
hard day’s work even for rested men. Although the earl had
decreed an extra half-day for rest and preparation, no one was
relaxing. Even calm Ox and unflappable Valet kept turning their gazes
to the tree line, wondering what strange force might draw Blysse out
into the unfriendly darkness night after night.
Derian was the least happy of the lot. Looking at his charge clad
in leather vest and rough knee breeches she had made by chopping off
a pair of the earl’s riding trousers just below her knees, she
was a winsome figure, hardly female, impossible to place in any of
the categories he had encountered traveling between Hawk Haven and
Bright Bay on business with his father.
To some eyes, as she sat busily untangling her brown locks with
the comb he had shown her how to use three days before, Blysse could
be any girl, albeit a somewhat boyishly dressed one. To Derian,
however, she had become more of an enigma for their several days of
acquaintance rather than less.
Upon their first meeting she had seemed a wild creature that had
taken human shape. By their second, assured of her humanity, Derian
had felt proprietary, even protective toward her. By the third
meeting, the very one that had ended with Earl Kestrel giving Derian
charge of her, Derian had felt certain of Blysse’s intelligence
and of her peculiar sense of humor.
This day she was a stranger, calm and composed, apparently immune
to the human storm that raged around her—as she should be.
Although her vocabulary was growing at an amazing rate, what words
she had were mostly nouns with a few simple additions such as Yes and
No, Come and Go.
“What do you suggest we do?” Earl Kestrel asked
Race.
“We should tie her,” the scout said firmly.
“It’s for her own safety, my lord. I don’t want her
arrow-shot by the first gamekeeper who takes her for a
poacher.”
“You don’t?” the earl’s inflection was
ironic, but Derian doubted that the scout noticed. Race still
believed that his envy of the woman’s woodcraft was his own
secret.
“No, sir, I don’t,” Race said earnestly.
“Think of the man’s shock when he finds a bit of a girl
dead with his shaft in her breast and him facing your wrath for doing
naught but his duty.”
“Indeed,” said Earl Kestrel dryly, “not to
mention the pitiable situation that Blysse should have survived ten
years of privation to die so sordidly.”
“That,” Race replied, suddenly aware of his
tactlessness, “so goes without saying that I didn’t
bother mentioning it.”
“Of course.” Earl Kestrel relented. “It has not
escaped my notice that you have scouted in the vicinity of the camp
following Blysse’s return each dawn. Have you found any sign of
where she goes or if she is meeting someone?”
“None,” Race said, superstitious dread deepening his
voice. “She leaves no more track than a spirit would.
I’ve wondered…”
Jared Surcliffe broke in, impatient with the earl’s game of
cat and mouse with the uneducated man.
“If she’s a restless spirit? Nonsense! I’ve
examined her more closely now and no spirit would have so many
scars—not to mention the cuts and bruises she gains each day.
She has clean healing flesh, thank the ancestors of our house, or she
would have died from some injury long since.”
“If I thought she was a spirit,” Race countered
defiantly, “would I have suggested putting a rope on her? My
lord, it would be no more unkind than the jesses on a hawk or the
leash on a dog. It’s to keep her from harm in my way of
thinking, not to do her some.”
“And can you explain that to her?” Earl Kestrel said
skeptically. “Derian, could Blysse understand such an
idea?”
Derian shrugged. “She’s smart, my lord, but we
don’t have enough words.”
“Mime it!” Race insisted.
“When she’s never seen—or at least has no memory
of—the farmers or gamekeepers you would protect her
from?” Derian scoffed. “How?”
In answer, Race lifted a coil of rope and strode over to where
Blysse was now interestedly watching.
“I’ll show you!” the scout retorted
defiantly.
He lifted the rope, uncoiled a section and held it out to the
young woman.
“Rope,” she said calmly.
Much to Derian’s despair, all items for binding, from the
thinnest thread to horse hobbles to fish line, had, for the nonce,
become rope. Doubtless Blysse thought Race’s approach with rope
in hand was another attempt to force her to discriminate. Mentally,
he kicked himself for not teaching her the word
“pavilion” for Earl Kestrel’s larger tent that
first night. The lack of discrimination seemed to have shaped her
attitude toward the refinements of spoken language.
With the ease of long practice, Race made a noose. Then, as Blysse
watched in unguarded curiosity, he dropped it over her shoulders and
pulled it fast, binding her arms tightly to her sides.
Blysse looked startled, pushing out with her shoulders against the
restraint. Her expression when she realized that she could not get
free became furious: dark eyes narrowed, lips paling, brows pulled
together.
“See, my lord,” Race said triumphantly, turning
slightly toward Earl Kestrel, leaning back on his heels so that his
weight would keep the noose tight. “We can hold her this way
and she can walk along or we can set her up on one of the mules.
They’ve grown accustomed to her by now and…”
He didn’t finish for Blysse screamed, high, shrill, and
angry. Her second such cry was echoed by one from the tops of the
tallest trees; then a blue-grey streak plummeted toward the gathered
men.
Derian didn’t think. Balling himself tight, he launched
forward, knocking Race to the ground, rolling the other man with the
force of his tackle so that the falcon’s strike hit the ground
inches from where the scout would have been standing.
Race lost his grip on the rope and, as the falcon was taking wing
again, Blysse clawed her way out of the loosened noose.
Free, she stood poised lightly on the balls of her feet, Prince
Barden’s knife in her hand. Her dark gaze darted from Race to
Derian to Kestrel then back again to Race.
A low growl rumbling in her throat, she advanced one stiff-legged
pace toward the prone man, then another.
Derian rose, imposed himself between her and Race, found that
cold, dark gaze now studying him impartially. All their tentative
friendship seemed to have vanished like snow beneath the sun.
Blysse’s growl deepened, became louder, and she peeled her
lips back from teeth. The snarl should have looked funny, for her
teeth remained blunt, human teeth, but the menace in her eyes made
the expression anything but.
Queenie, Race’s bird dog, had been running to assist her
master. Now, under Blysse’s snarl, she dropped to the dirt,
rolled onto her back, and whimpered submission.
Something visceral in Derian understood. He could not demean
himself to drop and roll, but he lowered his gaze and stepped
slightly to one side.
“Race,” he muttered urgently as he did so.
“Don’t get up! Don’t reach for any weapon! If you
stay down there, she won’t attack you.”
“What?” Race continued scrabbling backward in the dirt
and leaves of the forest floor, but he didn’t get to his feet,
nor did Blysse attack. “How can you be so sure?”
“I just am!” Derian replied, resisting an urge to
growl himself. “Stay put! Lower your gaze! Don’t
challenge her or she’ll have your head!”
Race obeyed, at least to the extent of not getting to his feet.
After Race had clawed his way back a few more paces, Blysse halted.
With one last snarl, she kicked dirt at him. Then she shook like a
dog after a rainstorm, her anger vanishing as quickly as it had
appeared.
She looked at Derian and grinned, then spoke her first
sentences.
“Race, dog,” she commented conversationally. Then she
bent and picked up the rope and shook it. “No rope.
No!”
Earl Kestrel spoke for the first time since Race had advanced on
Blysse.
“That, I think, quite nicely sums up the matter.”
Then he took the coil of rope from her and tossed it onto the
fire. Sparks flew as the flames engulfed the damp coils.
Firekeeper was in a merry mood the next morning. Today they would
cross the great mountains. Beneath tonight’s stars, she and
Blind Seer would hunt where none of the Royal Wolves had hunted in
uncounted years. Until then, she had the progress of humans and
horses up the steep incline to amuse her.
For once, Derian had abandoned his care of her, his skill with the
horses needed to coax them up the slope. She admired his labors with
the stupid things, and during a midmorning halt she offered through
gestures to assist.
Derian grinned and promptly handed her the rope tied to the head
of the smallest but least cooperative of the long-eared horses.
“Mule,” he said, pointing toward the creature.
Noting differences in ears, tail, and wickedness of temper,
Firekeeper was willing to concede that there might be a need for a
different word to separate this creature from a horse, never mind
that they smelled so much alike.
“Mule,” she repeated, pointing to the animal, then to
the others like it. “Mule.”
Derian grinned. “Yes. Good.”
The last word puzzled her, for it seemed to apply to nothing in
particular. She gestured toward the mule’s head-rope, wondering
if “Good” might be yet another of the useless plethora of
words for “rope” that Derian kept thrusting at her.
“Rope,” she said, waiting to see if he corrected
her.
“Rope,” he agreed. Then he made the hand gesture for
“wait” and went off to confer with the earl.
While Firekeeper waited, her gaze flickered toward Race,
remembering how the man had tried to bind her as the horses were
bound. He was keeping a safe distance from her, his spotted dog close
about his feet. Their fear pleased her. She liked having some
precedence within this human pack, even if over such minor
members.
When Hawk Nose shouted the command for them to start,
Firekeeper’s mule stubbornly refused to move. He stood
stiff-legged, lazily chewing a mouthful of leaves, defying her to
make him take a single step.
From the corner of her eye, Firekeeper saw Derian approaching,
lightly swinging the stick he used to swat the mules across their
hindquarters. Determined to move the animal herself, she considered
her options.
To this point, she had not tried talking with the animals the
two-legs had brought with them. She rarely had bothered speaking with
herbivores in any case, finding it uncomfortable to talk with those
she might later eat. Now, however, she stood on her toes, rising just
high enough that her lips were close to one of the mule’s
brown-haired, dark-tipped ears.
“Move!” she snarled. “Or I’ll
eat you for supper!”
Any doubts she had held that the mule would understand her
vanished as he threw back his head and brayed in naked terror. It
took all her strength, heels dug into the ground, to stop the animal
from bolting. With the loose end of the rope, she hit it across the
soft part of its nose.
“Walk quietly now!” she ordered.
“Follow!”
To attempt any command more detailed would be folly, for the
stupid animal had suddenly remembered that she was a wolf, not a
two-legs. It rolled its near eye at her, uncertain whether to obey or
to bolt.
“Follow the others!” she commanded and, after
the fashion of its kind it fell into line, comforted in doing what
the others were already doing.
Firekeeper whistled comment to Elation, who had been watching the
exchange from the trees nearby.
The falcon shrieked laughter. “Mistress of mice and mules!
To what lows the proud wolves have come!”
Firekeeper snorted, not deigning to comment further. She was
pleased enough to have made the mule obey her. See if the falcon
could do as well!
That night and for the nights that followed, she and Blind Seer
ranged the far slope of the mountains. This side was not, she
discovered with some disappointment, greatly different from the side
she had known since her puppyhood.
In one way, however, this region was greatly different. Except for
one goshawk, kin to Elation’s peregrines, they met none of the
Royal kind. The only wolves she and Blind Seer encountered were
Cousins. These knew of the Royal Wolves, having ranged west when the
hunting was poor in their own territories, and groveled before Blind
Seer as a pup before an adult.
Firekeeper found their deference right and natural. What troubled
her, having had little contact with Cousins in the past, was how
restricted the Cousins’ interests were.
They could report in great detail about sources of fresh water,
about rival packs, about good hunting, about the danger offered by
awakening bears. Beyond that, they seemed to see nothing, to know
less. She was shocked to realize that they reminded her more of
Queenie, Race’s spotted dog, than they did of wolves.
“Are they stupid?” she asked Blind Seer.
“No,” he said, lifting his head from the haunch of elk
he had been shredding. “They are Cousins. Didn’t the Ones
teach you about them?”
“Not much,” she admitted. “Mostly, they told me
to avoid them, that the Cousins would not protect me as did my own
pack. I thought nothing of this. Packs often have
rivalries.”
“That is so,” Blind Seer agreed. “However, there
is more to our parents’ warning than that. Cousins are lesser
than Royal-kind in more ways than size. We are wiser, more clever,
and possess gifts that the Cousins never have.”
He sat up, forgetting his meat in his pride. Firekeeper snatched
it from between his paws, winning an appreciative snarl from him.
“Tell me more,” she said, tossing him back his food.
Her own meal was long finished.
Blind Seer chewed at the knob end for a moment, considering before
he continued, “Well, Royal-kind is forbidden to breed with
Cousins, even if the urge is great.”
“You are?” she asked, surprised. “But they are
so like you. They even smell like you.”
“Maybe to a human’s nose,” he replied haughtily.
“I tell you, the scent is different, even as the scent of pale
roses and dark roses is different.”
“If you say so,” she said resignedly. “My nose
is dead.”
“I know,” he laughed. “Forget the Cousins,
Sister. We can intimidate them if need arises. Moreover, it is
spring. Like our own pack, they have pups to hunt for. They will be
too busy to bother us.”
Firekeeper nodded and for a time all was silent but for the
cracking of the elk haunch between Blind Seer’s jaws.
“These mules and horses the humans have,” she said at
last, thinking aloud. “They are certainly Cousin-kind, not
Royal-kind.”
“I certainly hope so.” Blind Seer grinned. “If
their Royal-kind are this stupid and docile, there is no hope for the
creatures.”
“What if the only non-humans the two-legs know,” she
mused, “are the Cousin-kind? How stupid they would believe all
others who walk the earth to be!”
“Does that matter?” the great wolf asked lazily.
“It might,” Firekeeper replied thoughtfully. “It
might matter very much.”
Foggy and ghostlike in the drizzle that fell from the purpling
heavens, West Keep loomed before them at twilight, eight days after
they had crossed the gap from the west side of the Iron Mountains.
Had they been in the lowlands, they would have covered the distance
more quickly, but here they were on rough roads, their travel
complicated by spring rains.
Derian, who was tired of living in the saddle and sleeping in a
tent, welcomed the sight of the keep as if he were already out of the
wind, enjoying fresh bread and butter in front of a roaring fire for
which someone else had fetched the wood.
Blysse, sitting perched atop a once stubborn mule, gasped aloud
when she saw the towering heap of dressed stone. For the first time
since Derian had met her she looked completely astonished.
“Hold up for a moment,” he called to the others.
“Blysse needs a minute to adjust. I think the keep scares
her.”
“I guess it would be something of a surprise,” Derian
continued, turning to the young woman. He had learned that she
appreciated being talked to, even if she couldn’t understand
the words. “The bend in the road hid it from view until it was
right on top of us.”
“Deliberately, I would guess,” Earl Kestrel added,
twisting slightly in Coal’s saddle to face them. “A good
strategic move. West Keep has a clear view of the road from its upper
towers, but from the road those same towers blend into the
surrounding terrain until this last mile.”
“Even in daylight?” Ox asked.
“Even in daylight,” Earl Kestrel said, as smugly as if
he had built the place himself.
Blysse turned to Derian. He hadn’t been able to teach her
the word “what” and he bet that was exactly the word she
wanted now. Instead she raised her hands and gestured wildly.
“Rock?” she asked. Then paused, frowning,
“Rock-tent?”
Derian nodded, considering what word to give her. He had tried
hard to avoid homonyms, wanting to reserve the confusion of words
that sounded alike but meant different things until they shared a
larger vocabulary. For that reason, he avoided the word
“keep” and chose another.
“Castle,” he said, pointing, using the slow, careful
cadence he had begun to reserve for new words.
“Castle.”
Blysse pointed. “Castle. Rock tent. Castle.”
She shook her head in amazement. Then, to Derian’s surprise,
she pursed her lips and gave a low whistle, identical to the one Race
used whenever he encountered something he hadn’t been ready
for: a fallen tree or swollen stream blocking the trail; his fish
trap plundered by a raccoon; ants in his boots.
Hearing her, Race laughed, a friendly laugh this time.
“I guess I’ve taught her something, too,” he
chuckled.
Derian nodded, an inkling of how he might manage Race brightening
the prospect of being left at the keep with Race without the
earl’s mitigating presence.
Beside him, Blysse was still gaping at the keep. Her brow wrinkled
in consideration as she tried to make her limited vocabulary express
her awe.
“Castle,” she said, gesturing up to indicate its
height, then out to sketch the extent of the girdling wall.
“Castle ox.”
Derian was puzzled for a moment. Then he grinned.
“Castle big,” he said, stressing the second
word. “Ox big.”
Blysse nodded vigorously.
“Big,” she repeated. Then, after a moment, she added,
“Ox big. Valet no big.”
Derian’s grin broadened as he wondered if it was tact that
had led Blysse to pick Valet as her example of small, rather than
Earl Kestrel, who was at least an inch shorter and somewhat slighter
of build. One thing Blysse seemed to have had no difficulty
interpreting were the relative degrees of importance within the
little company.
“Ox big,” he said, urging Roanne into a walk once more
and hearing the rest of the company follow suit, “Valet no big.
Valet small.”
He decided to leave the minor refinement of “not”
versus “no” for another time. Abstract concepts were a
hurdle he hadn’t been certain how to cross. Now that Blysse had
provided him with a starting point, he wasn’t going to waste
it.
They continued their language lesson as the pack train crossed the
last mile. At Earl Kestrel’s signal, Race rode ahead, blowing
his horn to alert the residents of West Keep that their master came
unexpected. Derian spared a moment of pity for the garrison if they
hadn’t kept the place in perfect order. Earl Kestrel was not
the most forgiving of masters.
That thought made him redouble his efforts with Blysse, suddenly
aware of the earl’s grey eyes watching him and the cool,
calculating mind assessing his student’s progress.
Earl Kestrel had uses for this woman who might or might not be his
niece and the best claimant to the throne of Hawk Haven. He would not
be forgiving if a mere horse carter impeded his advance. Certainly
there would be rewards for success, but Derian was sure that the
penalties for failure would be far greater in both degree and
kind.
Stone, stone on the floor. Stone surrounding. Caves made by human
hands.
Firekeeper felt some relief when the chamber into which Fox Hair
brought her had a ceiling made of wood and two great arched openings
in the sides. She rushed to one of these and leaned out, reassuring
herself by the sensation of the fresh, wet air on her face that the
wide world outside had not vanished.
When her first panic had abated, she noticed that she could see
for a great distance from this height. Directly below, several
stranger two-legs were leading the horses and mules into a shelter.
Beyond the narrow heap-of-stones-piled-on-top-of-stones that Derian
had called a wall, there was a cleared area, but then the forest
began again.
Even in the gathering darkness she could locate Blind Seer sitting
on his haunches in the shadow of a tall tree near the road. The
blue-eyed wolf was looking up at the castle, studying its shape. From
the tilt of his head, she knew he was quizzical, but not afraid, and
his lack of fear for himself or for her gave the young woman
courage.
Drawing inside, Firekeeper shook the water droplets from her hair
and turned to Derian. He was standing with his back to a fire built
in the side of the chamber, watching her with an expression that, had
she known it, was twin to Blind Seer’s.
“Castle big,” she commented with what coolness she
could muster.
Derian nodded. A knocking from the side of the chamber where they
had entered interrupted whatever he had been about to say. Derian
said something Firekeeper didn’t understand. Then, apparently
in response, a frightening thing happened.
A piece of the wall moved, revealing an opening behind it.
Firekeeper sprang to the opening she had been looking out of a
moment before and perched on the broad ledge beside it, ready to dive
out and take her chances falling.
Fox Hair seemed amused, not nervous, so she held her pose,
watching guardedly. The scent of food drifted in from the opening.
That of meat cooked with herbs was immediately familiar. There were
other scents that were almost familiar. These teased an awakening
part of her, bringing with them a mingled sense of comfort and of
longing that made Firekeeper strangely indecisive.
The food was carried by a two-legs nearly as stout as Ox but
barely half his height, a person built from rounding shapes that
included astonishing, swelling protrusions in the vicinity of her
chest. When this person saw Firekeeper she spoke, her voice
twittering like birdsong, high but sweet.
Derian made introductions, pointing first to Firekeeper, then to
the stranger and back again.
“Blysse, Steward Daisy. Steward Daisy, Blysse.”
Obediently, Firekeeper repeated the lesson, wondering why so small
a person should have so long a name. Her words released another spate
of birdsong from the little person, sounds that held a distinctly
cooing note along with the word “Blysse.”
Being called Blysse always made Firekeeper feel vaguely
uncomfortable, though she had no idea why it should. The words by
which the two-legs named themselves meant nothing to her. It was
quite reasonable that they employed an equally meaningless sound to
name her. But the name Blysse did make Firekeeper uncomfortable, so
much so that she longed for the day when she would speak enough human
tongue to teach them her wolf-given name.
Steward Daisy departed after making more cooing sounds, and
Firekeeper and Derian shared the food on the tray. One of the almost
familiar smells proved to belong to something called
“bread,” a soft, warm substance like nothing else that
Firekeeper had ever eaten. She liked it best spread with the salty
fat called “butter.” Jam, with its taste of overripe
berries, was good, but almost too rich.
Satiated, Firekeeper removed a blanket from one of the packs and
spread it in front of the fire. A few hours’ sleep, and then
she would decide how to get out to Blind Seer.
SHE awakened to find the fire burned down to red and white coals and
Fox Hair gone, doubtless to his own chamber.
Stretching, she located an oddly shaped container full of water,
its neck so tight that she could barely get her hand inside to cup
out water with which to appease her thirst.
As soon as Steward Daisy had departed, Derian had shown Firekeeper
how the door into the room worked. Now the wolf tested her memory and
was pleased to discover that she could open it without help. When she
scouted outside, she found a two-legs drowsing on a stool at the end
of the hall.
Distrusting this stranger, Firekeeper retreated and considered the
window. The drop to the ground below was considerable, but no worse
than from some trees she had climbed. Still, the earth below was
covered with stone, not soft leaves and forest duff.
Unwilling to risk a broken leg, Firekeeper rooted through the pack
Derian had left in her room. Most of the contents were useless, but
at the very bottom there was a coil of rope.
Over the past several days, Firekeeper had used rope to guide a
mule, to help set up tents, and to tie packs onto their reluctant
bearers. Now she anchored the rope to an iron loop on the windowsill
and used it to slow her drop to the ground. She ended up with burns
on her palms and a long scrape on her calf.
Well pleased, Firekeeper growled the barking dogs into submission
and, with a running start and a light foot on the edge of a cart,
scrabbled over the wall surrounding the castle.
On the other side, Blind Seer was waiting for her, blue eyes
glowing in the darkness.
BOOK TWO
VI
Elise archer, daughter of Baron Ivon Archer and Lady
Aurella Wellward, great-niece of King Tedric, was not so much
gathering flowers in the royal castle gardens as she was gathering
rumors. However, if her activities were dismissed as such an innocent
pursuit, she had no complaints.
Slight, almost fragile of form, peaches and cream of complexion,
with pale golden hair the very shade of early-morning sunlight and
sea-green eyes, seventeen-year-old Elise was just now becoming
beautiful.
For the only daughter of King Tedric’s nephew Ivon, son
himself of the Grand Duchess Rosene, beauty was hardly the advantage
it would be for a woman of lesser birth. Marriage for Elise was as
inevitable as rain in springtime. Nevertheless, Elise found this new
bloom of beauty a pleasant thing and smiled softly into her bouquet,
feeling the admiring gazes of gardeners and grooms follow her
graceful progress. “Good morning, Lady.”
“Good morning.”
“Good morning.” The murmurs followed Elise from damask
dark roses to brilliant yellow daisies to honeysuckle vines awash
with heavily scented flowers. She stopped by a bed of gladiolas in a
mixture of colors from pure white to deepest violet with shades of
pink and red between.
Shifting her nosegay of roses to her left hand, she fumbled for
her gardening clippers and, as suddenly as the High Sorcerer’s
griffin in the tales of Elrox Beyond the Sea, the head gardener
appeared at her side.
“Perhaps I might assist, Lady Elise?”
She smiled, a real smile, though it hid some guile. She had been
aware of the spare, sunburned figure of Timin, the master gardener,
anxiously tracking her progress for some time now. He had left her
alone among the roses, settling for wringing his hands as she clipped
a few blossoms, but the gladiolas had drawn him forth.
“Thank you, Master Gardener,” Elise replied. “I
had intended to add a few pink gladiolas to my bouquet, but these
look rather picked over.”
There was no reproof in her tone, only mild consternation, but the
gardener colored scarlet, then white, as if he had been found guilty
of treason.
“ ‘Twas the arrival of the Duchess and Earl Kestrel
that done it, Lady,” he managed as explanation.
“You were asked to supply flowers for the banquet
tables,” Elise helped him along. “I noticed the bouquets.
I hadn’t realized you’d been forced to raid your flower
beds to make the arrangements.”
Her sympathetic tone—and the fact that she had admired these
gardens since she was a toddler—opened the floodgate.
“I was, Lady,” Timin Gardener said. “Never has
there been such a springtime and summer for the nobility visiting the
king. It seems that as soon as the weather grew pleasant and the
roads a bit dry that every niece and nephew of a noble house has seen
fit to call. That many receptions taxes those beds I grow just for
cutting flowers, it does, pushes me out into the gardens.”
Elise nodded sympathetically, but beneath her gentle,
compassionate expression she was willing the man to keep talking.
Bending to cut her three magnificent pink glads with petals edged in
sunny yellow, the gardener continued:
“I exhausted the best of my daffodils and tulips when Grand
Duke Gadman brought Lord Rolfston Redbriar and his brood to pay their
respects to their uncle early this spring. Boar be praised that Earl
Kestrel didn’t come calling then. Neither sky-blue nor scarlet
are easy to find early in the season.”
“There are crocus for the blue,” Elise said,
considering.
“Too fragile for the banquet hall,” the gardener
sniffed. “Besides, we had the word that the king wanted Kestrel
given highest honors. That takes more than a few crocus wilting among
apple blossoms and then me having to answer in the autumn when
there’s not fruit enough on the trees.”
“True,” Elise agreed. “House Kestrel calls for
stronger colors. It’s a good thing Duchess Kestrel waited to
ask for audience until the summer.”
She stroked the petals of the gladiolas the gardener had handed to
her before tucking them in with her roses. The man was mollified,
seeing that she was not going to ask for more.
“I don’t recall,” Elise said cautiously,
“such a fuss being made when Earl Kestrel came to court over
the winter. He was in and out so much that his sleigh had a permanent
berth in the forecourt.”
“True enough,” Timin Gardener agreed, squatting to tug
a weed from among the flowers, then straightening as he suddenly
remembered her station.
He spoke more rapidly to make amends. “True enough, Lady,
but the word that came down from Steward Silver when she ordered the
decorations for the banquet hall was that Earl Kestrel had sent ahead
a letter thrice sealed. Once with his personal seal, once with his
mother’s, and once with the great seal of their
house.”
Elise nodded, hoping the glow of excitement didn’t show in
her eyes. Such a sequence of seals indicated a matter of the greatest
secrecy.
“I wonder,” she said guilelessly, “what business
could merit such? Earl Kestrel has been reigning beside his mother at
her behest these five years since. His seal is as good as hers in
matters of state.”
“They say,” the head gardener offered, strolling with
her down a path bordered in stocks and snapdragons, “that Earl
Kestrel journeyed west early this spring, leaving when the roads were
still sure to be deep in mud—not the usual time for traveling
at all. He only went with a small retinue and none of them are
talking about where they went.”
“None?”
“None, Lady Elise. To my way of thinking, that’s as
interesting as if they were talking waterfalls.”
“I agree,” she said thoughtfully, and carefully turned
the conversation to other matters.
Like his father Purcel, Elise’s sire, Ivon Archer, had made his
mark by serving in the army of Hawk Haven. That had been a wise move.
Although the Grand Duchess Rosene had granted her elder child the
title of baron at his father’s death twenty years before, Ivon
was aware that not everyone in the kingdom appreciated King
Chalmer’s decision to permit his youngest daughter to many the
dashing war hero who had captured her heart.
Ivon knew that there were many among the six Great Houses for whom
his descent from the grand duchess was far outweighed by his common
blood—never mind that King Chalmer had made Purcel a baron,
head of his own lesser noble house, complete with coat of arms, deed
of land, and a name into perpetuity.
It hadn’t been so long ago that Queen Zorana had created the
Great Houses to reward her staunchest supporters—just over a
hundred years. That was long enough for pride to emerge but not long
enough for the entitlement to be invulnerable to challenge by upstart
houses.
Elise had spent most of her young life in a manor in the capital
belonging to House Archer. However, with the first of his war booty
the then Lord Ivon had purchased property of his own, for he could
not know that his father would die comparatively young, or that he
himself would be blessed with only one child. Ivon’s own
property was held separately from the Archer grant, but, as the years
passed and no sibling followed Elise into the world, it was likely
that she would inherit both.
Rather than being insulted by Ivon’s building his estate,
King Tedric seemed to have appreciated his nephew’s gesture of
independence. Repeatedly, Ivon had earned command of his own company
and promotions based solely upon merit. In her turn, Ivon’s
wife, Lady Aurella Wellward, had made herself indispensable to her
aunt, Queen Elexa. Therefore, although just a grandniece and heir to
a lesser noble house, Elise had always been given free run of the
palace and its grounds.
As a child, this privilege had gained her some mild envy from her
cousins. These days, that envy had turned into something sharper.
King Tedric, rumor said, would name an heir to his throne come
Lynx Moon this late autumn, for this year the Festival of the Eagle
fell then by lot. The king’s own children were dead, as was all
the line of his older sister, Princess Marras. By the strictest
interpretation of the laws of inheritance, the king’s heir
should be his next sibling or her children, but old King Chalmer had
wed Princess Caryl to Prince Tavis Seagleam of Bright Bay in the hope
that the marriage alliance would foster peace between the two rival
countries.
Neither the marriage nor the alliance had been a success. Princess
Caryl had produced one son, Allister Seagleam. Although he was
reported to be a man grown with a family of his own, most residents
of Hawk Haven felt he was not really a contender for the throne. Who
would accept a foreigner when there were native-born possibilities
readily available?
In addition to Marras, Tedric, and Caryl, King Chalmer and Queen
Rose had produced two other children: Gadman and Rosene. Gadman and
Rosene were both still alive, but no one really expected King Tedric
to name either as his heir, for both were within a few years of his
own advanced age. Hawk Haven deserved more than a temporary monarch
after King Tedric’s long reign.
Grand Duke Gadman offered in his place a son, Lord Rolfston
Red-briar of the House of the Goshawk. Lord Rolfston had five
children of his own, so the succession would be secure. Moreover, a
Redbriar in his own right, he was married to a member of the
influential Shield family.
For her part, Grand Duchess Rosene had two living children: Ivon
and Zorana. Both these Archer scions were well married into Great
House families; both had children of their own. Rosene’s
partisans, of whom the Houses of Wellward and Trueheart were not the
least, argued that two possibilities from a line were better than
one. However, even these partisans were split as to which provided
the best choice: war-hero Ivon, with his staunch popular following,
or Zorana, with her brood of four and experience with the domestic
politics of the kingdom.
Personally Elise felt that, despite her frequenting the royal
palace, she herself had little chance of being named heir, nor had
her father and his sister, with their commoner father.
Grand Duke Gadman had married into a Great House, as had his son.
Thus, Rolfston Redbriar’s claim had the support of both his
wife’s and his mother’s Great Houses, where her own
father could only claim the sure support of his wife’s.
However, Grand Duke Gadman and his elder brother the king had long
quarreled over matters of state. Observers argued that given their
past disagreements, King Tedric would pass over his brother’s
line out of spite. Then?
Then Lady Elise Archer could quite easily find herself heir
apparent to the throne of Hawk Haven.
“And quickly now, Blysse, give me your hands.” Derian put
out his own, grasping those the two-legged wolf awkwardly
extended.
She did so, growling quietly to herself, displeased by her lack of
grace. In most matters when she compared herself with humankind she
was grace itself, but she had yet to learn the trick of this thing
called dancing.
Derian pretended not to notice her pique.
“That’s right,” he praised as she relaxed into
his guidance. “Now, three steps to the side. Then when the
music gets faster, we spin, so…”
One moon’s turning and half of another had done great things
for Firekeeper’s ability to understand what Derian said to her.
Hardly ever now did he use a word she didn’t know or for which
she could not deduce a meaning. Also now she understood the ways and
means of clothing (though not why humans wore so much of it) and how
to ride a horse without first threatening it with fear for its
life.
Dancing, though, dancing had proven to be a source of constant
puzzlement, a puzzlement that ran side by side with delight. In all
other things physical Firekeeper felt herself a wind through the
treetops when she compared the grace of her movements with those of
Race and Derian. When dancing, though…
Firekeeper snorted in disgust when—distracted by her
thoughts—she trod on Derian’s toes. From one corner of
the room, Race Forester heard her and chuckled. She forgave him for
the sake of the flute he held in one hand.
Music, especially that of the flute, was a pleasure heretofore
only suspected in birdsong and burbling brook. Firekeeper had been
enchanted the first time she heard Race play, so long ago when they
had crossed the mountains with Hawk Nose and his people.
As soon as Race had grown easier around her, Firekeeper had
insisted that he show her how to draw the notes from the slender
piece of carved wood. It had proven far more difficult than she had
imagined. Together, dancing and music raised her opinion of the
two-legs until for the first time she was not ashamed to have been
born of them, rather than of wolves.
“Turn right, Blysse,” Derian called, gently pushing
her in that direction. “Then back to me and out
again…”
Concentrating on where to place her feet, on the timing of the
steps, Firekeeper saw Race nod approvingly. They’d made a great
deal of progress since the day he tried to loop a rope around her and
imprison her in the human world. That progress had all been
Derian’s doing, for Firekeeper had been content to have Race
fear and respect her. Despite her lack of overt cooperation, Derian
had coaxed the scout into helping with Firekeeper’s education,
asking Race to teach her the names for plants and animals, how to
shape snares and traps, how to shoot a bow.
Race was pleased when Firekeeper proved to be an apt pupil, was
flattered when she showed more interest in his lessons than in
Derian’s. Eventually, Race realized how little Firekeeper knew
of human woodcraft and his envy of her began to fade. When he
realized how ungrudgingly she shared her own knowledge, they became
friends.
Firekeeper still thought of Race as a lesser pack member, far
below Derian and farther below Earl Kestrel. She knew that if need
arose she could make him cringe. However, now that Firekeeper had
become acquainted with some of the residents of the keep, Race no
longer rested quite so low in her estimation.
“Water,” she said to Derian when the dance ended.
“Thirsty me.”
“I am thirsty,” he corrected patiently.
“You, too?” she asked, pouring them both full mugs
from the pitcher set on the stand at the side of the room. She knew
perfectly well what Derian wanted and decided to humor him.
“I know,” she said, before he could decide if she had
been teasing him. “Say: I am thirsty. Why? Shorter
other.”
“Shorter,” Derian said, “but not
correct.”
“So?”
“So, would you eat hemlock?”
“No! Hemlock poison.”
“That’s right. And believe me, Blysse, words used
wrong are like poison.”
Derian sighed. The little line between his brows deepened as it
did more and more frequently since Firekeeper had learned to ask why,
instead of simply parroting whatever he said. After several swallows
from his mug, Derian tried to explain further.
“Imagine we’re hunting,” he said. “If you
want to make the deer come to you, would you imitate the sound of a
frightened deer?”
“No!”
“Would you make the sound of a sick deer?”
“No. But I say ‘Thirsty me’ not makes fear, not
makes sick. Just makes faster.”
“Yes, but faster is not always better.” Derian waved
his hand in dismissal. “Let’s leave it for
now.”
Firekeeper shrugged. “Dance more?”
“Not now. Dinner. Formal attire.”
She wrinkled up her nose. “No formal attire. Pinches. Skin
no breathe.”
“Formal attire,” Derian repeated firmly.
Firekeeper knew that he was serious by how he made himself swell
up like a bullfrog. When she didn’t obey, he simply refused to
acknowledge her until she did. She was amazed how something so unlike
wolf discipline could hurt as sharply.
“Formal attire,” she agreed, consoling herself with
the thought that later she could shed almost everything but the
leather breeches and vest and run with Blind Seer.
Still, as she permitted Steward Daisy to lace her into a formal
gown, this consolation seemed far distant indeed even flirting with
the pretty kitchen maid couldn’t keep Derian from reviewing
over and over again in his memory the text of Earl Kestrel’s
latest letter. Despite the grace notes that began a formal missive,
the text had been blunt. “Although I concede that six weeks is hardly enough time
to break a colt to saddle, much less time to teach the Lady Blysse
all she needs to know, the situation here in Eagle’s Nest has
become critical. Both Grand Duke Gadman and Grand Duchess Rosene are
urging King Tedric to name as his heir one of their children or
grandchildren. Failing that, they are demanding that he at least
indicate which line has precedence over the other. “Furthermore, the faction in favor of Duke Allister
Seagleam of Bright Bay is gaining adherents. Among those who have
most recently turned to his cause are those who have become weary of
the king’s siblings’ continued political
maneuvering. “If Lady Blysse is to be recognized to her greatest
advantage, it must be before King Tedric names his heir. Afterwards,
she could be accused of inciting civil war. Therefore, I command you
to bring Lady Blysse to me at the Kestrel Manse in Eagle’s
Nest. In order that she arrive without notice, you will be met at the
Westriver coach stop by one of your family’s
vehicles.” A squeal from the kitchen maid as his fingers
involuntarily tightened around hers brought Derian back to himself.
In apology, he kissed her lightly on the injured members and she
giggled and hurried off before the cook could see her blush.
Still fuming, Derian strode through the halls of West Keep, his
boots ringing against the flagstones.
Damn Norvin Norwood, though! “Inciting civil war”! It
would not be Blysse who would be so accused, but Norvin himself.
Unhappily, Blysse would not be immune to censure. No one who looked
into those dark eyes could believe she was as innocent as she truly
was. Derian himself had his doubts from time to time.
Running up the steps to the highest observation tower wore Derian
out enough that he was glad to pause. Leaning on the stone sill, he
looked out into the gathering darkness. Drizzle was falling, making
the night seem hazy and unreal. In the light from the rising
moon—about half-full tonight—Derian imagined that he saw
his charge flitting across the cleared zone about the keep’s
walls and darting into the forest.
That was imagination, though. If she was out there, he would never
see her. Time and time again during the first weeks of their stay in
the keep, Race Forester had tried to track Blysse, tried to learn
where she was going. Finally, he had given up, admitting that her
skills were nearly supernatural.
Privately, Derian believed that having learned from Race how he
read tracks, Lady Blysse simply took care to avoid leaving those
traces for which the woodsman would search. Certainly, anyone who
could have so much trouble tying a bodice lace or eating with a spoon
could not be gifted with supernatural powers.
Remembering the woman’s still execrable table manners, her
refusal to wear shoes, her tendency to growl at any and all of the
keep’s dogs, Derian felt a wide, ironic grin light his
face.
So Earl Kestrel thought that he could use the woman as a pawn in
his political games? He was going to discover that he had a wolf by
the tail and daren’t let go.
Fat warm raindrops greeted Firekeeper when she emerged from her
window into the courtyard surrounding West Keep. She cast a glance to
right then to left, probing each shadow with her gaze. Race, however,
seemed to have permanently given up their game of hide-and-seek.
Slightly disappointed, she climbed the wall and dropped to the
damp earth on the other side. No Race here either. Dismissing him
from her thoughts, she loped over to the tree line, swung up into the
branches of a spreading maple, then crossed from there into another
of its kind. The moonlight made the journey easy, so easy that she
arrived at the rendezvous before Blind Seer.
The blue-eyed wolf silently glided beside her as she was bending
her head to drink from the nearby brook.
“If I were a mountain cat,” he said, “I would
have broken your back.”
“If you were a mountain cat,” she replied, punching
him on the shoulder, “I would have smelled you a mile off. How
is the hunting?”
“Good,” he answered. “Even the latest of
winter’s sleepers are long awake. The deer grow fat on the new
grass. I grow fat on the deer. Do they feed you well in your stone
lair?”
“Enough,” she said, “though much of what they
eat tastes odd. Did I tell you that Fox Hair insists I eat as he does
now? He’s so slow! I could clear the platters while he is
spreading butter on his bread.”
“Two-legs are not wolves,” Blind Seer replied
practically. “Their ways are not ours.”
“True.”
They sat for a while, watching the play of moonlight on the
rippling waters of the brook.
“For how long does your trail go with mine?” she
asked, suddenly interrupting the silence. “Hawk Nose sent a
message this morning and since then Fox Hair has smelled of bitter
sweat. I heard him giving orders for supplies to Steward Daisy. When
we went out for a riding lesson, he spoke with the groom about the
readiness of the horses for the road. I think that soon we three
outliers get called to the human pack.”
“Do you want my trail to follow yours?” the wolf
asked, leaning against her. “You’ve lived in that great
stone lair one moon’s death and another’s new burning.
Surely you’ve confirmed what the Cousins told me. Two-legs do
not like wolves, even little ones like the Cousins. I don’t
think that they will like me at all.”
Firekeeper flung her arm around his great furry neck.
“They will be terrified of you,” she said with great
confidence. “Never doubt it. Still, I would have you run with
me longer. I can dance a few dances and prattle in their tongue, but
my blood is a wolf’s blood for this veneer of
humanity.”
“Wolf’s blood has always run beneath your naked
hide,” Blind Seer affirmed. “But I have no wish to see my
blood spilled by one of those arrows Race shoots so
straight.”
“No,” Firekeeper considered. “This is a problem,
but I think, from what Fox Hair has shown me, from the tales he has
told me, that where the two-legs den together, there are many such
buildings as the keep. There you may not be able to hide from their
eyes as easily as you have done here. Best that they know you are my
companion. They hold some odd respect for me. It may extend to you,
as fear of the adult wolves protects the pups.”
“Perhaps,” Blind Seer said. “We must think
further on this.”
“But not for too long,” Firekeeper said. “A
season is changing, not of the world, but in my life. I cannot turn
from the humans until I know more.”
“And I,” admitted Blind Seer, “cannot turn from
you, even if following you should mean my death.”
Derian had anticipated having difficulty getting Blysse ready for the
journey. What he had not anticipated was having trouble with the
horses.
On the morning of their scheduled departure, however, the young
woman was calm and collected, but the equines were edgy, requiring
the assistance of two grooms to calm them while Derian inspected
girths and pack straps.
Chestnut coat burnished and glossy from several weeks of easy
living, Roanne snaked back her ears and tried to nip the groom
standing nearest to where she was tied.
Race’s buckskin and Blysse’s grey were hardly any
better behaved, though the latter, having been chosen specifically
for his placid temper, continued to chew a wisp of hay while rolling
a white-rimmed eye at anything that moved.
Lady Blysse, dressed in her favorite battered leather vest and
hacked-off trousers, came out of the keep, carrying the saddlebags
the kitchen staff had packed for them. Her dark eyes sparkled,
dancing with what Derian hoped was anticipation. Seeing the curve of
her lips, he feared that it was mischief.
“Give me those packs,” he said, surreptitiously eyeing
them to see if she might have stolen something.
She did so, and as he was loading the bags onto the pack mule,
Blysse cocked her head, catching some sound of which he was unaware.
Then, the smile broadening across her face, she loped across the
cleared kill zone surrounding West Keep toward the forest.
Race, who had been chatting with Steward Daisy, come forth to see
her guests safely on the road, shouted after her:
“Come back here, Blysse!”
The young woman slowed, waving her hand to indicate that she had
heard, but kept going.
“Blysse!”
This time she halted right at the edge of the scrub growth
bordering the meadow. With her left hand, she made an elaborate
beckoning gesture toward something in the woods; with her right she
made the sign for Race and Derian to wait where they were.
Derian’s heart began to beat faster. He wondered if there
might have been more truth to Earl Kestrel’s tale of
Blysse’s survival than even that facile politician had ever
dreamed. Could Prince Barden be out there in the forest, ready to
emerge only now that he had been assured that his daughter would be
treated well?
Derian glanced over at Race and saw that the woodsman had grown
pale, his breath coming fast and shallow. Doubtless, being more
superstitious than Derian, he feared not a living prince, but a
vengeful ancestral spirit. Surreptitiously, Race fingered a talisman
hanging from his belt, invoking his own ancestors’ protection
against this imagined threat.
Oblivious of their reactions, Blysse repeated the beckoning
gesture more urgently, drawing forth whatever lurked within the
suddenly mysterious trees. Several pounding heartbeats later, without
the least whisper of motion, an enormous grey wolf slipped from the
cover to stand at the young woman’s side, so close that his fur
brushed her leg.
A more usual wolfs head might have reached to her waist; this
beast’s reached nearly to her chest. Moreover, his eyes were
not the more usual tawny gold or deep brown of a wolf, but instead a
brilliant blue.
Steward Daisy screamed once and would have again, but Race
smothered her mouth with his hand. One of the grooms began muttering
invocations for ancestral protection. Derian looked at Race and found
that, like him, the forester’s shock was melting away beneath
the glow of comprehension.
“Well,” Race said, his taut voice betraying his
tension. “Now we know where she’s been going every
night.”
Derian nodded, feeling a grin split the stiff mask of his face.
“And is Earl Kestrel ever in for a surprise.”
But Norvin Norwood, Earl Kestrel, was not the only one due for
further surprises. Even as Lady Blysse took her first step toward
them, the great wolf pacing at her heel, a shrill scream pierced the
morning air.
A blue-grey blur plummeted out of the sky, resolving into a
perfect peregrine falcon the size of an eagle. The bird circled once
about woman and wolf, then came to rest atop the baggage packed on
the mule. Ruffling its feathers, it shifted from one foot to the
other, cocking its head so that it could study each of the humans
from brilliant golden-rimmed eyes.
This critical inspection proved too much for Steward Daisy.
Sobbing, she fled into the safety of the castle walls. Using her
departure as an excuse, the two grooms hurried after; ostensibly to
comfort her, in reality to put solid stone between themselves and a
woman whose companions were giant beasts out of legend.
Having long since relegated these to a subordinate position in her
private hierarchy, Lady Blysse seemed indifferent to their reactions.
Her dark gaze was upon Derian and Race. The tightness in her
shoulders relaxed only slightly when she saw that neither of them had
made any offensive move.
Race’s dog Queenie had not been so much the coward as to
flee from her master, but as the wolf closed the distance, she
cringed and whined. Derian fought back an urge to do something
similar by speaking to Race as if this encounter were the most usual
thing in the world.
“I’d forgotten until now,” he said, “that
when I first spotted her footprint, there was a wolf’s print
beside it.”
Race nodded.
“I hadn’t wanted to remember,” Race admitted,
“not once we found her to be but a girl and so ill
used.”
“Then there were the wolfs’ howls we heard each night
while we were west of the gap.”
“Fewer and more distant,” Race added, his voice back
to normal now, “once we crossed, but still out there, as if
they were watching us.”
“I guess they were,” Derian said, “or at least
they were watching her.”
“And the falcon,” Race continued, “it sure looks
like the one that attacked me when I tried to put a rope on
Blysse.”
“It does,” Derian agreed, remembering pushing Race out
of the striking range of those talons. “I wondered then, but
there’s been so much else to wonder about.”
“I didn’t want to wonder,” Race admitted.
“I didn’t like where that wondering led me.”
Listening to their conversation but not commenting, Lady Blysse
halted her advance before the horses’ panic at the proximity of
the wolf reached the point where they might do themselves harm.
Derian wondered that the equines showed even this much control,
then realized that they must have been aware of the wolf’s
presence for a long while, far more aware than the humans had been.
What to him was a complete surprise was to them a long-borne
menace.
“Well, Blysse,” Derian said, “are these your
pets?”
“No,” she said, shaking her head vigorously and giving
Queenie a disdainful look. “Queenie pet. Wolf and falcon are my
friends.”
Her careful speech showed Derian how important it was to Blysse
that he and Race understand her. Even with his constant badgering,
she still tended to drop what she viewed as nonessential words. If
she was specifying that these animals were friends, rather than pets
or property, it was an essential distinction—at least to
her.
“Friends,” he repeated, taking in a breath so deep
that his lungs ached. “Well, I guess you had better introduce
us then.”
Blysse nodded solemnly, then indicated the wolf. In some distant
part of his mind, Derian was amused to see that she used the little
court mannerisms he had been careful to teach her.
“This is Not-Seeing Seer,” she said carefully.
By this point, Derian wouldn’t have been at all surprised if
the wolf had spoken with a human voice. It did not. Instead, it took
a step forward and stretched out its forelimbs in a credible,
non-groveling, bow.
Automatically, Derian bowed in return and Race gave a short jerk
in imitation. Smiling now, Blysse gestured to the peregrine
falcon.
“This is…” she paused, as if having trouble
translating the bird’s name, “Fierce Joy in
Flight.”
The falcon didn’t bow. Instead it made a soft, mewling cry,
quite conversational in tone.
“Pleased to meet you,” Derian responded solemnly.
“The same,” Race said. To himself he muttered,
“I must be dreaming this!”
“No dream,” Derian said. “Though it would be
easier if it was.”
He looked at Blysse. “I suppose that the wolf and the falcon
are coming with us.”
She looked puzzled, then worked through the essential parts of the
question to get at its meaning.
“With us, yes.” She put her hand on the wolf’s
head. “He my kin. Falcon is friend. They go with me.”
“The city,” Derian said, trying to dissuade her,
though he already knew the attempt would be futile, “is not a
place for wolves.”
“City can be place for wolves,” she said stubbornly.
“I go to city. Wolf goes with me.”
Derian surrendered. Maybe once she saw a town or two she would
change her mind. He doubted it, but it was a pleasant fantasy.
“Shall we go, then?” he asked. Then he mused to the
air, “The horses aren’t going to like this at
all.”
“I can run with horses,” Blysse replied.
“Not-Seeing Seer will run near me.”
She laughed. “Maybe then, someone think he dog, not
wolf.”
“There’s a chance of that,” Race admitted,
speaking for the first time since the introductions had been
concluded. “At least they’ll give a second thought before
shooting.”
“True.”
Derian worried about whether Blysse could keep up with the horses
now that the party would be traveling on roads rather than navigating
rough woodland trails, but he put the worry by. Either she could or
she could not. They’d deal with that problem when it became a
problem.
“Well,” Derian said, “I’ll loosen the
girth on your gelding, but he’ll be ready if you get tired. Is
that all right, Blysse?”
“Yes. No.”
She bit her lip, her expression showing the frustration she so
often felt when her grasp of the language was insufficient for her
needs. Derian waited, knowing he would only add to her frustration if
he tried guessing at what she needed to say. After consideration, she
began again:
“Yes for horse,” she said. “No for Blysse. My
name not Blysse. Wolf call me Firekeep. Firekeeper.”
Derian had eventually been able to teach her the verb “to
keep”—not an easy concept, but one made easier to explain
once they were settled where so many things were kept: keys at the
Steward’s belt, food in the pantry, clothing in a press.
“Firekeeper,” he repeated. Then, realizing he sounded
much like her, he asked, “Why? Why Firekeeper?”
She touched the bag containing flint and steel hanging around her
neck. “King Wolf, Queen Wolf, give me. Teach me.”
She scowled, perhaps reading the disbelief in his eyes. Quickly
Derian schooled his expression to polite attentiveness and hoped that
Race would do the same. He’d gone to great trouble to teach
Firekeeper hierarchical titles and had found that she grasped the
concept, if not the words, with amazing ease. If she said King Wolf,
she meant the wolf with the most authority.
“King Wolf,” he prompted, “gave them to
you.”
“King Wolf, Queen Wolf,” she insisted. “No wolf
make fire but me. I am Firekeeper.”
Derian let this go, his head reeling with the implications of this
simple statement. Not only was he to believe that Blysse could
understand what wolves said, he was also to believe that they could
teach her how to strike fire with flint and steel.
More disturbing still was Blysse’s repeated identification
of herself with these wolves.
“Blysse…” he began, then corrected himself when
she growled and the wolf beside her raised his hackles.
“Firekeeper, you are not a wolf. You are a human, like me, like
Race.”
“I am wolf,” she said placidly. “Wolf with two
legs and no fur, but wolf in blood.”
Race put his hand on Derian’s arm. “Leave it, Derian.
Leave it. We must get on the road and before we do so, you’d
better decide whether or not you want to warn Earl Kestrel about this
new development with his niece.”
“Or if I want to risk Steward Daisy sending word ahead by
pigeon.” Derian pressed at his eyes, feeling a headache coming
on. “How can I tell Earl Kestrel that Blysse… I mean
Firekeeper… thinks she’s a wolf?”
“Don’t,” Race said practically, “but warn
him about her unusual companions. We have at least a week on the road
to figure out what to do about the rest. More if the weather’s
bad.”
“At least a week,” Derian repeated, turning blindly
back toward the keep, mentally drafting his message. “This is
going to be a very, very interesting ride.”
VII
Usually, Elise enjoyed a chance to meet with her
cousins. Being related to the king, even so relatively distant a
relation as a grandniece, was a difficult role. There were so few
people to whom you were just another person, who could forget that
royal shadow looming over you. Being heir to House Archer only
complicated the matter.
In all honesty, she admitted, the barony hardly mattered right
now. Neither her grandmother Rosene nor her great-uncle Gadman had
ever let anyone forget that they and their descendants were royal
kin. Theirs had been a harmless enough pretention, one good for the
best seats at public games and partners at dances until Crown
Princess Lovella had been killed in battle. Then the entire
succession affair had opened up, quietly at first, then with greater
and greater intensity when King Tedric refused to name a new heir
quickly.
Now a gathering of cousins was a little like a gathering of
wolves, each knowing that there could be only one head of the pack.
Even those like herself who weren’t certain they wanted to be
that head were even less certain that they wanted anyone else to be
so.
“You can almost hear the growling,” she murmured to
herself, taking a goblet of wine from a tray held by a polite servant
and going to sit beside her cousin Purcel.
Named for their mutual grandfather, the war hero Purcel Archer,
Purcel Trueheart was a powerfully built youth of fifteen, who had
already distinguished himself in several skirmishes, earning himself
the rank of lieutenant.
Courage was not Purcel’s only asset. His budding tactical
sense had also been tested several times. These days, when he was
called to his commanders’ tents, it was not mere flattery that
gave him a place at their councils. Many argued that Purcel was the
single best reason for his mother, Lady Zorana, to be named crown
princess, for at her death she would be succeeded by a proven
battlefield commander.
Watching Purcel slurp down his beer and munch peanuts in
ill-concealed boredom, Elise wondered. Warlord, yes, and welcome to
it. King? As King Tedric had proven, a good king must be able to
reign as well as to command. Both Aunt Zorana and Great-Aunt Rosene
argued that Purcel would learn patience and discretion as he matured.
Given the familial longevity—the descendants of Zorana the
Great seemed to live long lives if they survived their
childhoods—Zorana would reign for many years herself before
joining the ancestors, and Purcel could learn the skills necessary to
be a monarch from her.
Elise wondered, though, if a man who from his youngest years had
been praised for quick, decisive action could learn to reflect and
consider rather than charge ahead.
Purcel brightened visibly as she seated herself next to him. Two
years apart in age, they had become close playmates once she had
stopped dismissing him as a baby. Even when he was three and she a
mature and thoughtful five, he had loved to trot about on a pony as
chubby as he was, playacting the role of a soldier protecting his
lady cousin.
“Elise,” Purcel said warmly by way of greeting,
“want a peanut?”
She took one to please him, though the oily things tended to make
her face break out. Purcel seemed immune to this bane of adolescence,
though she still nursed hopes.
“Thank you, cousin.” She kissed him lightly on the
cheek. “How was your ride into the capital?”
“Not bad, the roads were muddy, but we
managed…”
What followed was a long dissertation on thrown horseshoes,
partially washed-out bridges, troops needing to be kept from foraging
in newly planted fields, and other minutiae of military life. Elise
listened with one ear, nodding when appropriate, her gaze surveying
the others gathered in the room.
They were a small enough group given that King Chalmer fathered
five children and that each of those children had at least one child.
However, Princess Marras’s little ones had died as babies. King
Tedric’s three were gone now, all dying without issue except
for Barden, whose name was still a curse to his father.
Princess Caryl, King Chalmer’s third child, had been married
away into the kingdom of Bright Bay, her father’s pledge to a
peace that lasted only a few years. Caryl’s departure meant
that just Grand Duke Gadman and Grand Duchess Rosene remained. Each
of these had produced two children, but Grand Duke Gadman’s
Nydia had died long before Elise herself was born. In memory,
Elise’s aunt Zorana had named her first daughter Nydia, though
the girl was more commonly called Dia.
Just ten of them, unless one counted Allister Seagleam’s
four children, far away in Bright Bay. Elise found it odd to think
that those four—one older than her, the rest all
younger—were as close kin to her as were Lord Rolfston’s
four: grandchildren of her grandmother’s brother.
Banishing the faraway Seagleams from consideration, Elise
concentrated on the ten gathered here. Any one could become crown
prince or princess of the kingdom of Hawk Haven if luck was with
them. The chief contenders for that honor were Purcel, as his
mother’s eldest, Sapphire, as Lord Rolfston’s eldest, and
herself. However, some courtiers whispered that if King Tedric was
going to name an heir why did he need to follow the strict order of
precedence? He should choose instead some young grandniece or
grandnephew, someone he could shape and teach during whatever years
remained to him.
A voice, loud and piercing, cut into Elise’s reverie.
“Elise! Elise! Darling cousin, you look
wonderful!”
Quickly Elise set down her wine goblet, knowing that this gushing
greeting would be followed by an equally enthusiastic embrace, and
not really wanting to spill wine on her new pale pink,
rosebud-embroidered gown.
Sapphire Shield was the eldest of their generation, a buxom young
woman of twenty-three with dark, blue-black hair, a pointed chin, and
eyes the color of her namesake gem. She had been engaged several
times, always into very advantageous matches, but had never taken her
vows.
Elise knew perfectly well that politics, not romance, had ruled
each of these arrangements, but Sapphire enjoyed mooning about after
each broken engagement, acting as if her heart were truly broken.
Such behavior might make those who didn’t know her dismiss her
as flighty and shallow, but Elise was not fooled.
Sapphire Shield was heir to the comfortable holdings accumulated
through both her Redbriar and Shield family connections. Riki
Redbriar, a scion of House Goshawk, had brought a considerable dowry
into her marriage to Grand Duke Gadman, a good thing since members of
the House of the Eagle were all essentially landless—merely
comfortable life tenants on crown-held lands.
Their son Rolfston Redbriar had made a good marriage to Melina
Shield. Melina’s dowry had included several nice holdings
adjoining lands Riki Redbriar would eventually pass on to her son.
Although claiming no title higher than Lady, Melina also brought with
her the prestige of the Shield name and membership within the House
of the Gyrfalcon for her children.
Queen Zorana the First had been a Shield and the Gyrfalcons were
still considered first among the Great Houses. Therefore, as Lady
Melina never wearied of telling anyone who would listen, her children
were kin to the first queen of Hawk Haven both through their father,
who was her great-grandson, and through their mother, who was some
sort of cousin. No, thought Elise, Sapphire never forgets who she is,
no matter how flightily she behaves at functions like this.
As of this moment, that behavior included a crushing hug,
compliments on Elise’s dress (including insincere wishes that
she could wear pink), and other such prattle.
Elise politely prattled back, though she rather wished she could
snort, as Purcel did, and stalk off on the thin excuse of needing
another tankard of beer.
“So tell me, Castle Flower,” Sapphire said, bending
her head close to Elise’s, “why do you think Uncle Tedric
has summoned us all here?”
King Tedric, was, of course, Sapphire’s great-uncle, as he
was Elise’s, but Sapphire often chose to minimize the degree of
their relation. Among her peers, she had made no secret that she
considered herself practically crown princess already. After all, her
father was Grand Duke Gadman’s only surviving child and Grand
Duke Gadman should have been named King Tedric’s heir
immediately following Crown Princess Lovella’s death two years
before.
Elise thought Sapphire overconfident, but there was no gain in
telling her so, especially since Sapphire was more likely to become
crown princess than Elise herself was, no matter that their
relationship to the king was the same. Simply speaking, Sapphire had
better connections.
Instead of making excuses to escape after Purcel, Elise considered
the best way of answering Sapphire’s question. As the nickname
“Castle Flower” suggested, Sapphire was among those who
assumed that Elise’s familiarity with the structure had made
her privy to all its occupants’ secrets.
“Well,” Elise said, looking into her goblet as if the
dark red wine held mysteries, “I think it must have something
to do with Earl Kestrel, don’t you?”
Sapphire, torn between a desire to probe further and a desire to
seem to know more than her younger cousin, gave in to the latter
impulse.
“I do think so.” She leaned so she was nearly
whispering into Elise’s ear. “The senior porter at the
Kestrels’ city manse fancies my maid. He told her that a week
ago a closed carriage came to the manse. The courtyard was cleared
and Earl Kestrel ordered everyone away from the windows. Then someone
or something was brought into the manse, cloistered in one
ground-floor wing. No one but four servants and Earl Kestrel’s
cousin, Sir Jared Surcliffe, have been allowed in there
since.”
Sapphire looked at Elise, but Elise refused to show the least sign
that she, too, had heard some version of this tale. Let Sapphire
think she knew more than the Castle Flower. She might give away
something Elise didn’t know.
“They do say,” Sapphire continued with relish,
“that strange sounds are heard from the closed wing and that
Earl Kestrel’s bodyguard has been seen in the public markets
purchasing great quantities of raw meat.”
Elise raised her eyebrows. This last was indeed news.
“Truly?” she asked, playing the sycophant gladly.
“Truly,” Sapphire confirmed. “My maid’s
sister is married to the cook for a large tavern in the city and he
has seen the bodyguard with his own eyes.”
Elise swallowed a flippant impulse to ask with who else’s
eyes might the cook be expected to see.
“So, what surprise do you think Earl Kestrel has
brought?”
But Sapphire had given away as much as she would without getting
something in return. She shrugged her pretty white shoulders.
“I have no idea.”
Elise was about to suggest something in the line of a bear for the
king to hunt when Jet, Sapphire’s younger brother, sauntered
over to join them.
At twenty, Jet Shield looked five years older, his features rugged
under heavy black brows, his hair so thick that it resisted being
tied back in a fashionable queue. His eyes were so dark that pupil
could hardly be distinguished from iris. When his blood was up, they
glittered like the stone for which he was named.
Each of Melina Shield’s children was named for a precious
gem, an affectation most believed. Some whispered, however, that
Melina practiced sorcerous arts thought lost when the Plague caused
the Old World nations to abandon their colonies. Certainly the
physical appearance of each of Melina’s children bore out the
latter rumors.
Elise didn’t know which tale to believe. Her own mother,
Aurella Wellward, had known Melina Shield since they were both
children. Aurella said that she thought that Melina chose names for
her children only after they were born and some moon-spans grown.
Certainly, her confinements at private estates permitted this luxury.
However, Lady Melina’s old maidservant claimed loudly and
frequently that her mistress chose each infant’s name as soon
as she was certain that she was carrying.
Whatever Rolfston Redbriar thought on the matter, he was not
saying. Personally, Elise believed he was too canny to meddle with
anything that brought his branch of the family such respect and
awe.
“May I join you ladies?” Jet asked, sliding into a
seat next to Elise without waiting for an answer. This close she was
aware of his scent, something musky and masculine, just touched with
a faint hint of pipe smoke.
A year past his majority, Jet had joined his sister in the
matrimonial battles. Unlike her, he would doubtless have less time to
peruse the selection open to him. Sapphire was a good six years older
than Elise, her next equivalent competitor for matches. Although Jet
was five years older than Purcel, Zorana was far more aggressive than
Elise’s father and had already been hinting about making a
betrothal for her son. Such hints narrowed the field before the race
had really begun.
So Jet turned what was already becoming a practiced smile on his
second cousin.
“You look beautiful tonight, Elise,” he said.
“Your complexion is so well suited to the paler shades. Pinks
just make my sister look sallow.”
Elise ignored the dig, though she could see Sapphire fuming. It
was true, though, that Sapphire was best suited to stronger colors:
blues, reds, purples. It was also true that there was no love lost
between these siblings.
Long resenting Sapphire’s place as heir, Jet now treasured
the dream that if his father became King Tedric’s successor,
he, not Sapphire, would be named crown prince: “Sapphire has
trained long and hard,” Jet had told Elise, after pledging her
to silence, “to manage the estates our family has inherited
from both Shields and Redbriars. Why should that training be wasted?
Rather, let her continue as heir to our family holdings. I am free to
prepare, with no previous bias and no distractions, to follow our
father, after his own long reign, onto the throne.”
Doubtless Sapphire knew her brother’s feelings on the
matter. As she glowered at him, too well trained to pull his hair as
she would have when they were in the nursery, Elise wished that
someone, something, would break this uncomfortable moment.
Her wish was granted. A footman came to the door of the parlor
where the grandnieces and grandnephews had been sequestered to await
the end of their elders’ counsels.
“His Majesty,” the man boomed, looking at the carved
paneling on the far wall rather than at any one of the ten eager
faces now turned toward him, “requests that you attend him in
the Eagle’s Hall.”
Suddenly meek and obedient, the cousins set down goblets and
tankards, smoothed hair, surreptitiously checked reflections in
mirrors and polished glass. Then, falling into order as they had so
many times before, in so many gatherings like, but unlike, this one,
the cousins filed from the parlor. Only one voice broke the
silence.
Kenre Trueheart, at the age of seven the youngest of the cousins,
whispered to his older sister, “Now, Deste, now we’ll
find out what it’s all about.”
Smiling softly to herself, Elise could not help but think that
little Kenre was uttering the words imprinted on each of their hearts
sometimes,
Firekeeper thought she would go insane. It was the noise. Or perhaps
it was the smells. Maybe it was some undefined sense of too many
people—just the people, just the humans—forget their dogs
and cats, horses and mules, cows, goats, sheep, chickens…
She would go mad.
Each day when she bathed in the metal tub that Derian filled for
her in the great stone-walled chamber that was her haven in Earl
Kestrel’s mansion, she checked herself for bite marks. Surely
she must have been bitten by some rabid fox or possum. Surely, it was
that, something in her blood, running through her mind, setting it
afire.
There could not be so many people in all the world.
But the falcon Elation told her with sardonic calm that there
were— that this city of Eagle’s Nest was large, but not
the only such swarming of humans, not the largest even.
But Firekeeper had long been the only human in all the world. She
never realized that this was what she had believed. Now she must
acknowledge that she had believed herself unique.
Even the evidence of the artifacts—the knife and the
tinderbox—these had not convinced her that there were other
humans in the world. Now she must face humans in their varied colors,
shapes, sizes, and smells.
She would go mad.
Derian entered the room to find her sitting on the floor, her head
buried against Blind Seer’s flank. She ignored the man. Hoped
that he would go away. Knew from the gusting exhalation of the breath
beneath her brother’s ribs that he would not.
“Firekeeper?”
A finger poked her gently in the side. She growled.
“C’mon, kid.”
Hands on her shoulders.
“Today is the day. You don’t dare disappoint Earl
Kestrel.” Why not? she thought. She had disappointed herself. Why
shouldn’t she disappoint that small, hawk-nosed male with his
arrogant, proprietary attitude?
“Please?”
Derian sounded more unhappy than annoyed. Reluctantly, Firekeeper
permitted the smallest tendril of sympathy for him and his
predicament to finger through her own misery. Earl Kestrel was always
patient with her, even kind in a stiff, wooden fashion that owed more
than a little to his fear of Blind Seer. He was not always so with
Derian. More than once Firekeeper had heard him yelling at the
younger man, berating him for failures incomprehensible to her.
She raised her head from the comforting fur. Derian was kneeling
on the floor beside her. To his credit, he was ignoring Blind
Seer’s baleful blue gaze, having learned that the wolf could be
trusted on his terms. As long as Derian did not make what the wolf
interpreted as a threatening gesture toward the woman, he was
safe.
“Firekeeper,” Derian said, catching her gaze and
holding it when she would look away, “today you meet the king.
Tonight you dine in his halls. It is for this that Earl Kestrel
brought you from the wilds. You can’t back out now.”
“I can,” she threatened.
“You can,” he agreed, “but I wouldn’t like
to be you if you do. Earl Kestrel has always had his own uses for
you, no matter what pretty speeches he makes for other ears. If you
fail him…”
She said nothing.
Derian shrugged. “The best you can hope for is being turned
out into the streets. You might be fine. So would the falcon, but I
wouldn’t give Blind Seer a chance, not even at
night.”
Firekeeper knew too well what he meant. She had seen the city
streets, had been taken out into them cloaked and after dark under
Derian and Ox’s escort. (Fleetingly she wondered why the big
man permitted his own to call him after a castrated bull.)
Using curtains of heavy fabric, Derian had made her a concealed
place from which she could watch the city traffic without being seen
by either the inmates of the manse or the passersby.
So many people!
She felt the mad panic returning and stamped it back. Even so, it
filled her voice as she challenged Derian.
“He turn us out,” she said sharply. “How he do
that? Little man, big voice, no teeth.”
“There you are wrong, Lady Blysse.” Derian surged to
his feet and crossed to where a new gown has been spread on the bed.
“Earl Kestrel has many teeth. You just don’t know how to
see them. Do you think Ox is the only big man he commands or Race the
only one who can use a bow?”
She snarled. Derian continued as if she had not.
“You are probably meaner than any one of them—maybe
than any two. But in the end, they would win. You would be gone.
Blind Seer would be dead.”
He shrugged. “Or you can put on this pretty gown, scrub the
tears from your cheeks, and let me comb your hair. Then we’ll
have an audience with the king…”
He shook his head in wonder, still struggling with the idea that
he was to meet the king. “And then come back here and tell
Blind Seer all about it.”
She knew he was humoring her in this last. He didn’t believe
that she could speak with the wolf, understand all that he said to
her in return. At Elation’s prompting, she had agreed to stop
trying to convince him.
“With me?” she asked, rising to her feet in turn.
“Blind Seer come with me?”
Derian shook his head. “Not this time. You’ll have to
settle for me and Ox.”
“Blind Seer comes,” she insisted stubbornly.
“Tell Earl Kestrel, Norvin Norwood, Uncle Norvin—whatever
name. Blind Seer comes with me.”
Valet spoke from the doorway, his soft-footed arrival having been
unnoticed even by the wolves. “Derian, I will advise my master
to give Lady Blysse her will in this matter. There are
advantages.”
Firekeeper spun to stare at the little brown man.
“Do,” she said, “and I will make
ready.”
Valet bowed deeply, an acknowledgment of a deal made and sealed
rather than in abasement, and vanished.
“Well done, Sister,” Blind Seer said.
“Ilook forward to meeting this One above Ones. Now, you
must make ready. I, of course, am already
perfect.”
“Braggart,” she replied in the human language.
The gown she was to wear tonight was made of some soft stuff the
color of bone, decorated with thin lines of scarlet and of blue. With
it went a wreath of flowers and a string of small round pebbles
Derian called pearls.
“A lovely ensemble,” Derian commented, lifting the
gown by its shoulders so she could inspect it. “I believe that
Duchess Kestrel, the earl’s mother, selected it at her
son’s request. It should look good on you— very delicate
and virginal.”
He chuckled. “Of course the belt knife and the wolf will
rather ruin that effect.”
Firekeeper cocked a brow at him. They had long settled that
whether or not she was wearing formal attire a few accessories were
non-negotiable. Her knife and fire-making tools stayed with her and
she flatly refused to wear shoes. Even Earl Kestrel had given up in
his efforts to convince her otherwise.
She pulled off her leather vest and dropped her breeches, enjoying
the small victory of watching Derian’s fair skin turn dark red.
Then she gestured imperiously toward the fire.
“My bath, Derian,” she said. “Then we go see
this king.”
As Derian handed Firekeeper into the carriage—an assistance
she permitted only because of her difficulties handling long
skirts—he imagined many eyes watching them from behind the
curtained and shuttered windows of the Kestrel Manse. No matter what
the earl had ordered, some would disobey, would peek out. They would
tell their fellows of the strange girl but partially glimpsed in the
darkness and of the pale grey shadow whose very presence had
terrified the horses in the instant before it had leapt into the
carriage.
He shrugged. Secrecy wouldn’t matter after tonight. After
tonight, the entire city would be alive with tales. The only question
was what those tales would tell. Would they be about the return of a
long-lost granddaughter to her joyful grandfather, as Earl Kestrel
hoped? Or would they be about an impertinent nobleman
imprisoned—or perhaps executed— for his presumption in
forcing upon the king one he had wished forgotten?
Derian wished that he had a touch of the gift of foresight. Then,
as quickly, he withdrew that wish. Knowing—especially if the
news was bad—wouldn’t make tonight’s ordeal any
easier. He would like to know how King Tedric viewed henchmen,
though, and devoutly hoped that they were not judged in the light of
their master’s ambitions.
Tonight, Valet served as footman. Derian would drive the coach,
thus eliminating the need to bring anyone else into Earl
Kestrel’s secret. Ox and Race would provide their only
escort.
Turning away as Valet closed the carriage door upon the earl and
his niece, Derian spared a prayer to his ancestors that Norvin
Norwood would remember to be patient with the young woman. Firekeeper
had distinctly disliked the closed coach the times using one had been
necessary. Then only her strong sense of personal dignity (surprising
in one who still could not remember when modesty was appropriate) had
kept her from bolting.
Up on the box, Derian shook the reins and felt the elegant team of
matched rose-greys step out as smartly as if they were on parade,
their momentary fear of wolf scent forgotten. The pre-planned route
to the palace carefully avoided the market and the streets where the
guild members kept their shops, so traffic was light. Ox and Race,
riding in front, took care of obstacles as they occurred.
At the carriage’s approach the palace gates swung open. A
rider in the smart uniform of the King’s Own Guard trotted his
liver chestnut gelding out to intercept them.
“Follow me, please,” he said, his tone making the
phrase an order.
Derian obeyed, amusing himself by pricing the man’s elegant
mount and deciding that it must belong to the guard’s stables.
If it was the man’s personal mount, Derian figured he himself
should consider going for a soldier. The pay was obviously quite
good.
In a private walled courtyard, Derian brought the team to a halt
and swung lithely down from the box.
“Take care of these,” he said, tossing the reins to a
dutifully bored-looking guard standing outside the towering stone
archway. “Earl Kestrel will need me.”
A wide-eyed look of surprise and sudden anger shattered the
man’s trained indifference. Clearly, he had not expected to be
so spoken to by a coachman.
Earl Kestrel’s sharp bark of “Derian!” smothered
whatever dressing-down the guard had been planning for the
impertinent redhead. Drawing the mantle of the earl’s favor
around him, Derian crossed to where Valet held open the carriage
door. Norvin Norwood stood to one side of the portable steps.
Firekeeper crouched in the doorway, her traveling cloak pulled up
around her face, her nose wrinkling as she took in all the unfamiliar
scents. Blind Seer’s head poked around her waist, his own nose
busy.
“Derian, if you would explain to my ward,” Earl
Kestrel said, his tones barely civil with suppressed tension,
“that we have an appointment and should not keep the king
waiting.”
Derian nodded and extended a hand to the young woman.
“Come on, Firekeeper,” he coaxed. “There will be
time enough for that later. Right now, we need to follow Race and Ox
through that doorway.”
She looked at him, her dark eyes showing none of the confusion she
must feel.
“And see this king?”
“And see the king,” he agreed with soft emphasis on
the article. “Here there is only one.”
“Here,” she said, gathering up her skirts in massive,
unladylike bunches. “I remember. Elsewhere, Blind Seer and I
know it is different.”
Derian was quietly impressed with how the guards at the door
maintained their wooden expressions when confronted with woman and
wolf. They passed them through without comment, though the two who
led the way down the corridor seemed unnaturally tense. Doubtless
they feared being leapt upon from behind.
The castle at Eagle’s Nest was an old building as such
things were judged in the New World. It had been built some two
hundred and twenty-five years before by the family Gildcrest. They
had been granted land in this area by a ruler of some faraway nation
in the Old World, an old woman who had never and would never see any
more of the holdings she divvied up among her followers than their
outlines on a map.
However, this Old World ruler firmly believed in rewarding well
those who might otherwise become troublesome. If those rewards were
located at a great distance and presented in such a fashion that
refusing to relocate to them could be taken as a grievous insult,
then all the better.
During the years when the Plague gave lie to all claims of power
and dominion, the castle’s builders had perished. The castle
with its strong walls had been much fought over until Queen Zorana
the First had won it and kept it. That possession, almost as much as
the loyalty of her people to her, had made her queen then and made
her grandson Tedric king today. And will Blysse be queen thereafter?Derian mused as he
escorted his charge down the wide stone corridors. That, I
suppose, is precisely what we’re here to learn.
Then he turned a corner, stepped through a towering door, and
royalty was before him. Derian had never seen either King Tedric or
Queen Elexa from any closer than a seat in the crowd during some
public festival. Up close, he found them both more and less
impressive than he had imagined.
Distance had erased lines from both of the monarchs’ faces.
When Derian raised his head from making his homage on the dense New
Kelvinese carpet at the foot of the steps leading to the thrones, he
was shocked to see how ancient they both looked.
Intellectually, he knew that King Tedric was seventy-five years
old, old for even his long-lived family. Queen Elexa was somewhat
younger at sixty-nine, but the illness that years before had robbed
her of her ability to bear children had given her frailty beyond her
age in poor return. Beneath her tissue-paper-fine skin, the blood
could be seen running faintly blue. The crocheted lace gloves on her
hands could not completely hide the dark splotches of age spots.
Her gaze, though, was kind and compassionate. The gracious dip of
her head acknowledged commoners as well as their master.
King Tedric was less kind, more shrewd than his queen. His faded
brown eyes flickered over each of them swiftly, leaving Derian with
the inescapable impression that the monarch would remember each
individual. There was a taut alertness to the aged ruler that Derian
had never noticed when he had gazed upon him from the crowds and
something of the eagle in the tight grasp of his bony hands on the
arms of his throne.
“So, Norwood,” the king snapped, “this girl is
the one you claim as Barden’s daughter?”
He said the disowned prince’s name without any
hesitation—a good omen for the earl’s cause.
Earl Kestrel nodded. “And these four men can bear witness to
her finding, as can my cousin Sir Jared Surcliffe.”
“So you said when you came before us with your fanciful
tale. Well, I see little of my son in this young woman and less of
your sister. Must she bring her dog with her? I am willing to credit
your tale of survival in the wilds without such props.”
Norwood stiffened slightly. “My ward has her own will, Your
Majesty. She did not wish to be parted from the wolf.”
King Tedric’s lips moved slightly in something not quite a
smile.
“Wolf? Never have I seen one so large. Rather, I think, an
enormous hybrid.”
Derian glanced at Firekeeper, worried that she would react to the
insult to her beloved “brother,” but the king’s
diction and use of the unfamiliar term “hybrid” had only
confused her. She waited, still patient for now.
Earl Kestrel also chose not to challenge the king and so Tedric
continued:
“Now, I have seen the lass. Let me see this other proof you
mentioned.”
This was the moment that Derian had dreaded over all others.
Fire-keeper had refused to let the knife—her Fang, she called
it—leave her person. Not even when she had slept or bathed had
she put it by. No offer of a substitute, longer, sharper, or more
ornately made—Earl Kestrel had brought many such, some worth
small fortunes in themselves—had moved her.
At the earl’s request, Derian had coached Firekeeper long
and carefully for this moment. He found he was holding his breath
when Earl Kestrel turned to the young woman.
“Lady Blysse,” the earl said steadily, “show the
king your knife.”
The guards to either side of the dais tensed at these
ominous-sounding words, but King Tedric, briefed to expect them, only
waved his hand imperiously when they would interpose themselves
between his royal self and perceived danger.
“Back,” he said. “There should be no harm
here.”
Firekeeper stood where she had risen from her homage to the
throne. A slim, even slight figure in her long gown of maiden’s
white embroidered at throat and hem with ribbons, her cobalt-blue
traveling cloak tossed back from her shoulders, the young woman
didn’t look a threat. Her dark-brown hair was an unruly mass of
curls, worn rather shorter than was the fashion. Her only adornments
were a simple wreath of flowers and a short necklace of pearls.
Among those gathered in the lofty stone audience hall only Derian
and Race suspected that Firekeeper was far more deadly than any of
the armed and armored guards, despite their swords and ceremonial
halberds. However, Derian and Race could do nothing with their
knowledge but wait, tense and ready.
At Earl Kestrel’s command, Firekeeper dropped her hand to
her waist. There, rather than the more usual girdle of flowers and
ribbons, she wore a brown leather belt, much stained from the
weather.
“My knife,” she said, drawing the weapon and holding
it so that Prince Barden’s crest and the smooth garnet in the
hilt were clearly visible.
“Mine!”
The emphasis was clear, even without the growl that trailed the
announcement. One of King Tedric’s shaggy eyebrows flew upward
in astonishment. The queen gasped. Earl Kestrel colored a fiery
red. Embarrassment or anger? Derian wondered.
King Tedric recovered first. “Yours, then. I only wish to
see it more closely.”
The words barely were past his lips before Firekeeper, despite the
encumbering skirts, had flown up the steps to stand at his side. The
knife she held inches from his face could have as easily vanished
between his ribs, but the king neither started nor paled. Waiting
below, Blind Seer thumped his tail briefly in what Derian could swear
was muted applause.
The king examined the knife with all due consideration.
“It could be Barden’s,” he said at last.
“It bears his crest and I seem to recall some such
blade.”
Queen Elexa recovered from her shock and now she, too, examined
the knife. “I have seen this before. It was given to Barden by
Lovella on his wedding day. She showed it to me beforehand, pleased
by its craftsmanship. This one is just its like.”
“A knife can be imitated,” the king said
cautiously.
“Perhaps,” Elexa agreed, a faint smile on her lips,
“but the knife Lovella showed me possessed a secret. I doubt
that any who sought to imitate the weapon merely from its external
appearance could have known of it.”
“Can you show us what this secret is?” the king asked,
interested yet impatient.
“If the girl will let me touch the knife,” the queen
said, moving a fragile hand slightly.
Firekeeper had been listening, her head cocked to one side,
struggling with words and language patterns unfamiliar to her. From
the expression on her face, Derian knew that she was growing
confused—and when she was confused, her temper grew
unpredictable.
“Lady Blysse,” he called, without waiting for
permission, “the queen doesn’t want your knife. She
simply wants to touch it. Let her.”
“Touch?” Firekeeper said, the hoarseness of an almost
growl in her throat.
“Touch,” Derian assured her. Shrugging slightly, for
he had already committed one social misstep, he addressed the queen
directly. “Your Majesty, if you would move slowly, so as not to
alarm her.”
Accustomed to always being accorded social graces, the queen was
less offended by their violation in a good cause than someone of
lesser standing might be. Giving Blysse a reassuring smile, she
reached out delicately with thumb and forefinger and grasped the
garnet set into the pommel.
“Firekeeper,” Derian said warningly when his charge
stiffened, “hold still.”
She did, to his infinite relief. When the queen had difficulty,
she even steadied the hilt of the knife so that the queen could twist
more strongly.
“There!” the queen said, pleased. Then, directly to
the young woman standing before her, “Dear, my hands are not as
strong as they once were. If you would grab the stone as I did and
twist hard.”
Derian doubted that Firekeeper understood all the words, but the
queen’s gestures were eloquent. Firekeeper obeyed. A firm turn
or so and the garnet began to loosen.
Derian had shown the girl how to pull out corks, but a threaded
cap was something new and frustrated her momentarily. However, at the
queen’s urging Firekeeper continued to twist. At last, with a
small grating of sand caught in infrequently used grooves, the stone
came free, revealing a small compartment in the hilt.
“Not so very large,” the queen said complacently,
examining the hollow spot, “but large enough to bear a message
or some small item. Lovella was quite delighted with it.”
“Then without a doubt, this is Barden’s knife,”
King Tedric’s gaze was shrewd. “And there is less a doubt
that this is Barden’s daughter.”
Fascinated, Derian watched the king’s eyes narrow in an
expression far too like Earl Kestrel’s for him to doubt the
type of thoughts the ruler was entertaining. Norvin Norwood had been
right. King Tedric had not at all liked being subject to the
manipulations of his siblings and their young kin.
The possible existence of a granddaughter gave the king an upper
hand once again. The king smiled, but it was not precisely a kind
smile.
“Norvin, bring your ward…” Not “my granddaughter,” Derian noted to
himself. He’s not ready to grant quite that much, not yet.
He wants Earl Kestrel to remember who is in charge.
“And join my family at table tonight. They have all heard
rumors of your travels. It is time that they learn just what you have
brought home.”
The banquet hall into which they were escorted some hours later
was not the largest room Derian had ever seen. The Guildhall of the
Combined Crafts (tanners, leatherworkers, harness and saddlemakers)
in the city below was larger. Nor was the banquet hall the grandest
room he had seen. The inner chamber where the grandmasters of the
smiths held their secret conclaves was grander, its beams gleaming
with gilding and sparkling from the tiny silver stars that depended
from invisible threads.
This hall, though, surpassed both for mere magnificence. The stone
floor was polished to such a shine that the torches in the wall
sconces and the candles on the tables seemed to burn twice: once in
flame, once in reflection. Referring to the ivory-white marble walls
as bare would be an insult, for though they were free from tapestry
or curtain, the marble itself was so beautifully carved as to disdain
further ornamentation.
In the center of the hall were four long tables set in a modified
fan, all of their ends meeting near a head table. The flaring backs
of the throne-like chairs set at the center of this head table left
no doubt that the king and queen would be seated where they could
command the attention of those dispersed along the fan. Derian
wondered where Fire-keeper and Earl Kestrel would be placed.
The chief steward was a solid, silvery woman who shared some of
Valet’s immunity to excitement. As she addressed Earl Kestrel,
her voice rang in the nearly empty room like a herald’s
trumpet.
“The king commands that you and your ward be seated at the
head table. The ward is to be at the king’s right, you to her
right. Your party will be granted a few moments to orient yourselves
before the family will join you.”
Derian was grateful for those moments. Thus far Firekeeper had
been on her best behavior, but there was a trembling tension about
her that made him glad that she would have time to scout out the room
before it was filled with strangers.
He watched her as she flitted about from point to point, touching
the friezes on the wall, fingering the woven linen tablecloths,
peeking under the tables as if uncertain what might lurk in their
shadow. Blind Seer trotted beside her, more tense, less curious.
Derian feared that the wolf might have reached his limit regarding
new things and simply strike out at anything that came near.
Clearly the two members of the King’s Own who had remained
with them shared his concern. Each stood straight with his back
against the wall, knuckles white around his halberd shaft. If they
found Firekeeper’s behavior amusing, no trace of mirth showed
on their impassive countenances.
Derian ignored them, turning instead to Valet, who, along with
Derian, made up the entirety of Earl Kestrel’s escort. Ox and
Race had been excluded on the grounds that no one else would bring
bodyguards. Doubtless they were in some servants’ hall even now
being plied with ale and rich food by castle staff eager for
gossip.
“Valet,” Derian said, keeping his voice low,
“what am I supposed to do? I’m out of my element
here.”
“You and I will stand there along the wall,” Valet
gestured to the stretch behind the head table, “where we can be
ready if the earl needs us. Your particular role will be to assist
Blysse. If she is about to make any particularly dangerous error,
stop her, even at risk of reprimand to yourself.”
Derian had no doubt that the errors Valet referred to were not
merely social ones, like holding her spoon incorrectly or drinking
her soup from her bowl. Firekeeper possessed a quick temper when she
perceived offense and he had yet to figure out precisely what would
give offense.
He was permitted no further time to worry. The towering wooden
doors at the far end of the hall were beginning to open and the
steward’s trumpet voice announced: “Grand Duke Gadman,
Lord Rolfston Redbriar and Lady Melina Shield, with Sapphire, Jet,
Opal, Ruby, and Citrine Shield.”
“Firekeeper,” Derian hissed hopelessly, but his charge
hurried over to him immediately.
“Stand there,” Valet said, his own voice somehow both
strong and nearly inaudible. He dared a slight push to center
Firekeeper behind the chair where she was to sit. “And
wait.”
Firekeeper did so and Blind Seer sat beside her, his hackles
slightly raised. The woman acknowledged his tension by curling the
fingers of one hand in his fur, but her dark gaze was fixed on the
eight people entering the room. Derian reflected that the nobles
might mistake her unwavering stare for awe, but he knew the young
woman well enough to know that to Firekeeper any stranger was an
enemy until proven otherwise.
Such care might well be indicated when encountering this
particular family. Although the rumors Derian had heard about Grand
Duke Gad-man and Lord Rolfston credited them with everything from
courage to ruthlessness, they were as nothing compared to what was
whispered about Lady Melina Shield. In city and countryside alike it
was agreed that the noblewoman was a sorceress, one of power the like
of which had not been seen since the days when the Old Country still
reigned.
Looking at the woman, demurely gowned in mutedly iridescent silk,
her fingers resting lightly on her husband’s sleeve, Derian was
at first inclined to dismiss those rumors as mere superstitious talk.
Then he noticed the jeweled necklace encircling the still-firm flesh
of Melina Shield’s pale throat.
The necklace was short, just a few links too long to be a choker.
Polished silver links were hung with five pendants, each holding a
single faceted gem. The colors were not harmonious. Indeed a
connoisseur might even say that they clashed: brilliant blue; opaque,
glittering black; fiery hues like those of a new-lit fire; bloodred,
and, lastly, a rich orange-brown, the shade of a fine cognac. Derian
did not need to be a gem cutter’s nephew to recognize that each
of these gems was a pricelessly perfect example of the namestones of
each of Lady Melina’s children.
Now, seeing the necklace, seeing how each of the scion Shields
wore set in a band about their brow a namestone gem to match the one
about their mother’s throat, Derian believed with a sudden
thrill of his terrified soul that Melina Shield was indeed the
sorceress gossip had named her. He had little time to grow accustomed
to the thought, for the steward was announcing Grand Duchess Rosene
and her kin.
Although a widow of seventy, Rosene could still wear soft pinks,
for her hair was snow-white and her skin the delicate hues of the
inner petals of a newly blossomed wild rose. Her eyes, however, were
as shrewd as those of her brother the king and she let her son escort
her without hindrance, less from obedience to custom than the better
to glance about her and assess the situation.
Baron Ivon Archer, though a mature man, bore himself like the son
of a hero, but it was in his sister, Zorana, that Derian saw the true
heroic fire. Both of Grand Duchess Rosene’s children were
accompanied by a spouse and trailed by their get, the youngest of
whom might have been excluded from such a gathering just a year or so
before. Derian hardly had time to note that Baron Archer’s
daughter, the Lady Elise, was easily as lovely as any of her more
ostentatiously named second cousins when the steward announced:
“Their Royal Majesties, King Tedric and Queen
Elexa!”
As no one had taken a seat, no one needed to rise, but when the
brass trumpets sounded their fanfare, everyone stood straighter in
respect and turned to watch the monarchs enter. Everyone, that is,
except Derian’s Firekeeper. The loud trumpet call in the
contained chamber frightened her, causing her to start back in
alarm.
Before she could err further, Derian hurried forward and seized
her arm, aware that in doing so he had once again brought himself to
the king’s attention. He was too busy to worry about this, for
Firekeeper’s hand had flown to her knife even as she looked
about for some sheltered place from which to defend herself.
“Easy,” Derian assured her, wishing that his voice
didn’t sound so loud in the suddenly hushed hall.
“Easy.”
Firekeeper felt no such need not to be noticed. “What
that?”
“Trumpets,” he said, letting his own tones match hers.
If he could not go unnoticed, then let no one think he had anything
to hide. “Like a flute but larger and louder.”
“Where?”
“Over there.” He indicated with one hand, his other
gently guiding her knife back into its sheath.
Firekeeper moved as if she wished to examine one of the
instruments. Derian put a restraining hand on her arm, knowing that
if she intended to go, no strength of his would hold her.
“Stay,” he said, more pleading than ordering.
“You can look at them later. Now we owe the king our
attention.”
“Still?” she asked, blowing out through her nose in
what he had learned was exasperation. “We did!”
“And still we must,” Derian said patiently.
King Tedric rescued him. “Steward Silver, have one of the
heralds’ trumpets brought here for my guest’s inspection.
The rest of you have my leave to be seated.”
Even Earl Kestrel obeyed this implicit command and, after
examining the trumpet, Firekeeper was willing to do the same.
“Young man,” the king said, and Derian realized that
he was being addressed. Hurriedly, he bent knee. “Remain at the
young woman’s shoulder and advise her.”
Derian did as ordered, standing at Firekeeper’s right,
slightly to the left of Earl Kestrel and as far away as was polite
from the alarming presence of the king. Still, from where he stood he
noticed that the king’s white hair was a wig. The realization
embarrassed him, as if he had stumbled onto a state secret.
Servants bearing wine and bread emerged from discreet alcoves
along the wall. Noticing that none of the nobles seemed to regard
them at all, Derian did his best to mimic the servants’
impassive expressions, wishing more than anything else to be
forgotten. He only moved when one would pour Firekeeper wine.
“Water only,” he said softly.
The king, however, cocked an eyebrow. “Do you think my
vintage not good enough for her?”
Derian was about to answer when Firekeeper said:
“Wine like sick bird berries. Makes prey.”
“She means,” Earl Kestrel translated, “that she
has observed wild birds eating fermented berries or fruit. They
become sick, and sick creatures become easy prey.”
King Tedric stroked his angular cheekbone with one finger.
“Surely she does not believe that I intend her harm.”
Norvin Norwood was too old a campaigner to be discomfited.
“Not at all, Your Majesty, but her prejudices are firm. We
have not been able to convince her that wine or beer or any liquor is
a fair substitute for water.”
The king did not press the point, but directed his attention down
the fan of tables where his relatives were watching with as much
interest as would be considered polite. Indeed, a few, like Sapphire
and Grand Duchess Rosene, were watching with rather more attention
than good manners should admit.
“This young woman,” said the king with a slight
gesture, as if which young woman he meant could be in doubt,
“is the ward of Earl Kestrel. At his own initiative and at
great personal risk and expense, he mounted an expedition to learn
the fate of my son, Prince Barden.”
Behind his carefully impassive face, Derian marveled. Those last
two words, just a name and a title, but spoken so casually by the
king himself, all but rescinded the disinheritance Tedric had passed
on his son. From the expressions that flickered across surprised
faces at the lower tables not everyone was pleased.
The king paused, perhaps making a similar assessment, perhaps
merely to sip his wine.
“Sadly, for myself and for my queen, Norvin has learned that
Barden’s expedition was a failure. The prince and his
followers—all but one— died in the early years of the
colonization attempt, apparently in a fire.”
At least some of the murmurs of shock and pity seemed to be
genuine. Tedric waited for these to subside before continuing:
“The sole survivor was the young woman seated beside me.
Believing her to be his sister Eirene’s daughter Blysse, Earl
Kestrel has made her his ward. His mother, the Duchess Kestrel and
head of his household, has confirmed the adoption. Thus, my guest is
Blysse Norwood, newest member of House Kestrel.”
A hubbub arose at these words. Again Derian was forced to admire
the king. He had given a name to the foundling, the same name as was
borne by his granddaughter, but he had done so in such a fashion that
left open to doubt whether or not he acknowledged the young woman as
that granddaughter.
Only Grand Duke Gadman and Grand Duchess Rosene dared to address
the king directly, and Gadman’s querulous voice was
loudest.
“Tedric,” he said without formality, “are you
saying that this wild-eyed creature is Barden’s
daughter?”
Grand Duke Gadman was a bent-over, bent-nosed parody of his
brother’s regal aquilinity. Gossip said, and Derian could well
believe it, that the grand duke had been soured by holding no greater
honor than that of standby heir for something like seventy years.
Unlike Tedric, who had fairly earned his people’s respect in
battle, Gadman never ventured farther than the fringes of armed
conflict, risking his reputation but not his hide.
Yet Derian did not underestimate Grand Duke Gadman as a mere
blowhard. By chance, his own brother, Brock, and Grand Duke Gadman
were both members of the Bear Society. From the tales that Brock had
brought home, Grand Duke Gadman was shrewd, intelligent, and, in a
fashion quite different from his brother, charismatic.
“I have said,” Tedric replied, a faint smile playing
about his lips, “precisely what I have said.”
“You say that this girl is Eirene Norwood’s
daughter,” Gadman pressed. “Eirene was wed to Barden. Do
you mean to imply that this ‘Blysse’ is Barden’s
daughter?”
“Or,” Grand Duchess Rosene added stridently, “do
you not?”
King Tedric looked at each of his siblings with a weary tolerance
that was not without affection.
“I have said what I have said. However, I will now add that
because I wish to get to know Lady Blysse better, I am inviting her
to dwell in the castle with my family. Earl Kestrel may, of course,
take a suite here himself.”
Derian’s knees weakened. If Kestrel accepted, as he
undoubtedly would, then Derian knew perfectly well where he himself
was going to be staying. He had thought himself equal to anything,
but this was beyond the ambitions of a carter’s son. Any
thoughts he had of retreating, of making excuses, of risking both
parents and patron’s ire, vanished as Firekeeper glanced up at
him, her dark eyes anxious.
“King say we come here,” she said softly. “Blind
Seer, too?”
“Blind Seer, too,” Derian promised, knowing he would
keep his word even if he must smuggle the wolf in some dark
night.
The rest of the banquet went much as could be expected. Although
Firekeeper’s table manners had improved so greatly that Derian
had flattered himself that she could pass in polite company—and
Earl Kestrel had agreed—the real test cast bright sunlight on
their illusions.
The noble company gathered along the tables either turned politely
away or openly sniggered. That most of the mockery came from those
too young to have polished social skills—young Kenre Trueheart
and Citrine Shield, most notably—didn’t offer much
comfort.
Firekeeper still ate more like a wolf than like a woman and seemed
less like a noblewoman than ever.
Of course, Derian thought unhappily as he surveyed this august
company from the invisibility of servitude, rumor said that the
Princess Lovella had arranged her brother Chalmer’s death. Mere
acknowledgment would not make Firekeeper safe.
Far from it. If the king acknowledged her, she might be in greater
danger than she ever had been in the wilds.
VIII
“That banquet,” announced Grand Duchess
Rosene when the family had retired to the suite which had been hers
since as a young bride she brought her husband home to her
father’s castle, “was a nightmare!”
Ostensibly, her audience was restricted to her son and daughter
and their spouses. Lady Elise, bearing tea and honeycakes into her
grandmother’s parlor, retired to a corner after setting down
the tray, picked up her embroidery hoop, and was tacitly suffered to
remain.
“Whatever does that brother of mine intend!” the old
woman huffed, all offended privilege and suspicion. Without a word,
Aksel Trueheart leaned forward and began pouring tea, knowing that an
in-law’s comments would not be appreciated at this moment.
“Precisely what he has achieved, good Mother,” replied
Ivon Archer, nursing his pipe to life between sheltering hands,
“to unsettle us all.”
His sister Zorana nodded. “Yes. He has not acknowledged that
wild thing as Barden’s daughter, but he holds the possibility
over us like a whip. Now, we dare not press him to name an heir for
fear that he will choose her over one better suited.”
Unsaid but trembling in the air was that here, seated opposite
each other, brother and sister, were rival claimants.
Grand Duchess Rosene shook her head despairingly.
“Simpletons!” she chided her children scathingly.
“Tedric’s plan would never be anything so obvious.
Already Gadman and I have pressed him as hard as we dare. No, I fear
he plays some deeper game.”
“What?” Ivon and Zorana spoke as one, their rivalry
for the throne temporarily set aside.
“Well,” Grand Duchess Rosene said, accepting a cup of
tea and stirring honey into it, “some say he intends to put
aside Elexa and wed another. Why not this girl? Norvin Norwood may
claim her for the Kestrel line, but I see nothing of either Eirene or
Barden in this stranger’s face. She is too dark for
one.”
“Certainly he could not wed her!” Lady Aurella,
Elise’s mother, said shocked. “Queen Elexa is Wellward
born, my own mother’s sister. The king would not dare put her
off in favor of a commoner!”
“Not quite a commoner,” Rosene reminded, “for
Duchess Kestrel has accepted this ‘Blysse’ into her
household. By adoption, if not by blood, she is Kestrel.”
“King Tedric did seem to favor her.” Ivon puffed on
his pipe, as if reluctant to say more. “I noted how frequently
the king’s eyes strayed to the stranger. And he did have her
seated at his own right hand—far above her station, even if she
was a granddaughter.”
“Not if that granddaughter is his heir,” Rosene said
acidly sweet.
Watching her elders, Elise wondered if Grand Duchess Rosene was
enjoying stirring up her son and daughter. The old woman’s next
speech confirmed her suspicions.
“But perhaps you are right, Aurella,” Rosene said.
“Perhaps it is too much like a storyteller’s romance to
believe that an old king would shed his barren wife to father a son
on a common girl young enough to be his granddaughter. What other use
might he have for her?”
“He could,” said Aksel Trueheart, “mean to use
her to learn our own closest wishes.”
Lady Zorana’s husband spoke hesitantly, as if uncertain
precisely how to phrase his thoughts. Although he was a handsome man
and strong, no one held any illusions who was the dominant partner in
this marriage.
Some went so far as to jest that Zorana married Aksel simply as a
properly pedigreed stud for her brood. Elise, who had often found
Uncle Aksel in the castle library poring over old parchments from the
days before the Plague, knew him to be more, a self-taught scholar
and a bit of a poet.
“Our closest wishes?” Zorana said, her tones no
gentler than her mother’s. “What do you mean?”
“Forget I said anything,” Aksel replied. “A
fleeting thought, one I must consider further.”
Grand Duchess Rosene, however, would not let the point drop.
“I believe I seized the heel of your thought as it fled,
son-in-law,” she said. “Think, fools! What better thing
to bring us all behind one candidate than to threaten us with a new
player whom we desire less? Haven’t we all said that we would
rather see Rolfston Redbriar crowned king than have Allister Seagleam
of Bright Bay elevated above us?”
Murmurs of agreement answered her. The grand duchess continued,
setting her cup and saucer down with a rattle as her hands suddenly
trembled with excitement.
“Now Tedric has in his own castle one who he can use in much
the same fashion without raising the hopes of those who would see a
scion of our enemies on the throne!”
“That must be it, Mother!” Ivon agreed. “Blysse
Norwood can serve as King Tedric’s prod, a reminder of what we
get if we do not dance to his tune. My guess is that soon enough we
will hear hints of who is her best ‘rival’ for the
throne.”
“And if we still resist,” Zorana asked, her question
less a question than the voicing of a fear, “will he make this
newcomer queen simply to spite us?”
“That,” Grand Duchess Rosene said, “is
completely within the reach of my brother’s perversity. I would
not tempt him to try it.”
“And,” added Aksel Trueheart, heartened some by the
grand duchess’s expansion on his vague idea, “the girl
could still be useful to him, even if he does not name her crown
princess. He could offer her in marriage to someone—perhaps to
his heir, if the heir was unwed, perhaps to the heir’s heir, if
that one was male and unwed.”
“Like our son, Purcel,” said Zorana thoughtfully.
“Yes. Even if Blysse is never officially named Prince
Barden’s daughter, some trace of his noble aura will cling to
her. There will always be those who will respect her as an
unacknowledged daughter of the royal house.”
Elise noted with a small smile how Aunt Zorana had shown that her
house, rather than her brother’s, would be best suited to win
the king’s favor. She didn’t doubt that, beneath his
apparent vagueness, Uncle Aksel had entertained similar thoughts.
Certainly, her own father and mother didn’t look terribly
pleased. Their only child was a daughter, unsuited for a match with
the newcomer.
“Would the king,” said Ivon, trying to salvage what
was beginning to look like a bad situation, “elevate an unknown
woman—quite possibly not born from one of the Great
Houses—to such heights?”
“Don’t be an idiot,” Grand Duchess Rosene said
impatiently. “If we can seriously consider Tedric capable of
making her queen in her own right, certainly we can consider him
elevating her to queen by marriage. My dear husband Purcel was common
born—though proven hero. My own mother, Queen Rose, was not
born of a Great House. My father, King Chalmer, married for love,
quite against the wishes of his advisors.”
“And that’s what worries me the most,” Rosene
continued after a thoughtful pause. “My brother has ample
examples from our own immediate history of kings acting against what
their advisors wish.”
“Then this time,” Zorana put in fiercely, “we
must make certain that the king does nothing of the sort.”
There was that in her aunt’s tone that made Elise shudder
and hope that Lady Blysse, now housed somewhere within the
castle’s walls, locked her doors securely.
Earl Kestrel’s party was given rooms within the section of the
castle normally reserved for the king’s immediate family. Since
the death of Princess Lovella two years before, this wing had been
largely vacant and that vacancy was ostensibly the reason for
Kestrel’s party being housed there. Firekeeper could see that
Earl Kestrel was delighted by this mark of favor.
“The tower in which your rooms will be,” the
silver-haired steward explained to the earl, “is furnished with
its own door out into the castle grounds. The king said that all your
party is to have freedom of the parks and gardens.”
Earl Kestrel nodded. “That is thoughtful of His Majesty. My
ward is not accustomed to remaining indoors all the time.”
The steward managed a dry smile. “The king expressed
confidence that Lady Blysse would be able to control her pet if she
took him with her into public areas.”
Firekeeper decided that the time had come to speak for
herself.
“Blind Seer not a pet.”
Derian put a hand on her arm.
“Firekeeper,” he warned.
“Well, isn’t,” she persisted.
Derian shrugged and made some explanation to Steward Silver, using
language so complicated that Firekeeper could only catch the gist of
his argument. She did learn, however, that the falcon Elation would
be welcome at the castle and so went to sleep well content.
The next morning, Derian was nowhere about.
“Earl Kestrel,” Ox explained to Firekeeper, “let
him go visit his family. His parents.”
Ox always spoke carefully, pausing between each word as if she was
stupid, not merely ignorant of the language. Firekeeper recognized
the essential kindness in the big man, however, and didn’t
challenge him. When Ox was summoned to wait upon the earl, she sought
out Elation. The falcon rested on a perch near a window, watching the
little birds outside from sardonic golden-rimmed eyes.
“I wondered how long it would take you to wake up,”
Elation shrilled.
“Why wake?” Firekeeper replied, scratching behind one
of Blind Seer’s ears. “There is nothing for me to do.
They bring me my food, so I need not hunt. For the first time I can
remember, I am warm and fed.”
Blind Seer huffed out through his nose. “We fed
you!”
“After the strong had eaten,” she retorted.
“Sometimes there was little enough for me.”
“Little enough for any,” he replied, “when the
strong are finished. That is why only the strong survive.”
“I have survived,” Firekeeper said, “so I must
be strong.”
But despite the bravado in those words, there was a singular lack
of enthusiasm within her heart. Perhaps Elation heard this dullness,
for she shrieked.
“So, eat and grow fat. That is all you wish?”
“Is there else?” Firekeeper challenged without much
heat.
“You came away from your pack to learn about the
two-legs,” Elation replied. “What have you
learned?”
“That the world is far bigger than even the Ones
imagine,” Firekeeper said. “That I can talk human talk
after a fashion, but that I fear I shall never be more than a pup
among them, even as I have ever been a pup among the
wolves.”
“And have you acted as other than a pup?” Elation
prodded, her beak gaping in mocking laughter. “Have you done
other than pad about after your nurse, eating his leavings as if
summer will never end? Take care, wolfling, summer may end and leave
you within a trap.”
“What do you mean?”
“After last night’s rumpus, more than Earl Kestrel
know that you live. Remember, I understand human speech better than
you do, for those who were my masters one brief season often spoke of
weighty matters while they rode with falcons on their gloves. If you
are not to be chased hither and yon like a rabbit beneath the
falcon’s circling flight, then you must make yourself a place
within this aerie.“
Firekeeper straightened, some vague sense of purpose licking
tongues of fire in her soul.
“Do you think I can?” she asked, almost timidly.
“ ‘Do you think I can?’ ” the falcon
mimicked cruelly. “I think you must and from this very moment
forward. Your nurse is away. You can act without risking that Earl
Kestrel’s wrath will descend on him.”
“I have worried about such,” Firekeeper admitted.
“My missteps seem to bring blows to Derian’s head, not
mine.”
“So I have observed,” Elation said smugly. “It
is well to protect an ally but not when that protection weakens
yourself.”
“What,” interjected Blind Seer, “would you have
Firekeeper do? Somehow I don’t think that challenging their One
would do her any favors. From what Derian has told us, this is not
the way to earn prestige among these two-legged folk.”
“It is not,” the falcon agreed. “Let me
think.”
She did so, raising a leg to nibble on the wickedly curving talons
of one foot, preening her feathers, chortling and chuckling softly to
herself in falcon speech.
“I,” Elation announced at last, “shall provide
you with the means to meet more equally with those whom you must come
to know. Here they consider hunting with raptors—especially the
great birds such as myself— a sport reserved for noble folk. We
three shall go out into the gardens and I will fly for you as once I
flew for my human master.”
“What good will that do Firekeeper?” Blind Seer asked
dubiously.
“Humans are as curious as raccoons,” Elation replied.
“Some will come to learn what is happening, younger ones, I
suspect, who do not have so much dignity to preserve. Firekeeper can
impress them and they in turn will tell their elders that she is not
merely a toy.”
“Your idea might serve,” Firekeeper said thoughtfully,
“and certainly sitting in this room does us no good.”
“I would,” Blind Seer admitted, “like to be
outside in the sun again. My patience with cold stone rooms is near
ended. Had I loved you less, sweet Firekeeper, I would not have borne
them this long.”
“Then we are settled,” Firekeeper declared.
So it was that when Earl Kestrel came looking for his ward after
his breakfast had been eaten and his plans for the day were neatly in
place, he found the young woman gone and the door out into the castle
grounds standing open before him.
Although a city had grown up around it, the castle at Eagle’s
Nest showed remnants of the days when it had been constructed as a
fortification that could, in an emergency, take within its walls all
the surrounding population and their flocks and herds as well.
Those days were long past, but not because either the castle or
its grounds had grown smaller. Indeed, the descendants of Queen
Zorana had jealously guarded their property rights, holding on to not
only the gardens, workshops, and stables within the fortified walls
but to the surrounding acreage as well. Most of this flowed behind
and above the castle, rough land, not well suited for cultivation,
but perfect for game parks and meadows.
To one of these lower meadows was where Elation led Firekeeper and
Blind Seer, soaring time and again from a padded perch on the young
woman’s shoulder to check which of the winding paths they
should follow. After the coolness within the building, the summer
sunshine was welcome indeed. Butterflies congregated around neatly
ranked beds of flowers and songbirds nested in trees crowded with
ripening fruit. Passage of the three predators caused more than a
little consternation, though not one raised hand, paw, or talon to
hunt.
“Through that gate,” the falcon directed,
“beneath the grey stone arch. Step lively, wingless!”
Firekeeper laughed and began to run, forcing the bird to take
flight quickly and without great grace. Blind Seer bounded alongside,
leaping and almost catching the peregrine by her tail feathers. Once
through the gate, they found themselves in a meadow yellow and white
with wild flowers, thick with green grass yet unmowed and unbrowned
by the greater heat of late summer.
Firekeeper dove into it as she might have into a deep pool,
rolling neatly on one shoulder and bounding to her feet without a
pause. Around and around her, in spiraling circles, Blind Seer ran,
stretching muscles stiff and aching from confinement indoors. He
started a rabbit and gave chase, but let it escape since he was not
really hungry.
Wolf and woman played in this fashion for some time before a
shriek from Elation alerted them to the approach of strangers.
There were two: a male and a female. Neither were adults, of that
Firekeeper was certain. She was less certain about their actual ages.
Derian had made some effort to educate her on this matter, using as
models the few children at the keep and a few others glimpsed along
the road or from the windows of the Kestrel manse. After some
consideration, Firekeeper decided that the boy was the younger, more
from how he deferred to his playmate than from anything else.
That the two had not expected to find anyone else here was obvious
from the way they paused beneath the gateway arch. That they were
curious was evident from how they stood, hand clasped in hand,
staring.
“I wouldn’t swear it,” Blind Seer said, plopping
on his haunches next to Firekeeper, “but they smell familiar.
Could they have been among the pack yesterday?”
Firekeeper tilted her head to one side, studying the pair. After a
moment, she nodded, a human gesture that was becoming habit with
her.
“Yes, I think so,” she replied. “They were the
two who laughed hardest during the meal. I think they thought my
manner of eating amusing.”
This last was not something about which she was particularly
happy. She had been rather pleased with her progress in human
customs. The mockery of these small ones—and the
better-concealed reactions of their elders—had proven to her
that she still had much to learn.
“Talk with them!” the falcon urged from a perch high
in a peach tree. “From what I can see, none of their elders are
about. You may learn something here.”
Firekeeper nodded, swallowed past a sudden hard spot in her
throat, and managed a soft “Hello. Good morning.”
Girl and boy exchanged glances. Then the girl stepped a pace
forward.
“Good morning. What are you doing in our great-uncle’s
garden?”
Firekeeper frowned. “Running. The castle is very
cold.”
The girl took another step forward, her apprehensive gaze on Blind
Seer rather than on Firekeeper. She was solidly built, but not heavy,
with chubby cheeks and red hair highlighted with gold. In the center
of her forehead a dark reddish-orange stone glimmered, set in a band
of woven gold. Firekeeper hadn’t seen enough of humans to
decide if the girl would be judged pretty, but suspected that she was
as yet too gawky, too young to be considered so.
Pulling straight the skirt of her mid-calf-length flowered frock,
the girl continued her interrogation:
“But do you have permission to be here? These are the
king’s gardens.”
Even Firekeeper could hear the pride in the girl’s voice as
she said these words, but the wolf thought it a pardonable pride
given the importance humans placed on kings.
“I do,” she replied. “King Tedric told me last
night, when he asked us to stay at the castle.”
“Asked you?” began the girl, but the boy interrupted,
hurrying forward to tug one of her puffed sleeves.
“Don’t you get it, Citrine?” he hissed in what
Firekeeper guessed were meant to be hushed tones. “This is Earl
Kestrel’s ward. This is Blysse!”
“Oh, Kenre!” Citrine protested, looked again, then
frowned. “Oh!”
“I am called Blysse,” Firekeeper confirmed.
“What are you called?”
“I,” said the girl, “am Citrine
Shield.”
“I’m Kenre,” the boy said. “Kenre
Trueheart. Is that your dog?”
“Wolf,” Firekeeper answered. “Blind Seer,
because he have blue eyes.”
“They are!” the boy said, leaning forward to look, but
not closing with the wolf. Firekeeper respected him for his
prudence.
Kenre Trueheart was as sturdily built as Citrine, perhaps given
slightly to fat where she was not. With his soft light brown hair and
big brown eyes, his body all quivering with excitement, he reminded
Firekeeper, not unkindly, of a baby rabbit.
“I didn’t know wolves ever had blue eyes,” Kenre
said.
“Most do not,” Firekeeper answered, feeling a certain
thrill. She was actually talking to humans on her own, without Derian
there to intercede or clarify!
The little girl, Citrine, pushed her way through the tall grass.
As she came closer, Firekeeper caught her scent, a mingling of soap
and flowers, overlaid with the bacon and bread from her
breakfast.
“Can I pat him?” she asked, gesturing to Blind
Seer.
Firekeeper tilted her head, considering. “He
bites.”
“Oh! And Earl Kestrel lets you keep him?”
“Blind Seer stay with me,” Firekeeper replied,
avoiding the awkward issue of permission. “So does
falcon.”
She raised her forearm, encased from hand to elbow in a heavy
falconer’s glove that Race had bought for her along the road
from West Keep to Eagle’s Nest. With a showy screech, Elation
launched from the peach tree’s branches, spiraled upward, then
plummeted down to land with deceptive gentleness on
Firekeeper’s glove. Even so, Firekeeper had to steady herself
against the weight of that landing. Elation was to the average
peregrine falcon what Blind Seer was to Cousin wolves—bigger,
stronger, and far wiser.
Kenre and Citrine both scampered back at the falcon’s
descent, but curiosity brought them forward almost immediately.
Skirting the wolf, they stared up at the falcon, who obliged by
intelligently returning their regard.
“It looks like a peregrine,” Kenre said hesitantly,
“but bigger than any in my father’s aeries.”
“Kenre’s father is a Merlin,” Citrine said,
confusing Firekeeper to no end. “My father is a Goshawk, though
my mother is a Gyrfalcon.”
“I not,” said Firekeeper, feeling a sinking sensation
that this would not be the last time she made this statement,
“understand.”
Citrine looked delighted rather than exasperated, soothing
Firekeeper somewhat, and put on what even the wolf-raised woman had
come to recognize as a lecturing tone.
“Each of the six Great Houses has two names,” Citrine
said. “One is the original family name; the other is the emblem
given by King Chalmer the First in the Year Twenty-seven of this
Realm.”
Seeing that Firekeeper still looked confused, she clarified,
“This is the Year One Hundred Five.”
“It is?”
“Yes. One hundred and five years ago, Queen Zorana the Great
won her last battle with her enemies and founded the Kingdom of Hawk
Haven. The losers settled for becoming the Kingdom of Bright
Bay.”
Firekeeper had understood about a third of this, but the key
words, combined with Derian’s brief dissertations on the
importance of kings and queens, were enough to give her the essential
gist.
“So why is Kenre’s father a merlin?”
Kenre answered, “My family’s name is
Trueheart—just like yours is Norwood.”
Firekeeper remembered being told something of the kind following a
long session with Earl Kestrel and a woman he called Mother and
everyone else called Duchess. She nodded encouragement.
“Speak on.”
“When King Chalmer—that’s King Tedric’s
father—married Rose Rosewood, he gave titles to the Great
Houses as a wedding gift,” Kenre said, foundering somewhat.
Citrine came to his aid. “The Great Houses back then
weren’t happy that the king didn’t marry into one of
their families.”
Firekeeper nodded, though she understood little of this, hoping
they would get back to how a two-legs could also be a bird of
prey.
“To make them happier,” Citrine continued, “King
Chalmer gave them a special family name, like nothing anyone else
would have. So the Norwoods—that’s your
family—became the Kestrels.”
“Earl Kestrel?” Firekeeper asked. “He is not a
bird!”
“A kestrel is a type of falcon, like the peregrine but
smaller.”
From Firekeeper’s fist, Elation shrilled laughter.
“Smaller, stupider, milder.”
Firekeeper shook the bird slightly.
“So kestrel,” she asked carefully, “is name for
a bird?”
She remembered now the representations she had seen on the
earl’s baggage, on his carriage, over the doorways of his
manse. Her eyes still had trouble seeing the pictures in human art, a
thing that had frustrated some of Derian’s attempts to teach
her written words.
“That’s right,” Citrine said encouragingly.
“Just like your falcon is a peregrine.”
“I know that,” Firekeeper answered. “Derian told
me. He never told me kestrel was a bird.”
“Maybe he didn’t want to confuse you with too much too
fast,” Kenre said with the humble wisdom of someone who often
found himself in that very situation.
“Just so,” Firekeeper agreed. “He confuses me
without trying.”
All three of them laughed at this and looked at each other,
suddenly relaxed and at ease. Firekeeper remembered something of
human manners then.
“We sit,” she offered, “over by brook, maybe?
You tell me more about fathers who are birds?”
The children readily agreed. Elation soared again to a treetop
from which she could keep watch and Blind Seer, quietly amused by all
of this, vanished within the tall grass.
“I will run, scout, maybe hunt,” he said as he moved
away. “Ox fetches much meat, but it is all dead
cold.”
“Go,” Firekeeper replied, “but stay from the
town.”
“Gladly,” the wolf laughed. “It
stinks.”
When the three humans were seated, bare feet trailing in the
water, Citrine resumed her explanation.
“So Kenre’s father isn’t really a merlin.
It’s his father’s family’s symbol.”
“ ‘Symbol,’ ” Firekeeper repeated
carefully. “What is symbol?”
Citrine tapped at her headband, rubbing the stone as if it would
help her to construct a definition.
“A symbol is something that stands for something else. My
name is Citrine.”
“Yes?” Firekeeper said, confused at this sudden switch
of subject.
“Citrine is also the name of this stone.” The girl
indicated the translucent reddish-orange stone in her headband.
“The word stands for both me and this stone. Do you
understand?”
Firekeeper might have had more trouble if wolf names were not
essentially symbolic, though more literally so. She nodded.
“Yes, I think I do. So Kenre’s father is not merlin.
He is just called Merlin.”
“Right!” Citrine beamed. “Kenre’s family
uses his father’s name, rather than his mother’s, because
the Great Houses outrank those of lesser nobles and Zorana’s
father was a common archer before King Chalmer made him a noble
one.”
Firekeeper decided to ignore this for now. It sounded rather too
much like some of the lessons that Derian had tried to teach her and
she had dismissed as irrelevant to her situation. Uncomfortably, she
realized that she might have dismissed the matter of Great Houses and
precedence too quickly.
“Easier to know,” she said, thinking aloud,
“with wolves. Who is first is fastest and strongest.”
“Your dog,” Kenre said, glancing around nervously,
noticing for the first time that Blind Seer was gone, “really
is a wolf? You’re not just saying so?”
“Really wolf,” Firekeeper said, having had similar
discussions with Derian and Race along the road to Eagle’s
Nest. “Three years born in my family.”
“Your family?” the two children said together.
“Not Earl Kestrel’s!” Citrine added.
“No. I am wolf-raised,” Firekeeper explained.
“Human born. After big fire, my mother gives me to
wolves.”
“What happened to her?” Kenre asked.
“She died,” Firekeeper said, callously blunt toward
the memory of this woman she remembered only in dreams. “Wolves
say of fire burns.”
“Were you very old then?” Citrine asked, pity and
horror in her voice.
“Very small,” Firekeeper answered. “Smaller than
you or Kenre. Little. Young.”
Vocabulary exhausted, she shrugged. “So I am
wolf.”
“And your father?”
“Wolves not say.”
“Was he Prince Barden?”
“Earl Kestrel say so.” Firekeeper frowned
thoughtfully. “I cannot remember.”
From the looks the children traded she wondered if she had said
too much. Then she shrugged. Let Earl Kestrel deal with it, if the
little bird-man could. She didn’t want to be queen. At least
she didn’t think she did.
“Where did you get your knife?”
No one had bothered ask her that before, but Firekeeper knew that
the knife was somehow important to the earl and his plans. Since the
man had not been precisely unkind to her, she hedged:
“From the One Wolf when I was young, but I do not know where
he get. Maybe Prince Barden give to him.”
Their elders might have scoffed at such fanciful tales, but
Citrine and Kenre were young enough to live on the borders of
fantasy. To them, a girl raised by wolves did not seem at all
improbable, especially when they had seen for themselves the
impossibly huge wolf who shadowed her and the equally large hawk who
obeyed her commands though unhooded and unleashed. Moreover,
Citrine’s mother was reputed to be a sorceress, a thing both of
them implicitly believed though the evidence for that belief was
shared in whispers.
“That’s why you talk funny,” Citrine said with
the bluntness of the young, “and why you eat…”
She stopped herself just in time, but Kenre sniggered and they
both fell into uncontrolled giggles before stopping, suddenly aware
of the coolness of Firekeeper’s dark gaze.
“Like a wolf?” the woman offered dryly.
Citrine nervously tugged a lock of red-gold hair and Kenre
paled.
“Well…” the girl stammered.
“I do,” Firekeeper said, “but I learn human
ways. Can you do this?”
In an instant she was on her feet and up into the upper boughs of
a gnarled apple tree.
“Or this?”
She hung upside down from bent knees and, in one smooth motion,
unsheathed her knife and threw it, burying the blade to the hilt in
the soil between the two children.
“Or this?”
She was down again, knife back in her hand, dark eyes wild. In a
single bound she was across the brook, crouched on the other bank.
Wolves played such bragging games among their kind and she
hadn’t realized how much she missed showing off.
“I learn human ways,” Firekeeper repeated. “Can
you learn wolf ways?”
The two children stared in amazement and admiring awe.
“We could try,” Kenre offered, eager and intense.
“If our mothers let us,” Citrine added, more
dubious.
“Those birds of prey symbol humans!” Firekeeper said
scornfully. Then she recalled the power they wielded and softened her
tone. “Maybe they will let you.”
“We didn’t realize that you really meant you were a
wolf,” Citrine said, eager to apologize. “We thought you
meant as a symbol. There is a Wolf Society, you know.”
“Derian say something of that,” Firekeeper admitted.
“But I not understand. More symbols?”
“More,” Kenre said with another sigh. “My
society is the Horse Society.”
“Mine is the Elk,” Citrine offered.
“But you are not horses or elks,” Firekeeper asked,
wanting to be certain.
“I wish!” Kenre said wistfully. “When I was
really small I thought that was what would happen when I got older,
that I’d learn how to become a horse. I went to my first
meeting last year and there was nothing like that, just people in
fancy costumes.”
“Can,” Firekeeper asked, her heart pounding very fast
at this new and wonderful thought, “can humans become animals
for truth, not symbols?”
Her question was awkwardly worded, but neither Kenre nor Citrine
had any doubt what she meant.
“Maybe,” Kenre said, his voice suddenly soft.
“There are stories of sorcerers from the days before the Plague
when the Old Country ruled here.”
“My nurse,” Citrine added, her tones equally hushed,
“hints that such magics can be done.”
“Oh!” Firekeeper swallowed hard, unable to manage more
words around the sudden lump in her throat. To be a wolf, for real
and not just in heart!
“It may be,” Citrine said quickly, “just a
fireside story. That’s what my sister Ruby said.”
“Ruby,” Kenre retorted, speaking what he had heard his
older sister Deste say, “is scared of her own shadow. Of course
she wouldn’t want to believe in magic. It would scare her.
Especially with your mother being…”
They shuddered together, but didn’t offer clarification and
Firekeeper asked for none. There were too many new words here, too
many new concepts. She held on to just one, one that filled her with
delight and made her more determined than ever to learn the ways of
humankind.
Somewhere out there might be one who would know how to give her
wolf’s heart a wolf’s body. That was more than enough
incentive to make her go on, even if she must win the throne of Hawk
Haven to attain her goal!
IX
The day following the grand banquet, Elise Archer sat
at home reviewing correspondence and considering how to spend her
day. Queen Elexa had requested that Lady Aurella wait upon her and
Ivon Archer was once again in conference with his mother and sister,
so Elise was alone.
Secretly she was rather glad. Despite her father’s
ambitions, Elise suspected that either Aunt Zorana or Lord Rolfston
Redbriar would be named King Tedric’s heir. Further intrigue,
on top of last night’s session, seemed rather ridiculous.
She was folding a polite refusal of a dinner invitation when her
maid came to the door of her solar. “M’lady, you have a
caller.”
“Who is it, Ninette?”
The maid, a poor relative several years her senior, meant to serve
as her chaperon as much as her maid, frowned slightly before
replying. “A young man. Your cousin, Jet Shield.”
“Jet!” Elise considered not whether but where to
receive him. “Take him to the summerhouse near the duck pond
and have cool drinks and light refreshments brought to him. I will
attend him as soon as I have changed into something more
fitting.”
As soon as enough time had passed that she would seem neither
eager nor rude, Elise walked down to the summerhouse. She had combed
her hair and donned a pale yellow muslin gown perfect for informal
entertaining on a summer morning that already promised to become
quite hot. When she was a few steps from the summerhouse, she told
her maid:
“Wait for me on that bench, Ninette. I promise not to stray
from sight, but Cousin Jet may speak more freely to my ears
alone.”
Ninette was neither silly nor stupid. She knew as much about the
recent political maneuvering as could anyone who was not immediate
family and, unlike Elise, still treasured dreams of herself residing
within the castle, an intimate of King Ivon’s family and,
later, confidant to Queen Elise.
“Very good, Lady Elise.”
Elise greeted Jet with both hands outstretched, a relaxed informal
gesture quite appropriate between cousins. She was slightly taken
aback when he instead met her with a deep bow and lightly kissed the
air above the hand he gracefully captured in one of his own.
The greeting wasn’t precisely incorrect. Indeed, it would be
perfectly correct in some settings. However, a summerhouse in the
midmorning hours was not one of these.
“Cousin,” Elise said, retrieving her fingers.
“May I pour you something cool to drink?”
“Thank you, Elise. Whatever you are having,” Jet
replied. “You look lovely this morning. Cool, peaceful, and
tranquil—everything that my father’s house is
not.”
Elise smiled, acknowledging both the compliment and the neat
transition into current problems.
“I would be lying,” she said, knowing that the same
information could be learned from the servants, “if I said that
my parents were particularly tranquil this morning.”
“Great-Uncle Tedric,” Jet said with a small laugh,
“pulled a nice one last night. Introducing that girl in such a
fashion that we could not question her origin without insulting House
Kestrel was brilliant. He is a master of his craft.”
“Tedric is,” Elise agreed, “a great
king.”
“Would that I could be as certain,” Jet said, his
black eyes shining, “that his successor would be as well
prepared for the throne. Tedric was King Chalmer’s second born,
but Crown Princess Marras died a year before her father. King Chalmer
had time to prepare his new heir for his role.”
“My father said,” Elise added, eager to draw Jet out,
“that Princess Marras was so distracted from the deaths first
of her baby, Alben, then of her husband, Lorimer Stanbrook, that
Tedric was his father’s right hand for the two years before
King Chalmer’s death.”
“Indeed,” Jet said, “just as my sister Sapphire
is taken up with the minutiae of learning how to run our family
estates. Therefore, I have become my father’s confidant in the
larger matters of kingdom politics.”
That old song again, Elise thought, amused. She murmured
understandingly and Jet continued:
“My concern is that whomever King Tedric selects, there will
be hurt feelings all around. Rivals passed over may not so quickly
forget their own claims and be reluctant to bend knee to one they see
as an equal.”
The forceful manner in which he tossed a bit of roll to one of the
ducks suggested that he might be one of these.
“So you favor Lady Blysse Norwood?” Elise asked,
keeping her mien quite serious though she was laughing inside.
“If she is the king’s granddaughter, her claim supersedes
all others. No rival would be passed over for one with an equal
claim, for no other claim could be equal.”
Jet looked shocked for one quick moment before he regained control
of his features.
“If Lady Blysse is Prince Barden’s daughter,” he
began, a slight stress on the “if.” “then, of
course, I favor her. However, there is doubt that she is indeed
Barden’s daughter.”
“Yes?” Elise prompted.
“Certainly! My mother recalls that there were other children
included in Barden’s expedition. Lady Blysse could be one of
these.”
Elise nodded. She was certain that some thought other than those
raised by Blysse Norwood’s addition to the game was burning
behind Jet’s eyes and she was nearly as eager for him to tell
as he was to speak.
“There is a way,” Jet said slowly, “to make King
Tedric’s choice easier for him.”
“Oh?” For a fleeting moment, Elise wondered if Jet was
hinting that Blysse should be assassinated.
“Yes. Give King Tedric a choice that permits him to unite
two of the rival parties for the throne—all three, even, if
those involved are properly cultivated.”
Elise shook her head. “I don’t understand.”
“If you and I married, Elise,” Jet said, leaning
forward and capturing her hand between his own, “then by
selecting one of us, King Tedric would really be selecting both of
our houses.”
Only her mother’s careful training kept Elise’s mouth
from dropping open in shock at this cool proposal. At that moment, a
child she hadn’t even known still lived within her—a
child who had daydreamed of fervent entreaties, of romantic ballads
sung outside her window by moonlight, of elegant tokens—died
forever.
She gasped something inarticulate which Jet, fortunately,
interpreted as encouragement rather than dismay.
“I couldn’t believe no one had thought of this
solution before,” he said, squeezing her fingers tightly.
“You are the sole scion of your house. I am the senior male in
mine. Surely King Tedric would see the wisdom in selecting us over
any of our siblings. He might even forgo the intermediary step of
first choosing one of our parents as his heir and name one of us
directly.”
You, so you believe, Elise thought indignantly, or you
wouldn’t be so excited by the prospect.
“We two are the only ones who could play this game,”
Jet continued, “and that is to our great advantage. There are
no males in your household who could marry one of my sisters. Purcel
Trueheart is eight years younger than my sister Sapphire—too
great a gap for even Zorana to consider, especially when Purcel is
four years shy of his majority.”
“But I also am too young to marry!” Elise protested,
selecting the first argument that Jet’s words suggested.
“Marriages are not contracted until the partners are
nineteen.”
“Consummated,” Jet corrected with a unguarded glance
that suggested that he had fantasized about the prospect with some of
the ardor that had been absent from his proposal. “Some
marriages have been contracted long before that date, nor have all
the formalities waited until the participants reached their majority.
In any case, you’re nearly eighteen.”
Elise colored. The most usual reason for marriage before the
participants were legal adults was an accidental pregnancy. No matter
what the obvious political advantages, if she and Jet wed, there
would still be whispers, whispers that would not necessarily be
stilled when the bride did not deliver a “premature”
infant.
“I would not care to make myself the subject of
scandal,” she said firmly, “no matter how great the prize
to be won.”
“I understand, lovely cousin,” Jet said, pressing her
fingers to his lips. “Your scruples do you credit. Still, there
is no reason not to arrange a betrothal, is there? King Tedric might
even encourage us to marry before your majority. If we wed at the
king’s command, no one could cast aspersions on your maidenly
honor.”
Elise frowned. Jet’s proposal was enticing. He was handsome,
strong, well connected. Though they were cousins, the relationship
was not too close. Indeed, just a few years before, she had
daydreamed about marriage to him. That had been before she had
realized sadly that Lord Rolfston and Lady Melina would not permit
their son to remain unmarried until she was eligible.
Certainly, King Tedric could not fail to see the advantages of a
match between them. Grand Duke Gadman and Grand Duchess Rosene would
both be satisfied, for each would see a descendant ascend to the
throne. Only Aunt Zorana would be unhappy, and even she might be
consoled at the thought of her niece as queen—especially if Jet
was merely consort.
“Would you support me as queen?” Elise asked, pursuing
this idea. “King Tedric might not choose to pass over our
fathers. Or he might name me his heir. My odds of being named
heir—even without any alliance such as you suggest—have
usually been considered better than yours. Would you be content if I
were queen and you were my consort?”
Jet paused as if to consider, but she was certain he had mulled
over his answer in advance.
“Yes,” he said at last. “I would support you.
Whether you or I were monarch, the other still would be elevated to
great honor. Moreover, our child would follow us onto the throne.
That is an honor not lightly forgone.”
Elise nodded. Until this moment, she had not considered further
than her own ascension in the unlikelihood that her father succeeded
King Tedric. Now she realized that more was at stake here than the
prestige and power of a single lifetime.
As a royal ancestor, great honors would be paid to her even after
her death. On the Festival of the Eagle, her image would be paraded
with those of Queen Zorana, King Chalmer, and King Tedric. If she was
consort, those honors still would be paid to her, just as they were
to Clive Elkwood (who had died even before his wife had solidified
her kingdom) and to Queen Rose.
Ancestors were always patrons to their descendants, but the people
believed that ancestral monarchs were patrons to all their former
subjects down through time. As such, they received sacrifices from
every family altar, sacrifices that were said to give them
considerable power in the afterworld.
Aware that Jet was watching her, the glittering light in his eyes
brighter than ever, Elise managed to speak:
“That is an interesting point, Jet. I believe that you would
support my monarchy if I were named before you.”
“And would you support my kingship?” he asked, certain
of the reply. “As a scion of House Goshawk, my father outranks
yours. My mother is a Shield of House Gyrfalcon, and so outranks your
Wellward mother. King Tedric may consider this when naming his
heir.”
“Those arguments,” Elise admitted, “have been
raised before—although more usually in your sister’s
favor. Yes, if we were wed and King Tedric named you his heir, I
would support you.”
“And if we were merely engaged?” he pushed.
“Engagements,” she stated firmly, “have been
broken once political goals have been attained—as your sister
Sapphire has demonstrated so ably.”
Jet scowled. “I am not Sapphire!”
“No,” Elise replied easily, “but my parents will
not overlook her history, even if I trust you.” As I am not yet certain that I do, she added
silently.
“I concede your point,” he said gallantly, lightly
kissing her hand.
Gently, she drew her hand back, her fingers still tingling from
the caress.
“I am a minor yet,” she reminded him. “And
cannot contract a marriage for myself. If you are serious about this,
you must approach my parents.”
Jet nodded. “I know. Honestly, Elise, I have not even spoken
with my own parents on this matter. I wished first to know your
heart. When I speak with them, may I say that you would consider my
proposal?”
Elise liked Jet better for wanting her consent first, then
wondered if he was just being cautious. She phrased her answer
carefully.
“Yes, you may tell them that I would consider it. I
cannot answer for my parents.”
Nor, she thought, as they made their farewells and Jet took his
leave, have I said that I would accept—only consider.
Still, she would be lying to herself if she did not admit that an
acute thrill had entered her heart at the prospect of marrying Jet.
At this moment, perhaps, his eyes were on the crown, but she liked
the thought that in time she could turn them to herself alone.
Being queen would be preferable, but a consort could wield as much
influence, especially if she held the heart of the monarch in her
hand and bore his heirs within her womb. Humming to herself, Elise
left the summerhouse and hurried toward the house, suddenly impatient
for her parents’ return.
Once the necessary luggage, including Firekeeper’s falcon, was
transported to the castle, Derian was given the rest of the day off.
He suspected this was so Earl Kestrel could have a chance to work on
Firekeeper by himself. Where once that would have troubled Derian,
now he accepted it. If Firekeeper could only manage when he was there
to defend her, then she was ill equipped to survive in this new world
she had entered.
He wondered how much of her own practical view had influenced his
thoughts on the matter, and then shrugged. Being free of the castle
and of courtly constraints felt good. He had refused the earl’s
polite offer of a mount—horses were more trouble than they were
worth within the city walls—and hurried down the cobbled
streets on foot.
His parents’ livery stables were conveniently situated
outside the city walls, but their home was near Market Square. Today
the market was in full swing and he grinned at himself for forgetting
that, even as he enjoyed threading through the throng. A few
moon-spans before he would have gone out of his way to avoid the
crowds, but after his sojourn among the nobility he was glad to be
back among the common people.
He immersed himself in the hubbub: the cries of the vendors
praising their wares, the scolding of a mother when her child
strayed, the pinging of the tinkers’ hammers, the heated
bartering on all sides. It moved him like music and he danced to it,
his steps graceful and his heart light.
At one stall he bought a roll smeared with strawberry jam, at
another sweets for his brother and sister, at another a basket of
blackberries for his mother. He grinned when a farmer, known to him
for years, raised his eyebrows as he noticed the Kestrel crest
stamped on the reverse of the token offered in payment.
Derian himself had been fairly awed the first time he’d been
given one of those—up until then his pocket money had been the
more common guild tokens. Now he took the Kestrel tokens for granted.
After all, he was now a retainer of House Kestrel and entitled to use
their credit.
Whistling, his basket of berries on his arm, Derian strode down
the street toward the large brick house with the cut-slate roof that
had been in the Carter family for generations and which, in time,
would pass to him. The front door, used only for formal occasions,
was closed even on this hot afternoon, but the side door which led
into the office was open. He paused in the street, heard his
mother’s voice rising and falling in the polite but firm tones
she used for business, and passed around to the kitchen door.
His eight-year-old brother, Brock, light brown hair bleached from
the summer sun, was teasing their sister Damita, who was sitting on
the back steps, shelling sweet peas.
“Damita has a sweet-a,” the boy sang, dancing from
foot to foot, “wants to meet ‘im, at the square, but here
she sits, shellin’ peas. Now do you think that’s
fair?”
Damita, at thirteen, was as red-haired as Derian, but whereas his
own hair was darkening to a subdued auburn, her curls were coppery
bright. When Derian had departed with Earl Kestrel, she had been a
flat-chested, rambunctious imp, but in these three moon-spans she
seemed to have suddenly changed. She looked more a young woman with
her hair twisted on top of her head and the definite beginnings of a
woman’s bosom filling out her summer dress.
Derian paused, his hand on the latch of the white-painted board
gate, feeling uncomfortably the stranger. The sensation was not
relieved when Damita glanced over and, seeing him, said in polite,
bored tones meant to cover her embarrassment at being found barefoot
and doing kitchen work:
“May I help you, sir? Business enquiries should be made at
the side…”
She stopped in midphrase, then erupted to her feet, pea shells
flying everywhere. Nearly spilling the stoneware bowl on the step
next to her, she darted down the flagstone walk, familiar again.
“Deri! Deri! You’re back.”
Derian didn’t remember opening the gate, but somehow he was
inside, hugging her to him. Brock threw one arm around his older
brother’s waist and hammered on his shoulders, crowing
happily.
The initial chaos past, they settled on the steps. Damita
automatically began shelling peas again, but her mind wasn’t on
the job and several times Derian rescued a pod from amid the shucked
vegetables.
“I hardly knew you,” Damita repeated, “you look
so fine.”
Of course the leather breaches and heavy woolen shirts he had worn
on the journey west wouldn’t have done once the expeditionary
party was settled at the keep and later at the Kestrel Manse. Earl
Kestrel (or Valet, Derian suspected) had sent a new wardrobe along,
some of the items not too different from the clothes Derian had worn
in his parents’ service, some so elegant that they would be out
of place anywhere but in court.
For his visit home, conscious that he was representing his new
employer, Derian had donned knee-breeches and waistcoat, both of good
cotton dyed walnut brown. These were worn over a bleached linen
shirt, fine-knit socks, and matching brass-buckled shoes. A striking
tricorn hat of dark brown felt topped the assembly.
Damita ran a critical hand over the fabric of his waistcoat and
nodded approvingly. “You look like a young gentleman, Deri.
That’s what I thought you were, standing there at the gate. I
thought you’d come about hiring a horse or carriage.”
“And you look like a young lady,” Derian replied,
happy to banish that initial strangeness by voicing it.
“You’re wearing your hair up now.”
“Mother bought me some barrettes for my birthday,”
Damita answered, ducking her head so that he could admire the carved
doe running through her copper locks, “and said that I could
wear my hair up for occasions. I thought I was going to the market
with Cook…”
She paused to glare at Brock, and Derian, remembering the scene he
had interrupted, wisely kept silent.
“But Mother said these peas had to be shelled.”
Derian, who knew his mother’s disciplinary tactics perfectly
well, having been on the receiving end of them many times, filled in
the picture. Damita had undoubtedly sassed Mother and, as a penalty,
had not only been told she could not go to market, but that she must
shell the vegetables.
He took a handful of peas from the basket resting between his
sister’s feet.
“Well, let me give a hand. C’mon, Brock, something
wrong with you?”
Brock protested, “It’s her job, not mine! I did my
jobs: fed the chickens, weeded the kitchen garden, ran messages to
the stables…”
Derian interrupted. “True enough, but one thing I learned
when venturing west with the earl is that when there’s a job to
be done, everyone pitches in. Many’s the night I’ve sat
mending shirts by firelight so that we could hit the trail with the
dawn.”
Brock, hearing the promise of a story, dropped onto the step on
Derian’s other side and dipped his hand into the basket of
peas.
“Tell us all about it,” he commanded.
Vernita Carter found them all there about an hour later.
“Damita,” she said, her footsteps light as she crossed
the stones of the kitchen floor, “the peas look wonderful and
the carrots, too. Since you’ve finished the potatoes, I suppose
you can go to the market for…”
She stopped, a sudden smile lighting her face. In her day, Vernita
Carter had been regarded a great beauty. Even bearing several
children and long days managing the family business had not robbed
her of a certain grace and dignity.
“Derian,” she said softly, “why didn’t you
let me know you were home?”
“You had a client, ma’am,” he said, rising and
giving her his best bow before impulsively hugging her. When had she
grown so small? “And I was always told that nothing short of an
emergency should interrupt that.”
“I think,” Vernita replied, drawing back to look him
over proudly, “that the return home of my eldest son would
qualify. Damita, has Cook come back?”
“No, Mother,” Damita said. “If you wish, I could
run and find her.”
“Do. Tell her we will have an extra mouth for dinner.”
Vernita gave her son an anxious glance. “You can stay,
can’t you, Deri?”
“For dinner, Mother, but I must return by
bedtime.”
Vernita looked temporarily disappointed, but nodded. “Go
then, Damita. Take a few spare tokens and buy us all something
special for dessert.”
“Deri brought blackberries,” Brock informed her,
bringing the willow basket from the cool room to display the prize,
“and candy.”
“Then buy something that will go well with them, Dami. I
trust your judgment.” Vernita turned to her younger son.
“Brock, run to the stables and tell your father Derian is here
and that he’s to come home early for dinner.”
“Yes, Mother.”
Like a little tawny whirlwind, the boy was gone. Vernita
smiled.
“Let me shut the office door and put the sign out referring
emergency business to the stables. Then we can have tea and you can
tell me everything that has happened since you’ve been
gone.”
“Three moon-spans in a few hours,” Derian protested
with a grin. “Didn’t you read my letters?”
“I did,” she said, pulling a grubby bundle from a
drawer to show him. “We all did. Now you can tell us everything
you didn’t write.”
Derian, thinking how Earl Kestrel had sworn them all to secrecy
regarding Firekeeper, nodded.
“There’s more there than you might think,” he
said.
Vernita grinned, a grin to match his own. “Oh, I don’t
know. We hear things, those of us in trade. And the rumors have been
flying thick and fast today.”
Derian grinned back and began, “Our expedition did succeed,
but only in a way…”
Leaving out nothing, for Norvin Norwood’s version of the
tale must already be leaking from the castle into the city, Derian
told of his adventures, repeating a bit when his father and siblings
returned, and talking steadily through dinner.
When he ended, there was silence. Then Vernita said softly, so
softly that Derian wondered if he was meant to hear:
“Poor child…”
At first he thought she meant Firekeeper; then, catching her gaze,
he had the uncomfortable feeling that she was thinking of him.
Later that evening, Derian walked toward the outer gates of the
king’s castle with his father. Colby Carter was a thick,
broad-shouldered man with a deep inner stillness that came from
understanding and working with draft horses and oxen. Brock took
after him, while Derian and Damita more resembled their mother.
“I never thought I’d see a son of mine living
here,” Colby admitted, “except maybe as a
groom.”
“I’m hardly more, Father,” Derian reminded,
“but tending to a wolf-woman and her beasts instead of to
horses.”
“Maybe so,” Colby said. He thrust out a muscular,
callused hand. “Don’t stay away more than you
must.”
“I won’t,” Derian promised, wishing suddenly
that he could remain longer with his family. “But my duty is
yet to Earl Kestrel.”
“I know, son.” Colby started to turn away, then swung
back. “Will your master be expecting you yet?”
“I have some time before I will be quite overdue,”
Derian replied, puzzled.
“There are matters,” Colby continued heavily,
“that I had thought to raise with you, but I preferred not to
in front of the younger children. Damita is at a flighty age, quick
to become moody. Better not give her more to brood upon than the
imagined wrongs a girl her age is prone to. Brock is a good boy, but
too inclined to chatter.”
“And Mother?”
“Knows all that concerns me in this matter,” Colby
assured his son. “Even that I hoped to speak with you tonight.
She won’t be worrying if I don’t come home at
once.”
Derian looked down the road back toward the town. “We walked
by several alehouses on our way.”
“Just what I was thinking,” Colby agreed.
A few minutes later found them seated in an out-of-the-way corner
in a tavern still busy with the later elements of the market day
trade, mostly visitors from out of town who had hawked their wares
until dusk and would head for home with dawn. After the potboy had
set two mugs of new summer ale in front of them and hurried off,
Colby cleared his throat.
“Kings and earls,” he said, “are not the only
ones interested in this matter of succession. Honest guild members
have their concerns as well, as do factions outside our own
kingdom.”
Derian nodded, having considered some of this himself but,
frankly, having been too close to the concerns of his own earl to
think much beyond that immediate focus.
“Yes, Father. There’s much talk about a candidate for
the throne born outside of our kingdom entirely—one Allister
Seagleam of Bright Bay. I think, though, you have more than him in
mind.”
Colby sipped his ale. “True, but let us start with this
Allister Seagleam. There are many among the guilds who favor his
candidacy above all others.”
“Above our native born?” Derian asked, amazed.
“Not so long ago, a bare hundred years,” Colby
reminded him, “we were one land, the remnants of the colony of
Gildcrest. Before the Civil War, we were that colony itself. A
hundred years is a long time, true, but not so much that one man
cannot easily comprehend it.
“There are those,” the older man continued, “who
tire of the constant war between Hawk Haven and Bright Bay, those who
remember that King Chalmer meant Princess Caryl’s marriage to a
prince of our rival power to be a pledge for lasting peace among
us.”
“That peace didn’t last much beyond this
Mister’s birth,” Derian reminded his father sourly.
“I’m not denying that,” Colby said, “but
still, that is the reason for which Allister was born. Many say that
since King Tedric’s line cannot continue directly, this pledge
child should be permitted his destiny. Some go so far as to say that
this is why all three of King Tedric’s own begetting have died
before their father—to clear the way for our great
ancestor’s vision to come true.”
Derian stared at him. “Do you believe this,
Father?”
Colby shrugged. “I don’t know what to believe. There
is sense in that way of seeing things, though, sense that many common
folk understand. It doesn’t hurt that Duke Allister is the son
of the woman who would have been next in line for the throne if she
had remained in Hawk Haven. Nor was she ever disinherited, as Prince
Barden was. Therefore, her family’s claims are
strong.”
“And if a member of Bright Bay’s royal house took the
throne of Hawk Haven,” Derian said slowly, “there might
be an end to war between our lands.”
“Should be,” Colby agreed, “for there is no
indication that Allister Seagleam is unfavored in his own land. They
title him duke there and have given him lands like those of a scion
of a Great House. Peace would be good for most of the trades. Farmers
could live without the fear that their fields may be trampled or
plundered by roaming soldiers. The guilds could enforce their
standards more effectively. Even such as myself would gain great
opportunities from seeing travel open up. Only those few who have
made their livings in war would be unhappy, and even if Bright Bay
and Hawk Haven were at peace there would not be an end to
watchfulness.”
Derian frowned. “On other borders, you mean.”
“That’s right. Up until now, those countries that
share borders with ourselves and Bright Bay have been content to let
us weaken ourselves by fighting each other. If we were
reunited—as one kingdom or as allies through related
monarchs—they would be less easy.”
“During past conflicts,” Derian said, remembering
things Ox had told him, “Waterland has sent advisors and
marines to supplement our own forces. This is not widely known, but a
friend of mine who has served in the military told me about them. The
reason given for their presence was training—that Waterland
prefers to have some blooded troops among their companies.”
“I had heard something of the sort,” Colby agreed,
“working as I do among traveling folk, tending their animals
and gear. Did you know that Stonehold has made a similar agreement
with Bright Bay? Ostensibly their reasoning is much the same as that
given by Waterland, but I’ll tell you, rulers don’t worry
so much about having blooded troops unless they anticipate a need to
use them. Whether Bright Bay and Hawk Haven are reunited by conquest
or by peaceful means, our neighbors see us as a possible
threat.”
“Then is reuniting so wise?” Derian countered.
“The only alternative,” Colby replied soberly,
“is continuing the cycle of war into uneasy peace and into war
again. So it has been all my life and all my father’s life. Two
of my siblings died from this fighting, both in battles so small that
I doubt any but those who won glory in them even remember them, but
my brothers died just the same. I begrudge the loss of a son to such
circumstances—I even begrudge the death of a horse or ox if
there is an alternative.”
Mention of the ox made Derian uncomfortably aware of his own Ox,
who could have died quite easily despite all his great strength if
one of the arrows that had scarred his broad hide had been luckier in
finding its target.
“We need a strong monarch,” Derian said thoughtfully,
“whether this Duke Allister or not. One who can lead us well in
war and guide us in peace. Is there anyone among our noble families
fit for that task?”
“Not your wolf-girl?” Colby said teasingly.
“You’ve spoken warmly enough of her courage.”
“Courage and to spare,” Derian agreed, “but not
necessarily wisdom, though that could be gained. But can she unite
these jealous nobles behind her, even with King Tedric’s
support?”
“I don’t know,” Colby said honestly. “All
I can do is listen in the market, listen to my clients, listen to the
travelers who cross the borders. Now that we are somewhat at peace
with Bright Bay—more, I think, because they hope to win our
kingdom through inheritance than because hostilities are
ended—there are those who travel between the kingdoms once
more.”
“Merchants, entertainers,” Derian said, thinking back
to those he had met when working in his father’s business,
“tinkers, and simply the footloose—and any one of them
might be a spy.”
“True,” Colby said, “but I watch my tongue.
I’m but a simple livery stable owner, concerned with my horses
and wagons. My wife’s the brains of the
operation—everyone knows that.”
They laughed together at the old joke. Colby was often
underestimated, Vernita never. The arrangement suited them both
nicely.
“I’ll keep your words in mind, Father,” Derian
said soberly. “And you take care. Some may learn you have a son
in Kestrel service and think you more clever than you would
wish.”
“I will,” Colby promised, “and you also take
care. There will be those who will resent the kennel keeper of a
new-minted noblewoman, especially one who looks suspiciously like
she’s becoming a princess.”
Derian nodded. Without further comment, they finished their ales,
settled their score with the tavern keeper, and headed up the hill
toward the castle. A few steps away from the gate, Colby gave Derian
a bone-crushing hug.
“Come see us again soon, son. Bring your work with you if
you’d like. Just don’t be a stranger.”
“I won’t,” Derian repeated, his heart lighter
than before, though these new twists to the already complex political
picture made his head swim.
He turned to watch his father walk down the lamplit streets into
the city, then knocked on the iron-bound door. The porter opened it
so quickly that Derian knew he’d been watching through his
peephole.
“Good visit with the folks at home?”
“Good enough,” Derian said. “Wish I could have
stayed longer.”
“I’m glad to have you back,” the porter said
with anxious eagerness. “You’re Lady Blysse
Norwood’s man, aren’t you?”
“I am,” Derian agreed, wondering. He hadn’t
thought any of the servants knew him as yet.
“Is it true she keeps an enormous wolf as a pet?”
“She has a wolf with her, yes,” Derian answered,
careful even in Firekeeper’s absence not to refer to Blind Seer
as a pet.
“And a falcon the size of an eagle, big enough to carry off
a small child or a lamb?”
“She has a peregrine falcon of good size,” Derian
answered, amused.
“Then I’m glad you’re back,” the porter
repeated. “Good to know there’s someone managing them
all.”
Derian hid a grin, pleased enough with this sudden rise in status,
but unwilling to let the man think he was mocking him.
“I’ll just hurry up then and make certain
they’re all settled for bed,” Derian said politely.
“Good.” With a heavy thud of iron-bound oak, the
porter swung the door shut after Derian. “First time I ever
heard of locking the door to keep the wolf in,” he
muttered.
Running up the wide, smooth stone stairs into the tower, Derian
grinned.
X
When Elise heard footsteps coming up the garden path
behind her, her heart leapt in her breast. Irrationally, stupidly,
with an eagerness she felt was unworthy of the dignity of her
seventeen years, she hoped it would be Jet. She hadn’t seen him
since he made his proposal two days before and the suspense had been
unbearable. Although her initial impulse had been to blurt out
everything to her mother, the few hours’ delay while waiting
for Lady Aurella to return from the castle had shown Elise this would
be unwise.
Aurella Wellward was a good mother. Since Elise was an only child,
Aurella had spent much time with her rather than delegating the more
routine matters of her daughter’s upbringing to a nursemaid as
was more typical in noble houses. Mother and daughter had their
disagreements, their times of estrangement, but lately they had been
quite close. Still, Aurella was too much a lady of the royal court to
not first think of the political maneuvering in Jet’s proposal
rather than the romantic possibilities.
And Elise so very much wanted to dwell on those romantic
possibilities. This was her first marriage proposal (and maybe her
only) and Jet was very handsome. She wanted to dream of moonlight
rides, of holding hands, of whispered confidences. That was why, even
though the sound of two pairs of feet scampering up the graveled path
could never be the measured tread of one set of masculine boots
firmly striding, her heart leapt and she turned with careful grace to
meet…
Citrine Shield and Kenre Trueheart ran up, hands clasped, faces
flushed. For a moment, Elise preserved the hope that Citrine bore a
message from her older brother, but the girl’s words dispelled
even that fleeting fantasy.
“Cousin Elise!” she said. “Good morning! Your
maid Ninette told us you had come to the castle early.”
“You’re staying here, aren’t you?” Elise
said, bending to hug each of the children. An only child herself, she
had always doted on her younger cousins, viewing them as substitutes
for the siblings she herself lacked. The little ones returned her
affection openly, so openly that Sapphire had been known to comment
cattily that Elise wouldn’t like the brats nearly so much if
she had to spend more time with them.
“We are,” Citrine said, “though Jet’s gone
riding with Father. Mother and Sapphire are attending upon the
queen.” Poor Mother, Elise thought. Lady Melina would be
enough to set me off my breakfast.
Innocent in her romantic ideals, she didn’t reflect that if
she married Jet she would see Melina Shield far more often than at
the occasional breakfast.
Kenre cut in, “My family’s staying here too, but
Purcel’s out with his troops. I think he’s
bored.”
Elise nodded. “Are you bored too? Is that why you’re
out and about so early?”
“No,” Kenre said, “we’re not bored.
We’ve been visiting with the wolf-woman. She likes
us.”
“Wolf-woman?” Elise asked, but even as the question
was shaped she realized who Kenre must mean. Everyone had heard of
the great grey wolf who followed Lady Blysse wherever she
went—to the discomfort of every resident of the castle other
than King Tedric. “That isn’t a polite way to refer to
Lady Blysse.”
“She likes it,” Citrine said. “She likes it
better than Blysse. The second day we played with her she told us to
call her Firekeeper. She said that’s her real name, the name
the wolves gave her when she was small.”
“Want to come meet her?” Kenre asked before Elise
could voice any of the dozen questions that Citrine’s speech
had raised. “We thought you might when we saw Ninette in the
corridor. Firekeeper’s in the castle meadows.”
“How do you know?” Elise asked. “Did you make
plans to meet her there?”
“Not really,” Citrine said. Grabbing Elise’s
hand, she pointed up into the sky. “See the bird, way up there?
That’s Firekeeper’s peregrine falcon, Elation. They go
out into the meadows in the morning before Earl Kestrel needs
Firekeeper so that she can get some air and so Blind Seer can
run.”
Allowing herself to be towed along—after all, if Jet was out
riding with Rolfston Redbriar he wasn’t likely to come looking
for her loitering among the roses—Elise asked:
“Blind Seer?”
“That’s the wolf,” Kenre said. “Firekeeper
calls him her brother. She gets really mad if you call him her pet.
Derian said…”
“Derian? Who is that? Her horse?”
Citrine giggled. “Derian is her manservant. He’s from
the town. He was at the banquet: a tall man with red hair.”
Elise remembered this Derian now, a handsome enough commoner
standing awkwardly behind Lady Blysse’s chair, his face
flushing dark red every time his charge made a particularly vigorous
social gaffe.
The meadows were outside the castle walls, but Cousin Purcel had
explained to Elise at great length how they were far more defensible
than they might initially appear. It had something to do with the
high cliffs rising behind the fields and the ravines—some
natural, some otherwise— that flanked them. In a pinch, Purcel
had told her with martial enthusiasm, a few trees could be felled,
some pasturage burned to create a kill zone, and the woods and
meadows would be almost as secure as the castle itself. This was one
of the reasons that the Eagle’s Nest was nearly impossible to
take by siege. As long as the woods and water were accessible, the
besieged could hold out indefinitely.
Every child knew how Queen Zorana had taken the castle by intrigue
rather than by force, establishing herself once and forever as the
dominant figure in the civil conflict.
A few steps outside of the arched doorway in the stone wall, Elise
shook her hands free from the children’s grasp. If she was
going to meet a rival for the throne, she shouldn’t look too
undignified. A moment later, she learned that dignity—at least
in the way she had been taught to define it—wasn’t a
concern for Lady Blysse. When the three cousins entered the meadow,
this youngest heir to the Great House of Norwood was sitting sprawled
in a trampled patch of grass and wild flowers.
She was clad in brown leather breeches cut off just below the knee
and a battered leather vest loosely buttoned over small breasts. One
tanned arm was flung about the neck of an enormous grey wolf with
startling blue eyes. Lady Blysse’s face was bright with
unguarded curiosity, but she showed no surprise, as if she had been
given warning of their coming.
When Citrine and Kenre ran up to her, Blysse jumped to her feet,
giving each child a rough but affectionate embrace. Then she looked
toward Elise, her expression less open.
“Who that?” she asked.
“This is our best cousin,” Citrine said, inadvertently
warming Elise’s heart, “Lady Elise Archer, heir to the
House of Archer. Her father is Kenre’s mother’s
brother.”
“Best is good,” Blysse replied. Turning to Elise, she
offered her an awkward bow after the masculine fashion.
Initially shocked, Elise immediately realized that a curtsy
performed in trousers would look quite silly. Indeed, with her dark
hair drawn back in a short queue, man-fashion, her bare feet, and her
small, neat figure, Blysse looked more like a delicately featured lad
than a girl of fifteen.
Elise returned the greeting with a curtsy, only then acknowledging
the red-haired man who had scrambled to his feet at her entry. Derian
Carter, she thought, had potential to be quite handsome when he grew
into perfect comfort with his young man’s body. He was
attractive even now with his clear hazel-green eyes and fair skin;
his hair was auburn rather than carroty.
Derian’s bearing was respectful without being groveling, so
that Elise found herself returning his bow as she would to an equal
rather than to a servant. Somehow, she realized when she turned her
attention to Lady Blysse, this had done her no harm in the
newcomer’s opinion.
“Firekeeper,” Citrine was saying happily, “did
you catch anything this morning?”
“Rabbits” was the solemn response, “three, but
Blind Seer ate them all. He likes his meat blood-warm, but still eats
what Ox brings him. I tell him he get too big.”
“Fat,” Citrine said bossily. Elise caught her breath
at this rudeness, but something in Blysse’s bearing told her
that language lessons must have been a regular part of these
meetings.
“Fat,” Lady Blysse repeated, then tilted her head to
one side. “Why fat? Derian say fat is white part of
meat.”
Derian spoke for the first time. Elise was delighted to hear that
his voice was a pleasant, measured baritone with only a trace of a
lower-class accent.
“Fat in meat makes big,” he explained, frowning
slightly as he tried to keep his words simple. His eyes twinkled as
he added, “If we cut Blind Seer open, his meat would have much
white.”
Lady Blysse laughed at this, punching the wolf hard on one
shoulder as if the animal had understood the joke. From a tree branch
overhead, the peregrine falcon shrieked.
Feeling a bit left out, Elise essayed, “Does Earl Kestrel
know you come out here to hunt?”
“He know,” Blysse responded. “Not like when
first.”
Derian clarified, “Earl Kestrel was not delighted the first
time his ward came out here without his express permission. I had
been permitted to visit my parents in town, so Firekeeper was on her
own. However, he has had to acknowledge that you can’t keep a
wolf walled up without the furniture taking considerable
damage.”
“Couldn’t the wolf,” Elise hazarded what many
had stated openly, “be put in the kennels?”
Derian laughed. “The dogs would go mad. Our scout had a bird
dog with him on our journey west through the gap. I don’t think
poor Queenie stopped cringing for a moment—and that was even
before Blind Seer started traveling in our company. In any case, I
don’t think you could get him to leave Firekeeper.”
“Or Firekeeper him,” Lady Blysse said calmly.
“Oh.”
Elise was temporarily at a loss, but fortunately keeping the
conversation going was not up to her.
“Firekeeper has an idea,” Citrine chattered.
“She wants to meet the rest of the family, but she
doesn’t like banquets.”
“Who does?” Elise said with a pose of adult
boredom.
Actually, she still found banquets fascinating, especially those
attended by embassies from the neighboring kingdoms of New Kelvin and
Waterland. The foreigners with their odd mannerisms and turns of
phrase— for their initial colonies had not been from the same
Old Country as Gildcrest—were infinitely interesting. A career
in the diplomatic service was impossible for her, since she was
destined to become the Baroness Archer and be responsible for the
family estates, but back before she realized no little brother or
sister was likely to follow and share the job, this had been her
favorite dream.
“Wolves fight each other for their food,” Kenre added.
“So Firekeeper thinks eating and talking at the same time is
silly.”
“She has a point,” Elise laughed. “What is her
idea?”
“Hunting with birds,” Lady Blysse said, her tone
slightly miffed. I wonder. Elise thought. Since we keep talking about
her as if she’s an idiot. Uncivilized she may be, but
she’s no idiot.
“Falconry,” Derian said in a tone Elise immediately
recognized as that of a teacher reminding a student. Fleetingly she
wondered how he came into the job.
“Falconry,” Lady Blysse repeated. “Hawking. We
go. Me, some of nobles, on horses or walking. Hunt. Talk.”
Elise turned to her. “That’s a good idea, actually.
Most of the nobility of Hawk Haven are fascinated with falconry. I
think it comes from the names King Chalmer gave the Great Houses to
keep them from fussing when he married a commoner. Anyhow, it is
easier to get to know people when you’re not sitting around a
table or trapped in a parlor.”
“Parlor?”
“A room for sitting,” Elise laughed.
“So many rooms,” Blysse mused. “Wolves have dens
for pups. Nothing else. In winter, I use den for fire.”
Elise puzzled this out then nodded. “You would need shelter,
wouldn’t you?”
“No fur.” Blysse shrugged. “Cold.”
“But you had fire?”
Kenre interrupted. “That’s why her name is Firekeeper.
She could make fire, but none of the wolves could. They respected
that.”
Elise glanced at Derian. “Did she really live with
wolves?”
The redhead grinned. “She says so. Doc—excuse
me—Sir Jared Surcliffe, Earl Kestrel’s cousin, said that
there’s evidence of it. Firekeeper, show Lady Elise your
scars.”
“All?” Blysse bared her teeth in a brief smile.
“If so, then Derian get red.”
She thrust out one arm for Elise’s inspection. Beneath the
fine hairs, her skin was silvered with numerous tiny scars. A few
larger ones testified to considerable injuries recovered from in the
past.
“Little bites,” Blysse dismissed them, dropping her
arm. “Also cuts. No fur. Only,” she poked at the material
of her vest, “bad leather.”
“Badly tanned leather,” Derian clarified
automatically. “Somehow Firekeeper figured out the basics, but
while she could keep the leather from going completely stiff, the
stuff wasn’t good for much.”
Citrine and Kenre had dropped to the grass and were sitting in
identical attitudes, arms wrapped around knees, their expressions
glowing with interest and proprietary pride. Doubtless they saw the
newcomer as their special discovery.
Elise shook out her shawl, spread it on the grass to protect her
walking dress from stains, and joined them. Only once she was seated
did Lady Blysse and Derian resume their seats on the ground.
“Now,” Elise said to the general company, “tell
me what Lady Blysse has in mind.”
“I have falcon,” Blysse replied carefully, pointing to
the magnificent blue-grey peregrine.
“So I see,” Elise agreed. “A peregrine, the
emblem of the Wellward house—my mother’s
house.”
“Emblem?”
“Symbol,” Citrine said quickly. “It means the
same thing, Firekeeper.”
Lady Blysse gave a gusty sigh and Elise couldn’t blame her.
From her own foreign-language lessons, those words that seemed to
mean the same idling were the most annoying—especially when you
later discovered the subtleties of difference.
“You fly peregrine?” Lady Blysse asked her.
“No,” Elise replied ruefully, “though my mother
would be pleased if I did. I really don’t fly anything these
days. Our falconer keeps a little merlin for me. It’s more his
bird than mine. I don’t fool myself.”
Derian eased into the flow of her speech so smoothly that he
didn’t seem to be interrupting.
“Mistress Citrine was telling Firekeeper about how people
here fly their hawks. It gave Lady Blysse the idea of having her
falcon, Elation, demonstrate her skill.”
Elise nodded. “That’s a good idea. A few other birds
could be flown in their own turn—not too many or they would get
upset.”
She was out of her depth here and knew it. Falconry—with its
bloody successes, the feeding the bird a bit of flesh or warm brains
from the kill—had been something she had participated in only
reluctantly. To avoid having to reveal her ignorance she turned to
her young cousin.
“Citrine, who do you think would choose to go along if Lady
Blysse offered to fly her hawk for them?”
“Everyone, I think,” Citrine said, momentarily more
cynical than an eight-year-old should be. “Even those who
don’t like blood sport would want to go to get a look at Lady
Blysse.”
“Good point,” Elise said, thinking that if a hawking
party was arranged she would definitely see Jet again. She was
certain he practiced the art. Perhaps he would fly his own bird,
though more likely Sapphire would insist on the honor of representing
their family.
“Maybe Opal and Ruby would stay home,” Citrine added
after reflection. “They don’t like getting dirty and even
Mother doesn’t see us little girls having a chance at the
throne. What about your sisters, Kenre?”
“Dia and Deste might want to stay home,” Kenre said
honestly, “but Mama wouldn’t let them. She has no
patience with weak stomachs.”
He looked a little forlorn as he said this, having recently
graduated to an age where his mother no longer accepted weakness even
in her baby boy. Lady Blysse nodded agreement with Zorana’s
policy.
“Weak die,” she said. “Strong live.”
Looking at Blysse, so confident in her own strength as she
sprawled in the grass, an arm flung once more about her wolf, Elise
wondered how her relatives would perceive the stranger when they came
to know her better. Not all of them, she thought ruefully, would be
as fascinated as Citrine and Kenre. Most of them, in fact, would see
her as a threat. the hawking expedition, when it set out a few days
later, was somewhat smaller than Elise and Citrine had dreaded. Of
the five children of Lord Rolfston and Lady Melina, the two middle
girls, Ruby and Opal, were permitted to remain home. This might have
encouraged Zorana to make similar allowances, for neither Deste nor
Nydia were forced to attend.
Accompanied by Earl Kestrel, the host of this expedition, King
Tedric rode near the front of the party, deep in discussion with his
personal falconer about the condition of his magnificent golden
eagle, a bird known to be temperamental. Tedric’s absorption in
this matter—or apparent absorption—effectively prohibited
any member of the party from thrusting him or herself into his
company.
Derian wondered cynically if this wasn’t exactly what the
old king had intended. Certainly Sapphire Shield—a stunning
young woman who, with her flashing eyes and tendency to flare her
nostrils, reminded him uncomfortably of the first horse ever to throw
him—would like to remind her great-uncle of her presence. Her
brother Jet, however, hardly seemed to notice the king. His attention
was wholly on Lady Elise.
Elise looked even prettier than she had at their earlier meetings,
Derian thought ruefully, her fair skin flushed pale rose and her
golden hair glinting brighter than the light mesh net she had tucked
around it. Her laughter reminded him of silver bells or the ringing
of crystal goblets. It also reminded him that she didn’t even
know he existed.
Firekeeper was riding off to one flank on the same patient, if
boring, grey gelding who had carried her from West Keep. Much to
Derian’s surprise, she had agreed to leave Blind Seer in the
castle—on the condition that the wolf was not locked in. She
hadn’t liked leaving him, but she had to admit that the wolf
still upset any horse but grey Patience, Roanne, and Race’s
Dusty. Since the hawking party had been her idea, Firekeeper would
compromise to make it work.
That compromise hadn’t extended to her agreeing to wear the
riding frock Earl Kestrel had suggested, but she wasn’t alone
in finding skirts awkward for riding. Sapphire and Citrine both wore
women-tailored breeches and pretty white blouses, similar to the
outfit that Valet had mysteriously managed to procure for Firekeeper.
Those worn by the Shield sisters were far more elaborate, embroidered
with flowers and birds, perhaps the result of winter labor by the
fireside.
Lady Elise had chosen a light gown similar, to Derian’s
masculine assessment, to the ones she had worn before but somehow
subtly more attractive, a thing of pale lavender, laced tightly at
the breast. Fleetingly, Derian wondered how well Elise’s
legs—long, he imagined—and rounded hips might shape up in
riding breeches and decided that she would probably look
stunning.
The older women in the party—Aurella Wellward, Zorana
Archer, and Melina Shield—also wore gowns and rode sidesaddle.
All but Zorana seemed to be treating this as a general outing. Zorana
alone followed the preparation of the birds, pausing in her
conversation with a weather-beaten man who—for all his
undeniable handsomeness—somehow reminded Derian of a rat.
From one of the grooms, he had learned that this was Prince Newell
Shield, the widower of Princess Lovella, just returned from a voyage
on Wings, the flagship of the Hawk Haven Navy. Although Newell should
have reverted to his Shield family title on the death of his wife,
King Tedric had deemed it a courtesy to permit his son-in-law to
retain the title he had assumed when Lovella had become crown
princess.
A tough man, slightly older than his sister Melina, Newell had
been an ideal match for the ambitious warrior princess. Although the
couple had been childless, rumor said that this had not been for any
lack of shared passion, rather because Lovella did not wish to risk
the illnesses suffered by her mother during pregnancy until her deeds
were as legend.
Although no stories of sorcerous practice were told about Newell
as were told about his sister, still, finding the prince gazing at
him with curious intensity, Derian felt a cool chill slide down his
spine. Newell’s pale gaze was fixed yet somehow absent, and
Derian found himself booting Roanne in the ribs to remove himself
from the direct line of that stare.
Firekeeper rode over to join him, flushed with barely restrained
excitement. The falcon Elation sat—unhooded, unjessed,
unrestrained in any way—on a perch rigged to the back of the
grey’s saddle. Only her occasional sardonic squawk as she
surveyed her avian competition confirmed that a living bird was
perched there, not a product of the taxidermist’s art.
“Elation say,” Firekeeper commented as soon as they
were close, “that men ahead with birds in cages.”
“That’s for the hunt,” Derian said. “Earl
Kestrel made the arrangements.”
“Hunt? Men?” Firekeeper looked troubled at this, as
well she might. Derian had drummed into her that there were numerous
ramifications— some vague and terrible, some concrete and
demonstrable—for even hurting a human, much less hunting
one.
“No, no,” Derian laughed. “The birds are to be
hunted. This many people on horseback accompanied by attendants and
grooms will scare every real piece of game off for miles.”
“Yes. Too many,” Firekeeper agreed.
“So when we are ready, the gamekeepers will release birds
one at a time and the hawks will go after them.”
Firekeeper nodded, but he could tell that this was yet another bit
of incomprehensible human behavior. Dismissing the mysteries of
hunting already caged birds, Firekeeper quickly focused on the real
reason for this gathering.
“How, Derian, how I talk with these here like I talk with
Citrine and Kenre? How I do?”
He understood her puzzlement, for, unlike the children who had
been eager to make her acquaintance, the elders, especially those who
saw Lady Blysse as competition for the throne, had been studiously
ignoring her. Their excuse, if they were challenged, would certainly
be that a young, newly adopted ward of Earl Kestrel was not of their
usual circle. They would claim that they were not so much ignoring
her as they simply hadn’t thought her worth their regard.
They’d phrase it more politely, out of deference to Earl
Kestrel, but that was what they’d mean.
Derian surveyed the gathering. Elise was too absorbed in the
attentions of her handsome cousin to have any thought for Lady
Blysse. A formal introduction, such as Earl Kestrel could garner,
would be a disaster. Then he noted that one pair of eyes, dark blue
but amazingly clear, kept glancing toward Firekeeper. The expression
in them was challenging, not kind. Still, Sapphire Shield’s
interest in Firekeeper was apparent.
Derian saluted Citrine and the little girl rode over gladly, her
little, round-bodied chestnut pony jigging over the turf with
single-minded enthusiasm. When Citrine had come to greet Firekeeper
at the beginning of the ride, Melina Shield had called her daughter
away on some pretense and had kept her away since.
“M’lady,” Derian said in a respectful tone of
voice he didn’t bother with out in the meadows, “Lady
Blysse would like to make the acquaintance of your elder sister
Sapphire. Could you do us the honor of acting as liaison?”
Citrine giggled, then winked conspiratorially, keeping her back
carefully turned on the adults. “I think I can get her over
here. She’s just itching to try Firekeeper—I mean Lady
Blysse’s—mettle.”
Whatever Citrine said to her sister must have been effective, for
Sapphire rode over immediately. She made quite a picture in her blue
hunting clothes, mounted on a horse whose coat had been dyed a
shocking indigo blue—although the mane and tail had been left a
silvery white. Sapphire rode well, with natural grace and a certain
restlessness. Her every movement was accompanied by the ringing of
miniature hawk bells twined into her hair and fastened to her
sleeves. Dangerous, Derian thought, assessing her critically.
Tough and strong beneath all that hair and glitter. She sees
something of herself in Firekeeper and that scares her.
Introductions were made with punctilious correctness. Derian
dropped back a few steps, near enough to be at hand if need arose,
but effacing himself into servile invisibility. At first he had been
bothered that this was so easy to do—especially before some of
the more self-important nobles—but now he rather treasured the
capacity, for it let him gather knowledge without anyone considering
what he might do with it.
Sapphire dismissed formalities with a swiftness that reminded
Derian of Elation stooping on unsuspecting prey.
“So, Lady Blysse, my sister told me you think you’re a
wolf.”
Firekeeper shook her head sadly. “Am wolf-raised, not wolf
get. Sometimes wish I was wolf.”
“Oh?” Sapphire’s polished sneer didn’t
completely hide her curiosity. “Why would you wish
that?”
“They what I know best,” Firekeeper responded,
“and I cannot do what they do.”
Sapphire dismissed this revelation as of no importance, her
attention shifting to Elation. The peregrine falcon studied her,
impudence in her gold-ringed eyes, then made a strange churling
sound, almost like a laugh.
“Is that a peregrine?”
“Yes.”
“It’s rather large for a peregrine.” Sapphire
sounded miffed. “I fly a gyrfalcon—my
family’s bird. Some are as large as eagles. Are you sure this
isn’t some deviant cross?”
“Is peregrine,” Firekeeper repeated. “Across
mountain, animals get larger sometimes.”
Derian noticed with some relief that Firekeeper did not attempt to
explain to Sapphire her strange theory that there were two types of
animals, the royal and the common. Sapphire would not take kindly to
the thought that anything she possessed was common.
“I’ll buy the peregrine from you,” Sapphire
said. “It’s a magnificent bird.”
“No.” Firekeeper’s response was blunt but her
expression was amused, not offended. “Elation is not to
sell.”
Citrine deflected her sister’s pique with a loud squeak of
excitement. “We must be coming near the targets. Sapphire, I
wonder if your gyrfalcon can outfly Lady Blysse’s
Elation?”
Derian didn’t know whether he wanted to kick or kiss the
little girl. He gave a mental shrug. The competition between the
young women for a much bigger prize existed. Might as well have this
lesser one out in the open as well.
Once Jet arrived, mounted on a fine black gelding with white
stockings and a thin white blaze, Elise hardly noticed falcons,
horses, or gathered people. He hovered by her side from the start of
the ride, attentive as a declared lover. His first words, spoken
almost in a whisper, made her heart beat uncomfortably fast:
“I’ve finally convinced my mother and father. They
will speak with your parents today.”
The rest of their conversation was far more routine. Jet was
interested in what Elise could tell him of Firekeeper and her wolf.
He studied the other woman in a fashion that might have made Elise
jealous if he hadn’t just declared his intention to have his
parents speak with hers about their marriage.
When the time came for the falcons to be loosed, Jet abandoned
Elise to claim his own bird. It was a gyrfalcon, as was to be
expected, its plumage as black as night. Elise played with the fancy
that in the Redbriar-Shield establishment there were servants who had
no other job than running about seeking the best mounts, pets,
jewels, clothing, and other accoutrements to maintain the theme that
Melina Shield had begun with the naming of her brood. In wry
afterthought Elise realized that this must indeed be the case and she
treasured her own relative freedom of choice and action.
The two gyrfalcons, Blysse’s peregrine, and King
Tedric’s eagle were the only birds being flown today.
Initially, Elise had been surprised that Aunt Zorana, normally so
competitive, had not insisted on someone from her family taking part.
The Trueheart bird, however, was the merlin, a small, comparatively
delicate hawk, not known for succeeding with prey the size of the
game being taken today. The Archer family, not being one of the Great
Houses, did not have a bird of its own so Zorana could not choose
that as an alternative.
Purcel and Kenre were both, in attendance, the older brother on
his big, heavily muscled bay, one of his hands unobtrusively holding
the lead rein for Kenre’s sorrel pony. Despite the years
between them and Purcel’s frequent absences, strong affection
remained between the two brothers.
Elise brought her own mount alongside her mother’s when the
first of the pigeons was released.
“Tell me,” she said softly, “if the falcon hits
or not so I can applaud.”
“Squeamish, dear?”
“A little,” Elise admitted.
“The other young people are getting on quite well,”
Aurella said, nothing in her voice giving away her awareness that
something like this must have been the entire reason for the outing.
“They’re over there, arguing about the merits of the
different birds. Even King Tedric has joined them. A shame
you’ve chosen to be one of those who stands by and claps for
the other’s successes.”
“I choose,” Elise said with a slight mysterious smile,
“to fly birds other than falcons.”
Aurella’s smile was all too knowing. “Earl Kestrel
mentioned that his son Edlin is coming up from their lands in ten
days or so. Now that he has reached his majority, young Lord Kestrel
has more responsibilities on the Norwood estates, especially with his
father playing politics in the capital. As I recall, you always did
like Edlin Norwood, didn’t you?”
Elise had fancied Edlin once, actually, but now she couldn’t
see last winter’s flirtation in her new hopes for Jet.
Thankfully, Aurella didn’t press, for the heir to a Great House
was a far finer catch than a second son of a mere lord. Then the
first of the pigeons was freed and no one had attention for anything
but the sky.
With a few strokes of her powerful wings, the peregrine Elation
mounted into the sky, soared until she was little more than a dot
against the blue. The gathered falconers stirred nervously, waiting
for Lady Blysse to signal for the pigeon to be released.
“The bird’ll flee with the wind,” Elise heard
someone mutter. “What’s that fool girl playing
at?”
When the tension was at its highest, Lady Blysse dropped her hand.
The pigeon handlers, concealed in a blind some distance from the
party as a whole, loosed a panicked bird. It surged toward the sky,
wings beating in a desperate race for freedom. Does it know? Elise wondered wildly.
Then there was a streak from above: the peregrine dropped in a
perfect stoop, all the killing force of its descent hitting the
pigeon soundly. The explosion of feathers was like a sudden snowfall.
As with falling snow, there was no sound.
Then, though Blysse waved no lure, made no call, Elation left her
kill, fluttering from the grass to land on Blysse’s
outstretched glove. Her talons showed a slight line of red, a bit of
down. An astonished gamekeeper reported that the falcon had taken not
even a morsel from the pigeon.
Watching from just outside the circle, Elise found herself
thinking that the rapport between bird and woman was almost
supernatural. Apparently she was not the only one to think this.
Murmurs of surprise, respect, and apprehension reached her ears. Even
the horses seemed edgy.
Elation didn’t help matters by turning her head to look at
Blysse out of one gold-rimmed eye, her shrill mewling cries sounding
too conversational for comfort. When woman nodded as if in reply, the
enormous peregrine launched skyward again. Flying beyond where the
fowlers crouched with their cages, Elation circled, orienting on some
prey invisible to those on the ground, then stooped.
When Elation rose again, her wings were beating heavily, laboring
to raise not only herself but a large buck rabbit. With remarkable
ease she carried her heavy burden over to Blysse, dropping it on the
ground at the young woman’s feet before returning to the glove
and beginnings to ostentatiously preen.
Not to be outdone by the Lady Blysse and Elation, Sapphire and Jet
put their heads together, dark curls intertwining like their
whispered words. When brother and sister came out of their conference
they were both grinning a bit wickedly.
“We’ll fly our gyrfalcons together,” Sapphire
announced to the gathering in general, though her eyes were on Blysse
alone.
“Two birds,” Lady Blysse nodded understanding.
“Two pigeons?”
Sapphire agreed, adding airily, “A shame we don’t have
anything larger for them to go after—a heron, perhaps. Ah,
well. Pigeons will have to do.”
Unlike Blysse’s unceremonious flying of Elation, there was
quite a bit of fuss involved in preparing the gyrfalcons: hoods to be
loosened, jesses attended to, the birds themselves to be soothed when
they found themselves at the center of a crowd.
Sapphire’s female was not blue—gyrfalcons were not
feathered in blue and no temperamental raptor would submit to being
dyed. Still, the bird was elegant and unusual—pure white with
searching yellow eyes. Her eagerness to be away was signaled in how
she shifted from foot to foot on her mistress’s glove.
Jet’s black gyrkin was smaller and quieter, but more intense,
its gaze already fixed on the sky as if it knew in advance where the
prey would appear.
Gyrfalcons differed from peregrines in many significant ways. They
were fluffier, seeming bulky, almost fat. Within those thick
feathers, their heads seemed too small. The taloned feet they
concealed beneath long belly feathers had shorter toes. Yet, though
they lacked the peregrine’s sleek elegance, they were
magnificent birds, huge and haughty. Elise had heard that in some
countries gyrfalcons were reserved for kings, a thing she suspected
Sapphire also knew, given the pride with which she bore her bird.
Catching sight of Lady Blysse’s peregrine, the white
gyrfalcon shrieked defiance and rage, echoed a heartbeat behind by
the black gyrkin. Sapphire commented with conversational coolness
that didn’t fool Elise a bit:
“Gyrfalcons have been known to kill other falcons—even
eagles.”
Lady Blysse replied calmly, “They not kill Elation. Fly your
birds.”
At the agreed upon signal, Jet and Sapphire released their birds.
Black and white, like shadow and reflection, they soared upward,
wings beating in fast yet steady strokes until they were above their
prey. They soared for a moment, then plunged.
The pigeons didn’t have a chance. Hating herself for her
squeamish-ness, Elise turned away at the critical moment, hoping that
Jet wouldn’t notice.
On the next round, King Tedric’s eagle refused to fly at the
pigeon, offended perhaps by the indignity of being presented with
captive prey, perhaps by the commotion all around. The monarch was
not at all discomfited. He stroked the eagle’s golden brown
feathers as he re-hooded it and returned it to the fowler.
“Sometimes,” Tedric commented, his gaze almost too
nonspecific, “being king means accepting that sometimes things
will not go your way.”
Elise felt a surge of relief for the soft grey pigeon that had
winged its way to the safety of the nearest wooded copse. That relief
vanished when she heard Sapphire say in a too sweet tone of
voice:
“Lady Blysse, did I hear correctly when you said that you
believed that your peregrine could outfly our gyrfalcons?”
Blysse looked momentarily confused, then she said, her voice taut
and hard: “Yes.”
“Would you be interested in wagering your bird on that
belief?”
This time Blysse must turn to Derian for a translation. It took a
few moments, during which time Elise noticed Earl Kestrel making his
way toward his ward. She was touched by his concern for the girl, but
his words when he spoke were ambiguous.
“Dear Blysse, don’t do anything foolish.”
The look Blysse gave him was far less respectful than those Elise
had seen her turn on Derian and she wondered for the first time if
Blysse particularly liked her guardian.
Blysse’s response was as much to Sapphire as to the
earl.
“Is not foolish if is certain.”
“Then you accept our wager?” Jet cut in.
The wolf-woman bared her teeth in an expression too vicious to be
taken for a smile.
“What is wager if you give me nothing when I win?”
“Win?” Jet barked a hard, harsh laugh. “You
tempt the ancestors, Lady Blysse, assuming success.”
“What I get?” was the only reply.
“What do you want?”
“Your birds fly after my bird,” Blysse said carefully.
“Yes?”
“That’s the basic idea,” Jet sneered.
“If they catch my bird, my bird maybe die, maybe be
hurt.”
“Yes,” Jet’s tone had become impatient.
“What if my bird catch your birds?”
“Impossible!”
“What if?”
“There are two of our gyrfalcons to your one
peregrine!”
Blysse shrugged as if to say “So?”
“Will you, my Lord Jet,” came the calm, neutral voice
of Derian Carter, “be willing to accept the loss of your
gyrfalcons to the Lady Blysse?”
Blysse nodded, indicating that the translator’s words spoke
her intention.
Another voice, dry and passionless, yet somehow full of laughter,
spoke for the first time:
“It only seems fair.”
Heads swiveled to learn who had spoken, but Elise didn’t
need to look to see that Prince Newell, the widower of the Princess
Lovella, was responsible for the comment. When she was very small,
she had learned to know that voice and to fear the malice concealed
behind its seemingly innocent pronouncements.
Sapphire colored and Jet nodded stiffly. Earl Kestrel interceded
then, though the flush on his bearded cheeks made amply clear that he
was less than delighted with the situation.
“Then it is decided,” Earl Kestrel said. “The
gyrfalcons will be released first to give them a moment to gain
height. Then Lady Blysse will release her peregrine.”
He ended his speech with a quick, angry slash of his hand.
Accepting this as the signal, first Jet, then Sapphire released their
gyrfalcons. Lady Blysse permitted them enough time to climb to a
comfortable rise of air where they soared in easy arrogance. Any
bulkiness the gyrfalcons had shown when imprisoned on gloves was
gone.
At a word from her mistress, the peregrine Elation mounted the
air. Sharp, almost knife-edged wings beat rapidly, alerting the
gyrfalcons, which shrieked, infuriated by the intruder’s
arrogance. They circled for position while Elation was still gaining
altitude. Elise felt her heart beating faster, certain that in a
moment the sleek blue-grey peregrine would be nothing but a bloody
burst of feathers.
It’s like us! she thought frantically. Hunting each other,
seeking any advantage!
Where she had been able to turn away before, she could not now
draw her gaze from the sky. The three hawks were well matched in
size, but the gyrfalcons had the advantage. Or did they?
Elise watched in astonishment as Elation launched through the gap
between the black bird and the white, slipping through an opening so
small that the maneuver seemed impossible. Then, wings cutting the
air like knives, Elation rose, stooped, and from the power of that
stoop came down onto the white gyrfalcon.
Stunned, the white gyrfalcon tumbled in the air, falling, rolling,
recovering only inches from the dirt. Even then, all it could manage
was to spread its wings, slowing its fall before coming to land with
an undignified thud.
Her attention diverted by the falling bird, Elise didn’t see
how Elation got the better of the black gyrkin, but afterward she
would hear that the tactics were similar. The gyrkin came to earth
much as its mate had done. It didn’t so much strike the ground
as land with a sulk, its dignity insulted. Glancing at the two Shield
siblings, Elise saw its mood mirrored in their two faces, but where
the falcons were merely offended, Sapphire and Jet were shamed.
“Magnificent!” Prince Newell’s voice broke the
sudden silence. “Lady Blysse, my congratulations!”
Similar compliments followed from the various spectators, but Lady
Blysse had eyes only for her two competitors. Waving to them, she
invited them to inspect their gyrfalcons. Within a few moments, the
verdict was passed that Elation had taken them out with the weight of
her body rather than with her talons. Except for a few bruises and
offended dignity at finding themselves the prey rather than the
predator, both gyrfalcons should be fit for service.
“They’re yours now,” Sapphire said, anger and
embarrassment barely concealed in her polite words. “I hope you
enjoy them.”
“I enjoy them best,” Lady Blysse replied, “if
you keep them. They fine falcons. Maybe we hunt with them again
sometime.”
Jet started to smile, then tensed, fearful that this was some
further mockery. Elise felt her heart ache for his injured pride.
“We wagered them,” Jet said stiffly. “We can pay
our debts.”
“What is mine is mine to give,” Lady Blysse said
reasonably. “Please take.”
“As a favor,” Sapphire said, “to a scion of
House Kestrel, we will do so.”
With this, to Elise’s relief, the expedition was finally
over. The bloody carcasses of the unlucky pigeons were gathered into
sacks and Earl Kestrel bowed deeply to the assembled company. In his
rich, well-schooled bardic turns of phrase he thanked them all for
gracing himself and his ward with their company, praised the falcons
that had provided them with such fine sport, and invited them all to
attend a banquet that evening. The centerpiece would be the game
killed this morning.
The last was a formality, an almost ritual ending to a large
hawking party like this, so much so that Elise had already chosen
what dress and jewels she would wear this evening. She looked around
for Jet, hoping that now that the hunt was ended he would return to
her. Her beloved, however, was deep in conference with Lady Blysse
and Sapphire, hotly arguing the varying merits of gyrfalcons and
peregrines.
Elise’s mare was more than willing to trail after the other
horses. Although her thoughts were elsewhere, Elise chattered lightly
with the other ladies, commenting on the pleasures of the outing.
Only after they had returned their horses to the stable attendants
and were re-entering the castle did Aurella Wellward say softly into
her daughter’s ear:
“Lady Melina spoke with me this afternoon about something
that may be of interest to you. After you’ve freshened, would
you meet me in my solar here in the castle?”
“Yes, Mother,” Elise replied, her heart singing with
anticipation and sudden terror. Her feet were so light that she could
hardly keep from running up the stairs to her room.
DOUBTS AND FEARS plagued Elise as Ninette laced her into a clean
sundress and helped plait her hair into a gleaming coil that would
crown her head. When Elise entered her mother’s parlor, she
hoped that Lady Aurella could not see how nervous she was, but was
certain that her rapidly beating heart must give her away.
Aurella was sitting by a round window through which sunlight
spilled, transforming the embroidery thread spread across her lap
into silken gems. On a frame nearby was the piece she had been
working on since the previous spring, a heavy green wool waistcoat
embroidered with a hawk perched on a well, a bowman standing to one
side. The picture was an allusion to her family joined to
Ivon’s.
“Come in, Elise,” Aurella said, choosing a hank of
yellow thread from those arrayed on her lap and returning the rest to
her fat, round wicker embroidery basket, “and close the door
behind you.”
Elise did so, crossing to sit on a chair where she would not block
her mother’s light. In the winter, the stone flags would be
piled deep with rugs, but to counter the summer heat they were left
bare and the hard leather soles of her shoes tapped out an almost
military tattoo against them.
“Melina tells me,” Aurella began without preamble,
“that her son Jet desires a betrothal to you. She said that her
first instinct was to refuse, but on further consideration she saw
that there were advantages. With these in mind, she is willing to
permit Jet to become betrothed to you—if your father and I
agree, of course.”
She paused, snipping off a length of thread before moving to
another part of her pattern. Elise held her breath, knowing her
mother was not finished.
“I do not know whether or not Melina has consulted yet with
her husband. She was careful not to comment on that point as his
refusal—real or feigned—would end any decision with no
loss of face to anyone involved. My guess, however, is that Jet has
spoken only to her. Melina’s children must be well aware that
without her approval nothing can be done.
“For my own reasons, I have not yet spoken with your father.
Before I do so, cruelly raising hopes that have begun to fade, I
wanted to know if you had considered the disadvantages of Jet’s
proposal.”
“Disadvantages, Mother?” Elise, her mind alive with
images of her handsome suitor and a queen’s crown, was
shocked.
“Disadvantages, daughter.” Though her needle continued
stitching elaborate details with the ease of a professional
tirewoman, Aurella’s mien was as serious as if she were
advising Queen Elexa. “For one, you will make an
enemy—perhaps lifelong—of Sapphire Shield. She will not
easily forgive an attempt to supplant her as the favored candidate
for heir. This will cause you trouble even if you succeed in your
gambit for the throne, but if, despite your manipulations, she
becomes queen, she will be in a position to make you
miserable.”
“Sapphire will still have her family holdings,” Elise
said stubbornly. “If I am queen, she will need to placate
me—not the other way around.”
“Darling daughter, you,” Aurella sighed, “are
naive. And don’t forget, betrothal to Jet will not guarantee
that you will become queen. Have you considered your aunt
Zorana’s potential wrath? Even if you can handle a rival from
your own generation, how would you deal with her?”
“Aunt Zorana,” Elise said stiffly, her woodenness a
cover for the rapid racing of her mind as she considered problems
that had never arisen in Jet’s rosy depiction of their future,
“is the king’s niece, true, but once this is settled,
surely she will return to ambitions that had been hers before
Princess Lovella’s death started this play for the Eagle
Throne. Aunt Zorana has four children to think of and certainly will
court my favor toward their greater benefit. In any case, if I become
queen, her son will be the best choice for the next Baron Archer.
What advantage would there be to making an enemy of me?”
Aurella shook her head ruefully. “Always, always, your
solution is based on the assumption that this gambit guarantees you
the throne. I assure you, it may raise your chances, but it provides
no guarantee. King Tedric is a strange man, old and fickle,
embittered by the loss of the surety that his blood will follow him
to the throne. I wouldn’t put it past him to pass over all his
squabblmg nieces and nephews and choose this newcomer Blysse instead.
She showed character today and our kingdom is beset by rivals. With
Bright Bay at our frontiers, strength and decisiveness may matter
more to the king in his heir than possession of the right bloodline.
Don’t forget, too, that Blysse has House Kestrel to back her.
Kestrel may not be as prestigious a house as that of the Peregrine or
the Gyrfalcon, but it is as old and very respected.”
“And if King Tedric selects Lady Blysse, I,” Elise
said patiently, determined to demonstrate she had gotten her lesson
by heart, “would still have made enemies for myself.”
“And for your father and me as well,” Aurella reminded
her. “Since you are a minor, your betrothal must have our
blessing. We will put our heads into the furnace along with
you.”
“Isn’t the possible gain worth the risk?” Elise
asked, almost pleading.
“What gain?” Aurella said with deceptive mildness.
“The throne of Hawk Haven or handsome Jet Shield for a husband?
I think the first is worth the gamble, but I am doubtful about the
second.”
“Still!” Elise said, leaning forward, her hands
clasped so tightly that her knuckles grew white. “Still! Shall
we sit back and let ourselves be swept out of the running? Here is a
chance to ally our house with another, to make the king’s
decision easier, for he can please both his brother and his sister by
his selection!”
“That is the best point in favor of this match,”
Aurella agreed. “Then you wish me to speak with your
father?”
Elise swallowed, met her mother’s gaze, and was overwhelmed
by the realization that for the first time she was being spoken to
woman to woman, not as a daughter by a mother.
“Yes, ma’am, I do,” she said.
Aurella nodded. “Tonight, then, after the
banquet.”
In a single, swift, graceful movement, Lady Aurella rose, leaving
her fancy work behind her on the chair. She was gone before Elise
rose from her dutiful curtsy, but not before Elise saw the single
tear glittering like dew on her rose-petal cheek.
XI
Handless, footless, armless, kneeless, unmoving,
unbound. She drifts. Eagle-winged, free to ride air as warm and firm
as Blind Seer’s fur. Suddenly bound. Unable to move even within
human limitations. Time spiraling into memory’s clouds.
Smaller, shorter, weaker, afraid, alone, lost. Cold and hungry, the
raw meat the wolf has dropped before her as inedible as a rock would
have been. The little girl cries and her tears wet against her face
are the only thing warm about her. Trembles, coughs, lungs protesting
air’s intrusion. Wishing she was gone where the others are
gone. Shrill whining in her ears, keening of the wolves who have
taken her to themselves only to watch her shrivel and fade like
autumn leaves under winter’s blast. Dying. That’s what she’s doing! Dying. The
realization comes as a faint surprise, rather like learning that it
is her birthday: an abstract thing, anticipated but not understood.
Dying. How very odd. Little people die. She’d seen that during the first days
when they’d come with Prince Barden into the wild woods. Jeri
Punkinhair had died of a cough that wouldn’t go away, no matter
how warmly his parents wrapped him, no matter how dutifully
he’d choked down brews of honey and tree bark, hot broth,
stewed herbs. Little people die, twisting and bending like seedlings
that never quite get a start on growing. Now she is dying. She
wonders why if this was to come she hadn’t been burned in the
fire. This new dying seems a dreadful waste of effort. Lying on the cold stone floor, coughing from her smoke-seared
lungs, weeping until there are no more tears, breathing until there
is no more air. Around her, wailing like the mournful moans of the
winter wind around the cabin chimney, she hears howling as the wolves
voice their despair. Little person, pale flame, soon just so much
meat. She is fading, doesn’t even flinch when one arm, then
the other is grasped between fanged jaws. Pain can’t seem to
get through the dying. Astonishment, maybe, just a touch, feeling
that the breath of the wolves is warm. The wolves drag her through the autumn woods, big moon heavy
and orange watching from the horizon. Her feet trail behind her, legs
as limp as those of the rag doll Blysse carried with her nearly
everywhere. She gave it a new name each week, usually the name of
some wonderful heroine from the Old Country stories Sweet Eirene told
around the fire each night. Is she become a rag doll? Are the wolves become children? It
seems quite possible, there on the twilight fringes of dying. With
some faint spark of herself, the little girl holds on to the idea.
Even a rag doll has more life than does a dying child. The moon stops moving in the sky. Then she realizes that the
wolves have lowered her to the ground, released her arms. She feels a
flicker of regret for the loss of their hot breath. Her own breath is
cold and thick, full of slime. The effort to draw in air is not worth
the pain. She stops. Relief is temporary. Something presses against her mouth,
forces her to draw in air. She struggles but a heavy and furry weight
pins her legs. Eventually, she loses all sensation except for the
searing ache of her lungs being forced to draw in breath. Upon waking she discovers herself bathed in warm mist. Rough
hands, coarse but not unkind, rock her gently. Silence wraps her but
for a faint hiss of steam and a terrible hacking that she realizes is
her own coughing. Distantly, she feels each curving rib fragile as a twig,
bending beneath the racking coughs. The sensation is sufficiently
distant that she can dismiss it as unconnected to her relative
comfort. Timelessness passes. Vaguely she knows snowfall and blizzard
wind. More immediate is warmth, the caress of those coarse hands.
Sometimes voices. She cannot be permitted to die. We will need
her. Someday someone must speak our talks. Cross between
worlds. Separation forever is impossible. Nearly dead. If she comes back, she will be strong
enough to venture into life. Purpose. And we will teach her, though never will she
know our presence. You will be good parents to her, but she is too
weak to survive without other aid. A long journey, this one. Moons will die and be born
before it ends. Awakening into spring. Pale hazes green and yellow on the
branches. Scent of blossoms in the warm air. Birdsong and joyful
plashing of running water. Running outside on trembling legs, just
barely firm enough to bear her weight. Falling. Tumbling against a
furry flank that cushions her descent. Strawberries and fish. Warm
blood drunk from a rabbit’s throat. Crunching stems of
watercress. Hot liver. She has always been a wolf.
The announcement that Lady Elise Archer was to be formally
betrothed to Jet Shield was met with excitement and glee by most, a
delightful new twist in the engaging entertainment surrounding the
selection of an heir by the king. In tavern and shop, market stall
and street corner, the townspeople gathered to gossip about this new
development. The politically savvy gladly explained to their slower
comrades how this gambit would enhance the chances of either Elise or
Jet (or one of their fathers) being chosen as King Tedric’s
heir.
In the manses and suites occupied by the potential heirs of King
Tedric, the news was greeted more soberly. Grand Duke Gadman
consulted with his son, Lord Rolfston, and daughter-in-law, Lady
Melina, about how best to exploit this new twist without completely
invalidating Sapphire’s claim—should King Tedric not
choose to travel down the road that Jet and Elise had made so
inviting for him.
Gadman’s sister, Grand Duchess Rosene, sat alone in her
private rooms, denying audience to both her son, Ivon, and her
daughter, Zorana, steeling herself for the unpleasant but seemingly
necessary task of favoring one of her children over the other.
It had not been maternal love but expediency that had kept her
from doing so for this long. As long as King Tedric showed no clear
favorites, her case was stronger for having two potential candidates
in her line. Now Ivon, through Elise, had made a clever play. She
hoped that prospect of having Lieutenant Purcel Trueheart succeed in
time to the Archer Barony would soothe Zorana.
Earl kestrel took the news from Valet with the same calm with
which Valet presented it. Privately, Norvin Norwood admitted to
himself that this plan was a cunning one—one that anticipated a
move he had been prepared to make if King Tedric did not acknowledge
Blysse his heir. Delay had seemed wise since Tedric had seemed
interested in the girl.
Now Norvin Norwood wondered if he had waited too long. In passing,
he felt a sudden gladness that his own four children stood between
his adopted daughter and the Kestrel duchy. It said something about
his own nature that he was unaware of the irony in this thought.
Sapphire shield, suddenly ousted from a position she had viewed as
favored, locked herself in her room in the castle. In the hours since
her too well informed maid brought her the rumor of Elise’s
engagement to Jet along with the breakfast tray, Sapphire’s
mood had shifted from disbelief, to spiteful anger at this betrayal
by both parents and brother, to full-blown rage.
Even the trepidation Sapphire had felt when Earl Kestrel had
unveiled Prince Barden’s presumptive daughter was nothing to
this. She dreaded herself discarded, had nearly invaded King
Tedric’s private rooms to beg him not to forget her claims, put
aside that plan as childish, flung herself onto her bed screaming
into her pillow and kicking her feet against the feather padding.
Outside the stone walls of the room no one could hear her, but
inside the room her maid stood pale and trembling, watching the fit
and fearing that her mistress’s wrath would be turned against
her.
In yet another room there was fury so great as to diminish
Sapphire’s into nothing by contrast. Lady Zorana Archer tasted
the bitterness of certain defeat. There had been times that she had
almost felt the crown upon her brow, heard herself proclaimed Queen
Zorana the Second. Rolfston’s chances had never been as good as
he had believed. King Tedric despised him as a crawling worm just
like his father, Gadman. Melina Shield ran that family and no one in
Hawk Haven would accept a witch as queen.
Ivon was a good enough man, but he had only one heir. Privately,
Grand Duchess Rosene had admitted to her daughter that Ivon lacked
true regal fire—unlike Zorana, who had been named for Hawk
Haven’s first and greatest ruler and had modeled herself after
her achievements. Since Princess Lovella’s death Zorana had
even imagined that her ancestress favored her, was guiding her
fortunes from the world beyond.
This latest announcement—and her mother’s refusal to
meet with her— was a betrayal not only of Zorana’s hopes
but of her private mythology.
Zorana was alone in her chambers when a knock came on her door.
Since she had dismissed even her maid, she must answer it herself.
Smoothing her hair—though not a bit was out of place, her rages
being internal rather than external—Zorana opened it. Prince
Newell Shield stood without.
“May I beg admittance, Lady Zorana?”
She opened the door wider in reply. The corridor without was
empty. When she sent Aksel away an hour before he must have given
orders that she was to be left undisturbed until she herself summoned
companionship. Aksel, for all his weakness, had moments of wisdom. He
knew that Zorana was not one to lock herself away while secretly
craving that others seek her out. Newell, though, Newell she found
strangely welcome.
They had been playmates once upon a time, he Lord Newell, son of
the duke of House Gyrfalcon, a third son, unlikely to ever be the
heir. She had been even lesser ranked, a noblewoman, yes, but not
even heiress to her lesser house. When her niece Elise had been born,
Zorana became merely Lady Zorana, third in line for the Barony, her
title a courtesy she could not pass on to her children. Ambition to
be more had germinated then, an ambition unlikely to be achieved
through politics but attainable through other avenues.
Some three years or so after Newell Shield had married Princess
Lovella there were rumors among the women that there were times the
princess, unwilling to trust only in potions and herbals, banned her
husband from her bed. At that time, Zorana herself was betrothed to
Aksel Trueheart, a marriage arranged for the satisfaction of their
houses, not from any affection. Some almost formal pawing in dark
corners had awakened in Zorana the terror that she would never feel
passion. Then she had seen Newell’s gaze upon her, a pale thing
that wrapped her like spider’s silk: soft and insidiously
strong.
They had become lovers during those moon-spans before her wedding,
and Zorana had discovered that she was indeed capable of passion.
But Newell had turned from her after her wedding, saying he could
not risk fathering another man’s heir. Zorana had wondered if
the loss of Newell had not been what made her coupling with Aksel so
fierce. Certainly Purcel was conceived within a few moon-spans and
born slightly before his parents’ first anniversary.
Newell had never returned to Zorana’s bed, though after a
while they had eventually become something like friends. By the time
Deste was born, Zorana was feeling some satisfaction from mothering a
dynasty that might earn the honors that had been stolen from her.
On this day, though, Zorana forgot what honors young Purcel had
already earned, what promise the younger three showed. In the loss of
a crown she had dreamed upon her brow, these achievements were ashes.
And in this moment of despair, Newell returned to her.
“I thought,” he said, crossing to a chair and sitting
uninvited, “that you might want some friendly company, company
from someone outside of this mess.”
He looked older now than when they had been lovers some seventeen
years before, his skin showing the lines drawn by long days in sun
and weather on land and at sea. Princess Lovella had thought to earn
some fame as a naval commander and her husband had voyaged with her.
Now the brown hair that had often been bleached tow by the sun was
showing grey at the temples. His sideburns and beard were almost
completely white. As with some men, this made him more attractive,
not less, granting character to his lean features.
Zorana saw the changes and tingled. Here was the face of a
stranger, but the eyes that looked out of that face were the same
that had once met hers, wild with the passion that sealed their
bodies into a single sweaty whole.
“I am grateful for your company,” she replied
formally, hoping her face did not give away her thoughts. “This
engagement is an… interesting complication. But you must be
delighted, Jet is your nephew.”
Newell pursed his lips thoughtfully, as if testing his words
before uttering them even in this private place.
“I have never cared for my sister’s children as an
uncle should,” he admitted. “They are too much her
creatures, too tightly under her control for me to feel comfortable
with them.”
His words were so close to Zorana’s own thoughts that she
did not question them.
“I see,” she said softly. “Melina is a strong
woman.”
“A spoiled youngest,” Newell said bluntly.
“Always given her way when small and now married to a man who
cannot rule her. No wonder the common folk think her a
sorceress.”
Zorana smiled. “She isn’t?”
“No more than I,” Newell laughed. “But she has
the benefit of the reputation just the same. Or the
deficit…”
He let the words trail off, but Zorana followed his thought
without effort.
“Not all the common folk would be comfortable with a
sorceress queen, would they?”
“Nor the noble folk,” Newell added honestly. “I
have heard words among the rulers of the Great Houses. They think
such would be too much like the dark days when the Old World nations
ruled their colonies with dark arts as well as honest
statecraft.”
“Yet Rolfston will not divorce her?”
“For no better cause than ambition?” Newell laughed
heartily. “I doubt he could get the king to permit such a
divorce. Moreover, I believe he is devoted to Melina in his own way.
Their fortunes are hitched together.”
“Far easier,” Zorana said bitterly, “for them to
wed a younger son to a rival and so consolidate two
claims.”
“To the crown?” Newell asked.
“Of course!”
“More than one family can play at that game,” he said,
tentatively.
She glared at him. “Impossible!”
“Perhaps I speak too quickly,” he said, making as if
to rise. “I just thought…”
She stopped him. “It is I who speak too hastily. What do you
mean?”
“I…” Newell paused. She saw him swallow as if
the next words were stuck in his throat. “I have always been
fond of you, Zorana, in memory of those days we shared so long ago.
Childless myself, I find myself looking on others’ children as
if they are my own.”
Zorana felt her face growing hot, thinking how easily—had
Newell been less honorable—this might have truly been the
case.
“I have just returned from a voyage with our navy. Our
kingdom’s fleet is small, but we were fortunate and captured a
Bright Bay vessel. The captain invited my assistance in questioning
our prisoners before they were ransomed. From these I learned how
well Allister Seagleam is thought of by his peers. What surprised me
more was learning how well he is thought of by our own people. Did
you know that he is viewed by some—especially those who have
reason to journey between our rival nations—as a pledge child,
born to end the wars between us?”
Zorana was cautious. “I have heard some such
thing.”
“He has children of an age with your own, dear
Zorana,” Newell said caressingly. “Their grandmother was
King Tedric’s own sister—they are his grandnieces and
grandnephews just as your own children are.”
“Just as Elise and Jet are,” Zorana said,
understanding him and feeling her heart pounding. “And if I
betrothed one of my children—Purcel, say—to one of the
children of the Pledge Child…”
“It might make a claim as persuasive as that offered by the
marriage of Lady Elise and young Jet. Moreover,” Newell said,
rising from his chair and putting his hands on her shoulders,
“you would be the best interim ruler in those years following
the king’s death, before such children could be expected to
take on their responsibilities.”
“Purcel is but fifteen,” Zorana agreed, her voice
hushed but the words spilling out faster than she could speak them,
“and has a warrior’s nature. Even if King Tedric directly
named Purcel his heir, it is unlikely our aged monarch could live
until Purcel was old enough to take the throne.”
“For all Father Tedric’s unwillingness to admit
it,” Newell said sadly, “age has a firm hold on his
heart. Allister Seagleam’s eldest daughter is four years
younger than Purcel. She would be even less ready to take the
reins.”
Zorana smiled, feeling the crown take shape upon her brow once
more. The smile vanished at a sudden thought.
“Doesn’t Allister have a son older than my
Purcel?”
“Shad,” Newell admitted, “is five years older,
just shy of his own majority. I understand, however, that he is
already betrothed to an heiress of Bright Bay.”
“That engagement couldn’t be broken without causing
much trouble,” Zorana said anxiously, “could
it?”
“I think not,” Newell soothed. “Duke
Allister’s next son, Tavis, is a few moon-spans younger than
Purcel and wholly without Purcel’s achievements in battle. I
believe he paints pictures or some such.”
Relief weakened Zorana so that she sagged to a seat on the edge of
her bed. Newell poured her a glass of water from the pitcher on the
bedside table and held it to her lips. It seemed the most natural
thing in the world that he remained seated beside her when the glass
was set by.
“It will not,” Zorana said cautiously, “be an
easy thing to arrange. I do not believe that I can appeal to my
mother, the Grand Duchess Rosene, for assistance.”
“That would be unwise,” Newell agreed. “If her
heart is now set on encouraging young Elise’s advancement, she
will be hesitant to take this great gamble when she sees a sure
thing.”
“Yes,” Zorana frowned. “Yet I will need a
liaison. I cannot ride to Bright Bay myself and make this
proposition.”
Newell cleared his throat. “If you would permit me… I
am frequently called into areas where such duties would not be
impossible—nor terribly obvious. Your hand need not be shown
until all is ready.”
“Would you?” Zorana turned and found herself flushing
again at his closeness.
“I said before,” Newell purred, “that being
childless, I must think of others’ children as my
own.”
“There will be details to work out,” she said quickly,
“letters to draft, conditions to consider, some means of
stalling King Tedric’s announcement of an heir until we can
show him this newest option.”
Newell slid his arm about her waist. “That can all be worked
out.”
“Then we are in this together?”
“Most definitely.”
They sealed their agreement with something far more intimate than
a handshake.
IN the two weeks following the announcement of her engagement to Jet
Shield, Elise tried to believe that she was completely happy.
Certainly both in public or in private Jet was as attentive as she
could desire. Indeed, in private she became grateful that Ninette was
always within call. Otherwise, Jet’s ardor might overcome her
own good sense. She was startled to discover what fires lurked within
her and how easily he could kindle them—sometimes with as
little as the brush of his lips across her cheek or a smoldering look
that gave a heretofore unsuspected meaning to the most
innocent-seeming comment.
Her eighteenth-birthday celebration—a week after their
betrothal had been announced—had been a wonderful festivity,
marred only by her gathered relatives’ sour looks when Elise
warmly welcomed Lady Blysse and Derian Carter to the group.
However, ever since the falconry party, Elise had wandered out to
the upper castle meadows most mornings, joining in the casual
gatherings, teaching the feral woman how to weave daisy crowns and
other silly things, and finding herself quite enjoying Lady
Blysse’s—or rather Firekeeper’s—odd
perspective on human culture.
Elise had needed a new friend. Lady Aurella’s prediction
that Sapphire would be furious with her had come true—a thing
Elise had not thought would trouble her so much given how annoying
she often found her cousin. Perhaps it was not just that Sapphire had
cut out all contact with Elise; maybe it was that she looked so sad,
so hurt. Oddly, Aunt Zorana, whose wrath Elise had feared, was so
contented-seeming that Elise’s father was moved to comment (in
private) that he wondered if his sister was pregnant again.
As for Ivon Archer, he viewed his daughter with unconcealed pride
and joy. Although the necessity of training Elise to manage the
Archer estates had forced them frequently into each other’s
company, they had never been close. Privately, Elise had thought she
was a disappointment to her father: too quiet, too scholarly, too
uninterested in the martial games he had enjoyed with his own father
before the elder Purcel’s death in battle a few years before
Elise herself was born.
Strangely enough, the fact that Aurella Wellward apparently shared
the same weakness that had made her aunt Elexa barren had brought
Ivon closer to his wife, but had distanced him from his daughter.
Sometimes Elise thought that he privately blamed her in some fashion
for Aurella’s long illness following Elise’s birth and
her subsequent infertility.
Now, however, that was swept away as if it had never been. Ivon
Archer clearly viewed Elise’s desire to become betrothed to Jet
as a mark of her loyalty to her father and his cause. With that one
decision, Elise had removed all the deficits of being an only child,
allied her family to their greatest potential rival for the throne,
and made her father the most likely choice for King Tedric’s
heir.
Anticipating with an innocent enthusiasm that reminded Elise not a
little of Jet on the day he first proposed, Ivon took his daughter on
long rides through the countryside so that they could discuss
statecraft. She had learned more about her father in these two weeks
than she ever knew before and felt—a little
uncomfortably—that he was far more human and vulnerable than
she had ever imagined.
But no matter how hugely Baron Archer dreamed, the reality
remained that King Tedric had not selected an heir from among his
nieces and nephews, nor from among their children. Nor had he sent
Lady Blysse away, keeping her thus tacitly beneath the mantle of his
favor. Duty to his own estates and family called Earl Kestrel from
the castle from time to time, but Blysse remained in residence, a
lithe, dark-haired figure, gradually becoming more sophisticated in
her manners and seemingly-unaware of the shadow she had cast on
everyone else’s plans.
Fumbling at her throat, Elise fingered the exquisite jet carving
of a wolf’s head that Jet had given her as a betrothal gift.
She had given Jet a token of her own society patron, the Lynx, worked
in gold with tiny emerald eyes.
Exchanging society tokens was a long-standing tradition, dating
back to when the Old Country still reigned. The exchange of tokens
provided a symbolic pledge that one’s own society would now be
looking out for the soon-to-be wedded partner.
Touching the token, however, did not make Elise decide to seek out
Jet. Rather she resolved to go see the real wolf in her
life—Firekeeper.
Neither Derian nor Ox answered the door to the suite. Instead, a
slightly familiar man with something Kestrel about his dark hair and
hawk nose stood in the opening. Slightly disconcerted, for she had
been lost in her own reflections, Elise fumbled for words:
“Is Fire… I mean Lady Blysse in?”
“Firekeeper’s fine with me,” the man said,
opening the door wider and giving Elise a friendly smile.
“Since that’s what she insists on being called. However,
I’m sorry to disappoint you, but she’s not in.”
“Oh.”
Stepping back, Elise started to make her apologies, but the man
continued:
“I think she’s in the kitchen gardens. Derian has the
day off to visit his parents and so Firekeeper went down to the
gardens soon after breakfast.”
“The kitchen gardens?” Elise asked, the question
coming out despite herself. “Firekeeper?”
“She discovered them sometime after that first hawking
expedition,” the man replied. “She’s completely
fascinated by the concept that people can grow their own food. I
guess the gardens at West Keep weren’t very extensive or maybe
she just had too much else to learn then.”
He stopped suddenly. “I realize I’m being terribly
familiar,” he said.
“I, of course, know who you are, but I don’t suppose
you remember me. Our circles haven’t crossed that
frequently.”
Just as Elise was realizing who this must be, the man made a deep
and formal bow:
“Sir Jared Surcliffe, at your service, my lady. I am a
somewhat distant younger cousin of the Earl Kestrel.”
“Lady Elise Archer,” Elise replied with appropriate
formality, and curtsies. Then she smiled. “I remembered you
just as you introduced yourself. When I was quite small, my parents
took me out to the Kestrel estates. You were there, too, and very
patiently supervised me and Earl Kestrel’s boys while we rode
our ponies. Later you took us out fishing by that wonderful stone
bridge—the one that looked as if it must have trolls under it.
We’ve shared company since, but I hope you don’t mind
that that particular occasion is the one I remember best.”
“Not at all.” Sir Jared grinned, an open expression
that made him look much as he had ten years before, not at all like
the mature man of twenty-four or twenty-five that he must be. For the
first time, Elise realized that there was something vaguely sad about
the grown man’s expression that had not been present in the
boy’s. She struggled to remember what she could about him.
“I’m being very rude keeping you standing in the
hallway,” Sir Jared added. “Would you like to come in and
wait, or shall we stroll down to the gardens and make certain that
Blind Seer hasn’t eaten one of the gardener’s
sons?”
Elise giggled and was immediately horrified. Jared Surcliffe
didn’t appear to notice.
“I think,” Elise replied, cloaking herself in the
shreds of her dignity, “that I would like to go down to the
garden. Blind Seer may not be a problem, but the falcon might
be.”
Jared laughed. “Then if the Lady Archer…”
“Elise, please,” she hastily interrupted. “No
one calls me Lady Archer yet except on terribly formal occasions. I
don’t need to use the title until I reach my
majority.”
“And you’re not in a great hurry to get there,”
Surcliffe mused, almost to himself, as he stepped out into the
hallway and shut the door behind him. “Now, there is a wisdom
one doesn’t often see in a young lady.”
Elise felt flattered rather than insulted and, as Sir
Jared’s comment had been spoken quietly, she avoided a direct
reply. Instead she walked beside him down the corridors and toward
the stairs leading out into the gardens, searching her memory for
everything she could remember about her new companion.
Surcliffe, she recalled from her geography lessons, was a minor
holding in the Norwood grant. Theoretically, it belonged to the
Kestrels, but in practice those small holdings passed from parent to
child along similar lines of inheritance followed in other matters.
Only if the Surcliffes mismanaged the estate or did something
horrible or the line died out completely would the Norwood family
dare step in and reassign the land. Thus, for all practical purposes,
Jared Surcliffe was a minor noble, never mind that under Queen
Zorana’s rules restricting titles he did not even merit the
title “Lord.”
Jared’s knighthood was a different matter. He had earned it
in the same battle in which Crown Princess Lovella had lost her life.
Assigned to the princess’s company in a support
capacity—as a medic, Elise thought—he had been among the
first to see the princess fall. Despite being unarmored and unarmed,
Surcliffe had raced out into the field. Using Princess
Lovella’s own spear, he had held back the attackers until
Lovella’s troops rallied. Then he had done his best to save
Lovella’s life through his medical arts.
Lovella’s wounds had been too severe to be mended—even
by one with the healing talent—but due to Sir Jared’s
care the crown princess had lived long enough to bid both her husband
and her parents farewell. King Tedric—some said at
Lovella’s express request—had made Jared Surcliffe a
knight of the Order of the White Eagle, the highest honor in the
land. Elise had been present at his investiture, one figure in the
silent and awed crowd. She blushed now to think that she could have
failed to recognize him.
She allowed herself some leeway, for the man striding along beside
her was very different from the solemn, formally clad figure who had
knelt in front of his king and queen to receive their thanks and
blessing. He seemed younger, more relaxed, even in some strange way
playful. Perhaps, Elise thought, she could almost be forgiven.
Then she realized that Surcliffe was speaking to her and
apologized:
“I’m sorry, Sir Jared, I was distracted by my
thoughts. May I beg you to repeat yourself?”
“No need to beg, Lady Elise,” Surcliffe said. “I
was offering you my congratulations on your recent engagement.
I’ve met Jet Shield in passing and he seems like a fine
fellow.”
Elise nodded. “Thank you. We’ve known each other since
we were children and I’ve always been fond of him.” Fond, she thought. Fond! Is that the way to speak of
the man who has captured my heart and my hand?
Yet, somehow, in Jared Surcliffe’s company she could not go
into the effusions that were so easy when she was among her lady
friends. All of them were more than willing to praise every aspect of
Jet: his form, his manners, his seat on a horse, even the color of
his hair and the line of his eyebrows.
Fleetingly, Elise found herself thinking of her mother and the
tear she had glimpsed on her cheek. To distract herself, she asked
Surcliffe:
“Are you married, Sir Jared?”
“I am,” he replied stiffly, “a widower. My wife
died in childbirth three years ago. Our baby died as well. Since then
I have occupied myself with other things.”
“I’m sorry,” Elise murmured, not certain whether
she was expressing sympathy for his loss or apologizing for her
tactlessness.
Certainly she must have heard about his bereavement! When he had
been knighted every aspect of the new hero’s character and
person would have been discussed both in meetings and in more
informal gossip sessions.
“Thank you,” Sir Jared said, accepting her sympathy.
“My marriage was arranged, but as with you and your Jet, I had
known my bride since we were children together. Losing her came as a
shock.”
They were out of the castle now and crossing the rose gardens,
following the path down and around to where the kitchen gardens stood
within their stone-walled enclosure. Deftly, Sir Jared turned the
conversation to the shade of a particularly lovely yellow and orange
rose. Elise replied, telling him how the bush had been brought from
New Kelvin when she was but a child, and so they both were saved from
further awkward and painful revelations.
“No, dearie,” Holly Gardener said, coming over to
demonstrate. “Don’t pull the carrot by the fluffy part at
the top. Grasp here at the base, firmly, and give it a
tug.”
Firekeeper obeyed, eager to do this right. She was becoming
desperately fond of this bent old woman with her wispy white hair.
Holly was the only person she had met thus far who didn’t think
of Firekeeper as a potential heir to the throne. To Holly, she was
just a girl who wanted to learn about gardens. In her presence,
Firekeeper somehow felt younger, but without any of the vulnerability
her youth and relative lack of strength had given her among the
wolves.
Over the days that Firekeeper had been visiting the gardens and
attached orchard, Holly had trusted her with more and more duties. At
first Firekeeper had been permitted only to carry baskets and to
fetch water from the well, but even these tasks had delighted her,
giving exercise to muscles going soft from no greater challenge than
occasional horseback rides and her daily romps with Blind Seer.
Lately, Firekeeper had graduated into picking fruit and
vegetables. The late-summer harvest was beginning and even with the
extra help hired from the town the castle’s own staff could
barely keep up with their duties. Firekeeper hoped that she could
learn to pick the vegetables without harming either them or the
marvelous plants that bore them. Then she would free another to do
those jobs she had yet to master.
On her second try, the carrot slid freely from the dirt.
Firekeeper gazed upon it, fat and orange, lightly dusted with soil,
with as much pride as if she had grown it herself.
“Good job, dearie!” Holly said, her praise falling
sweetly on Firekeeper’s ears, for the gardener could be as
quick to criticize as her name plant was to prick unwary fingers.
“Now, if you wish, you may harvest the rest of that row. Leave
the little carrots to grow into the space left by their
fellows.”
Firekeeper obeyed. A pack member all her life, it felt good to be
contributing to the survival of the whole. Even though most of her
days as a wolf had been spent foraging for herself, still the Ones
had often trusted her to watch over the pups. Sometimes they even
sent her ahead to scout the herds of elk or deer. In the moon cycles
that had followed her departure from west of the Iron Mountains, all
of Firekeeper’s basic needs had been provided for. Moreover,
someone else was always more skilled than she in the tasks at
hand.
This last had become particularly irksome since they had come to
live in the castle. Here, even Derian—who had never been
without some task—now found himself idle except for his duties
teaching Firekeeper. Firekeeper, however, had a limited attention
span for lessons in etiquette and dancing. When she rebelled, Derian
had learned to let her be.
For his part, Blind Seer had no difficulty accepting idleness. A
wolf proverb stated: “Hunt when hungry, sleep when not, for
hunger always returns.”
This afternoon, faithful to his creed, the wolf drowsed in the
shade of a crab-apple tree whose fruits had already been harvested to
make jelly. The garden staff detoured widely to avoid him.
Consequently, Firekeeper and the old woman were alone in this
particular garden.
Overhead, Elation circled easily above the neat square and
rectangular plots, occasionally stooping upon some luckless rodent.
The first few times the huge bird had plummeted from the sky, she had
scared the wits out of the gardening staff. Now that they had grown
accustomed to her, they were rather delighted in having a creature
usually reserved for noble sport take part in their routine. They had
nicknamed her “Garden Cat”—an indignity the falcon
accepted with her usual arrogant grace.
Firekeeper heard a shrill call from above. “Company coming! Elise and Doc! They’ll be upon
you in a moment.”
Firekeeper sniffed the breeze, but it was blowing from the wrong
direction. Even if it had not been, she doubted she would smell
anything but the heavy scents of dirt, manure, bruised leaves, fresh
vegetables, and hot sunlight.
Carrot in her hand, she rose, turning to face the gate in the
stone wall. She greeted her friends as they passed through:
“Elise, Doc,” she said with measured solemnity.
“What brings you here?”
“Our feet,” Jared replied with equal formality.
“What else?”
Firekeeper grinned then. “I’ve been
picking…”
“Pulling,” interrupted Holly, who, like the rest of
those Firekeeper named as friends, believed it was her job to correct
the wolfling’s speech at every turn.
“Pulling,” Firekeeper repeated obediently,
“carrots. For the root cellar, for the castle, for the winter.
Also for the kitchen today and so that the carrots still in the
ground can grow wider.”
She shook her head, still amazed by the varied wonders of
gardening. Elise broke into a broad smile that Firekeeper far
preferred to the strained and weary look that had been on Lady
Archer’s face when she had entered the garden.
“Will you introduce me to your friend?” Elise asked,
this both a real request and a subtle prompt for Firekeeper to
practice her social graces.
Firekeeper nodded, straightened, and gestured with the carrot.
Unconsciously, she adopted the mannerisms of Steward Silver, a woman
she quietly admired for her ability to always know the right way
through the tangled maze of human social customs.
“Lady Elise…” She paused, glanced at Elise.
“Or should I say Lady Archer?”
“Lady Archer is best if you want someone to know my social
connections,” Elise explained. “Lady Elise if you think
they already know them, since you know that I prefer to be called
simply Elise.”
Firekeeper still felt uncertain, a state of mind not helped by
Blind Seer’s quiet sniggering from under the crab-apple tree.
The wolf would not admit that he, too, found human customs
fascinating, secure that he at least would never be forced to use
them. Doc came to her rescue:
“In such circumstances, Firekeeper, I have found that it is
always better to err on the side of greater formality.”
Elise nodded. “True.”
Holly Gardener had been watching this byplay with steady,
earth-rooted calm, her hands still busy sorting fresh-picked squash
into that which would be sent to the castle kitchens and that which
would go to the canning sheds.
Firekeeper began again, “Lady Elise Archer, Sir Jared
Surcliffe—may I have the pleasure of presenting my friend Goody
Holly Gardener. Holly, these are my friends.”
Rising to her feet with the aid of a gnarled piece of thorn wood
polished bright with beeswax and long use, Holly curtsied as deeply
as her arthritic knees would permit.
“I am honored,” she said in her creaky voice,
“to have the heir to House Archer and a knight of the White
Eagle grace my garden. Will you take a bench in the shade along the
wall and allow me to send for something cool to drink?”
Firekeeper shook her head in admiration. She had completely
forgotten her duties, but Holly had rescued her with the grace and
dignity most of the nobles reserved for their most formal
interactions.
It never occurred to her that for Holly Gardener this meeting
might be one of those formal occasions. Firekeeper’s own awe of
the gardener’s skill was so great that she placed Holly’s
worth far above that of the relatively useless members of the court
such as Lord Rolfston or his father, Grand Duke Gadman.
Elise answered, “I thank you for your offer of a drink,
Grandmother, but I see the well just across the way. Let me get the
water and you remain where you are.”
Jared grinned. “Not to be outdone, let me lend a hand so
that we won’t put you too behind in your tasks.”
When Holly began to protest, made honestly anxious by the thought
of a knight of the realm picking vegetables, he stilled her with a
hand on her shoulder.
“Goody, I may have this fancy title, but I am nothing more
than a younger son of landholders of a small, rocky estate on Norwood
lands. By helping you, I may help myself someday. Please, don’t
protest further.”
Firekeeper held her breath, but there was no need to intervene.
Holly settled back onto the low, three-legged stool she used to spare
her knees.
“Thank you, son,” she said, her smile showing only a
few missing teeth. “Tell me about your lands.”
“My parents’ land as of yet,” Jared began,
“and then my brother’s. I am the third born.”
Firekeeper knelt in the dirt and started pulling carrots again,
pleased as always to learn something more about how
“real” humans—as opposed to those who resided here
in the castle—lived. Elise came over with a maple bucket half
full of cool well water and silently offered Firekeeper the dipper.
She was somewhat clumsy in her task, but Firekeeper recognized that
clumsiness as something she saw far too often in
herself—unfamiliarity rather than ineptitude.
Jared continued talking while thinning carrots from the row
alongside Firekeeper’s:
“Let’s see, the land was in our family before Queen
Zorana established Hawk Haven. Back then it was just a frontier
farm—and not one that was doing very well, either. My ancestors
had ambition but not much luck in the land they held. At first they
eked out their living selling furs and burning charcoal, but that
can’t go on forever. The animals either die or get smart enough
to leave and you run out of hardwood.
“So they had to take to serious farming, a thing that
apparently didn’t delight my great-great-whatever-grandfather a
whole lot. When the fellow who would become the first Duke of Norwood
called for volunteers to support Zorana Shield against that skunk,
Gustin Sailor, Grandpappy went happily. He did well, too, gaining
both booty and honor. When Queen Zorana created the Norwood grant, my
family was given the Surcliffe holding in perpetuity.”
Firekeeper hadn’t followed all of this, but enough so that
she had a question: “If they not hunt or grow, how did they
eat?”
Doc rose, stretching the kinks out of his calf muscles.
“Well, some of them became vassals to the Kestrel
family—earning Kestrel credit, some of which was sent home.
There’s always been at least one member of the family stubborn
enough to want to stay and make something of the land. Most recently,
my own grandmother decided to set in grapevines. My father has
continued their cultivation and we’re just getting to the point
where we’re proud enough of our wine to sell it outside of the
Kestrel grant.”
Elise, sitting on a bench in the shade, the bucket between her
feet, asked, “And you, Sir Jared?”
“Call me Doc, if you don’t mind,” he said.
“The other is so formal.”
“Doc, then,” she said, “if you don’t mind
calling me Elise.”
“Not at all. I’d be pleased,” he replied.
“To answer your question, Elise, right now I’m one of
those who’s earning money to send home. Earl Kestrel has been a
good patron. We’re nearly twenty years apart in age and not
nearly as closely related as he sometimes represents. My parents are
both in good health and hopefully will not become ancestors for a
long while yet—they’re of Norvin’s generation. So
I’ve learned medicine and am trying to see something of the
country.
“Meanwhile, I send home a portion of my earnings
or—even better— hunt out interesting vine cultivars and
vintnering techniques and send them along. My brother and sister have
stayed closer to home. My sister is an attendant upon Duchess Norwood
and my brother apprenticed to a master wine maker for ten years.
He’s home again now and all afire to put his new knowledge to
work.”
The talk continued in this vein for a while, Holly Gardener
contributing a shrewd thought or two from her vast wealth of garden
lore. Firekeeper listened, pulling carrots until they were all
thinned, then hauling water to the rows.
After a while, a distant bell announced that the time for the
evening meal was drawing near. Elise sighed.
“Duty calls. I have promised my mother that I would go with
her and the queen to a banquet at Duke Wellward’s city
house.”
She glanced over at Firekeeper, her blue eyes twinkling, and
asked, “Tell me, Lady Blysse, what is Duke Wellward’s
relation to me?”
Firekeeper growled, very low, very quiet. This new addition to her
education, the learning of who were the rulers of the Great Houses
and how they related to the players for the throne, made her head
ache. Once again, she thought that wolves solved such questions so
much more simply. Elise, however, was merciless in her
persistence.
“Well, Firekeeper?”
“Duke Wellward is your mother’s father,”
Firekeeper began, “your grandfather. Your other grandfather is
Purcel Archer, the hero who died in the Battle of Salt Water in the
Year 85. Your grandmother is Grand Duchess Rosene.
“Holly,” Firekeeper added inconsequentially, knowing
from Elise’s approving smile that she had got the complicated
scheme of relationships right, “has been telling me stories
about Purcel Archer. I think I would have liked him.”
Jared Surcliffe grinned. “Given how you have taken to the
bow from the first time Race showed you how to use one, I suspect
that you would have indeed.”
He got to his feet.
“Lady Elise, may I escort you back to the castle?”
She nodded and Firekeeper thought that she saw the faintest hint
of a blush touch her cheeks.
“Thank you, Sir Jared.”
“Doc,” he reminded, and she smiled. Doc glanced over
at Firekeeper. “Are you coming back with us?”
“I help Holly Gardener carry the baskets in first,”
Firekeeper replied. “Then I hurry to the castle in time for
dinner. Will Derian be back?”
“Not yet. He has permission to remain out until after
dinner.”
Bending to pick up one of the baskets of carrots, Firekeeper
watched them leave. Behind her, she heard Holly say softly:
“I like that Elise. Maybe she would make a good queen after
she has some years on her. She’s not too proud to carry water
to quench a servant’s thirst.”
“And Doc?”
“I like him, too,” Holly assured her. Then she added
softly, so softly that Firekeeper didn’t think she was meant to
hear, “He’d be a far better king than that Jet
Shield.”
XII
The hot summer weather prompted Derian’s
parents to suggest a picnic along the banks of the Flin River,
upstream of the city. The entire family rode there in a wagon Derian
remembered as being creaky when he was Brock’s age, pulled by
an old draft horse to whom Colby and Vernita had given an honorable
retirement three years before. Once arrived, they staked out a
section for themselves and spent the day following quiet pursuits:
tossing horseshoes, rolling hoops, singing rounds and collapsing into
uncontrollable laughter when someone became tangled in the words and
tune. Derian drifted into the easy relaxation that came when someone
else was in charge and quite capable of doing whatever needed to be
done. Quite willingly, he would have stayed along the riverbank into
the long twilit evening hours, but Brock rather self-importantly
announced that tonight was a meeting of the Bear Society and he must
attend. In any case, the gnats were rising, making the grassy verge
less appealing.
When they returned to the house, Damita made excuses to go out.
She did indeed have a “sweet’a”—or at least
imagined that she did, a youth of sixteen who was apprenticed to
their jeweler uncle. Next to this beau, the entertainment offered by
an older brother—even one who had been living in the
king’s own castle—had limited appeal. Knowing this, Colby
and Vernita gave in with good humor when Damita asked to go out to
the nearby market square, where she would doubtless cluster with a
group of girls her own age and giggle at the boys.
Derian’s own onetime romance with the baker’s daughter
had not survived his long absence and his relocation to the
castle—especially as he was there in the role of guardian to
another girl. His opportunities to cultivate new romances had been
limited.
Unlike Ox and Race, who were clearly classed as servants, his role
was more that of an attendant, a subtle distinction that ruled out
the riotous entertainments the other men could pursue. However,
though Derian was slightly more than a servant, he was definitely
less than a noble and thus pretty girls like Elise Archer remained
out of his reach.
Sometimes this bothered Derian. He found himself brooding that he
would become like Valet, a man who apparently had no interests beyond
tending his master. But tonight such worries were far away. Derian
was content to remain at home and enjoy these last few hours of peace
before he must return to his duties.
Once Brock and Damita had departed, the remaining three moved out
into the garden. Most of the peaches had been picked and enjoyed, but
the narrow leaves of the tree created a pleasant, natural arbor.
Derian helped Colby move a few slat-backed chairs and a small,
round-topped table into place. Vernita brought drinks from the cool
room.
“So, who’s the favorite candidate with the guilds
these days?” Derian asked with slightly forced jocularity.
The longer he had known Firekeeper, the more he had come to
entertain the contradictory feeling that she would be both the best
and worst choice for the new monarch. He hadn’t been
particularly easy with himself when he had learned from his parents a
week or so before that the foundling remained high on the list of the
people’s choices.
“Well,” Colby drawled, sipping his chilled tea with an
appreciative nod to Vernita, “your wolf-woman is still the
romantics’ favorite, but those of soberer mind are torn. Some
like the idea of Lord Rolfston Redbriar as he is a steady man with a
good reputation among his own people. It doesn’t hurt that he
has a large family, so we won’t see a repetition of this
uncertainty when he passes on. Others say, and loudly too, that Lord
Rolfston is too tightly under the thumb of that sorceress wife of
his.”
“Derian,” Vernita asked, “you’ve been
living in the castle for almost a moon-span now…”
“Barely twenty days!” Derian protested.
“Still, long enough to have seen Lady Melina frequently. Do
you think she is indeed a sorceress?”
Derian considered this carefully, knowing that his parents were
asking his advice and that they would be certain to repeat whatever
he said to their friends and trusted associates.
“I have seen no absolute evidence,” he said,
“but I think that whether or not she is, Lady Melina likes for
people to think that she is gifted far beyond those small talents
that sometimes crop up here and there. Do you understand?”
“Perfectly,” Vernita replied. “She values the
awe—even the fear with which she is regarded. I wonder if she
realizes that she is hurting her own cause?”
“I doubt it,” Derian said. “I don’t think
she’s the kind to ever think even for a minute that she is
anything but an asset. Now that her son Jet is engaged to Lady Elise,
Lady Melina has not one but two roads to the throne. My feeling is
that she’s quite smug about it.”
“And the young woman Sapphire,” Colby asked.
“How is she taking having competition within her own
family?”
“She isn’t thrilled,” Derian admitted.
“For a day or two she sulked in her room like a child. Then she
must have realized—or someone must have told her—that
such behavior was not fitting in one who hoped to someday be monarch.
She has been much in public since—even invited Firekeeper out
for some real hawking and was fairly charming to her, though
Firekeeper’s Elation did far better than Sapphire’s
gyrfalcon—but Sapphire’s still cool to Elise.”
“And Lady Elise,” Vernita asked, a slight twinkle
lighting her eyes that her own son should be on such familiar terms
with the heir to a barony so as to speak of her by her first name,
“how does she view the situation?”
“I think she regrets the estrangement from her cousin but is
resigned to it. Sapphire Shield is a—to speak
mildly—strong personality. I’m certain they’ve
clashed before. But you haven’t finished telling me about how
the common folk view the field. So far my Firekeeper and Lord
Rolfston remain strong contenders…”
“And Baron Archer as well,” Colby added. “Lady
Zorana has fallen behind somewhat, now that there has been an
alliance between Lady Elise and Jet Shield.”
“What about Allister Seagleam?” Derian asked.
“Once you said he was favored by many.”
“A few weeks’ time hasn’t changed that situation
much,” Colby admitted. “More disturbing are rumors that
would seem to indicate that Bright Bay is determined that if Allister
wishes to claim his rights he will have support in doing
so.”
“What do you mean?” Derian asked, sitting up straight
in his chair.
“It’s the stories coming up the road,” Colby
said slowly. “You know that we border Bright Bay all along the
Barren River.”
“Of course.”
“Now strategically, the Barren makes a good border. It is
rocky most of its length and where it isn’t, it’s still
very wide. There are a few places, however, that are more fordable
than others and reports say that a greater concentration of Bright
Bay’s Stalwarts—or their allies from Stonehold—
have been seen in these places.”
“I understand,” Derian said, watching the map Colby
had drawn with his damp fingertip on the tabletop dry into
invisibility. “They’re watching us, but not yet moving
in.”
“Right. From my conversations with the army’s Master
of the Horse— he came by to ask on the quiet if we had any
draft animals to sell—the king’s officers are aware of
the situation but are unwilling to move in lest it prompt the very
conflict we would all like to avoid.”
“At least,” Vernita added, “until King
Tedric’s heir is selected. It would be a horror if we were to
lose the king while engaged in an active war and no one was prepared
to take his place. In the infighting for the crown, Hawk Haven could
easily be defeated by outside enemies.”
“Then,” Derian frowned, “the pressure from
Bright Bay may force the king to make his decision before the
Festival of the Eagle this coming Lynx Moon.”
“That,” Colby said, “is precisely how I see it.
And it may be precisely what Bright Bay wants.”
“Or,” Vernita countered, “precisely what they
don’t want. After all an heir chosen may ruin Allister
Seagleam’s hopes for the throne.”
“And we must not forget,” Colby added, a wicked
twinkle in his eyes, “that Hawk Haven’s allies may be
putting pressures on King Tedric that we know nothing about. No ruler
can be completely indifferent about those countries along the
border—even the friendly ones. They can become unfriendly far
too easily if offended. It’s all rather like running a
business.”
Derian rubbed his eyes with his hands, thinking of the
argumentative and contentious forces gathered at the castle,
wondering if any among them could see past the crown’s glitter
to realize what a tremendous headache wearing it must be.
“I wish we knew,” he said, “which way to jump
and what the consequences would be!”
“Foresight,” Vernita replied calmly, “is the
rarest of the gifts and the least understood.”
“I wonder,” Derian said with an attempt at humor,
“if Lady Melina possesses it.”
His joke fell flat. Together they sat, sharing in silence the
impotence of the common folk when the actions of the great threaten
their lives and happiness. Derian wondered what choice he would make
if he were King Tedric and was secretly glad that he could leave that
choice to the king.
Aboard a great masted ship anchored off the shore of a small
island in the ocean east of the mutual coasts of Hawk Haven and
Bright Bay, Prince Newell leaned against the starboard rail. His hair
was concealed beneath a seaman’s stocking cap; the rest of his
person was equally well disguised in a striped jersey and canvas
trousers. The disguise worked simply because no one expected a prince
to be so clad—especially as the colors he wore were the blue
and yellow of a rival navy.
If any were watching him, Newell would seem completely absorbed in
studying the eddies created when the water splashed against the hull.
Actually, he missed nothing that happened in his vicinity. When a
slightly built man crossed the deck with affected casualness and came
to stand near him, Newell did not look up to see who it was. Instead
he asked rather diffidently:
“Have a good voyage?”
“Yes, thank you,” said the man, whose name was Tench.
He was a trusted advisor to the throne of Bright Bay. “And
yours?”
“Good enough.”
Newell’s voyage had been, as a matter of fact, less than
ideal. He had departed the capital of Hawk Haven two days after
convincing Zorana Shield that pursuing her own policy with an enemy
power was not traitorous. From the capital he had ridden a series of
fast horses to the coast, arriving three days earlier than he had
been expected. From there he had helped sail a small, swift cutter to
rendezvous with this vessel. At dawn, he would return to that cutter
and make the return voyage, all so he could arrive just in time to
rendezvous with the Hawk Haven Wings, on which he served as Commander
of Marines, a task undertaken ostensibly as a means of soothing his
broken widower’s heart and of giving himself some sense of
purpose.
In reality, the game Prince Newell was playing was far more
complicated than any of those who associated with him realized, a
game that was meant to make him the next king of Hawk Haven and
beyond. The first step in this process was convincing the government
of Bright Bay that he favored a peaceful resolution of their
conflicts. Thus this meeting and the importance of seeming both
confident and invulnerable. So Newell said nothing of his onerous
journey, but instead commented languidly:
“And all remains well with Gustin the Fourth?”
All the monarchs of Bright Bay assumed the name Gustin on taking
the crown, men and women alike. It was a curious custom, one that
Prince Newell meant to change when he himself was king of Bright Bay.
That violation of tradition, however, would need to wait until he had
finished with Hawk Haven. One thing at a time.
“All is well with our honored monarch,” Tench said. He
was a foolish-looking man who rather resembled a fish, complete with
slightly popping eyes and a perpetually open mouth. “She
expresses some concern as to the situation in Hawk Haven. Although
some of her advisors feel otherwise, she is firm in her conviction
that her cousin Allister Seagleam is the only proper heir to that
contested throne.”
“Glad to know,” Newell said languidly, “that she
hasn’t changed her mind. Tell your queen that agents interested
in her cause have been working busily. Allister Seagleam should soon
receive correspondence suggesting a way to strengthen his claim to
the throne. Her Majesty should press him to accept the
offer.”
“Duke Allister,” came Tench’s stiff reply,
“remains difficult. He does not wish to reign in a land that
will not welcome him, no matter how prepared Her Majesty’s
military is to support him—no matter how much the queen presses
him.”
“Perhaps,” Newell said, “we should find a way to
make him a hero in the eyes of both peoples. He would feel himself
more welcome then.”
What Newell actually planned was for he himself to be that hero.
King Tedric, sadly, would probably not be present .to witness those
heroics, but he would hear report of them. The prince was not
precisely certain just what heroic deed he would perform, but he had
infinite trust in his ability to manufacture situations to his
advantage.
He turned and for the first time looked Tench squarely in the
face. “And Stonehold?” he asked, naming Bright
Bay’s primary ally.
“Remains firm in its support of an independent Bright Bay.
However, its ministers are as ever opposed to the uniting of Hawk
Haven and Bright Bay. They fear that the larger nation would threaten
their own national sovereignty.”
“And how shall they prevent this union?” asked Newell
scornfully. “Surely sending a few troops to support Bright Bay
is a peculiar tactic! What if Bright Bay conquers Hawk
Haven?”
“If Bright Bay wins on land,” Tench replied,
“the victory will be achieved only with Stonehold’s
support. In that case, Stonehold is confident that it will be able to
dictate some of the terms. I believe they favor a partition of the
conquered Hawk Haven lands.”
Tench added cautiously, “The diplomats from Stonehold have
hinted that if Bright Bay permits a marriage alliance with Hawk
Haven, Stonehold will be forced to withdraw its military support.
Then Bright Bay may be at Hawk Haven’s mercy on
land.” Fools! Newell thought. Once Stonehold does that, they lose any
chance of subtly pressuring Bright Bay into their way of thinking.
All that will remain to them will be force. I must make certain,
somehow, that Stonehold does withdraw and then re-enter the field as
an opponent. An independent threat would be just the thing to unite
both Hawk Haven and Bright Bay behind me.
Aloud he said, “Stonehold’s withdrawal, of course,
should be prevented at all cost. This is essential for the delicate
balance of power we are relying upon to achieve a peaceful alliance
between our nations. If Stonehold withdraws, Bright Bay loses in land
power and Hawk Haven may be less willing to treat with it as an
equal. Suggest to Queen Gustin the Fourth that even the least rumor
of Duke Allister’s negotiating with Hawk Haven must be kept the
greatest secret.”
“I will do what I can,” the diplomat said dubiously.
“Her Majesty is difficult to guide. She is yet young and
impulsive.”
“Make her think this secrecy is her own idea,” Newell
suggested. “Let her think she needs to convince Duke Allister.
If she must dominate another’s will, she will find she must
dominate her own.”
“A good thought,” Tench replied.
Newell smiled politely. His plans included a future wherein Queen
Gustin IV would be his wife. The fact that the headstrong young queen
was already married was a difficulty he chose to overlook. Political
assassination was not a completely unfamiliar tool to him.
He remembered the days when he and Princess Lovella had squarely
faced the terrible consequences that would arise if Crown Prince
Chalmer assumed the throne. Despite bearing the name of his
illustrious grandfather, Prince Chalmer was an indecisive man. King
Tedric had not realized that in the course of educating his son in
statecraft he had crushed his spirit as surely as the spirit of a
good horse could be ruined by being too severely broken to rein.
Although Chalmer had visited battlefields, he was not a warrior.
Lovella was and she feared for her nation if her brother became king.
Chalmers hemming and hawing over the least decision would have meant
disaster as his field commanders waited for orders that came too late
or were too frequently countermanded.
Since King Tedric refused to acknowledge his son’s flaws and
promote his daughter over him, then another must do the difficult
task for him. Lack of decisiveness was not one of Lovella’s
flaws. With Newell’s assistance, she had engineered her
brother’s death. Afterward, she had honestly grieved for
Chalmer, but, as she told her husband, she had not viewed his slaying
as murder, but rather as an execution necessary for the greater good
of the state. Simply put, an incompetent commander must be
demoted.
Prince Barden had already been disinherited, so only Lovella
remained to assist her father. She did her duty well and then, with
bitter irony, she died in battle before she could assume the throne,
leaving the kingdom in greater peril than it had been in before.
Many a dark night after Lovella’s death, Newell had sat
alone with only a bottle of strong brandy for company. In his most
miserable, most drunken moments he had wondered if Lovella’s
death had been Chalmers revenge reaching out from beyond the grave.
When he was sober, those fears dispersed like fog in the heat of the
sun. Rapidly, therefore, he learned to stay sober and found himself
praised for his strength of character.
Newell was sober when he decided that King Tedric had wronged him
by not confirming him as heir to the throne following Lovella’s
death. Surely he was suited. Certainly he had risked far more to
secure the throne than any of those who were now being considered. If
Lovella had lived, Newell would have been king. How had her death
changed anything?
Newell was sober when he decided that if his rights were not given
to him, he would take them. Sober he had remained as he had made his
plans, manipulating the policies of Bright Bay with words dropped
into eager ears. Sober he had continued as he had watched the
political maneuverings of King Tedric’s potential heirs with
sardonic humor bordering on scorn.
Certainly it was symptomatic of the greater chaos that Earl
Kestrel thought he could foist off a foundling on the king and
convince him to name her his heir. Yet, on meeting Lady Blysse,
Newell had rather admired the young woman. For all her lack of
manners, there was a buried ferocity to her that reminded him
somewhat of Lovella. Never mind. This Blysse Norwood would never see
the throne. Indeed, she might well be the very scapegoat he needed.
As an outsider, resented by the others, she could easily be blamed
for the work of his hands.
Prince Newell chuckled, a dry, humorless sound. His companion
checked to see if the sun was vanishing behind a cloud, for surely
the day had grown suddenly cooler.
“Now, Lord Tench,” Newell said, “I have told you
what you want to know. Why don’t you tell me…”
The next quarter of an hour or so was profitably spent taking
notes on the location of certain elements of Bright Bay’s
fleet, information that Tench gave freely since the two countries
were not technically at war.
Wishing to seem the patriot, Newell Shield had given out that his
price for supplying gossip about the workings of the Hawk Haven
nobility was information that would enable Hawk Haven’s navy to
avoid accidental clashes with Bright Bay’s more powerful fleet.
In reality, he hardly cared about such things, except that in some
small corner of his mind, that navy already belonged to him.
The bowstring made a sound like a drowsy hornet when Firekeeper
released it, but she hardly heard it, hardly felt the slap against
her broad, leather wrist guard. Her mind was focused on the target,
on the blood-red spot that was its heart. The arrowhead burrowed in
three finger widths to the right and she snarled.
“Easy!” Race Forester cautioned her. “It
doesn’t do to lose your temper. If that had been a deer or a
man, you’d have hit soundly.”
“Not,” Firekeeper replied, “a squirrel or
rabbit.”
“True,” Race agreed, wrenching the arrow from the
target. “But at that distance who could know for certain there
was a rabbit?”
“I,” she said with a deliberate calm she did not feel,
“would know.”
Race nodded. “Yes, I guess you would.”
Midmorning had become archery practice time, a thing Earl Kestrel
had agreed to willingly since King Tedric might well prefer an heir
who would lead in battle to one who must conduct campaigns from the
sidelines. For the same reason, Firekeeper was being tutored in
elementary swordplay, use of a shield, and some refinements of
knife-fighting that her hunting had not revealed to her.
Though she had taken to these elements of martial training with
varying degrees of enthusiasm, attempting to teach her lancework had
proven useless. As of yet, no horse of sufficient strength and energy
had been found that would tolerate her. The patient grey gelding that
had carried her from the keep could be coaxed into a walk or even a
trot, but certainly not into cantering at a target. Therefore, for
now, lancework had been set aside.
A couple of weeks’ work had not made Firekeeper an expert in
anything. Indeed, other than with a bow or a knife—weapons she
had more practice with—she was a greater danger to herself than
to any opponent. However, she had learned valuable lessons about how
a sword might damage or a shield protect. These lessons could someday
be enough to preserve her life.
Blind Seer had taken to practicing with her, though after a few
incidents with panicked castle guards they worked together only in
the company of Earl Kestrel’s retainers.
“I’m not fool enough,” the great wolf
panted, lunging to get at her beneath the cumbersome shield she
carried on her left arm, dexterously avoiding blows from the wooden
practice sword, “to follow where you will lead without
learning enough to defend myself I haven’t forgotten, even if
you have, how vulnerable my flanks are to arrows.”
Firekeeper tried a shield bash and Blind Seer danced backward,
haunches brushing the ground, tail wagging.
“Up close,” the wolf continued,
“that’s where they’ll fear to fire their bows
lest they hit their friends, so up close is where I must learn to
be.”
He snaked beneath the rim of her shield and clamped his jaws
lightly but firmly around her ankle. A single tug and she was flat on
her back. Blind Seer leapt upon her and then she pressed the blunt
point of her practice dagger into his soft underbelly.
“I cut?” she queried, pushing slightly.
“You never would have gotten this close if Ihadreally crushed your
ankle!” the wolf protested.
“Maybe,” Firekeeper replied, “but
Ox has told me of the wonders dying men can perform, even when pain
should leave them shivering like a throat-torn doe. You
shouldn’t allow yourself to forget how vulnerable your belly
can be.”
The wolf’s blue eyes were hard as ice for a moment; then
Blind Seer laughed.
“Call it a draw?” he suggested.
“A draw,” Firekeeper agreed.
Derian shook his head in mock dismay at Firekeeper when the woman
came in from the practice field covered with dirt and sweat, bleeding
from a score of scratches. She knew him well enough by now to know
that he really wasn’t upset—far from it. He had been more
worried when all she had done was eat and grow soft.
“Ox says,” he commented, “that you’re
getting better with a sword.”
“Want to practice with me?” she teased. “I show
you how good I am getting.”
Derian nodded slowly. “Actually, I would. Ox suggested that
you’d improve with a different opponent—he said
you’re learning to fight him specifically, not a general
opponent, so I’ve been brushing up on what I know. For some
reason none of the castle retainers will fence with you.”
From where he lay on a cool section of flagstone floor, Blind Seer
chuckled. “I wonder why…”
Firekeeper booted the wolf in the ribs.
“You know sword?” she asked Derian, pleased to
discover that her fox-haired friend had teeth.
“I’m no great expert,” Derian replied, though
before he had met real soldiers he had actually fancied himself quite
capable. “My parents insisted that I take lessons when I was
younger. Sometimes it helps if a pack train owner can help with
defense.”
“From thieves,” she said, remembering various
blood-thrilling stories that Holly had been telling her, “and
from bandits, highwaymen, and robbers.”
Derian laughed. “That’s it,” he agreed.
“What are your plans for the rest of the day, my
lady?”
Firekeeper frowned. Derian’s latest self-appointed task was
making her keep track of her own obligations. She had a sneaking
suspicion that this was a lure to make her take her reading and
writing lessons more seriously.
“Bath,” she said, hedging for time to remember.
“Then free until late afternoon. Then dancing lessons with Lady
Elise and the other girls.
“Then…” She shrugged. “Then nothing so
important if I can’t remember. Right?”
“Then dinner,” Derian said seriously, “with Duke
Gyrfalcon, his family, and—if rumor is to be
believed—emissaries from the court of New Kelvin. This is very
important. House Gyrfalcon is important in its own right—not
just as a source of potential heirs for the throne. Earl Kestrel is
working very hard for your cause, trying to show Duke Gyrfalcon that
you could be as good a monarch as the duke’s own niece or
nephew. Furthermore, the New Kelvin emissaries will take report of
you back to their rulers, so you must make a good
impression.”
Firekeeper snorted, more disgusted with herself than for any other
reason, but she didn’t anticipate another formal banquet with
any joy.
“Must I go?” she pleaded.
“Yes,” Derian said firmly. “Earl Kestrel is
quite delighted with this notice.”
“Very well,” she said, “to make my guardian
happy, I will go.”
Derian patted her sympathetically on one shoulder. “I have
the tub ready in my room. Hurry and bathe. If you don’t take
too long, you should be able to spend an hour or so in the garden
with Holly. Just don’t get filthy all over again.”
Firekeeper had a wolf’s fastidious nature—a thing that
might surprise those who thought of the carnivores as filthy,
ravening beasts delighting in blood and gore. In reality, if water
was available, wolves bathed after a kill or after eating.
Freshly scrubbed, her hair caught up in a queue behind, dressed in
a pair of leather trousers and matching vest, Firekeeper hurried off
to the gardens. Holly was resting on one of the benches, enjoying a
tumbler of well water seasoned with crushed spearmint.
“I thought you were coming,” she said, patting the
bench beside her. “Your falcon arrived a moment ago.”
“Elation,” Firekeeper said seriously, “is not my
falcon. She just stay with me.”
“It works out to about the same,” Holly replied
peacefully, “as I
[ MISSING SECTION ]
“What are you doing today?” Firekeeper asked, eager to
learn more of the mysteries of gardening.
“Mostly resting, child. It’s hot this afternoon. I
wonder that you don’t wear something lighter.”
Firekeeper stroked the leather possessively. “It protects.
If not wear clothes to protect, why wear at all?”
“I,” Holly said with a soft, secret laugh,
“would think that you had figured that out by now, but if you
haven’t…”
Firekeeper had heard that type of chuckle before and said
scornfully, “I know about mating. This is not the season. I do
not need fine plumage.”
“For men,” Holly replied, a hint of warning in her
tone, “it is always the season. Never mind,
child…”
“What are you doing today?” Firekeeper repeated,
feeling that this conversation was taking her out of her depth and,
as usual, not liking the feeling at all.
“I was weeding around the acorn squash, but now I’m
resting.” Holly sipped her drink. “I don’t have
your energy, child. After all, I’m old enough to be your
grandmother.”
“Is there still weeding?”
“Always.”
“Where?”
Without leaving her bench, Holly gave Firekeeper directions. Once
Firekeeper had settled into pulling the runner grass from between the
rows of squash vines, she asked, hoping to prompt a story:
“You say you old enough to be my grandmother. Do you have
grandchildren?”
“I do,” Holly replied. “Do you recall the head
gardener?”
Firekeeper had met the intense little man with his fussy manners,
had noted his nervous way of eyeing Blind Seer as if he expected the
wolf to dig up the rose gardens at the least notice. She was not
certain at all that she liked the head gardener but had learned
enough castle etiquette not to openly question those in positions of
authority.
She grunted a noncommittal “Yes.”
“He is my oldest son.”
“No!”
“Yes. Once upon a time, I was the head gardener, but when my
knees got creaky, King Tedric permitted me to pass the title on to my
son, even as my father once passed it to me. It’s an
inheritance after a fashion, as real as property or money.”
“Head Gardener is your son?”
“That’s right.”
“But he’s so…” Firekeeper waved her
hands, mimicking the head gardener’s mincing motions.
Holly laughed, not denying the truth, but not condemning the man
either.
“But he is also a very good gardener. I suspect he will
learn to relax as he ages. Being around gardens does that to you. In
any case, Timin— that’s my son’s name—has
three children of his own. The elder two are already learning the
craft. You may have seen them about: Dan and Robyn.”
Firekeeper had seen them, hardworking towheads dressed in matching
smocks and sandals. Her estimation of Timin Gardener went up a notch.
At least he didn’t spare his children work to their eventual
detriment. The two gardener sprigs took their tasks seriously and if
they paused to chase a butterfly or admire a spider’s web, they
didn’t expect others to make excuses for them just because
their father was the head gardener.
She’d seen something of what such sloughing off of
responsibility could do in Citrine’s sisters, Ruby and Opal,
and in Kenre’s sisters, Nydia and Deste. Those middle girls
were becoming spoiled weak things who didn’t seem to have any
purpose in life but learning how to be noblewomen. They seemed to
think a good marriage the best they could do for themselves, unlike
Sapphire and Elise, whose training as heirs had made them value
themselves for what they could do.
Firekeeper sighed, remembering that the middle girls would be at
dancing practice today. She dreaded their sneers and giggles at her
missteps, at her inability to hear the guidance the music offered her
feet. To distract herself from that dreary prospect, Firekeeper
asked:
“Do you have any other children or grandchildren?”
Holly nodded. “I have a daughter who married a fisherman and
lives by the seacoast. She has two children and I expect will have
more. My younger son hasn’t yet married—too restless.
He’s in the military.”
A sad expression flitted across Holly’s wrinkled face.
“And I had another daughter who is now dead. She was among
those who followed Prince Barden across the mountains.”
“Oh!” Firekeeper felt strange. “Then I may have
known her when I was very small.”
“I had thought of that,” Holly admitted. “I
suppose that’s why at first I was so glad to make your
acquaintance. In a way, you were a link to my daughter.”
“What was her name?” Firekeeper asked, sitting back on
her heels, a weed dangling from her hand.
“Sarena, Sarena Gardener. Her husband was Donal Hunter. They
had a little girl named Tamara.”
She looked so expectant that Firekeeper felt almost ill, for those
names meant nothing to her. She hated to disappoint the old woman,
but she shook her head slowly.
“I’m sorry. I don’t remember. I was very small
when the fire came.”
Holly wiped away a tear that had somehow appeared on her withered
cheek and smiled bravely.
“That’s all right, dearie. I didn’t expect that
you would.”
Firekeeper knew that her friend was lying and that truth made her
feel all the worse.
XIII
“…and as I stand here on the border
between life and death,” sang the minstrel, his coat of
feathers and twine as marvelous as the soaring reaches of his voice,
“ here I stand, one hand clutching the sword blade and the
other pressed against the heart of my love, pushing her back, saving
her from death, in the wash of blood across my face at last I see the
truth, dark truth, black as dry blood…”
The minstrel’s voice rose, became sweeter still,
“She loves me not at all!”
Elise knew by heart the story of which the minstrel sang. It was
as old as the kingdom, the tale of a man whose fingers were sliced
off one by one as he defended his faithless lover.
She hated the first part of the song, always found herself holding
her breath as the man catalogued the cold realities that sliced his
soul far more cruelly than the sword did his hand. Breath trapped
aching in her chest, she waited for the second verse, where the man,
accepting truth in place of the lies that had been so dear to him,
watched his fingers regrow again one by one. “Red baptism, dripping from my brow, through the rose of
new vision, I see her laughing at my pale offering—bent fingers
on our cottage floor…”
Seeking to distract herself until the hopeful verses began, Elise
glanced at Jet, wondering how he was responding to this classic story
of love and betrayal. In the several days that had passed since she
had visited with Firekeeper and Sir Jared in the castle gardens, she
had found herself giving Jet many such glances: wondering what he
thought and dreamed, dreading that he was hollow but for
ambition.
Elise had always imagined herself in the place of the man in the
song, the faithful one, believing in love despite all obstacles. Now
she dreaded that she might be more like the faithless lover than she
had ever dreamed. She shoved these thoughts away in real terror,
discovering that she had become a stranger even to herself.
Now as she looked upon her betrothed’s black-browed face,
she thought he looked bored. Then she realized that Jet was not
watching the minstrel at all, that what she had taken for boredom was
carefully guarded neutrality. Following the direction of Jet’s
gaze, she saw that a soldier had mounted the king’s dais and
was handing Tedric a letter many times folded and secured with bright
seals. The woman’s uniform was dusty and her face
expressionless—or was there a touch of pity on those dirty
features?
Gamely, the minstrel continued his verses, but no one heard him
and only Kenre Trueheart, too young to have wondered what messenger
would dare interrupt the king at his meat, patted his hands together
in applause when the entertainer made his awkward bow and gratefully
ducked behind a curtain concealing a door out of the banquet
hall.
Afterward, Elise remembered this unfinished ballad as a bad
omen.
King Tedric and Queen Elexa departed the hall almost as soon as
the packet was placed in the king’s hand and a few words were
exchanged with the weary messenger. The gathered nobility was
courteously invited to remain and continue enjoying the
entertainment, but no one had ears for the music. Hands reached for
goblets of wine by reflex rather than to savor the fine vintages.
Steward Silver escorted the messenger from the hall with a
swiftness that made any cross-examination impossible, but this did
not keep conjecture at bay. If anything, it added to it. Fragments of
information were welded into improbable theories.
Elise listened to the scattered scraps that drifted up and down
the long tables: “The stablemaster said that she came in without escort
and her horse was blown. It may be ruined.” “They have the messenger sequestered in a private room.
Steward Silver herself is waiting on her. No one else is being
permitted close. I wonder what they fear the messenger will
say?” “My maid just happened to be passing down the hallway
when a servant came by carrying the messenger’s soiled uniform.
She said that she’s certain that it bore signs of a battle. One
sleeve hung as if nearly sliced off.” “Did you see the king’s expression when he spoke
with the messenger? There must have been some terrible
tragedy!”
Initially, Elise was as eager as any of the others to gather
scraps and piece them into a crazy quilt of possible event. Then a
sudden weariness and unnamed sorrow seized her. Making her excuses,
she left the hall. She was heading for her rooms when she remembered
that Ninette would be waiting there, eager to continue the cycle of
gossip and conjecture.
Although the evening was dark, Elise slipped out a side door into
the garden. The moon was half-full and bright enough to navigate by,
though the garden seemed robbed of color. By moonlight, Elise found
refuge among the roses, their scent heavy in the hot, damp summer
air. She bent her head to breathe deeply of their perfume. When she
raised her head, she discovered that she was not alone.
A slim figure leaned against an arched trellis overgrown with pale
roses. Even in the dim light, Elise could tell the figure was another
woman, dressed in a long, formal gown. When the woman moved, Elise
knew her.
“Firekeeper,” she said softly.
“Yes,” came the equally soft reply. “I saw you
come out. What is happening?”
“News from the army, I think,” Elise said. “I
don’t know any more than that. I don’t think anyone knows
any more.”
“Oh.” A long silence, then Firekeeper asked, “I
don’t understand.”
“Neither,” Elise admitted, “do I. How can they
build such elaborate pictures out of guesses?”
She glanced around. “Where is Derian?”
“Inside, making guesses.” Firekeeper’s laugh was
throaty. “He doesn’t worry about me in the darkness,
especially since Blind Seer is always near. He said he worries about
those in the darkness who might meet me!”
Elise laughed in turn. “Shall we walk then? My head is muzzy
with wine and too much talk.”
She saw the pale oval of Firekeeper’s face nod agreement.
Side by side, they strolled down the curving paths. More than once,
Elise felt Firekeeper’s hand on her arm, steering her away from
a collision with a bush or other obstacle.
“Can you see in the dark?” she asked.
“See, like in daylight?”
“Yes.”
“Not really.” Firekeeper shook her head.
Elise heard rather than saw the motion, felt the breath of air
against her bare shoulders.
“I cannot see in the darkness,” the other continued.
“More I know how to see the dark, to know what is there. Wolves
hunt much at night, so I must learn darkness or I must
starve.”
Elise heard Firekeeper stumble, heard a soft curse, smiled,
wondering if Derian had taught it to his charge intentionally.
“Why,” Firekeeper asked plaintively, “do women
wear these dresses?”
Elise might have laughed, but she could hear the frustration in
the other woman’s voice.
“Because,” she offered slowly, “dresses make a
woman look attractive and graceful.”
Firekeeper snorted. “I am not graceful in a
dress.”
Having seen Firekeeper treading on her hem on the dance floor,
Elise could not deny the truth of this statement. Moreover, Elise had
learned that the other didn’t understand polite social
lies.
“No, you are not,” she admitted, “but
that’s because you have never learned to walk in a skirt. You
must shorten your stride just a little, not step out like a soldier
on parade.”
“I am not so noisy as a soldier,” Firekeeper
protested.
“No, you are not. You’re even graceful in your own
way—like a panther or a wolf—but not like a
woman.”
“But I am a woman,” Firekeeper responded in the tones
of one to whom this was still a matter for debate. “How can
what I do be not like a woman?”
Unlike her cousin Sapphire, who rode well and enjoyed hunting,
Elise had always preferred quieter pursuits. Still, she recalled some
of Sapphire’s loudly voiced frustrations when Melina had
moderated her daughter’s wilder behavior. Although she disliked
Melina, Elise found the very arguments Melina had presented to
Sapphire rising to her lips.
“You cannot escape that you are a woman,” she
began.
“I wish I could,” Firekeeper muttered, but Elise
continued as if she hadn’t heard.
“Since you cannot, you cannot escape the expectations that
our society and our class places upon women.”
“Why?” Firekeeper said querulously.
“Just listen to me for a moment,” Elise insisted.
“Since people will expect a young woman of a noble
house—and you are of one ever since Duchess Kestrel permitted
her son to adopt you—to know certain manners of behavior, you
must know them.”
“Circles,” Firekeeper complained, “like a pup
biting its tail. I am this so I must be that. I am that so I must be
this. Tell me, how will this little foot walking keep me
alive?”
Elise resisted the urge to reply, “By keeping you from
falling on your face.” She already knew that the literal-minded
Firekeeper would respond that this problem could be avoided by
letting her wear what she wanted.
“Consider,” she offered, “what you told me about
learning to see at night so that you could hunt with the wolves.
Learning to wear a gown, to walk gracefully, to eat
politely…”
“I do that!”
“You’re learning,” Elise admitted, “but
don’t change the subject. All of these are ways of learning to
see in the dark.”
“Maybe,” Firekeeper said, her tone unconvinced.
“Can you climb a tree?”
“Yes.”
“Swim?”
“Yes!” This second affirmative was almost
indignant.
“And these skills let you go places that you could not go
without them.”
Stubborn silence. Elise pressed her point.
“Why do you like knowing how to shoot a bow?”
“It lets me kill farther,” came the answer, almost in
a growl.
“And using a sword does the same?”
“Yes.”
“Let me tell you, Firekeeper, knowing a woman’s arts
can keep you alive, let you invade private sanctums, even help you to
subdue your enemies. If you don’t know those arts, others who
do will always have an advantage over you.”
“All this from wearing a gown that tangles your
feet?”
“If you know how to wear it,” Elise leapt onto a stone
bench, her long skirts swirling around her like bird’s wings,
“you can seem to fly.”
The next day, King Tedric summoned into private conference those
heads of the Great Houses who were in the capital or their
representatives. He also included his brother and sister, Grand Duke
Gadman and Grand Duchess Rosene. Anyone else was denied entrance, a
thing that forced several of the competitors for the throne to
swallow their rage when Earl Kestrel was admitted as representative
for his absent mother, the duchess.
Some hours later, the conferees emerged, uniformly somber. Yet,
despite the solemnity, the same inner glow lit the eyes of Earl
Kestrel, the grand duke, and the grand duchess, leaving observers to
comment that the king must have said something decisive regarding the
appointment of his heir.
As soon as the conference had ended, Earl Kestrel summoned
Firekeeper and Derian to him. At his orders, Ox mounted guard at the
door and Race was sent to linger near the entry from the gardens,
just in case someone tried to slip in from that direction. With his
usual tact, Jared Surcliffe had made himself politely absent.
“The king has sworn us to silence about what occurred at the
meeting,” Kestrel said, “but Lady Blysse, you must be
prepared.”
Firekeeper cocked an eyebrow at him, “For
silence?”
“No, to act!” Earl Kestrel calmed himself with visible
effort. “Bright Bay has sent an emissary escorted by a
considerable armed force to our southern border, into the contested
area near the twin towns of Hope and Good Crossing. King Tedric is
resolved to meet with this emissary himself. Since this action will
put him in great danger, the king has submitted to the request of the
Great Houses that he settle the matter of his heir before he departs.
From the way he kept glancing at me as he spoke, Blysse, I believe he
means to choose you!”
Firekeeper flushed, her heart suddenly pounding. She thought of
all she had learned to do, how much more she had learned that she
could not do. And over it all, seductive as the scent of a hot game
trail, was the realization that the power of a queen was all she
needed to make what she could and could not do moot.
“But I cannot…” she began.
Earl Kestrel cut her off. “Of course you can. You must! If
the king wishes you to be his heir, you have no choice in the matter.
I shall continue to advise you, as I have ever since I rescued you
from the wilderness. You will not be alone in your great
responsibilities. Indeed, since you are but fifteen you must have a
regent until you are nineteen. I am likely to be that person, since I
am your guardian…”
He was rattling on in this fashion, Firekeeper ignoring most of
his words, when Ox thumped on the door. Valet glided over and opened
it.
“Someone is here with a message,” Ox announced loudly.
“Says it’s not written.”
“Let the messenger enter,” Earl Kestrel said
grandly.
A man in castle livery came through the door, bowed deeply, and
announced: “King Tedric and Queen Elexa request that Lady
Blysse Norwood come to their chambers one hour from now. She may be
escorted as far as the door, but they wish to meet with her in
private.”
Earl Kestrel was so keyed up that a fascinating mixture of
emotions— delight, annoyance, fear, and finally smug
satisfaction—glided unguarded across his hawk-nosed face.
Firekeeper took advantage of his distraction to reply:
“Tell the king and queen that I will be there.”
Any momentary annoyance Earl Kestrel might have felt about his
privilege being usurped vanished in his greater elation.
“Wonderful!” he crowed as soon as the messenger had
departed and the door was secured.
He was about to say more, but Firekeeper held up a hand.
“I must get cleaned and dressed,” she said, her tones
haughty. “This is most certainly a formal occasion.”
“Yes!” Earl Kestrel slapped his palms together
smartly. “Absolutely. Valet! Ring for hot water. Prepare my
best jacket and trousers. Ox! Find Cousin Jared. Tell him I wish him
to be part of Lady Blysse’s escort. He should put on his
uniform and order of knighthood…”
Firekeeper escaped while Earl Kestrel was still shouting
orders.
“He do,” she said to Derian, “everything but
sing and spread his tail feathers.”
“This,” Derian replied, clearly a bit stunned,
“is the culmination of all his plans.”
“I wonder,” Firekeeper said softly, “if it is
the coming together of all of mine as well?”
Grand Duchess Rosene summoned her son and daughter to her, along with
their spouses. As a matter of course, Ivon brought Elise and Zorana
brought Purcel. The younger children were kept away lest they
inadvertently carry gossip.
When Jet Shield arrived at the door of Rosene’s suite, his
demeanor that of one who expects to take part in a family conference,
even the acid-tongued grand duchess could not turn him away, no
matter that her expression showed that she thought he was there more
likely as a spy for his grandfather than out of a desire to be near
Elise at this crucial time.
Elise was glad to have Jet there, no matter how of late she had
doubted the sincerity of his affection. The glitter in her
grandmother’s washed-out old eyes frightened her a bit. She
imagined that Grand Duke Gadman wore the same expression and wondered
how King Tedric had survived to such a ripe age while the focus of so
much malicious ambition.
“Tedric refused,” Rosene began snappishly, “to
read us the full text of the letters borne to him by the army
messenger. He said they were too long and too filled with
repetition.”
Her dry sniff was commentary enough on how much she believed that!
She continued:
“In essence, Bright Bay wishes to meet with someone in
authority to discuss a matter that will be to the benefit of the
mutual peace of our nations.”
“I thought,” commented scholarly Aksel Trueheart,
“that we were at peace.”
“Only technically,” Rosene replied with a glance at
her daughter as if to say, “How do you stand him!”
Aunt Zorana, however, seemed very calm, almost unnaturally so.
From a woman who had been infuriated by the reduction of her hopes
for the throne, she had become so self-contained that some had
wondered aloud if she was indulging heavily in drink or one of the
exotic drugs the New Kelvinese cultivated beneath green glass within
steam-heated greenhouses hidden in the valleys of their mountainous
realm.
“Although we do not have a declared state of war,”
Grand Duchess Rosene continued when Zorana remained silent,
“our interests continue to clash. There have been numerous
skirmishes over contested territories, robberies by bandits who may
well be Bright Bay raiders, and blockades of our sea-lanes by their
fleet. Now, suddenly, though war is undeclared, we are being offered
a means to peace. What might that be?”
Elise heard her voice speaking as if it were separate from
herself. “A marriage alliance—like Jet and
mine.”
“That is correct,” Rosene agreed with an approving
nod. “That is also the only thing that I can see drawing Tedric
out of the security of his castle. Allister Seagleam is wed and has
children of his own. Doubtless, the alliance would be between one of
his children and one of Tedric’s grandnieces or
nephews.”
Elise wondered if she was imagining the calculating look in
Jet’s eyes, as if he was recalling how easily Sapphire’s
engagements to various scions of Great Houses were broken when some
more promising liaison became available.
His next words, the first he had spoken since making his greetings
to his prospective in-laws, did nothing to reassure her.
“How old are Allister Seagleam’s children?”
Aunt Zorana answered, her tone oddly caressing, “His eldest
two are sons—one just your age, dear Jet, the other the same
age as my Purcel. His twin daughters are quite young, younger even
than my Deste.”
Elise was quite certain she didn’t imagine the malicious
glance Aunt Zorana shot at her brother as if to say: “See, if
you hadn’t been so eager to use Elise within our own kingdom,
you would have had the perfect offering for King Tedric.”
If Jet felt any disappointment at this news, he didn’t show
it. Instead he commented blandly, “My sister Opal would be just
the age for either of these sons. She’s three years my
junior.”
To Elise’s surprise—for she hadn’t needed a
dance card to see that Aunt Zorana’s own children, if a bit
young for betrothal under usual circumstances, meshed quite well with
those of Allister Seagleam—Aunt Zorana only smiled blandly.
“I’m certain that Uncle Tedric will not overlook that
point.”
At that moment, a sharp rap sounded on the door. Before any could
rise to answer it, the heavy door flew open and Grand Duke Gadman,
followed closely by Lord Redbriar, burst into the room, shoving his
way past protesting guards.
“I don’t suppose you’ve heard,” Gadman
almost shouted at his sister, “closeted in here with your
minions, plotting…”
“Heard what?” Rosene replied, her tones more moderated
but no less forceful.
“While you have been plotting, Tedric has stolen a march. He
summoned that girl Blysse Norwood to his chambers. They are to meet
in less than an hour!”
Feeling curiously outside all of this, as if her own prospects and
those of her father were unconcerned, Elise noted that the rivals had
been united for this brief moment by an even greater threat. Only one
person’s expression was less than shocked—Aunt
Zorana’s. She actually looked pleased, though that pleasure was
mingled with a trace of apprehension.
“He can’t name that foundling his heir!” Grand
Duchess Rosene proclaimed. “We must protest!”
“I’ve already demanded to see him,” Gadman said
bitterly. “He refused me.”
“Perhaps if both of us…” Rosene suggested.
“I can’t see how it will hurt to try,” Gadman
agreed.
The two bent figures stalked forth, their heirs trailing them like
an agitated flock of ducklings. Elise moved more slowly, unable to
remove Aunt Zorana’s strange expression from her mind.
An hour was barely enough time for Firekeeper to bathe—a thing
made necessary by her usual morning romp with Blind Seer—and
don a gown hastily pressed by Valet.
Escorted by Elation, who soared overhead screeching loud
commentary, Derian dashed out to find Holly Gardener. The old woman
asked no questions as she provided flowers for Firekeeper’s
hair and girdle, but something in her ancient eyes told Derian that
rumors had already reached the gardens.
“Wish her luck,” Holly said as she pressed the cut
flowers into his hand.
“I will,” he promised. “Whatever luck
is.”
There was a brief argument when Earl Kestrel, resplendently garbed
in frock coat, waistcoat, and knee-breeches of the Kestrel red and
blue, learned that Firekeeper planned to bring Blind Seer with
her.
“He comes,” she insisted. “The king know of him
and give him freedom of the castle.”
Earl Kestrel relented, muttering, “If the king wishes the
wolf kept without the door, doubtless he will have left orders to
that effect. Ancestors preserve me, but by now everyone in the castle
must know that she won’t leave the beast behind!”
Derian resisted adding, Just as everyone knows that the real issue
here is whether or not you can dominate Firekeeper!
When they set off for the king’s private chambers, the party
encountered an unexpected obstacle. A milling throng of the
king’s relatives blocked the corridor—less intentionally
than by their mere presence. Their mood was ugly. Clearly, the king
had refused to meet with them.
Upon seeing Earl Kestrel, Grand Duke Gadman snarled, “There
is no way we will allow this foundling to be named heir! No matter
what you say, there is no proof that you didn’t just pick this
girl up in some gutter, stuff her in a gown, and teach her the basic
rudiments of table manners!”
Firekeeper said nothing in response, studying the grand duke as if
he were merely some curious species of beetle who had crossed her
path. Not all of her companions were so silent.
“Our word is not proof enough?” Sir Jared asked with
dangerous dryness; his Order of the White Eagle gleamed on the breast
of his Army dress uniform.
Even in his self-righteous fury, Grand Duke Gadman was reminded
that Jared Surcliffe’s honesty was not open to question.
“I suppose…” he hedged, fumbling for an apology
that would not admit that he was ever really in the wrong. “You
must agree that the girl, the circumstances… most
unusual…”
“I do agree to that.” Sir Jared filled the gap
followed by this weak attempt. “Certainly we can open this
matter of Lady Blysse’s finding to question when you find
another gutter brat who lists among her peculiar assets being
attended by a wolf. Now, will you let us through?”
This reminder of Blind Seer’s presence parted the crowd.
They filtered past in a thin stream as the Kestrel party moved
forward.
Derian reflected that it was a measure of the gathered
nobles’ anxiety that they had overlooked the wolf at all, for
Blind Seer had grown no smaller, nor had the fangs he showed in a
deliberately sarcastic yawn grown any less sharp.
Only Lady Elise walked by the Kestrel contingent with something
like a friendliness in her bearing. She even reached out a hand to
pat Blind Seer’s grey fur.
“You look very elegant and graceful,” she said to
Firekeeper as they passed. “Quite the lady.”
Derian wondered why Firekeeper seemed so very pleased.
Firekeeper had feared that Earl Kestrel would try to inveigle himself
into her meeting with King Tedric. Frequently the earl reminded her
of a lesser wolf in a large pack, always trying to cut into the head
wolf’s share of the kill, always testing to see if this was the
moment to challenge for primacy.
She was pleasantly surprised when he motioned her entourage to a
halt in the hall and did not even try to press into the waiting
room.
“Lady Blysse Norwood,” he announced to the officer of
the King’s Own standing to one side of the door, “to see
His Majesty.”
“She is expected,” the officer said. “Pass
through, Lady Blysse.”
No mention was made of Blind Seer and Firekeeper did not bother to
ask permission. She nodded to her escort, adding a reassuring smile
for Derian, who looked quite worried.
“Thank you for bringing me.”
Earl Kestrel replied, “We will wait here to escort you back
when His Majesty has concluded his business.”
For all the calm formality of his words, the earl’s eyes
shone with anticipated glory.
Let through without question or search into a luxuriously
furnished waiting area, Firekeeper went into the king’s
parlor.
Unlike the waiting room, it was simply furnished. A cluster of
fine chairs upholstered for comfort, not for ostentation, rested on a
thick rug.
In the center of this loose circle was a low table set with light
refreshments. Light shone in from open windows curtained with gauze
against glare and insects.
From outside of one of these windows came a brief squawk that told
Firekeeper that Elation was watching.
Three people awaited her: King Tedric, Queen Elexa, and a man
Firekeeper recognized as someone important in the King’s Own
Guard. All three rose to greet her, a courtesy Firekeeper appreciated
since she knew that it was not her due—would not even be her
due if she were the king’s heir. She accepted the gesture as it
was meant, a welcome meant to put her at her ease. When bows and
curtsies had been exchanged, King Tedric motioned her to a chair.
“Be comfortable, Lady Blysse, or would you prefer that I
call you Firekeeper?”
“Firekeeper is what wolf call me,” she replied with
singular tact—for her. “Blysse what Earl Kestrel call me.
Please take your comfort.”
Queen Elexa smiled. “Then we shall call you Firekeeper here
in private, but in public, so as not to hurt Earl Kestrel’s
feelings, we shall refer to you as Blysse.”
In this, Firekeeper recognized the elaborate etiquette that
established rank, so like and yet so unlike the groveling and playful
biting used for the same purpose by a wolf pack.
“Let me present to you,” King Tedric continued,
“one of my most trusted advisors, Sir Dirkin Eastbranch. By
rights, Sir Dirkin should be commander of the King’s Own, but
his own choice has been to accept lower rank so that he will be free
to follow my most frivolous command.”
“Rarely,” Sir Dirkin said in a voice that came from
deep in his chest, “have Your Majesty’s orders been
frivolous.”
King Tedric laughed and Firekeeper sensed a long-standing joke.
Dirkin Eastbranch was a tall man with chiseled features that included
the squarest chin Firekeeper had ever seen. Something about his
upright posture reminded Firekeeper of a tree, a resemblance enhanced
by the weathered texture of his skin. Like many soldiers, he was
clean-shaven, but his brown hair was long and thick. She still had
difficulty guessing human ages, but she suspected that Dirkin was
older than Doc, maybe even as old as the earl.
“By now,” King Tedric said as Queen Elexa leaned
forward to pour early-pressed cider into elegant glass goblets,
“you will have heard that I plan to travel south to the border
of our kingdom and Bright Bay.”
King Tedric paused to let his guest reply. Firekeeper didn’t
say anything, but sat looking alert and interested. She knew that
Earl Kestrel was to have said nothing of the king’s plans to
anyone and refused, for all her occasional annoyance with her
guardian, to betray his indiscretion.
After a moment, King Tedric continued, a slight smile that she
might have imagined just touching his lips.
“To tell you something that I did not mention during this
morning’s conference—and that I would prefer did not
leave this room—Allister Seagleam, my sister Caryl’s only
child, has requested a meeting with me.”
By now Firekeeper had memorized the complete list of competitors
for the throne and heard their various merits argued so many times
that she had no trouble placing this one.
“The Pledge Child,” she said, remembering what Derian
had told her, “some say the favorite of the common
folk.”
This time she was certain that the king was pleased. Queen Elexa
also nodded approval, saying:
“Not all our nieces and nephews would speak so openly of
Duke Allister. Most seem to feel that we should deny him. What do you
think?”
Firekeeper shrugged, remembered this was not an elegant reply,
then shrugged again. “How can I say until I have met
him?”
This won a small, quickly swallowed, chuckle from Sir Dirkin.
“That is precisely what we think,” King Tedric said.
“I have prayed long and hard at the shrine to my ancestors and
I have come to the conclusion that I would be betraying my
father’s dream if I did not at least meet with the man whose
very birth is the result of my father’s hopes for peace.
“However, in order to assuage my Great Houses, I have had to
promise that I will not leave for such dangerous territories without
first assuring that the succession is safe. They believe that in this
way they will make it impossible for me to name Allister Seagleam my
heir, for how can I name one heir and then denounce him or her
without reason in favor of another?”
Firekeeper nodded to show that she had understood.
“So, Lady Blysse,” the king continued, “would
you like to be queen?”
XIV
Prince Newell might have known even before King
Tedric did what news was contained in the letter sent by Queen
Gustin. Whether or not this was the case, it was certainly true that
he was determined to be on the spot when the representatives of the
two monarchies met. This was quite critical to the fruition of his
plans.
Therefore, the prince made mysterious and cryptic comments to the
captain of Wings. These comments made that faithful if unimaginative
man quite certain that once again the prince was placing his life at
risk for the good of the Crown. Since Wings’s captain had
repeatedly benefited from the information that Prince Newell had
brought to him, news that had made Wings the most successful ship in
Hawk Haven’s small navy, he was willing to do without his
Commander of Marines for a time. If it also crossed the
captain’s mind that the reserve commander was a less willful
man with far fewer highly placed and important connections and thus
far easier to overrule in matters of tactics and suchlike, the
captain was not likely to say this to Prince Newell.
Instead, he assigned a couple of sailors to lower the small cutter
that was the prince’s own property (although Newell was
generous to a fault in sharing it with other officers for their need
and entertainment), told the quartermaster to grant the prince
anything he needed within reason from ship’s stores, and bid
Newell fair winds and fast sailing.
Racing before the wind toward his destination, Newell was assisted
in his tasks with sail and line only by Rook, his personal
manservant. Rook was a sandy-haired, quiet, forgettable fellow, as
efficient as Earl Kestrel’s Valet, although somewhat quicker
with a knife in the back in a dark alley. Newell had caught him
robbing the bedchamber of Duchess Merlin during a house party at the
Norwood country manse. In return for not being turned over to Duchess
Kestrel’s executioners, Rook had sworn Prince Newell his
abiding loyalty.
Skin stinging with salt, eyes red with concentration, Newell
Shield distracted himself from discomfort by meditating on those
things that set him apart from his competitors for the throne. As
these were also the qualities he felt would make him a superior king,
it was a pleasant self-indulgence.
For one, he thought, tightening a line around a brace and tacking
slightly, they were sheep whereas he was a wolf. All one had to do to
be sure of this was observe the lot of them flocking around King
Tedric, baaing compliments and waiting for the monarch to grace one
of them— or one of their lambs—with title and kingdom.
They thought that blood was merit enough.
He admitted that a few of them, Ivon Archer, in particular, had
distinguished themselves for their own achievements. Rolfston
Redbriar, though, he was a real bleater—had been since they
were all children gathering with the rest of the extended nobility
for the Festival of the Eagle.
Little sister Melina had Rolfston neatly in line. Sometimes Newell
was almost certain Melina was a sorceress—not that a woman
would need to be one to direct Rolfston. No matter the truth, the
reputation had garnered her a certain measure of respect. It was to
Newell’s own advantage that Melina had never realized that
respect based on fear can only go so far, especially for a younger
daughter of a Great House with no prospects for inheritance.
And then there was sweet Zorana. She was a lusty lady. It had been
delightful to renew their intimacy. Yet in the final assessment, she
had done nothing more to advance her position than bleat and
baa—and breed. Four living children! He wondered at
Zorana’s lack of wisdom. It was not as if she had a great deal
to offer her brood in the way of prospects. Purcel would make a good
career in the military even before he inherited, but what did she
plan to do with the rest?
Newell laughed and salt spray splashed into his mouth—make
them little ladies and lords with a queen for a mama! Doubtless when
he was king Zorana would be making sheep’s eyes at him and
hinting that she’d be quite happy to poison Aksel Trueheart and
become his queen—and provide him with a tidy little line of
ready-made heirs in the process. The idea would have its merits, but
he was going beyond Hawk Haven for his queen.
The thought of Gustin IV with her long sunset-gold hair, laughing
eyes, and breasts like a ship’s figurehead stirred him, soaked
with cold seawater as he was. She would be somewhere in her late
twenties now, ripe but far from withering. There was no way a woman
with a body like that could be barren, no matter what rumors said.
Her lack of children had to be the rooted in that effete husband of
hers.
Newell had heard that a woman became lustier in her middle years,
especially if she hadn’t borne a child, as if her body was
telling her to hurry up and be about it. He looked forward to finding
out if that tale was true.
If everything went according to plan he’d be bedding Gustin
by this next summer—those Bright Bay folks would just need to
be reasonable regarding mourning periods for her late husband. After
all, a king shouldn’t need to wait about getting an heir.
Prince Newell smiled into the sun, high and gold like the one on
the coat of arms of Bright Bay’s royal house. He’d
already designed the arms for his new kingdom—a fresh design
that eschewed both eagles and suns. He’d already planned so
much. Now, at last, he was going to have a chance to make those plans
reality.
“Queen?” firekeeper replied, thinking more rapidly than
she could ever remember doing before. Unknown to her, for the first
time since soon after the fire that destroyed her parents, her
thoughts took shape in human words and symbols. A bridge was
built.
“Queen,” King Tedric repeated steadily. “The one
who will rule here after I join the ancestors.”
And Firekeeper thought of power with a greater reach than her
single Fang. Of humans groveling before her as a wolf did before the
Ones, of the power to command, of that power turned to find the
answer to the question that had nipped the edges of her mind as the
pack nipped at the heels of an elk, and from that last image came her
answer.
“No,” she said. “A queen should be to her people
as the Ones are to the pack: the greatest strength to guide and
preserve through winter. I could not be a queen. I do not yet have
the wisdom.”
She looked squarely at the king, awaiting his anger, for she knew
that he had offered her a great honor and she had cast it away like a
too small fish into the stream. Tedric, however, was nodding
agreement. Queen Elexa looked hesitant, but Firekeeper thought she
was pleased. Only Sir Dirkin maintained a face of wooden
impassivity.
Feeling as if she was stalking some elusive prey, Firekeeper
curled her fingers in Blind Seer’s ruff, awaiting
developments.
King Tedric asked, “Are you certain about this, Firekeeper?
Your young wisdom could be guided by advisors until it grew. I would
appoint such and many others would offer their wisdom
unasked.”
This was Earl Kestrel’s vision voiced. Still Firekeeper must
shake her head.
“I am a wolf. Perhaps two-legged kind take leadership before
they can lead, but for a wolf that is folly and such folly is
death—not just for the wolf but often for all the
pack.”
Now King Tedric smiled a sour smile. “Would that all my
nieces and nephews were raised wolves, Firekeeper. All they think of
is the honor and the power, not the responsibility. That is why I
must meet this Allister Seagleam. My father laid the foundation for
his birth. I must see the structure that has risen on that foundation
before I reject it entirely.”
As Firekeeper struggled to follow the king’s imagery, she
realized that her afternoons in the gardens with Holly had taught her
a great deal. Through them, she had come to understand the hidden
preparation that rested beneath so many human endeavors. It was a
different way of living from the season-structured roaming of the
pack, yet a valid one for frail humankind.
King Tedric continued, “Yet even as I follow this course, I
must be faithful to my own responsibilities. Queen Elexa can reign in
my absence, but even with her firmly in charge I cannot leave the
relative safety of this castle without naming my heir.”
“Who?” Firekeeper asked, wondering which of the many
will finally become the One.
The old man bared yellow teeth in an expression that reminded her
very much of a wolf and answered with a question:
“Can you read, Firekeeper?”
“No.” She shrugged. “Derian tries, but the black
marks on the page won’t talk to me.”
“Or,” laughed Queen Elexa, her thin elderly voice
heard for the first time in a great while, “you will not speak
with them. That is closer to the truth as I have heard it from
Aurella Wellward.”
Firekeeper stared at the queen, her eyes round with indignant
astonishment. “How she speak of me? I have not spoken three
words with her!”
“But her daughter is your friend,” the queen replied.
“Every scrap of information about you, my dear, has been
gathered and traded, shared and twisted every which way. You do not
think we have left you to go your way unnoticed, do you?”
Actually, this was what Firekeeper had believed, for ever since
the king had granted her freedom of the castle she had felt herself
unimpeded but for the ever-watchful presence of Derian. If anything,
outside of the small circle of friends she had been able to
cultivate, she had felt herself slighted. Queen Elexa’s words
revealed a spiderweb of human chatter as complex and useful as
birdsong in a spring woodland.
Before she had time to contemplate this further, King Tedric was
speaking:
“Although you do not read, you seem to understand the idea
of reading—that the black marks on the page talk with the voice
of the writer.”
“I do.”
“Then this is my intention. Before I leave, I will write the
name of my heir on a special document called a will. Two copies shall
be made. One will travel with me. The other will be sealed and locked
away, to be opened only if I die. If I do not, then I am free to
change what is written. If not, I have fulfilled my
responsibility.”
“How,” Firekeeper asked, tentative before these
mysteries, “will they know one piece of paper from
another?”
“The marks of writing are distinct from person to
person,” Tedric said. Like scents on a trail, Firekeeper thought. All deer
smell like deer, but one deer smells more like itself than it does
like all others.
“Furthermore, both copies of my will and the boxes into
which they shall be locked will be impressed with my personal seal.
No other will be able to forge those marks.”
“I understand,” Firekeeper said, having seen similar
arrangements on the documents that Duchess Kestrel sent to her son.
“Why not just tell before you go?”
“For two reasons,” the king replied. “One is
that I may decide that Allister Seagleam is the best person to be
king after me. If I publicly designate one person as my heir, then
renounce him or her for no reason other than I have found another I
think would be better, I may create a feud between
factions.”
“But better is better!”
“Not all see this as simply as you do,” the king said
sadly. “And they are more correct than you are. Rulership of
humans takes more than strength and wisdom. Sometimes it takes more
uncertain qualities like charisma or political allies.”
“If you say,” she agreed.
“I do.”
Momentarily, the king looked so stern that Firekeeper had to
resist the impulse to lick the underside of his jaw and beg
forgiveness. Then he continued:
“The other reason for not naming my heir openly is that I
will create a danger for myself.”
“Why?”
“Once I name my heir, I become a danger to that heir because
I could change my mind and name another. The heir personally might
not fear my changing my mind, but there would be others who would
think it wisest to end my life before I could select a rival.
Needless to say, I hope that whoever I choose would not countenance
such behavior, but the heir might not even know what was done for his
or her benefit.”
Firekeeper shook her head, feeling it buzz with undesired
complexities. She could not believe Elise—for
example—would wish her great-uncle dead, but eager, watchful
Ivon Archer was another matter and he was nothing beside sour,
spiteful Zorana.
Sir Dirkin broke his own silence to add, “There are too many
plausible ways that an elderly monarch could die while traveling or
in an unexpected spate of battle. I have vowed to protect King Tedric
from these, but that restricts my own freedom greatly.”
“Therefore,” King Tedric said, “I have a request
to ask of you.”
Firekeeper was surprised. She had thought that once she refused
the king’s offer to make her queen he would be finished with
her. She had not realized that all the talk that had followed was
anything more than the tongue wagging of the type Earl Kestrel was so
fond.
“Ask,” she said, remembering the courtesies offered
from Royal Wolf to Royal Wolf. “You have fed me and I have
grown fat in your keeping. If I can feed you in turn, I
will.”
A small smile flitted across King Tedric’s face, but
instantly vanished and he replied with equal formality:
“Come with me to Hope. Be ears and eyes for Dirkin and
myself. Those skills your upbringing granted you have not escaped my
notice. One of the difficulties I suspect will result from my naming
my heir only in my will is that many of those who believe themselves
potential heirs will choose to join my train. Those who believe
themselves the chosen one will wish to stay close so as not to lose
in comparison to Allister Seagleam. Those who are less certain will
still wish to be nearby in case some valorous deed or great service
to me might bring them into my favor.
“I cannot refuse any of them without causing more
speculation. Those who were refused would plot behind
me—wondering if they were left behind to preserve them from
danger or merely because they were no longer of use to me. They would
envy those who went in my train. I wish I could refuse them all, but
to do the latter would rob my forces of three able
commanders—Norvin Norwood, Ivon Archer, and Purcel
Trueheart—and in my heart I dread that these negotiations
cannot end without bloodshed.”
Firekeeper nodded solemnly. “I will go with you.”
Sir Dirkin reminded her, “You will be placing yourself in
danger. There are those who will hate you for this meeting, believing
that the king has selected you his heir. Those who would resort to
assassinating a king would think still less of assassinating a
rival.”
“Let them try!” Firekeeper said, hand falling to the
knife at her waist.
Blind Seer—who had learned enough of human speech to follow
this talk, though the shape of his mouth would not let him speak it
as well— growled fierce agreement. If the falcon in the tree
outside flapped her wings in agreement, only Dirkin, silent and
watchful, noticed.
“I will watch my Firekeeper!” Blind Seer said
in wolf-speech and it almost seemed that the king and his advisors
agreed.
“I know you will take care,” Tedric said, “and
that your companions, human and otherwise, will guard you. Still, the
danger is real and must be accepted.”
“I accept it then,” Firekeeper said with a shrug,
“but I will still come with you and help Sir Dirkin
watch.”
“And I would have you watch my kinfolk as well,” King
Tedric said, “for the death of even one under suspicious
circumstances could create the very feuding I am hoping to
avoid.”
Firekeeper nodded agreement, but she could not resist saying:
“Wolves solve these matters more simply.”
“But wolves are not humans,” King Tedric replied,
“and I am hoping that my humans are not wolves.”
Early on the morning following Firekeeper’s meeting with King
Tedric, Derian Carter was sent into the city by Earl Kestrel.
Although he had a list of errands to run, he was also at leave to
visit his family.
“The earl is a fair master,” he explained to his
mother around a mouthful of freshly baked oatmeal cookies, the fat,
round cookies lavishly supplied with raisin. “As he plans for
us all to depart along with the king’s train, he has given
those of us who will attend him leave.”
“Does Earl Kestrel simply continue trailing in the
king’s wake, hoping for him to select your Firekeeper as his
heir?”
Derian shook his head. “Some perhaps, but he has also
volunteered his services as a commander of cavalry and the king has
accepted them.”
“And you?” Vernita asked eagerly. “You ride as
lightly as foam on the crest of a wave—are you going as a
member of Earl Kestrel’s unit?”
“No,” Derian replied. “I continue as attendant
upon the Lady Blysse.”
A mixture of disappointment and relief flitted across
Vernita’s pretty face. She asked carefully:
“And are you content with this?”
“Perfectly, Mother,” Derian assured her, although at
first he had been hurt and angry, knowing from his moon-span of
residence in the castle that he rode as well or better than most of
the King’s Horse. He could even shoot a bow from the saddle,
though his skill with a lance was less expert.
Patting his mother’s hand, he repeated to her what Earl
Kestrel himself had said when Derian dared protest:
“Earl Kestrel says that I am the only person Firekeeper
truly trusts. The earl hates admitting this, but it’s true. She
has made a few friends, but I am the one she returns to again and
again for explanations.”
“Is it not perhaps time for her to learn to trust
others?” Vernita hazarded.
Derian shook his head ruefully. “Mother, three and a half
moon-spans ago she was a wild animal, eating raw meat, sleeping in
the open, drinking blood as readily as water. We have succeeded in
putting a veneer of civilization over that animal, but the animal is
there, ready to burst free.”
“I have seen her,” Vernita said doubtfully,
“just once and that from a distance as she rode in an open
carriage with the Lady Archer. One seemed as much the lady as the
other.”
A full-throated laugh burst from Derian at the comparison between
delicate Elise and Firekeeper.
“Oh, Mother, appearances are deceptive. I remember that day.
Firekeeper had been invited to dine with Duke Peregrine and his
family at their city manse. A house guard, improperly prepared for
her or perhaps merely determined to show how he would dare what the
King’s Own Guard would not, tried to take her knife. Quick as
breath Firekeeper punched him squarely in the nose, then followed
through with a kick that nearly shattered one of the man’s
knees. Then, pretty as could be, she curtsied to the shocked duke,
apologizing for spilling blood on his carpet.”
Vernita’s green eyes widened in shock. “As well she
should!”
“No, Mother.” Derian could hardly keep from laughing
further at the memory. “You don’t understand. Firekeeper
then went on to explain that she would have punched the man in the
gut but she didn’t want to hurt her hand on his dress corselet
and she had to take him out quickly because Blind Seer was heading
for his throat.”
“She brought that wolf to a duke’s manse?”
“Blind Seer goes everywhere with her: bodyguard and
companion both. I spoke out of line when I said that I was the one
person she trusted. She trusts me to guide her actions, but Blind
Seer she trusts with both body and heart.”
“You speak as if the wolf is a person,” Vernita said.
“You’ve spent your entire life around animals. I
don’t think you would do this lightly.”
“Never, Mother.” Derian shrugged and bit into another
cookie. “Blind Seer is as much a person as I am—and not
just in Firekeeper’s opinion. I’ve watched him since Bear
Moon when Firekeeper first introduced him to me and Race. Blind Seer
is as clever as any human—and more so than many I’ve
known.”
“Oh.”
The monosyllable was noncommittal, but Derian grew defensive.
“Mother, she talks to him and he to her—I am certain
of it! Queen Zorana’s edicts encouraged us to forget everything
that came before the Civil War. Mostly I agree with her wisdom. Our
nation started fresh, without all the deadwood of Old Country
traditions that would have weighed us down. I doubt her wisdom where
it applies to the history of our own lands since the earliest days of
colonization.
“Lord Aksel Trueheart gives regular lectures to those who
wish to listen—much to Lady Zorana’s embarrassment.
Perhaps Firekeeper’s arrival spurred Lord Aksel in that
direction, but of late the topic has been what the New World was like
when the earliest settlers arrived. Their records to a one agree that
in those days there were animals far larger and far wiser than any we
know today. Then, some fifty years after colonization began, almost
to a one they vanished. Where did they go?”
Vernita humored him. “Across the Iron Mountains?”
“That’s what I think,” Derian replied, flushing
slightly as he realized he’d been ranting. “That’s
exactly what I think. I think they figured out that they
couldn’t compete with our bows and arrows, our swords and
armor, with the magics of the Old World wizards. Those who admitted
it left. The rest were slain.”
Footsteps on the wooden floor announced Colby’s arrival.
“I heard similar stories when I was a boy,” he said,
joining them at the table and pouring himself a mug of beer,
“from an old, old woman who belonged to my society. She claimed
to have them from her own mother, who had lived in the foothills of
the Iron Mountains and seen some of the wise beasts herself. Human
life is short and memory a chancy thing, but I believed her. She had
a relic, a bear claw long as a scythe blade. It was an impressive
thing.”
Vernita grinned at husband and son. “I consider myself
cautioned to keep an open mind. Colby, you’re home
early.”
“Brock came and told me Derian was here. We’ve heard
enough at the stables of the king’s planned departure for me to
guess that this might be Derian’s last visit for a while, so I
turned the day’s work over to the journeymen with promises that
you would review their books yourself.”
“Thanks,” Vernita said dryly.
“In any case, I want to go hear King Tedric’s farewell
speech.”
“Is that today?” Derian asked, surprised. “The
word I had is that he doesn’t depart for another few days
yet.”
“He doesn’t,” Colby replied, “but
apparently he has decided to scotch rumors by speaking with the
people himself now, rather than later.”
“Wise,” Derian said. “Just this morning in the
market I heard some remarkable tales, including one that he was dead
and this journey was simply an attempt to conceal the fact until the
nobility could fight out who would be his heir.”
“That one will be easily ended,” Colby agreed,
“but I wonder what new ones this will begin?”
“I can’t say,” Derian grinned, remembering.
“Actually, I’m curious about what the king will say
myself. Firekeeper met with him yesterday, but she refused to say
anything of what passed between them. The earl was nearly mad with
rage and frustration.”
Both Vernita and Colby looked as if they wished to ask more, but
they respected Derian’s professed ignorance. After all,
hadn’t he just finished boasting that he was the only person
Firekeeper trusted?
Derian sighed inwardly. Let them keep their illusions. On this
matter, Firekeeper had been as persistently mute as a stone.
“Let me close the office,” Vernita said, “and
call Damita and Brock in. We may as well go as a family. The younger
ones don’t seem at all aware that they’re living in
important times for the history of Hawk Haven.”
The paved assembly area outside the speaker’s tower of
Eagle’s Nest Castle was normally more than large enough to hold
those who came to hear news from the royal court. Here, once early in
the morning and again at sunset, a herald stood on a platform within
the tower and made announcements. Most of the time these were
routine, hardly more important than the crying of the hours. Other
times they included some interesting tidbit: the resolution of a
crucial court case, the passage of a law, the birth of a child into
the nobility. Each week a post-rider carried the same news to every
surrounding township.
The assembly area was usually strained to capacity when at midday
on each full moon, King Tedric himself came to the speaker’s
tower. From this lofty perch, but full in view of his subjects, he
reassured his people that all was well and gave the blessings of the
royal ancestors.
Today, the usual idlers and newsmongers could hardly find a place
to stand. It seemed as if most of the town and a fair portion of the
surrounding countryside had come to hear the king’s speech.
Pressed into the throng, craning his neck to get a good look, Derian
was once again made aware of how much more—well—noble the
nobility looked from a distance.
At this distance, most of the lines on King Tedric’s face
vanished. Those that remained gave his features a look of regal
dignity. No one could tell that the snow white hair was a wig or that
his eyes were yellowed with age. Crowned in gold and diamonds, Tedric
looked the storybook picture of a king, and Derian was aware of the
covert glances of respect directed at he himself from neighbors and
friends who knew of his employment in the castle. It’s as if he thought wryly, I’m somehow
improved by having been close to that old man once or twice. I doubt
their opinion would change if they knew the king doesn’t even
know me from the other servants.
Standing a few steps back from the king were several members of
the court. Derian recognized Queen Elexa, attended by Lady Aurella,
Steward Silver, and Sir Dirkin Eastbranch. He knew that the rest of
the court would be standing in the interior courtyard, unable to stay
away from this important speech, although doubtless court gossip and
rumor had revealed everything that would be said.
Indeed, initially there were no surprises for Derian. As he had in
private conference the day before, the king informed his people of
his proposed journey to Hope in order to confer with diplomats from
Bright Bay.
A soft murmur swept the crowd at this news. Not everyone was, like
Derian’s family, in a position to hear the earliest hints of
travel. Except for occasional journeys to family estates or to the
seats of his Great Houses, the elderly monarch had not left
Eagle’s Nest for years.
The king continued, informing his people that Queen Elexa would
administer daily business in his absence, but that he would be in
regular contact with her through carrier pigeons.
“My heir,” he said, his still powerful voice carrying
easily over hushed throng, hardly needing the amplified repetition
from the heralds to be heard at the farthest reaches, “has been
named in my will, a copy of which remains here in Eagle’s Nest,
a copy of which goes with me. I shall not reveal who I have selected
in any other fashion at this time.”
From this astonishing announcement, he moved onto the formal
blessing from the ancestors, but Derian hardly listened. Although
most around him stood with their faces upraised to accept the power
of the blessing, a few could not resist whispering. He goes to meet with the Pledge Child! Allister Seagleam will be our next king! Why else
wouldn’t the king name his heir publicly? There’ll be unhappiness in the court tonight! Pledge Child…
Over and over those two words were repeated, rustling like dry
leaves in the hush, practically taking on the force of an incantation
from an Old Country tale.
Moving through the crowd after the king had retired, Derian
listened to the gossip and conjecture, wondering at the fidelity of
an image. Allister Seagleam was hardly a child any longer. Indeed he
was a man grown with grown sons, but the image of a child born to
fulfill a promise of peace persisted. Even if King Tedric named
Allister Seagleam heir, could any man live up to such a legend?
As King Tedric had predicted, immediately after the announcement
that his choice of an heir was to be known only upon the reading of
his will, rapid arrangements were made so that many of the candidates
could join the royal train.
Grand Duchess Rosene’s fury when she learned how her brother
had resolved the matter was magnificent to behold. When she finished
raging, she began issuing orders.
“Although I wish to go, it would be an undue risk at my age.
Tedric should have more respect for his own aging bones. If Bright
Bay wishes to negotiate, he should insist that their emissaries come
here.”
Rosene had made the same argument to her brother to no effect.
Tedric had refused to even admit that there was sense to her
position, thus increasing her pique. Now, Rosene shored up her
diminished sense of self-importance by assigning positions to her
family members as a general might order troops.
“Aurella, of course, must remain here with Queen Elexa. To
have her do otherwise would be to our own detriment.”
Elise thought that it was a good thing that her grandmother could
not read minds, for Elise knew that there was no way, commanded or
not, that Aurella Wellward would leave the queen at such a time.
Aurella’s loyalty to her Wellward aunt might even exceed that
to her husband’s family—Ivon and Elise herself
excepted.
“Ivon, of course,” the elderly matriarch continued,
“must be with his troops. If Ivon’s name is the one on
that sealed document Tedric was waving about so arrogantly, he was
most certainly chosen at least in part for his martial prowess. No
need to undermine that reputation at this critical moment.”
“Thank you, Mother,” Ivon said dryly. To his credit,
much of his attention had been given to reviewing the roster that had
been delivered to him soon after the king’s announcement.
“Purcel will also be with his company,” the matriarch
continued. “Therefore, upon Zorana and Elise falls the
responsibility of keeping an eye on my brother. You must make certain
that Tedric makes no unwise decisions, that he does not overlook the
value of his own kinfolk in favor of a glamorous newcomer.”
“Your wish is as my own, Mother,” said this newly mild
Zorana. “Aksel can remain here to guard our interests and watch
the smaller children.”
“Fine. He is useless on a campaign—nothing like the
Truehearts who bore him. Your son’s talents clearly come from
the Archer side of the family.”
Zorana nodded, not even bristling at this dismissal of the father
of her children.
“I don’t think any of your other children need to be
taken along,” Grand Duchess Rosene continued to her daughter.
“They are young and almost certainly out of the
running.”
“I am bringing,” said Zorana with a flash of her old
fire, “my daughter Nydia. If I am King Tedric’s
heir—as is still possible despite your recent dismissal of my
chances—Purcel as my heir will need to shift his focus to
national matters. Nydia will then become heir to our family
properties. It is time her education is expanded.”
“Nydia is,” protested the Grand Duchess, “but
thirteen. Until this point you have not cared overmuch about her
education, even though she would follow if Purcel was killed on one
of his military ventures.”
“I care now,” Zorana said firmly.
The tension in the air between mother and daughter was a palpable
thing. Elise imagined that she could pull it, tug it, twist it like
taffy until it grew white, hard, and immobile.
Grand Duchess Rosene was the one to relent. “If you wish to
expose your thirteen-year-old daughter to the risks of a traveling
military encampment, so be it. Perhaps,” she added sourly,
“we should also include Deste and little Kenre. Are you certain
that you are not ignoring their education?”
“As to them,” Zorana said, her mildness now a mockery,
“I shall be ruled by you, but I thank you for your concern.
Perhaps you may devote some of your time here in the capital to their
lessons. You shall have little else to do.”
Offended, Rosene swept out, unwilling to discipline her daughter
in these sensitive times. Zorana took her leave a few moments after.
She spared a completely false smile for Elise.
“We shall be much in company, Niece. Certainly, your cousin
Sapphire will not welcome you into her pavilion and I wonder if Jet
will be so much about. He has himself to prove, you
understand.”
“Certainly, we follow the example of our elders,”
Elise answered with a flicker of her own malice. “I wonder
sometimes if Purcel does take after his mother’s side of the
family. He is such a noble warrior.”
This curiously mild Zorana did not deliver a scathing reply, as
the one of a few weeks ago might have, but the glower she directed at
Elise still shot a shiver of fear into the young woman’s soul,
one that lasted even after her aunt had departed.
“Was that wise?” Ivon asked, distracted from his
papers. “Your aunt Zorana has been much disappointed of late.
It is the hungry wolf that bites.”
“True,” Elise admitted, thinking of Firekeeper and
knowing that this was true.
“And speaking of wolves,” Ivon continued, his thoughts
following the same course, “you have a great advantage on this
campaign. You alone have a foothold in the Kestrel camp. Do not forgo
that contact now that King Tedric has made his decision. Personally,
I cannot believe that he has chosen Lady Blysse, but if he has, we
must cultivate her. Make yourself her familiar; learn what you
can.“
Aurella added. “Do not forget that you are growing into a
pretty enough young woman. Earl Kestrel has surrounded his ward with
men. One of them may talk freely to you even if Lady Blysse will
not.”
Elise nodded, but she doubted that Derian could be moved in his
loyalty to Firekeeper and the wolf-woman would confide in no other.
Sir Jared, perhaps… A tingle of anticipation melted the ice in
her soul at this excuse to speak further with the knight.
“Yes, Mother. I will remember what you have said.” She
paused, uncertain if she was really asking for advice or merely being
clever. “But should I risk this? What if Jet is
offended?”
“Jet Shield plays his own games,” Aurella said dryly.
“As he always has. He will only treasure you the more if he
thinks others value you. Still, keep Ninette nearby. Give Jet no
reason to question your honor.”
Ivon Archer stood and began gathering his papers. Then he turned
to his daughter, a wry expression, not completely without sorrow, on
his face.
“Welcome to the adult world, my daughter. Whether or not we
win the crown, you will always need to know how to use people against
each other. Such is our duty to our barony. My father won lands and
titles for us with his keen arrows in battle. To preserve those
honors, our weapons must be more subtle.”
Elise dropped him a deep curtsy. “Then we will go together
into this new battle, Father. Let us not flinch from whatever we must
do to honor our noble ancestor.”
Ivon clapped her on the shoulder and was gone. When Elise glanced
at Aurella she saw no sorrow, no unexplained tears upon her
mother’s cheek, only a stern countenance lit brightly from
within by pride.
BOOK THREE
XV
Several days on the road put Firekeeper into the best
shape she had been in since she left the wilderness to reside in West
Keep. Indeed, she realized that she might be in far better condition
than she had ever been, since her body at last had ample food with
which to build its strength.
In the wilds, she had hardly ever had enough to eat.
Summer’s glut quickly vanished as soon as the first frost
killed the plants with which she supplemented her diet and forced the
little animals into hiding and hibernation. Stealing the occasional
squirrel hoard (and eating the squirrel when possible) did not make
up for the loss of sweet fruits and slow, fat rodents. Without the
generosity of the wolves, she would have shriveled into nothing, her
body consuming itself in a desperate effort to keep lit the
spirit’s fire.
Three moon-spans of steady eating had changed Firekeeper from a
slat-sided, feral waif into something recognizable as a young woman.
A thin coating of fat now padded her muscles and buttocks. To her
slight consternation, she was even developing small, round breasts.
Despite devouring more than many grown men at any given meal, regular
exercise had kept her from becoming soft. She could still climb like
a squirrel, swim like a fish, and outrun a trotting horse—and
she did so on a regular basis.
Each day, the king’s train started moving as soon as dawn
crossed into pale daylight. It was mighty thing, ostensibly meant to
provide for the elderly monarch’s comfort and security, in
reality meant to impress the Bright Bay diplomats with a reminder of
what Hawk Haven could bring to bear if treachery was intended.
Scouts preceded the entire body, fanning out to the sides. Race
Forester was often among them and he was the only one who was ever
aware of Firekeeper’s presence in the surrounding woods.
Following the scouts were wings of light cavalry, the riders
armored in leather, armed with bows as well as swords. The heavier
cavalry rode closer to the king’s carriage, the dust they
stirred considered a fair trade for the safety their presence
offered.
Here, too, rode the members of King Tedric’s court, some in
carriages, some on horseback. Elise traded back and forth between the
two conveyances, but her cousin Sapphire remained on horseback.
Sapphire wore armor after the fashion of the light cavalry, the
leather portions dyed deep blue, the metal protecting the joints
polished to bright silver. A long sword was sheathed across her back,
its pommel set with a bright stone that some said was a sapphire and
others insisted was merely glass. Over one arm or slung from her
saddle she carried a shield with her personal device: a silver field
emblazoned with an octagonal sapphire.
Her brother Jet was similarly accoutred, though his chosen colors
were black and gold. Firekeeper was amused to discover that while
most of the soldiers were half in love with Sapphire, they thought
her brother a fop and pretender.
Groups of foot soldiers were interspersed about the column, some
guarding the creaking baggage wagons, some trudging in the rear.
Progress was so slow that these men and women had time to argue,
sing, gamble, and pursue rivalries between units.
This provided Firekeeper’s first exposure to a mass of the
common folk and she found them fascinating. Despite her usual dislike
of crowds, she frequently went among the soldiers. Some resented her
for behaving neither as a noble or a commoner, or from fear of Blind
Seer, but Purcel Trueheart welcomed her—perhaps at his mother
Zorana’s request—and so the soldiers tolerated her at
first. Later, she made friends among them and these welcomed her for
herself.
At Derian’s insistence, each day Firekeeper rode some hours
on Patience, the grey gelding, amusing herself by practicing archery
from the saddle. Her greatest delight, however, was when riding
lessons were finished and she could dismount. Pacing the caravan on
foot, she was free to investigate interesting parcels of woodland,
spear fish from brooks, and in general to behave in a fashion that
would drive insane any caretaker less accustomed to her ways than
Derian.
At first Earl Kestrel had tried to restrict Firekeeper’s
movements, but he was too busy with his own responsibilities to
enforce his commands. Later, King Tedric privately informed his
vassal that Lady Blysse had his express permission to go where she
wished. The earl, believing this yet another indication that his ward
was the chosen heir, happily acceded.
Blind Seer caused numerous problems simply because all the horses
and dogs were uniformly terrified of him. The dogs simply rolled over
and groveled, rarely essaying an attack even when they outnumbered
and outmassed the wolf. The horses, however, refused to compromise
with their terror unless Firekeeper wasted a considerable amount of
time talking to them—a task she found boring and repetitious
since the stupider horses needed to be frequently reminded that the
wolf wouldn’t eat them. Even Patience, Roanne, and Race’s
Dusty were skittish at first, reacting to their fellows’
fear.
Firekeeper resolved this frustrating situation by remaining away
from both the cavalry and king’s mounted companions as much as
possible. If she wished human companionship, there was plenty among
the soldiers. The placid oxen who drew the supply wagons were less
imaginative than the horses, more ready to accept the wolf as an
exceptionally large—and rather less annoying than
most—dog.
Firekeeper’s daily attire was a modified version of the
knee-length leather breeches and vest that she had favored since her
introduction to human-style clothing. She still ran barefoot, never
having lost the leather toughness of her foot soles. Nor did she need
gloves, for her long-fingered hands were as callused as any
farmer’s. To Firekeeper’s delight, her dark brown hair
finally had grown long enough to be tied back in a respectable queue.
A few clips, gifts from Elise, kept the straggle ends from her
eyes.
Since armed conflict was possible, Earl Kestrel insisted that his
ward be outfitted with some sort of armor. Firekeeper had rebelled
against the jangling weight of mail. However, after a vivid
demonstration by Ox of how armor could prevent a sword from
penetrating into the vitals, she had agreed—when
necessary—to wear leather armor similar to that worn by
Sapphire Shield, though less gaudily colored.
Except for riding lessons and weapons practice, during these days
of travel Firekeeper was free to run wild, bare of foot and head,
silent as the wind. Yet, despite her enthusiasm at being released
once again into the woodlands, Firekeeper did not forget the task the
king had enjoined her to perform. In daylight there was little she
could do, but at night she left her bedroll and glided among the
pitched tents, growling the curs to silence and taking shameless
delight in eavesdropping on her fellows.
In this fashion the wolf-woman learned many strange things.
Sapphire Shield, who by day rode straight and tall on the blue-dyed
horse with its silver-white mane and tail, regularly cried herself to
sleep each night. Lady Melina Shield frequently stole away into the
woods where, believing herself unwatched, she danced in the moonlight
and dipped glittering gemstones into pools of strongly scented
liquor.
Jet Shield, in the guise of courtship, frequently pressed himself
on Elise. When Elise refused him more than hot kisses and pawing at
her breasts, Jet found relief among the women who trailed the
caravan.
When night brought privacy, Lady Zorana vigorously tutored her
daughter Nydia in deportment, schooling the thirteen-year-old so
fiercely that Nydia, to this point ignored in favor of her older
brother, was driven into sullenness one step shy of rebellion. At
these moments, Zorana whispered to her, promising the little girl
great things until she sweetened and was willing to memorize signals
and responses that would puzzle Firekeeper more but that most human
rituals still puzzled her.
Elsewhere, Firekeeper learned that King Tedric’s old bones
did not permit him to sleep easily unless he was dosed by his
personal physician. Then nothing would wake him for some hours. In
contrast, Dirkin Eastbranch never slept—at least not that
Firekeeper had seen. He was also the only one among the king’s
retainers who seemed to notice her comings and goings, greeting her
with a silent smile and a slight raise of one eyebrow.
Nighttime was not Firekeeper’s only time for discovery. She
developed greater respect for Earl Kestrel when she realized that the
soldiers he commanded honored him for his courage and wisdom, not
merely for his title. From Doc she learned something of the arts of
treating cuts and bruises, of wrapping sprains, of salves and
ointments. From Race and Ox she continued to learn human arts of
survival and war. From Derian she learned humor and to play at
dice.
In all her memory, these days of travel became some of
Firekeeper’s happiest, filled with new things and with fitting
of them into a larger pattern of human society. No longer did she
think dance and music were the only things worthwhile about the human
way. Yet deep-rooted in her heart was the desire to be other, to run
on four fast feet, to raise night-seeing eyes to the moon, and sing
her praises from a wolf’s heart.
Arriving in Hope, Prince Newell Shield was delighted to learn that
King Tedric’s party was not expected for some days yet. Advance
riders were contracting with the locals for facilities and supplies.
Some were specially delegated to treat with the town leaders.
Although technically part of Hawk Haven, Hope had changed hands so
frequently—even since the Civil War ended some hundred and five
years before—that its residents viewed the entire issue of
citizenship with a cynical eye. If they felt a strong kinship with
any group they felt it for the citizens of Good Crossing,
Hope’s sister city across the Barren River. There had been
times when Good Crossing, too, had been part of Hawk Haven, times
when Hope had been part of Bright Bay.
An even greyer area of loyalty was Bridgeton, a massive stone
bridge on which shops and even houses had been built. Before the end
of the Civil War, there had been a bridge here—the “good
crossing” for which the original town had been named. In the
century since the end of the war, the original bridge had been
widened repeatedly until the small midriver islands on which the
pilings were set had all but vanished.
Bridgeton was dominated by the Toll House in the center. Although
no attempt was made to stop river traffic, enough commerce passed
over Bridgeton’s mighty span to keep it mended strong and its
coffers full. Neither monarchy had attempted to restrict
Bridgeton’s business, for the bridge was ideal neutral ground
for negotiations. At less peaceful times, the army that commanded the
span also commanded the perfect place from which to police the
river.
Prince Newell rather liked the locals’ cynicism. Hope and
Good Crossing both were home to dubious segments of the population,
men and women who found a close, easily crossed border extremely
convenient. It was home to deserters, thieves, smugglers,
practitioners of doubtful customs, and just plain free spirits. The
more law-abiding citizenry— which were the majority—put
up with the scoundrels because of the money they brought in, and
because people who had nowhere else to go would accept taxation (a
rarity elsewhere in Hawk Haven) and poor treatment.
The law-abiding elements also delighted in the economic benefits
derived from the permanent army garrison on the eastern fringes of
the town. The army officers, aware that alienation of the townspeople
was a good way to find themselves fighting alone if an invasion
attempt was made, turned a blind eye to anything that did not clearly
threaten Hawk Haven’s border. In return, the underworld
regularly supplied information about troop movements in Good Crossing
and elsewhere in Bright Bay. It was an arrangement that worked for
all.
Not wishing his presence to be known quite yet, Prince Newell had
Rook arrange for rooms in the Silent Wench, a tavern with many doors
and a reputation for discretion. Although this reputation was well
earned, Newell took no risks. Both Rook and Keen, his assistant, were
ordered to disguise themselves and give false names. Newell went the
further step of never venturing out of the tavern before sunset.
In many towns in both Hawk Haven and Bright Bay such behavior
would be either foolhardy or a guarantor of boredom. Hope was not a
typical town and with diplomatic contingents from the rival nations
converging upon it, even those rules it usually upheld were
broken.
Following a long day’s sleep, sorely needed after journeys
on water and land, Newell Shield sauntered down to the conveniently
dim-lit tavern. He doubted that his own mother could recognize him in
this light, but nonetheless he kept a greasy leather hat securely on
his head, the wide brim shadowing his eyes. Slouching in a corner
booth, calling for food and drink in harsh accents, he trusted that
no one but Rook and Keen would know him for the widower prince of
Hawk Haven.
While he ate, he listened to the gossip, but the Silent Wench was
renowned for her discretion and those who stayed there were not the
type to give much away. Paying in guild tokens which Rook had
acquired back in the port and at Eagle’s Nest, Prince Newell
ventured into the night. A soft cough from the shadows told him that
Keen trailed him, but Newell looked neither right nor left.
Keen was a round-faced, slightly soft-looking man in his late
twenties. By preference, he wore his straight brown hair loose to his
shoulders and cut blunt across his brow rather than pulled back in a
fashionable queue. Keen’s close-cut beard had the same glossy
sheen as an animal’s coat and his large, brown eyes seemed
guileless and gentle. That was all deception. Violence brewed beneath
that innocent gaze, as more than one woman lured into Keen’s
bed had discovered. Newell found him very useful.
Those who walked alone through the streets of Hope at night were
either drunks or fools or very confident of their own strength.
Newell clearly did not belong to either of the first two categories
and so no one bothered him.
He strolled along, noting that the Night Roost Inn displayed the
scarlet eagle of the Hawk Haven royal family. Here, then, stayed the
advance guard for the king. The laughter he heard through the
taproom’s open window was doubtless that of their guests,
locals wined and dined to make them glad to grant favors on their
monarch’s behalf.
It took Newell longer to find Stonehold’s presence, for
although Stonehold was no more at war with Hawk Haven than was Bright
Bay, when there had been war, Stonehold had regularly supported Hawk
Haven’s rival. Discretion regarding their
representative’s presence in Hope was wise, for only the most
open-minded could believe that it would be to Hawk Haven’s
benefit. But Newell found the Stoneholders by snooping among stables
and kitchen yards, swapping tall tales with burly men with
soldiers’ bearing yet conspicuously out of uniform. Many were
deserters or mercenaries, but at last he found those whose telltale
accents gave their origin away.
Having found Stonehold, it didn’t take more than another
hour to find those who were spying for Bright Bay. These hid their
accents, refrained from the nautical jargon with which even the most
inland-dwelling salted their language, and dressed as neutrally as he
did himself. They were ready with their money, buying drinks and
food, encouraging conjecture and speculation in the hope of learning
something to their advantage.
Though Newell drank wine and ale as offered, tonight he said
nothing beyond commenting on the weather or the quality of the local
vintages. Tonight he was taking the pulse of the situation and
finding it racing. Humming to himself, just slightly drunk, he ambled
back to his room at the Silent Wench.
THE first news that King Tedric’s party received when they
arrived outside Hope before noon on the fifth day of travel was that
Bright Bay’s contingent was not expected in Good Crossing until
late the next evening. This advantage of a day and a half did not
mean that there wasn’t plenty to do.
King Tedric, along with his closest advisors and personal staff,
would stay within the permanent fort to the east of Hope: the
Fortress of the Watchful Eye. Although the great stone-walled
structure could contain more, the king told his commanders to set up
in the surrounding open zone surrounding the fortress. No one
complained, for the late-summer weather, though sometimes muggy for
marching, had been so clement that camping was a pleasure.
Earl Kestrel ordered that his personal encampment be set up at the
fringes of the field, on the side nearest the cultivated areas. Part
of his reason was a desire to keep Blind Seer away from the bulk of
the army, part because the cavalry companies were stationed on the
other fringe, near to the river where the horses could be watered
with ease. The earl’s light mount, Coal, had joined Roanne,
Patience, and Dusty in grudgingly accepting the wolf and thus Norvin
could skirt the larger army encampment and ride between his areas of
responsibility with relative ease.
Derian was assisting Valet and Ox with setting up tents when Race
Forester arrived. More than willing to show off his skills to those
who could appreciate them, Race had accepted a temporary
scout’s commission, reporting directly to Earl Kestrel. He
looked good in the brown trousers and green shirt of the scouts, the
Kestrel arms—a shield divided top to bottom into narrow blue
and red bands, blazoned with a gold hunting horn—over his
heart.
Race’s ego had not been hurt at all during his association
with the scouts and he was swaggering a bit when he joined the
others, evidently bristling with gossip.
“Lend a hand,” Ox said with the good humor that rarely
left him, “and tell us what you’ve learned.”
Race grinned and grabbed a tent pole. “Half of Hope’s
folk already believe they know why we’re here. The other half
claims not to care. My gossips say differently, that Hope is glad to
have us here. Whatever happens with the negotiations, they expect to
come out the victors. The wine and ale merchants have been importing
from anywhere they can get it, anticipating that once the troops are
in place commerce will be slowed.”
“As it will be,” Ox said. His back muscles bulged as
he hauled the earl’s pavilion onto its frame. “Before
Earl Kestrel dismissed me this afternoon—saying with his usual
kindness that he’d be in meetings until sunset and there was no
need for me to just stand about—I heard enough about security
precautions to know that no one is getting near any place King Tedric
will be without careful searching.”
“Well,” Race commented, “tonight will be the
last night without rules. The army commanders have permission to
release up to two-thirds of their troops for a night on the town.
Those who volunteer to stay back will get bonus pay.”
“We’re not eligible for that,” Ox said, pointing
at Valet and Derian with his bearded chin, his hands being full,
“as we’re personal retainers. Are you for a night out or
bonus pay?”
Race shrugged. “I haven’t decided. I thought I’d
learn if Earl Kestrel has any preferences.”
Pausing in his own work, Derian glanced skyward, located Elation
soaring on the warm winds, and knew that Firekeeper was safe.
He’d gradually come to rely on the peregrine for such signals
and suspected that they were offered deliberately, that the bird knew
how difficult it was for him to track the wolf-woman and was
assisting him.
Despite how he had defended Blind Seer’s intelligence to his
mother, the thought made him uneasy, as if he were standing outside
of a door into a new world. If he accepted that a falcon was
voluntarily helping him do his job, he must accept that many things
he had thought simply old tales just might be true. If you accepted
beasts that were as intelligent as humans, then were the horrors and
wonders told of in some of the other stories far away?
Idly, Derian waved one hand in greeting and was certain he saw
Elation dip wing in acknowledgment. To distract himself he said:
“I suppose the negotiations themselves will be held on
Bridgeton?”
Race nodded. “That’s right. Advance parties agreed to
that easily enough. They’ll be using the Toll House and traffic
under Bridgeton itself is being halted entirely during the
meetings.”
“I bet the guilds love that!” Derian whistled.
“And what is being done about the shops and residences on
Bridgeton itself?”
“On our side,” Race said, raising his eyebrows
eloquently on the word “our.” “advance
negotiations have succeeded in renting space on rooftops and in front
of shops. I understand they tried to get everyone to agree to shut
down, but the guilds were having none of it. I expect that Bright Bay
did no better.”
Ox grumbled, “Two towns—three if you count
Bridgeton—united in nothing but their desire to oppose the
forces that surround them.”
Valet said softly from where he was stirring the fire, looking for
embers to heat his iron:
“And I, for one, don’t believe for a moment that
they’re not interested in these negotiations. If ever Bright
Bay and Hawk Haven make peace, the first casualty will be this
arrogant trio. We must not forget that.”
Race stared at him in amazement, then said, “Valet, you
don’t say much, but when you do, you sure say a
mouthful.”
Late that afternoon, when Derian was grooming Roanne and coaching
Firekeeper as she sparred with Ox, Doc came into their camp.
Like Race, Sir Jared had taken a temporary commission, but his was
with the medical corps. His uniform was the brilliant scarlet that
served both to mark him out as a medic and to hide the gorier side
effects of his calling.
Unlike Race, Doc didn’t wear the Kestrel badge, but the one
granted to him when he received his knighthood: a hand palm upraised
and impaled with several arrows. Beneath that was pinned a brooch in
the shape of an eagle outlined in scarlet enamel, the wing feathers
worked in silver, the beak and talons in gold, and the eyes perfectly
faceted diamonds.
Doc slipped Roanne a piece of carrot, then said to Derian in a
hushed voice, “I’d like to speak with you privately when
you’re done.”
“I’ll meet you there,” Derian tossed his head to
indicate a hillock about equidistant between their camp and a copse
of trees that skirted the field, “as soon as I have this
done.”
Curiosity made Derian finish more quickly than he should and by
way of an apology he gave the chestnut mare another chunk of carrot.
Seizing a water bottle, he ambled to where Doc leaned against a
slender tree trunk.
“What’s up?” he asked, sitting beside the other
man. “You look grim.”
“Do you know Hope well?” was Doc’s answer.
“I haven’t been here for some years.”
“Pretty well,” Derian replied. “I haven’t
been here for about a year, but I’ve come the last several with
my father. You can get some good deals on stock this time of year
from folk who don’t want to feed them over the
winter.”
“Legally owned?” Doc asked, curious despite his
evident preoccupation.
“Not all,” Derian admitted, “but quite a few
are. There are wild horses in the plains to the southwest. Some cross
into Hawk Haven, but the best herds are found in Bright Bay. Import
is legal, but elsewhere you pay a fee at the border.
Here…”
Doc nodded. “I see. Well, I need your help. The Surgeon
General and the king’s personal physician have asked me to
purchase something for them.”
He hesitated and Derian said quickly, “I won’t say a
word to anyone, not even Firekeeper if you don’t want me
to.”
“I’ll take your word on that,” the knight said,
and Derian felt his heart swell with pride.
“Go on,” he said, a bit more gruffly than he had
intended.
“The king,” Doc said, still hesitant, “is not a
young man and this journey has not been easy for him.”
Derian decided to help him along. “Lady Elise told
Firekeeper and me—she didn’t want to talk about it with
her aunts, they having their own agendas—that she was worried.
She said King Tedric looked grey and tired.”
“Lady Elise,” Doc said, a glow banishing his worried
expression for a moment, “has good eyes for this. She has
studied some of what I’ve been teaching Firekeeper, saying that
if there is trouble, ancestors forfend, she wants to be able to do
more than hide in the fortress.”
The glow vanished as Doc went back to his immediate concern.
“King Tedric’s heart is not strong,” he said, as
if admitting to treason, “not diseased, simply tired. As long
as he took limited, healthful exercise and rested well it did not
trouble him. However, both have been denied to him.
“There is a tonic that has been helping him. Unhappily, the
king’s physician did not anticipate so great a need and he has
nearly exhausted his supply. Some of the ingredients are rare and not
of the type the Surgeon General would stock in quantity for the field
hospital.”
“So they want you to buy some,” Derian prompted.
“Yes.” Jared smiled. “In short, I need to find
an apothecary who will not gossip, preferably one who is loyal to
Hawk Haven. Can you help me?”
Derian considered. “What are the ingredients you
need?”
After Jared had told him, Derian smiled encouragingly. “Some
of those are used for horses as well as people. We can buy those from
a farrier I know and none the wiser. The last few… Yes, I
think I know the person to deal with. My father buys fragrances from
her for my mother.“
“Fragrances?” Doc said dubiously.
“Don’t worry,” Derian assured him.
“Hazel’s a healer as well. Perfumes are her hobby. My
father swears her attar of roses is superior to anything you can get
in Eagle’s Nest.”
Doc nodded. “Very good. Now, remember, not a word of this to
anyone.”
“I promise.” Derian’s eyes sparkled. “If
any of the others ask me what we were talking about, I’ll say
you wanted my advice on the best way to court a girl.”
To his great amusement, Sir Jared Surcliffe colored nearly as deep
a red as his uniform.
They left camp that evening as dusk was falling. Derian had made a
quick trip into the town and assured himself that both farrier and
apothecary were going to be open that evening.
“Extended hours,” he told Doc as they walked into town
that evening, both of them dressed casually as if joining the men on
leave. “Who would miss a chance to do business tonight with all
these soldiers with money to spend and only one night to spend
it?”
“I’d forgotten that not all of them would go to
taverns and brothels,” Doc confessed.
“Nope,” Derian said cheerfully, caught up in the
general air of festivity despite his awareness of the importance of
their mission. “Many will end up there, but some simply want a
decent meal or to augment their kits. Others will be shopping for
gifts to send to the family back home. Smuggling being what it is
here, this is the perfect place to find something exotic and
wonderful.”
When the two men reached the town proper, they had to thread their
way through streets crowded with exultant soldiers. It was too early
for many to be very drunk, but they passed at least one brawl: two
men, slugging at each other with such narrow focused concentration
that they hadn’t noticed that the whore who was the reason for
their dispute had left with another man.
“I’m glad,” Doc said, “that Firekeeper
agreed to remain behind.”
Derian laughed. “I think I solved that one rather neatly. I
took her with me this afternoon. She was horrified by the crowding
and stench. When I told her it would be worse tonight, she was happy
to stay away.”
As they moved along, several times they encountered former
patients who offered to buy Sir Jared and his friend a drink. Other
soldiers, often those with whom Derian had raced horses or thrown
dice of an evening, called out to the pair to join them.
“We’d better accept some of their invitations,”
Derian advised, “unless you want to look like you’re on
duty.”
Doc agreed somewhat reluctantly, but Derian kept an eye on the
flow of traffic and made their excuses.
“I’ve got to stop by a farrier and pass on some
information for my family business,” he said. “Coming,
Doc? This fellow has some fine horses, better than the one
you’re riding.”
Doc shrugged. “I guess so. Just remember, my commission
doesn’t cover a private mount.”
They made their exit neatly and Doc gave Derian an admiring punch
on the shoulder.
“Nicely done, young man. Cover story as well as an excuse to
leave.”
“At your service, Sir Jared,” Derian laughed.
“What excuse do you have in mind for our trip to the
apothecary?” Jared asked with a grin.
“Perfume, of course,” Derian replied lightly,
“for that girl you were asking me about.”
This time he decided not to ignore Jared’s blush.
“Dare I guess who is on your mind?” he asked.
“It won’t go any further.”
“Please don’t let it,” Jared begged.
“I’ve tried hard to hide my feelings, but she is
betrothed.”
Elise’s name hardly needed to be spoken.
“A political arrangement,” Derian said firmly.
“One she asked for,” Jared countered, “if rumor
is correct.”
“One she may regret, if I read her right. Jet is not all
Elise imagined him to be. I think she has learned more about him over
the past moon-span, especially since she has been traveling in this
company.”
Derian hesitated, wondering how much he should say. Ninette,
Elise’s maid, was one of the few women in this entourage who
was not in uniform, above his station, or a prostitute. Although
Ninette was not really his type, Derian enjoyed female company and
had found himself drifting into visiting with her. Teasing and
flirtation had progressed into something like confidences, offered
since Ninette shrewdly recognized Derian’s sincere liking for
her mistress.
Jared remained somberly unconvinced and so Derian went on,
“Jet frequently seeks Elise’s company when the
day’s travel is over. Lately, I’ve noticed that she finds
reasons for them to visit in public.”
“She is a lady,” Jared protested indignantly,
“not some tart!”
“She is a young woman,” Derian persisted steadily,
“and a woman’s blood can run as hot as a man’s with
no fault to her but that she risks a child and a man does not.
Ninette tells me that Elise was not always so chary of time alone
with Jet.”
Jared colored, clearly torn between indignation at the thought
that his ideal could be vulnerable to passion, and hope that she
indeed did not favor her betrothed.
“She…” He stopped, unable to go on.
“You told me once you were married,” Derian said.
“An arranged marriage to a girl you had known from
childhood.”
“Yes.” Doc’s monosyllable was guarded.
“And are you telling me that you and your betrothed never
touched before the wedding? No kissing games? No little trial runs, a
blouse opened maybe, a hand guided to touch?”
The light was too dim for Derian to be certain, but he felt sure
Doc was blushing again. Shining Horse Hooves! He himself had played
the same games and more, and he could feel his own color rising. It
must be that talking about a thing was more embarrassing than
actually doing it.
“Don’t fault Elise for having the same
impulses,” Derian continued, despite his embarrassment,
“especially with a man she has been smitten with since she was
a girl. Take hope instead that she no longer welcomes such
games.”
Doc said nothing, but in the flickering light from a freshly lit
street-lamp, Derian caught the hint of a smile.
“Here’s the farrier,” Derian said, glad to have
an excuse to change the subject. “Come along and look at the
horses.”
Their stay lasted well over an hour, extended because the farrier
was busy with a group of cavalry women, each of whom was replacing
items from her kit, several of whom wanted to try the paces of a
horse or two. Knowing that Doc didn’t want to draw attention to
himself, Derian chatted up one of the stablehands, tried out a horse
or two himself, and even convinced Doc to relax enough to examine a
colt with great potential.
Derian did indeed have business messages from his father to the
farrier and would have delivered them that afternoon but for the
opportunity this gave him to draw the farrier aside. Then he asked to
see the man’s stock of horse medicines. Taking covert signals
from Doc, he investigated the wares and made his purchases.
Once they were out in the street with their packages, Derian said,
“You’ll need to speak with the apothecary yourself. I
know something about these ointments, but nothing about the rest of
the stuff you mentioned.”
“That won’t be a problem,” Doc replied.
“With what we’ve already purchased, she’ll have a
harder time guessing just why I need what I do. Especially,” he
grinned at Derian, “when I add a small order for attar of
roses.”
The apothecary’s shop was set back from the street behind a
small herb garden that provided advertisement for her wares. Climbing
roses in red, white, and pale yellow covered the front of the shop,
still heavily in bloom despite the lateness of the season.
“Some say,” Derian commented, as they passed through
the gate, “that the apothecary’s a sorceress.”
Doc looked quite serious. “I wouldn’t be at all
surprised if she is talented. It is late for roses to be so heavily
in bloom.”
Despite Derian’s own turns tending the family kitchen
garden, Derian had never considered the significance of late-blooming
roses. Without further words, he opened the shop door.
As elsewhere in the town, business was brisk, but Hazel Healer
herself recognized Derian as a regular customer and left her
assistants to handle the walk-in trade. A woman in her mid-fifties
with strong features that would never be called pretty, nonetheless,
her confidence and friendly smile made her handsome.
“Here’s an old customer,” she said. “Is
Colby with you?”
“Not this time,” Derian replied. “He’s
waiting to make his trip until the upcoming negotiations are through.
I’m here with my new master, Earl Kestrel.”
“As the wolf-girl’s keeper.” Hazel smiled.
“Yes. I’d heard something of that. Come into my workroom
and tell me more.”
Derian could not have wished for better and he motioned for Jared
to follow him. Once they were in the workroom, Derian made
introductions.
“Mistress Hazel Healer,” he said, “I would like
to present my friend, Jared.”
Doc had asked not to be introduced with his full name and titles,
but here again gossip had gone before them.
“Sir Jared Surcliffe,” Hazel replied, making a deep
curtsy. “I am honored.”
With a slight shrug for Derian, Doc returned her greeting with a
bow. “And I am to meet you. Derian has spoken well of you and
of your shop.”
“Thank you, and don’t look so surprised that I know
who you are. I’m from Eagle’s Nest myself originally.
Many members of my family live and work at the castle. I have seen
you there myself, years ago.”
“Would I know any of your family?” Jared asked
politely.
“Unless you frequent the grounds, Sir Jared,” she
said, “I doubt it. My cousin is Head Gardener now and, if the
Green Thumb passes on, one of his children will follow in
turn.”
Derian grinned. “I know your aunt, then,” he said.
“Goody Holly Gardener. She has befriended my wolf-girl, as you
called her.”
“Firekeeper,” Hazel said, twinkling at his surprise,
for Lady Blysse’s wolf-name was not commonly known. “Aunt
Holly wrote me when she heard you were coming here with the army,
asking that I help as I might. She never realized that you and I have
been friends since you were but freckles and red hair.”
She poured them tiny crystal glasses of her own cherry cordial and
they settled down to visit. Despite the relaxed atmosphere, Derian
was surprised when Doc himself opened the question of the necessary
herbs.
“Mistress Hazel,” Doc said, “I am in great need
of several rare—and expensive—items for my medical use. I
would like to purchase them from you or, if that is not possible,
have you act as my agent in their purchase. I am willing to pay more
for your complete silence in that matter—and will do so,
although I do not think such is necessary.”
Hazel, who a moment before had been laughing so hard at one of
Derian’s stories that he had worried she had imbibed too much
of her own distilling, grew immediately serious.
“Tell me what you need,” she said, “and unless
it violates my guild’s code, you will have it.”
Their conversation became technical then. The one thing Derian was
certain of was that although Hazel did not say so, she had both a
good idea what Doc was preparing to concoct and for whom. Nor did she
ask questions when Jared bought a small jar of her famous rose
attar.
When they departed the shop, Doc’s purse was much lighter,
for he had insisted on paying market rates and a bonus besides, and
the two men had several more bundles to stuff into their jacket
pockets.
“Come and see me again,” Hazel said at the door.
“Bring Firekeeper. I’d like to meet her.”
“If I can, I will,” Derian promised.
“And I with him,” Jared added. “I think you have
much you could teach me.”
“Gladly,” she said with a contented smile.
“Gladly.”
The streets were emptier now, but the noise from the taverns
louder. The two men walked briskly along, aware that human predators
seeking human prey would be prowling. Sober and in company, they were
not precisely worried—there was easier prey about—but
they saw no reason to invite trouble. None sought them out, but
others were not so lucky.
Past the market area, where residences mingled with businesses and
warehouses, they were drawn up short in their steps by a shrill
scream of pure terror.
Derian whirled, orienting on the sound. Doc pointed down a narrow
alley at whose far end was just visible a flicker of light.
“There!” he said, starting to dash that way.
“No, you fool!” Derian said, grabbing his arm.
“It could be a trap— a bait and hit!”
Doc shook him loose. “Then I’ll fall for
it!”
Cursing himself for behaving as no city-bred man should, Derian
ran after him. Their boots splashed in noxious puddles of unseen
mess. Doc bumped a pile of trash that squeaked and spewed forth rats.
Then they were in the open again.
They found themselves in a narrow street on which just about every
streetlamp had been blown out. In this scattered light, a young
woman, her black hair a cloud about her shoulders, was holding off
three men. Only the fact that she bore a sword and shield while they
were armed with knives had made this possible.
Even as Derian and Jared realized what was going on, the boldest
of the attackers darted forward. Raising his knife he made a
murderous slash. The woman blocked with her shield, but as she did so
the second darted forward and tangled her sword with his cloak. The
third was about to disarm her when Doc, unarmed except for his
courage, went charging forth.
His bellow halted the attackers in midmotion. The woman took
advantage of the momentary confusion to solidly bash the first man
with her shield. As he crumpled unconscious, she spun, perhaps more
from exhaustion than from skill, and Derian got a good look at the
device: a octagonal blue sapphire on a silver field.
“Hold on!” he yelled. “Rescue’s
here!”
Jared’s momentum carried him into the second man, who
dropped his cloak and reached for his knife. Derian would have liked
to keep an eye on him, but found himself confronting the third man,
the one who had been about to take Sapphire’s sword. The long
knife in the bandit’s right hand glittered wickedly, but Derian
didn’t feel fear, only a dreadful clarity of focus on that
shining silver edge.
“Haallooo!” he hollered, drawing his own knife, a more
utilitarian item meant for cutting rope or minor trimming of hooves.
Fortunately, what it lacked in length and grandeur it made up in
sharpness. His first blow sliced his opponent along the left upper
arm—a miss since he’d meant to stab him in the chest, but
effective enough.
His opponent hit as well, a long slash down Derian’s right
side that ruined his waistcoat and spilled packets of the
farrier’s medicines onto the cobbles but otherwise did no
damage. They sparred for several moments longer, during which time
Derian became aware that Sapphire had joined Doc and the two were
dealing effectively with the remaining bandit.
Still, Derian wondered if they could reach him before his luck ran
out. Practice with sword and shield he had; he’d even been in
the occasional tavern brawl, but never before had he been in a
close-up fight with death or maiming as the goal. The thought was
fleeting, passing through his brain as he and his nameless opponent
traded blow and counter, dodged and struck as if they were partners
in some weird, unchoreographed dance.
Sometimes Derian felt his blade hit something solid. Sometimes he
was the solid thing hit—and hurt. More often there was the
empty swish of air against his knife.
The dreadful clarity of the first few seconds was fading now,
replaced by vagueness. Blood was sticky on Derian’s left arm.
His own or his opponent’s? The face before him kept fading in
and out.
Faintly, Derian heard a low howl, saw his opponent’s
expression of focused cruelty transform into one of pure terror, and
then a dark and terrible shadow leapt onto his opponent.
When Derian looked again, there was a raw, red hole where the
man’s throat had been and his body was limp, tumbling onto the
street, blood gushing once from that terrible hole, then ebbing to a
dribble.
A slim arm grasped Derian firmly around his waist. He struggled,
and a familiar voice said:
“It’s me, Derian!”
“Firekeeper?”
“It’s me,” she said, her voice fierce and
choked. “The fight is over.”
To his eternal relief and eternal embarrassment, Derian Carter
took one look at Firekeeper, saw the splash of red blood across her
face, and collapsed into a dead faint.
XVI
FIREKEEPER VANISHED BEFORE THE NIGHT watch arrived so
resolving matters with the Hope town guard took less time than Derian
had dreaded. Sapphire’s three attackers were known criminals,
unwanted elements even within Hope’s comparatively easygoing
structure. Moreover, two of those who had been attacked were members
of the Hawk Haven noble class and the third was a personal servant of
Earl Kestrel.
After asking very few questions, the night watch took the thugs
away— one dead, two living, though one of these was badly
concussed—to the jail.
At Sapphire’s request, the men did not take her to her own
tent, but to the Kestrel camp at the fringes of the larger Hawk Haven
encampment. “I need,” Sapphire explained, “a chance
to clear my head. Mother will have questions. I need to know the
answers.”
Derian thought it odd that a woman of twenty-three should be so
worried about what her mother would think—especially when the
woman considered herself a fitting candidate for the throne—but
he was too aware of his place as Sapphire’s social inferior to
ask any questions.
Instead, ignoring his own wounds, he concentrated on his duties as
host. Guiding Sapphire toward that same hillock on which he had
conferred with Doc just that afternoon, Derian explained:
“We won’t wake anyone out here. Doc, go get your gear
so you can look at her wounds.”
Jared Surcliffe took Derian’s order as a matter of course,
and if Sapphire looked offended at the young redhead’s
presumption, Derian pretended not to notice.
“Earl Kestrel,” Derian said, seating Sapphire where
she could lean against a rock and trying hard not to notice a
spreading stain of blood along her side, “is standing watch
tonight with his cavalry force so that one more could go on leave
into town.”
“I heard him being toasted in the tavern,” Sapphire
commented, keeping her voice steady. “His men do love him.
Strange, for he’s such a dour sort.” She paused,
“And, by the way, thank you for coming to my aid.”
“I was just following Doc’s lead,” Derian
admitted, though her smile made him feel awfully good about
himself.
“ ‘Doc’ being Sir Jared?” Sapphire
asked.
“That’s right, Mistress. That’s what we called
him on our trip west and it just stuck.”
“West…” Sapphire looked at him, perhaps saw him
as a person for the first time. “You are?”
“Derian Carter, Mistress,” he said, wishing he
didn’t feel so tongue-tied. Sapphire was as different from
Elise as night from day, but no less captivating. “I work for
Earl Kestrel.”
“That’s right,” she said. “I remember you
now, the red-haired youth who tends Lady Blysse.”
Derian privately approved of her presence of mind. He’d
heard her call Firekeeper a few more uncomplimentary things when she
thought no one was listening. A crunching of boots on grass and a
detached star of lantern light announced Jared Surcliffe’s
return.
“Valet was awake,” he said, “and had hot water
on to make some tea to bring the earl. I borrowed some. Now, Mistress
Sapphire, if I could attend to your wounds.”
Inventory and treatment of their various cuts and bruises took
some time. Sapphire, thanks to sword and shield, had escaped with
mostly minor injuries, but a knife slash that had gotten through her
guard and sliced the fabric of her shirt on her right side looked
nasty. She also had countless bruises and nicks on her hands caused
by wielding her sword and shield without gloves.
Derian had several small nicks of his own, none impressive, but
all painful. His head ached abominably. Doc had escaped virtually
unscathed.
“Mistress Shield,” Doc explained unashamed,
“came to my rescue.”
“After you came to mine,” she reminded him.
“Again, thank you both.”
Jared produced a flask of good brandy from one of his pockets.
“The lady can use the cap for a cup,” he explained,
pouring. “I also suspect that Valet will be here with the tea
tray momentarily. Don’t worry, Mistress Sapphire. He’ll
never say a word to anyone—not even Earl Kestrel—the soul
of discretion, our Valet.”
Sapphire accepted the cup gratefully and passed the flask to
Derian.
“It doesn’t matter overmuch,” she said.
“My mother will know and that’s enough.”
Derian swigged directly from the flask before passing it back to
Jared. The strong liquor cleared his head and made him instantly
bolder.
“If you don’t mind my asking, Mistress Sapphire, but
how did you come to be out there alone? You’ve never struck me
as one to take foolish risks.”
“I appreciate that,” she said. “I… I went
out with my brother, Jet. I wanted to see something of the town and
everyone else was going somewhere interesting. Jet didn’t want
me to go with him, but I convinced him that I had as much right as he
did to enjoy myself.
“He let me come with him—I guess since he
couldn’t stop me—but I soon understood why Jet
didn’t want me around. His plan was to get drunk and
then…”
It was dark, but in the lantern light they could see her glance
down in embarrassment.
Doc cut in, “We understand, Mistress.”
Derian thought he sounded offended. Doubtless Sapphire would
believe he was offended for her, which couldn’t hurt, but
Derian suspected Doc’s indignation was for Jet’s insult
to Elise.
“As soon,” Sapphire continued, “as Jet got drunk
enough, he ditched me. I wandered around a bit and found myself in
that poky little street. Those men jumped me.”
“A good thing you had your sword and shield,” Derian
said, allowing a slight questioning note to enter his voice.
“Luck,” came the blunt reply. “I had scarred the
paint on my shield during our journey here. The armorer had white
paint with him, but not silver. I decided to see what someone in the
town could do…”
Ruefully, she looked at the newly battle-scarred shield. The
delicate silver work was scored in multiple places and there was a
large dent the size of a man’s head.
“I understand better now,” she said, false cheer in
her voice, “why white is a preferable substitute for silver, at
least for in the field. I shall make the change tomorrow and keep the
silver field for show.”
They toasted her choice and as they did so Valet shimmered up
rather like magic with tea, cookies, and fruit neatly arranged on a
tray. He set this on the rock behind Derian and vanished again.
“A remarkable man,” Sapphire said. “May I
pour?”
“Please do,” Doc replied.
“What I would like to know,” Derian asked the
listening night, “is how Firekeeper happened to be there when
we needed her.”
Firekeeper stepped from the darkness. Blind Seer, his fur slightly
damp, was with her.
“Tea?” Sapphire asked the newcomer, unable to keep a
slightly frosty note out of her voice. “I see that the
remarkable Valet has supplied a fourth cup.”
“Thank you,” Firekeeper said, accepting the proffered
cup and hunkering down on her haunches.
“How did you happen to be there, Firekeeper?” Jared
prompted.
“I follow,” the wolf-woman said, “practicing
cities. It isn’t too hard at night once the people go inside,
but in the crowds…”
She ended with an eloquent shudder.
“And Blind Seer?”
“He stay in the narrow places between buildings
mostly,” she said. “Is there a word, Derian?”
“Alley,” he supplied automatically. “Why
didn’t you join us sooner?”
“You were doing so well,” she said with a fey grin.
“I not want to hurt your fun. Then the man you fight hit you in
the head…”
“Is that what happened!” he muttered, remembering how
everything had gotten dreamy.
“And Mistress Sapphire was giving a good fight to her man,
so we came to help.”
“We?” Derian asked carefully, remembering the
nightmare vision of the bandit with his throat torn out, of
Firekeeper’s face smeared with blood.
“Blind Seer kill the man,” Firekeeper said with
indignant self-righteousness. “You tell me this not a thing to
do!”
Sapphire had softened at Firekeeper’s compliment to her
skill. “Were you hurt?” she asked, refreshing
Firekeeper’s tea.
“No.” Firekeeper looked almost disappointed. “I
not get to fight.”
Sapphire looked at her own dented shield, at the bandages on her
side and hands. “It isn’t nearly as much fun as it
looks.”
Jared and Derian nodded agreement. The wolf-woman did not seem at
all convinced and the great shaggy beast at her side opened his
fanged jaws in what Derian could swear was laughter.
BARON IVON ARCHER HAD TAKEN FULL ADVANTAGE of his rank to insist upon
a good position for the Archer pavilion, although he himself would be
splitting his time between his command and numerous conferences,
returning there only to sleep. Given her strained relations with both
Sapphire and Jet Shield, Elise had ample reason to be grateful for
this.
Along the road, she and Ninette had shared a fairly small tent
pitched between her father’s tent and Aunt Zorana’s. It
was a very proper arrangement, one that offered some protection from
Jet’s increasingly impatient advances, but one that also
guaranteed that she would hear every noise in the surrounding
tents.
Her father, she discovered, snored—as did his manservant.
Aunt Zorana insisted on being sung to sleep by her maid. Ninette rose
repeatedly during the night to answer nature’s call. After
these intrusions, Elise felt a certain guilty pleasure that the heir
to a barony could command not only room for a large pavilion, but a
certain degree of space surrounding it. Ninette still chaperoned
her—and Elise was glad for her company— but at least with
her on the other side of a curtain Elise was not so aware of the
other woman’s nocturnal micturitions.
On the first morning following their arrival, Elise woke after the
sun had risen. She was trying to guess the hour by the position of
the sun shining through the pavilion’s canvas when Ninette
lifted the dividing curtain and peeped around it. The other
woman’s eyes were shining with excitement and Elise was certain
she had some interesting gossip.
“Good morning, Ninette.”
“Good morning, Elise. I have water on for tea. Would you
like some?”
“I’d be grateful,” Elise said, swinging her feet
to the carpet at the side of her cot.
The camp bed had been an improvement over sleeping on pads on the
floor of a tent barely large enough to stand in, but still some of
her muscles protested. Stretching and enjoying the luxury of being
able to spread her arms over her head, Elise slipped into her morning
robe and went to join Ninette in the pavilion’s common area.
The curtain in front of Baron Archer’s sleeping niche was
lifted, revealing the section to be empty.
“My father?” she asked Ninette, crossing to where tea
is brewing in a cozy pot.
“Rose before dawn,” Ninette replied, “and has
gone to inspect his men. He said to remind you that the contingent
from Bright Bay is expected this evening. You are to stay within the
bounds of our encampment unless expressly summoned into the
city.”
“As if,” Elise said, sipping the raspberry leaf tea,
“I would want to go there. Doubtless it’s full of rascals
looking to take advantage of this situation.”
“Your cousin Sapphire,” Ninette said, lowering her
voice and glancing at the canvas walls for shadows that might
indicate listeners without, “went to town last night. She had
quite an adventure.”
With Elise’s encouragement, Ninette told the full story of
Sapphire’s encounter with the bandits. She’d already been
over to Earl Kestrel’s encampment and coaxed a few details from
Derian—prompting him to tell her the truth by offering him some
of the rumors that were already circulating within the small
servants’ community among the nobles’ pavilions.
“Lady Melina,” Elise said thoughtfully, “must be
furious. I wonder whether she’s more angry at Sapphire for
getting attacked or at Jet for leaving his sister?”
“I couldn’t say, Elise,” Ninette admitted.
“I have gone out of my way to avoid her. Lady Melina’s
lady’s maid had a red mark on her cheek the shape of a hand and
little Opal had clearly been crying.”
“Wise,” Elise said. “What time is it?”
“An hour past full sunrise, my lady.”
“And we are not expected anywhere?”
“Sir Jared Surcliffe indicated that he would be at the
hospital center until midday. After that, he would be happy to
continue your and Lady Blysse’s tutorial in the treatment of
wounds.”
“Send him a message saying you and I would be glad to take
him up on his kind offer. Say that unless we hear otherwise we will
meet him at the Kestrel encampment.”
“Very good.”
“Then why don’t we have breakfast here in the
pavilion? Afterwards, perhaps, we can use the luxury of being stopped
in one place for longer than a night to bathe and wash our
hair.”
Having finished these pleasant domestic tasks, the two women,
their hair still wet and scented with the marigold petals and
rosemary leaves with which they had rinsed it, stole away to a
natural solar created by a grouping of boulders near one edge of the
camp. By climbing over the outer rocks, they found a little hollow,
perfect for two, open to sun and sky though invisible from without.
The walls of the Watchful Eye loomed to their south, between them and
the river. Wise tactics dictated that a clear zone be kept around the
fort, so no troops were stationed anywhere near their refuge.
“Doubtless,” Elise explained to Ninette, spreading her
hair on a flat rock to speed its drying and pillowing her head on one
of the cushions they had brought with them, “the army would
have removed these rocks but for their great size and their distance
from the walls. Even a good archer would be pressed to make an
accurate shot from here.”
“I hadn’t thought of that, Elise,” Ninette said,
spreading out her own hair to dry. “I simply noticed these
yesterday when we were pitching camp and decided to investigate,
thinking they offered possibilities for discreet privacy within
limits.”
Elise, knowing her ever-romantic cousin had been thinking of
rendezvous with Jet, colored slightly. She hadn’t quite been
able to explain her changing feelings toward him, even to
Ninette—perhaps especially to Ninette, knowing how the other
woman dreamed of Elise as queen.
She settled for murmuring something grateful but noncommittal and
gazing into the sky. There was much to consider, both regarding her
own personal predicament and the impending conference. Elise was
weighing the advantages and disadvantages of being invited to the
initial conferences when voices interrupted her meditations.
Ninette started to her feet, but Elise cautioned her to silence
with a finger raised to her lips. There had been something in those
voices, something familiar, something angry, that made her wish their
presence to remain unknown. Rolling over, her drying hair chill
against her neck, Elise crept to one of the gaps between the towering
rocks and peered out. Sight confirmed what her ears had told her.
Lady Melina Shield stood without preparing to pass judgment on her
son and daughters.
Already it was too late to make a graceful exit, for the words
streamed from Lady Melina, pungent and furious. In any case, Elise
was not certain she wanted to depart. Jet had taken advantage of his
position as her betrothed to listen at Archer family conferences.
Certainly she had as much right as he did!
Ignoring Ninette’s trembling gestures that they could get
away by climbing over some other rocks, Elise instead motioned for
her to begin braiding her wet hair.
“We will not skulk away,” she said softly into
Ninette’s ear. “That would be a confession that they have
greater rights than I do—and no matter how well Lady Melina
thinks of herself, they do not!”
Ninette subsided and began plaiting Elise’s long hair into a
pair of thick braids. Elise ignored the tugging at her scalp, all her
attention on the drama unfolding without.
“I wonder,” Lady Melina was saying, evidently not for
the first time judging from the sulky expressions on her three
children’s faces, “that a woman as closely descended from
the family that produced Queen Zorana the Great could bear such
foolish children. It must be your Redbriar father’s
contribution.”
“Our father’s great-grandmother was Queen Zorana
herself,” Jet growled. His dark eyes beneath his handsome brow
were bloodshot. Elise might have felt more pity for him if she
hadn’t suspected he was nursing a hangover. “She is our
great-great-grandmother. Can you claim closer kinship?”
“Impudence,” Melina sighed. “A shame you have so
little cause for it, my stupid son. Doubtless when Queen Zorana
married Clive Elkwood, the strength of the Shields was diluted and
diluted again when King Chalmer insisted on marrying a commoner. Pity
that King Tedric’s lot all died. My brother Newell might have
returned Shield strength to the royal line.”
Elise could tell that Melina was toying with her brood, taunting
them, insulting them. She wondered that the elder two took it so
calmly, for neither was known for patience. With a slight shiver, she
realized that they feared the little woman who stood there, her gaudy
gemstone jewelry glittering in the midmorning sunlight.
“But Tedric’s children are dead and Newell never got a
legitimate heir.” Lady Melina drawled the word
“legitimate” with a special glower for her son.
“Doubtless like some he has spilled enough seed into anonymous
loins.”
Elise felt her face grow hot. Though Jet had never gotten that
close to her, she felt herself shamed by implication.
“Sowing wild oats,” Melina continued in her silky,
furious voice, “is well enough for common soldiers but for a
boy whose only hope for the crown is his betrothal alliance with
another family it is not only irresponsible, it is near
treason!”
She grasped the jet pendant depending from the multi-stone
necklace around her throat and closed her fingers around it as if
those slender fingers could crush it. Jet’s eyes widened in
unfeigned terror and Elise imagined that she felt heat from where her
betrothal gem rested against her skin.
“Treason against the crown you could wear and treason to the
father and mother who would wear it before you!”
In a single easy, graceful movement Lady Melina removed a fine
chain silver bracelet. Then she took the jet pendant from its place
on her necklace and attached it to the chain. Swinging it
pendulum-like, she crooned in a voice that transfixed her
listeners.
“From this moment forth, Jet, my son, your loins are bound.
Your staff shall not rise. Your blood shall not heat. Until you prove
yourself worthy of power, know yourself impotent! This is my
curse!”
Elise bit her lip to hold back an involuntary cry of fear. She
should be grateful, but this ritual gelding spoke of black sorcery
she had thought vanished from the land.
A small whimper of what might have been laughter, but could
equally be a strangled scream, slipped from Sapphire Shield’s
lips. Melina turned her gaze upon her eldest daughter, pitiless
despite the bandages visible beneath the bodice of the young
woman’s gown and the gloves that offered mute testimony to the
cuts and bruises on her hands.
“And you,” Melina sneered with even more contempt,
“you pitifully ambitious chit! I’ve watched you riding
your great blue stallion, armed and armored like some warrior maiden
from a nursery tale. How did you like your first taste of
battle?”
“I won,” Sapphire retorted, clearly speaking with
effort. “Two of the three men fell to my blows.”
“Yet you screamed for help like an infant,” came the
cold reply, “screamed and brought to your aid our greatest
rival for the throne: Lady Blysse herself, that flea-bitten waif who
has insinuated herself into King Tedric’s favor. You brought
Lady Blysse and her lackeys.”
Sapphire tried to protest, but Melina surged on, her hand coming
to rest on the blue stone in her necklace.
“Do you think I enjoyed thanking a common carter for
assisting in my daughter’s rescue? Do you think I enjoyed being
reminded that a lesser scion of House Kestrel has been awarded a
knighthood that none of my children will ever have the courage to
win? Sir Jared rushed to your aid though unarmored and not even
bearing a knife! You brag that you defeated two common thugs, yet
were it not for the three who raced to your aid, I doubt that you
would have taken out even one!”
Between clenched teeth Sapphire said defiantly, “When have
you even stood before even one opponent?”
Melina remained pitiless. “I am wise enough to know that a
woman can have other strengths—that wisdom and knowledge grant
their own powers. You, however, you care for nothing but posing. You
resent Jet’s competition instead of seeing that it matters not
which of you wears the crown. Whoever wears it, my will shall
rule!
“Better,” Melina continued after pause pregnant with
menace, “that you limit your ambitions to the inheritance you
will take from your father and me. When you inherit your lands and
country manses, then you may prance around in arms and armor to your
full delight. For now, remember your place and do not put yourself at
risk. I might decide that you are not worth preserving after
all.”
She twisted the blue stone at her throat and to Elise’s
horror the blood drained from Sapphire’s face. This was not
faintness on her cousin’s part; it was as if for a moment
Sapphire’s body was robbed of blood and breath. Melina changed
the sapphire for the jet stone on her chain. After a horrid moment
while the sapphire swung back and forth, glittering like a fragment
of the ocean deeps, Melina said in almost conversational tones:
“I curse you, my daughter, Sapphire, with pain. Though the
wound in your side has been treated, though it is clean and good
ointments soothe the flesh, though Sir Jared has the talent of
healing, still you shall feel pain there, dull and throbbing as it is
even now. If you should defy me further, then the pain shall become
sharp and keen, as hot as when the knife first sliced your flesh.
Thus pain shall tutor you in prudence until I judge you have learned
your lesson.”
Sapphire’s hand flew to her bandaged side and she gasped as
if for a stark moment a knife had freshly reopened the wound. Melina
bared her white teeth at her daughter, grimly satisfied.
As Melina reattached the pendants of jet and sapphire onto their
places on her necklace, her gaze fell upon Opal, and the girl, to
this point silent and stolidly calm, paled and trembled.
“And you, Opal,” Melina said. “Take these
punishments as a warning unto you. Obey me and perhaps someday I will
favor you with lessons in my craft. Disobey and know my
wrath.”
“Yes, Mother,” the little girl whispered. “I
understand.”
Melina pressed her hand once again to the gems on her necklace.
“I conjure and bind you all to silence on these matters. The
day has not yet come for my art to be revealed to the masses. Speak
of these doings and it shall be as if red ants bite your tongue. Even
as you suffer, the truth you sought to reveal shall be refashioned
into clever falsehood that shall honor me and defame you.”
“Yes, Mother,” came three subdued responses.
“Follow me. We have work to do before the diplomats from
Bright Bay arrive.”
Only as Elise watched the four Shields turn back toward the
encampment did she realize that she had her fingers pressed to her
mouth as if to keep even the faintest sound from coming forth. Even
as she struggled with her fear, Elise could feel a terrible resolve
forming within her, a resolve she dreaded almost as much as she
dreaded Melina’s dark arts.
Oh, Mother! she thought frantically. You never knew how wrong you
were about Lady Melina. She is a sorceress, her powers as wicked as
sin!
A terrible thought came to Elise then. What if Aurella Wellward
did know? What if her tongue had been conjured into silence by
Melina, even as Melina had bound her own children? Who could be
trusted to be free of the sorceress’s power? How many others
might have been so silenced?
At last, Melina and her children were safely gone. Pulling herself
with effort from her thoughts, Elise became aware that for some time
now Ninette had been murmuring to herself, only now daring to permit
her frantic whispers to become audible.
“Oh, ancestors, protect us from evil magic! Wolf, Elk,
Raven, Bull, Horse, Puma, Bear, Dog, Hummingbird, Deer, Lynx, and
Boar: Gracious Ones, shelter us from harm. Estrella and Rozen,
Jinette and Tunwe…” Ninette continued reciting her
personal ancestors back to the days of Queen Zorana and then began on
those of the House of the Eagle, for they were believed to protect
all their subjects from harm.
Patting Ninette on the shoulder, Elise joined her in her prayers.
Even as she recited the familiar litany, Elise suspected that the
answer to those prayers might come in a form as mysterious and
terrible as the powers themselves.
After a night of roaming the richly stinking streets of Hope, after
bloodshed and battle, sleep could not enchant Firekeeper. Blind Seer
at her side, she darted through the fringes of farmer’s fields,
haunted the forests, and swarmed up the spreading branches of a
thick-leafed oak to howl defiance at the moon. Only when dawn drifted
into full daylight—a late-summer day promising muggy heat
rising from the river before midday—was Firekeeper willing to
sleep.
She preferred the forests, cool even in the hottest parts of the
day, especially when compared with the interior of a canvas tent.
Derian had protested, more because Earl Kestrel had punished him for
permitting such wildness than because he saw any harm in her
choice.
Yet, despite her affection for Derian, Firekeeper had persisted.
Stone walls when there had been little other choice had been
tolerable; a canvas box when the trees beckoned a few yards away was
not.
Elation had provided compromise, alerting Derian to
Firekeeper’s location and keeping a golden eye bright for the
earl. Should Earl Kestrel begin to harangue Derian, Firekeeper could
reappear before he was fully warmed into his subject.
The earl’s need for Firekeeper outweighed his desire to
assert his power, so she could protect Derian. Now that she had known
Earl Kestrel longer, she realized that there was a certain fairness
to him. He assumed that Firekeeper obeyed Derian and thus Derian was
doing his job if Firekeeper did as the earl commanded. If she did not
obey, Derian would be punished.
Firekeeper obeyed nothing but her own impulses, but it
didn’t bother her if Earl Kestrel believed her controlled.
So as she had since the march from Eagle’s Nest to Hope
began, the wolf-woman slipped into the forest. In a tangled copse of
young maple saplings, not far from a narrow thread of a stream, she
pillowed her head on Blind Seer’s flank and fell instantly
asleep.
The past night’s events would not leave her mind to rest.
Looping like embroidery thread through a needle’s eye, they
stitched out a pattern that gradually mutated into something
approaching nightmare. Shadows and rocks underfoot, round rocks, smooth like those in
a streambed but these are wet by other than good, clean water. The
stream that runs over these rocks is horse piss and dog piss, man
piss and cat piss, vomit and sweat, manure and spilled beer, the
rotted sap of dead vegetation and the salt of ancient tears. Even
when the rainfalls it cannot remove the stench entirely. It settles
into the crevices between the rocks and waits for heat to bring it
forth. Barefoot, Firekeeper runs from cobble to cobble, feet light
and silent. There are no twigs to snap here, no leaves to crumble and
crunch. She feels like a shadow given life and Blind Seer padding
beside her is heralded only by the panicked barking of dogs in their
pathetic yards. Their appeals to their masters bring them no help, no
praise, only angry threats and the occasional thrown shoe. Partly from pity, partly because their barking annoys the
night, Blind Seer silences the curs with a growled command. In their
secret hearts the dogs are grateful. They retire to doormat or
kennel, wrap their tails about their noses, and try to believe they
are as ignorant as their masters as to what friend of the darkness
walks the streets. Each place where Derian and Doc halt is a delight of newness
to nose and eye. The tavern at twilight invites care; it is a busy
place. Wolf and woman sniff about the stableyard, steal scraps from
the trash heap, and marvel at the variety of people coming in and out
the doors. Leaving Blind Seer below, Firekeeper swings onto the roof
to peer into windows on the upper story. Nothing she sees through the
bared windows is precisely new, but much is educational. So it is with the livery stable and the heavily scented
gardens of the herbalist, Hazel. Then comes the return through the
night, the scream, Sapphire Shield fighting in fierce earnest, the
scent of her sweat cutting sharp and acrid even through the pong of
the streets. Indecisive, Firekeeper lurks in the shadows, uncertain whether
this is a fight in which another might be welcome. Only when Derian
is endangered does she throw etiquette to the winds and bound forth.
As she catches him in her arms, the blood streaming from his wounds
alternately red and black in the lamplight, Blind Seer leaps upon the
attacker. A man is not a wolf. There is no thick ruff to protect his
throat. He is not even a deer with great cabled muscles beneath a
thick hide. He is not even a rabbit who can sometimes shake loose
leaving a mouthful of fur. A man is a pitiful naked beast. One snap
and the red blood is running onto the cobbles, overlaying their
stench with a rich new scent. Blind Seer vanishes. Firekeeper remains. When Derian comes to
himself, she sees horror and fear in his eyes. Deep within her,
despite the exultation of victory, she is troubled. Horror and fear in his eyes. A body: the throat a raw red hole
through which life gushes and is gone. Fear and horror in her heart.
A raw red wound gushing life. Hot and blurring in her eyes, tears
salt on her tongue. Hot and terrible in her belly, hunger refusing
the question of right and wrong, living and dying. Where is the sweet sticky beverage? Day after day, it had been
forced between her lips. Slowly life had returned with it. Breath had
no longer tormented her lungs. Then there had been milk, sucked from
the teat of a she-wolf, girl-child nursing side by side with blind
balls of fur that grew far faster than she. Blood flowing life-hot from a gaping neck wound, steaming in
the cold of an autumn day. Around her she hears the Ones growling at
the pack to keep their distance. Despite hunger, the girl cannot
drink blood, not with the memory of the doe’s soft brown gaze
upon her, with the sharp stink of her panic as the wolves closed upon
her still fresh, not with her last terrified leap for freedom, doomed
before it began, imprinted on her mind. The girl’s stomach roils. The doe’s eyes had
reminded her of her own, of those of a sweet-voiced, soft-bodied
woman even now becoming a dream. If she drinks, she kills that woman
again. “So, is the life to be wasted then?” The girl has no idea who is speaking to her. The voice is
familiar, but her memory slides around it, as unable to grasp its
source as her hands are to pick the sunlight from a stream. “I can’t,”she sobs. I’ll be
sick!“ “Sick? You are sick now. Sick unto dying. How much
longer do you insist that others do your living for
you?” “Why live when so many others die?” the little
girl retorts, remembering the cooked-flesh smell of that almost
forgotten woman. “Why me?” “Fire spared you for a reason. Why can you not accept
this?” Though calm and measured, yet there is a note of impatience in
the voice. “How can I live on others’ deaths?” And the
death of which she thinks is not just the death of the doe, but the
death of those others in the fire. “We all live upon death, even the
deer. There is no escaping that part of the cycle. Your dying will
not save the deer. Your dying will not reverse the fire. Your dying
will only slay others
someday.” “What!” “Nothing more can be said on that matter. Trust
me.” “Why? “I have need of you. Enlightened self-interest is the
best reason I can give you.” ‘I don’t understand.“ “Nor should you. All you should know is that your
dying will serve no one. Your living may serve many, not the least of
which are those who have labored for your life. Now,
drink!” “I can’t!” “The doe dies for nothing?” “Let the wolves eat her!” “Why them and not you? Why are you less worthy of
life?” “I…” “Drink! The heat and liquid will do you well. You are
nearly starved from your stubbornness.”
“Let the wolves have her!” “Foolish human! Very well! If the wolves are to have
her, if the wolves are to live, then I name you a wolf. Be a wolf.
Forget that ever you were human. Your heart is a wolf’s, your
appetite a wolf’s, your memory a wolf’s. Strange wolf you
may be, but if only a wolf may live, then you must be
one!” Hot blood, slowing to a trickle. The wolf dips her human head,
laps at the stuff, sucks deeply, finds an appetite for life in the
blood. Chews hungrily at the still-warm flesh, finds strength for
living. Only when she is sated does she stop growling the others back
from her right. Only then do her parents call the rest of the pack to
share the bounty. When they are finished, there is doe no longer, not even
bones, for these have been cracked for their marrow and the
splintered segments chewed into dust. A single doe isn’t much
to the hunger of a wolf pack. Before the night is over, they will
hunt again, a two-legged wolf running beside them, eager now to be in
on the kill.
XVII
After three days’ residence in Hope, Prince
Newell Shield flattered himself that he understood the budding
political situation better than any of the central players. Although
a century of sporadic warfare following hard upon the chaos of civil
war had brewed hatreds between Bright Bay and Hawk Haven, largely
these were personal—hatreds for the ugly deeds done in battle
or of one person for another—not the terrible abstract fear and
horror with which both night fears and some enemies were
regarded.
Perhaps this was because legends of the Old Country monarchs who
wore crowns carved from skulls and wielded scepters worked from human
thighbones remained fresh—real enough to raise thrills of
terror when some old grand could say, “It was in my own
grandmother’s day that this was so,” and be right.
Perhaps this lack of hatred was because the goal of these battles,
skirmishes, and frays had always been reunification, not conquest.
When monarchs strove to bring the errant sheep back into the fold,
they could not resort to the rhetoric of hatred and alienation lest
this raise doubts in their people’s minds as to the wisdom of
reunification. With eager predators prowling on the fringes, neither
Bright Bay nor Hawk Haven could risk razed countryside and slaughter
of local inhabitants. Too easily then would the conqueror find itself
in danger of conquest as it sought to solidify its expanded
holdings.
Did anyone but himself realize that those who feared and hated
were the very allies who supported one side or the other while really
supporting none but themselves?
Prince Newell sniggered into his pewter tankard of ale. Blind!
Blind! That was what both Tedric and Gustin IV were. As their
predecessors had done, they accepted aid from nations who in their
most secret hearts desired not their allies’ success but their
failure.
Still laughing quietly to himself, Newell rubbed his fingers along
his temples, delighting in the clarity of his vision. He, he alone
had wisdom! The rest were as blinkered horses dragging their burdens
through crowded city streets, as sheep who blindly followed the
slaughterhouse goat to their own deaths!
Should such willfully ignorant creatures have the rulership over
thousands of souls? Ancestors, refuse! He knew his duty and had
already taken steps to achieve a position from which to carry it
out.
First there must be newly awakened doubt between the various
factions for Hawk Haven’s crown. He had hoped that Sapphire
Shield’s death would do the trick. The men Keen had hired to
follow her and Jet had been told to make it appear that an animal had
savaged her. Ostensibly this had been to draw suspicion away from
human hands— Keen had been posing as a love-maddened, rejected
suitor when he contracted the thugs’ services.
Needless to say, there had been a better reason for such
theatrics. Newell himself had intended—if no one else arrived
at the conclusion—to hesitantly suggest that young Lady Blysse
had murdered the one regarded by many as her greatest rival for the
throne. Blysse’s habit of slipping off into the night was well
known by now. Not even her faithful lackey Derian Carter would be
believed if he swore that he knew where she was every hour. His
laxness regarding her had been commented on, even by those who knew
that Blysse had the king’s favor.
Sapphire’s death should have weakened Blysse’s support
as well as eliminating one of Newell’s own rivals. He was still
disappointed that the thugs had bungled. Keen, however, had made
certain that they would not live to tell tales.
After going bail for the two survivors—not a difficult a
thing to do in Hope, where the local authorities did not wish to seem
to care more about assault on a noblewoman than on a
commoner—Keen had murdered the men and tossed their bodies into
the Barren River. If any wondered about the deaths, they should end
up thinking that one of Sapphire’s legion of admirers had done
the deed. Newell would make certain they thought so even if they
didn’t on their own.
Although he had been less than successful in the first part of his
plan, Prince Newell was progressing with the second part. This was to
make at least one of the allies betray that its deepest loyalties
were to none but itself. After consideration, he had elected
Stonehold for this role for the logical reason that it was Bright
Bay’s ally, not Hawk Haven’s. For now Hawk Haven provided
the foundation for Newell’s own prestige and influence. He did
not care to weaken that, though neither Waterland nor New Kelvin were
any more honest in their motives for alliance.
For the third part of his plan to work there must be conflict that
would bring the prince shining to the fore. Newell fancied a battle
would do the trick, one wherein Stonehold would show its true colors.
Perhaps weakened by loss of their ally, Bright Bay would join forces
with Hawk Haven. Alternatively, the battle could take place between
three armies. In either case, Hawk Haven’s army should come
forth victorious—they must, for they alone would be unweakened
by the defection of a traitorous ally.
And in that battle Prince Newell planned to lead. His would be the
great deeds. Based upon them, he would be hailed the new king of Hawk
Haven by popular acclaim. Rook and Keen were already sounding out the
gathered armies for those soldiers who could be easily bribed or
influenced to shout Newell’s praises loudly—and at the
proper moment.
Among the many deserters who resided in Hope and Good Crossing
there were those who could be bought and instructed to insert
themselves among the troops when added numbers would be welcomed, not
questioned. Their voices would shout loudly for Prince Newell, for he
would promise them pardon and honor. With the army firmly behind him
and the added weight of his own noble title, none would dare resist
him.
Then graciously would Prince Newell offer the conquered (or newly
weakened) Bright Bay a chance to come under his sweeping wing. He
smiled, imagining the meeting with lovely Gustin IV, perhaps
grief-stricken from her husband’s sudden death. Surely he could
arrange that little detail if it seemed meet. If Queen Gustin
suspected assassination, so much the better, for then she would fear
him and the power he wielded off the battlefield.
There was, of course, the small problem that King Tedric still
lived and must continue to live until the very day of the battle in
question. The mad old man had secured his succession while leaving
his prospective heirs spatting. All to the good for Prince Newell,
for united in their distrust of each other they would not look to him
as a rival. Once Newell was the hero of war and peace a mere name
scribbled by a quivering hand on a piece of parchment would not bear
the weight of his deeds.
But King Tedric must not die too soon.
The sound of a cautiously cleared throat brought Newell from his
revery.
“Master,” murmured Rook, “all is prepared for
your departure. Keen is sweating the horses even now. Rumor has
confirmed that the two diplomatic parties will meet at a reception in
Bridgeton this very evening—a reception hosted by the citizens
of Hope and Good Crossing.”
Newell’s lips curved in a cruel smile at this news, for he
was the one who had inserted such an idea into the minds of the Guild
Heads and other influential residents of the twin towns. It had been
easy enough to join the fringes of their meetings, for they usually
met in public houses. It had been easy enough to make a suggestion
from some shadowed corner of a crowded room, even easier to play upon
the emotions of the ambitious or fearful.
The prince doubted that even now any of those who were busy
supervising the decoration of the Toll House’s central
courtyard—watching as trays of sweets and meat pasties or kegs
of wine and ale were set into place—were in the least aware
that the idea to so subtly emphasize Good Crossing and Hope’s
own power was not solely their own.
“Very well.” Prince Newell rose, drawing up his hood
to hide his features. It would not do to become careless when the
game was nearly won. “Let us go. I believe I shall call upon my
father-in-law before the festivities begin. I am certain that he will
want me at the reception to support him in this time of
trial.”
“Who else can he trust?” Rook answered seriously, but
a wicked gleam in his bright eyes belied that sincerity. “Who
else among our noble king’s contentious court has only the best
interests of the nation at heart?”
Laughing then, arm in arm like two roisterers who had supped too
deeply of an afternoon, they stumbled from the tavern. None noted
their going but the barmaid who gathered up the coins left in payment
for their drinks; none even thought of them thereafter. Certainly
none equated the one who laughed hardest with the salt-stained and
road-dust-coated prince who rode into the Hawk Haven encampment late
that afternoon on a tired horse, his entourage only a single servant,
so great had been his eagerness to reach his father-in-law’s
side at this time of crisis.
Firekeeper was drawn from happy dreams of her childhood by
Derian’s voice saying things she had long dreaded to hear:
“Rise and shine, Firekeeper. Formal attire for the reception
tonight. Earl Kestrel expressly told me to make certain to scrub your
feet.”
Dragging herself from joyful participation in a full pack hunt,
Firekeeper reluctantly rolled over. Late-afternoon sunlight was
spilling down through the oak leaves. Absently, she noticed that the
edges of some of the leaves were turning orange and yellow. Despite
the present heat, the trees knew that autumn was coming.
Feeling a bit like one of those trees herself, Firekeeper pulled
herself to her feet.
“I have never slept so before,” she commented to Blind
Seer. “I didn’t even hear old heavy-foot Fox Hair
coming.”
“I heard him,” the wolf reassured her, “and knew
his step. Otherwise, I would have awakened you.”
Elation whistled in shrill laughter and launched into the sky.
Waving to the bird in thanks, Derian looked at Firekeeper with what
the wolf-woman now recognized as an affectionate grin on his
face.
“Stop growling and groaning,” he said.
“You’ve bathed daily, I know, but a good scrub
won’t do you any harm. Valet has a kettle on over the fire and
we’ve permission to use Earl Kestrel’s pavilion for your
ablutions. I’ve even bought you some lavender scent.”
Firekeeper bristled. Among the human customs she couldn’t
understand was that of covering one’s own perfectly good scent
with something derived from some tree or shrub.
Derian laughed. “You don’t have to use it if you
don’t want to. I’m certain Ninette or Lady Elise would be
happy to have it.”
“You think I should?” she asked, brushing leaves from
her hair. “Wear scent? Will Earl Kestrel be happier?”
“He might be,” Derian allowed.
“Then I wear,” she said, adding hastily, “a
little only.”
Derian clapped her on the shoulder. “You’re becoming a
real lady, Firekeeper.”
Remembering Elise’s lecture on social graces, Firekeeper was
quite pleased. She was sitting on one of the campstools in Earl
Kestrel’s tent, scrubbing the black from her bare feet with a
boar-bristle brush, when Elation’s shrill cry announced that
Lady Elise was coming, accompanied by Ninette. A few moments later,
Elise herself was raising the tent flap and requesting entry.
“Come to chaperon us, Elise?” Derian asked, rising
politely to his feet in greeting. He’d been sitting to one side
mending a small tear in the hem of the gown Firekeeper was to wear
tonight.
“Everyone in camp has heard of your valor last night,
Derian,” she said lightly. “I doubt that such a hero
would molest a young girl.”
Firekeeper snorted through her nose, but Derian, more skilled than
she in hearing the nuances of human intonation, frowned.
“Is something wrong, my lady?”
“Yes. No. I…”
Firekeeper dropped the brush and crossed to Elise. The other woman
was clearly in pain, her expressive blue eyes widening in surprise as
her hand rose to touch her lips.
Elise began again. “I came to thank you both for saving my
cousin. Sapphire can be both ambitious and obnoxious, but she is
brave and honest as well.”
“That,” Firekeeper said with certainty, “is not
just what you want to say.”
“No,” Elise agreed, licking her lips nervously.
“But I don’t think I should try to say anything more now.
Tell me, are you going to the reception tonight?”
“Am,” Firekeeper agreed, not satisfied with this
evasion, but willing to accept it for now. “Earl Kestrel
requests I do the honor of accompanying him to reception for the
diplomatic parties. I am not certain I understand what this is but he
asks and it is a small enough thing.”
Derian brought forward a campstool and offered it to Elise.
Firekeeper could see that he, too, was unhappy with Elise’s
sudden change of the subject. Unlike Firekeeper, however, he was too
aware of his social position to press a noble lady into
confidences.
“Sit for a bit, Lady,” Derian said, his use of her
title twice in such a short time underscoring his unease. “Even
better, ask Ninette to join us and you both can advise me in how to
dress Firekeeper’s hair. It’s getting long enough now
that it escapes my skill.”
Firekeeper expected Elise to refuse, but Elise suddenly
smiled.
“Would it be too much trouble for Earl Kestrel if I brought
all my dressing here? My father is away with his troops and my tent
seems so lonely.”
“She is afraid,” Blind Seer growled from
where he had been napping outside the tent. “Her scent is
sour with fear.”
Before Derian could vacillate, Firekeeper leapt in.
“Yes. Tell Ninette to bring. Valet can help if she
needs.”
Now it was Elise’s turn to look uncertain, as if she
suddenly dreaded her own request, but Firekeeper left her no room to
change her mind.
Hurrying outside, she found Ninette huddled by the cook fire as if
the day were quite chill. Valet was filling her teacup. Firekeeper
caught the scent of skullcap, wood betony, lavender and lemon balm.
She cocked an eyebrow, knowing this concoction was used to soothe a
troubled mind. Whatever had happened to Elise had affected her maid
as well.
“Valet,” Firekeeper said, “please if you have
time, go to Lady Elise’s big tent—pavilion—and
bring her gown and other things for tonight’s reception. She
and Ninette are to dine with us this evening so they can tell Derian
what to do with my hair. They will go straight from here to meet
Baron Archer for the reception.”
Imperturbable, Valet nodded. “Very good, Lady Firekeeper. I
am certain that Earl Kestrel would approve.”
“I wonder,” Blind Seer commented,
“what nose he uses to smell fear, for he smells it as
surely as do I.”
“And I,” Firekeeper agreed.
She returned to the pavilion and her interrupted foot scrubbing,
but no matter how subtly she and Derian phrased their questions,
Elise would say nothing more about what was evidently troubling her.
Ninette’s only reply was to tremble so violently that she could
hardly handle her combs and cosmetics.
“I am learning to lie,” Firekeeper said to
Blind Seer, “for otherwise how could I refuse to say what I
think when I see these two so bravely afraid?”
“You are,” the wolf said, “becoming
human. Tonight while you are at this reception—where I think I
would be less than welcome—I shall cast about. Perhaps I can
learn where she went, who she saw.”
“So many people here, so many to blur the
scent,” Firekeeper said doubtfully. “I can but try.”
If Earl Kestrel was relieved when Firekeeper informed him that
Blind Seer would not be attending the reception, he was too
well-mannered to say so. Firekeeper didn’t think she needed to
tell him that Elation would be on guard, tracking them from the air
and then watching from some perch high above the crowd.
All three of the wild creatures had their wind up, Elise’s
fear touching nerves honed to hear warning in crow call or squirrel
scolding. Never mind that most of the time the warnings were against
them—still, they had learned to heed and to take care. What
frightened one so deeply might mean danger to all.
Baron Archer came to meet his daughter at the Kestrel camp, adding
his considerable social weight to an escort already heavy with earl
and knight, forjared Surcliffe was also of their company. Tonight
bodyguards and caretakers were left behind, an agreement that pleased
the rival powers only slightly less than the alternative. Knowing
that Derian was deeply concerned, Firekeeper found a moment to
comfort him.
“Don’t worry, Fox Hair,” she said. “I am
to be the perfect lady, just like Elise. Look, I have even put my
Fang here—”
She hiked up her skirt to show the sheath strapped to her right
thigh.
“—not around my waist so the guard will not be
frightened.”
Derian laughed and almost managed not to blush. “You are a
little savage,” he said affectionately. “Behave.
Remember, your manners reflect on me.”
“Haven’t I promised?” she replied, evading
actually promising. “Elation will watch from without. If I am
in greater trouble than I can handle, she will rescue me.”
Derian groaned, “Great! Now I’m really
relaxed.”
The Toll House on Bridgeton, where the reception was being held,
was a huge building. It straddled the entirety of a bridge so wide
that its span was lined with houses and shops on either edge. Room
remained between the buildings for carts and foot traffic to pass in
two directions.
In its time, the Toll House had been fortress, shop, and
administration building. Tonight it was an unofficial palace,
flaunting the peculiar semi-independence of Hope and Good Crossing to
those who would claim the towns as their own, while forcing
acknowledgment of those qualities in the very use of the twinned
cities for this meeting.
Walls of polished river rock were adorned with pitch torches,
their yellow-orange light sputtering slightly in the gusts of river
wind. The paired arches at the base of the structure, each wide
enough to admit a heavily laden cart, glowed like the mouths of some
sea demon from Old World legend. The flags and pennants flying from
the poles on the roof high above were invisible except as snapping
black forms that blocked the wheeling constellations.
The Toll House was actually two buildings standing back to back, a
wide neutral zone between them. This courtyard was where the
reception was being held tonight. For light, chandeliers the size of
wagon wheels had been slung from great cables strung between the two
buildings and more torches were set on the walls. In this light, the
guests could admire paving stones scrubbed as clean as the deck of a
ship and adorned with thick carpets.
Long tables bent slightly beneath the weight of the food and drink
spread upon them. Light music performed by scattered musicians
filtered its way between conversations, creating an illusion of
privacy.
Here, tense beneath her superficial composure, Firekeeper
witnessed the first meeting of King Tedric of Hawk Haven with his
nephew, Duke Allister Seagleam of Bright Bay. She had been long
enough among humans by now to see them with something closer to their
own eyes.
From that newly expanded perspective, crowned in silver set with
rubies and gowned in regal scarlet trimmed in white, the elderly
monarch looked quite august—no longer merely an old man as
Firekeeper had first seen him. Yet even in the torchlight her
wolf’s eyes could see that the king’s lips were faintly
blue and his fingers, when he had extended them earlier for her to
kiss, had been cold as ice.
Beside his uncle, Allister Seagleam cut something less of a
impressive figure. His greying blond hair, though neatly tied back,
showed a tendency to escape its bounds, framing his features with
wisps of straw. Nor did the sea green and gold he wore suit him,
making him rather sallow. In the artificial light, Allister squinted,
reminding Firekeeper a bit of bookish Lord Aksel Trueheart. Yet there
was confidence in his bearing and nothing either servile or groveling
in his bow.
“Uncle Tedric,” he said, and his voice carried in the
sudden hush spreading through the courtyard. “I am honored to
have the privilege of finally meeting you.”
King Tedric did not bow in return, but opened his arms. “You
have the look of my sister about you, Allister. Something in the
shape of your mouth, I think. Her hair, too, was light.”
Accepting the kinsman’s embrace with dignified grace that
did not overstep the bounds of familiarity, Allister replied:
“No one has told me of that resemblance before and I am
pleased to learn of it. May I present my wife, Pearl Oyster, and our
children?”
While Allister was introducing a lady as plump and pale as the
full moon and several children who resembled both of their parents to
varying degrees, Firekeeper’s attention wandered. Everyone else
was watching the proceedings with great interest. Firekeeper noted
that a fierce look, almost a hunger, crossed Lady Zorana’s face
as Allister presented his sons. Zorana looks as if she will eat one of them, bones and
all! Firekeeper mused silently. Yet from what I have been
told, she will be lucky to get near the plate.
With skill that did not quite reject the rest of the company, King
Tedric drew Allister and his family aside. From what Firekeeper could
overhear, all they were discussing were family matters, including the
daily life of Princess Caryl in Bright Bay. As the wolf-woman drifted
restlessly about the courtyard, accepting food—but never
drink—from the footmen who circulated with trays, she was
amused to learn that almost everyone else thought that high matters
of state were being settled in that private gathering.
As she walked around the courtyard, Firekeeper was astonished to
discover that humans come in different colors. Until this point, she
had thought they were all basically like herself: light skin shading
into reddish brown with exposure to the sun, hair mostly in brownish
hues though occasionally lighter or redder. Here in the courtyard,
apparently as representatives of some of the interested countries she
had only known by name, were people with skin the yellowed shade of
grass in the winter and hair as fine as silk and black as a
raven’s wing. Their eyes were shaped differently, too, slanting
somehow.
There were also people so fair that they made her look dark, their
skin a rosy pink flushing red from sun or wind. These people had hair
so light that it almost glowed. Their eyes were very round, so that
Fire-keeper felt her own must seem heavy-lidded. These round eyes
shouted with blue or green beneath brows so pale that they seemed a
dream of a shape. These people were large, though trim about the
waist and hip, where the Winter Grass people were small and
delicate.
Finally, just three or five among the many, there were people who
in coloring were quite like those of Hawk Haven or Bright Bay, but
their attire was so strange that they seemed the most alien of all.
Men and women alike shaved the front of their heads and grew the hair
long behind. The exposed skin was colored in elaborate patterns that
extended over their faces. They wore long, straight robes embroidered
with complicated patterns in many colors and their shoes curled at
the toes.
Viewing the contrasting humanity pleased Firekeeper. She had
thought that humans might be like deer or rabbits, limited in their
coats and forms. Learning that they were more like wolves—who
could be any color from snow white to mingled shades of grey or brown
to night black, who could have eyes the color of pine tree tears or
maple leaves in autumn or a piece of the summer sky—was quite a
relief. Deep inside, Firekeeper felt that homogeneity was for prey
animals, not predators.
When viewing the passing scene palled, Firekeeper sought her
companions. Earl Kestrel was deep in conversation with some military
counterpart from Allister Seagleam’s escort: one of the Winter
Grass men, someone he had apparently met before on the field of
battle. Their verbal sparring, which barely kept the blade in the
sheath, amused Firekeeper for a time, but eventually became filled
with references to events far beyond her ken.
Doc was part of a group that included Lady Elise, Jet Shield, and
several representatives from the guilds in Hope and Good Crossing.
Their discussion bored Firekeeper almost immediately, largely
surpassing her command of the language. When everyone burst into
laughter for the third time at some witty comment that had not seemed
at all funny to her, Firekeeper gave up in disgust.
Her vague hope that there might be dancing to liven the evening
gradually dying, Firekeeper moved to one side of the span to where
she could watch the water flowing beneath the bridge. The torches
reflected in the black water made it seem as if the stars themselves
had descended to eavesdrop on these monumental human affairs.
Seeing her alone, the falcon Elation flew down from one of the
Toll House towers to perch on a jutting abutment below the line of
sight of the party.
“Having fun?” she whistled. “Not much,” Firekeeper admitted. “I
wish that humans solved their problems as wolves do. A quick fight
must be better than all this blather.”
“Human fights,” Elation said seriously,
“are not always quick. They do not always know when to
surrender or how to accept surrender when it is offered. Believe me,
once you have seen humans at war, you will understand why this
blathering—as you name it—has its place.” “Hush!”
Even through the mingled drone of music and conversation,
Firekeeper had heard someone approaching from behind. The step was
not one she knew, and the wind was from the wrong direction to carry
scent, so she wheeled to confront Prince Newell Shield while he was
still a good number of paces away.
“You’re like a cat, Lady Blysse,” he said with a
friendly smile. “Or should I say like a wolf?”
“Wolf,” she replied stubbornly, though she knew no
answer was expected.
“Mind if I join you?”
She started to shrug, remembered her promise to Derian that she
would do her best to be a lady, and said instead:
“That would be kind of you.”
Prince Newell leaned his elbows against the stone rampart and
stared down at the water. After a cautious moment, Firekeeper
returned to her previous attitude. Below, hidden in the darkness,
Elation kept her silence.
“Where is your wolf? I thought you went nowhere without
her.”
“Him. He is outside. This place is close and crowded. He
would not like it.” She left out mentioning that many of the
people would also not like him. Prince Newell didn’t need to
know that she would moderate her actions for anyone’s
comfort.
“I believe I sympathize with your wolf,” the prince
said after a moment. “For a sailor like me, parties like this
are very trying.”
Firekeeper remembered not to ask why and instead smiled politely.
Prince Newell continued, offering the answer she hadn’t asked
for:
“I suppose it’s the chatter, but that can’t be
it. On an oceangoing vessel we’re packed more closely.
Sometimes dinner at the captain’s table—especially when
the wine has gone around a few times—gets quite noisy. No, I
expect that it’s the tension. Everyone here wants something and
dreads that someone else will get it. That’s why I was so
surprised to see you over here. I thought you’d be checking out
the young men from Bright Bay.”
The word escaped her lips before she could school her
puzzlement.
“Why?”
Prince Newell chuckled heartily, his manner the same, she
realized, as she had seen him use with little Citrine during the
falconry party.
“Why because young men are interesting to young
ladies—and these two more than most—they could be a
secure way to the throne.”
“Oh,” she replied, understanding, “like Elise
and Jet.”
“That’s right. I’m certain that Baron Archer is
wishing he could sever that engagement ever more the longer the king
spends talking to Allister Seagleam’s family. Doubtless my
sister, Melina, feels the same way. But they’ve made their beds
and their children must lie in them.“
His laughter this time was somewhat coarse. Firekeeper wondered
how many times the bottle had gone ‘round the table for him
this evening. From her point of view, the betrothal between Elise and
Jet was a problem—largely because Elise did not seem happy. It
had not escaped Firekeeper how often Doc found excuses to talk with
Elise. Nor had she overlooked that Elise seemed much more cheerful
when Doc was about.
Turning from the rampart, she glanced over the gathering until she
located Elise. Yes. There she was, Jet close at her elbow, talking in
quite a lively fashion to several important guild representatives.
They looked delighted, but Jet seemed bored, his gaze frequently
wandering to where the Oyster twins were now venturing into tentative
conversation with his sister Opal and his cousin Nydia Trueheart.
Prince Newell followed the direction of her gaze without
difficulty.
“Yes, there is our young Jet, rearing against the lead
rope—despite the fact that little Minnow and Anemone are
something like eleven years old. Lady Archer has her betrothed firmly
in hand though. He cannot leave her side without giving grave insult
to her family—an insult which King Tedric cannot fail to
perceive. Tell me, Lady Blysse, who are you sweet on?”
His tone was playful, but she had learned when someone was fishing
for information. She had been asked this question or some variation
on it by everyone from the queen to Sapphire’s maid. Only the
queen seemed genuinely interested.
“No one,” she said. But her thoughts, as they often
did, flitted to Blind Seer. “There is no man I think
sweet.”
“Yet you are a young lady, surrounded by men. Surely it is
time Earl Kestrel got you a maid. That strapping redhead might have
done when you were just a… at first, that is, but now it must
raise questions of propriety.”
What she wanted to ask the prince was why should he care what
people thought of her, but Firekeeper had learned something of
manners. She replied courteously:
“True. Today Lady Elise was kind and came to help me gown
and do my hair. Ninette, too. I shall need a maid soon.”
“Perhaps,” he said in avuncular tones, “I can
help. I still know many reliable servants from the days when my late
wife and I maintained an estate. These days, alas, I am much the
wandering bachelor.”
Firekeeper knew that this was a cue to flirt with him. It was as
obvious as the song of a cock robin in the early spring or the
sparring of two young bucks with the velvet barely off their antlers.
Yet she could not bring herself to play this game. Wolves mate for
life, usually only after blood has been spilled and great battles
fought. Courtship was too serious a matter to play at with a man she
was quite certain she didn’t even like.
Therefore, she was greatly relieved when she noticed Doc casting
about, having noticed at last that she was missing. She lightly waved
her hand to show where she was and made a quick curtsy to the
prince.
“Forgive me. Sir Jared is seeking me, perhaps for Earl
Kestrel.”
She used titles and honors as protection against her flight being
halted. The prince did not stay her retreat but only looked after
her, the look of quizzical amusement on his face changing to one of
calculation as he returned to staring into the river. He might have
thought no one could see him, but the falcon Elation watched from the
darkness below and whistled softly as she beat her wings in
retreat.
The reception did not extend past Firekeeper’s level of
endurance. The guilds of Hope and Good Crossing had made their point.
No one would forget to calculate their wealth into the coming
negotiations. Representatives of the various contending forces had
met and now knew each other as more than tantalizing names. Old
rivals had re-met, new rivalries perhaps had begun. All in all, it
had been an interesting, if not precisely enjoyable, evening.
Only Doc seemed pleased with the outcome of the night’s
entertainment. As they walked back to their camp, Firekeeper noticed
with some amusement that he was humming.
Exhausted after the events of the previous day—discovering the
truth of Melina’s sorcery would have been enough without the
strain of visiting with her at the reception the night
before—Elise had trouble sleeping. At last she gave into
Ninette’s pleading and joined her in a cup of tea doctored with
an infusion of herbs which dragged her restless mind below the
threshold of nightmare.
Consequently, Elise slept into late morning and woke with a muzzy
head. Ninette was still asleep and Elise decided to wait upon her for
once. The other woman had been as shocked as she had been and was far
more terrified. Unlike Elise, Ninette was not a baronial heir and
clearly felt that while Melina might withhold her hand from Elise,
she might well make an example of her servant.
Both Ivon Archer and Aurella Wellward held that any noble who
could not perform at least the basic tasks of cooking, sewing, and
the like was dependent on her servants and so would become a slave to
them. Therefore, Elise, had no difficulty tending to her own
needs.
Her father’s valet had left a kettle to one side of the cook
fire so there was warm water for washing. Elise set another above the
coals to heat water for tea, then stoked the fire until a cheerful
blaze crackled beneath. Once again, the late-summer day promised to
become quite hot. The air here near the river was already thick and
humid. It didn’t promise well for tempers when the conferences
began.
Gowning herself in a light muslin dress with long sleeves of the
same material that should help protect her skin from insect bites,
Elise wished that there were a way for her to attend those
conferences. Rumor and report were no substitutes for actually seeing
the expressions on people’s faces or hearing their intonations
as they spoke.
Doubtless she was not the only one who felt that way and doubtless
King Tedric would refuse anyone he could in order to be able to
refuse those he genuinely did not wish to attend. She supposed this
must be an advantage of monarchy over the odd, oligarchical system
used in Stonehold or the plutocracy of Waterland. Right now, however,
she would give much for something like New Kelvin’s
parliamentary monarchy, where the reigning monarch—always a
king, an odd concept— must answer to someone other than
himself.
When Ninette awakened, Elise had porridge and tea ready. Over the
other woman’s protests, she insisted on waiting on her. By the
time Ninette had finished eating and dressing, there was color in her
cheeks and the tendency to blanch whenever she heard one of the
Shields’ voices, carrying over from their not too distant
pitch, had vanished.
“Last night,” Ninette admitted, sweetening her tea
with pale gold clover honey, “I couldn’t stay here alone.
The baron’s man had gone to play at dice with some other
retainers, you see. Usually, I’d find some of the other
lady’s maids, but I couldn’t bear the company of that
creaky-voiced old crone who attends on Lady Melina. She’s
always hinting about her mistress’s powers, especially to us
younger ones when she thinks we’re getting above
ourselves.”
Elise, who had been terrorized by the same old woman when she was
a child, nodded sympathetically. She knew that it would make no
difference to that one that Ninette was well-born, her only fault
that she was the daughter of a younger son with a tendency to
gamble.
Encouraged by Elise’s sympathetic murmurs, Ninette
continued, “I went over to Earl Kestrel’s camp. I hope
you don’t think it improper of me, given that they are all men,
but the earl’s valet is very polite—even
courtly—and Derian Carter may be brash, but he never oversteps
himself.”
“Were they the only ones there?” Elise asked.
“Yes. Ox had gone with Earl Kestrel, as you recall. He
couldn’t attend the reception, of course, but he waited with
the horses. The other man, the scout…”
“Race.”
“That’s right—Race Forester—wasn’t
there. I think he spends much of his time with his fellow scouts. He
may even have been on duty.”
“Doesn’t Sir Jared have a manservant?”
“Not that I have seen, my lady. I don’t think that,
for all his honors, he is very wealthy.”
“No,” Elise agreed. “That is probably true. He
mentioned that his family grew grapes somewhere in Kestrel lands.
That’s hardly the basis of a fortune.”
“Then you don’t mind that I went out?”
“I think it was the smartest thing you could have
done,” Elise assured her. “The question is, what should
we do next?”
“Next?”
“Yes.” Elise thought for a time, sipping her tea.
She had decided not to tell Ninette about the curious pain she had
felt when she had impulsively tried to tell Firekeeper and Derian
about what she had witnessed. The woman was terrified enough without
wondering if she herself was cursed.
Touching the carved piece of jet that hung around her neck, Elise
wondered if she might have been particularly susceptible because of
her link—however slight—to Jet. What if they had become
lovers as he had pressed? Would taking his body into hers have
increased the power his mother might hold over her?
She shuddered, feeling again that curious mixture of guilt and
relief when she realized that Melina’s curse served, evil as it
was, to protect her from Jet’s advances. Last night had been
the first he had not tried to convince her to go for a walk in the
woods or to duck into his tent. Either the curse had dulled his
desires as well as his ability to act on them or he had feared that
she would notice the difference in how his body expressed its
ardor.
She felt a stranger to herself as she realized again how much had
changed in her feelings toward Jet. At first she had only kept him at
a distance out of a sense of propriety and—she honestly
admitted to herself—a desire to test his devotion before
surrendering. Never had she dreamed that Jet would fail that test. In
her fantasies, he had become more and more ardent until, showered in
gifts, poetry, and song, she had given herself to him gladly.
Instead, Jet had become impatient, even sniping, hinting that she
was a tease or even unable to respond to his attentions. This had
been rather insulting. She might be unpracticed, but her mother had
told her about the mechanics and she was certain there was nothing
wrong with her’t
As their courtship had extended, Elise had tried to overlook the
occasional innuendos that hinted her betrothed visited the camp
followers, but learning that he had been in a brothel when his sister
had been assaulted—and apparently not for the first time in his
life—had been a real blow. Jet was nothing like she imagined
and she was bound to him by her own wish.
Elise was too honest with herself to accept the tempting notion
that Jet’s behavior was a result of his mother’s
machinations. The idea was tantalizing, inviting her dream to take on
new life. In that new fantasy, she would rescue him from the
sorceress’s control, grinding the jet emblem on his forehead
into dust beneath her heel. Then he would fall to his knees before
her, swearing his undying love, and become the man of her dreams.
No. As much as she wished that were the truth, Elise must honestly
admit that the truth of Jet’s character—no better, but no
worse than many a young man of his age—had been there all
along. Hadn’t there been the rumors about why Duke
Redbriar’s granddaughter vanished from the social scene?
Hadn’t Trissa Wellward hinted at things when she and Jet were
keeping company some years ago? Hadn’t Trissa been devastated
beyond proportion when Melina Shield put an end to the
relationship?
Hadn’t there been the time, back when Elise herself was
fourteen and playing hide-and-seek with Jet and his siblings, that he
had found her hiding place and used that privacy to steal a kiss and
fumble at her breast? At the time she had been flattered and
curiously thrilled that the handsome older boy had seen her as a
woman. Now she realized that his behavior was all of a type.
No. Jet had only been a hero from a romantic ballad in
Elise’s own imagination. She forgave him and herself, but that
didn’t change that if they married he would likely be
unfaithful and difficult. If Melina Shield ever raised the curse,
that is…
“We must stop Lady Melina,” Elise said softly.
“Otherwise what she said is perfectly true. Whoever is on the
throne, she will find a way to rule. Even now, the most likely
contenders include her husband and two of her children. Hawk Haven
must be ruled honestly, not through sorcery.”
Ninette blanched, but to her credit did not try to dissuade Elise.
Perhaps in the privacy of her own thoughts she had been reaching the
same decision. Setting her teacup on the tray, Ninette asked
simply:
“How?”
“First, someone else must know what we do,” Elise
said. “Otherwise we may join those who are bound to
silence.”
“Who?”
Elise had been about to suggest her father, but the sudden shrill
cry of a falcon, heard as if it called greeting while passing over
their pavilion, was inspiration.
“My father might or might not believe us, but I’m
certain that Derian and Firekeeper would. Let’s start
there.”
“How about Sir Jared? He has the king’s
ear.”
“Then him as well, if he is present.” Elise snatched
up a straw bonnet. “Let’s go. If I wait too long,
I’m going to lose my nerve.”
And I hope, she thought as they left the pavilion, that in telling
this I don’t lose my tongue.
XVIII
Without, the summer morning had become quite hot and
thick, but within the thick cobblestone walls of the Toll House, the
temperature was comfortable. The windows at either end of the room in
which King Tedric and Allister Seagleam were meeting were open,
curtained in fine woven fabric to keep out both insects and the river
miasma. Bowls of rose incense burned in front of each window as a
further precaution against river ills, giving the room the scent of a
well-born lady’s private chamber.
It is, thought Allister Seagleam, a strange ambience for a meeting
between two men.
King Tedric had suggested—and Allister readily
agreed—that their first conference be kept as small as
possible. They had settled on themselves, two assistants to take
notes, and two guards to watch the doors and handle the inevitable
interruptions. These were effacing themselves as much as possible, so
Allister had the curious feeling that he was alone with his
uncle.
Today’s meeting was being held on the Good Crossing side of
the Toll House, technically within territory owned by Bright Bay;
thus Hawk Haven had already made the first concession. Looking at the
steady old man seated across from him, Allister felt that King Tedric
had lost nothing. Last night he had only noticed the king’s
courtesy and majesty. Today he saw more.
King Tedric was evidently ill. Perhaps the malady was nothing more
than advancing age, but, like many of Bright Bay’s nobility,
Allister had studied some medicine. Those lessons were meant to
enable him to act as a medic if caught far from shore on one of the
sea commands that any able-bodied member of the nobility took as a
matter of course. Today they showed Allister the paleness of the
king’s face, the slight blueness around his lips, and told him:
“A weak heart. Uncle Tedric must resolve this contention on the
matter of his heir or leave his kingdom in chaos when his heart fails
him.”
Resembling more than a little the eagle woven into the brocade
fabric of his waistcoat, King Tedric leaned forward and said with a
curious bluntness that was not impolite:
“So. I have named my heir. Why are you here,
Nephew?”
“Because, when we asked for this meeting,” Allister
answered steadily, “you had not named your heir. I was born to
be your heir—or at any rate the heir to Hawk Haven. I thought
you should have a look at me before you made up your mind.”
King Tedric nodded. “I see you. Why should you be chosen
over someone I have known all his or her life?”
“Your father, my grandfather, King Chalmer, arranged for my
mother to marry my father so that a prince and princess of both
kingdoms might reunite the realms.”
“That’s true. Do you think it would work?”
Allister saw the faintest twinkle in the old man’s pale eyes
and answered honestly:
“I don’t really know. I have been told that many of
your people believe that I am heir to Bright Bay. You know and I know
that I am not. I do not think that Gustin the Fourth will step down
in favor of me, even if you granted me your throne. However, there is
hope that perhaps one of my children might wed one of Gustin’s
children—and as of yet she has none—and so in time
resolve the separation.”
“Trusting to an unborn child and the actions of not just
your generation but your grandchild’s generation to bring the
solution.” Tedric sighed. “That is a slim hope. The best
thing would have been to wed you when you were of age to one of your
cousins, my daughter Lovella, perhaps, or Rosene’s Zorana.
Marras’s daughter would have been ideal as she was already in
line for our throne, but poor Marigolde didn’t live beyond her
first year.”
“That might have been ideal,” Allister agreed,
“but by the time I was a young man, it was already evident that
the experiment was a mistake— that suited as they were by birth
and age, my parents were not suited by temperament. They lived apart
from shortly after my birth, but Princess Caryl was forced by
politics to remain in Bright Bay, an alien princess in a hostile
country. She might have been accepted eventually, but Mother was not
a tactful woman…”
“None of King Chalmer’s other children were,”
Tedric said grumpily. “Why should Caryl be
different?”
Allister hid a smile. “And she made many people hate her.
These would have refused to follow me as king even if the union of
which King Chalmer and Queen Gustin the Second had briefly dreamed
had come to pass. My father was among those who hated Princess
Caryl—as well as the ambivalence of his own position. Another
powerful group who opposed Mother was the family of Crown Prince
Basil’s wife, who saw Mother’s marriage to Father as an
attempt to unseat their daughter as queen-to-be. Indeed, Crown Prince
Basil wasn’t delighted by the thought that his younger brother
might be set above him at the whim of his mother—a resentment
that grew stronger after I was born and Uncle Basil and his wife
remained childless.”
“They were quite right to resent you,” King Tedric
grunted. “I have often thought that if my father and your
grandmother wished to make this great plan work they should have wed
their heirs, but that would have been a greater gamble. This one left
them the elegant pretense that the marriage was merely of noble to
noble, not of heir to heir.”
“True,” Duke Allister said, “but because they
did not take that gamble, Gustin the Fourth is ruler after her
grandmother and father rather than I.”
“Do you resent that?” King Tedric asked.
“Not really,” Allister answered honestly. “I
grew to manhood knowing that I was issue of a failed venture. Neither
of my parents were unkind to me. My father assured that I was granted
name and title. My mother schooled me in the traditions of both my
countries.”
“Both?”
“She did not wish me at disadvantage in anything.”
“That’s Caryl.”
“It’s strange,” Allister mused aloud. “My
parents died within a year of each other—both in their
mid-fifties. Neither could remarry, of course, but as far as I know
neither ever became seriously involved with another person. Mother
pined for Father, I think. I don’t know whether she had focused
so much of her energy on hating him that when he was gone she lost
all reason for living or whether she secretly loved him.”
“Your father died at sea?”
“That’s right. It’s a very usual death for a
member of the Bright Bay nobility. Most of our wealth comes from the
sea and we join our people in harvesting it.”
Allister was acutely aware of King Tedric studying him. His first
impulse was to look away. Then he squared his shoulders and met the
old man’s gaze.
“Tell me, Allister,” the old king said, “do you
want to be my heir?”
“Not,” Allister replied with an answering bluntness of
which he was certain Queen Gustin would not approve, “without
the approval of your people. Otherwise, I am inviting worse, not
better, for your people and for those of Bright Bay.”
“I notice you do not say for your people and for
mine.”
“I told you, my mother reared me to think of both countries
as my own. Although I have lived all my life in Bright Bay, it is
difficult to escape such early indoctrination.”
Allister wondered if he had said too much. He had selected the
clerk who sat scribbling notes a few places down the table, but the
man was duty bound to report to Queen Gustin. She might well consider
his making his own terms—when her orders had been to do his
best to win the Hawk Haven throne—an act of treason. King
Tedric hadn’t seemed to mind, but Allister’s home and
lands were not within King Tedric’s kingdom.
“For you to be accepted within Hawk Haven at all,”
Tedric said after a long pause, “you would need to be allied
with one of our Great Houses. I would offer you one of my own
children or grandchildren, but I have none. If I had any, I would not
be sitting here with you.”
“I suppose not,” Allister agreed. He wondered about
the wolf girl of whom he had heard. Some said that she was
Tedric’s granddaughter, others simply a contrivance of Earl
Kestrel’s. He decided to wait to ask about her until he could
introduce the subject gracefully.
“I have,” Tedric sighed, “nieces and nephews of
your age, but they are married and you are married. Beginning this
proposition with several divorces would undo any good we could
do.”
“True.”
“Thus we move to the next generation, playing games with
young lives as my father played with the lives of Caryl and Tavis. Do
we want to risk that?”
“I don’t know.”
Allister thought of the letter from Zorana Archer folded within
his breast pocket. The longer he spoke with the king, the more he was
certain that she had acted of her own accord, not with the
king’s knowledge. Should he tell the king? What might
Tedric’s reaction be? Would the king thank Allister for his
honesty or would he condemn him for treating with—or perhaps
for misrepresenting—one of his nieces?
Allister waited, knowing that he could not wait too long or the
moment would pass. King Tedric accepted a glass of sweet pear cider
from his clerk and continued thoughtfully:
“Are any of your children married?”
“No.”
“Betrothed?”
“My eldest, Shad, is betrothed to a girl of good family in
Bright Bay. It is a political arrangement.”
“Aren’t they all,” the king said breezily.
“I understand that your father married for love.”
“And was forced to distribute titles to appease his angry
Great Houses. These days most marriages among our Great Houses are
alliances. Sometimes they work out quite well. Elexa has become my
right hand, though initially we did not care for each other. Other
times these marriages do not work at all and create trouble for the
families.”
“Ah.”
“Are you indicating that Shad’s political betrothal
could be broken if necessary?”
“Queen Gustin would probably insist.”
“I see.”
A knock sounded on the door without. King Tedric’s
guard—Sir Dir-kin Eastbranch, Allister recalled—went to
answer it.
“Yes?”
A note was passed in. Sir Dirkin carried it to the king, who broke
the seal and read it. Smiling wearily, he passed it to Allister.
“As you can see, my physician is reminding me that my heart
is not strong and that I should rest. As much as I am enjoying this
conversation, I believe I should obey.”
“As you wish, sir.”
“We will both be hounded by questions. I, for one, shall
tell my people we are still feeling out what the other wants and
needs. You may tell yours whatever you wish.”
“I believe you have spoken the simple truth,
Uncle.‘’
“One last thing.”
“Yes?”
The king studied his gnarled fingers. “I am unwilling to
contract too freely with young lives as was done in my father’s
day. Within my kingdom, perhaps, but across the borders is a
different matter. I suggest we hold another gathering—a dance
perhaps—so I can see how everyone behaves.”
Allister could hardly believe what he was hearing. A dance? At
such a critical time? King Tedric read something of his
expression.
“You forget, good Nephew. I have named my heir. My meeting
with you is simply to see if I will change my mind. If we are to make
monumental decisions, let us not make them in haste.”
Allister bowed. “I agree.”
On that accord they departed. Messages would be sent back and
forth arranging the next meeting and the ball to be held some days
hence, as soon as arrangements could be made. Followed closely by his
men, Allister descended the Toll House stairs and departed.
He was so busy composing how he would reply to various questions
from the Bright Bay contingent that he did not notice the anxious
concern with which the generals of Stonehold watched him pass.
Prince Newell Shield initially had been more than a little put out
at being kept from the king’s conference with Allister
Seagleam. Surely he hadn’t come all this way to be balked at
the door! Somewhat mollified when he learned that everyone was being
refused, he decided to put his morning to good use.
The two generals from Stonehold had come to last night’s
reception already edgy and Newell had taken it upon himself to make
them more so. That there had been two of them had caused him some
difficulty at first, but there had been no avoiding that
situation.
Stonehold assigned all posts in pairs, a parallel to their
governmental system. One of the pair was drawn from stock originally
from the Old Country of Alkyab. The other was a scion of the Old
Country of Tavetch. When the Plague Years had begun, Alkyab and
Tavetch had been among the first countries to abandon their colonies.
Faced with powerful neighbors, all still receiving support from their
founding countries, their colonists had banded together.
Perhaps if physically they hadn’t looked so different, the
two cultures would have merged, but the people were different. The
people of Tavetch were tall, heavily built, massive people with a
tendency toward blue or green eyes and fair hair. The people of
Alkyab were small, even petite. Their skin was the yellow-tan of old
ivory, their eyes dark and slanting, their hair jetly dark.
Their religious customs differed as well. The fair-haired Tavetch
worshipped a sun deity possessed of three aspects who, according to
their legends, was wed to a lunar goddess whose face changed each day
as the face of the moon changed. The stars were the children of these
deities and danced messages regarding their parents’ wishes for
humanity in elaborate patterns on the night sky.
The Alkyab were, as the descendants of Gildcrest saw things, far
less superstitious. They, too, understood that one’s ancestors
were one’s liaisons with the complicated and incomprehensible
forces that ruled destiny and fortune. True, the Alkyab built temples
to their ancestors (rather than the descendants of Gildcrest’s
less ostentatious family shrines) and governed marriages by a complex
system having to do with figuring degrees of relationships. These
differences were an acceptable eccentricity given that the
Alkyab’s ancestors had come from lands unknown and so the
Alkyab were the ones with whom Newell Shield felt more
comfortable.
Therefore, at the reception Prince Newell had made his first
overtures to little General Yuci, a skilled horseman and commander of
cavalry. Yuci had been arguing with Earl Kestrel about the merits of
various methods of training horses to withstand the noise and chaos
of battle when Newell came up. Yuci was several strong glasses of
wine past what his slim frame could bear and Earl Kestrel had seemed
sincerely grateful at being rescued.
Under the guise of finding the general somewhere in which to sober
up a bit, Newell had steered Yuci to a quiet corner and proceeded to
alter his perception of events.
“Of course,” Newell had begun blithely, “King
Tedric is delighted to meet Allister Seagleam. He despises all his
other nieces and nephews, never could get on with his brother and
sister, you know.”
Later, seeing Elise Archer laughing at a joke made by one of the
guild representatives, Newell commented: “She seems terribly
innocent, doesn’t she? She grew up around the royal castle and
there isn’t a secret she doesn’t know or an intrigue to
which she isn’t privy.”
When Lady Blysse drifted from the party to watch the river, Newell
represented the young woman’s adolescent boredom as the sullen
silence of a cruel and calculating mind. He dropped rumors about her
upbringing among wolves, hinted that the creature who usually trailed
her with such fidelity was an evil familiar spirit.
So he went, telling a tale on this one, sharing a confidence about
that one. He spared his sister Melina’s family a little,
wanting to seem a loyal soul, but still managed to dredge up the
rumors about Melina’s use of magic.
By the end of his chat with Yuci, Newell was well pleased. Nothing
he had said about anyone had been precisely untrue—or had at
least been within the realm of common gossip. He knew, however, that
hearing it from his lips—from the lips of a prince of Hawk
Haven—would give even the most outrageous tales credence.
Eventually General Grimsel had joined them and Newell had experienced
the pleasure of hearing his slander repeated and amplified.
Yes, last night’s game had been a good one, a delightful way
to pass a portion of the reception. Today, however, refused a place
at his monarch’s side, Newell had something more serious in
mind. If last night he had set the logs on the fire, today he planned
to add the kindling.
At Newell’s request, the Stonehold generals agreed to meet
the prince at a nice little tavern on the Bright Bay side of the
river, near where one of the regular ferries docked. They arranged
for a private dining room and refreshments. Newell—as he saw
it—took responsibility for the entertainment.
He doubted that Grimsel and Yuci saw their meeting in exactly that
light. Doubtless they were nervous at meeting with a prince of a
nation that was not on the best of terms—if not openly at
war—with their own.
Had he not found their presence so useful, Newell might have even
felt sorry for them. The generals’ simple tour abroad to train
Bright Bay’s army and to command the mercenaries that augmented
that same army had mutated into a political crisis.
Newell imagined how they must have felt when Queen Gustin IV
commanded her army to accompany Duke Allister to Good Crossing. Even
if they had wanted to demur—and they would have found that
difficult—there would have been pressure from Stonehold that
they be on the spot to learn everything as it unfolded.
After greeting his hosts and inquiring after their welfare, Newell
jumped right to the reason he had called this meeting, judging that
he could hardly string their nerves any tighter without fueling an
explosion of some sort.
“Thank you both, Generals, for making the time to see
me.”
General Grimsel, a tall woman, built in every way on the heroic
scale, with eyes of transparent blue, returned his greeting with some
terseness. Her own infantry idolized her for her past deeds. The
Bright Bay troops she had trained were less happy with her, seeing
through her surface heartiness to her basic dislike of them,
realizing that she saw them as aliens, rather than allies.
Cavalry commander Yuci, neat and trim despite the previous
night’s binge, was more polite.
“We always have time to learn things that may be of interest
to Stone-hold. That is what you said in your note this early morning,
isn’t it? You said you had something to tell us that would be
of interest to Stonehold.”
Newell nodded. “I did and I do.”
“Pray,” Grimsel said, pouring herself a mug of summer
ale from the pitcher set in the center of the table, “tell
us.”
Newell bobbed his head again. Then in the slightly breathless
tones of a storyteller who wasn’t certain of his audience he
began:
“Well, you know the true reason for the split between Bright
Bay and Hawk Haven, don’t you? I mean, it wasn’t just a
natural outgrowth of the years of unrest following the
Plague.”
“No?” Grimsel said, her tones bored.
“No,” Newell replied, still eager. “There had
been any number of factional squabbles from the time the last Old
Country nobles left— people fighting to establish holds or to
keep what had been given them or just for the right to loot what had
been left behind.
“Out of these, three figures—Zorana Shield, Clive
Elkwood, and Gustin Sailor—had risen to the fore. While they
were working together it seemed pretty certain that all of
Gildcrest’s colonial lands would be reunited under a single
government. Then things split down the middle and we ended up with
two kingdoms.”
General Grimsel frowned a sturdy frown, no longer precisely bored
but clearly puzzled as to what bearing this discourse on factionalism
over a hundred years past could have on current events.
“I had heard,” Grimsel said, “that is, we were
told—that there was a differences of opinion in how the
campaigns should be conducted. In the end, some chose to follow
Gustin Sailor, some to follow Zorana Shield. So two kingdoms were
born rather than one.”
“That,” Newell gave an approving smile, “is the
story in all our history books. It is completely true but omits a
rather interesting point.”
“I had also heard,” General Yuci added with a slightly
embarrassed cough, “that Queen Zorana—Zorana Shield
then—had excited the love of both Gustin Sailor and Clive
Elkwood. She favored Elkwood and in a fit of pique, Gustin Sailor
went his own way and took his followers with him.”
“That,” Newell said, trying to sound as if he were
amused but politely concealing that amusement, “is the story
told in all our romantic ballads. The truth is darker, more
dangerous, and more believable.”
“Oh?” asked General Grimsel, refilling her mug from
the pitcher in what she clearly thought was a casual gesture.
“I learned the true story only because I was wed to a member
of the royal family,” Newell said, playing the generals before
setting the hook. “No one but members of the royal family are
ever told the story by order of Zorana herself. My late wife, the
Princess Lovella, knowing that I would rule alongside her one day,
confided the tale to me. She was very concerned about how I would
take it, for she believed that hearing this tale was what had
unmanned her brother, Crown Prince Chalmer, leading to his untimely
death.”
“What was this secret?” General Grimsel pressed,
anxious now lest Newell say nothing more.
Prince Newell dropped his voice and looked uneasy.
“I’m not certain I should tell you this, but I’m
hoping that if you know the truth, perhaps you will recognize how
important it is that Bright Bay and Hawk Haven not be
rejoined.”
General Yuri’s dark eyes glittered with what might have been
intensity but what Newell feared was laughter.
“Perhaps you have your own advancement in mind, Prince
Newell? Very well, I can understand such motives. Tell on.”
“And quickly,” Grimsel added.
Newell feigned a mixture of anger and embarrassment—a man
caught intriguing but unwilling to back out.
“The real reason that Gustin Sailor split from his
associates,” he said, “was that Zorana Shield and Clive
Elkwood believed firmly that everything that stank of Old World
sorcery should be destroyed. We all know how the rulers kept
knowledge of the higher orders of magic from the
colonists.”
The two generals nodded, willing to let him digress now that he
was on the point. Such restrictive policies had been fairly
universal, for the power of high magic was what had permitted the Old
Countries to dominate the residents of their colonies.
Newell continued, “And we all know that most of them took
their magical materials home when they left.”
Again nods.
“That didn’t always happen.” Newell saw the
generals exchange surprised glances. “According to the tale
King Tedric told Princess Lovella, one day some years after the
departure of the Old Country rulers of Gildcrest, Zorana Shield
chanced upon an isolated vacation retreat in the foothills of the
Iron Mountains where the residents had succumbed to the Plague.
Danger of contagion was long past, but the illness must have come
upon the residents suddenly for none of their magical trinkets had
been destroyed or sent away.”
Newell glanced at his audience. Neither looked either bored or
inclined to laugh. He continued, satisfied:
“Zorana burned the books and scrolls, but there were a few
items, a ring, I think, and maybe some sort of wand—Lovella was
vague. There may have been more. Before Zorana Shield could destroy
these items, her allies joined her. They quarreled, Clive Elkwood
supporting her, Gustin Sailor furious at the waste. When it became
clear that there was no resolution possible, Gustin acted.
“In the dark of night, he stole the items and fled to the
southeast, near the bay where his strongest base of power lay. Later,
those who thought he had done right rallied to him. Zorana Shield
already had a solid following in the lands north of the Barren River,
lands still held today by her Shield kindred. To the delight of the
balladeers she married Clive Elkwood.
“Thus the break between our countries—for though they
weren’t really countries yet the Barren River gradually became
a boundary between factions. It would take several more years before
Zorana Shield and Clive Elkwood solidified their hold on the lands
north of the Barren River. After they had, they went after Gustin
Sailor. He now held most of the lands south of the
Barren—though his interest lay especially along the coast and
in the Isles.
“When Zorana and Clive went after Gustin, that’s the
period we usually call the Civil War, though ideologically the split
had happened several years earlier. The Civil War was fought for
something like four years. Clive Elkwood died in one of those
battles, but Zorana was firmly at the head of their faction so the
fighting went on. Finally, peace seemed easier than continuing to
fight—you must remember that some of these people had been
fighting for fifteen years or more.
“With peace, the Barren was confirmed as the border between
Hawk Haven and Bright Bay. Zorana’s followers had been calling
themselves the Hawks, because they were resolved to fly free without
magic’s bondage, so their new kingdom was called Hawk
Haven.”
Newell fell silent and General Yuci prompted, “And Gustin
Sailor, of course, he became King Gustin I of Bright Bay, but what
happened to the magical relics?”
Newell looked tense and grim. He milked the silence for a few
moments more then said:
“Despite trying repeatedly, Zorana never managed to retrieve
them from Gustin. The good thing is that—according to what
Princess Lovella told me—no one in Bright Bay has ever
possessed the talent to employ the relics. To this day they remain
curiosities in the Bright Bay treasury, protected by the Seal of the
Sun and brought forth only upon the coronation of a ruler. Even then,
they are only seen by a select few. I’ve asked around and what
I’ve heard from those few makes me believe the story. Bright
Bay has Old World magic.”
General Grimsel swore a thunderous oath. “Old World magic!
If someone learns how to use it, they could destroy us
all!”
“And,” whispered General Yuci, “in Hawk Haven
there are those who are sorc…”
Yuci stopped then, remembering that Newell’s own sister was
a reputed sorceress. Newell politely pretended not to have heard.
He’d done what was necessary.
Stonehold now had an excuse to be at odds with Bright Bay. Whether
they would use that excuse to declare war on Bright Bay, to withdraw
their mercenaries, or merely to attempt to dictate domestic policy he
didn’t know. What he was certain of was that Stonehold’s
rulers would not let the opportunity pass them by. Soon enough,
Bright Bay would be seeing her ally’s true colors.
“It is an outrageous tale!” protested General Grimsel
loudly, perhaps to cover for her own too thoughtful silence.
Newell rose to take his leave. “I thought you needed to know
the truth—to know why it is so dangerous to let these nations
be reunited.”
“You are a true friend to all humanity,” General
Grimsel said. “Stonehold will not forget this noble
act.”
“Thank you, General.”
General Yuci favored him with a deep bow but said nothing. Newell
wondered if he was still shocked by his recollection of
Newell’s own familial reputation for sorcery or whether he was
simply keeping his counsel.
Prince Newell straightened his hat, bowed, and departed, not
wishing to dilute the impression he had made. He had no doubts that
Stonehold would do its best to confirm what he had said, but about
that he felt no qualms. It is an outrageous story, Newell thought as he left the
two generals to their certain consternation. The funny thing is,
it is also completely true.
Despite Elise’s resolve to act immediately, circumstances
conspired against her. First, she encountered her cousin Sapphire.
Since witnessing the events of the afternoon before, Elise’s
feelings toward Sapphire had undergone a revolution. No longer did
Sapphire seem a pushy older cousin but something of a valiant
heroine, striving to maintain her identity despite crippling pressure
from without.
The trouble was that Sapphire’s feelings about Elise
hadn’t changed at all. To Sapphire, Elise was still the upstart
who conspired with her own brother to steal a march on her. Elise
drew in a deep breath:
“Good morning, cousin.”
“Good morning—though from my reading of the
sun,” Sapphire commented unkindly, “it is nearly
noon.”
“True,” Elise replied mildly. “It is. I suppose
I do not have your constitution. Last night’s party was too
much for me. I am not accustomed to such hours or such strong
wine.”
Sapphire paused as if examining this comment for some subtle
insult. Failing to find one, she smiled.
“I am about to go riding,” she said reluctantly,
certainly remembering Melina Shield’s recent reminder that
Sapphire had a duty to her family, not merely to herself.
“Would you like to join me? It would sweat the wine out of you
properly.”
Riding was the last thing Elise wanted to do, but she would be an
utter fool to reject such an offer, especially since she had resolved
to rescue Sapphire from her mother.
“Let me change,” she said. “Ninette, ask one of
the grooms to bring around my palfrey.”
“I’ll take care of that,” Sapphire offered.
“I was going to saddle up the Blue.”
Elise thanked her. As she changed into riding breeches—the
pretty frock she had worn to go on Firekeeper’s hawking party
so long ago was back in Eagle’s Nest—Elise cautioned
Ninette to say nothing to anyone.
“I won’t, Elise,” the woman said earnestly.
“I think I’ll take my sewing and go join the lady’s
circle. I won’t be so scared in daylight and maybe I’ll
learn something.”
“You are brave,” Elise said, kissing Ninette on one
cheek. “Do that, but keep your own mouth tightly sealed. I
wouldn’t have harm come to you for all the world.”
Riding with Sapphire was surprisingly enjoyable, though, of
course, Sapphire must show off her superior skill. Elise found it
easy to give her cousin the praise she clearly craved, for when
Sapphire thought herself unwatched her hand often fell to her side as
if to quiet the pain of her wound.
They visited Ivon Archer and Purcel Trueheart among their troops.
Here, Elise learned, Sapphire had developed quite a following. They
found the same when Elise suggested that they visit Earl
Kestrel’s cavalry unit. Despite a large proportion of the
riders being female, here too Sapphire was a favorite. Perhaps she is not all bluster and pose, Elise thought.
Perhaps beneath that showy armor and boastful talk does beat a
warrior heart. The question is, is that also the heart of a
queen?
When they returned to the encampment, the nobles’ enclave
was buzzing with news. Nydia and Opal ran out to meet them.
“The king met with Allister Seagleam this morning,”
Dia announced.
“And,” Opal cut in, “they have arranged that
there will be a great ball in a few days. All our noble folk and
officers will be invited.”
“And all of theirs,” added Dia. “They’re
also inviting important people from the towns.”
“And Mother thinks,” said Opal with a guarded glance
at her older sister, “that the purpose is to see who might make
a marriage with one of Allister’s children.”
“Our mother thinks so too,” Dia added, and her
expression was strange, a mixture of anticipation and what Elise was
certain was fear.
“Since none of us brought appropriate clothing,” Opal
said, a real thrill of delight in her voice this time, “we are
all to go to town this afternoon and visit the shops. Messages have
been sent ahead and it is rumored that a great bazaar will be
prepared for our pleasure.”
“And Lady Blysse,” Elise said when the three excited
girls paused for breath, “has anyone told her of this grand
event?”
Glances between the two made clear that not only had Blysse not
been told, the tacit decision had been made not to tell her. Elise
was slightly surprised when Sapphire said:
“She has not been, I see. Very well. Elise and I will ride
to the Kestrel camp and tell her.”
Before there could be any protest, Sapphire reined the Blue around
and Elise’s palfrey was quick to follow.
“Blysse,” Sapphire said, “saved my
life—she and her men. I will not have her slighted in such a
petty way.”
Elise glowed with delight. Perhaps her cousin did have the heart
of a queen as well as that of a warrior.
“May I offer you a hint?” she said.
“What?”
“Lady Blysse likes her friends to call her
Firekeeper.”
Sapphire looked offended for a moment. Then a slow smile spread
across her face.
“Her friends, you say. Very well. I will remember
that.”
Shopping took the rest of the daylight hours. It was not merely a
female expedition. Most of the noblemen and officers had come no
better equipped. The informal bazaar was filled with men and women
examining bolts of fabric, conferring with seamstresses and tailors,
and shooting each other shy glances as if wondering what the other
sex would think of their finery. Festivities extended into twilight
with impromptu dinner parties in most of the finer inns.
Hope was up to the challenge. The resident clothiers recruited
nearly everyone who could use a needle to work in their shops. They
were forced to compete for labor with the jewelers and cobblers, as
well as the purveyors of food and drink. Despite all this ingenuity,
many of those invited found themselves forced to mend and polish
their own attire and many of the locals had to make do with last
season’s gown or waistcoat rather than the new one they
craved.
Yet minor disappointments could not quell the festive spirit. The
merchants of Hope (and her sister city Good Crossing) saw half a
year’s earnings or more flow into their coffers. This in turn
made them able to be more generous with those they hired. Even the
hard feelings raised when merchants lured away workers in their
neighbors’ employ were dismissed as points scored in a rather
rough and tumble game.
Normally, Elise would have delighted in such a shopping
expedition, especially when she discovered that due to extensive
smuggling through the area fine goods imported by the sailors of
Bright Bay were far less expensive here than they were in
Eagle’s Nest. The excellent wools of Stonehold were also well
represented and, although the weather was too warm for wool, Elise
and her father purchased several bolts of fabric to ship home.
Yet, despite such distractions, the thought of the conference she
must arrange for later that night was rarely far from Elise’s
thoughts. During a visit to an herbalist who also distilled the most
wonderful floral scents, Elise managed to slip Derian a note. His
quick nod and a light of interest in his greenish-brown eyes
acknowledged her message and agreed to the suggested arrangements.
Then he switched back into servile invisibility with such skill that
she could hardly believe he was the same man.
Later than evening, when the parties had broken up, Elise pleaded
exhaustion and went to her pavilion. Fortunately, Baron Archer was
one of the night officers, so no one would miss her. Even if they
did, Ninette would cover for her.
Elise skirted the fringes of the camp until she came to the edge
where the Kestrel tents were pitched. She avoided these, going out
into the fields to a cluster of rocks that had been appointed as
their meeting place. Derian, Firekeeper, and Sir Jared were already
there with a shielded lantern and a pot of tea.
“Valet,” Elise said to Derian, “is making his
mark on you.”
Derian grinned. “To think that when I first met him I judged
him a useless mouse of a man. I know better now.”
Firekeeper, from at the fringe of the circle of light where she
sat with her arm thrown around Blind Seer, had no patience with such
niceties.
“All day, Elise, you have smelled of fear. Last day, too.
Tell us why.”
Elise laughed nervously. “I hope that everyone does not have
your nose, Firekeeper.”
“Not just my nose. Blind Seer, too. If someone has
frightened you, we will frighten them back.”
“Thank you,” Elise said, genuinely grateful.
“But it’s not as simple as that. Might I have a cup of
tea?”
Part of her reason was to win a moment’s more respite. Part
was remembering what had happened when she had tried to tell before.
While Derian poured, she began, telling them of how she and Ninette
had gone out to the cluster of rocks near the Fortress of the
Watchful Eye.
“We hid ourselves because we did not want to invite the
attention of the soldiers. However, we were not the only ones to have
marked out those rocks as a good place for privacy. Melina Shield
came there with Sapphire, Jet, and Opal.”
Without wasting words, Elise told how Melina had scolded her
children. She was grateful for the darkness when she must relate how
bluntly Melina had berated Jet for his sexual exploits, but she must
be honest or risk leaving out something that might assist them.
Thus far, any pain she had felt could have been imagined or
dismissed as the slight burning of the tea, but when she began to
tell how Melina had cursed Jet, a sharp hot sensation, precisely as
if her tongue had been bitten, caused her to cry out.
“Lady!” Jared Surcliffe jumped to his feet.
“What is wrong?”
She waved him back. “Part of this tale, I fear.”
Digging the nails of her right hand into her palm, Elise
continued. She tasted blood by the time she had finished telling of
Jet’s cursing, but memory of Sapphire’s courage shamed
her into going on. She, too, had thought herself worthy to be queen.
She might not be a warrior, but surely she was not without
courage.
Firekeeper’s soft voice from the shadows broke through her
pretense.
“I smell blood on your breath,” she said. “What
causes this?”
Elise felt tears begin to slide down her cheeks unbidden, as if
Firekeeper’s detection of her pain had freed them.
“A third curse,” she said, each word a throbbing stab.
“To guard against… any telling what… Melina has
done. Jet and I… she didn’t know… but
still.”
The pain was horrid. Perhaps because this curse was the one that
had affected her personally, the sensation of biting ants was so
acute that she could even feel their little feet tromping on the
swollen flesh of her injured tongue.
“Quiet,” Derian urged Elise, pouring her more tea and
holding the cup to her lips. “Rinse your mouth and spit.
Don’t be proper.”
Sir Jared had vanished, returning a moment later with his medical
bag in his hand.
“Chamomile and sage,” he said, drawing out two
packets. “Both good for the mouth and throat. Chamomile has
soothing properties as well. Do we have more hot water,
Derian?”
“In the kettle by the fire.”
“I get,” Firekeeper said and was gone and back before
anyone could answer her.
Sir Jared’s potion did seem to help. At his urging, Elise
first rinsed her mouth with a tincture of sage, then drank more in a
tea blended with the chamomile and some honey.
“Don’t talk yet,” Sir Jared said when she
started to thank him. “Let us see if the pain is as intense if
you respond to our questions. We have enough information to
begin.”
Elise nodded. “Good idea.”
“Melina Shield cursed her son Jet with impotence.
Lovely.” Jared paused. “Did she know that you were there
when she cursed him?”
“No.”
“Any pain?”
“No.”
Actually, there might have been a twinge, but Elise wasn’t
going to tell him. He might refuse to go on and she needed to tell
this.
“Good. Now, based on what you said before, you think that
because you and Jet are betrothed, her magic was able to touch
you.”
“Yes.”
“Have you asked Ninette if she feels similar
pain?”
“No. She is so very frightened.”
“We’ll still need to test this.” In the lantern
light she saw him frown, then look embarrassed. “Lady Elise,
are you and Jet… lovers?”
“No.” Did she imagine it or was Sir Jared’s
expression a bit too pleased to be merely relief?
Derian cut in. “Elise wears a betrothal pendant. It’s
made of the same jet that he is named for, the same stone that the
sorceress used when she cursed him. Could there be a
connection?”
“There might be,” Sir Jared said. “Lady Elise,
take the pendant off.”
Elise had not removed the carved wolfs head pendant since the
betrothal ceremony. Even when she had bathed or slept, it had
remained in place. She felt curiously reluctant to take it off now,
an almost physical nausea that roiled the tea in her stomach.
To combat the nausea, Elise summoned an image of Jet bedding some
light woman, her own lynx pendant swinging from his neck or tossed
casually on a bedside table. Deliberately, she built the details,
fueling what she didn’t know from her imagination until she
roused an answering anger.
Quickly, before she could lose the will, Elise lifted the chain
from about her neck and set the pendant on the rock beside her.
“That was difficult, wasn’t it?” Jared asked.
“Interesting. When I was betrothed and later married I had no
such difficulty removing the associated jewelry.”
“My father takes his off all the time,” Derian added.
“Especially when he’s working with the horses, yet he
adores Mother.”
Sir Jared nodded. “I think you have guessed right, Derian,
that pendant, as much as anything, may be what Lady Melina used to
channel her spell. Tell me, Elise, did she do anything in particular
during the ceremony or soon thereafter?”
Elise tried to remember. She had attended numerous betrothals in
her capacity as heir to the Archer estates. In recent years, her
father had been tutoring her in how to perform the ritual since, as
head of the family, it would someday be her duty.
“Not during the ceremony,” she said, “but
afterwards she drew me aside and made quite a fuss about the pendant.
She asked to see it.”
“Did you take it off?” Derian asked.
“Yes. I had no problem with that—except for a
girl’s romantic heart flutters, that is.” The only pain
Elise felt as she spoke was disdain for herself. “Melina held
it up to admire the carving. She told me that I should be proud to
wear it always since it marked me as a member of her family. Now that
I think about it, she swung it back and forth, much as she did when
she…”
Elise hid a wince as a faint but certain bite pierced her tongue
near the tip.
“Cursed her children,” she finished steadily.
“Her children, you say,” Sir Jared nodded. “Time
for question and answer again. Did she curse Sapphire as
well?”
“Yes.”
“Not with impotence. That would hardly be appropriate. What
with?”
“Pain from her wounds.” Elise was certain that the ant
bites were less sharp now. “Pain and inability to heal until
Lady Melina releases her curse.”
Jared swore, invoking his society patron—the Eagle, Elise
noted in passing—and a long line of Surcliffe ancestors.
Firekeeper spoke for the first time since volunteering to bring
water.
“What happens if Melina Shield dies?”
Firekeeper’s intention was obvious. Though she was but a
shadow in the darkness, they could see her hand resting upon her
knife. Blind Seer’s hackles were up and his fangs gleamed white
as he snarled.
“No one knows,” Sir Jared answered. “The curse
may last forever without her to lift it. It may die with her. Great
magics were never taught in the New World. Most of what our people
had were inborn talents, like my gift for healing or Holly
Gardener’s green thumb. Some were trained in sorcery but those
with the most promise were taken back to the Old World for their
final training. Legend said that they were bound not to reveal their
arts to anyone.”
Derian whistled softly. “Bound. That’s just what she
did to her children. I doubt they could get around that.”
“We need to know more,” Elise said, feeling panicked,
“but how will we learn! If we were at home, I might consult the
library. There are musty tomes there, dating back to before Queen
Zorana captured the Castle. Aksel Trueheart often roots around in
them gathering information for his history.”
“I wonder if that library or someplace similar is where
Melina got her knowledge,” Jared mused. “You’re
right, Elise. We can’t go ahead in ignorance. We may do more
harm than help.”
“We have time,” Derian said. “Not a lot, but
some. King Tedric won’t leave or make any great changes until
after this ball, so we have time. I think I know where to start.
Hazel Healer strikes me as a wise woman. I saw lots of books in her
workshop and not all were about herbs.”
“Good,” Sir Jared said. “Happily, with the ball
to prepare for, no one will think it at all odd if we call on her.
They’ll just think the ladies are shopping for scent. I have
the excuse of searching for odd medicinal herbs. Indeed, since
Sapphire was assaulted, everyone is traveling in larger
groups.”
Firekeeper had risen to her feet. “Tomorrow then. Early.
Derian may think we have time, but wolves hunt when they are hungry
and I am very hungry.”
She turned then and in a few steps was gone.
Elise sighed. “I wish I could be as sure as she
is.”
“She’s less certain than she seems,” Derian
said. “I think.”
Aware of her trembling hand, Elise lifted the betrothal pendant
from the rock and put it back on.
“I can’t be seen without it,” she said.
“Good night, gentlemen.”
“Good night, Elise,” Derian said.
“Let me walk you back to your tent,” Sir Jared
suggested.
“No. Better no one sees us together. There is enough
uncertainty tonight. I’ll be fine.”
She smiled at him. “Have Firekeeper call for me in the
morning. My aunts dislike that Sapphire and I insisted on bringing
her shopping today. No one will press to accompany us.”
“What about Sapphire?” Derian asked.
“I think she has a dress fitting early. Don’t worry.
Now, good night.”
As she hurried back to her pavilion, Elise thought about the look
in Sir Jared’s eyes as she had turned away. Concern had been
there, and admiration, and something more. A sudden warmth touched
her cheeks as she realized that he might be the admirer who had
anonymously left her a small pot of very expensive rose attar
scent.
XIX
When Allister Seagleam awakened, he realized with
something like astonishment that he was actually looking forward to
his meeting with King Tedric. He listened with half an ear as Sir
Tench briefed him on various things he should and should not do,
kissed Pearl and assured her that the sketches for her new gown and
those for the twins looked wonderful, tossed said twins in the air
while they shrieked at this assault on their eleven-year-old dignity,
and then drew Shad and Tavis aside for a private word.
“You’ll be escorting your mother into the town today,
I expect.” Shad, a serious-looking young man of twenty who had
his mother’s rounded lines and fair coloring—but no
longer any of her plumpness— nodded.
“That’s right, Father. She is insisting on having us
all fitted for new clothes. I think my dress uniform should do quite
well, but Mother is acting as if this ball is Queen Gustin the
Fourth’s coronation all over again.”
“It is, Shad, especially for our family,” Allister
replied. “However, if you wish to wear your dress uniform, tell
Pearl that this is my wish as well. If you do choose to wear it, make
certain that every button and line of braid is as perfect as if you
were expecting an inspection by the Lord High Admiral.”
“I will, Father,” Shad said earnestly. His recent
promotion from ensign to lieutenant was the most important event in
his young life. Allister understood. He had also struggled to prove
himself though hampered by high birth and outlander blood.
Tavis, at fifteen, had yet to enter the Navy formally, though like
any youth raised in Bright Bay he swam like a fish and sailed as if
the masts and lines were extensions of his own body. He scuffed his
shoe along the ground and looked sidelong up at his father. Beneath
his thick golden lashes, his eyes were the exact shade of the sea
before a thunderstorm.
“I suppose,” Tavis said gloomily, “that I have
no choice but to let my mother doll me up in lace and
brocade.”
“None at all,” his father said sternly. “It is
time you realized that you have a responsibility to this family.
Think about this little fact while I am away. If a marriage alliance
is made between our family and one of the royal scions of Hawk Haven,
you are as good a candidate as your elder brother—better in
many ways for he is already betrothed.”
Tavis looked at his father wide-eyed. Although a second child in
Bright Bay prepared for the possibility of becoming heir far more
stringently than his counterpart in Hawk Haven might, Tavis had
passed from boyhood onto the threshold of young manhood secure in the
knowledge that he was protected by the double bulwark of father and
elder brother.
“But I… but the girls… but Mother said,”
he stammered.
“But nothing. I say all four of you must conduct yourselves
as if the entire fate of our family rests upon you alone. You boys
have been taking this upcoming ball less than seriously. I hereby
order you to start doing so.”
“Yes, sir!” snapped Shad.
“Yes, Father,” Tavis said slowly, but his expression
assured Allister that he would obey.
Allister could pity the boy. Born into another family, Tavis would
probably have become a musician or poet, a burden to be cherished
lest he starve but cherished nonetheless for the evidence that he had
been blessed by the ancestors with a special gift. Tavis, named for a
grandfather he had never met, now must take his own part in the
political games to which his namesake had been sacrificed.
“I must go now,” Allister said. “Make me proud
of you and know that I will not treat with your lives lightly, but
remember also—there is a part of our lives that does not belong
to us. It belongs to our country and to our families. That is the
price we pay for titles and honors common folk do not
have.”
He turned then, resisting the impulse to tousle their heads. For a
moment, twenty and fifteen though they might be, his sons had looked
very much like little boys.
Today Allister must cross the courtyard between the sides of the
Toll House to mount the stairs on the Hawk Haven side of the
building. A woman he recognized as Lady Melina Shield was busy
discussing potential decorations for the ball with one of Lord
Tench’s assistants. The matter under discussion seemed to be
whether or not the emblem of the royal family of Bright Bay should be
displayed given that the queen herself was not in attendance. More of this eternal political maneuvering for position,
Allister thought. And I am beginning to think that it matters as
little to Uncle Tedric as it does to me.
At that very moment, he made up his mind to tell King Tedric about
Zorana Archer’s letter. After greetings were exchanged, he
began on this immediately.
“Yesterday, Uncle Tedric, when the physician reminded you of
your health, I was about to tell you something rather interesting.
Lest we get distracted today, I would like to begin with that piece
of business.”
“I am quite curious,” the old monarch said equably.
“Speak on.”
“Some twenty or so days ago, I received a letter from a
member of your court. It was carried by private courier and delivered
in great secrecy. The letter suggested that it would be to the mutual
advantage of the writer and myself to arrange a marriage alliance
between our families. She…”
“Ah, she,” King Tedric murmured. “Do go
on.”
“She stated that she herself was already married,”
Allister continued, somewhat nervously, for the old eagle’s
face was completely unreadable, “but that she had several
children of marriageable or near marriageable age. She then went on
to name these children and note something about each.”
King Tedric coughed dryly. “It must have been a veritable
tome.”
“The missive did run to several close-written pages, Your
Majesty,” Allister admitted. “Next she expressed
considerable knowledge about my own family, including the knowledge
that my son Shad was already betrothed—a thing that astonished
me a little, as the betrothal is fairly recent and I had not thought
the news would have reached your court.
“Then she suggested the combination of her children and mine
would be—in her opinion—to our mutual advantage. She
signed the letter and impressed it with her personal seal so that
there would be no doubt of her identity.”
“Do you have this letter still?”
“Yes, Your Majesty. Queen Gustin, to whom I confided this
information…”
“You did. I see.”
“Queen Gustin ordered me to give her the letter for her
state archives. I refused on the grounds that it was a personal
communication to me in my capacity as the head of my family, not in
any of the positions that I hold for the Crown.”
“Very correctly, I’m certain.” King Tedric
smiled slightly. “And I’m certain also that as a monarch
Queen Gustin was rather piqued.”
“I’m afraid she was, Your Majesty.”
“I much preferred when you referred to me as Uncle Tedric
or, failing that, King Tedric. Don’t worry, Nephew. I’m
not going to bite heads off just because you brought this to me. Not
your head at least…”
For a moment his smile faded and Allister was reminded again that
the eagle was a bird of prey. Then King Tedric was sternly affable
again.
“Do you plan to show me this remarkable document?”
“If you will agree to leave it in my custody.”
“I will. I can hardly respect your rights less than did your
own monarch. I would come out rather badly in the
comparison.”
Allister reached into his inside jacket pocket and removed the
several sheets of vellum.
“Thick enough to stop an arrow,” King Tedric mused.
“If you would bide a moment, have a cup of something to drink,
I will just quickly review this.”
He pulled a pair of reading spectacles from his own breast pocket
and did so. Allister sipped water flavored with mint and rose hips,
hoping by the Bull’s Wide Forehead that he had done the right
thing.
At last, King Tedric set the letter aside and sighed. Removing his
spectacles, he methodically put them away, saying:
“Zorana. I thought it might be her when you began.
She’s ambitious and her ambitions were sadly stifled when Baron
Archer and Lord Rolfston agreed to betroth two of their children.
They knew I could hardly overlook the opportunity to flatter three of
my Great Houses. Lord Rolfston’s wife is a Shield, you see,
while Baron Archer’s wife is a Wellward. Lord Rolfston himself
is a Redbriar on his mother’s side.”
“Oh.” Allister felt a bit out of his depth here. In
Bright Bay the noble houses all had one name, the same as their house
emblem. His case was rather an exception. Normally, he would have
taken his mother’s family name since Seagleam was reserved for
members of the royal family—all but for the monarch, who became
a Gustin. However, he couldn’t well be an Eagle in Bright Bay,
so he had been granted a dispensation to bear his father’s
name. His children, however, were Oysters.
“Zorana,” King Tedric repeated the name, a little
sadly it seemed to Allister. “I will need to speak with her. In
the meantime, what do you think of her proposal: her Purcel and one
of your little girls?”
Allister spoke carefully. “Remembering that we are not
talking a romantic alliance here, but a political one, I suppose the
first and most important question is what do you think of her
proposal?”
King Tedric looked at him blankly, then roared with laughter, an
amazingly deep and rich sound coming from such an apparently frail
body. Worried that Tedric would do himself harm, Allister glanced
around, but even Sir Dirkin, normally as expressionless as a piece of
wood, seemed to have a small smile on his face.
“Nephew! Nephew!” the king gasped when the worst of
the laughter had passed. “Where did you learn to speak so
bluntly?”
“From my mother, your sister,” Allister replied
honestly. “I told you that she did not make herself popular
among the nobility and she did not do that by remaining meek, quiet,
and demure.”
A few more snorts of laughter and then the king said, “And
so this is how you honor Caryl’s memory. Very good. What do I
think about this proposal? I think that it has potential.”
“I would only agree to it myself,” Allister said
seriously, “if I had your word, both verbal and written, that
the boy Purcel would be named your heir and that my daughter would
have settled on her land and money. There would remain the question
of a regent. Purcel will not reach his majority for another four
years. If the ancestors call you to join them before that time,
someone must be designated in advance. Would your people accept me?
Would his mother accept a third party?”
Tedric waved his hand to slow Allister down. “I can see that
you have given this matter a great deal of thought, as well you
should since you have had twenty-some days to think about it. Let me
reply to your comments one at a time.”
“Very well, Uncle. Forgive my impetuosity. I have had few
people with whom to discuss this matter. Queen Gustm requested that I
keep it a state secret. Only myself, my wife, and the queen’s
advisor Tench are privy to the letter.”
“Zorana has also kept her peace,” Tedric said,
“although not without a certain gloating calm. Now, your first
demand before you would agree to this alliance is that I name Purcel
Archer my heir. I can see that. It would protect your daughter to a
certain extent, especially from her mother-in-law’s vagaries of
mood. If Zorana was to be queen with Purcel to follow her, she could
always pass him by in favor of another. Very good. I could agree to
naming Purcel my heir directly.
“I could also agree to settling some property and goods
specifically on your daughter. Purcel is a warrior. Although we can
hope that this alliance would make peace between our nations,
warriors do die in battle. Your daughter should have some security of
her own.
“Regent would be a more difficult matter. I am not certain
my people would accept you as sole regent nor do I like the idea of
two regents. We have enough divisiveness without encouraging more.
Zorana has proven herself able, but too willing to act outside of
channels. I believe I would need to select from outside of all of
those currently concerned in this matter. There would be too many
hurt feelings otherwise.”
Allister nodded. “I see—as well as someone who has
only observed matters from outside can see, that is.”
“I might have suggested Earl Kestrel,” the king said,
“but that he involved himself by hunting out Lady Blysse and so
involving himself.”
“About her, Uncle…”
“Yes?”
“There are so many stories. What is the truth?”
“The truth, as much as I am willing to admit,” the
king said, a twinkle in his eye, “is that Lady
Blysse—Firekeeper as she prefers to be called—is the
genuine sole survivor of an expedition into the lands west of the
Iron Mountains. She claims to have been raised by wolves. If you had
seen her table manners when she first arrived you would have no doubt
of the veracity of that statement.”
Clearing his throat, Allister pressed, “I heard that she is
followed everywhere by an evil familiar spirit in the shape of a
giant wolf.”
“That is partly true,” the king conceded. “She
is followed almost everywhere by an enormous grey wolf with blue
eyes. If it is not a familiar spirit—as I believe it is
not—then we must reconsider those old tales from the early days
of colonization which claimed that the animals in those days were
larger than any seen today.”
Allister knew he was skating on thin ice, but he must ask.
“Her name is ‘Blysse.’ That was the name of Prince
Barden’s daughter. Is she…”
“Blysse,” the king interrupted, “is what Earl
Kestrel named his feral foundling—one might say with the memory
of my granddaughter in mind. Duchess Kestrel agreed to adopt the girl
into the Kestrel House, therefore, Blysse can claim the title
‘Lady.’ As to whether or not she is my
granddaughter… that remains to be seen.”
“I see,” Allister grinned. “You are less blunt
than my dear mother, Uncle.”
“I have learned to be. I am a king.”
“True. Rumor said that the name on that piece of
paper—the one on which you named your heir—is that of
Lady Blysse. They say that you summoned her to you soon before your
departure and met with her in private.”
King Tedric bared his teeth in something too fierce to be a smile.
“The latter part of that is true. As to the former, I shall say
to you what I have said to everyone else: nothing.”
Allister leaned back in his chair, knowing that he had pushed as
far as even his uncle’s curious good humor would permit.
“Shall we then turn to other matters, Uncle Tedric? Sir
Tench hinted to me that Queen Gustin would very much like you to know
that the smugglers operating through these paired cities of Hope and
Good Crossing are not operating with her sanction. She wondered if
some sort of agreement might be reached to limit their activities to
the mutual benefit of our treasuries…”
King Tedric nodded and motioned for the clerk to start taking
notes. The rest of the morning passed in politely formal discussion
of matters of state. Only as Allister was rising to leave did King
Tedric push Zorana’s letter over to him.
“Don’t forget this, Nephew. And give my best wishes to
your family.”
Allister smiled. “And give mine to yours, Uncle, to all of
yours.”
Even those, he thought as he trooped down the stairs and across
the courtyard, who run about like wild things and howl at the
moon.
Despite the urgency of their business, Firekeeper didn’t awaken
Elise at dawn, having learned from Derian that Hazel Healer was not
likely to be able to meet with them until the morning was quite old.
Moreover, it would look as strange as a wolf in the treetops if they
were all to troop off to a perfume shop at that early hour with the
ball still some days off.
Knowing both more and less about magic than her companions
assumed, Firekeeper needed no warning to be cautious about arousing
Melina Shield’s suspicions. So she and Blind Seer hunted,
though the hunting was poor here on the edges of the town, and swam
in a millpond some miles from the camp. Then they trotted back at a
leisurely pace, arriving just in time for breakfast.
Such rituals completed, they gathered Elise and Ninette and walked
the track to town. The beaten dirt road was busy enough, but most of
the traffic was related to the routine of the military. Exchanging
greetings with those they knew, they made no secret of their
destination, hiding their purpose in plain sight, as Derian had
suggested.
Hazel was waiting for them and ushered them into her private
workroom. When they took seats beneath the hanging bunches of dried
herbs, Firekeeper must fight a powerful urge to sneeze and, from his
place beneath her chair, Blind Seer grumbled protest at this
olfactory assault.
As soon as they were settled, Hazel began, her expression somewhat
severe. “I understand from Derian’s note that you wish to
consult me about a matter of great delicacy and great secrecy. Let me
save you some trouble. I do not dispense abortifacients except in
extreme cases when the life of mother and child both are at
risk.”
Firekeeper was completely puzzled, but evidently what Hazel had
said meant something more to the others. Derian turned vivid scarlet.
Elise and Ninette both blushed and looked away. Only Doc remained
composed. He replied:
“Your assumption is quite reasonable, Mistress Healer, given
what you know, but let me assure you that we have come to consult you
about something quite different—although no less
grave.”
Hazel’s severe expression vanished. Now she looked both
worried and relieved.
“Very well. You have my promise of silence. Start telling me
what your problem is while I set a pot of tea brewing.”
In deference to the pain Elise would experience telling her own
story, Sir Jared began. Ninette volunteered specific details and
Firekeeper noticed with interest that she seemed to feel no pain
whatsoever. Hazel noticed this as well and, as soon as the narrative
was ended, she asked the maid:
“You don’t feel any pain, Ninette, even when you talk
about specific aspects of the curse?”
“No, Mistress Healer. My heart beats terribly fast and
sometimes I feel so afraid that I think I will fall down in a dead
faint, but I don’t feel any pain.”
“Then I must be right!” Derian said excitedly.
“The betrothal stone— that’s the means by which the
sorceress is affecting Elise!”
Ninette said, coloring slightly, “I guess I should also
admit that as soon as the Lady Melina started droning her curse, I
looked away— buried my face in my hands. I don’t know if
that might have helped.”
In response to the unasked question Elise volunteered, “I
never looked away. I was curious and angry—I wanted to know
what was going on. Another thing you should know, all through the
ritual Ninette never stopped muttering prayers to her Society patron
and to her ancestors. I was only aware of it afterwards, but when I
think back on the situation, I remember the low drone of her voice
behind me.”
Ninette nodded in confirmation. “That’s right, I did
pray. Mother always taught me to do that when I had night fears. I
guess I felt like a little girl again, faced with real
sorcery.”
Pouring tea, Hazel considered. Then she rose and, reaching up onto
a very high shelf, took down a book.
“Magical powers,” she said without preamble,
“did not vanish from the world simply because Queen Zorana
ruled that higher sorcery would not be practiced in Hawk Haven. They
still manifest today, mostly within families and then we only
recognize magical power when it takes the shape of what we call
talents.
“My family has a strong talent for working with
plants—the Green Thumb, as it is usually called. There are
other talents: a touch of precognition or clairvoyance, perfect sense
of direction, healing, a strong empathy for
animals…”
Firekeeper was surprised when Hazel paused and looked at her.
“I wouldn’t be at all surprised if Firekeeper has that
last gift and maybe others. It would explain her survival and her
ability to communicate with animals.”
Derian, Elise, and Ninette looked as surprised as Firekeeper felt
but Doc only nodded.
“I’d thought that might be the case, maybe because I
have the healing talent myself. It would be impossible to test, of
course. Firekeeper’s own story of her upbringing provides an
alternate explanation.”
From his place on the floor Blind Seer commented to Firekeeper,
“He speaks as if these talents are restricted to humankind,
but the Royal Beasts may have them as well. Ah, well. Doc is not a
bad man, only filled with human arrogance toward other
bloods.”
Hazel, of course unaware of this comment, continued, “The
House of the Eagle has never—to my knowledge—shown
evidence of being talented. Neither have the Shields. However, Melina
Shield’s other parent…”
“Her father is Stanbrook born,” Elise said.
“I don’t know much about what talents the various
Great Houses might have,” Hazel said apologetically.
“After Queen Zorana decreed a reign based on rejection of such
Old World things as elaborate titles and magical power, even those
families that had talents went out of their way to play them
down.”
Firekeeper thought this was the time to ask something that had
been troubling her.
“Everyone say that Queen Zorana want no titles, but still
there are king, queen, duke, duchess, all and more. These seem like
titles to me.”
“Good point,” Doc answered, “but you should
study how it was before Queen Zorana’s reform. She eliminated
some titles and the custom of one person bearing more than one title.
Before that, a single person might have five or six titles: King of
this, Prince of that, Duke of this, that, and the other thing, Baron
of this…”
“All one person?” Firekeeper asked, not at all certain
she wasn’t being teased.
“All one person,” Doc assured her. “It’s
sort of a variation of the way you call me Doc, while my associates
call me Sir Jared, and those who knew me when I was a boy and some of
my friends call me Jared. Different names for different
situations.”
“It is easier for wolves,” Firekeeper snorted.
“One name, one person.”
“Unless you are the One,” Blind Seer reminded her.
“Then you are the One Male or the One Female, but you
still have a personal name. Our Pack’s One Female was Shining
Coat. I have this on the best authority.”
Firekeeper kicked him.
“We’re getting off the subject,” Elise said
somewhat anxiously. “Mistress Hazel, you were saying that it is
possible that Melina Shield might have inherited a talent for sorcery
from House Kite.”
“Yes, but there are other options as well.” Hazel
opened the book in her lap and ran a finger down a closely written
page. For once, Firekeeper regretted not being able to read, for the
others clearly had some idea what Hazel was doing. At last she
halted.
“Here it is: trance induction.” Hazel looked up and
continued, “The good news and the bad news is that from what
you describe, Lady Melina may also be performing something that,
while rather like magic, is not magic at all. It is an art that
enables one person to control another person’s mind through
suggestion. As with many other practices, trance induction fell out
of favor after the retreat of the Old Countries, but some healers
advocate it to help with the control of pain or certain detrimental
impulses. That’s why it’s mentioned in this
book.”
“What does trance induction do?” Elise pressed.
“Why is this good news and bad news? It sounds all good to me.
If Lady Melina isn’t a sorceress, we may be able to defeat
her.”
“The reason it isn’t all good news,” Hazel
replied levelly, “is that if legend is correct, all magic that
isn’t locked into a specific physical item ceases to function
after the caster is dead. You remember what happened in the comic
song about Timin and the Flying Goat, don’t you?”
Everyone but Firekeeper nodded and she decided this wasn’t
the time to ask for details.
“Trance induction is used to create a suggestible state in
the mind of the subjects,” Hazel continued. “When the
subjects have been made suggestible, then they can be convinced to do
almost anything—especially if deep inside they wish to do this
thing anyhow. Since the person’s own mind is really in
charge—just under someone else’s direction—breaking
the power of the person who induced the trance doesn’t remove
the suggestion any more than a newly built table reverts to raw
lumber after the carpenter hangs up his tools.”
“Oh.” Elise’s small moan of dismay was echoed
around the room.
Hazel frowned. “That’s why it isn’t necessarily
a good thing if Lady Melina is using trance induction. If she is, she
has been working on the minds of her primary subjects—her
children and, I would guess, her husband and close servants—for
years. That hold will not be instantly broken. The only way to break
that hold would be to convince her subjects that she has somehow lost
her power over them.”
Derian drummed his fingers against his teacup, making a little
ringing sound. “I suppose we could tell them,” he said
dubiously. “Tell them about this trance induction, I
mean.”
“Lady Elise,” Hazel ordered suddenly,
“you’ve heard my explanation. Now, talk about how Lady
Melina laid the curses.”
Obediently, Elise began to speak, but the sudden twist of pain
that contorted her mouth was an eloquent answer to Hazel’s
test.
“But it must be sorcery,” she protested. “Lady
Melina only spoke with me briefly. How could she have induced a
trance in such a short time?”
Hazel looked at Elise with a trace of pity. “Because, Lady
Elise, you were quite willing to believe that Lady Melina had power
to command you and because she was telling you to do something you
already were inclined to do. What newly engaged young woman
doesn’t feel pride in her betrothal token and want to wear it
always? Lady Melina simply reinforced the impulse you already held in
your heart.”
Elise looked sad. “I wonder if she knew about Jet’s
unreliability and decided she’d better assure my loyalty
herself? If I’d been a stranger who knew nothing of her
reputation as a sorceress, then Lady Melina’s task would have
been more difficult.”
“I think so,” Hazel agreed. “Of course, it might
have been sorcery and the jet pendant the focus for her
charm.”
“Take off the necklace,” Firekeeper urged.
“Talking was easier then yesterday, I think.”
Elise lifted off the necklace with its jet wolfs head and set it
on the table next to her empty teacup. Firekeeper wondered if anyone
else saw the trembling of Elise’s hands.
“Lady Melina said…” Elise began tentatively,
“that if anyone spoke of what she had done…”
She stopped and frowned. “The pain is less but still
there.”
“So we don’t have a definite answer,” Derian
sighed. “It could be that a spell has been laid on Lady Elise
or it could be that she has been made to believe that a spell has
been laid on her. What do we do?”
Silence followed through which Firekeeper could hear the shoptalk
without, the comings and goings of people buying medicines, perfumes,
and spices. Seeing that no one else was going to offer a suggestion,
she said:
“Why not do something for both? Melina use the pendants on
her necklace to cast spell or to make believe she cast spell. If we
get necklace and destroy with great fuss,” she looked doubtful,
uncertain that she was expressing herself well, “then the way
of the control would be broken, too.”
Doc’s dour expression lightened. “You have a point
there, Firekeeper. That necklace is the key—at least to Lady
Melina’s control of her son and daughters.”
“But what Firekeeper suggests is very dangerous,”
Ninette piped up, trembling at the very thought. “Lady Melina
never lets that necklace out of her sight. Her maid said once she
wears it even in the bath and to bed.”
Firekeeper sprang to her feet. “So we take it!”
“That may be what we have to do,” Derian agreed. He
didn’t look happy. “I wish we could test the
effectiveness beforehand.”
“Could we,” Elise said, “have my necklace
duplicated? A substitute she has never touched wouldn’t have
the same power, would it?”
Firekeeper decided not to mention things she had heard about the
sympathetic resonances between types of stone. Maybe that was just a
wolf legend and didn’t apply to human magic. In any case, she
thought that Melina was more likely to be a trickster than a
sorceress. She hoped so—her own knowledge of human sorcery was
a bit shaky.
Hazel extended her hand. “Let me see the carving. If it
isn’t too complicated, I know someone who might be able to do
the work. Jet isn’t a terribly hard substance, thank the
Dog.”
That same almost invisible quiver in her hand, Elise picked up the
pendant and handed it to the healer.
“It’s intricate, yes,” Hazel murmured after a
few moments’ inspection by the sunlit window. “But my
friend may be able to do the job. He’s a local, but I’ve
known him for a long time and I think he’s
trustworthy.”
“Think?” Derian asked.
“Yes. He dabbled in some shady dealing, usually with
smugglers and thieves, but in his own business he has a very good
reputation.”
Elise decided. “I’ll do it. Thank the Lynx for this
ball! It makes all sorts of strange shopping trips
possible.”
“Derian,” Hazel said, “you know your way around
Hope. I’ll write you a note saying you represent someone who
needs private work done. You can run over there, get my
friends’s answer directly, and then retrieve Elise. In the
meantime, ladies,” she smiled, “can I interest you in any
of my wares?”
Apparently the jeweler —one Wain Cutter—was quite
accustomed to confidential commissions. He expressed only slight
surprise when Elise explained what she wanted done.
“Usually, I get asked to do something like this,” he
said, peering narrowly at the wolf’s-head carving, “after
the lady or gentleman has lost the piece. Then all I have to go on is
a description. This is much easier.”
Taking out a thin piece of charcoal, he started making a sketch on
a piece of smooth white board. Firekeeper moved behind him so she
could watch, fascinated as he drew the piece first in a front view
then in both right and left profiles.
“It’s a nice bit of carving,” Wain said as he
worked. “Very nice, but after seeing this young lady’s
companion I can think of a half-dozen things I’d do
differently.”
“Don’t,” Elise pleaded. “It must be as
much like the original as you can make it.”
“I understand,” Wain said peaceably. “Good luck
for you that I already have some nice jet in stock. Got it from a
trader who came down from the Iron Mountains. Prime stuff and I can
offer you a good price.”
Derian stepped up then and Firekeeper let her attention drift as
the intricacies of haggling began. She knew she should make an effort
to learn this skill, even realized that the thrill of getting a good
price for something must be similar to that of a successful hunt, but
she couldn’t escape the feeling that the strong should take,
not ask. Even her own acceptance that she was not one of the strong
hadn’t undermined her faith in this division of property.
Blind Seer, apparently asleep out in a patch of sunlight in the
gem carver’s yard, sensed her restlessness. “What are we going to do about this Melina
Shield?”
Firekeeper moved to sit next to him. “I wish I knew.
Things were simpler in the wolflands.”
“Only because you were a pup and others made your
decisions for you.”
“Hmm.” She considered and accepted the veracity of
this. “Still, I favor the simple solution. We should attack
this Melina, you and I, some dark night and take her necklace. Or,
even better, I could slip into her tent and take it while she
sleeps.”
“You could,” the wolf agreed. “Then
what?”
“Then we destroy it and the spell is
broken.” “And if it is not a spell, if it is this trance
induction?” “Still, Melina will no longer have the necklace. Her
frightened pups will see she no longer has power over
them.”
Blind Seer snorted. “They think the power is in her, not
in the necklace. That will do nothing and she will have another
necklace done. No, Little Two-legs, the answer is not so
simple.”
“Maybe not,” Firekeeper agreed with a sigh.
“I haven’t forgotten the promise I made to King
Tedric. Each night I prowl, but no one seems to hunt him. The attack
on Sapphire was the only attack we have seen and I know too little of
cities. Everyone seems to think that such human predators thrive
therein like beetles beneath a rotting carcass.” “True. But we will not cease in our
vigilance.” “Of course not. Besides, I like roaming about at
night.” She rested her head on the wolf’s flank and
lay there with her eyes closed, trying to come up with solutions.
From inside the shop she heard Elise say to Derian, her tone
distinctly wistful:
“I wish I was Firekeeper. Look at her there, not a worry in
the world.” Firekeeper didn’t disabuse her. Let Elise
take comfort in such fancies if she could. Soon, she suspected, they
all would have very little time for any consideration of such
niceties.
ON some levels, Prince Newell Shield was a very happy man. Through
discreet questioning, he had received the impression that his pet
Stonehold generals were leaping through their hoops of fear and
superstition just as he had planned. At least one courier had been
dispatched to their central command and carrier pigeons had been sent
in advance of the courier.
Without telling him anything of this, General Yuci had pleaded
with Newell to delay any permanent alliance between Bright Bay and
Hawk Haven. When, later, Yuci expressed his delight that the ball had
been scheduled for several days after King Tedric and Duke
Allister’s initial meeting and thanked Newell for using his
influence to assist their cause, Newell accepted his thanks, not
wanting to embarrass the good man, even though logistical
concerns—rather than any machinations on his part—had
been the reason for the delay.
He was less happy about events within King Tedric’s own
court. On the afternoon following his second meeting with Allister
Seagleam, King Tedric had summoned Zorana Archer to wait upon him in
his chambers within the Fortress of the Watchful Eye. The noblewoman
had gone to the meeting with a triumphant glow in her eye and a proud
arch to her neck—reminding her sometime lover rather of a
warhorse. She had returned with the air of a beaten cur.
Rumor had quickly spread—for King Tedric had not kept their
conference any great secret—that she had been severely berated
for usurping his prerogatives. The king had not specifically said
that Zorana had ruined the chances of one of her sons and daughters
being privileged with a marriage alliance, but bets around camp were
firmly against her.
In her disgrace, Zorana had focused her attention on grooming her
son and daughter for the ball. She was also avoiding Newell, though
whether out of anger or embarrassment, the prince wasn’t
certain. He figured he would smooth things out during the ball, when
his attentions would be interpreted by observers as mere
courtesy.
Newell was unwilling to trust to Stonehold alone for his success.
There was still too much harmony in the Hawk Haven encampment for his
taste. Lady Elise was treating Lady Blysse more like a sister than a
rival for the crown. Sapphire Shield was speaking to her cousin
again. Elise remained rather cool to Jet, but that was understandable
given that the young idiot had been foolish enough to shame her by
going to a public brothel.
The two other girls—Nydia and Opal—seemed to be
treating the unfolding events as if they were a drama which they were
observing rather than living. Maybe he could do something with that.
The men—other than Jet—were pretty much out of his reach.
Earl Kestrel, Baron Archer, and Purcel Trueheart all had been
dutifully attending to their commands within the army—eager, no
doubt, to show the king what responsible and mature kings or regents
they would make.
As if they were all carved pieces on a game board, Newell moved
this one here, considered pressing that one there… Over and
over, he arrived at a plan only to reject it. Finally, only two
pieces remained: Jet and Lady Blysse.
Could he contrive to make it appear that Jet and Blysse were
romantically entangled? He rejected that almost immediately. Blysse
barely spoke to Jet and Jet seemed to have lost his balls since the
night his sister was assaulted.
Maybe Newell should entice Jet out. Late…
The pieces of the puzzle began to lock into place. Out
late… Behaving shamefully… What would little
Blysse—that dangerous Firekeeper—do if she saw Jet with
his arms around a couple of light ladies? Wouldn’t it be
reasonable for her to fly into a fury at this added insult to her
beloved friend? Consider what her wolf had done to one of
Sapphire’s assailants. And, of course, there would be a
witness, unimpeachable as daylight: Prince Newell Shield himself.
The prince laughed, heartened once more. Now he simply needed to
find a way to put his plan into action. It would take honing,
especially developing a way to confirm that Lady Blysse would not
have a convenient alibi for her whereabouts at the time of the
attack. Still, the rewards were too great for him not to attempt to
carry this out.
Surely if Lady Blysse killed Jet that would end her friendship
with Elise. Sapphire, no matter how grateful for Blysse’s role
in saving her own life, would certainly be infuriated. She might even
challenge Blysse to a duel. That would be just lovely. They might
both end up dead or maimed. And as an added bonus, everyone would be
distracted from whatever Stonehold might be stirring up.
Newell smiled and resisted the impulse to rub his hands together
like a craftsman anticipating a day in his workshop. Step One: Talk
to Jet. Step Two: Find a way to get Lady Blysse out of the way. Step
Three: Sit back and enjoy the bloodshed.
Glancing across the encampment, he saw the king’s carriage
moving across the grounds, doubtless taking the king to another
secret or semi-secret conference. Newell shook his head sadly.
The king really should have kept him closer at hand. It was really
Tedric’s own fault that the prince was left with so much time
to pursue his own plans. He considered telling Tedric this at an
appropriate moment and smiled. That news might even trigger the
necessary fatal heart attack. Wouldn’t that be perfect!
XX
Despite complaints from both staff and participants
that they had not been given enough time to prepare, the ball was
held on the third day following King Tedric’s first meeting
with Duke Allister Seagleam of Bright Bay. Obviously, Derian mused as
he rubbed polish into dress shoes bought especially for the occasion,
there were advantages to being a king.
Such thoughts distracted him from the fact that he was distinctly
nervous about his role in this evening’s planned entertainment.
He would have been content to attend as he had now attended so many
grand functions—as Firekeeper’s nearly invisible
servant.
At first that invisibility had bothered him, but now he admitted
there were times that he revelled in it. Unnoticed, he heard and saw
things that no one bothered to hide from a servant.
He knew, for example, though he had spoken of it to no one, that
Lady Zorana was carrying on a flirtation, if not more, with Prince
Newell. He knew that Lady Sapphire’s maid took snuff—a
thing that would horrify her mistress. He knew that Baron Ivon Archer
had a fondness for strong brandy in his evening cup of tea—and
that sometimes he skipped the tea completely.
Derian was honest enough with himself to admit that he might not
be so happy with his state if there were not plenty of people above
the level of servant who treated him as an equal. His early hopeless
crush on Elise had faded and now he felt about her as he might a
sister. Doc had not put on airs with his return to society and
remained the same forthright and direct man he had been on the road
west. And Firekeeper remained impossibly herself.
Tonight, however, Derian must leave off his servant’s
anonymity and step onto the floor as a member of the party.
Someone—he suspected Firekeeper—had told Earl Kestrel
that Derian was an excellent dancer. Knowing that many of the
officers invited to attend would not wish to dance with any but those
whose political loyalties they were certain of, the earl had
commanded Derian to join the party, to fill in where needed so that
no lady need stand out more than one dance.
“Lucky me,” Derian muttered; then he felt instantly
ashamed.
Earl Kestrel had been generous, standing the bill for an entire
costume beginning with a new tricorn hat and including a white
ruffled shirt, a tailored waistcoat cut from brown and green brocade,
dark green knee-breeches, raw silk stockings, and the very same
wide-buckled shoes that Derian had just finished rubbing to the satin
polish that his father had insisted on for the best of their horse
leather.
Once dressed, Derian joined Earl Kestrel. Out of his cavalry
commander’s uniform for the first time since they had left
Eagle’s Nest, the earl was dressed in court attire. His dark
blue knee-breeches might have been bought in town, but the waistcoat
striped in Kestrel blue and red with a hovering hawk embroidered on
the right breast must be from his own wardrobe. Derian did not put it
past Valet to have found room to pack the waistcoat away among more
practical attire—just in case.
When Derian arrived, Valet was setting Earl Kestrel’s
tricorn on his head, just as carefully as if he were finishing a work
of art.
“You will do, my lord,” Valet said, surveying the
final effect with muted satisfaction. “I suppose one cannot
expect too much when forced to attire in a tent.”
Earl Kestrel gave one of his rare smiles. “I am certain I
look fine.” Seeing Derian he added, “Run your eye over
that tall redhead, though to my way of seeing, he looks quite a bit
finer than the sunburned young man who has been with me these past
weeks.”
“Good evening, Earl Kestrel,” Derian said,
flabbergasted at this unaccustomed praise. Valet winked at him and
adjusted the line of Derian’s waistcoat.
“You’ll do, Derian Carter.”
Earl Kestrel nodded. “Thank you, Valet. Derian, shall we go?
Lady Blysse is with Lady Archer. I told the carriage to meet us at
her pavilion.”
As they strolled to where the rest of the nobility was encamped,
the soldiers stopped cooking their dinners or playing at dice to
comment on their attire. Taking his lead from the earl, Derian did
his best to respond appropriately or not at all. Still, he was
certain that by the time they reached Elise’s pavilion his ears
must have been as red as his hair.
Baron Archer was waiting outside the tent for them, smoking his
pipe.
“Good evening, Earl Kestrel. Good evening, Mister
Carter.”
They answered and then the earl added, “Blasted hot,
isn’t it? I could have danced for joy when I heard that jackets
were unnecessary for this event. I don’t think my valet was
pleased, but then he’s a stickler for form. Still, I held my
ground.”
Baron Archer chuckled and tamped out his pipe. “The carriage
is ready and the young women should be with us momentarily. Ah! Here
they are even now.”
Derian managed to keep his mouth from gaping open by sheer force
of will, having been alerted by faint giggles from within that
something must be up.
First to emerge was Elise, resplendent in a gown of silvery satin
with side panels of glowing green. Her golden hair was piled high on
her head and adorned with a few tasteful white rosebuds. The jet
wolf’s head was nestled in the hollow of her throat, the only
spot of darkness in a confection of light. Although he looked
carefully, Derian could not tell if the jewel was the original or the
promised replacement.
The woman who followed her must be Firekeeper, but she was like no
Firekeeper that Derian had ever seen. The gown in which she was
attired was pale blue with rose piping about the throat. To conceal
the scars that marked her every limb, the gown’s sleeves were
long, but constructed of a loose diaphanous gauze that revealed the
grace of Fire-keeper’s arms while hiding their flaws. Above the
modest neckline of her gown she wore a strand of polished lapis
beads—an early gift from Earl Kestrel. Her dark brown hair was
now long enough to be worn upswept but a few tendrils had been left
to curl about her temples.
Derian was not the only one stunned to silence. Earl Kestrel stood
gaping for a moment before offering his arm.
“Lady Blysse, you look lovely,” he said.
Firekeeper smiled and Derian could almost swear that she blushed.
Baron Archer gave an approving nod, knocked the last ash from his
pipe, and offered his arm to his daughter.
“Earl Kestrel and I,” he said, “are fortunate to
have two such lovely ladies to escort. Come along. We don’t
want to be late.”
Trailing the others, Derian glanced back over his shoulder.
Standing in the door of the pavilion, Ninette waved cheerfully,
mouthing:
“Have fun!”
Standing beside her, his tail just a little low and his ears
cocked at a forlorn angle, Blind Seer watched them leave. Seeing
Derian’s gaze on him, he managed a quick wag before his brush
drooped again. Poor guy, Derian thought. More and more
Firekeeper’s going places where he can’t follow. I
don’t blame him for not liking that at all.
Above him he heard a shrill whistle and could swear that Elation,
soaring in the darkening sky above, was agreeing with him. They were
not late, but neither were they the first to arrive. In order to
round out the festivities and keep the ball from being too obviously
what it was—a chance for King Tedric to review his great nieces
and nephews in company with each other—a number of military
officers and important citizens from the two towns had been invited
as well. Especially for the townsfolk, this was the event of a
lifetime, something they would be telling their children and
grandchildren about two generations hence. The night I was
invited to King Tedric’s ball I saw… No wonder they
didn’t want to miss a single moment.
Derian rather wished that he could miss a moment or two. Whispered
comments, half-heard, made him acutely aware that he was masquerading
as a nobleman. What was he but a carter’s son?
Background music was playing softly as their party moved through
the reception line, greeting King Tedric and Duke Allister as
representatives of their respective monarchies, and Mayors Terulle
and Shoppe of Hope and Good Crossing as heads of the twinned towns.
When the orchestra struck up the overture to a line dance popular
since before the days of Queen Zorana, Derian began to fade back,
alert for a woman in need of a partner.
A hand lightly plucked his sleeve. He turned and saw Lady Elise, a
bright flush lighting her cheeks.
“Will you dance this one with me?” she asked.
“Jet is doing everything he can to pretend he hasn’t
located me just yet in the crowd and I don’t want to end up
slighted.”
Derian swept a deep bow. “I would be honored, my lady.
Forgive me for bluntness, but your betrothed is an ass.”
“I should call you out on that,” she said with a light
laugh that didn’t fool him at all, “but my father
cautioned me that this could be an opportunity to make a good
impression.”
“Indeed,” he replied in what he hoped were courtly
accents.
As they took a place at the bottom of a set, Derian noticed that
Jet had nearly pounced on one of Allister Seagleam’s young
daughters: Anemone, he thought, but it might well be Minnow.
Derian quickly made a joke, hoping that Elise wouldn’t
notice Jet’s tactlessness. The fellow to his right, a nervous
townsman, picked up on the quip and soon they were all laughing. When
counting off of sets of four began from the top of the line, they
were cheered to find themselves in the same set.
The dance began rather roughly, for although the Star Waltz had
been around for a long time, it had clearly evolved differently in
the two monarchies. The variety that the lead was familiar with was
the Bright Bay version. Fortunately, the residents of Hope and Good
Crossing seemed to know both forms and helped Derian and Elise
along.
Derian found himself easily swept into the next dance by the
simple expedient of trading partners with his new townsman friend.
That lucky man nearly stepped on his own feet when he learned that he
was dancing with the future Baroness Archer. Derian’s partner
was slightly disappointed when she learned Derian was no one so
famous, but he tried to make up for this by being a sprightly and
talented dancer.
By the third dance, Derian had forgotten that he ever felt nervous
or out of place. From long habit, he kept an eye on Firekeeper. Not
surprisingly, given her presumed favor with the king, she was not
short of partners. Elise was also doing well. Jet came through for
the third dance and the rules of etiquette that dictated that even an
engaged couple shouldn’t dance more than two dances together
gave them an excuse to stay apart without seeming to slight each
other.
Relaxed now, Derian was more than happy to fulfill Earl
Kestrel’s commission that no woman be left without a partner.
When the music began again after an intermission, he noticed a
stately though somewhat older woman standing alone. He strode over
and had already begun to ask her to dance before he realized that his
prospective partner was Lady Melina Shield, the reputed
sorceress.
With her silver-streaked, blond hair swept up in an intricate knot
interlaced with a strand of multicolored polished gemstone beads, and
the glittering diamond-cut gems of her omnipresent necklace displayed
upon the white skin of her throat, Melina Shield looked quite
well—past her first prime, certainly, but possessed of a calm
and control that made the prettier younger women look somehow gauche
and coltish.
Having begun, Derian could not back away. He continued after a
pause he hoped was interpretable as awe at realizing who he had
chanced upon:
“… and so I was hoping that your ladyship would deign
dance this piece with me.”
Melina smiled and he felt the full force of her considerable
personality.
“I would be happy to so honor you, young man. Let us hurry.
The dance is about to begin.”
When Derian would have politely joined at the bottom of the set,
Melina led the way toward the nearest set of four.
“Excuse me,” she said, breaking in so that they became
the second couple and everyone below must fumble to reorient
themselves with new partners. Derian didn’t doubt that a few
couples who had positioned themselves advantageously so that they
might flirt during the interweaving of the figures were rather put
out. If Melina Shield cared, she did not say.
Fortunately for Derian’s piece of mind, this dance was one
of those where the couples ended up dancing with their opposite
number in a set as often as with their own partner. Even so, as
progress through the intricate steps brought him once again back into
contact with Lady Melina, it was all he could do to not stare at her
necklace. Could one of those stones really be capable of inflicting
impotence on a man? Could another inflict agony on a brave young
woman?
He kept the thoughts as far from his mind as possible, terrified
that Lady Melina might be able to read them. Glancing down the long
line he caught a glimpse of Sapphire Shield—dressed in a
sweeping gown of brilliant blue overlaid with a light gauze in the
golden-yellow of House Gyrfalcon. Without knowing everything Elise
had confided, he might think it merely his imagination that Sapphire
favored her wounded side as her partner wound her under his arm or
walked her through a stately march.
Lady Melina apparently thought Derian’s silence respect for
her and concentration on the particularly intricate forms demanded
for this piece. Derian was relieved and rather glad that his sister,
Damita, wasn’t there to brag how he had mastered this one
several years before and won the Hummingbird Society-sponsored
contest as a result.
When he escorted Lady Melina off the floor, Derian discovered he
was soaked with sweat. After fetching Lady Melina a cup of punch, he
was glad that her bearing made quite clear that he need not remain.
He chatted with Doc for a few minutes, then with his acquaintances
from the first set. The orchestra wanning up reminded him that the
dancing was to begin again. He was dropping back to see who might be
left out when he noticed King Tedric beckoning to him.
At first Derian was certain that the king was summoning someone
beyond him, then that the king—recognizing him as essentially
servant— needed an errand run. Hurrying toward the low dais
from which King Tedric was watching the dancing, Derian bent knee
almost before he was there.
“Rise, Derian Carter,” came the king’s somewhat
high old voice, giving Derian his first shock. Despite having lived
among the court for a moon-span and more now, he had never thought
that King Tedric recalled his name.
“Come and sit beside me and talk for a while. It is
difficult being old and able to dance only a few sets. I had quite as
fine a leg as you when I was your age.”
Caught in this second shock, Derian recovered himself before he
could bolt in panic. Him sit with the king and speak with him? Only
the recognition that he would be guilty of a great insult to the
monarch kept him in place.
On legs that suddenly felt as if they had been carved from wood,
Derian mounted the few steps and sat on the chair toward which the
king gestured. He felt as if every eye in the room must be on him,
but when he stole a surreptitious glance toward the floor he saw that
nearly everyone was caught up in the unfolding dance.
Nearly everyone. Lady Melina cast a speculative glance his way and
from the slight grin on Earl Kestrel’s face his patron
hadn’t missed the situation either.
“So, young Carter, are you enjoying yourself?”
“Yes, sir… I mean, Your Majesty.”
“Sir is just fine. I was knighted once, long ago, for deeds
I performed. I was terribly thrilled. That was long before I knew
I’d be king one day. Long before poor Marras lost her will to
live.”
“I know the story of how you won your knighthood,”
Derian said, momentarily less afraid. “It was in
battle.”
“Yes, in battle, against these very people with whom we are
now dancing. Tell me, Derian Carter. Should I put one of our
enemies—or former enemies—in the position to rule our
people?”
This time all Derian could do was gape. King Tedric waited a
moment, then continued:
“You see, I was sitting here, watching the dancing and
thinking on that question. I was wondering what my people would want
me to do. Then I saw you down there, dancing away, and I thought to
myself: ‘Young Derian has been living in the castle for a good
time now. He has made friends with some of my potential heirs and has
met others. Most importantly, he is one of my people, scion and heir
of a hardworking trade family. I shall ask his opinion.’ So
here you are. Answer me truthfully. I won’t harm
you.”
With effort, Derian made his lips obey his racing brain. He
remembered his conversations with his parents, the gossip he had
heard in the markets and in the square when King Tedric announced his
intention of making this journey. Carefully, he framed his reply:
“Well, sir, they do—I mean lots of the people back in
Eagle’s Nest— they think making Duke AUister your heir is
just the thing for you to do. They call him the Pledge Child and have
great hopes for his ascension to the throne bringing peace and
goodwill between our lands.”
King Tedric nodded, coughed slightly, accepted the cup of wine
handed to him by his omnipresent guard, and said, “Yes, Pledge
Child, I heard that term back when Allister was first born. I took
reports that it was still in common use with a grain of salt. So my
people dream yet of my father’s great vision coming true. I
would hate to disappoint them.”
Accepting a goblet for himself without even realizing he was doing
so, Derian asked:
“Can you avoid disappointing everyone, sir? There are so
many conflicting claims.”
“Claims? I wouldn’t call them claims. I would call
them ambitions— for themselves or for their children. You still
haven’t answered my question, Derian Carter. Should I make
Allister Seagleam my heir?”
“I don’t know, sir.” Derian met those shrewd old
eyes for the first time. “I don’t know him.”
“Yes. That is the trouble. None of us really know him. He
seems an affable enough fellow here and now. Is it an act?”
“They say,” Derian offered, “you can judge a man
by his children or his dog.”
“True. Pity his dog isn’t here. His children are old
enough to have learned to act as they think they should rather than
how they are. Let’s talk for a moment about those you do know.
How about your charge? How about Firekeeper? Should I make her my
heir?”
Derian swallowed hard. He knew what Earl Kestrel would want him to
say. Knew, too, what he was going to say.
“I don’t think so, sir. Not unless you can be sure
you’ll be around to educate her. She’s as honest as the
day is long and brave as a wolf, loyal, too, but those things
aren’t necessarily the qualities a monarch needs.”
King Tedric chuckled dryly. “Interesting. She didn’t
think she was ready to be monarch either. I’m certain that Earl
Kestrel would think differently.”
“He has hopes for her, sir. You can’t blame him for
that.”
“I don’t. I respect him for his ambition while
condemning him for it at the same time. I’m certain that he
honestly hoped to find Barden alive when he went out into the western
lands. Barden would have been able to make a case for himself or for
Blysse. Firekeeper with her odd habits and weird upbringing is a much
less easy piece to situate advantageously on the board.”
The king’s use of Firekeeper and Blysse as separate names
for seemingly separate individuals had not escaped Derian. Knowing
that he was out of line, but unable to resist, Derian asked:
“Sir, do you think that Firekeeper is your
granddaughter?”
A smile that might be called mischievous curved the old
man’s lips.
“If I told you what I think would you swear to say nothing
of this matter—not even to Firekeeper herself? I have my
reasons at this time for withholding public admission one way or
another.”
Derian’s heart, which had slowed its panicked thumping, now
felt as if it was going to burst out of his chest with excitement and
fear.
“You have my word of honor, sir, sworn on my society patron,
the Horse.”
“Very good, then. I accept your word.” The king bent
his head so that his lips nearly touched Derian’s ear.
“Firekeeper is not my granddaughter, Blysse, but I know who she
is.”
Disappointment, relief, and curiosity warred for a moment, then
Derian asked:
“Who?”
The king leaned back slightly. “Firekeeper is the daughter
of two members of my son’s expedition. Her mother was the
daughter of a lady you have befriended: Holly Gardener. She was named
Serena, after a maternal aunt who died young. Firekeeper’s
father was Donal Hunter, a steady man with a gift for the bow and a
love of the wilds. They said of him that he understood animals so
well it was as if he could speak to them. Firekeeper’s birth
name was Tamara, after her deceased paternal grandmother.”
Hearing this, the world spun behind Derian’s eyes then
righted itself. Once he had heard this, the truth seemed obvious. It
would explain so much about Firekeeper—he couldn’t think
of her as Tamara. Another question burst forth before he could school
his tongue.
“Sir, how did you know?”
“When I was a boy,” King Tedric replied, unfazed by
Derian’s effrontery, “Holly Gardener was one of my
playmates. I knew her and her sisters well. Firekeeper has the look
of Holly’s youngest sister Pansy at that same age, though she
takes after her father’s mother as well. I saw the resemblance
nearly at once and confirmed that Serena had been among
Barden’s recruits. Tamara—like Blysse—is listed
among the records.”
Catching Derian’s surprised stare the old king chuckled.
“We were not so grand then. The Great Houses were still
learning to feel their importance. My own mother, Rose, was not from
a Great House. Holly’s family was related to my
mother’s—cousins, I think—and came into castle
service because they possessed the Green Thumb quite reliably. Their
relation to Queen Rose is one reason why they hold their place in
perpetuity, for as long as the Thumb continues to manifest in their
line. Thus far it has not failed them. Nor would I banish them if it
did. Their knowledge and wisdom means far more than a chance
talent.”
“I wonder,” Derian said, thinking aloud, “if
Holly knows… knows, I mean, who Firekeeper is?”
King Tedric nodded. “I am certain that she suspects, but,
like me, she knows that Firekeeper is best preserved by doubt about
her origins. The Gardeners have little they could give Firekeeper
even if they did claim her. Best then that Firekeeper keep to her
recent alliances. Earl Kestrel is ambitious, but he would never deny
basic support to one he has taken as his ward.”
Thinking of a father who disowned his youngest son for
disobedience, Derian’s expression grew unhappily
thoughtful.
“What are you thinking about, Derian Carter,” the king
asked sharply. “Have I misjudged Norvin Norwood?”
“No, Your Majesty,” Derian fumbled, then forged ahead.
“I was wondering how you could… I mean why you…
why you disowned Prince Barden.”
The king looked angry for a moment, then sad. “I was hasty,
infuriated that he would act so without my express permission, angry,
too, that he did not trust that I had a place planned for him in the
governing of Hawk Haven. I was younger then and maybe I believed
myself immortal. It has been so long—ten years or more are
still ten years, even to a man of my age—that I am a stranger
to that sour, proud man. I have lost both son and daughter. That
changed me. Now, I would give anything to not have driven Barden
away, but it is too late and my heir must come from among
those.”
He made a sweeping gesture at the dancers twisting through the
latest intricate form.
“What do you think of Lady Elise? Would she make a good
queen?”
“Please, Sire,” Derian begged. “I’m just a
carter’s son. I’m not fit to advise kings.”
“That you would say that at all makes you fit. And you are
not just a carter’s son. Earl Kestrel does not hire dead
weight. If he has kept you on it is because he sees good in
you—good beyond your ability to coach Firekeeper. Now, will you
disobey me? I want your opinion!”
Derian chewed his lower lip before speaking. Despite the wine, he
felt dreadfully sober, so sober that he knew he was out of his
depth.
“I know Elise mostly as a friend…” he
began.
“Good. Friends see sides of each other that elderly and
terrifying great-uncles do not. Speak up, Derian! Or are you in love
with her and afraid to admit it?”
“No.” Derian straightened. “I’m not. I was
taken with her at first— she’s kind and sweet when you
get to know her and she was the first noble lady I was close to, but
now that I know her better I realize we’re not suited.
She’s much better for me as a friend.”
“So, you didn’t cease to love her because you found
fault in her?”
“No, sir, not at all! What I loved was the idea of a titled
lady with golden hair. When I got to know Elise I found she was much
more than that—just a person.”
King Tedric nodded. “And young men don’t fall in love
with people. I believe I understand. Tell me what you think of her as
a potential queen.”
It hadn’t escaped Derian that the king was skipping his
nieces and nephews and moving directly to their offspring. Was this
because he had rejected the others or because he was asking Derian
about those Derian was most likely to know well?
“Elise,” Derian began slowly, “is a good person.
She knows her way around the castle and its people
already.”
“Castle Flower,” the king murmured.
Rightly guessing that this cryptic comment didn’t need a
reply, Derian continued:
“That’s already an advantage over Firekeeper. A few
days ago, I’d have said that Elise’s greatest weakness
was a lack of courage, but now…”
He trailed off, realizing he shouldn’t say exactly how he
had learned of Elise’s deeper reserves.
“Now I know differently. She may be a bit squeamish, but
she’s not lacking courage.”
King Tedric didn’t press Derian to clarify, but after a
thoughtful pause during which he studied the young woman below as she
whirled through the steps of a particularly fast dance, her face
alight with laughter, he said:
“So, you think Elise should be queen.”
Derian blurted, “I don’t think she wants to be queen,
Sire. I think she might have once, but now I’m not so
certain.”
“And you don’t think that someone who doesn’t
want to be monarch should be forced to do so.”
Derian fumbled to explain, “Princess Caryl didn’t want
to go to Bright Bay and marry Prince Tavis and so that didn’t
work out too well. I was just thinking that this might be a bit the
same.”
“Hmm. And how about Jet Shield? Do you think he should be
king?”
“Him?” Derian couldn’t keep the disgust out of
his voice, no matter how he tried to school it. “He’s too
ambitious. He wants it too much.”
“So I should neither choose someone who doesn’t want
the task nor someone who does. That is quite a conundrum, Mister
Carter. How shall I resolve it?”
Derian could feel himself turning bright red, but he pressed on,
determined that if he was going to have to go through this peculiar
interrogation he wouldn’t flub it completely.
“Your Majesty, what I’m trying to say is that the best
candidate would be someone who wants to rule but for the good of Hawk
Haven, not solely for his or her own good. Someone, like Elise, who
doesn’t want to rule is going to do a bad job because either
she isn’t going to pay attention to the small details or
she’s going to resent them.”
King Tedric snorted. “Even I—and I wanted to be
king—even I grow tired of those small details.”
Derian persisted. “Someone who wants to rule because
he’ll have titles and honors…”
“And power, don’t forget power.”
“And power. That type of person is equally a bad choice
because he’s going to make decisions based on how they’ll
affect his own importance. He’s not going to care about how
they affect the people who live under his rule. Eventually,
they’ll realize this. Common folk aren’t as innocent as
some of your noble folk believe.”
“Yes. I know. My mother never let me forget that. I wish I
had thought to drill that into my nieces and nephews, but then I
never thought that I would be forced to pick one of them or their
offspring to follow me. So, is Jet’s only flaw his
ambition?”
Shrugging, feeling himself already in so far that he could not get
in much farther, Derian said:
“I think if he were made king no matter whose head wore the
crown his mother would wield too great an influence.”
“I saw you dancing with Melina earlier. So you don’t
like her?”
Derian shook his head. “I don’t know her well enough
to say that, sir. I do know that her children respect her with a
respect that is akin to fear.”
“So you’re offering me a criticism that would apply to
any of Lord Rolfston’s children—and perhaps to Rolfston
himself. You narrow my choices dramatically with that small
statement.”
Stubbornly Derian said, “One of the first to befriend
Firekeeper was little Citrine. She made no secret that her mother
commands more than a mother’s respect. I don’t know the
others well, but I think the same must apply.”
“Interesting thought, young Carter, and one not altogether
alien to my observations.”
King Tedric added nothing more and Derian waited quietly. The
orchestra and dancers were taking another intermission. As they
milled about sipping their chilled wine or punch, their
gazes—surreptitious or not—often rested on the
king’s dais.
All at once, Derian’s self-consciousness came back to him.
When he glanced at the king, however, Tedric seemed unaware of the
scrutiny from below. Perhaps a king must learn to live with such
continual observation. If so, Derian was suddenly glad that he had
betrayed Firekeeper’s weakness to the monarch. His wild
wolf-woman could never live so.
“Well, Derian Carter,” King Tedric said at last.
“I had a mind to question you further. It is refreshing to be
counseled by one who speaks only of individual merits and never of
who is related to whom except as that is related to those
merits.”
Derian colored. “Thank you, Sire.”
“Don’t think for a moment that those relationships
don’t matter. They do. However, it is easy to forget that this
one’s daughter or that one’s son is also a person
possessed of personal weaknesses and strengths. Don’t you
forget that when you are older.”
“No, Sire, I won’t.”
King Tedric stretched slightly and smiled benignly at the young
man. “Now, you have given me good counsel. What do you wish for
your reward? I offer you anything within reason.”
“Nothing, Sire. I am honored, really.”
“Tosh, of course you are, but still I wish to give you a
gift.”
An idea slipped into Derian’s mind, as wild and insane as
any he had ever had. Even as he tried to dismiss it, he knew he would
ask and accept the consequences.
“Then, sir, I ask for the necklace that Lady Melina Shield
is wearing this very moment, the one she always wears.”
The expression in King Tedric’s pale eyes was shrewd, not
startled, and Derian wondered how much the old man knew, how much he
merely suspected. All the king said, however, was:
“I fear I cannot give you something that does not belong to
me. If you so covet the necklace, why not have one made? Despite the
pride with which Lady Melina wears it, it is not so impossibly
unique.”
Derian drew in a deep breath. It had been too much to hope that he
and his friends’ problem would be so easily solved, but even as
he nodded his acceptance of what the king had said Derian wondered if
Tedric had just shown him a way out of at least part of their
problem.
Tedric continued, “Since you cannot think of something
yourself, let me choose. Dirkin, come here.”
Sir Dirkin Eastbranch, who had been standing such silent witness
to all their conversation that Derian had never noticed his presence,
stepped forth.
“Your Majesty?”
“Give me one of the counselor rings. The men’s
ones.”
Sir Dirkin reached into a leather pouch at his belt and drew forth
a gold ring. The band bore the royal eagle cast directly into the
metal. Set in the center was a cabochon-cut ruby. King Tedric’s
personal emblem, an eight-pointed star, was incised into the stone
and inlaid with a thin bead of gold.
“Here you are, Derian Carter,” said King Tedric,
fitting the ring onto Derian’s right index finger. “You
are now among those who may request my ear at any hour of day or
night. I know that you will not abuse the privilege. Understand that
this is a personal privilege. When I pass on to my ancestors, you may
keep the ring, but the privilege will vanish unless the new monarch
chooses to renew it. In return for this honor, I inflict on you the
added burden of making yourself available to me when I feel desire of
your counsel.”
For the second time in a very short while, Derian discovered that
he could not speak. King Tedric chuckled.
“A poor gift, you may think, giving you added duties under
the guise of a reward.”
Derian found his tongue. “No, Sire. Really. I am so honored.
I don’t…”
“Don’t worry too much,” King Tedric said and
placed a wrinkled hand on his shoulder. “Have the ring sized as
soon as possible. You wouldn’t want it to slip off.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.”
“And say nothing of our conference to anyone—even to
Earl Kestrel or Firekeeper. If asked, simply say that I was bored and
wanted a bit of common conversation.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.”
“Now, Derian Carter, give me your arm and help me to the
dance floor. The orchestra is warming up. I believe I will claim Lady
Blysse for this dance. It will keep my contentious nieces and nephews
guessing. Unfortunately, it will also raise poor Norvin’s hopes
unduly, but he is strong enough to survive the eventual
disappointment.”
As Derian helped King Tedric down the few steps and signaled for
Firekeeper to join them, he couldn’t help thinking that the old
man was rather calculating, even a bit wicked. It was an unsettling
thought that maybe even a good king—or perhaps
especially a good king—might need to be so.
XXI
Elise awakened the morning after the ball aware that
something momentous had occurred, but a moment passed before she
remembered what had happened. Then she remembered: Derian and the
counselor ring, King Tedric dancing the last dance of the evening
with Firekeeper. The terrible fury in her father’s eyes. How
he’d refused to ride back to the encampment in the same
carriage as Earl Kestrel and “those upstarts” even though
it meant crushing into a carriage with Aunt Zorana, Nydia, and
Purcel.
Purcel had finally gotten out, saying he would walk back. He never
showed up back at the nobles’ enclave. Later they learned he
had walked all the way back to his unit in his dress clothes rather
than deal with his mother and uncle’s fury.
Elise thought that Purcel had been wise. The angry counsel,
practically of war, between her father and Aunt Zorana had lasted
long into the night. They’d even invited Lady Melina and Lord
Rolfston to join them. When Elise had dared speak up for Firekeeper,
saying they couldn’t very well blame her for accepting the
king’s invitation to dance, her father had sworn at her and
sent her to her tent.
Given how reserved Baron Archer usually was and how affable
he’d been toward her since her engagement to Jet, Elise was
truly hurt. Still, she’d kept her tears to herself until she
had reached the safety of her curtained-off bedchamber. Then she had
let them flow. Her father’s man might report her collapse to
Baron Archer, but at least no one could accuse her of acting like a
child in public.
Secretly, Elise had been rather glad to be sent away. She
didn’t want to hear the familiar bickering again. Moreover,
knowing what she now did about Lady Melina, she had no desire to
spend time in her company. Elise’s only fear—a fear that
returned to her with full wakefulness—was that her father would
forbid her to see Firekeeper and Derian.
With her morning pot of tea, Ninette brought Elise word that Baron
Archer had requested her company as soon as she was dressed.
“Did he say ‘request’?” Elise asked.
“Or are you being polite?”
“He said ‘request,’ ” Ninette assured her.
“And he seems milder this morning. Perhaps he’s sorry for
shouting at you that way.”
“Perhaps,” Elise replied, but she didn’t feel
very hopeful. Baron Archer had always been vaguely disappointed that
his heir was female— and a softhearted female as well. When
Aurella contracted an illness similar to that which had rendered
Queen Elexa sterile, he had resigned himself to not having sons,
acting instead as a second father to Purcel, who was as similar to
his bookish father as Elise was like Ivon.
Ivon Archer was waiting stern and formal in his military uniform
when Elise stepped out of the pavilion.
“Good morning, Elise.”
She dropped a curtsy. “Good morning, Father.”
He frowned at her excessive formality, but he couldn’t
precisely chide her for being too polite. Instead he grunted:
“Come, walk with me. I wish to speak with you about last
night.”
Elise obeyed with deceptive tameness. Still, her heart skipped a
beat when she realized that her father was walking toward that same
cluster of stones where she had witnessed Melina Shield ensorcelling
Sapphire and Jet. What would she do if Melina was there? Then she
calmed herself. With almost all the resident nobles living in canvas
tents, those rocks were the obvious place for a private
conference.
Indeed, when they reached the rocks, the area appeared to be
empty.
Elise, however, spared a moment to peek into the hidden space from
which she had unintentionally spied on Lady Melina, garnering a
strange look from her father in the process. The space appeared to be
empty and Baron Archer did not comment on her actions. His mind was
busy with other matters.
“Elise,” he said, “you disappointed me last
night when you spoke up for that foundling of Norvin Norwood’s.
I know you have befriended her—though I am at a loss to
understand why—but that is no reason to side with her against
your own kin.”
With effort, Elise kept her silence. Silence, her mother had once
told her, was the best weapon when your opponent had all the
strength. She wondered now if Lady Aurella had meant specifically her
husband.
Baron Archer continued, “Yet, you will have an opportunity
to redeem yourself.” Here it comes, Elise thought. Stop seeing that girl
and her low-bred companions and…
She was so busy with her own thoughts that she almost missed what
her father was saying.
“Since Earl Kestrel’s party trusts you, you will have
the opportunity to continue to call on them. I fear that my evident
anger last night makes such casual social contact on my part
suspect.”
He frowned, but that was as far as he was going to come to
admitting that his behavior had been rude and ungentlemanly toward
either daughter or peer.
“Therefore, I order you to continue your visits. Attempt to
learn everything you can about their plans. Find out if the king has
made any promises. Whether King Tedric intends to make Lady Blysse
his bride, the bride of one of Seagleam’s brats, or ruler in
her own right will affect my own actions.”
Momentarily his expression turned pleading. “Remember,
Elise. I am worried about this not only for myself, but for you as
well. I would like to see you made queen with Jet as your consort. No
foundling should be able to take what is ours by blood
right.”
Elise, however, refused to be mollified. Ironically, though her
father’s commands were the opposite of what she had dreaded
moments before, she was coolly enraged.
“So, a few hours ago I was a traitor to you,” she
said, her tones as measured as the steps of last night’s
waltzes. “Today you wish me to spy on my friends. I see you
still see me as a traitor, but betrayal is fine as long as it is to
your advantage.”
Baron Archer gaped at her. “Elise, you misunderstand…
I spoke in anger last night.”
Elise ducked within a bubble of almost preternatural calm,
speaking with her gaze fastened on the towering stone walls of the
distant fortress.
“You did,” she agreed, “but your very words to
me a few moments ago show how poorly you regard me. Very well. If you
feel that way, you have your choice. Permit me to redeem myself in my
own fashion or disown me as your heir.”
Baron Archer began to speak, but she breezed on as if she
hadn’t heard him.
“Just remember before you lose your temper and make such a
drastic move that I am your sole child. Without me, that crown you
crave so deeply is lost to you. Remember, too, that King Tedric came
to regret similar rashness.”
Despite the cruel thrust of her words, Elise delivered them in a
tone so detached that it was almost clinical. She might be Hazel
Healer diagnosing what herb poultice would best treat a rash.
“Well, Father,” she said when Ivon Archer did not
reply, “what is your wish?”
When she turned her gaze to him at last, she found that he was
studying her, neither angry nor pleased, but with a care that she
never recalled seeing directed to her.
“I think,” Ivon Archer said, “that disowning you
would be foolish. Remember before you grow too triumphant, that it
remains an option.”
“I won’t forget,” Elise said, her inner calm
wavering slightly. “But I also cannot forget the tone in which
you called me a traitor and then dismissed me like a small child. I
am your heir, just a year short of my majority. I think I am owed
more consideration.”
“Perhaps,” her father said grudgingly. “For now,
I lay no task on you. You retain your freedom and your
title.”
“I won’t thank you,” she said, “because
both are mine, not to be taken from me by anyone—not even you.
As for Earl Kestrel’s entourage, I will continue to visit with
them. If I learn anything that I am not expressly requested to keep
in confidence, I will be happy to share it with you.”
“Thank you,” Ivon said, a spark of last night’s
anger lighting his eyes, “for your gracious
condescension.”
She thought she heard him mutter, “You little bitch,”
but his voice was low enough that she could pretend to have heard
nothing.
“Well,” Baron Archer said, brushing imaginary dirt
from his trouser leg, “I have duties to perform. May I escort
you back to camp on my way?”
“I would be honored,” she said, offering him a neutral
smile and resting her hand on his arm. Nothing further was said
during the interminable length of that walk.
Later that morning when Elise met Firekeeper and Derian she gave an
abbreviated account of the events both following the ball and this
morning. When she finished, Derian commented:
“And the odd thing is, the king made no such promises as
everyone seems to imagine. He only wanted to hear my opinion—as
a commoner— on various issues.”
“Including the succession,” Elise said teasingly.
Derian looked with unwonted seriousness at the ruby ring on his
finger. “I was asked not to say.”
Elise nodded and changed the subject. “I’m amazed that
you had the courage to demand Lady Melina’s necklace as your
reward. That was clever.”
“It didn’t work, though,” Derian replied.
“Still, I’ve been thinking about what the king did say. I
don’t know if he meant it as a hint, but his idea of our having
an identical necklace made was brilliant. It solves the problem of
Lady Melina missing her own.”
“I suppose Wain Cutter could do the work,” Elise
agreed. “This should actually be easier. Still, even if we got
it, how would we work the trade?”
Firekeeper offered, “I could do it. Every night I go among
those tents. Blind Seer terrifies the dogs. None even bark any
longer. Get the necklace. I will trade it.”
“You’ve been skulking among the tents?” Elise
asked, amused yet vaguely embarrassed. What might Firekeeper have
seen or heard—especially before Jet lost interest in her?
“I have,” the wolf-woman said. “All through the
camp I go. Sometimes I learn things. Mostly, I just walk and put into
my memory scents and sounds.”
Derian added, “I believe she can do it, Elise, but to pull
this off we need as exact a description of the necklace as we can
get. Wain Cutter said that he can work from a verbal description,
thank the Horse, but a sketch would be better. Did your young
lady’s training include such skills?”
“It did,” Elise said, “though my teacher never
praised me highly. Still, I can manage something. Also, Melina likes
to go into town and she’s never without that necklace. Wain
Cutter could easily get a good look at her then.”
“That’s going to mean trusting him,” Derian
cautioned.
“He’s not stupid,” Elise retorted. “That
necklace is famous. He may well guess without our admitting precisely
which necklace we want copied.”
Derian nodded. “Very well. You get the description.
I’ll sound out Wain when I go into town today to have my new
ring sized.”
He touched it almost reverently. Elise hid a grin.
“You’re a bit overwhelmed, aren’t you?”
she asked.
“More than a bit.” Derian looked at her squarely.
“I realize I’m not the first to be given one of these,
not even the first common born. King Tedric has always had counselors
from among his subjects. But you’re born to such honors. You
can’t imagine what this will mean to my family. My mother is
likely to insist on my keeping the ring in the family’s
ancestral shrine when I’m not wearing it. The king’s
trust is a great honor.”
Elise suddenly realized that she had been being a bit of a snob, a
trait she has come to despise in others.
“It is a great honor,” she said firmly, “and
your parents will be justified in their pride. King Tedric chooses
widely but never foolishly.”
Firekeeper shook her head, as if wondering that this much
attention was being paid to a shiny thing with no virtue as a
tool.
“Talk does not get us any further with necklaces,” she
reminded them. “Elise must learn the look of the necklace in
perfect. Derian and I will talk to Wain Cutter. Then I will talk to
Doc.”
“Why talk with Doc?” Derian asked.
“He has powders to bring sleep. Lady Melina not sleep alone.
Sometime her maid sleep in her tent, sometime her husband, too. On
the night of the change, Elise must give all some powder to
sleep.”
“I thought,” Derian teased, “that no one ever
hears you when you go among the tents.”
Firekeeper stared at him as if he was an idiot.
“This is important, Fox Hair, like the first hunt in spring
after winter starving. We take no risks just as the One does not hunt
alone when there is a pack.”
Elise nodded, suddenly somber, quietly afraid of the role she must
play but agreeing with Firekeeper’s wisdom.
“She’s right. We don’t dare take any risk. My
relatives may think the matter of the succession is settled, but we
know how tenuous it is. King Tedric doesn’t know what we know.
It is our duty to make certain that a sorceress cannot rule from
behind the throne.”
Derian curled his fist tightly as if daring the ring to slip free.
Elise thought she knew what he was thinking. So much rested on their
shoulders. Were they really up to the challenge?
Although not expressly privy to the counsels of his fellow nobles,
Prince Newell shared their indignation and frustrated anger.
He’d actually been enjoying that thrice-cursed ball. The food
and drink had been excellent, and many of the women fair. Since his
ambitions reached far higher than marriage into the family of
Allister Seagleam, he hadn’t wasted his time dancing with
eleven-year-old girls.
Just for the fun of renewing his acquaintance with Lady Blysse he
had asked her for a dance. She had accepted, but he could feel her
dislike of him in the lightness of her fingers on his whenever the
ritualized motions demanded that they touch. By the end he was rather
sorry he hadn’t asked her for a waltz.
Other women, even Lady Zorana after he whispered a few sympathetic
words in her ear, were far less reluctant to dance with a prince.
Unable to continue the flirtation with Zorana in such a public place,
Newell had been in the process of cultivating the acquaintance of the
pretty daughter of a local silversmith. She was intimating that she
was willing to do more than dance when the ripple of gossip through
the room alerted Newell to a new element in the game. He had turned
in time to see Derian Carter, dressed like a gentleman in an outfit
that must have set his patron back a good bit, mounting the steps of
the dais from which King Tedric watched the festivities.
Mindful of his health, the king had taken part only in the Star
Waltz which had opened the entertainment. Appropriately, his partner
had been Pearl Oyster, the plump but still winsome wife of Allister
Seagleam. Inviting everyone to continue on, King Tedric then had made
his way up to the makeshift throne that had been prepared for him and
indulgently surveyed the others at their pleasure. Needless to say,
just about everyone who was anyone made an excuse to mount the few
steps and speak with him, but only young Carter had been invited.
That invitation ended the evening’s pleasure for Newell. The
lovely young thing he had been flirting with previously now held as
much interest for him as might a painted doll. When King Tedric chose
to close the evening by dancing with Lady Blysse, any joy Newell
might have salvaged from seeing his Hawk Haven competitors equally
crushed vanished.
Only Allister Seagleam seemed untroubled by this turn of events
and that was quite understandable. The king favoring Lady Blysse did
not mean an end of his hopes. At fifteen or so, she was a good age to
be wed to either of his sons. Newell had noted that both Shad and
Tavis had taken their turns partnering the foundling. Of course, they
had each danced with all of the other eligible contenders for a
polite political marriage and a few tentative friendships seemed to
have begun.
During one of the intermissions, Purcel Archer, Sapphire Shield,
and Shad Oyster got into a heated discussion about the various merits
of combat on land and on sea. Jet flirted shamelessly with Minnow and
Anemone, not precisely forsaking Elise, for the manners of a grand
ball insisted that an engaged couple mingle with everyone and not
remain selfishly absorbed in each other. Tavis Oyster apparently
found an unexpected friend in Nydia Trueheart. When Newell had
drifted near— ostensibly to get a new glass of wine—they
had been discussing the merits of various New Kelvinese poets.
But any hopes the parents of these sprigs might have entertained
had been dashed when King Tedric chose Lady Blysse for his dance
partner.
Newell’s fury that next morning was not mediated when he
considered how hopeless his attempts to discover a way to distract or
disable Lady Blysse had been. Her unwarranted dislike of him had made
it impossible for him to chat her up and thereby drop a hint that she
go hither or yon so as to be neatly away while Newell’s lackeys
pulverized Jet. Her illiteracy had robbed him of that favorite tool
of conspirators, the anonymous note. That damned wolf which shadowed
her whenever she was not in company—and often when she
was—made it unlikely that he could simply have her hit over the
head and put out of the way.
As a last resort, Newell had taken advantage of the crowded ball
to slip a tincture of valerian (a preparation known to encourage
drowsiness) into Lady Blysse’s fruit juice. Raising the cup to
her lips, she had suddenly wrinkled her nose and dropped the entire
thing—cup and all— into the nearest waste bin.
So the morning following the ball, foiled and frustrated, Newell
sent a note to Lady Zorana asking if he might pay a call in private.
Before going to meet her he summoned Keen and Rook to him.
Without preamble, Newell growled, “I’ve been going
about this all wrong. Why should I try to frame Lady Blysse and rely
on others to condemn her? She needs to die.”
Keen cocked an eyebrow.
Rook simply said: “Indeed, sir.”
“Yes. This afternoon, I’m going to take Lady Zorana
for a ride.”
Keen, always one for a double entendre, grinned slightly.
Ignoring the other man’s smirk, Newell continued,
“Once I have Zorana deep in the woods, one of you—Keen, I
think, since no one knows he works for me—is going to kidnap
her.
“Keen, when you attack, I will appear to defend Zorana.
I’m afraid I’ll have to take a split lip or black eye or
my defense won’t look convincing. Just don’t hurt me so
much that I can’t join in the battle if the Stoneholders come
through. That’s more important than any little mischief we may
do here.”
Keen nodded.
“After a bit, I’ll feign to be knocked out,”
Newell went on. “You take the lady. I’ll go for her
help.”
His henchmen knew better than to interrupt, so Newell surged
on.
“I’ll go directly to King Tedric, suggest that we keep
the incident quiet. If he doesn’t suggest that we enlist Lady
Blysse, I will. She is certain to go tearing off without any more
backup than her damned wolf. When they reach wherever you’re
holding Zorana, shoot Blysse with an arrow or two. Don’t let
her or that beast get close. Then flee in apparent panic, leaving
your prisoner behind. I’ll come later with a rescue party.
Questions?”
“Where should I take Lady Zorana?” Keen asked.
“There must be a woodsman’s hut or something. If there
isn’t, tie her to a tree. Knock her out if you want. At least
gag her to keep her from screaming. Just give her to understand that
you have someone delivering a ransom note and she’ll be freed
when you get your money.”
Keen nodded again, his eyes shining.
“Wouldn’t it be better,” Rook asked, more
willing to question, secure in his position as senior aide, “to
kidnap someone like Lady Elise? Lady Blysse likes her. I don’t
think Lady Blysse cares for Lady Zorana one way or
another.”
“Who she cares for hardly matters,” Newell snapped.
“She’ll do the king’s bidding. Besides, I
don’t know if I could get Elise to go with me. She’s been
a stuck-up little bitch since she was just a snip, never could take
even a tease. Even if Elise would go with me, it would look
suspicious. Zorana, however… We go a long way back.”
Keen chuckled. “It’ll even give you a good excuse for
losing the fight. Right, boss? I mean, caught with your pants down
and all.”
Newell glowered at this joke at his expense, but he had to admit
that Keen had a point.
“Good thought,” he agreed reluctantly. “I had
wondered how to justify my being defeated by one man.”
Keen laughed. “Don’t worry, boss. I’ll be
implying that there are two or three more around.”
“Disguise yourself,” Newell ordered. “I
don’t want Zorana killed, only roughed up a little so this
threat will seem convincing. Rook, you stay completely out of sight.
Both of you bring bows, swords, and knives. When Lady Blysse comes to
the rescue, I want her very dead.”
Rook nodded. “I had appropriate tools laid by against our
proposed assault on Jet Shield. Since you have yet to invite Lady
Zorana, we have some time to prepare. I’ll go ahead secretly
and find a defensible place to hide the lady. I don’t think
we’ll need to tell you where in advance.”
“No. I’m trusting that Lady Blysse’s
nose—or at least her wolf’s nose— will lead her
there.”
“Then, unless you have further orders, I am gone.”
“Go. I will send Keen after you if for some reason Lady
Zorana is unable to join me.”
That lady, however, proved more than amendable to a ride in the
countryside and dismissed her personal attendant to mind young Nydia.
Zorana fussed a bit, making up a basket with light refreshments, and
Newell was content to wait, knowing that this would give his men the
time they needed to prepare.
“I had thought,” Zorana said when they were safely
away from listening ears, “that the day Elise became engaged to
Jet was the worst in my life.”
“Last night must have been terrible,” Newell said,
soothing his own anger by pouring salt on Zorana’s wounds,
“seeing the king so publicly favoring someone other than one of
your own.”
“You don’t know a mother’s grief and
frustration!” Zorana replied dramatically. “I do
everything I can for them. I even nursed hopes that tonight would be
the realization of my dreams. Purcel was visiting quite nicely with
one of Duke Allister’s sons. I thought such decorous behavior
far better than the opportunistic flirtation in which Jet Shield was
indulging. Certainly, Duke Allister would be more interested in a
proven warrior who can maturely discuss men’s business than in
a young rogue.”
“Certainly,” Newell murmured, allowing his spirited
red roan to match the brisk pace of Lady Zorana’s dapple grey.
The dapple grey seemed to have caught some of her rider’s
feisty mood and had to be discouraged from breaking into a trot.
“And then just as I was allowing myself to feel
hopeful—and encouraging Nydia in her friendship with young
Tavis—then that Derian Carter was summoned to the
dais.”
Newell listened with half an ear as Zorana recounted the events of
the night before, noticing her difference in emphasis. Again he was
struck by how her ambition overwhelmed her good sense. How deeply had
she embraced his little fantasy that the mere age of her children
made them the most suitable matches for those of Allister Seagleam!
How eager had she been to ignore how many political matches these
days were being made without due consideration for the relative ages
of bride and groom.
King Tedric had indicated his disapproval of such matches but not
expressly forbidden them, so dukes and duchesses paired up their
available children like toy soldiers ranked on the nursery hearth
rug.
Thinking of deep embraces and matches stirred brutal excitement
both in Newell’s groin and within the darkest reaches of his
mind. They were well away from both camp and town now. Even while
gabbling away, Zorana accepted his lead toward the forests maintained
as a game preserve on the fringes of Hope. Once they were deep within
its shelter, privacy was virtually guaranteed.
Virtually. Zorana had been too interested both in her woes and in
her desire for privacy to notice the figure that had been shadowing
them all along. A man on foot could easily pace a walking horse,
especially if he didn’t wish to get too close. As requested by
his master before they departed, Keen had remained near.
Seeing a sheltered glen near an attractively babbling brook,
Newell suggested to Zorana that they “let the horses have a
drink and a rest.” Their easy pace hadn’t even sweated
the animals, but Zorana agreed with a coy smile.
Tying their mounts to a tree, Newell loosened their girths and
removed their bridles, pleased with the glade. There could hardly be
a more ideal place for a tryst—or an assault. Trees and shrubs
provided both shade and a screen from observation, but warm, green
sunlight filtered through. The ground underfoot was thick with
springy moss. When Zorana took a rolled blanket from behind her
saddle, Newell smiled. It was rather pleasant to be the seduced
instead of the seducer from time to time.
Excusing himself for a call of nature, he walked into the woods.
As he expected, Keen met him almost at once.
“Is all ready?” Newell murmured.
“It is. We’ve got a place and Rook even had the sense
to rub our boots and clothes with lavender oil so later the wolf-chit
won’t be able to identify us.”
Newell made a mental note to reward Rook for his initiative.
Despite his own depending on Blysse’s tracking abilities and
his suspicion that the rumors that she could speak with her wolf were
true, he had overlooked this weak point in his plan.
“Good. Bide until you can convincingly take us both,”
Newell reminded Keen.
Keen nodded, his brown eyes glittering almost feverishly.
“Keep your pecker up, boss.”
Newell had never considered himself an exhibitionist, but the
thought of Keen and possibly Rook out there in the shadows watching
his love-making stirred him strangely. When he returned to her,
Zorana had spread a thick blanket on the moss and poured two glasses
of white wine. The remainder of the bottle was chilling in the
brook.
Taking his goblet, Newell brushed his fingers against hers. As he
sipped, he locked her eyes with his own, holding her gaze until a
blush began to creep up her throat.
“What are you looking at?” she asked, and her voice
was husky.
“You, lovely lady. Just you.”
“Want a better look?” she invited and untied the
ribbon lacing her bodice. Newell set down his glass and freed her
breasts from their prison.
The next few moments were a welter of sensual impressions: his
hand on her naked breast, her mouth on his tasting of wine and salt,
her arms pulling him closer. She was as eager as he was, so it
wasn’t long before he was bare-assed: naked but for his shirt
which she had slid her hands playfully beneath.
Women’s garments were more complicated, but Zorana had made
things easier by removing several of the more involved undergarments
in preparation. Newell had a moment to wonder if she did this in
advance or while he was in the woods; then he was topping her and
even the watchers were forgotten in a more immediate obsession.
He was thrusting his way to completion, Zorana alternately moaning
and whimpering her own response, when a hard hand fell on his
shoulder and a rough voice said:
“Enough of that. I’ve a use of my own for the
lady.”
Newell couldn’t stop and despite Zorana’s sudden
shriek of alarm, he continued where his body led. Hands grabbed him
and pulled him forcibly off Zorana. Newell surged to his feet, truly
insane in that moment of frustrated need. He swung wildly and missed.
Keen’s first blow caught him solidly on the side of his face.
Newell stumbled backward a few steps, then charged forward again.
Keen punched him in the gut and the prince fell to his knees
retching.
Zorana was busy shoving down her skirts, shrieking hysterically.
There was a wild look on Keen’s face that cooled Newell’s
lust and made him suddenly afraid that this neat little plan was
going awry. Keen looked as if he could kill him. Newell’s next
punch was driven with the force of fear and Keen lurched.
“Damn you,” Newell hissed in the other man’s
ear. “Get control of yourself!”
And Keen did. Clubbing his hands together, he effectively battered
Newell to the ground. However, Newell could feel that he was pulling
the force of his blows somewhat and though there would be bruises,
nothing should be broken.
Keen leered down at Newell as the prince fell and dropped a piece
of paper onto his chest. “Take this to the king. It gives our
terms. Got it?”
Newell groaned. Keen kicked him. Though he didn’t put much
force behind the kick, coming on top of Newell’s other injuries
it still hurt.
“Passed out,” Keen sneered, according to script.
“Lily-livered as well as a wimp.”
Lying on the ground, hurting so much that real unconsciousness
would be welcome, Newell heard Keen continue in silky tones:
“Stop screaming, Lady Zorana, and come with me. I’ll
take you to a nice place and we’ll wait there for the mail to
be delivered.”
Zorana said shrilly, “You’re kidnapping me?”
“Detaining you, rather.” Newell heard Zorana jerked to
her feet. “Now come along quietly. If you’re a good girl,
I may even reward you by finishing the job your inconsiderate friend
there didn’t.”
Keeping his eyes shut and his breathing shallow, Newell considered
the very real probability that Keen would rape Zorana. It
wouldn’t be Keen’s first rape and he did have
provocation.
Ah, well. As long as Keen wasn’t about his fun when Lady
Blysse came along. Newell had learned long ago, if you wanted to
dance, you must expect to pay the piper.
Later, when the sounds of their footsteps and Zorana’s
whimpering had diminished, Newell hauled himself to his feet. He
staggered to the brook, where he splashed cold water on his face.
There was wine left in the bottle and he felt a bit better once
he’d drained that to the lees. He hoped that Keen hurt at least
a little. Surely at least one of his own blows had gone solidly
home.
Re-bridling and tightening the girth on the red roan took
considerable effort. Then Prince Newell pulled himself into the
saddle. He’d be to the Watchful Eye by dusk. By using the most
convenient gate, he’d also avoid the bulk of the Hawk Haven
encampment. He ran his tongue around his teeth, reassuring himself
that they were all in place. Then he smiled and urged the roan into a
fast walk. Everything was going according to plan.
XXII
In response to King Tedric’s summons,
Firekeeper came running to the Watchful Eye. It was some measure of
the urgency of the king’s summons that the gates swung open
upon her approach and that none of the armed and armored guards who
stood their posts attempted to slow her or question the rightness of
the great, grey wolf bounding at her side.
Overhead, the falcon Elation soared in defiance of the rules
normally governing diurnal and nocturnal creatures. Glimpsing her
broad wings silhouetted against the orange face of the rising harvest
moon, more than one soldier touched an amulet pouch or totem necklace
and muttered that the days of black sorcery had returned.
But Firekeeper had no time for these. King Tedric’s message
had said for her to come as rapidly as two feet could run and for
Derian to follow at his own pace. They were to speak to no
one—not even Earl Kestrel— about the reason for their
going.
So Firekeeper ran through the gate into the stone-flagged
courtyard, through the arched doorway into the fortress building
itself, then padded quick-foot up the broad stone steps. Silent
guards directed her with gestures, and even those with whom she had
laughed and thrown dice during the slow journey to Hope said not a
word. Grateful she was for their guidance, but Firekeeper could have
found her way without it for the scent of the king and the
medicaments of his sickroom heralded his presence to her more
brightly than trumpet calls.
For all the speed with which she had run, Firekeeper arrived in
the king’s presence barely winded, only the rising and falling
of her nascent breasts beneath her leather vest giving testimony to
the speed at which she had flown over the ground.
Gracefully, she bowed to King Tedric, for she had come to respect
him far more than ever she would have dreamed possible at their first
meeting. Beside her, Blind Seer stretched out his forelimbs in a deep
wolf-bow, but his blue eyes remained alert so Firekeeper would be
protected even while she abased herself.
And when she raised her head, shaking back the wild tangle of
dark-brown curls, she saw what her nose had already told her.
King Tedric had a visitor before her and that visitor was wounded.
Yet, though Firekeeper knew that according to the laws of etiquette
Prince Newell was due a bow in turn she refused him the homage. There
was that about Newell that she did not trust and she would not lower
her guard before him, even with Sir Dirkin and his ready sword
present.
Instead Firekeeper said to the king:
“I am here as you wished, King Tedric.”
“Do you remember of what we spoke before we left the castle,
Firekeeper?” the king asked with the directness she admired in
him.
“Every word, every breath.”
“One of those things I feared has occurred,” he said,
and she noticed how tired and ill the old man looked. “My
niece, Lady Zorana Archer, has been kidnapped—stolen—by
men who would exchange her safety for money. She was taken while in
the forests to the northeast of this fortress. The message the men
sent said that they will hold her in a safe place until we send
money.”
Firekeeper listened but her gaze rested for a moment on Prince
Newell. He had clearly been in a fight. One eye was blackening; his
upper lip was swollen fat. Rather than lolling in his chair with the
indolent ease she knew was customary for him, he sat stiffly straight
as if his body hurt him.
Beneath the scents of blood and sweat, Prince Newell smelled of
wine and of something else that it took her a moment to place.
However, she had not slipped her way between the tents of the camp
followers without learning the scent of mating humans.
Blind Seer had reached the same conclusion as she. “This
prince is the one who lost Lady Zorana. My nose says they were
interrupted at their dalliance.”
Thus Firekeeper did not ask how Lady Zorana came to be taken but
asked instead:
“Do you wish me to find her, One, or do you wish me to bring
money to her takers?”
“Find her, bring her back if you can. I would prefer not to
pay to redeem her.” Tedric added hastily, “This not
because I do not value her, but because then others would think to do
the same.”
Firekeeper shrugged, only partly understanding this but trusting
the king’s wisdom in how to deal with his own kind. What she
did not trust was the small smile that had touched Prince
Newell’s mouth when the king asked her to find Zorana.
From what Firekeeper knew of human pride, especially male pride,
Newell should be demanding that the rescue was his right. Perhaps he
was more wounded than he smelled. Perhaps he had the wisdom to know
that a wolf was wiser in the woods than any human.
“I go,” she said.
King Tedric nodded. “I will send Derian Carter after you
with reinforcements. My counselors and I agree that it is best that
as few as possible know that Zorana has been taken. Not even her
children have been told. I have sent word that she is visiting with
me so they will not worry.”
“Derian is good,” Firekeeper said, “but Race
Forester has eyes to see even in the woods at night. He will know how
to find the signs I will leave him for they will be signs he taught.
I will send Elation to him if you will write a message for her to
carry.”
King Tedric reached for quill and paper. “The peregrine will
fly at night?”
In reply Elation glided through the open window and squawked
complacently, holding out one foot as if to grasp the message once it
was ready. Firekeeper grinned.
“Elation is like Blind Seer, among the greatest of her kind.
She will find Race Forester. If you tell him to meet Derian near the
wood they will save time.”
King Tedric continued scratching quill across paper. “I have
already done so, Madame General. Sir Dirkin, reach me the sand so I
can blot this, then a tube so that this falcon does not crush the
paper in her talons.”
Prince Newell spoke, his speech sounding odd as he forced the
words through his swollen lip.
“Again, I beg Your Majesty, let me go with the rescue party.
I realize I would only slow Lady Blysse, but surely I can sit a horse
and ride with the others.”
“You have already done enough this afternoon,” King
Tedric replied with an ambiguity that Firekeeper quite admired.
“I refuse your request. You will remain here and a healer will
be sent for to tend your wounds.”
Turning away, eager to be on the trail before it lost its
freshness, Firekeeper said:
“Get Doc—Sir Jared—he knows how to keep
silence.”
King Tedric’s agreement in her ears, she fled down the steps
and into the gathering night.
The brilliance of the harvest moon, even though its face lacked
fullness, still gave her ample light to run full out until they
reached the forest. Blind Seer ranged ahead until he found the signs
they sought. “This trail bears the recent scent of horses. Two went
in, only one of those two came out. Prince Newell’s scent is
here as well. His blood was spilled on the ground.”
The wolf sniffed more deeply and added, “There is
another scent here, too, the scent of lavender masking a faint scent
of humans—males. At least one smokes a pipe.”
“Cry that trail,” Firekeeper said as she
plunged into the forest, all senses alert, “even as we run.
Your nose is keener than mine. I will follow this horse trail and
leave marks for Race to find.”
Breaking slightly from the path, Blind Seer padded silently
through the bracken at the trail’s edge. “Lavender Scent’s path followed the others, but he
took care to stay from sight. Here I find where he waited behind a
tree. Here he paused. Ah! I see why. The ground is open beneath this
Grandmother Oak. He waited until the horses were farther ahead before
showing himself. In the ways of hiding, this one is a master.
Remember that as you run, sweet Firekeeper.” “I will,” she promised, “but even my dead
nose can smell the reek of lavender and the wind kindly blows toward
us. We should have warning before he can leap upon us. I wonder why
he took such great care to hide his shape but left his scent so
blatant?”
Blind Seer coughed derisive laughter. “He hid himself
from human prey. They use their eyes and ears, but
their noses smell nothing. Doubtless this scent he wears is such as
those blended by Hazel Healer, meant to adorn the
wearer.”
“Perhaps,” Firekeeper replied, but the worry
stayed with her and made her slow her gait slightly and watch with
even greater care. She wished for Elation, but the falcon could not
see anything through the spreading canopy of tree branches. If those
who had taken Zorana remained beneath their shelter, the falcon would
not be able to find them any more quickly than those on the
ground.
At length wolf and woman came to a small clearing tucked off to
one side of the trail. The dapple-grey palfrey tethered to a tree to
one side jerked against her rope when she smelled Blind Seer, but her
relief at human company—even that of so dubious a human as
Firekeeper—outweighed her fear.
Giving the mare a brisk pat on one shoulder, Firekeeper told
Blind-Seer—for the wolf would never lightly speak to a
horse—“This frightened one says that there are no
humans here. She is alone and afraid but we must leave her behind.
She would only slow us. The others can gather her up.”
Blind Seer was busy snuffling the glade. “Prince Newell
came here with Zorana. They rutted upon the blanket and were
interrupted by Lavender Scent. They fought. Here is Newell’s
blood on the moss and here again. I do not smell that of Lavender
Scent.”
“Here is something else,” Firekeeper added,
pointing.
Pinned to a tree trunk was a piece of white bark on which black
marks had been made.
“This was done with a burned stick,” she
said, sniffing. “Alas, it cannot speak to me. We will leave
it for the others. Perhaps it will hasten their trail. Come. We have
learned all we can here. Can you catch their trail when they
left?”
“As easily as you breathe,” the wolf boasted,
leading the way. “There are two trails
now—Zorana’s is added. No, there are three! Here a second
human/lavender scent joins the first. This one was waiting in the
tree.”
Firekeeper padded after Blind Seer and noted the marks left on the
ground. She made a broad arrow sign in the dirt that Race would be
certain to see, and followed. “They hunt in a little pack, then. This second one was
not needed for the rutting Newell was easy prey.”
Firekeeper snorted in derision. “I hope I am never so human
as to be ruled out of season by my loins!”
Blind Seer laughed. “You are human, Little Two-legs, but
even humans can moderate themselves. Most simply do not care
to do so.”
They ran in silence then, Blind Seer easily guiding them and
Firekeeper leaving sign for those who would follow. At times this was
hardly necessary for Lady Zorana had left pieces of her clothing
behind her. The first time Firekeeper spotted a scrap, she thought
the bit of fabric had snagged accidentally on a jutting twig. By the
third bit, she knew that Lady Zorana was deliberately marking her
trail. The tiny shreds of lace could be torn from her riding habit
fairly soundlessly and yet their whiteness shouted the way.
“Good for her,” Blind Seer said when Firekeeper
told him. “She always struck me as having some heart to
her.”
Sometime later Firekeeper said, “I smell
smoke.”
“Burning pine,” Blind Seer added,
“such as two-legs use for torches. Walk slowly now, with
care. The lavender scent is heavy here. They may have dug traps or
set snares.”
They found nothing so subtle. Soon flickering lights, like
grounded stars, could be glimpsed through the trees.
“What madness is this?” Blind Seer said as
soon as they were a bit closer. “Do they shine their
denning to all and sundry?”
Once Firekeeper would have agreed that this was madness. There in
the center of a well-cleared glade was a gamekeeper’s cabin,
the cages in which the pheasants and grouse were kept lighter forms
surrounding the solidness of the central building. Lashed to every
sizable tree were makeshift sconces holding brightly burning pine
torches. But Firekeeper had come to understand humans far better than
once she did. “No, there is wisdom here. Humans see little in the
darkness. Any who could track them this far at night would follow
that trail to its end. Thus Lavender Scent and his pack mate have lit
the grounds all about the den wherein they keep Zorana. Their eyes
will be accustomed to the fire brightness, but those like us who come
through the darkness may be blinded.” “And even,” Blind Seer agreed, “if both see
the same, those within are at advantage, for all who cross into the
lit space will be seen before they can reach the cabin. This is a
good game, sweet Firekeeper!”
She agreed. Her heart was pounding within her breast and every
nerve was as alive as ever it had been. She could hear muffled voices
from within the cabin: deep male and the sobbing of a female.
“How do we take Zorana away?” Blind Seer
asked. “Shall we wait for Derian and the others to join
us?”
“No,” Firekeeper said decisively.
“I do not like the sound of Zorana’s cries. There is
terror in them and despair. The others may be long coming
yet.”
“Then how do we take her away?” Blind Seer
repeated. “I will not cross that bright circle. Too easy
for an arrow to find my heart and you did not wear your
armor.”
“Neither did I bring a bow,” she brooded,
“but I hunted much game before I knew how to use one. What
do you think of this? I will climb out along the branches of the tree
that stretches farthest over the clearing. From there I will throw
rocks at the cabin. Perhaps they will come out.”
“Stupid,” the wolf replied. “Why
announce ourselves only to have you shot like a squirrel? Think
better.”
She scowled at him. “This fire is our enemy. In darkness
we are any two-legs’ better.”
“Then the fire must die first,” Blind Seer
said sensibly. “You are Fire-keeper. How do we kill it
without killing ourselves or burning down the forest?”
Firekeeper considered and rejected numerous plans based on the
unavailability of buckets, bags, and bowls. Then she grinned: “Fox Hair will love me for this. I will take these
leather breeches and cut them into two bags. My vest is of soft
leather. I can fashion another small bag quickly enough. Strips of
leather will close them and I will hang them over three torches. Then
I shall slash them open: one-two-three. Three torches will gutter and
fail—that should be enough to create a wedge of darkness to
hide us. In that moment, we strike.”
“You take a great risk,” Blind Seer said
dubiously.
Firekeeper was already stepping out of her breeches and making the
legs into bags. She cocked her head toward the cabin. “Listen to her weep. That is not just fear—someone
treats her badly. Zorana has been no friend to me, but Kenre
Trueheart is our friend and he loves his mother. Go with care, dear
one. See where the cabin looks out into the night? We will put out
the torches where those within the cabin will have the least chance
of shooting arrows at us without coming out
themselves.”
“You are too kind,” the wolf grumbled, but he
went and by the time she had her three bags filled with water he was
ready. “The cabin sits four-square in the glade, flanked with
bird cages to rear and out behind. The door faces north. There are
windows on all sides. Though they are shuttered, a watcher could have
them open quickly I think.”
“Or they may have made arrow slits,”
Firekeeper added, remembering such security arrangements in West Keep
and in Eagle’s Nest Castle.
“If you put out the torches to the west,” the
wolf continued, “the approach is slightly shorter. After
you cover the ground, the cabin itself would be your
shelter.”
Firekeeper nodded and hefted the bags. “They leak
some,” she said critically, “but they will do.
Keep to the shadows, my dear.” “I will make the pheasants and grouse our
allies,” Blind Seer said with a trace of laughter beneath
his growl. “Be careful yourself. Your naked hide near glows
in the moonlight.”
Firekeeper snorted as she scrabbled up and anchored the bags above
the torches. When she had fetched water, she had removed her
underclothing lest its pale color make her visible and then rubbed
herself carefully with wet dirt from near the brook and knew she was
nearly as mottled in color as the wolf himself.
“Go then” was all she said. Raising her Fang,
she slashed the first bag open. The other two were ripped open in
quick succession, nor did she pause to see how well her plan had
worked. The light had dimmed, the hunt begun.
Dropping nearly to all fours, Firekeeper raced across the ground,
eschewing some stealth for speed. An arrow passed over her head,
confirming her guess that the kidnappers had constructed arrow
slits.
To her right she heard avian squawks of terror and knew that Blind
Seer had released the caged birds. Their terrified fluttering filled
the grove with shadows and her mouth with down. Nonetheless she
howled with glee.
“Well done!” she cried, then she was upon the
cabin.
At that moment she was all wolf and the human clamor from within
mattered no more to her than did the plaints of the game birds.
Pressing her back against the rough wood of the cabin, Firekeeper
studied the shutter to her left. Something darker was pressed against
it, peering out.
Dropping below the level of the sill, she crept into position,
then bounded up, thrusting the Fang’s blade through the shutter
slats. A shrill scream of pain rewarded her, but she was already
gone.
Darting around to the back she thudded her body’s weight
against the shutter there. It didn’t break open, but a shout of
alarm rose. She did not wait to see how those within would deal with
that supposed intrusion, but dropped back to the west side. Picking
up a chunk of firewood, she threw it with all her might against the
shutter. A few slats broke and there was another shout.
She was about to continue this game when a call rang out through
the night.
“Stop what you are doing at once or we will kill the Lady
Zorana!”
Firekeeper had expected something like this. Her goal had been to
keep those within guessing, nothing more. She trusted that they would
be reluctant to kill their prisoner—after all, what would
protect them thereafter? However, in a panic many a mother animal had
smothered her own young. Therefore, Firekeeper proceeded with
caution.
The cabin had a stone chimney on the east side. Firekeeper swarmed
up this, finding toe- and handholds with ease. Once on the roof, she
moved with great care, keeping her weight on the center beam. Using
the Fang, she pried away several of the shingles until she found a
crack between the roof boards through which she could peer. Within,
the cabin was lit by several lanterns so she had no trouble seeing
what was going on.
Two men prowled restlessly within, glancing out through the
shutters, hands dropping to their swords at every sound. Each also
had a bow. Arrows were set ready beside every window.
The men’s faces had been blackened, but one had a broad
slash on the cheekbone below one eye. Blood still leaked from the
wound and from time to time he dabbed at it with a folded piece of
cloth. Firekeeper spared a moment’s regret that her blade had
not gone in a bit higher.
Lady Zorana lay tied to a narrow bed set in the center of the
room. The bodice of her dress was open and her skirts were hiked up
over her naked lower body. She had stopped weeping now and watched
her captors with single-minded hatred.
A fourth person—an older man Firekeeper recalled as one she
had encountered in the forest from time to time, usually messing
about with birds or setting snares—was tied to a
straight-backed chair. His eyes above his gagged mouth look
frightened and a spreading bruise along one cheekbone gave ample
reason for that fear.
Watching the two men prowl, Firekeeper considered what to do next.
She had hoped to find Lady Zorana near one window or another, but the
kidnappers had anticipated that. Still, the cabin was not so large
that Zorana could not be reached easily enough from either window.
The old man should not be left to die either.
Firekeeper knew that she must find a way to distract the men
without giving them time to kill their prisoners and she must do so
quickly. Derian and the others could arrive any moment and their
presence could drive the kidnappers to foolishness.
Deciding, she dropped to the ground once more. Blind Seer met her
instantly. “Blind Seer, I want you to go find Derian and stop him
from coming further. Those kidnappers are afraid, but not yet
panicked. They may act rashly if further
pressed.”
The wolf growled agreement, but he wasn’t pleased.
“And what will you do alone, Firekeeper?” “I will set a fire,” she said. “The cabin is
wooden but for the chimney. I will kindle a fire here where they will
not see. Then I will drop smoking damp stuff down the chimney to
force them out. I can carry straw in the ruins of my breeches. To
make their choice easier, I will set fire to this western shutter
before I go to the roof. Then they will have trouble east and west
and me above.” “Will you then leave the others to burn
alive?” “No. I will break in the southern shutter and cut them
free. I don’t like breathing smoke, but I can hold my breath
long enough.”
“Dangerous,” Blind Seer replied, but she had
already begun to gather her kindling and straw. “I will go
find Derian, then. Someday you must learn to write. Then I could
carry a message telling them to be silent.”
Firekeeper nodded acceptance of his criticism, blowing on the
spark she had struck. By the time she had a flame licking the tinder,
the wolf had vanished. As she fed her flame, Firekeeper wished she
could just steal one of the torches, but knew that the burning brand
would make her too fine a target as she carried it across the
clearing.
When the flame was stronger, she kindled a bit of the western
shutter, kneeling below the lowest edge until it caught. Then, taking
her smoldering straw onto the roof, she stuffed it down the chimney.
The effect was immediate and satisfactory.
Coughing. Then a male voice choked out:
“Coming down the chimney! Stomp it!”
Firekeeper stuffed down more straw to make this last more
difficult. Darting to her peephole, she saw the man with the cut face
tromping on the straw. Then the other man noticed the smoke eddying
in at the window.
“The cabin’s on fire!” he shouted, racing to see
if he could put it out. “Grab the woman and get out of
here!”
This last suited Firekeeper fine. She waited until she saw
Zorana’s bonds had been cut, then went to the edge of the roof
on the south side. The eaves were lower here. Grabbing the roof edge
she swung down, her feet toward the shutter, forcing the full weight
of her descent into the wood. It splintered and she was through,
keeping her balance with the ease of one who had spent her life
climbing trees.
The wounded man stood by the bed. Despite the smoke and the fire
now reddening the west shutter, he reacted to Firekeeper’s
arrival by turning his knife in his hand and throwing it at her. She
dodged, but she had not even her hide for protection and the blade
sliced a furrow across her rib cage.
Before she could feel the pain, Firekeeper charged forward, her
Fang in one hand. The momentum of her charge knocked the now unarmed
man off his feet. She stomped on his hand, wishing this once for
boots, and pushed Zorana back toward the south window.
Zorana stumbled that direction, hampered by her skirts. Then,
seeing the other prisoner, she stopped and began fumbling with his
bonds.
“Out!” Firekeeper howled at her.
Then she howled again, returning to battle. Kneeing the wounded
man in the face as he struggled to rise, she flung herself at the
second man as he surged toward her, a sword held high in both his
hands, the blade arcing down toward her.
Firekeeper had nothing with which to parry. The first man was
clawing at her legs, making dodging nearly impossible. In
desperation, the wolf-woman did the only thing possible and darted
under the arch of descending blade.
This move kept her away from the sharp edge, but the hilt struck
her soundly between the shoulder blades, knocking the breath from her
lungs. Firekeeper fell into the swordman’s arms in a parody of
an embrace. She could feel him turning the sword in his hands, knew
he meant to stab her in the back.
Going limp was almost too easy. Before the man could arrange the
clumsy blade in order to stab, Firekeeper had dropped to her knees on
the floor, landing almost on top of the wounded man. He grasped at
her, trying to reestablish his hold.
Firekeeper kicked herself clear but the exertion caused her to
choke on the now smoky air. The air within the cabin was thick with
smoke. The sound of crackling wood as the fire claimed the west side
of the cabin and moved toward the roof loudly snapped in her
ears.
The man with the sword seemed to realize his own danger for the
first time.
“Get out!” he yelled to his comrade and turned to run.
The wounded man struggled to his feet, eager to follow. Firekeeper
made no move to stop him. In all honesty, she was not certain that
she could.
Dragging herself to her feet and turning weakly, she saw that
Zorana must have disobeyed her, for the tied man was no longer in his
chair. Through the smoke, Firekeeper glimpsed him clambering over the
windowsill. She followed, wondering why this seemed so weirdly
familiar, wondering if she would ever catch her breath, thinking
vaguely that fire was a very chancy ally indeed.
Then she felt packed earth cool beneath her feet. After a few
staggered steps forward, the air, too, cooled. She breathed it in
gratefully, though every gasp caused the place where the sword hilt
had struck her to throb. Her head cleared with each breath, then
Blind Seer was beside her.
“Little idiot,” he said fondly.
“Come away. Zorana and the gamekeeper are safe but the
kidnappers have escaped and the cabin is lost to the flames. Derian
and the rest fetch water now so that the fire will not spread to the
forest. The falcon Elation has carried a note back to King Tedric,
telling him all is well.”
Staggering slightly, glad for the wolf’s strength beneath
her hand, Firekeeper followed.
Far later, resting on a cushion on the floor of King Tedric’s
room in the Watchful Eye, Firekeeper learned the rest of the tale as
told by Lady Zorana. As had Firekeeper herself, Lady Zorana had been
bathed and given a loose linen shift to wear.
While the wolf-woman lay still, Doc’s hands traveled over
her various scrapes, cuts, and bruises, applying ointment and
bandages as was appropriate. From his touch emanated a strange
coolness that seemed to go to the heart of the pain and ease it at
once.
“And so after the brute had beaten poor Prince Newell until
he crumpled unconscious on the moss,” Lady Zorana said,
“he and his fellow dragged me through the forest and imprisoned
me in the cabin. They treated me badly…”
She paused and colored. King Tedric asked in level tones that
somehow conspired to make the brutal words gentle:
“Did they rape you?”
Zorana shook her head. “No, Uncle, but they handled me most
familiarly, making free with my person. I think if rescue had not
come they might have steeled themselves to the deed, but they rightly
feared pursuit.”
King Tedric frowned. “I wonder that they feared pursuit
before morning. Had I not summoned Lady Blysse, none could have found
them so swiftly. Pray, continue, Niece.”
“When Lady Blysse arrived,” Zorana said, glancing at
the young woman, a curious mixture of gratitude and resentment on her
face, “the men were ready to slay me rather than risk
themselves. They swore they would kill me and one stood over me with
a knife at my throat until the noises without died away. Lady Blysse
was clever, though. Smoking them out was a good idea.”
Firekeeper nodded in acknowledgment of the praise. Zorana
continued:
“They cut me loose and prepared to escape. When Lady Blysse
came in through the window shutter—and such a figure
you’ve never seen, naked as the day she was born but for a
knife belt, mud smeared on every inch of her skin—I hastened to
escape through the broken window. First I paused to cut loose the
gamekeeper. That poor man had done no wrong beyond living where those
ruffians wanted to be yet they had beaten him and tied him to a
chair, making him unwilling witness to their depravities. How is he,
Uncle?”
King Tedric turned to Doc. “Sir Jared?”
“The gamekeeper is resting,” Doc replied. “His
bones couldn’t take the battering. His jaw is broken and
several ribs are cracked. Saddest perhaps is that his mind has been
swallowed by fear of any man. The townsfolk tell me that he was
always simple. That’s why he was given that job. Weeks at a
time he would never see a human being. Then two strangers come and
steal his house to molest a lady. I had to call in a female healer
from one of the cavalry units to treat him. He just started screaming
whenever he laid eyes on me.”
Zorana said firmly, “I will arrange for the
gamekeeper’s care, for he took those injuries because of me. My
husband and I have lands he can care for if he wishes to leave here.
If he doesn’t wish to leave, I will pay for his home to be
rebuilt and for help recovering his birds.”
King Tedric nodded. “So be it. Is that the end of your
story, Zorana?”
“Almost. When the gamekeeper and I escaped from the cabin,
we found that other rescuers had come. One man took us in charge. The
rest went to put out the fire.”
Derian Carter cleared his throat and the king acknowledged
him.
“Firekeeper left a trail clear enough for Race to follow
even by torchlight,” Derian said. “We found the grove
from which Lady Zorana had been kidnapped and stopped to read a copy
of the ransom note that had been left there. When we drew near the
cabin and heard the noise from within we would have gone charging in,
making things worse from how Lady Zorana tells it, but then Blind
Seer appeared. By scaring our horses so he could drive them like
cattle, he made it known to us that we should approach the back of
the cabin. That’s how we were there when Lady Zorana needed
succor.”
“Thank you,” the king said. “I had wondered why
you were so conveniently placed. Lady Zorana, Lady Blysse, Prince
Newell, can any of you identify these ruffians? Though they were
stopped short of their intention, still I would have them
hanged.”
Firekeeper shook her head regretfully. “Not even by scent,
King Tedric. All they smelled of was lavender and the oiled ash they
had smeared on their faces.”
“They were disguised,” Lady Zorana agreed, “and
took care never to call each other by name. I would say that each had
borne arms in his time and that they were of Hawk Haven not Bright
Bay. They had not even the accent you hear in this border
region.”
“That is useful,” King Tedric acknowledged, “as
is the knife slash that Firekeeper left on one of their faces. Prince
Newell, have you anything to add?”
The prince shook his head sadly. He reeked of anger and remorse,
but Firekeeper couldn’t escape the feeling that he was not
being wholly truthful.
“I was attacked when my back was turned,” he said. “I guess you could call it that.” Blind Seer
commented dryly. Firekeeper smothered a giggle in her hand.
“And never saw my attacker clearly. I agree with Lady Zorana
that he knew something of combat. The way he went for me was not the
random flailing of a barroom brawler.”
Sir Dirkin frowned. “Unhappily, unless we find the man with
the fresh knife cut, we are at a complete loss. Too many residents of
these twinned towns are deserters or fled criminals. The towns’
policy is to protect them. My guess is that they are already away
across the river into Good Crossing. We shall not see them
again.”
“You think them opportunists then?” King Tedric
asked.
“I don’t know what I think them,” Sir Dirkin
replied, “but I expect that they will not take similar risks
again.”
“I see,” the king said, and once again Firekeeper had
the feeling that he was not saying all he thought.
Doc rose and bowed. “Your Majesty should rest, as should my
patients. For all her courage in reporting so clearly, Lady Zorana
has been sorely abused. I would like to dose her with an herbal
mixture to help her sleep without dreams. I also suggest that she
stay here within the fortress so that she will feel
secure.”
Lady Zorana looked as if she wished to reject such coddling but
was only too well aware that she needed it. King Tedric saved her
dignity by saying:
“I command that Zorana take your recommendation, Sir Jared.
Place yourself on call in the anteroom to my chamber, where you may
be available if anyone has need of your services. The rest of you are
dismissed. Remember, speak nothing of tonight’s events except
to keep rumor from exaggerating them beyond measure. Now, good night
and thank you.”
He gestured for Firekeeper to close with him and whispered in her
ear, “And be careful, little wolfling. There is wickedness
abroad.”
She bowed to him and with a thoughtful hand twined in Blind
Seer’s ruff followed Derian and Race back to the Kestrel
encampment.
Perhaps lady Zorana’s kidnapping and the daring rescue would
have been ferreted out by the nosy despite the best attempts of those
involved to keep the secret, but something happened to eclipse her
adventure. The next morning shortly before noon, news came across the
river that Stonehold was withdrawing its troops from where they were
bivouacked with those of Bright Bay.
Lady Zorana, returning from the Watchful Eye, brought additional
news to her brother. Despite the fact that others must be spreading
the same information, Zorana acted as if what she was reporting were
privileged information.
“Word has come to the Watchful Eye,” Zorana said, her
voice low and breathy with excitement, “that Generals Yuci and
Grimsel have sent a letter to Queen Gustin—with copies to her
representatives here—having to do with their discovery of
something about Bright Bay of which the Stone-hold government seems
to strongly disapprove. They have demanded that Queen Gustin the
Fourth come meet with them immediately. They say that if she does not
the alliance between Stonehold and Bright Bay otherwise will be
forever broken and war declared between their nations.”
Baron Archer cocked an eyebrow, but for all the steadiness with
which he stuffed his pipe neither Elise nor Zorana was fooled. He was
as surprised as anyone by the recent change in events. Silence merely
provided him with the opportunity to calculate what these changes
would mean to Hawk Haven.
Seeing that her father wasn’t going to give his sister the
satisfaction of a reply, Elise asked her aunt:
“How can they make such demands, Aunt Zorana? Certainly
foreign generals aren’t in a position to order a queen
about—especially in her own land!”
Zorana looked quite serious. “Foreign generals can try,
Elise, if their army provides much of the strength of that
queen’s army. Never forget, Bright Bay is powerful on the
sea—a rival for Waterland most say—but for a long time
now her army has depended on Stonehold for both troops and officers.
The withdrawal of their troops from among hers is a reminder to them
of that dependence.”
“An unwise dependence, I’ve always thought,”
commented Ivon Archer, “but it was an arrangement that enabled
Bright Bay to fully exploit her own rich naval resources. Stonehold
has seafront, but no ports deep enough for large ships, so her people
benefitted, too. Still, I’ve often wondered how much time would
pass before Bright Bay became a vassal state of Stonehold in fact if
not in name.”
“Then,” Elise pressed, “can Stonehold dictate to
Queen Gustin?”
“The question,” her father replied, “is not can
they—that’s just what they have done. The question is
whether or not Queen Gustin will permit herself to be given orders by
them and what her decision will mean for the rest of us.”
Later, arriving at the Kestrel encampment, Elise wasn’t
surprised to learn that news of this new development had reached the
earl’s retainers before her. After exhausting speculation on
how this new event might affect the negotiations between Hawk Haven
and Bright Bay, Derian, Fire-keeper, and Elise shifted to their more
immediate problem, planning the next step in their private campaign
against Lady Melina’s sorcery.
Elise was showing them the sketches she had made of the necklace
when Valet came out toward their makeshift conference center.
“Derian,” he called from a polite distance, “a
messenger has just arrived from King Tedric. You are requested to
meet with His Majesty and other of his counselors at the Watchful Eye
at your soonest convenience.”
“Ladies,” Derian said, looking both proud and nervous,
“will you excuse me?”
“Of course,” Elise replied, as Firekeeper nodded.
“Enjoy yourself. We’ll take these sketches into Hope. If
there is to be trouble, then all the more reason for having Sapphire
freed of her mother’s control.” And you, as well, Derian thought, but he said
nothing.
AFTER HURRIEDLY CHANGING INTO CLEAN SHIRT and breeches, Derian strode
toward the Watchful Eye. He noticed the occasional puzzled glance
flicked his way and heard one man say to another: “I know
he’s the newest counselor, but where’s the heir?”
Derian smiled quietly to himself. Let them stay a bit confused. He
was beginning to understand that governing was not unlike horse
trading—you held the advantage best when even your friends were
a bit off balance.
Earl Kestrel, already present at the fort, greeted Derian with the
courtesy, but not the condescension, of patron to dependent. He
gestured to a seat beside him.
“Is all well in our camp?”
“Yes, sir.”
At that moment, the king’s secretary rapped for silence and
they all stood as King Tedric entered the room. He can’t have had much sleep since last night,
Derian thought. Doc and the other medicos must be
furious.
King Tedric, however, didn’t look as if he needed
anyone’s coddling. Standing before his chair, leaning slightly
against the table in an attitude that seemed belligerent rather than
weak, he began the meeting.
“You are all,” he said without formality, “aware
of the changed situation between Stonehold and Bright Bay. In the
interests of forestalling rumors, I have summoned you here. My
secretary is going to read you several documents, the contents of
which I expressly wish to be shared with the men and women in your
various households and commands. At a time such as this, rumor and
misinformation are our greatest enemies. Farand, please
begin.”
He sank into his chair and Lady Farand Briarcott, a pinch-nosed
woman with snowy hair piled high on her head and a voice that could
command troops—and had indeed done so—rose, paper in
hand:
“This first missive,” Lady Farand announced,
“comes from the First Equal of Stonehold. It is also signed by
the Second Equal and the members of the advisory cabinet.
“ ‘To King Tedric I, Monarch of Hawk Haven, Knight
of the Eight-Rayed Star-”
“Skip that unzoranic nonsense and read the text,” the
king snapped.
Lady Farand gave a curt nod, ran her finger down the outer margin,
and recommenced: “Through our loyal generals, Yuci and Grimsel,
information has come to our ears that gives us to realize that the
support we have granted to the nation of Bright Bay was done while
that nation deliberately maintained a foul and most unreasonable
deception. “We have written to Queen Gustin the Fourth requesting a
meeting with herself. Until she grants this meeting and the results
of said meeting are satisfactory to our needs, we will withdraw the
military support which to this time we have granted Bright
Bay. “If subsequent to our meeting with Queen Gustin the
Fourth, Bright Bay persists in her foolish and dangerous practices,
we will have no choice but to declare war upon her. Moreover, in
light of these discoveries, we hereby warn you as ruler of Hawk Haven
that any efforts to support, succor, or in anyway ally with Bright
Bay will cause us to view you in an unfriendly light. “We have confided some measure of our concern on these
matters to the countries of New Kelvin and Waterland, noting that we
believe that the government of Hawk Haven is well aware of the
deception practiced by Bright Bay and that its refusal to share that
information constitutes an unfriendly act uncomely between
allies. “Note that if you remain neutral toward Bright Bay so we
will remain toward you and your people.”
Derian hardly heard as the secretary read off a long list of the
titles and names belonging to the distinguished signatories. As soon
as Lady Farand finished, voices were raised, some nearly shouting
frantic questions. King Tedric banged for silence.
“Listen to the rest of the correspondence,” he
demanded. “You may find some of your questions answered
therein.”
Lady Farand unfolded a shorter missive stating, “This one is
from the Plutarchs of Waterland: “To King Tedric… “Recent discoveries of foul secrets held by the Crown of
Bright Bay lead us to encourage you to stay away from entanglements,
whether civil or military, with that nation: “Waterland has always found it profitable to support
your kingdom’s continued freedom from Bright Bay’s
encroachment, especially upon the seas where our vessels could offer
our aid and protection. However, if you continue to treat with Bright
Bay without insisting on the destruction of their foul hoard, we
shall view you as one with them, no matter how separate your
boundaries. Your ships shall be to us as their ships: our rightful
prey. “We trust that a man of your great years and
well-respected wisdom thinks as we do in this matter.
Signed…”
The missive from New Kelvin, Hawk Haven’s other ally, was
much the same, though in this case the threat was to withdraw the
economic support and favored nation trading status which Hawk Haven
had hereto enjoyed.
Derian was already quite confused and anxious when Farand
Briarcott unrolled the final missive, a personal letter to King
Tedric from Allister Seagleam. “Uncle Tedric, “By now you must have heard the accusations of deception
and foul play being heaped upon Bright Bay by Stonehold. I hardly
know what to say. If there is any deep secret, I know nothing of it.
I came here as I told you, in sincere hopes of building a bridge
between our nations—in hopes of fulfilling the charge laid upon
me at my birth. “Now I must wait until Queen Gustin the Fourth decides
how to answer these demands. In the meantime, my family is held not
quite prisoner in our residence by guards supplied by our own people
and supported by those members of Queen Gustin’s court who do
not wish to risk that any small action of mine might be interpreted
by Stonehold’s spies as an excuse for war. As we are no longer
free to come and go, I fear I can no longer attend our planned
conferences. I deeply regret this. “In hopes of resolution of this strange situation, I am,
your nephew, Allister Seagleam.”
Lady Farand’s reseating herself seemed a signal for the
hubbub to erupt once again. King Tedric let the confused babble go on
for a few moments, then recognized a senior army commander:
“Your Majesty,” the man said, “what is this? Do
you know of any dark secret?”
“In answer to your first question,” King Tedric said,
“ ‘this’ is a warning to us from our three
neighboring countries that if we meddle in any way, peaceful or not,
in the affairs of Bright Bay, we will find ourselves viewed as
enemies as well.
“As to your second question: How could I know what dark
secrets Bright Bay conceals? I have never been there.”
While Derian was admiring the fashion in which the king had
avoided a direct answer to the latter question, Ivon Archer was
recognized:
“Your Majesty, I recommend that we prepare to attack Bright
Bay as soon as Queen Gustin arrives to negotiate with Stonehold. If
we take her, we have her kingdom. War between our peoples would be
ended. If there is something in Bright Bay’s
treasury—this ‘foul secret’ alluded to—we
will then be in a position to turn it over to Stonehold. All wars
will be ended.”
“I agree with that,” said Rolfston Redbriar, not to be
outdone. “Everyone knows that Bright Bay’s power is on
the seas, not on the land. Since Stonehold has withdrawn her troops,
we could defeat Bright Bay’s remaining force handily. We
already have a base of operations set up here at the Watchful Eye.
Stonehold does not. Moreover, we have the Barren River between
ourselves and Bright Bay. Stonehold, even if it brings in
reinforcements, will share ground with those it seeks to conquer. The
very countryside will rise against them. We are secure in our own
lands. Our supply lines need cross no enemy territory.”
There was more clamor along similar lines. Derian could
practically feel the blood-lust rising and wondered if Stonehold had
anticipated this reaction on the part of Hawk Haven. Gripping the
edge of the table hard, he listened and said nothing, feeling more
than ever a mere carter’s son. At last King Tedric banged his
gavel on the table and said, his tones dry and ironic:
“So I am to understand that most of you are in favor of
taking advantage of this situation to invade Bright Bay, never mind
that our own navy would be forfeit to Waterland, never mind that New
Kelvin has promised economic repercussions and could quite possibly
offer more than that if it felt threatened.”
No one moved for a moment; then Prince Newell asked to be
recognized.
“As one who has recently served with our navy,” said
the prince, “I would like to offer my opinion on
Waterland’s threat.”
“Speak,” King Tedric said.
“Our navy,” the prince said, a feverish light in his
eyes, “could be warned of what we intend to do. Our ships could
temporarily withdraw into secure waters, leaving Waterland’s
fleet to futilely sweep a vacant sea. When the reunification of
Bright Bay with Hawk Haven is completed, our newly augmented navy
will be large enough to deal fairly with
Waterland’s.”
Derian saw many of the soldiers nod and smile in approval of
Prince Newell’s vision. Hawk Haven’s weakness upon the
seas had long been a sore point among the military, but a nation with
only one major harbor and no offshore holdings could not expect to
compete with nations like Bright Bay and Waterland, overblessed as
they were with ports.
“Thank you, Prince Newell,” King Tedric said.
“If we do move against Bright Bay, certainly we will take your
advice and warn the navy in advance.”
Derian thought that the prince looked a bit deflated, even a bit
miffed, to hear his dream of naval domination reduced to such a
simple point. King Tedric didn’t allow the prince time to
retort. Instead he asked his assembled counselors:
“You all seem to believe that we could easily conquer Bright
Bay. Tell me, though, is creating three enemies where before we had
none— for we are at peace with Bright Bay never you
forget—is that a fair trade?”
“Peace,” spat an old soldier, his exposed skin fairly
seamed with scars, “peace that erupts in border raids and
banditry, not to mention privateering upon the seas! Call that peace
if you wish. I call it war.“
“Peace,” said young Purcel Archer, his voice light in
contrast. “I wish I thought we were at peace. However, if we
truly believed what we had with Bright Bay was peace why did Your
Majesty need such a large and heavily armed escort just to meet with
your foreign-born nephew? Doesn’t that speak of a tension
greater than that of peace?”
“What both of you say,” King Tedric sighed,
“holds an element of truth, but peace—even peace with
border raids and armed tension—kills far fewer men and women
than even one pitched battle. Think carefully before you advise this
course.”
A slim woman not much older than Derian himself but wearing a
uniform decorated with honors up and down the sleeves, said into the
silence following the king’s statement:
“Your Majesty is correct. My fellows should remember that
Waterland and New Kelvin have long supported us—as Stonehold
has Bright Bay-not from love of us or of our way of life but from
fear of what we might become if we were one nation with Bright Bay.
Think you. You see a touch of that fear now directed toward Bright
Bay. Do you think it would fade to nothing if we conquered our old
rival and so became the great country that they have long feared?
Neutrality is the answer to this difficulty. Let Bright Bay pay for
her sins—whatever they are—herself. Perhaps then she will
have the humility to leave us to our lives and the border raids will
cease.”
There were a good number of muttered agreements at this, mostly
from the very grizzled veterans—those who knew what a pitched
battle could be—or the very young officers who were beginning
to dread the learning.
“Yet that neutrality means,” said Prince Newell, his
voice as clear as a bell, “that we will resign ourselves to
forever being at war. We can do this—we have for over a hundred
years since the end of the Civil War. Yet I find myself thinking of
my aunt’s son, this Allister Seagleam who came to us with such
touching hopes for peace. Are we to leave him and his
children—two of them just small girls—to the mercies of
Stonehold’s army because we fear the future? I say then that we
are not worthy of that future! I say war now for those little girls.
War now for a future of peace! What good are allies who support us
merely to keep us weak? I say defy them and show our
strength!”
An unguarded cheer greeted the conclusion of this stirring speech.
King Tedric, however, only smiled dryly:
“So, Prince Newell, you believe we should conquer Bright Bay
in order to preserve her against an army that has not yet declared
war. That is an interesting policy. However, it is good to see how
many of you would go to war to protect my nephew’s little
girls.”
After this evaluation, King Tedric fell silent and all the room
fell silent with him in respect of the burden that was his alone to
bear. They might counsel, but the king alone must decide.
When Tedric raised his head from his hands, decision was written
in the aged lines on his face.
“War it shall be.” He raised his hand to still the
cheering that arose at these words. “Not a war of conquest, a
different war than any you have suggested. We shall start our way to
peace with Bright Bay by offering our support to her in this time of
trouble, by giving our support to those who came here to treat for
peace.
“When or if Queen Gustin the Fourth comes, she shall
encounter us not as enemies, but as those who are willing to maintain
her rights against those who would take them. If false allies are to
be unmasked and flouted, then we must be well on the way to making
true ones. Are you with me?”
The cheer that greeted the conclusion of this speech was pure
acclaim, so loud and ready that it made that which had answered
Prince Newell sound like the thready wail of a newborn kitten. Even
as his own voice joined the cry, Derian wondered to find tears on his
face, streaming from eyes he had been certain must be bright with
joy.
XXIII
MY NATION IS ON THE BRINK OF WAR, Elise thought.
Some of our troops have crossed the Barren River and stand between
our former enemy and their former friend. Others make a tight cordon
along the banks of the Barren and scouts patrol the farther reaches
lest we miss some hint of invasion while our attention is centered
here. My nation is on the brink of war and what do I do? I go
shopping for jewelry.
She smiled ruefully, knowing how unjust she was being to herself.
Still, there had never been a time in her life that she so regretted
being unskilled with a bow or sword and being rather squeamish at the
thought of killing another living thing.
Five days had passed since King Tedric made his decision to
support Bright Bay if Stonehold enforced its threat to answer Queen
Gustin’s refusal to speak with their representatives with arms.
The necessity had become rapidly apparent, for Queen Gustin’s
refusal to meet with Stonehold had come a mere two days after
Stonehold’s initial demand had been made.
Gustin’s letter (a copy of which had been sent to King
Tedric) simply refused to permit an outside power—no matter how
friendly—to give her orders. Her response had been blunt,
leaving no room for misinterpretation. Forced to either declare war
or have their threats called as a bluff, Stonehold had attacked.
They had been rebuffed for two reasons. One, Good Crossing’s
walls had held—though they would not hold against another such
press. Two, King Tedric had his troops ready to march. As the first
volley of arrows had been fired, Bridgeton had opened her broad span
to permit Hawk Haven to come to aid Bright Bay.
Stonehold’s relatively small army—for Yuci and Grimsel
only had those troops which had been withdrawn from Bright
Bay’s own army— had been unable to take a walled city
while being attacked on their flank by a second, stronger force.
Still, they had done considerable damage. Good Crossing’s walls
were no longer unbreached, forcing Duke Allister to bring his troops
out into the fields surrounding the city.
A large, relatively open area to the south and west of Good
Crossing had become the acknowledged battleground. Stonehold had
pulled back to the southern edge while the combined forces of Hawk
Haven and Bright Bay held the area outside of Good Crossing and along
the Barren River.
Elise’s own role in all of this martial activity had been
comparatively insignificant. While others dashed hither and
yon—important in armor, freshened blazons on their
shields—she wound bandages or blended ointments and tinctures
for the infirmary with inexpert hands.
Baron Archer had hinted that Elise might do well to return to
Eagle’s Nest, where she would be safe if Stonehold managed to
cross the Barren. Elise had pretended not to understand those hints
and her father had let the matter drop. Doubtless he had come to
realize how unjust he had been in hotheadedly branding his daughter a
traitor, but he could not press her to leave this sensitive area
without risking that she raise the matter once more.
At least the commanders of Bright Bay’s troops had been wise
enough to accept the help offered by Hawk Haven. Allister Seagleam
had taken advantage of his place as senior noble present to become
effectively commander in chief of the Bright Bay forces. His first
command had been that his officers work with those of Hawk Haven.
Yet, despite Duke Allister’s efforts to smooth things over,
tempers were short and trust shorter still.
Duke Allister’s task might have been easier if Lord Tench,
the queen’s advisor, had remained, but he had departed on a
fast horse to advise Queen Gustin as to the situation. It was still
uncertain whether Gustin IV would come to Good Crossing at all. On
that matter, the rumor mill was most vocal and most
contradictory.
Some said the queen was on her way from Silver Whale Cove, armed
and armored and leading a host of noble knights, fronting a band of
blooded marines. This was a favorite among Bright Bay’s
troops—never mind that Bright Bay’s nobility was more
comfortable on the command deck of a ship than on horseback and that
those marines would be scattered among dozens of ships.
Or the queen was waiting in her castle in the capital, afraid for
her life. She would deal with the situation once others had risked
life and limb. This was the favorite of the more cynical elements of
Hawk Haven’s forces.
Or yet, the queen was coming in disguise and on a fast horse,
ready to negotiate terms that would keep her nation independent now
that Stonehold had actually used its teeth. This was the favorite of
those on both sides who had actually thought about the text of
Stonehold’s demands.
Or the queen had fled to safety in the Isles. The queen was
already present but keeping her exact whereabouts secret. The queen
was dead or ill or pregnant. The queen didn’t matter—what
mattered was force of arms upon this one field.
That last was what Elise herself dreaded would prove true. The
situation seemed to have progressed beyond what rational words and
negotiation could achieve. Armor had been polished, swords sharpened,
arrows newly fletched. The only seemingly impossible thing in all
this chaotic and unpredictable situation was that these would be
returned to armory, sheath, and quiver unblooded and unstained.
Her thoughts running thus, Elise needed Ninette’s tap on her
sleeve to alert her when they had reached Wain Cutter’s shop.
Over the past several days, Elise had grown quite comfortable with
Wain. Whereas on their first visit she had hardly noticed him as a
person, now she found the thoughtful calmness of his hound-dog
features comfortable in the midst of confusion and the way he rubbed
his bald pate when working his way through a problem rather
endearing.
Wain had set to work on their second commission as soon as they
had given it to him. His first step had been locating gems of a size
and color to match those in Zorana’s necklace. He had been
lucky with the sapphire and the ruby, but a citrine of the deep
cognac shade favored by Lady Melina had been difficult to find, and
he had been forced to cut the gem himself. The opal had been gained
after negotiations with a rival across the river and then cut down to
match the others. The jet he had also cut himself—though from a
different piece than that which had supplied Elise’s new
betrothal pendant.
Although Derian had accompanied Elise that first morning to
explain the new commission to Wain Cutter, the developing military
situation had given him no time to join her since. If he was not in
some meeting, he was making Firekeeper buckle on her armor or acting
as reserve farrier for Earl Kestrel’s command.
Firekeeper was busy as well. Elise rather suspected the king had
given the wolf-woman some task or other, for she often vanished for
entire half-days. One of the tasks Firekeeper was almost certainly
performing was scouting, and Elise doubted that Firekeeper remained
on Hawk Haven’s side of the river or that all the reports she
delivered were restricted to the ostensible enemy’s
readiness.
Yet it was Firekeeper who made certain to check with Elise several
times a day and Firekeeper who had not forgotten in the new turmoil
that within their own camp, a few long paces away from the pavilion
in which Elise herself slept, was one who might be more dangerous
than any army.
Now Elise bent her head over the finished necklace that Wain
Cutter proudly spread out upon a piece of white velvet for her
inspection.
“I finished it early this morning,” he said,
“rose before the dawn. Couldn’t get it off my mind,
dreamed of it even. I got the feeling that it wanted to be made and
that I shouldn’t be holding it up.”
Elise nodded comprehension, though she didn’t really
understand such obsession.
“It’s lovely,” she said honestly, admiring the
gentle curve of silver with the five diamond-shaped pendants hanging
down, “but the silver looks just the slightest bit
scratched.”
“Patina,” Wain explained hastily, rubbing his pate in
quick circles as if polishing the baldness. “That’s what
that’s called. It makes a piece of jewelry look not so new.
Soft metals like silver and gold often acquire a patina after
they’ve been worn for a time.”
He colored and Elise knew why. If you were asked to duplicate a
famous—even notorious—piece of jewelry by people who
swore you into secrecy, it wasn’t a great jump for even a slow
mind to guess that maybe a substitution was planned. And Wain Cutter
was not a slow man at all. He hurried on, talking fast as if to cover
an awkward pause in the conversation that hadn’t yet
occurred.
“Of course, if you’re wanting it looking bright and
new, I can shine it up and buff out the patina.”
Elise smiled at him. “No, the patina is perfect.
You’re right. It gives the piece the look of an old family
heirloom rather than something commissioned by that market woman who
discovered she was the only heir to a duke.”
There was a popular comic song about that very situation. For
generations tavern drunks and small children alike had enjoyed
reeling off the long list of the things the market woman had ordered
when she had discovered that she was to be a “duchess
fine.”
The words of one verse rose unbidden from Elise’s memory and
she had to resist the urge to hum along with the jaunty tune: A sweeping gown of fine brocade, A long-maned, elegant pacing jade, An ivory board on which games were played, For these all in future coin she paid, That soon to be duchess
fine!
But resist Elise did, for Wain was unhooking the sapphire pendant
and showing her its catch.
“Getting these right was the biggest trick,” he was
saying, “for you told me that each pendant needed to be
removable with some ease, yet remain firm set the rest of the time. I
appreciated those sketches you made for me.”
Elise nodded acknowledgment. It hadn’t been at all easy to
see how the pendants were held in place and had meant spending far
more time in Lady Melina’s company than she had desired.
Fortunately, Lady Melina, like everyone else, was eager to
demonstrate her support of King Tedric’s war and had spent many
hours in the infirmary.
There Elise’s persistence had been rewarded. She had
contrived to tangle into Lady Melina’s necklace a stray end of
linen thread from the bandage strips she was cutting, snagging both
the opal and ruby pendants. Greatly annoyed, Lady Melina had rebuked
her sharply, then permitted her to untangle the mess to make
amends.
Afterward, Elise had nearly fled the infirmary to sketch the
details before she forgot them. She didn’t doubt that Lady
Melina believed she scurried off to sob at the harshness of Her
Ladyship’s words, but in the interest of the greater good,
Elise could live with a little loss of dignity.
“Very fine work, absolutely marvelous,” she said,
meaning every word of her praise. “I am amazed you could do
such complex work from an amateur’s sketch.”
“There’s a logic in it, my lady,” Wain said
complacently, “that guides a crafter through the job. Your
sketch was a map, but my skill taught me to make sense of
it.”
“Then the necklace is ready for me to take?” Elise
asked.
“It is.” With a final proud and affectionate glance at
his creation, Wain tucked it into a little bag of dark red
velvet.
Elise paid him in a mixture of credit tokens, some bearing the
Archer mark, others that of the Eagle, still others the local guild
mark. Before he had been called to other duties, Derian had changed
the Kestrel tokens he and Firekeeper possessed into local marks,
thereby muddying the trail should any wonder why Lady Elise had spent
such a great sum. Some Archer marks were necessary, however, for
Elise had excused her frequent visits on the grounds that Wain was
making her a bracelet to bring back to Lady Aurella.
Wain gave her the bracelet as well, a pretty thing of cut
gemstones set upon a heavy silver band. He had adapted it from a
design he had been working on before their new commissions had
distracted him. It was complex enough to excuse Elise’s visits
and yet not too expensive for her already strained purse.
Thanking the jeweler, Elise forced herself to visit several more
shops before returning to camp. There she settled herself to rolling
bandages and listening to the anxious gossip of the noncombatants
while waiting for Firekeeper to make an appearance.
The wolf-woman glided into Elise’s pavilion late that night,
long after Elise had snuffed out her candle.
“You have it,” she whispered after she had woken
Elise.
“I do.”
“And you will put sleeping herbs into Lady Melina’s
food and that of Opal and the nurse?”
“I’ll try.” Even though she was whispering,
Elise could hear the note of doubt in her own voice.
“You must,” Firekeeper urged. “When you do this
leave this stone…”
Elise felt something flat and vaguely oval-shaped set next to her
on the cot.
“… on the ground outside of your pavilion just the
other side of your sleeping. I will find it there and know that we
may hope that they are sleeping deep.”
“I will,” Elise whispered. “It may take a few
days to find an opportunity.”
“I know. That’s why I bring the stone. Good luck. I
know you will be brave.”
There was a faint stirring of air and Elise knew she was alone
again. For a long time she lay awake, staring into the darkness, and
wondering if she was indeed the least bit brave.
Allister Seagleam knew something that no one else knew. He knew which
of the rumors about Queen Gustin IV was true. He knew, but the
knowing brought him little comfort. Tench had returned the evening
before—cautious, worried, little Lord Tench who was Lord Tench
rather than Tench Clark because of his service to Her Majesty, first
as her secretary when she was Crown Princess Valora, later as a
trusted member of her diplomatic corps.
And with him Lord Tench had carried letters: letters commanding
generals to hold fast and obey Allister Seagleam as they would her
royal self; letters to other nobles in the entourage who might not
think this a good idea; letters to Allister’s children telling
them to obey their father and be the firm deck under his feet in this
tossing storm. Lastly there was a letter to Allister himself telling
him much the same and assuring him of the queen’s support.
This was the letter for public eyes, for possible spies. Allister
Seagleam doubted that even Lord Tench had read it—though he was
certainly privy to the contents of the others. Gustin IV had left
nothing to chance, however. This letter was triply sealed and
encoded. The key to this code had been given to Allister by Gustin
herself when he had departed Silver Whale Cove to meet with King
Tedric. She swore that no one else knew it and Allister believed her.
From a small girl, Gustin had been good with numbers and puzzles. She
was quite capable of constructing and employing a code without any
assistance.
Once he had decoded the letter, it read: “Dear Cousin, “I wish I could come to your side—and indeed to
the forefront of this battle that has been thrust upon our people.
Sadly, I cannot. What Stonehold accuses us of may indeed be true as
they see things. There are secrets known only to the monarchs of
Bright Bay. To share them even with you, cousin, would be treason. If
in some mysterious fashion Stonehold has learned one of these
secrets, I certainly cannot confirm the rightness or wrongness of
their knowledge by rushing to Good Crossing at their command as might
a kitchen maid called to task by cook for breaking a
platter. “So here I remain. Soon you will hear tales that pirate
activity on the coast forces me to remain in the capital. Part at
least will be true. Here I must remain until either you come home
victorious or Stonehold’s generals batter down my
door. “Tench tells me that King Tedric has offered his
alliance for the nonce and that you in my name have accepted it. I
shall support you in this, even before those who whine about your
foreign blood. They are asses. You did the only thing you
could—accept a new ally when an old turned against
you. “Standing fast is only part of your duty. You must drive
Stonehold out. I realize that military command was never your
ambition, but I know you well. You have a fair mind and will weigh
the advice given to you by those who do know that art before deciding
a course of action. “As soon as this war is resolved, I will reward you as
you deserve. For now, I fear you will need to settle for my
thanks.”
The formalities which ended the letter were fluff and vanity.
Allister stared at the missive for quite a long while before folding
it into thirds, smoothing it flat, and tucking it into the interior
pocket of his waistcoat. Then he headed outside to attend to the
duties assigned to him, not altogether certain that Queen Gustin IV,
guardian of dark secrets, was as worthy of his loyalty as she clearly
believed she was.
In the midst of this martial preparation, Lady Elise Archer, heiress
to a barony earned by her grandfather in battle, went into the fray
herself, but her battleground was a dinner party and her weapon a
flask of fine-ground powder.
It had been easy enough to arrange the party. Ever since the entry
of Duke Allister Seagleam and his brood into the competition for the
throne of Hawk Haven, the alliance between the family of Rolfston
Redbriar with that of Baron Archer had been strained. Nor had Jet
Shield’s failure to behave as a properly betrothed young man
should helped the situation.
So when Lady Elise had chosen not to spend overmuch time with her
betrothed, she had been well within her rights. Equally so, when she
invited her betrothed and his family, including sisters and father,
to dine with her in the sumptuous Archer pavilion, they were not
likely to refuse.
Baron Archer dined with them, but before the sweets and cheese he
returned to his command. Lord Rolfston, never wishing to seem less
the warrior than his rival, excused himself soon thereafter. Soon Jet
and Sapphire also departed, each having accepted temporary military
posts. Sapphire now rode with the cavalry under the command of Earl
Kestrel. Jet was learning to hate drilling with the foot soldiers and
to hate even more their sly smiles as they invited him night after
night to join them on visits to the camp followers’ tents.
Elise was glad to see them go. Sapphire’s pain was obvious
to her though her cousin hid it bravely. Elise feared that her own
sympathy would seem too knowing and so guarded her own words and then
worried that she seemed cold. Every word Jet spoke, every courtly
gesture he made infuriated Elise, but this fury was directed not at
him, but at herself for allowing romanticism and ambition to
overwhelm her native good sense.
Their departure left Elise with Melina and Opal just as she had
planned. She brought out a cunningly crafted miniature game board.
For a while they played hopping pegs and gossiped just as if they
were at home. When Ninette brought out elegant goblets of strongly
flavored mint cordial, Elise dissolved the sleeping powder into two
of them. Lady Melina and Opal, absorbed in counting the score and
arguing over the values of various strategies, never saw her.
When Melina drank her goblet to the last honey-green drop, Elise
felt like dancing. Opal, ever her mother’s shadow, did the
same. Glancing at Ninette, Elise hid a smile at the sign the other
woman made her. As planned, Ninette had shared her mistress’s
hospitality with the sour crone who waited on Lady Melina. The signal
meant that Nanny too had drunk the sleeping draught. Elise’s
part in the exchange of the necklace was completed.
And indeed after another round of their game, Lady Melina yawned,
delicately patting her lips with a beringed hand.
“I apologize, dear Elise. It must be all your good food on
top of rising with the sun. I am so tired I can hardly keep my eyes
open.”
Opal blinked owlishly. “Me, too. May I beg to be
excused?”
Elise feigned drowsiness herself. “Of course. Let me walk
you back to your pavilions. Ninette will dash ahead and tell Nanny to
expect you.”
She escorted her guests back and returned to her own tent,
brimming with triumph. Then she set in place the river cobble
Firekeeper had brought her the night before. It was a pretty thing
when seen in daylight, greyish white, veined with black,
smooth-polished by the rapidly flowing waters of the Barren.
Elise settled in to wait for Firekeeper to arrive and claim the
substitute necklace. Surfeited with success, she worked a piece of
embroidery near a lamp to pass the time.
Time passed. Ninette finished cleaning up from the dinner party
and came in to help Elise braid her hair for bed. More time passed.
Ninette went into her own curtained alcove and blew out her candle.
Still more time passed. Elise finished one rose and began on another.
She heard the guards change shifts and fought sleep.
After the second guard shift, Elise was no longer tired. She
realized that something had happened to delay Firekeeper, perhaps for
the entire night. It need not be that the wolf-woman was in any
difficulty. Undoubtedly she had been sent scouting. She might not
return before dawn. Elise pricked the canvas and drew some pink
thread through, her mind racing.
She could not hope to give Lady Melina the sleeping drug twice and
go undetected. Perhaps it was her own nervousness, but the more she
remembered the sorceress’s gaze the more it seemed to her that
beneath the drowsiness there had been a hint of suspicion. The
embroidery canvas dropped unheeded into Elise’s lap. She knew
what the only course of action left to her was, but she took another
several minutes to work herself up to it.
Then, moving like one in a dream, Elise rose from her cot. Among
her clothing were some riding breeches dyed dark forest green and a
matching long-sleeved blouse. Donning these, Elise then stepped into
the soft leather house slippers she wore around the tent, for she was
no Firekeeper to go barefoot. Lastly, she tucked the substitute
necklace into the band of her breeches.
Walking softly on the carpeted floors of the pavilion was easy.
She left her lit candle on the table, protected by a tin shield, and
stepped into the night.
Outside, the stars and moon were dimmed by light high clouds that
raced along, pushed by a wind unfelt by those on the ground. Elise
waited until her eyes adjusted to the dimmer light, then moved
purposefully toward the Shield encampment.
There were many more tents here than in her own doss: a smallish
one for Jet, one large enough to stand in for Sapphire and Opal, a
square-bodied one for Lord Rolfston, and a fine pavilion for Lady
Melina. Sometimes Opal slept with her mother. Other times Nanny did
so. Only Lord Rolfston must negotiate to share his wife’s
sleeping space. Lady Melina claimed he snored.
When she passed his tent Elise had to agree. The deep, steady
vibrations shook the air even through the muffling of thick canvas.
Within, the noise must be terrible. Elise fought down a nervous
desire to giggle. Then the realization of what she was about to do
hit her and she sobered instantly.
Reaching Lady Melina’s pavilion, Elise ducked inside before
she could lose her nerve. The air was thick and muggy with trapped
breath. The interior of the pavilion seemed so dark and close that
she nearly panicked and ran outside again, never mind her mission.
Then she stilled herself.
Over the last several days she had been in here many times,
usually fetching something Lady Melina had forgotten. Opal hated
running errands for her mother and such a menial task was beneath
Nanny’s dignity. Both had been happy that the newly dutiful
daughter-in-law was willing to do it.
Now Elise called the floor plan into her mind’s eye, counted
the steps as she had done earlier when she had intended to pass the
information on to Firekeeper, never dreaming she would need it for
herself. At six steps, just as she had estimated, her hand touched
the curtain. Another three steps and she could hear Lady
Melina’s breathing. There was no mistaking the characteristic
scent of lilacs that permeated her bed linens.
Firekeeper claimed to know how to see in the dark, but Elise had
no such skill. Instead, she moved her hand to where the top of
Melina’s head should be. Slowly, carefully, she brought it down
until she touched ever so lightly the top of the older woman’s
head. Tracing her fingertips along the sleeping woman’s hair,
Elise estimated where her throat must be.
The next step was something she never would have dared if she
hadn’t known Melina was drugged. She touched her again, hoping
to feel the body-warmed silver of the necklace. Instead she felt
skin. Again. Again skin. A desperate terror rose within her. What if
Lady Melina took the necklace off after all and stowed it away? What
if this was all a terrible mistake?
Resisting the impulse to flee, Elise tried again. On her fourth
try, she touched metal. A sob of relief rose unbidden in her throat.
She swallowed it before she made any but the faintest sound, then
stood like a stone, listening. All she heard was the steady, distant
roar of Lord Rolfston’s snoring.
Reaching with both hands now, Elise slid her fingers along the
necklace until she felt the clasp. Undoing this without being able to
see it proved nearly impossible. Her hands fumbled until she
pretended that she was reaching up behind her own neck, undoing a
similar clasp as she had hundreds, even thousands of times before.
The clasp opened and she slipped the necklace off.
Grasping the necklace in her teeth, Elise quickly took the
counterfeit from her waistband. Thankfully, it was warm from contact
with her body. She placed it against the sleeping woman’s
throat. Melina stirred restlessly, muttered something.
Hurriedly, Elise fastened the clasp. The original necklace still
held between her teeth because she did not trust herself not to drop
it, Elise turned slowly, walked three steps, and found the
curtain.
The doorway out of the pavilion was comparatively easy to find,
the variance between dark and darker easy for her adjusted eye to
see. Six steps and she was to the pavilion door and outside. Not
wanting to cross the Shield compound again, she slipped behind Lady
Melina’s tent. Now she dropped the necklace into her hand,
holding it so tightly the metal dented the skin. Elise was nearly
back to her own tent when she realized someone had followed her.
Sapphire Shield, clad in a long sleeping gown that looked black in
the faint starlight but was almost certainly dark blue, stood in the
open ground in front of the Archer tent watching her. She motioned
Elise into Elise’s own pavilion. Elise obeyed, not because
Sapphire held her bare sword in her hands but because she wanted the
relative privacy. Her father and his man were with Baron
Archer’s command. Only Ninette was within and she knew
everything of importance.
When they were inside, Sapphire said in low tones:
“I saw you coming out of my mother’s tent.”
“Yes,” Elise said calmly, revealing what she held in
her hand. “I’ve stolen your mother’s
necklace.”
Sapphire’s eyes narrowed in suspicion. Even in light from
the single candle on the table, Elise could see her hand move
restlessly along the hilt of her sword. A pang of pure terror soured
Elise’s stomach. What other controls might Melina Shield have
put on her children? But Sapphire said only a single word.
“Why?”
The truth rose unbidden to Elise’s lips. “I want to
set you free.”
Sapphire’s eyes widened. “How much do you
know?”
“Enough. Enough to know about pain that never fades from
wounds that seem to be healing and about the biting of
ants.”
“We must do it tonight,” Sapphire said. “Before
my mother learns anything is different.”
“I left a substitute,” Elise said with pardonable
pride.
“I’m certain it is beautifully crafted,”
Sapphire said, “but can we be certain it is enough?”
Elise shook her head. “No, we can’t, but I know
nothing about how to perform a disenchantment.”
A husky voice spoke from the doorway. “Hazel Healer may
know. We must ask her.”
Firekeeper stood in the doorway, the oval river rock in her
hand.
“I only just come,” she explained, “from across
the river. I see this, then I hear. You not need me after all,
Elise.”
Elise nearly crumpled, her knees suddenly weak as she realized
that all her risk had been for nothing. Then she straightened.
“I handled it,” she said simply. “And my cousin
is right. We need to do something with this as soon as
possible.”
Firekeeper turned. “Then I am away to Hazel. Can you two
come to her house or do I bring her here?”
Elise glanced at Sapphire. Sapphire frowned thoughtfully.
“The road to town is going to be watched and we’ll be
obvious. There’s no rule against our going to town, but
I’d prefer not to raise comment. These tents with their canvas
walls are as public as a street.”
A wicked grin lit the wolf-woman’s face. “Why not the
forest? I think every sort of thing goes on in that forest. I meet
you there with Hazel.”
“Do you think she’ll come?” Elise asked.
“Oh, yes,” Firekeeper grinned again, and Elise found
herself thinking what a predatory thing a smile could be. “I
will ask her very nicely.”
Elise took advantage of the walk to the edge of the forest to tell
Sapphire everything she knew, including what they had learned from
Hazel about both trance induction and enchantment. In return,
Sapphire told her a little about what it was like being a daughter of
Melina Shield.
“I’m not certain I have ever had a choice of my own in
my entire life,” Sapphire said. Her tone was blunt, without a
trace of whining. “And much of the time I’m not certain I
even minded. While others worried about what color to wear, I always
knew. My jewels, my horses, my pets, even my playmates were all
neatly chosen within two parameters: whether they were blue and
whether they fit the traditions and mystique of my noble
ancestors.”
“And you never minded?” Elise asked hesitantly.
Sapphire shrugged. “It didn’t seem much different from
how everyone else I knew lived. My parents didn’t encourage us
to cultivate friends outside of the Great Houses. There was even some
debate about your suitability, you know.”
“Oh?”
“Yes. Archer is a lesser house, but in the end Mother
decided that the close relationship to the Crown could not be
ignored. Moreover, your mother is a Wellward and intimate with the
queen.”
“I see.”
Sapphire’s tone was so matter-of-fact that Elise found it
easy not to take offense. Her cousin was reporting history—past
history—not getting in a subtle dig.
“When did you start,” Elise asked, changing the
subject, “resenting your mother’s control?”
“Not until recently,” Sapphire admitted, “not
until you and Jet pushed me down in the running for the Crown and
diminished me in her eyes. Then I got angry at her as well as at
you.”
“Not at your father?”
“Father,” Sapphire said in those same level tones,
“doesn’t matter. He has never mattered. He may be the
king’s nephew, the only son of Grand Duke Gadman, but he
doesn’t matter—except that he has good connections and
came with generous holdings.”
They had reached the forest trail by then. Casting about with the
narrow beam from their lantern, they found a fallen tree trunk set
alongside the path several paces within the fringe of trees. The lack
of bark and low polish along its upper surface testified that they
were not the first to employ it as a bench.
Once they were seated, they turned the lantern low so as not to
waste oil. A chance play of light touched the faceted sapphire set in
the band on Sapphire’s forehead.
“I never asked,” Elise said, “but I’ve
always wondered, doesn’t that headband get
uncomfortable?”
Sapphire laughed softly. “You know, I don’t even
notice it, no more than you notice your shoes if they fit well.
I’ve been wearing it—or one like it—since I was a
year old. I’d feel strange without it—naked.”
“You wear it even to sleep or bathe?”
“Always,” Sapphire assured her. “The only time I
haven’t worn a headpiece like this is when I removed one to
replace it with another.”
“Does your mother make any sort of fuss then?”
“You’re thinking of sorcery, aren’t
you?”
“Well, yes.”
“She does, actually,” Sapphire admitted. “The
stone from one headband has to be set into the new one—even our
family can’t afford to replace precious stones of the first
water as fast as children grow.”
Snob! Elise thought defensively. Then she felt rather bad.
Sapphire was taking a stand against her mother, the person who had
defined every waking moment of her life. Certainly, she had the right
to hold on to some scrap of pride. Then an uncomfortable thought
slipped its way in beneath Elise’s sympathy. What if she isn’t taking a stand? What if she’s
just trying to learn what we know and then plans to turn us over to
Lady Melina?
Unbidden, Elise’s hand touched her lips as if already the
fiery bites of red ants were lacerating the tender flesh. And
Sapphire continued, her voice soft but steady in the darkness:
“Mother had studied how to set the stones herself and while
she did so I had to sit by and wait. She always gave me something to
drink, something rather sweet, that made me feel dreamy. After a
while, I’d stop feeling anxious about the funny feeling along
my brow where the sapphire should rest.”
Sapphire paused for a moment, then whispered, her words barely
audible, “When I was very small, I thought I stopped existing
when the stone wasn’t there. I was Sapphire—somehow that
stone was me—when it wasn’t touching me, I was no longer
myself. I wasn’t anyone.”
“It hasn’t always been the same stone,” Elise
said, “has it?”
“No.” Elise felt her cousin shudder so violently that
the log vibrated beneath them. “Until I was about
Citrine’s age it was a different stone, a smaller one. Then
Mother decided that the smaller one didn’t make the same
impression. I still remember when she took the band off and, instead
of removing the stone to set in the new band, put it to one side.
“I screamed when she started setting the new stone. What I
felt was raw panic. I shook. I was nauseated. Tears nearly choked
me.
“Only when Mother let me hold the little stone did I calm
down. For a while, she let me carry it in an amulet bag like the
common folk use. Then she took it away. By then I was comfortable
with the new stone, even liked it better. The color was more vibrant
and the cut better. People admired it. I didn’t miss the old
stone anymore.”
“And the new stone,” Elise asked, “that’s
the one you’re wearing now.”
“That’s right.”
“I hope you can give it up,” said Hazel Healer,
stepping out from the shadows, Firekeeper a pace behind her,
“because that is going to be the first step, whatever we
do.”
The cousins jumped and Sapphire asked, “How long have you
been there?”
“Longer than you have,” Hazel answered easily.
“Firekeeper was probably to my house before you changed out of
your nightdress and found a lantern. She is very direct, she is. My
mare is used to night calls, and I keep my bag packed and beside her
in the stables. Even with taking the road around the camp, we made
good time. No one stops a healer, you see, not even army
pickets.”
Elise felt Sapphire relax slightly and smiled. Her own heart was
thudding in her chest but she was obscurely relieved now that someone
else was there to share the responsibility.
“You were doing so well,” Hazel continued,
“telling Elise about your mother that I didn’t want to
interrupt, but time is running short. The sleeping draught Elise gave
your mother should last all night, but varying metabolisms react
differently to drugs. Therefore, I interrupted as soon as our course
of action became clear.”
“Clear?” Elise asked.
“That’s right.” Hazel didn’t elucidate
further. “Firekeeper said there is a glade a bit deeper in
where a light wouldn’t be seen so we can turn up the lanterns.
She’s gone ahead to kindle a fire.”
Elise looked around and, indeed, the wolf-woman had
disappeared.
“Still with us?” she asked Sapphire.
When Sapphire bent to pick up their lantern, Elise saw that her
cousin was dreadfully pale beneath her tan, but when she replied her
voice was steady. “I’m with you. I’ll walk first
with the lantern. Let Mistress Healer come last leading the
horse.”
In the glen where—as Elise would later learn—Prince
Newell and Lady Zorana lingered for dalliance and met with disaster,
Firekeeper had a steady fire burning within a ring of river rocks. A
small copper pot— hardly larger than an apple and polished so
bright as to look almost pink—was slung over the flames.
“From my emergency kit,” Hazel explained, tying her
mare, a brown horse unremarkable for anything but its calm, to a
bush. “You won’t believe how often you need hot water
fast and the best thing available is a kettle large enough to make
stew for an entire harvest crew and cast of thick iron besides. Now,
let’s get comfortable.”
Under her calm authority, Elise positioned her lamp and two more
from Hazel’s gear so that, without shedding undue light outside
of the glen, they had enough that they could read each other’s
expressions. Firekeeper brought over a couple of logs to act as
benches and when the water boiled Elise brewed rosehip tea. Sapphire
set more water to heat and then Hazel indicated that she was ready to
continue.
“From what you told Lady Elise,” she said to Sapphire,
“the sapphire—indeed the entire headpiece—is
symbolic to you of the identity which your mother has crafted for
you. Is that right?”
Sapphire nodded. “Of who I am.”
“And who you are is someone under Lady Melina’s
control,” Hazel stated unapologetically. “And don’t
try to deny it. I saw how you favored your side while you were
helping set up our little parlor here. I’ve spoken at length
with Sir Jared about his talent. Your injury should be mending now
without pain. The wounds were superficial, though ugly, and were
treated almost immediately.”
Sapphire bit her lip, then nodded stiffly. “It has been
fourteen days. Very well. I accept that my mother has the ability to
inflict pain on me, pain I shouldn’t feel. I’ll even
admit that she’s done it other times, though I never remember
feeling this angry about it before. What I want to know is do you
think this is sorcery or that trance induction that Elise told me
about?”
Hazel sighed. “I wish Elise hadn’t told you quite so
much. It will make our task more difficult. To be blunt, I
don’t know. However, I don’t think it
matters…”
“Doesn’t matter!” Sapphire said with a fury that
Elise realized was mostly fear. “It doesn’t matter
whether my mother is a sorceress or merely skilled in some form of
controlling the mind? How couldn’t it matter?”
Hazel ignored the anger and answered the question. “Because
the tool which she used to effect her control is the same in either
case. It doesn’t matter because if we can—if you
can—destroy that means, then the hold should be
broken.”
I wonder, Elise thought uneasily, just how much Hazel is bluffing.
She didn’t seem to know this much when we consulted her ten
days ago.
“I’ve been reading about related matters ever since
Elise brought her own problem to me,” Hazel said as if in
answer, “and have consulted most privately with various
colleagues. Lady Melina’s fondness for the showy
gesture—for using her power over you to enhance her own
reputation rather than keeping it quiet—may be her undoing.
However, I can only show you the way. I cannot do any
more.”
“What,” Sapphire said, “as if I can’t
already guess, do I need to do?”
Hazel ignored her for a moment. Removing the boiling water from
over the fire, she poured some into a round pottery cup, then shook
in powder from a folded paper packet. This done, she covered the cup
and asked:
“Elise, how much trouble did you have telling Sapphire about
your discovery of Lady Melina’s powers?”
“Not much,” Elise replied, slightly puzzled at this
change of subject. “I felt shy, of course. It’s hard to
admit you’ve been spying on people, even by
accident.”
“But you didn’t feel any pain? No ants biting your
tongue?”
“No!” Elise was surprised. “But why should I?
Sapphire already knew the truth.”
Hazel turned to look at Sapphire. “Tell me, is that the
usual way with your mother’s curses? Do they work only when you
try to talk to the uninformed?”
Sapphire shook her head. “I haven’t really tried, not
for years, but we never could talk about what she had forbidden, not
even to each other, not without bringing down the curse.”
“So, you see, Elise,” Hazel said, “what you did
is remarkable.”
“Do you think it’s because we replaced my jet
piece?” Elise asked eagerly.
“Yes, I do. When you removed the means by which Lady Melina
had laid her hold on you, that hold was broken.”
“Then all I need to do,” Sapphire said, her disbelief
evident, “is take off my coronet?”
“I fear not,” Hazel said sadly. “Lady
Melina’s control over you is of much greater duration and her
curse laid upon you directly. For you to break her hold, not only
must you remove the sapphire from your brow, you must destroy
it.”
There was a long silence. When Sapphire spoke her voice was no
longer that of the confident, even arrogant, warrior and noblewoman
but of a very young girl.
“I can’t!” she wailed.
“Then you are doomed to remain bound.”
“Wait!” Elise said. “Sapphire was talking to me
before with no trouble. Maybe the hold is already broken.”
“No,” Hazel said sadly. “Think back. She told
you about very general things. The closest she came to anything
sensitive was when she mentioned her panic whenever the sapphire was
removed—she said nothing that couldn’t be dismissed as
superstition. I’d guess Sapphire knows her own limits very
well.”
“I do,” the other admitted dully.
“Perfectly.”
Firekeeper, who had hovered at the edge of the firelight, her back
to them so as not to diminish her night vision, spoke for the first
time.
“So we are ended before we begin?”
“No,” Sapphire replied with sudden stubborn
decisiveness, “I won’t let myself be.”
Her hands rose to the elegant band about her brow, rose, fell, and
rose again. Elise could see them shaking as Sapphire rumbled for a
catch.
“It’s beneath the stone setting,” Sapphire said,
her voice a weak semblance of normalcy. “Nice bit of design,
really.”
Hazel strained the mixture in the pottery cup and offered it to
Sapphire. “It will calm you. I suspect it’s similar to
what your mother gave you.”
“Then I don’t want it!” Sapphire snarled.
With a violent tug she snapped the strap. Elise heard a slight
metallic ping as the silver wire parted.
The torn strip dangling from her hand, Sapphire asked, “And
now?”
“And now,” Hazel replied, “I’m afraid
you’re going to need to crush or break the stone. That
won’t be easy. Sapphires are quite hard, not as hard as
diamonds, but almost.”
“Gem cutters manage,” Sapphire said, the words
sounding torn from her. Unable to speak further, she put out her free
hand in a mute request for tools.
Hazel said apologetically, “I couldn’t get a gem
cutter’s wheel in the middle of the night, but I do have a
hammer with a steel head. We can use a large river cobble for an
anvil.”
Firekeeper brought the latter, pausing to put her hand on
Sapphire’s shoulder. Even this slight delay had started
Sapphire trembling again, but she stiffened at Firekeeper’s
touch.
Elise wondered if Sapphire could not bear pity—or what she
perceived as pity—from a potential rival. For whatever reason,
Sapphire steadied enough to kneel and place the damaged headpiece
flat across the cobble, the blue gem in its center glittering like a
single eye in the lantern light.
Raising the hammer, Sapphire swung with all the power of muscles
trained to use of sword and shield. A thin cry slipped out between
teeth locked in a death’s-head grimace. The bright steel arced
down, a blur rather than a solid thing. There was the sound of metal
hitting rock, a sharp stink as of sulphur, a crack…
Elise stared in disbelief. Sapphire’s blow had struck the
cobble, not the sapphire, splitting the rounded stone in two. Bending
forward, her long black hair masking her face, the hammer clutched in
both hands, Sapphire was whimpering hysterically:
“I can’t, I can’t, I can’t… It will
kill me if I do. My soul… I can’t.” The
repetitious rhythm of her chant was more terrifying than any scream
could be.
“You must!” Elise pleaded, hearing her own voice
shrill despite her efforts to keep it level. “You
must!”
“I can’t!” Sapphire snapped, sitting straight in
a sudden motion like an arrow shot from a bow. “I
can’t…”
And her voice sank again.
In the shocked silence, Firekeeper’s return with a new
cobble seemed as prosaic as a shopkeeper polishing counters on a slow
day. She crouched beside Sapphire, removed the split cobble, and
placed the headpiece in the new cobble’s center.
“I think,” the wolf-woman commented sardonically,
“that you are like the Whiner in my pack. She is great hunter
except when anyone bigger face her. She even afraid of me!”
Firekeeper’s laughter made plain how ridiculous she found
the thought of any wolf fearing a naked, clawless, fangless creature
like herself.
“I’m not afraid of you!” Sapphire gasped, her
gaze still downcast, safe within the sheltering tent of her hair.
“I not say you are, but your mother, she the great One of
your pack and never will her pups rise to challenge her. Never even
will they disperse to found their own packs. You are poor, sad
creatures: can’t piss, can’t eat, can’t breed
without mama’s word.”
That “mama” was said with a rich sneer to
Firekeeper’s voice, a sneer that Elise noted did not reach her
face. Sapphire only heard the mockery and some faint shred of pride
in her responded.
Raising her head, she glared at Firekeeper. “You dare! I am
a Shield and grandniece to a king.”
“You are a weak-spined, mewling pup,” Firekeeper said
savagely. “You dine only on the regurgitated pap from your
mother’s gut. You crouch so in her shade that you fear a blue
rock! A rock!”
She laughed, a cruel sound from deep in her belly, and from the
shadows Blind Seer sniggered agreement.
“I’ll break your head!” Sapphire shouted,
leaping to her feet and swinging the hammer at Firekeeper.
Firekeeper blocked her, hand grasping the descending forearm and
squeezing, forcing the infuriated woman to face the glimmering blue
eye of the sapphire on the rock.
“A pup,” Firekeeper said steadily, “attacks a
butterfly to show how big he is. So you attack me naked and unarmed
as I am—you with steel death in your hands—because you
are a pup. If you are so terrible, smash that blue stone.”
“I thought you said,” Sapphire retorted, twisting but
unable to get free, “that it was just a stone.”
“Then why,” came the reasonable voice, just showing
the edge of the effort Firekeeper was exerting to hold the larger
woman in place, “don’t you break it?”
She let go then and Sapphire’s own twisting spun her to the
ground in front of the makeshift altar with its mute sacrificial
victim across it. With one hand Sapphire caressed the faceted surface
as if it were the face of a lover, perhaps recalling the years during
which it had adorned her brow, the fairest gem of its type in all the
land.
Then Sapphire grasped the hammer with two hands, raised it above
her head, and brought the steel head down with the force not only of
her arms, but of the entire weight of her body behind it.
Elise surged to her feet, unable to look away, unable to remain
still, knowing in her heart that if Sapphire missed this time, if the
gem refused to break, if she lost courage at the last moment, that
there would never be another attempt, that this was the last chance
and if it failed everything—even the stealing of Lady
Melina’s necklace—would have been for nothing.
When the hammer rose, a fine blue dust littered with tiny
fragments of gemstone sparkled on the river rock, brighter even than
the tears that glittered in Sapphire Shield’s eyes. But
Sapphire did not weep, only said:
“I guess I’d better have the matching stone from
Mother’s necklace. We’d better do a thorough job of
this.”
Elise wrenched the pendant holding the sapphire from the band. Not
bothering to remove the gemstone from the silver that framed it,
Sapphire smashed it, her first blow breaking the diamond-shaped
stone, her second thoroughly flattening the silver and breaking the
gem to pieces.
Rising to her feet a bit unsteadily, Sapphire looked at
Firekeeper. “Still think me a pup?”
“I think you a great woman,” came the reply, and
Firekeeper bowed low. Beside her the enormous grey wolf bowed as
well.
Hazel said then, “Do we destroy the rest of the necklace
here and now, or should we preserve it for the others?”
“I think,” Sapphire said, “that it must be
preserved as proof that this can be done. It’s going to be hard
enough to convince my brother and sisters as it is.”
“And you,” Hazel asked, “how do you
feel?”
“Like I’ve jumped off a cliff only to be caught by
water at the bottom and nearly drowned. My knees are shaking, my head
is throbbing, and,” Sapphire grinned, “my side has
stopped hurting. I don’t think I’ve felt better in a
long, long time.”
“How do you plan to hide from Lady Melina what you’ve
done?” Elise hardly recognized her own voice when she
spoke.
“I don’t. It’s time Mother realized that her
control of me is over and here in this camp with King Tedric near at
hand she should moderate her response to what she will see as my
rebellion.”
“Do you plan to tell her what… what we… what
you… suspect?”
Sapphire shook her head. “Not at all. There’s no need.
I think I’ll just tell Mother that I got tired of her taste in
jewelry.”
The laughter that followed this announcement was too loud, too
ragged to be cheerful, but it held a bravado more warming than the
bright yellow-orange flames of the campfire.
XXIV
Prince Newell Shield noted his sister Melina’s
outrage when Sapphire stopped wearing the gem-studded headpiece that
had been hers since she was small, and thought Melina’s
reaction disproportionate.
Certainly a young woman of twenty-three—one who had been her
mother’s cat’s-paw for her entire life—should be
expected to rebel at some point. Melina should be grateful that
Sapphire had chosen to discard a piece of jewelry rather than, say,
one of the numerous titled young men Melina had betrothed to her,
only to break the engagement when one more advantageous seemed
possible.
He told Melina as much and her rage was so great that he deemed a
retreat advisable. Calling for Rook to saddle the red roan, Newell
went out to look for signs of war.
Things seemed promising. From Keen, who was recovering from his
cut face hidden in a tavern in Good Crossing, Newell had learned that
Bright Bay’s troops were nervous and demoralized, trusting no
one, not even—as the five days following the first battle with
Stonehold produced no sign of Queen Gustin or her young husband, King
Harwill—their own monarchs.
Allister Seagleam’s role as commander in chief provided the
troops no particular comfort. The duke had no great reputation as a
warrior on land or at sea—although he had done nothing of which
to be ashamed, either. Moreover, they resented him somewhat. The
Stalwarts had marched out on a mission that should have been mostly
play, to escort the Pledge Child to his uncle. Never had they dreamed
that they might need to fight and, though Duke Allister was not
responsible for the current situation, they blamed him
nonetheless.
Additionally, knowing too much about a strong opponent was never a
good thing for any army—and Bright Bay’s Stalwarts of the
Golden Sunburst knew far too much about Stonehold’s Rocky Band.
After all, until a slight eight days before, Stonehold’s troops
had been not only comrades under the same banner, but also the source
of most of Bright Bay’s noncommissioned officers: the sergeants
and corporals who made things work when idealistic officers gave
impossible commands.
The Stalwarts must feel, Newell thought, cupping his hand around
his pipe and striving to light it despite a freshening wind from the
north, rather like children who suddenly found themselves challenging
their teachers. He liked the image and played with it as he gave up
on the pipe and cantered Serenity along a road running west then
turning south along the edge of the rough foothills west of Good
Crossing.
If Stonehold was bringing in reinforcements, they might be visible
from this general direction. Stonehold’s border with Bright Bay
was the Fox River, a river as broad and difficult to span as the
Barren itself. Indeed both the Fox and the Barren had their source in
Rimed Lake, high in the mountains to the west. The same volcano whose
eruption long ago had split Rimed Lake into two fat lobes had spilled
molten rock down its eastern side, creating the Barren Lands, a place
where nothing grew but those determined plants that could subsist on
dirt caught within crevices in the basalt.
Even at the foot of the flow, where Newell now slowed Serenity to
a more cautious pace as the road roughened, the volcano’s
influence could be seen, but here trees had managed a roothold and a
struggling forest had grown up. He felt secure continuing south under
the cover of the trees, knowing that Hawk Haven had posted scouts
throughout this area.
Moreover, the day was pleasant. Here, away from the river’s
immediate influence, Newell noted a kiss of autumn in the air. Good
campaigning weather, but the harvest would be ripening, making
foraging easier for both sides.
He was thinking about how he would handle an extended campaign
through this area when a flicker of motion caught his eye. Drawing
Serenity up, Newell was poised either for flight or to take cover
when a rather grubby woman stepped from cover. She wore the green
uniform of the scouts, her arm banded in Kite blue with a chestnut
stallion embroidered upon it.
Newell didn’t recognize her, but she clearly knew him.
“Prince Newell,” she said, her voice was rusty, as if
she hadn’t spoken for hours. “I am Joy Spinner, scout
under the command of Earle Kite, posted to this point. May I ask your
business here?”
“I came to check the situation,” Newell said honestly.
“I grew restless in camp. There were no signs that Stonehold
would make a major push today so I decided to see if there were any
signs of why they were waiting.”
Finishing his speech, Prince Newell unscrewed the top of his wine
flask and offered Joy Spinner a pull of the dry white wine within.
The scout accepted, then looked at him squarely with eyes the color
of violets.
“Your timing is fine, sir,” she said. “My
ancestors must have put you on the road. You see, not long ago I
spotted something interesting to the south. I don’t dare leave
my post to report it—we’ve had trouble with Stoneholders
trying to slip through here—but I think King Tedric and Duke
Allister should know.”
“And your relief?”
“Not due for hours. Even the officer who’s checking
the posts isn’t due for a while.”
“What have you seen?” Prince Newell asked, a tingling
in his breast making him certain that this very moment was the
beginning of his time to be a hero, even as he had dreamed.
“Let me show you,” Joy said. “Your horse will be
safe here.”
They crept through the brush to the basalt outcropping from which
Joy had been keeping watch. It was a good lookout, set higher than
much of the surrounding area but offering perfect concealment. Joy
checked something with her long glass, then handed the glass to
Newell.
“Look there, just where I was. Site along the road as it
leaves the field along which Stonehold is encamped. The road itself
vanishes when the land dips, but it heads roughly south, bending a
bit east. I won’t say more—I want to know if you see what
I do.”
Prince Newell did as Joy had requested, finding the road easily
enough. Over the past five days he had pored over the superior
interior maps of Bright Bay supplied by Duke Allister over the
grumbling protests of some of his advisors. These maps, added to the
information Newell had already memorized from Hawk Haven’s own
maps, came to him as he obeyed Joy Spinner’s instructions.
One of the reasons that the Fox River made such an effective
barrier between Bright Bay and Stonehold was that it flared out into
a broad marshy delta many miles before it met the ocean. In the
summer these marshes bred disease. Even in the winter one had to be
an expert to navigate them without grief. No large force, especially
one with horses and armored troops, could cross through them.
The middle stretches of the Fox were too broad and deep to be
forded, even in the autumn when there was no snowmelt to augment the
flow and when irrigation of fields had lowered the river further. The
Fox was bridged in several places, the nearest of which was due south
and east of Good Crossing.
Mason’s Bridge was hardly close—indeed, miles of
Bright Bay-held lands lay between their current battlefield and the
bridge. Reports from the south, however, informed them that Stonehold
had secured Mason’s Bridge before the local Bright Bay
pickets—hardly more than toll collectors—even knew there
was trouble between the countries.
Since then, the other bridges across the Fox—or at least
their northern ends—had been secured or destroyed by troops
sent out from Silver Whale Cove. These now patrolled the Bright Bay
side of the Fox, reducing the chances that Stonehold would abandon
their attack on Good Crossing and strike for the capital. This
necessary expenditure of troops had further reduced those
reinforcements which Bright Bay could bring to the immediate battle
and had increased the low morale of the Stalwarts, who once again
found themselves the lesser part of an army defending their own
country.
Now Newell traced the road more by memory than by sight, quickly
spotting what Joy Spinner had seen. The Stoneholders weren’t
foolhardy; they knew that the less their opponents could see the
better. The troops marching along that road showed no metal that
might flash in the sun; their wagons were tarped over to conceal what
they carried. The road they traveled was packed, but even so many
feet raised a thin column of dust.
Prince Newell drew in his breath with a sharp hiss. “So
Stonehold sends reinforcements to augment those who currently hold
the ground south of Good Crossing! Surely Bright Bay’s people
will rise against them!”
Joy Spinner spat eloquently. “The folk of Bright Bay look to
the ocean, not the land. Too long have they relied on Stonehold
mercenaries to keep Hawk Haven from claiming their lands for our own.
All those poor farmers and herders will look to defend will be their
harvest and flocks. If Stonehold’s Rocky Band will cross and
leave their livelihood unmolested, then they will let them
pass.”
“And judging from the supply wagons,” mused Prince
Newell, “the commanders are wise enough to not give the common
folk of Bright Bay reason to turn soldier. Stonehold’s Rocky
Band is well disciplined. They won’t loot the lands through
which they pass—especially if they know that supplies await
them at the end.”
“And with the supplies being protected by columns of
troops,” Joy added, “no farmer will be tempted to turn
bandit. They’ve thought it through all right. Some of their
reinforcements may travel more slowly, but everything will get here
intact.”
Prince Newell handed Joy the long glass and turned back toward
where Serenity waited.
“I wonder,” he said thoughtfully, “just when
those wagons started their trip?” He shook himself. Now was a
time for action, not speculation. “Scout Spinner, trust my
horse and myself to carry the message as swiftly as we can. I think
the time for stealth has ended.”
Joy nodded. “Good. I will keep my post. Ride safely, Prince
Newell. Doubtless someone else has seen the signs, but we may be
first.”
Newell smiled. “First or last, the news is still
important.”
As Newell swung into the saddle, Serenity pawed the ground,
catching his rider’s excitement and eager to be away.
“I will see you in Hope!” Newell cried. Touching his
heels to the red roan’s flanks, he was away.
He did not look back, nor did he doubt in the least that he cut a
perfectly dashing figure. Serenity was nearly fresh, for the
morning’s ride had been easy and the gelding was in good
fettle. Newell pressed his mount to speed wherever the road
permitted. No matter what he had said to Joy Spinner, he wanted to be
the first with the news. Even if he was not, eagerness would count
for something.
Both Newell and Serenity were nicely sweated and covered with road
dust when they arrived outside of the commanders’ pavilions in
the encampment outside of Good Crossing’s walls. Stumbling from
the saddle on legs tired and sore, Newell tossed Serenity’s
reins to the first guard he saw. Then he gasped:
“The king, where is he?”
“Within,” the guard replied, “in consultation.
What…”
Newell looked sternly at him. “Tend my mount, good man. My
news is urgent and for King Tedric’s ears alone.”
Such vagueness was certain to start rumors. Prince Newell trusted
that his dutiful discretion would have the troops swearing to each
other that Stonehold was arriving within the hour, armed with war
machines meant to batter the walls of Good Crossing until one stone
did not stand on another. Why else would a prince ride so hard and
look so grim?
Sir Dirkin Eastbranch paused in his steady pacing about the
perimeter of the king’s pavilion to nod to his subordinate.
“Let the prince pass,” he said.
Pleased, Newell pushed back the curtain door, knowing that in a
few minutes he would be able to collapse into a comfortable chair
while servants pulled his boots off his aching feet and put a glass
of wine into his hand. Such pleasures were good indeed, especially
upon what might well be the eve of war.
Two men listened while Prince Newell gave his report. It was a
small enough audience, but as one of these men was King Tedric and
the other was Duke Allister, the prince felt sufficiently rewarded
for his hard ride. He even forgot that his aching feet had not been
tended. King Tedric had apparently dispensed with servants for the
moment.
When Newell finished his report, King Tedric frowned:
“Estimated numbers?”
“I’m not precisely certain, Your Majesty,”
Newell replied. “I was catching glimpses through the trees.
Several companies, well armed, I believe. I’d guess that when
they’re added to those Stonehold has pulled from their recent
service throughout Bright Bay they’ll be a match for what we
have gathered here.”
“Your report,” the king said, “confirms
speculations that we have had from our spies—reports that to
this point have been but rumors. You have done well,
Newell.”
The prince bowed and tried to look humble rather than
gloating.
Duke Allister managed a wry grin. “Evidently Generals Yuci
and Grimsel doubted that Stonehold could defeat us with those forces
they already had in place so they risked our own reinforcements
arriving while they brought in their troops.”
King Tedric nodded wearily. “A reasonable risk for them to
take. The distance from Hope to Eagle’s Nest is easily as far
as that to Mason’s Bridge. Troops from my more northern lands
have even farther to travel. True we can and have drawn troops from
the more southern parts of the kingdom, but we cannot strip our
border with Bright Bay any more than you can strip yours with
Stonehold.”
Duke Allister nodded, accepting that despite Hawk Haven coming to
his country’s aid perfect trust would not occur instantly.
Leaving this issue unspoken, he added thoughtfully:
“And what use would a victory be to Stonehold if she lacked
the forces to occupy Good Crossing after her troops had taken it? Now
they have their greater force and supplies to sustain them. Doubtless
their commanders have left troops back along the road south so that
further reinforcements can be brought through as needed.”
“I wonder,” Prince Newell said, attentive despite his
honest weariness, “how those wagons managed to come so far so
fast?”
Duke Allister sighed. “I suspect that many crossed
Mason’s Bridge and began the trip north days before the troops,
maybe even as early as the very day that Queen Gustin was sent
Stonehold’s ultimatum. We have active trade with
Stonehold—indeed, much of our steel and iron comes from there,
for the Barren Lands are metal poor and block our access to the Iron
Mountains your own nation mines.”
“So,” Newell frowned, “not even a heavily laden
wagon would seem curious—not even if it clanked with quantities
of finished metal.”
“The only people who would look at those wagons would be the
toll collectors, whose interest would be in judging how much each
wagon should pay for crossing into Bright Bay,” Duke Allister
said. “We can send a pigeon to our garrison near Mason’s
Bridge for confirmation, but I think we have enough of a working
theory to plan upon.”
King Tedric unrolled the best of the maps of Bright Bay.
“Even if,” he said, tracing his finger along the road
south, “Stonehold has brought in fresh troops and more
supplies, the length of their supply line home remains their greatest
weakness.”
“Yet we can’t get our army around the mass of their
army to get to those supplies or that road,” Newell put in
practically, rather enjoying pointing out the worst aspects of the
situation. “Our troops would be spotted too easily as they
crossed the open zone around Good Crossing. Generals Yuci and Grimsel
did not strike me as tactically dull. They, too, must realize that
their supply line is their vulnerable point and will be alert to
efforts to harm it.”
“They must,” Allister agreed, “and yet they will
wait to lessen their dependence on supplies from home until they have
no choice. Looting and pillaging would awaken a new enemy all around
them. Farmers armed with pitchforks or old spears scavenged from the
family’s ancestral shrine may not be much of a threat to a
prepared army, but they could become a dangerous nuisance.”
“And with the harvest ready to come in,” Tedric added,
“those farmers will be more easily enraged. No one, not even
the most peaceful grower of wheat, likes to see an entire
year’s work vanish into someone else’s mouth.”
Prince Newell cleared his throat and asked anxiously, “How
long do you think the Stoneholders will give us before they
attack?”
“Until tomorrow,” Tedric replied bluntly.
“Perhaps they will wait until the next day, but from what you
reported their troops were marching steadily, though not at a forced
pace. Most should be ready for action after a night’s
rest.”
“Might they attack tonight?” Allister asked.
“I think not,” Tedric said after a moment’s
thoughtful pause, “but if they do, we will have ample
warning—warning beyond the usual sounds or lights of their
approach.”
The king’s thin smile held a hint of the indulgent grin he
reserved for one favored person.
With a surge of envy, Prince Newell realized that Tedric meant
that he expected Lady Blysse to bring Hawk Haven warning.
Newell’s envy turned into a peculiarly uncomfortable form of
fear as he realized that the wolf-woman must have been scouting for
the king ever since this war had been declared—and perhaps even
before. What might she have seen?
He endeavored to look bluff and hearty.
“It’s good to know we’ll have warning, Sire. Our
men will sleep better for the news.”
“Whatever news you are envisioning spreading, Newell,”
the king ordered sternly, “keep it to yourself. One reason that
Allister and I have kept our conferences as small as possible is that
we cannot be certain who—especially among Bright Bay’s
forces—may still feel allied to Stone-hold.”
“You must remember,” Allister said a touch sadly,
“that until a mere handful of days ago most of my
nation’s troops viewed Stonehold as a friend and her army as
teachers. Although most are angry and offended by the recent
betrayals, still, there must be some—maybe even some
officers—who retain loyalty to those who taught
them.”
“And,” Newell added bluntly, “who still hate
us.”
“Well,” Allister said, “you were the
enemy.”
King Tedric sighed. “Newell, go gather the officers.
It’s time we gave a briefing.”
“Yes, Your Majesty!” Newell replied, saluting
smartly.
As he was leaving he heard the king say to Allister:
“I have a thought how we might deal with that supply line.
Tell me what you think of this…”
Race Forester came to Derian Carter late that afternoon while Derian
was checking the shoes and feet of the horses who—if all
progressed as anticipated—would carry their riders into battle
tomorrow.
At Earl Kestrel’s express command, Derian himself
wasn’t going to fight. He didn’t know whether he felt
relieved or angry. For the first time since Firekeeper had been given
into his charge Derian felt as if he’d been demoted from a
man’s place to that of a boy.
Because of this, the sight of Race, clean-lined and military in
his scout’s uniform, made Derian scowl and dig at the stone
lodged in Ox’s bald-faced chestnut’s shoe with rather
more intensity than he should. The normally placid horse shuddered
his skin and muttered equine warning. Queenie, who had been sniffing
around the horse’s heels, flinched away.
“Good afternoon to you, too, Derian Carter,” Race
said, leaning against one of the hitching posts and scratching
Queenie behind the ears.
“Oh, Race,” Derian said, flinging the stone away and
pretending to notice the scout for the first time. “I
didn’t see you coming.”
“And no wonder with that mountain of horseflesh hanging over
you,” Race said easily.
Derian, knowing he had been being rude, felt rather embarrassed.
He pulled out a curry comb and began grooming the chestnut’s
coat.
“Ready for tomorrow, Race?”
“I suppose so,” Race said. “For a bit there I
thought I might be drafted into the archers at the last
moment—someone had been bragging about how good I am with a
bow—but the commander of scouts insisted he couldn’t
spare me.”
“Great.”
“Yes, it is rather nice having people argue over who will
get your services.” Race paused. “Isn’t
it?”
“I wouldn’t know,” Derian said stiffly.
“Oh?” Race drew closer and lowered his voice.
“Then I must be the first to get to you. Derian, how do you
feel about going into battle tomorrow?”
Derian kept his voice equally soft, though he felt like shouting
in surprise and indignation.
“Me? I can’t. Earl Kestrel has demanded that I stay
with the horses. He says that both his and Duchess Merlin’s
units are short of farriers and my skill with horses far outweighs my
skill with a sword.”
Despite himself, Derian heard the bitterness in his voice.
“As if,” he added, “Earl Kestrel has even
noticed how I’ve kept in practice all these
moon-spans.”
“He’s noticed more than you might imagine,” Race
said, “and he’s said no more than the truth. There are
few men—especially of your years—who are as good with a
horse.”
Derian grunted, accepting the compliment but not being
particularly graceful about it. Race punched him in the shoulder with
affectionate bluster.
“Young idiot,” Race said. “Did you ever think
that Earl Kestrel might want to keep you alive? King Tedric has made
you one of his counselors. That’s important not only to the
king, but to the earl. Norwood’s been preening ever since you
were named—pointing out to his peers whenever he can that he
knows how to pick a good man. But whether or not he wants to keep you
alive, that’s all out with the wash. There’s been a
change of plans.”
“Change?” Derian suddenly felt frightened. It was one
thing to scowl and brood about being overlooked when you were safely
out of danger; it was quite another when that danger was immediate
again.
Race nodded. “I was to tell you quietly if my commander
hadn’t gotten to you. I guess he hasn’t. Are you about
done with those nags?”
“About.”
“Meet me at our camp,” by this Race meant the new
Kestrel camp on the southern bank of the Barren, “when
you’re done. Make sure you finish up properly because you might
not make it back here tonight.”
Derian did as Race had suggested, going over each horse carefully
and consulting with the farrier from Hope—the same from whom he
and Doc had bought medicine just days before—as to the
strengths and weaknesses of the war mounts. These were huge, fierce
horses, often intolerant of any but their handler, and working with
them took special consideration.
Only when he was certain that he had discharged his duty to Earl
Kestrel did Derian head for the camp, but he did so at a quick trot
that was nearly a run. Overhead he heard Elation shrill something
like laughter. The great peregrine had taken to following Derian
about more often now that Firekeeper was scouting for the army and a
beacon overhead would be neither welcome nor wise.
Arriving at the Kestrel camp, Derian found Race and Valet waiting
for him. As before, their camp’s location had been selected to
permit Firekeeper to come and go without Blind Seer panicking the
rest of the army. Backed against the Barren River, downstream from
Good Crossing, they were the farthest group east but for the pickets
who patrolled the camp’s border.
Across the river, Derian could see lights glowing in the Watchful
Eye and along the northern side of the river. For the first time he
realized that evening was gathering. Tomorrow if all rumors were
correct, there would be battle, a massive thing that would make the
battle a few days before—now called the Battle on the
Banks—look like a minor skirmish.
And he might be in it. Not wanting to introduce the matter, Derian
commented:
“I always meant to ask why we built the Watchful Eye on our
side of the river but Bright Bay never built any similar fort on
their side.”
Valet poured him a cup of mulled cider and commented, “When
the Civil War ended, Bright Bay received Good Crossing. Hope
didn’t exist then—just a few houses and farms as I
understand it. The Watchful Eye was built to house the garrison that
would protect this newly vulnerable point.”
He fell silent, having been far more talkative than was his wont.
Race added:
“Good Crossing had a watchtower—it’s part of the
walls now—and was a whole lot bigger. Hope grew up pretty fast,
though, what with smuggling and tolls and soldiers to supply.
I’ve heard that when it got to be a town rather than a cluster
of houses they called it Hope because folks there hoped they
wouldn’t get attacked.”
“My father,” Derian said, “told me it was named
for a hope for peace and reunification.”
“Maybe,” Race shrugged. “I’m no historian.
Anyhow, thanks for getting here so quickly, Derian. I’ve got
your marching orders, if you’ll take them.”
Derian nodded, swallowing cider despite the lump that suddenly
appeared in his throat.
“Go on,” he said.
“I was told to tell you that this was a request, not an
order,” Race began. He stopped, scratched his beard and started
again. “Sorry, I’m not much good at speeches.”
Derian wanted to strangle him, but waited with what patience he
could muster.
“It’s been decided,” Race began again,
“that Stonehold’s biggest weak spot is that they’ve
got a long way to go to get in their supplies. The king and the duke,
though, they don’t want to send the army after those supplies.
They figure it would be too easy for Stonehold to defend
them.”
“Would it?” Derian asked.
“Well, I haven’t been over there myself,” Race
said, “but from reports we’ve got they’ve got their
wagons drawn up alongside the road that leads back to Mason’s
Bridge. They’re keeping the road mostly open, but their camp is
all along there as well as along the southern end of the field
outside of Good Crossing.
“Now,” Race continued, “if our army does succeed
in breaking Stonehold’s lines and going through we’ll get
those supplies, no question. The thing is, we may not break those
lines, at least not right away. It might take days of
fighting.”
Derian refilled his mug, mostly to hide a shiver.
“And during those days,” Race said,
“they’ll be bringing in more supplies and maybe even
build good defenses for what they have. So, what King Tedric and Duke
Allister have decided is that at the same time the main armies are
hitting each other out on the field, a small group—one that
could circle wide around the eastern fringes of the Stonehold camp
and come in where they’ll only have guards, not a whole
army—that small group could come in and destroy as many of the
supplies as possible.”
Derian nodded. “That makes sense. If the group could get
through, they could do real damage.”
“Right.” Race nodded. “Now, the problem is that
the king and the duke figure that there are spies in the main
army.”
“Our army?” Derian asked, a little shocked, even
though his common sense told him that this must be so. After all,
didn’t Hawk Haven have spies around Stonehold’s army?
“If the spies got wind of this flank maneuver,” Race
said, “they would certainly tell their chiefs and perimeter
patrols would be beefed up. So the raiders are being drawn from
people who have the skills but aren’t part of any regular
units. Take me, for instance. I’m with the scouts, but I
haven’t given up my primary allegiance to Earl Kestrel.
There’s another scout—one who came with Earle
Kite’s group—who’s also
semi-independent.”
Derian could see where Race was heading. He decided to anticipate
it.
“And me? I’m one of Earl Kestrel’s people,
too.”
“Right.” Race puffed his chest a bit. “I told my
commander that you’d learned a lot from me on the trip
west—and more from taking care of Firekeeper.”
“Is Firekeeper part of this, too?” Derian asked,
momentarily dismayed that his true worth was actually as a watch on
the wolf-woman.
“Actually,” Race seemed embarrassed,
“she’s not. They discussed it and decided that Blind Seer
would spook the Stonehold animals. It’s happened a time or two
already, when Firekeeper’s been scouting for the king, but it
hasn’t mattered then because the two of them just took off
before the guards could be sure of anything.”
“Whereas we need to stay,” Derian said.
“Another reason is that Firekeeper,” Race shrugged,
“just doesn’t know how to pick a target. She
wouldn’t know how to figure out what’s valuable and
what’s not. She’s also fairly reluctant to kill
people.”
“A good thing,” Derian said dryly, “given how
good she is at killing game.”
“True,” Race agreed hastily, “but we can’t
have someone distracted by needing to give her orders or clarify a
target. All the raiders need to be capable of initiative. King Tedric
has spoken with Firekeeper already and she’s agreed to stay
out.”
“I hope she listens to him better than she does to
me,” Derian said, recalling how Firekeeper had followed him and
Doc into town.
“I think she will,” Race said. “I think this
entire concept of war has her rather confused.”
Valet added quietly, “I agree. She is most
distressed.”
“I hadn’t noticed,” Derian admitted,
“mostly because she’s been away so much and I’ve
been with the cavalry mounts where she doesn’t dare
come—not with Blind Seer.”
“Talk with her,” Valet urged. “You will have
time before our departure.”
“Our?” Derian looked at him. “Are you going
along on this raid, too?”
“Earl Kestrel,” Valet said with a faint sigh,
“has requested I join, recalling how Race praised my woodcraft
when we were seeking Prince Barden.”
Derian grinned, assured despite himself. It seemed impossible that
anything could go wrong if Valet was taking part.
“Who else?” he asked. “Us three, the scout Race
mentioned, and… ?”
“About a dozen other people chosen for both their skills and
their certain loyalty,” Race said. “It’s not been
easy to find what we need, especially on short notice and with most
of those assigned to the army ruled out lest they be missed. Still,
scouts are harder to pin down and my commander has found clever ways
to cover for those we’re taking. The other members are personal
attendants on various of the nobles who have arrived with their
troops. You’ll see them all at a meeting tonight.”
“Meeting?” Derian asked. “Won’t that be
risky?”
“We’ve a safe place,” Race assured him.
“Anyhow, it would be more risky to go in without a chance to
plan, practice, and meet each other.”
Derian thought fleetingly of Prince Newell’s man Rook and
hoped he wasn’t being included. The times their paths had
crossed—which hadn’t been often—he had not liked
the man any better than he had liked his master. Derian decided not
to ask. If Rook had been ruled trustworthy, then it was not
Derian’s place to question.
Instead he looked out across the camp, watching the glow of the
campfires, listening to the rise and fall of voices, the sound of
weapons being sharpened, of meals being prepared. In the middle
distance, a clear baritone voice began a mournful song. It’s for real, Derian thought. I’m going
to war.
He rose then and went to check his own armor and weapons. There
wasn’t any time to waste.
XXV
Good Crossing was the westernmost town in Bright Bay.
The reason for this was that no one could live in the Barren Lands.
Out of the Barren Lands flowed the Barren River, widening as soon as
the waters reached less rocky land, like a broad-shouldered man
stretching after a day in a cramped coach.
Long ago, those rapid-flowing waters had carried enormous boulders
downstream. These, over even more time, had collected other rocks,
dirt, and detritus, becoming small islands that would one day entice
colonists to rest the supports for a bridge upon them. Around the
bridge a town would grow up and someday the bridge itself would be a
town. Firekeeper found the ways and reasons for human settlement
astonishing. It was so unlike the roving ways of the wolves, like but
unlike the nesting of certain birds who would return to the same tree
or cliff edge year after year.
She thought about this as she stood with Derian on the hills to
the west of Good Crossing, hills that were themselves the last
remnants of the Barren Lands. Because the soil here was rocky, these
hills had never been cultivated. Because the trees that grew on them
were stunted and twisted, they had never been cut for lumber and only
rarely thinned for firewood. Since the soil east of the Barren Lands
had been enriched by the ash from the long-ago volcanic eruptions, it
produced not only good timber but good farming. So this poor excuse
for a forest had been left alone.
Surrounding Good Crossing there was a large, cleared area. In
happier days, this had provided public grazing for the town, the
place where market wagons clustered before the opening of the city
gates, and the home of the horse fair held once in the spring and
once in a autumn.
Until a few days ago, Firekeeper had crossed those fields almost
every night while gathering information for King Tedric. Now she was
amazed at how different the place seemed—transformed since the
almost impulsive Battle of the Banks into an acknowledged
battleground.
After that battle, Stonehold’s forces had retreated as far
as the southern edge of the field, arraying themselves along the
field and spreading to either side of the broad north-south road that
would ultimately arrive at Mason’s Bridge. The road had a
grassy margin along it, bordered here and there with saplings or by
hedges protecting farmers’ fields or by orchards.
Firekeeper looked back and forth between the two camps. In the
camp outside of Good Crossing, the scarlet and white shields borne by
Hawk Haven’s rank and file blended with the sea green and
yellow of Bright Bay. On the other side of that cleared area, which
to Firekeeper’s eyes looked no different from any other patch
of cleared ground, neither scarlet and white nor green and yellow
could be seen, but only the triple chevronels of Stonehold—red,
purple, and blue on a field of white.
Even through the long glass that Derian had borrowed from Race,
the array of flags and pennons was confusing. Ever since King Tedric
had departed from Eagle’s Nest to meet with Duke Allister,
Firekeeper had been studying various insignia, trying to learn how to
tell person from person by their signs, and occasionally regretting
her refusal to learn to read and write.
Her memory was good, far better than that of most humans she had
met, but it was schooled to recall scents and sounds more than visual
images. Notes would help her to remember, or at least provide a
better sense of how human symbols worked.
“I don’t understand, still,” the wolf-woman
admitted to Derian. “The simplest, yes. Hawk Haven’s
soldiers bear the shield split side to side on the slant: red and
white. King Tedric’s colors.”
“Scarlet and silver are the preferred heraldic terms for
those colors,” Derian said teasingly, “but red and white
will do.”
“And those of Bright Bay carry shields of green and yellow,
split on a similar slant, but opposite,” Firekeeper gestured,
miming a line that started high on the left and dropped to the
right.
“Very good. Sea green and gold—yellow in this
case—are the colors of the royal house of Bright Bay,”
Derian said.
“And Stonehold soldiers,” Firekeeper continued,
“have on their shields what looks like three skinny mountains
against a snowy sky, colored one each red and purple and
blue.”
“Yes.”
“But some shields—no matter the color of the
background—have something drawn on the middle of the shield. A
star—or what you call a star—or a flower—though I
have never seen such flowers—or animals.”
Firekeeper’s snort showed what she thought of these last as
representations of the true beasts and beside her Blind Seer
laughed.
“The basic shields,” Derian explained with the
enthusiasm of a youth raised in the capital city for whom heraldry
meant not just symbols but real people—some of them heroes,
“are carried by the rank and file. The shields with a simple
blazon—the star or flower or animal—are carried by the
officers.”
Firekeeper nodded. “This so those they command may know them
when helmets are pulled low, but Earl Kestrel is an officer and yet
his shield is different yet more so. It bears the same blue and red
bands set side by side with the golden hunting horn that he shows on
his flag and even on his clothing.”
“That’s because he’s heir to a Great House and
entitled to bear his own house’s colors instead of those of the
king,” Derian said. “If you look to where Elise’s
father stands with his archers you will see that his shield is
different again: white with an archer upon it shooting a scarlet
arrow from his bow.”
Derian pointed. “If you look you’ll see that there are
others carrying Earl Kestrel’s red and blue stripes. These are
troops raised from his lands, his local militia. There aren’t
many of these because Norwood lands are all the way cross Hawk
Haven—in the area bordering New Kelvin. Most of his troops have
stayed home to patrol banks of the White Water River, just in case
the New Kelvinese get to wondering if we’re watching our
flanks. Still, there were some based at the Kestrel Manse in
Eagle’s Nest and they’ve come along so that Kestrel can
demonstrate its support of the king.”
Firekeeper nodded, noting that what Derian said of the Kestrel
colors was true of the other Great Houses as well. She resigned
herself to confusion, wondering how anyone could keep all of this
straight. In addition to those devices she had come to know there
were so many new ones: mostly devices designating military companies
or personal devices such as Sapphire’s gem-blazoned shield. “I have a new respect for heralds,” she said to
Blind Seer. “When we were in at the castle they seemed stuffy,
self-important sorts. Now I see how useful their knowledge
is.” Blind Seer grunted agreement . “I wonder what keeps one
soldier from carrying another’s shield or stealing a great
noble’s banner?” “A good question.” She repeated it to Derian, who
replied: “In the heat of battle one soldier will often seize
another’s shield, especially to replace one lost or damaged.
However, the imposture couldn’t continue after helmets were
removed.” “But deliberately change,” Firekeeper pressed,
“to make oneself more important.”
Derian laughed. “That would be its own penalty, for those
with reputation enough to merit a personal coat of arms are usually
the target of many soldiers. Killing a common soldier is useful, but
killing an officer or a noble may strike fear in those who depend on
his or her commands.”
“I see,” Firekeeper frowned. “You speak lightly
of killing and even laugh. Have you ever killed anyone?”
Derian sobered. “I have not. Honestly, I’m wondering
if I’m a great coward for being so glad that my place will be
off the main field.”
“I don’t think you’re a coward,”
Firekeeper said, looking out over that strip of empty land and
thinking of the coming battle as Derian had described it to her.
“I think you show great good sense. What will they fight for?
How will they know who has won?”
“Our troops fight to defend their position and to drive the
others away,” Derian explained. “Their troops fight to
take ground and make our soldiers lose heart.”
“Then we will win,” Firekeeper said confidently.
“We are here already and have nowhere to go. It is easier, too,
for more of King Tedric’s troops to join this army
here.”
“True,” Derian said, “as far as that goes. But
the damage done to land and property is all ours to take. If this war
stretches on, we are hurt by those damages.”
“Long? I thought this war was to be this
afternoon!”
“This battle,” Derian said heavily. “Wars are
made of many battles or sometimes of only one.”
“Which is this to be?”
“I wish I knew,” he said. “I bet King Tedric
wishes that he knew, too.”
“Is there any way to make the war end without many
battles?”
“Never start,” Derian said, then regretted the
flippancy in his tone. “I take that back. If that quick wisdom
was true our country and Bright Bay would not have been spatting
these hundred years and more. Sometimes a war is needed to clear the
enmity as a thunderstorm clears a late-summer sky—or so they
say.”
Firekeeper grunted, politely noncommittal about what she thought
about this bit of human wisdom.
“The other way wars are won,” Derian continued,
“is if one side captures a place or person so important that
the other side will surrender rather than risk their destruction: a
king or queen or perhaps someone like Duke Allister Seagleam, who has
taken his queen’s place here. I have heard that in New Kelvin
there are buildings so revered that the New Kelvinese honor them more
highly than any living thing.”
“Buildings?”
“So they say,” Derian shrugged, “but then New
Kelvinese are mad for old things and older customs.”
Firekeeper caught her breath in excitement. “Do the
Stoneholders have a king here? Where is his sign?”
Derian shook his head. “It’s not so easy, Firekeeper.
Stoneholders are ruled by two people, not one, and by a council in
addition. Moreover, none of those august personages are here as far
as I know. They’ve left Generals Yuci and Grimsel and their
troops to fight the battles for them.”
“I don’t,” Firekeeper admitted,
“understand.”
“I’m beginning to think,” Derian replied,
reaching over and squeezing her shoulder, “that neither do
I.”
Within a few hours, a field battle was no longer a thing to be
imagined. High in the concealing branches of a twisted oak on the
hilly ground west of Good Crossing, Firekeeper watched.
She was alone now but for Blind Seer. The wolf was prowling at the
base of the tree trunk, too nervous to sleep, though the early
afternoon was filled with lazy sunlight. Like her, he had come to
care for many of their human friends—to love them as an ersatz
pack—and to see these friends risk their lives so lightly for
so little was maddening.
Derian had gone to his post—to join the raiding party from
which Firekeeper herself had been asked to keep clear. She had
agreed, reluctantly acknowledging the wisdom of King Tedric’s
arguments, but at Firekeeper’s request, Elation was with
Derian, providing both guard and messenger should their friend come
to harm.
Both Elise and Doc were serving in the hospital tents erected to
the rear of the Hawk Haven-Bright Bay lines. Ox was at Earl
Kestrel’s side; Race and Valet were with Derian. Sapphire and
Jet were both bearing arms on the field. Even Lady Zorana was pulling
a bow under her brother’s command. Various spare nobles had
been delegated to run the king’s messages to the commanders on
the field.
Alone of all those she had befriended, Firekeeper had no place in
this war. Her skills with sword and shield, while admirable for the
scant training she had been given, were not good enough for her to
serve in the ranks without being more of a liability to her allies
than to the enemy. Although she was more skilled with a bow, she
could not bring herself to do as Baron Ivon’s archers would
do—stand in a line and loose arrows on command, hoping to hit
some anonymous figure on the other side. Slaughter so impersonal made
the wolf-woman shiver and feel sick.
Through the long glass, Firekeeper saw Duke Allister near the
center of Bright Bay and Hawk Haven’s allied
armies—riding out among them as chief commander of all those
assembled. She wondered how Duke Allister felt about his tasks and
the deaths that would occur upon his word. She wondered if King
Tedric regretted not being out there himself—he had seemed so
very angry when the physicians had adamantly refused to risk him any
nearer to the battlefield than a tent at the rear of the lines. She
wondered if she was even human to so little understand war.
And troubled by such thoughts, she watched from the limbs of her
towering oak. A thin shrill blast as from a hunting horn pierced the
air. This was followed by a flight of arrows, one coming so rapidly
after the others that the horn call seemed the source of that
black-shafted hail.
Though slim and light in the air, the arrows landed to deadly
effect. Firekeeper cringed as on both sides soldiers crumpled and
screamed. After a few more volleys, archers slung their bows across
their shoulders and lifted their fallen fellows, carrying dead and
wounded alike toward the rear lines. Then she heard the trumpet call
signaling the next movement in the battle.
From the flanks rode out the cavalry. Mounted on a dark sorrel far
heavier than familiar Coal, Earl Kestrel led the right wing onto the
field. Riding slightly behind him on a bald-faced chestnut selected
more for strength than for beauty or grace was Ox. The big man bore
the Kestrel banner in one hand and a sword in the other.
Ox has no shield, Firekeeper thought anxiously. No shield but the
speed and skill with which he wields his sword. Yet I could swear
that he is laughing and urging the others on.
Her gaze turned then to the other flank, where a woman she had met
only in passing led the left flank of the cavalry charge. This was
the Duchess Merlin, a woman young for her position—barely
twenty-four. Her grandfather and father had both died in their
forties.
There had been those who had argued that House Trueheart would do
better with an older, steadier person at its head to help young Grace
learn her way about her responsibilities—among those had been
Zorana Archer, who had nominated her husband, Aksel Trueheart, the
duchess’s uncle. Grace, however, had been twenty-two when her
father died and so was legally eligible to take her place among the
heads of the Great Houses.
Many had expressed surprise when Duchess Merlin had arrived
personally leading the reinforcements raised from those who usually
patrolled her lands. Derian had reported that the king had said that
the young duchess needed to prove herself and that she fully
understood the risk she was taking. On her arrival Duchess Merlin had
presented the king with a document not unlike the king’s own
will, naming a regent for her year-old son should she die on the
field.
And how many others, Firekeeper mused, watching the slender
duchess on her sturdy dapple grey charge into the opposing line of
mounted soldiers, are out there fighting not because they believe in
preserving Bright Bay’s territory from Stonehold, but because
they have something to prove? Surely Sapphire Shield fights to earn
glory rather than for Bright Bay. And perhaps Jet hopes that valor in
battle may remove the ignominy of his behavior on the night of the
brothels.
When Sapphire Shield had requested to join Earl Kestrel’s
company, the earl had welcomed her, not so much, Firekeeper knew, for
her skill— though Sapphire rode as well as many of the cavalry
troops—but because the soldiers loved her for appearing like a
figure out of legend: for the blue steed she rode, for her dyed and
enameled armor.
Sapphire’s renunciation of the stone that had glowed so long
on her brow had done nothing to lessen the tales growing up around
her. Though two days had passed, the skin where the headband had
rested for so long remained as white as new-fallen snow. Already some
whispered that Sapphire had battled evil sorcery and won. And yet, even those who shiver deliciously at the tales
don’t believe them, not deep inside. How strange.
The infantry waded into the gaps left by the clash of cavalry.
Here was where Rolfston Redbriar fought and here was where he died,
slain by a practiced sword slash from a grim-faced woman with a
dogwood blossom painted above the triple chevronels on her shield.
Neither Sapphire nor Jet, each elsewhere on the field, knew that they
were now fatherless. Melina was right when she told Rolfston Redbriar not to be a
fool and join the battle, but he would have nothing of her
wisdom—not when Ivon Archer fights both as an archer and then
on foot. I wonder if somehow Lady Melina will turn even this tragedy
to enhance her reputation.
In the infantry was where many other people Firekeeper had met
were fighting: men and women with whom she had tossed dice or who had
proven their courage by stroking Blind Seer’s head. It bothered
her that she could not tell one from another even with the long
glass. Helmets and armor, combined with shields held to protect vital
spots, turned each figure into a blood- and dirt-smeared variation on
the rest.
Firekeeper found herself watching the cavalry instead, for horses
were distinct where humans were not.
She watched, fingernails digging trenches in her palms, as Earl
Kestrel’s sorrel was belly-wounded and tumbled screaming to the
ground. Had Ox not been near to lift the body from his earl, Norvin
Norwood, too, would have died there. As it was, Earl Kestrel
struggled to his feet and eschewed his own safety to cut his
horse’s throat before turning to face those who saw an unseated
cavalry officer as fair game.
Prince Newell, mounted on a rust-colored steed splashed with white
on legs and face, rescued Earl Kestrel by dashing close enough to
shield-bash the soldier who was raising his sword to strike, though
this left Newell himself vulnerable.
Ox tended to the soldier who would have stabbed Newell, receiving
in return an ugly slash that laid open one side of his jaw. Ignoring
the red rain that came forth, he beat his way back to the little
earl’s side, finally shoving him into the saddle of his own
sturdy chestnut. Then, scooping up the banner pole, Ox raised the
Kestrel crest so that the earl’s troop would take heart from
the knowledge that their commander was safe.
Once unremarkable, now the little scrap of land was watered with
blood, mostly in trickles and dribbles but sometimes in terrible
gouts where soldiers or steeds had been mortally wounded. The hot,
coppery stink came even to where Firekeeper sat and soon she thought
she could bear no more. Yet she remained anchored to her perch, held
by a fierce desire not to cheapen the sacrifice of those who were
fighting by hiding like a rabbit.
So she was there to see when Duke Allister’s aide, a man she
vaguely recalled as Lord Tench, was slain by an arrow meant for the
duke.
Duke Allister’s group was mostly afoot now—perhaps to
make the duke less visible. Had Allister Seagleam not turned to
answer some request from a bloodied retainer, had Tench not moved to
listen to what was being said, the arrow might have landed unnoticed
in dirt already churned by many feet, already littered with countless
arrows from earlier attacks. But the arrow hit Tench squarely in the
back, a mortal wound that left the others in his vicinity scattering
for cover. And Firekeeper was down from her sheltering oak before
Tench hit the ground.
“That arrow could only have come from near here,” she
cried to Blind Seer. “That was no chance shot! Let us find the
archer. I have no love for those who kill brave soldiers from a
distance and from cover.”
Blind Seer gaped his fanged jaws in a vicious smile. “I
am with you, Little Two-legs, but the smells of blood and sweat and
fear thicken the air. I cannot find this ‘archer by scent
alone. Use your knowledge of the archer’s craft and find him
for us.”
And Firekeeper nodded, calling to mind every trace and trick for
use of the bow that Race Forester had taught her. Her teacher’s
skill had been honed by the need to live by his hunting and her
enthusiasm for his lessons had been avid; otherwise she might not
have found the place from which the assassin’s arrow had been
shot. But having all her life—at least her life as she
remembered it—needed to survive by dint of quickness and
cleverness, Firekeeper remembered precisely the path of that arrow as
it had streaked through the fair sky.
“It is not so unlike finding the lark’s nest by
recalling how she darts into the sky from cover,” she said to
Blind Seer, mentally tracing the arrow’s path. “We will
find the archer there in that clump of maples— ahead a bit,
closer to the battlefield. Doubtless he has hidden in the tree boughs
as I did here.” “The ground between is opener than I like,” the
wolf replied, already lowering himself to slink close to the earth as
the pack would when stalking a herd of elk. “I mislike how
your tall two-legged shape will stand out.”
The feral woman stroked his thick ruff. “There is no
avoiding that risk. We can only hope this archer’s thoughts are
for his prey alone. Keep to what cover you can, dearest one. Remember
his skill with the bow!”
Together they left their shelter. Blind Seer, belly so close to
the earth that the stubble groomed his fur, took the most direct
line, but Firekeeper dropped back to approach the clump of maples
from behind. Once in the open, she ran like a deer or a
wolf—for one was much the same in short bursts; it must be for
the one to live by hunting the other. And it was doubtful that even
if the archer in his lofty blind had seen her he would have been able
to fit arrow to string in time to take aim.
Despite having more ground to cover, Firekeeper arrived slightly
before the wolf. No scent betrayed the archer, but the scuffed bark
of the largest tree in the clump testified to his presence. Blind
Seer crouched below as she leapt onto the tree trunk, scrabbling
upward like a squirrel, her bare feet finding purchase where most
climbers would have found none. “If he jumps down,” Firekeeper called to her
companion, “catch him, but leave the killing to me. I liked
not how the humans looked at you in fear when you killed the one who
would have slain Sapphire in the town that night.”
Blind Seer howled softly in agreement and this gave the archer
warning of Firekeeper’s coming. He was well placed on a
platform jury-rigged across two thick boughs and traded bow for knife
as Firekeeper’s hand emerged from the leaves, casting as if
searching for a firm hold to continue the ascent.
A human would have died without seeing the hidden archer’s
face, but Firekeeper was not a human in such things. Though the
archer had moved with stealth, she had heard the soft tap as the bow
was set down, the slight scrape as knife left sheath. The questing
hand had been a feint to draw his attack.
Her Fang was ready in her free hand, her feet securely braced on a
lower limb. When the archer’s knife flashed to where her arm
should be, her Fang met his own arm right at the shoulder joint.
Though the archer wore armor, it did him no good. The Fang pierced
the light leather in the interstices between the heavier sections,
drawing both blood and a cry of pain. Yet the archer kept both his
balance and his blade. Stumbling back onto the platform, he seized
his quiver. When Firekeeper leapt onto the branch, he hurled it at
her. She parried with one hand, keeping the Fang ready to bite again
in the other.
They faced each other then and Firekeeper knew the man. This man
had taken care to be unobtrusive in his comings and goings about the
Hawk Haven camp, but she had taken equal care to know something about
the entourage of each noble.
“Rook!” she exclaimed, startled, for what was Prince
Newell’s manservant doing here, attacking his master’s
commander?
Rook’s reply was to lunge forward, perhaps hoping to take
advantage of her momentary surprise. Firekeeper’s defenses,
though, were as automatic as breathing—they needed to be, for
in the wilds she would not have breathed long if she needed to think
about defense. She dodged the blow and counterstruck. Already she
knew that she did not want to kill Rook—alive he could
talk—but he had no such consideration for her.
Rook was larger and had better footing. He might be stronger,
though Firekeeper was discovering that she was stronger than most
humans she encountered. However, stronger or not, Rook outmassed her,
not a trivial consideration in a duel where one could win merely by
making the other fall. But Firekeeper was at home in the trees,
almost as much at ease as she would be on the ground, especially in a
spreading, broad-branched old tree like this maple. Reluctant to
leave the sure footing of his platform, Rook was greatly
handicapped.
Below, Blind Seer leapt into the air, snapping his jaws loudly. He
could not reach the upper branches where the two humans tussled, but
Firekeeper saw how his growls and snarls unnerved her opponent.
“Surrender,” she suggested, nicking Rook’s
forearm on the underside so that the blood ran from between the
lacings. “You cannot run. Blind Seer will wait for you, even if
you defeat me. Surrender and I swear you will live to speak with the
king.”
Rook considered and even glanced out at the battlefield as if
expecting to see King Tedric there. Unwilling to risk killing him,
Firekeeper did not press beyond nicking Rook again, this time along
the back of his neck where his helmet and collar did not quite
meet.
Perhaps it was this, perhaps it was a foreboding that surrender or
not he would eventually become her prisoner, but Rook snarled:
“I surrender! Do you promise you or that beast will not kill
me until I have seen the king?”
“Seen and spoken with,” Firekeeper agreed, “if
King Tedric wishes to speak with you. And if you surrender
faithfully.”
“I will,” Rook said, laying down his long knife.
Not trusting him overmuch, Firekeeper bound Rook with his own
bowstring there in the treetops.
“This can be your prison,” she said, “until the
battle is done.” “Seal his mouth!” Blind Seer called, leaping
and snapping still for the pleasure of it. “He may call for
help otherwise.”
Firekeeper agreed. As she bound Rook’s mouth with cloth torn
from his shirt, she thought she saw dismay as well as anger in the
man’s eyes. “A good reminder,”she said to the wolf as she
dropped down beside him and rubbed his head. “I wonder if
his master knows of his treachery?”
She looked out over the still raging battlefield, hunting for
Prince Newell and his rust-red steed. Duke Allister, she noted in
passing, was back in command, framed by four soldiers who must be
very brave because they intended to intercept any arrow meant for
their commander—with their own bodies more likely than not. Sir
Dirkin East-branch was one of these four, doubtless participating in
today’s battle at his king’s express command.
Lord Tench’s corpse lay on the ground to one side, still
facedown, though the arrow had been broken off, probably in a
desperate attempt to stanch the blood and save his life.
“I don’t see Prince Newell,” Firekeeper
said, puzzled. “Nor is his war mount among the dumb brutes
lying dead on the field. Where could he have gone?”
“Perhaps he has retreated wounded to the
hospital,” Blind Seer suggested.
Firekeeper turned the long-glass in that direction, but saw no
sign of the rust-red horse or its rider. Troubled now, she cast wider
and finally, at the very rear of the line, she located the horse.
Prince Newell’s shield hung from the saddle harness, confirming
that she had not been mistaken.
“Newell is with King Tedric,” she said.
“Perhaps he reports on the progress of the
fighting.”
But something troubled her even as she offered this explanation.
She remembered how Rook had scanned the battlefield before
surrendering. Recalled how he had insisted on speaking with
“the king,” not with “King Tedric.” Little things, she thought, but a strong bird’s nest can
be built with nothing but slim twigs and rabbit fluff. Beginning to run, she called to Blind Seer, “Come away
with me, sweet hunter. Suddenly, I am very afraid.”
No one but a few frightened horses seemed to notice when woman and
wolf came running down the hillside and went darting through the rear
lines toward the scarlet pavilion pitched as a command center for the
aged king.
As Firekeeper closed with that pavilion, however, she noticed a
strange thing. The guards who should stand flanking the door to the
pavilion or pace a patrol outside of it were standing a good number
of feet from the structure. Standing there as well were some of those
who had been acting as messengers for King Tedric: nobles and castle
staff alike.
Lady Zorana raised her bow when Firekeeper would cross the
perimeter around the pavilion, her expression grim.
“No one may interrupt the king, not even you, Lady Blysse.
He is in deep and confidential conference.”
“No!” Firekeeper swallowed a snarl of frustration.
“Not with Prince Newell?”
“That’s right.” Lady Zorana looked slightly
puzzled, but her bow and that deadly arrow remained steady.
Other of the guards were drawing weapons as well. Realizing that
even she and Blind Seer could not take out so many—especially
when she wished these people no harm—Firekeeper decided to risk
the arrow. Feinting left, then ducking in the other direction, she
dashed for the pavilion. She hadn’t reckoned on the skill of
the daughter of Purcel Archer.
Lady Zorana corrected her aim while Firekeeper was still pounding
across the open ground. The wolf-woman heard the bowstring sing out
and leapt up, but Zorana’s aim was true. Only the fact that
Zorana had not wished—despite, or perhaps because of, her
political rivalry with the king’s presumed heir—to kill
Firekeeper preserved the young woman’s life. The arrow plowed
across the flesh on the outside of Firekeeper’s left thigh,
cutting a deep furrow through skin and muscle.
Ox’s courage when she had seen him wounded sprang to mind,
balancing but not diminishing the searing pain. Firekeeper had been
hurt many times before, but most of those injuries had been of the
pummeling variety. When she had been cut, it had rarely been deep.
Nothing in her experience had prepared her for the sensation of
muscle being neatly sliced and of control vanishing.
Yet she leapt forward on her strong leg, relying on her arms as
she had when a pup. Carried by momentum, she pitched through the
pavilion’s door. Blind Seer bounded beside her, alert, though
whimpering his concern.
Firekeeper nearly surrendered to the pain when she saw what
awaited her within. Prince Newell bent over the high-backed chair
from which King Tedric had commanded his forces. The king’s
form was still upright; his hands still grasped the carved arms of
the chair, but his eyes were shut. There was a pallor to the
king’s face that Firekeeper did not like at all and he did not
seem to be breathing.
Prince Newell straightened when he saw her.
“Lady Blysse,” he said, his tone for a moment as
casual as it had been when they met at the ball. Then it altered,
filling with concern and shock. “You’ve been
wounded!”
“The king,” she said. “What have you done to the
king!”
“Nothing,” he responded. “I was telling him
about the attempt to assassinate Duke Allister when His Majesty
collapsed. I fear the news was more than his heart could take. I was
attempting to revive him.”
Firekeeper knew nothing of medicine’s deeper mysteries, but
it did not seem to her that Newell had been reviving the king. Why
then was the king’s wig knocked to one side? Why was there none
of the sharp stink of stimulants that she recalled from her visits to
the king’s chambers? Why were the king’s pale lips slowly
shaping one word?
“Help…” Tedric hissed.
“He lives!” she said to Blind Seer.
“Quickly! Get Doc!” “But Prince Newell!” the wolf growled in protest.
“He reeks of treachery!” “Go!” Firekeeper repeated. “You must not be
here when I deal with him.”
And the great grey wolf slipped beneath the edge of the
pavilion’s scarlet fabric and was gone. From without Firekeeper
heard cries of alarm, but she could not attend to them. Her argument
with Blind Seer had taken half the time it would have in human words
but still she had wasted too much time.
“I think,” Newell was saying, already drawing his
sword and lunging at her, “the shock of your death, little
Blysse, will finish my job for me.”
Firekeeper leapt back, knowing that she could hope for no
assistance, even if those outside overcame their reluctance to
disobey the prince’s orders. They would see her as the attacker
and Newell as the bold defender. Yet she could not abandon the king,
unarmed and lightly armored though she was, not after the proud old
Eagle had asked her for help.
She leapt back, stumbling on her wounded leg. Normally she could
have gotten clean away, but slowed as she was the sword’s sharp
point deeply scored the leather armor across her belly. Silently
Firekeeper thanked Derian, who had insisted that she wear the
stifling stuff, even if she was not to be in combat.
Drawing her Fang from its Mouth, Firekeeper dropped low, coming
within the compass of Prince Newell’s arm, too close for him to
bring the sword to bear. He was more heavily armored than she was,
but she jabbed the blade between two metal plates and through the
leather. It grated against a rib, then slid in.
Her reward was a grunt from Prince Newell and a kiss of warm blood
on her fingers. The prince jerked back before she could pull the
blade free, leaving her unarmed, her only weapon damming the wound in
his side. Not only weapon, she reminded herself. Have I not called
myself a wolf?
More cautious now, Prince Newell held his sword as much to guard
as to attack. He must indeed regret the shield he had left hanging
from the rust-red charger’s harness.
Blood loss was making Firekeeper light-headed, but she remained
enough herself to know that she could not charge again. Instead she
lifted a small table. The papers that had covered it fluttered to the
ground and began sopping up her blood from where it puddled on the
rugs.
Throwing the table, then a footstool, Firekeeper took advantage of
Prince Newell’s dodging to close a few more steps. Her leg
didn’t even hurt now; the pain was as much a constant as her
unwavering desire to protect the old man in his high-backed
chair.
In the background she heard the sound of someone entering the
tent. From the corner of her eye, she glimpsed one of the
King’s Own Guard. Knowing that in any moment she might have
another enemy, Firekeeper grabbed a medicine bottle, a carafe
half-filled with red wine, a tray, and hurled them one by one with
the pinpoint accuracy of one who had lived by that skill.
Prince Newell was wholly on the defensive now, unable—or
perhaps merely unwilling—to close as long as she had
ammunition. An angry red mark spread on one cheek where a heavy
pottery goblet had broken against the bone. His lower lip was
bleeding.
There was the sound of more people entering the pavilion, but thus
far no one interfered. Firekeeper’s vision was beginning to
blur now: fading in and out so that she had moments of great clarity
and others where she could hardly see the man whom she no longer
recalled by name, recalling only that he was her prey and that this
was the most important hunt of her life.
On the periphery of her attention, Firekeeper heard shouts and
screams. Considered that they might be important, dismissed the
thought as a distraction from her task.
Relentlessly, she dragged herself after her prey, throwing
whatever came to hand: scraps of pottery, bits of blood-soaked paper,
a solid metal box. Then, suddenly, the tips of her fingers scrabbled
vainly in the plush of the rugs. For the first time, she realized
that she was on the floor, her weight resting on the knee of her
sound right leg and on her right arm. Her left hand quested blindly
after something to throw.
A shadow fell over her. In one of those moments of perfect clarity
of thought and vision, Firekeeper recognized Prince Newell, battered
and bloodied but still alive. Grasping the hilt in both hands, he was
raising his sword to pin her to the ground, thus to end her crawling
forever.
A dark red eye, bright and wet in his side, looked down at
Firekeeper—the garnet set into the hilt of her Fang. With her
last strength, the wolf-woman surged just high enough to grasp the
knife handle. Shoving the blade in with desperate power, she twisted.
The force of Prince Newell’s own descending thrust ripped the
Fang free.
Then hot, terrible pain forced her face into the bloodied rugs.
She knew nothing except that faintly, at the very edge of her
hearing, a wolf was howling as if his heart must break.
XXVI
Even before the thin wail of the trumpet signaled the
first exchange of arrows, Derian and the other raiders had been long
gone. They had left via Good Crossing’s river gate huddled
beneath a tarp on the deck of a cargo boat. To an observer, theirs
would, appear to be just one of many small boats filled to capacity
with those who had decided that it was safer to be away from the
city, just in case the defenders did not hold.
However, unlike most of these boats, which went downriver to land
at the usually placid hamlet of Butterfield, their boatman carried
them only as far as a small cove hidden from the city—and, they
hoped, from any observers—by a thick tangle of willows.
Derian felt dreadfully exposed as he climbed from the boat onto
the shore, uncomforted by the fact that not even most of the river
traffic seemed to notice their detour. Rationally, he knew they were
invisible, but he fully expected a roving band of Stoneholders to
leap out upon them.
His back tensed against this imagined threat, he steadied the boat
as the others climbed ashore. Each raider carried a bow and arrows, a
knife, and a hand weapon of choice. Each was lightly armored, any
metal dulled, any light tanned leather rubbed dark with soot. None
carried a shield, for these would slow them and the raiders had to
move quickly and use what cover they could.
Traffic on the road east from Good Crossing, a road that roughly
paralleled the Barren River, was nonexistent. In an effort to keep
Stonehold from pressing east should they break the army at Good
Crossing, the road had been barricaded with fallen trees where it
left the open grounds around the city. In any case, no coward or
refugee was going to chance a land journey when the river was so
near.
Race Forester led them away from the riverbank and across the
road, then through a gap in a hedgerow bordering a farmer’s
fields. The grain was high and—Derian thought—close to
being ripe. It made an admirable shield from anything.
He glanced up, catching a glimpse of what he thought was Elation
lazily riding the air currents far above. Firekeeper had told Derian
that the falcon would be there keeping an eye on him and that she
would bring Firekeeper if needed. Otherwise, the bird was to stay
high enough that she would not draw attention to herself or to the
raiders.
Derian thought it was nice that his death would be avenged, but
other than that he didn’t think the great peregrine would be
much help. Realizing that he was woolgathering, Derian forced himself
to pay attention as Race reviewed their plans.
“We’re going to make our way back,” Race said,
“just about all the way that boat carried us, but this time
we’ll angle inland south and west. Jem”—the scout
nodded toward a burly, bent man who looked as if his nose had been
hit with a potato masher—“has done a good deal of
scouting over on this side of the Barren and is going to take us
through orchards and fields.”
“And folks’ barns,” Jem grunted. “We
won’t touch a road and the Stoneholders”—he
spat—“won’t see us until we choose.”
Between practice sessions last night, Derian had talked for a
while with Jem, the only Bright Bay scout in their strike force. Jem
passionately hated Stonehold because of how a Stonehold sergeant had
violently beat him some years before. His smashed nose was only the
most visible of his injuries.
When he had recovered enough to walk, Jem had defected to Hawk
Haven and by now was well known and well trusted by the garrison at
the Watchful Eye, who knew him for a smuggler who would smuggle
information as well as goods.
“I know not all ‘holders are like that
sergeant,” Jem had told Derian. “I know it in my head,
but in my heart I hate ’em.”
Derian dragged his attention to the present.
“Stay out of sight,” Race reminded them. “The
army’s providing a distraction for us, but that won’t
mean everyone’s staring toward the front lines like kids
watching a puppet show. Some will remember their duty to guard, some
won’t want to watch, others will have jobs that will take them
through the camp. Still, they won’t be watching every wagon and
supply dump. Those are our targets.”
Derian nodded, his mouth dry. Then he fell into place. In front of
him was Joy Spinner—the scout from House Kite—and behind
him was another scout, a man called Thyme. Valet was toward the back
and Jem out front. Race, nominally in command though this raid
demanded initiative as well as obedience, moved alongside Jem, ready
for trouble.
Jem’s chosen route, however, was clear. Those who owned the
farms they crossed were either absent or reluctant to notice an armed
group that was so evidently just passing through. The barns they cut
through were empty of any livestock other than the occasional chicken
or cat. In a surprisingly short period of time the raiders were
behind the Stonehold lines and drawing up on their encampment.
In the near distance, shouts and commands, the clash of metal, and
the screams of the wounded confirmed that battle had been joined.
They came sharply to Derian as he closed on his own battlefield, a
reminder of the penalty for failure.
Jem led them through an orchard, the upper boughs of the trees
heavy with unpicked fruit, the air smelling of cider. It came up
right to the edge of the Stonehold camp. Doubtless even the strict
rules against pillaging hadn’t kept the soldiers from stealing
the more easily picked fruit.
Derian didn’t need Race’s hand signal to remind him to
keep to cover. As on the banks of the Barren, he felt dreadfully
exposed, even though he knew that as long as he kept his movements
slow and steady only the most alert guard would be likely to spot him
through the intervening apple trees.
He knelt behind one of the trees, studying the camp through the
veil of low-hanging branches.
The Stoneholders had not unloaded most of the recently arrived
wagons. That made sense. If the Rocky Band won today’s battle,
they would be moving forward to take new ground. If they failed, they
needed to be ready to retreat. Many of the tarps covering the wagons
had been thrown back, probably to inventory the contents and to haul
out what was immediately needed. Those wagons that remained covered
clearly contained fodder, for hay poked out at either end. There’s my target, Derian thought. I’m sure
I can hit a haystack and even slightly green hay will burn
nicely.
He gestured his choice to Race and the scout nodded. A few moments
later, he signaled for them to string their bows. Each raider carried
several arrows specially prepared for fire. Five of their
number—Valet was one—carried clay pots containing coals.
As they had rehearsed the night before, they broke into clumps of
three and set their arrows tip-down into the coals. First, Derian reminded himself, light the arrow. The smell of
burning shouldn’t alert the guards, because they’ll have
campfires of their own. Wait for Race’s signal to shoot. Shoot
all your prepared arrows. Then decide whether you can constructively
do more or whether the best thing you can do is clear out.
Neat orders. Tidy. Simple when they were just diagrams drawn in
the dirt rather than directed toward a living camp that looked far
too much like the one you had left behind.
The Stoneholders didn’t look like monsters, just like
soldiers. The guards were alert, scanning the orchards though more
than one spared a glance toward the battlefield where their comrades
were fighting. Some of these guards were clearly walking wounded,
reassigned after the Battle of the Banks.
A few had dogs with them, heavy, thick-bodied brutes meant for
guarding not hunting. Derian was glad that Race had left Queenie
behind. The bird dog wouldn’t have a chance against these
animals. They might even give Blind Seer a good fight. The dogs had a
better chance than the guards of spotting the group creeping through
the orchard, but the light wind blew from the north and
Stonehold’s camp was rich with odors so the dogs hadn’t
scented the raiders.
In addition to the guards, there were other Stoneholders in the
camp, men and women who hurried about purposefully fetching stuff
from the wagons, darting in and out of tents, hurrying along with
serious expressions on their faces. There was even a fat woman
washing socks in a cauldron slung from a tripod over a fire.
I’ve been around Firekeeper too long, Derian thought. People
just look like people.
The arrows in the pot had just caught when Race’s signal to
shoot came. Derian fired, fumbling a bit because—despite
practice the night before—he’d never fired a burning
arrow with any speed. To his right, Valet shot off two shafts with
neat precision before Derian had readied his own second arrow. When
Derian tried to hurry, Valet said softly:
“Make it count.”
Derian slowed. His first arrow had landed in his chosen haystack
and fire began to catch the hay. He sent another arrow at the same
stack— after all, you didn’t use just one piece of
kindling to start a cook fire.
As he reached for a third arrow, Derian realized that
Valet—having finished with his own prepared arrows—had
been poaching Derian’s. Momentarily angry, Derian would have
laughed at himself if he hadn’t been so nervous. What did it
matter who fired the arrows as long as they were shot?
Only as he was lowering his own bow did he realize that one of the
dogs from the Stonehold camp was charging toward him. Its
long-muzzled face was set in an ugly, fang-barring snarl that
reminded Derian of Blind Seer.
If this had been a ballad, Derian would have reached for an arrow
from his quiver and smoothly fired, dropping the vicious canine in
its tracks. Instead, Derian yelled and swung his bow. The string
popped, stinging as it slapped against his face, but the solid shaft
hit the dog soundly along head and neck. The dog reared back on its
haunches, yelping in surprise and pain. By the time it attacked
again, Derian had dropped the bow and drawn his sword.
Here the practicing he had done with Firekeeper and Blind Seer
came to his aid. He knew how the dog would attack; indeed, he nearly
misjudged because he expected one of Blind Seer’s more subtle
feints. This animal didn’t feint or dodge. It came straight in,
trusting its speed and ferocity.
Derian’s sword laid it open along one flank. His second
stroke took off its head.
“Very good, sir,” Valet said from beside him.
“And thanks.”
Derian grinned, feeling wetness on his face where dog blood had
spattered. Excitement made his own blood race and his head feel
light. He might have dashed foolishly to where the Stoneholders were
turning to face the dozens of fires blazing throughout their camp if
Valet hadn’t held him. Suddenly, he realized that the attack
had come to them.
Stonehold guards were surging into the orchard, determined to find
the source of the fire arrows. A short distance away from where
Derian and Valet were half-hidden by the same tree, the scout Thyme,
who had shared their pot of coals, was trading sword blows with a
Stoneholder. Race was entangled with another, disadvantaged by his
lack of a shield. Joy Spinner lay curiously still on the ground, an
arrow in her back and one of the dogs sniffing at her pooling
blood.
The excitement left Derian as quickly as it had come. He glanced
at Valet.
He wanted to yell, “Let’s get out of here!”
Instead he managed, “What next?”
Valet pointed. Fire was spreading through the Stoneholder’s
supplies. In some places it had been beaten out or drenched with
water from one of the butts distributed with military order among the
tents. In other places it had spread to the saplings and shrubs that
bordered the road. Hot leaves and twigs dropped down, rekindling the
blaze.
Derian looked where Valet had pointed. At the west edge of the
Stone-holders’ camp was a makeshift corral holding, at rough
estimate, at least two dozen draft horses. The fire was spreading
near them, feeding on the fodder in the wagons parked conveniently
close and on the wagons themselves. The huge, normally placid animals
were panicked, rolling their eyes, wheeling and plunging, screaming
like frightened women or small children.
Kicks from powerful hind legs had broken out sections of the
corral, but mostly the horses had simply crowded as far as possible
from the flames. They were strong, but not brilliant, bred to trust
people to do their thinking for them.
“Loss of those horses,” Valet said, “would hurt
Stonehold badly.”
Without a second thought, Derian headed for the horses. Never mind
that the Stoneholders’ cause would be hurt! Those horses had
done nothing but haul wagons. He couldn’t let them burn to
death—especially not in fires he had set.
Even in his sudden fury, Derian didn’t forget he had to
cross most of the Stonehold camp to reach the imperiled horses. Joy
Spinner with the arrow in her back was reminder enough of the risk he
was taking.
But in this case, fire and the chaos it had engendered actually
helped Derian. Once he slunk past the closest guards and entered the
Stonehold camp, most people didn’t look twice at him. His light
armor wasn’t banded with any crest. Rubbed with soot as it was,
Derian looked as if he’d been fighting the fire.
That’s just what he did as he darted through the camp, Valet
a few steps behind. He stomped out a grass fire where a hot twig
fell, tipped the kettle of socks—somehow forgotten until
now—onto a heap of burning laundry. He was just a red-haired
youth with a scared look on his face, running toward the fire. The
enemy was outside. Am I the enemy? Derian thought. Not to those horses.
Others had noticed the horses by now, but they were more
interested in combating the fire rather than dealing with the massed
equine terror. One grizzled sergeant actually gave Derian a quick
grin of praise when he saw him heading into the corral.
“Take care, son,” he shouted, never turning from where
he was throwing water onto some hay. “They’re fair
panicked and won’t know friend from foe.” Icertainly hope they don’t, Derian
thought.
Glancing around with a practiced eye, he quickly spotted a horse
that seemed marginally calmer than the rest—a big, black
gelding with white stockings and a broad white blaze. Derian could
feel the horse’s strength when he grabbed his halter and
tugged. The horse balked and Derian, remembering what he’d been
taught, grabbed a rag—doubtlessly used to rub down the
horses—and blindfolded the animal.
The horse didn’t magically become unafraid, but now it was
at least willing to be led. Even better, several of the other horses,
seeing that there was a human in charge, seemed inclined to
follow.
Derian grabbed Valet by the arm and shoved him at the black
gelding.
“Take this one out!” he ordered, shouting over the
crackling of the fire and screams of the horses. “I’ll
see what I can do to urge the others on.”
Ever efficient, Valet produced a bit of rope from about his waist
and slipped it through the horse’s halter as a makeshift lead
line. Feeling the tug at his head and Derian’s hand slap his
haunch, the black permitted himself to be led by the small man.
Derian’s self-appointed task was nearly impossible, but
Derian had been around horses since before he could walk. His mother
had carried him slung from a saddle when he was an infant—him
on one side, a saddlebag on the other. His first job had been in the
stables, the first present he could remember had been a pony. There
were times Derian believed he could think like a horse—and he
tried to think like one now.
Horses feared and hated fire like any intelligent creature should.
Derian offered them a way out. He pulled at their halters, turning
their heads away from the nearby flames, urging them away. They might
not understand his words, but they understood that a human was taking
charge. And being herd animals, once the first few were heading
somewhere, the rest wanted to follow. Ancestors! Derian thought. We’re actually getting away
with this!
“What do we do with them?” Derian asked Valet when the
little man returned to help. “Won’t the Stoneholders just
recapture them when the fire’s out?”
“I suspect,” Valet said, slipping his lead rope
through another halter, “that the local farmers will be happy
to give the horses new homes.”
Derian nodded. Although his eyes streamed from the smoke, he could
see that the newly released horses were heading into the stubble of a
harvested oat field on the west side of the road, equal parts eager
to escape the fire and to settle down to some interesting foraging.
Stonehold might reclaim a few of their horses, but not many—not
if the farmers who owned that field and others like it had any
say.
As he eased the last horse out of the corral, Derian glanced back
over his shoulder. The Stoneholders were getting the fire under
control. The fodder for their horses was gone, though, along with
bedding, many tents, and a good bit of food. There were dead guards
on the ground, too. Not all of the raiders had contented themselves
with stealing horses.
Not all of the raiders had gotten away, either, Derian learned
when he and Valet rejoined the others at the barn that had been
designated as their meeting place. Joy Spinner was dead; so were
three other scouts whose names Derian hadn’t even learned. Jem
was missing; so was another of the scouts.
Race was there, his arm in a rough sling. Thyme lay on a stretcher
made from a horse blanket and the shafts from two spears. He was
unconscious and there was blood on his lips. Most of the other
raiders bore wounds, though none so grave.
Derian was surprised to find that his broken bowstring had raised
a huge welt across his face and that he had burns on his hands. He
hadn’t felt any of it during the action. Still, he was better
off than many of the others.
Taking one end of the stretcher holding Thyme, Derian tried to
keep his tired feet steady as Race led them back toward the river
road. Several of the scouts had their bows out, ready for ambush.
None came.
The battle still raged and the fires still burned in the infirmary
tent, Elise wrapped a bandage around a newly stitched wound in the
forearm of a cavalry officer from Duchess Merlin’s company. The
face she saw in front of her was not that of the wounded woman, but
of her cousin Purcel as she had seen him only a few minutes before:
still, white, and dead.
He had been brought in by bearers from the battlefield. A glance
at the blood soaking the stretcher’s taut canvas and running
from the young man’s slightly parted lips had told the story,
but the bearer, perhaps knowing her Purcel’s cousin, perhaps
merely to assuage his own grief and shock, had blurted out:
“He was alive when we picked him up, Lady Elise. Laughing a
little even, trying to buck up our spirits. We moved him
careful-like, very careful. Then he gave a soft cry and coughed. Just
like that, he was gone.”
Elise had started to cry, had wanted nothing more than to sit
there beside the still, cooling body. Who would tell Kenre? What
would Aunt Zorana do? A firm hand had touched her arm. She had looked
up to see one of the field medics, a man she didn’t even know
by name though today they had worked as closely as brother and
sister.
“I’m sorry,” he had said, “but you could
best honor this man by saving some of those who served with him. We
are so very short of trained hands that we can’t spare even a
pair.”
And Elise had staggered to her feet, knowing that Purcel would
understand. By the time she reached the infirmary, she had blinked
the tears from her eyes, but their stiff, dry tracks remained.
Remained as she picked up bandages and began wrapping fresh wounds,
remained as she murmured calming words she didn’t even hear,
remained as if they had been seared onto her face.
Suddenly, Elise’s patient drew her breath in sharply.
“Did I hurt you?” Elise apologized, fearing that in
her preoccupation she had been clumsy.
“No!” the woman gasped. “Behind you. A
wolf!”
Similar murmurs, whispers, and even a few screams sounded beneath
the hospital canopy. Elise turned and saw Blind Seer standing at the
edge of the canopy, his head up and his tail wagging.
Everything about the beast shouted: “I am not here to
hurt,” but Elise saw hands searching for weapons and several of
the wounded trying to get out of their beds.
“Stay still,” she called, remembering her own first
reaction to the enormous blue-eyed wolf. “That wolf is a
friend.”
Leaving her patient, she crossed to Blind Seer. Behind her she
heard the regulars, those who had been with King Tedric since he left
the capital, explaining to the new arrivals: “That’s Lady
Blysse’s wolf. He’s safe. Well, not safe, but he
won’t hurt us. See how he wags his tail at Lady
Archer?”
Elise ignored them and spoke directly to the wolf. “What do
you want? Where’s Firekeeper?”
Blind Seer whined, groveled, then tugged delicately at the edge of
her skirt.
“I’ll come with you,” Elise assured him.
Immediately, Blind Seer dropped the fabric and began to trot toward
one of the surgeries.
These were partially enclosed tents meant to keep out dust and
distraction, not like the convalescent shelters, which were left open
to light and air. Not until they ducked through the door of one did
Elise realize who Blind Seer wanted. Sir Jared was busy with a
critically wounded man. His face was strained, as he pressed his
hands to a savaged abdomen and visibly willed the sutured flesh to
heal.
Healing talent can help, but not when the person is already dead,
Elise thought. Oh, Purcel!
Sir Jared turned just as Blind Seer nudged her and whined.
Elise called to him, “Sir Jared?”
Hearing her voice, to her amazement, Jared Surcliffe actually
smiled.
“Yes, Lady Elise?”
“Blind Seer wants you rather urgently. Please come or
I’m afraid he’ll drag you with him.”
Sir Jared did not ask questions, but obeyed. A few of the other
physicians looked as if they might protest, but the combined prestige
of baronial heir and knight silenced them.
Outside the tent, Blind Seer barked once and trotted in the
direction of the king’s tent, Sir Jared at his heels. Elise was
about to follow when a familiar voice—almost shrill with
strain—shouted:
“Elise! Sir Jared! Medic!”
Sir Jared hesitated, causing Blind Seer to growl, his hackles
rising. Elise pushed the knight between the shoulder blades.
“Go!” she urged. “I’ll handle
this.”
Grabbing one of the emergency kits from a long line stacked on a
bench, Elise hurried toward the voice. Wounded were being carried off
the battlefield on every side, but one pair crystallized her
attention. Sapphire Shield was helping a young man off the field. It
took Elise a moment to realize that her cousin’s companion was
Shad Oyster.
Sapphire’s showy armor was streaked with blood—at
least some of which seemed to be her own—caking field dust into
clumps. Shad was nearly unconscious. Still, his limbs were all intact
and he was not gushing blood, making him, no matter his social
standing, a lesser priority than many others.
Elise guided them to a prep area explaining, “Unless he is
in danger of death or of losing a limb, he must wait.”
“Right,” Sapphire said, and assisted Shad to something
resembling comfort on the dirt. Folding her cloak under his head, she
patted his hand reassuringly.
“The Blue and I were on the south flank,” she said,
turning some of her attention to Elise. Words spilled from her lips,
though her gaze remained distracted.
“We fought for I don’t know how long. Then there was
one of those gaps that happen. I heard someone saying that Lord Tench
had been shot. I looked in the direction of Duke Allister’s
command center. Everyone there was taking cover, but I didn’t
like the look of a group of Stonehold cavalry that was pushing that
way. Earl Kestrel didn’t either and shouted for us to get
between them.
“We did. Somewhere in that, I was unhorsed. The Blue
panicked— I hope he got away. I kept my sword and shield,
though and kept backing toward the command center. That’s when
I met Shad doing pretty much the same thing.”
She started helping Elise undo Shad’s armor. When they
lifted the breastplate off, Elise was relieved to see no evidence of
an abdominal wound. She’d already learned how ugly those
were—and how hard to treat.
Purcel!
Sapphire continued talking as she worked. Elise wondered if the
flow of words was meant to stem similarly horrific thoughts. Did
Sapphire know yet that her father was dead? Did she know about
Purcel? For the first time, Elise remembered that Jet, too, was out
there on the battlefield. Love must be dead—if ever it had
lived—for her to have forgotten him so entirely.
With an effort, she focused on Sapphire’s words:
“Earl Kestrel and his group stalled the cavalry charge or I
wouldn’t be here, but some Stonehold infantry took advantage of
the horses kicking and milling to slip around the edges. They were
heading for the commander again and no wonder. Duke Allister may have
taken his training at sea, but he has tactical sense. Our side might
have cut and run if they learned he was down—nearly did when
the rumor came that he had been shot. Shad, though, he bellowed just
like he was on deck in a storm, telling everyone that Duke Allister
was alive.”
Mopping blood from the young man’s pale face, Elise found it
difficult to believe that Shad could summon that much force. He
looked exquisitely fragile now. Still, there was no blood on his lips
and his gut was sound.
“How can I help?” Sapphire said, interrupting her own
account.
“Try to get a little water into him,” Elise said,
“but slowly. There may be injuries I can’t
see.”
Sapphire took the proffered water bottle, reminding Elise in her
gentleness of the days they had both nursed dolls. Then the regular
bustle of hospital and distant battle was pierced by a deep, mournful
howl.
“Blind Seer!” Elise gasped, keeping herself to her
duty with effort. “Something has happened to
Firekeeper.”
“I hope not,” Sapphire said, but she too remained
where she was needed.
Perhaps to distract herself from how the water dribbled down
Shad’s face or from the implications of that mournful howl,
Sapphire continued:
“I’m not bragging, but it got down to few enough of
us. Then a lucky blow slipped through and caught Duke Allister in the
head. Shad went crazy, slashing at the man who’d done it. The
commander was only stunned though. Someone got a bandage around his
head and tried to get him to command from the rear but he insisted on
staying. That’s the kind of courage Duke Allister has. He knew
what would happen if he left.
“I was crossing blades with some Stoneholder when Shad went
down so I don’t know exactly how it happened. Afterwards,
someone told me that he took the flat of a sword squarely on the side
of his head. I guess it’s lucky that it wasn’t the edge,
but whatever did it, he went down like a bull under the hammer.
“Duke Allister ordered me to get his son off the field and I
did. The duke wasn’t playing favorites—not a
bit—but I knew he couldn’t very well fight a war with his
son dead or dying at his feet. How is he?”
For a confused moment, Elise thought her cousin meant the duke,
but then she recovered:
“He’s breathing. His brain has obviously been shaken.
Still, I see no deep wounds. I’m no doctor, but I think
there’s hope.”
Sapphire smiled and got wearily to her feet. “Then I must
report back. The commander will need to know. And…”
Her voice trailed off. “What is that?”
Elise looked where Sapphire was pointing, seeing a thick cloud of
dark smoke rising in the west.
“Fire?” she said. “What does that
mean?”
“It means,” Sapphire said, straightening her helmet
and arraying her much dented shield, “that if we press now the
battle may be over.”
Elise looked after her cousin as she ran toward the battlefield,
understanding.
“The battle,” she whispered, hardly daring hope,
“and maybe even the war.”
Then she remembered Blind Seer’s howl and, calling for an
aide to tend to Shad Oyster, she ran in the direction of the
king’s pavilion.
A splatter of blood on the ground outside the pavilion heralded
the scene she found inside. Elise’s overshift of bloodstained
raw cotton (no medical uniform could be found for her when she
volunteered) was her passport past the guards, for it marked her as
someone from the hospital. Only after she was heading through the
door did she hear one comment to the other:
“Was that Lady Archer?”
Within, the pavilion was crowded with those who had been delegated
to stay near the king. Elise saw Aunt Zorana, Opal Shield, and Nydia
Trueheart among the faces, but despite this usually talkative
company, the pavilion was curiously silent, all attention fixed on
the middle of the room. There Sir Jared knelt over a patient lying on
one of the several carpets that had been spread for the king’s
comfort.
King Tedric himself held the lamp that lit the medic’s work
and Elise did not need to see Blind Seer pressed flat on the ground
near the patient’s head, whimpering with rather more pathos
than one would expect from such an enormous beast, to know that the
woman facedown on the floor was Firekeeper.
The crowd parted to let Elise through. She moved immediately to
Sir Jared’s side and asked:
“What can I do?”
“Hold this open,” he said, not even glancing at her.
“I need to make certain it’s clean before I stitch it
up.”
Elise grasped the separators as she had been taught earlier that
day, holding open a deep and ugly slice in Firekeeper’s left
thigh. While Jared sloshed something pungent into the raw opening
Elise glanced at Fire-keeper, but though the wound must have burned
horribly, the younger woman did not stir.
Firekeeper’s eyes were not so much closed as not open. A
faint white line could be seen beneath the shuttered lid. An ugly
wound in her back near her left side testified that a mere leg wound
alone hadn’t felled the wolf-woman so profoundly. Her armor and
clothing had been partially removed, the sword cut cleaned, but
little else had been done.
“Firekeeper saved my life,” King Tedric explained, his
voice quavering. “Prince Newell came. I believe he hoped to
shock my heart into bursting, but failing that I think he would have
taken more direct means. I don’t know how Firekeeper knew, but
she came charging in here— Newell had sent everyone away,
saying he had something for my ears only and who was I to doubt him?
There are state secrets he knew because of his marriage to
Lovella.”
“Knew?” Elise asked, letting the wound close when
Jared signaled and then holding the edges in position so he could
stitch.
“He’s dead,” the king said. “Firekeeper
killed him even as he stabbed her in the back.”
“Didn’t anyone try to help her?” Elise asked
indignantly.
“I was unable to do so.” The king sounded as if he was
apologizing. “Newell came closer to bringing on a heart attack
than he will ever know. When the guards came in, I could not get the
breath to speak. All I could do was keep them from interfering. Sir
Jared, how does your patient?”
“There’s not much I can do about the back
wound,” Jared said, his hands busy. “I think the sword
blade missed most of the vitals, but I don’t like the blood on
her lips. A lung may have been nicked. Still, my talent may help keep
internal damage from worsening.”
Blind Seer moaned and sniffed Firekeeper’s hair.
Elise asked, “But this on her leg doesn’t look like a
sword cut.”
“Arrow,” Jared said briefly.
“I did it,” Lady Zorana said, coming forth and taking
the lantern from King Tedric’s hand. “Sit, Uncle. Do you
want Lady Blysse’s valor to end for nothing?”
The king reluctantly obeyed, leaning forward to keep watch over
the proceedings. Zorana went on to Elise:
“Lady Blysse came charging up and without any explanation
insisted on going into the tent. We told her the king was in
conference, but she wasn’t having anything of it.”
“So you shot her?” Elise heard the incredulity in her
voice.
“You may be comfortable with feral women and wolves,”
Zorana said in angry defense, “but some of us are
not.”
“She’s also Lady Blysse and has lived with us for
moon-spans now!” Elise protested.
Sir Jared glanced up. “Elise, please fight with your aunt
later. I need you now.”
Elise complied, but her anger didn’t diminish. Only later
would she calm enough to wonder if Purcel’s death might have so
shaken his mother that sane judgment had failed her.
At last, Sir Jared lifted his red-stained hands. Unasked, Elise
poured water for him from a carafe, noticing for the first time how
everything portable seemed to have been thrown about. Her gaze fell
on Prince Newell’s corpse, on the ugly red mark on the side of
his face, and she thought she knew how the mess had been made.
Sir Jared said, “Your Majesty, I don’t think
Firekeeper should be moved except perhaps from the floor onto a cot.
I’ll need to commandeer your pavilion.”
“It is hers,” the king said. “I would remain
here to guard her, but I fear I have a war to fight.”
Elise realized that King Tedric knew nothing of the fire to the
west. “Sire, if you’re strong enough, you should go out
and see what messages may be waiting. Just before I came here it
seemed as if the enemy camp might be on fire.”
“Lend me an arm, Opal,” the king said immediately,
turning to his grandniece. Elise noted absently that he didn’t
seem surprised by her news. “I’m strong enough if I have
someone to lean on.”
“The rest of you,” Jared snapped, clearly expecting to
be obeyed, “get out. Two of you take the corpse with you. Get
me a cot, clean bandages, and more water.”
The gathered nobles, even Lady Zorana, obeyed. Zorana, however,
paused long enough to hang the lantern from one of the pavilion
beams.
“Whatever you think,” she said to Elise. “I do
regret my part in this. I thought I was right—that’s all
I want you to realize—but I was wrong.”
Elise nodded. When Zorana turned to go, Elise said to Sir Jared,
“I’m not leaving.”
“I didn’t mean you,” he said.
“You’re medical staff.”
Warmed by his confident assumption that she had a right to be
there, Elise confided, “I would have never thought I could do
this work. I hate hawking or hunting, get all squeamish. My father is
quite fed up with me.”
“Squeamish?” Sir Jared shrugged. “Not when it
counts. I’ve found you a steady assistant. It’s a pity
you’re to be a baroness. I’d like to see what would
happen if you had further training.”
Elise raised an eyebrow. “There is no law against a baroness
learning medicine. It could be quite useful.”
He coughed. “I apologize.”
Two guards came in then with the requested cot and gear. As they
were setting it up, there was a shrill, avian cry from above.
“Elation,” Elise said. “Then
Derian…”
The tent flap all but flew open and the redhead dashed in. He was
sweaty, reeking of smoke and horses. Blind Seer greeted him with
another whine.
“Is she going to be all right?” Derian asked, flinging
himself on the rug next to Firekeeper.
Jared said, “I hope so, but it’s too early to tell.
She’s taken several bad wounds and lost a lot of
blood.”
Derian groaned. “I tried to get here faster. We heard Blind
Seer howl, but we were still quite a ways off. Then we had trouble
getting through the camp. Everyone was running here and there—a
new push was on— fresh soldiers were needed. I nearly got
hauled out there myself, but Elation kept diving at everyone who came
close. What happened?”
They told him as, with his help, they moved Firekeeper onto the
cot. Blind Seer promptly positioned himself directly under his pack
mate and no one dared try to move him. The fierce desperation in the
wolfs blue eyes was more eloquent than words.
“Poor guy,” Derian said, doing what no one else had
dared and actually patting the wolf on the head. “She’s
going to make it, fellow. After everything Firekeeper has survived
she isn’t going to let a couple of pompous noble-born asses
kill her.”
He glanced at Elise. “I’m not going to apologize for
calling your aunt pompous.”
“Just as long as you don’t include me in that
assessment of the nobility.” Elise forced a laugh.
“Not you,” Derian promised. “I don’t even
think it.”
“Now that we’ve got her on the cot,” Sir Jared
said, “we should get the rest of Firekeeper’s clothes off
of her. Lady Elise can…”
Derian interrupted. “I’ve seen Firekeeper naked plenty
of times. I think the minx used to do it on purpose to make me blush.
Elise can chaperon if you want, but I’m here and I’m not
leaving.”
Jared patted the younger man. “Why do you all think
I’m trying to get rid of you? I’m grateful for your help.
Do you think you could tell Blind Seer not to bite us? Firekeeper may
cry out as we move her.”
“I think he understands,” Derian said, taking out his
knife and carefully beginning to cut away leather and fabric.
“I just wish we could understand him better. He could tell us
how Firekeeper knew the king was in trouble.”
To his complete surprise, Blind Seer crept out from under the cot
and, going to the door of the pavilion, barked once sharply. They
heard Elation cry response; then the wolf returned. To
everyone’s astonishment, the peregrine falcon was walking with
deliberate care after him.
She shrilled softly, almost cooing as she inspected Firekeeper.
The wolf, busy fitting himself back under the cot, gave a low bark.
Elation came to Derian and tugged at the cufFof his riding breeches
with her beak.
“No,” the young man replied. “I will not follow
you. I’m staying with Firekeeper. Do you want someone to go
somewhere with you?”
The peregrine drew her entire body up, then down, bobbing her
torso in a fair facsimile of a nod.
Derian stepped to the door of the pavilion.
“Guard, get me Valet, Earl Kestrel’s manservant. If
you can’t get him, I’ll settle for Ox or Race
Forester.”
When it seemed that the guard might protest, Sir Jared snapped,
“Do it!”
Derian returned to his task, saying to the falcon in passing,
“Just a couple minutes. I’d have sent you after them, but
I think you need someone to explain.”
Grinning rather weakly, he looked at his friends. “You try
tending to Firekeeper for nearly five moon-spans and see if
you’re not talking to animals at the end.”
Elise saw the tears that filled Derian’s hazel eyes as he
looked at the unconscious woman, and politely pretended not to
notice.
Valet arrived almost immediately. Elise noted that the usually
immaculate manservant was nearly as grubby as Derian.
“That guard said you desired my presence,” Valet said
politely.
Derian nodded. “Follow Elation. I think she knows where
something important is. I don’t know more. Can you go in
safety?”
Valet nodded. “The battle is over. The fire demoralized
Stonehold’s troops. To their credit, they didn’t like
fighting soldiers who were in many cases their friends. General
Grimsel—the big blond woman—had been killed, earlier. Not
much was needed to break their morale. General Yuci surrendered to
Duke Allister a few moments ago.”
The rush of relief that filled Elise was so powerful that her
hands started shaking. Biting down on her lip, she steadied herself
and continued with the delicate task of removing Firekeeper’s
undergarments without leaving fibers in the wounds that might later
encourage infection and scarring.
“So it’s over,” Derian said for all of them.
“Not yet,” Sir Jared replied with the sad wisdom of
one who had been through fighting before. “That battle is
ended. Now we need to know if the war is over as well.”
XXVII
ALLISTER SEAGLEAM BRUSHED PEARL’S HANDS away
from straightening the bandage that still wrapped his head.
“Enough, dear,” he said firmly. “I realize it is
hardly approved head gear for an audience with the queen, but the
doctors say I must keep the wound lightly covered. There is too much
risk of infection, especially here where the horses attract so many
flies.”
Pearl folded her arms over her chest, just slightly pouting.
“I only wanted you to look your best for your meeting with
Queen Gustin, Allister. This is the first time in the two days since
her arrival that she has granted you a private audience. Given all
you have done for her, that is hardly just!”
Allister patted his wife’s hand, thinking that for an
arranged marriage really this one had worked out remarkably well.
Pearl was actually concerned about the slight to him, not because
it was a slight to herself or to her family, but because of her
fondness for him. How many couples could claim that after twenty-two
years of marriage and four children?
“My dear,” he said, bending to kiss her round cheek,
“Queen Gustin wants to play down her debt to me. You
cannot have forgotten her reception when she arrived at the head of
her marines, can you?”
“And I hope I never will!” Pearl laughed, her good
humor restored. Then she frowned. “Though perhaps the townsfolk
throwing rubbish at her from the walls was a bit much.”
Allister nodded. “It was, but who could blame them? They are
simple folk who place their trust in the Crown. This was not the
first battle fought in the shadows of those walls—only the
biggest.”
“And the only one where Hawk Haven fought beside us rather
than against us,” Pearl mused. “Yes, when an enemy turns
out to be a friend, is it any surprise that late-coming friends
suddenly seem like enemies?”
“No, it is not.” Allister paused thoughtfully.
“My dear, what I want to say to the queen today may put me on
the list of those she sees as enemies. One word from you and I will
hold my tongue.”
Pearl raised an eyebrow. “That bad?”
“That bad.”
“Have you spoken to the children about it? Shad, at least,
is old enough that you should consider his opinion before doing
something that will affect his future.”
“I have. He encourages me.” As he should, Allister thought, for if I pull this off it will
make his fortune.
“And have you spoken with Tavis?”
“A little. Right now he is still adjusting to the realities
of war. He did not fight, but in acting as runner he saw plenty of
bloodshed. The concept that true heroism and true horror can and do
exist together is a large one for a romantic fifteen-year-old to
grasp.”
Pearl nodded. “It is. I had wondered at him spending so much
time with the soldiers all of a sudden. At the ball he avoided them;
now he sits by their firesides for hours, listening to stories and
asking questions.”
A discreet knock at the door reminded Allister that the time had
come for him to depart for his appointment.
“Do you really want me to do this?” he asked, putting
on his tricorn at a rather rakish angle over his bandage.
“Perhaps you should tell me just what it is you plan to
do,” Pearl sighed, but something in her shrewd gaze made him
think she had guessed.
Allister turned back from the door he had been about to open and
said softly, “I plan to tell Queen Gustin that she must make me
her heir and, if I predecease her, that my surviving eldest must take
over as crown prince.”
Pearl stood on tiptoe to kiss him, her eyes very bright.
“You saved her kingdom. What else would be reward
enough?”
But as Allister went out the door he could not fail to see that
Pearl was trembling and knew that she feared she would never see him
again. Queen Gustin was not always a just monarch—only a
successful one.
After the second battle of what people were calling
Allister’s War, the grateful town of Good Crossing had made
much of her defenders. Needing a secure command center, Allister had
accepted the loan of a mansion from a real-estate speculator who had
imagined all his investments torched and battered by
Stonehold’s invading army.
Flanked by his bodyguards, Duke Allister trotted briskly down the
mansion’s broad, stone front steps. Cheering greeted him the
moment he passed into the sight of the people gathered outside his
temporary headquarters.
Day and night, idlers waited outside the place, hoping for a
glimpse of the Pledge Child, the valiant commander in chief. Winning
the battle had made Allister a hero—nor had it hurt the
duke’s prestige that both himself and his eldest son had been
injured fighting in defense of Bright Bay.
However, what had helped Allister Seagleam’s reputation the
most was that Queen Gustin IV had not been present for either battle.
When rumors had spread that she had not been fighting pirates but had
been within a day’s ride of Good Crossing for several days
before the fighting began, escorted by a host of blooded marines
drawn from her best ships, Allister’s reputation had soared
even as hers had plummeted.
Waving to his admirers, Allister accepted a hand up into the
carriage that would rattle him through the cobble streets to where
Queen Gustin resided in sumptuous quarters in the Toll House. In the
carriage, he made casual comments that he could not remember a moment
later, his thoughts focused on the meeting to come.
It was not as if he hadn’t seen the queen in the days since
her arrival. There had been countless meetings: with King Tedric and
his officers, with General Yuci of Stonehold, with members of the
local guildhalls. During all of them Queen Gustin had been
faultlessly courteous, deferring to her cousin’s greater
knowledge of the situation while making clear that she was his ruler
and that she believed that his triumph was best seen within the
context of her reign.
Allister supposed it had been that attitude—that combined
with the current situation regarding King Tedric’s own
heir—which had made him consider what he would demand as reward
for his services. He knew that he was being foolhardy, but he also
knew that he could not go back to his former situation. It had taken
him over forty years to be something more than a failed pledge. The
need to continue building the bridge between Hawk Haven and Bright
Bay was a desperate fire within him, hot in breast and mind.
Cheering admirers ran alongside his carriage and greeted him as he
dismounted from it at the Toll House. Even while acknowledging their
good wishes, Allister knew that those noisy praises were doing him no
good with the queen.
Arriving at the tower room where Queen Gustin IV was holding
audience, he was admitted at once. Queen Gustin rose from her
paper-strewn desk, holding out her hands to greet him in a familiar
embrace.
“Welcome, cousin,” she said. “I am so glad that
matters of state at last relent enough to permit us a private
talk.”
Queen Gustin IV was regarded by many as a lovely woman. Certainly
her eyes were the blue of oceans and her hair the red-gold of honey
just as the ballads said, but a calculating expression rarely left
those blue eyes. At twenty-eight her figure was still firm and buxom
and her smile merry, but that smile came infrequently these days and
to him, who had known her since she was a child, it possessed a
studied cast.
“I am glad to see you, too,” he replied.
“And Shad, is he recovering?”
“Nicely. He took a solid blow to the head, but several of
the medics possessed the healing talent. Give him a couple days bed
rest and he will be up and about—though the doctors suggest he
do nothing too strenuous for a moon-span or so if at all
possible.”
“I am glad to hear he is doing so well. Sit down, Cousin
Allister. We have much to discuss.”
Allister did so. An unobtrusive servant took his hat and set out a
tray with peach cider and cups.
“Leave us now,” Queen Gustin ordered.
The man—a marine, Allister thought—bowed and
departed.
“I don’t know how to thank you for the work you have
done for me these past days,” she began. Here is where you could make your demands, Allister, he
thought, but all he said was:
“Thank you. Bright Bay is my country, too.”
“There are those back at court who are remembering that Hawk
Haven is your country, as well,” Gustin said, just a bit
slyly.
“My mother’s,” he replied. “I have never
crossed its borders, not even as far as over this bridge.”
“Yet report is that King Tedric embraced you like a
long-lost son.”
“King Tedric was kind to me for his sister’s sake and
for the sake of peace between our nations,” Allister
replied.
“And has he made you any offers?”
“We had not reached that point before Stonehold grew nervous
and our negotiations were suspended.”
“ ‘Grew nervous’—that’s an odd way
to say ‘Declared war.’ ”
“They did not declare war,” Allister said,
“until it was evident that Your Majesty was not going to treat
with them.”
“They had no right to meddle with a completely internal
issue!”
“I agree, Your Majesty. I was merely responding to your
statement.”
Queen Gustin IV glowered at Allister, reminding him irresistibly
of the autocratic little girl with whom he once had played at
make-believe. She hadn’t liked being criticized then
either—not even by implication. That very well might be the problem of raising someone to know
that she can expect to rule someday, Allister thought. Of course, the
opposite problem is what King Tedric faces—choosing a successor
from those unprepared for the responsibility.
“Negotiations with Stonehold are progressing,” Queen
Gustin said, “slowly, but progressing. A pair of ministers
empowered to sign a treaty should arrive tomorrow. They are bringing
with them a fine sum to compensate us for our losses in soldiers and
goods. If all goes well, Stonehold will begin withdrawing the
following day.”
“Very good.”
“Although we have promised her a share of the compensation,
Hawk Haven is being a bit more difficult about stating exactly when
her troops will withdraw,” the queen continued thoughtfully,
“and I am not in an advantageous position to set dates and
times. Even with the reinforcements I brought with me, the Stalwarts
of the Golden Sunburst are less impressive without Hawk Haven’s
army intermingled with them. Without Hawk Haven’s support,
Stonehold might decide not to depart after all.”
Allister forbore from commenting.
“Indeed, I would have Hawk Haven’s troops remain until
Stonehold’s are gone and Mason’s Bridge secured, but I
can extract no promise that they will withdraw at all.” Queen
Gustin frowned. “Have you any suggestions as to how we might
resolve this problem?” This is it! Allister thought, taking a deep breath.
“Yes, I do,” he said, and was amazed that his voice
did not shake. “Hawk Haven has proven a true friend to us. They
need equal proof that we will be a true friend to them.”
“And,” Gustin said, her tone just a touch sardonic,
“do you have any idea what we might do to give them this
assurance?”
“Make me your heir,” Allister said coolly, “for
I have shown myself their friend. In the event I predecease
you—as is likely—my heir must take my place as your
heir.
“In return, I will convince King Tedric to wed to his own
heir one of my children—who I will immediately designate my own
heir. Thus, upon Tedric’s death—which sadly cannot be too
far away—a child Bright Bay born will sit upon the throne of
Hawk Haven. When I become an ancestor, the reverse will be true. By
then our nations will have grown accustomed to—perhaps even
come to anticipate—the idea of a union between our peoples and
all should progress smoothly.“
Allister managed to complete this long speech mostly because Queen
Gustin was far too astonished to interrupt. When he stopped, she
exclaimed:
“I should make you my heir? Why should I care for a
union?”
“Promise of a union will permit us to forge an alliance with
Hawk Haven, an alliance that will give King Tedric’s people the
incentive to provide Bright Bay with military support without taking
the further step of becoming conquerors—a thing that is
otherwise far too tempting.
“If my plan is followed, you will reign as long as you live.
Then I— or more probably my heir—will assume the throne.
Since that same heir will quite likely already be king or queen of
Hawk Haven, our kingdoms will be reunited under one ruler and my
royal grandparents’ dreams will at last come true.”
Queen Gustin was too self-disciplined to start out of her chair,
but she did slam her cup of peachy down with such force that the tray
rattled. “This plan is insane! I forbid you to mention it to
anyone.”
“I’m sorry, Your Majesty,” Allister replied
levelly. “I have already discussed something like this with
King Tedric in the context of my permitting one of my children to
marry his unnamed heir.” That’s stretching the point a bit, he thought, but the
clerk who attended the meeting will not be able to say for certain
that something of the sort was not discussed in private. There is no
need for her to know that I’ve written Uncle Tedric telling him
my plans and nearly begging for his support—and for sanctuary
for me and my family if I fail.
“Oh, you have…” She fell into thought.
“And has this tasty bit of treason been mentioned to anyone
else?”
Allister answered calmly. “Not in so many words, but several
of my callers these past days have expressed hope that some such plan
may be in the making. I have only been able to say that I believed
Your Majesty a good and wise ruler with the best interests of her
nation at heart.”
“Oh, you have…”
“I could hardly say more when Your Majesty and I had not yet
spoken in private.” So there! he thought with what he knew was childish
vindictiveness. Ah, well. Her neglecting to give me a private meeting
was equally childish.
Still, he was privately embarrassed. He was a grown man of
forty-four, not a child.
Queen Gustin had not seemed to hear the reproof in his retort.
“We had not, had we? And if I do not agree to make you my heir?
What will Hawk Haven do then?”
“I couldn’t say.”
“But that doesn’t mean you don’t know…
and their troops already on our soil and the local people lauding
them as saviors.”
Allister replied sternly, “Hawk Haven deserves such praise.
Their army fought and many died in defense of Good Crossing. We could
not have held the city without them. The Battle of the Banks would
have been our disgrace, not the first action in a victorious
war.”
“Perhaps,” Gustin said hotly, “they merely
fought to keep Stonehold from crossing at Bridgeton and threatening
their own lands.”
“Don’t be an idiot,” Allister retorted sharply.
“Stonehold was already stretched to the limits of their supply
line. If anything Hawk Haven stood to benefit economically by
Stonehold’s conquest of Good Crossing.”
Queen Gustin’s cheeks had flared hot and red at the
sharpness of Duke Allister’s words, but his fame as the hero of
the recent war protected him. She could have him neither executed nor
arrested without bringing the rage of the local populace down upon
her.
Allister, who had regretted his lack of tact as soon as the words
slipped out, saw the red fade from the queen’s cheeks to be
replaced by an ivory white pallor that was no less furious.
“Economically?” she replied, the word coming out as a
cough. “I suppose you mean by supplying Stonehold’s
army.”
“I do,” Allister said, watching her guardedly. Queen
Gustin seemed to be under control now, so he went on pedantically,
giving her more time to cool. “The raiders who burned
Stonehold’s supplies performed an act that was as decisive an
element in General Yuci’s decision to surrender as anything
done on the battlefield. All of them, by the way, were residents of
Hawk Haven.”
“Including among their numbers,” Queen Gustin said,
cooler now, but needing to vent her fury, “a carter, a
manservant, and a criminal, if I read the report
correctly.”
“Yes, I suppose you could say that,” Allister replied,
deciding not to protest too strongly. “Earl Kestrel permitted
several members of his personal entourage to take part in the
battle.”
“Kestrel…” Gustin murmured as if trying to
place the name, though Allister did not doubt she knew precisely of
whom they spoke.
“Kestrel,” Allister repeated dryly. “The man who
led the left wing of the cavalry charge and fought bravely despite
ribs broken when a horse fell on him.”
“I remember him now,” Queen Gustin said. “Norvin
Norwood. He’s also the man who brought back some foundling and
tried to claim she was King Tedric’s granddaughter,
right?”
“Yes. There is some evidence in favor of his claim.
I’ve met the young woman. She’s quite
remarkable.”
“Rumor said she’s nearly dead from injuries taken when
she assaulted Prince Newell Shield.”
“At last report,” Allister replied, a trifle more
sharply than he had intended, “Lady Blysse is expected to live,
though she will be convalescing for some time. Prince Newell, as you
may have heard, was attempting to assassinate King Tedric. From what
one of the late prince’s servants confessed, Newell had planned
to have himself declared king.” And I don’t suppose we’ll ever know just how much
you knew of his plans or whether you would have supported them. Oh,
Valora, I wish I could trust you!
“We can’t treat with Stonehold from a position of
strength,” the queen mused aloud, “without the support of
Hawk Haven. Now you tell me—or at least imply—that Hawk
Haven’s continued support is contingent upon my naming you my
heir. Tell me, why shouldn’t I make my treaty with Stonehold,
get them gone, and then dismiss Hawk Haven?”
“Well, Your Majesty, they might be difficult to
dismiss.”
“True. And they might even ally themselves with Stonehold
and complete the conquest. Our army could not withstand them
both.”
Allister nodded. “I do not like to dwell on the idea, but
the possibility has occurred to me. Still, I believe that King Tedric
would prefer to ally himself with us with eventual reunification in
mind. We share a common heritage—common ancestors—so to
speak.”
“Yet he could be a conqueror with half our lands as his
booty,” Queen Gustin said, “far more quickly than if we
travel the route you suggest.”
Allister Seagleam shrugged. “True. However, conquered lands
might be hard to hold. Once secure with part of Bright Bay, Stonehold
might decide she wants the whole. We have the ocean ports their own
land lacks.”
Queen Gustin laughed bitterly. “Stonehold might want the
whole, just as Hawk Haven has decided she wants the whole. Yes, I can
see how King Tedric might take warning from his own example. Tell me,
Allister, why shouldn’t I just prolong negotiations until King
Tedric dies? His new heir might prove more tractable.”
“Or he or she might not,” Allister countered,
fascinated despite himself with this weird byplay. He could feel
Gustin hating him for the position in which he had put her, yet she
persisted in asking for his advice. “And King Tedric, while
possessed of a weak heart, is not in any immediate danger. Some have
suggested that the stimulation of this journey has actually
strengthened him.”
“Delightful…” Gustin IV sank her polished white
teeth into her little finger, as if pain was the only distraction
that would keep her from screaming. “So my only choice is to
make you my heir.”
“I never said that, Your Majesty,” Allister replied
firmly, “only that I thought that solution provided the best
way to secure an alliance with Hawk Haven that will prove for our
mutual benefit.”
Queen Gustin fell silent for a moment, then looked across at him,
her face eerily expressionless, a portrait cast in clean, white
porcelain.
“You may leave, Duke Allister,” she said with cool
formality. “Thank you for your services. Send my commander of
marines up to me as you are leaving.”
Allister did as ordered, wondering what thoughts had lain behind
that lovely mask and dreading that he must soon learn.
Derian sat at firekeeper’s bedside occupying the restless
patient by drilling her in the alphabet—alternating these
lessons with basic heraldry when she grew frustrated.
Annoying as the wolf-woman’s impatience could be, Derian
took it as a good sign that she had energy enough to get angry. For
two days following her struggle with Prince Newell, Firekeeper had
lain still and silent, hardly responding to any stimulus, no matter
who her caller or what news she was told.
A few things had sparked her interest: praise from Earl Kestrel,
who had knelt by her bedside holding her hand, tears actually running
down his cheeks into his neat black and white beard; learning that
Rook had been taken and had confessed—in return for a promise
of imprisonment rather than execution—the extent of Prince
Newell’s plotting; the story of Derian’s own adventures,
told with great enthusiasm by Race Forester.
But for most of those two long days she had simply lain still,
neither restfully sleeping nor truly awake, suffering with every
breath. Derian or Elise or Doc had kept vigil by her cot, wiping the
bloody spume off her lips, moistening her throat with dribble of
water, and talking to her when it seemed she might actually hear.
On the third day, Firekeeper had begun to recover, reacting with
small signs of pleasure when Doc had ordered her cot moved out into
the warm autumn sunshine. Today—the fourth day since the end of
the decisive battle of Allister’s War—she was sitting
propped against carefully positioned pillows and fretting because Doc
would not let her get up— and because Blind Seer and Elation
had nominated themselves enforcers of the physician’s
orders.
Doubtless Doc’s healing talent had been instrumental in
assisting Fire-keeper’s recovery, but he had refused to take
full credit. Indeed, he had confided to Derian that without her own
indomitable desire to live, Firekeeper—like so many of those
wounded on the battlefield—would have died.
Derian had taken his turn digging graves for the dead of both
sides. The continuing warmth of early autumn would not permit the
bodies to be carried home to their families, but still the
dead’s spirits must be properly honored. Sitting by Firekeeper
as she had slept, Derian had lettered temporary
gravestones—wooden plaques that would be set in place until the
stonecutters could finish the permanent headstones.
As he worked, Derian was inexorably reminded of those anonymous
graves west of the gap. Now he knew two more of the names that should
be there: Sarena Gardener and Donal Hunter. Silently, he vowed that
he’d learn the other names and return someday to set a
permanent gravestone in that burned glade.
“Scarlet beside forest green blazed with…”
Derian was prompting Firekeeper when footsteps crunching up the path
announced callers.
Elation squawked and Firekeeper said:
“Sapphire Shield and Shad Oyster.” A wicked twinkle
lit her dark eyes. “Elation say they were holding hands when
they were farther, but have let go now.”
Derian wagged a finger at the peregrine falcon.
“You’re a worse gossip than any market-wife.”
The falcon, who continued to follow Derian about his errands until
Derian couldn’t decide whether he felt honored or pestered,
screeched at him and Firekeeper chuckled, stopping abruptly as if the
intake of air still hurt her damaged lung.
“We can’t precisely knock,” Sapphire called,
halting a short distance away, “but Elise said that Firekeeper
was entertaining callers.”
“As long as she stays in bed,” Derian said, rising and
bowing. “Would you like me to withdraw?”
“Not for my sake,” said Shad in a pleasant light
baritone. “I’ve wanted to meet you. That was a brave deed
you did, Derian Carter.”
He offered his hand as if he were not a duke’s son, but just
another man. Derian accepted the handclasp.
“The real credit should go to the scouts,” Derian said
firmly. “They fought the enemy. I shot a few arrows and freed a
few horses.”
“Not having killed doesn’t alter the courage you
showed in going behind the lines,” Shad insisted, and Sapphire
nodded agreement. “And given that the diversion caused by the
fire probably saved my father’s life I am particularly
grateful.”
“Thank you,” Derian replied, dismissing the topic of
his own heroism by turning to Firekeeper. “Have you met Lady
Blysse?”
“At the ball,” Shad said, “I believe I had the
pleasure of a dance.”
“No dancing now,” Firekeeper commented sadly,
“not yet. Your father is well?”
“If having Queen Gustin the Fourth furious with you can be
taken as well,” Shad said proudly, “yes, he
is.”
“And you,” Firekeeper said to Sapphire, “I was
told your father died. I am sorry.”
“Me, too,” Sapphire admitted. “I miss him more
than I had thought possible. Mother has already departed for home
with Opal. The dual blows of losing her husband and having her
brother proven traitor were too much for her. She said she will
retreat to our country estate for a time.”
“Good!” Firekeeper replied with such firmness that
Shad looked puzzled, but his manners were too good—or perhaps
he also had heard rumors about Lady Melina—for him to ask.
“What does Jet do?”
“Jet is a problem,” Sapphire sighed. “He
conducted himself well enough in the battle. Elise, however, has
petitioned her father for permission to break the engagement. Baron
Archer has asked Elise to wait until the current negotiations are
ended and she agreed—but only after insisting that the king be
told informally that the alliance is ended. So now Jet is questing
around, looking for someone or something to which he could attach
himself. I really don’t know what to do with him.”
Shad laughed. “In my country we’d send him to sea on a
‘prentice cruise. It’s amazing how quickly ambitious
young aristocrats learn just how little they matter when pitted
against a hurricane.”
“That’s not a bad idea,” Sapphire reflected.
“There’s good in Jet, but he’s been too influenced
by Mother.”
She brushed her fingers along the snow white mark on her forehead
as she said this, a tacit admission to those who knew her history
that Jet was not the only one who must overcome Melina Shield’s
influence.
“And peace?” Firekeeper said. “Is peace
found?”
“The talks continue,” Sapphire replied, “but in
great secrecy. King Tedric has not even called in his
counselors.”
Derian demurred. “That’s not quite correct. He calls
us together every afternoon and again every evening. However, I agree
wholeheartedly with his decision not to take a huge entourage with
him to these meetings. Forgive me, noble friends, but I have never
heard anything like dukes and duchesses, earls and…”
Here Derian paused for a moment, for the title for male and female
Great House heirs was pronounced the same, though spelled
differently. Then he shrugged and stormed on, “And earles all
arguing for positions that—no matter how they are
worded—are meant merely to advance their personal
causes.”
Sapphire didn’t look offended, neither did Shad. Derian
reflected that what he had said was no news at all to scions of Great
Houses. How had he ever been so naive as to believe that those noble
born were any different from the lowliest farmer or cobbler?
Derian continued: “And matters become worse the longer we
remain here. Queen Gustin’s entourage has been fattened by
representatives of all her Great Houses. King Tedric already had
members of most of his here, but those who felt they were not
represented by someone of high enough rank have sent along someone
else. The only ones who benefit from this proliferation are the
merchants in the twin towns. Hazel Healer said that profits are up so
high that even rumors that changes are in the wind bother no
one.”
“Changes,” mused Shad Oyster. “My father has
told us to expect such. I fear that no matter how these negotiations
are resolved, I will never again stand on the deck of a Bright Bay
ship. Father has made the queen his enemy.”
Given that such rumors had been current for several days now, not
even Firekeeper looked greatly surprised.
“This feels,” the wolf-woman said somberly, showing a
greater understanding of the situation than Derian would have given
her credit for, “like the prickle that fills the air before a
thunderstorm. We shall either see battle again to make the battle
before as nothing or…”
“What?” Shad asked, as transfixed as if she spoke
prophecy.
“I don’t know,” Firekeeper said, wincing as she
leaned back against her pillows. “I am only a wolf.”
XXVIII
Duke Allister Seagleam feared that despite his best
efforts Bright Bay would soon be at war again. The question was with
whom?
The ministers from Stonehold had arrived several days before with
the promised compensation payment. However, doubtless informed by
their spies of the tension between Hawk Haven and Bright Bay, they
were being remarkably coy about handing the money over and clearing
out their army.
The ministers’ excuses were ever so polite and ever so
practical. Stonehold’s wounded could not yet be moved. The army
was short of horses to pull their wagons. They needed to purchase
supplies for the march home since Queen Gustin would not permit them
to bring over supplies from Stonehold.
Neither Duke Allister nor Queen Gustin was fooled by these
excuses. What Stonehold’s ministers were really waiting to see
was how much longer Hawk Haven would continue to support Bright Bay
and, indeed, how much longer could Queen Gustin keep a hold on her
increasingly unhappy populace.
The degree of that unhappiness had been a surprise to the young
queen—although perhaps it should not have been. Crown Princess
Valora had ascended the throne of Bright Bay eight years before, on
the death of her long-lived father, Gustin III. Hers had not been an
easy ascension, complicated by events from many years before her
birth.
Duke Allister, seventeen years her senior and the result of much
intrigue himself, clearly recalled those events and the history that
had seemed to make them inevitable.
The net of intrigues, likes, and dislikes within the noble
families of Bright Bay was no less complicated than that within Hawk
Haven. At the time he established his new kingdom, Gustin I had
created five Great Houses. From the start, these had relinquished
their original family names and assumed new ones: Oyster, Dolphin,
Pelican, Seal, and Lobster. The members of the newly created Great
Houses had been encouraged to think well of themselves, to design
elegant coats of arms, to build fine estates.
This had almost certainly been because Gustin Sailor—unlike
Zorana Shield—craved pomp and circumstance. Indeed, at the same
time that Gustin I was giving names and titles to his Great Houses,
he had renamed his own family, shedding the pedestrian trade name
Sailor in favor of the lofty and poetic Seagleam.
But beneath his flourishes, Gustin I was practical when it came to
securing his ambitions for his young family. Before the end of the
Civil War, his wife Gayl Minter—later Queen Gayl—had
borne him two children. The eldest, a son named Gustin for his
father, was designated crown prince. The second became Princess
Merry. A year or so after the war had ended, Princess Lyra was born,
the first child to be born into the Seagleam name.
Gustin I would have rested content had not Crown Prince Gustin
died of pneumonia shortly after his sixteenth birthday. Driven nearly
mad with grief, Gustin I confirmed Princess Merry as his heir, but
decreed that upon ascending the throne she would be known as Gustin
in memory of her brother—and, the cynical said, of himself.
King Gustin died five years after his son, an embittered man of
sixty-five whose many successes could not console him for his one
great loss. Crown Princess Merry, aware that the first succession in
a monarchy is always the most uncertain, followed her father’s
commands and changed her name to Gustin, although she had been heard
to protest about being forced to bear what before had always been an
exclusively male name.
Although the new monarch was only nineteen, she was a
strong-willed woman. Queen Gustin II used her unmarried state to
explore the internal politics of her Great Houses and six years after
she had taken the throne she married wisely and well to Lord Amery
Pelican, a second son of that house. Their first child, a son, was
born less than two years later. Contrary to expectations, the queen
named the boy Basil, saying that two Gustins was too many. In this
way she unintentionally established the custom that the name Gustin
was only to be used by the monarch.
Queen Gustin II bore two other children, Princess Seastar and
Prince Tavis. Then she concentrated her efforts on ruling her
kingdom, efforts which included the idealistic but doomed marriage
arranged between her son Prince Tavis and King Chalmer of Hawk
Haven’s daughter Princess Caryl Eagle.
When he was twenty-six, Crown Prince Basil married Lady Brina
Dolphin, a union that was to have serious consequences for Bright Bay
and for Basil’s own unborn heir.
The marriage was unblessed with children. When this became evident
some suggested that Crown Prince Basil adopt an heir. Several Great
Houses thrust forth candidates—one of whom was young Allister
Seagleam. With an egotism suggestive of his grandfather, Gustin I,
Crown Prince Basil refused to settle for anything but an heir of his
body. His mother frowned upon a divorce—not wishing to anger
the Dolphin family, which had already been offended by her marrying
of Tavis to Princess Caryl—as it had suggested to them that the
children of their Brina might not succeed their father to the
throne.
But the Dolphins’ Brina bore no children and when at the age
of thirty-six Crown Prince Basil became Gustin III, he set about
finding a new wife. He did not do this quickly. Indeed, some said he
enjoyed sampling the eligible noblewomen quite freely. Others said
that his reasons for delaying were more practical—he needed to
gather support from the rising nobles of his generation before
declaring his divorce.
Whatever the reason for the delay, seven years after ascending the
throng Gustin III took the formal step of divorcing Queen
Brina—who reassumed her family name and title. Before the next
year ended, King Gustin III had married Lady Viona Seal, a woman of
only twenty— twenty-four years his junior.
Rumor said that the new queen was pregnant with the king’s
child when marriage oaths were exchanged. Rumor further reported that
Queen Viona miscarried shortly thereafter. Whatever the truth, Queen
Viona did not succeed in bearing a living child until seven full
years after her marriage to the king.
The birth of Crown Princess Valora was publicly celebrated with
dances, feasts, and songs. Privately, it was the source of much
wrath. The newly made Grand Duchess Seastar—for as the king now
had an heir she was displaced as Crown Princess—was wrathful.
Although of late Grand Duchess Seastar had ceased to believe she
would succeed her brother, she had come to believe that King Gustin
III must adopt one of her sons as his heir.
Nor was she the only one of King Gustin III’s nobles to feel
that the baby girl was too little too late. Some muttered that Crown
Princess Valora was not legitimate—that Gustin III’s
seed, not Lady Brina’s womb, had been at fault for their
childless marriage and that young Viona had in desperation found
another man to father her child.
Others, unwilling to publicly question Viona’s honesty, had
questioned the validity of Gustin Ill’s divorce. Still others
had urged the claim of Duke Allister Seagleam, saying that he had
been born to assume the throne and that the long delay in the
king’s producing an heir had been an omen in his favor.
All in all, Valora’s birth had awakened much spite, but King
Gustin III had turned a deaf ear to the murmurings, distracting
himself by watching his daughter grow and his people with military
ventures against Hawk Haven.
Crown Princess Valora proved to be a healthy child, astonishingly
free of whatever flaws had slain her brothers and sisters while still
in the womb. She grew strong, intelligent, willful, and even
beautiful. Her doting father was too wise to permit her to become
quite spoiled, but from the time she could talk, Valora knew she
would be queen. Unlike King Tedric, who could threaten to disown one
of his children, Gustin III had no such option—even should he
desire it. Nor did the crown princess ever believe her father would
wish it. He had striven too hard for her birth.
As Crown Princess Valora grew, the ambitious still dreamed that a
way to power would be opened to them—that King Gustin III would
die while his daughter was still too young to rule without a regent
and they could assume that privileged post. Yet King Gustin III
defied them all, remaining sound of mind until a weak heart claimed
him at seventy-one. By then Crown Princess Valora had passed her
twentieth birthday and was safely beyond any challenge that she was
disbarred by age from taking up her crown.
At the time of her coronation, some raised the old complaint that
Valora was not a child of Gustin III’s body, but this was a
weak argument by now. From Gildcrest, Bright Bay had inherited the
custom that an adopted child could inherit with the full rights of a
naturally born one. Even if Valora was not Gustin III’s
daughter, he had clearly raised her as such and the will of a king
served as adoption enough.
So Crown Princess Valora ascended the throne. In the pattern of
her grandmother, Valora continued the tradition of taking the male
name Gustin. Like her grandmother, she waited to marry until each of
her Great Houses could present its claim—and its best
candidate. Two years after becoming queen, Gustin IV married Lord
Harwill Lobster, a handsome, but untried man slightly younger than
herself. Some said that Harwill’s relative youth and lack of
achievement had been part of his attraction, for Queen Gustin IV
would accept no rivals. Others were kinder and said that there was
real affection between the two. And yet how quickly our queen forgets, Duke Allister thought,
how her very birth was resented, how her own aunt saw her as a
squatter on a throne destined for other—better—people.
Perhaps she doesn’t want to remember, but prefers to believe
that these eight years have erased ambitions that had over thirty to
grow. Whatever the reasons for her way of thinking, the
queen’s lack of decisiveness in this recent action has not
helped her position. Indeed, I think that noble and commoner alike
would support me over Gustin the Fourth if their choice was me as
king or more war to keep a woman who many think should never have
been born or ascended the throne.
Indeed, once rumors had been spread that Allister had requested
the queen name him her heir, representatives of several of the Great
Houses—starting with Pearl’s own brother, Reed, Duke
Oyster—had approached Allister, offering him their support if
he wished to force the queen to step down. King Tedric had also shown
his support for Allister—not publicly where the Stonehold
ministers might claim it invalidated agreements made with Queen
Gustin IV, but in a private meeting with Queen Gustin IV.
The queen had not been pleased, but no one was certain what shape
that displeasure would take. Would she force a war that might lead to
her kingdom’s destruction or would she step down?
Duke Allister didn’t know, but he suspected that the closed
meeting which had been called for this very morning at the Toll House
would resolve the question. the meeting room was crowded, for the
Toll House had not been designed to accommodate such events. However,
the international nature of the invitation list demanded that the
conference be held on something resembling neutral ground.
Both Bright Bay and Hawk Haven were represented not only by their
monarchs but by a single representative for each of their Great
Houses. Duke Allister Seagleam, although technically not a
representative of any Great House, was also present. Whether his
Bright Bay title, his relationship to King Tedric, or his recent
victory gave him the right was moot—not even Queen Gustin IV at
her most autocratic would have dared exclude him.
In addition to these fourteen people, there were bodyguards for
the monarchs—a matter, most hoped, of etiquette rather than of
necessity.
There were a handful of secretaries and clerks to take notes or to
supply documents as needed.
The crowding of not quite two dozen people made the stone-walled
room close and heightened the air of tension. Duke Allister Seagleam,
seated beside his brother-in-law, Reed Oyster, tried hard to look
impassive though his heart was beating at a frantic rate.
King Tedric, as befitted his years, made the opening
statement.
“We have gathered here,” the king said, “to
resolve certain matters that have arisen out of Stonehold’s
attack on Bright Bay. My kingdom came to Bright Bay’s aid when
she was attacked by her supposed allies. Although Bright Bay has
settled with Stonehold, she has not fully settled with me. Until this
is done, I do not believe matters with Stonehold truly have been
resolved.”
Queen Gustin IV, her red-gold hair cascading loose over her
shoulders from beneath her crown, looked pale and stern as she stood
to make her reply. As had King Tedric, she addressed her remarks to
the gathered nobles rather than to her fellow monarch.
“Bright Bay has offered Hawk Haven a half share of the
monies to be received from Stonehold as compensation for her
assistance in defending our lands. We believe this fair and even
generous for although both of our armies fought, Bright Bay’s
lands alone suffered damage. We have taken more than half of the
injury, yet we are prepared to give over a fair half of the
compensation in thanks to our recent ally.”
Whereas King Tedric’s speech had been met with neutral
silence, when Queen Gustin stopped speaking low, angry muttering
could be heard—mostly from where the Hawk Haven delegates were
seated. I wonder, Allister thought. Their people died in her defense
and yet she belittles their sacrifice. She doesn’t even repeat
the thanks she offered publicly and grudgingly upon her arrival after
the bloodshed had ended.
He noticed, however, that not all the Bright Bay delegates were
neutral. Arsen, Duke Dolphin, no great friend of the queen and enough
years her senior that he felt secure speaking out, stood to be
recognized. Gustin did so with a formal nod of her head.
“I wish to call to Your Majesty’s attention,”
Duke Dolphin stated with equal formality, “that according to
the heralds’ counts more of Hawk Haven’s soldiers died
upon the field than did our own. True, the number was close, but
their valor in giving up their lives for the security of your kingdom
deserves more than mere monetary reward.”
Duke Dolphin’s sly but certain emphasis of the phrases
“their valor” and “your kingdom” served as a
pointed reminder that Queen Valora had not been present to defend her
lands. The queen’s eyes narrowed, but her color did not
rise.
“We thank Duke Dolphin,” she said, “for his
reminder. We had not forgotten this fact, but the matter remains that
we had not asked for Hawk Haven’s aid. We feel she should
accept what reward we have to give, not barter like fish sellers in
the marketplace.”
This time the angry exclamations were more general and less
restrained. King Tedric, however, merely raised to his hand for
silence and said:
“Indeed, Hawk Haven was not invited initially, but after the
Battle of the Banks, Duke Allister did thank us and formally request
our continued assistance. It is my understanding that, although Your
Majesty was too busy to come and assess the situation for yourself,
you did feel comfortable designating Duke Allister your
representative, even to the point of urging your officers to support
him.”
“I did,” Queen Gustin said stiffly. She might have
said more, but King Tedric continued with a smoothness that made his
overriding her not even seem rude.
“We came to Bright Bay’s aid,” Tedric said,
“without any formal contract, nor did we come as mercenaries.
We came because I wished to support those who shared a heritage with
my people against a foreign aggressor. Moreover, Duke Allister
Seagleam is my own sister’s son. I could not face my ancestors
in good conscience if I refused him aid.”
“Yet,” Queen Gustin said bitterly, “you have not
worried about your ancestors’ reaction to the many battles you
have fought against my people in the past.”
“Those,” King Tedric said, “were family
squabbles such as the ancestors themselves have fought. No doubt you
planned to instigate a few yourself, perhaps once this old king was
gone and a monarch less certain sat upon the Eagle Throne.”
Queen Gustin’s cheeks flared sudden, unguarded red.
So that is what she did intend, Allister mused. Good tactical
sense, really, if anyone thinks about it, but her blush—whether
angry or embarrassed—makes her appear a ‘prentice caught
plotting to steal from the larder.
Duke Dolphin took advantage of Gustin’s momentary silence to
comment rather more loudly than necessary to his closest neighbor,
Earle Pelican:
“In my father’s day, our wars with Hawk Haven truly
were a continuation of our Civil War. Gustin the Third was the first
king to become dependent on foreign mercenaries. His daughter, our
queen, has continued the dependence.”
Wisely, Queen Gustin did not respond to this unofficial
commentary. However, as she did not seem quite prepared to speak,
King Tedric added:
“As I was saying, I sent my soldiers to Bright Bay’s
aid because I did not wish to see her fall to a foreign aggressor.
Whether or not I believe the compensation Your Majesty has offered to
us is just is not the real issue. The issue as I see it is, what do
you offer us to remain your allies?”
Queen Gustin had regained her composure and her reply showed even
a touch of humor.
“I don’t suppose that you’d continue to support
us out of kindred feeling?”
“My personal family feeling would not be enough,” King
Tedric replied. “My noble counselors do not have nephews among
your Great Houses. I would need to be able to offer them something
more if they were to send their sons and daughters to fight on your
fields.”
Queen Gustin glanced down at some papers in front of her, as if
consulting them. Then she said coolly:
“Stonehold found the benefit of money earned and a place to
train their forces compensation enough. In addition, we gave their
ships use of some of our ports. Would you consider a similar
contract?”
King Tedric shook his head.
“My people are my greatest treasure,” he said.
“I cannot sell their lives for mere monies. Moreover, New
Kelvin and Waterland are not as aggressive neighbors as those
Stonehold might find challenging their southern frontier if the Rocky
Band were not so well-trained. We have a port of our own, poor when
compared to the water wealth of Bright Bay, but serviceable, and
Waterland freely shares the northern oceans with our
vessels.”
“I heard,” Queen Gustin said acidly, “from
well-informed sources, that neither Waterland nor New Kelvin were
pleased that you had come to Bright Bay’s aid. Perhaps your
borders and vessels are not as secure as you think.”
King Tedric shook his head. “I am certain that if we offered
due apology and promised never to aid Bright Bay again—no
matter which foreign powers threatened—New Kelvin and Waterland
would forgive us. Waterland in particular might have other ventures
to occupy her time.” You walked into that one, Valora, Allister thought, listening
to the murmured consternation from the Bright Bay representatives.
That old eagle was playing such games when you were floating toy
ships in a garden pond. Now your own people see our increased
vulnerability.
For the first time, Queen Gustin looked momentarily panicked,
perhaps envisioning a Bright Bay embattled on land by
Stonehold—with or without Hawk Haven’s aid—while
Waterland preyed upon her from the sea. Until this point, Bright Bay
had been a fair match for the neighboring sea power precisely because
of Stonehold’s support against Hawk Haven on land. Gustin has been so busy concentrating on the immediate
picture, Allister thought, that she did not realize what other sharks
would start circling once they smelled our blood and thought us
wounded. Yet, if she had come to fight this battle, she would not
find herself needing to grant concessions. It is her own
cowardice—or prudence—that brought her to this
point.
For a fleeting moment the duke wondered what ultimatum Stonehold
had offered Queen Gustin that war had been preferable to reply.
Despite how attentively his spies and those of his allies had snooped
about, no one knew for certain. The best any could say was that
Stonehold’s letter had to do with events dating back to days of
Gustin Sailor.
Looking at the queen, sitting stiff and haughty in her high-backed
chair, Allister Seagleam was certain of one thing. The
ultimatum—no matter what it entailed—had meant less than
the fact that it had offended Gustin’s pride. She would not
rush to Stonehold’s bidding like a servant to cook, as she had
put it in her letter to him, no matter what the cost.
Although there was still a small glimmer of fear in her eyes,
Queen Gustin found her voice and addressed King Tedric:
“Your Majesty then agrees that what compensation we have
offered Hawk Haven for her assistance in the battles of these few
days past is sufficient.”
Tedric replied carefully, “I have said we will accept
it—I do not wish to discuss whether or not I consider the
compensation sufficient, not when there is a larger question to
settle. I ask you bluntly, Your Majesty, do you wish to continue in
alliance with Hawk Haven and if so, what is that alliance worth to
you?”
Queen Gustin hedged, “You have said you will not take money
nor use of harbors, that your troops need no training. What is the
price of your aid?”
“Nothing,” King Tedric said, “that you must
personally pay. I only ask that you name as your heir my nephew, your
cousin Allister Seagleam. I believe that he will work toward the
union of both our kingdoms, so that never again no such word as
‘alliance’ need ever be used to define our relationship
to each other.”
“You say,” Queen Gustin said, her voice rising,
“that this is no price to pay!”
“I do not ask that you step down,” King Tedric said
reasonably. “Only that you name Duke Allister Seagleam, son of
Princess Caryl Eagle and Prince Tavis Seagleam, your heir. You have
no son or daughter nor younger sibling. I am not asking you to
disinherit anyone, only that you choose Duke Allister out of all
those who could raise a claim to the throne and that you assure
his—or his own heir’s—succeeding you even in the
instance that a child is born to you.”
Duke Lobster, father of King Harwill and thus grandfather to the
yet-unconceived child of the queen, spoke out without bothering to be
recognized:
“Even if the queen has not yet born a child, there are those
within Bright Bay’s own nobility who should follow her. Grand
Duchess Sea-star’s eldest, Culver, holds the title crown
prince, though all understand that he will step down gracefully when
Queen Gustin the Fourth bears a child.”
“Then I,” King Tedric replied, smiling slightly as if
acknowledging Duke Lobster’s unspoken advocacy of his potential
grandchild, “am merely asking Crown Prince Culver to be
gracious a bit sooner than was planned.”
A few people laughed and Duke Allister noted that not all those
who laughed were from Hawk Haven.
Queen Gustin was not laughing, despite the fact that this proposal
came as no surprise. She had heard it before, both from Allister and
from Tedric—and probably from others. Her request that King
Tedric tell her what he wanted of her in return for his support had
been for the benefit of those representatives of her Great Houses who
might not have heard Tedric’s demands—and who hopefully
would be offended by them.
Doubtless what made the queen’s face so stern was that Duke
Lobster was the only one to raise a protest. There was no offended
hubbub as there had been when she slighted Hawk Haven’s
contribution to the recent war, only thoughtful silence.
Duke Allister was not so naive as to believe that this meant there
was near universal support for him. King Tedric’s people were
prepared to support him because of the near certainty that Stonehold
would withdraw once Hawk Haven and Bright Bay showed a united front.
Hawk Haven, therefore, would have won a victory none of their armies
had in over a hundred years—the promise of
unification—with no further bloodshed.
Among Bright Bay’s assembled Houses, Oyster and Dolphin
would support Allister’s claim with enthusiasm. Oyster because
of the prospect of seeing Pearl made queen—and the satisfaction
of seeing their long shot in giving Allister a bride pay off. Dolphin
would support Allister because of the old insult to Lady
Brina—an insult that still rankled so strongly that Dolphin had
risked its own interests to hinder those of the past two Gustins.
Dolphin had long ago forgiven Allister for the earlier offense of his
parent’s arranged marriage in the light of that greater
insult.
Lobster would support the queen. They must because King Harwill
was of their family. Pelican and Seal were more problematical. True,
Queen Gustin’s mother was a Seal, but that House had old
internal conflicts dating back to Viona’s marriage to King
Gustin III. Moreover, the Queen Mother Viona had not kept friends
with all of her kin. Pelican owned lands along the Stonehold border
and should be grateful for Hawk Haven’s support, but they might
prefer reconciliation with their closer neighbor. Do I really want to be Gustin’s heir? Allister asked
himself. Do I really wish this kettle of fish on Shad?
He nodded to himself. He did. The problems would exist whether or
not he was in a position to do anything about them. This way, he
would have some control. Indeed, Gustin would need to work with
him—or at least with Shad, as he would be her more probable
successor—from the start if she wished to see any of her
projects carried out.
“I am certain,” Queen Gustin said, seeing that no one
else was going to speak out in favor of her, “that Crown Prince
Culver would be gracious. I, too, wish to be gracious, but this is
much to ask.”
“Still, I ask it,” King Tedric said firmly, “and
I am making demands not only of you. I will expect Duke Allister to
prove his good faith to my people by wedding his heir to my
heir.”
There was murmuring at this, especially among the Hawk Haven
contingent. King Tedric had remained stubborn in his refusal to name
his heir in anything other than his sealed will. This last statement
offered some slight clue to who that heir might be for
Allister’s own heir was widely recognized to be Shad, so
Tedric’s heir would need to be female. However, as there were
three female candidates, this was hardly decisive.
Queen Gustin said silkily, “Duke Allister’s heir is
engaged to be married. Are you suggesting he name another child his
heir or that he break the engagement?”
“That,” King Tedric said, “is not my problem. To
satisfy my belief that I am securing peace with Bright Bay for my
kingdom, Duke Allister must wed his heir to mine. How Allister
chooses to arrive at this end is his choice.”
Earl Kestrel, quivering like his namesake bird about to launch
after prey, stood and was recognized.
“Your Majesty, does that mean you will name your heir
here?”
“If,” King Tedric said deliberately, “Queen
Gustin agrees to my terms, I will be naming my heir here so that
everyone will know how the succession is to be
established.”
Earl Kestrel bowed and sat, glancing at Allister as if wondering
how the duke would take to wedding his son to a feral woman who
apparently thought she was a wolf. I would wed Shad, Allister thought, or Tavis, if Shad’s
engagement cannot be broken—to any of the three young women
from whom King Tedric would select his heir and he would choose a
young one rather than his niece Zorana, of that I am sure. The male
candidates please me less since young Purcel Archer was killed, but I
do not think the king will choose one of these. Baron Archer would
not divorce his wife to marry an eleven-year-old; Rolfston Redbriar
is dead, and Jet Shield is disgraced.
Judging from the expressions on the faces of the Hawk Haven
representatives, similar conclusions were being reached. The
representative for House Goshawk looked vaguely disappointed, but
those for Peregrine, Kestrel, and Gyrfalcon were quite alert.
“Queen Gustin,” King Tedric said, “what is your
answer? I have given Bright Bay ample time to consider my offer.
Although this is the first time my terms have been mentioned in this
company, it is not the first time you have heard them.”
“It is,” the queen said, “a monumental decision.
Although this is not the first time I have heard your offer, it is
the first time some of my Great Houses have been informed. I ask to
have time to consult with them in private.”
“Take that time,” King Tedric said rising, “but
know this, I will not wait beyond this hour tomorrow. Moreover, I do
not think that Stonehold will wait. Already they see Hawk
Haven’s support as a negotiable commodity. I have given you the
chance to win our support, but it does not mean that it is not valued
by others.”
With these stinging words, the king pushed himself to his feet and
turned to go, escorted by his guards. His nobles rose in respect and
followed him from the room, trailed by the clerks for Hawk Haven.
The words that had been kept back lest Bright Bay look less in the
eyes of a nation that had been enemy, ally, and kin now flooded
forth. Representatives of the five Great Houses surged to their feet,
shouting, without waiting for recognition. Allister Seagleam listened
to the noise in consternation. Here, now, at last, it will be settled.
XXIX
From her cot high on a sunny hill, Firekeeper saw
movement around the pavilion in which the negotiations had been being
held. The cleared area around the pavilion, meant to keep
eavesdroppers at bay, suddenly swarmed with those privileged few who
had met with King Tedric, Queen Gustin, and the two ministers of
Stonehold. Everyone was visible but Queen Gustin and King Tedric.
They emerged some minutes later. Through the long glass, Firekeeper
saw that the faces of both were grim and fierce.
“Now it comes,” she said with certainty to Doc.
“Soon the call comes.”
“Call?” Doc said, looking up from the notes he had
been making on a bit of paper. “You mean they’ve settled
it all? Are you certain? I thought that was what yesterday’s
meeting at the Toll House should have done.”
In response, Firekeeper handed him the long glass and motioned
below. “If I have learned anything of humans,” the
wolf-woman said, “I have learned that when counselors look
upset and monarchs serious, a decision has been reached.”
The bright call of a trumpet followed almost as she finished
speaking and a herald’s voice was heard announcing:
“Peace is made! Peace is won!”
Cheering followed these simple words, drowning out what the herald
said next so that he must stop and wait. Firekeeper watched as men
and women smiled or wept, pounding each other on the backs,
embracing. She wondered at their simple joy. Couldn’t they
smell the blood that had been spilt? How could they rejoice at a
peace following a war that should never have been?
Once again she resigned herself to accepting that perhaps for
humans that battle did need to happen. Dangling her hand from the
edge of the cot, she felt Blind Seer lick her fingers.
Doc lowered the long glass, saying: “The herald has given up
trying to say anything more. I’m going to run down and learn
the terms.”
Firekeeper did not stop him, having plans of her own. As soon as
the physician was gone, she said to Blind Seer: “I smell Patience not far away.”
The wolf grunted agreement. “If you bring the horse to me, I will not need to walk
all the way down the hill.” “Who said you are getting out of bed?” the wolf
growled. “I have,” Firekeeper replied. “And as you
cannot stop me without hurting me further, I think you will get
Patience.”
The wolf snarled something about stupid, impulsive humans, but by
the time Firekeeper had sat up and swung her feet to the ground, he
was back, driving the snorting grey gelding in front of him. Patience
wore neither bridle nor saddle, but Firekeeper said to him: “Kneel down so that I may mount or I will bite
you.”
A bit awkwardly, Patience complied, having no doubt at all that
Firekeeper was completely in earnest. Wrapping her hands in the
horse’s mane and using the strength of her arms, the wolf-woman
hauled herself astride. Despite the pain, she kept her expression
carefully stoic, for she knew that at the first sign of weakness
Blind Seer would realize he could stop her without retaliation.
She must have succeeded in hiding the pain that stabbed her back
and groaned in the healing muscles of her thigh when she stretched it
around the horse’s barrel, for the wolf contented himself with
grumbling: “If Elation had not so taken to Derian, I would have her
fetch him here. He could stop you.” “I doubt it,” Firekeeper said cheerfully, adding
“Up!” to the horse. Patience rose stiffly, muttering
complaints about mad wolves. Firekeeper felt so good to be up and
moving she let the gelding have his say. “Down the hill,” shesaid, slapping her
steed’s neck, “to where the people are gathering. I want
to be there when the king makes his announcement. ” “What announcement?” Blind Seer asked, trotting
alongside. “Why, his heir,” Firekeeper replied blithely.
“I feel in my bones that now is the time.” “Do you expect him to name you?” “No, but I am no less curious for that.“ “Curiosity is a puppy’s vice.” “And a human virtue.”
Doubtless because Blind Seer moved to pad a few steps in front of
the grey gelding, a path cleared for them as they passed through the
army camp. Firekeeper sat as straight as she was able, but she feared
that she must look rather less than herself. Still, sporadic cheers
and friendly greetings met her progress.
The news of her coming must have flowed ahead of her, because as
she reached the area near the central pavilion Elation soared
screeching out of the sky, heralding Derian’s arrival a few
moment’s after.
“Firekeeper!” Derian exclaimed, the word protest and
question all at once. She realized how much she had learned in that
she could understand this. Once she would have thought it a simple
greeting.
“I wanted to hear the king’s announcement,” she
replied blandly.
“How did you know there was to be one?” he asked
teasingly. “Isn’t the herald’s news of peace enough
for you?”
Firekeeper replied as she had to Blind Seer, “I felt it in
my bones.” How else could she explain her growing awareness
that humans revealed their thoughts and intentions through little
signs even as wolves did?
Humans might lack tails and decent ears, but the signs were
present nonetheless.
Derian might have teased further, but he was too concerned about
her health and comfort. Given his height, he had no trouble checking
both the sword wound to her back and the stitches on her leg without
getting her down from Patience’s back. When he had contented
himself that she was not bleeding afresh and nothing seemed to have
pulled loose, he grunted:
“Well, you are here, you might as well stay. Are you
comfortable up there?”
“Enough,” she replied. “Though Patience has a
sharp backbone.”
Derian remedied this by commandeering a blanket to make her a pad.
Firekeeper leaned with her arms on Patience’s withers while
Derian slipped it under her. They’d just finished when Doc
joined them, glowered at Firekeeper, but said nothing more. He was
followed a few moments later by Valet, Race, and Ox. The latter
explained:
“The king has called most of his nobles to him. That’s
where Earl Kestrel has gone. Shouldn’t you be there,
Firekeeper?”
She shrugged. “I am comfortable here. If they want me, I am
easily found.”
But no one came for her and when the herald emerged from the tent
and the crowd fell silent she remained just one among many. After the
herald made a completely unnecessary call for quiet, he
continued:
“His Majesty King Tedric and Her Majesty Queen Gustin the
Fourth have several very important announcements to make. They demand
your complete and obedient attention.”
At this, the monarchs emerged from the pavilion. Each was trailed
by a small herd of nobles, each dressed in the best that could be
found at short notice. Earl Kestrel and Baron Archer, like most of
those who had seen recent military service, wore their uniforms.
Standing next to Sapphire Shield who was wearing her battered blue
armor, Lady Elise looked tranquil, if rather frail, dressed in the
same gown she had worn to the ball.
Firekeeper wondered if hers were the only ears sharp enough to
hear the sigh of longing and admiration that inadvertently slipped
from between Doc’s lips as he gazed at the young noblewoman.
Something about the slight but definitely compassionate twinkle in
Valet’s eyes made her think that hers were not.
A raised dais a few feet high had been hastily constructed and
side by side with measured tread, rival king and queen mounted to
stand where all could see them. Courage, Firekeeper thought with admiration. Until Prince
Newell’s attack on the king, I never realized the risks these
human Ones take whenever they are in public. Queen Gustin is not
loved here. How easily an arrow shot from afar could end her life!
Yet she stands there cool and even arrogant, like the senior doe of
some great herd.
This was the first time she had seen Bright Bay’s queen
close up and Firekeeper took a deep breath, hoping to catch something
of her scent. All she got was that of horse and hot humans, but she
did not doubt that the elegant young woman before her was scented
like some rich flower or perhaps an exotic spice.
The queen, Firekeeper decided as the herald blatted out a
completely unnecessary recitation of titles and honors, was furiously
angry but knew herself in no position to express that anger.
After the announcement of titles, King Tedric began to speak. His
every sentence was echoed by the herald so that even those at the far
reaches of the crowd could hear, but Firekeeper was close enough to
hear the old voice projecting with strength despite the shrillness of
age.
“Good people. As was announced a short time ago, we have
achieved peace between those who so recently contended upon the field
just west of this point. Stonehold has paid the promised
compensation. They will begin to withdraw their troops tomorrow
morning.”
He lifted a hand to forestall the cheer that began almost
inadvertently and continued:
“Compromise is the weapon of peace. As many of you know, I
first came here on my quest for a fitting heir. Part of my compromise
for peace was agreeing to name that heir publicly. But before I do
so, Queen Gustin has an important announcement of her own to
make.”
As the queen moved slightly forward to take over, a low murmur
rippled through the throng to be instantly quelled by her gaze.
“As Stonehold’s perfidy has demonstrated,” Queen
Gustin said in a firm yet musical voice, “neither Hawk Haven
nor Bright Bay is strong enough to exist alone. My greatest wish is
for an alliance between our kindred nations. In token of this, I am
stepping down as queen of Bright Bay in favor of my cousin, Duke
Allister Seagleam. As he was born as a pledge of our land’s
desire for mutual peace, I can think of no better proof of Bright
Bay’s goodwill toward Hawk Haven.”
Nothing could stop the noisy roar of acclamation that exploded
almost before her words were finished. Duke Allister nodded solemnly,
but something of how deeply he was moved showed in the line of color
that crept up from his collar to flush his cheeks. His wife, Pearl,
was less composed. When she burst into joyful tears, Duke Allister
was able to take refuge in comforting her.
The herald shouted the crowd to relative silence, and Queen Gustin
continued, her tones now icy:
“My cousin has agreed that I should not make this great
sacrifice for my people’s good without some fitting reward.
Therefore, the islands that have to this time been part of the nation
of Bright Bay will become my new realm. To guard and protect the
islands, I shall be taking with me a portion of Bright Bay’s
fleet. I hope that relations between my new realm of the Isles and
her sister nations shall be characterized by mutual
accord.” That last, Firekeeper thought, is as true as if Blind Seer
said he wanted all his fur shaved off. I doubt either King Tedric or
Duke Allister believe her. Neither are fools.
King Tedric stepped forward and resumed:
“I thank my noble sister and I shall devote my strongest
efforts in these last years of my life to maintaining mutual peace.
In the interests of this, I have decided that I can no longer delay
announcing my heir. At one point I had seriously considered Duke
Allister, but his new role as king of Bright Bay will heavily occupy
his time.
“I wish to state that my naming of one person as my heir
should in no way be taken as a slight to those who were not selected.
All of the men and women I considered had qualities that might have
made them good and able monarchs, but in the end, I could only select
one person. Unlike Stonehold, my nation cannot be ruled by a
committee.
“In the interests of furthering an alliance with Bright Bay,
I decided to pass over my niece Zorana Archer and my nephew Ivon
Archer. My other nephew, Lord Rolfston Redbriar, bravely gave his
life on the battlefield before this decision was resolved, as did my
grandnephew Purcel Archer.
“The next generation holds many fine young men and women.
However, in choosing between them I let my desire for peace between
Bright Bay and Hawk Haven dictate my choice to a certain extent. Duke
Allister has four children. His eldest and his heir is a young man,
the heroic Shad Oyster.
“My desire was that the reunification of our nations be
delayed no longer than absolutely necessary. Therefore, my heir must
be someone who could wed Shad Oyster. Together, they would rule Hawk
Haven after my death and—with Allister Seagleam’s
enthusiastic concurrence— upon Allister’s passing to the
ancestors, they would also rule in Bright Bay.
“This narrowed my choices considerably, for only two women
of near marriageable age are among my potential heirs. Both young
women have shown true courage and fortitude in different ways during
the battle. One of these candidates, Lady Archer, is the sole heir to
her family duties. She is also just eighteen—not quite of
marriageable age. However, these difficulties could have been
overcome. What made me decide to select Elise’s cousin,
Sapphire Shield, over her was an event that is already becoming
legend.
“By now all of you have heard how during the final battle of
this recent war, Sapphire risked her own life to preserve that of
Duke Allister and how, when Shad Oyster fell defending his father
from further attacks, Sapphire herself carried him from the field.
Such events forge deep bonds. I am not such a fool as to ignore the
promptings of the ancestors. Therefore, I here name with all of you
as my witnesses, Sapphire Shield the crown princess of Hawk
Haven!”
Now, clearly, was a time for cheering and none attempted to
restrain the thunderous applause that arose as Duke Allister led
forward his son and his daughter-in-law-to-be. As the young couple
stepped decorously forward to receive the acclaim of those who would
someday be their subjects, they clasped hands tightly. Firekeeper was
pleased to note that this was not mere form. From her elevated perch
she could clearly see that the knuckles on both hands were white from
the tightness of that grasp.
When the shouts and cheers faded to a happy murmur, King Tedric
continued, “My voice is old and weak. Therefore, I ask my
nephew, Allister Seagleam, to continue explaining the terms of
peace.”
Allister stepped next to the woman he had deposed and offered her
a deep bow. Queen Gustin IV, soon to be Queen Valora of the Isles,
was gracious enough, but the tight lines around mouth and eyes could
not be smoothed away by mere intention.
Allister held up his hand for silence. When he spoke, his strong
voice seemed emblematic of the promise of the new days to follow.
“My good people, tomorrow morning I shall depart for Silver
Whale Cove, the capital of Bright Bay. There, with the full agreement
of these nobles and the families they represent…” Here
he paused to gesture at the gathered representatives of Bright
Bay’s five Great Houses. “I shall be crowned king of
Bright Bay. However, I will not be made King Gustin the Fifth. The
name Gustin shall be allowed to rest. Nor shall I be King Allister
Seagleam. Instead, the name I will take is King Allister of the
Pledge, chosen as a reminder of what has brought us all to this
point.
“My son and heir, Shad, and Crown Princess Sapphire will be
married soon after, also in Bright Bay. Thereafter, together, they
will travel to Hawk Haven and renew their vows before their new
countrymen. When I pass on to the ancestors, Shad and Sapphire will
reunite the portions of our severed people. At that time, Bright Bay
and Hawk Haven will cease to exist, becoming instead a new nation
embracing the best of our peoples. To commemorate that change, a new
name will be taken. Uncle Tedric has suggested we call our new
country Bright Haven. What say you all?”
Firekeeper thought there could be no doubt of the people’s
approval. In keeping with the general festive atmosphere, even Blind
Seer threw back his head and howled enthusiastically.
“I want you to know,” Allister said, “that this
union of our kingdoms is not contingent upon chance. If something
takes Shad before me, Sapphire shall still follow me and
reunification continue. The same is true if Sapphire dies suddenly.
Shad is her heir, even as he is mine. The child of their bodies will
follow them—either of them—to the throne. Their lives
will not be easy for they must learn to govern wisely not one, but
two peoples. Yet our dream is that by the time Bright Haven is born
the people of that nation will no longer be two but one.
“I have spoken long enough. You gathered here have seen
history made. The realm of the Isles is born. Bright Haven is
conceived. Each one of you is witness to those births. Guard that
responsibility as you would any newborn child, knowing that you stand
as ancestors to those great events. Blessings on you all!”
As Duke Allister stepped back, Firekeeper joined in the new wave
of acclaim, a thunder of cheering and shouting that lasted until the
noble party had retreated from the dais. As the joyful noise faded,
the crowd surrounding them began to break up, flowing about their
little wolf-guarded group like a stream parting around a rock.
Looking down from her seat on Patience, Firekeeper saw that Derian
was looking at her, a quizzical expression on his face.
“You look awfully happy for someone who just learned she
isn’t going to be queen,” Derian said.
“I knew that I wouldn’t be for a time,”
Firekeeper replied. “I was glad then and am gladder now because
now Earl Kestrel won’t look at me that hungry, hopeful way
anymore.”
“I wonder what he will do about you?” Derian
asked.
Ox spoke up for his employer. “Kestrel adopted her. The earl
won’t dump her. He has too much pride of house for
that.”
Valet nodded agreement. “Firekeeper will never need search
for a home. She has one in Kestrel.”
Firekeeper thought about this as the group returned to the Kestrel
camp. On threat of Doc’s wrath, she was immediately returned to
a cot. The others began breaking down the tents and storing the
gear.
Some of Hawk Haven’s army—Race among them—would
remain in Bright Bay to make certain that Stonehold left as
scheduled, but Earl Kestrel had been released from his command to
tend his other duties. Immediately, he had arranged for a suite of
comfortable rooms at one of Hope’s better inns. Valet was
openly pleased.
“What if,” Firekeeper asked the five men, “I
already have a home? Am I to be Kestrel’s prisoner?”
Derian looked embarrassed, Ox and Race puzzled, Doc carefully
blank, but Valet understood and reassured her.
“You should have freedom to come and go,” Valet said,
his hands busy stowing polished cookware. “Even if you are
still nearly a child by Hawk Haven’s standards, you have lived
a very different life and Earl Kestrel will not wish you to be
unhappy. Tell me, do you intend to return to the wilds?”
Firekeeper shrugged. “Winter is hard in the wolflands, but
someday I would wish to see my pack, maybe in the spring. Then you
found me; then I could return.”
“Forever?” Derian’s voice sounded oddly choked.
He turned away and made himself busy stacking some blankets.
“Forever?” Firekeeper laughed. “After I go to
all such trouble to learn human ways! Of course I come
back.”
“I’m glad,” a new voice entered the conversation
as Earl Kestrel walked into the camp. His followers sprang to offer
him proper bows, but he waved them down. “Be at ease.
“I am glad,” the earl repeated, turning to Firekeeper,
“to learn that you plan to come back to us. Can I encourage you
to stay through the winter?”
Firekeeper nodded. “I was thinking that food is hard to get
in winter and, even with Doc’s help, I will be some time yet
making these cut muscles strong enough to run and hunt.”
“Very good.” Earl Kestrel beamed generally.
“Before I left the king’s presence, the new heir spoke
with me. Sapphire asked me to counsel her on the needs of my house.
Very prettily, she told me that until now she has concentrated solely
on those of her birth house.”
Earl Kestrel looked more serious. “Crown Princess Sapphire
also wished to make certain that I would not hold any resentment
against you, Blysse, for not being chosen as heir.”
“Do you?” Firekeeper asked bluntly.
“No,” replied the earl with equal directness.
“Given the situation, the king could not have chosen anyone
about whose heritage there was the least doubt. Moreover, as a public
sign of her favor, the heir has asked if you will be an attendant at
her forthcoming wedding.”
Firekeeper frowned. “Wedding attendant?”
Earl Kestrel actually laughed. “It is a formal-attire
occasion of the highest honor.”
“More honor than the ball?”
“More than a dozen balls,” Earl Kestrel assured her.
He glanced at Der-ian. “I believe that Counselor Derian could
teach you what you would need to know. Lady Archer will also be
attendant upon her cousin. I believe that the crown princess wished
to publicly demonstrate their amity.”
Firekeeper shrugged away the unfamiliar word, more concerned about
this new social challenge.
“Will you teach me, Derian? You and Elise?”
Derian nodded, pretending dismay. “I seem fated to act as
lady’s maid,” he said in resigned tones, but Firekeeper
saw the sparkle in his eyes.
Blind Seer saw it also. “More kings,” the wolf
grumbled, “and queens and formal attire. What shall I
do?”
Firekeeper scratched his great grey head. “Be with me.
Guard my back. There will be dangers there also.”
“Despite what Duke Allister implied today,” Earl
Kestrel said, unaware of the wolves’ conversation, “the
wedding and coronation cannot be held for some weeks. Queen Gustin
must be permitted to move her belongings from the royal dwellings at
Silver Whale Cove. Nobles from both Bright Bay and Hawk Haven must be
given time to prepare for the festivities. Duke Allister will take up
his responsibilities as monarch immediately—indeed, the last
thing we witnessed before the meeting ended was a representative of
each of Bright Bay’s Great Houses swearing loyalty to their new
king—but further formalities will wait.”
“I must return to Eagle’s Nest” Earl Kestrel
continued, “and then to the Norwood Grant. King Tedric has
asked that I take Prince Newell’s servant Rook into my custody.
Apparently, Lady Zorana wants him executed, no matter what promises
he was given in return for his confession. King Tedric might have
given Lady Zorana what she wished but this Rook claims that he is not
the one who took such liberties with Lady Zorana’s
person—he says another man, named Keen, was
responsible.”
“I think,” Firekeeper said slowly, “that Rook
tells the truth. I did not see faces, but I did see shapes and hair
and such. The man who pawed at Lady Zorana was not Rook. He was the
one who later I cut beneath the eye. I did not recall this at the
time, but once or twice I saw one who could have been this Keen near
Prince Newell’s tent.”
Earl Kestrel looked interested. “I doubt that such
information would change Lady Zorana’s feelings. She would
simply say that Rook stood by and permitted this Keen his abuses.
Still, I shall pass your report on to King Tedric. For whatever
reason, King Tedric is standing by his promise to Rook and has asked
that I secure the prisoner in the Norwood Grant, where Lady Zorana
would find it more difficult to do him injury.”
“My thought,” the earl went on, “is to have Lady
Blysse remain here in Hope to recuperate from her wounds. Not only
would it spare her a trip in a jolting wagon, but when she feels
better she will have woodlands near for her pleasure. I must take Ox
and Valet with me, and Derian will certainly wish to visit his family
and tell them about his new honors, but I thought that you, Jared,
might be willing to look after my ward.”
“That’s a good thought,” Doc said.
“I’ll stay and keep Firekeeper and Blind Seer out of
trouble. No one is waiting for me in Eagle’s Nest.”
Firekeeper heard the sadness in his voice. If Earl Kestrel did, he
didn’t comment.
“I may be speaking out of turn, Cousin Jared,” the
earl added, “but I was given the impression that you will be
invited to the wedding celebration in Silver Whale Cove—as well
as to the one in Eagle’s Nest. Shad Oyster appreciates how your
talent sped along his healing and that of his father. He wishes to
offer you this mark of favor before his people.”
Sir Jared’s smile glowed. Firekeeper knew why. Elise would
be at the wedding. The prospect of that meeting—not the royal
invitation—was the honor that lit his soul.
Firekeeper shook her head, wondering if she would ever feel so
intensely about a human. She could be fond of humans, yes. She was
fond of Derian, of Elise, of all those she thought of as her human
pack— even of Earl Kestrel. She would die for King Tedric as
she would for Blind Seer.
Her hand curled tightly in the woll’s ruff, knowing that her
silent wish was impossible, wondering nonetheless if somewhere,
somehow, there was magic that would transform her so that she might
run beside Blind Seer, wolf and wolf.
Through Wolf's Eyes
The launch of a compellingly original epic of
human and animal magic
Through Wolf’s Eyes
Jane Lindskold
Years ago Prince Barden disobeyed his
father’s orders and led a colonizing expedition beyond the
boundaries of Hawk Haven, across the mountains and into the
wilderness beyond. That was the last anyone heard of the prince and
his followers. Now there’s a problem: one of Barden’s
children, if found alive, could still inherit the throne. Earl
Kestrel, an ambitious noble, has mounted an expedition to find out
what became of the colonists—and, perhaps, persuade some of
them to come back. They don’t find Barden’s colony. Young Firekeeper,
a strange, feral young lady, finds them. She’s just the right
age to be one of Barden’s children, and her sole
possessions—aside from the crudely prepared furs she
wears—are some flint stones for striking fire and Prince
Barden’s own knife. Firekeeper only vaguely remembers a time when she didn’t
live with her “family,” a pack of royal wolves.
They’re bigger, stronger, and smarter than normal wolves, and
speak a language that Firekeeper has also learned as she’s
grown up with them. Now the wolves who lead her pack tell her
they’re sending her back to live among the humans. They
promised this to her mother long ago, and now they must honor their
promise—though if Firekeeper finds she doesn’t care for
the humans, they add, she can always just come home and be a wolf
again. But for now she has to give it a try. Thus it is that one fine morning Firekeeper walks into Earl
Kestrel’s encampment. She’s wary. They’re
astonished. They’d be even more astonished if they knew her
beloved best friend, the wolf called Blind Seer, sits watching, just
outside the clearing. He’s planning to come along with
Firekeeper, for the adventure and to keep her company. The men of the
expedition decide to call her Lady Blysse, after Barden’s young
daughter, and set out on the long journey back to Hawk
Haven. Firekeeper and Blind Seer will have much to contemplate in the
months to come. The process of learning to behave like a human will
turn out to be more complicated than she’d ever imagined.
Firekeeper/Blysse will find herself entangled in intrigues, plots
both foul and fair, as the long-smoldering question of royal
succession finally bursts into flame. And yet, while human ways may
be stranger than anything found in the forest, their infighting is
nothing Firekeeper hasn’t seen before…
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed
in this novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.
For Jim, with Love
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I’d like to thank several people for their help during the
development of this book. Christie Golden’s eloquent discussion
of some aspects of characterization remained with me as I developed
certain characters. Phyllis White of Flying Coyote Books supplied
numerous valuable references on wolves. Jim Moore was once again my
priceless first reader and constant sounding board. Kay McCauley, Jan
and Steve Stirling, David Weber and Sharon Rice-Weber never let me
give up. Sally Gwylan helped me to conquer time and error. Last, but
not at all least, Patrick and Teresa Nielsen Hayden provided
thoughtful encouragement and cogent editorial comments.
Special thanks go to Dr. Mark Anthony for fixing my shoulder and
to Candy Kitchen Wolf Ranch for giving me a chance to meet several
wolves up close and personal.
BOOK ONE
I
AAA-ROOO! AAA-ROOO! Distant, yet carrying, the
wolf’s howl broke the late-afternoon stillness.
In the depths of the forest, a young woman, as strong and supple
as the sound, rose noiselessly to her feet. With bloodstained
fingers, she pushed her short, dark brown hair away from her ears to
better hear the call. Aaa-rooo! Aaa-rooo!
It was a sentry howl, relayed from a great distance to the east.
The young woman understood its message more easily than she would
have understood any form of human speech. “Strangers! Strangers! Strangers!
Strange!”
The last lilt of inflection clarified the previous howls. Whatever
was coming from the east was not merely a trespasser—perhaps a
young wolf dispersing from his birth pack—but an unknown
quantity. But from the relay signal that preceded the call, the
strangers were far away.
The young woman felt a momentary flicker of curiosity. Hunger,
however, was more pressing. The cold times were not long past and her
memories of dark, freezing days, when even the stupid fish were
unreachable beneath the ice, were sharp.
She squatted again and continued skinning a still warm rabbit,
musing, not for the first time, how much more convenient it would be
if she could eat it as her kinfolk did: fur, bone, flesh, and guts
all in one luxurious mouthful.
AAA-ROOO! AAA-ROOO!
Derian Carter, the youngest member of Earl Kestrel’s
expedition, felt his shoulder jerked nearly out of its socket when
the wolf howl pierced the late-afternoon peace. The haunting sound
startled the sensitive chestnut mare he was unbridling nearly out of
her highly bred stockings.
“Easy, easy, Roanne,” he murmured mechanically, all
too aware that his own heart was racing. That wolf sounded close!
As Derian eased the mare’s headstall over ears that
couldn’t seem to decide whether to prick in alarm or flatten in
annoyance, he said in a voice he was pleased to discover remained
calm, almost nonchalant:
“That sounds like a big wolf out there, Race.”
Race Forester, the guide for Earl Kestrel’s expedition,
looked down his long nose at the younger man and chuckled. He was a
lean fellow with a strong, steady tread that spoke of long distances
traveled afoot and blond hair bleached so white by constant exposure
to the sun that he would look much the same at sixty as he did at
thirty.
“That it does, Derian.” Race stroked his short but
full beard as he glanced around their sheltered forest camp,
systematically noting the areas that would need to be secured now
that big predators were about. “Wolves always sound bigger when
you’re on their turf, rather than safe behind a city
wall.”
Derian swallowed a retort. In the weeks since Earl Kestrel’s
expedition had departed the capital of Hawk Haven, Race had rarely
missed an opportunity to remind the members (other than the earl
himself) that Race himself was the woodsman, while they were mere
city folk. Only the fact that Race’s contempt was so generally
administered had kept Derian from calling him out and showing him
that a city-bred man could know a thing or two.
Only that, Derian admitted honestly (though only to himself), and
the fact that Race would probably turn Derian into a smear on the
turf. Though Derian Carter was tall enough to need to duck his head
going through low doorways, muscular enough to handle the most
spirited horse or work from dawn to dusk loading and unloading wagons
at his father’s warehouses, there was something about Race
Forester’s sinewy form, about the way he carried his slighter
build, that made Derian doubt who would be the winner in a
hand-to-hand fight.
And, with another surge of honesty, Derian admitted that the
woodsman had earned the right to express his contempt. Race was good
at what he did—many said the best in both Hawk Haven and their
rival kingdom of Bright Bay. What was Derian Carter in comparison?
Well trained, but untried.
Derian would never have admitted that before they set
out—knowing himself good with a horse or an account book or
even with his fists— but a few things had been hammered into
his red head since they left the capital, things that hadn’t
been all that much fun to learn, and Derian didn’t plan on
forgetting them now.
So Derian swallowed his retort and continued removing the tack
from the six riding horses. To his right, burly Ox, his road-grown
beard incongruously black against pink, round cheeks, was heaving the
packs from the four mules. When another long, eerie wolfs howl caused
the nearest mule to kick back at the imagined danger, Ox blocked the
kick rather than dodging.
That block neatly summed up why Ox was a member of the expedition.
Even-tempered, like most big men who have never been forced to fight,
Ox had made his recent living in the Hawk Haven military. During the
current lull in hostilities, however, he had left the military to
serve as Earl Kestrel’s bodyguard.
Ox’s birth name, Derian had learned to his surprise, was
Malvin Hogge.
“But no one’s called me that since long before my hair
started receding,” he’d told Derian, rubbing ruefully
where his curly hairline was making an undignified and premature
retreat. “But I prefer the name that my buddies in Kestrel
Company gave me long ago and, strangely enough, no one ever calls me
‘Malvin’ twice.”
Unlike Derian, Ox felt no inordinate awe toward Race Forester,
aware that in his own way he was as valuable as the guide. How many
men could shift a battering ram by themselves or do the work of three
packers?
“Think that wolf wants us for dinner?” Ox asked Race
in his deep-voiced, ponderous way.
“Hardly,” the guide retorted scornfully.
“We’re too big a group and wolves, savage as they are,
are not stupid.”
“Well,” Ox replied, laughing at his own joke,
“you’d better tell the mules that. I don’t think
they understand.”
Sir Jared Surcliffe, a lesser member of Earl Kestrel’s own
family, but prouder of his recently acquired nickname
“Doc” than of any trace of noble blood, crossed to claim
the general provisions bundle. Like the earl he had black hair and
clear, grey eyes, but his height and build lacked the earl’s
seeming delicacy. There was strength in his long-fingered
hands—as Derian had learned when Jared stitched a cut in his
forearm a couple of weeks back. Derian recalled that Doc had won
honors in battle, so he must have other strengths as well.
“Valet has the fire started,” Jared said, an
upper-class accent giving his simple statement unwonted authority.
“I’ll start dinner. Race, shouldn’t you see if
there might be a fish or two in yonder brook? Earl Kestrel would
enjoy fresh trout with his dinner.”
Had anyone but Jared or the earl himself even hinted at giving the
guide orders, he might have found himself standing a late-night watch
on an anthill. Race Forester, though, for all his pride in his
skills, knew when he could—and could not—push his social
betters.
“Right,” he grunted, and departed, whistling for
Queenie, his bird dog. The red-spotted hound reluctantly abandoned
the station near the fire from which she’d been watching Earl
Kestrel’s man unpack the delicacies kept for the earl’s
own consumption.
When the wolf howled again, Derian wondered how much of
Queenie’s reluctance was due to leaving the food and how much
to the proximity of the big predator.
“They say that the wolves in the mountains are bigger than
anything found in settled lands,” Derian said, talking to
distract himself and feeling freer to speculate now that Race was
gone.
“They do,” Doc agreed, “but I’ve always
wondered, just who has seen these giant wolves? Few people have gone
beyond the foothills of the Iron Mountains—those mostly miners
and trappers. As far as I know, the only ones to have crossed the
range are Prince Barden and those who went with him.”
Derian finished currying Roanne and moved to the earl’s Coal
before answering.
“Maybe in the early days,” he hazarded, “when
the colonies were new. Maybe people saw the wolves then.”
“Possibly,” Jared said agreeably, shaping a journey
cake on its board. “And possibly it’s all
grandmother’s fire stories. Race is right. Wolves and other
night creatures do sound bigger when you’re camping.”
Conversation lagged as the members of the expedition hurried to
complete their chores before the last of the late-spring light faded.
Part of the reason Earl Kestrel had planned his journey for this time
of year was that the days would be growing longer, but after hours
spent riding on muddy trails, the evenings seemed brief enough.
Cool, too, Derian thought, blowing on his fingers as he measured
grain for the mules and horses. Winter may be gone, but she’s
not letting us forget her just yet.
Ox, who had finished putting up the tents and was now effortlessly
chopping wood, paused, his axe in the air.
“If you’re cold, Derian, you can help me chop this
wood. You know what they say, ‘Wood warms you twice: once in
the cutting, once in the burning.’ ”
Derian grinned at him. “No thanks. I’ve enough else to
finish. Do you think we’ll get snow tonight? The air almost has
the scent of it.”
Ox shrugged, measuring his answer out between the blows of his
axe. “The mountains do get snow, even this late in the season,
but I hope we’re not in for any. A blackberry winter’s
all we need.”
Derian frowned thoughtfully. “At home I’d say snow
would be a good thing for business. It’s easier to move goods
by sled and people by sleigh, but out here, on horseback… I
could do without the snow.”
“We won’t have snow,” announced Race,
re-entering the camp from the forest fringe. Three long, shining
river trout dangled from one hand. “The smoke’s rising
straight off the fires. Clear but cold tonight. Derian, you might
want to break out your spare blankets.”
Derian nodded. He’d slept cold one night out of a stubborn
desire to show himself as tough as the woodsman and had been stiff
and nearly useless the next morning. Earl Kestrel himself had chided
him for foolish pride.
“Our mission is too important to be trifled with,”
Kestrel had continued in his mincing way. “Mind that you listen
to Race Forester’s advice from here on.”
And Derian had nodded and apologized, but in his heart he
wondered. Just how important was this mission? King Tedric had seemed
content enough these dozen years not knowing his son’s fate.
And Prince Barden had shown no desire to contact the king.
Earl Kestrel had been the one to decide that knowing what had
happened to the disinherited prince was important—Kestrel said
for the realm, but Derian suspected that the information was
important mostly for how it would affect the earl’s private
ambitions.
The young woman was bathing when a thin, tail-chewed female informed
her that the One Male wanted her at the den. The messenger, a
yearling who had barely made it through her first winter, cringed and
groveled as she delivered her message.
“When shall I say you will come before him,
Firekeeper?” the she-wolf concluded, using the name most of the
wolves called the woman—a name indicating a measure of respect,
for even the Royal Wolves feared fire.
Firekeeper tossed a fat chub to the Whiner. She certainly
wasn’t going to have time to eat it, not if she must run all
the way to the den. Ah, well! She could catch more fish later.
“Tell him,” she said, considering, “I will be
there as fast as two feet can carry me.”
“Slow enough,” sneered the Whiner, emboldened as she
remembered how all but the fattest pups could outrun the two-legged
wolf.
Firekeeper snatched a stone from the bank and, swifter than even
the Whiner’s paranoia, threw it at the wolfs snout. “Ai-eee!”
“That might have been your skull,” the woman reminded
her. “Go, bone-chewer. My feet may be slow, but my belly is
full with the meat of my own hunting!”
A lip-curling snarl before the Whiner vanished into the brush
showed that the insult had gone home. Faintly, Firekeeper could hear
the retreat of her running paws.
Her own departure would be less swift. Bending at the waist, she
shook the water from her close-cropped hair, then smoothed the locks
down, pressing out more water as she did so.
Even before her hair had stopped dripping down her back,
Firekeeper had retrieved her most valuable possession from where she
had set it on a flat rock near the water. It was a fang made of some
hard, bright stone. With it, she could kill almost as neatly as a
young wolf, skin her prey, sharpen the ends of sticks, and perform
many other useful tasks. The One Male of her youngest memories had
given it to her when he knew he was going into his last winter.
“These are used by those such as yourself, Little
Two-legs,” he had said fondly, “since they lack teeth or
claws useful for hunting. I remember how they are used and can tutor
you some, but you will need to discover much for yourself.”
She had accepted the Fang and the leather Mouth in which it slept.
At first she had hung them from a thong about her neck, but later,
when she had learned more about their uses, she had contrived a way
to hang them from a belt around her waist. Only when she was bathing,
for the Fang hated water, did she take it off.
Now she held the tool in her teeth while she reached for the cured
hide she had hung in a tree lest those like the Whiner chew it to
shreds. Most hides she couldn’t care less about but this one,
taken from an elk killed for the purpose, was special.
Out of the center she had cut a hole for her head, wide enough not
to chafe her neck. The rest of the skin hung front and back,
protecting her most vulnerable parts. A belt made from strips of hide
kept the garment in place and she had trimmed away the parts that
interfered with free movement of her arms.
Some of the young wolves had laughed when she had contrived her
first hide, but she had disregarded their taunts. The wolves had fur
to protect themselves from brambles and sticks. She must borrow from
the more fortunate or be constantly bleeding from some scrape. An
extra skin was welcome, too, against the chill.
In the winter, she tied rabbit skins along her legs and arms with
the fur next to her flesh. The skins were awkward, often slipping or
falling off, but were still far better than frostbite.
Later in the year, when the days grew hotter and the hide
stifling, Firekeeper would wear only a shorter bit of leather around
her waist, relinquishing some protection for comfort.
Lastly, Firekeeper hung around her neck a small bag containing the
special stones with which she could strike fire. She valued these
less than the Fang, but without their power she could not have
survived this winter or others before it.
Faintly, Firekeeper remembered when she did not live this way,
when she wore something softer and more yielding than hides, when
winters were warmer. Almost, she thought, those memories were a
dream, but it was a dream that seemed strangely close as she ran to
where the One Male awaited her.
The one male was a big silver-grey wolf with a dark streak running
along his spine to the tip of his tail and a broad white ruff. He was
the third of that title Firekeeper could remember and had held the
post for only two years. His predecessor would have dominated the
pack longer except for a chance stumble in front of an elk during a
hunt in midwinter along an icy lakeshore.
The current One Male had been accepted by the One Female, who had
led the pack alone through the remainder of that winter until the
mating season early the following spring. Competition for her had
been fierce and one contender had been killed. A second chose exile
rather than live beneath his pack mate’s rule.
Yet the diminished pack had fared well, perhaps because of, rather
than despite, the losses. Fewer wolves meant fewer ways to split the
food. New pups had since grown to fill the gaps and the Ones reigned
over a fine pack eight adults strong—with a single strange,
two-legged, not-quite-wolf to round out the group.
Although she remembered when both had been fat, blue-eyed,
round-bellied puppies, Firekeeper thought of both the One Male and
the One Female as older than herself. However, though the human had
more years than the wolves, the reality was that they were adults
while she, when judged by her abilities rather than her years, was a
pup. Indeed, she might always be a pup—a thing she regarded
with some dissatisfaction during rare, idle moments.
When she loped into the flat, bone-strewn area outside of the den,
the One Male was waiting for her. None of the rest of the pack was
visible.
The One Female was within the cave nearby, occupied with her
newborn pups. The day for them to be introduced to the rest of their
family was close and Firekeeper warmed in pleasant anticipation.
Already she knew that there were six pups, all apparently healthy,
but everything else about them was kept a guarded secret until the
great event of Emergence.
Seeing Firekeeper—though doubtless he had heard her
arrive—the One Male rose to his feet. She ran to within a few
paces, then dropped onto all fours. When he permitted her to
approach, she stroked her fingers along his jaw, mimicking a
puppy’s begging.
Tail wagging gently, the One Male drew his lips back from his
teeth as if regurgitating—though he did not actually do so. All
spare food these days went to the One Female and the pups.
Firekeeper, who had been made hungry by her swim followed by a swift
run, was rather sorry. Many times during the past winter meat had
been carried to her from a kill too distant for her to reach before
the scavengers would have stripped it.
“You summoned me, Father?” she asked, sitting back on
her haunches now that the greeting ritual had been completed.
The One Male wagged his tail, then sat beside her, tacitly
inviting her to throw an arm around him and scratch between his
ears.
“Yes, Little Two-legs, I did. Did you hear the message howl
some while ago?”
“Stranger! Stranger! Stranger! Strange!” she repeated
softly by way of answer. “From the east, I thought.”
“Yes, all the way from the gap in the mountains, not far
from where you came to us.”
Firekeeper nodded. She knew the place. There was good hunting in
those meadows come late summer when the young deer grew foolish and
their mothers careless. There was also a burned place, overgrown now,
but hiding black ash and hard-burnt wood beneath the vines and
grasses. Every year when the pack hunted in that region the Ones told
her how she had come from the burned place and reminded her of her
heritage.
“I remember the place,” Firekeeper answered, mostly
because she knew the One would want to hear confirmation, not because
she thought he needed it.
“The Strangers Strange are two-legs, like yourself,”
the One continued. “A falcon has been following them by day and
she relays through our scouts that the two-legs go to the Burnt
Place, seeking those who were there before I was born.”
“Oh!” Firekeeper gasped softly. Then a question drew a
line between her dark, dark eyes. “How does the falcon know
where they are going?”
“When this falcon was young she was taken from the air while
on migration,” the One explained. “I don’t know how
it was done, but the Mothers of her people say it was so and I
believe them.”
“Like knows like best,” Firekeeper said, repeating a
wolf proverb.
“Remember that,” the One Male said, then returned to
his explanation. “This falcon lived for a time with the
two-legs and hunted for them. During that time, she learned something
of their speech—far more than the few words they used to
address her. From their speech and from the direction they are
heading, she believes that these two-legs are not hunters come for a
short time to take furs.”
“The wrong time for that game, certainly,” Firekeeper
said. “Your coats are shedding now and make me
sneeze.”
“That is why those fingers of yours feel so good,” the
One Male admitted. “Pull out the mats as you find
them.”
“Only if you remember,” she teased with mock hauteur,
“not to bite off my hand!”
“I promise,” he said with sudden solemnity. “As
all of us have promised not to harm our strange little
sister.”
Made uneasy by this change of mood, Firekeeper occupied herself
tugging out a mat, worrying the undercoat loose with dexterous
ease.
“Why did you summon me to tell me of the two-legs?”
she asked at last. “I know less of them than the falcons do.
They are strangers to me. The wolves are my people.”
“Always,” the One Male promised her, “but since
before I was born each One has told those who may follow that there
is a trust held by our pack for you. When your people return, we have
sworn to bring you back to them. It is an ancient trust, given, so
our tales say, to your own mother.”
Firekeeper was silenced by astonishment. Then she blurted out
indignantly:
“I was never told of this!”
“You,” the One Male said gently, “have never
been considered old enough to know. Only those who may one day lead
the pack are told of this trust, so that they may vow to keep it in
their turn.”
The human admitted the justice of this, but hot tears of
frustration and anticipated grief burned in her eyes.
“What if I want nothing of this trust, given to a mother I
cannot remember?”
“You will always be a wolf, Firekeeper,” the One Male
said. “Meet the two-legs. Learn of them. If you do not care for
their ways, come back to the pack. A wise wolf,” he continued,
quoting another proverb, “scouts the prey, knows when to hunt,
when to stay away.”
“If I did less,” Firekeeper admitted, wiping the tears
away with the back of one hand, “I would be less than a wolf.
Let me begin by scouting the two-legs. When I have learned who leads,
who follows, then I will make myself known to them.”
“Wise,” the One Male said. “The thoughts of a
wolf and the courage as well.”
“Tell me where to find them,” Firekeeper said, rising.
“Call my coming to our kin along the trail that they may guide
and protect me.”
“I will…”
The One Male’s words were interrupted by a husky voice from
the den’s opening. An elegant head, pure silver, unmarred with
white or black, showed against the shadows.
“Go after tonight, Little Two-legs,” said the One
Female. “Tonight I will bring out your new brothers and sisters
so that you may know them and they you. Then, fully of the pack, you
may be heartened for your task.”
Overcome with joy, Firekeeper leapt straight into the air.
“Father, Mother, may I cry the pack together?”
“Do, Little Two-legs,” said the One Female.
“Loud and long, so that even the scouts come home. Call our
family together.”
“We pass through the gap tomorrow,” announced Race
Forester as they gathered round the fire after dinner that night.
“Then, we will need to slow our progress. Earl
Kestrel…” he dipped his head in respectful
acknowledgment, “has collected reports from the trappers and
peddlers who had contact with Prince Barden. They all agree that he
did not intend to go much further than the first good site beyond the
mountains. He wanted to be well away from settled lands, but I
suspect not so far that trade could not be established
later.”
Derian, full, warm, and pleasantly weary, asked, “But no one
has heard from him since he crossed the Iron Mountains?”
“No one who is admitting it,” said Earl Kestrel.
From where Derian sat, the earl was just a solid, hook-nosed
shadow. He was not a big man. Indeed, he was quite small, but as with
the kestrel of his house name, small did not mean weak or tame. The
furious lash of his tongue when he was roused was to be as feared as
another man’s fist—more so, to Derian’s way of
thinking. You could outrun a bully, but never escape the wrath of a
man of consequence.
He wondered, then, if that had not been precisely what Prince
Barden of the House of the Eagle had been trying to do when he left
Hawk Haven for the unsettled lands beyond the barrier of the Iron
Mountains.
Prince Barden had been a third child and, by all accounts, roundly
unhappy about being so. Although King Tedric had his heir and his
spare, he resisted having his youngest son attempt any independent
venture. Enough for the king that Barden learn to sit a horse, fight
well enough for his class, and perhaps dabble in some court
tasks.
Perhaps when Crown Prince Chalmer had married and fathered a child
or even when Princess Lovella was similarly settled, then Barden
might finally have been superfluous enough to be permitted his
freedom. Or maybe not even then. King Tedric was said to be a very
domineering father.
Ironically, because Prince Barden had been the least noticed and
least dominated by his father, he was the most like the king in
temperament. Prince Barden decided he would not see his life
frittered away while waiting for his siblings to marry (a task, to be
fair to them, made more difficult in that King Tedric wanted a hand
in that choosing as well), to breed heirs, for his father to die.
Thus, Prince Barden began quietly laying plans for a venture of which
his father was certain to disapprove.
Sometimes Derian wondered at the younger prince’s ambitions.
Himself an eldest son, Derian was all too aware of the pressure of
his parents’ hopes and expectations. How much easier life would
be if they would just leave him alone! Oh, they were loving and
kind—nothing like King Tedric—but sometimes Derian
thought he would rebel if he heard one more “Derian, have you
practiced your… handwriting, riding, fencing…”
The list was endless.
Even when he wasn’t being set to his books, there were
quizzes. “Quick, son, tell me whose crest that is!” Or
“Don’t hold your knife in that hand, Derian Carter. A
gentleman holds it like so.” Lately even his dancing, which had
made him the delight of the womenfolk since he was old enough to
leave the children’s circles, had come into question.
“Don’t skip so! More stately, more graceful!”
No doubt his parents had dreams of him rising into the lower ranks
of the nobility, perhaps by marriage to some impoverished
noble’s plain daughter! Derian groaned inwardly at the thought.
He fancied the baker’s pretty second daughter, the one with the
round cheeks and the saucy smile.
Maybe, now that he considered it, he was more like Prince Barden
than he had thought. Both of them had found their parents’
expectations a bit more than they could take, but the difference was
that Prince Barden had defied his father. Quietly and carefully he
had gathered a cadre of men and women who, like himself, longed for
more than what Hawk Haven and her endless sparring with Bright Bay
could offer.
Only after the expedition was planned, supplied (largely from King
Tedric’s own pocket—he didn’t believe it good
policy to stint too greatly on his children’s allowances), and
on its way did the king learn that Prince Barden, his wife, and his
little daughter had not stayed at their keep in the foothills of the
Iron Mountains, but had gone beyond the gap to the other side.
The steward of West Keep delivered the news himself, bringing with
him a letter from the prince. Barden’s plan had been well laid.
Almost every lesser guard, groom, gardener, cook, or maidservant at
the keep had been of his party. The steward, left with only his core
group, had not dared pursue them and leave his trust untended.
By the time King Tedric learned of Prince Barden’s
departure, attempting to drag him back would have been futile.
Instead, the king disowned his younger son, blotting his name from
the books and refusing to let it be spoken by any in court or
country. However, Derian knew, as did all the members of Earl
Kestrel’s expedition, that even in his fury the king had left
himself a loophole.
Lady Blysse, Barden’s daughter, had not been blotted from
the records. She, if the need arose, could be named to the
succession. Prince Barden could even be named her regent if her
grandfather so wished. In those long-ago days, it had not seemed
likely that King Tedric would ever so wish.
But things change, and those changes were why Derian Carter found
himself one of six select men seated around a fire, preparing to go
through a mountain pass where, to their best knowledge, no human had
gone for twelve long years.
He shuddered deliciously at the thought of the adventure before
them and turned his attention again to the informal conference around
the fire.
Earl Kestrel was finishing his diatribe against those who might
have defied King Tedric’s wrath and made profitable and secret
trade with Prince Barden’s group.
“It would be to their best interests,” he said,
“to never speak of their doings. Why risk royal
censure?”
“Why,” added his cousin Jared, “risk having to
share a closed market?”
“Indeed,” the earl agreed approvingly.
“Forester, as we move deeper into unknown territory,
Barden’s people may not take such care to hide traces of their
comings and goings. Keep a sharp eye out for them.”
“Ever, my lord,” answered Race promptly and humbly.
Then, “My lord, when we find them,” (he didn’t say
what he had said frequently to Derian and Ox, that he thought Barden
and his party all dead or fled to some foreign country), “how
shall we approach them?”
“We shall scout them,” Earl Kestrel said, “from
hiding if possible. When we have ascertained their numbers and
whether Prince Barden is among them I will choose the manner of my
approach. If we find an abandoned settlement, then we shall remain
long enough to discover whether Prince Barden and his people are dead
or if they have merely moved elsewhere.
“Any information,” he continued sanctimoniously,
“will be of help and comfort to the king in his
bereavement.” And you’ll find a way to turn it to your advantage,
Derian thought sardonically.
That there was an advantage to be gained Derian did not
doubt— neither had his father and mother. This was why they had
insisted on Derian’s accompanying Earl Kestrel as one of their
conditions for setting a good rate for pack mules, a couple of riding
horses, and a coach for the early stages of the journey.
As all Hawk Haven knew, King Tedric’s paranoia regarding
heirs had proven well founded. Crown Prince Chalmer had died as a
result of a questionable hunting accident. His sister, Lovella, the
new crown princess, had died some years later in a battle against
pirates. Neither had left legitimate issue. Prince Chalmer had been
unmarried. Princess Lovella had been careful not to make that
mistake, but she had delayed bearing a child until she felt she
wouldn’t be needed as a general.
Now, as King Tedric, still a fierce old eagle of a man, aged,
potential heirs buzzed about the throne. The genealogical picture was
so complex that Derian was still working out who had the best claim.
There was even a member of the royal family of Bright Bay with
factions agitating for King Tedric to name him heir.
All Derian was certain of was that Prince Barden, if reinstated to
his father’s favor, would have the best claim. Lady Blysse, who
would be about fifteen now, would have as good a claim as any and
better than many.
And certainly the lost prince or his lost daughter would need a
counselor. And who better than the kind and wise Earl Kestrel, who
had risked life and limb to bring father and daughter forth from
exile?
That night, a few hours before dawn, Firekeeper curled up among the
pups so that they would soak in her scent and know her even after an
absence. Perhaps it was the hot, round bodies clustered around her
own, perhaps the memories awakened by her talk with the One Male, but
she dreamed of fire. Kindled in a shallow pit ringed around with river rock and
bordered with cleared dirt. Her fingers ache a little from striking
together the special stones from the little bag the Ones have just
given her. Deep inside, she feels a shiver of fear as she tentatively
nurses the fire to life with gentle breath and offerings of
food. “That’s right,” says the One Female, her
tones level though her neck ruff is stiff with tension at remaining
so close to the flames. “Feed it little things first: a dry
leaf, a bit of grass, a twig. Only when it is stronger can it eat
bigger things.” “Yes, Mother. How do you know so much?” The One Female smiles, lips pulled back from teeth. “I
have watched such small fires being made, Little Two-legs. Only when
they are permitted to eat more than their fill do they grow
dangerous.” The pale new flames reach out greedily for a twig, lapping her
hand. She drops the twig and sucks on an injured finger. “It bit me, Mother!” “Tamara! Don’t put your hand in the fire,
sweetling! You’ll get burnt!” The voice is not the rumble of the wolf, thoughts
half-expressed by ears and posture rather than by sounds. These words
are all sound, the voice high but strong. The speaker is a two-legs,
towering far taller than any wolf. “I didn’t touch it, Mama. I was only
looking.” Orange and red, glowing warm and comforting where it is
contained within the hearth, the flames taste the bottom of the fat,
round-bellied black kettle hung over them. The air smells of burning
wood and simmering soup. “Good girl. We welcome fire into our homes but never
forget that it can be a dangerous guest…” Dangerous. Smoke so thick and choking that her eyes run with water.
Coughs rack her ribs. A band wraps around her, squeezing what little
air there is out of her. Vaguely she realizes that it is a broad,
muscular arm. Her father’s arm. He is crawling along the packed earth floor, keeping his head
and hers low. Moving slowly, so slowly, coughing with every breath.
The room in the cabin is hot and full of smoke. Something falls
behind them with a crash that reverberates even through the dirt
floor. “Donal!” Mama’s voice, shrill now with
panic. “Donal!” “Sar…” More a gasp than a word. Then
stronger, “Sarena!” A shadow seen through burning eyes, crouching, grabbing
her. “Donal! What…” She is being dragged again, more quickly now. “My legs, a beam… when I went for the
child.” “I’ll get her out, come back for
you!” “No! Get clear.” “I’ll come back.” Outside, clearer air, but still so full of smoke. She is
weeping now, tears washing her eyes so that she can see. Mama has
brought her outside of the wooden palisade that surrounds
Bardenville. Looking back she can see that all the buildings are
aflame. Where are the people? “Wait here, Tamara.” Mama coughs. “I’m
going to get Papa.” She can’t do anything but wait, her legs are so weak.
Though the air outside is clearer, she can barely breathe, but she
struggles to reassure her mother. “I’ll wait, Mama.” Mama turns. Even smudged with soot, coughing and limping, she
is graceful. Tamara watches through bleared eyes as Mama goes into
the burning thing that was once a cabin. Where are the people? Where is Barden? Where is Carpenter who
made her a doll? Where is Blysse who plays with her? Where
is… Something large comes out of the forest behind her. A wolf.
What Mama and Papa call a Royal Wolf, though Tamara doesn’t
know why. The wolf licks her in greeting, whines. Tamara points to the burning cabin. “Mama
…” The wolf barks sharply. A second wolf, then two more, come out
of the forest. Clearly they fear the fire, but they run into the
burning settlement. One even runs into the cabin, comes out dragging
something that is screaming in raw pain. Tamara’s eyes flood. She hears shriller screaming and
realizes it is her own voice out of control, belonging it seems to
someone other than herself. She can’t stop screaming and all
around there are sparks, flames, smoke, and a terrible
smell. She screams and…
Firekeeper awoke, the scream still in her throat, the pups
stirring nervously around her. Beyond them, a large white shape rose.
The One Female nudged Firekeeper fully awake, lapping her face with
her tongue.
“Awake, Little Two-legs. The dawn is becoming day. Your
journey is before you.”
II
GETTING THROUGH THE IRON MOUNTAIN GAP the next day
proved only nearly impossible. There was nothing like a traveled
path—certainly a blow to Earl Kestrel’s conjectures about
renegade peddlers—but there was a fairly well used game
trail.
“Elk,” Race proclaimed. “Moose. Certainly
creatures larger than deer. They may summer across the pass and then
come east in the winter.”
“Delighting our huntsmen to no end,” said Sir Jared
Surcliffe. “Why do you say they come east in the
winter?”
“Just a guess,” the guide admitted. “Ocean and
mountains both moderate the weather. My thought was that our winters
may be milder because we are walled in by mountains on the
west.”
Derian, recalling some pretty nasty winter storms, bit back a
sarcastic comment. He had his hands full with two of the pack mules,
stubborn beasts who refused to follow unless dragged. His booted feet
ached, and he cursed the boulders and loose rocks that made following
the straightest route a fool’s dream.
“Must have been tough going for Prince Barden’s
group,” Jared continued. Still mounted, he was leading
Derian’s Roanne. “They didn’t have just a few
horses and mules. From what the steward reported to King Tedric, they
pretty much stripped the manor of its livestock.”
“It was the prince’s property,” Earl Kestrel
reminded them with gentle firmness. “West Keep was one of the
estates his father had given to him.”
Derian grinned despite his weariness. It was to the earl’s
advantage to make certain that all of them remained sympathetic
toward a man who was—realistically seen—at the very least
a rebel and perhaps even a traitor.
Not for the first time he wondered just how much King Tedric would
welcome back his third child. For some moon-spans now rumors had been
flying around the capital that the king was considering putting off
Queen Elexa, who was well past childbearing years, and taking a new
bride in an attempt to get another heir.
Of course, that would likely anger the queen’s Wellward
relatives, for she had been, by all accounts, a blameless wife.
They paused an hour or so later so that Race and Ox could clear a
path through some growth that moose or elk would likely view as a
pleasant snack. Derian trudged down to the nearest brook and hauled
water back to the horses and mules.
“A little, not too much,” he cautioned Valet, who
silently came to help him.
Valet was a small, agile man who, from what Derian had observed,
must be made entirely out of iron wire. Equally talented at handling
a tea service or a hawk, versed in both etiquette and his
temperamental master’s moods, he had held up well through the
long, muddy springtide journey.
This had come as a surprise to Derian, who had expected, upon
first meeting Valet, that the little man would collapse as soon as
the going got rough. Who would expect hardiness from a fellow who
made his final duty of every evening putting hot coals into a
travelling iron and pressing his master’s shirts and
trousers?
But Valet had proven Derian wrong. When Derian had shared his
surprise with Ox, the bodyguard had told him that Valet accompanied
Earl Kestrel everywhere, even into battle. Certainly, Derian would
never have learned this from Valet himself. The man rarely spoke
three words unless directly addressed.
Even now, though he must have known not to overwater a hot horse,
Valet said nothing in reproof (as Derian himself might have), but
merely nodded.
As dusk was fading into full dark, the expedition emerged from the
pass and onto something like level ground. The light was almost, but
not quite, too poor to make camp, a thing for which Derian’s
aching body was eternally grateful. A cold meal, then sleeping
wrapped in a bedroll on lumpy ground, would have been more than he
could have borne. Every part of him cried out for hot food, hot water
in which to soak his feet, and the relative comfort of a proper
tent.
Of course, these things must wait until after the horses and mules
were tended, after he had fetched water for all the camp, after he
had unpacked the bedrolls, the horse feed, and the party’s
personal kits.
He couldn’t even feel sorry for himself while he worked, for
no one else was resting, not even the earl. The nobleman, between
mouthfuls of sauteed pigeon with wild mushrooms and lightly braised
greens, was estimating how long they could remain away from
civilization without replenishing their supplies.
Although Derian had no desire to seem less willing than any of the
rest, he was grateful beyond words when, after a meal of journey cake
and hard cheese followed by a withered apple for dessert, Jared
Surcliffe ordered Derian to remove his boots.
“As you wish, Doc,” Derian agreed, “but who will
do the cleaning up?”
“Race can handle it,” Jared replied bluntly.
“I’ve watched you limping from midday on. He’s more
accustomed to tromping about over rough ground.”
Race, complimented, accepted the menial chore without protest.
“I wanted to set some fish traps in any case,” he said,
gathering up the pots and cups.
The lonely howl of a wolf, answered by a fainter, second cry,
silenced for a moment the singing of the night peepers and shriller
chirps of the insects. The humans froze in visceral, instinctive
fear.
“Take Ox with you,” the earl commanded.
Race nodded and the two men departed.
“Think they’ll be all right, Doc?” Derian asked
nervously as Jared helped him off with his boots.
“I’m more worried about your feet than I am about
wolves,” the other man replied. “Race and Ox are big men.
The wolves should find much easier hunting this time of
year.”
“The horses don’t like all that howling much,”
Derian said, talking to keep his mind off the sting of hot water on
his feet. “But that just makes sense. Wolves probably see the
horses as an easy dinner.”
“That’s something to remember,” Doc agreed.
“Whoever’s on watch should keep a close eye on horses and
mules alike.”
A few minutes later, he lifted Derian’s feet from the water,
inspected them, then smeared some ointment on the blisters.
“We’ll probably stay in this camp until we locate
Prince Barden,” Doc said. “I’m going to suggest to
Earl Kestrel that you take camp watch so you can wear soft shoes and
let these blisters heal.”
“Thanks,” Derian said, not bothering to mask his
relief.
“My pleasure.” Doc grinned. “I had the privilege
of staying on horseback most of the day rather than picking along the
ground dragging a string of mules. You and Ox took most of the
punishment there.”
“Ox seems fine,” Derian commented enviously.
“He’s an old campaigner and knows how to pamper his
feet,” Doc replied. “You should consult him before we
continue.”
“I will.”
They sat in companionable silence for a long moment.
“Doc, do you think we’ll find the prince?
Honestly?”
Jared shook his head, but his words belied the gesture.
“We’ll find something—the earl insists.”
Later, almost too tired to sleep, dismissed from guard duty for
this night, Derian lay in the tent he shared with Ox and listened to
the night sounds above the other man’s breathing. Deep in his
heart, he began to suspect that they would find no one. Nothing in
the surrounding wilderness spoke with a human voice.
A howl sounded and was answered by a chorus which continued even
as Derian slipped into exhausted rest.
Firekeeper swallowed a hurried meal of lightly grilled brook trout
while listening to the Ones’ parting advice.
“We have sent the pack ahead to hunt for you,” the One
Female said, her silver fur glinting in the morning light.
“This way you will not be delayed along the trail.”
“But, Mother,” the young woman protested, “you
and the pups will go hungry!”
“The One Male will hunt for us,” the One Female
reassured her, “and we have kept the Whiner near to mind the
pups so I can hunt as well. If you are worried about us, remember,
the faster you make your trail, the faster the others can
return.”
Firekeeper nodded.
“Blind Seer waits where the two-legs are,” the One
Male added. “He learned of their coming from a Cousin wolf who
came in panic before them. Blind Seer crossed through the gap to
watch the two-legs’ coming and send word ahead. He will remain
with you. The falcon should be with him, though by now she may have
departed to report to the Mothers of her aerie.”
“Good.”
The young woman dropped to her knees to rub her face in each
puppy’s fuzzy coat. They looked more like little bears now than
wolves: muzzles short, ears small and round. Their blue eyes were
still cloudy.
“I’ll miss you all,” she said, embracing the
Ones and punching the Whiner, who had emerged from behind a rock,
lightly on one shoulder.
“Sing your news,” the One Male reminded her,
“and it will reach our ears.”
Firekeeper promised to do so. Then, after extinguishing her fire,
she departed. As morning passed into bright daylight, daylight into
afternoon, noon into evening, she ran east, her gait the steady
mile-eating jog of a wolf. When she grew tired, she slowed, walking a
hundred paces, jogging a hundred. When even this became onerous, she
climbed into the boughs of some spreading forest giant, an oak or
maple by choice, and napped.
As promised, her brothers and sisters met her along the way,
telling her how winter had reshaped the trails, feeding her if she
was hungry, showing her the closest fresh water.
By night, she had met up with Blind Seer. This young, powerful
male, some three years old, had been named for his eyes, which never
changed from puppy blue to the more usual yellow-brown. For a time,
the wolves had thought his vision damaged and had philosophically
accepted that he would be among those pups who did not survive their
first year.
Blind Seer had surprised them all by demonstrating evidence of
sight as sharp as any wolfs. His baby fur had grown out into a
classic grey coat shading to ghostly silver at the tips and touched
with reddish brown around his face. Content to remain with the pack
his first two summers, this spring he was showing restlessness.
Firekeeper knew that the Ones fully expected Blind Seer to
disperse this spring, seeking territory and perhaps a mate of his
own. The knowledge had saddened her, since Blind Seer had been one of
her favorites since he was a pup. Perhaps the fact that he, like her,
was marked by a difference had drawn her to him. Perhaps it was that
he had never lost a puppyish curiosity about what lay over the next
hill.
Now she must face that, different as he seemed, Blind Seer
belonged to the way of the wolf in a fashion that she never could. He
would follow it and she would go on, as ever, somewhat apart from
those she loved best.
The thought sobered her mind even as her long day’s journey
had made her limbs weary. She was glad that Blind Seer had enough to
say for them both.
“The two-legs crossed through the gap today,” he
reported, leading her to a sheltered place where she might kindle a
fire and soften the rabbit he had caught for her over the flames.
“What a trial they had of it!”
“Tell,” she prompted. “Can we look at them
tonight?”
“Better if not,” he said. “They have gathered
themselves into a circle and they have beasts with them who grow
nervous when I close. They have a creature with them, a bitch, but of
a breed I’ve never dreamed existed!”
“Oh?”
“Smaller even than the Cousins,” Blind Seer said,
chewing on the rabbit fur and viscera she had tossed to him.
“Her fur is lighter than even the One Female’s: white as
a rabbit’s winter coat, but spotted fawn-like with fox-red. She
is a weird parody of wolf or fox, but there’s no doubt that she
knows when I prowl about.”
“I’d like to see this creature.”
“Not tonight. If you wish to study the two-legs, it is best
that we do not spook them while they are weary.”
“Weary from crossing the gap,” Firekeeper asked,
“or do they sleep as birds do, simply because the sun has
set?”
“Weary from the crossing,” Blind Seer replied.
“Even before dawn, they started taking down their dens, making
their food. They sear their meat as you do, over fire, but take much
more time about it.”
Firekeeper cut off a haunch of still pink rabbit meat and began
eating, leaving the rest over the fire.
“Tell on,” she prompted.
“The two-legs have courage, I’ll grant them
that,” Blind Seer said, “and even some wisdom, but no
great forest lore. The most skilled of them went ahead and marked a
trail. The rest followed, bringing with them the beasts.”
“This spotted fox?”
“Not that,” Blind Seer replied impatiently. “She
went with the scout and shivered when the wind brought her my scent.
Other beasts. Large ones built like elk in some ways, but with manes
and tails of long, soft hair—rather like yours is when you have
not cropped it short.”
Firekeeper, who found the constantly changing length of her hair a
nuisance, nodded.
“Why do they herd these elk? It seems a great deal of
trouble to go to for fresh meat.”
“They don’t eat them—at least from what
I’ve seen. They sit on them or put their belongings on their
backs. These two-legs carry more with them than a raven or jay hides
in its nest.”
Firekeeper, remembering how she needed the Fang, the stones, the
hides, just to stay alive, sighed.
“I will enjoy looking on these things of the
two-legs,” she said. “Tell more.”
“There is not much more to tell. They sleep now, but one of
their pack remains awake to guard the rest. If trouble is
suspected—as I tested last night—they make a great clamor
and all wake.”
“Let them sleep,” Firekeeper said. “We will look
on them come morning.”
She finished her meal and waded into a shockingly cold stream to
wash clean. Then Blind Seer mouthed her arm affectionately.
“You will need to rest, sweet Firekeeper, but come with me
first. Let us sing home the news of your safe arrival. I have found a
rise from which the sound carries far.”
Firekeeper went with him, refreshed, fed, and excited. They raised
their voices in chorus, heard their howls augmented by the Cousins
who marked this region for their own, and, after a time, heard a
faint reply to the west.
Even when the message had been passed on, they continued singing,
enjoying the sound of their voices intertwined in friendship and in
love.
Upon waking the next morning, Derian was pleased to find that the
blisters on his feet had ceased to throb. Still, he was relieved to
learn that he had drawn camp duty and so would be able to trade
riding boots for soft leather slippers.
“Did you hear those wolves howling last night?” he
asked as he stirred the morning porridge, adding bits of dried apple
and peach to the glutinous mass.
“Who couldn’t? None of us are deaf,” replied
Race sarcastically. “The monsters must have been readying
themselves for a slaughter. I’ll bet Prince Barden lost his
flocks within the first winter. These woods are full of the thieving
brutes.”
“My brother was given to the Wolf Society when he was
born,” commented Ox, “but even he prefers to appreciate
wolves from a distance. Such cunning and ferocity is admirable in
symbols perhaps, but I don’t want to find them on my
doorstep.”
Over oat porridge and strong mint tea, they traded tales of wolf
predation. Race began with the story of the Mad Wolf of Garwood. Doc
countered with the story of a wolf pack that wiped out a village one
winter when Hawk Haven was but a portion of the larger colony of
Gildcrest. Everyone had at least one such story to relate and the
telling fired the blood for the day’s work.
Eventually, however, Earl Kestrel began briefing them on the
activities planned for the day.
“We will search in two teams. I will take Ox. Race, you will
take Jared. As we have seen no sign of Prince Barden and his people
to the east, I will go further north; you shall go to the west. Based
on your report yestere’en, there is a river to the south. Let
us wait to ford that until we must.”
Race nodded and the earl continued:
“Derian and Valet will mind the camp. This is a good time to
attend to the minor repairs we have been postponing. Furthermore, the
horses can use a rest.”
“How far from this base camp do you want us to go, my
lord?” asked Race.
“You must return here by evening. We will each carry hunting
horns. Three short blasts will signal a return to camp. Two a request
for aid. Remember, if at all possible, save first contact for me. Are
there any questions?”
Five heads shook a negative.
“Get ready, then. Valet has made up packets of cold food for
the midday meal. If you have anything to be repaired, give it to
Derian.”
A few moments later, in their shared tent, Derian accepted from Ox
some leggings that needed mending.
“Earl Kestrel isn’t wasting any time, is he?” he
commented. “Yesterday we slogged across a pass still spotted
with snow. Today he orders a full day’s search, even though a
holiday would be a fair reward.”
“You forget,” Ox replied, checking the edge on the axe
he carried with him as both weapon and tool, “that our time
here is limited. Even if Race succeeds in augmenting our supplies by
hunting and fishing, we need fodder for the horses. It’s too
early in the year for them to do much grazing.”
“I haven’t forgotten,” Derian protested.
“Remember, my folks own stables in three towns!”
“I know,” Ox said mildly. “I simply didn’t
know that you did.”
When the others had departed, leaving behind enough chores to
occupy Derian and Valet for a week, Derian sighed, regretting now
that his blistered feet kept him out of the adventure. Then, sitting
cross-legged on the ground, he took a torn shirt into his lap and
doggedly began to sew.
From the concealment of thick shrub growth atop a rise overlooking
the two-legs’ camp, Firekeeper studied the occupants. The
animals amazed her, but her response to their keepers mingled
astonishment and admiration.
“They are so noisy,” she said to Blind Seer, watching
one of their number go to a stream for water. “Yet so
bold!”
Blind Seer snorted. “What do they know to fear? The
red-spotted white animal sees more than any of them, but they ignore
her. Did you see their One kick at her when she tried to tell him we
were watching?”
“I did,” Firekeeper agreed. “I am not certain,
though, that he is the One. The other one, smaller, with the hooked
nose and silver-shot black hair, they all seem to defer to
him.”
“True,” Blind Seer admitted, “but how could he
defeat even the next smallest in a fight? Certainly he couldn’t
defeat the huge one.”
“Maybe they are not a full pack,” Firekeeper
speculated. “They are all males and how could a pack survive
without females?”
“All male?” asked the wolf in astonishment. “How
can you tell? They smell of smoke and sweat to me.”
“Not by scent,” the woman admitted. “I could be
wrong, but it seems that I remember ways of telling.”
“She is right,” came a shrill voice from above them.
“Males all.”
The speaker was the peregrine falcon, Elation, who had been
introduced to Firekeeper soon after sunrise. Elation was a beautiful
example of her kind, compact of body, with plumage of a deep
blue-grey. Her head was capped with feathers the color of slate and
her white throat and underbody were marked with darker bars. Brown
eyes ringed with bright yellow missed nothing.
“If you say so,” Blind Seer said, immediately
deferring to the bird’s greater experience, “then it must
be so, but I’d prefer to be able to trust my nose.”
Ignoring the conversation between falcon and wolf, Firekeeper
studied the six gathered below, feeling memories stirring and teasing
just beyond what she could grasp.
The men possessed a certain degree of grace, neither toppling over
nor lumbering like bears as they made their way about on two legs.
Firekeeper knew this was how she herself moved, had even glimpsed her
reflection and studied the distorted image of her shadow, but seeing
others move this way was a revelation. Before she had always felt
vaguely like a freak. Now she felt justified in her choice.
Already Firekeeper had observed many things she planned to adapt
to her use. All of the men wore their hair caught behind their heads
with a thong—a thing much more convenient than her own short
cropping with its heritage of odd-length ends that dangled in her
eyes.
The hides they wore were different, too. She didn’t think
that all their clothing was made from leather, though leather was
amply represented. Magpie-like, she wanted to steal some for her own
use.
When four of the two-legs left the camp, Blind Seer and Elation
followed to learn where they went. Firekeeper remained behind,
studying the two remaining.
One was quite tall, the other among the smallest of the group.
Neither openly deferred to the other, so she guessed that they were
of similar rank within their pack. Wolf-like, she dismissed the
smaller one as less important and gave most of her attention to the
bigger and stronger.
This one was the second largest of the two-legs, smaller only than
the one who towered over the rest as the Royal Wolves did over the
Cousins.
A passing thought distracted Firekeeper. Could the two-legs be
like the forest-dwellers, each with two kinds? Could the huge man be,
in fact, the master of the rest?
After some consideration, she dismissed the idea. The big man had
deferred quite openly to several of the others. A Royal Wolf, even a
lesser one like herself, would never do so before even the strongest
of Cousins. If the two-legs had a Royal kind, it was not represented
among those here.
Or they all could be of the Royal kind…
She shook her head as if chasing a fly from her ear. Too much
guessing. Too little that was certain. As the Ones taught the pups
when hunting, guesses were no replacement for knowledge.
Firekeeper returned her unruly attention to the man below.
He was tall enough to reach effortlessly into the lower limbs of
the tree from which the two-legs had hung their food. He was strong
enough to control the elk-with-long-hair, even though they outmassed
him. After a time, she sorted his attire from himself and could
better see what he looked like.
His hair was reddish, the color of a fox’s pelt or an oak
leaf in autumn. Loosed from its thong, it hung straight, going past
his shoulders by perhaps the breadth of two fingers. It was cut so
neatly that when it was tied back not a strand strayed from its
bonds.
What she could see of Fox Hair’s skin seemed lighter than
her own, redder as well. His eyes were light, but not blue. At this
distance she could not tell precisely what color they were. From the
way he moved, the little extra motions he made, the fluidity of his
limbs, she guessed that he was young compared with some of the
others.
Fox Hair was injured as well, walking as if he had thorns in his
feet but not the wit to pull them out.
The smaller man was colored in shades of brown like a rabbit or a
deer. Unlike the red-haired man, he had a thin strip of hair growing
between his nose and his upper lip. It seemed to bother him, for as
he went about the camp doing incomprehensible things with other
incomprehensible things, he often pulled at it with his fingers.
So much! And so much unknowable! Firekeeper watched, fascination
turning into frustration. In the late afternoon, the other four
two-legs returned and more than ever she was certain that the little
hawk-nosed man with black and white hair was the One among them.
Blind Seer came and flopped beside her, his flanks heaving with
laughter.
“They went hither and yon, over hills and around trees.
I’ll give it to the tawny-furred one. He knows something of the
forest, but he’d know more if he’d heed his red-and-white
spotted pack mate. She saw me time and again—when I let her!
From her scent, she’s of our kind in the same way the foxes are
and she had wit enough to stay clear of me!”
Firekeeper listened patiently to her brother’s boasting.
“Did they find what they seek?”
“No, but Tawny came close. If he goes west again tomorrow,
he will find it.”
“Hawk Nose is their leader,” Firekeeper said. “I
am certain of it now. Elation, what did he find?”
“Less than he knew,” came the screeched reply.
“Time and again, he stopped to study the trunk of a tree or a
stump or a pile of rocks. He had the giant collect some things that
interested him.”
“My two looked at such things as well,” Blind Seer
admitted. “I think they look for sign of their missing kin.
Tell me, falcon, do two-legs do things to trees?”
“Even as your sister does,” Elation agreed,
“though she is less obvious about her comings and goings.
Two-legs cut down trees, pile up stones, make lairs from these things
or feed wood to their hungry fires.”
“Then these two-legs should be able to find sign of where my
ancestors found Firekeeper.”
“If the signs are not too old.”
Blind Seer turned to Firekeeper. “Will you talk with them
tonight?”
“No!” the young woman replied, suddenly panicked.
“They are still too strange. Let me follow their movements for
a bit longer.”
“Well enough,” he soothed. “I have not had this
much fun since we raced with the young bucks of the Royal Elk for
sport.”
Firekeeper rose to her feet, aware that she was hungry and very
bored from a day spent mostly sitting still.
“Come, dear heart. Hunt with me. Dusk is falling and I have
no desire to watch shadows by firelight.”
Blind Seer howled in anticipation. “And you,
falcon?”
“I have dined on mice and young rabbits, today,”
Elation said, preening her wing feathers. “I will watch the
two-legs until darkness falls. Then I will sleep.”
Firekeeper stretched, shaking the numbness from her limbs.
Growling low in her throat, she flung herself on Blind Seer. They
wrestled for a brief time; then, wild-eyed and excited, they chased
each other down the hill.
“Wolves!” said the falcon to herself. “May as
well try to understand a storm cloud.”
When morning came, the two-legs began taking down their dens and
loading things onto their animals.
“Perhaps Tawny is more clever than I thought,” Blind
Seer admitted. “Look, he goes ahead with Spots and Mountain to
mark a trail.”
“He marks it,” Firekeeper said when they had followed
Tawny for a ways, “as a bear or mountain lion does, by
stripping the good bark from a tree.”
“Such marks do last,” Blind Seer said, “longer
than our scent posts, especially when the rain comes. I wonder if he
found such marks during yesterday’s hunt?”
“He did! Look!” Firekeeper exclaimed, moving to
investigate a tree trunk when Tawny and Mountain were safely past.
“Here is such a mark, greyed now by weather, but
clear.”
“Then he reads a trail,” Blind Seer said, “and
the others will follow his marking. Why doesn’t he trust them
to see the old trail or the marks of his passage? The last alone
would sing to me at least until the next rain.”
Firekeeper shrugged. “They are deaf and blind and dead of
nose as you have said many times before.”
She didn’t add that she had long been aware that her senses
were less keen than those of the wolves. Her upright manner of travel
and a sharper sense for color had provided her with some
compensation. Now she was beginning to wonder if her senses were to
those of the two-legs as the wolves’ were to hers.
Her head hurt a little at the consideration and she distracted
herself by concentrating on the problem at hand.
“Do we follow the larger pack,” she said, “or
these two?”
“Why not both?” Blind Seer laughed. “Elation has
stayed with the larger pack, but she can come ahead if we go back. At
the pace these move, you and I can dance around them as we dance
around a crippled doe.”
“True,” she admitted. “First then, let us go
with these. I wish to see if I can learn more of these signs they are
using to find their way.”
They did so, learning of piled cairns of rock, appreciating
Tawny’s skill when he located a pouch of slim sticks with sharp
points where it had been cached in a tree.
“He is not such a fool as I thought,” Blind Seer said
again. “Without scent or sight to guide him, he found that
thing.”
Firekeeper nodded. “He is searching for things he knows may
be,” she hazarded, “the way in winter we know that fish
sleep beneath the ice or deer hide in their secret yards. He seeks a
possibility and sometimes he finds it.”
“It excites him,” Blind Seer said. “Look how he
marks that tree with his scent and cuts the bark away from
another.”
“At this pace, they will reach the Burnt Place when the sun
is at peak or soon after,” Firekeeper said. “Let us go
back and watch the others.”
Blind Seer agreed and they ran swiftly, ignoring the scolding of
squirrels and the frightened flight of a doe and fawn. Wolves needed
to eat either frequently or heavily, but when something interested
them, they could forget hunger. Firekeeper possessed less stamina
than her kin, but she had long ago learned to ignore her
belly’s plaints.
They found the larger, slower-moving group by following the reek
of the not-quite-elk. As the wolves slowed, so as not to startle
their subjects, the falcon called greeting.
“How goes it with Tawny and Mountain?”
“Well enough,” Firekeeper answered. “And
these?”
“Slow! So slow!” the great bird shrieked. “These
men are like ants though, steady.”
“We will watch here if you wish to hunt.”
“Good! Then I fly ahead to see what the others
do.”
Firekeeper was far less bored by the two-legs’ slow progress
than Elation had been. Other than young possums clinging to their
mothers, she had never seen one creature riding another.
“Most other animals,” she commented to Blind Seer,
“carry their babies in their mouths. Two-legs sit on these elk
as if on a rock.”
“They go more slowly than they would on their own
feet,” Blind Seer added. “I wonder why they
bother?”
Firekeeper shrugged. “Another mystery.”
The sun was slightly past midday when a bleating bellow, rather
like that of a moose but not quite so, called out from the west. The
sound stirred great excitement among the two-legs, who had persisted
in their steady progress, even eating their food while perched upon
the backs of the not-elks.
Hawk Nose, the One of the two-legs, took a curving thing the color
of antler from where it had hung on his belt and, putting it to his
lips, made an answering sound.
“He blows into it!” Firekeeper said, amazed and
laughing. “Look how his cheeks round out beneath their hair! He
looks like a bullfrog courting in the spring!”
Blind Seer laughed with her, then added, “So these two-legs
howl, too, in their fashion. The thing he puts to his mouth makes a
fair cry.”
“Just as the Fang gives me teeth like a wolf,”
Firekeeper thought aloud, “this thing gives Hawk Nose the lungs
of a moose. Are all their things ways of being more than they could
be alone?”
“Two-legs,” her brother replied teasingly, “are
weak, hairless creatures with flat teeth, no strength, and little
wit. This, though, I have known long before seeing these, eh,
Firekeeper?”
Accustomed to such jests, Firekeeper sprang on him, forgetting
stealth in the joy of the puppy game. Only when they heard the shrill
huffs and screams of the not-elk, the shouts of the two-legs, did
they think about the consequences of their actions.
“Oh, well,” said Blind Seer, mouthing her arm
affectionately as they sat up on the leafy ground. “We have
frightened them. Let us hunt, then go ahead to where they go. There
is no need for this slow progress when we know the trail’s
end.”
“I agree,” Firekeeper said. “The not-elk have
our scent now and the two-legs will move more slowly if their pack
mates are afraid. I want to see what will happen when they find the
Burnt Place.”
“The beasts are quiet now,” Blind Seer observed.
“Then away with us.”
They melted silently into the brush and were well away before
Jared Surcliffe, coming with great trepidation to investigate the
commotion, found their watching place and gathered from a low-slung
briar a grey hank of wolfs fur.
DERIAN CARTER WAS IRRATIONALLY RELIEVED when they caught up with Ox
and Race. Irrational because this glade was no safer than any other
place, but relieved nonetheless because his nerves were still on edge
from the ferocious snarling and growling that had broken the woodland
peace a few hours before.
Not that he was afraid of the wolves—or whatever the noise
had been. In fact, he’d been amusing himself by imagining his
return home wearing a wolf-skin cloak. “This?”
he’d say to Heather, the baker’s daughter. “Oh, I
slew it when it attacked the horses. Mad as the Ravening Beast of
Garwood, so our guide said. It had been trailing us for days.
We’d hear it howling at night, slavering for our flesh
…”
He had the story all scripted out, so carefully refined that
sometimes he had to remind himself that the encounter hadn’t
taken place. Still, he’d been glad enough when the earl had
decided to increase their pace.
Earl Kestrel’s reason for wanting speed hadn’t been
fear. It had been eagerness. Race’s horn blast had signaled
that he and Ox had found something. It couldn’t be the
prince’s settlement—in that case, signaling was strictly
forbidden lest it ruin the earl’s opportunities for an
advantageous approach—but it was something.
Now Derian looked around the open meadow wondering just what Race
Forester had found and what it would mean to their quest. However,
until the horses and mules were untacked and groomed, he
wouldn’t be free to join the conference.
As a compromise between duty and curiosity, Derian moved to where
he could eavesdrop.
“Yes, Race,” Earl Kestrel was saying. “Evidently
there was a settlement of some size here. Now that you point it out,
I see where the palisade must have been. Those mounds of vines and
suchlike, those must have been buildings.”
“Yes, my lord,” Race replied. “Fire did for the
place pretty thoroughly, but until we do some digging we can’t
tell if the fire came before or after the people left.”
“How can we tell?” called Ox from where he was helping
Valet pitch the earl’s tent.
“By what’s left behind,” Race said. “If we
find most of their goods or bones, then we must face that the fire
happened when they were here. Graves, too. Survivors would have
buried their dead before moving on or left some sort of
marker.”
“To do less,” Jared agreed from where he was tending
the cook fire, “would be an insult to the spirits of the
departed.”
Derian nodded thoughtful agreement. Ancestors were the means by
which the living petitioned the natural world. Even if the dead had
no blood kin among the living, they still would be the ancestors of
the settlement group, meant to be revered even as Hawk Haven still
shared with King Tedric and his family reverence for the spirit of
Zorana Shield, who had won the kingdom its freedom following the
Years of Abandonment.
Since the discussion had become general, he asked:
“Will we start looking for signs while we still have
light?”
“No, Derian,” Earl Kestrel replied. “Long enough
has passed for vines and young trees to sprout from the houses.
Almost certainly, the settlers dug cellars and wells. We do not want
to stumble into these in twilight. Tether the horses well away from
the ruins of the palisade and check for anything that might harm
them.”
“Yes, sir. And, my lord?”
“Yes?”
“If we’re going to remain here some days, we should
make a corral for the horses and mules. Pickets can be ripped up when
the ground is soft like this and I dislike the idea of tying them
when there are wolves about.”
“Good thought. Will hobbles do?”
“For some, perhaps, but not all.”
“Very well. Tomorrow, you can begin constructing a corral. I
want Ox for the excavation.”
“Yes, my lord.”
Mentally, Derian kicked himself for making more work; then he
kicked himself again for acting like a child. Taking care of the
mounts and pack animals was his responsibility and he had done a good
job so far, hadn’t lost a single beast. Let the earl and the
others dig through the ruins and make the great discoveries.
Suddenly he cheered up.
That way they’d be the ones to disturb any angry
spirits.
THE morning after their arrival at the Burnt Place, the two-legs
began rooting about like young beavers with an undammed stream or
bears scenting a honeycomb in a hollow tree.
Firekeeper had admired how quickly they had rebuilt their portable
dens and created a little nesting place for themselves at the edge of
the meadow. However, when Fox Hair began his day felling small trees
and piling them on each other, she was completely puzzled.
Elation clarified his actions for her.
“They plan to stay awhile,” she shrieked. Then more
calmly, “The fallen trees will cage their riding beasts so they
do not stray. Fox Hair is their keeper.”
“Oh.” Firekeeper was confused; then she thought of an
analogy. “Just as a young wolf acts as nursemaid to the pups. I
understand. I did think he was junior among them, for all that he is
so big.”
“And the others,” Blind Seer asked with a lazy yawn,
“those who root in the heart of the Burnt Place. What are they
making?”
“Nothing,” Firekeeper replied with certainty.
“They are looking for traces of those who once denned there.
Didn’t Elation tell us that they sought them?”
“True enough.” Blind Seer yawned again. “I will
sleep while they dig. Wake me if you have need.”
“I will,” she promised, her gaze drawn irresistibly
back to the two-legs.
Today Firekeeper climbed a towering evergreen which oozed strongly
scented sap onto her hands and feet. She would have preferred an oak
or maple, but their pale green, still growing leaves offered little
concealment.
Hidden by the thick, dark green needles, Firekeeper had a clear
view of all that went on below. Elation perched nearby.
Sometimes the falcon was able to clarify some incomprehensible
behavior; sometimes she admitted herself as confused as the wolf.
Sometimes, when the scene below became tedious, she dozed or hunted
mice.
Even though the two-legs kept watch around them, they never looked
up, never saw the watchers. Firekeeper didn’t hold this against
them. When she remained still there was nothing to be seen. When she
climbed higher or lower, she was careful to wiggle the branches no
more than a squirrel might. Moreover, there was a stream between her
tree and the Burnt Place. As none of the two-legs or their animals
had crossed this natural barrier, none caught her scent on the
ground.
That night she climbed down to join Blind Seer, careful this time
to keep their greetings relatively quiet. The two-legs had gathered
round their fire and she could hear the rise and fall of their voices
as they discussed something—quite likely the results of their
day’s hunting.
She wished she could understand them, but the sounds they made
meant less to her than the hoots of the owls awakening for the night
or the sleepy chirps of the day birds settling in to sleep.
By the time darkness fell that night, all the expedition was subdued
and depressed. Race had pulled out his flute, planning to play for
them as he had many nights along the trail, but the instrument
dangled unused between his fingers. Even one day’s excavation
had provided evidence that at least some of Prince Barden’s
expedition, if not all, had died in this place.
“Human bones,” Ox said heavily. “No doubt about
it. Even if there was doubt, little things confirm that the
settlement wasn’t systematically evacuated.”
“Little things?” Derian asked. He didn’t
remember ever seeing the big man so depressed.
“Pots scattered where they fell,” Ox explained,
“a tool kit, a sword with bits of the scabbard burnt hard
around it. Things they would have taken with them if they were merely
resettling elsewhere.”
Race glanced at Earl Kestrel. “We could do some systematic
salvage work here.”
“Looting, you mean!” the nobleman said sharply.
“No! There will be nothing of the kind. Cousin Jared, to what
society did your parents give you when you were born?”
“The Eagle,” Jared replied uncomfortably.
Derian wondered at Doc’s apparent embarrassment, then
realized that by giving their son to the society patronized by the
royal house, Jared Surcliffe’s parents had been openly
soliciting royal favor. That would be an embarrassment for a man who
took such obvious delight in making his way through his own
skills.
“I thought that was what I recalled.” Earl Kestrel
nodded somberly, apparently immune to his relative’s
embarrassment. “Eagle joins heaven and earth with his flight;
therefore you will take charge of the funeral rites for those who
died here. Also, if anyone can be identified, you will keep records
of the proof.”
Doc lowered his head in acquiescence, but there was a frown
visible on his lips.
No wonder, Derian thought. What the earl means is: “You
will do your best to discover if Prince Barden is among the
dead.” How does he expect Doc to learn that from old charred
bones?
Surcliffe voiced some of the same doubt. “I will try,
cousin, but unless the body was miraculously preserved or wears on
its bones some bit of jewelry or insignia that has survived the fire,
the best I can do is count skulls and pieces of skulls and hope to
guess how many died here.”
“Very well,” Earl Kestrel said heavily. “Men,
retrieve not only bones but also anything that might have belonged to
the owner.”
Race Forester was obviously unhappy about this situation. “I
didn’t hire on to dig up people’s bones,” he
muttered, almost, but not quite, mutinous.
“I hired you to help me find the missing prince,”
Kestrel replied sharply, “but if you are afraid of digging, you
can do Derian’s work with nice horses and keeping the camp.
Derian, consider yourself reassigned!”
“Yes, my lord!”
“I didn’t say…” Race Forester began to
protest, but a sharp glance from the earl’s pale grey eyes
silenced him. Disappointment or perhaps sorrow had set the
nobleman’s usually short temper smoldering. Instead, Race
swallowed whatever he had planned to say and occupied himself by
taking his flute out and cleaning the stops.
Derian Carter whistled a light air as he fetched the water that
night, his previous fear of ancestral spirits quieted by his tacit
promotion. Tomorrow Race Forester would haul and carry!
Firekeeper watched the next day as the two-legs turned most of their
efforts to excavating the burned-out ruins. Even a steady drizzle
that transformed soot and dirt to tacky mud didn’t stop
them.
“They work like a pregnant mother searching for a perfect
den site,” commented Blind Seer when he awakened from one of
his frequent naps. “Do you think they’re
whelping?”
“Idiot,” she said fondly, tossing a few twigs down at
him. “They’re carrying out the bones of the ones who died
in the fire. Heads interest them especially.”
“ ‘One head, one kill,’ ” quoted Blind
Seer. “How better to tell if they have found all their missing
ones? How soon till they find your head, sweet Firekeeper?”
“All in my time,” she temporized. “Whenever I
think I understand them, they do something strange. Today Fox Hair is
certainly over Tawny. I heard no sound of fighting. Why then the
change?”
“Perhaps they fought while we were out hunting.” Blind
Seer dismissed the question for something more immediate.
“I’m hungry, tired of eating rabbit. The wind is ripe
with the scent of some spring-mad buck. Will you hunt with me or must
you stay to see each bone taken from the soil?”
Firekeeper considered. “I’ll hunt. Elation, will you
tell me if they depart from here?”
“One or all?” the bird asked.
“All or mostly all,” the young woman replied.
“One or two may go hunt for the rest.”
When she and Blind Seer returned, full of the flesh of a foolish
buck who had cracked his foreleg while fighting his reflection, more
skulls and pieces of skulls were laid out in neat ranks. Many were
broken, but the two-legs who was their keeper sat fitting broken
pieces together into an approximation of a whole.
“Strange,” said Firekeeper, “many of the bones
must have been burnt entirely. Why do they keep at this crazy
hunt?”
“Because,” Elation said, swiveling her head so that
one golden-ringed eye pinned Firekeeper securely, “from knowing
how many are certainly dead they can estimate how many may be dead.
It is not unlike judging a wolf pack from two of its
members.”
“They must know by now,” Blind Seer said, licking a
trace of deer blood from one paw, “that all or nearly all died
here. Firekeeper, you will need to find courage to speak with them
before they go back across the mountains.”
“I will,” she promised, “I will.”
But that night, as she and Blind Seer sang home the news of the
two-legs and of their own doings, Firekeeper wondered how she could
ever dare to approach the strangers.
Derian woke up feeling like the aftermath of a New Beer festival. As
he struggled awake, he felt vaguely surprised that his mouth was not
foul, nor his limbs heavy.
Then he remembered. This hangover was spiritual, not physical, the
result of a day spent grubbing in the burned ruins of peoples’
homes, bringing out their bones and their belongings, ending any hope
that Prince Barden’s expedition had survived.
Breakfast that morning was a subdued meal, but at least Earl
Kestrel had joined them. The night before he had attended the
ceremony for the dead that Jared had improvised, then had retired to
his tent. Valet had come over to the main fire a few minutes later
and requested silence for his master.
“His youngest sister, you may recall, was Prince
Barden’s wife,” he said before departing.
“I had forgotten,” Derian had whispered, appalled that
he had thought the earl’s mood only disappointed ambition,
“if I ever knew.”
Ox and Race nodded agreement. Doc sighed.
“Eirene,” he had said as if the name itself were a
prayer. “Never beautiful, but gentle and sweet. Brave beneath
her quiet demeanor. King Tedric didn’t care who his youngest
son married as long as the bride was from one of the Great
Houses.”
“So Prince Barden married for love?” Derian had asked
softly.
“Yes,” Doc had replied, wiping his eyes with the back
of his hand. “He did. I’m for bed.”
All had nodded. No one felt much like talking in any case. They
had performed the evening chores with a minimum of discussion and
each had retired to his own tent. Ox had fallen asleep with the ease
of an old campaigner, but Derian had heard him muttering in his
sleep.
Derian himself had lain awake for some hours watching the shadows
against the canvas, trying to imagine what might have happened to all
those people. His mind was so populated with horrors that the nightly
wolf concert had seemed like a familiar, almost pleasant
thing—that is, until he began to imagine wolves dragging
roasted corpses from the burned buildings and feasting on the charred
flesh.
This morning, however, Earl Kestrel did not mention his
sister’s death and no one had the courage to offer him
sympathy. Instead they listened alertly when, after putting aside his
porridge bowl, Earl Kestrel began the morning conference.
“Does anyone have a theory about what happened here? I would
like to be able to make a full report to the king.” Poor fellow, Derianthought with surprised sympathy.
Not only does he share our common horror and the loss of his little
sister, but also he has to face telling King Tedric his son is surely
dead.
Race Forester offered tentatively, “A fire in the night,
I’d say. I’d swear that two of those I uncovered were
lying down, peaceful-seeming.”
“No one bore weapons,” Ox agreed quietly. Soot he
hadn’t washed away the night before blended in with his scruffy
beard, making his face unusually dark. “But how could such a
fire start if everyone was asleep?”
“Coals poorly banked, a spark in a chimney, a candle
guttering out on a bedside table, a pipe left smoldering,” Doc
shrugged. “These things and their like have happened
before.”
“But how did they sleep through it all!” Derian
protested, his own voice as shrill as that of the hawk whose cries
they had heard periodically over these past days.
“Smoke,” said Ox. “Smoke is more dangerous than
fire and it rises. Families asleep in the lofts and attics of their
cottages might breathe in their deaths without knowing.”
“If they trusted themselves to the protection of their
palisade,” Race said, his voice hoarse, “the fire could
have gotten out of control before anyone knew. My lord!” he
appealed to the earl, his eyes wide. “Pray tell me that we are
not going to spend today as we did yesterday!”
“We are,” Earl Kestrel replied, his gaze stern.
“I owe the king a full report. You, as yesterday, will tend the
camp.”
Race sulked, mutiny in his eyes. “It isn’t right to so
disturb the dead!”
‘It is not right,“ the earl said in measured tones,
”to leave them without their rituals.“
So passed another day of soot, of painful discovery, of sweaty,
back-breaking labor. The only relief was that it was no longer
raining.
At the end of the day, Derian was so heartsick he didn’t
protest when Race shoved a pail at him and demanded that he fetch
water from the stream.
Instead he staggered down the newly broken footpath, hardly seeing
the ground beneath his feet for the more vivid reality in his memory:
a wedding bowl, the names of husband and wife still readable despite
the cracking; a tin horse, twisted, but twin to one he had bought his
little brother for Summer Festival; buttons lined in a row, though
the shirt they closed was ash; a stone inkwell.
And, of course, the bones of the dead.
The stream water was icy cold, fed with runoff from the not too
distant mountains. On impulse, Derian thrust his head beneath a
little waterfall that interrupted the stream’s course. Shedding
his clothing as if he could shed the visions with it, he waded into
the water, dunking his head again and again, scrubbing the soot from
his skin with handfuls of sand.
He could feel his lips turning blue as he pulled himself onto the
bank, but his mind was his own again. He could even grin, imagining
the expressions on the others’ faces when he came into camp
stark naked, buckets of water slung from the yoke over his shoulders
and his damp clothing in his hands.
Derian was adjusting the yoke on his bare neck when he saw the
impossible thing. Across the water, a few yards upstream from the
waterfall, was a broad patch of sand, deposited, no doubt, when the
waters ran higher.
In the sand, as clear as daylight, was the solid imprint of a
small human foot. Next to it, as if the two had walked side by side,
were the equally real prints of an improbably large wolf.
III
Firekeeper slipped away in the confusion following
Fox Hair’s discovery of her footprint in the sand. Blind Seer
ran with her, but Elation remained faithfully watching the
two-legs.
“I have been as stupid as an unweaned pup!” Firekeeper
admonished herself aloud. “I knew that they read trails with
their eyes, if not with their noses.”
“One footprint will not lead them to you,” Blind Seer
said calmly. “Your trail went from sandbank into the stream,
onto a rock, across a pebbled shore, and then up into the tree
branches. They may find where the evergreen bled upon you, but its
boughs sweep low enough that they may not even look.”
Firekeeper scowled, slowed her run to a trot, then stopped
completely, leaning her back against a smooth birch trunk.
“As I have planned how I will meet them,” she said
thoughtfully, “all my dreams have held them ignorant of my
existence. This is an adjustment.”
“ ‘When the calf bolts right,’ ” Blind
Seer quoted, “ ‘it is foolish to run left.’
”
“I know,” she said, her scowl lightening only some.
“Don’t you realize I’m scared?”
“Scared?” The wolf cocked his head to one side,
perking his ears inquiringly. “Of the two-legs?”
“Not of them, of what meeting with them will mean.”
Firekeeper slid down against the tree until she sat on the leaf mold
beneath. “All my life, but for shadows I recall only in dreams,
I have been a wolf. I knew I was different from my brothers and
sisters, but living day-to-day filled my head. I could ignore the
differences if I choose.”
“And you so chose,” Blind Seer said,
understanding.
“Yes. Now these,” she gestured wildly back to where
the two-legs have their camp, “come and my life will never be
the same. If I speak with them or if I do not, if I travel with them
or if I do not: any choice reshapes the world I have known. Never,
never again will I be only a wolf.”
Blind Seer scratched vigorously behind one ear. “Then speak
with them. What does it matter that they have seen one footprint? I
call it a good thing, for your coming when they have believed all
their people dead will be a relief.”
“I hope so,” she breathed softly. “By the blood
that runs through my body, I hope so.”
Initially, Derian’s claim was dismissed as a prank. Only when
he convinced Ox to go look for himself and Ox called Race and the two
men confirmed that the footprint was both real and too small to
belong to any of their number, only then did the others begin to
share his excitement.
“Why would I lie?” Derian said indignantly when they
had regathered around the fire.
“No reason.” Jared Surcliffe shrugged apologetically.
“Our disappointment spoke, not any disbelief in you. After so
much pain, so much work for nothing, it was easier to believe you
were suddenly given to boyish pranks than to feel hope awaken once
more.”
Ox grunted agreement. Race nodded. Valet gave a ghost of a smile,
and Earl Kestrel, seated on his canvas camp chair, simply brooded
over the implications of the discovery. That was all the apology
Derian was likely to get, but it warmed him strangely. He’d
started out this journey the youngest and most untried. Now they gave
him no more consideration than they would to any man.
After a time, the earl cleared his throat and said, “Of
course, Derian’s discovery changes everything. In the morning,
we must begin searching. Race, you are the most skilled in woodcraft.
Who would you assign to the search?”
“You, my lord, and Sir Jared know something of tracking, but
the one I would choose…”
Derian straightened, hoping that Race saw some promise in him.
“… is your valet. I’ve watched him. He misses
nothing.”
Valet blinked, then refilled his master’s teacup before
reseating himself and continuing to darn a holed sock.
“He does that,” Earl Kestrel said with the closest
thing to affection Derian had heard in his dry tones. “You may
have him if you wish.”
“My lord!” Valet said in protest, alarm widening his
brown eyes.
“My comfort can wait,” the earl insisted. “Come
dawn, the four of us will divide the search under Race’s
direction. Derian and Ox will tend the camp and, if their other
duties permit, continue excavating the ruins of the
settlement.”
Murmured agreement was almost drowned out by the now nightly
chorus of wolf howls.
“Poor lost soul,” Jared said softly, “out there
alone with the wolves on his trail.”
“I could fair hire out as a tailor when this journey’s
done,” grumbled Derian, as he took up yet another pair of
riding breeches and settled his palm shield into place.
“Derian Tailor doesn’t sound bad,” Ox replied.
He set aside the burned roof beam he’d been shifting and wiped
his forehead with his hand, leaving a large black streak on the pink
skin. “Though I myself would go for Saddler or Sailmaker.
You’re working leather now and, by my way of seeing things,
those are more interesting jobs than making shirts and
breeches.”
Derian glanced at Ox and confirmed that the big man was teasing
him.
“Well, you would…”
His ready retort stuck in his throat for, across the meadow,
something—someone—was emerging from the forest.
His first impression was of woodland shadows come to life, for the
figure was all browns and blacks. Then it resolved into a person clad
in a rough cape of poorly tanned leather; a knife hung from an
equally crude belt.
“Ox,” Derian hissed softly. “Move slowly. Look
to the west.”
His caution was merited, for when the big man started to turn, the
person moved slightly, poised now to flee.
“Great Boar,” Ox whispered. “We’ve found
him!”
“Or he us,” Derian replied in equally soft tones.
“What do we do?”
“I frighten even those who know me,” Ox said,
“on account of my size. You handle him and I’ll hunker
down and keep my movements slow.”
Derian nodded, wishing for a moment that Earl Kestrel were there,
then with a startling insight glad that he was not. The severe earl
with his sharp commands and ordered plans would only frighten this
shy creature away.
Carefully, Derian set his sewing aside and rose to greet the
newcomer.
“Hello,” he said, speaking in the gentle tones he
reserved for a frightened horse. “Welcome.”
The person showed no sign of understanding, but he didn’t
bolt. Encouraged, Derian deliberately extended his arms, palms
upward, showing that he bore no weapons.
The newcomer mimicked the gesture and for the first time Derian
saw that the deeply tanned arms and legs were silvered with countless
scars, some just lines, others puckered and seamed. Pity now mingled
with his excitement.
“He’s been badly used,” Derian said softly to
Ox.
“He…” Ox paused, carefully lowering his voice,
though excitement vibrated in every note. “He! I think
it’s a she, Derian. Look more closely.”
Derian did so and for the first time noticed the visitor’s
nearly hairless arms and legs, the smooth curve of the throat. Either
this was a young boy or a woman.
“If you say so,” he said uncertainly.
“It’s hard to tell. That cape is so heavy it hides the
body.”
The person now took a few hesitant steps closer. Her gait was
light and graceful; her bare legs rippled with muscle.
Derian, well aware that the woman could vanish into the forest
without warning, matched her approach step by step. Compared with how
she moved, his dancer’s gait seemed awkward and clumsy.
She stopped at two arm-lengths’ distance, studying him with
intelligent eyes. Her nostrils widened and fluttered slightly as if
she was taking in his scent as well as his appearance.
Derian halted when she did, studying the stranger as she did him.
She was of fair height, taller than Earl Kestrel, but then he was
short for a man. Her exposed skin was so deeply tanned and weathered
that he could not guess what its original color might be, but he
guessed from the lack of freckles that she was not as fair as, say,
himself or Ox.
He would bet that her dark brown hair had been cut with the knife
that hung from her belt. That and a pouch around her neck seemed to
be her only belongings—unless one counted the rough hide
garment. Wildness emanated from her like a wind from an approaching
storm, but her gaze showed rational judgment.
“She’s no village idiot,” he said to Ox.
“Careful what you say,” Ox cautioned. “Who is to
say she won’t understand?”
Derian was curiously certain that she did not understand, but he
nodded.
After more scrutiny, the woman stepped closer. This time Derian
held his ground, unwilling to press her. His skin thrilled as she
raised a callused hand and touched first his cheek, then his hair,
then the fabric of his woolen shirt.
The feel of the last delighted her. Her expression brightened into
a wide, unfeigned, childlike smile. For the first time, she seemed
human rather than something of the woodlands given form. Derian
smiled in return.
This startled her, but only for a moment. She kept her place and
continued her tactile investigation. Derian covered his vague
embarrassment by saying to Ox:
“She is definitely female. I got a good glimpse of her
breasts just now. Small, though. Young, maybe.”
Ox grunted agreement. “I’d guess she’s been
watching us, maybe since we came here. She seems curious but not
amazed, like she’s confirming things she already
knew.”
The woman turned her head at the sound of Ox’s voice and
studied him, but made no effort to go closer. A faint smile shaped
her lips as she compared his height with Derian’s. Then she
touched Derian’s cleanshaven cheek and frowned.
With a swift gesture, she mimed the line of Ox’s beard, then
touched Derian’s cheek again.
“She wants to know why you have a beard,” Derian
interpreted in delighted wonder, “and I do not.”
He considered how to answer, then mimed removing his knife from
its sheath and putting the edge to his face.
The woman started back, considered, then tilted her head in what
was clearly an interrogative gesture. Derian repeated the motions.
She smiled and mimed taking out her own knife and chopping at a lock
of hair that hung close to her eyes.
“That’s it,” Derian replied. “You cut your
hair and I shave my face.”
She was kneeling down, perhaps to examine his slippers, when
something made her jump up and back in one fluid motion. Then,
silently as she had arrived, she vanished back into the woods.
Only after she was gone did Derian notice that the horses were
casually sniffing the air. A few moments later, moving with a
woodsman’s stealth and grace, Race Forester, followed by the
even more cautious Valet, emerged from the forest.
“No luck,” he called. “Any word from the
others?”
Ox found his voice before Derian did. “No, but she’s
been here, right here with us. She heard you coming and vanished like
a dream.”
Firekeeper, crouched over a kill she was sharing with Blind Seer,
spoke for the first time since she had fled the two-legs’
camp.
“I couldn’t bear it!” she cried. “I was
doing well dealing with one, knowing the second was there, but when I
heard the others returning, I couldn’t bear the thought of
being beneath so many eyes. Now I know how a fawn must feel when the
full pack cries the hunt.”
“The full pack would never hunt a fawn,” Blind Seer
said practically, “but I understand you. Still, dear heart, I
think you have done well.”
“I ran,” she said bluntly.
“So, go back.”
“Not now, not tonight. Tonight I want to sing my story home
to the Ones, run for a time in the enfolding arms of the dark, sleep
through daylight for a change instead of crouching in a tree like a
squirrel.”
“Who’s stopping you?” Blind Seer asked, chewing
on the gristle end of a bone.
She grinned at him, punched him in the shoulder, then grabbed at
the bone. He slashed at her, raising a slight blood trail on the skin
of her arm, but she had pulled the bone from between his paws.
Leaping to her feet, she raised it over her head, wiggling her hips
in a puppy frolic.
“Got it! Got it! Slow slug!”
He growled at her, crouched to spring. She kicked him in the nose;
he knocked her from her feet. She brought the bone down on his
head— hard. He barked in mock anger. She rolled clear. He leapt
on her. Together they wrestled, the bone forgotten, the night mad in
their veins.
Tension ebbed as Firekeeper played with the blue-eyed wolf. She
simply couldn’t afford the indulgence and come close to holding
her own. Blind Seer’s furiously wagging tail proved too much
temptation for her. She grabbed it, pulled. He howled in surprise.
She rolled back, belly up, throat exposed, laughing,
laughing…
“I do love you!” she said when she had her breath
again. “Why wasn’t I born truly a wolf?”
After Derian and ox finished their report, Earl Kestrel half-rose
from his seat and bellowed, “You had her and you let her get
away!”
“As soon try to grasp water,” Ox said bluntly.
“But Derian said that she came close enough to touch
him!” The earl’s tone was not in the least
conciliatory.
“She did at that,” the bodyguard agreed, “but
still there would have been no holding her, even if we’d had
more than a moment’s warning of her flight. I’ve never
seen any person move so fast.”
The earl was still glowering, but he fell silent long enough for
Jared Surcliffe to ask:
“How old would you guess she was?”
Derian spread his hands and shrugged. “Hard to say. Not old.
I’d say young.”
“Young as in thirty,” Doc pressed, “or young as
in eighteen?”
“Eighteen,” Derian said promptly, “and maybe
younger than that. She was female, but didn’t have much in the
way of breasts.”
He’d already explained, glad that the darkness hid his
blush, how he’d come to be sure that the visitor was
female.
“If my records are correct,” Earl Kestrel said
ponderously, “there were two young girls with Prince
Barden’s expedition. One was Lady Blysse. The other was the
daughter of two of the prince’s associates. I have her name
written down somewhere. Of course, there could have been others. Or
the young woman you saw could have been a child born after they were
settled here.”
“My lord,” Race offered haughtily, still indignant,
for the earl had yelled at him for scaring the visitor away,
“from what we’ve seen of the ruins the fire happened ten
or so years ago. There are saplings growing out of the burned houses
that are eight years old. The extent of vine coverage speaks for a
long passage of time as well.”
“Would you say,” Earl Kestrel asked Derian,
“that young woman you saw was as young as eight?”
“Definitely not, my lord. She had breasts, small as they
were. I don’t want to be accused of raising hopes, sir, but she
could have been right about the age of your niece, the Lady
Blysse.”
“Dark hair, dark eyes?”
“Yes, sir. That is, her hair was not quite as dark as yours
or your cousins‘.” Before your hair started turning white that is, Derian
added mentally. A small grin at the corner of Ox’s mouth told
him that his friend was sharing the thought.
“Prince Barden,” Jared said with infinite caution,
“had dark brown hair. Eirene’s hair, however, was pale
blond and the child, as I recall her, took after her
mother.”
“Children often darken with age.” Earl Kestrel
dismissed the difficulty with a casual wave of his hand. “And
this young woman has probably not bathed except by
accident.”
Derian was offended, as if the visitor were his personal creation
rather than his accidental discovery.
“She smelled clean to me, my lord, slightly of sweat and
there was definitely the stink of the hide she wore about her, but
she looked as if she knew how to wash.”
Earl Kestrel shrugged. “Good. It would be a great
embarrassment to bring King Tedric his granddaughter and have her
ignorant of bathing.” So that’s how it’s going to be, Derian thought. We
have found Lady Blysse wandering wild in the forest. Now we will
restore her to her family. To the king and the Kestrels.
Thinking of the lively curiosity in the dark eyes, he felt oddly
sad and suddenly immeasurably older. For the first time, he
understood just how politics used some men and women—and how it
consumed still others.
“If she lost her parents when she was young,” Doc
mused, thinking aloud, “it may explain why she did not speak to
Derian and Ox. She may have forgotten how to talk. Such has happened
to hermits or shipwreck survivors who are alone for a long
time.”
“If so,” again the earl dismissed the difficulty as
trivial, “she can be taught to speak again when we have her in
our keeping.”
“And how,” Race asked deliberately, “shall we
catch this wild child? If she is so wood wise, we could search until
winter comes and never find her. I could set snares for her perhaps
or dig a pit trap…”
Earl Kestrel frowned, considering. A voice so rarely heard as to
be almost a stranger’s spoke from the shadows at the edge of
the fire.
“If my lord would permit,” Valet said, lifting his
traveling iron from the shirt he had been pressing, “I have a
suggestion.”
“Speak,” the earl commanded, as surprised as the rest
of them.
“It would be impolitic to have Lady Blysse tell her
grandfather that she had been trapped or snared or handled in any
rough fashion. I suggest that we convince her to trust us. Derian
Carter said that she admired his shirt, did she not?”
“She did,” Derian agreed, leaning forward with
eagerness, grateful beyond belief that Valet, at least, seemed to see
their quarry as worthy of human consideration.
“We have spare clothing among us,” Valet continued,
tactfully avoiding direct mention that his master possessed three
changes of clothing to each one carried by the other members of the
expedition. “Make her a gift of a shirt. A man’s wool
shirt with a long tail would cover as much as the hide Derian
described.”
“Yes! Let her be clothed from my wardrobe,” Earl
Kestrel proclaimed, apparently mentally drafting a portion of the
speech he would make before the king. “Moreover, since she is
timid, let the four of us depart at dawn, even as we did today.
Perhaps if Derian and Ox alone are in the camp, she could be lured
close once more.”
“Depart?” Race asked. “Where to?”
“Perhaps there are other survivors,” the earl said.
“We can look for sign of them. Certainly we could hunt and so
augment our larder. It is early for the fattest meat, but surely a
man with your talent can find something worth hunting.”
A slightly mocking note in his voice revealed that Earl Kestrel
had been well aware of the guide’s tendency to flaunt his
skills.
Race nodded, reluctant to be away from where the real hunt would
be going on, but acknowledging the wisdom of his patron’s plan.
Besides, he couldn’t have won an argument on this point in any
case.
Earl Kestrel rubbed his hands together in satisfaction.
“Our plan is ready, then. I suggest that all but the first
watch get some rest. Tomorrow will be a long and busy day for us
all.”
Derian, who had the first watch, began his slow perimeter patrol.
When he passed the place where the wild visitor had first emerged
from the woods he felt a thrill of anticipation. Would she return
tomorrow? Would he be able to convince her to stay?
In the darkness he heard a chorus of wolf howls and knew that
somehow they held the answer to his questions in their clear,
lonesome cries.
Firekeeper’s courage had returned to her by the middle of the
next morning. A full belly and a warm spring day didn’t hurt
either. This combination, which tended to make the wolves want to
nap, had always stirred her desire to explore.
“Sleep then, Brother,” she said, stroking Blind
Seer’s flank. He looked particularly handsome, for she had
pulled out all the clumps of shedding fur. “I will go and visit
the two-legs again. Elation said that all but Fox Hair and Mountain
have gone hunting.”
“Will you come back when they sleep?” the wolf asked
without opening his blue eyes.
“I will, but I hope my courage does not fail me and I can
remain long enough to look closely at the others when they return
from hunting.”
“Good. I will sleep then but not so deeply that I will fail
to hear your call if they give you any trouble.”
Firekeeper ruffled his fur and departed. She made a fast trail
going to the two-legs’ camp, aware that she felt a strange
anticipation. This is like but not like finding the first strawberries in
the spring, she thought. Like but not like returning to a sheltered
place in winter and knowing that I can make a fire and get warm. I
don’t think I have ever felt like this before. It is
interesting and not unpleasant.
When she reached the trees curtaining the edge of the Burnt Place,
Firekeeper exchanged greetings with Elation, then made certain all
was safe before going out into the open.
All seemed much as it had the day before. Fox Hair was seated on
the ground doing something with one of their soft hides. Mountain was
shifting burned wood, bringing out things from time to time and
setting them on a cleared space.
There were fewer bones now, she noticed. Most of those that were
not burned entirely must have been found by now. She wondered, as she
never had wondered before, what those other things might be. She
herself had found odd things in the grass when the Ones had brought
her here each year, but never before had she wondered about what they
were.
Almost as if her impulse guided her feet, she emerged from the
forest and trotted over to the heap of rubble. Mountain saw her,
swallowed a shout, then held completely still. Fox Hair looked up
from what he was doing and, as on the day before, rose very
slowly.
He smiled at her. She was fairly certain, at least, that this was
a smile, not a baring of fangs. Since she had no idea what her own
smile looked like, she couldn’t be completely certain, but Fox
Hair did nothing aggressive so she decided the expression must be a
smile.
Again he held out his arms, twisted them so the palms were
upraised and open. She imitated the gesture. They stood like this for
the long circuit of a robin’s song; then Fox Hair lowered his
arms slowly.
He said something to Mountain, who answered him in what Firekeeper
was certain was a deliberately hushed voice. Nothing they said made
any sense, but there was intelligent purpose behind the sounds.
Now Fox Hair crouched and lifted something from the ground near
him. Dangling it between two hands, he held it out to her. The wind
caught it, making it flap, but Firekeeper stopped herself in
mid-bolt. This flapping thing had offered her no harm!
Seeing that she had been startled, Fox Hair carefully spread the
thing flat on the ground between them. He said something, plucking at
the soft hide he wore, then pointing to the thing on the grass.
Cautiously, Firekeeper extended her hand and touched the thing,
feeling the same delightful softness that had met her hand the day
before.
Again Fox Hair pointed to his upper body, then, in response to
something said by Mountain, he tugged his garment clear from his
body.
The skin below, she noted, was lighter than that on his face. It
was also rippling with cold, as if the warm spring air were as chill
as that of midwinter. But these were things she noted in passing.
With deliberate motions, Fox Hair was showing her how his garment
dropped over his head, rested on his shoulders, fell down over the
torso…
She yelped in pleased comprehension. Two quick tugs on her belt
freed her from her own cumbersome hide. The Fang’s Mouth held
between her teeth, she bent and lifted the soft thing from the grass.
Finding the opening at the bottom proved a bit difficult, for the
soft stuff clung together, but she growled at Fox Hair when he moved
as if to take it from her.
Once she found the hole at the bottom, she groped and located the
hole at the top. There were holes for the arms as well. After some
fumbling and getting tangled and nearly panicking and nearly having
to drop the Mouth so her head would go through the head hole, she
pushed head and neck and arms all through their appropriate
openings.
The garment was light, surprisingly warm, and slightly prickly,
like the leaves of a mullein plant in late summer. It felt infinitely
better against her skin than the hide had done. Over the animal
smell, it was scented with lavender and thyme.
Fox Hair extended an arm toward her and she backed and growled.
This was hers now. She was not going to let him take it away. He
lowered his arm quickly and she saw that he held a thin strip of
hide, much like the one at his own waist. Understanding suddenly that
he had been offering her a belt, she snatched it from him.
As she looped it about her waist, threading it first through the
Mouth as she had learned to do long ago and finding the task much
easier with this even piece of leather, she noticed that Fox Hair was
staring first at her, then at his hand as if amazed that she had
taken the belt so easily.
She grinned at him. Clearly he had never dined with wolves! Only
the fastest and fiercest ate from a kill. Even the meat of her own
hunting would be stolen if she wasn’t careful. She’d
learned that young enough.
Fox Hair answered her smile, but she thought there was something
of fear and uneasiness in the tang of his sweat.
WHEN the rest of the expedition returned later that afternoon, Derian
was pleased to see that their wild visitor, although clearly nervous,
didn’t flee.
Lightly balanced on the balls of her feet, ready to run if
anything startled her, she watched the four men file into the camp.
Race carried a couple of rabbits, Valet a string of brook trout. When
they passed her, Derian noticed again how she sniffed the air, taking
in their scents.
Clad in her new shirt and nothing else (he couldn’t help but
remember his embarrassment when she had stripped right in front of
both him and Ox) the young woman looked more like an untidy
curly-haired urchin than the wild thing who had first come into their
camp. With that strange surge of possessiveness, Derian realized that
he was glad that Earl Kestrel’s first sight of her would be
this way, rather than draped in that awkward hide. He would treat her
better, maybe even respect her a little.
“How long has she been here?” the earl asked, studying
the woman speculatively.
“Since midmorning, sir.”
“And has she spoken?”
“No. We’ve tried talking to her, but she only makes
sounds—whines and growls.” That had been both
disappointing and a bit frightening. Derian brightened.
“She’s a wonderful mimic, though. We’ve been
communicating a little by signs.”
“Communicating?” The aristocratic brow arched.
“Like about the shirt,” Derian replied, “and we
offered her something to eat.”
“Ah!”
“She eats like a wild animal,” Derian admitted.
“I’ve seen neater pigs.”
“Mm.”
Earl Kestrel’s attention was only partially on the
conversation. His gaze never left the woman; however, as hers never
left him, the clinical investigation seemed less rude. She had taken
a position a few steps from the center of the camp, carefully leaving
a line of escape open behind her.
Kestrel bowed to her. The woman did not respond in kind. Indeed,
Derian fancied she looked vaguely disdainful. Kestrel may have
reached something of the same conclusion, for he frowned.
The other three men also had been studying the visitor but more
covertly, aware of the penalties for usurping the earl’s
rights. Derian heard Race comment softly to Ox:
“She doesn’t look much like a noblewoman. Acts like
one though. There’s not a humble bone in that body.”
Ox chuckled softly. “I’d noticed that
myself.”
“She’s healthy-looking,” Doc said,
“despite all the scars. She has a fresh cut on her arm, but it
shows no sign of festering. Someone’s taught her basic
hygiene.”
“She is cleaner than I’d expected,” Race
admitted.
“I’d love a chance to examine her,” Jared said,
raising his voice slightly to include Derian in the implied question.
“We might get a better idea of her age then. From what I can
see from here, she’s not overfed, not precisely undernourished,
but there’s little fat on her.”
Derian, keeping his own voice soft, said, “She’s very
cautious about letting anyone close. I don’t think it’s
fear of being touched as much as fear of being trapped.”
Ox nodded agreement. “She was interested in touching us: my
beard, Derian’s hair, the fabrics of our clothing, but she
wouldn’t accept anything but the lightest pat in return. Even
then, you could tell she was letting us out of good
manners.”
“Interesting,” Earl Kestrel said. “Very well,
Jared, your examination will need to wait until she trusts us more.
She has accepted clothing and food, so we are well on the way. I will
not have these advances damaged.”
As if, Derian thought indignantly, you had anything to do with
those advances.
“Secondly,” Earl Kestrel continued, “we cannot
go about simply referring to this young woman as ‘she.’
There are very good odds that she is Lady Blysse. Address her
accordingly.”
“ ‘Lady Blysse,’ ” Doc offered, the
slightest of grins on his lips, “is a bit of a mouthful for
daily use. Given her father’s standing with the king and her
own probable age at the time of the fire, she was most likely merely
called ‘Blysse.’ I suggest we do the same.”
Earl Kestrel, who had been a stickler for protocol even on the
trail, glowered at his cousin and Doc hastened to clarify.
“I mean no disrespect, Norvin,” he said, emphasizing
his own point by using the earl’s given name rather than his
title, “but if we hope to awaken her memories of herself and of
language, we don’t want our first lesson to be too
complicated.”
Norvin Norwood, Earl Kestrel, nodded. “I concede the point,
Jared. She will be addressed as Blysse.”
The young woman had listened to this byplay with apparent
interest, but showed no recognition of the name. Derian sighed. As
ever, Earl Kestrel had his own best interests at heart.
“She looks well in that shirt,” Jared said. “Is
the hide you said she was wearing anywhere about? I would like to
examine the tailoring. It might give us a clue as to whether she has
a companion or two hidden away.”
“I set it over there,” Derian said. “I thought
she might want it,” (he remembered the rapidity with which she
had snatched the belt from his hand), “but she lost interest in
it as soon as she had figured out how the shirt went on.”
Doc crossed to examine the hide. Blysse’s jet-black gaze
followed his movements, but, though she seemed completely absorbed in
watching Doc, when the earl took a step toward her, she sprang back
without turning her head, without even apparent volition.
“Like an animal,” Race muttered. Then, “My lord,
I’ll go get these fish ready for the fire.”
“Go,” Earl Kestrel dismissed him. “The rest of
you may go about your tasks as well, but do not come near Blysse. Do
not make any loud noises or sudden motions. We wish her to feel
safe.”
Everyone murmured acknowledgment.
The earl continued, “Derian Carter, come stand next to me. I
have noticed that she uses you as a touchstone. If we are together,
she may be willing to approach me.”
Derian did so, almost hating himself for the subliminal thrill he
received from standing shoulder to shoulder with a nobleman. Always
before this, in small ways and subtle, the earl had kept his distance
from the commoners in his expedition.
Blysse didn’t seem to notice, but by now Derian was certain
that she missed little.
“What are your conclusions about her attire?” Earl
Kestrel asked Doc impatiently, for his cousin was staring at Blysse
rather than continuing his examination of the hide.
“She could have done the work herself,” Doc said, his
deliberately soft tone almost idle but holding beneath it a
suppressed excitement. “It is the most simple of constructions,
rather like the dresses young girls make for their dolls. The
hide—it’s elk, by the way, and I wonder how she killed an
elk—has been tanned, though badly. It is in one piece; nothing
has been stitched on. A hole has been cut in the center rather larger
than her head—I expect she didn’t like how the rough
leather chafed her neck. The rest has been trimmed so that the
movement of her arms would be unimpeded.
“This belt,” he lifted a twisted piece of leather,
“must have closed it somewhat at the sides, if
poorly.”
“That’s right, Doc,” Derian confirmed.
“Derian,” Jared asked, the quiet excitement now rising
into his voice, “did you give Blysse anything other than the
shirt and belt?”
“No, Doc.”
“Not the knife?”
“No. She had it with her. Never even put it down. Held it in
her teeth while she was changing.”
Both Doc and the earl glanced at him when he said that, but
mercifully, this once Derian didn’t blush.
“So you haven’t gotten a good look at it,” Doc
continued. “Then you probably didn’t notice that, worn as
the sheath is, it is of superlative construction, hardened leather
with metal reinforcement. Stamped onto it, I believe, is the crest of
the royal house.”
“Oh?” Earl Kestrel’s grey eyes shone as he
understood the drift of his cousin’s thoughts. “I cannot
see it from here. Is there anything else?”
“Yes,” Doc said. “Set into the pommel is what
looks like a cabochon gem, a garnet, I’d guess, though
it’s too filthy for me to be certain. I’m certain
I’ve seen the like before, when hunting with Prince
Barden.”
Suddenly Derian looked at his discovery with new eyes. Until this
moment, he hadn’t believed in the earl’s dreams, but now
it seemed quite possible that this dark-eyed lady of the forest might
well be the heir to the throne of Hawk Haven.
IV
Firekeeper had slipped away to spend the good night
with Blind Seer, but before dawn pinked the sky, she crept back
again, so silently that even the spotted not-wolf didn’t note
her return. Lifting the edge of the shelter the two-legs had given
her, she crawled back inside and sat on the soft things they had
heaped as a sleeping place for her.
She was full from hunting, weary from running, howling, and
wrestling with her pack mate. In the dim light that penetrated her
lair she saw that her new garment was covered with tiny twigs, bits
of leaf, and other forest matter. Fastidious as any wolf, she
stripped the shirt off and was pulling the mess from the fabric when
sleep took her. “One character, one sound,” a pleasant, melodious
female voice says. “Put them together and the words will talk
to you.” Tamara looks down at the slate uncertainly. Sweet Eirene has
made marks there with a bit of chalk. Tamara recognizes some of the
marks, but fitting them together into sounds still bothers her. She
feels hot and foolish as she tries, her lips fat and heavy. Her only
comfort is that Blysse seems no more enthusiastic than she. “Mama,” Blysse demands, “we want to go
outside, Tamara and me.” Outside! Sunlight dappling through the trees. Springtime
flowers scenting the air. “Tamara and I.” Sweet Eirene corrects her daughter
patiently. She shifts baby Clive to one arm, opens her blouse to
nurse him. “After you have sounded out what is written on the
slates you may go out.” Tamara looks through the open window with longing, but
reluctantly obeys the woman. At least Sweet Eirene keeps her deals,
not like some of the other grownups, who seem to believe that the
little girls have no more memory than chickens. Blysse, though as willful as any doted-upon child, seems to
know that this is not a time to argue with her mother. Mumbling their
attempts to each other, the girls bend their heads, one fair, one
dark, over their slates. “Dog and Hog run with Frog,” Blysse announces
after a few minutes. Sweet Eirene smiles at her daughter. “Very good, Blysse.
Now, Tamara, what does your slate say?” “The big pig can dig,” Tamara sounds out
carefully, wondering why anyone would want to know something so
stupid. “Very good, Tamara.” Sweet Eirene offers Clive her
other nipple. “Since both of you girls have worked so hard, you
may have two strawberries each from the bowl in the
pantry.” “Thank you, Mama.” Blysse says, hopping down from
her chair and running with pattering steps to open the pantry
door. “Thank you, ma’am,” Tamara echoes, taking
the berries Blysse thrusts at her with pink-stained fingers. The strawberries are still sweet in her mouth. She sits on the
ground outside Blysse’s cabin, playing dolls with her friend.
Distantly, she hears Barden come inside from the fields. The prince’s boots thump solidly against the new plank
floor. A scraping sound is the slate being pushed to one side. A
clunk is his heavy pottery tumbler being set on the table. “It’s a beautiful day, Eirene,” he says.
“Too beautiful to sit indoors and tutor little
girls.” “They need to learn how to read, Barden,” Sweet
Eirene replies. Her voice twangs a little under its gentle melody.
They argue about this frequently. “Let them play,” the prince urges.
“There’s no need to force them along. We have few enough
books and they’re only four years old.” “Blysse will be five in a few moon-spans. At her age, I
could cross-stitch my alphabet. She can barely recite the
letters!” “She can lead a horse, feed a chicken, and tell a weed
from a seedling.” Barden’s tone is affectionate.
“Her education must needs be different from that of a lady of
Kestrel.” “Maybe.” Sweet Eirene’s voice is no longer
so sweet. She sounds determined. “Barden, I swear that these
children will not grow up like wild animals!” Wild animals, animals, animals… The words echo through Tamara’s head and she is kneeling
on the ground next to her mother. Mama holds a furry grey ball in her
lap. It stares fuzzily at Tamara from cloudy blue eyes. “Careful, Tamara,” Mama says when Tamara reaches
to touch the puppy. “This is a wild animal, not one of your
toys.” Tamara pats the wolf puppy very, very carefully. “Wild,
Mama? It doesn’t seem wild. What is wild?” “Wild is not obeying humans,” Mama says after a
moment. “Wild is that.” “Wild,” Tamara tries the word out. “Wild.
Wild wolf. Will the wild wolf bite me?” “If you poke it or hurt it or tease it,” Mama
says, “and well it should. But its mother might bite you even
faster.” Tamara senses rather than hears the she-wolf emerging from the
brush. Her grey head is taller than Tamara’s dark one. Her
yellow-brown eyes study the girl; then her fanged mouth opens in a
panting smile. “Wild,” Tamara says, putting out her hand to pat
the wolf. “Wild.” She throws back her head and pipes a thin howl. Wild.
Firekeeper awakened slowly from her dream, feeling it clinging to
corners of her mind dense as fog and just as impossible to grasp. The
garment Fox Hair had given her was draped across her thighs,
puppy-fur soft.
Suddenly she was homesick. Confused and forlorn, she didn’t
know who she was homesick for. Her pack? Mama? Blysse?
The loud clang of the iron pot being slung over the campfire
brought her fully awake. Gratefully Firekeeper pushed homesickness
away with anticipation and curiosity.
From outside her shelter, she heard Fox Hair calling in a low
voice, “Blysse? Blysse?”
This word was followed by other sounds that almost, coming as they
did on the heels of her dream, made sense. So Firekeeper yapped a
greeting and pushed her way outside. Fox Hair smiled greeting in
return. Then, to her astonishment, his face turned as red as the
setting sun.
Derian’s pleasure at learning the wild woman had not fled in
the night vanished in a wash of embarrassment when he realized that
she had emerged from the tent completely naked. The wool shirt,
incomprehensibly covered with bits of bracken, trailed from her left
hand. She grasped her sheathed knife in the right.
Moreover, she was staring at him in astonishment, as if he, not
she, were displaying himself naked before a company of the opposite
sex. Dropping the shirt, she reached out and touched his cheek. Only
when he felt the coolness of her fingers did he realize that he must
be blushing furiously.
Frozen in shock, he regained control of his limbs only when he
heard Doc comment dryly:
“Well, from what I see, I’d concur with the estimate
of her age as somewhere between twelve and fifteen. She’s thin
as a rail, poor child. No wonder she doesn’t have much up
top.”
Derian bent and picked up the discarded shirt, not caring this
once if his sudden movement frightened Blysse. His fingers were
touching the cloth when he felt it snatched from beneath them.
The woman was glowering at him, holding the shirt close to her.
When he straightened, she fixed him with her dark gaze. Then, clearly
and distinctly, she growled.
Behind him Derian heard murmurs of astonishment as the other men
registered her speed and agility. Then Ox said calmly:
“Well, Derian, she may not want to wear it now, but
I’d say that she plans on keeping that shirt.”
Coming to himself, Earl Kestrel snapped, “Stop staring at
Lady Blysse, all of you! Get on with your chores! Derian Carter, try
to convince her to re-don her garb. Then I want to speak with
you.”
Derian convinced Blysse to dress, helped by the fact that she
obviously had intended to do so in any case. With some effort he
convinced her to remain with Ox.
Seeing her safe, Derian reluctantly crossed toward the
earl’s tent. He glanced behind him to check on Blysse and saw
her standing behind Ox’s bulk, peering out to watch the others
as they prepared breakfast and fed the horses.
When Derian reached the area marked out as Earl Kestrel’s
own, Valet glanced up from the quail eggs he was scrambling for the
earl’s breakfast to give Derian an encouraging nod. Even so,
Derian didn’t feel any braver as he announced himself and
obeyed the earl’s invitation to enter.
Earl Kestrel’s tent was larger than the one Derian shared
with Ox. It had straight sides and a peaked roof, rather like a small
house, whereas the other members of the expedition slept in simple
triangular shelters. When Derian entered, he found Earl Kestrel
seated on a campstool, making notes in a leather-bound book resting
on a collapsible table.
“Be seated while I finish this,” Kestrel ordered
curtly.
Derian balanced on a second campstool, his hands folded stiffly on
his knees. After an eon or so, the earl blotted his ink, sanded the
page, and turned to Derian.
“We have a serious problem,” he said bluntly,
“with the Lady Blysse. We may have located her, but ten years
of living like a wild animal have made her unfit for civilized
company. At first I intended to head back to Eagle’s Nest as
soon as we could regroup. Now I see this would be unwise. I want
Blysse to be presented to the king as a human being— one who
has suffered trials, surely, but as a human being. If we go back now,
even with the weeks we must spend on the road, she will still be
little more than a freak.”
Derian had expected to be reprimanded for staring at the naked
woman, for not keeping the woman covered, for something he’d
done wrong. These confidences startled him so that all he could do
was nod.
“Last night I consulted with both my valet and with my
cousin,” the earl continued. “They advise that you would
be the best choice for the girl’s tutor.”
“Me?”
“Yes. Thus far, she trusts you more than she does any of us.
You are closer to her age. Moreover, you are educated, unlike Race
and Ox. Jared and I should return to our homes, at least briefly.
Therefore, we cannot teach her.”
“Valet?” Derian offered tentatively.
“She does not seem to respect Valet,” Earl Kestrel
said. “He is very good at what he does, but he himself has
noted that he lacks the force of personality to impress
her.”
“Oh.”
“I am offering you an important job, a great opportunity to
serve both my house and the throne.”
Derian bit his lip, reviewing his options. Could he really
civilize this wild woman? What would be the penalty for failure? He
was certain that he was still considering when he heard his own voice
saying:
“Yes. I would like to try teaching her, sir.”
“Good!” The earl briskly rubbed his hands together.
“I always knew you had potential as an aide. As you may be
aware, after Prince Barden departed, his father sold his
property.”
“Departed.” Was disinherited, you mean, Derian
thought, some of his usual sardonic humor returning to him now that
the worst shock had passed.
“I purchased West Keep—the place from which Prince
Barden departed into the wilds,” Earl Kestrel continued.
“It should make a fit place for Barden’s daughter, my
niece, to begin her education. I will speak to Race Forester about
his remaining in my employ and staying there to support you. The rest
of us will depart, but I will expect regular reports from
you.”
“How delivered, sir?” Derian asked, his head
swimming.
“I will send a courier. He will take your first report and
leave a covey of homing pigeons with you. Hopefully, that will
suffice.”
“Yes, sir.”
Earl Kestrel kept talking, but Derian heard little of what he
said. He knew he would regret his inattention later, but for now only
one refrain kept going through his head.
What have I gotten myself into?
Firekeeper spent an exciting but nerve-tightening day among the
two-legs. Three or four times she ate their food, finding it
overcooked and full of the taste of strange plants. It was warming,
though, with a warmth that stayed like sunlight in her belly.
When Fox Hair observed her pulling the leaves out of her soft
shirt, he brought her another set of garments. This time there were
two parts: one to be worn on her lower body and another for the
top.
As easily as a mockingbird mimics sounds, Fox Hair communicated
with Firekeeper by acting out what he wanted her to know. In this way
he showed her that the one part went over the soft shirt, the other
over her lower parts.
Thinking the stuff these garments was made from smelled familiar,
Firekeeper chewed the material and found that it was indeed leather,
but leather that had been made soft and supple, as if the animal were
still wearing its hide.
Initially, she wore the clothing in the fashion that Fox Hair had
suggested, but she found the combination of two tops along with the
bottoms stifling. As much as she liked the soft top, she found the
leather one stronger and less likely to accumulate leaf matter. The
bottoms protected her legs and rear far better than her hide had ever
done, though she missed the feeling of the wind against her skin.
Firekeeper compromised by wearing the leather top and bottoms,
setting the soft top aside for another time. When the little brown
man made as if to touch the soft top, she growled.
She might not be using it that moment, but she wasn’t going
to give it up!
During the brightest part of the day, Firekeeper slept for a
while, leaving her rested and clearheaded when night fell and the
two-legs went into their shelters to sleep. Shedding her new attire,
since she was not quite comfortable in it, she slipped out to meet
Blind Seer.
They romped for a time, celebrating their reunion with such
enthusiasm that she was slightly bruised and soundly scratched. When
they had stretched out on some young grass, Firekeeper with her head
pillowed on her brother’s flank, the wolf sighed.
“What troubles you, Blue Eyes?”
“Elation said that the two-legs plan to depart tomorrow.
Tawny has pulled his fish traps from the water and taken down his
snares. There are other signs the falcon sees. Although they mean
nothing to me, I believe her.”
Firekeeper’s heart started beating far too fast.
“Tomorrow?”
“Probably as soon as there is light.” The wolf thumped
his tail on the ground. “Do you go with them?”
It was far to soon to make such a decision, but in her belly
Firekeeper knew that the decision was already made.
“I will.”
“Across the mountains?”
“Let us see how they treat me in the days it takes to reach
the mountains,” she temporized.
“But if they treat you well?”
She sighed. “Then I go.”
Sitting up, she rubbed the wolf behind his ears.
“I could miss you, Sister,” Blind Seer said at last,
“but Mother and Father reminded us that all wolves feel the
urge to disperse from the pack. Why should our two-legged sister be
different?”
“Could miss me?” she said, teasing to lighten this
serious moment.
“Could, if I were parting from you,” he replied,
“but I think I will go with you to see what lies over the
mountain. It is long since any but the winged members of the Royal
kind went there. Now that the two-legs have come here, why
shouldn’t I go there?”
Firekeeper howled her delight, thumping Blind Seer so hard that he
leapt up and trotted out of range.
“Easy, Sister! Easy!” he protested.
“You’re not a tiny pup anymore. There’s strength in
those funny hands of yours.”
“Will you come meet the two-legs, then?” she asked
eagerly.
“Not yet,” he replied cautiously. “Their beasts
fear me as we fear fire. Let them grow a bit accustomed to my scent.
We should learn, too, if the two-legs also fear wolves. The Cousins
who have crossed the mountains don’t speak well of
them.”
“True.” She smiled, though, too happy at the knowledge
that he would be nearby to worry yet about how the two-legs would
take to him. “Have you told the Ones what you will
do?”
“How could I?” he replied. “I didn’t know
until you made your own choice.”
“Then let us sing our news to the pack,” she said.
“The Ones will want to know that we are both
departing.”
Trotting side by side, they went to a rise from which their voices
would carry far. Two voices began a song that became a chorus as it
was relayed through trees whose branches reached as if to brush the
stars.
“Easy, NOW! Easy, Roanne!” Derian jerked the mare’s
headstall, but still she danced nervously away from Blysse.
The woman, clad in leather vest and riding breeches, stood
barefoot, watching the horse’s antics in evident amusement.
“Problem, Derian?” Earl Kestrel asked from where he
stood a polite distance away.
“Yes, sir. I’d thought to have Lady Blysse ride my
horse while I rode one of the pack animals. We can spare one since
we’ve used so much of the fodder they were carrying. Roanne
won’t go near Blysse, though.”
Exasperated, he punctuated his reply by loosing the mare into the
corral, where she promptly trotted to the far side of the enclosure,
shuddering her skin as if it were crawling with flies.
“None of the other horses will either,” Derian
continued. “They’re scared stiff of Blysse.”
The earl thoughtfully stroked his beard with one forefinger.
“Interesting,” he said. “Well, then, until we
get a horse accustomed to her, she will have to walk.”
He looked as if he was considering declaring that everyone else
must walk as well, but self-interest came to the fore.
“Perhaps your horse will grow easier around Blysse if you
are in the saddle and she walks alongside.”
“Perhaps,” Derian agreed doubtfully.
“In any case, how does Blysse seem to take to the idea of
riding?”
“Well enough.” Derian gestured to where he had flung a
saddle across a fallen tree trunk. “I showed her the basics
there and she took to them
[ MISSING SECTION ]
“Brace the bodies of his friends and comrades, perhaps the
body of his lady wife.”
The earl’s voice broke there and Derian liked him better for
it. Even in the midst of constructing a pedigree for the foundling, a
pedigree on which rested Kestrel’s own ambitions for
advancement, the man couldn’t quite subdue his own sorrow at
the loss of his sister.
Suspicious then that he was too gullible, that the catch in the
earl’s voice had just been good theater, Derian glanced at the
nobleman, but the tightness around Norvin Norwood’s eyes and
mouth was genuine. His voice, though, when he spoke again, had
returned to his control:
“Prince Barden holds in one of his great hands a small one,
that of his small daughter, Blysse. Terrified and confused by the
changes the night has wrought, still the little girl tries to be
brave for her father’s sake. He, in turn, takes courage from
the child’s need for him.
“After foraging among the ruins for the basic necessities of
existence, the prince leads his daughter into the forest. There is no
benefit to staying near, yet Barden cannot bear to take himself too
far away from this accidental funeral pyre. If he departs, who will
make the offerings to the spirits of the dead?
“So he remains and builds a small shelter in which he raises
his daughter, letting her help him forage and hunt for what they need
to survive in the wilds. Certainly, he made no more permanent
provisions for the future. Doubtless, when the traditional two years
of sacrifices for the dead were ended, Prince Barden planned to
return to his father’s kingdom. Once there, if only for his
small daughter’s sake, he would beg forgiveness for his
rashness and ask to be taken back into the fold.
“However, before those two years can pass, something happens
to him. Perhaps the heat of the fires that Prince Barden certainly
challenged when attempting to save his people seared his lungs.
Perhaps he broke a limb or caught an illness while hunting in the
freezing cold of winter for food for his daughter. Perhaps it was
simply the final stroke of the ill luck that had dogged his young
life. For whatever reason, when the two years had passed, the prince
was too weak to make the onerous journey across the mountains.
Instead, he put his full energies into teaching his daughter what she
would need to survive.
“At last, his strength failing him, Prince Barden strapped
his own knife about young Blysse’s waist, rested her small but
strong hand on the polished garnet on the pommel, made her swear to
fight to survive even when he had passed on. Taking her to the ruins,
he consigned her care to the ancestral spirits to whom he had so
devotedly sacrificed. Shortly thereafter, he joined them.
“Perhaps Blysse buried him in the ruins near those he had
loved. Perhaps, trembling with grief, she was forced to leave his
body to the ministry of the wild creatures. However, like her father,
she remained close by the familiar places. There, nearly wild, we
found her, and so we return her to the embrace of her
grandfather.”
Earl Kestrel paused, one hand holding Coal’s reins, the
other lightly stroking his lip, his gaze keenly observing the
reaction of his listeners. Jared Surcliffe was the first to speak.
His voice was a bit hoarse, as if he had been holding back tears.
“That’s a good explanation, cousin,” he said
slowly. “It explains much of what has puzzled me: how the girl
survived; why she stayed near to this place; why, even if someone had
lived to care for her when she was small, didn’t that same
person take her home to Hawk Haven.”
Earl Kestrel bowed his head in gracious acknowledgment of the
praise.
“I like the touch about the prince giving his daughter his
own knife,” Race Forester said, his envy forgotten under the
story’s spell. “It rings true. A royal prince would have
done something just like that.”
Derian nodded, but as he glanced at the dark-haired figure
trotting alongside his horse, her eyes alive with curiosity, he
wondered. It could have been just like that, but was it?
He wondered if they would ever know and realized with a shiver
that discovering the truth was up to him, for if the woman remained a
creature of the wilds, the truth would never be known.
The two-legs stopped traveling toward the mountains long before
Firekeeper was at all tired. Still, she was glad for the break, glad
for an opportunity to assess what she had learned.
Fox Hair had clearly been made her nursemaid, a role that was
apparently a promotion among the two-legs, for it was evident to her
that Tawny resented him greatly.
She was rather pleased for Fox Hair, nonetheless. He was amusing
and willing to make great efforts in order to befriend her.
After a day of watching the two-legs interact from within their
midst, she was certain that they could talk as well as any wolf.
Unlike wolves, however, they mostly used their mouths, a thing she
found limiting. How could you tell someone to keep away from your
food when your own mouth was full?
While the two-legs were lighting their fire and taking all the
things off the not-elk that they had put on them with such effort a
short time before, Fox Hair motioned Firekeeper to join him by the
fire. Although she disliked how the smoke dulled her sense of smell,
Firekeeper came over and seated herself on a rock upwind.
While busily washing some vegetables in a container of water, Fox
Hair chattered squirrel-like at Mountain, who was setting up one of
the shelters. Feeling left out when Fox Hair stopped, Firekeeper
attempted to mimic his final string of sounds.
She was a good mimic. So long ago that she did not remember the
learning, she had discovered that imitating various bird and animal
calls could bring her prey to her, rather than forcing her to seek it
over great distances.
Hearing her imitate him now, Fox Hair’s eyes widened in an
expression she recognized as surprise. In a sharp tone, he said
something to her. She did her best to make the same noises back at
him.
Hearing her, Mountain laughed and said something to Fox Hair. She
mimicked him as well, pitching her voice lower, though she could not
reach his great, thunder-deep rumbles.
Fox Hair nodded at this, reached up, and pulled at his mouth in
what Firekeeper was certain was a gesture of thought. Two-legs pulled
at their mouths a great deal. Those who grew hair there often
fingered it or tugged at it.
She wondered if her own inability to grow hair on her face would
be a handicap among two-legs, perhaps one as great as not having
fangs had proved to be among wolves. If so, she supposed, she could
fasten another creature’s hair there, just as her Fang had
compensated for her other natural shortcomings. However, she hoped
that since Fox Hair cut the hair from his face she would be spared
this.
Letting his hand drop into his lap, Fox Hair picked up one of the
plant roots that he had been washing a moment before.
Slowly and carefully, he said: “Potato.”
Firekeeper imitated him perfectly. Fox Hair smiled, picked up
another root, this one long and orange.
“Carrot.”
She imitated him.
“Onion.”
A dozen items later, he began to repeat. Soon she had all the
words and could, when Fox Hair pointed to one or another of the
items, match word to thing.
Fox Hair grinned his delight. Hawk Nose, who had been watching
from a distance, came over and tested her himself.
Firekeeper went through the routine again, aware that impressing
this two-legged One was important. Hawk Nose nodded at her when she
had finished, then said something rapidly to Fox Hair. Fox Hair
replied. His tones, Firekeeper noted, were more measured than when he
spoke with Mountain. She wondered if cadence indicated something,
perhaps relative standing within the pack.
After they had eaten, Fox Hair drew Firekeeper off to the side and
continued teaching her sounds. By full dark, she had learned several
dozen more, knew that the not-elk were horses, that the cringing
spotted kin-creature was a dog, that the shelters were tents.
She was a little puzzled to find that the same word applied to the
small shelters such as the one in which she slept and the larger one
in which Hawk Nose slept. They were so different in shape and
purpose— Hawk Nose spent much time in his doing more than
sleeping—that she thought his should have a different word.
More interesting was learning that the two-legs had names for
themselves. Fox Hair was called Derian. Mountain was Ox.
Derian seemed uncertain what to name Hawk Nose. He tried various
sounds. Then he shrugged and shook his head, dismissing them all.
Firekeeper was fascinated and more than a little confused.
Despite her pleasure in discovering that one could communicate
with two-legs, when she heard Blind Seer call, she was eager to leave
and join him.
She rose, turning toward the forest. Fox Hair/Derian stood as
well, his expression anxious. Blind Seer howled again. “Come, Firekeeper! I’m lonely!”
Firekeeper smiled and started to walk toward the forest. Derian,
to her surprise, for he had never before laid even a finger on her
without permission, put his hand on her arm.
She stopped, stared at him, and, seeing concern evident on his
features, did not strike him. Perhaps two-legs, like wolves, touched
for other reasons than to attack.
Fox Hair gestured in the direction of Blind Seer’s cry.
“Wolf,” he said.
Blind Seer howled again.
“Wolf,” Derian repeated anxiously.
Firekeeper gently pushed his hand from her arm and moved swiftly
away. Before she stepped into the darkness of the trees, she turned
to Fox Hair and nodded.
“Wolf,” she agreed, and slipped into the night.
V
“But this can’t go on!” exclaimed
Race Forester, eyes ablaze.
“Tomorrow we cross the gap; a day or two thereafter
we’re in populated lands. What happens then when Lady Blysse
slips off into the night and runs about in the darkness?”
There was a sneer in his voice when he said “Lady,” a
sneer just this side of unforgivable cheek, but Earl Kestrel chose to
overlook that insolence. No matter how rudely phrased, Race’s
point was reasonable.
Each night since they had broken camp at the ruins of Bardenville,
Blysse had left her tent and vanished into the night. What she did
then, no one knew, but she returned each day shortly before dawn.
They had made slower progress on their return east to civilization
than they had on the way out. The first day Earl Kestrel had called
halt after a half-day’s travel, worried that the young woman
would not have the stamina to pace the horses any longer. He might
also have been prompted by the steady drizzle that had begun with
first light and had never ceased—unless turning into
intermittent sleet could be considered ceasing.
The second day their start had been late, for the camp had
remained on alert for many hours after Blysse had left Derian’s
side, in answer, it almost seemed, to a howl of a wolf in the
darkness beyond. Only on her return had Earl Kestrel fallen into a
restful sleep. The third day had been something of a repetition of
the second, though Earl Kestrel had permitted Valet to convince him
that wakeful watchfulness would do nothing to bring the girl back,
that indeed it might do the opposite.
The end of this fourth day of travel found them at the lower
reaches of the gap. Tomorrow they would attempt the crossing, a long,
hard day’s work even for rested men. Although the earl had
decreed an extra half-day for rest and preparation, no one was
relaxing. Even calm Ox and unflappable Valet kept turning their gazes
to the tree line, wondering what strange force might draw Blysse out
into the unfriendly darkness night after night.
Derian was the least happy of the lot. Looking at his charge clad
in leather vest and rough knee breeches she had made by chopping off
a pair of the earl’s riding trousers just below her knees, she
was a winsome figure, hardly female, impossible to place in any of
the categories he had encountered traveling between Hawk Haven and
Bright Bay on business with his father.
To some eyes, as she sat busily untangling her brown locks with
the comb he had shown her how to use three days before, Blysse could
be any girl, albeit a somewhat boyishly dressed one. To Derian,
however, she had become more of an enigma for their several days of
acquaintance rather than less.
Upon their first meeting she had seemed a wild creature that had
taken human shape. By their second, assured of her humanity, Derian
had felt proprietary, even protective toward her. By the third
meeting, the very one that had ended with Earl Kestrel giving Derian
charge of her, Derian had felt certain of Blysse’s intelligence
and of her peculiar sense of humor.
This day she was a stranger, calm and composed, apparently immune
to the human storm that raged around her—as she should be.
Although her vocabulary was growing at an amazing rate, what words
she had were mostly nouns with a few simple additions such as Yes and
No, Come and Go.
“What do you suggest we do?” Earl Kestrel asked
Race.
“We should tie her,” the scout said firmly.
“It’s for her own safety, my lord. I don’t want her
arrow-shot by the first gamekeeper who takes her for a
poacher.”
“You don’t?” the earl’s inflection was
ironic, but Derian doubted that the scout noticed. Race still
believed that his envy of the woman’s woodcraft was his own
secret.
“No, sir, I don’t,” Race said earnestly.
“Think of the man’s shock when he finds a bit of a girl
dead with his shaft in her breast and him facing your wrath for doing
naught but his duty.”
“Indeed,” said Earl Kestrel dryly, “not to
mention the pitiable situation that Blysse should have survived ten
years of privation to die so sordidly.”
“That,” Race replied, suddenly aware of his
tactlessness, “so goes without saying that I didn’t
bother mentioning it.”
“Of course.” Earl Kestrel relented. “It has not
escaped my notice that you have scouted in the vicinity of the camp
following Blysse’s return each dawn. Have you found any sign of
where she goes or if she is meeting someone?”
“None,” Race said, superstitious dread deepening his
voice. “She leaves no more track than a spirit would.
I’ve wondered…”
Jared Surcliffe broke in, impatient with the earl’s game of
cat and mouse with the uneducated man.
“If she’s a restless spirit? Nonsense! I’ve
examined her more closely now and no spirit would have so many
scars—not to mention the cuts and bruises she gains each day.
She has clean healing flesh, thank the ancestors of our house, or she
would have died from some injury long since.”
“If I thought she was a spirit,” Race countered
defiantly, “would I have suggested putting a rope on her? My
lord, it would be no more unkind than the jesses on a hawk or the
leash on a dog. It’s to keep her from harm in my way of
thinking, not to do her some.”
“And can you explain that to her?” Earl Kestrel said
skeptically. “Derian, could Blysse understand such an
idea?”
Derian shrugged. “She’s smart, my lord, but we
don’t have enough words.”
“Mime it!” Race insisted.
“When she’s never seen—or at least has no memory
of—the farmers or gamekeepers you would protect her
from?” Derian scoffed. “How?”
In answer, Race lifted a coil of rope and strode over to where
Blysse was now interestedly watching.
“I’ll show you!” the scout retorted
defiantly.
He lifted the rope, uncoiled a section and held it out to the
young woman.
“Rope,” she said calmly.
Much to Derian’s despair, all items for binding, from the
thinnest thread to horse hobbles to fish line, had, for the nonce,
become rope. Doubtless Blysse thought Race’s approach with rope
in hand was another attempt to force her to discriminate. Mentally,
he kicked himself for not teaching her the word
“pavilion” for Earl Kestrel’s larger tent that
first night. The lack of discrimination seemed to have shaped her
attitude toward the refinements of spoken language.
With the ease of long practice, Race made a noose. Then, as Blysse
watched in unguarded curiosity, he dropped it over her shoulders and
pulled it fast, binding her arms tightly to her sides.
Blysse looked startled, pushing out with her shoulders against the
restraint. Her expression when she realized that she could not get
free became furious: dark eyes narrowed, lips paling, brows pulled
together.
“See, my lord,” Race said triumphantly, turning
slightly toward Earl Kestrel, leaning back on his heels so that his
weight would keep the noose tight. “We can hold her this way
and she can walk along or we can set her up on one of the mules.
They’ve grown accustomed to her by now and…”
He didn’t finish for Blysse screamed, high, shrill, and
angry. Her second such cry was echoed by one from the tops of the
tallest trees; then a blue-grey streak plummeted toward the gathered
men.
Derian didn’t think. Balling himself tight, he launched
forward, knocking Race to the ground, rolling the other man with the
force of his tackle so that the falcon’s strike hit the ground
inches from where the scout would have been standing.
Race lost his grip on the rope and, as the falcon was taking wing
again, Blysse clawed her way out of the loosened noose.
Free, she stood poised lightly on the balls of her feet, Prince
Barden’s knife in her hand. Her dark gaze darted from Race to
Derian to Kestrel then back again to Race.
A low growl rumbling in her throat, she advanced one stiff-legged
pace toward the prone man, then another.
Derian rose, imposed himself between her and Race, found that
cold, dark gaze now studying him impartially. All their tentative
friendship seemed to have vanished like snow beneath the sun.
Blysse’s growl deepened, became louder, and she peeled her
lips back from teeth. The snarl should have looked funny, for her
teeth remained blunt, human teeth, but the menace in her eyes made
the expression anything but.
Queenie, Race’s bird dog, had been running to assist her
master. Now, under Blysse’s snarl, she dropped to the dirt,
rolled onto her back, and whimpered submission.
Something visceral in Derian understood. He could not demean
himself to drop and roll, but he lowered his gaze and stepped
slightly to one side.
“Race,” he muttered urgently as he did so.
“Don’t get up! Don’t reach for any weapon! If you
stay down there, she won’t attack you.”
“What?” Race continued scrabbling backward in the dirt
and leaves of the forest floor, but he didn’t get to his feet,
nor did Blysse attack. “How can you be so sure?”
“I just am!” Derian replied, resisting an urge to
growl himself. “Stay put! Lower your gaze! Don’t
challenge her or she’ll have your head!”
Race obeyed, at least to the extent of not getting to his feet.
After Race had clawed his way back a few more paces, Blysse halted.
With one last snarl, she kicked dirt at him. Then she shook like a
dog after a rainstorm, her anger vanishing as quickly as it had
appeared.
She looked at Derian and grinned, then spoke her first
sentences.
“Race, dog,” she commented conversationally. Then she
bent and picked up the rope and shook it. “No rope.
No!”
Earl Kestrel spoke for the first time since Race had advanced on
Blysse.
“That, I think, quite nicely sums up the matter.”
Then he took the coil of rope from her and tossed it onto the
fire. Sparks flew as the flames engulfed the damp coils.
Firekeeper was in a merry mood the next morning. Today they would
cross the great mountains. Beneath tonight’s stars, she and
Blind Seer would hunt where none of the Royal Wolves had hunted in
uncounted years. Until then, she had the progress of humans and
horses up the steep incline to amuse her.
For once, Derian had abandoned his care of her, his skill with the
horses needed to coax them up the slope. She admired his labors with
the stupid things, and during a midmorning halt she offered through
gestures to assist.
Derian grinned and promptly handed her the rope tied to the head
of the smallest but least cooperative of the long-eared horses.
“Mule,” he said, pointing toward the creature.
Noting differences in ears, tail, and wickedness of temper,
Firekeeper was willing to concede that there might be a need for a
different word to separate this creature from a horse, never mind
that they smelled so much alike.
“Mule,” she repeated, pointing to the animal, then to
the others like it. “Mule.”
Derian grinned. “Yes. Good.”
The last word puzzled her, for it seemed to apply to nothing in
particular. She gestured toward the mule’s head-rope, wondering
if “Good” might be yet another of the useless plethora of
words for “rope” that Derian kept thrusting at her.
“Rope,” she said, waiting to see if he corrected
her.
“Rope,” he agreed. Then he made the hand gesture for
“wait” and went off to confer with the earl.
While Firekeeper waited, her gaze flickered toward Race,
remembering how the man had tried to bind her as the horses were
bound. He was keeping a safe distance from her, his spotted dog close
about his feet. Their fear pleased her. She liked having some
precedence within this human pack, even if over such minor
members.
When Hawk Nose shouted the command for them to start,
Firekeeper’s mule stubbornly refused to move. He stood
stiff-legged, lazily chewing a mouthful of leaves, defying her to
make him take a single step.
From the corner of her eye, Firekeeper saw Derian approaching,
lightly swinging the stick he used to swat the mules across their
hindquarters. Determined to move the animal herself, she considered
her options.
To this point, she had not tried talking with the animals the
two-legs had brought with them. She rarely had bothered speaking with
herbivores in any case, finding it uncomfortable to talk with those
she might later eat. Now, however, she stood on her toes, rising just
high enough that her lips were close to one of the mule’s
brown-haired, dark-tipped ears.
“Move!” she snarled. “Or I’ll
eat you for supper!”
Any doubts she had held that the mule would understand her
vanished as he threw back his head and brayed in naked terror. It
took all her strength, heels dug into the ground, to stop the animal
from bolting. With the loose end of the rope, she hit it across the
soft part of its nose.
“Walk quietly now!” she ordered.
“Follow!”
To attempt any command more detailed would be folly, for the
stupid animal had suddenly remembered that she was a wolf, not a
two-legs. It rolled its near eye at her, uncertain whether to obey or
to bolt.
“Follow the others!” she commanded and, after
the fashion of its kind it fell into line, comforted in doing what
the others were already doing.
Firekeeper whistled comment to Elation, who had been watching the
exchange from the trees nearby.
The falcon shrieked laughter. “Mistress of mice and mules!
To what lows the proud wolves have come!”
Firekeeper snorted, not deigning to comment further. She was
pleased enough to have made the mule obey her. See if the falcon
could do as well!
That night and for the nights that followed, she and Blind Seer
ranged the far slope of the mountains. This side was not, she
discovered with some disappointment, greatly different from the side
she had known since her puppyhood.
In one way, however, this region was greatly different. Except for
one goshawk, kin to Elation’s peregrines, they met none of the
Royal kind. The only wolves she and Blind Seer encountered were
Cousins. These knew of the Royal Wolves, having ranged west when the
hunting was poor in their own territories, and groveled before Blind
Seer as a pup before an adult.
Firekeeper found their deference right and natural. What troubled
her, having had little contact with Cousins in the past, was how
restricted the Cousins’ interests were.
They could report in great detail about sources of fresh water,
about rival packs, about good hunting, about the danger offered by
awakening bears. Beyond that, they seemed to see nothing, to know
less. She was shocked to realize that they reminded her more of
Queenie, Race’s spotted dog, than they did of wolves.
“Are they stupid?” she asked Blind Seer.
“No,” he said, lifting his head from the haunch of elk
he had been shredding. “They are Cousins. Didn’t the Ones
teach you about them?”
“Not much,” she admitted. “Mostly, they told me
to avoid them, that the Cousins would not protect me as did my own
pack. I thought nothing of this. Packs often have
rivalries.”
“That is so,” Blind Seer agreed. “However, there
is more to our parents’ warning than that. Cousins are lesser
than Royal-kind in more ways than size. We are wiser, more clever,
and possess gifts that the Cousins never have.”
He sat up, forgetting his meat in his pride. Firekeeper snatched
it from between his paws, winning an appreciative snarl from him.
“Tell me more,” she said, tossing him back his food.
Her own meal was long finished.
Blind Seer chewed at the knob end for a moment, considering before
he continued, “Well, Royal-kind is forbidden to breed with
Cousins, even if the urge is great.”
“You are?” she asked, surprised. “But they are
so like you. They even smell like you.”
“Maybe to a human’s nose,” he replied haughtily.
“I tell you, the scent is different, even as the scent of pale
roses and dark roses is different.”
“If you say so,” she said resignedly. “My nose
is dead.”
“I know,” he laughed. “Forget the Cousins,
Sister. We can intimidate them if need arises. Moreover, it is
spring. Like our own pack, they have pups to hunt for. They will be
too busy to bother us.”
Firekeeper nodded and for a time all was silent but for the
cracking of the elk haunch between Blind Seer’s jaws.
“These mules and horses the humans have,” she said at
last, thinking aloud. “They are certainly Cousin-kind, not
Royal-kind.”
“I certainly hope so.” Blind Seer grinned. “If
their Royal-kind are this stupid and docile, there is no hope for the
creatures.”
“What if the only non-humans the two-legs know,” she
mused, “are the Cousin-kind? How stupid they would believe all
others who walk the earth to be!”
“Does that matter?” the great wolf asked lazily.
“It might,” Firekeeper replied thoughtfully. “It
might matter very much.”
Foggy and ghostlike in the drizzle that fell from the purpling
heavens, West Keep loomed before them at twilight, eight days after
they had crossed the gap from the west side of the Iron Mountains.
Had they been in the lowlands, they would have covered the distance
more quickly, but here they were on rough roads, their travel
complicated by spring rains.
Derian, who was tired of living in the saddle and sleeping in a
tent, welcomed the sight of the keep as if he were already out of the
wind, enjoying fresh bread and butter in front of a roaring fire for
which someone else had fetched the wood.
Blysse, sitting perched atop a once stubborn mule, gasped aloud
when she saw the towering heap of dressed stone. For the first time
since Derian had met her she looked completely astonished.
“Hold up for a moment,” he called to the others.
“Blysse needs a minute to adjust. I think the keep scares
her.”
“I guess it would be something of a surprise,” Derian
continued, turning to the young woman. He had learned that she
appreciated being talked to, even if she couldn’t understand
the words. “The bend in the road hid it from view until it was
right on top of us.”
“Deliberately, I would guess,” Earl Kestrel added,
twisting slightly in Coal’s saddle to face them. “A good
strategic move. West Keep has a clear view of the road from its upper
towers, but from the road those same towers blend into the
surrounding terrain until this last mile.”
“Even in daylight?” Ox asked.
“Even in daylight,” Earl Kestrel said, as smugly as if
he had built the place himself.
Blysse turned to Derian. He hadn’t been able to teach her
the word “what” and he bet that was exactly the word she
wanted now. Instead she raised her hands and gestured wildly.
“Rock?” she asked. Then paused, frowning,
“Rock-tent?”
Derian nodded, considering what word to give her. He had tried
hard to avoid homonyms, wanting to reserve the confusion of words
that sounded alike but meant different things until they shared a
larger vocabulary. For that reason, he avoided the word
“keep” and chose another.
“Castle,” he said, pointing, using the slow, careful
cadence he had begun to reserve for new words.
“Castle.”
Blysse pointed. “Castle. Rock tent. Castle.”
She shook her head in amazement. Then, to Derian’s surprise,
she pursed her lips and gave a low whistle, identical to the one Race
used whenever he encountered something he hadn’t been ready
for: a fallen tree or swollen stream blocking the trail; his fish
trap plundered by a raccoon; ants in his boots.
Hearing her, Race laughed, a friendly laugh this time.
“I guess I’ve taught her something, too,” he
chuckled.
Derian nodded, an inkling of how he might manage Race brightening
the prospect of being left at the keep with Race without the
earl’s mitigating presence.
Beside him, Blysse was still gaping at the keep. Her brow wrinkled
in consideration as she tried to make her limited vocabulary express
her awe.
“Castle,” she said, gesturing up to indicate its
height, then out to sketch the extent of the girdling wall.
“Castle ox.”
Derian was puzzled for a moment. Then he grinned.
“Castle big,” he said, stressing the second
word. “Ox big.”
Blysse nodded vigorously.
“Big,” she repeated. Then, after a moment, she added,
“Ox big. Valet no big.”
Derian’s grin broadened as he wondered if it was tact that
had led Blysse to pick Valet as her example of small, rather than
Earl Kestrel, who was at least an inch shorter and somewhat slighter
of build. One thing Blysse seemed to have had no difficulty
interpreting were the relative degrees of importance within the
little company.
“Ox big,” he said, urging Roanne into a walk once more
and hearing the rest of the company follow suit, “Valet no big.
Valet small.”
He decided to leave the minor refinement of “not”
versus “no” for another time. Abstract concepts were a
hurdle he hadn’t been certain how to cross. Now that Blysse had
provided him with a starting point, he wasn’t going to waste
it.
They continued their language lesson as the pack train crossed the
last mile. At Earl Kestrel’s signal, Race rode ahead, blowing
his horn to alert the residents of West Keep that their master came
unexpected. Derian spared a moment of pity for the garrison if they
hadn’t kept the place in perfect order. Earl Kestrel was not
the most forgiving of masters.
That thought made him redouble his efforts with Blysse, suddenly
aware of the earl’s grey eyes watching him and the cool,
calculating mind assessing his student’s progress.
Earl Kestrel had uses for this woman who might or might not be his
niece and the best claimant to the throne of Hawk Haven. He would not
be forgiving if a mere horse carter impeded his advance. Certainly
there would be rewards for success, but Derian was sure that the
penalties for failure would be far greater in both degree and
kind.
Stone, stone on the floor. Stone surrounding. Caves made by human
hands.
Firekeeper felt some relief when the chamber into which Fox Hair
brought her had a ceiling made of wood and two great arched openings
in the sides. She rushed to one of these and leaned out, reassuring
herself by the sensation of the fresh, wet air on her face that the
wide world outside had not vanished.
When her first panic had abated, she noticed that she could see
for a great distance from this height. Directly below, several
stranger two-legs were leading the horses and mules into a shelter.
Beyond the narrow heap-of-stones-piled-on-top-of-stones that Derian
had called a wall, there was a cleared area, but then the forest
began again.
Even in the gathering darkness she could locate Blind Seer sitting
on his haunches in the shadow of a tall tree near the road. The
blue-eyed wolf was looking up at the castle, studying its shape. From
the tilt of his head, she knew he was quizzical, but not afraid, and
his lack of fear for himself or for her gave the young woman
courage.
Drawing inside, Firekeeper shook the water droplets from her hair
and turned to Derian. He was standing with his back to a fire built
in the side of the chamber, watching her with an expression that, had
she known it, was twin to Blind Seer’s.
“Castle big,” she commented with what coolness she
could muster.
Derian nodded. A knocking from the side of the chamber where they
had entered interrupted whatever he had been about to say. Derian
said something Firekeeper didn’t understand. Then, apparently
in response, a frightening thing happened.
A piece of the wall moved, revealing an opening behind it.
Firekeeper sprang to the opening she had been looking out of a
moment before and perched on the broad ledge beside it, ready to dive
out and take her chances falling.
Fox Hair seemed amused, not nervous, so she held her pose,
watching guardedly. The scent of food drifted in from the opening.
That of meat cooked with herbs was immediately familiar. There were
other scents that were almost familiar. These teased an awakening
part of her, bringing with them a mingled sense of comfort and of
longing that made Firekeeper strangely indecisive.
The food was carried by a two-legs nearly as stout as Ox but
barely half his height, a person built from rounding shapes that
included astonishing, swelling protrusions in the vicinity of her
chest. When this person saw Firekeeper she spoke, her voice
twittering like birdsong, high but sweet.
Derian made introductions, pointing first to Firekeeper, then to
the stranger and back again.
“Blysse, Steward Daisy. Steward Daisy, Blysse.”
Obediently, Firekeeper repeated the lesson, wondering why so small
a person should have so long a name. Her words released another spate
of birdsong from the little person, sounds that held a distinctly
cooing note along with the word “Blysse.”
Being called Blysse always made Firekeeper feel vaguely
uncomfortable, though she had no idea why it should. The words by
which the two-legs named themselves meant nothing to her. It was
quite reasonable that they employed an equally meaningless sound to
name her. But the name Blysse did make Firekeeper uncomfortable, so
much so that she longed for the day when she would speak enough human
tongue to teach them her wolf-given name.
Steward Daisy departed after making more cooing sounds, and
Firekeeper and Derian shared the food on the tray. One of the almost
familiar smells proved to belong to something called
“bread,” a soft, warm substance like nothing else that
Firekeeper had ever eaten. She liked it best spread with the salty
fat called “butter.” Jam, with its taste of overripe
berries, was good, but almost too rich.
Satiated, Firekeeper removed a blanket from one of the packs and
spread it in front of the fire. A few hours’ sleep, and then
she would decide how to get out to Blind Seer.
SHE awakened to find the fire burned down to red and white coals and
Fox Hair gone, doubtless to his own chamber.
Stretching, she located an oddly shaped container full of water,
its neck so tight that she could barely get her hand inside to cup
out water with which to appease her thirst.
As soon as Steward Daisy had departed, Derian had shown Firekeeper
how the door into the room worked. Now the wolf tested her memory and
was pleased to discover that she could open it without help. When she
scouted outside, she found a two-legs drowsing on a stool at the end
of the hall.
Distrusting this stranger, Firekeeper retreated and considered the
window. The drop to the ground below was considerable, but no worse
than from some trees she had climbed. Still, the earth below was
covered with stone, not soft leaves and forest duff.
Unwilling to risk a broken leg, Firekeeper rooted through the pack
Derian had left in her room. Most of the contents were useless, but
at the very bottom there was a coil of rope.
Over the past several days, Firekeeper had used rope to guide a
mule, to help set up tents, and to tie packs onto their reluctant
bearers. Now she anchored the rope to an iron loop on the windowsill
and used it to slow her drop to the ground. She ended up with burns
on her palms and a long scrape on her calf.
Well pleased, Firekeeper growled the barking dogs into submission
and, with a running start and a light foot on the edge of a cart,
scrabbled over the wall surrounding the castle.
On the other side, Blind Seer was waiting for her, blue eyes
glowing in the darkness.
BOOK TWO
VI
Elise archer, daughter of Baron Ivon Archer and Lady
Aurella Wellward, great-niece of King Tedric, was not so much
gathering flowers in the royal castle gardens as she was gathering
rumors. However, if her activities were dismissed as such an innocent
pursuit, she had no complaints.
Slight, almost fragile of form, peaches and cream of complexion,
with pale golden hair the very shade of early-morning sunlight and
sea-green eyes, seventeen-year-old Elise was just now becoming
beautiful.
For the only daughter of King Tedric’s nephew Ivon, son
himself of the Grand Duchess Rosene, beauty was hardly the advantage
it would be for a woman of lesser birth. Marriage for Elise was as
inevitable as rain in springtime. Nevertheless, Elise found this new
bloom of beauty a pleasant thing and smiled softly into her bouquet,
feeling the admiring gazes of gardeners and grooms follow her
graceful progress. “Good morning, Lady.”
“Good morning.”
“Good morning.” The murmurs followed Elise from damask
dark roses to brilliant yellow daisies to honeysuckle vines awash
with heavily scented flowers. She stopped by a bed of gladiolas in a
mixture of colors from pure white to deepest violet with shades of
pink and red between.
Shifting her nosegay of roses to her left hand, she fumbled for
her gardening clippers and, as suddenly as the High Sorcerer’s
griffin in the tales of Elrox Beyond the Sea, the head gardener
appeared at her side.
“Perhaps I might assist, Lady Elise?”
She smiled, a real smile, though it hid some guile. She had been
aware of the spare, sunburned figure of Timin, the master gardener,
anxiously tracking her progress for some time now. He had left her
alone among the roses, settling for wringing his hands as she clipped
a few blossoms, but the gladiolas had drawn him forth.
“Thank you, Master Gardener,” Elise replied. “I
had intended to add a few pink gladiolas to my bouquet, but these
look rather picked over.”
There was no reproof in her tone, only mild consternation, but the
gardener colored scarlet, then white, as if he had been found guilty
of treason.
“ ‘Twas the arrival of the Duchess and Earl Kestrel
that done it, Lady,” he managed as explanation.
“You were asked to supply flowers for the banquet
tables,” Elise helped him along. “I noticed the bouquets.
I hadn’t realized you’d been forced to raid your flower
beds to make the arrangements.”
Her sympathetic tone—and the fact that she had admired these
gardens since she was a toddler—opened the floodgate.
“I was, Lady,” Timin Gardener said. “Never has
there been such a springtime and summer for the nobility visiting the
king. It seems that as soon as the weather grew pleasant and the
roads a bit dry that every niece and nephew of a noble house has seen
fit to call. That many receptions taxes those beds I grow just for
cutting flowers, it does, pushes me out into the gardens.”
Elise nodded sympathetically, but beneath her gentle,
compassionate expression she was willing the man to keep talking.
Bending to cut her three magnificent pink glads with petals edged in
sunny yellow, the gardener continued:
“I exhausted the best of my daffodils and tulips when Grand
Duke Gadman brought Lord Rolfston Redbriar and his brood to pay their
respects to their uncle early this spring. Boar be praised that Earl
Kestrel didn’t come calling then. Neither sky-blue nor scarlet
are easy to find early in the season.”
“There are crocus for the blue,” Elise said,
considering.
“Too fragile for the banquet hall,” the gardener
sniffed. “Besides, we had the word that the king wanted Kestrel
given highest honors. That takes more than a few crocus wilting among
apple blossoms and then me having to answer in the autumn when
there’s not fruit enough on the trees.”
“True,” Elise agreed. “House Kestrel calls for
stronger colors. It’s a good thing Duchess Kestrel waited to
ask for audience until the summer.”
She stroked the petals of the gladiolas the gardener had handed to
her before tucking them in with her roses. The man was mollified,
seeing that she was not going to ask for more.
“I don’t recall,” Elise said cautiously,
“such a fuss being made when Earl Kestrel came to court over
the winter. He was in and out so much that his sleigh had a permanent
berth in the forecourt.”
“True enough,” Timin Gardener agreed, squatting to tug
a weed from among the flowers, then straightening as he suddenly
remembered her station.
He spoke more rapidly to make amends. “True enough, Lady,
but the word that came down from Steward Silver when she ordered the
decorations for the banquet hall was that Earl Kestrel had sent ahead
a letter thrice sealed. Once with his personal seal, once with his
mother’s, and once with the great seal of their
house.”
Elise nodded, hoping the glow of excitement didn’t show in
her eyes. Such a sequence of seals indicated a matter of the greatest
secrecy.
“I wonder,” she said guilelessly, “what business
could merit such? Earl Kestrel has been reigning beside his mother at
her behest these five years since. His seal is as good as hers in
matters of state.”
“They say,” the head gardener offered, strolling with
her down a path bordered in stocks and snapdragons, “that Earl
Kestrel journeyed west early this spring, leaving when the roads were
still sure to be deep in mud—not the usual time for traveling
at all. He only went with a small retinue and none of them are
talking about where they went.”
“None?”
“None, Lady Elise. To my way of thinking, that’s as
interesting as if they were talking waterfalls.”
“I agree,” she said thoughtfully, and carefully turned
the conversation to other matters.
Like his father Purcel, Elise’s sire, Ivon Archer, had made his
mark by serving in the army of Hawk Haven. That had been a wise move.
Although the Grand Duchess Rosene had granted her elder child the
title of baron at his father’s death twenty years before, Ivon
was aware that not everyone in the kingdom appreciated King
Chalmer’s decision to permit his youngest daughter to many the
dashing war hero who had captured her heart.
Ivon knew that there were many among the six Great Houses for whom
his descent from the grand duchess was far outweighed by his common
blood—never mind that King Chalmer had made Purcel a baron,
head of his own lesser noble house, complete with coat of arms, deed
of land, and a name into perpetuity.
It hadn’t been so long ago that Queen Zorana had created the
Great Houses to reward her staunchest supporters—just over a
hundred years. That was long enough for pride to emerge but not long
enough for the entitlement to be invulnerable to challenge by upstart
houses.
Elise had spent most of her young life in a manor in the capital
belonging to House Archer. However, with the first of his war booty
the then Lord Ivon had purchased property of his own, for he could
not know that his father would die comparatively young, or that he
himself would be blessed with only one child. Ivon’s own
property was held separately from the Archer grant, but, as the years
passed and no sibling followed Elise into the world, it was likely
that she would inherit both.
Rather than being insulted by Ivon’s building his estate,
King Tedric seemed to have appreciated his nephew’s gesture of
independence. Repeatedly, Ivon had earned command of his own company
and promotions based solely upon merit. In her turn, Ivon’s
wife, Lady Aurella Wellward, had made herself indispensable to her
aunt, Queen Elexa. Therefore, although just a grandniece and heir to
a lesser noble house, Elise had always been given free run of the
palace and its grounds.
As a child, this privilege had gained her some mild envy from her
cousins. These days, that envy had turned into something sharper.
King Tedric, rumor said, would name an heir to his throne come
Lynx Moon this late autumn, for this year the Festival of the Eagle
fell then by lot. The king’s own children were dead, as was all
the line of his older sister, Princess Marras. By the strictest
interpretation of the laws of inheritance, the king’s heir
should be his next sibling or her children, but old King Chalmer had
wed Princess Caryl to Prince Tavis Seagleam of Bright Bay in the hope
that the marriage alliance would foster peace between the two rival
countries.
Neither the marriage nor the alliance had been a success. Princess
Caryl had produced one son, Allister Seagleam. Although he was
reported to be a man grown with a family of his own, most residents
of Hawk Haven felt he was not really a contender for the throne. Who
would accept a foreigner when there were native-born possibilities
readily available?
In addition to Marras, Tedric, and Caryl, King Chalmer and Queen
Rose had produced two other children: Gadman and Rosene. Gadman and
Rosene were both still alive, but no one really expected King Tedric
to name either as his heir, for both were within a few years of his
own advanced age. Hawk Haven deserved more than a temporary monarch
after King Tedric’s long reign.
Grand Duke Gadman offered in his place a son, Lord Rolfston
Red-briar of the House of the Goshawk. Lord Rolfston had five
children of his own, so the succession would be secure. Moreover, a
Redbriar in his own right, he was married to a member of the
influential Shield family.
For her part, Grand Duchess Rosene had two living children: Ivon
and Zorana. Both these Archer scions were well married into Great
House families; both had children of their own. Rosene’s
partisans, of whom the Houses of Wellward and Trueheart were not the
least, argued that two possibilities from a line were better than
one. However, even these partisans were split as to which provided
the best choice: war-hero Ivon, with his staunch popular following,
or Zorana, with her brood of four and experience with the domestic
politics of the kingdom.
Personally Elise felt that, despite her frequenting the royal
palace, she herself had little chance of being named heir, nor had
her father and his sister, with their commoner father.
Grand Duke Gadman had married into a Great House, as had his son.
Thus, Rolfston Redbriar’s claim had the support of both his
wife’s and his mother’s Great Houses, where her own
father could only claim the sure support of his wife’s.
However, Grand Duke Gadman and his elder brother the king had long
quarreled over matters of state. Observers argued that given their
past disagreements, King Tedric would pass over his brother’s
line out of spite. Then?
Then Lady Elise Archer could quite easily find herself heir
apparent to the throne of Hawk Haven.
“And quickly now, Blysse, give me your hands.” Derian put
out his own, grasping those the two-legged wolf awkwardly
extended.
She did so, growling quietly to herself, displeased by her lack of
grace. In most matters when she compared herself with humankind she
was grace itself, but she had yet to learn the trick of this thing
called dancing.
Derian pretended not to notice her pique.
“That’s right,” he praised as she relaxed into
his guidance. “Now, three steps to the side. Then when the
music gets faster, we spin, so…”
One moon’s turning and half of another had done great things
for Firekeeper’s ability to understand what Derian said to her.
Hardly ever now did he use a word she didn’t know or for which
she could not deduce a meaning. Also now she understood the ways and
means of clothing (though not why humans wore so much of it) and how
to ride a horse without first threatening it with fear for its
life.
Dancing, though, dancing had proven to be a source of constant
puzzlement, a puzzlement that ran side by side with delight. In all
other things physical Firekeeper felt herself a wind through the
treetops when she compared the grace of her movements with those of
Race and Derian. When dancing, though…
Firekeeper snorted in disgust when—distracted by her
thoughts—she trod on Derian’s toes. From one corner of
the room, Race Forester heard her and chuckled. She forgave him for
the sake of the flute he held in one hand.
Music, especially that of the flute, was a pleasure heretofore
only suspected in birdsong and burbling brook. Firekeeper had been
enchanted the first time she heard Race play, so long ago when they
had crossed the mountains with Hawk Nose and his people.
As soon as Race had grown easier around her, Firekeeper had
insisted that he show her how to draw the notes from the slender
piece of carved wood. It had proven far more difficult than she had
imagined. Together, dancing and music raised her opinion of the
two-legs until for the first time she was not ashamed to have been
born of them, rather than of wolves.
“Turn right, Blysse,” Derian called, gently pushing
her in that direction. “Then back to me and out
again…”
Concentrating on where to place her feet, on the timing of the
steps, Firekeeper saw Race nod approvingly. They’d made a great
deal of progress since the day he tried to loop a rope around her and
imprison her in the human world. That progress had all been
Derian’s doing, for Firekeeper had been content to have Race
fear and respect her. Despite her lack of overt cooperation, Derian
had coaxed the scout into helping with Firekeeper’s education,
asking Race to teach her the names for plants and animals, how to
shape snares and traps, how to shoot a bow.
Race was pleased when Firekeeper proved to be an apt pupil, was
flattered when she showed more interest in his lessons than in
Derian’s. Eventually, Race realized how little Firekeeper knew
of human woodcraft and his envy of her began to fade. When he
realized how ungrudgingly she shared her own knowledge, they became
friends.
Firekeeper still thought of Race as a lesser pack member, far
below Derian and farther below Earl Kestrel. She knew that if need
arose she could make him cringe. However, now that Firekeeper had
become acquainted with some of the residents of the keep, Race no
longer rested quite so low in her estimation.
“Water,” she said to Derian when the dance ended.
“Thirsty me.”
“I am thirsty,” he corrected patiently.
“You, too?” she asked, pouring them both full mugs
from the pitcher set on the stand at the side of the room. She knew
perfectly well what Derian wanted and decided to humor him.
“I know,” she said, before he could decide if she had
been teasing him. “Say: I am thirsty. Why? Shorter
other.”
“Shorter,” Derian said, “but not
correct.”
“So?”
“So, would you eat hemlock?”
“No! Hemlock poison.”
“That’s right. And believe me, Blysse, words used
wrong are like poison.”
Derian sighed. The little line between his brows deepened as it
did more and more frequently since Firekeeper had learned to ask why,
instead of simply parroting whatever he said. After several swallows
from his mug, Derian tried to explain further.
“Imagine we’re hunting,” he said. “If you
want to make the deer come to you, would you imitate the sound of a
frightened deer?”
“No!”
“Would you make the sound of a sick deer?”
“No. But I say ‘Thirsty me’ not makes fear, not
makes sick. Just makes faster.”
“Yes, but faster is not always better.” Derian waved
his hand in dismissal. “Let’s leave it for
now.”
Firekeeper shrugged. “Dance more?”
“Not now. Dinner. Formal attire.”
She wrinkled up her nose. “No formal attire. Pinches. Skin
no breathe.”
“Formal attire,” Derian repeated firmly.
Firekeeper knew that he was serious by how he made himself swell
up like a bullfrog. When she didn’t obey, he simply refused to
acknowledge her until she did. She was amazed how something so unlike
wolf discipline could hurt as sharply.
“Formal attire,” she agreed, consoling herself with
the thought that later she could shed almost everything but the
leather breeches and vest and run with Blind Seer.
Still, as she permitted Steward Daisy to lace her into a formal
gown, this consolation seemed far distant indeed even flirting with
the pretty kitchen maid couldn’t keep Derian from reviewing
over and over again in his memory the text of Earl Kestrel’s
latest letter. Despite the grace notes that began a formal missive,
the text had been blunt. “Although I concede that six weeks is hardly enough time
to break a colt to saddle, much less time to teach the Lady Blysse
all she needs to know, the situation here in Eagle’s Nest has
become critical. Both Grand Duke Gadman and Grand Duchess Rosene are
urging King Tedric to name as his heir one of their children or
grandchildren. Failing that, they are demanding that he at least
indicate which line has precedence over the other. “Furthermore, the faction in favor of Duke Allister
Seagleam of Bright Bay is gaining adherents. Among those who have
most recently turned to his cause are those who have become weary of
the king’s siblings’ continued political
maneuvering. “If Lady Blysse is to be recognized to her greatest
advantage, it must be before King Tedric names his heir. Afterwards,
she could be accused of inciting civil war. Therefore, I command you
to bring Lady Blysse to me at the Kestrel Manse in Eagle’s
Nest. In order that she arrive without notice, you will be met at the
Westriver coach stop by one of your family’s
vehicles.” A squeal from the kitchen maid as his fingers
involuntarily tightened around hers brought Derian back to himself.
In apology, he kissed her lightly on the injured members and she
giggled and hurried off before the cook could see her blush.
Still fuming, Derian strode through the halls of West Keep, his
boots ringing against the flagstones.
Damn Norvin Norwood, though! “Inciting civil war”! It
would not be Blysse who would be so accused, but Norvin himself.
Unhappily, Blysse would not be immune to censure. No one who looked
into those dark eyes could believe she was as innocent as she truly
was. Derian himself had his doubts from time to time.
Running up the steps to the highest observation tower wore Derian
out enough that he was glad to pause. Leaning on the stone sill, he
looked out into the gathering darkness. Drizzle was falling, making
the night seem hazy and unreal. In the light from the rising
moon—about half-full tonight—Derian imagined that he saw
his charge flitting across the cleared zone about the keep’s
walls and darting into the forest.
That was imagination, though. If she was out there, he would never
see her. Time and time again during the first weeks of their stay in
the keep, Race Forester had tried to track Blysse, tried to learn
where she was going. Finally, he had given up, admitting that her
skills were nearly supernatural.
Privately, Derian believed that having learned from Race how he
read tracks, Lady Blysse simply took care to avoid leaving those
traces for which the woodsman would search. Certainly, anyone who
could have so much trouble tying a bodice lace or eating with a spoon
could not be gifted with supernatural powers.
Remembering the woman’s still execrable table manners, her
refusal to wear shoes, her tendency to growl at any and all of the
keep’s dogs, Derian felt a wide, ironic grin light his
face.
So Earl Kestrel thought that he could use the woman as a pawn in
his political games? He was going to discover that he had a wolf by
the tail and daren’t let go.
Fat warm raindrops greeted Firekeeper when she emerged from her
window into the courtyard surrounding West Keep. She cast a glance to
right then to left, probing each shadow with her gaze. Race, however,
seemed to have permanently given up their game of hide-and-seek.
Slightly disappointed, she climbed the wall and dropped to the
damp earth on the other side. No Race here either. Dismissing him
from her thoughts, she loped over to the tree line, swung up into the
branches of a spreading maple, then crossed from there into another
of its kind. The moonlight made the journey easy, so easy that she
arrived at the rendezvous before Blind Seer.
The blue-eyed wolf silently glided beside her as she was bending
her head to drink from the nearby brook.
“If I were a mountain cat,” he said, “I would
have broken your back.”
“If you were a mountain cat,” she replied, punching
him on the shoulder, “I would have smelled you a mile off. How
is the hunting?”
“Good,” he answered. “Even the latest of
winter’s sleepers are long awake. The deer grow fat on the new
grass. I grow fat on the deer. Do they feed you well in your stone
lair?”
“Enough,” she said, “though much of what they
eat tastes odd. Did I tell you that Fox Hair insists I eat as he does
now? He’s so slow! I could clear the platters while he is
spreading butter on his bread.”
“Two-legs are not wolves,” Blind Seer replied
practically. “Their ways are not ours.”
“True.”
They sat for a while, watching the play of moonlight on the
rippling waters of the brook.
“For how long does your trail go with mine?” she
asked, suddenly interrupting the silence. “Hawk Nose sent a
message this morning and since then Fox Hair has smelled of bitter
sweat. I heard him giving orders for supplies to Steward Daisy. When
we went out for a riding lesson, he spoke with the groom about the
readiness of the horses for the road. I think that soon we three
outliers get called to the human pack.”
“Do you want my trail to follow yours?” the wolf
asked, leaning against her. “You’ve lived in that great
stone lair one moon’s death and another’s new burning.
Surely you’ve confirmed what the Cousins told me. Two-legs do
not like wolves, even little ones like the Cousins. I don’t
think that they will like me at all.”
Firekeeper flung her arm around his great furry neck.
“They will be terrified of you,” she said with great
confidence. “Never doubt it. Still, I would have you run with
me longer. I can dance a few dances and prattle in their tongue, but
my blood is a wolf’s blood for this veneer of
humanity.”
“Wolf’s blood has always run beneath your naked
hide,” Blind Seer affirmed. “But I have no wish to see my
blood spilled by one of those arrows Race shoots so
straight.”
“No,” Firekeeper considered. “This is a problem,
but I think, from what Fox Hair has shown me, from the tales he has
told me, that where the two-legs den together, there are many such
buildings as the keep. There you may not be able to hide from their
eyes as easily as you have done here. Best that they know you are my
companion. They hold some odd respect for me. It may extend to you,
as fear of the adult wolves protects the pups.”
“Perhaps,” Blind Seer said. “We must think
further on this.”
“But not for too long,” Firekeeper said. “A
season is changing, not of the world, but in my life. I cannot turn
from the humans until I know more.”
“And I,” admitted Blind Seer, “cannot turn from
you, even if following you should mean my death.”
Derian had anticipated having difficulty getting Blysse ready for the
journey. What he had not anticipated was having trouble with the
horses.
On the morning of their scheduled departure, however, the young
woman was calm and collected, but the equines were edgy, requiring
the assistance of two grooms to calm them while Derian inspected
girths and pack straps.
Chestnut coat burnished and glossy from several weeks of easy
living, Roanne snaked back her ears and tried to nip the groom
standing nearest to where she was tied.
Race’s buckskin and Blysse’s grey were hardly any
better behaved, though the latter, having been chosen specifically
for his placid temper, continued to chew a wisp of hay while rolling
a white-rimmed eye at anything that moved.
Lady Blysse, dressed in her favorite battered leather vest and
hacked-off trousers, came out of the keep, carrying the saddlebags
the kitchen staff had packed for them. Her dark eyes sparkled,
dancing with what Derian hoped was anticipation. Seeing the curve of
her lips, he feared that it was mischief.
“Give me those packs,” he said, surreptitiously eyeing
them to see if she might have stolen something.
She did so, and as he was loading the bags onto the pack mule,
Blysse cocked her head, catching some sound of which he was unaware.
Then, the smile broadening across her face, she loped across the
cleared kill zone surrounding West Keep toward the forest.
Race, who had been chatting with Steward Daisy, come forth to see
her guests safely on the road, shouted after her:
“Come back here, Blysse!”
The young woman slowed, waving her hand to indicate that she had
heard, but kept going.
“Blysse!”
This time she halted right at the edge of the scrub growth
bordering the meadow. With her left hand, she made an elaborate
beckoning gesture toward something in the woods; with her right she
made the sign for Race and Derian to wait where they were.
Derian’s heart began to beat faster. He wondered if there
might have been more truth to Earl Kestrel’s tale of
Blysse’s survival than even that facile politician had ever
dreamed. Could Prince Barden be out there in the forest, ready to
emerge only now that he had been assured that his daughter would be
treated well?
Derian glanced over at Race and saw that the woodsman had grown
pale, his breath coming fast and shallow. Doubtless, being more
superstitious than Derian, he feared not a living prince, but a
vengeful ancestral spirit. Surreptitiously, Race fingered a talisman
hanging from his belt, invoking his own ancestors’ protection
against this imagined threat.
Oblivious of their reactions, Blysse repeated the beckoning
gesture more urgently, drawing forth whatever lurked within the
suddenly mysterious trees. Several pounding heartbeats later, without
the least whisper of motion, an enormous grey wolf slipped from the
cover to stand at the young woman’s side, so close that his fur
brushed her leg.
A more usual wolfs head might have reached to her waist; this
beast’s reached nearly to her chest. Moreover, his eyes were
not the more usual tawny gold or deep brown of a wolf, but instead a
brilliant blue.
Steward Daisy screamed once and would have again, but Race
smothered her mouth with his hand. One of the grooms began muttering
invocations for ancestral protection. Derian looked at Race and found
that, like him, the forester’s shock was melting away beneath
the glow of comprehension.
“Well,” Race said, his taut voice betraying his
tension. “Now we know where she’s been going every
night.”
Derian nodded, feeling a grin split the stiff mask of his face.
“And is Earl Kestrel ever in for a surprise.”
But Norvin Norwood, Earl Kestrel, was not the only one due for
further surprises. Even as Lady Blysse took her first step toward
them, the great wolf pacing at her heel, a shrill scream pierced the
morning air.
A blue-grey blur plummeted out of the sky, resolving into a
perfect peregrine falcon the size of an eagle. The bird circled once
about woman and wolf, then came to rest atop the baggage packed on
the mule. Ruffling its feathers, it shifted from one foot to the
other, cocking its head so that it could study each of the humans
from brilliant golden-rimmed eyes.
This critical inspection proved too much for Steward Daisy.
Sobbing, she fled into the safety of the castle walls. Using her
departure as an excuse, the two grooms hurried after; ostensibly to
comfort her, in reality to put solid stone between themselves and a
woman whose companions were giant beasts out of legend.
Having long since relegated these to a subordinate position in her
private hierarchy, Lady Blysse seemed indifferent to their reactions.
Her dark gaze was upon Derian and Race. The tightness in her
shoulders relaxed only slightly when she saw that neither of them had
made any offensive move.
Race’s dog Queenie had not been so much the coward as to
flee from her master, but as the wolf closed the distance, she
cringed and whined. Derian fought back an urge to do something
similar by speaking to Race as if this encounter were the most usual
thing in the world.
“I’d forgotten until now,” he said, “that
when I first spotted her footprint, there was a wolf’s print
beside it.”
Race nodded.
“I hadn’t wanted to remember,” Race admitted,
“not once we found her to be but a girl and so ill
used.”
“Then there were the wolfs’ howls we heard each night
while we were west of the gap.”
“Fewer and more distant,” Race added, his voice back
to normal now, “once we crossed, but still out there, as if
they were watching us.”
“I guess they were,” Derian said, “or at least
they were watching her.”
“And the falcon,” Race continued, “it sure looks
like the one that attacked me when I tried to put a rope on
Blysse.”
“It does,” Derian agreed, remembering pushing Race out
of the striking range of those talons. “I wondered then, but
there’s been so much else to wonder about.”
“I didn’t want to wonder,” Race admitted.
“I didn’t like where that wondering led me.”
Listening to their conversation but not commenting, Lady Blysse
halted her advance before the horses’ panic at the proximity of
the wolf reached the point where they might do themselves harm.
Derian wondered that the equines showed even this much control,
then realized that they must have been aware of the wolf’s
presence for a long while, far more aware than the humans had been.
What to him was a complete surprise was to them a long-borne
menace.
“Well, Blysse,” Derian said, “are these your
pets?”
“No,” she said, shaking her head vigorously and giving
Queenie a disdainful look. “Queenie pet. Wolf and falcon are my
friends.”
Her careful speech showed Derian how important it was to Blysse
that he and Race understand her. Even with his constant badgering,
she still tended to drop what she viewed as nonessential words. If
she was specifying that these animals were friends, rather than pets
or property, it was an essential distinction—at least to
her.
“Friends,” he repeated, taking in a breath so deep
that his lungs ached. “Well, I guess you had better introduce
us then.”
Blysse nodded solemnly, then indicated the wolf. In some distant
part of his mind, Derian was amused to see that she used the little
court mannerisms he had been careful to teach her.
“This is Not-Seeing Seer,” she said carefully.
By this point, Derian wouldn’t have been at all surprised if
the wolf had spoken with a human voice. It did not. Instead, it took
a step forward and stretched out its forelimbs in a credible,
non-groveling, bow.
Automatically, Derian bowed in return and Race gave a short jerk
in imitation. Smiling now, Blysse gestured to the peregrine
falcon.
“This is…” she paused, as if having trouble
translating the bird’s name, “Fierce Joy in
Flight.”
The falcon didn’t bow. Instead it made a soft, mewling cry,
quite conversational in tone.
“Pleased to meet you,” Derian responded solemnly.
“The same,” Race said. To himself he muttered,
“I must be dreaming this!”
“No dream,” Derian said. “Though it would be
easier if it was.”
He looked at Blysse. “I suppose that the wolf and the falcon
are coming with us.”
She looked puzzled, then worked through the essential parts of the
question to get at its meaning.
“With us, yes.” She put her hand on the wolf’s
head. “He my kin. Falcon is friend. They go with me.”
“The city,” Derian said, trying to dissuade her,
though he already knew the attempt would be futile, “is not a
place for wolves.”
“City can be place for wolves,” she said stubbornly.
“I go to city. Wolf goes with me.”
Derian surrendered. Maybe once she saw a town or two she would
change her mind. He doubted it, but it was a pleasant fantasy.
“Shall we go, then?” he asked. Then he mused to the
air, “The horses aren’t going to like this at
all.”
“I can run with horses,” Blysse replied.
“Not-Seeing Seer will run near me.”
She laughed. “Maybe then, someone think he dog, not
wolf.”
“There’s a chance of that,” Race admitted,
speaking for the first time since the introductions had been
concluded. “At least they’ll give a second thought before
shooting.”
“True.”
Derian worried about whether Blysse could keep up with the horses
now that the party would be traveling on roads rather than navigating
rough woodland trails, but he put the worry by. Either she could or
she could not. They’d deal with that problem when it became a
problem.
“Well,” Derian said, “I’ll loosen the
girth on your gelding, but he’ll be ready if you get tired. Is
that all right, Blysse?”
“Yes. No.”
She bit her lip, her expression showing the frustration she so
often felt when her grasp of the language was insufficient for her
needs. Derian waited, knowing he would only add to her frustration if
he tried guessing at what she needed to say. After consideration, she
began again:
“Yes for horse,” she said. “No for Blysse. My
name not Blysse. Wolf call me Firekeep. Firekeeper.”
Derian had eventually been able to teach her the verb “to
keep”—not an easy concept, but one made easier to explain
once they were settled where so many things were kept: keys at the
Steward’s belt, food in the pantry, clothing in a press.
“Firekeeper,” he repeated. Then, realizing he sounded
much like her, he asked, “Why? Why Firekeeper?”
She touched the bag containing flint and steel hanging around her
neck. “King Wolf, Queen Wolf, give me. Teach me.”
She scowled, perhaps reading the disbelief in his eyes. Quickly
Derian schooled his expression to polite attentiveness and hoped that
Race would do the same. He’d gone to great trouble to teach
Firekeeper hierarchical titles and had found that she grasped the
concept, if not the words, with amazing ease. If she said King Wolf,
she meant the wolf with the most authority.
“King Wolf,” he prompted, “gave them to
you.”
“King Wolf, Queen Wolf,” she insisted. “No wolf
make fire but me. I am Firekeeper.”
Derian let this go, his head reeling with the implications of this
simple statement. Not only was he to believe that Blysse could
understand what wolves said, he was also to believe that they could
teach her how to strike fire with flint and steel.
More disturbing still was Blysse’s repeated identification
of herself with these wolves.
“Blysse…” he began, then corrected himself when
she growled and the wolf beside her raised his hackles.
“Firekeeper, you are not a wolf. You are a human, like me, like
Race.”
“I am wolf,” she said placidly. “Wolf with two
legs and no fur, but wolf in blood.”
Race put his hand on Derian’s arm. “Leave it, Derian.
Leave it. We must get on the road and before we do so, you’d
better decide whether or not you want to warn Earl Kestrel about this
new development with his niece.”
“Or if I want to risk Steward Daisy sending word ahead by
pigeon.” Derian pressed at his eyes, feeling a headache coming
on. “How can I tell Earl Kestrel that Blysse… I mean
Firekeeper… thinks she’s a wolf?”
“Don’t,” Race said practically, “but warn
him about her unusual companions. We have at least a week on the road
to figure out what to do about the rest. More if the weather’s
bad.”
“At least a week,” Derian repeated, turning blindly
back toward the keep, mentally drafting his message. “This is
going to be a very, very interesting ride.”
VII
Usually, Elise enjoyed a chance to meet with her
cousins. Being related to the king, even so relatively distant a
relation as a grandniece, was a difficult role. There were so few
people to whom you were just another person, who could forget that
royal shadow looming over you. Being heir to House Archer only
complicated the matter.
In all honesty, she admitted, the barony hardly mattered right
now. Neither her grandmother Rosene nor her great-uncle Gadman had
ever let anyone forget that they and their descendants were royal
kin. Theirs had been a harmless enough pretention, one good for the
best seats at public games and partners at dances until Crown
Princess Lovella had been killed in battle. Then the entire
succession affair had opened up, quietly at first, then with greater
and greater intensity when King Tedric refused to name a new heir
quickly.
Now a gathering of cousins was a little like a gathering of
wolves, each knowing that there could be only one head of the pack.
Even those like herself who weren’t certain they wanted to be
that head were even less certain that they wanted anyone else to be
so.
“You can almost hear the growling,” she murmured to
herself, taking a goblet of wine from a tray held by a polite servant
and going to sit beside her cousin Purcel.
Named for their mutual grandfather, the war hero Purcel Archer,
Purcel Trueheart was a powerfully built youth of fifteen, who had
already distinguished himself in several skirmishes, earning himself
the rank of lieutenant.
Courage was not Purcel’s only asset. His budding tactical
sense had also been tested several times. These days, when he was
called to his commanders’ tents, it was not mere flattery that
gave him a place at their councils. Many argued that Purcel was the
single best reason for his mother, Lady Zorana, to be named crown
princess, for at her death she would be succeeded by a proven
battlefield commander.
Watching Purcel slurp down his beer and munch peanuts in
ill-concealed boredom, Elise wondered. Warlord, yes, and welcome to
it. King? As King Tedric had proven, a good king must be able to
reign as well as to command. Both Aunt Zorana and Great-Aunt Rosene
argued that Purcel would learn patience and discretion as he matured.
Given the familial longevity—the descendants of Zorana the
Great seemed to live long lives if they survived their
childhoods—Zorana would reign for many years herself before
joining the ancestors, and Purcel could learn the skills necessary to
be a monarch from her.
Elise wondered, though, if a man who from his youngest years had
been praised for quick, decisive action could learn to reflect and
consider rather than charge ahead.
Purcel brightened visibly as she seated herself next to him. Two
years apart in age, they had become close playmates once she had
stopped dismissing him as a baby. Even when he was three and she a
mature and thoughtful five, he had loved to trot about on a pony as
chubby as he was, playacting the role of a soldier protecting his
lady cousin.
“Elise,” Purcel said warmly by way of greeting,
“want a peanut?”
She took one to please him, though the oily things tended to make
her face break out. Purcel seemed immune to this bane of adolescence,
though she still nursed hopes.
“Thank you, cousin.” She kissed him lightly on the
cheek. “How was your ride into the capital?”
“Not bad, the roads were muddy, but we
managed…”
What followed was a long dissertation on thrown horseshoes,
partially washed-out bridges, troops needing to be kept from foraging
in newly planted fields, and other minutiae of military life. Elise
listened with one ear, nodding when appropriate, her gaze surveying
the others gathered in the room.
They were a small enough group given that King Chalmer fathered
five children and that each of those children had at least one child.
However, Princess Marras’s little ones had died as babies. King
Tedric’s three were gone now, all dying without issue except
for Barden, whose name was still a curse to his father.
Princess Caryl, King Chalmer’s third child, had been married
away into the kingdom of Bright Bay, her father’s pledge to a
peace that lasted only a few years. Caryl’s departure meant
that just Grand Duke Gadman and Grand Duchess Rosene remained. Each
of these had produced two children, but Grand Duke Gadman’s
Nydia had died long before Elise herself was born. In memory,
Elise’s aunt Zorana had named her first daughter Nydia, though
the girl was more commonly called Dia.
Just ten of them, unless one counted Allister Seagleam’s
four children, far away in Bright Bay. Elise found it odd to think
that those four—one older than her, the rest all
younger—were as close kin to her as were Lord Rolfston’s
four: grandchildren of her grandmother’s brother.
Banishing the faraway Seagleams from consideration, Elise
concentrated on the ten gathered here. Any one could become crown
prince or princess of the kingdom of Hawk Haven if luck was with
them. The chief contenders for that honor were Purcel, as his
mother’s eldest, Sapphire, as Lord Rolfston’s eldest, and
herself. However, some courtiers whispered that if King Tedric was
going to name an heir why did he need to follow the strict order of
precedence? He should choose instead some young grandniece or
grandnephew, someone he could shape and teach during whatever years
remained to him.
A voice, loud and piercing, cut into Elise’s reverie.
“Elise! Elise! Darling cousin, you look
wonderful!”
Quickly Elise set down her wine goblet, knowing that this gushing
greeting would be followed by an equally enthusiastic embrace, and
not really wanting to spill wine on her new pale pink,
rosebud-embroidered gown.
Sapphire Shield was the eldest of their generation, a buxom young
woman of twenty-three with dark, blue-black hair, a pointed chin, and
eyes the color of her namesake gem. She had been engaged several
times, always into very advantageous matches, but had never taken her
vows.
Elise knew perfectly well that politics, not romance, had ruled
each of these arrangements, but Sapphire enjoyed mooning about after
each broken engagement, acting as if her heart were truly broken.
Such behavior might make those who didn’t know her dismiss her
as flighty and shallow, but Elise was not fooled.
Sapphire Shield was heir to the comfortable holdings accumulated
through both her Redbriar and Shield family connections. Riki
Redbriar, a scion of House Goshawk, had brought a considerable dowry
into her marriage to Grand Duke Gadman, a good thing since members of
the House of the Eagle were all essentially landless—merely
comfortable life tenants on crown-held lands.
Their son Rolfston Redbriar had made a good marriage to Melina
Shield. Melina’s dowry had included several nice holdings
adjoining lands Riki Redbriar would eventually pass on to her son.
Although claiming no title higher than Lady, Melina also brought with
her the prestige of the Shield name and membership within the House
of the Gyrfalcon for her children.
Queen Zorana the First had been a Shield and the Gyrfalcons were
still considered first among the Great Houses. Therefore, as Lady
Melina never wearied of telling anyone who would listen, her children
were kin to the first queen of Hawk Haven both through their father,
who was her great-grandson, and through their mother, who was some
sort of cousin. No, thought Elise, Sapphire never forgets who she is,
no matter how flightily she behaves at functions like this.
As of this moment, that behavior included a crushing hug,
compliments on Elise’s dress (including insincere wishes that
she could wear pink), and other such prattle.
Elise politely prattled back, though she rather wished she could
snort, as Purcel did, and stalk off on the thin excuse of needing
another tankard of beer.
“So tell me, Castle Flower,” Sapphire said, bending
her head close to Elise’s, “why do you think Uncle Tedric
has summoned us all here?”
King Tedric, was, of course, Sapphire’s great-uncle, as he
was Elise’s, but Sapphire often chose to minimize the degree of
their relation. Among her peers, she had made no secret that she
considered herself practically crown princess already. After all, her
father was Grand Duke Gadman’s only surviving child and Grand
Duke Gadman should have been named King Tedric’s heir
immediately following Crown Princess Lovella’s death two years
before.
Elise thought Sapphire overconfident, but there was no gain in
telling her so, especially since Sapphire was more likely to become
crown princess than Elise herself was, no matter that their
relationship to the king was the same. Simply speaking, Sapphire had
better connections.
Instead of making excuses to escape after Purcel, Elise considered
the best way of answering Sapphire’s question. As the nickname
“Castle Flower” suggested, Sapphire was among those who
assumed that Elise’s familiarity with the structure had made
her privy to all its occupants’ secrets.
“Well,” Elise said, looking into her goblet as if the
dark red wine held mysteries, “I think it must have something
to do with Earl Kestrel, don’t you?”
Sapphire, torn between a desire to probe further and a desire to
seem to know more than her younger cousin, gave in to the latter
impulse.
“I do think so.” She leaned so she was nearly
whispering into Elise’s ear. “The senior porter at the
Kestrels’ city manse fancies my maid. He told her that a week
ago a closed carriage came to the manse. The courtyard was cleared
and Earl Kestrel ordered everyone away from the windows. Then someone
or something was brought into the manse, cloistered in one
ground-floor wing. No one but four servants and Earl Kestrel’s
cousin, Sir Jared Surcliffe, have been allowed in there
since.”
Sapphire looked at Elise, but Elise refused to show the least sign
that she, too, had heard some version of this tale. Let Sapphire
think she knew more than the Castle Flower. She might give away
something Elise didn’t know.
“They do say,” Sapphire continued with relish,
“that strange sounds are heard from the closed wing and that
Earl Kestrel’s bodyguard has been seen in the public markets
purchasing great quantities of raw meat.”
Elise raised her eyebrows. This last was indeed news.
“Truly?” she asked, playing the sycophant gladly.
“Truly,” Sapphire confirmed. “My maid’s
sister is married to the cook for a large tavern in the city and he
has seen the bodyguard with his own eyes.”
Elise swallowed a flippant impulse to ask with who else’s
eyes might the cook be expected to see.
“So, what surprise do you think Earl Kestrel has
brought?”
But Sapphire had given away as much as she would without getting
something in return. She shrugged her pretty white shoulders.
“I have no idea.”
Elise was about to suggest something in the line of a bear for the
king to hunt when Jet, Sapphire’s younger brother, sauntered
over to join them.
At twenty, Jet Shield looked five years older, his features rugged
under heavy black brows, his hair so thick that it resisted being
tied back in a fashionable queue. His eyes were so dark that pupil
could hardly be distinguished from iris. When his blood was up, they
glittered like the stone for which he was named.
Each of Melina Shield’s children was named for a precious
gem, an affectation most believed. Some whispered, however, that
Melina practiced sorcerous arts thought lost when the Plague caused
the Old World nations to abandon their colonies. Certainly the
physical appearance of each of Melina’s children bore out the
latter rumors.
Elise didn’t know which tale to believe. Her own mother,
Aurella Wellward, had known Melina Shield since they were both
children. Aurella said that she thought that Melina chose names for
her children only after they were born and some moon-spans grown.
Certainly, her confinements at private estates permitted this luxury.
However, Lady Melina’s old maidservant claimed loudly and
frequently that her mistress chose each infant’s name as soon
as she was certain that she was carrying.
Whatever Rolfston Redbriar thought on the matter, he was not
saying. Personally, Elise believed he was too canny to meddle with
anything that brought his branch of the family such respect and
awe.
“May I join you ladies?” Jet asked, sliding into a
seat next to Elise without waiting for an answer. This close she was
aware of his scent, something musky and masculine, just touched with
a faint hint of pipe smoke.
A year past his majority, Jet had joined his sister in the
matrimonial battles. Unlike her, he would doubtless have less time to
peruse the selection open to him. Sapphire was a good six years older
than Elise, her next equivalent competitor for matches. Although Jet
was five years older than Purcel, Zorana was far more aggressive than
Elise’s father and had already been hinting about making a
betrothal for her son. Such hints narrowed the field before the race
had really begun.
So Jet turned what was already becoming a practiced smile on his
second cousin.
“You look beautiful tonight, Elise,” he said.
“Your complexion is so well suited to the paler shades. Pinks
just make my sister look sallow.”
Elise ignored the dig, though she could see Sapphire fuming. It
was true, though, that Sapphire was best suited to stronger colors:
blues, reds, purples. It was also true that there was no love lost
between these siblings.
Long resenting Sapphire’s place as heir, Jet now treasured
the dream that if his father became King Tedric’s successor,
he, not Sapphire, would be named crown prince: “Sapphire has
trained long and hard,” Jet had told Elise, after pledging her
to silence, “to manage the estates our family has inherited
from both Shields and Redbriars. Why should that training be wasted?
Rather, let her continue as heir to our family holdings. I am free to
prepare, with no previous bias and no distractions, to follow our
father, after his own long reign, onto the throne.”
Doubtless Sapphire knew her brother’s feelings on the
matter. As she glowered at him, too well trained to pull his hair as
she would have when they were in the nursery, Elise wished that
someone, something, would break this uncomfortable moment.
Her wish was granted. A footman came to the door of the parlor
where the grandnieces and grandnephews had been sequestered to await
the end of their elders’ counsels.
“His Majesty,” the man boomed, looking at the carved
paneling on the far wall rather than at any one of the ten eager
faces now turned toward him, “requests that you attend him in
the Eagle’s Hall.”
Suddenly meek and obedient, the cousins set down goblets and
tankards, smoothed hair, surreptitiously checked reflections in
mirrors and polished glass. Then, falling into order as they had so
many times before, in so many gatherings like, but unlike, this one,
the cousins filed from the parlor. Only one voice broke the
silence.
Kenre Trueheart, at the age of seven the youngest of the cousins,
whispered to his older sister, “Now, Deste, now we’ll
find out what it’s all about.”
Smiling softly to herself, Elise could not help but think that
little Kenre was uttering the words imprinted on each of their hearts
sometimes,
Firekeeper thought she would go insane. It was the noise. Or perhaps
it was the smells. Maybe it was some undefined sense of too many
people—just the people, just the humans—forget their dogs
and cats, horses and mules, cows, goats, sheep, chickens…
She would go mad.
Each day when she bathed in the metal tub that Derian filled for
her in the great stone-walled chamber that was her haven in Earl
Kestrel’s mansion, she checked herself for bite marks. Surely
she must have been bitten by some rabid fox or possum. Surely, it was
that, something in her blood, running through her mind, setting it
afire.
There could not be so many people in all the world.
But the falcon Elation told her with sardonic calm that there
were— that this city of Eagle’s Nest was large, but not
the only such swarming of humans, not the largest even.
But Firekeeper had long been the only human in all the world. She
never realized that this was what she had believed. Now she must
acknowledge that she had believed herself unique.
Even the evidence of the artifacts—the knife and the
tinderbox—these had not convinced her that there were other
humans in the world. Now she must face humans in their varied colors,
shapes, sizes, and smells.
She would go mad.
Derian entered the room to find her sitting on the floor, her head
buried against Blind Seer’s flank. She ignored the man. Hoped
that he would go away. Knew from the gusting exhalation of the breath
beneath her brother’s ribs that he would not.
“Firekeeper?”
A finger poked her gently in the side. She growled.
“C’mon, kid.”
Hands on her shoulders.
“Today is the day. You don’t dare disappoint Earl
Kestrel.” Why not? she thought. She had disappointed herself. Why
shouldn’t she disappoint that small, hawk-nosed male with his
arrogant, proprietary attitude?
“Please?”
Derian sounded more unhappy than annoyed. Reluctantly, Firekeeper
permitted the smallest tendril of sympathy for him and his
predicament to finger through her own misery. Earl Kestrel was always
patient with her, even kind in a stiff, wooden fashion that owed more
than a little to his fear of Blind Seer. He was not always so with
Derian. More than once Firekeeper had heard him yelling at the
younger man, berating him for failures incomprehensible to her.
She raised her head from the comforting fur. Derian was kneeling
on the floor beside her. To his credit, he was ignoring Blind
Seer’s baleful blue gaze, having learned that the wolf could be
trusted on his terms. As long as Derian did not make what the wolf
interpreted as a threatening gesture toward the woman, he was
safe.
“Firekeeper,” Derian said, catching her gaze and
holding it when she would look away, “today you meet the king.
Tonight you dine in his halls. It is for this that Earl Kestrel
brought you from the wilds. You can’t back out now.”
“I can,” she threatened.
“You can,” he agreed, “but I wouldn’t like
to be you if you do. Earl Kestrel has always had his own uses for
you, no matter what pretty speeches he makes for other ears. If you
fail him…”
She said nothing.
Derian shrugged. “The best you can hope for is being turned
out into the streets. You might be fine. So would the falcon, but I
wouldn’t give Blind Seer a chance, not even at
night.”
Firekeeper knew too well what he meant. She had seen the city
streets, had been taken out into them cloaked and after dark under
Derian and Ox’s escort. (Fleetingly she wondered why the big
man permitted his own to call him after a castrated bull.)
Using curtains of heavy fabric, Derian had made her a concealed
place from which she could watch the city traffic without being seen
by either the inmates of the manse or the passersby.
So many people!
She felt the mad panic returning and stamped it back. Even so, it
filled her voice as she challenged Derian.
“He turn us out,” she said sharply. “How he do
that? Little man, big voice, no teeth.”
“There you are wrong, Lady Blysse.” Derian surged to
his feet and crossed to where a new gown has been spread on the bed.
“Earl Kestrel has many teeth. You just don’t know how to
see them. Do you think Ox is the only big man he commands or Race the
only one who can use a bow?”
She snarled. Derian continued as if she had not.
“You are probably meaner than any one of them—maybe
than any two. But in the end, they would win. You would be gone.
Blind Seer would be dead.”
He shrugged. “Or you can put on this pretty gown, scrub the
tears from your cheeks, and let me comb your hair. Then we’ll
have an audience with the king…”
He shook his head in wonder, still struggling with the idea that
he was to meet the king. “And then come back here and tell
Blind Seer all about it.”
She knew he was humoring her in this last. He didn’t believe
that she could speak with the wolf, understand all that he said to
her in return. At Elation’s prompting, she had agreed to stop
trying to convince him.
“With me?” she asked, rising to her feet in turn.
“Blind Seer come with me?”
Derian shook his head. “Not this time. You’ll have to
settle for me and Ox.”
“Blind Seer comes,” she insisted stubbornly.
“Tell Earl Kestrel, Norvin Norwood, Uncle Norvin—whatever
name. Blind Seer comes with me.”
Valet spoke from the doorway, his soft-footed arrival having been
unnoticed even by the wolves. “Derian, I will advise my master
to give Lady Blysse her will in this matter. There are
advantages.”
Firekeeper spun to stare at the little brown man.
“Do,” she said, “and I will make
ready.”
Valet bowed deeply, an acknowledgment of a deal made and sealed
rather than in abasement, and vanished.
“Well done, Sister,” Blind Seer said.
“Ilook forward to meeting this One above Ones. Now, you
must make ready. I, of course, am already
perfect.”
“Braggart,” she replied in the human language.
The gown she was to wear tonight was made of some soft stuff the
color of bone, decorated with thin lines of scarlet and of blue. With
it went a wreath of flowers and a string of small round pebbles
Derian called pearls.
“A lovely ensemble,” Derian commented, lifting the
gown by its shoulders so she could inspect it. “I believe that
Duchess Kestrel, the earl’s mother, selected it at her
son’s request. It should look good on you— very delicate
and virginal.”
He chuckled. “Of course the belt knife and the wolf will
rather ruin that effect.”
Firekeeper cocked a brow at him. They had long settled that
whether or not she was wearing formal attire a few accessories were
non-negotiable. Her knife and fire-making tools stayed with her and
she flatly refused to wear shoes. Even Earl Kestrel had given up in
his efforts to convince her otherwise.
She pulled off her leather vest and dropped her breeches, enjoying
the small victory of watching Derian’s fair skin turn dark red.
Then she gestured imperiously toward the fire.
“My bath, Derian,” she said. “Then we go see
this king.”
As Derian handed Firekeeper into the carriage—an assistance
she permitted only because of her difficulties handling long
skirts—he imagined many eyes watching them from behind the
curtained and shuttered windows of the Kestrel Manse. No matter what
the earl had ordered, some would disobey, would peek out. They would
tell their fellows of the strange girl but partially glimpsed in the
darkness and of the pale grey shadow whose very presence had
terrified the horses in the instant before it had leapt into the
carriage.
He shrugged. Secrecy wouldn’t matter after tonight. After
tonight, the entire city would be alive with tales. The only question
was what those tales would tell. Would they be about the return of a
long-lost granddaughter to her joyful grandfather, as Earl Kestrel
hoped? Or would they be about an impertinent nobleman
imprisoned—or perhaps executed— for his presumption in
forcing upon the king one he had wished forgotten?
Derian wished that he had a touch of the gift of foresight. Then,
as quickly, he withdrew that wish. Knowing—especially if the
news was bad—wouldn’t make tonight’s ordeal any
easier. He would like to know how King Tedric viewed henchmen,
though, and devoutly hoped that they were not judged in the light of
their master’s ambitions.
Tonight, Valet served as footman. Derian would drive the coach,
thus eliminating the need to bring anyone else into Earl
Kestrel’s secret. Ox and Race would provide their only
escort.
Turning away as Valet closed the carriage door upon the earl and
his niece, Derian spared a prayer to his ancestors that Norvin
Norwood would remember to be patient with the young woman. Firekeeper
had distinctly disliked the closed coach the times using one had been
necessary. Then only her strong sense of personal dignity (surprising
in one who still could not remember when modesty was appropriate) had
kept her from bolting.
Up on the box, Derian shook the reins and felt the elegant team of
matched rose-greys step out as smartly as if they were on parade,
their momentary fear of wolf scent forgotten. The pre-planned route
to the palace carefully avoided the market and the streets where the
guild members kept their shops, so traffic was light. Ox and Race,
riding in front, took care of obstacles as they occurred.
At the carriage’s approach the palace gates swung open. A
rider in the smart uniform of the King’s Own Guard trotted his
liver chestnut gelding out to intercept them.
“Follow me, please,” he said, his tone making the
phrase an order.
Derian obeyed, amusing himself by pricing the man’s elegant
mount and deciding that it must belong to the guard’s stables.
If it was the man’s personal mount, Derian figured he himself
should consider going for a soldier. The pay was obviously quite
good.
In a private walled courtyard, Derian brought the team to a halt
and swung lithely down from the box.
“Take care of these,” he said, tossing the reins to a
dutifully bored-looking guard standing outside the towering stone
archway. “Earl Kestrel will need me.”
A wide-eyed look of surprise and sudden anger shattered the
man’s trained indifference. Clearly, he had not expected to be
so spoken to by a coachman.
Earl Kestrel’s sharp bark of “Derian!” smothered
whatever dressing-down the guard had been planning for the
impertinent redhead. Drawing the mantle of the earl’s favor
around him, Derian crossed to where Valet held open the carriage
door. Norvin Norwood stood to one side of the portable steps.
Firekeeper crouched in the doorway, her traveling cloak pulled up
around her face, her nose wrinkling as she took in all the unfamiliar
scents. Blind Seer’s head poked around her waist, his own nose
busy.
“Derian, if you would explain to my ward,” Earl
Kestrel said, his tones barely civil with suppressed tension,
“that we have an appointment and should not keep the king
waiting.”
Derian nodded and extended a hand to the young woman.
“Come on, Firekeeper,” he coaxed. “There will be
time enough for that later. Right now, we need to follow Race and Ox
through that doorway.”
She looked at him, her dark eyes showing none of the confusion she
must feel.
“And see this king?”
“And see the king,” he agreed with soft emphasis on
the article. “Here there is only one.”
“Here,” she said, gathering up her skirts in massive,
unladylike bunches. “I remember. Elsewhere, Blind Seer and I
know it is different.”
Derian was quietly impressed with how the guards at the door
maintained their wooden expressions when confronted with woman and
wolf. They passed them through without comment, though the two who
led the way down the corridor seemed unnaturally tense. Doubtless
they feared being leapt upon from behind.
The castle at Eagle’s Nest was an old building as such
things were judged in the New World. It had been built some two
hundred and twenty-five years before by the family Gildcrest. They
had been granted land in this area by a ruler of some faraway nation
in the Old World, an old woman who had never and would never see any
more of the holdings she divvied up among her followers than their
outlines on a map.
However, this Old World ruler firmly believed in rewarding well
those who might otherwise become troublesome. If those rewards were
located at a great distance and presented in such a fashion that
refusing to relocate to them could be taken as a grievous insult,
then all the better.
During the years when the Plague gave lie to all claims of power
and dominion, the castle’s builders had perished. The castle
with its strong walls had been much fought over until Queen Zorana
the First had won it and kept it. That possession, almost as much as
the loyalty of her people to her, had made her queen then and made
her grandson Tedric king today. And will Blysse be queen thereafter?Derian mused as he
escorted his charge down the wide stone corridors. That, I
suppose, is precisely what we’re here to learn.
Then he turned a corner, stepped through a towering door, and
royalty was before him. Derian had never seen either King Tedric or
Queen Elexa from any closer than a seat in the crowd during some
public festival. Up close, he found them both more and less
impressive than he had imagined.
Distance had erased lines from both of the monarchs’ faces.
When Derian raised his head from making his homage on the dense New
Kelvinese carpet at the foot of the steps leading to the thrones, he
was shocked to see how ancient they both looked.
Intellectually, he knew that King Tedric was seventy-five years
old, old for even his long-lived family. Queen Elexa was somewhat
younger at sixty-nine, but the illness that years before had robbed
her of her ability to bear children had given her frailty beyond her
age in poor return. Beneath her tissue-paper-fine skin, the blood
could be seen running faintly blue. The crocheted lace gloves on her
hands could not completely hide the dark splotches of age spots.
Her gaze, though, was kind and compassionate. The gracious dip of
her head acknowledged commoners as well as their master.
King Tedric was less kind, more shrewd than his queen. His faded
brown eyes flickered over each of them swiftly, leaving Derian with
the inescapable impression that the monarch would remember each
individual. There was a taut alertness to the aged ruler that Derian
had never noticed when he had gazed upon him from the crowds and
something of the eagle in the tight grasp of his bony hands on the
arms of his throne.
“So, Norwood,” the king snapped, “this girl is
the one you claim as Barden’s daughter?”
He said the disowned prince’s name without any
hesitation—a good omen for the earl’s cause.
Earl Kestrel nodded. “And these four men can bear witness to
her finding, as can my cousin Sir Jared Surcliffe.”
“So you said when you came before us with your fanciful
tale. Well, I see little of my son in this young woman and less of
your sister. Must she bring her dog with her? I am willing to credit
your tale of survival in the wilds without such props.”
Norwood stiffened slightly. “My ward has her own will, Your
Majesty. She did not wish to be parted from the wolf.”
King Tedric’s lips moved slightly in something not quite a
smile.
“Wolf? Never have I seen one so large. Rather, I think, an
enormous hybrid.”
Derian glanced at Firekeeper, worried that she would react to the
insult to her beloved “brother,” but the king’s
diction and use of the unfamiliar term “hybrid” had only
confused her. She waited, still patient for now.
Earl Kestrel also chose not to challenge the king and so Tedric
continued:
“Now, I have seen the lass. Let me see this other proof you
mentioned.”
This was the moment that Derian had dreaded over all others.
Fire-keeper had refused to let the knife—her Fang, she called
it—leave her person. Not even when she had slept or bathed had
she put it by. No offer of a substitute, longer, sharper, or more
ornately made—Earl Kestrel had brought many such, some worth
small fortunes in themselves—had moved her.
At the earl’s request, Derian had coached Firekeeper long
and carefully for this moment. He found he was holding his breath
when Earl Kestrel turned to the young woman.
“Lady Blysse,” the earl said steadily, “show the
king your knife.”
The guards to either side of the dais tensed at these
ominous-sounding words, but King Tedric, briefed to expect them, only
waved his hand imperiously when they would interpose themselves
between his royal self and perceived danger.
“Back,” he said. “There should be no harm
here.”
Firekeeper stood where she had risen from her homage to the
throne. A slim, even slight figure in her long gown of maiden’s
white embroidered at throat and hem with ribbons, her cobalt-blue
traveling cloak tossed back from her shoulders, the young woman
didn’t look a threat. Her dark-brown hair was an unruly mass of
curls, worn rather shorter than was the fashion. Her only adornments
were a simple wreath of flowers and a short necklace of pearls.
Among those gathered in the lofty stone audience hall only Derian
and Race suspected that Firekeeper was far more deadly than any of
the armed and armored guards, despite their swords and ceremonial
halberds. However, Derian and Race could do nothing with their
knowledge but wait, tense and ready.
At Earl Kestrel’s command, Firekeeper dropped her hand to
her waist. There, rather than the more usual girdle of flowers and
ribbons, she wore a brown leather belt, much stained from the
weather.
“My knife,” she said, drawing the weapon and holding
it so that Prince Barden’s crest and the smooth garnet in the
hilt were clearly visible.
“Mine!”
The emphasis was clear, even without the growl that trailed the
announcement. One of King Tedric’s shaggy eyebrows flew upward
in astonishment. The queen gasped. Earl Kestrel colored a fiery
red. Embarrassment or anger? Derian wondered.
King Tedric recovered first. “Yours, then. I only wish to
see it more closely.”
The words barely were past his lips before Firekeeper, despite the
encumbering skirts, had flown up the steps to stand at his side. The
knife she held inches from his face could have as easily vanished
between his ribs, but the king neither started nor paled. Waiting
below, Blind Seer thumped his tail briefly in what Derian could swear
was muted applause.
The king examined the knife with all due consideration.
“It could be Barden’s,” he said at last.
“It bears his crest and I seem to recall some such
blade.”
Queen Elexa recovered from her shock and now she, too, examined
the knife. “I have seen this before. It was given to Barden by
Lovella on his wedding day. She showed it to me beforehand, pleased
by its craftsmanship. This one is just its like.”
“A knife can be imitated,” the king said
cautiously.
“Perhaps,” Elexa agreed, a faint smile on her lips,
“but the knife Lovella showed me possessed a secret. I doubt
that any who sought to imitate the weapon merely from its external
appearance could have known of it.”
“Can you show us what this secret is?” the king asked,
interested yet impatient.
“If the girl will let me touch the knife,” the queen
said, moving a fragile hand slightly.
Firekeeper had been listening, her head cocked to one side,
struggling with words and language patterns unfamiliar to her. From
the expression on her face, Derian knew that she was growing
confused—and when she was confused, her temper grew
unpredictable.
“Lady Blysse,” he called, without waiting for
permission, “the queen doesn’t want your knife. She
simply wants to touch it. Let her.”
“Touch?” Firekeeper said, the hoarseness of an almost
growl in her throat.
“Touch,” Derian assured her. Shrugging slightly, for
he had already committed one social misstep, he addressed the queen
directly. “Your Majesty, if you would move slowly, so as not to
alarm her.”
Accustomed to always being accorded social graces, the queen was
less offended by their violation in a good cause than someone of
lesser standing might be. Giving Blysse a reassuring smile, she
reached out delicately with thumb and forefinger and grasped the
garnet set into the pommel.
“Firekeeper,” Derian said warningly when his charge
stiffened, “hold still.”
She did, to his infinite relief. When the queen had difficulty,
she even steadied the hilt of the knife so that the queen could twist
more strongly.
“There!” the queen said, pleased. Then, directly to
the young woman standing before her, “Dear, my hands are not as
strong as they once were. If you would grab the stone as I did and
twist hard.”
Derian doubted that Firekeeper understood all the words, but the
queen’s gestures were eloquent. Firekeeper obeyed. A firm turn
or so and the garnet began to loosen.
Derian had shown the girl how to pull out corks, but a threaded
cap was something new and frustrated her momentarily. However, at the
queen’s urging Firekeeper continued to twist. At last, with a
small grating of sand caught in infrequently used grooves, the stone
came free, revealing a small compartment in the hilt.
“Not so very large,” the queen said complacently,
examining the hollow spot, “but large enough to bear a message
or some small item. Lovella was quite delighted with it.”
“Then without a doubt, this is Barden’s knife,”
King Tedric’s gaze was shrewd. “And there is less a doubt
that this is Barden’s daughter.”
Fascinated, Derian watched the king’s eyes narrow in an
expression far too like Earl Kestrel’s for him to doubt the
type of thoughts the ruler was entertaining. Norvin Norwood had been
right. King Tedric had not at all liked being subject to the
manipulations of his siblings and their young kin.
The possible existence of a granddaughter gave the king an upper
hand once again. The king smiled, but it was not precisely a kind
smile.
“Norvin, bring your ward…” Not “my granddaughter,” Derian noted to
himself. He’s not ready to grant quite that much, not yet.
He wants Earl Kestrel to remember who is in charge.
“And join my family at table tonight. They have all heard
rumors of your travels. It is time that they learn just what you have
brought home.”
The banquet hall into which they were escorted some hours later
was not the largest room Derian had ever seen. The Guildhall of the
Combined Crafts (tanners, leatherworkers, harness and saddlemakers)
in the city below was larger. Nor was the banquet hall the grandest
room he had seen. The inner chamber where the grandmasters of the
smiths held their secret conclaves was grander, its beams gleaming
with gilding and sparkling from the tiny silver stars that depended
from invisible threads.
This hall, though, surpassed both for mere magnificence. The stone
floor was polished to such a shine that the torches in the wall
sconces and the candles on the tables seemed to burn twice: once in
flame, once in reflection. Referring to the ivory-white marble walls
as bare would be an insult, for though they were free from tapestry
or curtain, the marble itself was so beautifully carved as to disdain
further ornamentation.
In the center of the hall were four long tables set in a modified
fan, all of their ends meeting near a head table. The flaring backs
of the throne-like chairs set at the center of this head table left
no doubt that the king and queen would be seated where they could
command the attention of those dispersed along the fan. Derian
wondered where Fire-keeper and Earl Kestrel would be placed.
The chief steward was a solid, silvery woman who shared some of
Valet’s immunity to excitement. As she addressed Earl Kestrel,
her voice rang in the nearly empty room like a herald’s
trumpet.
“The king commands that you and your ward be seated at the
head table. The ward is to be at the king’s right, you to her
right. Your party will be granted a few moments to orient yourselves
before the family will join you.”
Derian was grateful for those moments. Thus far Firekeeper had
been on her best behavior, but there was a trembling tension about
her that made him glad that she would have time to scout out the room
before it was filled with strangers.
He watched her as she flitted about from point to point, touching
the friezes on the wall, fingering the woven linen tablecloths,
peeking under the tables as if uncertain what might lurk in their
shadow. Blind Seer trotted beside her, more tense, less curious.
Derian feared that the wolf might have reached his limit regarding
new things and simply strike out at anything that came near.
Clearly the two members of the King’s Own who had remained
with them shared his concern. Each stood straight with his back
against the wall, knuckles white around his halberd shaft. If they
found Firekeeper’s behavior amusing, no trace of mirth showed
on their impassive countenances.
Derian ignored them, turning instead to Valet, who, along with
Derian, made up the entirety of Earl Kestrel’s escort. Ox and
Race had been excluded on the grounds that no one else would bring
bodyguards. Doubtless they were in some servants’ hall even now
being plied with ale and rich food by castle staff eager for
gossip.
“Valet,” Derian said, keeping his voice low,
“what am I supposed to do? I’m out of my element
here.”
“You and I will stand there along the wall,” Valet
gestured to the stretch behind the head table, “where we can be
ready if the earl needs us. Your particular role will be to assist
Blysse. If she is about to make any particularly dangerous error,
stop her, even at risk of reprimand to yourself.”
Derian had no doubt that the errors Valet referred to were not
merely social ones, like holding her spoon incorrectly or drinking
her soup from her bowl. Firekeeper possessed a quick temper when she
perceived offense and he had yet to figure out precisely what would
give offense.
He was permitted no further time to worry. The towering wooden
doors at the far end of the hall were beginning to open and the
steward’s trumpet voice announced: “Grand Duke Gadman,
Lord Rolfston Redbriar and Lady Melina Shield, with Sapphire, Jet,
Opal, Ruby, and Citrine Shield.”
“Firekeeper,” Derian hissed hopelessly, but his charge
hurried over to him immediately.
“Stand there,” Valet said, his own voice somehow both
strong and nearly inaudible. He dared a slight push to center
Firekeeper behind the chair where she was to sit. “And
wait.”
Firekeeper did so and Blind Seer sat beside her, his hackles
slightly raised. The woman acknowledged his tension by curling the
fingers of one hand in his fur, but her dark gaze was fixed on the
eight people entering the room. Derian reflected that the nobles
might mistake her unwavering stare for awe, but he knew the young
woman well enough to know that to Firekeeper any stranger was an
enemy until proven otherwise.
Such care might well be indicated when encountering this
particular family. Although the rumors Derian had heard about Grand
Duke Gad-man and Lord Rolfston credited them with everything from
courage to ruthlessness, they were as nothing compared to what was
whispered about Lady Melina Shield. In city and countryside alike it
was agreed that the noblewoman was a sorceress, one of power the like
of which had not been seen since the days when the Old Country still
reigned.
Looking at the woman, demurely gowned in mutedly iridescent silk,
her fingers resting lightly on her husband’s sleeve, Derian was
at first inclined to dismiss those rumors as mere superstitious talk.
Then he noticed the jeweled necklace encircling the still-firm flesh
of Melina Shield’s pale throat.
The necklace was short, just a few links too long to be a choker.
Polished silver links were hung with five pendants, each holding a
single faceted gem. The colors were not harmonious. Indeed a
connoisseur might even say that they clashed: brilliant blue; opaque,
glittering black; fiery hues like those of a new-lit fire; bloodred,
and, lastly, a rich orange-brown, the shade of a fine cognac. Derian
did not need to be a gem cutter’s nephew to recognize that each
of these gems was a pricelessly perfect example of the namestones of
each of Lady Melina’s children.
Now, seeing the necklace, seeing how each of the scion Shields
wore set in a band about their brow a namestone gem to match the one
about their mother’s throat, Derian believed with a sudden
thrill of his terrified soul that Melina Shield was indeed the
sorceress gossip had named her. He had little time to grow accustomed
to the thought, for the steward was announcing Grand Duchess Rosene
and her kin.
Although a widow of seventy, Rosene could still wear soft pinks,
for her hair was snow-white and her skin the delicate hues of the
inner petals of a newly blossomed wild rose. Her eyes, however, were
as shrewd as those of her brother the king and she let her son escort
her without hindrance, less from obedience to custom than the better
to glance about her and assess the situation.
Baron Ivon Archer, though a mature man, bore himself like the son
of a hero, but it was in his sister, Zorana, that Derian saw the true
heroic fire. Both of Grand Duchess Rosene’s children were
accompanied by a spouse and trailed by their get, the youngest of
whom might have been excluded from such a gathering just a year or so
before. Derian hardly had time to note that Baron Archer’s
daughter, the Lady Elise, was easily as lovely as any of her more
ostentatiously named second cousins when the steward announced:
“Their Royal Majesties, King Tedric and Queen
Elexa!”
As no one had taken a seat, no one needed to rise, but when the
brass trumpets sounded their fanfare, everyone stood straighter in
respect and turned to watch the monarchs enter. Everyone, that is,
except Derian’s Firekeeper. The loud trumpet call in the
contained chamber frightened her, causing her to start back in
alarm.
Before she could err further, Derian hurried forward and seized
her arm, aware that in doing so he had once again brought himself to
the king’s attention. He was too busy to worry about this, for
Firekeeper’s hand had flown to her knife even as she looked
about for some sheltered place from which to defend herself.
“Easy,” Derian assured her, wishing that his voice
didn’t sound so loud in the suddenly hushed hall.
“Easy.”
Firekeeper felt no such need not to be noticed. “What
that?”
“Trumpets,” he said, letting his own tones match hers.
If he could not go unnoticed, then let no one think he had anything
to hide. “Like a flute but larger and louder.”
“Where?”
“Over there.” He indicated with one hand, his other
gently guiding her knife back into its sheath.
Firekeeper moved as if she wished to examine one of the
instruments. Derian put a restraining hand on her arm, knowing that
if she intended to go, no strength of his would hold her.
“Stay,” he said, more pleading than ordering.
“You can look at them later. Now we owe the king our
attention.”
“Still?” she asked, blowing out through her nose in
what he had learned was exasperation. “We did!”
“And still we must,” Derian said patiently.
King Tedric rescued him. “Steward Silver, have one of the
heralds’ trumpets brought here for my guest’s inspection.
The rest of you have my leave to be seated.”
Even Earl Kestrel obeyed this implicit command and, after
examining the trumpet, Firekeeper was willing to do the same.
“Young man,” the king said, and Derian realized that
he was being addressed. Hurriedly, he bent knee. “Remain at the
young woman’s shoulder and advise her.”
Derian did as ordered, standing at Firekeeper’s right,
slightly to the left of Earl Kestrel and as far away as was polite
from the alarming presence of the king. Still, from where he stood he
noticed that the king’s white hair was a wig. The realization
embarrassed him, as if he had stumbled onto a state secret.
Servants bearing wine and bread emerged from discreet alcoves
along the wall. Noticing that none of the nobles seemed to regard
them at all, Derian did his best to mimic the servants’
impassive expressions, wishing more than anything else to be
forgotten. He only moved when one would pour Firekeeper wine.
“Water only,” he said softly.
The king, however, cocked an eyebrow. “Do you think my
vintage not good enough for her?”
Derian was about to answer when Firekeeper said:
“Wine like sick bird berries. Makes prey.”
“She means,” Earl Kestrel translated, “that she
has observed wild birds eating fermented berries or fruit. They
become sick, and sick creatures become easy prey.”
King Tedric stroked his angular cheekbone with one finger.
“Surely she does not believe that I intend her harm.”
Norvin Norwood was too old a campaigner to be discomfited.
“Not at all, Your Majesty, but her prejudices are firm. We
have not been able to convince her that wine or beer or any liquor is
a fair substitute for water.”
The king did not press the point, but directed his attention down
the fan of tables where his relatives were watching with as much
interest as would be considered polite. Indeed, a few, like Sapphire
and Grand Duchess Rosene, were watching with rather more attention
than good manners should admit.
“This young woman,” said the king with a slight
gesture, as if which young woman he meant could be in doubt,
“is the ward of Earl Kestrel. At his own initiative and at
great personal risk and expense, he mounted an expedition to learn
the fate of my son, Prince Barden.”
Behind his carefully impassive face, Derian marveled. Those last
two words, just a name and a title, but spoken so casually by the
king himself, all but rescinded the disinheritance Tedric had passed
on his son. From the expressions that flickered across surprised
faces at the lower tables not everyone was pleased.
The king paused, perhaps making a similar assessment, perhaps
merely to sip his wine.
“Sadly, for myself and for my queen, Norvin has learned that
Barden’s expedition was a failure. The prince and his
followers—all but one— died in the early years of the
colonization attempt, apparently in a fire.”
At least some of the murmurs of shock and pity seemed to be
genuine. Tedric waited for these to subside before continuing:
“The sole survivor was the young woman seated beside me.
Believing her to be his sister Eirene’s daughter Blysse, Earl
Kestrel has made her his ward. His mother, the Duchess Kestrel and
head of his household, has confirmed the adoption. Thus, my guest is
Blysse Norwood, newest member of House Kestrel.”
A hubbub arose at these words. Again Derian was forced to admire
the king. He had given a name to the foundling, the same name as was
borne by his granddaughter, but he had done so in such a fashion that
left open to doubt whether or not he acknowledged the young woman as
that granddaughter.
Only Grand Duke Gadman and Grand Duchess Rosene dared to address
the king directly, and Gadman’s querulous voice was
loudest.
“Tedric,” he said without formality, “are you
saying that this wild-eyed creature is Barden’s
daughter?”
Grand Duke Gadman was a bent-over, bent-nosed parody of his
brother’s regal aquilinity. Gossip said, and Derian could well
believe it, that the grand duke had been soured by holding no greater
honor than that of standby heir for something like seventy years.
Unlike Tedric, who had fairly earned his people’s respect in
battle, Gadman never ventured farther than the fringes of armed
conflict, risking his reputation but not his hide.
Yet Derian did not underestimate Grand Duke Gadman as a mere
blowhard. By chance, his own brother, Brock, and Grand Duke Gadman
were both members of the Bear Society. From the tales that Brock had
brought home, Grand Duke Gadman was shrewd, intelligent, and, in a
fashion quite different from his brother, charismatic.
“I have said,” Tedric replied, a faint smile playing
about his lips, “precisely what I have said.”
“You say that this girl is Eirene Norwood’s
daughter,” Gadman pressed. “Eirene was wed to Barden. Do
you mean to imply that this ‘Blysse’ is Barden’s
daughter?”
“Or,” Grand Duchess Rosene added stridently, “do
you not?”
King Tedric looked at each of his siblings with a weary tolerance
that was not without affection.
“I have said what I have said. However, I will now add that
because I wish to get to know Lady Blysse better, I am inviting her
to dwell in the castle with my family. Earl Kestrel may, of course,
take a suite here himself.”
Derian’s knees weakened. If Kestrel accepted, as he
undoubtedly would, then Derian knew perfectly well where he himself
was going to be staying. He had thought himself equal to anything,
but this was beyond the ambitions of a carter’s son. Any
thoughts he had of retreating, of making excuses, of risking both
parents and patron’s ire, vanished as Firekeeper glanced up at
him, her dark eyes anxious.
“King say we come here,” she said softly. “Blind
Seer, too?”
“Blind Seer, too,” Derian promised, knowing he would
keep his word even if he must smuggle the wolf in some dark
night.
The rest of the banquet went much as could be expected. Although
Firekeeper’s table manners had improved so greatly that Derian
had flattered himself that she could pass in polite company—and
Earl Kestrel had agreed—the real test cast bright sunlight on
their illusions.
The noble company gathered along the tables either turned politely
away or openly sniggered. That most of the mockery came from those
too young to have polished social skills—young Kenre Trueheart
and Citrine Shield, most notably—didn’t offer much
comfort.
Firekeeper still ate more like a wolf than like a woman and seemed
less like a noblewoman than ever.
Of course, Derian thought unhappily as he surveyed this august
company from the invisibility of servitude, rumor said that the
Princess Lovella had arranged her brother Chalmer’s death. Mere
acknowledgment would not make Firekeeper safe.
Far from it. If the king acknowledged her, she might be in greater
danger than she ever had been in the wilds.
VIII
“That banquet,” announced Grand Duchess
Rosene when the family had retired to the suite which had been hers
since as a young bride she brought her husband home to her
father’s castle, “was a nightmare!”
Ostensibly, her audience was restricted to her son and daughter
and their spouses. Lady Elise, bearing tea and honeycakes into her
grandmother’s parlor, retired to a corner after setting down
the tray, picked up her embroidery hoop, and was tacitly suffered to
remain.
“Whatever does that brother of mine intend!” the old
woman huffed, all offended privilege and suspicion. Without a word,
Aksel Trueheart leaned forward and began pouring tea, knowing that an
in-law’s comments would not be appreciated at this moment.
“Precisely what he has achieved, good Mother,” replied
Ivon Archer, nursing his pipe to life between sheltering hands,
“to unsettle us all.”
His sister Zorana nodded. “Yes. He has not acknowledged that
wild thing as Barden’s daughter, but he holds the possibility
over us like a whip. Now, we dare not press him to name an heir for
fear that he will choose her over one better suited.”
Unsaid but trembling in the air was that here, seated opposite
each other, brother and sister, were rival claimants.
Grand Duchess Rosene shook her head despairingly.
“Simpletons!” she chided her children scathingly.
“Tedric’s plan would never be anything so obvious.
Already Gadman and I have pressed him as hard as we dare. No, I fear
he plays some deeper game.”
“What?” Ivon and Zorana spoke as one, their rivalry
for the throne temporarily set aside.
“Well,” Grand Duchess Rosene said, accepting a cup of
tea and stirring honey into it, “some say he intends to put
aside Elexa and wed another. Why not this girl? Norvin Norwood may
claim her for the Kestrel line, but I see nothing of either Eirene or
Barden in this stranger’s face. She is too dark for
one.”
“Certainly he could not wed her!” Lady Aurella,
Elise’s mother, said shocked. “Queen Elexa is Wellward
born, my own mother’s sister. The king would not dare put her
off in favor of a commoner!”
“Not quite a commoner,” Rosene reminded, “for
Duchess Kestrel has accepted this ‘Blysse’ into her
household. By adoption, if not by blood, she is Kestrel.”
“King Tedric did seem to favor her.” Ivon puffed on
his pipe, as if reluctant to say more. “I noted how frequently
the king’s eyes strayed to the stranger. And he did have her
seated at his own right hand—far above her station, even if she
was a granddaughter.”
“Not if that granddaughter is his heir,” Rosene said
acidly sweet.
Watching her elders, Elise wondered if Grand Duchess Rosene was
enjoying stirring up her son and daughter. The old woman’s next
speech confirmed her suspicions.
“But perhaps you are right, Aurella,” Rosene said.
“Perhaps it is too much like a storyteller’s romance to
believe that an old king would shed his barren wife to father a son
on a common girl young enough to be his granddaughter. What other use
might he have for her?”
“He could,” said Aksel Trueheart, “mean to use
her to learn our own closest wishes.”
Lady Zorana’s husband spoke hesitantly, as if uncertain
precisely how to phrase his thoughts. Although he was a handsome man
and strong, no one held any illusions who was the dominant partner in
this marriage.
Some went so far as to jest that Zorana married Aksel simply as a
properly pedigreed stud for her brood. Elise, who had often found
Uncle Aksel in the castle library poring over old parchments from the
days before the Plague, knew him to be more, a self-taught scholar
and a bit of a poet.
“Our closest wishes?” Zorana said, her tones no
gentler than her mother’s. “What do you mean?”
“Forget I said anything,” Aksel replied. “A
fleeting thought, one I must consider further.”
Grand Duchess Rosene, however, would not let the point drop.
“I believe I seized the heel of your thought as it fled,
son-in-law,” she said. “Think, fools! What better thing
to bring us all behind one candidate than to threaten us with a new
player whom we desire less? Haven’t we all said that we would
rather see Rolfston Redbriar crowned king than have Allister Seagleam
of Bright Bay elevated above us?”
Murmurs of agreement answered her. The grand duchess continued,
setting her cup and saucer down with a rattle as her hands suddenly
trembled with excitement.
“Now Tedric has in his own castle one who he can use in much
the same fashion without raising the hopes of those who would see a
scion of our enemies on the throne!”
“That must be it, Mother!” Ivon agreed. “Blysse
Norwood can serve as King Tedric’s prod, a reminder of what we
get if we do not dance to his tune. My guess is that soon enough we
will hear hints of who is her best ‘rival’ for the
throne.”
“And if we still resist,” Zorana asked, her question
less a question than the voicing of a fear, “will he make this
newcomer queen simply to spite us?”
“That,” Grand Duchess Rosene said, “is
completely within the reach of my brother’s perversity. I would
not tempt him to try it.”
“And,” added Aksel Trueheart, heartened some by the
grand duchess’s expansion on his vague idea, “the girl
could still be useful to him, even if he does not name her crown
princess. He could offer her in marriage to someone—perhaps to
his heir, if the heir was unwed, perhaps to the heir’s heir, if
that one was male and unwed.”
“Like our son, Purcel,” said Zorana thoughtfully.
“Yes. Even if Blysse is never officially named Prince
Barden’s daughter, some trace of his noble aura will cling to
her. There will always be those who will respect her as an
unacknowledged daughter of the royal house.”
Elise noted with a small smile how Aunt Zorana had shown that her
house, rather than her brother’s, would be best suited to win
the king’s favor. She didn’t doubt that, beneath his
apparent vagueness, Uncle Aksel had entertained similar thoughts.
Certainly, her own father and mother didn’t look terribly
pleased. Their only child was a daughter, unsuited for a match with
the newcomer.
“Would the king,” said Ivon, trying to salvage what
was beginning to look like a bad situation, “elevate an unknown
woman—quite possibly not born from one of the Great
Houses—to such heights?”
“Don’t be an idiot,” Grand Duchess Rosene said
impatiently. “If we can seriously consider Tedric capable of
making her queen in her own right, certainly we can consider him
elevating her to queen by marriage. My dear husband Purcel was common
born—though proven hero. My own mother, Queen Rose, was not
born of a Great House. My father, King Chalmer, married for love,
quite against the wishes of his advisors.”
“And that’s what worries me the most,” Rosene
continued after a thoughtful pause. “My brother has ample
examples from our own immediate history of kings acting against what
their advisors wish.”
“Then this time,” Zorana put in fiercely, “we
must make certain that the king does nothing of the sort.”
There was that in her aunt’s tone that made Elise shudder
and hope that Lady Blysse, now housed somewhere within the
castle’s walls, locked her doors securely.
Earl Kestrel’s party was given rooms within the section of the
castle normally reserved for the king’s immediate family. Since
the death of Princess Lovella two years before, this wing had been
largely vacant and that vacancy was ostensibly the reason for
Kestrel’s party being housed there. Firekeeper could see that
Earl Kestrel was delighted by this mark of favor.
“The tower in which your rooms will be,” the
silver-haired steward explained to the earl, “is furnished with
its own door out into the castle grounds. The king said that all your
party is to have freedom of the parks and gardens.”
Earl Kestrel nodded. “That is thoughtful of His Majesty. My
ward is not accustomed to remaining indoors all the time.”
The steward managed a dry smile. “The king expressed
confidence that Lady Blysse would be able to control her pet if she
took him with her into public areas.”
Firekeeper decided that the time had come to speak for
herself.
“Blind Seer not a pet.”
Derian put a hand on her arm.
“Firekeeper,” he warned.
“Well, isn’t,” she persisted.
Derian shrugged and made some explanation to Steward Silver, using
language so complicated that Firekeeper could only catch the gist of
his argument. She did learn, however, that the falcon Elation would
be welcome at the castle and so went to sleep well content.
The next morning, Derian was nowhere about.
“Earl Kestrel,” Ox explained to Firekeeper, “let
him go visit his family. His parents.”
Ox always spoke carefully, pausing between each word as if she was
stupid, not merely ignorant of the language. Firekeeper recognized
the essential kindness in the big man, however, and didn’t
challenge him. When Ox was summoned to wait upon the earl, she sought
out Elation. The falcon rested on a perch near a window, watching the
little birds outside from sardonic golden-rimmed eyes.
“I wondered how long it would take you to wake up,”
Elation shrilled.
“Why wake?” Firekeeper replied, scratching behind one
of Blind Seer’s ears. “There is nothing for me to do.
They bring me my food, so I need not hunt. For the first time I can
remember, I am warm and fed.”
Blind Seer huffed out through his nose. “We fed
you!”
“After the strong had eaten,” she retorted.
“Sometimes there was little enough for me.”
“Little enough for any,” he replied, “when the
strong are finished. That is why only the strong survive.”
“I have survived,” Firekeeper said, “so I must
be strong.”
But despite the bravado in those words, there was a singular lack
of enthusiasm within her heart. Perhaps Elation heard this dullness,
for she shrieked.
“So, eat and grow fat. That is all you wish?”
“Is there else?” Firekeeper challenged without much
heat.
“You came away from your pack to learn about the
two-legs,” Elation replied. “What have you
learned?”
“That the world is far bigger than even the Ones
imagine,” Firekeeper said. “That I can talk human talk
after a fashion, but that I fear I shall never be more than a pup
among them, even as I have ever been a pup among the
wolves.”
“And have you acted as other than a pup?” Elation
prodded, her beak gaping in mocking laughter. “Have you done
other than pad about after your nurse, eating his leavings as if
summer will never end? Take care, wolfling, summer may end and leave
you within a trap.”
“What do you mean?”
“After last night’s rumpus, more than Earl Kestrel
know that you live. Remember, I understand human speech better than
you do, for those who were my masters one brief season often spoke of
weighty matters while they rode with falcons on their gloves. If you
are not to be chased hither and yon like a rabbit beneath the
falcon’s circling flight, then you must make yourself a place
within this aerie.“
Firekeeper straightened, some vague sense of purpose licking
tongues of fire in her soul.
“Do you think I can?” she asked, almost timidly.
“ ‘Do you think I can?’ ” the falcon
mimicked cruelly. “I think you must and from this very moment
forward. Your nurse is away. You can act without risking that Earl
Kestrel’s wrath will descend on him.”
“I have worried about such,” Firekeeper admitted.
“My missteps seem to bring blows to Derian’s head, not
mine.”
“So I have observed,” Elation said smugly. “It
is well to protect an ally but not when that protection weakens
yourself.”
“What,” interjected Blind Seer, “would you have
Firekeeper do? Somehow I don’t think that challenging their One
would do her any favors. From what Derian has told us, this is not
the way to earn prestige among these two-legged folk.”
“It is not,” the falcon agreed. “Let me
think.”
She did so, raising a leg to nibble on the wickedly curving talons
of one foot, preening her feathers, chortling and chuckling softly to
herself in falcon speech.
“I,” Elation announced at last, “shall provide
you with the means to meet more equally with those whom you must come
to know. Here they consider hunting with raptors—especially the
great birds such as myself— a sport reserved for noble folk. We
three shall go out into the gardens and I will fly for you as once I
flew for my human master.”
“What good will that do Firekeeper?” Blind Seer asked
dubiously.
“Humans are as curious as raccoons,” Elation replied.
“Some will come to learn what is happening, younger ones, I
suspect, who do not have so much dignity to preserve. Firekeeper can
impress them and they in turn will tell their elders that she is not
merely a toy.”
“Your idea might serve,” Firekeeper said thoughtfully,
“and certainly sitting in this room does us no good.”
“I would,” Blind Seer admitted, “like to be
outside in the sun again. My patience with cold stone rooms is near
ended. Had I loved you less, sweet Firekeeper, I would not have borne
them this long.”
“Then we are settled,” Firekeeper declared.
So it was that when Earl Kestrel came looking for his ward after
his breakfast had been eaten and his plans for the day were neatly in
place, he found the young woman gone and the door out into the castle
grounds standing open before him.
Although a city had grown up around it, the castle at Eagle’s
Nest showed remnants of the days when it had been constructed as a
fortification that could, in an emergency, take within its walls all
the surrounding population and their flocks and herds as well.
Those days were long past, but not because either the castle or
its grounds had grown smaller. Indeed, the descendants of Queen
Zorana had jealously guarded their property rights, holding on to not
only the gardens, workshops, and stables within the fortified walls
but to the surrounding acreage as well. Most of this flowed behind
and above the castle, rough land, not well suited for cultivation,
but perfect for game parks and meadows.
To one of these lower meadows was where Elation led Firekeeper and
Blind Seer, soaring time and again from a padded perch on the young
woman’s shoulder to check which of the winding paths they
should follow. After the coolness within the building, the summer
sunshine was welcome indeed. Butterflies congregated around neatly
ranked beds of flowers and songbirds nested in trees crowded with
ripening fruit. Passage of the three predators caused more than a
little consternation, though not one raised hand, paw, or talon to
hunt.
“Through that gate,” the falcon directed,
“beneath the grey stone arch. Step lively, wingless!”
Firekeeper laughed and began to run, forcing the bird to take
flight quickly and without great grace. Blind Seer bounded alongside,
leaping and almost catching the peregrine by her tail feathers. Once
through the gate, they found themselves in a meadow yellow and white
with wild flowers, thick with green grass yet unmowed and unbrowned
by the greater heat of late summer.
Firekeeper dove into it as she might have into a deep pool,
rolling neatly on one shoulder and bounding to her feet without a
pause. Around and around her, in spiraling circles, Blind Seer ran,
stretching muscles stiff and aching from confinement indoors. He
started a rabbit and gave chase, but let it escape since he was not
really hungry.
Wolf and woman played in this fashion for some time before a
shriek from Elation alerted them to the approach of strangers.
There were two: a male and a female. Neither were adults, of that
Firekeeper was certain. She was less certain about their actual ages.
Derian had made some effort to educate her on this matter, using as
models the few children at the keep and a few others glimpsed along
the road or from the windows of the Kestrel manse. After some
consideration, Firekeeper decided that the boy was the younger, more
from how he deferred to his playmate than from anything else.
That the two had not expected to find anyone else here was obvious
from the way they paused beneath the gateway arch. That they were
curious was evident from how they stood, hand clasped in hand,
staring.
“I wouldn’t swear it,” Blind Seer said, plopping
on his haunches next to Firekeeper, “but they smell familiar.
Could they have been among the pack yesterday?”
Firekeeper tilted her head to one side, studying the pair. After a
moment, she nodded, a human gesture that was becoming habit with
her.
“Yes, I think so,” she replied. “They were the
two who laughed hardest during the meal. I think they thought my
manner of eating amusing.”
This last was not something about which she was particularly
happy. She had been rather pleased with her progress in human
customs. The mockery of these small ones—and the
better-concealed reactions of their elders—had proven to her
that she still had much to learn.
“Talk with them!” the falcon urged from a perch high
in a peach tree. “From what I can see, none of their elders are
about. You may learn something here.”
Firekeeper nodded, swallowed past a sudden hard spot in her
throat, and managed a soft “Hello. Good morning.”
Girl and boy exchanged glances. Then the girl stepped a pace
forward.
“Good morning. What are you doing in our great-uncle’s
garden?”
Firekeeper frowned. “Running. The castle is very
cold.”
The girl took another step forward, her apprehensive gaze on Blind
Seer rather than on Firekeeper. She was solidly built, but not heavy,
with chubby cheeks and red hair highlighted with gold. In the center
of her forehead a dark reddish-orange stone glimmered, set in a band
of woven gold. Firekeeper hadn’t seen enough of humans to
decide if the girl would be judged pretty, but suspected that she was
as yet too gawky, too young to be considered so.
Pulling straight the skirt of her mid-calf-length flowered frock,
the girl continued her interrogation:
“But do you have permission to be here? These are the
king’s gardens.”
Even Firekeeper could hear the pride in the girl’s voice as
she said these words, but the wolf thought it a pardonable pride
given the importance humans placed on kings.
“I do,” she replied. “King Tedric told me last
night, when he asked us to stay at the castle.”
“Asked you?” began the girl, but the boy interrupted,
hurrying forward to tug one of her puffed sleeves.
“Don’t you get it, Citrine?” he hissed in what
Firekeeper guessed were meant to be hushed tones. “This is Earl
Kestrel’s ward. This is Blysse!”
“Oh, Kenre!” Citrine protested, looked again, then
frowned. “Oh!”
“I am called Blysse,” Firekeeper confirmed.
“What are you called?”
“I,” said the girl, “am Citrine
Shield.”
“I’m Kenre,” the boy said. “Kenre
Trueheart. Is that your dog?”
“Wolf,” Firekeeper answered. “Blind Seer,
because he have blue eyes.”
“They are!” the boy said, leaning forward to look, but
not closing with the wolf. Firekeeper respected him for his
prudence.
Kenre Trueheart was as sturdily built as Citrine, perhaps given
slightly to fat where she was not. With his soft light brown hair and
big brown eyes, his body all quivering with excitement, he reminded
Firekeeper, not unkindly, of a baby rabbit.
“I didn’t know wolves ever had blue eyes,” Kenre
said.
“Most do not,” Firekeeper answered, feeling a certain
thrill. She was actually talking to humans on her own, without Derian
there to intercede or clarify!
The little girl, Citrine, pushed her way through the tall grass.
As she came closer, Firekeeper caught her scent, a mingling of soap
and flowers, overlaid with the bacon and bread from her
breakfast.
“Can I pat him?” she asked, gesturing to Blind
Seer.
Firekeeper tilted her head, considering. “He
bites.”
“Oh! And Earl Kestrel lets you keep him?”
“Blind Seer stay with me,” Firekeeper replied,
avoiding the awkward issue of permission. “So does
falcon.”
She raised her forearm, encased from hand to elbow in a heavy
falconer’s glove that Race had bought for her along the road
from West Keep to Eagle’s Nest. With a showy screech, Elation
launched from the peach tree’s branches, spiraled upward, then
plummeted down to land with deceptive gentleness on
Firekeeper’s glove. Even so, Firekeeper had to steady herself
against the weight of that landing. Elation was to the average
peregrine falcon what Blind Seer was to Cousin wolves—bigger,
stronger, and far wiser.
Kenre and Citrine both scampered back at the falcon’s
descent, but curiosity brought them forward almost immediately.
Skirting the wolf, they stared up at the falcon, who obliged by
intelligently returning their regard.
“It looks like a peregrine,” Kenre said hesitantly,
“but bigger than any in my father’s aeries.”
“Kenre’s father is a Merlin,” Citrine said,
confusing Firekeeper to no end. “My father is a Goshawk, though
my mother is a Gyrfalcon.”
“I not,” said Firekeeper, feeling a sinking sensation
that this would not be the last time she made this statement,
“understand.”
Citrine looked delighted rather than exasperated, soothing
Firekeeper somewhat, and put on what even the wolf-raised woman had
come to recognize as a lecturing tone.
“Each of the six Great Houses has two names,” Citrine
said. “One is the original family name; the other is the emblem
given by King Chalmer the First in the Year Twenty-seven of this
Realm.”
Seeing that Firekeeper still looked confused, she clarified,
“This is the Year One Hundred Five.”
“It is?”
“Yes. One hundred and five years ago, Queen Zorana the Great
won her last battle with her enemies and founded the Kingdom of Hawk
Haven. The losers settled for becoming the Kingdom of Bright
Bay.”
Firekeeper had understood about a third of this, but the key
words, combined with Derian’s brief dissertations on the
importance of kings and queens, were enough to give her the essential
gist.
“So why is Kenre’s father a merlin?”
Kenre answered, “My family’s name is
Trueheart—just like yours is Norwood.”
Firekeeper remembered being told something of the kind following a
long session with Earl Kestrel and a woman he called Mother and
everyone else called Duchess. She nodded encouragement.
“Speak on.”
“When King Chalmer—that’s King Tedric’s
father—married Rose Rosewood, he gave titles to the Great
Houses as a wedding gift,” Kenre said, foundering somewhat.
Citrine came to his aid. “The Great Houses back then
weren’t happy that the king didn’t marry into one of
their families.”
Firekeeper nodded, though she understood little of this, hoping
they would get back to how a two-legs could also be a bird of
prey.
“To make them happier,” Citrine continued, “King
Chalmer gave them a special family name, like nothing anyone else
would have. So the Norwoods—that’s your
family—became the Kestrels.”
“Earl Kestrel?” Firekeeper asked. “He is not a
bird!”
“A kestrel is a type of falcon, like the peregrine but
smaller.”
From Firekeeper’s fist, Elation shrilled laughter.
“Smaller, stupider, milder.”
Firekeeper shook the bird slightly.
“So kestrel,” she asked carefully, “is name for
a bird?”
She remembered now the representations she had seen on the
earl’s baggage, on his carriage, over the doorways of his
manse. Her eyes still had trouble seeing the pictures in human art, a
thing that had frustrated some of Derian’s attempts to teach
her written words.
“That’s right,” Citrine said encouragingly.
“Just like your falcon is a peregrine.”
“I know that,” Firekeeper answered. “Derian told
me. He never told me kestrel was a bird.”
“Maybe he didn’t want to confuse you with too much too
fast,” Kenre said with the humble wisdom of someone who often
found himself in that very situation.
“Just so,” Firekeeper agreed. “He confuses me
without trying.”
All three of them laughed at this and looked at each other,
suddenly relaxed and at ease. Firekeeper remembered something of
human manners then.
“We sit,” she offered, “over by brook, maybe?
You tell me more about fathers who are birds?”
The children readily agreed. Elation soared again to a treetop
from which she could keep watch and Blind Seer, quietly amused by all
of this, vanished within the tall grass.
“I will run, scout, maybe hunt,” he said as he moved
away. “Ox fetches much meat, but it is all dead
cold.”
“Go,” Firekeeper replied, “but stay from the
town.”
“Gladly,” the wolf laughed. “It
stinks.”
When the three humans were seated, bare feet trailing in the
water, Citrine resumed her explanation.
“So Kenre’s father isn’t really a merlin.
It’s his father’s family’s symbol.”
“ ‘Symbol,’ ” Firekeeper repeated
carefully. “What is symbol?”
Citrine tapped at her headband, rubbing the stone as if it would
help her to construct a definition.
“A symbol is something that stands for something else. My
name is Citrine.”
“Yes?” Firekeeper said, confused at this sudden switch
of subject.
“Citrine is also the name of this stone.” The girl
indicated the translucent reddish-orange stone in her headband.
“The word stands for both me and this stone. Do you
understand?”
Firekeeper might have had more trouble if wolf names were not
essentially symbolic, though more literally so. She nodded.
“Yes, I think I do. So Kenre’s father is not merlin.
He is just called Merlin.”
“Right!” Citrine beamed. “Kenre’s family
uses his father’s name, rather than his mother’s, because
the Great Houses outrank those of lesser nobles and Zorana’s
father was a common archer before King Chalmer made him a noble
one.”
Firekeeper decided to ignore this for now. It sounded rather too
much like some of the lessons that Derian had tried to teach her and
she had dismissed as irrelevant to her situation. Uncomfortably, she
realized that she might have dismissed the matter of Great Houses and
precedence too quickly.
“Easier to know,” she said, thinking aloud,
“with wolves. Who is first is fastest and strongest.”
“Your dog,” Kenre said, glancing around nervously,
noticing for the first time that Blind Seer was gone, “really
is a wolf? You’re not just saying so?”
“Really wolf,” Firekeeper said, having had similar
discussions with Derian and Race along the road to Eagle’s
Nest. “Three years born in my family.”
“Your family?” the two children said together.
“Not Earl Kestrel’s!” Citrine added.
“No. I am wolf-raised,” Firekeeper explained.
“Human born. After big fire, my mother gives me to
wolves.”
“What happened to her?” Kenre asked.
“She died,” Firekeeper said, callously blunt toward
the memory of this woman she remembered only in dreams. “Wolves
say of fire burns.”
“Were you very old then?” Citrine asked, pity and
horror in her voice.
“Very small,” Firekeeper answered. “Smaller than
you or Kenre. Little. Young.”
Vocabulary exhausted, she shrugged. “So I am
wolf.”
“And your father?”
“Wolves not say.”
“Was he Prince Barden?”
“Earl Kestrel say so.” Firekeeper frowned
thoughtfully. “I cannot remember.”
From the looks the children traded she wondered if she had said
too much. Then she shrugged. Let Earl Kestrel deal with it, if the
little bird-man could. She didn’t want to be queen. At least
she didn’t think she did.
“Where did you get your knife?”
No one had bothered ask her that before, but Firekeeper knew that
the knife was somehow important to the earl and his plans. Since the
man had not been precisely unkind to her, she hedged:
“From the One Wolf when I was young, but I do not know where
he get. Maybe Prince Barden give to him.”
Their elders might have scoffed at such fanciful tales, but
Citrine and Kenre were young enough to live on the borders of
fantasy. To them, a girl raised by wolves did not seem at all
improbable, especially when they had seen for themselves the
impossibly huge wolf who shadowed her and the equally large hawk who
obeyed her commands though unhooded and unleashed. Moreover,
Citrine’s mother was reputed to be a sorceress, a thing both of
them implicitly believed though the evidence for that belief was
shared in whispers.
“That’s why you talk funny,” Citrine said with
the bluntness of the young, “and why you eat…”
She stopped herself just in time, but Kenre sniggered and they
both fell into uncontrolled giggles before stopping, suddenly aware
of the coolness of Firekeeper’s dark gaze.
“Like a wolf?” the woman offered dryly.
Citrine nervously tugged a lock of red-gold hair and Kenre
paled.
“Well…” the girl stammered.
“I do,” Firekeeper said, “but I learn human
ways. Can you do this?”
In an instant she was on her feet and up into the upper boughs of
a gnarled apple tree.
“Or this?”
She hung upside down from bent knees and, in one smooth motion,
unsheathed her knife and threw it, burying the blade to the hilt in
the soil between the two children.
“Or this?”
She was down again, knife back in her hand, dark eyes wild. In a
single bound she was across the brook, crouched on the other bank.
Wolves played such bragging games among their kind and she
hadn’t realized how much she missed showing off.
“I learn human ways,” Firekeeper repeated. “Can
you learn wolf ways?”
The two children stared in amazement and admiring awe.
“We could try,” Kenre offered, eager and intense.
“If our mothers let us,” Citrine added, more
dubious.
“Those birds of prey symbol humans!” Firekeeper said
scornfully. Then she recalled the power they wielded and softened her
tone. “Maybe they will let you.”
“We didn’t realize that you really meant you were a
wolf,” Citrine said, eager to apologize. “We thought you
meant as a symbol. There is a Wolf Society, you know.”
“Derian say something of that,” Firekeeper admitted.
“But I not understand. More symbols?”
“More,” Kenre said with another sigh. “My
society is the Horse Society.”
“Mine is the Elk,” Citrine offered.
“But you are not horses or elks,” Firekeeper asked,
wanting to be certain.
“I wish!” Kenre said wistfully. “When I was
really small I thought that was what would happen when I got older,
that I’d learn how to become a horse. I went to my first
meeting last year and there was nothing like that, just people in
fancy costumes.”
“Can,” Firekeeper asked, her heart pounding very fast
at this new and wonderful thought, “can humans become animals
for truth, not symbols?”
Her question was awkwardly worded, but neither Kenre nor Citrine
had any doubt what she meant.
“Maybe,” Kenre said, his voice suddenly soft.
“There are stories of sorcerers from the days before the Plague
when the Old Country ruled here.”
“My nurse,” Citrine added, her tones equally hushed,
“hints that such magics can be done.”
“Oh!” Firekeeper swallowed hard, unable to manage more
words around the sudden lump in her throat. To be a wolf, for real
and not just in heart!
“It may be,” Citrine said quickly, “just a
fireside story. That’s what my sister Ruby said.”
“Ruby,” Kenre retorted, speaking what he had heard his
older sister Deste say, “is scared of her own shadow. Of course
she wouldn’t want to believe in magic. It would scare her.
Especially with your mother being…”
They shuddered together, but didn’t offer clarification and
Firekeeper asked for none. There were too many new words here, too
many new concepts. She held on to just one, one that filled her with
delight and made her more determined than ever to learn the ways of
humankind.
Somewhere out there might be one who would know how to give her
wolf’s heart a wolf’s body. That was more than enough
incentive to make her go on, even if she must win the throne of Hawk
Haven to attain her goal!
IX
The day following the grand banquet, Elise Archer sat
at home reviewing correspondence and considering how to spend her
day. Queen Elexa had requested that Lady Aurella wait upon her and
Ivon Archer was once again in conference with his mother and sister,
so Elise was alone.
Secretly she was rather glad. Despite her father’s
ambitions, Elise suspected that either Aunt Zorana or Lord Rolfston
Redbriar would be named King Tedric’s heir. Further intrigue,
on top of last night’s session, seemed rather ridiculous.
She was folding a polite refusal of a dinner invitation when her
maid came to the door of her solar. “M’lady, you have a
caller.”
“Who is it, Ninette?”
The maid, a poor relative several years her senior, meant to serve
as her chaperon as much as her maid, frowned slightly before
replying. “A young man. Your cousin, Jet Shield.”
“Jet!” Elise considered not whether but where to
receive him. “Take him to the summerhouse near the duck pond
and have cool drinks and light refreshments brought to him. I will
attend him as soon as I have changed into something more
fitting.”
As soon as enough time had passed that she would seem neither
eager nor rude, Elise walked down to the summerhouse. She had combed
her hair and donned a pale yellow muslin gown perfect for informal
entertaining on a summer morning that already promised to become
quite hot. When she was a few steps from the summerhouse, she told
her maid:
“Wait for me on that bench, Ninette. I promise not to stray
from sight, but Cousin Jet may speak more freely to my ears
alone.”
Ninette was neither silly nor stupid. She knew as much about the
recent political maneuvering as could anyone who was not immediate
family and, unlike Elise, still treasured dreams of herself residing
within the castle, an intimate of King Ivon’s family and,
later, confidant to Queen Elise.
“Very good, Lady Elise.”
Elise greeted Jet with both hands outstretched, a relaxed informal
gesture quite appropriate between cousins. She was slightly taken
aback when he instead met her with a deep bow and lightly kissed the
air above the hand he gracefully captured in one of his own.
The greeting wasn’t precisely incorrect. Indeed, it would be
perfectly correct in some settings. However, a summerhouse in the
midmorning hours was not one of these.
“Cousin,” Elise said, retrieving her fingers.
“May I pour you something cool to drink?”
“Thank you, Elise. Whatever you are having,” Jet
replied. “You look lovely this morning. Cool, peaceful, and
tranquil—everything that my father’s house is
not.”
Elise smiled, acknowledging both the compliment and the neat
transition into current problems.
“I would be lying,” she said, knowing that the same
information could be learned from the servants, “if I said that
my parents were particularly tranquil this morning.”
“Great-Uncle Tedric,” Jet said with a small laugh,
“pulled a nice one last night. Introducing that girl in such a
fashion that we could not question her origin without insulting House
Kestrel was brilliant. He is a master of his craft.”
“Tedric is,” Elise agreed, “a great
king.”
“Would that I could be as certain,” Jet said, his
black eyes shining, “that his successor would be as well
prepared for the throne. Tedric was King Chalmer’s second born,
but Crown Princess Marras died a year before her father. King Chalmer
had time to prepare his new heir for his role.”
“My father said,” Elise added, eager to draw Jet out,
“that Princess Marras was so distracted from the deaths first
of her baby, Alben, then of her husband, Lorimer Stanbrook, that
Tedric was his father’s right hand for the two years before
King Chalmer’s death.”
“Indeed,” Jet said, “just as my sister Sapphire
is taken up with the minutiae of learning how to run our family
estates. Therefore, I have become my father’s confidant in the
larger matters of kingdom politics.”
That old song again, Elise thought, amused. She murmured
understandingly and Jet continued:
“My concern is that whomever King Tedric selects, there will
be hurt feelings all around. Rivals passed over may not so quickly
forget their own claims and be reluctant to bend knee to one they see
as an equal.”
The forceful manner in which he tossed a bit of roll to one of the
ducks suggested that he might be one of these.
“So you favor Lady Blysse Norwood?” Elise asked,
keeping her mien quite serious though she was laughing inside.
“If she is the king’s granddaughter, her claim supersedes
all others. No rival would be passed over for one with an equal
claim, for no other claim could be equal.”
Jet looked shocked for one quick moment before he regained control
of his features.
“If Lady Blysse is Prince Barden’s daughter,” he
began, a slight stress on the “if.” “then, of
course, I favor her. However, there is doubt that she is indeed
Barden’s daughter.”
“Yes?” Elise prompted.
“Certainly! My mother recalls that there were other children
included in Barden’s expedition. Lady Blysse could be one of
these.”
Elise nodded. She was certain that some thought other than those
raised by Blysse Norwood’s addition to the game was burning
behind Jet’s eyes and she was nearly as eager for him to tell
as he was to speak.
“There is a way,” Jet said slowly, “to make King
Tedric’s choice easier for him.”
“Oh?” For a fleeting moment, Elise wondered if Jet was
hinting that Blysse should be assassinated.
“Yes. Give King Tedric a choice that permits him to unite
two of the rival parties for the throne—all three, even, if
those involved are properly cultivated.”
Elise shook her head. “I don’t understand.”
“If you and I married, Elise,” Jet said, leaning
forward and capturing her hand between his own, “then by
selecting one of us, King Tedric would really be selecting both of
our houses.”
Only her mother’s careful training kept Elise’s mouth
from dropping open in shock at this cool proposal. At that moment, a
child she hadn’t even known still lived within her—a
child who had daydreamed of fervent entreaties, of romantic ballads
sung outside her window by moonlight, of elegant tokens—died
forever.
She gasped something inarticulate which Jet, fortunately,
interpreted as encouragement rather than dismay.
“I couldn’t believe no one had thought of this
solution before,” he said, squeezing her fingers tightly.
“You are the sole scion of your house. I am the senior male in
mine. Surely King Tedric would see the wisdom in selecting us over
any of our siblings. He might even forgo the intermediary step of
first choosing one of our parents as his heir and name one of us
directly.”
You, so you believe, Elise thought indignantly, or you
wouldn’t be so excited by the prospect.
“We two are the only ones who could play this game,”
Jet continued, “and that is to our great advantage. There are
no males in your household who could marry one of my sisters. Purcel
Trueheart is eight years younger than my sister Sapphire—too
great a gap for even Zorana to consider, especially when Purcel is
four years shy of his majority.”
“But I also am too young to marry!” Elise protested,
selecting the first argument that Jet’s words suggested.
“Marriages are not contracted until the partners are
nineteen.”
“Consummated,” Jet corrected with a unguarded glance
that suggested that he had fantasized about the prospect with some of
the ardor that had been absent from his proposal. “Some
marriages have been contracted long before that date, nor have all
the formalities waited until the participants reached their majority.
In any case, you’re nearly eighteen.”
Elise colored. The most usual reason for marriage before the
participants were legal adults was an accidental pregnancy. No matter
what the obvious political advantages, if she and Jet wed, there
would still be whispers, whispers that would not necessarily be
stilled when the bride did not deliver a “premature”
infant.
“I would not care to make myself the subject of
scandal,” she said firmly, “no matter how great the prize
to be won.”
“I understand, lovely cousin,” Jet said, pressing her
fingers to his lips. “Your scruples do you credit. Still, there
is no reason not to arrange a betrothal, is there? King Tedric might
even encourage us to marry before your majority. If we wed at the
king’s command, no one could cast aspersions on your maidenly
honor.”
Elise frowned. Jet’s proposal was enticing. He was handsome,
strong, well connected. Though they were cousins, the relationship
was not too close. Indeed, just a few years before, she had
daydreamed about marriage to him. That had been before she had
realized sadly that Lord Rolfston and Lady Melina would not permit
their son to remain unmarried until she was eligible.
Certainly, King Tedric could not fail to see the advantages of a
match between them. Grand Duke Gadman and Grand Duchess Rosene would
both be satisfied, for each would see a descendant ascend to the
throne. Only Aunt Zorana would be unhappy, and even she might be
consoled at the thought of her niece as queen—especially if Jet
was merely consort.
“Would you support me as queen?” Elise asked, pursuing
this idea. “King Tedric might not choose to pass over our
fathers. Or he might name me his heir. My odds of being named
heir—even without any alliance such as you suggest—have
usually been considered better than yours. Would you be content if I
were queen and you were my consort?”
Jet paused as if to consider, but she was certain he had mulled
over his answer in advance.
“Yes,” he said at last. “I would support you.
Whether you or I were monarch, the other still would be elevated to
great honor. Moreover, our child would follow us onto the throne.
That is an honor not lightly forgone.”
Elise nodded. Until this moment, she had not considered further
than her own ascension in the unlikelihood that her father succeeded
King Tedric. Now she realized that more was at stake here than the
prestige and power of a single lifetime.
As a royal ancestor, great honors would be paid to her even after
her death. On the Festival of the Eagle, her image would be paraded
with those of Queen Zorana, King Chalmer, and King Tedric. If she was
consort, those honors still would be paid to her, just as they were
to Clive Elkwood (who had died even before his wife had solidified
her kingdom) and to Queen Rose.
Ancestors were always patrons to their descendants, but the people
believed that ancestral monarchs were patrons to all their former
subjects down through time. As such, they received sacrifices from
every family altar, sacrifices that were said to give them
considerable power in the afterworld.
Aware that Jet was watching her, the glittering light in his eyes
brighter than ever, Elise managed to speak:
“That is an interesting point, Jet. I believe that you would
support my monarchy if I were named before you.”
“And would you support my kingship?” he asked, certain
of the reply. “As a scion of House Goshawk, my father outranks
yours. My mother is a Shield of House Gyrfalcon, and so outranks your
Wellward mother. King Tedric may consider this when naming his
heir.”
“Those arguments,” Elise admitted, “have been
raised before—although more usually in your sister’s
favor. Yes, if we were wed and King Tedric named you his heir, I
would support you.”
“And if we were merely engaged?” he pushed.
“Engagements,” she stated firmly, “have been
broken once political goals have been attained—as your sister
Sapphire has demonstrated so ably.”
Jet scowled. “I am not Sapphire!”
“No,” Elise replied easily, “but my parents will
not overlook her history, even if I trust you.” As I am not yet certain that I do, she added
silently.
“I concede your point,” he said gallantly, lightly
kissing her hand.
Gently, she drew her hand back, her fingers still tingling from
the caress.
“I am a minor yet,” she reminded him. “And
cannot contract a marriage for myself. If you are serious about this,
you must approach my parents.”
Jet nodded. “I know. Honestly, Elise, I have not even spoken
with my own parents on this matter. I wished first to know your
heart. When I speak with them, may I say that you would consider my
proposal?”
Elise liked Jet better for wanting her consent first, then
wondered if he was just being cautious. She phrased her answer
carefully.
“Yes, you may tell them that I would consider it. I
cannot answer for my parents.”
Nor, she thought, as they made their farewells and Jet took his
leave, have I said that I would accept—only consider.
Still, she would be lying to herself if she did not admit that an
acute thrill had entered her heart at the prospect of marrying Jet.
At this moment, perhaps, his eyes were on the crown, but she liked
the thought that in time she could turn them to herself alone.
Being queen would be preferable, but a consort could wield as much
influence, especially if she held the heart of the monarch in her
hand and bore his heirs within her womb. Humming to herself, Elise
left the summerhouse and hurried toward the house, suddenly impatient
for her parents’ return.
Once the necessary luggage, including Firekeeper’s falcon, was
transported to the castle, Derian was given the rest of the day off.
He suspected this was so Earl Kestrel could have a chance to work on
Firekeeper by himself. Where once that would have troubled Derian,
now he accepted it. If Firekeeper could only manage when he was there
to defend her, then she was ill equipped to survive in this new world
she had entered.
He wondered how much of her own practical view had influenced his
thoughts on the matter, and then shrugged. Being free of the castle
and of courtly constraints felt good. He had refused the earl’s
polite offer of a mount—horses were more trouble than they were
worth within the city walls—and hurried down the cobbled
streets on foot.
His parents’ livery stables were conveniently situated
outside the city walls, but their home was near Market Square. Today
the market was in full swing and he grinned at himself for forgetting
that, even as he enjoyed threading through the throng. A few
moon-spans before he would have gone out of his way to avoid the
crowds, but after his sojourn among the nobility he was glad to be
back among the common people.
He immersed himself in the hubbub: the cries of the vendors
praising their wares, the scolding of a mother when her child
strayed, the pinging of the tinkers’ hammers, the heated
bartering on all sides. It moved him like music and he danced to it,
his steps graceful and his heart light.
At one stall he bought a roll smeared with strawberry jam, at
another sweets for his brother and sister, at another a basket of
blackberries for his mother. He grinned when a farmer, known to him
for years, raised his eyebrows as he noticed the Kestrel crest
stamped on the reverse of the token offered in payment.
Derian himself had been fairly awed the first time he’d been
given one of those—up until then his pocket money had been the
more common guild tokens. Now he took the Kestrel tokens for granted.
After all, he was now a retainer of House Kestrel and entitled to use
their credit.
Whistling, his basket of berries on his arm, Derian strode down
the street toward the large brick house with the cut-slate roof that
had been in the Carter family for generations and which, in time,
would pass to him. The front door, used only for formal occasions,
was closed even on this hot afternoon, but the side door which led
into the office was open. He paused in the street, heard his
mother’s voice rising and falling in the polite but firm tones
she used for business, and passed around to the kitchen door.
His eight-year-old brother, Brock, light brown hair bleached from
the summer sun, was teasing their sister Damita, who was sitting on
the back steps, shelling sweet peas.
“Damita has a sweet-a,” the boy sang, dancing from
foot to foot, “wants to meet ‘im, at the square, but here
she sits, shellin’ peas. Now do you think that’s
fair?”
Damita, at thirteen, was as red-haired as Derian, but whereas his
own hair was darkening to a subdued auburn, her curls were coppery
bright. When Derian had departed with Earl Kestrel, she had been a
flat-chested, rambunctious imp, but in these three moon-spans she
seemed to have suddenly changed. She looked more a young woman with
her hair twisted on top of her head and the definite beginnings of a
woman’s bosom filling out her summer dress.
Derian paused, his hand on the latch of the white-painted board
gate, feeling uncomfortably the stranger. The sensation was not
relieved when Damita glanced over and, seeing him, said in polite,
bored tones meant to cover her embarrassment at being found barefoot
and doing kitchen work:
“May I help you, sir? Business enquiries should be made at
the side…”
She stopped in midphrase, then erupted to her feet, pea shells
flying everywhere. Nearly spilling the stoneware bowl on the step
next to her, she darted down the flagstone walk, familiar again.
“Deri! Deri! You’re back.”
Derian didn’t remember opening the gate, but somehow he was
inside, hugging her to him. Brock threw one arm around his older
brother’s waist and hammered on his shoulders, crowing
happily.
The initial chaos past, they settled on the steps. Damita
automatically began shelling peas again, but her mind wasn’t on
the job and several times Derian rescued a pod from amid the shucked
vegetables.
“I hardly knew you,” Damita repeated, “you look
so fine.”
Of course the leather breaches and heavy woolen shirts he had worn
on the journey west wouldn’t have done once the expeditionary
party was settled at the keep and later at the Kestrel Manse. Earl
Kestrel (or Valet, Derian suspected) had sent a new wardrobe along,
some of the items not too different from the clothes Derian had worn
in his parents’ service, some so elegant that they would be out
of place anywhere but in court.
For his visit home, conscious that he was representing his new
employer, Derian had donned knee-breeches and waistcoat, both of good
cotton dyed walnut brown. These were worn over a bleached linen
shirt, fine-knit socks, and matching brass-buckled shoes. A striking
tricorn hat of dark brown felt topped the assembly.
Damita ran a critical hand over the fabric of his waistcoat and
nodded approvingly. “You look like a young gentleman, Deri.
That’s what I thought you were, standing there at the gate. I
thought you’d come about hiring a horse or carriage.”
“And you look like a young lady,” Derian replied,
happy to banish that initial strangeness by voicing it.
“You’re wearing your hair up now.”
“Mother bought me some barrettes for my birthday,”
Damita answered, ducking her head so that he could admire the carved
doe running through her copper locks, “and said that I could
wear my hair up for occasions. I thought I was going to the market
with Cook…”
She paused to glare at Brock, and Derian, remembering the scene he
had interrupted, wisely kept silent.
“But Mother said these peas had to be shelled.”
Derian, who knew his mother’s disciplinary tactics perfectly
well, having been on the receiving end of them many times, filled in
the picture. Damita had undoubtedly sassed Mother and, as a penalty,
had not only been told she could not go to market, but that she must
shell the vegetables.
He took a handful of peas from the basket resting between his
sister’s feet.
“Well, let me give a hand. C’mon, Brock, something
wrong with you?”
Brock protested, “It’s her job, not mine! I did my
jobs: fed the chickens, weeded the kitchen garden, ran messages to
the stables…”
Derian interrupted. “True enough, but one thing I learned
when venturing west with the earl is that when there’s a job to
be done, everyone pitches in. Many’s the night I’ve sat
mending shirts by firelight so that we could hit the trail with the
dawn.”
Brock, hearing the promise of a story, dropped onto the step on
Derian’s other side and dipped his hand into the basket of
peas.
“Tell us all about it,” he commanded.
Vernita Carter found them all there about an hour later.
“Damita,” she said, her footsteps light as she crossed
the stones of the kitchen floor, “the peas look wonderful and
the carrots, too. Since you’ve finished the potatoes, I suppose
you can go to the market for…”
She stopped, a sudden smile lighting her face. In her day, Vernita
Carter had been regarded a great beauty. Even bearing several
children and long days managing the family business had not robbed
her of a certain grace and dignity.
“Derian,” she said softly, “why didn’t you
let me know you were home?”
“You had a client, ma’am,” he said, rising and
giving her his best bow before impulsively hugging her. When had she
grown so small? “And I was always told that nothing short of an
emergency should interrupt that.”
“I think,” Vernita replied, drawing back to look him
over proudly, “that the return home of my eldest son would
qualify. Damita, has Cook come back?”
“No, Mother,” Damita said. “If you wish, I could
run and find her.”
“Do. Tell her we will have an extra mouth for dinner.”
Vernita gave her son an anxious glance. “You can stay,
can’t you, Deri?”
“For dinner, Mother, but I must return by
bedtime.”
Vernita looked temporarily disappointed, but nodded. “Go
then, Damita. Take a few spare tokens and buy us all something
special for dessert.”
“Deri brought blackberries,” Brock informed her,
bringing the willow basket from the cool room to display the prize,
“and candy.”
“Then buy something that will go well with them, Dami. I
trust your judgment.” Vernita turned to her younger son.
“Brock, run to the stables and tell your father Derian is here
and that he’s to come home early for dinner.”
“Yes, Mother.”
Like a little tawny whirlwind, the boy was gone. Vernita
smiled.
“Let me shut the office door and put the sign out referring
emergency business to the stables. Then we can have tea and you can
tell me everything that has happened since you’ve been
gone.”
“Three moon-spans in a few hours,” Derian protested
with a grin. “Didn’t you read my letters?”
“I did,” she said, pulling a grubby bundle from a
drawer to show him. “We all did. Now you can tell us everything
you didn’t write.”
Derian, thinking how Earl Kestrel had sworn them all to secrecy
regarding Firekeeper, nodded.
“There’s more there than you might think,” he
said.
Vernita grinned, a grin to match his own. “Oh, I don’t
know. We hear things, those of us in trade. And the rumors have been
flying thick and fast today.”
Derian grinned back and began, “Our expedition did succeed,
but only in a way…”
Leaving out nothing, for Norvin Norwood’s version of the
tale must already be leaking from the castle into the city, Derian
told of his adventures, repeating a bit when his father and siblings
returned, and talking steadily through dinner.
When he ended, there was silence. Then Vernita said softly, so
softly that Derian wondered if he was meant to hear:
“Poor child…”
At first he thought she meant Firekeeper; then, catching her gaze,
he had the uncomfortable feeling that she was thinking of him.
Later that evening, Derian walked toward the outer gates of the
king’s castle with his father. Colby Carter was a thick,
broad-shouldered man with a deep inner stillness that came from
understanding and working with draft horses and oxen. Brock took
after him, while Derian and Damita more resembled their mother.
“I never thought I’d see a son of mine living
here,” Colby admitted, “except maybe as a
groom.”
“I’m hardly more, Father,” Derian reminded,
“but tending to a wolf-woman and her beasts instead of to
horses.”
“Maybe so,” Colby said. He thrust out a muscular,
callused hand. “Don’t stay away more than you
must.”
“I won’t,” Derian promised, wishing suddenly
that he could remain longer with his family. “But my duty is
yet to Earl Kestrel.”
“I know, son.” Colby started to turn away, then swung
back. “Will your master be expecting you yet?”
“I have some time before I will be quite overdue,”
Derian replied, puzzled.
“There are matters,” Colby continued heavily,
“that I had thought to raise with you, but I preferred not to
in front of the younger children. Damita is at a flighty age, quick
to become moody. Better not give her more to brood upon than the
imagined wrongs a girl her age is prone to. Brock is a good boy, but
too inclined to chatter.”
“And Mother?”
“Knows all that concerns me in this matter,” Colby
assured his son. “Even that I hoped to speak with you tonight.
She won’t be worrying if I don’t come home at
once.”
Derian looked down the road back toward the town. “We walked
by several alehouses on our way.”
“Just what I was thinking,” Colby agreed.
A few minutes later found them seated in an out-of-the-way corner
in a tavern still busy with the later elements of the market day
trade, mostly visitors from out of town who had hawked their wares
until dusk and would head for home with dawn. After the potboy had
set two mugs of new summer ale in front of them and hurried off,
Colby cleared his throat.
“Kings and earls,” he said, “are not the only
ones interested in this matter of succession. Honest guild members
have their concerns as well, as do factions outside our own
kingdom.”
Derian nodded, having considered some of this himself but,
frankly, having been too close to the concerns of his own earl to
think much beyond that immediate focus.
“Yes, Father. There’s much talk about a candidate for
the throne born outside of our kingdom entirely—one Allister
Seagleam of Bright Bay. I think, though, you have more than him in
mind.”
Colby sipped his ale. “True, but let us start with this
Allister Seagleam. There are many among the guilds who favor his
candidacy above all others.”
“Above our native born?” Derian asked, amazed.
“Not so long ago, a bare hundred years,” Colby
reminded him, “we were one land, the remnants of the colony of
Gildcrest. Before the Civil War, we were that colony itself. A
hundred years is a long time, true, but not so much that one man
cannot easily comprehend it.
“There are those,” the older man continued, “who
tire of the constant war between Hawk Haven and Bright Bay, those who
remember that King Chalmer meant Princess Caryl’s marriage to a
prince of our rival power to be a pledge for lasting peace among
us.”
“That peace didn’t last much beyond this
Mister’s birth,” Derian reminded his father sourly.
“I’m not denying that,” Colby said, “but
still, that is the reason for which Allister was born. Many say that
since King Tedric’s line cannot continue directly, this pledge
child should be permitted his destiny. Some go so far as to say that
this is why all three of King Tedric’s own begetting have died
before their father—to clear the way for our great
ancestor’s vision to come true.”
Derian stared at him. “Do you believe this,
Father?”
Colby shrugged. “I don’t know what to believe. There
is sense in that way of seeing things, though, sense that many common
folk understand. It doesn’t hurt that Duke Allister is the son
of the woman who would have been next in line for the throne if she
had remained in Hawk Haven. Nor was she ever disinherited, as Prince
Barden was. Therefore, her family’s claims are
strong.”
“And if a member of Bright Bay’s royal house took the
throne of Hawk Haven,” Derian said slowly, “there might
be an end to war between our lands.”
“Should be,” Colby agreed, “for there is no
indication that Allister Seagleam is unfavored in his own land. They
title him duke there and have given him lands like those of a scion
of a Great House. Peace would be good for most of the trades. Farmers
could live without the fear that their fields may be trampled or
plundered by roaming soldiers. The guilds could enforce their
standards more effectively. Even such as myself would gain great
opportunities from seeing travel open up. Only those few who have
made their livings in war would be unhappy, and even if Bright Bay
and Hawk Haven were at peace there would not be an end to
watchfulness.”
Derian frowned. “On other borders, you mean.”
“That’s right. Up until now, those countries that
share borders with ourselves and Bright Bay have been content to let
us weaken ourselves by fighting each other. If we were
reunited—as one kingdom or as allies through related
monarchs—they would be less easy.”
“During past conflicts,” Derian said, remembering
things Ox had told him, “Waterland has sent advisors and
marines to supplement our own forces. This is not widely known, but a
friend of mine who has served in the military told me about them. The
reason given for their presence was training—that Waterland
prefers to have some blooded troops among their companies.”
“I had heard something of the sort,” Colby agreed,
“working as I do among traveling folk, tending their animals
and gear. Did you know that Stonehold has made a similar agreement
with Bright Bay? Ostensibly their reasoning is much the same as that
given by Waterland, but I’ll tell you, rulers don’t worry
so much about having blooded troops unless they anticipate a need to
use them. Whether Bright Bay and Hawk Haven are reunited by conquest
or by peaceful means, our neighbors see us as a possible
threat.”
“Then is reuniting so wise?” Derian countered.
“The only alternative,” Colby replied soberly,
“is continuing the cycle of war into uneasy peace and into war
again. So it has been all my life and all my father’s life. Two
of my siblings died from this fighting, both in battles so small that
I doubt any but those who won glory in them even remember them, but
my brothers died just the same. I begrudge the loss of a son to such
circumstances—I even begrudge the death of a horse or ox if
there is an alternative.”
Mention of the ox made Derian uncomfortably aware of his own Ox,
who could have died quite easily despite all his great strength if
one of the arrows that had scarred his broad hide had been luckier in
finding its target.
“We need a strong monarch,” Derian said thoughtfully,
“whether this Duke Allister or not. One who can lead us well in
war and guide us in peace. Is there anyone among our noble families
fit for that task?”
“Not your wolf-girl?” Colby said teasingly.
“You’ve spoken warmly enough of her courage.”
“Courage and to spare,” Derian agreed, “but not
necessarily wisdom, though that could be gained. But can she unite
these jealous nobles behind her, even with King Tedric’s
support?”
“I don’t know,” Colby said honestly. “All
I can do is listen in the market, listen to my clients, listen to the
travelers who cross the borders. Now that we are somewhat at peace
with Bright Bay—more, I think, because they hope to win our
kingdom through inheritance than because hostilities are
ended—there are those who travel between the kingdoms once
more.”
“Merchants, entertainers,” Derian said, thinking back
to those he had met when working in his father’s business,
“tinkers, and simply the footloose—and any one of them
might be a spy.”
“True,” Colby said, “but I watch my tongue.
I’m but a simple livery stable owner, concerned with my horses
and wagons. My wife’s the brains of the
operation—everyone knows that.”
They laughed together at the old joke. Colby was often
underestimated, Vernita never. The arrangement suited them both
nicely.
“I’ll keep your words in mind, Father,” Derian
said soberly. “And you take care. Some may learn you have a son
in Kestrel service and think you more clever than you would
wish.”
“I will,” Colby promised, “and you also take
care. There will be those who will resent the kennel keeper of a
new-minted noblewoman, especially one who looks suspiciously like
she’s becoming a princess.”
Derian nodded. Without further comment, they finished their ales,
settled their score with the tavern keeper, and headed up the hill
toward the castle. A few steps away from the gate, Colby gave Derian
a bone-crushing hug.
“Come see us again soon, son. Bring your work with you if
you’d like. Just don’t be a stranger.”
“I won’t,” Derian repeated, his heart lighter
than before, though these new twists to the already complex political
picture made his head swim.
He turned to watch his father walk down the lamplit streets into
the city, then knocked on the iron-bound door. The porter opened it
so quickly that Derian knew he’d been watching through his
peephole.
“Good visit with the folks at home?”
“Good enough,” Derian said. “Wish I could have
stayed longer.”
“I’m glad to have you back,” the porter said
with anxious eagerness. “You’re Lady Blysse
Norwood’s man, aren’t you?”
“I am,” Derian agreed, wondering. He hadn’t
thought any of the servants knew him as yet.
“Is it true she keeps an enormous wolf as a pet?”
“She has a wolf with her, yes,” Derian answered,
careful even in Firekeeper’s absence not to refer to Blind Seer
as a pet.
“And a falcon the size of an eagle, big enough to carry off
a small child or a lamb?”
“She has a peregrine falcon of good size,” Derian
answered, amused.
“Then I’m glad you’re back,” the porter
repeated. “Good to know there’s someone managing them
all.”
Derian hid a grin, pleased enough with this sudden rise in status,
but unwilling to let the man think he was mocking him.
“I’ll just hurry up then and make certain
they’re all settled for bed,” Derian said politely.
“Good.” With a heavy thud of iron-bound oak, the
porter swung the door shut after Derian. “First time I ever
heard of locking the door to keep the wolf in,” he
muttered.
Running up the wide, smooth stone stairs into the tower, Derian
grinned.
X
When Elise heard footsteps coming up the garden path
behind her, her heart leapt in her breast. Irrationally, stupidly,
with an eagerness she felt was unworthy of the dignity of her
seventeen years, she hoped it would be Jet. She hadn’t seen him
since he made his proposal two days before and the suspense had been
unbearable. Although her initial impulse had been to blurt out
everything to her mother, the few hours’ delay while waiting
for Lady Aurella to return from the castle had shown Elise this would
be unwise.
Aurella Wellward was a good mother. Since Elise was an only child,
Aurella had spent much time with her rather than delegating the more
routine matters of her daughter’s upbringing to a nursemaid as
was more typical in noble houses. Mother and daughter had their
disagreements, their times of estrangement, but lately they had been
quite close. Still, Aurella was too much a lady of the royal court to
not first think of the political maneuvering in Jet’s proposal
rather than the romantic possibilities.
And Elise so very much wanted to dwell on those romantic
possibilities. This was her first marriage proposal (and maybe her
only) and Jet was very handsome. She wanted to dream of moonlight
rides, of holding hands, of whispered confidences. That was why, even
though the sound of two pairs of feet scampering up the graveled path
could never be the measured tread of one set of masculine boots
firmly striding, her heart leapt and she turned with careful grace to
meet…
Citrine Shield and Kenre Trueheart ran up, hands clasped, faces
flushed. For a moment, Elise preserved the hope that Citrine bore a
message from her older brother, but the girl’s words dispelled
even that fleeting fantasy.
“Cousin Elise!” she said. “Good morning! Your
maid Ninette told us you had come to the castle early.”
“You’re staying here, aren’t you?” Elise
said, bending to hug each of the children. An only child herself, she
had always doted on her younger cousins, viewing them as substitutes
for the siblings she herself lacked. The little ones returned her
affection openly, so openly that Sapphire had been known to comment
cattily that Elise wouldn’t like the brats nearly so much if
she had to spend more time with them.
“We are,” Citrine said, “though Jet’s gone
riding with Father. Mother and Sapphire are attending upon the
queen.” Poor Mother, Elise thought. Lady Melina would be
enough to set me off my breakfast.
Innocent in her romantic ideals, she didn’t reflect that if
she married Jet she would see Melina Shield far more often than at
the occasional breakfast.
Kenre cut in, “My family’s staying here too, but
Purcel’s out with his troops. I think he’s
bored.”
Elise nodded. “Are you bored too? Is that why you’re
out and about so early?”
“No,” Kenre said, “we’re not bored.
We’ve been visiting with the wolf-woman. She likes
us.”
“Wolf-woman?” Elise asked, but even as the question
was shaped she realized who Kenre must mean. Everyone had heard of
the great grey wolf who followed Lady Blysse wherever she
went—to the discomfort of every resident of the castle other
than King Tedric. “That isn’t a polite way to refer to
Lady Blysse.”
“She likes it,” Citrine said. “She likes it
better than Blysse. The second day we played with her she told us to
call her Firekeeper. She said that’s her real name, the name
the wolves gave her when she was small.”
“Want to come meet her?” Kenre asked before Elise
could voice any of the dozen questions that Citrine’s speech
had raised. “We thought you might when we saw Ninette in the
corridor. Firekeeper’s in the castle meadows.”
“How do you know?” Elise asked. “Did you make
plans to meet her there?”
“Not really,” Citrine said. Grabbing Elise’s
hand, she pointed up into the sky. “See the bird, way up there?
That’s Firekeeper’s peregrine falcon, Elation. They go
out into the meadows in the morning before Earl Kestrel needs
Firekeeper so that she can get some air and so Blind Seer can
run.”
Allowing herself to be towed along—after all, if Jet was out
riding with Rolfston Redbriar he wasn’t likely to come looking
for her loitering among the roses—Elise asked:
“Blind Seer?”
“That’s the wolf,” Kenre said. “Firekeeper
calls him her brother. She gets really mad if you call him her pet.
Derian said…”
“Derian? Who is that? Her horse?”
Citrine giggled. “Derian is her manservant. He’s from
the town. He was at the banquet: a tall man with red hair.”
Elise remembered this Derian now, a handsome enough commoner
standing awkwardly behind Lady Blysse’s chair, his face
flushing dark red every time his charge made a particularly vigorous
social gaffe.
The meadows were outside the castle walls, but Cousin Purcel had
explained to Elise at great length how they were far more defensible
than they might initially appear. It had something to do with the
high cliffs rising behind the fields and the ravines—some
natural, some otherwise— that flanked them. In a pinch, Purcel
had told her with martial enthusiasm, a few trees could be felled,
some pasturage burned to create a kill zone, and the woods and
meadows would be almost as secure as the castle itself. This was one
of the reasons that the Eagle’s Nest was nearly impossible to
take by siege. As long as the woods and water were accessible, the
besieged could hold out indefinitely.
Every child knew how Queen Zorana had taken the castle by intrigue
rather than by force, establishing herself once and forever as the
dominant figure in the civil conflict.
A few steps outside of the arched doorway in the stone wall, Elise
shook her hands free from the children’s grasp. If she was
going to meet a rival for the throne, she shouldn’t look too
undignified. A moment later, she learned that dignity—at least
in the way she had been taught to define it—wasn’t a
concern for Lady Blysse. When the three cousins entered the meadow,
this youngest heir to the Great House of Norwood was sitting sprawled
in a trampled patch of grass and wild flowers.
She was clad in brown leather breeches cut off just below the knee
and a battered leather vest loosely buttoned over small breasts. One
tanned arm was flung about the neck of an enormous grey wolf with
startling blue eyes. Lady Blysse’s face was bright with
unguarded curiosity, but she showed no surprise, as if she had been
given warning of their coming.
When Citrine and Kenre ran up to her, Blysse jumped to her feet,
giving each child a rough but affectionate embrace. Then she looked
toward Elise, her expression less open.
“Who that?” she asked.
“This is our best cousin,” Citrine said, inadvertently
warming Elise’s heart, “Lady Elise Archer, heir to the
House of Archer. Her father is Kenre’s mother’s
brother.”
“Best is good,” Blysse replied. Turning to Elise, she
offered her an awkward bow after the masculine fashion.
Initially shocked, Elise immediately realized that a curtsy
performed in trousers would look quite silly. Indeed, with her dark
hair drawn back in a short queue, man-fashion, her bare feet, and her
small, neat figure, Blysse looked more like a delicately featured lad
than a girl of fifteen.
Elise returned the greeting with a curtsy, only then acknowledging
the red-haired man who had scrambled to his feet at her entry. Derian
Carter, she thought, had potential to be quite handsome when he grew
into perfect comfort with his young man’s body. He was
attractive even now with his clear hazel-green eyes and fair skin;
his hair was auburn rather than carroty.
Derian’s bearing was respectful without being groveling, so
that Elise found herself returning his bow as she would to an equal
rather than to a servant. Somehow, she realized when she turned her
attention to Lady Blysse, this had done her no harm in the
newcomer’s opinion.
“Firekeeper,” Citrine was saying happily, “did
you catch anything this morning?”
“Rabbits” was the solemn response, “three, but
Blind Seer ate them all. He likes his meat blood-warm, but still eats
what Ox brings him. I tell him he get too big.”
“Fat,” Citrine said bossily. Elise caught her breath
at this rudeness, but something in Blysse’s bearing told her
that language lessons must have been a regular part of these
meetings.
“Fat,” Lady Blysse repeated, then tilted her head to
one side. “Why fat? Derian say fat is white part of
meat.”
Derian spoke for the first time. Elise was delighted to hear that
his voice was a pleasant, measured baritone with only a trace of a
lower-class accent.
“Fat in meat makes big,” he explained, frowning
slightly as he tried to keep his words simple. His eyes twinkled as
he added, “If we cut Blind Seer open, his meat would have much
white.”
Lady Blysse laughed at this, punching the wolf hard on one
shoulder as if the animal had understood the joke. From a tree branch
overhead, the peregrine falcon shrieked.
Feeling a bit left out, Elise essayed, “Does Earl Kestrel
know you come out here to hunt?”
“He know,” Blysse responded. “Not like when
first.”
Derian clarified, “Earl Kestrel was not delighted the first
time his ward came out here without his express permission. I had
been permitted to visit my parents in town, so Firekeeper was on her
own. However, he has had to acknowledge that you can’t keep a
wolf walled up without the furniture taking considerable
damage.”
“Couldn’t the wolf,” Elise hazarded what many
had stated openly, “be put in the kennels?”
Derian laughed. “The dogs would go mad. Our scout had a bird
dog with him on our journey west through the gap. I don’t think
poor Queenie stopped cringing for a moment—and that was even
before Blind Seer started traveling in our company. In any case, I
don’t think you could get him to leave Firekeeper.”
“Or Firekeeper him,” Lady Blysse said calmly.
“Oh.”
Elise was temporarily at a loss, but fortunately keeping the
conversation going was not up to her.
“Firekeeper has an idea,” Citrine chattered.
“She wants to meet the rest of the family, but she
doesn’t like banquets.”
“Who does?” Elise said with a pose of adult
boredom.
Actually, she still found banquets fascinating, especially those
attended by embassies from the neighboring kingdoms of New Kelvin and
Waterland. The foreigners with their odd mannerisms and turns of
phrase— for their initial colonies had not been from the same
Old Country as Gildcrest—were infinitely interesting. A career
in the diplomatic service was impossible for her, since she was
destined to become the Baroness Archer and be responsible for the
family estates, but back before she realized no little brother or
sister was likely to follow and share the job, this had been her
favorite dream.
“Wolves fight each other for their food,” Kenre added.
“So Firekeeper thinks eating and talking at the same time is
silly.”
“She has a point,” Elise laughed. “What is her
idea?”
“Hunting with birds,” Lady Blysse said, her tone
slightly miffed. I wonder. Elise thought. Since we keep talking about
her as if she’s an idiot. Uncivilized she may be, but
she’s no idiot.
“Falconry,” Derian said in a tone Elise immediately
recognized as that of a teacher reminding a student. Fleetingly she
wondered how he came into the job.
“Falconry,” Lady Blysse repeated. “Hawking. We
go. Me, some of nobles, on horses or walking. Hunt. Talk.”
Elise turned to her. “That’s a good idea, actually.
Most of the nobility of Hawk Haven are fascinated with falconry. I
think it comes from the names King Chalmer gave the Great Houses to
keep them from fussing when he married a commoner. Anyhow, it is
easier to get to know people when you’re not sitting around a
table or trapped in a parlor.”
“Parlor?”
“A room for sitting,” Elise laughed.
“So many rooms,” Blysse mused. “Wolves have dens
for pups. Nothing else. In winter, I use den for fire.”
Elise puzzled this out then nodded. “You would need shelter,
wouldn’t you?”
“No fur.” Blysse shrugged. “Cold.”
“But you had fire?”
Kenre interrupted. “That’s why her name is Firekeeper.
She could make fire, but none of the wolves could. They respected
that.”
Elise glanced at Derian. “Did she really live with
wolves?”
The redhead grinned. “She says so. Doc—excuse
me—Sir Jared Surcliffe, Earl Kestrel’s cousin, said that
there’s evidence of it. Firekeeper, show Lady Elise your
scars.”
“All?” Blysse bared her teeth in a brief smile.
“If so, then Derian get red.”
She thrust out one arm for Elise’s inspection. Beneath the
fine hairs, her skin was silvered with numerous tiny scars. A few
larger ones testified to considerable injuries recovered from in the
past.
“Little bites,” Blysse dismissed them, dropping her
arm. “Also cuts. No fur. Only,” she poked at the material
of her vest, “bad leather.”
“Badly tanned leather,” Derian clarified
automatically. “Somehow Firekeeper figured out the basics, but
while she could keep the leather from going completely stiff, the
stuff wasn’t good for much.”
Citrine and Kenre had dropped to the grass and were sitting in
identical attitudes, arms wrapped around knees, their expressions
glowing with interest and proprietary pride. Doubtless they saw the
newcomer as their special discovery.
Elise shook out her shawl, spread it on the grass to protect her
walking dress from stains, and joined them. Only once she was seated
did Lady Blysse and Derian resume their seats on the ground.
“Now,” Elise said to the general company, “tell
me what Lady Blysse has in mind.”
“I have falcon,” Blysse replied carefully, pointing to
the magnificent blue-grey peregrine.
“So I see,” Elise agreed. “A peregrine, the
emblem of the Wellward house—my mother’s
house.”
“Emblem?”
“Symbol,” Citrine said quickly. “It means the
same thing, Firekeeper.”
Lady Blysse gave a gusty sigh and Elise couldn’t blame her.
From her own foreign-language lessons, those words that seemed to
mean the same idling were the most annoying—especially when you
later discovered the subtleties of difference.
“You fly peregrine?” Lady Blysse asked her.
“No,” Elise replied ruefully, “though my mother
would be pleased if I did. I really don’t fly anything these
days. Our falconer keeps a little merlin for me. It’s more his
bird than mine. I don’t fool myself.”
Derian eased into the flow of her speech so smoothly that he
didn’t seem to be interrupting.
“Mistress Citrine was telling Firekeeper about how people
here fly their hawks. It gave Lady Blysse the idea of having her
falcon, Elation, demonstrate her skill.”
Elise nodded. “That’s a good idea. A few other birds
could be flown in their own turn—not too many or they would get
upset.”
She was out of her depth here and knew it. Falconry—with its
bloody successes, the feeding the bird a bit of flesh or warm brains
from the kill—had been something she had participated in only
reluctantly. To avoid having to reveal her ignorance she turned to
her young cousin.
“Citrine, who do you think would choose to go along if Lady
Blysse offered to fly her hawk for them?”
“Everyone, I think,” Citrine said, momentarily more
cynical than an eight-year-old should be. “Even those who
don’t like blood sport would want to go to get a look at Lady
Blysse.”
“Good point,” Elise said, thinking that if a hawking
party was arranged she would definitely see Jet again. She was
certain he practiced the art. Perhaps he would fly his own bird,
though more likely Sapphire would insist on the honor of representing
their family.
“Maybe Opal and Ruby would stay home,” Citrine added
after reflection. “They don’t like getting dirty and even
Mother doesn’t see us little girls having a chance at the
throne. What about your sisters, Kenre?”
“Dia and Deste might want to stay home,” Kenre said
honestly, “but Mama wouldn’t let them. She has no
patience with weak stomachs.”
He looked a little forlorn as he said this, having recently
graduated to an age where his mother no longer accepted weakness even
in her baby boy. Lady Blysse nodded agreement with Zorana’s
policy.
“Weak die,” she said. “Strong live.”
Looking at Blysse, so confident in her own strength as she
sprawled in the grass, an arm flung once more about her wolf, Elise
wondered how her relatives would perceive the stranger when they came
to know her better. Not all of them, she thought ruefully, would be
as fascinated as Citrine and Kenre. Most of them, in fact, would see
her as a threat. the hawking expedition, when it set out a few days
later, was somewhat smaller than Elise and Citrine had dreaded. Of
the five children of Lord Rolfston and Lady Melina, the two middle
girls, Ruby and Opal, were permitted to remain home. This might have
encouraged Zorana to make similar allowances, for neither Deste nor
Nydia were forced to attend.
Accompanied by Earl Kestrel, the host of this expedition, King
Tedric rode near the front of the party, deep in discussion with his
personal falconer about the condition of his magnificent golden
eagle, a bird known to be temperamental. Tedric’s absorption in
this matter—or apparent absorption—effectively prohibited
any member of the party from thrusting him or herself into his
company.
Derian wondered cynically if this wasn’t exactly what the
old king had intended. Certainly Sapphire Shield—a stunning
young woman who, with her flashing eyes and tendency to flare her
nostrils, reminded him uncomfortably of the first horse ever to throw
him—would like to remind her great-uncle of her presence. Her
brother Jet, however, hardly seemed to notice the king. His attention
was wholly on Lady Elise.
Elise looked even prettier than she had at their earlier meetings,
Derian thought ruefully, her fair skin flushed pale rose and her
golden hair glinting brighter than the light mesh net she had tucked
around it. Her laughter reminded him of silver bells or the ringing
of crystal goblets. It also reminded him that she didn’t even
know he existed.
Firekeeper was riding off to one flank on the same patient, if
boring, grey gelding who had carried her from West Keep. Much to
Derian’s surprise, she had agreed to leave Blind Seer in the
castle—on the condition that the wolf was not locked in. She
hadn’t liked leaving him, but she had to admit that the wolf
still upset any horse but grey Patience, Roanne, and Race’s
Dusty. Since the hawking party had been her idea, Firekeeper would
compromise to make it work.
That compromise hadn’t extended to her agreeing to wear the
riding frock Earl Kestrel had suggested, but she wasn’t alone
in finding skirts awkward for riding. Sapphire and Citrine both wore
women-tailored breeches and pretty white blouses, similar to the
outfit that Valet had mysteriously managed to procure for Firekeeper.
Those worn by the Shield sisters were far more elaborate, embroidered
with flowers and birds, perhaps the result of winter labor by the
fireside.
Lady Elise had chosen a light gown similar, to Derian’s
masculine assessment, to the ones she had worn before but somehow
subtly more attractive, a thing of pale lavender, laced tightly at
the breast. Fleetingly, Derian wondered how well Elise’s
legs—long, he imagined—and rounded hips might shape up in
riding breeches and decided that she would probably look
stunning.
The older women in the party—Aurella Wellward, Zorana
Archer, and Melina Shield—also wore gowns and rode sidesaddle.
All but Zorana seemed to be treating this as a general outing. Zorana
alone followed the preparation of the birds, pausing in her
conversation with a weather-beaten man who—for all his
undeniable handsomeness—somehow reminded Derian of a rat.
From one of the grooms, he had learned that this was Prince Newell
Shield, the widower of Princess Lovella, just returned from a voyage
on Wings, the flagship of the Hawk Haven Navy. Although Newell should
have reverted to his Shield family title on the death of his wife,
King Tedric had deemed it a courtesy to permit his son-in-law to
retain the title he had assumed when Lovella had become crown
princess.
A tough man, slightly older than his sister Melina, Newell had
been an ideal match for the ambitious warrior princess. Although the
couple had been childless, rumor said that this had not been for any
lack of shared passion, rather because Lovella did not wish to risk
the illnesses suffered by her mother during pregnancy until her deeds
were as legend.
Although no stories of sorcerous practice were told about Newell
as were told about his sister, still, finding the prince gazing at
him with curious intensity, Derian felt a cool chill slide down his
spine. Newell’s pale gaze was fixed yet somehow absent, and
Derian found himself booting Roanne in the ribs to remove himself
from the direct line of that stare.
Firekeeper rode over to join him, flushed with barely restrained
excitement. The falcon Elation sat—unhooded, unjessed,
unrestrained in any way—on a perch rigged to the back of the
grey’s saddle. Only her occasional sardonic squawk as she
surveyed her avian competition confirmed that a living bird was
perched there, not a product of the taxidermist’s art.
“Elation say,” Firekeeper commented as soon as they
were close, “that men ahead with birds in cages.”
“That’s for the hunt,” Derian said. “Earl
Kestrel made the arrangements.”
“Hunt? Men?” Firekeeper looked troubled at this, as
well she might. Derian had drummed into her that there were numerous
ramifications— some vague and terrible, some concrete and
demonstrable—for even hurting a human, much less hunting
one.
“No, no,” Derian laughed. “The birds are to be
hunted. This many people on horseback accompanied by attendants and
grooms will scare every real piece of game off for miles.”
“Yes. Too many,” Firekeeper agreed.
“So when we are ready, the gamekeepers will release birds
one at a time and the hawks will go after them.”
Firekeeper nodded, but he could tell that this was yet another bit
of incomprehensible human behavior. Dismissing the mysteries of
hunting already caged birds, Firekeeper quickly focused on the real
reason for this gathering.
“How, Derian, how I talk with these here like I talk with
Citrine and Kenre? How I do?”
He understood her puzzlement, for, unlike the children who had
been eager to make her acquaintance, the elders, especially those who
saw Lady Blysse as competition for the throne, had been studiously
ignoring her. Their excuse, if they were challenged, would certainly
be that a young, newly adopted ward of Earl Kestrel was not of their
usual circle. They would claim that they were not so much ignoring
her as they simply hadn’t thought her worth their regard.
They’d phrase it more politely, out of deference to Earl
Kestrel, but that was what they’d mean.
Derian surveyed the gathering. Elise was too absorbed in the
attentions of her handsome cousin to have any thought for Lady
Blysse. A formal introduction, such as Earl Kestrel could garner,
would be a disaster. Then he noted that one pair of eyes, dark blue
but amazingly clear, kept glancing toward Firekeeper. The expression
in them was challenging, not kind. Still, Sapphire Shield’s
interest in Firekeeper was apparent.
Derian saluted Citrine and the little girl rode over gladly, her
little, round-bodied chestnut pony jigging over the turf with
single-minded enthusiasm. When Citrine had come to greet Firekeeper
at the beginning of the ride, Melina Shield had called her daughter
away on some pretense and had kept her away since.
“M’lady,” Derian said in a respectful tone of
voice he didn’t bother with out in the meadows, “Lady
Blysse would like to make the acquaintance of your elder sister
Sapphire. Could you do us the honor of acting as liaison?”
Citrine giggled, then winked conspiratorially, keeping her back
carefully turned on the adults. “I think I can get her over
here. She’s just itching to try Firekeeper—I mean Lady
Blysse’s—mettle.”
Whatever Citrine said to her sister must have been effective, for
Sapphire rode over immediately. She made quite a picture in her blue
hunting clothes, mounted on a horse whose coat had been dyed a
shocking indigo blue—although the mane and tail had been left a
silvery white. Sapphire rode well, with natural grace and a certain
restlessness. Her every movement was accompanied by the ringing of
miniature hawk bells twined into her hair and fastened to her
sleeves. Dangerous, Derian thought, assessing her critically.
Tough and strong beneath all that hair and glitter. She sees
something of herself in Firekeeper and that scares her.
Introductions were made with punctilious correctness. Derian
dropped back a few steps, near enough to be at hand if need arose,
but effacing himself into servile invisibility. At first he had been
bothered that this was so easy to do—especially before some of
the more self-important nobles—but now he rather treasured the
capacity, for it let him gather knowledge without anyone considering
what he might do with it.
Sapphire dismissed formalities with a swiftness that reminded
Derian of Elation stooping on unsuspecting prey.
“So, Lady Blysse, my sister told me you think you’re a
wolf.”
Firekeeper shook her head sadly. “Am wolf-raised, not wolf
get. Sometimes wish I was wolf.”
“Oh?” Sapphire’s polished sneer didn’t
completely hide her curiosity. “Why would you wish
that?”
“They what I know best,” Firekeeper responded,
“and I cannot do what they do.”
Sapphire dismissed this revelation as of no importance, her
attention shifting to Elation. The peregrine falcon studied her,
impudence in her gold-ringed eyes, then made a strange churling
sound, almost like a laugh.
“Is that a peregrine?”
“Yes.”
“It’s rather large for a peregrine.” Sapphire
sounded miffed. “I fly a gyrfalcon—my
family’s bird. Some are as large as eagles. Are you sure this
isn’t some deviant cross?”
“Is peregrine,” Firekeeper repeated. “Across
mountain, animals get larger sometimes.”
Derian noticed with some relief that Firekeeper did not attempt to
explain to Sapphire her strange theory that there were two types of
animals, the royal and the common. Sapphire would not take kindly to
the thought that anything she possessed was common.
“I’ll buy the peregrine from you,” Sapphire
said. “It’s a magnificent bird.”
“No.” Firekeeper’s response was blunt but her
expression was amused, not offended. “Elation is not to
sell.”
Citrine deflected her sister’s pique with a loud squeak of
excitement. “We must be coming near the targets. Sapphire, I
wonder if your gyrfalcon can outfly Lady Blysse’s
Elation?”
Derian didn’t know whether he wanted to kick or kiss the
little girl. He gave a mental shrug. The competition between the
young women for a much bigger prize existed. Might as well have this
lesser one out in the open as well.
Once Jet arrived, mounted on a fine black gelding with white
stockings and a thin white blaze, Elise hardly noticed falcons,
horses, or gathered people. He hovered by her side from the start of
the ride, attentive as a declared lover. His first words, spoken
almost in a whisper, made her heart beat uncomfortably fast:
“I’ve finally convinced my mother and father. They
will speak with your parents today.”
The rest of their conversation was far more routine. Jet was
interested in what Elise could tell him of Firekeeper and her wolf.
He studied the other woman in a fashion that might have made Elise
jealous if he hadn’t just declared his intention to have his
parents speak with hers about their marriage.
When the time came for the falcons to be loosed, Jet abandoned
Elise to claim his own bird. It was a gyrfalcon, as was to be
expected, its plumage as black as night. Elise played with the fancy
that in the Redbriar-Shield establishment there were servants who had
no other job than running about seeking the best mounts, pets,
jewels, clothing, and other accoutrements to maintain the theme that
Melina Shield had begun with the naming of her brood. In wry
afterthought Elise realized that this must indeed be the case and she
treasured her own relative freedom of choice and action.
The two gyrfalcons, Blysse’s peregrine, and King
Tedric’s eagle were the only birds being flown today.
Initially, Elise had been surprised that Aunt Zorana, normally so
competitive, had not insisted on someone from her family taking part.
The Trueheart bird, however, was the merlin, a small, comparatively
delicate hawk, not known for succeeding with prey the size of the
game being taken today. The Archer family, not being one of the Great
Houses, did not have a bird of its own so Zorana could not choose
that as an alternative.
Purcel and Kenre were both, in attendance, the older brother on
his big, heavily muscled bay, one of his hands unobtrusively holding
the lead rein for Kenre’s sorrel pony. Despite the years
between them and Purcel’s frequent absences, strong affection
remained between the two brothers.
Elise brought her own mount alongside her mother’s when the
first of the pigeons was released.
“Tell me,” she said softly, “if the falcon hits
or not so I can applaud.”
“Squeamish, dear?”
“A little,” Elise admitted.
“The other young people are getting on quite well,”
Aurella said, nothing in her voice giving away her awareness that
something like this must have been the entire reason for the outing.
“They’re over there, arguing about the merits of the
different birds. Even King Tedric has joined them. A shame
you’ve chosen to be one of those who stands by and claps for
the other’s successes.”
“I choose,” Elise said with a slight mysterious smile,
“to fly birds other than falcons.”
Aurella’s smile was all too knowing. “Earl Kestrel
mentioned that his son Edlin is coming up from their lands in ten
days or so. Now that he has reached his majority, young Lord Kestrel
has more responsibilities on the Norwood estates, especially with his
father playing politics in the capital. As I recall, you always did
like Edlin Norwood, didn’t you?”
Elise had fancied Edlin once, actually, but now she couldn’t
see last winter’s flirtation in her new hopes for Jet.
Thankfully, Aurella didn’t press, for the heir to a Great House
was a far finer catch than a second son of a mere lord. Then the
first of the pigeons was freed and no one had attention for anything
but the sky.
With a few strokes of her powerful wings, the peregrine Elation
mounted into the sky, soared until she was little more than a dot
against the blue. The gathered falconers stirred nervously, waiting
for Lady Blysse to signal for the pigeon to be released.
“The bird’ll flee with the wind,” Elise heard
someone mutter. “What’s that fool girl playing
at?”
When the tension was at its highest, Lady Blysse dropped her hand.
The pigeon handlers, concealed in a blind some distance from the
party as a whole, loosed a panicked bird. It surged toward the sky,
wings beating in a desperate race for freedom. Does it know? Elise wondered wildly.
Then there was a streak from above: the peregrine dropped in a
perfect stoop, all the killing force of its descent hitting the
pigeon soundly. The explosion of feathers was like a sudden snowfall.
As with falling snow, there was no sound.
Then, though Blysse waved no lure, made no call, Elation left her
kill, fluttering from the grass to land on Blysse’s
outstretched glove. Her talons showed a slight line of red, a bit of
down. An astonished gamekeeper reported that the falcon had taken not
even a morsel from the pigeon.
Watching from just outside the circle, Elise found herself
thinking that the rapport between bird and woman was almost
supernatural. Apparently she was not the only one to think this.
Murmurs of surprise, respect, and apprehension reached her ears. Even
the horses seemed edgy.
Elation didn’t help matters by turning her head to look at
Blysse out of one gold-rimmed eye, her shrill mewling cries sounding
too conversational for comfort. When woman nodded as if in reply, the
enormous peregrine launched skyward again. Flying beyond where the
fowlers crouched with their cages, Elation circled, orienting on some
prey invisible to those on the ground, then stooped.
When Elation rose again, her wings were beating heavily, laboring
to raise not only herself but a large buck rabbit. With remarkable
ease she carried her heavy burden over to Blysse, dropping it on the
ground at the young woman’s feet before returning to the glove
and beginnings to ostentatiously preen.
Not to be outdone by the Lady Blysse and Elation, Sapphire and Jet
put their heads together, dark curls intertwining like their
whispered words. When brother and sister came out of their conference
they were both grinning a bit wickedly.
“We’ll fly our gyrfalcons together,” Sapphire
announced to the gathering in general, though her eyes were on Blysse
alone.
“Two birds,” Lady Blysse nodded understanding.
“Two pigeons?”
Sapphire agreed, adding airily, “A shame we don’t have
anything larger for them to go after—a heron, perhaps. Ah,
well. Pigeons will have to do.”
Unlike Blysse’s unceremonious flying of Elation, there was
quite a bit of fuss involved in preparing the gyrfalcons: hoods to be
loosened, jesses attended to, the birds themselves to be soothed when
they found themselves at the center of a crowd.
Sapphire’s female was not blue—gyrfalcons were not
feathered in blue and no temperamental raptor would submit to being
dyed. Still, the bird was elegant and unusual—pure white with
searching yellow eyes. Her eagerness to be away was signaled in how
she shifted from foot to foot on her mistress’s glove.
Jet’s black gyrkin was smaller and quieter, but more intense,
its gaze already fixed on the sky as if it knew in advance where the
prey would appear.
Gyrfalcons differed from peregrines in many significant ways. They
were fluffier, seeming bulky, almost fat. Within those thick
feathers, their heads seemed too small. The taloned feet they
concealed beneath long belly feathers had shorter toes. Yet, though
they lacked the peregrine’s sleek elegance, they were
magnificent birds, huge and haughty. Elise had heard that in some
countries gyrfalcons were reserved for kings, a thing she suspected
Sapphire also knew, given the pride with which she bore her bird.
Catching sight of Lady Blysse’s peregrine, the white
gyrfalcon shrieked defiance and rage, echoed a heartbeat behind by
the black gyrkin. Sapphire commented with conversational coolness
that didn’t fool Elise a bit:
“Gyrfalcons have been known to kill other falcons—even
eagles.”
Lady Blysse replied calmly, “They not kill Elation. Fly your
birds.”
At the agreed upon signal, Jet and Sapphire released their birds.
Black and white, like shadow and reflection, they soared upward,
wings beating in fast yet steady strokes until they were above their
prey. They soared for a moment, then plunged.
The pigeons didn’t have a chance. Hating herself for her
squeamish-ness, Elise turned away at the critical moment, hoping that
Jet wouldn’t notice.
On the next round, King Tedric’s eagle refused to fly at the
pigeon, offended perhaps by the indignity of being presented with
captive prey, perhaps by the commotion all around. The monarch was
not at all discomfited. He stroked the eagle’s golden brown
feathers as he re-hooded it and returned it to the fowler.
“Sometimes,” Tedric commented, his gaze almost too
nonspecific, “being king means accepting that sometimes things
will not go your way.”
Elise felt a surge of relief for the soft grey pigeon that had
winged its way to the safety of the nearest wooded copse. That relief
vanished when she heard Sapphire say in a too sweet tone of
voice:
“Lady Blysse, did I hear correctly when you said that you
believed that your peregrine could outfly our gyrfalcons?”
Blysse looked momentarily confused, then she said, her voice taut
and hard: “Yes.”
“Would you be interested in wagering your bird on that
belief?”
This time Blysse must turn to Derian for a translation. It took a
few moments, during which time Elise noticed Earl Kestrel making his
way toward his ward. She was touched by his concern for the girl, but
his words when he spoke were ambiguous.
“Dear Blysse, don’t do anything foolish.”
The look Blysse gave him was far less respectful than those Elise
had seen her turn on Derian and she wondered for the first time if
Blysse particularly liked her guardian.
Blysse’s response was as much to Sapphire as to the
earl.
“Is not foolish if is certain.”
“Then you accept our wager?” Jet cut in.
The wolf-woman bared her teeth in an expression too vicious to be
taken for a smile.
“What is wager if you give me nothing when I win?”
“Win?” Jet barked a hard, harsh laugh. “You
tempt the ancestors, Lady Blysse, assuming success.”
“What I get?” was the only reply.
“What do you want?”
“Your birds fly after my bird,” Blysse said carefully.
“Yes?”
“That’s the basic idea,” Jet sneered.
“If they catch my bird, my bird maybe die, maybe be
hurt.”
“Yes,” Jet’s tone had become impatient.
“What if my bird catch your birds?”
“Impossible!”
“What if?”
“There are two of our gyrfalcons to your one
peregrine!”
Blysse shrugged as if to say “So?”
“Will you, my Lord Jet,” came the calm, neutral voice
of Derian Carter, “be willing to accept the loss of your
gyrfalcons to the Lady Blysse?”
Blysse nodded, indicating that the translator’s words spoke
her intention.
Another voice, dry and passionless, yet somehow full of laughter,
spoke for the first time:
“It only seems fair.”
Heads swiveled to learn who had spoken, but Elise didn’t
need to look to see that Prince Newell, the widower of the Princess
Lovella, was responsible for the comment. When she was very small,
she had learned to know that voice and to fear the malice concealed
behind its seemingly innocent pronouncements.
Sapphire colored and Jet nodded stiffly. Earl Kestrel interceded
then, though the flush on his bearded cheeks made amply clear that he
was less than delighted with the situation.
“Then it is decided,” Earl Kestrel said. “The
gyrfalcons will be released first to give them a moment to gain
height. Then Lady Blysse will release her peregrine.”
He ended his speech with a quick, angry slash of his hand.
Accepting this as the signal, first Jet, then Sapphire released their
gyrfalcons. Lady Blysse permitted them enough time to climb to a
comfortable rise of air where they soared in easy arrogance. Any
bulkiness the gyrfalcons had shown when imprisoned on gloves was
gone.
At a word from her mistress, the peregrine Elation mounted the
air. Sharp, almost knife-edged wings beat rapidly, alerting the
gyrfalcons, which shrieked, infuriated by the intruder’s
arrogance. They circled for position while Elation was still gaining
altitude. Elise felt her heart beating faster, certain that in a
moment the sleek blue-grey peregrine would be nothing but a bloody
burst of feathers.
It’s like us! she thought frantically. Hunting each other,
seeking any advantage!
Where she had been able to turn away before, she could not now
draw her gaze from the sky. The three hawks were well matched in
size, but the gyrfalcons had the advantage. Or did they?
Elise watched in astonishment as Elation launched through the gap
between the black bird and the white, slipping through an opening so
small that the maneuver seemed impossible. Then, wings cutting the
air like knives, Elation rose, stooped, and from the power of that
stoop came down onto the white gyrfalcon.
Stunned, the white gyrfalcon tumbled in the air, falling, rolling,
recovering only inches from the dirt. Even then, all it could manage
was to spread its wings, slowing its fall before coming to land with
an undignified thud.
Her attention diverted by the falling bird, Elise didn’t see
how Elation got the better of the black gyrkin, but afterward she
would hear that the tactics were similar. The gyrkin came to earth
much as its mate had done. It didn’t so much strike the ground
as land with a sulk, its dignity insulted. Glancing at the two Shield
siblings, Elise saw its mood mirrored in their two faces, but where
the falcons were merely offended, Sapphire and Jet were shamed.
“Magnificent!” Prince Newell’s voice broke the
sudden silence. “Lady Blysse, my congratulations!”
Similar compliments followed from the various spectators, but Lady
Blysse had eyes only for her two competitors. Waving to them, she
invited them to inspect their gyrfalcons. Within a few moments, the
verdict was passed that Elation had taken them out with the weight of
her body rather than with her talons. Except for a few bruises and
offended dignity at finding themselves the prey rather than the
predator, both gyrfalcons should be fit for service.
“They’re yours now,” Sapphire said, anger and
embarrassment barely concealed in her polite words. “I hope you
enjoy them.”
“I enjoy them best,” Lady Blysse replied, “if
you keep them. They fine falcons. Maybe we hunt with them again
sometime.”
Jet started to smile, then tensed, fearful that this was some
further mockery. Elise felt her heart ache for his injured pride.
“We wagered them,” Jet said stiffly. “We can pay
our debts.”
“What is mine is mine to give,” Lady Blysse said
reasonably. “Please take.”
“As a favor,” Sapphire said, “to a scion of
House Kestrel, we will do so.”
With this, to Elise’s relief, the expedition was finally
over. The bloody carcasses of the unlucky pigeons were gathered into
sacks and Earl Kestrel bowed deeply to the assembled company. In his
rich, well-schooled bardic turns of phrase he thanked them all for
gracing himself and his ward with their company, praised the falcons
that had provided them with such fine sport, and invited them all to
attend a banquet that evening. The centerpiece would be the game
killed this morning.
The last was a formality, an almost ritual ending to a large
hawking party like this, so much so that Elise had already chosen
what dress and jewels she would wear this evening. She looked around
for Jet, hoping that now that the hunt was ended he would return to
her. Her beloved, however, was deep in conference with Lady Blysse
and Sapphire, hotly arguing the varying merits of gyrfalcons and
peregrines.
Elise’s mare was more than willing to trail after the other
horses. Although her thoughts were elsewhere, Elise chattered lightly
with the other ladies, commenting on the pleasures of the outing.
Only after they had returned their horses to the stable attendants
and were re-entering the castle did Aurella Wellward say softly into
her daughter’s ear:
“Lady Melina spoke with me this afternoon about something
that may be of interest to you. After you’ve freshened, would
you meet me in my solar here in the castle?”
“Yes, Mother,” Elise replied, her heart singing with
anticipation and sudden terror. Her feet were so light that she could
hardly keep from running up the stairs to her room.
DOUBTS AND FEARS plagued Elise as Ninette laced her into a clean
sundress and helped plait her hair into a gleaming coil that would
crown her head. When Elise entered her mother’s parlor, she
hoped that Lady Aurella could not see how nervous she was, but was
certain that her rapidly beating heart must give her away.
Aurella was sitting by a round window through which sunlight
spilled, transforming the embroidery thread spread across her lap
into silken gems. On a frame nearby was the piece she had been
working on since the previous spring, a heavy green wool waistcoat
embroidered with a hawk perched on a well, a bowman standing to one
side. The picture was an allusion to her family joined to
Ivon’s.
“Come in, Elise,” Aurella said, choosing a hank of
yellow thread from those arrayed on her lap and returning the rest to
her fat, round wicker embroidery basket, “and close the door
behind you.”
Elise did so, crossing to sit on a chair where she would not block
her mother’s light. In the winter, the stone flags would be
piled deep with rugs, but to counter the summer heat they were left
bare and the hard leather soles of her shoes tapped out an almost
military tattoo against them.
“Melina tells me,” Aurella began without preamble,
“that her son Jet desires a betrothal to you. She said that her
first instinct was to refuse, but on further consideration she saw
that there were advantages. With these in mind, she is willing to
permit Jet to become betrothed to you—if your father and I
agree, of course.”
She paused, snipping off a length of thread before moving to
another part of her pattern. Elise held her breath, knowing her
mother was not finished.
“I do not know whether or not Melina has consulted yet with
her husband. She was careful not to comment on that point as his
refusal—real or feigned—would end any decision with no
loss of face to anyone involved. My guess, however, is that Jet has
spoken only to her. Melina’s children must be well aware that
without her approval nothing can be done.
“For my own reasons, I have not yet spoken with your father.
Before I do so, cruelly raising hopes that have begun to fade, I
wanted to know if you had considered the disadvantages of Jet’s
proposal.”
“Disadvantages, Mother?” Elise, her mind alive with
images of her handsome suitor and a queen’s crown, was
shocked.
“Disadvantages, daughter.” Though her needle continued
stitching elaborate details with the ease of a professional
tirewoman, Aurella’s mien was as serious as if she were
advising Queen Elexa. “For one, you will make an
enemy—perhaps lifelong—of Sapphire Shield. She will not
easily forgive an attempt to supplant her as the favored candidate
for heir. This will cause you trouble even if you succeed in your
gambit for the throne, but if, despite your manipulations, she
becomes queen, she will be in a position to make you
miserable.”
“Sapphire will still have her family holdings,” Elise
said stubbornly. “If I am queen, she will need to placate
me—not the other way around.”
“Darling daughter, you,” Aurella sighed, “are
naive. And don’t forget, betrothal to Jet will not guarantee
that you will become queen. Have you considered your aunt
Zorana’s potential wrath? Even if you can handle a rival from
your own generation, how would you deal with her?”
“Aunt Zorana,” Elise said stiffly, her woodenness a
cover for the rapid racing of her mind as she considered problems
that had never arisen in Jet’s rosy depiction of their future,
“is the king’s niece, true, but once this is settled,
surely she will return to ambitions that had been hers before
Princess Lovella’s death started this play for the Eagle
Throne. Aunt Zorana has four children to think of and certainly will
court my favor toward their greater benefit. In any case, if I become
queen, her son will be the best choice for the next Baron Archer.
What advantage would there be to making an enemy of me?”
Aurella shook her head ruefully. “Always, always, your
solution is based on the assumption that this gambit guarantees you
the throne. I assure you, it may raise your chances, but it provides
no guarantee. King Tedric is a strange man, old and fickle,
embittered by the loss of the surety that his blood will follow him
to the throne. I wouldn’t put it past him to pass over all his
squabblmg nieces and nephews and choose this newcomer Blysse instead.
She showed character today and our kingdom is beset by rivals. With
Bright Bay at our frontiers, strength and decisiveness may matter
more to the king in his heir than possession of the right bloodline.
Don’t forget, too, that Blysse has House Kestrel to back her.
Kestrel may not be as prestigious a house as that of the Peregrine or
the Gyrfalcon, but it is as old and very respected.”
“And if King Tedric selects Lady Blysse, I,” Elise
said patiently, determined to demonstrate she had gotten her lesson
by heart, “would still have made enemies for myself.”
“And for your father and me as well,” Aurella reminded
her. “Since you are a minor, your betrothal must have our
blessing. We will put our heads into the furnace along with
you.”
“Isn’t the possible gain worth the risk?” Elise
asked, almost pleading.
“What gain?” Aurella said with deceptive mildness.
“The throne of Hawk Haven or handsome Jet Shield for a husband?
I think the first is worth the gamble, but I am doubtful about the
second.”
“Still!” Elise said, leaning forward, her hands
clasped so tightly that her knuckles grew white. “Still! Shall
we sit back and let ourselves be swept out of the running? Here is a
chance to ally our house with another, to make the king’s
decision easier, for he can please both his brother and his sister by
his selection!”
“That is the best point in favor of this match,”
Aurella agreed. “Then you wish me to speak with your
father?”
Elise swallowed, met her mother’s gaze, and was overwhelmed
by the realization that for the first time she was being spoken to
woman to woman, not as a daughter by a mother.
“Yes, ma’am, I do,” she said.
Aurella nodded. “Tonight, then, after the
banquet.”
In a single, swift, graceful movement, Lady Aurella rose, leaving
her fancy work behind her on the chair. She was gone before Elise
rose from her dutiful curtsy, but not before Elise saw the single
tear glittering like dew on her rose-petal cheek.
XI
Handless, footless, armless, kneeless, unmoving,
unbound. She drifts. Eagle-winged, free to ride air as warm and firm
as Blind Seer’s fur. Suddenly bound. Unable to move even within
human limitations. Time spiraling into memory’s clouds.
Smaller, shorter, weaker, afraid, alone, lost. Cold and hungry, the
raw meat the wolf has dropped before her as inedible as a rock would
have been. The little girl cries and her tears wet against her face
are the only thing warm about her. Trembles, coughs, lungs protesting
air’s intrusion. Wishing she was gone where the others are
gone. Shrill whining in her ears, keening of the wolves who have
taken her to themselves only to watch her shrivel and fade like
autumn leaves under winter’s blast. Dying. That’s what she’s doing! Dying. The
realization comes as a faint surprise, rather like learning that it
is her birthday: an abstract thing, anticipated but not understood.
Dying. How very odd. Little people die. She’d seen that during the first days
when they’d come with Prince Barden into the wild woods. Jeri
Punkinhair had died of a cough that wouldn’t go away, no matter
how warmly his parents wrapped him, no matter how dutifully
he’d choked down brews of honey and tree bark, hot broth,
stewed herbs. Little people die, twisting and bending like seedlings
that never quite get a start on growing. Now she is dying. She
wonders why if this was to come she hadn’t been burned in the
fire. This new dying seems a dreadful waste of effort. Lying on the cold stone floor, coughing from her smoke-seared
lungs, weeping until there are no more tears, breathing until there
is no more air. Around her, wailing like the mournful moans of the
winter wind around the cabin chimney, she hears howling as the wolves
voice their despair. Little person, pale flame, soon just so much
meat. She is fading, doesn’t even flinch when one arm, then
the other is grasped between fanged jaws. Pain can’t seem to
get through the dying. Astonishment, maybe, just a touch, feeling
that the breath of the wolves is warm. The wolves drag her through the autumn woods, big moon heavy
and orange watching from the horizon. Her feet trail behind her, legs
as limp as those of the rag doll Blysse carried with her nearly
everywhere. She gave it a new name each week, usually the name of
some wonderful heroine from the Old Country stories Sweet Eirene told
around the fire each night. Is she become a rag doll? Are the wolves become children? It
seems quite possible, there on the twilight fringes of dying. With
some faint spark of herself, the little girl holds on to the idea.
Even a rag doll has more life than does a dying child. The moon stops moving in the sky. Then she realizes that the
wolves have lowered her to the ground, released her arms. She feels a
flicker of regret for the loss of their hot breath. Her own breath is
cold and thick, full of slime. The effort to draw in air is not worth
the pain. She stops. Relief is temporary. Something presses against her mouth,
forces her to draw in air. She struggles but a heavy and furry weight
pins her legs. Eventually, she loses all sensation except for the
searing ache of her lungs being forced to draw in breath. Upon waking she discovers herself bathed in warm mist. Rough
hands, coarse but not unkind, rock her gently. Silence wraps her but
for a faint hiss of steam and a terrible hacking that she realizes is
her own coughing. Distantly, she feels each curving rib fragile as a twig,
bending beneath the racking coughs. The sensation is sufficiently
distant that she can dismiss it as unconnected to her relative
comfort. Timelessness passes. Vaguely she knows snowfall and blizzard
wind. More immediate is warmth, the caress of those coarse hands.
Sometimes voices. She cannot be permitted to die. We will need
her. Someday someone must speak our talks. Cross between
worlds. Separation forever is impossible. Nearly dead. If she comes back, she will be strong
enough to venture into life. Purpose. And we will teach her, though never will she
know our presence. You will be good parents to her, but she is too
weak to survive without other aid. A long journey, this one. Moons will die and be born
before it ends. Awakening into spring. Pale hazes green and yellow on the
branches. Scent of blossoms in the warm air. Birdsong and joyful
plashing of running water. Running outside on trembling legs, just
barely firm enough to bear her weight. Falling. Tumbling against a
furry flank that cushions her descent. Strawberries and fish. Warm
blood drunk from a rabbit’s throat. Crunching stems of
watercress. Hot liver. She has always been a wolf.
The announcement that Lady Elise Archer was to be formally
betrothed to Jet Shield was met with excitement and glee by most, a
delightful new twist in the engaging entertainment surrounding the
selection of an heir by the king. In tavern and shop, market stall
and street corner, the townspeople gathered to gossip about this new
development. The politically savvy gladly explained to their slower
comrades how this gambit would enhance the chances of either Elise or
Jet (or one of their fathers) being chosen as King Tedric’s
heir.
In the manses and suites occupied by the potential heirs of King
Tedric, the news was greeted more soberly. Grand Duke Gadman
consulted with his son, Lord Rolfston, and daughter-in-law, Lady
Melina, about how best to exploit this new twist without completely
invalidating Sapphire’s claim—should King Tedric not
choose to travel down the road that Jet and Elise had made so
inviting for him.
Gadman’s sister, Grand Duchess Rosene, sat alone in her
private rooms, denying audience to both her son, Ivon, and her
daughter, Zorana, steeling herself for the unpleasant but seemingly
necessary task of favoring one of her children over the other.
It had not been maternal love but expediency that had kept her
from doing so for this long. As long as King Tedric showed no clear
favorites, her case was stronger for having two potential candidates
in her line. Now Ivon, through Elise, had made a clever play. She
hoped that prospect of having Lieutenant Purcel Trueheart succeed in
time to the Archer Barony would soothe Zorana.
Earl kestrel took the news from Valet with the same calm with
which Valet presented it. Privately, Norvin Norwood admitted to
himself that this plan was a cunning one—one that anticipated a
move he had been prepared to make if King Tedric did not acknowledge
Blysse his heir. Delay had seemed wise since Tedric had seemed
interested in the girl.
Now Norvin Norwood wondered if he had waited too long. In passing,
he felt a sudden gladness that his own four children stood between
his adopted daughter and the Kestrel duchy. It said something about
his own nature that he was unaware of the irony in this thought.
Sapphire shield, suddenly ousted from a position she had viewed as
favored, locked herself in her room in the castle. In the hours since
her too well informed maid brought her the rumor of Elise’s
engagement to Jet along with the breakfast tray, Sapphire’s
mood had shifted from disbelief, to spiteful anger at this betrayal
by both parents and brother, to full-blown rage.
Even the trepidation Sapphire had felt when Earl Kestrel had
unveiled Prince Barden’s presumptive daughter was nothing to
this. She dreaded herself discarded, had nearly invaded King
Tedric’s private rooms to beg him not to forget her claims, put
aside that plan as childish, flung herself onto her bed screaming
into her pillow and kicking her feet against the feather padding.
Outside the stone walls of the room no one could hear her, but
inside the room her maid stood pale and trembling, watching the fit
and fearing that her mistress’s wrath would be turned against
her.
In yet another room there was fury so great as to diminish
Sapphire’s into nothing by contrast. Lady Zorana Archer tasted
the bitterness of certain defeat. There had been times that she had
almost felt the crown upon her brow, heard herself proclaimed Queen
Zorana the Second. Rolfston’s chances had never been as good as
he had believed. King Tedric despised him as a crawling worm just
like his father, Gadman. Melina Shield ran that family and no one in
Hawk Haven would accept a witch as queen.
Ivon was a good enough man, but he had only one heir. Privately,
Grand Duchess Rosene had admitted to her daughter that Ivon lacked
true regal fire—unlike Zorana, who had been named for Hawk
Haven’s first and greatest ruler and had modeled herself after
her achievements. Since Princess Lovella’s death Zorana had
even imagined that her ancestress favored her, was guiding her
fortunes from the world beyond.
This latest announcement—and her mother’s refusal to
meet with her— was a betrayal not only of Zorana’s hopes
but of her private mythology.
Zorana was alone in her chambers when a knock came on her door.
Since she had dismissed even her maid, she must answer it herself.
Smoothing her hair—though not a bit was out of place, her rages
being internal rather than external—Zorana opened it. Prince
Newell Shield stood without.
“May I beg admittance, Lady Zorana?”
She opened the door wider in reply. The corridor without was
empty. When she sent Aksel away an hour before he must have given
orders that she was to be left undisturbed until she herself summoned
companionship. Aksel, for all his weakness, had moments of wisdom. He
knew that Zorana was not one to lock herself away while secretly
craving that others seek her out. Newell, though, Newell she found
strangely welcome.
They had been playmates once upon a time, he Lord Newell, son of
the duke of House Gyrfalcon, a third son, unlikely to ever be the
heir. She had been even lesser ranked, a noblewoman, yes, but not
even heiress to her lesser house. When her niece Elise had been born,
Zorana became merely Lady Zorana, third in line for the Barony, her
title a courtesy she could not pass on to her children. Ambition to
be more had germinated then, an ambition unlikely to be achieved
through politics but attainable through other avenues.
Some three years or so after Newell Shield had married Princess
Lovella there were rumors among the women that there were times the
princess, unwilling to trust only in potions and herbals, banned her
husband from her bed. At that time, Zorana herself was betrothed to
Aksel Trueheart, a marriage arranged for the satisfaction of their
houses, not from any affection. Some almost formal pawing in dark
corners had awakened in Zorana the terror that she would never feel
passion. Then she had seen Newell’s gaze upon her, a pale thing
that wrapped her like spider’s silk: soft and insidiously
strong.
They had become lovers during those moon-spans before her wedding,
and Zorana had discovered that she was indeed capable of passion.
But Newell had turned from her after her wedding, saying he could
not risk fathering another man’s heir. Zorana had wondered if
the loss of Newell had not been what made her coupling with Aksel so
fierce. Certainly Purcel was conceived within a few moon-spans and
born slightly before his parents’ first anniversary.
Newell had never returned to Zorana’s bed, though after a
while they had eventually become something like friends. By the time
Deste was born, Zorana was feeling some satisfaction from mothering a
dynasty that might earn the honors that had been stolen from her.
On this day, though, Zorana forgot what honors young Purcel had
already earned, what promise the younger three showed. In the loss of
a crown she had dreamed upon her brow, these achievements were ashes.
And in this moment of despair, Newell returned to her.
“I thought,” he said, crossing to a chair and sitting
uninvited, “that you might want some friendly company, company
from someone outside of this mess.”
He looked older now than when they had been lovers some seventeen
years before, his skin showing the lines drawn by long days in sun
and weather on land and at sea. Princess Lovella had thought to earn
some fame as a naval commander and her husband had voyaged with her.
Now the brown hair that had often been bleached tow by the sun was
showing grey at the temples. His sideburns and beard were almost
completely white. As with some men, this made him more attractive,
not less, granting character to his lean features.
Zorana saw the changes and tingled. Here was the face of a
stranger, but the eyes that looked out of that face were the same
that had once met hers, wild with the passion that sealed their
bodies into a single sweaty whole.
“I am grateful for your company,” she replied
formally, hoping her face did not give away her thoughts. “This
engagement is an… interesting complication. But you must be
delighted, Jet is your nephew.”
Newell pursed his lips thoughtfully, as if testing his words
before uttering them even in this private place.
“I have never cared for my sister’s children as an
uncle should,” he admitted. “They are too much her
creatures, too tightly under her control for me to feel comfortable
with them.”
His words were so close to Zorana’s own thoughts that she
did not question them.
“I see,” she said softly. “Melina is a strong
woman.”
“A spoiled youngest,” Newell said bluntly.
“Always given her way when small and now married to a man who
cannot rule her. No wonder the common folk think her a
sorceress.”
Zorana smiled. “She isn’t?”
“No more than I,” Newell laughed. “But she has
the benefit of the reputation just the same. Or the
deficit…”
He let the words trail off, but Zorana followed his thought
without effort.
“Not all the common folk would be comfortable with a
sorceress queen, would they?”
“Nor the noble folk,” Newell added honestly. “I
have heard words among the rulers of the Great Houses. They think
such would be too much like the dark days when the Old World nations
ruled their colonies with dark arts as well as honest
statecraft.”
“Yet Rolfston will not divorce her?”
“For no better cause than ambition?” Newell laughed
heartily. “I doubt he could get the king to permit such a
divorce. Moreover, I believe he is devoted to Melina in his own way.
Their fortunes are hitched together.”
“Far easier,” Zorana said bitterly, “for them to
wed a younger son to a rival and so consolidate two
claims.”
“To the crown?” Newell asked.
“Of course!”
“More than one family can play at that game,” he said,
tentatively.
She glared at him. “Impossible!”
“Perhaps I speak too quickly,” he said, making as if
to rise. “I just thought…”
She stopped him. “It is I who speak too hastily. What do you
mean?”
“I…” Newell paused. She saw him swallow as if
the next words were stuck in his throat. “I have always been
fond of you, Zorana, in memory of those days we shared so long ago.
Childless myself, I find myself looking on others’ children as
if they are my own.”
Zorana felt her face growing hot, thinking how easily—had
Newell been less honorable—this might have truly been the
case.
“I have just returned from a voyage with our navy. Our
kingdom’s fleet is small, but we were fortunate and captured a
Bright Bay vessel. The captain invited my assistance in questioning
our prisoners before they were ransomed. From these I learned how
well Allister Seagleam is thought of by his peers. What surprised me
more was learning how well he is thought of by our own people. Did
you know that he is viewed by some—especially those who have
reason to journey between our rival nations—as a pledge child,
born to end the wars between us?”
Zorana was cautious. “I have heard some such
thing.”
“He has children of an age with your own, dear
Zorana,” Newell said caressingly. “Their grandmother was
King Tedric’s own sister—they are his grandnieces and
grandnephews just as your own children are.”
“Just as Elise and Jet are,” Zorana said,
understanding him and feeling her heart pounding. “And if I
betrothed one of my children—Purcel, say—to one of the
children of the Pledge Child…”
“It might make a claim as persuasive as that offered by the
marriage of Lady Elise and young Jet. Moreover,” Newell said,
rising from his chair and putting his hands on her shoulders,
“you would be the best interim ruler in those years following
the king’s death, before such children could be expected to
take on their responsibilities.”
“Purcel is but fifteen,” Zorana agreed, her voice
hushed but the words spilling out faster than she could speak them,
“and has a warrior’s nature. Even if King Tedric directly
named Purcel his heir, it is unlikely our aged monarch could live
until Purcel was old enough to take the throne.”
“For all Father Tedric’s unwillingness to admit
it,” Newell said sadly, “age has a firm hold on his
heart. Allister Seagleam’s eldest daughter is four years
younger than Purcel. She would be even less ready to take the
reins.”
Zorana smiled, feeling the crown take shape upon her brow once
more. The smile vanished at a sudden thought.
“Doesn’t Allister have a son older than my
Purcel?”
“Shad,” Newell admitted, “is five years older,
just shy of his own majority. I understand, however, that he is
already betrothed to an heiress of Bright Bay.”
“That engagement couldn’t be broken without causing
much trouble,” Zorana said anxiously, “could
it?”
“I think not,” Newell soothed. “Duke
Allister’s next son, Tavis, is a few moon-spans younger than
Purcel and wholly without Purcel’s achievements in battle. I
believe he paints pictures or some such.”
Relief weakened Zorana so that she sagged to a seat on the edge of
her bed. Newell poured her a glass of water from the pitcher on the
bedside table and held it to her lips. It seemed the most natural
thing in the world that he remained seated beside her when the glass
was set by.
“It will not,” Zorana said cautiously, “be an
easy thing to arrange. I do not believe that I can appeal to my
mother, the Grand Duchess Rosene, for assistance.”
“That would be unwise,” Newell agreed. “If her
heart is now set on encouraging young Elise’s advancement, she
will be hesitant to take this great gamble when she sees a sure
thing.”
“Yes,” Zorana frowned. “Yet I will need a
liaison. I cannot ride to Bright Bay myself and make this
proposition.”
Newell cleared his throat. “If you would permit me… I
am frequently called into areas where such duties would not be
impossible—nor terribly obvious. Your hand need not be shown
until all is ready.”
“Would you?” Zorana turned and found herself flushing
again at his closeness.
“I said before,” Newell purred, “that being
childless, I must think of others’ children as my
own.”
“There will be details to work out,” she said quickly,
“letters to draft, conditions to consider, some means of
stalling King Tedric’s announcement of an heir until we can
show him this newest option.”
Newell slid his arm about her waist. “That can all be worked
out.”
“Then we are in this together?”
“Most definitely.”
They sealed their agreement with something far more intimate than
a handshake.
IN the two weeks following the announcement of her engagement to Jet
Shield, Elise tried to believe that she was completely happy.
Certainly both in public or in private Jet was as attentive as she
could desire. Indeed, in private she became grateful that Ninette was
always within call. Otherwise, Jet’s ardor might overcome her
own good sense. She was startled to discover what fires lurked within
her and how easily he could kindle them—sometimes with as
little as the brush of his lips across her cheek or a smoldering look
that gave a heretofore unsuspected meaning to the most
innocent-seeming comment.
Her eighteenth-birthday celebration—a week after their
betrothal had been announced—had been a wonderful festivity,
marred only by her gathered relatives’ sour looks when Elise
warmly welcomed Lady Blysse and Derian Carter to the group.
However, ever since the falconry party, Elise had wandered out to
the upper castle meadows most mornings, joining in the casual
gatherings, teaching the feral woman how to weave daisy crowns and
other silly things, and finding herself quite enjoying Lady
Blysse’s—or rather Firekeeper’s—odd
perspective on human culture.
Elise had needed a new friend. Lady Aurella’s prediction
that Sapphire would be furious with her had come true—a thing
Elise had not thought would trouble her so much given how annoying
she often found her cousin. Perhaps it was not just that Sapphire had
cut out all contact with Elise; maybe it was that she looked so sad,
so hurt. Oddly, Aunt Zorana, whose wrath Elise had feared, was so
contented-seeming that Elise’s father was moved to comment (in
private) that he wondered if his sister was pregnant again.
As for Ivon Archer, he viewed his daughter with unconcealed pride
and joy. Although the necessity of training Elise to manage the
Archer estates had forced them frequently into each other’s
company, they had never been close. Privately, Elise had thought she
was a disappointment to her father: too quiet, too scholarly, too
uninterested in the martial games he had enjoyed with his own father
before the elder Purcel’s death in battle a few years before
Elise herself was born.
Strangely enough, the fact that Aurella Wellward apparently shared
the same weakness that had made her aunt Elexa barren had brought
Ivon closer to his wife, but had distanced him from his daughter.
Sometimes Elise thought that he privately blamed her in some fashion
for Aurella’s long illness following Elise’s birth and
her subsequent infertility.
Now, however, that was swept away as if it had never been. Ivon
Archer clearly viewed Elise’s desire to become betrothed to Jet
as a mark of her loyalty to her father and his cause. With that one
decision, Elise had removed all the deficits of being an only child,
allied her family to their greatest potential rival for the throne,
and made her father the most likely choice for King Tedric’s
heir.
Anticipating with an innocent enthusiasm that reminded Elise not a
little of Jet on the day he first proposed, Ivon took his daughter on
long rides through the countryside so that they could discuss
statecraft. She had learned more about her father in these two weeks
than she ever knew before and felt—a little
uncomfortably—that he was far more human and vulnerable than
she had ever imagined.
But no matter how hugely Baron Archer dreamed, the reality
remained that King Tedric had not selected an heir from among his
nieces and nephews, nor from among their children. Nor had he sent
Lady Blysse away, keeping her thus tacitly beneath the mantle of his
favor. Duty to his own estates and family called Earl Kestrel from
the castle from time to time, but Blysse remained in residence, a
lithe, dark-haired figure, gradually becoming more sophisticated in
her manners and seemingly-unaware of the shadow she had cast on
everyone else’s plans.
Fumbling at her throat, Elise fingered the exquisite jet carving
of a wolf’s head that Jet had given her as a betrothal gift.
She had given Jet a token of her own society patron, the Lynx, worked
in gold with tiny emerald eyes.
Exchanging society tokens was a long-standing tradition, dating
back to when the Old Country still reigned. The exchange of tokens
provided a symbolic pledge that one’s own society would now be
looking out for the soon-to-be wedded partner.
Touching the token, however, did not make Elise decide to seek out
Jet. Rather she resolved to go see the real wolf in her
life—Firekeeper.
Neither Derian nor Ox answered the door to the suite. Instead, a
slightly familiar man with something Kestrel about his dark hair and
hawk nose stood in the opening. Slightly disconcerted, for she had
been lost in her own reflections, Elise fumbled for words:
“Is Fire… I mean Lady Blysse in?”
“Firekeeper’s fine with me,” the man said,
opening the door wider and giving Elise a friendly smile.
“Since that’s what she insists on being called. However,
I’m sorry to disappoint you, but she’s not in.”
“Oh.”
Stepping back, Elise started to make her apologies, but the man
continued:
“I think she’s in the kitchen gardens. Derian has the
day off to visit his parents and so Firekeeper went down to the
gardens soon after breakfast.”
“The kitchen gardens?” Elise asked, the question
coming out despite herself. “Firekeeper?”
“She discovered them sometime after that first hawking
expedition,” the man replied. “She’s completely
fascinated by the concept that people can grow their own food. I
guess the gardens at West Keep weren’t very extensive or maybe
she just had too much else to learn then.”
He stopped suddenly. “I realize I’m being terribly
familiar,” he said.
“I, of course, know who you are, but I don’t suppose
you remember me. Our circles haven’t crossed that
frequently.”
Just as Elise was realizing who this must be, the man made a deep
and formal bow:
“Sir Jared Surcliffe, at your service, my lady. I am a
somewhat distant younger cousin of the Earl Kestrel.”
“Lady Elise Archer,” Elise replied with appropriate
formality, and curtsies. Then she smiled. “I remembered you
just as you introduced yourself. When I was quite small, my parents
took me out to the Kestrel estates. You were there, too, and very
patiently supervised me and Earl Kestrel’s boys while we rode
our ponies. Later you took us out fishing by that wonderful stone
bridge—the one that looked as if it must have trolls under it.
We’ve shared company since, but I hope you don’t mind
that that particular occasion is the one I remember best.”
“Not at all.” Sir Jared grinned, an open expression
that made him look much as he had ten years before, not at all like
the mature man of twenty-four or twenty-five that he must be. For the
first time, Elise realized that there was something vaguely sad about
the grown man’s expression that had not been present in the
boy’s. She struggled to remember what she could about him.
“I’m being very rude keeping you standing in the
hallway,” Sir Jared added. “Would you like to come in and
wait, or shall we stroll down to the gardens and make certain that
Blind Seer hasn’t eaten one of the gardener’s
sons?”
Elise giggled and was immediately horrified. Jared Surcliffe
didn’t appear to notice.
“I think,” Elise replied, cloaking herself in the
shreds of her dignity, “that I would like to go down to the
garden. Blind Seer may not be a problem, but the falcon might
be.”
Jared laughed. “Then if the Lady Archer…”
“Elise, please,” she hastily interrupted. “No
one calls me Lady Archer yet except on terribly formal occasions. I
don’t need to use the title until I reach my
majority.”
“And you’re not in a great hurry to get there,”
Surcliffe mused, almost to himself, as he stepped out into the
hallway and shut the door behind him. “Now, there is a wisdom
one doesn’t often see in a young lady.”
Elise felt flattered rather than insulted and, as Sir
Jared’s comment had been spoken quietly, she avoided a direct
reply. Instead she walked beside him down the corridors and toward
the stairs leading out into the gardens, searching her memory for
everything she could remember about her new companion.
Surcliffe, she recalled from her geography lessons, was a minor
holding in the Norwood grant. Theoretically, it belonged to the
Kestrels, but in practice those small holdings passed from parent to
child along similar lines of inheritance followed in other matters.
Only if the Surcliffes mismanaged the estate or did something
horrible or the line died out completely would the Norwood family
dare step in and reassign the land. Thus, for all practical purposes,
Jared Surcliffe was a minor noble, never mind that under Queen
Zorana’s rules restricting titles he did not even merit the
title “Lord.”
Jared’s knighthood was a different matter. He had earned it
in the same battle in which Crown Princess Lovella had lost her life.
Assigned to the princess’s company in a support
capacity—as a medic, Elise thought—he had been among the
first to see the princess fall. Despite being unarmored and unarmed,
Surcliffe had raced out into the field. Using Princess
Lovella’s own spear, he had held back the attackers until
Lovella’s troops rallied. Then he had done his best to save
Lovella’s life through his medical arts.
Lovella’s wounds had been too severe to be mended—even
by one with the healing talent—but due to Sir Jared’s
care the crown princess had lived long enough to bid both her husband
and her parents farewell. King Tedric—some said at
Lovella’s express request—had made Jared Surcliffe a
knight of the Order of the White Eagle, the highest honor in the
land. Elise had been present at his investiture, one figure in the
silent and awed crowd. She blushed now to think that she could have
failed to recognize him.
She allowed herself some leeway, for the man striding along beside
her was very different from the solemn, formally clad figure who had
knelt in front of his king and queen to receive their thanks and
blessing. He seemed younger, more relaxed, even in some strange way
playful. Perhaps, Elise thought, she could almost be forgiven.
Then she realized that Surcliffe was speaking to her and
apologized:
“I’m sorry, Sir Jared, I was distracted by my
thoughts. May I beg you to repeat yourself?”
“No need to beg, Lady Elise,” Surcliffe said. “I
was offering you my congratulations on your recent engagement.
I’ve met Jet Shield in passing and he seems like a fine
fellow.”
Elise nodded. “Thank you. We’ve known each other since
we were children and I’ve always been fond of him.” Fond, she thought. Fond! Is that the way to speak of
the man who has captured my heart and my hand?
Yet, somehow, in Jared Surcliffe’s company she could not go
into the effusions that were so easy when she was among her lady
friends. All of them were more than willing to praise every aspect of
Jet: his form, his manners, his seat on a horse, even the color of
his hair and the line of his eyebrows.
Fleetingly, Elise found herself thinking of her mother and the
tear she had glimpsed on her cheek. To distract herself, she asked
Surcliffe:
“Are you married, Sir Jared?”
“I am,” he replied stiffly, “a widower. My wife
died in childbirth three years ago. Our baby died as well. Since then
I have occupied myself with other things.”
“I’m sorry,” Elise murmured, not certain whether
she was expressing sympathy for his loss or apologizing for her
tactlessness.
Certainly she must have heard about his bereavement! When he had
been knighted every aspect of the new hero’s character and
person would have been discussed both in meetings and in more
informal gossip sessions.
“Thank you,” Sir Jared said, accepting her sympathy.
“My marriage was arranged, but as with you and your Jet, I had
known my bride since we were children together. Losing her came as a
shock.”
They were out of the castle now and crossing the rose gardens,
following the path down and around to where the kitchen gardens stood
within their stone-walled enclosure. Deftly, Sir Jared turned the
conversation to the shade of a particularly lovely yellow and orange
rose. Elise replied, telling him how the bush had been brought from
New Kelvin when she was but a child, and so they both were saved from
further awkward and painful revelations.
“No, dearie,” Holly Gardener said, coming over to
demonstrate. “Don’t pull the carrot by the fluffy part at
the top. Grasp here at the base, firmly, and give it a
tug.”
Firekeeper obeyed, eager to do this right. She was becoming
desperately fond of this bent old woman with her wispy white hair.
Holly was the only person she had met thus far who didn’t think
of Firekeeper as a potential heir to the throne. To Holly, she was
just a girl who wanted to learn about gardens. In her presence,
Firekeeper somehow felt younger, but without any of the vulnerability
her youth and relative lack of strength had given her among the
wolves.
Over the days that Firekeeper had been visiting the gardens and
attached orchard, Holly had trusted her with more and more duties. At
first Firekeeper had been permitted only to carry baskets and to
fetch water from the well, but even these tasks had delighted her,
giving exercise to muscles going soft from no greater challenge than
occasional horseback rides and her daily romps with Blind Seer.
Lately, Firekeeper had graduated into picking fruit and
vegetables. The late-summer harvest was beginning and even with the
extra help hired from the town the castle’s own staff could
barely keep up with their duties. Firekeeper hoped that she could
learn to pick the vegetables without harming either them or the
marvelous plants that bore them. Then she would free another to do
those jobs she had yet to master.
On her second try, the carrot slid freely from the dirt.
Firekeeper gazed upon it, fat and orange, lightly dusted with soil,
with as much pride as if she had grown it herself.
“Good job, dearie!” Holly said, her praise falling
sweetly on Firekeeper’s ears, for the gardener could be as
quick to criticize as her name plant was to prick unwary fingers.
“Now, if you wish, you may harvest the rest of that row. Leave
the little carrots to grow into the space left by their
fellows.”
Firekeeper obeyed. A pack member all her life, it felt good to be
contributing to the survival of the whole. Even though most of her
days as a wolf had been spent foraging for herself, still the Ones
had often trusted her to watch over the pups. Sometimes they even
sent her ahead to scout the herds of elk or deer. In the moon cycles
that had followed her departure from west of the Iron Mountains, all
of Firekeeper’s basic needs had been provided for. Moreover,
someone else was always more skilled than she in the tasks at
hand.
This last had become particularly irksome since they had come to
live in the castle. Here, even Derian—who had never been
without some task—now found himself idle except for his duties
teaching Firekeeper. Firekeeper, however, had a limited attention
span for lessons in etiquette and dancing. When she rebelled, Derian
had learned to let her be.
For his part, Blind Seer had no difficulty accepting idleness. A
wolf proverb stated: “Hunt when hungry, sleep when not, for
hunger always returns.”
This afternoon, faithful to his creed, the wolf drowsed in the
shade of a crab-apple tree whose fruits had already been harvested to
make jelly. The garden staff detoured widely to avoid him.
Consequently, Firekeeper and the old woman were alone in this
particular garden.
Overhead, Elation circled easily above the neat square and
rectangular plots, occasionally stooping upon some luckless rodent.
The first few times the huge bird had plummeted from the sky, she had
scared the wits out of the gardening staff. Now that they had grown
accustomed to her, they were rather delighted in having a creature
usually reserved for noble sport take part in their routine. They had
nicknamed her “Garden Cat”—an indignity the falcon
accepted with her usual arrogant grace.
Firekeeper heard a shrill call from above. “Company coming! Elise and Doc! They’ll be upon
you in a moment.”
Firekeeper sniffed the breeze, but it was blowing from the wrong
direction. Even if it had not been, she doubted she would smell
anything but the heavy scents of dirt, manure, bruised leaves, fresh
vegetables, and hot sunlight.
Carrot in her hand, she rose, turning to face the gate in the
stone wall. She greeted her friends as they passed through:
“Elise, Doc,” she said with measured solemnity.
“What brings you here?”
“Our feet,” Jared replied with equal formality.
“What else?”
Firekeeper grinned then. “I’ve been
picking…”
“Pulling,” interrupted Holly, who, like the rest of
those Firekeeper named as friends, believed it was her job to correct
the wolfling’s speech at every turn.
“Pulling,” Firekeeper repeated obediently,
“carrots. For the root cellar, for the castle, for the winter.
Also for the kitchen today and so that the carrots still in the
ground can grow wider.”
She shook her head, still amazed by the varied wonders of
gardening. Elise broke into a broad smile that Firekeeper far
preferred to the strained and weary look that had been on Lady
Archer’s face when she had entered the garden.
“Will you introduce me to your friend?” Elise asked,
this both a real request and a subtle prompt for Firekeeper to
practice her social graces.
Firekeeper nodded, straightened, and gestured with the carrot.
Unconsciously, she adopted the mannerisms of Steward Silver, a woman
she quietly admired for her ability to always know the right way
through the tangled maze of human social customs.
“Lady Elise…” She paused, glanced at Elise.
“Or should I say Lady Archer?”
“Lady Archer is best if you want someone to know my social
connections,” Elise explained. “Lady Elise if you think
they already know them, since you know that I prefer to be called
simply Elise.”
Firekeeper still felt uncertain, a state of mind not helped by
Blind Seer’s quiet sniggering from under the crab-apple tree.
The wolf would not admit that he, too, found human customs
fascinating, secure that he at least would never be forced to use
them. Doc came to her rescue:
“In such circumstances, Firekeeper, I have found that it is
always better to err on the side of greater formality.”
Elise nodded. “True.”
Holly Gardener had been watching this byplay with steady,
earth-rooted calm, her hands still busy sorting fresh-picked squash
into that which would be sent to the castle kitchens and that which
would go to the canning sheds.
Firekeeper began again, “Lady Elise Archer, Sir Jared
Surcliffe—may I have the pleasure of presenting my friend Goody
Holly Gardener. Holly, these are my friends.”
Rising to her feet with the aid of a gnarled piece of thorn wood
polished bright with beeswax and long use, Holly curtsied as deeply
as her arthritic knees would permit.
“I am honored,” she said in her creaky voice,
“to have the heir to House Archer and a knight of the White
Eagle grace my garden. Will you take a bench in the shade along the
wall and allow me to send for something cool to drink?”
Firekeeper shook her head in admiration. She had completely
forgotten her duties, but Holly had rescued her with the grace and
dignity most of the nobles reserved for their most formal
interactions.
It never occurred to her that for Holly Gardener this meeting
might be one of those formal occasions. Firekeeper’s own awe of
the gardener’s skill was so great that she placed Holly’s
worth far above that of the relatively useless members of the court
such as Lord Rolfston or his father, Grand Duke Gadman.
Elise answered, “I thank you for your offer of a drink,
Grandmother, but I see the well just across the way. Let me get the
water and you remain where you are.”
Jared grinned. “Not to be outdone, let me lend a hand so
that we won’t put you too behind in your tasks.”
When Holly began to protest, made honestly anxious by the thought
of a knight of the realm picking vegetables, he stilled her with a
hand on her shoulder.
“Goody, I may have this fancy title, but I am nothing more
than a younger son of landholders of a small, rocky estate on Norwood
lands. By helping you, I may help myself someday. Please, don’t
protest further.”
Firekeeper held her breath, but there was no need to intervene.
Holly settled back onto the low, three-legged stool she used to spare
her knees.
“Thank you, son,” she said, her smile showing only a
few missing teeth. “Tell me about your lands.”
“My parents’ land as of yet,” Jared began,
“and then my brother’s. I am the third born.”
Firekeeper knelt in the dirt and started pulling carrots again,
pleased as always to learn something more about how
“real” humans—as opposed to those who resided here
in the castle—lived. Elise came over with a maple bucket half
full of cool well water and silently offered Firekeeper the dipper.
She was somewhat clumsy in her task, but Firekeeper recognized that
clumsiness as something she saw far too often in
herself—unfamiliarity rather than ineptitude.
Jared continued talking while thinning carrots from the row
alongside Firekeeper’s:
“Let’s see, the land was in our family before Queen
Zorana established Hawk Haven. Back then it was just a frontier
farm—and not one that was doing very well, either. My ancestors
had ambition but not much luck in the land they held. At first they
eked out their living selling furs and burning charcoal, but that
can’t go on forever. The animals either die or get smart enough
to leave and you run out of hardwood.
“So they had to take to serious farming, a thing that
apparently didn’t delight my great-great-whatever-grandfather a
whole lot. When the fellow who would become the first Duke of Norwood
called for volunteers to support Zorana Shield against that skunk,
Gustin Sailor, Grandpappy went happily. He did well, too, gaining
both booty and honor. When Queen Zorana created the Norwood grant, my
family was given the Surcliffe holding in perpetuity.”
Firekeeper hadn’t followed all of this, but enough so that
she had a question: “If they not hunt or grow, how did they
eat?”
Doc rose, stretching the kinks out of his calf muscles.
“Well, some of them became vassals to the Kestrel
family—earning Kestrel credit, some of which was sent home.
There’s always been at least one member of the family stubborn
enough to want to stay and make something of the land. Most recently,
my own grandmother decided to set in grapevines. My father has
continued their cultivation and we’re just getting to the point
where we’re proud enough of our wine to sell it outside of the
Kestrel grant.”
Elise, sitting on a bench in the shade, the bucket between her
feet, asked, “And you, Sir Jared?”
“Call me Doc, if you don’t mind,” he said.
“The other is so formal.”
“Doc, then,” she said, “if you don’t mind
calling me Elise.”
“Not at all. I’d be pleased,” he replied.
“To answer your question, Elise, right now I’m one of
those who’s earning money to send home. Earl Kestrel has been a
good patron. We’re nearly twenty years apart in age and not
nearly as closely related as he sometimes represents. My parents are
both in good health and hopefully will not become ancestors for a
long while yet—they’re of Norvin’s generation. So
I’ve learned medicine and am trying to see something of the
country.
“Meanwhile, I send home a portion of my earnings
or—even better— hunt out interesting vine cultivars and
vintnering techniques and send them along. My brother and sister have
stayed closer to home. My sister is an attendant upon Duchess Norwood
and my brother apprenticed to a master wine maker for ten years.
He’s home again now and all afire to put his new knowledge to
work.”
The talk continued in this vein for a while, Holly Gardener
contributing a shrewd thought or two from her vast wealth of garden
lore. Firekeeper listened, pulling carrots until they were all
thinned, then hauling water to the rows.
After a while, a distant bell announced that the time for the
evening meal was drawing near. Elise sighed.
“Duty calls. I have promised my mother that I would go with
her and the queen to a banquet at Duke Wellward’s city
house.”
She glanced over at Firekeeper, her blue eyes twinkling, and
asked, “Tell me, Lady Blysse, what is Duke Wellward’s
relation to me?”
Firekeeper growled, very low, very quiet. This new addition to her
education, the learning of who were the rulers of the Great Houses
and how they related to the players for the throne, made her head
ache. Once again, she thought that wolves solved such questions so
much more simply. Elise, however, was merciless in her
persistence.
“Well, Firekeeper?”
“Duke Wellward is your mother’s father,”
Firekeeper began, “your grandfather. Your other grandfather is
Purcel Archer, the hero who died in the Battle of Salt Water in the
Year 85. Your grandmother is Grand Duchess Rosene.
“Holly,” Firekeeper added inconsequentially, knowing
from Elise’s approving smile that she had got the complicated
scheme of relationships right, “has been telling me stories
about Purcel Archer. I think I would have liked him.”
Jared Surcliffe grinned. “Given how you have taken to the
bow from the first time Race showed you how to use one, I suspect
that you would have indeed.”
He got to his feet.
“Lady Elise, may I escort you back to the castle?”
She nodded and Firekeeper thought that she saw the faintest hint
of a blush touch her cheeks.
“Thank you, Sir Jared.”
“Doc,” he reminded, and she smiled. Doc glanced over
at Firekeeper. “Are you coming back with us?”
“I help Holly Gardener carry the baskets in first,”
Firekeeper replied. “Then I hurry to the castle in time for
dinner. Will Derian be back?”
“Not yet. He has permission to remain out until after
dinner.”
Bending to pick up one of the baskets of carrots, Firekeeper
watched them leave. Behind her, she heard Holly say softly:
“I like that Elise. Maybe she would make a good queen after
she has some years on her. She’s not too proud to carry water
to quench a servant’s thirst.”
“And Doc?”
“I like him, too,” Holly assured her. Then she added
softly, so softly that Firekeeper didn’t think she was meant to
hear, “He’d be a far better king than that Jet
Shield.”
XII
The hot summer weather prompted Derian’s
parents to suggest a picnic along the banks of the Flin River,
upstream of the city. The entire family rode there in a wagon Derian
remembered as being creaky when he was Brock’s age, pulled by
an old draft horse to whom Colby and Vernita had given an honorable
retirement three years before. Once arrived, they staked out a
section for themselves and spent the day following quiet pursuits:
tossing horseshoes, rolling hoops, singing rounds and collapsing into
uncontrollable laughter when someone became tangled in the words and
tune. Derian drifted into the easy relaxation that came when someone
else was in charge and quite capable of doing whatever needed to be
done. Quite willingly, he would have stayed along the riverbank into
the long twilit evening hours, but Brock rather self-importantly
announced that tonight was a meeting of the Bear Society and he must
attend. In any case, the gnats were rising, making the grassy verge
less appealing.
When they returned to the house, Damita made excuses to go out.
She did indeed have a “sweet’a”—or at least
imagined that she did, a youth of sixteen who was apprenticed to
their jeweler uncle. Next to this beau, the entertainment offered by
an older brother—even one who had been living in the
king’s own castle—had limited appeal. Knowing this, Colby
and Vernita gave in with good humor when Damita asked to go out to
the nearby market square, where she would doubtless cluster with a
group of girls her own age and giggle at the boys.
Derian’s own onetime romance with the baker’s daughter
had not survived his long absence and his relocation to the
castle—especially as he was there in the role of guardian to
another girl. His opportunities to cultivate new romances had been
limited.
Unlike Ox and Race, who were clearly classed as servants, his role
was more that of an attendant, a subtle distinction that ruled out
the riotous entertainments the other men could pursue. However,
though Derian was slightly more than a servant, he was definitely
less than a noble and thus pretty girls like Elise Archer remained
out of his reach.
Sometimes this bothered Derian. He found himself brooding that he
would become like Valet, a man who apparently had no interests beyond
tending his master. But tonight such worries were far away. Derian
was content to remain at home and enjoy these last few hours of peace
before he must return to his duties.
Once Brock and Damita had departed, the remaining three moved out
into the garden. Most of the peaches had been picked and enjoyed, but
the narrow leaves of the tree created a pleasant, natural arbor.
Derian helped Colby move a few slat-backed chairs and a small,
round-topped table into place. Vernita brought drinks from the cool
room.
“So, who’s the favorite candidate with the guilds
these days?” Derian asked with slightly forced jocularity.
The longer he had known Firekeeper, the more he had come to
entertain the contradictory feeling that she would be both the best
and worst choice for the new monarch. He hadn’t been
particularly easy with himself when he had learned from his parents a
week or so before that the foundling remained high on the list of the
people’s choices.
“Well,” Colby drawled, sipping his chilled tea with an
appreciative nod to Vernita, “your wolf-woman is still the
romantics’ favorite, but those of soberer mind are torn. Some
like the idea of Lord Rolfston Redbriar as he is a steady man with a
good reputation among his own people. It doesn’t hurt that he
has a large family, so we won’t see a repetition of this
uncertainty when he passes on. Others say, and loudly too, that Lord
Rolfston is too tightly under the thumb of that sorceress wife of
his.”
“Derian,” Vernita asked, “you’ve been
living in the castle for almost a moon-span now…”
“Barely twenty days!” Derian protested.
“Still, long enough to have seen Lady Melina frequently. Do
you think she is indeed a sorceress?”
Derian considered this carefully, knowing that his parents were
asking his advice and that they would be certain to repeat whatever
he said to their friends and trusted associates.
“I have seen no absolute evidence,” he said,
“but I think that whether or not she is, Lady Melina likes for
people to think that she is gifted far beyond those small talents
that sometimes crop up here and there. Do you understand?”
“Perfectly,” Vernita replied. “She values the
awe—even the fear with which she is regarded. I wonder if she
realizes that she is hurting her own cause?”
“I doubt it,” Derian said. “I don’t think
she’s the kind to ever think even for a minute that she is
anything but an asset. Now that her son Jet is engaged to Lady Elise,
Lady Melina has not one but two roads to the throne. My feeling is
that she’s quite smug about it.”
“And the young woman Sapphire,” Colby asked.
“How is she taking having competition within her own
family?”
“She isn’t thrilled,” Derian admitted.
“For a day or two she sulked in her room like a child. Then she
must have realized—or someone must have told her—that
such behavior was not fitting in one who hoped to someday be monarch.
She has been much in public since—even invited Firekeeper out
for some real hawking and was fairly charming to her, though
Firekeeper’s Elation did far better than Sapphire’s
gyrfalcon—but Sapphire’s still cool to Elise.”
“And Lady Elise,” Vernita asked, a slight twinkle
lighting her eyes that her own son should be on such familiar terms
with the heir to a barony so as to speak of her by her first name,
“how does she view the situation?”
“I think she regrets the estrangement from her cousin but is
resigned to it. Sapphire Shield is a—to speak
mildly—strong personality. I’m certain they’ve
clashed before. But you haven’t finished telling me about how
the common folk view the field. So far my Firekeeper and Lord
Rolfston remain strong contenders…”
“And Baron Archer as well,” Colby added. “Lady
Zorana has fallen behind somewhat, now that there has been an
alliance between Lady Elise and Jet Shield.”
“What about Allister Seagleam?” Derian asked.
“Once you said he was favored by many.”
“A few weeks’ time hasn’t changed that situation
much,” Colby admitted. “More disturbing are rumors that
would seem to indicate that Bright Bay is determined that if Allister
wishes to claim his rights he will have support in doing
so.”
“What do you mean?” Derian asked, sitting up straight
in his chair.
“It’s the stories coming up the road,” Colby
said slowly. “You know that we border Bright Bay all along the
Barren River.”
“Of course.”
“Now strategically, the Barren makes a good border. It is
rocky most of its length and where it isn’t, it’s still
very wide. There are a few places, however, that are more fordable
than others and reports say that a greater concentration of Bright
Bay’s Stalwarts—or their allies from Stonehold—
have been seen in these places.”
“I understand,” Derian said, watching the map Colby
had drawn with his damp fingertip on the tabletop dry into
invisibility. “They’re watching us, but not yet moving
in.”
“Right. From my conversations with the army’s Master
of the Horse— he came by to ask on the quiet if we had any
draft animals to sell—the king’s officers are aware of
the situation but are unwilling to move in lest it prompt the very
conflict we would all like to avoid.”
“At least,” Vernita added, “until King
Tedric’s heir is selected. It would be a horror if we were to
lose the king while engaged in an active war and no one was prepared
to take his place. In the infighting for the crown, Hawk Haven could
easily be defeated by outside enemies.”
“Then,” Derian frowned, “the pressure from
Bright Bay may force the king to make his decision before the
Festival of the Eagle this coming Lynx Moon.”
“That,” Colby said, “is precisely how I see it.
And it may be precisely what Bright Bay wants.”
“Or,” Vernita countered, “precisely what they
don’t want. After all an heir chosen may ruin Allister
Seagleam’s hopes for the throne.”
“And we must not forget,” Colby added, a wicked
twinkle in his eyes, “that Hawk Haven’s allies may be
putting pressures on King Tedric that we know nothing about. No ruler
can be completely indifferent about those countries along the
border—even the friendly ones. They can become unfriendly far
too easily if offended. It’s all rather like running a
business.”
Derian rubbed his eyes with his hands, thinking of the
argumentative and contentious forces gathered at the castle,
wondering if any among them could see past the crown’s glitter
to realize what a tremendous headache wearing it must be.
“I wish we knew,” he said, “which way to jump
and what the consequences would be!”
“Foresight,” Vernita replied calmly, “is the
rarest of the gifts and the least understood.”
“I wonder,” Derian said with an attempt at humor,
“if Lady Melina possesses it.”
His joke fell flat. Together they sat, sharing in silence the
impotence of the common folk when the actions of the great threaten
their lives and happiness. Derian wondered what choice he would make
if he were King Tedric and was secretly glad that he could leave that
choice to the king.
Aboard a great masted ship anchored off the shore of a small
island in the ocean east of the mutual coasts of Hawk Haven and
Bright Bay, Prince Newell leaned against the starboard rail. His hair
was concealed beneath a seaman’s stocking cap; the rest of his
person was equally well disguised in a striped jersey and canvas
trousers. The disguise worked simply because no one expected a prince
to be so clad—especially as the colors he wore were the blue
and yellow of a rival navy.
If any were watching him, Newell would seem completely absorbed in
studying the eddies created when the water splashed against the hull.
Actually, he missed nothing that happened in his vicinity. When a
slightly built man crossed the deck with affected casualness and came
to stand near him, Newell did not look up to see who it was. Instead
he asked rather diffidently:
“Have a good voyage?”
“Yes, thank you,” said the man, whose name was Tench.
He was a trusted advisor to the throne of Bright Bay. “And
yours?”
“Good enough.”
Newell’s voyage had been, as a matter of fact, less than
ideal. He had departed the capital of Hawk Haven two days after
convincing Zorana Shield that pursuing her own policy with an enemy
power was not traitorous. From the capital he had ridden a series of
fast horses to the coast, arriving three days earlier than he had
been expected. From there he had helped sail a small, swift cutter to
rendezvous with this vessel. At dawn, he would return to that cutter
and make the return voyage, all so he could arrive just in time to
rendezvous with the Hawk Haven Wings, on which he served as Commander
of Marines, a task undertaken ostensibly as a means of soothing his
broken widower’s heart and of giving himself some sense of
purpose.
In reality, the game Prince Newell was playing was far more
complicated than any of those who associated with him realized, a
game that was meant to make him the next king of Hawk Haven and
beyond. The first step in this process was convincing the government
of Bright Bay that he favored a peaceful resolution of their
conflicts. Thus this meeting and the importance of seeming both
confident and invulnerable. So Newell said nothing of his onerous
journey, but instead commented languidly:
“And all remains well with Gustin the Fourth?”
All the monarchs of Bright Bay assumed the name Gustin on taking
the crown, men and women alike. It was a curious custom, one that
Prince Newell meant to change when he himself was king of Bright Bay.
That violation of tradition, however, would need to wait until he had
finished with Hawk Haven. One thing at a time.
“All is well with our honored monarch,” Tench said. He
was a foolish-looking man who rather resembled a fish, complete with
slightly popping eyes and a perpetually open mouth. “She
expresses some concern as to the situation in Hawk Haven. Although
some of her advisors feel otherwise, she is firm in her conviction
that her cousin Allister Seagleam is the only proper heir to that
contested throne.”
“Glad to know,” Newell said languidly, “that she
hasn’t changed her mind. Tell your queen that agents interested
in her cause have been working busily. Allister Seagleam should soon
receive correspondence suggesting a way to strengthen his claim to
the throne. Her Majesty should press him to accept the
offer.”
“Duke Allister,” came Tench’s stiff reply,
“remains difficult. He does not wish to reign in a land that
will not welcome him, no matter how prepared Her Majesty’s
military is to support him—no matter how much the queen presses
him.”
“Perhaps,” Newell said, “we should find a way to
make him a hero in the eyes of both peoples. He would feel himself
more welcome then.”
What Newell actually planned was for he himself to be that hero.
King Tedric, sadly, would probably not be present .to witness those
heroics, but he would hear report of them. The prince was not
precisely certain just what heroic deed he would perform, but he had
infinite trust in his ability to manufacture situations to his
advantage.
He turned and for the first time looked Tench squarely in the
face. “And Stonehold?” he asked, naming Bright
Bay’s primary ally.
“Remains firm in its support of an independent Bright Bay.
However, its ministers are as ever opposed to the uniting of Hawk
Haven and Bright Bay. They fear that the larger nation would threaten
their own national sovereignty.”
“And how shall they prevent this union?” asked Newell
scornfully. “Surely sending a few troops to support Bright Bay
is a peculiar tactic! What if Bright Bay conquers Hawk
Haven?”
“If Bright Bay wins on land,” Tench replied,
“the victory will be achieved only with Stonehold’s
support. In that case, Stonehold is confident that it will be able to
dictate some of the terms. I believe they favor a partition of the
conquered Hawk Haven lands.”
Tench added cautiously, “The diplomats from Stonehold have
hinted that if Bright Bay permits a marriage alliance with Hawk
Haven, Stonehold will be forced to withdraw its military support.
Then Bright Bay may be at Hawk Haven’s mercy on
land.” Fools! Newell thought. Once Stonehold does that, they lose any
chance of subtly pressuring Bright Bay into their way of thinking.
All that will remain to them will be force. I must make certain,
somehow, that Stonehold does withdraw and then re-enter the field as
an opponent. An independent threat would be just the thing to unite
both Hawk Haven and Bright Bay behind me.
Aloud he said, “Stonehold’s withdrawal, of course,
should be prevented at all cost. This is essential for the delicate
balance of power we are relying upon to achieve a peaceful alliance
between our nations. If Stonehold withdraws, Bright Bay loses in land
power and Hawk Haven may be less willing to treat with it as an
equal. Suggest to Queen Gustin the Fourth that even the least rumor
of Duke Allister’s negotiating with Hawk Haven must be kept the
greatest secret.”
“I will do what I can,” the diplomat said dubiously.
“Her Majesty is difficult to guide. She is yet young and
impulsive.”
“Make her think this secrecy is her own idea,” Newell
suggested. “Let her think she needs to convince Duke Allister.
If she must dominate another’s will, she will find she must
dominate her own.”
“A good thought,” Tench replied.
Newell smiled politely. His plans included a future wherein Queen
Gustin IV would be his wife. The fact that the headstrong young queen
was already married was a difficulty he chose to overlook. Political
assassination was not a completely unfamiliar tool to him.
He remembered the days when he and Princess Lovella had squarely
faced the terrible consequences that would arise if Crown Prince
Chalmer assumed the throne. Despite bearing the name of his
illustrious grandfather, Prince Chalmer was an indecisive man. King
Tedric had not realized that in the course of educating his son in
statecraft he had crushed his spirit as surely as the spirit of a
good horse could be ruined by being too severely broken to rein.
Although Chalmer had visited battlefields, he was not a warrior.
Lovella was and she feared for her nation if her brother became king.
Chalmers hemming and hawing over the least decision would have meant
disaster as his field commanders waited for orders that came too late
or were too frequently countermanded.
Since King Tedric refused to acknowledge his son’s flaws and
promote his daughter over him, then another must do the difficult
task for him. Lack of decisiveness was not one of Lovella’s
flaws. With Newell’s assistance, she had engineered her
brother’s death. Afterward, she had honestly grieved for
Chalmer, but, as she told her husband, she had not viewed his slaying
as murder, but rather as an execution necessary for the greater good
of the state. Simply put, an incompetent commander must be
demoted.
Prince Barden had already been disinherited, so only Lovella
remained to assist her father. She did her duty well and then, with
bitter irony, she died in battle before she could assume the throne,
leaving the kingdom in greater peril than it had been in before.
Many a dark night after Lovella’s death, Newell had sat
alone with only a bottle of strong brandy for company. In his most
miserable, most drunken moments he had wondered if Lovella’s
death had been Chalmers revenge reaching out from beyond the grave.
When he was sober, those fears dispersed like fog in the heat of the
sun. Rapidly, therefore, he learned to stay sober and found himself
praised for his strength of character.
Newell was sober when he decided that King Tedric had wronged him
by not confirming him as heir to the throne following Lovella’s
death. Surely he was suited. Certainly he had risked far more to
secure the throne than any of those who were now being considered. If
Lovella had lived, Newell would have been king. How had her death
changed anything?
Newell was sober when he decided that if his rights were not given
to him, he would take them. Sober he had remained as he had made his
plans, manipulating the policies of Bright Bay with words dropped
into eager ears. Sober he had continued as he had watched the
political maneuverings of King Tedric’s potential heirs with
sardonic humor bordering on scorn.
Certainly it was symptomatic of the greater chaos that Earl
Kestrel thought he could foist off a foundling on the king and
convince him to name her his heir. Yet, on meeting Lady Blysse,
Newell had rather admired the young woman. For all her lack of
manners, there was a buried ferocity to her that reminded him
somewhat of Lovella. Never mind. This Blysse Norwood would never see
the throne. Indeed, she might well be the very scapegoat he needed.
As an outsider, resented by the others, she could easily be blamed
for the work of his hands.
Prince Newell chuckled, a dry, humorless sound. His companion
checked to see if the sun was vanishing behind a cloud, for surely
the day had grown suddenly cooler.
“Now, Lord Tench,” Newell said, “I have told you
what you want to know. Why don’t you tell me…”
The next quarter of an hour or so was profitably spent taking
notes on the location of certain elements of Bright Bay’s
fleet, information that Tench gave freely since the two countries
were not technically at war.
Wishing to seem the patriot, Newell Shield had given out that his
price for supplying gossip about the workings of the Hawk Haven
nobility was information that would enable Hawk Haven’s navy to
avoid accidental clashes with Bright Bay’s more powerful fleet.
In reality, he hardly cared about such things, except that in some
small corner of his mind, that navy already belonged to him.
The bowstring made a sound like a drowsy hornet when Firekeeper
released it, but she hardly heard it, hardly felt the slap against
her broad, leather wrist guard. Her mind was focused on the target,
on the blood-red spot that was its heart. The arrowhead burrowed in
three finger widths to the right and she snarled.
“Easy!” Race Forester cautioned her. “It
doesn’t do to lose your temper. If that had been a deer or a
man, you’d have hit soundly.”
“Not,” Firekeeper replied, “a squirrel or
rabbit.”
“True,” Race agreed, wrenching the arrow from the
target. “But at that distance who could know for certain there
was a rabbit?”
“I,” she said with a deliberate calm she did not feel,
“would know.”
Race nodded. “Yes, I guess you would.”
Midmorning had become archery practice time, a thing Earl Kestrel
had agreed to willingly since King Tedric might well prefer an heir
who would lead in battle to one who must conduct campaigns from the
sidelines. For the same reason, Firekeeper was being tutored in
elementary swordplay, use of a shield, and some refinements of
knife-fighting that her hunting had not revealed to her.
Though she had taken to these elements of martial training with
varying degrees of enthusiasm, attempting to teach her lancework had
proven useless. As of yet, no horse of sufficient strength and energy
had been found that would tolerate her. The patient grey gelding that
had carried her from the keep could be coaxed into a walk or even a
trot, but certainly not into cantering at a target. Therefore, for
now, lancework had been set aside.
A couple of weeks’ work had not made Firekeeper an expert in
anything. Indeed, other than with a bow or a knife—weapons she
had more practice with—she was a greater danger to herself than
to any opponent. However, she had learned valuable lessons about how
a sword might damage or a shield protect. These lessons could someday
be enough to preserve her life.
Blind Seer had taken to practicing with her, though after a few
incidents with panicked castle guards they worked together only in
the company of Earl Kestrel’s retainers.
“I’m not fool enough,” the great wolf
panted, lunging to get at her beneath the cumbersome shield she
carried on her left arm, dexterously avoiding blows from the wooden
practice sword, “to follow where you will lead without
learning enough to defend myself I haven’t forgotten, even if
you have, how vulnerable my flanks are to arrows.”
Firekeeper tried a shield bash and Blind Seer danced backward,
haunches brushing the ground, tail wagging.
“Up close,” the wolf continued,
“that’s where they’ll fear to fire their bows
lest they hit their friends, so up close is where I must learn to
be.”
He snaked beneath the rim of her shield and clamped his jaws
lightly but firmly around her ankle. A single tug and she was flat on
her back. Blind Seer leapt upon her and then she pressed the blunt
point of her practice dagger into his soft underbelly.
“I cut?” she queried, pushing slightly.
“You never would have gotten this close if Ihadreally crushed your
ankle!” the wolf protested.
“Maybe,” Firekeeper replied, “but
Ox has told me of the wonders dying men can perform, even when pain
should leave them shivering like a throat-torn doe. You
shouldn’t allow yourself to forget how vulnerable your belly
can be.”
The wolf’s blue eyes were hard as ice for a moment; then
Blind Seer laughed.
“Call it a draw?” he suggested.
“A draw,” Firekeeper agreed.
Derian shook his head in mock dismay at Firekeeper when the woman
came in from the practice field covered with dirt and sweat, bleeding
from a score of scratches. She knew him well enough by now to know
that he really wasn’t upset—far from it. He had been more
worried when all she had done was eat and grow soft.
“Ox says,” he commented, “that you’re
getting better with a sword.”
“Want to practice with me?” she teased. “I show
you how good I am getting.”
Derian nodded slowly. “Actually, I would. Ox suggested that
you’d improve with a different opponent—he said
you’re learning to fight him specifically, not a general
opponent, so I’ve been brushing up on what I know. For some
reason none of the castle retainers will fence with you.”
From where he lay on a cool section of flagstone floor, Blind Seer
chuckled. “I wonder why…”
Firekeeper booted the wolf in the ribs.
“You know sword?” she asked Derian, pleased to
discover that her fox-haired friend had teeth.
“I’m no great expert,” Derian replied, though
before he had met real soldiers he had actually fancied himself quite
capable. “My parents insisted that I take lessons when I was
younger. Sometimes it helps if a pack train owner can help with
defense.”
“From thieves,” she said, remembering various
blood-thrilling stories that Holly had been telling her, “and
from bandits, highwaymen, and robbers.”
Derian laughed. “That’s it,” he agreed.
“What are your plans for the rest of the day, my
lady?”
Firekeeper frowned. Derian’s latest self-appointed task was
making her keep track of her own obligations. She had a sneaking
suspicion that this was a lure to make her take her reading and
writing lessons more seriously.
“Bath,” she said, hedging for time to remember.
“Then free until late afternoon. Then dancing lessons with Lady
Elise and the other girls.
“Then…” She shrugged. “Then nothing so
important if I can’t remember. Right?”
“Then dinner,” Derian said seriously, “with Duke
Gyrfalcon, his family, and—if rumor is to be
believed—emissaries from the court of New Kelvin. This is very
important. House Gyrfalcon is important in its own right—not
just as a source of potential heirs for the throne. Earl Kestrel is
working very hard for your cause, trying to show Duke Gyrfalcon that
you could be as good a monarch as the duke’s own niece or
nephew. Furthermore, the New Kelvin emissaries will take report of
you back to their rulers, so you must make a good
impression.”
Firekeeper snorted, more disgusted with herself than for any other
reason, but she didn’t anticipate another formal banquet with
any joy.
“Must I go?” she pleaded.
“Yes,” Derian said firmly. “Earl Kestrel is
quite delighted with this notice.”
“Very well,” she said, “to make my guardian
happy, I will go.”
Derian patted her sympathetically on one shoulder. “I have
the tub ready in my room. Hurry and bathe. If you don’t take
too long, you should be able to spend an hour or so in the garden
with Holly. Just don’t get filthy all over again.”
Firekeeper had a wolf’s fastidious nature—a thing that
might surprise those who thought of the carnivores as filthy,
ravening beasts delighting in blood and gore. In reality, if water
was available, wolves bathed after a kill or after eating.
Freshly scrubbed, her hair caught up in a queue behind, dressed in
a pair of leather trousers and matching vest, Firekeeper hurried off
to the gardens. Holly was resting on one of the benches, enjoying a
tumbler of well water seasoned with crushed spearmint.
“I thought you were coming,” she said, patting the
bench beside her. “Your falcon arrived a moment ago.”
“Elation,” Firekeeper said seriously, “is not my
falcon. She just stay with me.”
“It works out to about the same,” Holly replied
peacefully, “as I
[ MISSING SECTION ]
“What are you doing today?” Firekeeper asked, eager to
learn more of the mysteries of gardening.
“Mostly resting, child. It’s hot this afternoon. I
wonder that you don’t wear something lighter.”
Firekeeper stroked the leather possessively. “It protects.
If not wear clothes to protect, why wear at all?”
“I,” Holly said with a soft, secret laugh,
“would think that you had figured that out by now, but if you
haven’t…”
Firekeeper had heard that type of chuckle before and said
scornfully, “I know about mating. This is not the season. I do
not need fine plumage.”
“For men,” Holly replied, a hint of warning in her
tone, “it is always the season. Never mind,
child…”
“What are you doing today?” Firekeeper repeated,
feeling that this conversation was taking her out of her depth and,
as usual, not liking the feeling at all.
“I was weeding around the acorn squash, but now I’m
resting.” Holly sipped her drink. “I don’t have
your energy, child. After all, I’m old enough to be your
grandmother.”
“Is there still weeding?”
“Always.”
“Where?”
Without leaving her bench, Holly gave Firekeeper directions. Once
Firekeeper had settled into pulling the runner grass from between the
rows of squash vines, she asked, hoping to prompt a story:
“You say you old enough to be my grandmother. Do you have
grandchildren?”
“I do,” Holly replied. “Do you recall the head
gardener?”
Firekeeper had met the intense little man with his fussy manners,
had noted his nervous way of eyeing Blind Seer as if he expected the
wolf to dig up the rose gardens at the least notice. She was not
certain at all that she liked the head gardener but had learned
enough castle etiquette not to openly question those in positions of
authority.
She grunted a noncommittal “Yes.”
“He is my oldest son.”
“No!”
“Yes. Once upon a time, I was the head gardener, but when my
knees got creaky, King Tedric permitted me to pass the title on to my
son, even as my father once passed it to me. It’s an
inheritance after a fashion, as real as property or money.”
“Head Gardener is your son?”
“That’s right.”
“But he’s so…” Firekeeper waved her
hands, mimicking the head gardener’s mincing motions.
Holly laughed, not denying the truth, but not condemning the man
either.
“But he is also a very good gardener. I suspect he will
learn to relax as he ages. Being around gardens does that to you. In
any case, Timin— that’s my son’s name—has
three children of his own. The elder two are already learning the
craft. You may have seen them about: Dan and Robyn.”
Firekeeper had seen them, hardworking towheads dressed in matching
smocks and sandals. Her estimation of Timin Gardener went up a notch.
At least he didn’t spare his children work to their eventual
detriment. The two gardener sprigs took their tasks seriously and if
they paused to chase a butterfly or admire a spider’s web, they
didn’t expect others to make excuses for them just because
their father was the head gardener.
She’d seen something of what such sloughing off of
responsibility could do in Citrine’s sisters, Ruby and Opal,
and in Kenre’s sisters, Nydia and Deste. Those middle girls
were becoming spoiled weak things who didn’t seem to have any
purpose in life but learning how to be noblewomen. They seemed to
think a good marriage the best they could do for themselves, unlike
Sapphire and Elise, whose training as heirs had made them value
themselves for what they could do.
Firekeeper sighed, remembering that the middle girls would be at
dancing practice today. She dreaded their sneers and giggles at her
missteps, at her inability to hear the guidance the music offered her
feet. To distract herself from that dreary prospect, Firekeeper
asked:
“Do you have any other children or grandchildren?”
Holly nodded. “I have a daughter who married a fisherman and
lives by the seacoast. She has two children and I expect will have
more. My younger son hasn’t yet married—too restless.
He’s in the military.”
A sad expression flitted across Holly’s wrinkled face.
“And I had another daughter who is now dead. She was among
those who followed Prince Barden across the mountains.”
“Oh!” Firekeeper felt strange. “Then I may have
known her when I was very small.”
“I had thought of that,” Holly admitted. “I
suppose that’s why at first I was so glad to make your
acquaintance. In a way, you were a link to my daughter.”
“What was her name?” Firekeeper asked, sitting back on
her heels, a weed dangling from her hand.
“Sarena, Sarena Gardener. Her husband was Donal Hunter. They
had a little girl named Tamara.”
She looked so expectant that Firekeeper felt almost ill, for those
names meant nothing to her. She hated to disappoint the old woman,
but she shook her head slowly.
“I’m sorry. I don’t remember. I was very small
when the fire came.”
Holly wiped away a tear that had somehow appeared on her withered
cheek and smiled bravely.
“That’s all right, dearie. I didn’t expect that
you would.”
Firekeeper knew that her friend was lying and that truth made her
feel all the worse.
XIII
“…and as I stand here on the border
between life and death,” sang the minstrel, his coat of
feathers and twine as marvelous as the soaring reaches of his voice,
“ here I stand, one hand clutching the sword blade and the
other pressed against the heart of my love, pushing her back, saving
her from death, in the wash of blood across my face at last I see the
truth, dark truth, black as dry blood…”
The minstrel’s voice rose, became sweeter still,
“She loves me not at all!”
Elise knew by heart the story of which the minstrel sang. It was
as old as the kingdom, the tale of a man whose fingers were sliced
off one by one as he defended his faithless lover.
She hated the first part of the song, always found herself holding
her breath as the man catalogued the cold realities that sliced his
soul far more cruelly than the sword did his hand. Breath trapped
aching in her chest, she waited for the second verse, where the man,
accepting truth in place of the lies that had been so dear to him,
watched his fingers regrow again one by one. “Red baptism, dripping from my brow, through the rose of
new vision, I see her laughing at my pale offering—bent fingers
on our cottage floor…”
Seeking to distract herself until the hopeful verses began, Elise
glanced at Jet, wondering how he was responding to this classic story
of love and betrayal. In the several days that had passed since she
had visited with Firekeeper and Sir Jared in the castle gardens, she
had found herself giving Jet many such glances: wondering what he
thought and dreamed, dreading that he was hollow but for
ambition.
Elise had always imagined herself in the place of the man in the
song, the faithful one, believing in love despite all obstacles. Now
she dreaded that she might be more like the faithless lover than she
had ever dreamed. She shoved these thoughts away in real terror,
discovering that she had become a stranger even to herself.
Now as she looked upon her betrothed’s black-browed face,
she thought he looked bored. Then she realized that Jet was not
watching the minstrel at all, that what she had taken for boredom was
carefully guarded neutrality. Following the direction of Jet’s
gaze, she saw that a soldier had mounted the king’s dais and
was handing Tedric a letter many times folded and secured with bright
seals. The woman’s uniform was dusty and her face
expressionless—or was there a touch of pity on those dirty
features?
Gamely, the minstrel continued his verses, but no one heard him
and only Kenre Trueheart, too young to have wondered what messenger
would dare interrupt the king at his meat, patted his hands together
in applause when the entertainer made his awkward bow and gratefully
ducked behind a curtain concealing a door out of the banquet
hall.
Afterward, Elise remembered this unfinished ballad as a bad
omen.
King Tedric and Queen Elexa departed the hall almost as soon as
the packet was placed in the king’s hand and a few words were
exchanged with the weary messenger. The gathered nobility was
courteously invited to remain and continue enjoying the
entertainment, but no one had ears for the music. Hands reached for
goblets of wine by reflex rather than to savor the fine vintages.
Steward Silver escorted the messenger from the hall with a
swiftness that made any cross-examination impossible, but this did
not keep conjecture at bay. If anything, it added to it. Fragments of
information were welded into improbable theories.
Elise listened to the scattered scraps that drifted up and down
the long tables: “The stablemaster said that she came in without escort
and her horse was blown. It may be ruined.” “They have the messenger sequestered in a private room.
Steward Silver herself is waiting on her. No one else is being
permitted close. I wonder what they fear the messenger will
say?” “My maid just happened to be passing down the hallway
when a servant came by carrying the messenger’s soiled uniform.
She said that she’s certain that it bore signs of a battle. One
sleeve hung as if nearly sliced off.” “Did you see the king’s expression when he spoke
with the messenger? There must have been some terrible
tragedy!”
Initially, Elise was as eager as any of the others to gather
scraps and piece them into a crazy quilt of possible event. Then a
sudden weariness and unnamed sorrow seized her. Making her excuses,
she left the hall. She was heading for her rooms when she remembered
that Ninette would be waiting there, eager to continue the cycle of
gossip and conjecture.
Although the evening was dark, Elise slipped out a side door into
the garden. The moon was half-full and bright enough to navigate by,
though the garden seemed robbed of color. By moonlight, Elise found
refuge among the roses, their scent heavy in the hot, damp summer
air. She bent her head to breathe deeply of their perfume. When she
raised her head, she discovered that she was not alone.
A slim figure leaned against an arched trellis overgrown with pale
roses. Even in the dim light, Elise could tell the figure was another
woman, dressed in a long, formal gown. When the woman moved, Elise
knew her.
“Firekeeper,” she said softly.
“Yes,” came the equally soft reply. “I saw you
come out. What is happening?”
“News from the army, I think,” Elise said. “I
don’t know any more than that. I don’t think anyone knows
any more.”
“Oh.” A long silence, then Firekeeper asked, “I
don’t understand.”
“Neither,” Elise admitted, “do I. How can they
build such elaborate pictures out of guesses?”
She glanced around. “Where is Derian?”
“Inside, making guesses.” Firekeeper’s laugh was
throaty. “He doesn’t worry about me in the darkness,
especially since Blind Seer is always near. He said he worries about
those in the darkness who might meet me!”
Elise laughed in turn. “Shall we walk then? My head is muzzy
with wine and too much talk.”
She saw the pale oval of Firekeeper’s face nod agreement.
Side by side, they strolled down the curving paths. More than once,
Elise felt Firekeeper’s hand on her arm, steering her away from
a collision with a bush or other obstacle.
“Can you see in the dark?” she asked.
“See, like in daylight?”
“Yes.”
“Not really.” Firekeeper shook her head.
Elise heard rather than saw the motion, felt the breath of air
against her bare shoulders.
“I cannot see in the darkness,” the other continued.
“More I know how to see the dark, to know what is there. Wolves
hunt much at night, so I must learn darkness or I must
starve.”
Elise heard Firekeeper stumble, heard a soft curse, smiled,
wondering if Derian had taught it to his charge intentionally.
“Why,” Firekeeper asked plaintively, “do women
wear these dresses?”
Elise might have laughed, but she could hear the frustration in
the other woman’s voice.
“Because,” she offered slowly, “dresses make a
woman look attractive and graceful.”
Firekeeper snorted. “I am not graceful in a
dress.”
Having seen Firekeeper treading on her hem on the dance floor,
Elise could not deny the truth of this statement. Moreover, Elise had
learned that the other didn’t understand polite social
lies.
“No, you are not,” she admitted, “but
that’s because you have never learned to walk in a skirt. You
must shorten your stride just a little, not step out like a soldier
on parade.”
“I am not so noisy as a soldier,” Firekeeper
protested.
“No, you are not. You’re even graceful in your own
way—like a panther or a wolf—but not like a
woman.”
“But I am a woman,” Firekeeper responded in the tones
of one to whom this was still a matter for debate. “How can
what I do be not like a woman?”
Unlike her cousin Sapphire, who rode well and enjoyed hunting,
Elise had always preferred quieter pursuits. Still, she recalled some
of Sapphire’s loudly voiced frustrations when Melina had
moderated her daughter’s wilder behavior. Although she disliked
Melina, Elise found the very arguments Melina had presented to
Sapphire rising to her lips.
“You cannot escape that you are a woman,” she
began.
“I wish I could,” Firekeeper muttered, but Elise
continued as if she hadn’t heard.
“Since you cannot, you cannot escape the expectations that
our society and our class places upon women.”
“Why?” Firekeeper said querulously.
“Just listen to me for a moment,” Elise insisted.
“Since people will expect a young woman of a noble
house—and you are of one ever since Duchess Kestrel permitted
her son to adopt you—to know certain manners of behavior, you
must know them.”
“Circles,” Firekeeper complained, “like a pup
biting its tail. I am this so I must be that. I am that so I must be
this. Tell me, how will this little foot walking keep me
alive?”
Elise resisted the urge to reply, “By keeping you from
falling on your face.” She already knew that the literal-minded
Firekeeper would respond that this problem could be avoided by
letting her wear what she wanted.
“Consider,” she offered, “what you told me about
learning to see at night so that you could hunt with the wolves.
Learning to wear a gown, to walk gracefully, to eat
politely…”
“I do that!”
“You’re learning,” Elise admitted, “but
don’t change the subject. All of these are ways of learning to
see in the dark.”
“Maybe,” Firekeeper said, her tone unconvinced.
“Can you climb a tree?”
“Yes.”
“Swim?”
“Yes!” This second affirmative was almost
indignant.
“And these skills let you go places that you could not go
without them.”
Stubborn silence. Elise pressed her point.
“Why do you like knowing how to shoot a bow?”
“It lets me kill farther,” came the answer, almost in
a growl.
“And using a sword does the same?”
“Yes.”
“Let me tell you, Firekeeper, knowing a woman’s arts
can keep you alive, let you invade private sanctums, even help you to
subdue your enemies. If you don’t know those arts, others who
do will always have an advantage over you.”
“All this from wearing a gown that tangles your
feet?”
“If you know how to wear it,” Elise leapt onto a stone
bench, her long skirts swirling around her like bird’s wings,
“you can seem to fly.”
The next day, King Tedric summoned into private conference those
heads of the Great Houses who were in the capital or their
representatives. He also included his brother and sister, Grand Duke
Gadman and Grand Duchess Rosene. Anyone else was denied entrance, a
thing that forced several of the competitors for the throne to
swallow their rage when Earl Kestrel was admitted as representative
for his absent mother, the duchess.
Some hours later, the conferees emerged, uniformly somber. Yet,
despite the solemnity, the same inner glow lit the eyes of Earl
Kestrel, the grand duke, and the grand duchess, leaving observers to
comment that the king must have said something decisive regarding the
appointment of his heir.
As soon as the conference had ended, Earl Kestrel summoned
Firekeeper and Derian to him. At his orders, Ox mounted guard at the
door and Race was sent to linger near the entry from the gardens,
just in case someone tried to slip in from that direction. With his
usual tact, Jared Surcliffe had made himself politely absent.
“The king has sworn us to silence about what occurred at the
meeting,” Kestrel said, “but Lady Blysse, you must be
prepared.”
Firekeeper cocked an eyebrow at him, “For
silence?”
“No, to act!” Earl Kestrel calmed himself with visible
effort. “Bright Bay has sent an emissary escorted by a
considerable armed force to our southern border, into the contested
area near the twin towns of Hope and Good Crossing. King Tedric is
resolved to meet with this emissary himself. Since this action will
put him in great danger, the king has submitted to the request of the
Great Houses that he settle the matter of his heir before he departs.
From the way he kept glancing at me as he spoke, Blysse, I believe he
means to choose you!”
Firekeeper flushed, her heart suddenly pounding. She thought of
all she had learned to do, how much more she had learned that she
could not do. And over it all, seductive as the scent of a hot game
trail, was the realization that the power of a queen was all she
needed to make what she could and could not do moot.
“But I cannot…” she began.
Earl Kestrel cut her off. “Of course you can. You must! If
the king wishes you to be his heir, you have no choice in the matter.
I shall continue to advise you, as I have ever since I rescued you
from the wilderness. You will not be alone in your great
responsibilities. Indeed, since you are but fifteen you must have a
regent until you are nineteen. I am likely to be that person, since I
am your guardian…”
He was rattling on in this fashion, Firekeeper ignoring most of
his words, when Ox thumped on the door. Valet glided over and opened
it.
“Someone is here with a message,” Ox announced loudly.
“Says it’s not written.”
“Let the messenger enter,” Earl Kestrel said
grandly.
A man in castle livery came through the door, bowed deeply, and
announced: “King Tedric and Queen Elexa request that Lady
Blysse Norwood come to their chambers one hour from now. She may be
escorted as far as the door, but they wish to meet with her in
private.”
Earl Kestrel was so keyed up that a fascinating mixture of
emotions— delight, annoyance, fear, and finally smug
satisfaction—glided unguarded across his hawk-nosed face.
Firekeeper took advantage of his distraction to reply:
“Tell the king and queen that I will be there.”
Any momentary annoyance Earl Kestrel might have felt about his
privilege being usurped vanished in his greater elation.
“Wonderful!” he crowed as soon as the messenger had
departed and the door was secured.
He was about to say more, but Firekeeper held up a hand.
“I must get cleaned and dressed,” she said, her tones
haughty. “This is most certainly a formal occasion.”
“Yes!” Earl Kestrel slapped his palms together
smartly. “Absolutely. Valet! Ring for hot water. Prepare my
best jacket and trousers. Ox! Find Cousin Jared. Tell him I wish him
to be part of Lady Blysse’s escort. He should put on his
uniform and order of knighthood…”
Firekeeper escaped while Earl Kestrel was still shouting
orders.
“He do,” she said to Derian, “everything but
sing and spread his tail feathers.”
“This,” Derian replied, clearly a bit stunned,
“is the culmination of all his plans.”
“I wonder,” Firekeeper said softly, “if it is
the coming together of all of mine as well?”
Grand Duchess Rosene summoned her son and daughter to her, along with
their spouses. As a matter of course, Ivon brought Elise and Zorana
brought Purcel. The younger children were kept away lest they
inadvertently carry gossip.
When Jet Shield arrived at the door of Rosene’s suite, his
demeanor that of one who expects to take part in a family conference,
even the acid-tongued grand duchess could not turn him away, no
matter that her expression showed that she thought he was there more
likely as a spy for his grandfather than out of a desire to be near
Elise at this crucial time.
Elise was glad to have Jet there, no matter how of late she had
doubted the sincerity of his affection. The glitter in her
grandmother’s washed-out old eyes frightened her a bit. She
imagined that Grand Duke Gadman wore the same expression and wondered
how King Tedric had survived to such a ripe age while the focus of so
much malicious ambition.
“Tedric refused,” Rosene began snappishly, “to
read us the full text of the letters borne to him by the army
messenger. He said they were too long and too filled with
repetition.”
Her dry sniff was commentary enough on how much she believed that!
She continued:
“In essence, Bright Bay wishes to meet with someone in
authority to discuss a matter that will be to the benefit of the
mutual peace of our nations.”
“I thought,” commented scholarly Aksel Trueheart,
“that we were at peace.”
“Only technically,” Rosene replied with a glance at
her daughter as if to say, “How do you stand him!”
Aunt Zorana, however, seemed very calm, almost unnaturally so.
From a woman who had been infuriated by the reduction of her hopes
for the throne, she had become so self-contained that some had
wondered aloud if she was indulging heavily in drink or one of the
exotic drugs the New Kelvinese cultivated beneath green glass within
steam-heated greenhouses hidden in the valleys of their mountainous
realm.
“Although we do not have a declared state of war,”
Grand Duchess Rosene continued when Zorana remained silent,
“our interests continue to clash. There have been numerous
skirmishes over contested territories, robberies by bandits who may
well be Bright Bay raiders, and blockades of our sea-lanes by their
fleet. Now, suddenly, though war is undeclared, we are being offered
a means to peace. What might that be?”
Elise heard her voice speaking as if it were separate from
herself. “A marriage alliance—like Jet and
mine.”
“That is correct,” Rosene agreed with an approving
nod. “That is also the only thing that I can see drawing Tedric
out of the security of his castle. Allister Seagleam is wed and has
children of his own. Doubtless, the alliance would be between one of
his children and one of Tedric’s grandnieces or
nephews.”
Elise wondered if she was imagining the calculating look in
Jet’s eyes, as if he was recalling how easily Sapphire’s
engagements to various scions of Great Houses were broken when some
more promising liaison became available.
His next words, the first he had spoken since making his greetings
to his prospective in-laws, did nothing to reassure her.
“How old are Allister Seagleam’s children?”
Aunt Zorana answered, her tone oddly caressing, “His eldest
two are sons—one just your age, dear Jet, the other the same
age as my Purcel. His twin daughters are quite young, younger even
than my Deste.”
Elise was quite certain she didn’t imagine the malicious
glance Aunt Zorana shot at her brother as if to say: “See, if
you hadn’t been so eager to use Elise within our own kingdom,
you would have had the perfect offering for King Tedric.”
If Jet felt any disappointment at this news, he didn’t show
it. Instead he commented blandly, “My sister Opal would be just
the age for either of these sons. She’s three years my
junior.”
To Elise’s surprise—for she hadn’t needed a
dance card to see that Aunt Zorana’s own children, if a bit
young for betrothal under usual circumstances, meshed quite well with
those of Allister Seagleam—Aunt Zorana only smiled blandly.
“I’m certain that Uncle Tedric will not overlook that
point.”
At that moment, a sharp rap sounded on the door. Before any could
rise to answer it, the heavy door flew open and Grand Duke Gadman,
followed closely by Lord Redbriar, burst into the room, shoving his
way past protesting guards.
“I don’t suppose you’ve heard,” Gadman
almost shouted at his sister, “closeted in here with your
minions, plotting…”
“Heard what?” Rosene replied, her tones more moderated
but no less forceful.
“While you have been plotting, Tedric has stolen a march. He
summoned that girl Blysse Norwood to his chambers. They are to meet
in less than an hour!”
Feeling curiously outside all of this, as if her own prospects and
those of her father were unconcerned, Elise noted that the rivals had
been united for this brief moment by an even greater threat. Only one
person’s expression was less than shocked—Aunt
Zorana’s. She actually looked pleased, though that pleasure was
mingled with a trace of apprehension.
“He can’t name that foundling his heir!” Grand
Duchess Rosene proclaimed. “We must protest!”
“I’ve already demanded to see him,” Gadman said
bitterly. “He refused me.”
“Perhaps if both of us…” Rosene suggested.
“I can’t see how it will hurt to try,” Gadman
agreed.
The two bent figures stalked forth, their heirs trailing them like
an agitated flock of ducklings. Elise moved more slowly, unable to
remove Aunt Zorana’s strange expression from her mind.
An hour was barely enough time for Firekeeper to bathe—a thing
made necessary by her usual morning romp with Blind Seer—and
don a gown hastily pressed by Valet.
Escorted by Elation, who soared overhead screeching loud
commentary, Derian dashed out to find Holly Gardener. The old woman
asked no questions as she provided flowers for Firekeeper’s
hair and girdle, but something in her ancient eyes told Derian that
rumors had already reached the gardens.
“Wish her luck,” Holly said as she pressed the cut
flowers into his hand.
“I will,” he promised. “Whatever luck
is.”
There was a brief argument when Earl Kestrel, resplendently garbed
in frock coat, waistcoat, and knee-breeches of the Kestrel red and
blue, learned that Firekeeper planned to bring Blind Seer with
her.
“He comes,” she insisted. “The king know of him
and give him freedom of the castle.”
Earl Kestrel relented, muttering, “If the king wishes the
wolf kept without the door, doubtless he will have left orders to
that effect. Ancestors preserve me, but by now everyone in the castle
must know that she won’t leave the beast behind!”
Derian resisted adding, Just as everyone knows that the real issue
here is whether or not you can dominate Firekeeper!
When they set off for the king’s private chambers, the party
encountered an unexpected obstacle. A milling throng of the
king’s relatives blocked the corridor—less intentionally
than by their mere presence. Their mood was ugly. Clearly, the king
had refused to meet with them.
Upon seeing Earl Kestrel, Grand Duke Gadman snarled, “There
is no way we will allow this foundling to be named heir! No matter
what you say, there is no proof that you didn’t just pick this
girl up in some gutter, stuff her in a gown, and teach her the basic
rudiments of table manners!”
Firekeeper said nothing in response, studying the grand duke as if
he were merely some curious species of beetle who had crossed her
path. Not all of her companions were so silent.
“Our word is not proof enough?” Sir Jared asked with
dangerous dryness; his Order of the White Eagle gleamed on the breast
of his Army dress uniform.
Even in his self-righteous fury, Grand Duke Gadman was reminded
that Jared Surcliffe’s honesty was not open to question.
“I suppose…” he hedged, fumbling for an apology
that would not admit that he was ever really in the wrong. “You
must agree that the girl, the circumstances… most
unusual…”
“I do agree to that.” Sir Jared filled the gap
followed by this weak attempt. “Certainly we can open this
matter of Lady Blysse’s finding to question when you find
another gutter brat who lists among her peculiar assets being
attended by a wolf. Now, will you let us through?”
This reminder of Blind Seer’s presence parted the crowd.
They filtered past in a thin stream as the Kestrel party moved
forward.
Derian reflected that it was a measure of the gathered
nobles’ anxiety that they had overlooked the wolf at all, for
Blind Seer had grown no smaller, nor had the fangs he showed in a
deliberately sarcastic yawn grown any less sharp.
Only Lady Elise walked by the Kestrel contingent with something
like a friendliness in her bearing. She even reached out a hand to
pat Blind Seer’s grey fur.
“You look very elegant and graceful,” she said to
Firekeeper as they passed. “Quite the lady.”
Derian wondered why Firekeeper seemed so very pleased.
Firekeeper had feared that Earl Kestrel would try to inveigle himself
into her meeting with King Tedric. Frequently the earl reminded her
of a lesser wolf in a large pack, always trying to cut into the head
wolf’s share of the kill, always testing to see if this was the
moment to challenge for primacy.
She was pleasantly surprised when he motioned her entourage to a
halt in the hall and did not even try to press into the waiting
room.
“Lady Blysse Norwood,” he announced to the officer of
the King’s Own standing to one side of the door, “to see
His Majesty.”
“She is expected,” the officer said. “Pass
through, Lady Blysse.”
No mention was made of Blind Seer and Firekeeper did not bother to
ask permission. She nodded to her escort, adding a reassuring smile
for Derian, who looked quite worried.
“Thank you for bringing me.”
Earl Kestrel replied, “We will wait here to escort you back
when His Majesty has concluded his business.”
For all the calm formality of his words, the earl’s eyes
shone with anticipated glory.
Let through without question or search into a luxuriously
furnished waiting area, Firekeeper went into the king’s
parlor.
Unlike the waiting room, it was simply furnished. A cluster of
fine chairs upholstered for comfort, not for ostentation, rested on a
thick rug.
In the center of this loose circle was a low table set with light
refreshments. Light shone in from open windows curtained with gauze
against glare and insects.
From outside of one of these windows came a brief squawk that told
Firekeeper that Elation was watching.
Three people awaited her: King Tedric, Queen Elexa, and a man
Firekeeper recognized as someone important in the King’s Own
Guard. All three rose to greet her, a courtesy Firekeeper appreciated
since she knew that it was not her due—would not even be her
due if she were the king’s heir. She accepted the gesture as it
was meant, a welcome meant to put her at her ease. When bows and
curtsies had been exchanged, King Tedric motioned her to a chair.
“Be comfortable, Lady Blysse, or would you prefer that I
call you Firekeeper?”
“Firekeeper is what wolf call me,” she replied with
singular tact—for her. “Blysse what Earl Kestrel call me.
Please take your comfort.”
Queen Elexa smiled. “Then we shall call you Firekeeper here
in private, but in public, so as not to hurt Earl Kestrel’s
feelings, we shall refer to you as Blysse.”
In this, Firekeeper recognized the elaborate etiquette that
established rank, so like and yet so unlike the groveling and playful
biting used for the same purpose by a wolf pack.
“Let me present to you,” King Tedric continued,
“one of my most trusted advisors, Sir Dirkin Eastbranch. By
rights, Sir Dirkin should be commander of the King’s Own, but
his own choice has been to accept lower rank so that he will be free
to follow my most frivolous command.”
“Rarely,” Sir Dirkin said in a voice that came from
deep in his chest, “have Your Majesty’s orders been
frivolous.”
King Tedric laughed and Firekeeper sensed a long-standing joke.
Dirkin Eastbranch was a tall man with chiseled features that included
the squarest chin Firekeeper had ever seen. Something about his
upright posture reminded Firekeeper of a tree, a resemblance enhanced
by the weathered texture of his skin. Like many soldiers, he was
clean-shaven, but his brown hair was long and thick. She still had
difficulty guessing human ages, but she suspected that Dirkin was
older than Doc, maybe even as old as the earl.
“By now,” King Tedric said as Queen Elexa leaned
forward to pour early-pressed cider into elegant glass goblets,
“you will have heard that I plan to travel south to the border
of our kingdom and Bright Bay.”
King Tedric paused to let his guest reply. Firekeeper didn’t
say anything, but sat looking alert and interested. She knew that
Earl Kestrel was to have said nothing of the king’s plans to
anyone and refused, for all her occasional annoyance with her
guardian, to betray his indiscretion.
After a moment, King Tedric continued, a slight smile that she
might have imagined just touching his lips.
“To tell you something that I did not mention during this
morning’s conference—and that I would prefer did not
leave this room—Allister Seagleam, my sister Caryl’s only
child, has requested a meeting with me.”
By now Firekeeper had memorized the complete list of competitors
for the throne and heard their various merits argued so many times
that she had no trouble placing this one.
“The Pledge Child,” she said, remembering what Derian
had told her, “some say the favorite of the common
folk.”
This time she was certain that the king was pleased. Queen Elexa
also nodded approval, saying:
“Not all our nieces and nephews would speak so openly of
Duke Allister. Most seem to feel that we should deny him. What do you
think?”
Firekeeper shrugged, remembered this was not an elegant reply,
then shrugged again. “How can I say until I have met
him?”
This won a small, quickly swallowed, chuckle from Sir Dirkin.
“That is precisely what we think,” King Tedric said.
“I have prayed long and hard at the shrine to my ancestors and
I have come to the conclusion that I would be betraying my
father’s dream if I did not at least meet with the man whose
very birth is the result of my father’s hopes for peace.
“However, in order to assuage my Great Houses, I have had to
promise that I will not leave for such dangerous territories without
first assuring that the succession is safe. They believe that in this
way they will make it impossible for me to name Allister Seagleam my
heir, for how can I name one heir and then denounce him or her
without reason in favor of another?”
Firekeeper nodded to show that she had understood.
“So, Lady Blysse,” the king continued, “would
you like to be queen?”
XIV
Prince Newell might have known even before King
Tedric did what news was contained in the letter sent by Queen
Gustin. Whether or not this was the case, it was certainly true that
he was determined to be on the spot when the representatives of the
two monarchies met. This was quite critical to the fruition of his
plans.
Therefore, the prince made mysterious and cryptic comments to the
captain of Wings. These comments made that faithful if unimaginative
man quite certain that once again the prince was placing his life at
risk for the good of the Crown. Since Wings’s captain had
repeatedly benefited from the information that Prince Newell had
brought to him, news that had made Wings the most successful ship in
Hawk Haven’s small navy, he was willing to do without his
Commander of Marines for a time. If it also crossed the
captain’s mind that the reserve commander was a less willful
man with far fewer highly placed and important connections and thus
far easier to overrule in matters of tactics and suchlike, the
captain was not likely to say this to Prince Newell.
Instead, he assigned a couple of sailors to lower the small cutter
that was the prince’s own property (although Newell was
generous to a fault in sharing it with other officers for their need
and entertainment), told the quartermaster to grant the prince
anything he needed within reason from ship’s stores, and bid
Newell fair winds and fast sailing.
Racing before the wind toward his destination, Newell was assisted
in his tasks with sail and line only by Rook, his personal
manservant. Rook was a sandy-haired, quiet, forgettable fellow, as
efficient as Earl Kestrel’s Valet, although somewhat quicker
with a knife in the back in a dark alley. Newell had caught him
robbing the bedchamber of Duchess Merlin during a house party at the
Norwood country manse. In return for not being turned over to Duchess
Kestrel’s executioners, Rook had sworn Prince Newell his
abiding loyalty.
Skin stinging with salt, eyes red with concentration, Newell
Shield distracted himself from discomfort by meditating on those
things that set him apart from his competitors for the throne. As
these were also the qualities he felt would make him a superior king,
it was a pleasant self-indulgence.
For one, he thought, tightening a line around a brace and tacking
slightly, they were sheep whereas he was a wolf. All one had to do to
be sure of this was observe the lot of them flocking around King
Tedric, baaing compliments and waiting for the monarch to grace one
of them— or one of their lambs—with title and kingdom.
They thought that blood was merit enough.
He admitted that a few of them, Ivon Archer, in particular, had
distinguished themselves for their own achievements. Rolfston
Redbriar, though, he was a real bleater—had been since they
were all children gathering with the rest of the extended nobility
for the Festival of the Eagle.
Little sister Melina had Rolfston neatly in line. Sometimes Newell
was almost certain Melina was a sorceress—not that a woman
would need to be one to direct Rolfston. No matter the truth, the
reputation had garnered her a certain measure of respect. It was to
Newell’s own advantage that Melina had never realized that
respect based on fear can only go so far, especially for a younger
daughter of a Great House with no prospects for inheritance.
And then there was sweet Zorana. She was a lusty lady. It had been
delightful to renew their intimacy. Yet in the final assessment, she
had done nothing more to advance her position than bleat and
baa—and breed. Four living children! He wondered at
Zorana’s lack of wisdom. It was not as if she had a great deal
to offer her brood in the way of prospects. Purcel would make a good
career in the military even before he inherited, but what did she
plan to do with the rest?
Newell laughed and salt spray splashed into his mouth—make
them little ladies and lords with a queen for a mama! Doubtless when
he was king Zorana would be making sheep’s eyes at him and
hinting that she’d be quite happy to poison Aksel Trueheart and
become his queen—and provide him with a tidy little line of
ready-made heirs in the process. The idea would have its merits, but
he was going beyond Hawk Haven for his queen.
The thought of Gustin IV with her long sunset-gold hair, laughing
eyes, and breasts like a ship’s figurehead stirred him, soaked
with cold seawater as he was. She would be somewhere in her late
twenties now, ripe but far from withering. There was no way a woman
with a body like that could be barren, no matter what rumors said.
Her lack of children had to be the rooted in that effete husband of
hers.
Newell had heard that a woman became lustier in her middle years,
especially if she hadn’t borne a child, as if her body was
telling her to hurry up and be about it. He looked forward to finding
out if that tale was true.
If everything went according to plan he’d be bedding Gustin
by this next summer—those Bright Bay folks would just need to
be reasonable regarding mourning periods for her late husband. After
all, a king shouldn’t need to wait about getting an heir.
Prince Newell smiled into the sun, high and gold like the one on
the coat of arms of Bright Bay’s royal house. He’d
already designed the arms for his new kingdom—a fresh design
that eschewed both eagles and suns. He’d already planned so
much. Now, at last, he was going to have a chance to make those plans
reality.
“Queen?” firekeeper replied, thinking more rapidly than
she could ever remember doing before. Unknown to her, for the first
time since soon after the fire that destroyed her parents, her
thoughts took shape in human words and symbols. A bridge was
built.
“Queen,” King Tedric repeated steadily. “The one
who will rule here after I join the ancestors.”
And Firekeeper thought of power with a greater reach than her
single Fang. Of humans groveling before her as a wolf did before the
Ones, of the power to command, of that power turned to find the
answer to the question that had nipped the edges of her mind as the
pack nipped at the heels of an elk, and from that last image came her
answer.
“No,” she said. “A queen should be to her people
as the Ones are to the pack: the greatest strength to guide and
preserve through winter. I could not be a queen. I do not yet have
the wisdom.”
She looked squarely at the king, awaiting his anger, for she knew
that he had offered her a great honor and she had cast it away like a
too small fish into the stream. Tedric, however, was nodding
agreement. Queen Elexa looked hesitant, but Firekeeper thought she
was pleased. Only Sir Dirkin maintained a face of wooden
impassivity.
Feeling as if she was stalking some elusive prey, Firekeeper
curled her fingers in Blind Seer’s ruff, awaiting
developments.
King Tedric asked, “Are you certain about this, Firekeeper?
Your young wisdom could be guided by advisors until it grew. I would
appoint such and many others would offer their wisdom
unasked.”
This was Earl Kestrel’s vision voiced. Still Firekeeper must
shake her head.
“I am a wolf. Perhaps two-legged kind take leadership before
they can lead, but for a wolf that is folly and such folly is
death—not just for the wolf but often for all the
pack.”
Now King Tedric smiled a sour smile. “Would that all my
nieces and nephews were raised wolves, Firekeeper. All they think of
is the honor and the power, not the responsibility. That is why I
must meet this Allister Seagleam. My father laid the foundation for
his birth. I must see the structure that has risen on that foundation
before I reject it entirely.”
As Firekeeper struggled to follow the king’s imagery, she
realized that her afternoons in the gardens with Holly had taught her
a great deal. Through them, she had come to understand the hidden
preparation that rested beneath so many human endeavors. It was a
different way of living from the season-structured roaming of the
pack, yet a valid one for frail humankind.
King Tedric continued, “Yet even as I follow this course, I
must be faithful to my own responsibilities. Queen Elexa can reign in
my absence, but even with her firmly in charge I cannot leave the
relative safety of this castle without naming my heir.”
“Who?” Firekeeper asked, wondering which of the many
will finally become the One.
The old man bared yellow teeth in an expression that reminded her
very much of a wolf and answered with a question:
“Can you read, Firekeeper?”
“No.” She shrugged. “Derian tries, but the black
marks on the page won’t talk to me.”
“Or,” laughed Queen Elexa, her thin elderly voice
heard for the first time in a great while, “you will not speak
with them. That is closer to the truth as I have heard it from
Aurella Wellward.”
Firekeeper stared at the queen, her eyes round with indignant
astonishment. “How she speak of me? I have not spoken three
words with her!”
“But her daughter is your friend,” the queen replied.
“Every scrap of information about you, my dear, has been
gathered and traded, shared and twisted every which way. You do not
think we have left you to go your way unnoticed, do you?”
Actually, this was what Firekeeper had believed, for ever since
the king had granted her freedom of the castle she had felt herself
unimpeded but for the ever-watchful presence of Derian. If anything,
outside of the small circle of friends she had been able to
cultivate, she had felt herself slighted. Queen Elexa’s words
revealed a spiderweb of human chatter as complex and useful as
birdsong in a spring woodland.
Before she had time to contemplate this further, King Tedric was
speaking:
“Although you do not read, you seem to understand the idea
of reading—that the black marks on the page talk with the voice
of the writer.”
“I do.”
“Then this is my intention. Before I leave, I will write the
name of my heir on a special document called a will. Two copies shall
be made. One will travel with me. The other will be sealed and locked
away, to be opened only if I die. If I do not, then I am free to
change what is written. If not, I have fulfilled my
responsibility.”
“How,” Firekeeper asked, tentative before these
mysteries, “will they know one piece of paper from
another?”
“The marks of writing are distinct from person to
person,” Tedric said. Like scents on a trail, Firekeeper thought. All deer
smell like deer, but one deer smells more like itself than it does
like all others.
“Furthermore, both copies of my will and the boxes into
which they shall be locked will be impressed with my personal seal.
No other will be able to forge those marks.”
“I understand,” Firekeeper said, having seen similar
arrangements on the documents that Duchess Kestrel sent to her son.
“Why not just tell before you go?”
“For two reasons,” the king replied. “One is
that I may decide that Allister Seagleam is the best person to be
king after me. If I publicly designate one person as my heir, then
renounce him or her for no reason other than I have found another I
think would be better, I may create a feud between
factions.”
“But better is better!”
“Not all see this as simply as you do,” the king said
sadly. “And they are more correct than you are. Rulership of
humans takes more than strength and wisdom. Sometimes it takes more
uncertain qualities like charisma or political allies.”
“If you say,” she agreed.
“I do.”
Momentarily, the king looked so stern that Firekeeper had to
resist the impulse to lick the underside of his jaw and beg
forgiveness. Then he continued:
“The other reason for not naming my heir openly is that I
will create a danger for myself.”
“Why?”
“Once I name my heir, I become a danger to that heir because
I could change my mind and name another. The heir personally might
not fear my changing my mind, but there would be others who would
think it wisest to end my life before I could select a rival.
Needless to say, I hope that whoever I choose would not countenance
such behavior, but the heir might not even know what was done for his
or her benefit.”
Firekeeper shook her head, feeling it buzz with undesired
complexities. She could not believe Elise—for
example—would wish her great-uncle dead, but eager, watchful
Ivon Archer was another matter and he was nothing beside sour,
spiteful Zorana.
Sir Dirkin broke his own silence to add, “There are too many
plausible ways that an elderly monarch could die while traveling or
in an unexpected spate of battle. I have vowed to protect King Tedric
from these, but that restricts my own freedom greatly.”
“Therefore,” King Tedric said, “I have a request
to ask of you.”
Firekeeper was surprised. She had thought that once she refused
the king’s offer to make her queen he would be finished with
her. She had not realized that all the talk that had followed was
anything more than the tongue wagging of the type Earl Kestrel was so
fond.
“Ask,” she said, remembering the courtesies offered
from Royal Wolf to Royal Wolf. “You have fed me and I have
grown fat in your keeping. If I can feed you in turn, I
will.”
A small smile flitted across King Tedric’s face, but
instantly vanished and he replied with equal formality:
“Come with me to Hope. Be ears and eyes for Dirkin and
myself. Those skills your upbringing granted you have not escaped my
notice. One of the difficulties I suspect will result from my naming
my heir only in my will is that many of those who believe themselves
potential heirs will choose to join my train. Those who believe
themselves the chosen one will wish to stay close so as not to lose
in comparison to Allister Seagleam. Those who are less certain will
still wish to be nearby in case some valorous deed or great service
to me might bring them into my favor.
“I cannot refuse any of them without causing more
speculation. Those who were refused would plot behind
me—wondering if they were left behind to preserve them from
danger or merely because they were no longer of use to me. They would
envy those who went in my train. I wish I could refuse them all, but
to do the latter would rob my forces of three able
commanders—Norvin Norwood, Ivon Archer, and Purcel
Trueheart—and in my heart I dread that these negotiations
cannot end without bloodshed.”
Firekeeper nodded solemnly. “I will go with you.”
Sir Dirkin reminded her, “You will be placing yourself in
danger. There are those who will hate you for this meeting, believing
that the king has selected you his heir. Those who would resort to
assassinating a king would think still less of assassinating a
rival.”
“Let them try!” Firekeeper said, hand falling to the
knife at her waist.
Blind Seer—who had learned enough of human speech to follow
this talk, though the shape of his mouth would not let him speak it
as well— growled fierce agreement. If the falcon in the tree
outside flapped her wings in agreement, only Dirkin, silent and
watchful, noticed.
“I will watch my Firekeeper!” Blind Seer said
in wolf-speech and it almost seemed that the king and his advisors
agreed.
“I know you will take care,” Tedric said, “and
that your companions, human and otherwise, will guard you. Still, the
danger is real and must be accepted.”
“I accept it then,” Firekeeper said with a shrug,
“but I will still come with you and help Sir Dirkin
watch.”
“And I would have you watch my kinfolk as well,” King
Tedric said, “for the death of even one under suspicious
circumstances could create the very feuding I am hoping to
avoid.”
Firekeeper nodded agreement, but she could not resist saying:
“Wolves solve these matters more simply.”
“But wolves are not humans,” King Tedric replied,
“and I am hoping that my humans are not wolves.”
Early on the morning following Firekeeper’s meeting with King
Tedric, Derian Carter was sent into the city by Earl Kestrel.
Although he had a list of errands to run, he was also at leave to
visit his family.
“The earl is a fair master,” he explained to his
mother around a mouthful of freshly baked oatmeal cookies, the fat,
round cookies lavishly supplied with raisin. “As he plans for
us all to depart along with the king’s train, he has given
those of us who will attend him leave.”
“Does Earl Kestrel simply continue trailing in the
king’s wake, hoping for him to select your Firekeeper as his
heir?”
Derian shook his head. “Some perhaps, but he has also
volunteered his services as a commander of cavalry and the king has
accepted them.”
“And you?” Vernita asked eagerly. “You ride as
lightly as foam on the crest of a wave—are you going as a
member of Earl Kestrel’s unit?”
“No,” Derian replied. “I continue as attendant
upon the Lady Blysse.”
A mixture of disappointment and relief flitted across
Vernita’s pretty face. She asked carefully:
“And are you content with this?”
“Perfectly, Mother,” Derian assured her, although at
first he had been hurt and angry, knowing from his moon-span of
residence in the castle that he rode as well or better than most of
the King’s Horse. He could even shoot a bow from the saddle,
though his skill with a lance was less expert.
Patting his mother’s hand, he repeated to her what Earl
Kestrel himself had said when Derian dared protest:
“Earl Kestrel says that I am the only person Firekeeper
truly trusts. The earl hates admitting this, but it’s true. She
has made a few friends, but I am the one she returns to again and
again for explanations.”
“Is it not perhaps time for her to learn to trust
others?” Vernita hazarded.
Derian shook his head ruefully. “Mother, three and a half
moon-spans ago she was a wild animal, eating raw meat, sleeping in
the open, drinking blood as readily as water. We have succeeded in
putting a veneer of civilization over that animal, but the animal is
there, ready to burst free.”
“I have seen her,” Vernita said doubtfully,
“just once and that from a distance as she rode in an open
carriage with the Lady Archer. One seemed as much the lady as the
other.”
A full-throated laugh burst from Derian at the comparison between
delicate Elise and Firekeeper.
“Oh, Mother, appearances are deceptive. I remember that day.
Firekeeper had been invited to dine with Duke Peregrine and his
family at their city manse. A house guard, improperly prepared for
her or perhaps merely determined to show how he would dare what the
King’s Own Guard would not, tried to take her knife. Quick as
breath Firekeeper punched him squarely in the nose, then followed
through with a kick that nearly shattered one of the man’s
knees. Then, pretty as could be, she curtsied to the shocked duke,
apologizing for spilling blood on his carpet.”
Vernita’s green eyes widened in shock. “As well she
should!”
“No, Mother.” Derian could hardly keep from laughing
further at the memory. “You don’t understand. Firekeeper
then went on to explain that she would have punched the man in the
gut but she didn’t want to hurt her hand on his dress corselet
and she had to take him out quickly because Blind Seer was heading
for his throat.”
“She brought that wolf to a duke’s manse?”
“Blind Seer goes everywhere with her: bodyguard and
companion both. I spoke out of line when I said that I was the one
person she trusted. She trusts me to guide her actions, but Blind
Seer she trusts with both body and heart.”
“You speak as if the wolf is a person,” Vernita said.
“You’ve spent your entire life around animals. I
don’t think you would do this lightly.”
“Never, Mother.” Derian shrugged and bit into another
cookie. “Blind Seer is as much a person as I am—and not
just in Firekeeper’s opinion. I’ve watched him since Bear
Moon when Firekeeper first introduced him to me and Race. Blind Seer
is as clever as any human—and more so than many I’ve
known.”
“Oh.”
The monosyllable was noncommittal, but Derian grew defensive.
“Mother, she talks to him and he to her—I am certain
of it! Queen Zorana’s edicts encouraged us to forget everything
that came before the Civil War. Mostly I agree with her wisdom. Our
nation started fresh, without all the deadwood of Old Country
traditions that would have weighed us down. I doubt her wisdom where
it applies to the history of our own lands since the earliest days of
colonization.
“Lord Aksel Trueheart gives regular lectures to those who
wish to listen—much to Lady Zorana’s embarrassment.
Perhaps Firekeeper’s arrival spurred Lord Aksel in that
direction, but of late the topic has been what the New World was like
when the earliest settlers arrived. Their records to a one agree that
in those days there were animals far larger and far wiser than any we
know today. Then, some fifty years after colonization began, almost
to a one they vanished. Where did they go?”
Vernita humored him. “Across the Iron Mountains?”
“That’s what I think,” Derian replied, flushing
slightly as he realized he’d been ranting. “That’s
exactly what I think. I think they figured out that they
couldn’t compete with our bows and arrows, our swords and
armor, with the magics of the Old World wizards. Those who admitted
it left. The rest were slain.”
Footsteps on the wooden floor announced Colby’s arrival.
“I heard similar stories when I was a boy,” he said,
joining them at the table and pouring himself a mug of beer,
“from an old, old woman who belonged to my society. She claimed
to have them from her own mother, who had lived in the foothills of
the Iron Mountains and seen some of the wise beasts herself. Human
life is short and memory a chancy thing, but I believed her. She had
a relic, a bear claw long as a scythe blade. It was an impressive
thing.”
Vernita grinned at husband and son. “I consider myself
cautioned to keep an open mind. Colby, you’re home
early.”
“Brock came and told me Derian was here. We’ve heard
enough at the stables of the king’s planned departure for me to
guess that this might be Derian’s last visit for a while, so I
turned the day’s work over to the journeymen with promises that
you would review their books yourself.”
“Thanks,” Vernita said dryly.
“In any case, I want to go hear King Tedric’s farewell
speech.”
“Is that today?” Derian asked, surprised. “The
word I had is that he doesn’t depart for another few days
yet.”
“He doesn’t,” Colby replied, “but
apparently he has decided to scotch rumors by speaking with the
people himself now, rather than later.”
“Wise,” Derian said. “Just this morning in the
market I heard some remarkable tales, including one that he was dead
and this journey was simply an attempt to conceal the fact until the
nobility could fight out who would be his heir.”
“That one will be easily ended,” Colby agreed,
“but I wonder what new ones this will begin?”
“I can’t say,” Derian grinned, remembering.
“Actually, I’m curious about what the king will say
myself. Firekeeper met with him yesterday, but she refused to say
anything of what passed between them. The earl was nearly mad with
rage and frustration.”
Both Vernita and Colby looked as if they wished to ask more, but
they respected Derian’s professed ignorance. After all,
hadn’t he just finished boasting that he was the only person
Firekeeper trusted?
Derian sighed inwardly. Let them keep their illusions. On this
matter, Firekeeper had been as persistently mute as a stone.
“Let me close the office,” Vernita said, “and
call Damita and Brock in. We may as well go as a family. The younger
ones don’t seem at all aware that they’re living in
important times for the history of Hawk Haven.”
The paved assembly area outside the speaker’s tower of
Eagle’s Nest Castle was normally more than large enough to hold
those who came to hear news from the royal court. Here, once early in
the morning and again at sunset, a herald stood on a platform within
the tower and made announcements. Most of the time these were
routine, hardly more important than the crying of the hours. Other
times they included some interesting tidbit: the resolution of a
crucial court case, the passage of a law, the birth of a child into
the nobility. Each week a post-rider carried the same news to every
surrounding township.
The assembly area was usually strained to capacity when at midday
on each full moon, King Tedric himself came to the speaker’s
tower. From this lofty perch, but full in view of his subjects, he
reassured his people that all was well and gave the blessings of the
royal ancestors.
Today, the usual idlers and newsmongers could hardly find a place
to stand. It seemed as if most of the town and a fair portion of the
surrounding countryside had come to hear the king’s speech.
Pressed into the throng, craning his neck to get a good look, Derian
was once again made aware of how much more—well—noble the
nobility looked from a distance.
At this distance, most of the lines on King Tedric’s face
vanished. Those that remained gave his features a look of regal
dignity. No one could tell that the snow white hair was a wig or that
his eyes were yellowed with age. Crowned in gold and diamonds, Tedric
looked the storybook picture of a king, and Derian was aware of the
covert glances of respect directed at he himself from neighbors and
friends who knew of his employment in the castle. It’s as if he thought wryly, I’m somehow
improved by having been close to that old man once or twice. I doubt
their opinion would change if they knew the king doesn’t even
know me from the other servants.
Standing a few steps back from the king were several members of
the court. Derian recognized Queen Elexa, attended by Lady Aurella,
Steward Silver, and Sir Dirkin Eastbranch. He knew that the rest of
the court would be standing in the interior courtyard, unable to stay
away from this important speech, although doubtless court gossip and
rumor had revealed everything that would be said.
Indeed, initially there were no surprises for Derian. As he had in
private conference the day before, the king informed his people of
his proposed journey to Hope in order to confer with diplomats from
Bright Bay.
A soft murmur swept the crowd at this news. Not everyone was, like
Derian’s family, in a position to hear the earliest hints of
travel. Except for occasional journeys to family estates or to the
seats of his Great Houses, the elderly monarch had not left
Eagle’s Nest for years.
The king continued, informing his people that Queen Elexa would
administer daily business in his absence, but that he would be in
regular contact with her through carrier pigeons.
“My heir,” he said, his still powerful voice carrying
easily over hushed throng, hardly needing the amplified repetition
from the heralds to be heard at the farthest reaches, “has been
named in my will, a copy of which remains here in Eagle’s Nest,
a copy of which goes with me. I shall not reveal who I have selected
in any other fashion at this time.”
From this astonishing announcement, he moved onto the formal
blessing from the ancestors, but Derian hardly listened. Although
most around him stood with their faces upraised to accept the power
of the blessing, a few could not resist whispering. He goes to meet with the Pledge Child! Allister Seagleam will be our next king! Why else
wouldn’t the king name his heir publicly? There’ll be unhappiness in the court tonight! Pledge Child…
Over and over those two words were repeated, rustling like dry
leaves in the hush, practically taking on the force of an incantation
from an Old Country tale.
Moving through the crowd after the king had retired, Derian
listened to the gossip and conjecture, wondering at the fidelity of
an image. Allister Seagleam was hardly a child any longer. Indeed he
was a man grown with grown sons, but the image of a child born to
fulfill a promise of peace persisted. Even if King Tedric named
Allister Seagleam heir, could any man live up to such a legend?
As King Tedric had predicted, immediately after the announcement
that his choice of an heir was to be known only upon the reading of
his will, rapid arrangements were made so that many of the candidates
could join the royal train.
Grand Duchess Rosene’s fury when she learned how her brother
had resolved the matter was magnificent to behold. When she finished
raging, she began issuing orders.
“Although I wish to go, it would be an undue risk at my age.
Tedric should have more respect for his own aging bones. If Bright
Bay wishes to negotiate, he should insist that their emissaries come
here.”
Rosene had made the same argument to her brother to no effect.
Tedric had refused to even admit that there was sense to her
position, thus increasing her pique. Now, Rosene shored up her
diminished sense of self-importance by assigning positions to her
family members as a general might order troops.
“Aurella, of course, must remain here with Queen Elexa. To
have her do otherwise would be to our own detriment.”
Elise thought that it was a good thing that her grandmother could
not read minds, for Elise knew that there was no way, commanded or
not, that Aurella Wellward would leave the queen at such a time.
Aurella’s loyalty to her Wellward aunt might even exceed that
to her husband’s family—Ivon and Elise herself
excepted.
“Ivon, of course,” the elderly matriarch continued,
“must be with his troops. If Ivon’s name is the one on
that sealed document Tedric was waving about so arrogantly, he was
most certainly chosen at least in part for his martial prowess. No
need to undermine that reputation at this critical moment.”
“Thank you, Mother,” Ivon said dryly. To his credit,
much of his attention had been given to reviewing the roster that had
been delivered to him soon after the king’s announcement.
“Purcel will also be with his company,” the matriarch
continued. “Therefore, upon Zorana and Elise falls the
responsibility of keeping an eye on my brother. You must make certain
that Tedric makes no unwise decisions, that he does not overlook the
value of his own kinfolk in favor of a glamorous newcomer.”
“Your wish is as my own, Mother,” said this newly mild
Zorana. “Aksel can remain here to guard our interests and watch
the smaller children.”
“Fine. He is useless on a campaign—nothing like the
Truehearts who bore him. Your son’s talents clearly come from
the Archer side of the family.”
Zorana nodded, not even bristling at this dismissal of the father
of her children.
“I don’t think any of your other children need to be
taken along,” Grand Duchess Rosene continued to her daughter.
“They are young and almost certainly out of the
running.”
“I am bringing,” said Zorana with a flash of her old
fire, “my daughter Nydia. If I am King Tedric’s
heir—as is still possible despite your recent dismissal of my
chances—Purcel as my heir will need to shift his focus to
national matters. Nydia will then become heir to our family
properties. It is time her education is expanded.”
“Nydia is,” protested the Grand Duchess, “but
thirteen. Until this point you have not cared overmuch about her
education, even though she would follow if Purcel was killed on one
of his military ventures.”
“I care now,” Zorana said firmly.
The tension in the air between mother and daughter was a palpable
thing. Elise imagined that she could pull it, tug it, twist it like
taffy until it grew white, hard, and immobile.
Grand Duchess Rosene was the one to relent. “If you wish to
expose your thirteen-year-old daughter to the risks of a traveling
military encampment, so be it. Perhaps,” she added sourly,
“we should also include Deste and little Kenre. Are you certain
that you are not ignoring their education?”
“As to them,” Zorana said, her mildness now a mockery,
“I shall be ruled by you, but I thank you for your concern.
Perhaps you may devote some of your time here in the capital to their
lessons. You shall have little else to do.”
Offended, Rosene swept out, unwilling to discipline her daughter
in these sensitive times. Zorana took her leave a few moments after.
She spared a completely false smile for Elise.
“We shall be much in company, Niece. Certainly, your cousin
Sapphire will not welcome you into her pavilion and I wonder if Jet
will be so much about. He has himself to prove, you
understand.”
“Certainly, we follow the example of our elders,”
Elise answered with a flicker of her own malice. “I wonder
sometimes if Purcel does take after his mother’s side of the
family. He is such a noble warrior.”
This curiously mild Zorana did not deliver a scathing reply, as
the one of a few weeks ago might have, but the glower she directed at
Elise still shot a shiver of fear into the young woman’s soul,
one that lasted even after her aunt had departed.
“Was that wise?” Ivon asked, distracted from his
papers. “Your aunt Zorana has been much disappointed of late.
It is the hungry wolf that bites.”
“True,” Elise admitted, thinking of Firekeeper and
knowing that this was true.
“And speaking of wolves,” Ivon continued, his thoughts
following the same course, “you have a great advantage on this
campaign. You alone have a foothold in the Kestrel camp. Do not forgo
that contact now that King Tedric has made his decision. Personally,
I cannot believe that he has chosen Lady Blysse, but if he has, we
must cultivate her. Make yourself her familiar; learn what you
can.“
Aurella added. “Do not forget that you are growing into a
pretty enough young woman. Earl Kestrel has surrounded his ward with
men. One of them may talk freely to you even if Lady Blysse will
not.”
Elise nodded, but she doubted that Derian could be moved in his
loyalty to Firekeeper and the wolf-woman would confide in no other.
Sir Jared, perhaps… A tingle of anticipation melted the ice in
her soul at this excuse to speak further with the knight.
“Yes, Mother. I will remember what you have said.” She
paused, uncertain if she was really asking for advice or merely being
clever. “But should I risk this? What if Jet is
offended?”
“Jet Shield plays his own games,” Aurella said dryly.
“As he always has. He will only treasure you the more if he
thinks others value you. Still, keep Ninette nearby. Give Jet no
reason to question your honor.”
Ivon Archer stood and began gathering his papers. Then he turned
to his daughter, a wry expression, not completely without sorrow, on
his face.
“Welcome to the adult world, my daughter. Whether or not we
win the crown, you will always need to know how to use people against
each other. Such is our duty to our barony. My father won lands and
titles for us with his keen arrows in battle. To preserve those
honors, our weapons must be more subtle.”
Elise dropped him a deep curtsy. “Then we will go together
into this new battle, Father. Let us not flinch from whatever we must
do to honor our noble ancestor.”
Ivon clapped her on the shoulder and was gone. When Elise glanced
at Aurella she saw no sorrow, no unexplained tears upon her
mother’s cheek, only a stern countenance lit brightly from
within by pride.
BOOK THREE
XV
Several days on the road put Firekeeper into the best
shape she had been in since she left the wilderness to reside in West
Keep. Indeed, she realized that she might be in far better condition
than she had ever been, since her body at last had ample food with
which to build its strength.
In the wilds, she had hardly ever had enough to eat.
Summer’s glut quickly vanished as soon as the first frost
killed the plants with which she supplemented her diet and forced the
little animals into hiding and hibernation. Stealing the occasional
squirrel hoard (and eating the squirrel when possible) did not make
up for the loss of sweet fruits and slow, fat rodents. Without the
generosity of the wolves, she would have shriveled into nothing, her
body consuming itself in a desperate effort to keep lit the
spirit’s fire.
Three moon-spans of steady eating had changed Firekeeper from a
slat-sided, feral waif into something recognizable as a young woman.
A thin coating of fat now padded her muscles and buttocks. To her
slight consternation, she was even developing small, round breasts.
Despite devouring more than many grown men at any given meal, regular
exercise had kept her from becoming soft. She could still climb like
a squirrel, swim like a fish, and outrun a trotting horse—and
she did so on a regular basis.
Each day, the king’s train started moving as soon as dawn
crossed into pale daylight. It was mighty thing, ostensibly meant to
provide for the elderly monarch’s comfort and security, in
reality meant to impress the Bright Bay diplomats with a reminder of
what Hawk Haven could bring to bear if treachery was intended.
Scouts preceded the entire body, fanning out to the sides. Race
Forester was often among them and he was the only one who was ever
aware of Firekeeper’s presence in the surrounding woods.
Following the scouts were wings of light cavalry, the riders
armored in leather, armed with bows as well as swords. The heavier
cavalry rode closer to the king’s carriage, the dust they
stirred considered a fair trade for the safety their presence
offered.
Here, too, rode the members of King Tedric’s court, some in
carriages, some on horseback. Elise traded back and forth between the
two conveyances, but her cousin Sapphire remained on horseback.
Sapphire wore armor after the fashion of the light cavalry, the
leather portions dyed deep blue, the metal protecting the joints
polished to bright silver. A long sword was sheathed across her back,
its pommel set with a bright stone that some said was a sapphire and
others insisted was merely glass. Over one arm or slung from her
saddle she carried a shield with her personal device: a silver field
emblazoned with an octagonal sapphire.
Her brother Jet was similarly accoutred, though his chosen colors
were black and gold. Firekeeper was amused to discover that while
most of the soldiers were half in love with Sapphire, they thought
her brother a fop and pretender.
Groups of foot soldiers were interspersed about the column, some
guarding the creaking baggage wagons, some trudging in the rear.
Progress was so slow that these men and women had time to argue,
sing, gamble, and pursue rivalries between units.
This provided Firekeeper’s first exposure to a mass of the
common folk and she found them fascinating. Despite her usual dislike
of crowds, she frequently went among the soldiers. Some resented her
for behaving neither as a noble or a commoner, or from fear of Blind
Seer, but Purcel Trueheart welcomed her—perhaps at his mother
Zorana’s request—and so the soldiers tolerated her at
first. Later, she made friends among them and these welcomed her for
herself.
At Derian’s insistence, each day Firekeeper rode some hours
on Patience, the grey gelding, amusing herself by practicing archery
from the saddle. Her greatest delight, however, was when riding
lessons were finished and she could dismount. Pacing the caravan on
foot, she was free to investigate interesting parcels of woodland,
spear fish from brooks, and in general to behave in a fashion that
would drive insane any caretaker less accustomed to her ways than
Derian.
At first Earl Kestrel had tried to restrict Firekeeper’s
movements, but he was too busy with his own responsibilities to
enforce his commands. Later, King Tedric privately informed his
vassal that Lady Blysse had his express permission to go where she
wished. The earl, believing this yet another indication that his ward
was the chosen heir, happily acceded.
Blind Seer caused numerous problems simply because all the horses
and dogs were uniformly terrified of him. The dogs simply rolled over
and groveled, rarely essaying an attack even when they outnumbered
and outmassed the wolf. The horses, however, refused to compromise
with their terror unless Firekeeper wasted a considerable amount of
time talking to them—a task she found boring and repetitious
since the stupider horses needed to be frequently reminded that the
wolf wouldn’t eat them. Even Patience, Roanne, and Race’s
Dusty were skittish at first, reacting to their fellows’
fear.
Firekeeper resolved this frustrating situation by remaining away
from both the cavalry and king’s mounted companions as much as
possible. If she wished human companionship, there was plenty among
the soldiers. The placid oxen who drew the supply wagons were less
imaginative than the horses, more ready to accept the wolf as an
exceptionally large—and rather less annoying than
most—dog.
Firekeeper’s daily attire was a modified version of the
knee-length leather breeches and vest that she had favored since her
introduction to human-style clothing. She still ran barefoot, never
having lost the leather toughness of her foot soles. Nor did she need
gloves, for her long-fingered hands were as callused as any
farmer’s. To Firekeeper’s delight, her dark brown hair
finally had grown long enough to be tied back in a respectable queue.
A few clips, gifts from Elise, kept the straggle ends from her
eyes.
Since armed conflict was possible, Earl Kestrel insisted that his
ward be outfitted with some sort of armor. Firekeeper had rebelled
against the jangling weight of mail. However, after a vivid
demonstration by Ox of how armor could prevent a sword from
penetrating into the vitals, she had agreed—when
necessary—to wear leather armor similar to that worn by
Sapphire Shield, though less gaudily colored.
Except for riding lessons and weapons practice, during these days
of travel Firekeeper was free to run wild, bare of foot and head,
silent as the wind. Yet, despite her enthusiasm at being released
once again into the woodlands, Firekeeper did not forget the task the
king had enjoined her to perform. In daylight there was little she
could do, but at night she left her bedroll and glided among the
pitched tents, growling the curs to silence and taking shameless
delight in eavesdropping on her fellows.
In this fashion the wolf-woman learned many strange things.
Sapphire Shield, who by day rode straight and tall on the blue-dyed
horse with its silver-white mane and tail, regularly cried herself to
sleep each night. Lady Melina Shield frequently stole away into the
woods where, believing herself unwatched, she danced in the moonlight
and dipped glittering gemstones into pools of strongly scented
liquor.
Jet Shield, in the guise of courtship, frequently pressed himself
on Elise. When Elise refused him more than hot kisses and pawing at
her breasts, Jet found relief among the women who trailed the
caravan.
When night brought privacy, Lady Zorana vigorously tutored her
daughter Nydia in deportment, schooling the thirteen-year-old so
fiercely that Nydia, to this point ignored in favor of her older
brother, was driven into sullenness one step shy of rebellion. At
these moments, Zorana whispered to her, promising the little girl
great things until she sweetened and was willing to memorize signals
and responses that would puzzle Firekeeper more but that most human
rituals still puzzled her.
Elsewhere, Firekeeper learned that King Tedric’s old bones
did not permit him to sleep easily unless he was dosed by his
personal physician. Then nothing would wake him for some hours. In
contrast, Dirkin Eastbranch never slept—at least not that
Firekeeper had seen. He was also the only one among the king’s
retainers who seemed to notice her comings and goings, greeting her
with a silent smile and a slight raise of one eyebrow.
Nighttime was not Firekeeper’s only time for discovery. She
developed greater respect for Earl Kestrel when she realized that the
soldiers he commanded honored him for his courage and wisdom, not
merely for his title. From Doc she learned something of the arts of
treating cuts and bruises, of wrapping sprains, of salves and
ointments. From Race and Ox she continued to learn human arts of
survival and war. From Derian she learned humor and to play at
dice.
In all her memory, these days of travel became some of
Firekeeper’s happiest, filled with new things and with fitting
of them into a larger pattern of human society. No longer did she
think dance and music were the only things worthwhile about the human
way. Yet deep-rooted in her heart was the desire to be other, to run
on four fast feet, to raise night-seeing eyes to the moon, and sing
her praises from a wolf’s heart.
Arriving in Hope, Prince Newell Shield was delighted to learn that
King Tedric’s party was not expected for some days yet. Advance
riders were contracting with the locals for facilities and supplies.
Some were specially delegated to treat with the town leaders.
Although technically part of Hawk Haven, Hope had changed hands so
frequently—even since the Civil War ended some hundred and five
years before—that its residents viewed the entire issue of
citizenship with a cynical eye. If they felt a strong kinship with
any group they felt it for the citizens of Good Crossing,
Hope’s sister city across the Barren River. There had been
times when Good Crossing, too, had been part of Hawk Haven, times
when Hope had been part of Bright Bay.
An even greyer area of loyalty was Bridgeton, a massive stone
bridge on which shops and even houses had been built. Before the end
of the Civil War, there had been a bridge here—the “good
crossing” for which the original town had been named. In the
century since the end of the war, the original bridge had been
widened repeatedly until the small midriver islands on which the
pilings were set had all but vanished.
Bridgeton was dominated by the Toll House in the center. Although
no attempt was made to stop river traffic, enough commerce passed
over Bridgeton’s mighty span to keep it mended strong and its
coffers full. Neither monarchy had attempted to restrict
Bridgeton’s business, for the bridge was ideal neutral ground
for negotiations. At less peaceful times, the army that commanded the
span also commanded the perfect place from which to police the
river.
Prince Newell rather liked the locals’ cynicism. Hope and
Good Crossing both were home to dubious segments of the population,
men and women who found a close, easily crossed border extremely
convenient. It was home to deserters, thieves, smugglers,
practitioners of doubtful customs, and just plain free spirits. The
more law-abiding citizenry— which were the majority—put
up with the scoundrels because of the money they brought in, and
because people who had nowhere else to go would accept taxation (a
rarity elsewhere in Hawk Haven) and poor treatment.
The law-abiding elements also delighted in the economic benefits
derived from the permanent army garrison on the eastern fringes of
the town. The army officers, aware that alienation of the townspeople
was a good way to find themselves fighting alone if an invasion
attempt was made, turned a blind eye to anything that did not clearly
threaten Hawk Haven’s border. In return, the underworld
regularly supplied information about troop movements in Good Crossing
and elsewhere in Bright Bay. It was an arrangement that worked for
all.
Not wishing his presence to be known quite yet, Prince Newell had
Rook arrange for rooms in the Silent Wench, a tavern with many doors
and a reputation for discretion. Although this reputation was well
earned, Newell took no risks. Both Rook and Keen, his assistant, were
ordered to disguise themselves and give false names. Newell went the
further step of never venturing out of the tavern before sunset.
In many towns in both Hawk Haven and Bright Bay such behavior
would be either foolhardy or a guarantor of boredom. Hope was not a
typical town and with diplomatic contingents from the rival nations
converging upon it, even those rules it usually upheld were
broken.
Following a long day’s sleep, sorely needed after journeys
on water and land, Newell Shield sauntered down to the conveniently
dim-lit tavern. He doubted that his own mother could recognize him in
this light, but nonetheless he kept a greasy leather hat securely on
his head, the wide brim shadowing his eyes. Slouching in a corner
booth, calling for food and drink in harsh accents, he trusted that
no one but Rook and Keen would know him for the widower prince of
Hawk Haven.
While he ate, he listened to the gossip, but the Silent Wench was
renowned for her discretion and those who stayed there were not the
type to give much away. Paying in guild tokens which Rook had
acquired back in the port and at Eagle’s Nest, Prince Newell
ventured into the night. A soft cough from the shadows told him that
Keen trailed him, but Newell looked neither right nor left.
Keen was a round-faced, slightly soft-looking man in his late
twenties. By preference, he wore his straight brown hair loose to his
shoulders and cut blunt across his brow rather than pulled back in a
fashionable queue. Keen’s close-cut beard had the same glossy
sheen as an animal’s coat and his large, brown eyes seemed
guileless and gentle. That was all deception. Violence brewed beneath
that innocent gaze, as more than one woman lured into Keen’s
bed had discovered. Newell found him very useful.
Those who walked alone through the streets of Hope at night were
either drunks or fools or very confident of their own strength.
Newell clearly did not belong to either of the first two categories
and so no one bothered him.
He strolled along, noting that the Night Roost Inn displayed the
scarlet eagle of the Hawk Haven royal family. Here, then, stayed the
advance guard for the king. The laughter he heard through the
taproom’s open window was doubtless that of their guests,
locals wined and dined to make them glad to grant favors on their
monarch’s behalf.
It took Newell longer to find Stonehold’s presence, for
although Stonehold was no more at war with Hawk Haven than was Bright
Bay, when there had been war, Stonehold had regularly supported Hawk
Haven’s rival. Discretion regarding their
representative’s presence in Hope was wise, for only the most
open-minded could believe that it would be to Hawk Haven’s
benefit. But Newell found the Stoneholders by snooping among stables
and kitchen yards, swapping tall tales with burly men with
soldiers’ bearing yet conspicuously out of uniform. Many were
deserters or mercenaries, but at last he found those whose telltale
accents gave their origin away.
Having found Stonehold, it didn’t take more than another
hour to find those who were spying for Bright Bay. These hid their
accents, refrained from the nautical jargon with which even the most
inland-dwelling salted their language, and dressed as neutrally as he
did himself. They were ready with their money, buying drinks and
food, encouraging conjecture and speculation in the hope of learning
something to their advantage.
Though Newell drank wine and ale as offered, tonight he said
nothing beyond commenting on the weather or the quality of the local
vintages. Tonight he was taking the pulse of the situation and
finding it racing. Humming to himself, just slightly drunk, he ambled
back to his room at the Silent Wench.
THE first news that King Tedric’s party received when they
arrived outside Hope before noon on the fifth day of travel was that
Bright Bay’s contingent was not expected in Good Crossing until
late the next evening. This advantage of a day and a half did not
mean that there wasn’t plenty to do.
King Tedric, along with his closest advisors and personal staff,
would stay within the permanent fort to the east of Hope: the
Fortress of the Watchful Eye. Although the great stone-walled
structure could contain more, the king told his commanders to set up
in the surrounding open zone surrounding the fortress. No one
complained, for the late-summer weather, though sometimes muggy for
marching, had been so clement that camping was a pleasure.
Earl Kestrel ordered that his personal encampment be set up at the
fringes of the field, on the side nearest the cultivated areas. Part
of his reason was a desire to keep Blind Seer away from the bulk of
the army, part because the cavalry companies were stationed on the
other fringe, near to the river where the horses could be watered
with ease. The earl’s light mount, Coal, had joined Roanne,
Patience, and Dusty in grudgingly accepting the wolf and thus Norvin
could skirt the larger army encampment and ride between his areas of
responsibility with relative ease.
Derian was assisting Valet and Ox with setting up tents when Race
Forester arrived. More than willing to show off his skills to those
who could appreciate them, Race had accepted a temporary
scout’s commission, reporting directly to Earl Kestrel. He
looked good in the brown trousers and green shirt of the scouts, the
Kestrel arms—a shield divided top to bottom into narrow blue
and red bands, blazoned with a gold hunting horn—over his
heart.
Race’s ego had not been hurt at all during his association
with the scouts and he was swaggering a bit when he joined the
others, evidently bristling with gossip.
“Lend a hand,” Ox said with the good humor that rarely
left him, “and tell us what you’ve learned.”
Race grinned and grabbed a tent pole. “Half of Hope’s
folk already believe they know why we’re here. The other half
claims not to care. My gossips say differently, that Hope is glad to
have us here. Whatever happens with the negotiations, they expect to
come out the victors. The wine and ale merchants have been importing
from anywhere they can get it, anticipating that once the troops are
in place commerce will be slowed.”
“As it will be,” Ox said. His back muscles bulged as
he hauled the earl’s pavilion onto its frame. “Before
Earl Kestrel dismissed me this afternoon—saying with his usual
kindness that he’d be in meetings until sunset and there was no
need for me to just stand about—I heard enough about security
precautions to know that no one is getting near any place King Tedric
will be without careful searching.”
“Well,” Race commented, “tonight will be the
last night without rules. The army commanders have permission to
release up to two-thirds of their troops for a night on the town.
Those who volunteer to stay back will get bonus pay.”
“We’re not eligible for that,” Ox said, pointing
at Valet and Derian with his bearded chin, his hands being full,
“as we’re personal retainers. Are you for a night out or
bonus pay?”
Race shrugged. “I haven’t decided. I thought I’d
learn if Earl Kestrel has any preferences.”
Pausing in his own work, Derian glanced skyward, located Elation
soaring on the warm winds, and knew that Firekeeper was safe.
He’d gradually come to rely on the peregrine for such signals
and suspected that they were offered deliberately, that the bird knew
how difficult it was for him to track the wolf-woman and was
assisting him.
Despite how he had defended Blind Seer’s intelligence to his
mother, the thought made him uneasy, as if he were standing outside
of a door into a new world. If he accepted that a falcon was
voluntarily helping him do his job, he must accept that many things
he had thought simply old tales just might be true. If you accepted
beasts that were as intelligent as humans, then were the horrors and
wonders told of in some of the other stories far away?
Idly, Derian waved one hand in greeting and was certain he saw
Elation dip wing in acknowledgment. To distract himself he said:
“I suppose the negotiations themselves will be held on
Bridgeton?”
Race nodded. “That’s right. Advance parties agreed to
that easily enough. They’ll be using the Toll House and traffic
under Bridgeton itself is being halted entirely during the
meetings.”
“I bet the guilds love that!” Derian whistled.
“And what is being done about the shops and residences on
Bridgeton itself?”
“On our side,” Race said, raising his eyebrows
eloquently on the word “our.” “advance
negotiations have succeeded in renting space on rooftops and in front
of shops. I understand they tried to get everyone to agree to shut
down, but the guilds were having none of it. I expect that Bright Bay
did no better.”
Ox grumbled, “Two towns—three if you count
Bridgeton—united in nothing but their desire to oppose the
forces that surround them.”
Valet said softly from where he was stirring the fire, looking for
embers to heat his iron:
“And I, for one, don’t believe for a moment that
they’re not interested in these negotiations. If ever Bright
Bay and Hawk Haven make peace, the first casualty will be this
arrogant trio. We must not forget that.”
Race stared at him in amazement, then said, “Valet, you
don’t say much, but when you do, you sure say a
mouthful.”
Late that afternoon, when Derian was grooming Roanne and coaching
Firekeeper as she sparred with Ox, Doc came into their camp.
Like Race, Sir Jared had taken a temporary commission, but his was
with the medical corps. His uniform was the brilliant scarlet that
served both to mark him out as a medic and to hide the gorier side
effects of his calling.
Unlike Race, Doc didn’t wear the Kestrel badge, but the one
granted to him when he received his knighthood: a hand palm upraised
and impaled with several arrows. Beneath that was pinned a brooch in
the shape of an eagle outlined in scarlet enamel, the wing feathers
worked in silver, the beak and talons in gold, and the eyes perfectly
faceted diamonds.
Doc slipped Roanne a piece of carrot, then said to Derian in a
hushed voice, “I’d like to speak with you privately when
you’re done.”
“I’ll meet you there,” Derian tossed his head to
indicate a hillock about equidistant between their camp and a copse
of trees that skirted the field, “as soon as I have this
done.”
Curiosity made Derian finish more quickly than he should and by
way of an apology he gave the chestnut mare another chunk of carrot.
Seizing a water bottle, he ambled to where Doc leaned against a
slender tree trunk.
“What’s up?” he asked, sitting beside the other
man. “You look grim.”
“Do you know Hope well?” was Doc’s answer.
“I haven’t been here for some years.”
“Pretty well,” Derian replied. “I haven’t
been here for about a year, but I’ve come the last several with
my father. You can get some good deals on stock this time of year
from folk who don’t want to feed them over the
winter.”
“Legally owned?” Doc asked, curious despite his
evident preoccupation.
“Not all,” Derian admitted, “but quite a few
are. There are wild horses in the plains to the southwest. Some cross
into Hawk Haven, but the best herds are found in Bright Bay. Import
is legal, but elsewhere you pay a fee at the border.
Here…”
Doc nodded. “I see. Well, I need your help. The Surgeon
General and the king’s personal physician have asked me to
purchase something for them.”
He hesitated and Derian said quickly, “I won’t say a
word to anyone, not even Firekeeper if you don’t want me
to.”
“I’ll take your word on that,” the knight said,
and Derian felt his heart swell with pride.
“Go on,” he said, a bit more gruffly than he had
intended.
“The king,” Doc said, still hesitant, “is not a
young man and this journey has not been easy for him.”
Derian decided to help him along. “Lady Elise told
Firekeeper and me—she didn’t want to talk about it with
her aunts, they having their own agendas—that she was worried.
She said King Tedric looked grey and tired.”
“Lady Elise,” Doc said, a glow banishing his worried
expression for a moment, “has good eyes for this. She has
studied some of what I’ve been teaching Firekeeper, saying that
if there is trouble, ancestors forfend, she wants to be able to do
more than hide in the fortress.”
The glow vanished as Doc went back to his immediate concern.
“King Tedric’s heart is not strong,” he said, as
if admitting to treason, “not diseased, simply tired. As long
as he took limited, healthful exercise and rested well it did not
trouble him. However, both have been denied to him.
“There is a tonic that has been helping him. Unhappily, the
king’s physician did not anticipate so great a need and he has
nearly exhausted his supply. Some of the ingredients are rare and not
of the type the Surgeon General would stock in quantity for the field
hospital.”
“So they want you to buy some,” Derian prompted.
“Yes.” Jared smiled. “In short, I need to find
an apothecary who will not gossip, preferably one who is loyal to
Hawk Haven. Can you help me?”
Derian considered. “What are the ingredients you
need?”
After Jared had told him, Derian smiled encouragingly. “Some
of those are used for horses as well as people. We can buy those from
a farrier I know and none the wiser. The last few… Yes, I
think I know the person to deal with. My father buys fragrances from
her for my mother.“
“Fragrances?” Doc said dubiously.
“Don’t worry,” Derian assured him.
“Hazel’s a healer as well. Perfumes are her hobby. My
father swears her attar of roses is superior to anything you can get
in Eagle’s Nest.”
Doc nodded. “Very good. Now, remember, not a word of this to
anyone.”
“I promise.” Derian’s eyes sparkled. “If
any of the others ask me what we were talking about, I’ll say
you wanted my advice on the best way to court a girl.”
To his great amusement, Sir Jared Surcliffe colored nearly as deep
a red as his uniform.
They left camp that evening as dusk was falling. Derian had made a
quick trip into the town and assured himself that both farrier and
apothecary were going to be open that evening.
“Extended hours,” he told Doc as they walked into town
that evening, both of them dressed casually as if joining the men on
leave. “Who would miss a chance to do business tonight with all
these soldiers with money to spend and only one night to spend
it?”
“I’d forgotten that not all of them would go to
taverns and brothels,” Doc confessed.
“Nope,” Derian said cheerfully, caught up in the
general air of festivity despite his awareness of the importance of
their mission. “Many will end up there, but some simply want a
decent meal or to augment their kits. Others will be shopping for
gifts to send to the family back home. Smuggling being what it is
here, this is the perfect place to find something exotic and
wonderful.”
When the two men reached the town proper, they had to thread their
way through streets crowded with exultant soldiers. It was too early
for many to be very drunk, but they passed at least one brawl: two
men, slugging at each other with such narrow focused concentration
that they hadn’t noticed that the whore who was the reason for
their dispute had left with another man.
“I’m glad,” Doc said, “that Firekeeper
agreed to remain behind.”
Derian laughed. “I think I solved that one rather neatly. I
took her with me this afternoon. She was horrified by the crowding
and stench. When I told her it would be worse tonight, she was happy
to stay away.”
As they moved along, several times they encountered former
patients who offered to buy Sir Jared and his friend a drink. Other
soldiers, often those with whom Derian had raced horses or thrown
dice of an evening, called out to the pair to join them.
“We’d better accept some of their invitations,”
Derian advised, “unless you want to look like you’re on
duty.”
Doc agreed somewhat reluctantly, but Derian kept an eye on the
flow of traffic and made their excuses.
“I’ve got to stop by a farrier and pass on some
information for my family business,” he said. “Coming,
Doc? This fellow has some fine horses, better than the one
you’re riding.”
Doc shrugged. “I guess so. Just remember, my commission
doesn’t cover a private mount.”
They made their exit neatly and Doc gave Derian an admiring punch
on the shoulder.
“Nicely done, young man. Cover story as well as an excuse to
leave.”
“At your service, Sir Jared,” Derian laughed.
“What excuse do you have in mind for our trip to the
apothecary?” Jared asked with a grin.
“Perfume, of course,” Derian replied lightly,
“for that girl you were asking me about.”
This time he decided not to ignore Jared’s blush.
“Dare I guess who is on your mind?” he asked.
“It won’t go any further.”
“Please don’t let it,” Jared begged.
“I’ve tried hard to hide my feelings, but she is
betrothed.”
Elise’s name hardly needed to be spoken.
“A political arrangement,” Derian said firmly.
“One she asked for,” Jared countered, “if rumor
is correct.”
“One she may regret, if I read her right. Jet is not all
Elise imagined him to be. I think she has learned more about him over
the past moon-span, especially since she has been traveling in this
company.”
Derian hesitated, wondering how much he should say. Ninette,
Elise’s maid, was one of the few women in this entourage who
was not in uniform, above his station, or a prostitute. Although
Ninette was not really his type, Derian enjoyed female company and
had found himself drifting into visiting with her. Teasing and
flirtation had progressed into something like confidences, offered
since Ninette shrewdly recognized Derian’s sincere liking for
her mistress.
Jared remained somberly unconvinced and so Derian went on,
“Jet frequently seeks Elise’s company when the
day’s travel is over. Lately, I’ve noticed that she finds
reasons for them to visit in public.”
“She is a lady,” Jared protested indignantly,
“not some tart!”
“She is a young woman,” Derian persisted steadily,
“and a woman’s blood can run as hot as a man’s with
no fault to her but that she risks a child and a man does not.
Ninette tells me that Elise was not always so chary of time alone
with Jet.”
Jared colored, clearly torn between indignation at the thought
that his ideal could be vulnerable to passion, and hope that she
indeed did not favor her betrothed.
“She…” He stopped, unable to go on.
“You told me once you were married,” Derian said.
“An arranged marriage to a girl you had known from
childhood.”
“Yes.” Doc’s monosyllable was guarded.
“And are you telling me that you and your betrothed never
touched before the wedding? No kissing games? No little trial runs, a
blouse opened maybe, a hand guided to touch?”
The light was too dim for Derian to be certain, but he felt sure
Doc was blushing again. Shining Horse Hooves! He himself had played
the same games and more, and he could feel his own color rising. It
must be that talking about a thing was more embarrassing than
actually doing it.
“Don’t fault Elise for having the same
impulses,” Derian continued, despite his embarrassment,
“especially with a man she has been smitten with since she was
a girl. Take hope instead that she no longer welcomes such
games.”
Doc said nothing, but in the flickering light from a freshly lit
street-lamp, Derian caught the hint of a smile.
“Here’s the farrier,” Derian said, glad to have
an excuse to change the subject. “Come along and look at the
horses.”
Their stay lasted well over an hour, extended because the farrier
was busy with a group of cavalry women, each of whom was replacing
items from her kit, several of whom wanted to try the paces of a
horse or two. Knowing that Doc didn’t want to draw attention to
himself, Derian chatted up one of the stablehands, tried out a horse
or two himself, and even convinced Doc to relax enough to examine a
colt with great potential.
Derian did indeed have business messages from his father to the
farrier and would have delivered them that afternoon but for the
opportunity this gave him to draw the farrier aside. Then he asked to
see the man’s stock of horse medicines. Taking covert signals
from Doc, he investigated the wares and made his purchases.
Once they were out in the street with their packages, Derian said,
“You’ll need to speak with the apothecary yourself. I
know something about these ointments, but nothing about the rest of
the stuff you mentioned.”
“That won’t be a problem,” Doc replied.
“With what we’ve already purchased, she’ll have a
harder time guessing just why I need what I do. Especially,” he
grinned at Derian, “when I add a small order for attar of
roses.”
The apothecary’s shop was set back from the street behind a
small herb garden that provided advertisement for her wares. Climbing
roses in red, white, and pale yellow covered the front of the shop,
still heavily in bloom despite the lateness of the season.
“Some say,” Derian commented, as they passed through
the gate, “that the apothecary’s a sorceress.”
Doc looked quite serious. “I wouldn’t be at all
surprised if she is talented. It is late for roses to be so heavily
in bloom.”
Despite Derian’s own turns tending the family kitchen
garden, Derian had never considered the significance of late-blooming
roses. Without further words, he opened the shop door.
As elsewhere in the town, business was brisk, but Hazel Healer
herself recognized Derian as a regular customer and left her
assistants to handle the walk-in trade. A woman in her mid-fifties
with strong features that would never be called pretty, nonetheless,
her confidence and friendly smile made her handsome.
“Here’s an old customer,” she said. “Is
Colby with you?”
“Not this time,” Derian replied. “He’s
waiting to make his trip until the upcoming negotiations are through.
I’m here with my new master, Earl Kestrel.”
“As the wolf-girl’s keeper.” Hazel smiled.
“Yes. I’d heard something of that. Come into my workroom
and tell me more.”
Derian could not have wished for better and he motioned for Jared
to follow him. Once they were in the workroom, Derian made
introductions.
“Mistress Hazel Healer,” he said, “I would like
to present my friend, Jared.”
Doc had asked not to be introduced with his full name and titles,
but here again gossip had gone before them.
“Sir Jared Surcliffe,” Hazel replied, making a deep
curtsy. “I am honored.”
With a slight shrug for Derian, Doc returned her greeting with a
bow. “And I am to meet you. Derian has spoken well of you and
of your shop.”
“Thank you, and don’t look so surprised that I know
who you are. I’m from Eagle’s Nest myself originally.
Many members of my family live and work at the castle. I have seen
you there myself, years ago.”
“Would I know any of your family?” Jared asked
politely.
“Unless you frequent the grounds, Sir Jared,” she
said, “I doubt it. My cousin is Head Gardener now and, if the
Green Thumb passes on, one of his children will follow in
turn.”
Derian grinned. “I know your aunt, then,” he said.
“Goody Holly Gardener. She has befriended my wolf-girl, as you
called her.”
“Firekeeper,” Hazel said, twinkling at his surprise,
for Lady Blysse’s wolf-name was not commonly known. “Aunt
Holly wrote me when she heard you were coming here with the army,
asking that I help as I might. She never realized that you and I have
been friends since you were but freckles and red hair.”
She poured them tiny crystal glasses of her own cherry cordial and
they settled down to visit. Despite the relaxed atmosphere, Derian
was surprised when Doc himself opened the question of the necessary
herbs.
“Mistress Hazel,” Doc said, “I am in great need
of several rare—and expensive—items for my medical use. I
would like to purchase them from you or, if that is not possible,
have you act as my agent in their purchase. I am willing to pay more
for your complete silence in that matter—and will do so,
although I do not think such is necessary.”
Hazel, who a moment before had been laughing so hard at one of
Derian’s stories that he had worried she had imbibed too much
of her own distilling, grew immediately serious.
“Tell me what you need,” she said, “and unless
it violates my guild’s code, you will have it.”
Their conversation became technical then. The one thing Derian was
certain of was that although Hazel did not say so, she had both a
good idea what Doc was preparing to concoct and for whom. Nor did she
ask questions when Jared bought a small jar of her famous rose
attar.
When they departed the shop, Doc’s purse was much lighter,
for he had insisted on paying market rates and a bonus besides, and
the two men had several more bundles to stuff into their jacket
pockets.
“Come and see me again,” Hazel said at the door.
“Bring Firekeeper. I’d like to meet her.”
“If I can, I will,” Derian promised.
“And I with him,” Jared added. “I think you have
much you could teach me.”
“Gladly,” she said with a contented smile.
“Gladly.”
The streets were emptier now, but the noise from the taverns
louder. The two men walked briskly along, aware that human predators
seeking human prey would be prowling. Sober and in company, they were
not precisely worried—there was easier prey about—but
they saw no reason to invite trouble. None sought them out, but
others were not so lucky.
Past the market area, where residences mingled with businesses and
warehouses, they were drawn up short in their steps by a shrill
scream of pure terror.
Derian whirled, orienting on the sound. Doc pointed down a narrow
alley at whose far end was just visible a flicker of light.
“There!” he said, starting to dash that way.
“No, you fool!” Derian said, grabbing his arm.
“It could be a trap— a bait and hit!”
Doc shook him loose. “Then I’ll fall for
it!”
Cursing himself for behaving as no city-bred man should, Derian
ran after him. Their boots splashed in noxious puddles of unseen
mess. Doc bumped a pile of trash that squeaked and spewed forth rats.
Then they were in the open again.
They found themselves in a narrow street on which just about every
streetlamp had been blown out. In this scattered light, a young
woman, her black hair a cloud about her shoulders, was holding off
three men. Only the fact that she bore a sword and shield while they
were armed with knives had made this possible.
Even as Derian and Jared realized what was going on, the boldest
of the attackers darted forward. Raising his knife he made a
murderous slash. The woman blocked with her shield, but as she did so
the second darted forward and tangled her sword with his cloak. The
third was about to disarm her when Doc, unarmed except for his
courage, went charging forth.
His bellow halted the attackers in midmotion. The woman took
advantage of the momentary confusion to solidly bash the first man
with her shield. As he crumpled unconscious, she spun, perhaps more
from exhaustion than from skill, and Derian got a good look at the
device: a octagonal blue sapphire on a silver field.
“Hold on!” he yelled. “Rescue’s
here!”
Jared’s momentum carried him into the second man, who
dropped his cloak and reached for his knife. Derian would have liked
to keep an eye on him, but found himself confronting the third man,
the one who had been about to take Sapphire’s sword. The long
knife in the bandit’s right hand glittered wickedly, but Derian
didn’t feel fear, only a dreadful clarity of focus on that
shining silver edge.
“Haallooo!” he hollered, drawing his own knife, a more
utilitarian item meant for cutting rope or minor trimming of hooves.
Fortunately, what it lacked in length and grandeur it made up in
sharpness. His first blow sliced his opponent along the left upper
arm—a miss since he’d meant to stab him in the chest, but
effective enough.
His opponent hit as well, a long slash down Derian’s right
side that ruined his waistcoat and spilled packets of the
farrier’s medicines onto the cobbles but otherwise did no
damage. They sparred for several moments longer, during which time
Derian became aware that Sapphire had joined Doc and the two were
dealing effectively with the remaining bandit.
Still, Derian wondered if they could reach him before his luck ran
out. Practice with sword and shield he had; he’d even been in
the occasional tavern brawl, but never before had he been in a
close-up fight with death or maiming as the goal. The thought was
fleeting, passing through his brain as he and his nameless opponent
traded blow and counter, dodged and struck as if they were partners
in some weird, unchoreographed dance.
Sometimes Derian felt his blade hit something solid. Sometimes he
was the solid thing hit—and hurt. More often there was the
empty swish of air against his knife.
The dreadful clarity of the first few seconds was fading now,
replaced by vagueness. Blood was sticky on Derian’s left arm.
His own or his opponent’s? The face before him kept fading in
and out.
Faintly, Derian heard a low howl, saw his opponent’s
expression of focused cruelty transform into one of pure terror, and
then a dark and terrible shadow leapt onto his opponent.
When Derian looked again, there was a raw, red hole where the
man’s throat had been and his body was limp, tumbling onto the
street, blood gushing once from that terrible hole, then ebbing to a
dribble.
A slim arm grasped Derian firmly around his waist. He struggled,
and a familiar voice said:
“It’s me, Derian!”
“Firekeeper?”
“It’s me,” she said, her voice fierce and
choked. “The fight is over.”
To his eternal relief and eternal embarrassment, Derian Carter
took one look at Firekeeper, saw the splash of red blood across her
face, and collapsed into a dead faint.
XVI
FIREKEEPER VANISHED BEFORE THE NIGHT watch arrived so
resolving matters with the Hope town guard took less time than Derian
had dreaded. Sapphire’s three attackers were known criminals,
unwanted elements even within Hope’s comparatively easygoing
structure. Moreover, two of those who had been attacked were members
of the Hawk Haven noble class and the third was a personal servant of
Earl Kestrel.
After asking very few questions, the night watch took the thugs
away— one dead, two living, though one of these was badly
concussed—to the jail.
At Sapphire’s request, the men did not take her to her own
tent, but to the Kestrel camp at the fringes of the larger Hawk Haven
encampment. “I need,” Sapphire explained, “a chance
to clear my head. Mother will have questions. I need to know the
answers.”
Derian thought it odd that a woman of twenty-three should be so
worried about what her mother would think—especially when the
woman considered herself a fitting candidate for the throne—but
he was too aware of his place as Sapphire’s social inferior to
ask any questions.
Instead, ignoring his own wounds, he concentrated on his duties as
host. Guiding Sapphire toward that same hillock on which he had
conferred with Doc just that afternoon, Derian explained:
“We won’t wake anyone out here. Doc, go get your gear
so you can look at her wounds.”
Jared Surcliffe took Derian’s order as a matter of course,
and if Sapphire looked offended at the young redhead’s
presumption, Derian pretended not to notice.
“Earl Kestrel,” Derian said, seating Sapphire where
she could lean against a rock and trying hard not to notice a
spreading stain of blood along her side, “is standing watch
tonight with his cavalry force so that one more could go on leave
into town.”
“I heard him being toasted in the tavern,” Sapphire
commented, keeping her voice steady. “His men do love him.
Strange, for he’s such a dour sort.” She paused,
“And, by the way, thank you for coming to my aid.”
“I was just following Doc’s lead,” Derian
admitted, though her smile made him feel awfully good about
himself.
“ ‘Doc’ being Sir Jared?” Sapphire
asked.
“That’s right, Mistress. That’s what we called
him on our trip west and it just stuck.”
“West…” Sapphire looked at him, perhaps saw him
as a person for the first time. “You are?”
“Derian Carter, Mistress,” he said, wishing he
didn’t feel so tongue-tied. Sapphire was as different from
Elise as night from day, but no less captivating. “I work for
Earl Kestrel.”
“That’s right,” she said. “I remember you
now, the red-haired youth who tends Lady Blysse.”
Derian privately approved of her presence of mind. He’d
heard her call Firekeeper a few more uncomplimentary things when she
thought no one was listening. A crunching of boots on grass and a
detached star of lantern light announced Jared Surcliffe’s
return.
“Valet was awake,” he said, “and had hot water
on to make some tea to bring the earl. I borrowed some. Now, Mistress
Sapphire, if I could attend to your wounds.”
Inventory and treatment of their various cuts and bruises took
some time. Sapphire, thanks to sword and shield, had escaped with
mostly minor injuries, but a knife slash that had gotten through her
guard and sliced the fabric of her shirt on her right side looked
nasty. She also had countless bruises and nicks on her hands caused
by wielding her sword and shield without gloves.
Derian had several small nicks of his own, none impressive, but
all painful. His head ached abominably. Doc had escaped virtually
unscathed.
“Mistress Shield,” Doc explained unashamed,
“came to my rescue.”
“After you came to mine,” she reminded him.
“Again, thank you both.”
Jared produced a flask of good brandy from one of his pockets.
“The lady can use the cap for a cup,” he explained,
pouring. “I also suspect that Valet will be here with the tea
tray momentarily. Don’t worry, Mistress Sapphire. He’ll
never say a word to anyone—not even Earl Kestrel—the soul
of discretion, our Valet.”
Sapphire accepted the cup gratefully and passed the flask to
Derian.
“It doesn’t matter overmuch,” she said.
“My mother will know and that’s enough.”
Derian swigged directly from the flask before passing it back to
Jared. The strong liquor cleared his head and made him instantly
bolder.
“If you don’t mind my asking, Mistress Sapphire, but
how did you come to be out there alone? You’ve never struck me
as one to take foolish risks.”
“I appreciate that,” she said. “I… I went
out with my brother, Jet. I wanted to see something of the town and
everyone else was going somewhere interesting. Jet didn’t want
me to go with him, but I convinced him that I had as much right as he
did to enjoy myself.
“He let me come with him—I guess since he
couldn’t stop me—but I soon understood why Jet
didn’t want me around. His plan was to get drunk and
then…”
It was dark, but in the lantern light they could see her glance
down in embarrassment.
Doc cut in, “We understand, Mistress.”
Derian thought he sounded offended. Doubtless Sapphire would
believe he was offended for her, which couldn’t hurt, but
Derian suspected Doc’s indignation was for Jet’s insult
to Elise.
“As soon,” Sapphire continued, “as Jet got drunk
enough, he ditched me. I wandered around a bit and found myself in
that poky little street. Those men jumped me.”
“A good thing you had your sword and shield,” Derian
said, allowing a slight questioning note to enter his voice.
“Luck,” came the blunt reply. “I had scarred the
paint on my shield during our journey here. The armorer had white
paint with him, but not silver. I decided to see what someone in the
town could do…”
Ruefully, she looked at the newly battle-scarred shield. The
delicate silver work was scored in multiple places and there was a
large dent the size of a man’s head.
“I understand better now,” she said, false cheer in
her voice, “why white is a preferable substitute for silver, at
least for in the field. I shall make the change tomorrow and keep the
silver field for show.”
They toasted her choice and as they did so Valet shimmered up
rather like magic with tea, cookies, and fruit neatly arranged on a
tray. He set this on the rock behind Derian and vanished again.
“A remarkable man,” Sapphire said. “May I
pour?”
“Please do,” Doc replied.
“What I would like to know,” Derian asked the
listening night, “is how Firekeeper happened to be there when
we needed her.”
Firekeeper stepped from the darkness. Blind Seer, his fur slightly
damp, was with her.
“Tea?” Sapphire asked the newcomer, unable to keep a
slightly frosty note out of her voice. “I see that the
remarkable Valet has supplied a fourth cup.”
“Thank you,” Firekeeper said, accepting the proffered
cup and hunkering down on her haunches.
“How did you happen to be there, Firekeeper?” Jared
prompted.
“I follow,” the wolf-woman said, “practicing
cities. It isn’t too hard at night once the people go inside,
but in the crowds…”
She ended with an eloquent shudder.
“And Blind Seer?”
“He stay in the narrow places between buildings
mostly,” she said. “Is there a word, Derian?”
“Alley,” he supplied automatically. “Why
didn’t you join us sooner?”
“You were doing so well,” she said with a fey grin.
“I not want to hurt your fun. Then the man you fight hit you in
the head…”
“Is that what happened!” he muttered, remembering how
everything had gotten dreamy.
“And Mistress Sapphire was giving a good fight to her man,
so we came to help.”
“We?” Derian asked carefully, remembering the
nightmare vision of the bandit with his throat torn out, of
Firekeeper’s face smeared with blood.
“Blind Seer kill the man,” Firekeeper said with
indignant self-righteousness. “You tell me this not a thing to
do!”
Sapphire had softened at Firekeeper’s compliment to her
skill. “Were you hurt?” she asked, refreshing
Firekeeper’s tea.
“No.” Firekeeper looked almost disappointed. “I
not get to fight.”
Sapphire looked at her own dented shield, at the bandages on her
side and hands. “It isn’t nearly as much fun as it
looks.”
Jared and Derian nodded agreement. The wolf-woman did not seem at
all convinced and the great shaggy beast at her side opened his
fanged jaws in what Derian could swear was laughter.
BARON IVON ARCHER HAD TAKEN FULL ADVANTAGE of his rank to insist upon
a good position for the Archer pavilion, although he himself would be
splitting his time between his command and numerous conferences,
returning there only to sleep. Given her strained relations with both
Sapphire and Jet Shield, Elise had ample reason to be grateful for
this.
Along the road, she and Ninette had shared a fairly small tent
pitched between her father’s tent and Aunt Zorana’s. It
was a very proper arrangement, one that offered some protection from
Jet’s increasingly impatient advances, but one that also
guaranteed that she would hear every noise in the surrounding
tents.
Her father, she discovered, snored—as did his manservant.
Aunt Zorana insisted on being sung to sleep by her maid. Ninette rose
repeatedly during the night to answer nature’s call. After
these intrusions, Elise felt a certain guilty pleasure that the heir
to a barony could command not only room for a large pavilion, but a
certain degree of space surrounding it. Ninette still chaperoned
her—and Elise was glad for her company— but at least with
her on the other side of a curtain Elise was not so aware of the
other woman’s nocturnal micturitions.
On the first morning following their arrival, Elise woke after the
sun had risen. She was trying to guess the hour by the position of
the sun shining through the pavilion’s canvas when Ninette
lifted the dividing curtain and peeped around it. The other
woman’s eyes were shining with excitement and Elise was certain
she had some interesting gossip.
“Good morning, Ninette.”
“Good morning, Elise. I have water on for tea. Would you
like some?”
“I’d be grateful,” Elise said, swinging her feet
to the carpet at the side of her cot.
The camp bed had been an improvement over sleeping on pads on the
floor of a tent barely large enough to stand in, but still some of
her muscles protested. Stretching and enjoying the luxury of being
able to spread her arms over her head, Elise slipped into her morning
robe and went to join Ninette in the pavilion’s common area.
The curtain in front of Baron Archer’s sleeping niche was
lifted, revealing the section to be empty.
“My father?” she asked Ninette, crossing to where tea
is brewing in a cozy pot.
“Rose before dawn,” Ninette replied, “and has
gone to inspect his men. He said to remind you that the contingent
from Bright Bay is expected this evening. You are to stay within the
bounds of our encampment unless expressly summoned into the
city.”
“As if,” Elise said, sipping the raspberry leaf tea,
“I would want to go there. Doubtless it’s full of rascals
looking to take advantage of this situation.”
“Your cousin Sapphire,” Ninette said, lowering her
voice and glancing at the canvas walls for shadows that might
indicate listeners without, “went to town last night. She had
quite an adventure.”
With Elise’s encouragement, Ninette told the full story of
Sapphire’s encounter with the bandits. She’d already been
over to Earl Kestrel’s encampment and coaxed a few details from
Derian—prompting him to tell her the truth by offering him some
of the rumors that were already circulating within the small
servants’ community among the nobles’ pavilions.
“Lady Melina,” Elise said thoughtfully, “must be
furious. I wonder whether she’s more angry at Sapphire for
getting attacked or at Jet for leaving his sister?”
“I couldn’t say, Elise,” Ninette admitted.
“I have gone out of my way to avoid her. Lady Melina’s
lady’s maid had a red mark on her cheek the shape of a hand and
little Opal had clearly been crying.”
“Wise,” Elise said. “What time is it?”
“An hour past full sunrise, my lady.”
“And we are not expected anywhere?”
“Sir Jared Surcliffe indicated that he would be at the
hospital center until midday. After that, he would be happy to
continue your and Lady Blysse’s tutorial in the treatment of
wounds.”
“Send him a message saying you and I would be glad to take
him up on his kind offer. Say that unless we hear otherwise we will
meet him at the Kestrel encampment.”
“Very good.”
“Then why don’t we have breakfast here in the
pavilion? Afterwards, perhaps, we can use the luxury of being stopped
in one place for longer than a night to bathe and wash our
hair.”
Having finished these pleasant domestic tasks, the two women,
their hair still wet and scented with the marigold petals and
rosemary leaves with which they had rinsed it, stole away to a
natural solar created by a grouping of boulders near one edge of the
camp. By climbing over the outer rocks, they found a little hollow,
perfect for two, open to sun and sky though invisible from without.
The walls of the Watchful Eye loomed to their south, between them and
the river. Wise tactics dictated that a clear zone be kept around the
fort, so no troops were stationed anywhere near their refuge.
“Doubtless,” Elise explained to Ninette, spreading her
hair on a flat rock to speed its drying and pillowing her head on one
of the cushions they had brought with them, “the army would
have removed these rocks but for their great size and their distance
from the walls. Even a good archer would be pressed to make an
accurate shot from here.”
“I hadn’t thought of that, Elise,” Ninette said,
spreading out her own hair to dry. “I simply noticed these
yesterday when we were pitching camp and decided to investigate,
thinking they offered possibilities for discreet privacy within
limits.”
Elise, knowing her ever-romantic cousin had been thinking of
rendezvous with Jet, colored slightly. She hadn’t quite been
able to explain her changing feelings toward him, even to
Ninette—perhaps especially to Ninette, knowing how the other
woman dreamed of Elise as queen.
She settled for murmuring something grateful but noncommittal and
gazing into the sky. There was much to consider, both regarding her
own personal predicament and the impending conference. Elise was
weighing the advantages and disadvantages of being invited to the
initial conferences when voices interrupted her meditations.
Ninette started to her feet, but Elise cautioned her to silence
with a finger raised to her lips. There had been something in those
voices, something familiar, something angry, that made her wish their
presence to remain unknown. Rolling over, her drying hair chill
against her neck, Elise crept to one of the gaps between the towering
rocks and peered out. Sight confirmed what her ears had told her.
Lady Melina Shield stood without preparing to pass judgment on her
son and daughters.
Already it was too late to make a graceful exit, for the words
streamed from Lady Melina, pungent and furious. In any case, Elise
was not certain she wanted to depart. Jet had taken advantage of his
position as her betrothed to listen at Archer family conferences.
Certainly she had as much right as he did!
Ignoring Ninette’s trembling gestures that they could get
away by climbing over some other rocks, Elise instead motioned for
her to begin braiding her wet hair.
“We will not skulk away,” she said softly into
Ninette’s ear. “That would be a confession that they have
greater rights than I do—and no matter how well Lady Melina
thinks of herself, they do not!”
Ninette subsided and began plaiting Elise’s long hair into a
pair of thick braids. Elise ignored the tugging at her scalp, all her
attention on the drama unfolding without.
“I wonder,” Lady Melina was saying, evidently not for
the first time judging from the sulky expressions on her three
children’s faces, “that a woman as closely descended from
the family that produced Queen Zorana the Great could bear such
foolish children. It must be your Redbriar father’s
contribution.”
“Our father’s great-grandmother was Queen Zorana
herself,” Jet growled. His dark eyes beneath his handsome brow
were bloodshot. Elise might have felt more pity for him if she
hadn’t suspected he was nursing a hangover. “She is our
great-great-grandmother. Can you claim closer kinship?”
“Impudence,” Melina sighed. “A shame you have so
little cause for it, my stupid son. Doubtless when Queen Zorana
married Clive Elkwood, the strength of the Shields was diluted and
diluted again when King Chalmer insisted on marrying a commoner. Pity
that King Tedric’s lot all died. My brother Newell might have
returned Shield strength to the royal line.”
Elise could tell that Melina was toying with her brood, taunting
them, insulting them. She wondered that the elder two took it so
calmly, for neither was known for patience. With a slight shiver, she
realized that they feared the little woman who stood there, her gaudy
gemstone jewelry glittering in the midmorning sunlight.
“But Tedric’s children are dead and Newell never got a
legitimate heir.” Lady Melina drawled the word
“legitimate” with a special glower for her son.
“Doubtless like some he has spilled enough seed into anonymous
loins.”
Elise felt her face grow hot. Though Jet had never gotten that
close to her, she felt herself shamed by implication.
“Sowing wild oats,” Melina continued in her silky,
furious voice, “is well enough for common soldiers but for a
boy whose only hope for the crown is his betrothal alliance with
another family it is not only irresponsible, it is near
treason!”
She grasped the jet pendant depending from the multi-stone
necklace around her throat and closed her fingers around it as if
those slender fingers could crush it. Jet’s eyes widened in
unfeigned terror and Elise imagined that she felt heat from where her
betrothal gem rested against her skin.
“Treason against the crown you could wear and treason to the
father and mother who would wear it before you!”
In a single easy, graceful movement Lady Melina removed a fine
chain silver bracelet. Then she took the jet pendant from its place
on her necklace and attached it to the chain. Swinging it
pendulum-like, she crooned in a voice that transfixed her
listeners.
“From this moment forth, Jet, my son, your loins are bound.
Your staff shall not rise. Your blood shall not heat. Until you prove
yourself worthy of power, know yourself impotent! This is my
curse!”
Elise bit her lip to hold back an involuntary cry of fear. She
should be grateful, but this ritual gelding spoke of black sorcery
she had thought vanished from the land.
A small whimper of what might have been laughter, but could
equally be a strangled scream, slipped from Sapphire Shield’s
lips. Melina turned her gaze upon her eldest daughter, pitiless
despite the bandages visible beneath the bodice of the young
woman’s gown and the gloves that offered mute testimony to the
cuts and bruises on her hands.
“And you,” Melina sneered with even more contempt,
“you pitifully ambitious chit! I’ve watched you riding
your great blue stallion, armed and armored like some warrior maiden
from a nursery tale. How did you like your first taste of
battle?”
“I won,” Sapphire retorted, clearly speaking with
effort. “Two of the three men fell to my blows.”
“Yet you screamed for help like an infant,” came the
cold reply, “screamed and brought to your aid our greatest
rival for the throne: Lady Blysse herself, that flea-bitten waif who
has insinuated herself into King Tedric’s favor. You brought
Lady Blysse and her lackeys.”
Sapphire tried to protest, but Melina surged on, her hand coming
to rest on the blue stone in her necklace.
“Do you think I enjoyed thanking a common carter for
assisting in my daughter’s rescue? Do you think I enjoyed being
reminded that a lesser scion of House Kestrel has been awarded a
knighthood that none of my children will ever have the courage to
win? Sir Jared rushed to your aid though unarmored and not even
bearing a knife! You brag that you defeated two common thugs, yet
were it not for the three who raced to your aid, I doubt that you
would have taken out even one!”
Between clenched teeth Sapphire said defiantly, “When have
you even stood before even one opponent?”
Melina remained pitiless. “I am wise enough to know that a
woman can have other strengths—that wisdom and knowledge grant
their own powers. You, however, you care for nothing but posing. You
resent Jet’s competition instead of seeing that it matters not
which of you wears the crown. Whoever wears it, my will shall
rule!
“Better,” Melina continued after pause pregnant with
menace, “that you limit your ambitions to the inheritance you
will take from your father and me. When you inherit your lands and
country manses, then you may prance around in arms and armor to your
full delight. For now, remember your place and do not put yourself at
risk. I might decide that you are not worth preserving after
all.”
She twisted the blue stone at her throat and to Elise’s
horror the blood drained from Sapphire’s face. This was not
faintness on her cousin’s part; it was as if for a moment
Sapphire’s body was robbed of blood and breath. Melina changed
the sapphire for the jet stone on her chain. After a horrid moment
while the sapphire swung back and forth, glittering like a fragment
of the ocean deeps, Melina said in almost conversational tones:
“I curse you, my daughter, Sapphire, with pain. Though the
wound in your side has been treated, though it is clean and good
ointments soothe the flesh, though Sir Jared has the talent of
healing, still you shall feel pain there, dull and throbbing as it is
even now. If you should defy me further, then the pain shall become
sharp and keen, as hot as when the knife first sliced your flesh.
Thus pain shall tutor you in prudence until I judge you have learned
your lesson.”
Sapphire’s hand flew to her bandaged side and she gasped as
if for a stark moment a knife had freshly reopened the wound. Melina
bared her white teeth at her daughter, grimly satisfied.
As Melina reattached the pendants of jet and sapphire onto their
places on her necklace, her gaze fell upon Opal, and the girl, to
this point silent and stolidly calm, paled and trembled.
“And you, Opal,” Melina said. “Take these
punishments as a warning unto you. Obey me and perhaps someday I will
favor you with lessons in my craft. Disobey and know my
wrath.”
“Yes, Mother,” the little girl whispered. “I
understand.”
Melina pressed her hand once again to the gems on her necklace.
“I conjure and bind you all to silence on these matters. The
day has not yet come for my art to be revealed to the masses. Speak
of these doings and it shall be as if red ants bite your tongue. Even
as you suffer, the truth you sought to reveal shall be refashioned
into clever falsehood that shall honor me and defame you.”
“Yes, Mother,” came three subdued responses.
“Follow me. We have work to do before the diplomats from
Bright Bay arrive.”
Only as Elise watched the four Shields turn back toward the
encampment did she realize that she had her fingers pressed to her
mouth as if to keep even the faintest sound from coming forth. Even
as she struggled with her fear, Elise could feel a terrible resolve
forming within her, a resolve she dreaded almost as much as she
dreaded Melina’s dark arts.
Oh, Mother! she thought frantically. You never knew how wrong you
were about Lady Melina. She is a sorceress, her powers as wicked as
sin!
A terrible thought came to Elise then. What if Aurella Wellward
did know? What if her tongue had been conjured into silence by
Melina, even as Melina had bound her own children? Who could be
trusted to be free of the sorceress’s power? How many others
might have been so silenced?
At last, Melina and her children were safely gone. Pulling herself
with effort from her thoughts, Elise became aware that for some time
now Ninette had been murmuring to herself, only now daring to permit
her frantic whispers to become audible.
“Oh, ancestors, protect us from evil magic! Wolf, Elk,
Raven, Bull, Horse, Puma, Bear, Dog, Hummingbird, Deer, Lynx, and
Boar: Gracious Ones, shelter us from harm. Estrella and Rozen,
Jinette and Tunwe…” Ninette continued reciting her
personal ancestors back to the days of Queen Zorana and then began on
those of the House of the Eagle, for they were believed to protect
all their subjects from harm.
Patting Ninette on the shoulder, Elise joined her in her prayers.
Even as she recited the familiar litany, Elise suspected that the
answer to those prayers might come in a form as mysterious and
terrible as the powers themselves.
After a night of roaming the richly stinking streets of Hope, after
bloodshed and battle, sleep could not enchant Firekeeper. Blind Seer
at her side, she darted through the fringes of farmer’s fields,
haunted the forests, and swarmed up the spreading branches of a
thick-leafed oak to howl defiance at the moon. Only when dawn drifted
into full daylight—a late-summer day promising muggy heat
rising from the river before midday—was Firekeeper willing to
sleep.
She preferred the forests, cool even in the hottest parts of the
day, especially when compared with the interior of a canvas tent.
Derian had protested, more because Earl Kestrel had punished him for
permitting such wildness than because he saw any harm in her
choice.
Yet, despite her affection for Derian, Firekeeper had persisted.
Stone walls when there had been little other choice had been
tolerable; a canvas box when the trees beckoned a few yards away was
not.
Elation had provided compromise, alerting Derian to
Firekeeper’s location and keeping a golden eye bright for the
earl. Should Earl Kestrel begin to harangue Derian, Firekeeper could
reappear before he was fully warmed into his subject.
The earl’s need for Firekeeper outweighed his desire to
assert his power, so she could protect Derian. Now that she had known
Earl Kestrel longer, she realized that there was a certain fairness
to him. He assumed that Firekeeper obeyed Derian and thus Derian was
doing his job if Firekeeper did as the earl commanded. If she did not
obey, Derian would be punished.
Firekeeper obeyed nothing but her own impulses, but it
didn’t bother her if Earl Kestrel believed her controlled.
So as she had since the march from Eagle’s Nest to Hope
began, the wolf-woman slipped into the forest. In a tangled copse of
young maple saplings, not far from a narrow thread of a stream, she
pillowed her head on Blind Seer’s flank and fell instantly
asleep.
The past night’s events would not leave her mind to rest.
Looping like embroidery thread through a needle’s eye, they
stitched out a pattern that gradually mutated into something
approaching nightmare. Shadows and rocks underfoot, round rocks, smooth like those in
a streambed but these are wet by other than good, clean water. The
stream that runs over these rocks is horse piss and dog piss, man
piss and cat piss, vomit and sweat, manure and spilled beer, the
rotted sap of dead vegetation and the salt of ancient tears. Even
when the rainfalls it cannot remove the stench entirely. It settles
into the crevices between the rocks and waits for heat to bring it
forth. Barefoot, Firekeeper runs from cobble to cobble, feet light
and silent. There are no twigs to snap here, no leaves to crumble and
crunch. She feels like a shadow given life and Blind Seer padding
beside her is heralded only by the panicked barking of dogs in their
pathetic yards. Their appeals to their masters bring them no help, no
praise, only angry threats and the occasional thrown shoe. Partly from pity, partly because their barking annoys the
night, Blind Seer silences the curs with a growled command. In their
secret hearts the dogs are grateful. They retire to doormat or
kennel, wrap their tails about their noses, and try to believe they
are as ignorant as their masters as to what friend of the darkness
walks the streets. Each place where Derian and Doc halt is a delight of newness
to nose and eye. The tavern at twilight invites care; it is a busy
place. Wolf and woman sniff about the stableyard, steal scraps from
the trash heap, and marvel at the variety of people coming in and out
the doors. Leaving Blind Seer below, Firekeeper swings onto the roof
to peer into windows on the upper story. Nothing she sees through the
bared windows is precisely new, but much is educational. So it is with the livery stable and the heavily scented
gardens of the herbalist, Hazel. Then comes the return through the
night, the scream, Sapphire Shield fighting in fierce earnest, the
scent of her sweat cutting sharp and acrid even through the pong of
the streets. Indecisive, Firekeeper lurks in the shadows, uncertain whether
this is a fight in which another might be welcome. Only when Derian
is endangered does she throw etiquette to the winds and bound forth.
As she catches him in her arms, the blood streaming from his wounds
alternately red and black in the lamplight, Blind Seer leaps upon the
attacker. A man is not a wolf. There is no thick ruff to protect his
throat. He is not even a deer with great cabled muscles beneath a
thick hide. He is not even a rabbit who can sometimes shake loose
leaving a mouthful of fur. A man is a pitiful naked beast. One snap
and the red blood is running onto the cobbles, overlaying their
stench with a rich new scent. Blind Seer vanishes. Firekeeper remains. When Derian comes to
himself, she sees horror and fear in his eyes. Deep within her,
despite the exultation of victory, she is troubled. Horror and fear in his eyes. A body: the throat a raw red hole
through which life gushes and is gone. Fear and horror in her heart.
A raw red wound gushing life. Hot and blurring in her eyes, tears
salt on her tongue. Hot and terrible in her belly, hunger refusing
the question of right and wrong, living and dying. Where is the sweet sticky beverage? Day after day, it had been
forced between her lips. Slowly life had returned with it. Breath had
no longer tormented her lungs. Then there had been milk, sucked from
the teat of a she-wolf, girl-child nursing side by side with blind
balls of fur that grew far faster than she. Blood flowing life-hot from a gaping neck wound, steaming in
the cold of an autumn day. Around her she hears the Ones growling at
the pack to keep their distance. Despite hunger, the girl cannot
drink blood, not with the memory of the doe’s soft brown gaze
upon her, with the sharp stink of her panic as the wolves closed upon
her still fresh, not with her last terrified leap for freedom, doomed
before it began, imprinted on her mind. The girl’s stomach roils. The doe’s eyes had
reminded her of her own, of those of a sweet-voiced, soft-bodied
woman even now becoming a dream. If she drinks, she kills that woman
again. “So, is the life to be wasted then?” The girl has no idea who is speaking to her. The voice is
familiar, but her memory slides around it, as unable to grasp its
source as her hands are to pick the sunlight from a stream. “I can’t,”she sobs. I’ll be
sick!“ “Sick? You are sick now. Sick unto dying. How much
longer do you insist that others do your living for
you?” “Why live when so many others die?” the little
girl retorts, remembering the cooked-flesh smell of that almost
forgotten woman. “Why me?” “Fire spared you for a reason. Why can you not accept
this?” Though calm and measured, yet there is a note of impatience in
the voice. “How can I live on others’ deaths?” And the
death of which she thinks is not just the death of the doe, but the
death of those others in the fire. “We all live upon death, even the
deer. There is no escaping that part of the cycle. Your dying will
not save the deer. Your dying will not reverse the fire. Your dying
will only slay others
someday.” “What!” “Nothing more can be said on that matter. Trust
me.” “Why? “I have need of you. Enlightened self-interest is the
best reason I can give you.” ‘I don’t understand.“ “Nor should you. All you should know is that your
dying will serve no one. Your living may serve many, not the least of
which are those who have labored for your life. Now,
drink!” “I can’t!” “The doe dies for nothing?” “Let the wolves eat her!” “Why them and not you? Why are you less worthy of
life?” “I…” “Drink! The heat and liquid will do you well. You are
nearly starved from your stubbornness.”
“Let the wolves have her!” “Foolish human! Very well! If the wolves are to have
her, if the wolves are to live, then I name you a wolf. Be a wolf.
Forget that ever you were human. Your heart is a wolf’s, your
appetite a wolf’s, your memory a wolf’s. Strange wolf you
may be, but if only a wolf may live, then you must be
one!” Hot blood, slowing to a trickle. The wolf dips her human head,
laps at the stuff, sucks deeply, finds an appetite for life in the
blood. Chews hungrily at the still-warm flesh, finds strength for
living. Only when she is sated does she stop growling the others back
from her right. Only then do her parents call the rest of the pack to
share the bounty. When they are finished, there is doe no longer, not even
bones, for these have been cracked for their marrow and the
splintered segments chewed into dust. A single doe isn’t much
to the hunger of a wolf pack. Before the night is over, they will
hunt again, a two-legged wolf running beside them, eager now to be in
on the kill.
XVII
After three days’ residence in Hope, Prince
Newell Shield flattered himself that he understood the budding
political situation better than any of the central players. Although
a century of sporadic warfare following hard upon the chaos of civil
war had brewed hatreds between Bright Bay and Hawk Haven, largely
these were personal—hatreds for the ugly deeds done in battle
or of one person for another—not the terrible abstract fear and
horror with which both night fears and some enemies were
regarded.
Perhaps this was because legends of the Old Country monarchs who
wore crowns carved from skulls and wielded scepters worked from human
thighbones remained fresh—real enough to raise thrills of
terror when some old grand could say, “It was in my own
grandmother’s day that this was so,” and be right.
Perhaps this lack of hatred was because the goal of these battles,
skirmishes, and frays had always been reunification, not conquest.
When monarchs strove to bring the errant sheep back into the fold,
they could not resort to the rhetoric of hatred and alienation lest
this raise doubts in their people’s minds as to the wisdom of
reunification. With eager predators prowling on the fringes, neither
Bright Bay nor Hawk Haven could risk razed countryside and slaughter
of local inhabitants. Too easily then would the conqueror find itself
in danger of conquest as it sought to solidify its expanded
holdings.
Did anyone but himself realize that those who feared and hated
were the very allies who supported one side or the other while really
supporting none but themselves?
Prince Newell sniggered into his pewter tankard of ale. Blind!
Blind! That was what both Tedric and Gustin IV were. As their
predecessors had done, they accepted aid from nations who in their
most secret hearts desired not their allies’ success but their
failure.
Still laughing quietly to himself, Newell rubbed his fingers along
his temples, delighting in the clarity of his vision. He, he alone
had wisdom! The rest were as blinkered horses dragging their burdens
through crowded city streets, as sheep who blindly followed the
slaughterhouse goat to their own deaths!
Should such willfully ignorant creatures have the rulership over
thousands of souls? Ancestors, refuse! He knew his duty and had
already taken steps to achieve a position from which to carry it
out.
First there must be newly awakened doubt between the various
factions for Hawk Haven’s crown. He had hoped that Sapphire
Shield’s death would do the trick. The men Keen had hired to
follow her and Jet had been told to make it appear that an animal had
savaged her. Ostensibly this had been to draw suspicion away from
human hands— Keen had been posing as a love-maddened, rejected
suitor when he contracted the thugs’ services.
Needless to say, there had been a better reason for such
theatrics. Newell himself had intended—if no one else arrived
at the conclusion—to hesitantly suggest that young Lady Blysse
had murdered the one regarded by many as her greatest rival for the
throne. Blysse’s habit of slipping off into the night was well
known by now. Not even her faithful lackey Derian Carter would be
believed if he swore that he knew where she was every hour. His
laxness regarding her had been commented on, even by those who knew
that Blysse had the king’s favor.
Sapphire’s death should have weakened Blysse’s support
as well as eliminating one of Newell’s own rivals. He was still
disappointed that the thugs had bungled. Keen, however, had made
certain that they would not live to tell tales.
After going bail for the two survivors—not a difficult a
thing to do in Hope, where the local authorities did not wish to seem
to care more about assault on a noblewoman than on a
commoner—Keen had murdered the men and tossed their bodies into
the Barren River. If any wondered about the deaths, they should end
up thinking that one of Sapphire’s legion of admirers had done
the deed. Newell would make certain they thought so even if they
didn’t on their own.
Although he had been less than successful in the first part of his
plan, Prince Newell was progressing with the second part. This was to
make at least one of the allies betray that its deepest loyalties
were to none but itself. After consideration, he had elected
Stonehold for this role for the logical reason that it was Bright
Bay’s ally, not Hawk Haven’s. For now Hawk Haven provided
the foundation for Newell’s own prestige and influence. He did
not care to weaken that, though neither Waterland nor New Kelvin were
any more honest in their motives for alliance.
For the third part of his plan to work there must be conflict that
would bring the prince shining to the fore. Newell fancied a battle
would do the trick, one wherein Stonehold would show its true colors.
Perhaps weakened by loss of their ally, Bright Bay would join forces
with Hawk Haven. Alternatively, the battle could take place between
three armies. In either case, Hawk Haven’s army should come
forth victorious—they must, for they alone would be unweakened
by the defection of a traitorous ally.
And in that battle Prince Newell planned to lead. His would be the
great deeds. Based upon them, he would be hailed the new king of Hawk
Haven by popular acclaim. Rook and Keen were already sounding out the
gathered armies for those soldiers who could be easily bribed or
influenced to shout Newell’s praises loudly—and at the
proper moment.
Among the many deserters who resided in Hope and Good Crossing
there were those who could be bought and instructed to insert
themselves among the troops when added numbers would be welcomed, not
questioned. Their voices would shout loudly for Prince Newell, for he
would promise them pardon and honor. With the army firmly behind him
and the added weight of his own noble title, none would dare resist
him.
Then graciously would Prince Newell offer the conquered (or newly
weakened) Bright Bay a chance to come under his sweeping wing. He
smiled, imagining the meeting with lovely Gustin IV, perhaps
grief-stricken from her husband’s sudden death. Surely he could
arrange that little detail if it seemed meet. If Queen Gustin
suspected assassination, so much the better, for then she would fear
him and the power he wielded off the battlefield.
There was, of course, the small problem that King Tedric still
lived and must continue to live until the very day of the battle in
question. The mad old man had secured his succession while leaving
his prospective heirs spatting. All to the good for Prince Newell,
for united in their distrust of each other they would not look to him
as a rival. Once Newell was the hero of war and peace a mere name
scribbled by a quivering hand on a piece of parchment would not bear
the weight of his deeds.
But King Tedric must not die too soon.
The sound of a cautiously cleared throat brought Newell from his
revery.
“Master,” murmured Rook, “all is prepared for
your departure. Keen is sweating the horses even now. Rumor has
confirmed that the two diplomatic parties will meet at a reception in
Bridgeton this very evening—a reception hosted by the citizens
of Hope and Good Crossing.”
Newell’s lips curved in a cruel smile at this news, for he
was the one who had inserted such an idea into the minds of the Guild
Heads and other influential residents of the twin towns. It had been
easy enough to join the fringes of their meetings, for they usually
met in public houses. It had been easy enough to make a suggestion
from some shadowed corner of a crowded room, even easier to play upon
the emotions of the ambitious or fearful.
The prince doubted that even now any of those who were busy
supervising the decoration of the Toll House’s central
courtyard—watching as trays of sweets and meat pasties or kegs
of wine and ale were set into place—were in the least aware
that the idea to so subtly emphasize Good Crossing and Hope’s
own power was not solely their own.
“Very well.” Prince Newell rose, drawing up his hood
to hide his features. It would not do to become careless when the
game was nearly won. “Let us go. I believe I shall call upon my
father-in-law before the festivities begin. I am certain that he will
want me at the reception to support him in this time of
trial.”
“Who else can he trust?” Rook answered seriously, but
a wicked gleam in his bright eyes belied that sincerity. “Who
else among our noble king’s contentious court has only the best
interests of the nation at heart?”
Laughing then, arm in arm like two roisterers who had supped too
deeply of an afternoon, they stumbled from the tavern. None noted
their going but the barmaid who gathered up the coins left in payment
for their drinks; none even thought of them thereafter. Certainly
none equated the one who laughed hardest with the salt-stained and
road-dust-coated prince who rode into the Hawk Haven encampment late
that afternoon on a tired horse, his entourage only a single servant,
so great had been his eagerness to reach his father-in-law’s
side at this time of crisis.
Firekeeper was drawn from happy dreams of her childhood by
Derian’s voice saying things she had long dreaded to hear:
“Rise and shine, Firekeeper. Formal attire for the reception
tonight. Earl Kestrel expressly told me to make certain to scrub your
feet.”
Dragging herself from joyful participation in a full pack hunt,
Firekeeper reluctantly rolled over. Late-afternoon sunlight was
spilling down through the oak leaves. Absently, she noticed that the
edges of some of the leaves were turning orange and yellow. Despite
the present heat, the trees knew that autumn was coming.
Feeling a bit like one of those trees herself, Firekeeper pulled
herself to her feet.
“I have never slept so before,” she commented to Blind
Seer. “I didn’t even hear old heavy-foot Fox Hair
coming.”
“I heard him,” the wolf reassured her, “and knew
his step. Otherwise, I would have awakened you.”
Elation whistled in shrill laughter and launched into the sky.
Waving to the bird in thanks, Derian looked at Firekeeper with what
the wolf-woman now recognized as an affectionate grin on his
face.
“Stop growling and groaning,” he said.
“You’ve bathed daily, I know, but a good scrub
won’t do you any harm. Valet has a kettle on over the fire and
we’ve permission to use Earl Kestrel’s pavilion for your
ablutions. I’ve even bought you some lavender scent.”
Firekeeper bristled. Among the human customs she couldn’t
understand was that of covering one’s own perfectly good scent
with something derived from some tree or shrub.
Derian laughed. “You don’t have to use it if you
don’t want to. I’m certain Ninette or Lady Elise would be
happy to have it.”
“You think I should?” she asked, brushing leaves from
her hair. “Wear scent? Will Earl Kestrel be happier?”
“He might be,” Derian allowed.
“Then I wear,” she said, adding hastily, “a
little only.”
Derian clapped her on the shoulder. “You’re becoming a
real lady, Firekeeper.”
Remembering Elise’s lecture on social graces, Firekeeper was
quite pleased. She was sitting on one of the campstools in Earl
Kestrel’s tent, scrubbing the black from her bare feet with a
boar-bristle brush, when Elation’s shrill cry announced that
Lady Elise was coming, accompanied by Ninette. A few moments later,
Elise herself was raising the tent flap and requesting entry.
“Come to chaperon us, Elise?” Derian asked, rising
politely to his feet in greeting. He’d been sitting to one side
mending a small tear in the hem of the gown Firekeeper was to wear
tonight.
“Everyone in camp has heard of your valor last night,
Derian,” she said lightly. “I doubt that such a hero
would molest a young girl.”
Firekeeper snorted through her nose, but Derian, more skilled than
she in hearing the nuances of human intonation, frowned.
“Is something wrong, my lady?”
“Yes. No. I…”
Firekeeper dropped the brush and crossed to Elise. The other woman
was clearly in pain, her expressive blue eyes widening in surprise as
her hand rose to touch her lips.
Elise began again. “I came to thank you both for saving my
cousin. Sapphire can be both ambitious and obnoxious, but she is
brave and honest as well.”
“That,” Firekeeper said with certainty, “is not
just what you want to say.”
“No,” Elise agreed, licking her lips nervously.
“But I don’t think I should try to say anything more now.
Tell me, are you going to the reception tonight?”
“Am,” Firekeeper agreed, not satisfied with this
evasion, but willing to accept it for now. “Earl Kestrel
requests I do the honor of accompanying him to reception for the
diplomatic parties. I am not certain I understand what this is but he
asks and it is a small enough thing.”
Derian brought forward a campstool and offered it to Elise.
Firekeeper could see that he, too, was unhappy with Elise’s
sudden change of the subject. Unlike Firekeeper, however, he was too
aware of his social position to press a noble lady into
confidences.
“Sit for a bit, Lady,” Derian said, his use of her
title twice in such a short time underscoring his unease. “Even
better, ask Ninette to join us and you both can advise me in how to
dress Firekeeper’s hair. It’s getting long enough now
that it escapes my skill.”
Firekeeper expected Elise to refuse, but Elise suddenly
smiled.
“Would it be too much trouble for Earl Kestrel if I brought
all my dressing here? My father is away with his troops and my tent
seems so lonely.”
“She is afraid,” Blind Seer growled from
where he had been napping outside the tent. “Her scent is
sour with fear.”
Before Derian could vacillate, Firekeeper leapt in.
“Yes. Tell Ninette to bring. Valet can help if she
needs.”
Now it was Elise’s turn to look uncertain, as if she
suddenly dreaded her own request, but Firekeeper left her no room to
change her mind.
Hurrying outside, she found Ninette huddled by the cook fire as if
the day were quite chill. Valet was filling her teacup. Firekeeper
caught the scent of skullcap, wood betony, lavender and lemon balm.
She cocked an eyebrow, knowing this concoction was used to soothe a
troubled mind. Whatever had happened to Elise had affected her maid
as well.
“Valet,” Firekeeper said, “please if you have
time, go to Lady Elise’s big tent—pavilion—and
bring her gown and other things for tonight’s reception. She
and Ninette are to dine with us this evening so they can tell Derian
what to do with my hair. They will go straight from here to meet
Baron Archer for the reception.”
Imperturbable, Valet nodded. “Very good, Lady Firekeeper. I
am certain that Earl Kestrel would approve.”
“I wonder,” Blind Seer commented,
“what nose he uses to smell fear, for he smells it as
surely as do I.”
“And I,” Firekeeper agreed.
She returned to the pavilion and her interrupted foot scrubbing,
but no matter how subtly she and Derian phrased their questions,
Elise would say nothing more about what was evidently troubling her.
Ninette’s only reply was to tremble so violently that she could
hardly handle her combs and cosmetics.
“I am learning to lie,” Firekeeper said to
Blind Seer, “for otherwise how could I refuse to say what I
think when I see these two so bravely afraid?”
“You are,” the wolf said, “becoming
human. Tonight while you are at this reception—where I think I
would be less than welcome—I shall cast about. Perhaps I can
learn where she went, who she saw.”
“So many people here, so many to blur the
scent,” Firekeeper said doubtfully. “I can but try.”
If Earl Kestrel was relieved when Firekeeper informed him that
Blind Seer would not be attending the reception, he was too
well-mannered to say so. Firekeeper didn’t think she needed to
tell him that Elation would be on guard, tracking them from the air
and then watching from some perch high above the crowd.
All three of the wild creatures had their wind up, Elise’s
fear touching nerves honed to hear warning in crow call or squirrel
scolding. Never mind that most of the time the warnings were against
them—still, they had learned to heed and to take care. What
frightened one so deeply might mean danger to all.
Baron Archer came to meet his daughter at the Kestrel camp, adding
his considerable social weight to an escort already heavy with earl
and knight, forjared Surcliffe was also of their company. Tonight
bodyguards and caretakers were left behind, an agreement that pleased
the rival powers only slightly less than the alternative. Knowing
that Derian was deeply concerned, Firekeeper found a moment to
comfort him.
“Don’t worry, Fox Hair,” she said. “I am
to be the perfect lady, just like Elise. Look, I have even put my
Fang here—”
She hiked up her skirt to show the sheath strapped to her right
thigh.
“—not around my waist so the guard will not be
frightened.”
Derian laughed and almost managed not to blush. “You are a
little savage,” he said affectionately. “Behave.
Remember, your manners reflect on me.”
“Haven’t I promised?” she replied, evading
actually promising. “Elation will watch from without. If I am
in greater trouble than I can handle, she will rescue me.”
Derian groaned, “Great! Now I’m really
relaxed.”
The Toll House on Bridgeton, where the reception was being held,
was a huge building. It straddled the entirety of a bridge so wide
that its span was lined with houses and shops on either edge. Room
remained between the buildings for carts and foot traffic to pass in
two directions.
In its time, the Toll House had been fortress, shop, and
administration building. Tonight it was an unofficial palace,
flaunting the peculiar semi-independence of Hope and Good Crossing to
those who would claim the towns as their own, while forcing
acknowledgment of those qualities in the very use of the twinned
cities for this meeting.
Walls of polished river rock were adorned with pitch torches,
their yellow-orange light sputtering slightly in the gusts of river
wind. The paired arches at the base of the structure, each wide
enough to admit a heavily laden cart, glowed like the mouths of some
sea demon from Old World legend. The flags and pennants flying from
the poles on the roof high above were invisible except as snapping
black forms that blocked the wheeling constellations.
The Toll House was actually two buildings standing back to back, a
wide neutral zone between them. This courtyard was where the
reception was being held tonight. For light, chandeliers the size of
wagon wheels had been slung from great cables strung between the two
buildings and more torches were set on the walls. In this light, the
guests could admire paving stones scrubbed as clean as the deck of a
ship and adorned with thick carpets.
Long tables bent slightly beneath the weight of the food and drink
spread upon them. Light music performed by scattered musicians
filtered its way between conversations, creating an illusion of
privacy.
Here, tense beneath her superficial composure, Firekeeper
witnessed the first meeting of King Tedric of Hawk Haven with his
nephew, Duke Allister Seagleam of Bright Bay. She had been long
enough among humans by now to see them with something closer to their
own eyes.
From that newly expanded perspective, crowned in silver set with
rubies and gowned in regal scarlet trimmed in white, the elderly
monarch looked quite august—no longer merely an old man as
Firekeeper had first seen him. Yet even in the torchlight her
wolf’s eyes could see that the king’s lips were faintly
blue and his fingers, when he had extended them earlier for her to
kiss, had been cold as ice.
Beside his uncle, Allister Seagleam cut something less of a
impressive figure. His greying blond hair, though neatly tied back,
showed a tendency to escape its bounds, framing his features with
wisps of straw. Nor did the sea green and gold he wore suit him,
making him rather sallow. In the artificial light, Allister squinted,
reminding Firekeeper a bit of bookish Lord Aksel Trueheart. Yet there
was confidence in his bearing and nothing either servile or groveling
in his bow.
“Uncle Tedric,” he said, and his voice carried in the
sudden hush spreading through the courtyard. “I am honored to
have the privilege of finally meeting you.”
King Tedric did not bow in return, but opened his arms. “You
have the look of my sister about you, Allister. Something in the
shape of your mouth, I think. Her hair, too, was light.”
Accepting the kinsman’s embrace with dignified grace that
did not overstep the bounds of familiarity, Allister replied:
“No one has told me of that resemblance before and I am
pleased to learn of it. May I present my wife, Pearl Oyster, and our
children?”
While Allister was introducing a lady as plump and pale as the
full moon and several children who resembled both of their parents to
varying degrees, Firekeeper’s attention wandered. Everyone else
was watching the proceedings with great interest. Firekeeper noted
that a fierce look, almost a hunger, crossed Lady Zorana’s face
as Allister presented his sons. Zorana looks as if she will eat one of them, bones and
all! Firekeeper mused silently. Yet from what I have been
told, she will be lucky to get near the plate.
With skill that did not quite reject the rest of the company, King
Tedric drew Allister and his family aside. From what Firekeeper could
overhear, all they were discussing were family matters, including the
daily life of Princess Caryl in Bright Bay. As the wolf-woman drifted
restlessly about the courtyard, accepting food—but never
drink—from the footmen who circulated with trays, she was
amused to learn that almost everyone else thought that high matters
of state were being settled in that private gathering.
As she walked around the courtyard, Firekeeper was astonished to
discover that humans come in different colors. Until this point, she
had thought they were all basically like herself: light skin shading
into reddish brown with exposure to the sun, hair mostly in brownish
hues though occasionally lighter or redder. Here in the courtyard,
apparently as representatives of some of the interested countries she
had only known by name, were people with skin the yellowed shade of
grass in the winter and hair as fine as silk and black as a
raven’s wing. Their eyes were shaped differently, too, slanting
somehow.
There were also people so fair that they made her look dark, their
skin a rosy pink flushing red from sun or wind. These people had hair
so light that it almost glowed. Their eyes were very round, so that
Fire-keeper felt her own must seem heavy-lidded. These round eyes
shouted with blue or green beneath brows so pale that they seemed a
dream of a shape. These people were large, though trim about the
waist and hip, where the Winter Grass people were small and
delicate.
Finally, just three or five among the many, there were people who
in coloring were quite like those of Hawk Haven or Bright Bay, but
their attire was so strange that they seemed the most alien of all.
Men and women alike shaved the front of their heads and grew the hair
long behind. The exposed skin was colored in elaborate patterns that
extended over their faces. They wore long, straight robes embroidered
with complicated patterns in many colors and their shoes curled at
the toes.
Viewing the contrasting humanity pleased Firekeeper. She had
thought that humans might be like deer or rabbits, limited in their
coats and forms. Learning that they were more like wolves—who
could be any color from snow white to mingled shades of grey or brown
to night black, who could have eyes the color of pine tree tears or
maple leaves in autumn or a piece of the summer sky—was quite a
relief. Deep inside, Firekeeper felt that homogeneity was for prey
animals, not predators.
When viewing the passing scene palled, Firekeeper sought her
companions. Earl Kestrel was deep in conversation with some military
counterpart from Allister Seagleam’s escort: one of the Winter
Grass men, someone he had apparently met before on the field of
battle. Their verbal sparring, which barely kept the blade in the
sheath, amused Firekeeper for a time, but eventually became filled
with references to events far beyond her ken.
Doc was part of a group that included Lady Elise, Jet Shield, and
several representatives from the guilds in Hope and Good Crossing.
Their discussion bored Firekeeper almost immediately, largely
surpassing her command of the language. When everyone burst into
laughter for the third time at some witty comment that had not seemed
at all funny to her, Firekeeper gave up in disgust.
Her vague hope that there might be dancing to liven the evening
gradually dying, Firekeeper moved to one side of the span to where
she could watch the water flowing beneath the bridge. The torches
reflected in the black water made it seem as if the stars themselves
had descended to eavesdrop on these monumental human affairs.
Seeing her alone, the falcon Elation flew down from one of the
Toll House towers to perch on a jutting abutment below the line of
sight of the party.
“Having fun?” she whistled. “Not much,” Firekeeper admitted. “I
wish that humans solved their problems as wolves do. A quick fight
must be better than all this blather.”
“Human fights,” Elation said seriously,
“are not always quick. They do not always know when to
surrender or how to accept surrender when it is offered. Believe me,
once you have seen humans at war, you will understand why this
blathering—as you name it—has its place.” “Hush!”
Even through the mingled drone of music and conversation,
Firekeeper had heard someone approaching from behind. The step was
not one she knew, and the wind was from the wrong direction to carry
scent, so she wheeled to confront Prince Newell Shield while he was
still a good number of paces away.
“You’re like a cat, Lady Blysse,” he said with a
friendly smile. “Or should I say like a wolf?”
“Wolf,” she replied stubbornly, though she knew no
answer was expected.
“Mind if I join you?”
She started to shrug, remembered her promise to Derian that she
would do her best to be a lady, and said instead:
“That would be kind of you.”
Prince Newell leaned his elbows against the stone rampart and
stared down at the water. After a cautious moment, Firekeeper
returned to her previous attitude. Below, hidden in the darkness,
Elation kept her silence.
“Where is your wolf? I thought you went nowhere without
her.”
“Him. He is outside. This place is close and crowded. He
would not like it.” She left out mentioning that many of the
people would also not like him. Prince Newell didn’t need to
know that she would moderate her actions for anyone’s
comfort.
“I believe I sympathize with your wolf,” the prince
said after a moment. “For a sailor like me, parties like this
are very trying.”
Firekeeper remembered not to ask why and instead smiled politely.
Prince Newell continued, offering the answer she hadn’t asked
for:
“I suppose it’s the chatter, but that can’t be
it. On an oceangoing vessel we’re packed more closely.
Sometimes dinner at the captain’s table—especially when
the wine has gone around a few times—gets quite noisy. No, I
expect that it’s the tension. Everyone here wants something and
dreads that someone else will get it. That’s why I was so
surprised to see you over here. I thought you’d be checking out
the young men from Bright Bay.”
The word escaped her lips before she could school her
puzzlement.
“Why?”
Prince Newell chuckled heartily, his manner the same, she
realized, as she had seen him use with little Citrine during the
falconry party.
“Why because young men are interesting to young
ladies—and these two more than most—they could be a
secure way to the throne.”
“Oh,” she replied, understanding, “like Elise
and Jet.”
“That’s right. I’m certain that Baron Archer is
wishing he could sever that engagement ever more the longer the king
spends talking to Allister Seagleam’s family. Doubtless my
sister, Melina, feels the same way. But they’ve made their beds
and their children must lie in them.“
His laughter this time was somewhat coarse. Firekeeper wondered
how many times the bottle had gone ‘round the table for him
this evening. From her point of view, the betrothal between Elise and
Jet was a problem—largely because Elise did not seem happy. It
had not escaped Firekeeper how often Doc found excuses to talk with
Elise. Nor had she overlooked that Elise seemed much more cheerful
when Doc was about.
Turning from the rampart, she glanced over the gathering until she
located Elise. Yes. There she was, Jet close at her elbow, talking in
quite a lively fashion to several important guild representatives.
They looked delighted, but Jet seemed bored, his gaze frequently
wandering to where the Oyster twins were now venturing into tentative
conversation with his sister Opal and his cousin Nydia Trueheart.
Prince Newell followed the direction of her gaze without
difficulty.
“Yes, there is our young Jet, rearing against the lead
rope—despite the fact that little Minnow and Anemone are
something like eleven years old. Lady Archer has her betrothed firmly
in hand though. He cannot leave her side without giving grave insult
to her family—an insult which King Tedric cannot fail to
perceive. Tell me, Lady Blysse, who are you sweet on?”
His tone was playful, but she had learned when someone was fishing
for information. She had been asked this question or some variation
on it by everyone from the queen to Sapphire’s maid. Only the
queen seemed genuinely interested.
“No one,” she said. But her thoughts, as they often
did, flitted to Blind Seer. “There is no man I think
sweet.”
“Yet you are a young lady, surrounded by men. Surely it is
time Earl Kestrel got you a maid. That strapping redhead might have
done when you were just a… at first, that is, but now it must
raise questions of propriety.”
What she wanted to ask the prince was why should he care what
people thought of her, but Firekeeper had learned something of
manners. She replied courteously:
“True. Today Lady Elise was kind and came to help me gown
and do my hair. Ninette, too. I shall need a maid soon.”
“Perhaps,” he said in avuncular tones, “I can
help. I still know many reliable servants from the days when my late
wife and I maintained an estate. These days, alas, I am much the
wandering bachelor.”
Firekeeper knew that this was a cue to flirt with him. It was as
obvious as the song of a cock robin in the early spring or the
sparring of two young bucks with the velvet barely off their antlers.
Yet she could not bring herself to play this game. Wolves mate for
life, usually only after blood has been spilled and great battles
fought. Courtship was too serious a matter to play at with a man she
was quite certain she didn’t even like.
Therefore, she was greatly relieved when she noticed Doc casting
about, having noticed at last that she was missing. She lightly waved
her hand to show where she was and made a quick curtsy to the
prince.
“Forgive me. Sir Jared is seeking me, perhaps for Earl
Kestrel.”
She used titles and honors as protection against her flight being
halted. The prince did not stay her retreat but only looked after
her, the look of quizzical amusement on his face changing to one of
calculation as he returned to staring into the river. He might have
thought no one could see him, but the falcon Elation watched from the
darkness below and whistled softly as she beat her wings in
retreat.
The reception did not extend past Firekeeper’s level of
endurance. The guilds of Hope and Good Crossing had made their point.
No one would forget to calculate their wealth into the coming
negotiations. Representatives of the various contending forces had
met and now knew each other as more than tantalizing names. Old
rivals had re-met, new rivalries perhaps had begun. All in all, it
had been an interesting, if not precisely enjoyable, evening.
Only Doc seemed pleased with the outcome of the night’s
entertainment. As they walked back to their camp, Firekeeper noticed
with some amusement that he was humming.
Exhausted after the events of the previous day—discovering the
truth of Melina’s sorcery would have been enough without the
strain of visiting with her at the reception the night
before—Elise had trouble sleeping. At last she gave into
Ninette’s pleading and joined her in a cup of tea doctored with
an infusion of herbs which dragged her restless mind below the
threshold of nightmare.
Consequently, Elise slept into late morning and woke with a muzzy
head. Ninette was still asleep and Elise decided to wait upon her for
once. The other woman had been as shocked as she had been and was far
more terrified. Unlike Elise, Ninette was not a baronial heir and
clearly felt that while Melina might withhold her hand from Elise,
she might well make an example of her servant.
Both Ivon Archer and Aurella Wellward held that any noble who
could not perform at least the basic tasks of cooking, sewing, and
the like was dependent on her servants and so would become a slave to
them. Therefore, Elise, had no difficulty tending to her own
needs.
Her father’s valet had left a kettle to one side of the cook
fire so there was warm water for washing. Elise set another above the
coals to heat water for tea, then stoked the fire until a cheerful
blaze crackled beneath. Once again, the late-summer day promised to
become quite hot. The air here near the river was already thick and
humid. It didn’t promise well for tempers when the conferences
began.
Gowning herself in a light muslin dress with long sleeves of the
same material that should help protect her skin from insect bites,
Elise wished that there were a way for her to attend those
conferences. Rumor and report were no substitutes for actually seeing
the expressions on people’s faces or hearing their intonations
as they spoke.
Doubtless she was not the only one who felt that way and doubtless
King Tedric would refuse anyone he could in order to be able to
refuse those he genuinely did not wish to attend. She supposed this
must be an advantage of monarchy over the odd, oligarchical system
used in Stonehold or the plutocracy of Waterland. Right now, however,
she would give much for something like New Kelvin’s
parliamentary monarchy, where the reigning monarch—always a
king, an odd concept— must answer to someone other than
himself.
When Ninette awakened, Elise had porridge and tea ready. Over the
other woman’s protests, she insisted on waiting on her. By the
time Ninette had finished eating and dressing, there was color in her
cheeks and the tendency to blanch whenever she heard one of the
Shields’ voices, carrying over from their not too distant
pitch, had vanished.
“Last night,” Ninette admitted, sweetening her tea
with pale gold clover honey, “I couldn’t stay here alone.
The baron’s man had gone to play at dice with some other
retainers, you see. Usually, I’d find some of the other
lady’s maids, but I couldn’t bear the company of that
creaky-voiced old crone who attends on Lady Melina. She’s
always hinting about her mistress’s powers, especially to us
younger ones when she thinks we’re getting above
ourselves.”
Elise, who had been terrorized by the same old woman when she was
a child, nodded sympathetically. She knew that it would make no
difference to that one that Ninette was well-born, her only fault
that she was the daughter of a younger son with a tendency to
gamble.
Encouraged by Elise’s sympathetic murmurs, Ninette
continued, “I went over to Earl Kestrel’s camp. I hope
you don’t think it improper of me, given that they are all men,
but the earl’s valet is very polite—even
courtly—and Derian Carter may be brash, but he never oversteps
himself.”
“Were they the only ones there?” Elise asked.
“Yes. Ox had gone with Earl Kestrel, as you recall. He
couldn’t attend the reception, of course, but he waited with
the horses. The other man, the scout…”
“Race.”
“That’s right—Race Forester—wasn’t
there. I think he spends much of his time with his fellow scouts. He
may even have been on duty.”
“Doesn’t Sir Jared have a manservant?”
“Not that I have seen, my lady. I don’t think that,
for all his honors, he is very wealthy.”
“No,” Elise agreed. “That is probably true. He
mentioned that his family grew grapes somewhere in Kestrel lands.
That’s hardly the basis of a fortune.”
“Then you don’t mind that I went out?”
“I think it was the smartest thing you could have
done,” Elise assured her. “The question is, what should
we do next?”
“Next?”
“Yes.” Elise thought for a time, sipping her tea.
She had decided not to tell Ninette about the curious pain she had
felt when she had impulsively tried to tell Firekeeper and Derian
about what she had witnessed. The woman was terrified enough without
wondering if she herself was cursed.
Touching the carved piece of jet that hung around her neck, Elise
wondered if she might have been particularly susceptible because of
her link—however slight—to Jet. What if they had become
lovers as he had pressed? Would taking his body into hers have
increased the power his mother might hold over her?
She shuddered, feeling again that curious mixture of guilt and
relief when she realized that Melina’s curse served, evil as it
was, to protect her from Jet’s advances. Last night had been
the first he had not tried to convince her to go for a walk in the
woods or to duck into his tent. Either the curse had dulled his
desires as well as his ability to act on them or he had feared that
she would notice the difference in how his body expressed its
ardor.
She felt a stranger to herself as she realized again how much had
changed in her feelings toward Jet. At first she had only kept him at
a distance out of a sense of propriety and—she honestly
admitted to herself—a desire to test his devotion before
surrendering. Never had she dreamed that Jet would fail that test. In
her fantasies, he had become more and more ardent until, showered in
gifts, poetry, and song, she had given herself to him gladly.
Instead, Jet had become impatient, even sniping, hinting that she
was a tease or even unable to respond to his attentions. This had
been rather insulting. She might be unpracticed, but her mother had
told her about the mechanics and she was certain there was nothing
wrong with her’t
As their courtship had extended, Elise had tried to overlook the
occasional innuendos that hinted her betrothed visited the camp
followers, but learning that he had been in a brothel when his sister
had been assaulted—and apparently not for the first time in his
life—had been a real blow. Jet was nothing like she imagined
and she was bound to him by her own wish.
Elise was too honest with herself to accept the tempting notion
that Jet’s behavior was a result of his mother’s
machinations. The idea was tantalizing, inviting her dream to take on
new life. In that new fantasy, she would rescue him from the
sorceress’s control, grinding the jet emblem on his forehead
into dust beneath her heel. Then he would fall to his knees before
her, swearing his undying love, and become the man of her dreams.
No. As much as she wished that were the truth, Elise must honestly
admit that the truth of Jet’s character—no better, but no
worse than many a young man of his age—had been there all
along. Hadn’t there been the rumors about why Duke
Redbriar’s granddaughter vanished from the social scene?
Hadn’t Trissa Wellward hinted at things when she and Jet were
keeping company some years ago? Hadn’t Trissa been devastated
beyond proportion when Melina Shield put an end to the
relationship?
Hadn’t there been the time, back when Elise herself was
fourteen and playing hide-and-seek with Jet and his siblings, that he
had found her hiding place and used that privacy to steal a kiss and
fumble at her breast? At the time she had been flattered and
curiously thrilled that the handsome older boy had seen her as a
woman. Now she realized that his behavior was all of a type.
No. Jet had only been a hero from a romantic ballad in
Elise’s own imagination. She forgave him and herself, but that
didn’t change that if they married he would likely be
unfaithful and difficult. If Melina Shield ever raised the curse,
that is…
“We must stop Lady Melina,” Elise said softly.
“Otherwise what she said is perfectly true. Whoever is on the
throne, she will find a way to rule. Even now, the most likely
contenders include her husband and two of her children. Hawk Haven
must be ruled honestly, not through sorcery.”
Ninette blanched, but to her credit did not try to dissuade Elise.
Perhaps in the privacy of her own thoughts she had been reaching the
same decision. Setting her teacup on the tray, Ninette asked
simply:
“How?”
“First, someone else must know what we do,” Elise
said. “Otherwise we may join those who are bound to
silence.”
“Who?”
Elise had been about to suggest her father, but the sudden shrill
cry of a falcon, heard as if it called greeting while passing over
their pavilion, was inspiration.
“My father might or might not believe us, but I’m
certain that Derian and Firekeeper would. Let’s start
there.”
“How about Sir Jared? He has the king’s
ear.”
“Then him as well, if he is present.” Elise snatched
up a straw bonnet. “Let’s go. If I wait too long,
I’m going to lose my nerve.”
And I hope, she thought as they left the pavilion, that in telling
this I don’t lose my tongue.
XVIII
Without, the summer morning had become quite hot and
thick, but within the thick cobblestone walls of the Toll House, the
temperature was comfortable. The windows at either end of the room in
which King Tedric and Allister Seagleam were meeting were open,
curtained in fine woven fabric to keep out both insects and the river
miasma. Bowls of rose incense burned in front of each window as a
further precaution against river ills, giving the room the scent of a
well-born lady’s private chamber.
It is, thought Allister Seagleam, a strange ambience for a meeting
between two men.
King Tedric had suggested—and Allister readily
agreed—that their first conference be kept as small as
possible. They had settled on themselves, two assistants to take
notes, and two guards to watch the doors and handle the inevitable
interruptions. These were effacing themselves as much as possible, so
Allister had the curious feeling that he was alone with his
uncle.
Today’s meeting was being held on the Good Crossing side of
the Toll House, technically within territory owned by Bright Bay;
thus Hawk Haven had already made the first concession. Looking at the
steady old man seated across from him, Allister felt that King Tedric
had lost nothing. Last night he had only noticed the king’s
courtesy and majesty. Today he saw more.
King Tedric was evidently ill. Perhaps the malady was nothing more
than advancing age, but, like many of Bright Bay’s nobility,
Allister had studied some medicine. Those lessons were meant to
enable him to act as a medic if caught far from shore on one of the
sea commands that any able-bodied member of the nobility took as a
matter of course. Today they showed Allister the paleness of the
king’s face, the slight blueness around his lips, and told him:
“A weak heart. Uncle Tedric must resolve this contention on the
matter of his heir or leave his kingdom in chaos when his heart fails
him.”
Resembling more than a little the eagle woven into the brocade
fabric of his waistcoat, King Tedric leaned forward and said with a
curious bluntness that was not impolite:
“So. I have named my heir. Why are you here,
Nephew?”
“Because, when we asked for this meeting,” Allister
answered steadily, “you had not named your heir. I was born to
be your heir—or at any rate the heir to Hawk Haven. I thought
you should have a look at me before you made up your mind.”
King Tedric nodded. “I see you. Why should you be chosen
over someone I have known all his or her life?”
“Your father, my grandfather, King Chalmer, arranged for my
mother to marry my father so that a prince and princess of both
kingdoms might reunite the realms.”
“That’s true. Do you think it would work?”
Allister saw the faintest twinkle in the old man’s pale eyes
and answered honestly:
“I don’t really know. I have been told that many of
your people believe that I am heir to Bright Bay. You know and I know
that I am not. I do not think that Gustin the Fourth will step down
in favor of me, even if you granted me your throne. However, there is
hope that perhaps one of my children might wed one of Gustin’s
children—and as of yet she has none—and so in time
resolve the separation.”
“Trusting to an unborn child and the actions of not just
your generation but your grandchild’s generation to bring the
solution.” Tedric sighed. “That is a slim hope. The best
thing would have been to wed you when you were of age to one of your
cousins, my daughter Lovella, perhaps, or Rosene’s Zorana.
Marras’s daughter would have been ideal as she was already in
line for our throne, but poor Marigolde didn’t live beyond her
first year.”
“That might have been ideal,” Allister agreed,
“but by the time I was a young man, it was already evident that
the experiment was a mistake— that suited as they were by birth
and age, my parents were not suited by temperament. They lived apart
from shortly after my birth, but Princess Caryl was forced by
politics to remain in Bright Bay, an alien princess in a hostile
country. She might have been accepted eventually, but Mother was not
a tactful woman…”
“None of King Chalmer’s other children were,”
Tedric said grumpily. “Why should Caryl be
different?”
Allister hid a smile. “And she made many people hate her.
These would have refused to follow me as king even if the union of
which King Chalmer and Queen Gustin the Second had briefly dreamed
had come to pass. My father was among those who hated Princess
Caryl—as well as the ambivalence of his own position. Another
powerful group who opposed Mother was the family of Crown Prince
Basil’s wife, who saw Mother’s marriage to Father as an
attempt to unseat their daughter as queen-to-be. Indeed, Crown Prince
Basil wasn’t delighted by the thought that his younger brother
might be set above him at the whim of his mother—a resentment
that grew stronger after I was born and Uncle Basil and his wife
remained childless.”
“They were quite right to resent you,” King Tedric
grunted. “I have often thought that if my father and your
grandmother wished to make this great plan work they should have wed
their heirs, but that would have been a greater gamble. This one left
them the elegant pretense that the marriage was merely of noble to
noble, not of heir to heir.”
“True,” Duke Allister said, “but because they
did not take that gamble, Gustin the Fourth is ruler after her
grandmother and father rather than I.”
“Do you resent that?” King Tedric asked.
“Not really,” Allister answered honestly. “I
grew to manhood knowing that I was issue of a failed venture. Neither
of my parents were unkind to me. My father assured that I was granted
name and title. My mother schooled me in the traditions of both my
countries.”
“Both?”
“She did not wish me at disadvantage in anything.”
“That’s Caryl.”
“It’s strange,” Allister mused aloud. “My
parents died within a year of each other—both in their
mid-fifties. Neither could remarry, of course, but as far as I know
neither ever became seriously involved with another person. Mother
pined for Father, I think. I don’t know whether she had focused
so much of her energy on hating him that when he was gone she lost
all reason for living or whether she secretly loved him.”
“Your father died at sea?”
“That’s right. It’s a very usual death for a
member of the Bright Bay nobility. Most of our wealth comes from the
sea and we join our people in harvesting it.”
Allister was acutely aware of King Tedric studying him. His first
impulse was to look away. Then he squared his shoulders and met the
old man’s gaze.
“Tell me, Allister,” the old king said, “do you
want to be my heir?”
“Not,” Allister replied with an answering bluntness of
which he was certain Queen Gustin would not approve, “without
the approval of your people. Otherwise, I am inviting worse, not
better, for your people and for those of Bright Bay.”
“I notice you do not say for your people and for
mine.”
“I told you, my mother reared me to think of both countries
as my own. Although I have lived all my life in Bright Bay, it is
difficult to escape such early indoctrination.”
Allister wondered if he had said too much. He had selected the
clerk who sat scribbling notes a few places down the table, but the
man was duty bound to report to Queen Gustin. She might well consider
his making his own terms—when her orders had been to do his
best to win the Hawk Haven throne—an act of treason. King
Tedric hadn’t seemed to mind, but Allister’s home and
lands were not within King Tedric’s kingdom.
“For you to be accepted within Hawk Haven at all,”
Tedric said after a long pause, “you would need to be allied
with one of our Great Houses. I would offer you one of my own
children or grandchildren, but I have none. If I had any, I would not
be sitting here with you.”
“I suppose not,” Allister agreed. He wondered about
the wolf girl of whom he had heard. Some said that she was
Tedric’s granddaughter, others simply a contrivance of Earl
Kestrel’s. He decided to wait to ask about her until he could
introduce the subject gracefully.
“I have,” Tedric sighed, “nieces and nephews of
your age, but they are married and you are married. Beginning this
proposition with several divorces would undo any good we could
do.”
“True.”
“Thus we move to the next generation, playing games with
young lives as my father played with the lives of Caryl and Tavis. Do
we want to risk that?”
“I don’t know.”
Allister thought of the letter from Zorana Archer folded within
his breast pocket. The longer he spoke with the king, the more he was
certain that she had acted of her own accord, not with the
king’s knowledge. Should he tell the king? What might
Tedric’s reaction be? Would the king thank Allister for his
honesty or would he condemn him for treating with—or perhaps
for misrepresenting—one of his nieces?
Allister waited, knowing that he could not wait too long or the
moment would pass. King Tedric accepted a glass of sweet pear cider
from his clerk and continued thoughtfully:
“Are any of your children married?”
“No.”
“Betrothed?”
“My eldest, Shad, is betrothed to a girl of good family in
Bright Bay. It is a political arrangement.”
“Aren’t they all,” the king said breezily.
“I understand that your father married for love.”
“And was forced to distribute titles to appease his angry
Great Houses. These days most marriages among our Great Houses are
alliances. Sometimes they work out quite well. Elexa has become my
right hand, though initially we did not care for each other. Other
times these marriages do not work at all and create trouble for the
families.”
“Ah.”
“Are you indicating that Shad’s political betrothal
could be broken if necessary?”
“Queen Gustin would probably insist.”
“I see.”
A knock sounded on the door without. King Tedric’s
guard—Sir Dir-kin Eastbranch, Allister recalled—went to
answer it.
“Yes?”
A note was passed in. Sir Dirkin carried it to the king, who broke
the seal and read it. Smiling wearily, he passed it to Allister.
“As you can see, my physician is reminding me that my heart
is not strong and that I should rest. As much as I am enjoying this
conversation, I believe I should obey.”
“As you wish, sir.”
“We will both be hounded by questions. I, for one, shall
tell my people we are still feeling out what the other wants and
needs. You may tell yours whatever you wish.”
“I believe you have spoken the simple truth,
Uncle.‘’
“One last thing.”
“Yes?”
The king studied his gnarled fingers. “I am unwilling to
contract too freely with young lives as was done in my father’s
day. Within my kingdom, perhaps, but across the borders is a
different matter. I suggest we hold another gathering—a dance
perhaps—so I can see how everyone behaves.”
Allister could hardly believe what he was hearing. A dance? At
such a critical time? King Tedric read something of his
expression.
“You forget, good Nephew. I have named my heir. My meeting
with you is simply to see if I will change my mind. If we are to make
monumental decisions, let us not make them in haste.”
Allister bowed. “I agree.”
On that accord they departed. Messages would be sent back and
forth arranging the next meeting and the ball to be held some days
hence, as soon as arrangements could be made. Followed closely by his
men, Allister descended the Toll House stairs and departed.
He was so busy composing how he would reply to various questions
from the Bright Bay contingent that he did not notice the anxious
concern with which the generals of Stonehold watched him pass.
Prince Newell Shield initially had been more than a little put out
at being kept from the king’s conference with Allister
Seagleam. Surely he hadn’t come all this way to be balked at
the door! Somewhat mollified when he learned that everyone was being
refused, he decided to put his morning to good use.
The two generals from Stonehold had come to last night’s
reception already edgy and Newell had taken it upon himself to make
them more so. That there had been two of them had caused him some
difficulty at first, but there had been no avoiding that
situation.
Stonehold assigned all posts in pairs, a parallel to their
governmental system. One of the pair was drawn from stock originally
from the Old Country of Alkyab. The other was a scion of the Old
Country of Tavetch. When the Plague Years had begun, Alkyab and
Tavetch had been among the first countries to abandon their colonies.
Faced with powerful neighbors, all still receiving support from their
founding countries, their colonists had banded together.
Perhaps if physically they hadn’t looked so different, the
two cultures would have merged, but the people were different. The
people of Tavetch were tall, heavily built, massive people with a
tendency toward blue or green eyes and fair hair. The people of
Alkyab were small, even petite. Their skin was the yellow-tan of old
ivory, their eyes dark and slanting, their hair jetly dark.
Their religious customs differed as well. The fair-haired Tavetch
worshipped a sun deity possessed of three aspects who, according to
their legends, was wed to a lunar goddess whose face changed each day
as the face of the moon changed. The stars were the children of these
deities and danced messages regarding their parents’ wishes for
humanity in elaborate patterns on the night sky.
The Alkyab were, as the descendants of Gildcrest saw things, far
less superstitious. They, too, understood that one’s ancestors
were one’s liaisons with the complicated and incomprehensible
forces that ruled destiny and fortune. True, the Alkyab built temples
to their ancestors (rather than the descendants of Gildcrest’s
less ostentatious family shrines) and governed marriages by a complex
system having to do with figuring degrees of relationships. These
differences were an acceptable eccentricity given that the
Alkyab’s ancestors had come from lands unknown and so the
Alkyab were the ones with whom Newell Shield felt more
comfortable.
Therefore, at the reception Prince Newell had made his first
overtures to little General Yuci, a skilled horseman and commander of
cavalry. Yuci had been arguing with Earl Kestrel about the merits of
various methods of training horses to withstand the noise and chaos
of battle when Newell came up. Yuci was several strong glasses of
wine past what his slim frame could bear and Earl Kestrel had seemed
sincerely grateful at being rescued.
Under the guise of finding the general somewhere in which to sober
up a bit, Newell had steered Yuci to a quiet corner and proceeded to
alter his perception of events.
“Of course,” Newell had begun blithely, “King
Tedric is delighted to meet Allister Seagleam. He despises all his
other nieces and nephews, never could get on with his brother and
sister, you know.”
Later, seeing Elise Archer laughing at a joke made by one of the
guild representatives, Newell commented: “She seems terribly
innocent, doesn’t she? She grew up around the royal castle and
there isn’t a secret she doesn’t know or an intrigue to
which she isn’t privy.”
When Lady Blysse drifted from the party to watch the river, Newell
represented the young woman’s adolescent boredom as the sullen
silence of a cruel and calculating mind. He dropped rumors about her
upbringing among wolves, hinted that the creature who usually trailed
her with such fidelity was an evil familiar spirit.
So he went, telling a tale on this one, sharing a confidence about
that one. He spared his sister Melina’s family a little,
wanting to seem a loyal soul, but still managed to dredge up the
rumors about Melina’s use of magic.
By the end of his chat with Yuci, Newell was well pleased. Nothing
he had said about anyone had been precisely untrue—or had at
least been within the realm of common gossip. He knew, however, that
hearing it from his lips—from the lips of a prince of Hawk
Haven—would give even the most outrageous tales credence.
Eventually General Grimsel had joined them and Newell had experienced
the pleasure of hearing his slander repeated and amplified.
Yes, last night’s game had been a good one, a delightful way
to pass a portion of the reception. Today, however, refused a place
at his monarch’s side, Newell had something more serious in
mind. If last night he had set the logs on the fire, today he planned
to add the kindling.
At Newell’s request, the Stonehold generals agreed to meet
the prince at a nice little tavern on the Bright Bay side of the
river, near where one of the regular ferries docked. They arranged
for a private dining room and refreshments. Newell—as he saw
it—took responsibility for the entertainment.
He doubted that Grimsel and Yuci saw their meeting in exactly that
light. Doubtless they were nervous at meeting with a prince of a
nation that was not on the best of terms—if not openly at
war—with their own.
Had he not found their presence so useful, Newell might have even
felt sorry for them. The generals’ simple tour abroad to train
Bright Bay’s army and to command the mercenaries that augmented
that same army had mutated into a political crisis.
Newell imagined how they must have felt when Queen Gustin IV
commanded her army to accompany Duke Allister to Good Crossing. Even
if they had wanted to demur—and they would have found that
difficult—there would have been pressure from Stonehold that
they be on the spot to learn everything as it unfolded.
After greeting his hosts and inquiring after their welfare, Newell
jumped right to the reason he had called this meeting, judging that
he could hardly string their nerves any tighter without fueling an
explosion of some sort.
“Thank you both, Generals, for making the time to see
me.”
General Grimsel, a tall woman, built in every way on the heroic
scale, with eyes of transparent blue, returned his greeting with some
terseness. Her own infantry idolized her for her past deeds. The
Bright Bay troops she had trained were less happy with her, seeing
through her surface heartiness to her basic dislike of them,
realizing that she saw them as aliens, rather than allies.
Cavalry commander Yuci, neat and trim despite the previous
night’s binge, was more polite.
“We always have time to learn things that may be of interest
to Stone-hold. That is what you said in your note this early morning,
isn’t it? You said you had something to tell us that would be
of interest to Stonehold.”
Newell nodded. “I did and I do.”
“Pray,” Grimsel said, pouring herself a mug of summer
ale from the pitcher set in the center of the table, “tell
us.”
Newell bobbed his head again. Then in the slightly breathless
tones of a storyteller who wasn’t certain of his audience he
began:
“Well, you know the true reason for the split between Bright
Bay and Hawk Haven, don’t you? I mean, it wasn’t just a
natural outgrowth of the years of unrest following the
Plague.”
“No?” Grimsel said, her tones bored.
“No,” Newell replied, still eager. “There had
been any number of factional squabbles from the time the last Old
Country nobles left— people fighting to establish holds or to
keep what had been given them or just for the right to loot what had
been left behind.
“Out of these, three figures—Zorana Shield, Clive
Elkwood, and Gustin Sailor—had risen to the fore. While they
were working together it seemed pretty certain that all of
Gildcrest’s colonial lands would be reunited under a single
government. Then things split down the middle and we ended up with
two kingdoms.”
General Grimsel frowned a sturdy frown, no longer precisely bored
but clearly puzzled as to what bearing this discourse on factionalism
over a hundred years past could have on current events.
“I had heard,” Grimsel said, “that is, we were
told—that there was a differences of opinion in how the
campaigns should be conducted. In the end, some chose to follow
Gustin Sailor, some to follow Zorana Shield. So two kingdoms were
born rather than one.”
“That,” Newell gave an approving smile, “is the
story in all our history books. It is completely true but omits a
rather interesting point.”
“I had also heard,” General Yuci added with a slightly
embarrassed cough, “that Queen Zorana—Zorana Shield
then—had excited the love of both Gustin Sailor and Clive
Elkwood. She favored Elkwood and in a fit of pique, Gustin Sailor
went his own way and took his followers with him.”
“That,” Newell said, trying to sound as if he were
amused but politely concealing that amusement, “is the story
told in all our romantic ballads. The truth is darker, more
dangerous, and more believable.”
“Oh?” asked General Grimsel, refilling her mug from
the pitcher in what she clearly thought was a casual gesture.
“I learned the true story only because I was wed to a member
of the royal family,” Newell said, playing the generals before
setting the hook. “No one but members of the royal family are
ever told the story by order of Zorana herself. My late wife, the
Princess Lovella, knowing that I would rule alongside her one day,
confided the tale to me. She was very concerned about how I would
take it, for she believed that hearing this tale was what had
unmanned her brother, Crown Prince Chalmer, leading to his untimely
death.”
“What was this secret?” General Grimsel pressed,
anxious now lest Newell say nothing more.
Prince Newell dropped his voice and looked uneasy.
“I’m not certain I should tell you this, but I’m
hoping that if you know the truth, perhaps you will recognize how
important it is that Bright Bay and Hawk Haven not be
rejoined.”
General Yuri’s dark eyes glittered with what might have been
intensity but what Newell feared was laughter.
“Perhaps you have your own advancement in mind, Prince
Newell? Very well, I can understand such motives. Tell on.”
“And quickly,” Grimsel added.
Newell feigned a mixture of anger and embarrassment—a man
caught intriguing but unwilling to back out.
“The real reason that Gustin Sailor split from his
associates,” he said, “was that Zorana Shield and Clive
Elkwood believed firmly that everything that stank of Old World
sorcery should be destroyed. We all know how the rulers kept
knowledge of the higher orders of magic from the
colonists.”
The two generals nodded, willing to let him digress now that he
was on the point. Such restrictive policies had been fairly
universal, for the power of high magic was what had permitted the Old
Countries to dominate the residents of their colonies.
Newell continued, “And we all know that most of them took
their magical materials home when they left.”
Again nods.
“That didn’t always happen.” Newell saw the
generals exchange surprised glances. “According to the tale
King Tedric told Princess Lovella, one day some years after the
departure of the Old Country rulers of Gildcrest, Zorana Shield
chanced upon an isolated vacation retreat in the foothills of the
Iron Mountains where the residents had succumbed to the Plague.
Danger of contagion was long past, but the illness must have come
upon the residents suddenly for none of their magical trinkets had
been destroyed or sent away.”
Newell glanced at his audience. Neither looked either bored or
inclined to laugh. He continued, satisfied:
“Zorana burned the books and scrolls, but there were a few
items, a ring, I think, and maybe some sort of wand—Lovella was
vague. There may have been more. Before Zorana Shield could destroy
these items, her allies joined her. They quarreled, Clive Elkwood
supporting her, Gustin Sailor furious at the waste. When it became
clear that there was no resolution possible, Gustin acted.
“In the dark of night, he stole the items and fled to the
southeast, near the bay where his strongest base of power lay. Later,
those who thought he had done right rallied to him. Zorana Shield
already had a solid following in the lands north of the Barren River,
lands still held today by her Shield kindred. To the delight of the
balladeers she married Clive Elkwood.
“Thus the break between our countries—for though they
weren’t really countries yet the Barren River gradually became
a boundary between factions. It would take several more years before
Zorana Shield and Clive Elkwood solidified their hold on the lands
north of the Barren River. After they had, they went after Gustin
Sailor. He now held most of the lands south of the
Barren—though his interest lay especially along the coast and
in the Isles.
“When Zorana and Clive went after Gustin, that’s the
period we usually call the Civil War, though ideologically the split
had happened several years earlier. The Civil War was fought for
something like four years. Clive Elkwood died in one of those
battles, but Zorana was firmly at the head of their faction so the
fighting went on. Finally, peace seemed easier than continuing to
fight—you must remember that some of these people had been
fighting for fifteen years or more.
“With peace, the Barren was confirmed as the border between
Hawk Haven and Bright Bay. Zorana’s followers had been calling
themselves the Hawks, because they were resolved to fly free without
magic’s bondage, so their new kingdom was called Hawk
Haven.”
Newell fell silent and General Yuci prompted, “And Gustin
Sailor, of course, he became King Gustin I of Bright Bay, but what
happened to the magical relics?”
Newell looked tense and grim. He milked the silence for a few
moments more then said:
“Despite trying repeatedly, Zorana never managed to retrieve
them from Gustin. The good thing is that—according to what
Princess Lovella told me—no one in Bright Bay has ever
possessed the talent to employ the relics. To this day they remain
curiosities in the Bright Bay treasury, protected by the Seal of the
Sun and brought forth only upon the coronation of a ruler. Even then,
they are only seen by a select few. I’ve asked around and what
I’ve heard from those few makes me believe the story. Bright
Bay has Old World magic.”
General Grimsel swore a thunderous oath. “Old World magic!
If someone learns how to use it, they could destroy us
all!”
“And,” whispered General Yuci, “in Hawk Haven
there are those who are sorc…”
Yuci stopped then, remembering that Newell’s own sister was
a reputed sorceress. Newell politely pretended not to have heard.
He’d done what was necessary.
Stonehold now had an excuse to be at odds with Bright Bay. Whether
they would use that excuse to declare war on Bright Bay, to withdraw
their mercenaries, or merely to attempt to dictate domestic policy he
didn’t know. What he was certain of was that Stonehold’s
rulers would not let the opportunity pass them by. Soon enough,
Bright Bay would be seeing her ally’s true colors.
“It is an outrageous tale!” protested General Grimsel
loudly, perhaps to cover for her own too thoughtful silence.
Newell rose to take his leave. “I thought you needed to know
the truth—to know why it is so dangerous to let these nations
be reunited.”
“You are a true friend to all humanity,” General
Grimsel said. “Stonehold will not forget this noble
act.”
“Thank you, General.”
General Yuci favored him with a deep bow but said nothing. Newell
wondered if he was still shocked by his recollection of
Newell’s own familial reputation for sorcery or whether he was
simply keeping his counsel.
Prince Newell straightened his hat, bowed, and departed, not
wishing to dilute the impression he had made. He had no doubts that
Stonehold would do its best to confirm what he had said, but about
that he felt no qualms. It is an outrageous story, Newell thought as he left the
two generals to their certain consternation. The funny thing is,
it is also completely true.
Despite Elise’s resolve to act immediately, circumstances
conspired against her. First, she encountered her cousin Sapphire.
Since witnessing the events of the afternoon before, Elise’s
feelings toward Sapphire had undergone a revolution. No longer did
Sapphire seem a pushy older cousin but something of a valiant
heroine, striving to maintain her identity despite crippling pressure
from without.
The trouble was that Sapphire’s feelings about Elise
hadn’t changed at all. To Sapphire, Elise was still the upstart
who conspired with her own brother to steal a march on her. Elise
drew in a deep breath:
“Good morning, cousin.”
“Good morning—though from my reading of the
sun,” Sapphire commented unkindly, “it is nearly
noon.”
“True,” Elise replied mildly. “It is. I suppose
I do not have your constitution. Last night’s party was too
much for me. I am not accustomed to such hours or such strong
wine.”
Sapphire paused as if examining this comment for some subtle
insult. Failing to find one, she smiled.
“I am about to go riding,” she said reluctantly,
certainly remembering Melina Shield’s recent reminder that
Sapphire had a duty to her family, not merely to herself.
“Would you like to join me? It would sweat the wine out of you
properly.”
Riding was the last thing Elise wanted to do, but she would be an
utter fool to reject such an offer, especially since she had resolved
to rescue Sapphire from her mother.
“Let me change,” she said. “Ninette, ask one of
the grooms to bring around my palfrey.”
“I’ll take care of that,” Sapphire offered.
“I was going to saddle up the Blue.”
Elise thanked her. As she changed into riding breeches—the
pretty frock she had worn to go on Firekeeper’s hawking party
so long ago was back in Eagle’s Nest—Elise cautioned
Ninette to say nothing to anyone.
“I won’t, Elise,” the woman said earnestly.
“I think I’ll take my sewing and go join the lady’s
circle. I won’t be so scared in daylight and maybe I’ll
learn something.”
“You are brave,” Elise said, kissing Ninette on one
cheek. “Do that, but keep your own mouth tightly sealed. I
wouldn’t have harm come to you for all the world.”
Riding with Sapphire was surprisingly enjoyable, though, of
course, Sapphire must show off her superior skill. Elise found it
easy to give her cousin the praise she clearly craved, for when
Sapphire thought herself unwatched her hand often fell to her side as
if to quiet the pain of her wound.
They visited Ivon Archer and Purcel Trueheart among their troops.
Here, Elise learned, Sapphire had developed quite a following. They
found the same when Elise suggested that they visit Earl
Kestrel’s cavalry unit. Despite a large proportion of the
riders being female, here too Sapphire was a favorite. Perhaps she is not all bluster and pose, Elise thought.
Perhaps beneath that showy armor and boastful talk does beat a
warrior heart. The question is, is that also the heart of a
queen?
When they returned to the encampment, the nobles’ enclave
was buzzing with news. Nydia and Opal ran out to meet them.
“The king met with Allister Seagleam this morning,”
Dia announced.
“And,” Opal cut in, “they have arranged that
there will be a great ball in a few days. All our noble folk and
officers will be invited.”
“And all of theirs,” added Dia. “They’re
also inviting important people from the towns.”
“And Mother thinks,” said Opal with a guarded glance
at her older sister, “that the purpose is to see who might make
a marriage with one of Allister’s children.”
“Our mother thinks so too,” Dia added, and her
expression was strange, a mixture of anticipation and what Elise was
certain was fear.
“Since none of us brought appropriate clothing,” Opal
said, a real thrill of delight in her voice this time, “we are
all to go to town this afternoon and visit the shops. Messages have
been sent ahead and it is rumored that a great bazaar will be
prepared for our pleasure.”
“And Lady Blysse,” Elise said when the three excited
girls paused for breath, “has anyone told her of this grand
event?”
Glances between the two made clear that not only had Blysse not
been told, the tacit decision had been made not to tell her. Elise
was slightly surprised when Sapphire said:
“She has not been, I see. Very well. Elise and I will ride
to the Kestrel camp and tell her.”
Before there could be any protest, Sapphire reined the Blue around
and Elise’s palfrey was quick to follow.
“Blysse,” Sapphire said, “saved my
life—she and her men. I will not have her slighted in such a
petty way.”
Elise glowed with delight. Perhaps her cousin did have the heart
of a queen as well as that of a warrior.
“May I offer you a hint?” she said.
“What?”
“Lady Blysse likes her friends to call her
Firekeeper.”
Sapphire looked offended for a moment. Then a slow smile spread
across her face.
“Her friends, you say. Very well. I will remember
that.”
Shopping took the rest of the daylight hours. It was not merely a
female expedition. Most of the noblemen and officers had come no
better equipped. The informal bazaar was filled with men and women
examining bolts of fabric, conferring with seamstresses and tailors,
and shooting each other shy glances as if wondering what the other
sex would think of their finery. Festivities extended into twilight
with impromptu dinner parties in most of the finer inns.
Hope was up to the challenge. The resident clothiers recruited
nearly everyone who could use a needle to work in their shops. They
were forced to compete for labor with the jewelers and cobblers, as
well as the purveyors of food and drink. Despite all this ingenuity,
many of those invited found themselves forced to mend and polish
their own attire and many of the locals had to make do with last
season’s gown or waistcoat rather than the new one they
craved.
Yet minor disappointments could not quell the festive spirit. The
merchants of Hope (and her sister city Good Crossing) saw half a
year’s earnings or more flow into their coffers. This in turn
made them able to be more generous with those they hired. Even the
hard feelings raised when merchants lured away workers in their
neighbors’ employ were dismissed as points scored in a rather
rough and tumble game.
Normally, Elise would have delighted in such a shopping
expedition, especially when she discovered that due to extensive
smuggling through the area fine goods imported by the sailors of
Bright Bay were far less expensive here than they were in
Eagle’s Nest. The excellent wools of Stonehold were also well
represented and, although the weather was too warm for wool, Elise
and her father purchased several bolts of fabric to ship home.
Yet, despite such distractions, the thought of the conference she
must arrange for later that night was rarely far from Elise’s
thoughts. During a visit to an herbalist who also distilled the most
wonderful floral scents, Elise managed to slip Derian a note. His
quick nod and a light of interest in his greenish-brown eyes
acknowledged her message and agreed to the suggested arrangements.
Then he switched back into servile invisibility with such skill that
she could hardly believe he was the same man.
Later than evening, when the parties had broken up, Elise pleaded
exhaustion and went to her pavilion. Fortunately, Baron Archer was
one of the night officers, so no one would miss her. Even if they
did, Ninette would cover for her.
Elise skirted the fringes of the camp until she came to the edge
where the Kestrel tents were pitched. She avoided these, going out
into the fields to a cluster of rocks that had been appointed as
their meeting place. Derian, Firekeeper, and Sir Jared were already
there with a shielded lantern and a pot of tea.
“Valet,” Elise said to Derian, “is making his
mark on you.”
Derian grinned. “To think that when I first met him I judged
him a useless mouse of a man. I know better now.”
Firekeeper, from at the fringe of the circle of light where she
sat with her arm thrown around Blind Seer, had no patience with such
niceties.
“All day, Elise, you have smelled of fear. Last day, too.
Tell us why.”
Elise laughed nervously. “I hope that everyone does not have
your nose, Firekeeper.”
“Not just my nose. Blind Seer, too. If someone has
frightened you, we will frighten them back.”
“Thank you,” Elise said, genuinely grateful.
“But it’s not as simple as that. Might I have a cup of
tea?”
Part of her reason was to win a moment’s more respite. Part
was remembering what had happened when she had tried to tell before.
While Derian poured, she began, telling them of how she and Ninette
had gone out to the cluster of rocks near the Fortress of the
Watchful Eye.
“We hid ourselves because we did not want to invite the
attention of the soldiers. However, we were not the only ones to have
marked out those rocks as a good place for privacy. Melina Shield
came there with Sapphire, Jet, and Opal.”
Without wasting words, Elise told how Melina had scolded her
children. She was grateful for the darkness when she must relate how
bluntly Melina had berated Jet for his sexual exploits, but she must
be honest or risk leaving out something that might assist them.
Thus far, any pain she had felt could have been imagined or
dismissed as the slight burning of the tea, but when she began to
tell how Melina had cursed Jet, a sharp hot sensation, precisely as
if her tongue had been bitten, caused her to cry out.
“Lady!” Jared Surcliffe jumped to his feet.
“What is wrong?”
She waved him back. “Part of this tale, I fear.”
Digging the nails of her right hand into her palm, Elise
continued. She tasted blood by the time she had finished telling of
Jet’s cursing, but memory of Sapphire’s courage shamed
her into going on. She, too, had thought herself worthy to be queen.
She might not be a warrior, but surely she was not without
courage.
Firekeeper’s soft voice from the shadows broke through her
pretense.
“I smell blood on your breath,” she said. “What
causes this?”
Elise felt tears begin to slide down her cheeks unbidden, as if
Firekeeper’s detection of her pain had freed them.
“A third curse,” she said, each word a throbbing stab.
“To guard against… any telling what… Melina has
done. Jet and I… she didn’t know… but
still.”
The pain was horrid. Perhaps because this curse was the one that
had affected her personally, the sensation of biting ants was so
acute that she could even feel their little feet tromping on the
swollen flesh of her injured tongue.
“Quiet,” Derian urged Elise, pouring her more tea and
holding the cup to her lips. “Rinse your mouth and spit.
Don’t be proper.”
Sir Jared had vanished, returning a moment later with his medical
bag in his hand.
“Chamomile and sage,” he said, drawing out two
packets. “Both good for the mouth and throat. Chamomile has
soothing properties as well. Do we have more hot water,
Derian?”
“In the kettle by the fire.”
“I get,” Firekeeper said and was gone and back before
anyone could answer her.
Sir Jared’s potion did seem to help. At his urging, Elise
first rinsed her mouth with a tincture of sage, then drank more in a
tea blended with the chamomile and some honey.
“Don’t talk yet,” Sir Jared said when she
started to thank him. “Let us see if the pain is as intense if
you respond to our questions. We have enough information to
begin.”
Elise nodded. “Good idea.”
“Melina Shield cursed her son Jet with impotence.
Lovely.” Jared paused. “Did she know that you were there
when she cursed him?”
“No.”
“Any pain?”
“No.”
Actually, there might have been a twinge, but Elise wasn’t
going to tell him. He might refuse to go on and she needed to tell
this.
“Good. Now, based on what you said before, you think that
because you and Jet are betrothed, her magic was able to touch
you.”
“Yes.”
“Have you asked Ninette if she feels similar
pain?”
“No. She is so very frightened.”
“We’ll still need to test this.” In the lantern
light she saw him frown, then look embarrassed. “Lady Elise,
are you and Jet… lovers?”
“No.” Did she imagine it or was Sir Jared’s
expression a bit too pleased to be merely relief?
Derian cut in. “Elise wears a betrothal pendant. It’s
made of the same jet that he is named for, the same stone that the
sorceress used when she cursed him. Could there be a
connection?”
“There might be,” Sir Jared said. “Lady Elise,
take the pendant off.”
Elise had not removed the carved wolfs head pendant since the
betrothal ceremony. Even when she had bathed or slept, it had
remained in place. She felt curiously reluctant to take it off now,
an almost physical nausea that roiled the tea in her stomach.
To combat the nausea, Elise summoned an image of Jet bedding some
light woman, her own lynx pendant swinging from his neck or tossed
casually on a bedside table. Deliberately, she built the details,
fueling what she didn’t know from her imagination until she
roused an answering anger.
Quickly, before she could lose the will, Elise lifted the chain
from about her neck and set the pendant on the rock beside her.
“That was difficult, wasn’t it?” Jared asked.
“Interesting. When I was betrothed and later married I had no
such difficulty removing the associated jewelry.”
“My father takes his off all the time,” Derian added.
“Especially when he’s working with the horses, yet he
adores Mother.”
Sir Jared nodded. “I think you have guessed right, Derian,
that pendant, as much as anything, may be what Lady Melina used to
channel her spell. Tell me, Elise, did she do anything in particular
during the ceremony or soon thereafter?”
Elise tried to remember. She had attended numerous betrothals in
her capacity as heir to the Archer estates. In recent years, her
father had been tutoring her in how to perform the ritual since, as
head of the family, it would someday be her duty.
“Not during the ceremony,” she said, “but
afterwards she drew me aside and made quite a fuss about the pendant.
She asked to see it.”
“Did you take it off?” Derian asked.
“Yes. I had no problem with that—except for a
girl’s romantic heart flutters, that is.” The only pain
Elise felt as she spoke was disdain for herself. “Melina held
it up to admire the carving. She told me that I should be proud to
wear it always since it marked me as a member of her family. Now that
I think about it, she swung it back and forth, much as she did when
she…”
Elise hid a wince as a faint but certain bite pierced her tongue
near the tip.
“Cursed her children,” she finished steadily.
“Her children, you say,” Sir Jared nodded. “Time
for question and answer again. Did she curse Sapphire as
well?”
“Yes.”
“Not with impotence. That would hardly be appropriate. What
with?”
“Pain from her wounds.” Elise was certain that the ant
bites were less sharp now. “Pain and inability to heal until
Lady Melina releases her curse.”
Jared swore, invoking his society patron—the Eagle, Elise
noted in passing—and a long line of Surcliffe ancestors.
Firekeeper spoke for the first time since volunteering to bring
water.
“What happens if Melina Shield dies?”
Firekeeper’s intention was obvious. Though she was but a
shadow in the darkness, they could see her hand resting upon her
knife. Blind Seer’s hackles were up and his fangs gleamed white
as he snarled.
“No one knows,” Sir Jared answered. “The curse
may last forever without her to lift it. It may die with her. Great
magics were never taught in the New World. Most of what our people
had were inborn talents, like my gift for healing or Holly
Gardener’s green thumb. Some were trained in sorcery but those
with the most promise were taken back to the Old World for their
final training. Legend said that they were bound not to reveal their
arts to anyone.”
Derian whistled softly. “Bound. That’s just what she
did to her children. I doubt they could get around that.”
“We need to know more,” Elise said, feeling panicked,
“but how will we learn! If we were at home, I might consult the
library. There are musty tomes there, dating back to before Queen
Zorana captured the Castle. Aksel Trueheart often roots around in
them gathering information for his history.”
“I wonder if that library or someplace similar is where
Melina got her knowledge,” Jared mused. “You’re
right, Elise. We can’t go ahead in ignorance. We may do more
harm than help.”
“We have time,” Derian said. “Not a lot, but
some. King Tedric won’t leave or make any great changes until
after this ball, so we have time. I think I know where to start.
Hazel Healer strikes me as a wise woman. I saw lots of books in her
workshop and not all were about herbs.”
“Good,” Sir Jared said. “Happily, with the ball
to prepare for, no one will think it at all odd if we call on her.
They’ll just think the ladies are shopping for scent. I have
the excuse of searching for odd medicinal herbs. Indeed, since
Sapphire was assaulted, everyone is traveling in larger
groups.”
Firekeeper had risen to her feet. “Tomorrow then. Early.
Derian may think we have time, but wolves hunt when they are hungry
and I am very hungry.”
She turned then and in a few steps was gone.
Elise sighed. “I wish I could be as sure as she
is.”
“She’s less certain than she seems,” Derian
said. “I think.”
Aware of her trembling hand, Elise lifted the betrothal pendant
from the rock and put it back on.
“I can’t be seen without it,” she said.
“Good night, gentlemen.”
“Good night, Elise,” Derian said.
“Let me walk you back to your tent,” Sir Jared
suggested.
“No. Better no one sees us together. There is enough
uncertainty tonight. I’ll be fine.”
She smiled at him. “Have Firekeeper call for me in the
morning. My aunts dislike that Sapphire and I insisted on bringing
her shopping today. No one will press to accompany us.”
“What about Sapphire?” Derian asked.
“I think she has a dress fitting early. Don’t worry.
Now, good night.”
As she hurried back to her pavilion, Elise thought about the look
in Sir Jared’s eyes as she had turned away. Concern had been
there, and admiration, and something more. A sudden warmth touched
her cheeks as she realized that he might be the admirer who had
anonymously left her a small pot of very expensive rose attar
scent.
XIX
When Allister Seagleam awakened, he realized with
something like astonishment that he was actually looking forward to
his meeting with King Tedric. He listened with half an ear as Sir
Tench briefed him on various things he should and should not do,
kissed Pearl and assured her that the sketches for her new gown and
those for the twins looked wonderful, tossed said twins in the air
while they shrieked at this assault on their eleven-year-old dignity,
and then drew Shad and Tavis aside for a private word.
“You’ll be escorting your mother into the town today,
I expect.” Shad, a serious-looking young man of twenty who had
his mother’s rounded lines and fair coloring—but no
longer any of her plumpness— nodded.
“That’s right, Father. She is insisting on having us
all fitted for new clothes. I think my dress uniform should do quite
well, but Mother is acting as if this ball is Queen Gustin the
Fourth’s coronation all over again.”
“It is, Shad, especially for our family,” Allister
replied. “However, if you wish to wear your dress uniform, tell
Pearl that this is my wish as well. If you do choose to wear it, make
certain that every button and line of braid is as perfect as if you
were expecting an inspection by the Lord High Admiral.”
“I will, Father,” Shad said earnestly. His recent
promotion from ensign to lieutenant was the most important event in
his young life. Allister understood. He had also struggled to prove
himself though hampered by high birth and outlander blood.
Tavis, at fifteen, had yet to enter the Navy formally, though like
any youth raised in Bright Bay he swam like a fish and sailed as if
the masts and lines were extensions of his own body. He scuffed his
shoe along the ground and looked sidelong up at his father. Beneath
his thick golden lashes, his eyes were the exact shade of the sea
before a thunderstorm.
“I suppose,” Tavis said gloomily, “that I have
no choice but to let my mother doll me up in lace and
brocade.”
“None at all,” his father said sternly. “It is
time you realized that you have a responsibility to this family.
Think about this little fact while I am away. If a marriage alliance
is made between our family and one of the royal scions of Hawk Haven,
you are as good a candidate as your elder brother—better in
many ways for he is already betrothed.”
Tavis looked at his father wide-eyed. Although a second child in
Bright Bay prepared for the possibility of becoming heir far more
stringently than his counterpart in Hawk Haven might, Tavis had
passed from boyhood onto the threshold of young manhood secure in the
knowledge that he was protected by the double bulwark of father and
elder brother.
“But I… but the girls… but Mother said,”
he stammered.
“But nothing. I say all four of you must conduct yourselves
as if the entire fate of our family rests upon you alone. You boys
have been taking this upcoming ball less than seriously. I hereby
order you to start doing so.”
“Yes, sir!” snapped Shad.
“Yes, Father,” Tavis said slowly, but his expression
assured Allister that he would obey.
Allister could pity the boy. Born into another family, Tavis would
probably have become a musician or poet, a burden to be cherished
lest he starve but cherished nonetheless for the evidence that he had
been blessed by the ancestors with a special gift. Tavis, named for a
grandfather he had never met, now must take his own part in the
political games to which his namesake had been sacrificed.
“I must go now,” Allister said. “Make me proud
of you and know that I will not treat with your lives lightly, but
remember also—there is a part of our lives that does not belong
to us. It belongs to our country and to our families. That is the
price we pay for titles and honors common folk do not
have.”
He turned then, resisting the impulse to tousle their heads. For a
moment, twenty and fifteen though they might be, his sons had looked
very much like little boys.
Today Allister must cross the courtyard between the sides of the
Toll House to mount the stairs on the Hawk Haven side of the
building. A woman he recognized as Lady Melina Shield was busy
discussing potential decorations for the ball with one of Lord
Tench’s assistants. The matter under discussion seemed to be
whether or not the emblem of the royal family of Bright Bay should be
displayed given that the queen herself was not in attendance. More of this eternal political maneuvering for position,
Allister thought. And I am beginning to think that it matters as
little to Uncle Tedric as it does to me.
At that very moment, he made up his mind to tell King Tedric about
Zorana Archer’s letter. After greetings were exchanged, he
began on this immediately.
“Yesterday, Uncle Tedric, when the physician reminded you of
your health, I was about to tell you something rather interesting.
Lest we get distracted today, I would like to begin with that piece
of business.”
“I am quite curious,” the old monarch said equably.
“Speak on.”
“Some twenty or so days ago, I received a letter from a
member of your court. It was carried by private courier and delivered
in great secrecy. The letter suggested that it would be to the mutual
advantage of the writer and myself to arrange a marriage alliance
between our families. She…”
“Ah, she,” King Tedric murmured. “Do go
on.”
“She stated that she herself was already married,”
Allister continued, somewhat nervously, for the old eagle’s
face was completely unreadable, “but that she had several
children of marriageable or near marriageable age. She then went on
to name these children and note something about each.”
King Tedric coughed dryly. “It must have been a veritable
tome.”
“The missive did run to several close-written pages, Your
Majesty,” Allister admitted. “Next she expressed
considerable knowledge about my own family, including the knowledge
that my son Shad was already betrothed—a thing that astonished
me a little, as the betrothal is fairly recent and I had not thought
the news would have reached your court.
“Then she suggested the combination of her children and mine
would be—in her opinion—to our mutual advantage. She
signed the letter and impressed it with her personal seal so that
there would be no doubt of her identity.”
“Do you have this letter still?”
“Yes, Your Majesty. Queen Gustin, to whom I confided this
information…”
“You did. I see.”
“Queen Gustin ordered me to give her the letter for her
state archives. I refused on the grounds that it was a personal
communication to me in my capacity as the head of my family, not in
any of the positions that I hold for the Crown.”
“Very correctly, I’m certain.” King Tedric
smiled slightly. “And I’m certain also that as a monarch
Queen Gustin was rather piqued.”
“I’m afraid she was, Your Majesty.”
“I much preferred when you referred to me as Uncle Tedric
or, failing that, King Tedric. Don’t worry, Nephew. I’m
not going to bite heads off just because you brought this to me. Not
your head at least…”
For a moment his smile faded and Allister was reminded again that
the eagle was a bird of prey. Then King Tedric was sternly affable
again.
“Do you plan to show me this remarkable document?”
“If you will agree to leave it in my custody.”
“I will. I can hardly respect your rights less than did your
own monarch. I would come out rather badly in the
comparison.”
Allister reached into his inside jacket pocket and removed the
several sheets of vellum.
“Thick enough to stop an arrow,” King Tedric mused.
“If you would bide a moment, have a cup of something to drink,
I will just quickly review this.”
He pulled a pair of reading spectacles from his own breast pocket
and did so. Allister sipped water flavored with mint and rose hips,
hoping by the Bull’s Wide Forehead that he had done the right
thing.
At last, King Tedric set the letter aside and sighed. Removing his
spectacles, he methodically put them away, saying:
“Zorana. I thought it might be her when you began.
She’s ambitious and her ambitions were sadly stifled when Baron
Archer and Lord Rolfston agreed to betroth two of their children.
They knew I could hardly overlook the opportunity to flatter three of
my Great Houses. Lord Rolfston’s wife is a Shield, you see,
while Baron Archer’s wife is a Wellward. Lord Rolfston himself
is a Redbriar on his mother’s side.”
“Oh.” Allister felt a bit out of his depth here. In
Bright Bay the noble houses all had one name, the same as their house
emblem. His case was rather an exception. Normally, he would have
taken his mother’s family name since Seagleam was reserved for
members of the royal family—all but for the monarch, who became
a Gustin. However, he couldn’t well be an Eagle in Bright Bay,
so he had been granted a dispensation to bear his father’s
name. His children, however, were Oysters.
“Zorana,” King Tedric repeated the name, a little
sadly it seemed to Allister. “I will need to speak with her. In
the meantime, what do you think of her proposal: her Purcel and one
of your little girls?”
Allister spoke carefully. “Remembering that we are not
talking a romantic alliance here, but a political one, I suppose the
first and most important question is what do you think of her
proposal?”
King Tedric looked at him blankly, then roared with laughter, an
amazingly deep and rich sound coming from such an apparently frail
body. Worried that Tedric would do himself harm, Allister glanced
around, but even Sir Dirkin, normally as expressionless as a piece of
wood, seemed to have a small smile on his face.
“Nephew! Nephew!” the king gasped when the worst of
the laughter had passed. “Where did you learn to speak so
bluntly?”
“From my mother, your sister,” Allister replied
honestly. “I told you that she did not make herself popular
among the nobility and she did not do that by remaining meek, quiet,
and demure.”
A few more snorts of laughter and then the king said, “And
so this is how you honor Caryl’s memory. Very good. What do I
think about this proposal? I think that it has potential.”
“I would only agree to it myself,” Allister said
seriously, “if I had your word, both verbal and written, that
the boy Purcel would be named your heir and that my daughter would
have settled on her land and money. There would remain the question
of a regent. Purcel will not reach his majority for another four
years. If the ancestors call you to join them before that time,
someone must be designated in advance. Would your people accept me?
Would his mother accept a third party?”
Tedric waved his hand to slow Allister down. “I can see that
you have given this matter a great deal of thought, as well you
should since you have had twenty-some days to think about it. Let me
reply to your comments one at a time.”
“Very well, Uncle. Forgive my impetuosity. I have had few
people with whom to discuss this matter. Queen Gustm requested that I
keep it a state secret. Only myself, my wife, and the queen’s
advisor Tench are privy to the letter.”
“Zorana has also kept her peace,” Tedric said,
“although not without a certain gloating calm. Now, your first
demand before you would agree to this alliance is that I name Purcel
Archer my heir. I can see that. It would protect your daughter to a
certain extent, especially from her mother-in-law’s vagaries of
mood. If Zorana was to be queen with Purcel to follow her, she could
always pass him by in favor of another. Very good. I could agree to
naming Purcel my heir directly.
“I could also agree to settling some property and goods
specifically on your daughter. Purcel is a warrior. Although we can
hope that this alliance would make peace between our nations,
warriors do die in battle. Your daughter should have some security of
her own.
“Regent would be a more difficult matter. I am not certain
my people would accept you as sole regent nor do I like the idea of
two regents. We have enough divisiveness without encouraging more.
Zorana has proven herself able, but too willing to act outside of
channels. I believe I would need to select from outside of all of
those currently concerned in this matter. There would be too many
hurt feelings otherwise.”
Allister nodded. “I see—as well as someone who has
only observed matters from outside can see, that is.”
“I might have suggested Earl Kestrel,” the king said,
“but that he involved himself by hunting out Lady Blysse and so
involving himself.”
“About her, Uncle…”
“Yes?”
“There are so many stories. What is the truth?”
“The truth, as much as I am willing to admit,” the
king said, a twinkle in his eye, “is that Lady
Blysse—Firekeeper as she prefers to be called—is the
genuine sole survivor of an expedition into the lands west of the
Iron Mountains. She claims to have been raised by wolves. If you had
seen her table manners when she first arrived you would have no doubt
of the veracity of that statement.”
Clearing his throat, Allister pressed, “I heard that she is
followed everywhere by an evil familiar spirit in the shape of a
giant wolf.”
“That is partly true,” the king conceded. “She
is followed almost everywhere by an enormous grey wolf with blue
eyes. If it is not a familiar spirit—as I believe it is
not—then we must reconsider those old tales from the early days
of colonization which claimed that the animals in those days were
larger than any seen today.”
Allister knew he was skating on thin ice, but he must ask.
“Her name is ‘Blysse.’ That was the name of Prince
Barden’s daughter. Is she…”
“Blysse,” the king interrupted, “is what Earl
Kestrel named his feral foundling—one might say with the memory
of my granddaughter in mind. Duchess Kestrel agreed to adopt the girl
into the Kestrel House, therefore, Blysse can claim the title
‘Lady.’ As to whether or not she is my
granddaughter… that remains to be seen.”
“I see,” Allister grinned. “You are less blunt
than my dear mother, Uncle.”
“I have learned to be. I am a king.”
“True. Rumor said that the name on that piece of
paper—the one on which you named your heir—is that of
Lady Blysse. They say that you summoned her to you soon before your
departure and met with her in private.”
King Tedric bared his teeth in something too fierce to be a smile.
“The latter part of that is true. As to the former, I shall say
to you what I have said to everyone else: nothing.”
Allister leaned back in his chair, knowing that he had pushed as
far as even his uncle’s curious good humor would permit.
“Shall we then turn to other matters, Uncle Tedric? Sir
Tench hinted to me that Queen Gustin would very much like you to know
that the smugglers operating through these paired cities of Hope and
Good Crossing are not operating with her sanction. She wondered if
some sort of agreement might be reached to limit their activities to
the mutual benefit of our treasuries…”
King Tedric nodded and motioned for the clerk to start taking
notes. The rest of the morning passed in politely formal discussion
of matters of state. Only as Allister was rising to leave did King
Tedric push Zorana’s letter over to him.
“Don’t forget this, Nephew. And give my best wishes to
your family.”
Allister smiled. “And give mine to yours, Uncle, to all of
yours.”
Even those, he thought as he trooped down the stairs and across
the courtyard, who run about like wild things and howl at the
moon.
Despite the urgency of their business, Firekeeper didn’t awaken
Elise at dawn, having learned from Derian that Hazel Healer was not
likely to be able to meet with them until the morning was quite old.
Moreover, it would look as strange as a wolf in the treetops if they
were all to troop off to a perfume shop at that early hour with the
ball still some days off.
Knowing both more and less about magic than her companions
assumed, Firekeeper needed no warning to be cautious about arousing
Melina Shield’s suspicions. So she and Blind Seer hunted,
though the hunting was poor here on the edges of the town, and swam
in a millpond some miles from the camp. Then they trotted back at a
leisurely pace, arriving just in time for breakfast.
Such rituals completed, they gathered Elise and Ninette and walked
the track to town. The beaten dirt road was busy enough, but most of
the traffic was related to the routine of the military. Exchanging
greetings with those they knew, they made no secret of their
destination, hiding their purpose in plain sight, as Derian had
suggested.
Hazel was waiting for them and ushered them into her private
workroom. When they took seats beneath the hanging bunches of dried
herbs, Firekeeper must fight a powerful urge to sneeze and, from his
place beneath her chair, Blind Seer grumbled protest at this
olfactory assault.
As soon as they were settled, Hazel began, her expression somewhat
severe. “I understand from Derian’s note that you wish to
consult me about a matter of great delicacy and great secrecy. Let me
save you some trouble. I do not dispense abortifacients except in
extreme cases when the life of mother and child both are at
risk.”
Firekeeper was completely puzzled, but evidently what Hazel had
said meant something more to the others. Derian turned vivid scarlet.
Elise and Ninette both blushed and looked away. Only Doc remained
composed. He replied:
“Your assumption is quite reasonable, Mistress Healer, given
what you know, but let me assure you that we have come to consult you
about something quite different—although no less
grave.”
Hazel’s severe expression vanished. Now she looked both
worried and relieved.
“Very well. You have my promise of silence. Start telling me
what your problem is while I set a pot of tea brewing.”
In deference to the pain Elise would experience telling her own
story, Sir Jared began. Ninette volunteered specific details and
Firekeeper noticed with interest that she seemed to feel no pain
whatsoever. Hazel noticed this as well and, as soon as the narrative
was ended, she asked the maid:
“You don’t feel any pain, Ninette, even when you talk
about specific aspects of the curse?”
“No, Mistress Healer. My heart beats terribly fast and
sometimes I feel so afraid that I think I will fall down in a dead
faint, but I don’t feel any pain.”
“Then I must be right!” Derian said excitedly.
“The betrothal stone— that’s the means by which the
sorceress is affecting Elise!”
Ninette said, coloring slightly, “I guess I should also
admit that as soon as the Lady Melina started droning her curse, I
looked away— buried my face in my hands. I don’t know if
that might have helped.”
In response to the unasked question Elise volunteered, “I
never looked away. I was curious and angry—I wanted to know
what was going on. Another thing you should know, all through the
ritual Ninette never stopped muttering prayers to her Society patron
and to her ancestors. I was only aware of it afterwards, but when I
think back on the situation, I remember the low drone of her voice
behind me.”
Ninette nodded in confirmation. “That’s right, I did
pray. Mother always taught me to do that when I had night fears. I
guess I felt like a little girl again, faced with real
sorcery.”
Pouring tea, Hazel considered. Then she rose and, reaching up onto
a very high shelf, took down a book.
“Magical powers,” she said without preamble,
“did not vanish from the world simply because Queen Zorana
ruled that higher sorcery would not be practiced in Hawk Haven. They
still manifest today, mostly within families and then we only
recognize magical power when it takes the shape of what we call
talents.
“My family has a strong talent for working with
plants—the Green Thumb, as it is usually called. There are
other talents: a touch of precognition or clairvoyance, perfect sense
of direction, healing, a strong empathy for
animals…”
Firekeeper was surprised when Hazel paused and looked at her.
“I wouldn’t be at all surprised if Firekeeper has that
last gift and maybe others. It would explain her survival and her
ability to communicate with animals.”
Derian, Elise, and Ninette looked as surprised as Firekeeper felt
but Doc only nodded.
“I’d thought that might be the case, maybe because I
have the healing talent myself. It would be impossible to test, of
course. Firekeeper’s own story of her upbringing provides an
alternate explanation.”
From his place on the floor Blind Seer commented to Firekeeper,
“He speaks as if these talents are restricted to humankind,
but the Royal Beasts may have them as well. Ah, well. Doc is not a
bad man, only filled with human arrogance toward other
bloods.”
Hazel, of course unaware of this comment, continued, “The
House of the Eagle has never—to my knowledge—shown
evidence of being talented. Neither have the Shields. However, Melina
Shield’s other parent…”
“Her father is Stanbrook born,” Elise said.
“I don’t know much about what talents the various
Great Houses might have,” Hazel said apologetically.
“After Queen Zorana decreed a reign based on rejection of such
Old World things as elaborate titles and magical power, even those
families that had talents went out of their way to play them
down.”
Firekeeper thought this was the time to ask something that had
been troubling her.
“Everyone say that Queen Zorana want no titles, but still
there are king, queen, duke, duchess, all and more. These seem like
titles to me.”
“Good point,” Doc answered, “but you should
study how it was before Queen Zorana’s reform. She eliminated
some titles and the custom of one person bearing more than one title.
Before that, a single person might have five or six titles: King of
this, Prince of that, Duke of this, that, and the other thing, Baron
of this…”
“All one person?” Firekeeper asked, not at all certain
she wasn’t being teased.
“All one person,” Doc assured her. “It’s
sort of a variation of the way you call me Doc, while my associates
call me Sir Jared, and those who knew me when I was a boy and some of
my friends call me Jared. Different names for different
situations.”
“It is easier for wolves,” Firekeeper snorted.
“One name, one person.”
“Unless you are the One,” Blind Seer reminded her.
“Then you are the One Male or the One Female, but you
still have a personal name. Our Pack’s One Female was Shining
Coat. I have this on the best authority.”
Firekeeper kicked him.
“We’re getting off the subject,” Elise said
somewhat anxiously. “Mistress Hazel, you were saying that it is
possible that Melina Shield might have inherited a talent for sorcery
from House Kite.”
“Yes, but there are other options as well.” Hazel
opened the book in her lap and ran a finger down a closely written
page. For once, Firekeeper regretted not being able to read, for the
others clearly had some idea what Hazel was doing. At last she
halted.
“Here it is: trance induction.” Hazel looked up and
continued, “The good news and the bad news is that from what
you describe, Lady Melina may also be performing something that,
while rather like magic, is not magic at all. It is an art that
enables one person to control another person’s mind through
suggestion. As with many other practices, trance induction fell out
of favor after the retreat of the Old Countries, but some healers
advocate it to help with the control of pain or certain detrimental
impulses. That’s why it’s mentioned in this
book.”
“What does trance induction do?” Elise pressed.
“Why is this good news and bad news? It sounds all good to me.
If Lady Melina isn’t a sorceress, we may be able to defeat
her.”
“The reason it isn’t all good news,” Hazel
replied levelly, “is that if legend is correct, all magic that
isn’t locked into a specific physical item ceases to function
after the caster is dead. You remember what happened in the comic
song about Timin and the Flying Goat, don’t you?”
Everyone but Firekeeper nodded and she decided this wasn’t
the time to ask for details.
“Trance induction is used to create a suggestible state in
the mind of the subjects,” Hazel continued. “When the
subjects have been made suggestible, then they can be convinced to do
almost anything—especially if deep inside they wish to do this
thing anyhow. Since the person’s own mind is really in
charge—just under someone else’s direction—breaking
the power of the person who induced the trance doesn’t remove
the suggestion any more than a newly built table reverts to raw
lumber after the carpenter hangs up his tools.”
“Oh.” Elise’s small moan of dismay was echoed
around the room.
Hazel frowned. “That’s why it isn’t necessarily
a good thing if Lady Melina is using trance induction. If she is, she
has been working on the minds of her primary subjects—her
children and, I would guess, her husband and close servants—for
years. That hold will not be instantly broken. The only way to break
that hold would be to convince her subjects that she has somehow lost
her power over them.”
Derian drummed his fingers against his teacup, making a little
ringing sound. “I suppose we could tell them,” he said
dubiously. “Tell them about this trance induction, I
mean.”
“Lady Elise,” Hazel ordered suddenly,
“you’ve heard my explanation. Now, talk about how Lady
Melina laid the curses.”
Obediently, Elise began to speak, but the sudden twist of pain
that contorted her mouth was an eloquent answer to Hazel’s
test.
“But it must be sorcery,” she protested. “Lady
Melina only spoke with me briefly. How could she have induced a
trance in such a short time?”
Hazel looked at Elise with a trace of pity. “Because, Lady
Elise, you were quite willing to believe that Lady Melina had power
to command you and because she was telling you to do something you
already were inclined to do. What newly engaged young woman
doesn’t feel pride in her betrothal token and want to wear it
always? Lady Melina simply reinforced the impulse you already held in
your heart.”
Elise looked sad. “I wonder if she knew about Jet’s
unreliability and decided she’d better assure my loyalty
herself? If I’d been a stranger who knew nothing of her
reputation as a sorceress, then Lady Melina’s task would have
been more difficult.”
“I think so,” Hazel agreed. “Of course, it might
have been sorcery and the jet pendant the focus for her
charm.”
“Take off the necklace,” Firekeeper urged.
“Talking was easier then yesterday, I think.”
Elise lifted off the necklace with its jet wolfs head and set it
on the table next to her empty teacup. Firekeeper wondered if anyone
else saw the trembling of Elise’s hands.
“Lady Melina said…” Elise began tentatively,
“that if anyone spoke of what she had done…”
She stopped and frowned. “The pain is less but still
there.”
“So we don’t have a definite answer,” Derian
sighed. “It could be that a spell has been laid on Lady Elise
or it could be that she has been made to believe that a spell has
been laid on her. What do we do?”
Silence followed through which Firekeeper could hear the shoptalk
without, the comings and goings of people buying medicines, perfumes,
and spices. Seeing that no one else was going to offer a suggestion,
she said:
“Why not do something for both? Melina use the pendants on
her necklace to cast spell or to make believe she cast spell. If we
get necklace and destroy with great fuss,” she looked doubtful,
uncertain that she was expressing herself well, “then the way
of the control would be broken, too.”
Doc’s dour expression lightened. “You have a point
there, Firekeeper. That necklace is the key—at least to Lady
Melina’s control of her son and daughters.”
“But what Firekeeper suggests is very dangerous,”
Ninette piped up, trembling at the very thought. “Lady Melina
never lets that necklace out of her sight. Her maid said once she
wears it even in the bath and to bed.”
Firekeeper sprang to her feet. “So we take it!”
“That may be what we have to do,” Derian agreed. He
didn’t look happy. “I wish we could test the
effectiveness beforehand.”
“Could we,” Elise said, “have my necklace
duplicated? A substitute she has never touched wouldn’t have
the same power, would it?”
Firekeeper decided not to mention things she had heard about the
sympathetic resonances between types of stone. Maybe that was just a
wolf legend and didn’t apply to human magic. In any case, she
thought that Melina was more likely to be a trickster than a
sorceress. She hoped so—her own knowledge of human sorcery was
a bit shaky.
Hazel extended her hand. “Let me see the carving. If it
isn’t too complicated, I know someone who might be able to do
the work. Jet isn’t a terribly hard substance, thank the
Dog.”
That same almost invisible quiver in her hand, Elise picked up the
pendant and handed it to the healer.
“It’s intricate, yes,” Hazel murmured after a
few moments’ inspection by the sunlit window. “But my
friend may be able to do the job. He’s a local, but I’ve
known him for a long time and I think he’s
trustworthy.”
“Think?” Derian asked.
“Yes. He dabbled in some shady dealing, usually with
smugglers and thieves, but in his own business he has a very good
reputation.”
Elise decided. “I’ll do it. Thank the Lynx for this
ball! It makes all sorts of strange shopping trips
possible.”
“Derian,” Hazel said, “you know your way around
Hope. I’ll write you a note saying you represent someone who
needs private work done. You can run over there, get my
friends’s answer directly, and then retrieve Elise. In the
meantime, ladies,” she smiled, “can I interest you in any
of my wares?”
Apparently the jeweler —one Wain Cutter—was quite
accustomed to confidential commissions. He expressed only slight
surprise when Elise explained what she wanted done.
“Usually, I get asked to do something like this,” he
said, peering narrowly at the wolf’s-head carving, “after
the lady or gentleman has lost the piece. Then all I have to go on is
a description. This is much easier.”
Taking out a thin piece of charcoal, he started making a sketch on
a piece of smooth white board. Firekeeper moved behind him so she
could watch, fascinated as he drew the piece first in a front view
then in both right and left profiles.
“It’s a nice bit of carving,” Wain said as he
worked. “Very nice, but after seeing this young lady’s
companion I can think of a half-dozen things I’d do
differently.”
“Don’t,” Elise pleaded. “It must be as
much like the original as you can make it.”
“I understand,” Wain said peaceably. “Good luck
for you that I already have some nice jet in stock. Got it from a
trader who came down from the Iron Mountains. Prime stuff and I can
offer you a good price.”
Derian stepped up then and Firekeeper let her attention drift as
the intricacies of haggling began. She knew she should make an effort
to learn this skill, even realized that the thrill of getting a good
price for something must be similar to that of a successful hunt, but
she couldn’t escape the feeling that the strong should take,
not ask. Even her own acceptance that she was not one of the strong
hadn’t undermined her faith in this division of property.
Blind Seer, apparently asleep out in a patch of sunlight in the
gem carver’s yard, sensed her restlessness. “What are we going to do about this Melina
Shield?”
Firekeeper moved to sit next to him. “I wish I knew.
Things were simpler in the wolflands.”
“Only because you were a pup and others made your
decisions for you.”
“Hmm.” She considered and accepted the veracity of
this. “Still, I favor the simple solution. We should attack
this Melina, you and I, some dark night and take her necklace. Or,
even better, I could slip into her tent and take it while she
sleeps.”
“You could,” the wolf agreed. “Then
what?”
“Then we destroy it and the spell is
broken.” “And if it is not a spell, if it is this trance
induction?” “Still, Melina will no longer have the necklace. Her
frightened pups will see she no longer has power over
them.”
Blind Seer snorted. “They think the power is in her, not
in the necklace. That will do nothing and she will have another
necklace done. No, Little Two-legs, the answer is not so
simple.”
“Maybe not,” Firekeeper agreed with a sigh.
“I haven’t forgotten the promise I made to King
Tedric. Each night I prowl, but no one seems to hunt him. The attack
on Sapphire was the only attack we have seen and I know too little of
cities. Everyone seems to think that such human predators thrive
therein like beetles beneath a rotting carcass.” “True. But we will not cease in our
vigilance.” “Of course not. Besides, I like roaming about at
night.” She rested her head on the wolf’s flank and
lay there with her eyes closed, trying to come up with solutions.
From inside the shop she heard Elise say to Derian, her tone
distinctly wistful:
“I wish I was Firekeeper. Look at her there, not a worry in
the world.” Firekeeper didn’t disabuse her. Let Elise
take comfort in such fancies if she could. Soon, she suspected, they
all would have very little time for any consideration of such
niceties.
ON some levels, Prince Newell Shield was a very happy man. Through
discreet questioning, he had received the impression that his pet
Stonehold generals were leaping through their hoops of fear and
superstition just as he had planned. At least one courier had been
dispatched to their central command and carrier pigeons had been sent
in advance of the courier.
Without telling him anything of this, General Yuci had pleaded
with Newell to delay any permanent alliance between Bright Bay and
Hawk Haven. When, later, Yuci expressed his delight that the ball had
been scheduled for several days after King Tedric and Duke
Allister’s initial meeting and thanked Newell for using his
influence to assist their cause, Newell accepted his thanks, not
wanting to embarrass the good man, even though logistical
concerns—rather than any machinations on his part—had
been the reason for the delay.
He was less happy about events within King Tedric’s own
court. On the afternoon following his second meeting with Allister
Seagleam, King Tedric had summoned Zorana Archer to wait upon him in
his chambers within the Fortress of the Watchful Eye. The noblewoman
had gone to the meeting with a triumphant glow in her eye and a proud
arch to her neck—reminding her sometime lover rather of a
warhorse. She had returned with the air of a beaten cur.
Rumor had quickly spread—for King Tedric had not kept their
conference any great secret—that she had been severely berated
for usurping his prerogatives. The king had not specifically said
that Zorana had ruined the chances of one of her sons and daughters
being privileged with a marriage alliance, but bets around camp were
firmly against her.
In her disgrace, Zorana had focused her attention on grooming her
son and daughter for the ball. She was also avoiding Newell, though
whether out of anger or embarrassment, the prince wasn’t
certain. He figured he would smooth things out during the ball, when
his attentions would be interpreted by observers as mere
courtesy.
Newell was unwilling to trust to Stonehold alone for his success.
There was still too much harmony in the Hawk Haven encampment for his
taste. Lady Elise was treating Lady Blysse more like a sister than a
rival for the crown. Sapphire Shield was speaking to her cousin
again. Elise remained rather cool to Jet, but that was understandable
given that the young idiot had been foolish enough to shame her by
going to a public brothel.
The two other girls—Nydia and Opal—seemed to be
treating the unfolding events as if they were a drama which they were
observing rather than living. Maybe he could do something with that.
The men—other than Jet—were pretty much out of his reach.
Earl Kestrel, Baron Archer, and Purcel Trueheart all had been
dutifully attending to their commands within the army—eager, no
doubt, to show the king what responsible and mature kings or regents
they would make.
As if they were all carved pieces on a game board, Newell moved
this one here, considered pressing that one there… Over and
over, he arrived at a plan only to reject it. Finally, only two
pieces remained: Jet and Lady Blysse.
Could he contrive to make it appear that Jet and Blysse were
romantically entangled? He rejected that almost immediately. Blysse
barely spoke to Jet and Jet seemed to have lost his balls since the
night his sister was assaulted.
Maybe Newell should entice Jet out. Late…
The pieces of the puzzle began to lock into place. Out
late… Behaving shamefully… What would little
Blysse—that dangerous Firekeeper—do if she saw Jet with
his arms around a couple of light ladies? Wouldn’t it be
reasonable for her to fly into a fury at this added insult to her
beloved friend? Consider what her wolf had done to one of
Sapphire’s assailants. And, of course, there would be a
witness, unimpeachable as daylight: Prince Newell Shield himself.
The prince laughed, heartened once more. Now he simply needed to
find a way to put his plan into action. It would take honing,
especially developing a way to confirm that Lady Blysse would not
have a convenient alibi for her whereabouts at the time of the
attack. Still, the rewards were too great for him not to attempt to
carry this out.
Surely if Lady Blysse killed Jet that would end her friendship
with Elise. Sapphire, no matter how grateful for Blysse’s role
in saving her own life, would certainly be infuriated. She might even
challenge Blysse to a duel. That would be just lovely. They might
both end up dead or maimed. And as an added bonus, everyone would be
distracted from whatever Stonehold might be stirring up.
Newell smiled and resisted the impulse to rub his hands together
like a craftsman anticipating a day in his workshop. Step One: Talk
to Jet. Step Two: Find a way to get Lady Blysse out of the way. Step
Three: Sit back and enjoy the bloodshed.
Glancing across the encampment, he saw the king’s carriage
moving across the grounds, doubtless taking the king to another
secret or semi-secret conference. Newell shook his head sadly.
The king really should have kept him closer at hand. It was really
Tedric’s own fault that the prince was left with so much time
to pursue his own plans. He considered telling Tedric this at an
appropriate moment and smiled. That news might even trigger the
necessary fatal heart attack. Wouldn’t that be perfect!
XX
Despite complaints from both staff and participants
that they had not been given enough time to prepare, the ball was
held on the third day following King Tedric’s first meeting
with Duke Allister Seagleam of Bright Bay. Obviously, Derian mused as
he rubbed polish into dress shoes bought especially for the occasion,
there were advantages to being a king.
Such thoughts distracted him from the fact that he was distinctly
nervous about his role in this evening’s planned entertainment.
He would have been content to attend as he had now attended so many
grand functions—as Firekeeper’s nearly invisible
servant.
At first that invisibility had bothered him, but now he admitted
there were times that he revelled in it. Unnoticed, he heard and saw
things that no one bothered to hide from a servant.
He knew, for example, though he had spoken of it to no one, that
Lady Zorana was carrying on a flirtation, if not more, with Prince
Newell. He knew that Lady Sapphire’s maid took snuff—a
thing that would horrify her mistress. He knew that Baron Ivon Archer
had a fondness for strong brandy in his evening cup of tea—and
that sometimes he skipped the tea completely.
Derian was honest enough with himself to admit that he might not
be so happy with his state if there were not plenty of people above
the level of servant who treated him as an equal. His early hopeless
crush on Elise had faded and now he felt about her as he might a
sister. Doc had not put on airs with his return to society and
remained the same forthright and direct man he had been on the road
west. And Firekeeper remained impossibly herself.
Tonight, however, Derian must leave off his servant’s
anonymity and step onto the floor as a member of the party.
Someone—he suspected Firekeeper—had told Earl Kestrel
that Derian was an excellent dancer. Knowing that many of the
officers invited to attend would not wish to dance with any but those
whose political loyalties they were certain of, the earl had
commanded Derian to join the party, to fill in where needed so that
no lady need stand out more than one dance.
“Lucky me,” Derian muttered; then he felt instantly
ashamed.
Earl Kestrel had been generous, standing the bill for an entire
costume beginning with a new tricorn hat and including a white
ruffled shirt, a tailored waistcoat cut from brown and green brocade,
dark green knee-breeches, raw silk stockings, and the very same
wide-buckled shoes that Derian had just finished rubbing to the satin
polish that his father had insisted on for the best of their horse
leather.
Once dressed, Derian joined Earl Kestrel. Out of his cavalry
commander’s uniform for the first time since they had left
Eagle’s Nest, the earl was dressed in court attire. His dark
blue knee-breeches might have been bought in town, but the waistcoat
striped in Kestrel blue and red with a hovering hawk embroidered on
the right breast must be from his own wardrobe. Derian did not put it
past Valet to have found room to pack the waistcoat away among more
practical attire—just in case.
When Derian arrived, Valet was setting Earl Kestrel’s
tricorn on his head, just as carefully as if he were finishing a work
of art.
“You will do, my lord,” Valet said, surveying the
final effect with muted satisfaction. “I suppose one cannot
expect too much when forced to attire in a tent.”
Earl Kestrel gave one of his rare smiles. “I am certain I
look fine.” Seeing Derian he added, “Run your eye over
that tall redhead, though to my way of seeing, he looks quite a bit
finer than the sunburned young man who has been with me these past
weeks.”
“Good evening, Earl Kestrel,” Derian said,
flabbergasted at this unaccustomed praise. Valet winked at him and
adjusted the line of Derian’s waistcoat.
“You’ll do, Derian Carter.”
Earl Kestrel nodded. “Thank you, Valet. Derian, shall we go?
Lady Blysse is with Lady Archer. I told the carriage to meet us at
her pavilion.”
As they strolled to where the rest of the nobility was encamped,
the soldiers stopped cooking their dinners or playing at dice to
comment on their attire. Taking his lead from the earl, Derian did
his best to respond appropriately or not at all. Still, he was
certain that by the time they reached Elise’s pavilion his ears
must have been as red as his hair.
Baron Archer was waiting outside the tent for them, smoking his
pipe.
“Good evening, Earl Kestrel. Good evening, Mister
Carter.”
They answered and then the earl added, “Blasted hot,
isn’t it? I could have danced for joy when I heard that jackets
were unnecessary for this event. I don’t think my valet was
pleased, but then he’s a stickler for form. Still, I held my
ground.”
Baron Archer chuckled and tamped out his pipe. “The carriage
is ready and the young women should be with us momentarily. Ah! Here
they are even now.”
Derian managed to keep his mouth from gaping open by sheer force
of will, having been alerted by faint giggles from within that
something must be up.
First to emerge was Elise, resplendent in a gown of silvery satin
with side panels of glowing green. Her golden hair was piled high on
her head and adorned with a few tasteful white rosebuds. The jet
wolf’s head was nestled in the hollow of her throat, the only
spot of darkness in a confection of light. Although he looked
carefully, Derian could not tell if the jewel was the original or the
promised replacement.
The woman who followed her must be Firekeeper, but she was like no
Firekeeper that Derian had ever seen. The gown in which she was
attired was pale blue with rose piping about the throat. To conceal
the scars that marked her every limb, the gown’s sleeves were
long, but constructed of a loose diaphanous gauze that revealed the
grace of Fire-keeper’s arms while hiding their flaws. Above the
modest neckline of her gown she wore a strand of polished lapis
beads—an early gift from Earl Kestrel. Her dark brown hair was
now long enough to be worn upswept but a few tendrils had been left
to curl about her temples.
Derian was not the only one stunned to silence. Earl Kestrel stood
gaping for a moment before offering his arm.
“Lady Blysse, you look lovely,” he said.
Firekeeper smiled and Derian could almost swear that she blushed.
Baron Archer gave an approving nod, knocked the last ash from his
pipe, and offered his arm to his daughter.
“Earl Kestrel and I,” he said, “are fortunate to
have two such lovely ladies to escort. Come along. We don’t
want to be late.”
Trailing the others, Derian glanced back over his shoulder.
Standing in the door of the pavilion, Ninette waved cheerfully,
mouthing:
“Have fun!”
Standing beside her, his tail just a little low and his ears
cocked at a forlorn angle, Blind Seer watched them leave. Seeing
Derian’s gaze on him, he managed a quick wag before his brush
drooped again. Poor guy, Derian thought. More and more
Firekeeper’s going places where he can’t follow. I
don’t blame him for not liking that at all.
Above him he heard a shrill whistle and could swear that Elation,
soaring in the darkening sky above, was agreeing with him. They were
not late, but neither were they the first to arrive. In order to
round out the festivities and keep the ball from being too obviously
what it was—a chance for King Tedric to review his great nieces
and nephews in company with each other—a number of military
officers and important citizens from the two towns had been invited
as well. Especially for the townsfolk, this was the event of a
lifetime, something they would be telling their children and
grandchildren about two generations hence. The night I was
invited to King Tedric’s ball I saw… No wonder they
didn’t want to miss a single moment.
Derian rather wished that he could miss a moment or two. Whispered
comments, half-heard, made him acutely aware that he was masquerading
as a nobleman. What was he but a carter’s son?
Background music was playing softly as their party moved through
the reception line, greeting King Tedric and Duke Allister as
representatives of their respective monarchies, and Mayors Terulle
and Shoppe of Hope and Good Crossing as heads of the twinned towns.
When the orchestra struck up the overture to a line dance popular
since before the days of Queen Zorana, Derian began to fade back,
alert for a woman in need of a partner.
A hand lightly plucked his sleeve. He turned and saw Lady Elise, a
bright flush lighting her cheeks.
“Will you dance this one with me?” she asked.
“Jet is doing everything he can to pretend he hasn’t
located me just yet in the crowd and I don’t want to end up
slighted.”
Derian swept a deep bow. “I would be honored, my lady.
Forgive me for bluntness, but your betrothed is an ass.”
“I should call you out on that,” she said with a light
laugh that didn’t fool him at all, “but my father
cautioned me that this could be an opportunity to make a good
impression.”
“Indeed,” he replied in what he hoped were courtly
accents.
As they took a place at the bottom of a set, Derian noticed that
Jet had nearly pounced on one of Allister Seagleam’s young
daughters: Anemone, he thought, but it might well be Minnow.
Derian quickly made a joke, hoping that Elise wouldn’t
notice Jet’s tactlessness. The fellow to his right, a nervous
townsman, picked up on the quip and soon they were all laughing. When
counting off of sets of four began from the top of the line, they
were cheered to find themselves in the same set.
The dance began rather roughly, for although the Star Waltz had
been around for a long time, it had clearly evolved differently in
the two monarchies. The variety that the lead was familiar with was
the Bright Bay version. Fortunately, the residents of Hope and Good
Crossing seemed to know both forms and helped Derian and Elise
along.
Derian found himself easily swept into the next dance by the
simple expedient of trading partners with his new townsman friend.
That lucky man nearly stepped on his own feet when he learned that he
was dancing with the future Baroness Archer. Derian’s partner
was slightly disappointed when she learned Derian was no one so
famous, but he tried to make up for this by being a sprightly and
talented dancer.
By the third dance, Derian had forgotten that he ever felt nervous
or out of place. From long habit, he kept an eye on Firekeeper. Not
surprisingly, given her presumed favor with the king, she was not
short of partners. Elise was also doing well. Jet came through for
the third dance and the rules of etiquette that dictated that even an
engaged couple shouldn’t dance more than two dances together
gave them an excuse to stay apart without seeming to slight each
other.
Relaxed now, Derian was more than happy to fulfill Earl
Kestrel’s commission that no woman be left without a partner.
When the music began again after an intermission, he noticed a
stately though somewhat older woman standing alone. He strode over
and had already begun to ask her to dance before he realized that his
prospective partner was Lady Melina Shield, the reputed
sorceress.
With her silver-streaked, blond hair swept up in an intricate knot
interlaced with a strand of multicolored polished gemstone beads, and
the glittering diamond-cut gems of her omnipresent necklace displayed
upon the white skin of her throat, Melina Shield looked quite
well—past her first prime, certainly, but possessed of a calm
and control that made the prettier younger women look somehow gauche
and coltish.
Having begun, Derian could not back away. He continued after a
pause he hoped was interpretable as awe at realizing who he had
chanced upon:
“… and so I was hoping that your ladyship would deign
dance this piece with me.”
Melina smiled and he felt the full force of her considerable
personality.
“I would be happy to so honor you, young man. Let us hurry.
The dance is about to begin.”
When Derian would have politely joined at the bottom of the set,
Melina led the way toward the nearest set of four.
“Excuse me,” she said, breaking in so that they became
the second couple and everyone below must fumble to reorient
themselves with new partners. Derian didn’t doubt that a few
couples who had positioned themselves advantageously so that they
might flirt during the interweaving of the figures were rather put
out. If Melina Shield cared, she did not say.
Fortunately for Derian’s piece of mind, this dance was one
of those where the couples ended up dancing with their opposite
number in a set as often as with their own partner. Even so, as
progress through the intricate steps brought him once again back into
contact with Lady Melina, it was all he could do to not stare at her
necklace. Could one of those stones really be capable of inflicting
impotence on a man? Could another inflict agony on a brave young
woman?
He kept the thoughts as far from his mind as possible, terrified
that Lady Melina might be able to read them. Glancing down the long
line he caught a glimpse of Sapphire Shield—dressed in a
sweeping gown of brilliant blue overlaid with a light gauze in the
golden-yellow of House Gyrfalcon. Without knowing everything Elise
had confided, he might think it merely his imagination that Sapphire
favored her wounded side as her partner wound her under his arm or
walked her through a stately march.
Lady Melina apparently thought Derian’s silence respect for
her and concentration on the particularly intricate forms demanded
for this piece. Derian was relieved and rather glad that his sister,
Damita, wasn’t there to brag how he had mastered this one
several years before and won the Hummingbird Society-sponsored
contest as a result.
When he escorted Lady Melina off the floor, Derian discovered he
was soaked with sweat. After fetching Lady Melina a cup of punch, he
was glad that her bearing made quite clear that he need not remain.
He chatted with Doc for a few minutes, then with his acquaintances
from the first set. The orchestra wanning up reminded him that the
dancing was to begin again. He was dropping back to see who might be
left out when he noticed King Tedric beckoning to him.
At first Derian was certain that the king was summoning someone
beyond him, then that the king—recognizing him as essentially
servant— needed an errand run. Hurrying toward the low dais
from which King Tedric was watching the dancing, Derian bent knee
almost before he was there.
“Rise, Derian Carter,” came the king’s somewhat
high old voice, giving Derian his first shock. Despite having lived
among the court for a moon-span and more now, he had never thought
that King Tedric recalled his name.
“Come and sit beside me and talk for a while. It is
difficult being old and able to dance only a few sets. I had quite as
fine a leg as you when I was your age.”
Caught in this second shock, Derian recovered himself before he
could bolt in panic. Him sit with the king and speak with him? Only
the recognition that he would be guilty of a great insult to the
monarch kept him in place.
On legs that suddenly felt as if they had been carved from wood,
Derian mounted the few steps and sat on the chair toward which the
king gestured. He felt as if every eye in the room must be on him,
but when he stole a surreptitious glance toward the floor he saw that
nearly everyone was caught up in the unfolding dance.
Nearly everyone. Lady Melina cast a speculative glance his way and
from the slight grin on Earl Kestrel’s face his patron
hadn’t missed the situation either.
“So, young Carter, are you enjoying yourself?”
“Yes, sir… I mean, Your Majesty.”
“Sir is just fine. I was knighted once, long ago, for deeds
I performed. I was terribly thrilled. That was long before I knew
I’d be king one day. Long before poor Marras lost her will to
live.”
“I know the story of how you won your knighthood,”
Derian said, momentarily less afraid. “It was in
battle.”
“Yes, in battle, against these very people with whom we are
now dancing. Tell me, Derian Carter. Should I put one of our
enemies—or former enemies—in the position to rule our
people?”
This time all Derian could do was gape. King Tedric waited a
moment, then continued:
“You see, I was sitting here, watching the dancing and
thinking on that question. I was wondering what my people would want
me to do. Then I saw you down there, dancing away, and I thought to
myself: ‘Young Derian has been living in the castle for a good
time now. He has made friends with some of my potential heirs and has
met others. Most importantly, he is one of my people, scion and heir
of a hardworking trade family. I shall ask his opinion.’ So
here you are. Answer me truthfully. I won’t harm
you.”
With effort, Derian made his lips obey his racing brain. He
remembered his conversations with his parents, the gossip he had
heard in the markets and in the square when King Tedric announced his
intention of making this journey. Carefully, he framed his reply:
“Well, sir, they do—I mean lots of the people back in
Eagle’s Nest— they think making Duke AUister your heir is
just the thing for you to do. They call him the Pledge Child and have
great hopes for his ascension to the throne bringing peace and
goodwill between our lands.”
King Tedric nodded, coughed slightly, accepted the cup of wine
handed to him by his omnipresent guard, and said, “Yes, Pledge
Child, I heard that term back when Allister was first born. I took
reports that it was still in common use with a grain of salt. So my
people dream yet of my father’s great vision coming true. I
would hate to disappoint them.”
Accepting a goblet for himself without even realizing he was doing
so, Derian asked:
“Can you avoid disappointing everyone, sir? There are so
many conflicting claims.”
“Claims? I wouldn’t call them claims. I would call
them ambitions— for themselves or for their children. You still
haven’t answered my question, Derian Carter. Should I make
Allister Seagleam my heir?”
“I don’t know, sir.” Derian met those shrewd old
eyes for the first time. “I don’t know him.”
“Yes. That is the trouble. None of us really know him. He
seems an affable enough fellow here and now. Is it an act?”
“They say,” Derian offered, “you can judge a man
by his children or his dog.”
“True. Pity his dog isn’t here. His children are old
enough to have learned to act as they think they should rather than
how they are. Let’s talk for a moment about those you do know.
How about your charge? How about Firekeeper? Should I make her my
heir?”
Derian swallowed hard. He knew what Earl Kestrel would want him to
say. Knew, too, what he was going to say.
“I don’t think so, sir. Not unless you can be sure
you’ll be around to educate her. She’s as honest as the
day is long and brave as a wolf, loyal, too, but those things
aren’t necessarily the qualities a monarch needs.”
King Tedric chuckled dryly. “Interesting. She didn’t
think she was ready to be monarch either. I’m certain that Earl
Kestrel would think differently.”
“He has hopes for her, sir. You can’t blame him for
that.”
“I don’t. I respect him for his ambition while
condemning him for it at the same time. I’m certain that he
honestly hoped to find Barden alive when he went out into the western
lands. Barden would have been able to make a case for himself or for
Blysse. Firekeeper with her odd habits and weird upbringing is a much
less easy piece to situate advantageously on the board.”
The king’s use of Firekeeper and Blysse as separate names
for seemingly separate individuals had not escaped Derian. Knowing
that he was out of line, but unable to resist, Derian asked:
“Sir, do you think that Firekeeper is your
granddaughter?”
A smile that might be called mischievous curved the old
man’s lips.
“If I told you what I think would you swear to say nothing
of this matter—not even to Firekeeper herself? I have my
reasons at this time for withholding public admission one way or
another.”
Derian’s heart, which had slowed its panicked thumping, now
felt as if it was going to burst out of his chest with excitement and
fear.
“You have my word of honor, sir, sworn on my society patron,
the Horse.”
“Very good, then. I accept your word.” The king bent
his head so that his lips nearly touched Derian’s ear.
“Firekeeper is not my granddaughter, Blysse, but I know who she
is.”
Disappointment, relief, and curiosity warred for a moment, then
Derian asked:
“Who?”
The king leaned back slightly. “Firekeeper is the daughter
of two members of my son’s expedition. Her mother was the
daughter of a lady you have befriended: Holly Gardener. She was named
Serena, after a maternal aunt who died young. Firekeeper’s
father was Donal Hunter, a steady man with a gift for the bow and a
love of the wilds. They said of him that he understood animals so
well it was as if he could speak to them. Firekeeper’s birth
name was Tamara, after her deceased paternal grandmother.”
Hearing this, the world spun behind Derian’s eyes then
righted itself. Once he had heard this, the truth seemed obvious. It
would explain so much about Firekeeper—he couldn’t think
of her as Tamara. Another question burst forth before he could school
his tongue.
“Sir, how did you know?”
“When I was a boy,” King Tedric replied, unfazed by
Derian’s effrontery, “Holly Gardener was one of my
playmates. I knew her and her sisters well. Firekeeper has the look
of Holly’s youngest sister Pansy at that same age, though she
takes after her father’s mother as well. I saw the resemblance
nearly at once and confirmed that Serena had been among
Barden’s recruits. Tamara—like Blysse—is listed
among the records.”
Catching Derian’s surprised stare the old king chuckled.
“We were not so grand then. The Great Houses were still
learning to feel their importance. My own mother, Rose, was not from
a Great House. Holly’s family was related to my
mother’s—cousins, I think—and came into castle
service because they possessed the Green Thumb quite reliably. Their
relation to Queen Rose is one reason why they hold their place in
perpetuity, for as long as the Thumb continues to manifest in their
line. Thus far it has not failed them. Nor would I banish them if it
did. Their knowledge and wisdom means far more than a chance
talent.”
“I wonder,” Derian said, thinking aloud, “if
Holly knows… knows, I mean, who Firekeeper is?”
King Tedric nodded. “I am certain that she suspects, but,
like me, she knows that Firekeeper is best preserved by doubt about
her origins. The Gardeners have little they could give Firekeeper
even if they did claim her. Best then that Firekeeper keep to her
recent alliances. Earl Kestrel is ambitious, but he would never deny
basic support to one he has taken as his ward.”
Thinking of a father who disowned his youngest son for
disobedience, Derian’s expression grew unhappily
thoughtful.
“What are you thinking about, Derian Carter,” the king
asked sharply. “Have I misjudged Norvin Norwood?”
“No, Your Majesty,” Derian fumbled, then forged ahead.
“I was wondering how you could… I mean why you…
why you disowned Prince Barden.”
The king looked angry for a moment, then sad. “I was hasty,
infuriated that he would act so without my express permission, angry,
too, that he did not trust that I had a place planned for him in the
governing of Hawk Haven. I was younger then and maybe I believed
myself immortal. It has been so long—ten years or more are
still ten years, even to a man of my age—that I am a stranger
to that sour, proud man. I have lost both son and daughter. That
changed me. Now, I would give anything to not have driven Barden
away, but it is too late and my heir must come from among
those.”
He made a sweeping gesture at the dancers twisting through the
latest intricate form.
“What do you think of Lady Elise? Would she make a good
queen?”
“Please, Sire,” Derian begged. “I’m just a
carter’s son. I’m not fit to advise kings.”
“That you would say that at all makes you fit. And you are
not just a carter’s son. Earl Kestrel does not hire dead
weight. If he has kept you on it is because he sees good in
you—good beyond your ability to coach Firekeeper. Now, will you
disobey me? I want your opinion!”
Derian chewed his lower lip before speaking. Despite the wine, he
felt dreadfully sober, so sober that he knew he was out of his
depth.
“I know Elise mostly as a friend…” he
began.
“Good. Friends see sides of each other that elderly and
terrifying great-uncles do not. Speak up, Derian! Or are you in love
with her and afraid to admit it?”
“No.” Derian straightened. “I’m not. I was
taken with her at first— she’s kind and sweet when you
get to know her and she was the first noble lady I was close to, but
now that I know her better I realize we’re not suited.
She’s much better for me as a friend.”
“So, you didn’t cease to love her because you found
fault in her?”
“No, sir, not at all! What I loved was the idea of a titled
lady with golden hair. When I got to know Elise I found she was much
more than that—just a person.”
King Tedric nodded. “And young men don’t fall in love
with people. I believe I understand. Tell me what you think of her as
a potential queen.”
It hadn’t escaped Derian that the king was skipping his
nieces and nephews and moving directly to their offspring. Was this
because he had rejected the others or because he was asking Derian
about those Derian was most likely to know well?
“Elise,” Derian began slowly, “is a good person.
She knows her way around the castle and its people
already.”
“Castle Flower,” the king murmured.
Rightly guessing that this cryptic comment didn’t need a
reply, Derian continued:
“That’s already an advantage over Firekeeper. A few
days ago, I’d have said that Elise’s greatest weakness
was a lack of courage, but now…”
He trailed off, realizing he shouldn’t say exactly how he
had learned of Elise’s deeper reserves.
“Now I know differently. She may be a bit squeamish, but
she’s not lacking courage.”
King Tedric didn’t press Derian to clarify, but after a
thoughtful pause during which he studied the young woman below as she
whirled through the steps of a particularly fast dance, her face
alight with laughter, he said:
“So, you think Elise should be queen.”
Derian blurted, “I don’t think she wants to be queen,
Sire. I think she might have once, but now I’m not so
certain.”
“And you don’t think that someone who doesn’t
want to be monarch should be forced to do so.”
Derian fumbled to explain, “Princess Caryl didn’t want
to go to Bright Bay and marry Prince Tavis and so that didn’t
work out too well. I was just thinking that this might be a bit the
same.”
“Hmm. And how about Jet Shield? Do you think he should be
king?”
“Him?” Derian couldn’t keep the disgust out of
his voice, no matter how he tried to school it. “He’s too
ambitious. He wants it too much.”
“So I should neither choose someone who doesn’t want
the task nor someone who does. That is quite a conundrum, Mister
Carter. How shall I resolve it?”
Derian could feel himself turning bright red, but he pressed on,
determined that if he was going to have to go through this peculiar
interrogation he wouldn’t flub it completely.
“Your Majesty, what I’m trying to say is that the best
candidate would be someone who wants to rule but for the good of Hawk
Haven, not solely for his or her own good. Someone, like Elise, who
doesn’t want to rule is going to do a bad job because either
she isn’t going to pay attention to the small details or
she’s going to resent them.”
King Tedric snorted. “Even I—and I wanted to be
king—even I grow tired of those small details.”
Derian persisted. “Someone who wants to rule because
he’ll have titles and honors…”
“And power, don’t forget power.”
“And power. That type of person is equally a bad choice
because he’s going to make decisions based on how they’ll
affect his own importance. He’s not going to care about how
they affect the people who live under his rule. Eventually,
they’ll realize this. Common folk aren’t as innocent as
some of your noble folk believe.”
“Yes. I know. My mother never let me forget that. I wish I
had thought to drill that into my nieces and nephews, but then I
never thought that I would be forced to pick one of them or their
offspring to follow me. So, is Jet’s only flaw his
ambition?”
Shrugging, feeling himself already in so far that he could not get
in much farther, Derian said:
“I think if he were made king no matter whose head wore the
crown his mother would wield too great an influence.”
“I saw you dancing with Melina earlier. So you don’t
like her?”
Derian shook his head. “I don’t know her well enough
to say that, sir. I do know that her children respect her with a
respect that is akin to fear.”
“So you’re offering me a criticism that would apply to
any of Lord Rolfston’s children—and perhaps to Rolfston
himself. You narrow my choices dramatically with that small
statement.”
Stubbornly Derian said, “One of the first to befriend
Firekeeper was little Citrine. She made no secret that her mother
commands more than a mother’s respect. I don’t know the
others well, but I think the same must apply.”
“Interesting thought, young Carter, and one not altogether
alien to my observations.”
King Tedric added nothing more and Derian waited quietly. The
orchestra and dancers were taking another intermission. As they
milled about sipping their chilled wine or punch, their
gazes—surreptitious or not—often rested on the
king’s dais.
All at once, Derian’s self-consciousness came back to him.
When he glanced at the king, however, Tedric seemed unaware of the
scrutiny from below. Perhaps a king must learn to live with such
continual observation. If so, Derian was suddenly glad that he had
betrayed Firekeeper’s weakness to the monarch. His wild
wolf-woman could never live so.
“Well, Derian Carter,” King Tedric said at last.
“I had a mind to question you further. It is refreshing to be
counseled by one who speaks only of individual merits and never of
who is related to whom except as that is related to those
merits.”
Derian colored. “Thank you, Sire.”
“Don’t think for a moment that those relationships
don’t matter. They do. However, it is easy to forget that this
one’s daughter or that one’s son is also a person
possessed of personal weaknesses and strengths. Don’t you
forget that when you are older.”
“No, Sire, I won’t.”
King Tedric stretched slightly and smiled benignly at the young
man. “Now, you have given me good counsel. What do you wish for
your reward? I offer you anything within reason.”
“Nothing, Sire. I am honored, really.”
“Tosh, of course you are, but still I wish to give you a
gift.”
An idea slipped into Derian’s mind, as wild and insane as
any he had ever had. Even as he tried to dismiss it, he knew he would
ask and accept the consequences.
“Then, sir, I ask for the necklace that Lady Melina Shield
is wearing this very moment, the one she always wears.”
The expression in King Tedric’s pale eyes was shrewd, not
startled, and Derian wondered how much the old man knew, how much he
merely suspected. All the king said, however, was:
“I fear I cannot give you something that does not belong to
me. If you so covet the necklace, why not have one made? Despite the
pride with which Lady Melina wears it, it is not so impossibly
unique.”
Derian drew in a deep breath. It had been too much to hope that he
and his friends’ problem would be so easily solved, but even as
he nodded his acceptance of what the king had said Derian wondered if
Tedric had just shown him a way out of at least part of their
problem.
Tedric continued, “Since you cannot think of something
yourself, let me choose. Dirkin, come here.”
Sir Dirkin Eastbranch, who had been standing such silent witness
to all their conversation that Derian had never noticed his presence,
stepped forth.
“Your Majesty?”
“Give me one of the counselor rings. The men’s
ones.”
Sir Dirkin reached into a leather pouch at his belt and drew forth
a gold ring. The band bore the royal eagle cast directly into the
metal. Set in the center was a cabochon-cut ruby. King Tedric’s
personal emblem, an eight-pointed star, was incised into the stone
and inlaid with a thin bead of gold.
“Here you are, Derian Carter,” said King Tedric,
fitting the ring onto Derian’s right index finger. “You
are now among those who may request my ear at any hour of day or
night. I know that you will not abuse the privilege. Understand that
this is a personal privilege. When I pass on to my ancestors, you may
keep the ring, but the privilege will vanish unless the new monarch
chooses to renew it. In return for this honor, I inflict on you the
added burden of making yourself available to me when I feel desire of
your counsel.”
For the second time in a very short while, Derian discovered that
he could not speak. King Tedric chuckled.
“A poor gift, you may think, giving you added duties under
the guise of a reward.”
Derian found his tongue. “No, Sire. Really. I am so honored.
I don’t…”
“Don’t worry too much,” King Tedric said and
placed a wrinkled hand on his shoulder. “Have the ring sized as
soon as possible. You wouldn’t want it to slip off.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.”
“And say nothing of our conference to anyone—even to
Earl Kestrel or Firekeeper. If asked, simply say that I was bored and
wanted a bit of common conversation.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.”
“Now, Derian Carter, give me your arm and help me to the
dance floor. The orchestra is warming up. I believe I will claim Lady
Blysse for this dance. It will keep my contentious nieces and nephews
guessing. Unfortunately, it will also raise poor Norvin’s hopes
unduly, but he is strong enough to survive the eventual
disappointment.”
As Derian helped King Tedric down the few steps and signaled for
Firekeeper to join them, he couldn’t help thinking that the old
man was rather calculating, even a bit wicked. It was an unsettling
thought that maybe even a good king—or perhaps
especially a good king—might need to be so.
XXI
Elise awakened the morning after the ball aware that
something momentous had occurred, but a moment passed before she
remembered what had happened. Then she remembered: Derian and the
counselor ring, King Tedric dancing the last dance of the evening
with Firekeeper. The terrible fury in her father’s eyes. How
he’d refused to ride back to the encampment in the same
carriage as Earl Kestrel and “those upstarts” even though
it meant crushing into a carriage with Aunt Zorana, Nydia, and
Purcel.
Purcel had finally gotten out, saying he would walk back. He never
showed up back at the nobles’ enclave. Later they learned he
had walked all the way back to his unit in his dress clothes rather
than deal with his mother and uncle’s fury.
Elise thought that Purcel had been wise. The angry counsel,
practically of war, between her father and Aunt Zorana had lasted
long into the night. They’d even invited Lady Melina and Lord
Rolfston to join them. When Elise had dared speak up for Firekeeper,
saying they couldn’t very well blame her for accepting the
king’s invitation to dance, her father had sworn at her and
sent her to her tent.
Given how reserved Baron Archer usually was and how affable
he’d been toward her since her engagement to Jet, Elise was
truly hurt. Still, she’d kept her tears to herself until she
had reached the safety of her curtained-off bedchamber. Then she had
let them flow. Her father’s man might report her collapse to
Baron Archer, but at least no one could accuse her of acting like a
child in public.
Secretly, Elise had been rather glad to be sent away. She
didn’t want to hear the familiar bickering again. Moreover,
knowing what she now did about Lady Melina, she had no desire to
spend time in her company. Elise’s only fear—a fear that
returned to her with full wakefulness—was that her father would
forbid her to see Firekeeper and Derian.
With her morning pot of tea, Ninette brought Elise word that Baron
Archer had requested her company as soon as she was dressed.
“Did he say ‘request’?” Elise asked.
“Or are you being polite?”
“He said ‘request,’ ” Ninette assured her.
“And he seems milder this morning. Perhaps he’s sorry for
shouting at you that way.”
“Perhaps,” Elise replied, but she didn’t feel
very hopeful. Baron Archer had always been vaguely disappointed that
his heir was female— and a softhearted female as well. When
Aurella contracted an illness similar to that which had rendered
Queen Elexa sterile, he had resigned himself to not having sons,
acting instead as a second father to Purcel, who was as similar to
his bookish father as Elise was like Ivon.
Ivon Archer was waiting stern and formal in his military uniform
when Elise stepped out of the pavilion.
“Good morning, Elise.”
She dropped a curtsy. “Good morning, Father.”
He frowned at her excessive formality, but he couldn’t
precisely chide her for being too polite. Instead he grunted:
“Come, walk with me. I wish to speak with you about last
night.”
Elise obeyed with deceptive tameness. Still, her heart skipped a
beat when she realized that her father was walking toward that same
cluster of stones where she had witnessed Melina Shield ensorcelling
Sapphire and Jet. What would she do if Melina was there? Then she
calmed herself. With almost all the resident nobles living in canvas
tents, those rocks were the obvious place for a private
conference.
Indeed, when they reached the rocks, the area appeared to be
empty.
Elise, however, spared a moment to peek into the hidden space from
which she had unintentionally spied on Lady Melina, garnering a
strange look from her father in the process. The space appeared to be
empty and Baron Archer did not comment on her actions. His mind was
busy with other matters.
“Elise,” he said, “you disappointed me last
night when you spoke up for that foundling of Norvin Norwood’s.
I know you have befriended her—though I am at a loss to
understand why—but that is no reason to side with her against
your own kin.”
With effort, Elise kept her silence. Silence, her mother had once
told her, was the best weapon when your opponent had all the
strength. She wondered now if Lady Aurella had meant specifically her
husband.
Baron Archer continued, “Yet, you will have an opportunity
to redeem yourself.” Here it comes, Elise thought. Stop seeing that girl
and her low-bred companions and…
She was so busy with her own thoughts that she almost missed what
her father was saying.
“Since Earl Kestrel’s party trusts you, you will have
the opportunity to continue to call on them. I fear that my evident
anger last night makes such casual social contact on my part
suspect.”
He frowned, but that was as far as he was going to come to
admitting that his behavior had been rude and ungentlemanly toward
either daughter or peer.
“Therefore, I order you to continue your visits. Attempt to
learn everything you can about their plans. Find out if the king has
made any promises. Whether King Tedric intends to make Lady Blysse
his bride, the bride of one of Seagleam’s brats, or ruler in
her own right will affect my own actions.”
Momentarily his expression turned pleading. “Remember,
Elise. I am worried about this not only for myself, but for you as
well. I would like to see you made queen with Jet as your consort. No
foundling should be able to take what is ours by blood
right.”
Elise, however, refused to be mollified. Ironically, though her
father’s commands were the opposite of what she had dreaded
moments before, she was coolly enraged.
“So, a few hours ago I was a traitor to you,” she
said, her tones as measured as the steps of last night’s
waltzes. “Today you wish me to spy on my friends. I see you
still see me as a traitor, but betrayal is fine as long as it is to
your advantage.”
Baron Archer gaped at her. “Elise, you misunderstand…
I spoke in anger last night.”
Elise ducked within a bubble of almost preternatural calm,
speaking with her gaze fastened on the towering stone walls of the
distant fortress.
“You did,” she agreed, “but your very words to
me a few moments ago show how poorly you regard me. Very well. If you
feel that way, you have your choice. Permit me to redeem myself in my
own fashion or disown me as your heir.”
Baron Archer began to speak, but she breezed on as if she
hadn’t heard him.
“Just remember before you lose your temper and make such a
drastic move that I am your sole child. Without me, that crown you
crave so deeply is lost to you. Remember, too, that King Tedric came
to regret similar rashness.”
Despite the cruel thrust of her words, Elise delivered them in a
tone so detached that it was almost clinical. She might be Hazel
Healer diagnosing what herb poultice would best treat a rash.
“Well, Father,” she said when Ivon Archer did not
reply, “what is your wish?”
When she turned her gaze to him at last, she found that he was
studying her, neither angry nor pleased, but with a care that she
never recalled seeing directed to her.
“I think,” Ivon Archer said, “that disowning you
would be foolish. Remember before you grow too triumphant, that it
remains an option.”
“I won’t forget,” Elise said, her inner calm
wavering slightly. “But I also cannot forget the tone in which
you called me a traitor and then dismissed me like a small child. I
am your heir, just a year short of my majority. I think I am owed
more consideration.”
“Perhaps,” her father said grudgingly. “For now,
I lay no task on you. You retain your freedom and your
title.”
“I won’t thank you,” she said, “because
both are mine, not to be taken from me by anyone—not even you.
As for Earl Kestrel’s entourage, I will continue to visit with
them. If I learn anything that I am not expressly requested to keep
in confidence, I will be happy to share it with you.”
“Thank you,” Ivon said, a spark of last night’s
anger lighting his eyes, “for your gracious
condescension.”
She thought she heard him mutter, “You little bitch,”
but his voice was low enough that she could pretend to have heard
nothing.
“Well,” Baron Archer said, brushing imaginary dirt
from his trouser leg, “I have duties to perform. May I escort
you back to camp on my way?”
“I would be honored,” she said, offering him a neutral
smile and resting her hand on his arm. Nothing further was said
during the interminable length of that walk.
Later that morning when Elise met Firekeeper and Derian she gave an
abbreviated account of the events both following the ball and this
morning. When she finished, Derian commented:
“And the odd thing is, the king made no such promises as
everyone seems to imagine. He only wanted to hear my opinion—as
a commoner— on various issues.”
“Including the succession,” Elise said teasingly.
Derian looked with unwonted seriousness at the ruby ring on his
finger. “I was asked not to say.”
Elise nodded and changed the subject. “I’m amazed that
you had the courage to demand Lady Melina’s necklace as your
reward. That was clever.”
“It didn’t work, though,” Derian replied.
“Still, I’ve been thinking about what the king did say. I
don’t know if he meant it as a hint, but his idea of our having
an identical necklace made was brilliant. It solves the problem of
Lady Melina missing her own.”
“I suppose Wain Cutter could do the work,” Elise
agreed. “This should actually be easier. Still, even if we got
it, how would we work the trade?”
Firekeeper offered, “I could do it. Every night I go among
those tents. Blind Seer terrifies the dogs. None even bark any
longer. Get the necklace. I will trade it.”
“You’ve been skulking among the tents?” Elise
asked, amused yet vaguely embarrassed. What might Firekeeper have
seen or heard—especially before Jet lost interest in her?
“I have,” the wolf-woman said. “All through the
camp I go. Sometimes I learn things. Mostly, I just walk and put into
my memory scents and sounds.”
Derian added, “I believe she can do it, Elise, but to pull
this off we need as exact a description of the necklace as we can
get. Wain Cutter said that he can work from a verbal description,
thank the Horse, but a sketch would be better. Did your young
lady’s training include such skills?”
“It did,” Elise said, “though my teacher never
praised me highly. Still, I can manage something. Also, Melina likes
to go into town and she’s never without that necklace. Wain
Cutter could easily get a good look at her then.”
“That’s going to mean trusting him,” Derian
cautioned.
“He’s not stupid,” Elise retorted. “That
necklace is famous. He may well guess without our admitting precisely
which necklace we want copied.”
Derian nodded. “Very well. You get the description.
I’ll sound out Wain when I go into town today to have my new
ring sized.”
He touched it almost reverently. Elise hid a grin.
“You’re a bit overwhelmed, aren’t you?”
she asked.
“More than a bit.” Derian looked at her squarely.
“I realize I’m not the first to be given one of these,
not even the first common born. King Tedric has always had counselors
from among his subjects. But you’re born to such honors. You
can’t imagine what this will mean to my family. My mother is
likely to insist on my keeping the ring in the family’s
ancestral shrine when I’m not wearing it. The king’s
trust is a great honor.”
Elise suddenly realized that she had been being a bit of a snob, a
trait she has come to despise in others.
“It is a great honor,” she said firmly, “and
your parents will be justified in their pride. King Tedric chooses
widely but never foolishly.”
Firekeeper shook her head, as if wondering that this much
attention was being paid to a shiny thing with no virtue as a
tool.
“Talk does not get us any further with necklaces,” she
reminded them. “Elise must learn the look of the necklace in
perfect. Derian and I will talk to Wain Cutter. Then I will talk to
Doc.”
“Why talk with Doc?” Derian asked.
“He has powders to bring sleep. Lady Melina not sleep alone.
Sometime her maid sleep in her tent, sometime her husband, too. On
the night of the change, Elise must give all some powder to
sleep.”
“I thought,” Derian teased, “that no one ever
hears you when you go among the tents.”
Firekeeper stared at him as if he was an idiot.
“This is important, Fox Hair, like the first hunt in spring
after winter starving. We take no risks just as the One does not hunt
alone when there is a pack.”
Elise nodded, suddenly somber, quietly afraid of the role she must
play but agreeing with Firekeeper’s wisdom.
“She’s right. We don’t dare take any risk. My
relatives may think the matter of the succession is settled, but we
know how tenuous it is. King Tedric doesn’t know what we know.
It is our duty to make certain that a sorceress cannot rule from
behind the throne.”
Derian curled his fist tightly as if daring the ring to slip free.
Elise thought she knew what he was thinking. So much rested on their
shoulders. Were they really up to the challenge?
Although not expressly privy to the counsels of his fellow nobles,
Prince Newell shared their indignation and frustrated anger.
He’d actually been enjoying that thrice-cursed ball. The food
and drink had been excellent, and many of the women fair. Since his
ambitions reached far higher than marriage into the family of
Allister Seagleam, he hadn’t wasted his time dancing with
eleven-year-old girls.
Just for the fun of renewing his acquaintance with Lady Blysse he
had asked her for a dance. She had accepted, but he could feel her
dislike of him in the lightness of her fingers on his whenever the
ritualized motions demanded that they touch. By the end he was rather
sorry he hadn’t asked her for a waltz.
Other women, even Lady Zorana after he whispered a few sympathetic
words in her ear, were far less reluctant to dance with a prince.
Unable to continue the flirtation with Zorana in such a public place,
Newell had been in the process of cultivating the acquaintance of the
pretty daughter of a local silversmith. She was intimating that she
was willing to do more than dance when the ripple of gossip through
the room alerted Newell to a new element in the game. He had turned
in time to see Derian Carter, dressed like a gentleman in an outfit
that must have set his patron back a good bit, mounting the steps of
the dais from which King Tedric watched the festivities.
Mindful of his health, the king had taken part only in the Star
Waltz which had opened the entertainment. Appropriately, his partner
had been Pearl Oyster, the plump but still winsome wife of Allister
Seagleam. Inviting everyone to continue on, King Tedric then had made
his way up to the makeshift throne that had been prepared for him and
indulgently surveyed the others at their pleasure. Needless to say,
just about everyone who was anyone made an excuse to mount the few
steps and speak with him, but only young Carter had been invited.
That invitation ended the evening’s pleasure for Newell. The
lovely young thing he had been flirting with previously now held as
much interest for him as might a painted doll. When King Tedric chose
to close the evening by dancing with Lady Blysse, any joy Newell
might have salvaged from seeing his Hawk Haven competitors equally
crushed vanished.
Only Allister Seagleam seemed untroubled by this turn of events
and that was quite understandable. The king favoring Lady Blysse did
not mean an end of his hopes. At fifteen or so, she was a good age to
be wed to either of his sons. Newell had noted that both Shad and
Tavis had taken their turns partnering the foundling. Of course, they
had each danced with all of the other eligible contenders for a
polite political marriage and a few tentative friendships seemed to
have begun.
During one of the intermissions, Purcel Archer, Sapphire Shield,
and Shad Oyster got into a heated discussion about the various merits
of combat on land and on sea. Jet flirted shamelessly with Minnow and
Anemone, not precisely forsaking Elise, for the manners of a grand
ball insisted that an engaged couple mingle with everyone and not
remain selfishly absorbed in each other. Tavis Oyster apparently
found an unexpected friend in Nydia Trueheart. When Newell had
drifted near— ostensibly to get a new glass of wine—they
had been discussing the merits of various New Kelvinese poets.
But any hopes the parents of these sprigs might have entertained
had been dashed when King Tedric chose Lady Blysse for his dance
partner.
Newell’s fury that next morning was not mediated when he
considered how hopeless his attempts to discover a way to distract or
disable Lady Blysse had been. Her unwarranted dislike of him had made
it impossible for him to chat her up and thereby drop a hint that she
go hither or yon so as to be neatly away while Newell’s lackeys
pulverized Jet. Her illiteracy had robbed him of that favorite tool
of conspirators, the anonymous note. That damned wolf which shadowed
her whenever she was not in company—and often when she
was—made it unlikely that he could simply have her hit over the
head and put out of the way.
As a last resort, Newell had taken advantage of the crowded ball
to slip a tincture of valerian (a preparation known to encourage
drowsiness) into Lady Blysse’s fruit juice. Raising the cup to
her lips, she had suddenly wrinkled her nose and dropped the entire
thing—cup and all— into the nearest waste bin.
So the morning following the ball, foiled and frustrated, Newell
sent a note to Lady Zorana asking if he might pay a call in private.
Before going to meet her he summoned Keen and Rook to him.
Without preamble, Newell growled, “I’ve been going
about this all wrong. Why should I try to frame Lady Blysse and rely
on others to condemn her? She needs to die.”
Keen cocked an eyebrow.
Rook simply said: “Indeed, sir.”
“Yes. This afternoon, I’m going to take Lady Zorana
for a ride.”
Keen, always one for a double entendre, grinned slightly.
Ignoring the other man’s smirk, Newell continued,
“Once I have Zorana deep in the woods, one of you—Keen, I
think, since no one knows he works for me—is going to kidnap
her.
“Keen, when you attack, I will appear to defend Zorana.
I’m afraid I’ll have to take a split lip or black eye or
my defense won’t look convincing. Just don’t hurt me so
much that I can’t join in the battle if the Stoneholders come
through. That’s more important than any little mischief we may
do here.”
Keen nodded.
“After a bit, I’ll feign to be knocked out,”
Newell went on. “You take the lady. I’ll go for her
help.”
His henchmen knew better than to interrupt, so Newell surged
on.
“I’ll go directly to King Tedric, suggest that we keep
the incident quiet. If he doesn’t suggest that we enlist Lady
Blysse, I will. She is certain to go tearing off without any more
backup than her damned wolf. When they reach wherever you’re
holding Zorana, shoot Blysse with an arrow or two. Don’t let
her or that beast get close. Then flee in apparent panic, leaving
your prisoner behind. I’ll come later with a rescue party.
Questions?”
“Where should I take Lady Zorana?” Keen asked.
“There must be a woodsman’s hut or something. If there
isn’t, tie her to a tree. Knock her out if you want. At least
gag her to keep her from screaming. Just give her to understand that
you have someone delivering a ransom note and she’ll be freed
when you get your money.”
Keen nodded again, his eyes shining.
“Wouldn’t it be better,” Rook asked, more
willing to question, secure in his position as senior aide, “to
kidnap someone like Lady Elise? Lady Blysse likes her. I don’t
think Lady Blysse cares for Lady Zorana one way or
another.”
“Who she cares for hardly matters,” Newell snapped.
“She’ll do the king’s bidding. Besides, I
don’t know if I could get Elise to go with me. She’s been
a stuck-up little bitch since she was just a snip, never could take
even a tease. Even if Elise would go with me, it would look
suspicious. Zorana, however… We go a long way back.”
Keen chuckled. “It’ll even give you a good excuse for
losing the fight. Right, boss? I mean, caught with your pants down
and all.”
Newell glowered at this joke at his expense, but he had to admit
that Keen had a point.
“Good thought,” he agreed reluctantly. “I had
wondered how to justify my being defeated by one man.”
Keen laughed. “Don’t worry, boss. I’ll be
implying that there are two or three more around.”
“Disguise yourself,” Newell ordered. “I
don’t want Zorana killed, only roughed up a little so this
threat will seem convincing. Rook, you stay completely out of sight.
Both of you bring bows, swords, and knives. When Lady Blysse comes to
the rescue, I want her very dead.”
Rook nodded. “I had appropriate tools laid by against our
proposed assault on Jet Shield. Since you have yet to invite Lady
Zorana, we have some time to prepare. I’ll go ahead secretly
and find a defensible place to hide the lady. I don’t think
we’ll need to tell you where in advance.”
“No. I’m trusting that Lady Blysse’s
nose—or at least her wolf’s nose— will lead her
there.”
“Then, unless you have further orders, I am gone.”
“Go. I will send Keen after you if for some reason Lady
Zorana is unable to join me.”
That lady, however, proved more than amendable to a ride in the
countryside and dismissed her personal attendant to mind young Nydia.
Zorana fussed a bit, making up a basket with light refreshments, and
Newell was content to wait, knowing that this would give his men the
time they needed to prepare.
“I had thought,” Zorana said when they were safely
away from listening ears, “that the day Elise became engaged to
Jet was the worst in my life.”
“Last night must have been terrible,” Newell said,
soothing his own anger by pouring salt on Zorana’s wounds,
“seeing the king so publicly favoring someone other than one of
your own.”
“You don’t know a mother’s grief and
frustration!” Zorana replied dramatically. “I do
everything I can for them. I even nursed hopes that tonight would be
the realization of my dreams. Purcel was visiting quite nicely with
one of Duke Allister’s sons. I thought such decorous behavior
far better than the opportunistic flirtation in which Jet Shield was
indulging. Certainly, Duke Allister would be more interested in a
proven warrior who can maturely discuss men’s business than in
a young rogue.”
“Certainly,” Newell murmured, allowing his spirited
red roan to match the brisk pace of Lady Zorana’s dapple grey.
The dapple grey seemed to have caught some of her rider’s
feisty mood and had to be discouraged from breaking into a trot.
“And then just as I was allowing myself to feel
hopeful—and encouraging Nydia in her friendship with young
Tavis—then that Derian Carter was summoned to the
dais.”
Newell listened with half an ear as Zorana recounted the events of
the night before, noticing her difference in emphasis. Again he was
struck by how her ambition overwhelmed her good sense. How deeply had
she embraced his little fantasy that the mere age of her children
made them the most suitable matches for those of Allister Seagleam!
How eager had she been to ignore how many political matches these
days were being made without due consideration for the relative ages
of bride and groom.
King Tedric had indicated his disapproval of such matches but not
expressly forbidden them, so dukes and duchesses paired up their
available children like toy soldiers ranked on the nursery hearth
rug.
Thinking of deep embraces and matches stirred brutal excitement
both in Newell’s groin and within the darkest reaches of his
mind. They were well away from both camp and town now. Even while
gabbling away, Zorana accepted his lead toward the forests maintained
as a game preserve on the fringes of Hope. Once they were deep within
its shelter, privacy was virtually guaranteed.
Virtually. Zorana had been too interested both in her woes and in
her desire for privacy to notice the figure that had been shadowing
them all along. A man on foot could easily pace a walking horse,
especially if he didn’t wish to get too close. As requested by
his master before they departed, Keen had remained near.
Seeing a sheltered glen near an attractively babbling brook,
Newell suggested to Zorana that they “let the horses have a
drink and a rest.” Their easy pace hadn’t even sweated
the animals, but Zorana agreed with a coy smile.
Tying their mounts to a tree, Newell loosened their girths and
removed their bridles, pleased with the glade. There could hardly be
a more ideal place for a tryst—or an assault. Trees and shrubs
provided both shade and a screen from observation, but warm, green
sunlight filtered through. The ground underfoot was thick with
springy moss. When Zorana took a rolled blanket from behind her
saddle, Newell smiled. It was rather pleasant to be the seduced
instead of the seducer from time to time.
Excusing himself for a call of nature, he walked into the woods.
As he expected, Keen met him almost at once.
“Is all ready?” Newell murmured.
“It is. We’ve got a place and Rook even had the sense
to rub our boots and clothes with lavender oil so later the wolf-chit
won’t be able to identify us.”
Newell made a mental note to reward Rook for his initiative.
Despite his own depending on Blysse’s tracking abilities and
his suspicion that the rumors that she could speak with her wolf were
true, he had overlooked this weak point in his plan.
“Good. Bide until you can convincingly take us both,”
Newell reminded Keen.
Keen nodded, his brown eyes glittering almost feverishly.
“Keep your pecker up, boss.”
Newell had never considered himself an exhibitionist, but the
thought of Keen and possibly Rook out there in the shadows watching
his love-making stirred him strangely. When he returned to her,
Zorana had spread a thick blanket on the moss and poured two glasses
of white wine. The remainder of the bottle was chilling in the
brook.
Taking his goblet, Newell brushed his fingers against hers. As he
sipped, he locked her eyes with his own, holding her gaze until a
blush began to creep up her throat.
“What are you looking at?” she asked, and her voice
was husky.
“You, lovely lady. Just you.”
“Want a better look?” she invited and untied the
ribbon lacing her bodice. Newell set down his glass and freed her
breasts from their prison.
The next few moments were a welter of sensual impressions: his
hand on her naked breast, her mouth on his tasting of wine and salt,
her arms pulling him closer. She was as eager as he was, so it
wasn’t long before he was bare-assed: naked but for his shirt
which she had slid her hands playfully beneath.
Women’s garments were more complicated, but Zorana had made
things easier by removing several of the more involved undergarments
in preparation. Newell had a moment to wonder if she did this in
advance or while he was in the woods; then he was topping her and
even the watchers were forgotten in a more immediate obsession.
He was thrusting his way to completion, Zorana alternately moaning
and whimpering her own response, when a hard hand fell on his
shoulder and a rough voice said:
“Enough of that. I’ve a use of my own for the
lady.”
Newell couldn’t stop and despite Zorana’s sudden
shriek of alarm, he continued where his body led. Hands grabbed him
and pulled him forcibly off Zorana. Newell surged to his feet, truly
insane in that moment of frustrated need. He swung wildly and missed.
Keen’s first blow caught him solidly on the side of his face.
Newell stumbled backward a few steps, then charged forward again.
Keen punched him in the gut and the prince fell to his knees
retching.
Zorana was busy shoving down her skirts, shrieking hysterically.
There was a wild look on Keen’s face that cooled Newell’s
lust and made him suddenly afraid that this neat little plan was
going awry. Keen looked as if he could kill him. Newell’s next
punch was driven with the force of fear and Keen lurched.
“Damn you,” Newell hissed in the other man’s
ear. “Get control of yourself!”
And Keen did. Clubbing his hands together, he effectively battered
Newell to the ground. However, Newell could feel that he was pulling
the force of his blows somewhat and though there would be bruises,
nothing should be broken.
Keen leered down at Newell as the prince fell and dropped a piece
of paper onto his chest. “Take this to the king. It gives our
terms. Got it?”
Newell groaned. Keen kicked him. Though he didn’t put much
force behind the kick, coming on top of Newell’s other injuries
it still hurt.
“Passed out,” Keen sneered, according to script.
“Lily-livered as well as a wimp.”
Lying on the ground, hurting so much that real unconsciousness
would be welcome, Newell heard Keen continue in silky tones:
“Stop screaming, Lady Zorana, and come with me. I’ll
take you to a nice place and we’ll wait there for the mail to
be delivered.”
Zorana said shrilly, “You’re kidnapping me?”
“Detaining you, rather.” Newell heard Zorana jerked to
her feet. “Now come along quietly. If you’re a good girl,
I may even reward you by finishing the job your inconsiderate friend
there didn’t.”
Keeping his eyes shut and his breathing shallow, Newell considered
the very real probability that Keen would rape Zorana. It
wouldn’t be Keen’s first rape and he did have
provocation.
Ah, well. As long as Keen wasn’t about his fun when Lady
Blysse came along. Newell had learned long ago, if you wanted to
dance, you must expect to pay the piper.
Later, when the sounds of their footsteps and Zorana’s
whimpering had diminished, Newell hauled himself to his feet. He
staggered to the brook, where he splashed cold water on his face.
There was wine left in the bottle and he felt a bit better once
he’d drained that to the lees. He hoped that Keen hurt at least
a little. Surely at least one of his own blows had gone solidly
home.
Re-bridling and tightening the girth on the red roan took
considerable effort. Then Prince Newell pulled himself into the
saddle. He’d be to the Watchful Eye by dusk. By using the most
convenient gate, he’d also avoid the bulk of the Hawk Haven
encampment. He ran his tongue around his teeth, reassuring himself
that they were all in place. Then he smiled and urged the roan into a
fast walk. Everything was going according to plan.
XXII
In response to King Tedric’s summons,
Firekeeper came running to the Watchful Eye. It was some measure of
the urgency of the king’s summons that the gates swung open
upon her approach and that none of the armed and armored guards who
stood their posts attempted to slow her or question the rightness of
the great, grey wolf bounding at her side.
Overhead, the falcon Elation soared in defiance of the rules
normally governing diurnal and nocturnal creatures. Glimpsing her
broad wings silhouetted against the orange face of the rising harvest
moon, more than one soldier touched an amulet pouch or totem necklace
and muttered that the days of black sorcery had returned.
But Firekeeper had no time for these. King Tedric’s message
had said for her to come as rapidly as two feet could run and for
Derian to follow at his own pace. They were to speak to no
one—not even Earl Kestrel— about the reason for their
going.
So Firekeeper ran through the gate into the stone-flagged
courtyard, through the arched doorway into the fortress building
itself, then padded quick-foot up the broad stone steps. Silent
guards directed her with gestures, and even those with whom she had
laughed and thrown dice during the slow journey to Hope said not a
word. Grateful she was for their guidance, but Firekeeper could have
found her way without it for the scent of the king and the
medicaments of his sickroom heralded his presence to her more
brightly than trumpet calls.
For all the speed with which she had run, Firekeeper arrived in
the king’s presence barely winded, only the rising and falling
of her nascent breasts beneath her leather vest giving testimony to
the speed at which she had flown over the ground.
Gracefully, she bowed to King Tedric, for she had come to respect
him far more than ever she would have dreamed possible at their first
meeting. Beside her, Blind Seer stretched out his forelimbs in a deep
wolf-bow, but his blue eyes remained alert so Firekeeper would be
protected even while she abased herself.
And when she raised her head, shaking back the wild tangle of
dark-brown curls, she saw what her nose had already told her.
King Tedric had a visitor before her and that visitor was wounded.
Yet, though Firekeeper knew that according to the laws of etiquette
Prince Newell was due a bow in turn she refused him the homage. There
was that about Newell that she did not trust and she would not lower
her guard before him, even with Sir Dirkin and his ready sword
present.
Instead Firekeeper said to the king:
“I am here as you wished, King Tedric.”
“Do you remember of what we spoke before we left the castle,
Firekeeper?” the king asked with the directness she admired in
him.
“Every word, every breath.”
“One of those things I feared has occurred,” he said,
and she noticed how tired and ill the old man looked. “My
niece, Lady Zorana Archer, has been kidnapped—stolen—by
men who would exchange her safety for money. She was taken while in
the forests to the northeast of this fortress. The message the men
sent said that they will hold her in a safe place until we send
money.”
Firekeeper listened but her gaze rested for a moment on Prince
Newell. He had clearly been in a fight. One eye was blackening; his
upper lip was swollen fat. Rather than lolling in his chair with the
indolent ease she knew was customary for him, he sat stiffly straight
as if his body hurt him.
Beneath the scents of blood and sweat, Prince Newell smelled of
wine and of something else that it took her a moment to place.
However, she had not slipped her way between the tents of the camp
followers without learning the scent of mating humans.
Blind Seer had reached the same conclusion as she. “This
prince is the one who lost Lady Zorana. My nose says they were
interrupted at their dalliance.”
Thus Firekeeper did not ask how Lady Zorana came to be taken but
asked instead:
“Do you wish me to find her, One, or do you wish me to bring
money to her takers?”
“Find her, bring her back if you can. I would prefer not to
pay to redeem her.” Tedric added hastily, “This not
because I do not value her, but because then others would think to do
the same.”
Firekeeper shrugged, only partly understanding this but trusting
the king’s wisdom in how to deal with his own kind. What she
did not trust was the small smile that had touched Prince
Newell’s mouth when the king asked her to find Zorana.
From what Firekeeper knew of human pride, especially male pride,
Newell should be demanding that the rescue was his right. Perhaps he
was more wounded than he smelled. Perhaps he had the wisdom to know
that a wolf was wiser in the woods than any human.
“I go,” she said.
King Tedric nodded. “I will send Derian Carter after you
with reinforcements. My counselors and I agree that it is best that
as few as possible know that Zorana has been taken. Not even her
children have been told. I have sent word that she is visiting with
me so they will not worry.”
“Derian is good,” Firekeeper said, “but Race
Forester has eyes to see even in the woods at night. He will know how
to find the signs I will leave him for they will be signs he taught.
I will send Elation to him if you will write a message for her to
carry.”
King Tedric reached for quill and paper. “The peregrine will
fly at night?”
In reply Elation glided through the open window and squawked
complacently, holding out one foot as if to grasp the message once it
was ready. Firekeeper grinned.
“Elation is like Blind Seer, among the greatest of her kind.
She will find Race Forester. If you tell him to meet Derian near the
wood they will save time.”
King Tedric continued scratching quill across paper. “I have
already done so, Madame General. Sir Dirkin, reach me the sand so I
can blot this, then a tube so that this falcon does not crush the
paper in her talons.”
Prince Newell spoke, his speech sounding odd as he forced the
words through his swollen lip.
“Again, I beg Your Majesty, let me go with the rescue party.
I realize I would only slow Lady Blysse, but surely I can sit a horse
and ride with the others.”
“You have already done enough this afternoon,” King
Tedric replied with an ambiguity that Firekeeper quite admired.
“I refuse your request. You will remain here and a healer will
be sent for to tend your wounds.”
Turning away, eager to be on the trail before it lost its
freshness, Firekeeper said:
“Get Doc—Sir Jared—he knows how to keep
silence.”
King Tedric’s agreement in her ears, she fled down the steps
and into the gathering night.
The brilliance of the harvest moon, even though its face lacked
fullness, still gave her ample light to run full out until they
reached the forest. Blind Seer ranged ahead until he found the signs
they sought. “This trail bears the recent scent of horses. Two went
in, only one of those two came out. Prince Newell’s scent is
here as well. His blood was spilled on the ground.”
The wolf sniffed more deeply and added, “There is
another scent here, too, the scent of lavender masking a faint scent
of humans—males. At least one smokes a pipe.”
“Cry that trail,” Firekeeper said as she
plunged into the forest, all senses alert, “even as we run.
Your nose is keener than mine. I will follow this horse trail and
leave marks for Race to find.”
Breaking slightly from the path, Blind Seer padded silently
through the bracken at the trail’s edge. “Lavender Scent’s path followed the others, but he
took care to stay from sight. Here I find where he waited behind a
tree. Here he paused. Ah! I see why. The ground is open beneath this
Grandmother Oak. He waited until the horses were farther ahead before
showing himself. In the ways of hiding, this one is a master.
Remember that as you run, sweet Firekeeper.” “I will,” she promised, “but even my dead
nose can smell the reek of lavender and the wind kindly blows toward
us. We should have warning before he can leap upon us. I wonder why
he took such great care to hide his shape but left his scent so
blatant?”
Blind Seer coughed derisive laughter. “He hid himself
from human prey. They use their eyes and ears, but
their noses smell nothing. Doubtless this scent he wears is such as
those blended by Hazel Healer, meant to adorn the
wearer.”
“Perhaps,” Firekeeper replied, but the worry
stayed with her and made her slow her gait slightly and watch with
even greater care. She wished for Elation, but the falcon could not
see anything through the spreading canopy of tree branches. If those
who had taken Zorana remained beneath their shelter, the falcon would
not be able to find them any more quickly than those on the
ground.
At length wolf and woman came to a small clearing tucked off to
one side of the trail. The dapple-grey palfrey tethered to a tree to
one side jerked against her rope when she smelled Blind Seer, but her
relief at human company—even that of so dubious a human as
Firekeeper—outweighed her fear.
Giving the mare a brisk pat on one shoulder, Firekeeper told
Blind-Seer—for the wolf would never lightly speak to a
horse—“This frightened one says that there are no
humans here. She is alone and afraid but we must leave her behind.
She would only slow us. The others can gather her up.”
Blind Seer was busy snuffling the glade. “Prince Newell
came here with Zorana. They rutted upon the blanket and were
interrupted by Lavender Scent. They fought. Here is Newell’s
blood on the moss and here again. I do not smell that of Lavender
Scent.”
“Here is something else,” Firekeeper added,
pointing.
Pinned to a tree trunk was a piece of white bark on which black
marks had been made.
“This was done with a burned stick,” she
said, sniffing. “Alas, it cannot speak to me. We will leave
it for the others. Perhaps it will hasten their trail. Come. We have
learned all we can here. Can you catch their trail when they
left?”
“As easily as you breathe,” the wolf boasted,
leading the way. “There are two trails
now—Zorana’s is added. No, there are three! Here a second
human/lavender scent joins the first. This one was waiting in the
tree.”
Firekeeper padded after Blind Seer and noted the marks left on the
ground. She made a broad arrow sign in the dirt that Race would be
certain to see, and followed. “They hunt in a little pack, then. This second one was
not needed for the rutting Newell was easy prey.”
Firekeeper snorted in derision. “I hope I am never so human
as to be ruled out of season by my loins!”
Blind Seer laughed. “You are human, Little Two-legs, but
even humans can moderate themselves. Most simply do not care
to do so.”
They ran in silence then, Blind Seer easily guiding them and
Firekeeper leaving sign for those who would follow. At times this was
hardly necessary for Lady Zorana had left pieces of her clothing
behind her. The first time Firekeeper spotted a scrap, she thought
the bit of fabric had snagged accidentally on a jutting twig. By the
third bit, she knew that Lady Zorana was deliberately marking her
trail. The tiny shreds of lace could be torn from her riding habit
fairly soundlessly and yet their whiteness shouted the way.
“Good for her,” Blind Seer said when Firekeeper
told him. “She always struck me as having some heart to
her.”
Sometime later Firekeeper said, “I smell
smoke.”
“Burning pine,” Blind Seer added,
“such as two-legs use for torches. Walk slowly now, with
care. The lavender scent is heavy here. They may have dug traps or
set snares.”
They found nothing so subtle. Soon flickering lights, like
grounded stars, could be glimpsed through the trees.
“What madness is this?” Blind Seer said as
soon as they were a bit closer. “Do they shine their
denning to all and sundry?”
Once Firekeeper would have agreed that this was madness. There in
the center of a well-cleared glade was a gamekeeper’s cabin,
the cages in which the pheasants and grouse were kept lighter forms
surrounding the solidness of the central building. Lashed to every
sizable tree were makeshift sconces holding brightly burning pine
torches. But Firekeeper had come to understand humans far better than
once she did. “No, there is wisdom here. Humans see little in the
darkness. Any who could track them this far at night would follow
that trail to its end. Thus Lavender Scent and his pack mate have lit
the grounds all about the den wherein they keep Zorana. Their eyes
will be accustomed to the fire brightness, but those like us who come
through the darkness may be blinded.” “And even,” Blind Seer agreed, “if both see
the same, those within are at advantage, for all who cross into the
lit space will be seen before they can reach the cabin. This is a
good game, sweet Firekeeper!”
She agreed. Her heart was pounding within her breast and every
nerve was as alive as ever it had been. She could hear muffled voices
from within the cabin: deep male and the sobbing of a female.
“How do we take Zorana away?” Blind Seer
asked. “Shall we wait for Derian and the others to join
us?”
“No,” Firekeeper said decisively.
“I do not like the sound of Zorana’s cries. There is
terror in them and despair. The others may be long coming
yet.”
“Then how do we take her away?” Blind Seer
repeated. “I will not cross that bright circle. Too easy
for an arrow to find my heart and you did not wear your
armor.”
“Neither did I bring a bow,” she brooded,
“but I hunted much game before I knew how to use one. What
do you think of this? I will climb out along the branches of the tree
that stretches farthest over the clearing. From there I will throw
rocks at the cabin. Perhaps they will come out.”
“Stupid,” the wolf replied. “Why
announce ourselves only to have you shot like a squirrel? Think
better.”
She scowled at him. “This fire is our enemy. In darkness
we are any two-legs’ better.”
“Then the fire must die first,” Blind Seer
said sensibly. “You are Fire-keeper. How do we kill it
without killing ourselves or burning down the forest?”
Firekeeper considered and rejected numerous plans based on the
unavailability of buckets, bags, and bowls. Then she grinned: “Fox Hair will love me for this. I will take these
leather breeches and cut them into two bags. My vest is of soft
leather. I can fashion another small bag quickly enough. Strips of
leather will close them and I will hang them over three torches. Then
I shall slash them open: one-two-three. Three torches will gutter and
fail—that should be enough to create a wedge of darkness to
hide us. In that moment, we strike.”
“You take a great risk,” Blind Seer said
dubiously.
Firekeeper was already stepping out of her breeches and making the
legs into bags. She cocked her head toward the cabin. “Listen to her weep. That is not just fear—someone
treats her badly. Zorana has been no friend to me, but Kenre
Trueheart is our friend and he loves his mother. Go with care, dear
one. See where the cabin looks out into the night? We will put out
the torches where those within the cabin will have the least chance
of shooting arrows at us without coming out
themselves.”
“You are too kind,” the wolf grumbled, but he
went and by the time she had her three bags filled with water he was
ready. “The cabin sits four-square in the glade, flanked with
bird cages to rear and out behind. The door faces north. There are
windows on all sides. Though they are shuttered, a watcher could have
them open quickly I think.”
“Or they may have made arrow slits,”
Firekeeper added, remembering such security arrangements in West Keep
and in Eagle’s Nest Castle.
“If you put out the torches to the west,” the
wolf continued, “the approach is slightly shorter. After
you cover the ground, the cabin itself would be your
shelter.”
Firekeeper nodded and hefted the bags. “They leak
some,” she said critically, “but they will do.
Keep to the shadows, my dear.” “I will make the pheasants and grouse our
allies,” Blind Seer said with a trace of laughter beneath
his growl. “Be careful yourself. Your naked hide near glows
in the moonlight.”
Firekeeper snorted as she scrabbled up and anchored the bags above
the torches. When she had fetched water, she had removed her
underclothing lest its pale color make her visible and then rubbed
herself carefully with wet dirt from near the brook and knew she was
nearly as mottled in color as the wolf himself.
“Go then” was all she said. Raising her Fang,
she slashed the first bag open. The other two were ripped open in
quick succession, nor did she pause to see how well her plan had
worked. The light had dimmed, the hunt begun.
Dropping nearly to all fours, Firekeeper raced across the ground,
eschewing some stealth for speed. An arrow passed over her head,
confirming her guess that the kidnappers had constructed arrow
slits.
To her right she heard avian squawks of terror and knew that Blind
Seer had released the caged birds. Their terrified fluttering filled
the grove with shadows and her mouth with down. Nonetheless she
howled with glee.
“Well done!” she cried, then she was upon the
cabin.
At that moment she was all wolf and the human clamor from within
mattered no more to her than did the plaints of the game birds.
Pressing her back against the rough wood of the cabin, Firekeeper
studied the shutter to her left. Something darker was pressed against
it, peering out.
Dropping below the level of the sill, she crept into position,
then bounded up, thrusting the Fang’s blade through the shutter
slats. A shrill scream of pain rewarded her, but she was already
gone.
Darting around to the back she thudded her body’s weight
against the shutter there. It didn’t break open, but a shout of
alarm rose. She did not wait to see how those within would deal with
that supposed intrusion, but dropped back to the west side. Picking
up a chunk of firewood, she threw it with all her might against the
shutter. A few slats broke and there was another shout.
She was about to continue this game when a call rang out through
the night.
“Stop what you are doing at once or we will kill the Lady
Zorana!”
Firekeeper had expected something like this. Her goal had been to
keep those within guessing, nothing more. She trusted that they would
be reluctant to kill their prisoner—after all, what would
protect them thereafter? However, in a panic many a mother animal had
smothered her own young. Therefore, Firekeeper proceeded with
caution.
The cabin had a stone chimney on the east side. Firekeeper swarmed
up this, finding toe- and handholds with ease. Once on the roof, she
moved with great care, keeping her weight on the center beam. Using
the Fang, she pried away several of the shingles until she found a
crack between the roof boards through which she could peer. Within,
the cabin was lit by several lanterns so she had no trouble seeing
what was going on.
Two men prowled restlessly within, glancing out through the
shutters, hands dropping to their swords at every sound. Each also
had a bow. Arrows were set ready beside every window.
The men’s faces had been blackened, but one had a broad
slash on the cheekbone below one eye. Blood still leaked from the
wound and from time to time he dabbed at it with a folded piece of
cloth. Firekeeper spared a moment’s regret that her blade had
not gone in a bit higher.
Lady Zorana lay tied to a narrow bed set in the center of the
room. The bodice of her dress was open and her skirts were hiked up
over her naked lower body. She had stopped weeping now and watched
her captors with single-minded hatred.
A fourth person—an older man Firekeeper recalled as one she
had encountered in the forest from time to time, usually messing
about with birds or setting snares—was tied to a
straight-backed chair. His eyes above his gagged mouth look
frightened and a spreading bruise along one cheekbone gave ample
reason for that fear.
Watching the two men prowl, Firekeeper considered what to do next.
She had hoped to find Lady Zorana near one window or another, but the
kidnappers had anticipated that. Still, the cabin was not so large
that Zorana could not be reached easily enough from either window.
The old man should not be left to die either.
Firekeeper knew that she must find a way to distract the men
without giving them time to kill their prisoners and she must do so
quickly. Derian and the others could arrive any moment and their
presence could drive the kidnappers to foolishness.
Deciding, she dropped to the ground once more. Blind Seer met her
instantly. “Blind Seer, I want you to go find Derian and stop him
from coming further. Those kidnappers are afraid, but not yet
panicked. They may act rashly if further
pressed.”
The wolf growled agreement, but he wasn’t pleased.
“And what will you do alone, Firekeeper?” “I will set a fire,” she said. “The cabin is
wooden but for the chimney. I will kindle a fire here where they will
not see. Then I will drop smoking damp stuff down the chimney to
force them out. I can carry straw in the ruins of my breeches. To
make their choice easier, I will set fire to this western shutter
before I go to the roof. Then they will have trouble east and west
and me above.” “Will you then leave the others to burn
alive?” “No. I will break in the southern shutter and cut them
free. I don’t like breathing smoke, but I can hold my breath
long enough.”
“Dangerous,” Blind Seer replied, but she had
already begun to gather her kindling and straw. “I will go
find Derian, then. Someday you must learn to write. Then I could
carry a message telling them to be silent.”
Firekeeper nodded acceptance of his criticism, blowing on the
spark she had struck. By the time she had a flame licking the tinder,
the wolf had vanished. As she fed her flame, Firekeeper wished she
could just steal one of the torches, but knew that the burning brand
would make her too fine a target as she carried it across the
clearing.
When the flame was stronger, she kindled a bit of the western
shutter, kneeling below the lowest edge until it caught. Then, taking
her smoldering straw onto the roof, she stuffed it down the chimney.
The effect was immediate and satisfactory.
Coughing. Then a male voice choked out:
“Coming down the chimney! Stomp it!”
Firekeeper stuffed down more straw to make this last more
difficult. Darting to her peephole, she saw the man with the cut face
tromping on the straw. Then the other man noticed the smoke eddying
in at the window.
“The cabin’s on fire!” he shouted, racing to see
if he could put it out. “Grab the woman and get out of
here!”
This last suited Firekeeper fine. She waited until she saw
Zorana’s bonds had been cut, then went to the edge of the roof
on the south side. The eaves were lower here. Grabbing the roof edge
she swung down, her feet toward the shutter, forcing the full weight
of her descent into the wood. It splintered and she was through,
keeping her balance with the ease of one who had spent her life
climbing trees.
The wounded man stood by the bed. Despite the smoke and the fire
now reddening the west shutter, he reacted to Firekeeper’s
arrival by turning his knife in his hand and throwing it at her. She
dodged, but she had not even her hide for protection and the blade
sliced a furrow across her rib cage.
Before she could feel the pain, Firekeeper charged forward, her
Fang in one hand. The momentum of her charge knocked the now unarmed
man off his feet. She stomped on his hand, wishing this once for
boots, and pushed Zorana back toward the south window.
Zorana stumbled that direction, hampered by her skirts. Then,
seeing the other prisoner, she stopped and began fumbling with his
bonds.
“Out!” Firekeeper howled at her.
Then she howled again, returning to battle. Kneeing the wounded
man in the face as he struggled to rise, she flung herself at the
second man as he surged toward her, a sword held high in both his
hands, the blade arcing down toward her.
Firekeeper had nothing with which to parry. The first man was
clawing at her legs, making dodging nearly impossible. In
desperation, the wolf-woman did the only thing possible and darted
under the arch of descending blade.
This move kept her away from the sharp edge, but the hilt struck
her soundly between the shoulder blades, knocking the breath from her
lungs. Firekeeper fell into the swordman’s arms in a parody of
an embrace. She could feel him turning the sword in his hands, knew
he meant to stab her in the back.
Going limp was almost too easy. Before the man could arrange the
clumsy blade in order to stab, Firekeeper had dropped to her knees on
the floor, landing almost on top of the wounded man. He grasped at
her, trying to reestablish his hold.
Firekeeper kicked herself clear but the exertion caused her to
choke on the now smoky air. The air within the cabin was thick with
smoke. The sound of crackling wood as the fire claimed the west side
of the cabin and moved toward the roof loudly snapped in her
ears.
The man with the sword seemed to realize his own danger for the
first time.
“Get out!” he yelled to his comrade and turned to run.
The wounded man struggled to his feet, eager to follow. Firekeeper
made no move to stop him. In all honesty, she was not certain that
she could.
Dragging herself to her feet and turning weakly, she saw that
Zorana must have disobeyed her, for the tied man was no longer in his
chair. Through the smoke, Firekeeper glimpsed him clambering over the
windowsill. She followed, wondering why this seemed so weirdly
familiar, wondering if she would ever catch her breath, thinking
vaguely that fire was a very chancy ally indeed.
Then she felt packed earth cool beneath her feet. After a few
staggered steps forward, the air, too, cooled. She breathed it in
gratefully, though every gasp caused the place where the sword hilt
had struck her to throb. Her head cleared with each breath, then
Blind Seer was beside her.
“Little idiot,” he said fondly.
“Come away. Zorana and the gamekeeper are safe but the
kidnappers have escaped and the cabin is lost to the flames. Derian
and the rest fetch water now so that the fire will not spread to the
forest. The falcon Elation has carried a note back to King Tedric,
telling him all is well.”
Staggering slightly, glad for the wolf’s strength beneath
her hand, Firekeeper followed.
Far later, resting on a cushion on the floor of King Tedric’s
room in the Watchful Eye, Firekeeper learned the rest of the tale as
told by Lady Zorana. As had Firekeeper herself, Lady Zorana had been
bathed and given a loose linen shift to wear.
While the wolf-woman lay still, Doc’s hands traveled over
her various scrapes, cuts, and bruises, applying ointment and
bandages as was appropriate. From his touch emanated a strange
coolness that seemed to go to the heart of the pain and ease it at
once.
“And so after the brute had beaten poor Prince Newell until
he crumpled unconscious on the moss,” Lady Zorana said,
“he and his fellow dragged me through the forest and imprisoned
me in the cabin. They treated me badly…”
She paused and colored. King Tedric asked in level tones that
somehow conspired to make the brutal words gentle:
“Did they rape you?”
Zorana shook her head. “No, Uncle, but they handled me most
familiarly, making free with my person. I think if rescue had not
come they might have steeled themselves to the deed, but they rightly
feared pursuit.”
King Tedric frowned. “I wonder that they feared pursuit
before morning. Had I not summoned Lady Blysse, none could have found
them so swiftly. Pray, continue, Niece.”
“When Lady Blysse arrived,” Zorana said, glancing at
the young woman, a curious mixture of gratitude and resentment on her
face, “the men were ready to slay me rather than risk
themselves. They swore they would kill me and one stood over me with
a knife at my throat until the noises without died away. Lady Blysse
was clever, though. Smoking them out was a good idea.”
Firekeeper nodded in acknowledgment of the praise. Zorana
continued:
“They cut me loose and prepared to escape. When Lady Blysse
came in through the window shutter—and such a figure
you’ve never seen, naked as the day she was born but for a
knife belt, mud smeared on every inch of her skin—I hastened to
escape through the broken window. First I paused to cut loose the
gamekeeper. That poor man had done no wrong beyond living where those
ruffians wanted to be yet they had beaten him and tied him to a
chair, making him unwilling witness to their depravities. How is he,
Uncle?”
King Tedric turned to Doc. “Sir Jared?”
“The gamekeeper is resting,” Doc replied. “His
bones couldn’t take the battering. His jaw is broken and
several ribs are cracked. Saddest perhaps is that his mind has been
swallowed by fear of any man. The townsfolk tell me that he was
always simple. That’s why he was given that job. Weeks at a
time he would never see a human being. Then two strangers come and
steal his house to molest a lady. I had to call in a female healer
from one of the cavalry units to treat him. He just started screaming
whenever he laid eyes on me.”
Zorana said firmly, “I will arrange for the
gamekeeper’s care, for he took those injuries because of me. My
husband and I have lands he can care for if he wishes to leave here.
If he doesn’t wish to leave, I will pay for his home to be
rebuilt and for help recovering his birds.”
King Tedric nodded. “So be it. Is that the end of your
story, Zorana?”
“Almost. When the gamekeeper and I escaped from the cabin,
we found that other rescuers had come. One man took us in charge. The
rest went to put out the fire.”
Derian Carter cleared his throat and the king acknowledged
him.
“Firekeeper left a trail clear enough for Race to follow
even by torchlight,” Derian said. “We found the grove
from which Lady Zorana had been kidnapped and stopped to read a copy
of the ransom note that had been left there. When we drew near the
cabin and heard the noise from within we would have gone charging in,
making things worse from how Lady Zorana tells it, but then Blind
Seer appeared. By scaring our horses so he could drive them like
cattle, he made it known to us that we should approach the back of
the cabin. That’s how we were there when Lady Zorana needed
succor.”
“Thank you,” the king said. “I had wondered why
you were so conveniently placed. Lady Zorana, Lady Blysse, Prince
Newell, can any of you identify these ruffians? Though they were
stopped short of their intention, still I would have them
hanged.”
Firekeeper shook her head regretfully. “Not even by scent,
King Tedric. All they smelled of was lavender and the oiled ash they
had smeared on their faces.”
“They were disguised,” Lady Zorana agreed, “and
took care never to call each other by name. I would say that each had
borne arms in his time and that they were of Hawk Haven not Bright
Bay. They had not even the accent you hear in this border
region.”
“That is useful,” King Tedric acknowledged, “as
is the knife slash that Firekeeper left on one of their faces. Prince
Newell, have you anything to add?”
The prince shook his head sadly. He reeked of anger and remorse,
but Firekeeper couldn’t escape the feeling that he was not
being wholly truthful.
“I was attacked when my back was turned,” he said. “I guess you could call it that.” Blind Seer
commented dryly. Firekeeper smothered a giggle in her hand.
“And never saw my attacker clearly. I agree with Lady Zorana
that he knew something of combat. The way he went for me was not the
random flailing of a barroom brawler.”
Sir Dirkin frowned. “Unhappily, unless we find the man with
the fresh knife cut, we are at a complete loss. Too many residents of
these twinned towns are deserters or fled criminals. The towns’
policy is to protect them. My guess is that they are already away
across the river into Good Crossing. We shall not see them
again.”
“You think them opportunists then?” King Tedric
asked.
“I don’t know what I think them,” Sir Dirkin
replied, “but I expect that they will not take similar risks
again.”
“I see,” the king said, and once again Firekeeper had
the feeling that he was not saying all he thought.
Doc rose and bowed. “Your Majesty should rest, as should my
patients. For all her courage in reporting so clearly, Lady Zorana
has been sorely abused. I would like to dose her with an herbal
mixture to help her sleep without dreams. I also suggest that she
stay here within the fortress so that she will feel
secure.”
Lady Zorana looked as if she wished to reject such coddling but
was only too well aware that she needed it. King Tedric saved her
dignity by saying:
“I command that Zorana take your recommendation, Sir Jared.
Place yourself on call in the anteroom to my chamber, where you may
be available if anyone has need of your services. The rest of you are
dismissed. Remember, speak nothing of tonight’s events except
to keep rumor from exaggerating them beyond measure. Now, good night
and thank you.”
He gestured for Firekeeper to close with him and whispered in her
ear, “And be careful, little wolfling. There is wickedness
abroad.”
She bowed to him and with a thoughtful hand twined in Blind
Seer’s ruff followed Derian and Race back to the Kestrel
encampment.
Perhaps lady Zorana’s kidnapping and the daring rescue would
have been ferreted out by the nosy despite the best attempts of those
involved to keep the secret, but something happened to eclipse her
adventure. The next morning shortly before noon, news came across the
river that Stonehold was withdrawing its troops from where they were
bivouacked with those of Bright Bay.
Lady Zorana, returning from the Watchful Eye, brought additional
news to her brother. Despite the fact that others must be spreading
the same information, Zorana acted as if what she was reporting were
privileged information.
“Word has come to the Watchful Eye,” Zorana said, her
voice low and breathy with excitement, “that Generals Yuci and
Grimsel have sent a letter to Queen Gustin—with copies to her
representatives here—having to do with their discovery of
something about Bright Bay of which the Stone-hold government seems
to strongly disapprove. They have demanded that Queen Gustin the
Fourth come meet with them immediately. They say that if she does not
the alliance between Stonehold and Bright Bay otherwise will be
forever broken and war declared between their nations.”
Baron Archer cocked an eyebrow, but for all the steadiness with
which he stuffed his pipe neither Elise nor Zorana was fooled. He was
as surprised as anyone by the recent change in events. Silence merely
provided him with the opportunity to calculate what these changes
would mean to Hawk Haven.
Seeing that her father wasn’t going to give his sister the
satisfaction of a reply, Elise asked her aunt:
“How can they make such demands, Aunt Zorana? Certainly
foreign generals aren’t in a position to order a queen
about—especially in her own land!”
Zorana looked quite serious. “Foreign generals can try,
Elise, if their army provides much of the strength of that
queen’s army. Never forget, Bright Bay is powerful on the
sea—a rival for Waterland most say—but for a long time
now her army has depended on Stonehold for both troops and officers.
The withdrawal of their troops from among hers is a reminder to them
of that dependence.”
“An unwise dependence, I’ve always thought,”
commented Ivon Archer, “but it was an arrangement that enabled
Bright Bay to fully exploit her own rich naval resources. Stonehold
has seafront, but no ports deep enough for large ships, so her people
benefitted, too. Still, I’ve often wondered how much time would
pass before Bright Bay became a vassal state of Stonehold in fact if
not in name.”
“Then,” Elise pressed, “can Stonehold dictate to
Queen Gustin?”
“The question,” her father replied, “is not can
they—that’s just what they have done. The question is
whether or not Queen Gustin will permit herself to be given orders by
them and what her decision will mean for the rest of us.”
Later, arriving at the Kestrel encampment, Elise wasn’t
surprised to learn that news of this new development had reached the
earl’s retainers before her. After exhausting speculation on
how this new event might affect the negotiations between Hawk Haven
and Bright Bay, Derian, Fire-keeper, and Elise shifted to their more
immediate problem, planning the next step in their private campaign
against Lady Melina’s sorcery.
Elise was showing them the sketches she had made of the necklace
when Valet came out toward their makeshift conference center.
“Derian,” he called from a polite distance, “a
messenger has just arrived from King Tedric. You are requested to
meet with His Majesty and other of his counselors at the Watchful Eye
at your soonest convenience.”
“Ladies,” Derian said, looking both proud and nervous,
“will you excuse me?”
“Of course,” Elise replied, as Firekeeper nodded.
“Enjoy yourself. We’ll take these sketches into Hope. If
there is to be trouble, then all the more reason for having Sapphire
freed of her mother’s control.” And you, as well, Derian thought, but he said
nothing.
AFTER HURRIEDLY CHANGING INTO CLEAN SHIRT and breeches, Derian strode
toward the Watchful Eye. He noticed the occasional puzzled glance
flicked his way and heard one man say to another: “I know
he’s the newest counselor, but where’s the heir?”
Derian smiled quietly to himself. Let them stay a bit confused. He
was beginning to understand that governing was not unlike horse
trading—you held the advantage best when even your friends were
a bit off balance.
Earl Kestrel, already present at the fort, greeted Derian with the
courtesy, but not the condescension, of patron to dependent. He
gestured to a seat beside him.
“Is all well in our camp?”
“Yes, sir.”
At that moment, the king’s secretary rapped for silence and
they all stood as King Tedric entered the room. He can’t have had much sleep since last night,
Derian thought. Doc and the other medicos must be
furious.
King Tedric, however, didn’t look as if he needed
anyone’s coddling. Standing before his chair, leaning slightly
against the table in an attitude that seemed belligerent rather than
weak, he began the meeting.
“You are all,” he said without formality, “aware
of the changed situation between Stonehold and Bright Bay. In the
interests of forestalling rumors, I have summoned you here. My
secretary is going to read you several documents, the contents of
which I expressly wish to be shared with the men and women in your
various households and commands. At a time such as this, rumor and
misinformation are our greatest enemies. Farand, please
begin.”
He sank into his chair and Lady Farand Briarcott, a pinch-nosed
woman with snowy hair piled high on her head and a voice that could
command troops—and had indeed done so—rose, paper in
hand:
“This first missive,” Lady Farand announced,
“comes from the First Equal of Stonehold. It is also signed by
the Second Equal and the members of the advisory cabinet.
“ ‘To King Tedric I, Monarch of Hawk Haven, Knight
of the Eight-Rayed Star-”
“Skip that unzoranic nonsense and read the text,” the
king snapped.
Lady Farand gave a curt nod, ran her finger down the outer margin,
and recommenced: “Through our loyal generals, Yuci and Grimsel,
information has come to our ears that gives us to realize that the
support we have granted to the nation of Bright Bay was done while
that nation deliberately maintained a foul and most unreasonable
deception. “We have written to Queen Gustin the Fourth requesting a
meeting with herself. Until she grants this meeting and the results
of said meeting are satisfactory to our needs, we will withdraw the
military support which to this time we have granted Bright
Bay. “If subsequent to our meeting with Queen Gustin the
Fourth, Bright Bay persists in her foolish and dangerous practices,
we will have no choice but to declare war upon her. Moreover, in
light of these discoveries, we hereby warn you as ruler of Hawk Haven
that any efforts to support, succor, or in anyway ally with Bright
Bay will cause us to view you in an unfriendly light. “We have confided some measure of our concern on these
matters to the countries of New Kelvin and Waterland, noting that we
believe that the government of Hawk Haven is well aware of the
deception practiced by Bright Bay and that its refusal to share that
information constitutes an unfriendly act uncomely between
allies. “Note that if you remain neutral toward Bright Bay so we
will remain toward you and your people.”
Derian hardly heard as the secretary read off a long list of the
titles and names belonging to the distinguished signatories. As soon
as Lady Farand finished, voices were raised, some nearly shouting
frantic questions. King Tedric banged for silence.
“Listen to the rest of the correspondence,” he
demanded. “You may find some of your questions answered
therein.”
Lady Farand unfolded a shorter missive stating, “This one is
from the Plutarchs of Waterland: “To King Tedric… “Recent discoveries of foul secrets held by the Crown of
Bright Bay lead us to encourage you to stay away from entanglements,
whether civil or military, with that nation: “Waterland has always found it profitable to support
your kingdom’s continued freedom from Bright Bay’s
encroachment, especially upon the seas where our vessels could offer
our aid and protection. However, if you continue to treat with Bright
Bay without insisting on the destruction of their foul hoard, we
shall view you as one with them, no matter how separate your
boundaries. Your ships shall be to us as their ships: our rightful
prey. “We trust that a man of your great years and
well-respected wisdom thinks as we do in this matter.
Signed…”
The missive from New Kelvin, Hawk Haven’s other ally, was
much the same, though in this case the threat was to withdraw the
economic support and favored nation trading status which Hawk Haven
had hereto enjoyed.
Derian was already quite confused and anxious when Farand
Briarcott unrolled the final missive, a personal letter to King
Tedric from Allister Seagleam. “Uncle Tedric, “By now you must have heard the accusations of deception
and foul play being heaped upon Bright Bay by Stonehold. I hardly
know what to say. If there is any deep secret, I know nothing of it.
I came here as I told you, in sincere hopes of building a bridge
between our nations—in hopes of fulfilling the charge laid upon
me at my birth. “Now I must wait until Queen Gustin the Fourth decides
how to answer these demands. In the meantime, my family is held not
quite prisoner in our residence by guards supplied by our own people
and supported by those members of Queen Gustin’s court who do
not wish to risk that any small action of mine might be interpreted
by Stonehold’s spies as an excuse for war. As we are no longer
free to come and go, I fear I can no longer attend our planned
conferences. I deeply regret this. “In hopes of resolution of this strange situation, I am,
your nephew, Allister Seagleam.”
Lady Farand’s reseating herself seemed a signal for the
hubbub to erupt once again. King Tedric let the confused babble go on
for a few moments, then recognized a senior army commander:
“Your Majesty,” the man said, “what is this? Do
you know of any dark secret?”
“In answer to your first question,” King Tedric said,
“ ‘this’ is a warning to us from our three
neighboring countries that if we meddle in any way, peaceful or not,
in the affairs of Bright Bay, we will find ourselves viewed as
enemies as well.
“As to your second question: How could I know what dark
secrets Bright Bay conceals? I have never been there.”
While Derian was admiring the fashion in which the king had
avoided a direct answer to the latter question, Ivon Archer was
recognized:
“Your Majesty, I recommend that we prepare to attack Bright
Bay as soon as Queen Gustin arrives to negotiate with Stonehold. If
we take her, we have her kingdom. War between our peoples would be
ended. If there is something in Bright Bay’s
treasury—this ‘foul secret’ alluded to—we
will then be in a position to turn it over to Stonehold. All wars
will be ended.”
“I agree with that,” said Rolfston Redbriar, not to be
outdone. “Everyone knows that Bright Bay’s power is on
the seas, not on the land. Since Stonehold has withdrawn her troops,
we could defeat Bright Bay’s remaining force handily. We
already have a base of operations set up here at the Watchful Eye.
Stonehold does not. Moreover, we have the Barren River between
ourselves and Bright Bay. Stonehold, even if it brings in
reinforcements, will share ground with those it seeks to conquer. The
very countryside will rise against them. We are secure in our own
lands. Our supply lines need cross no enemy territory.”
There was more clamor along similar lines. Derian could
practically feel the blood-lust rising and wondered if Stonehold had
anticipated this reaction on the part of Hawk Haven. Gripping the
edge of the table hard, he listened and said nothing, feeling more
than ever a mere carter’s son. At last King Tedric banged his
gavel on the table and said, his tones dry and ironic:
“So I am to understand that most of you are in favor of
taking advantage of this situation to invade Bright Bay, never mind
that our own navy would be forfeit to Waterland, never mind that New
Kelvin has promised economic repercussions and could quite possibly
offer more than that if it felt threatened.”
No one moved for a moment; then Prince Newell asked to be
recognized.
“As one who has recently served with our navy,” said
the prince, “I would like to offer my opinion on
Waterland’s threat.”
“Speak,” King Tedric said.
“Our navy,” the prince said, a feverish light in his
eyes, “could be warned of what we intend to do. Our ships could
temporarily withdraw into secure waters, leaving Waterland’s
fleet to futilely sweep a vacant sea. When the reunification of
Bright Bay with Hawk Haven is completed, our newly augmented navy
will be large enough to deal fairly with
Waterland’s.”
Derian saw many of the soldiers nod and smile in approval of
Prince Newell’s vision. Hawk Haven’s weakness upon the
seas had long been a sore point among the military, but a nation with
only one major harbor and no offshore holdings could not expect to
compete with nations like Bright Bay and Waterland, overblessed as
they were with ports.
“Thank you, Prince Newell,” King Tedric said.
“If we do move against Bright Bay, certainly we will take your
advice and warn the navy in advance.”
Derian thought that the prince looked a bit deflated, even a bit
miffed, to hear his dream of naval domination reduced to such a
simple point. King Tedric didn’t allow the prince time to
retort. Instead he asked his assembled counselors:
“You all seem to believe that we could easily conquer Bright
Bay. Tell me, though, is creating three enemies where before we had
none— for we are at peace with Bright Bay never you
forget—is that a fair trade?”
“Peace,” spat an old soldier, his exposed skin fairly
seamed with scars, “peace that erupts in border raids and
banditry, not to mention privateering upon the seas! Call that peace
if you wish. I call it war.“
“Peace,” said young Purcel Archer, his voice light in
contrast. “I wish I thought we were at peace. However, if we
truly believed what we had with Bright Bay was peace why did Your
Majesty need such a large and heavily armed escort just to meet with
your foreign-born nephew? Doesn’t that speak of a tension
greater than that of peace?”
“What both of you say,” King Tedric sighed,
“holds an element of truth, but peace—even peace with
border raids and armed tension—kills far fewer men and women
than even one pitched battle. Think carefully before you advise this
course.”
A slim woman not much older than Derian himself but wearing a
uniform decorated with honors up and down the sleeves, said into the
silence following the king’s statement:
“Your Majesty is correct. My fellows should remember that
Waterland and New Kelvin have long supported us—as Stonehold
has Bright Bay-not from love of us or of our way of life but from
fear of what we might become if we were one nation with Bright Bay.
Think you. You see a touch of that fear now directed toward Bright
Bay. Do you think it would fade to nothing if we conquered our old
rival and so became the great country that they have long feared?
Neutrality is the answer to this difficulty. Let Bright Bay pay for
her sins—whatever they are—herself. Perhaps then she will
have the humility to leave us to our lives and the border raids will
cease.”
There were a good number of muttered agreements at this, mostly
from the very grizzled veterans—those who knew what a pitched
battle could be—or the very young officers who were beginning
to dread the learning.
“Yet that neutrality means,” said Prince Newell, his
voice as clear as a bell, “that we will resign ourselves to
forever being at war. We can do this—we have for over a hundred
years since the end of the Civil War. Yet I find myself thinking of
my aunt’s son, this Allister Seagleam who came to us with such
touching hopes for peace. Are we to leave him and his
children—two of them just small girls—to the mercies of
Stonehold’s army because we fear the future? I say then that we
are not worthy of that future! I say war now for those little girls.
War now for a future of peace! What good are allies who support us
merely to keep us weak? I say defy them and show our
strength!”
An unguarded cheer greeted the conclusion of this stirring speech.
King Tedric, however, only smiled dryly:
“So, Prince Newell, you believe we should conquer Bright Bay
in order to preserve her against an army that has not yet declared
war. That is an interesting policy. However, it is good to see how
many of you would go to war to protect my nephew’s little
girls.”
After this evaluation, King Tedric fell silent and all the room
fell silent with him in respect of the burden that was his alone to
bear. They might counsel, but the king alone must decide.
When Tedric raised his head from his hands, decision was written
in the aged lines on his face.
“War it shall be.” He raised his hand to still the
cheering that arose at these words. “Not a war of conquest, a
different war than any you have suggested. We shall start our way to
peace with Bright Bay by offering our support to her in this time of
trouble, by giving our support to those who came here to treat for
peace.
“When or if Queen Gustin the Fourth comes, she shall
encounter us not as enemies, but as those who are willing to maintain
her rights against those who would take them. If false allies are to
be unmasked and flouted, then we must be well on the way to making
true ones. Are you with me?”
The cheer that greeted the conclusion of this speech was pure
acclaim, so loud and ready that it made that which had answered
Prince Newell sound like the thready wail of a newborn kitten. Even
as his own voice joined the cry, Derian wondered to find tears on his
face, streaming from eyes he had been certain must be bright with
joy.
XXIII
MY NATION IS ON THE BRINK OF WAR, Elise thought.
Some of our troops have crossed the Barren River and stand between
our former enemy and their former friend. Others make a tight cordon
along the banks of the Barren and scouts patrol the farther reaches
lest we miss some hint of invasion while our attention is centered
here. My nation is on the brink of war and what do I do? I go
shopping for jewelry.
She smiled ruefully, knowing how unjust she was being to herself.
Still, there had never been a time in her life that she so regretted
being unskilled with a bow or sword and being rather squeamish at the
thought of killing another living thing.
Five days had passed since King Tedric made his decision to
support Bright Bay if Stonehold enforced its threat to answer Queen
Gustin’s refusal to speak with their representatives with arms.
The necessity had become rapidly apparent, for Queen Gustin’s
refusal to meet with Stonehold had come a mere two days after
Stonehold’s initial demand had been made.
Gustin’s letter (a copy of which had been sent to King
Tedric) simply refused to permit an outside power—no matter how
friendly—to give her orders. Her response had been blunt,
leaving no room for misinterpretation. Forced to either declare war
or have their threats called as a bluff, Stonehold had attacked.
They had been rebuffed for two reasons. One, Good Crossing’s
walls had held—though they would not hold against another such
press. Two, King Tedric had his troops ready to march. As the first
volley of arrows had been fired, Bridgeton had opened her broad span
to permit Hawk Haven to come to aid Bright Bay.
Stonehold’s relatively small army—for Yuci and Grimsel
only had those troops which had been withdrawn from Bright
Bay’s own army— had been unable to take a walled city
while being attacked on their flank by a second, stronger force.
Still, they had done considerable damage. Good Crossing’s walls
were no longer unbreached, forcing Duke Allister to bring his troops
out into the fields surrounding the city.
A large, relatively open area to the south and west of Good
Crossing had become the acknowledged battleground. Stonehold had
pulled back to the southern edge while the combined forces of Hawk
Haven and Bright Bay held the area outside of Good Crossing and along
the Barren River.
Elise’s own role in all of this martial activity had been
comparatively insignificant. While others dashed hither and
yon—important in armor, freshened blazons on their
shields—she wound bandages or blended ointments and tinctures
for the infirmary with inexpert hands.
Baron Archer had hinted that Elise might do well to return to
Eagle’s Nest, where she would be safe if Stonehold managed to
cross the Barren. Elise had pretended not to understand those hints
and her father had let the matter drop. Doubtless he had come to
realize how unjust he had been in hotheadedly branding his daughter a
traitor, but he could not press her to leave this sensitive area
without risking that she raise the matter once more.
At least the commanders of Bright Bay’s troops had been wise
enough to accept the help offered by Hawk Haven. Allister Seagleam
had taken advantage of his place as senior noble present to become
effectively commander in chief of the Bright Bay forces. His first
command had been that his officers work with those of Hawk Haven.
Yet, despite Duke Allister’s efforts to smooth things over,
tempers were short and trust shorter still.
Duke Allister’s task might have been easier if Lord Tench,
the queen’s advisor, had remained, but he had departed on a
fast horse to advise Queen Gustin as to the situation. It was still
uncertain whether Gustin IV would come to Good Crossing at all. On
that matter, the rumor mill was most vocal and most
contradictory.
Some said the queen was on her way from Silver Whale Cove, armed
and armored and leading a host of noble knights, fronting a band of
blooded marines. This was a favorite among Bright Bay’s
troops—never mind that Bright Bay’s nobility was more
comfortable on the command deck of a ship than on horseback and that
those marines would be scattered among dozens of ships.
Or the queen was waiting in her castle in the capital, afraid for
her life. She would deal with the situation once others had risked
life and limb. This was the favorite of the more cynical elements of
Hawk Haven’s forces.
Or yet, the queen was coming in disguise and on a fast horse,
ready to negotiate terms that would keep her nation independent now
that Stonehold had actually used its teeth. This was the favorite of
those on both sides who had actually thought about the text of
Stonehold’s demands.
Or the queen had fled to safety in the Isles. The queen was
already present but keeping her exact whereabouts secret. The queen
was dead or ill or pregnant. The queen didn’t matter—what
mattered was force of arms upon this one field.
That last was what Elise herself dreaded would prove true. The
situation seemed to have progressed beyond what rational words and
negotiation could achieve. Armor had been polished, swords sharpened,
arrows newly fletched. The only seemingly impossible thing in all
this chaotic and unpredictable situation was that these would be
returned to armory, sheath, and quiver unblooded and unstained.
Her thoughts running thus, Elise needed Ninette’s tap on her
sleeve to alert her when they had reached Wain Cutter’s shop.
Over the past several days, Elise had grown quite comfortable with
Wain. Whereas on their first visit she had hardly noticed him as a
person, now she found the thoughtful calmness of his hound-dog
features comfortable in the midst of confusion and the way he rubbed
his bald pate when working his way through a problem rather
endearing.
Wain had set to work on their second commission as soon as they
had given it to him. His first step had been locating gems of a size
and color to match those in Zorana’s necklace. He had been
lucky with the sapphire and the ruby, but a citrine of the deep
cognac shade favored by Lady Melina had been difficult to find, and
he had been forced to cut the gem himself. The opal had been gained
after negotiations with a rival across the river and then cut down to
match the others. The jet he had also cut himself—though from a
different piece than that which had supplied Elise’s new
betrothal pendant.
Although Derian had accompanied Elise that first morning to
explain the new commission to Wain Cutter, the developing military
situation had given him no time to join her since. If he was not in
some meeting, he was making Firekeeper buckle on her armor or acting
as reserve farrier for Earl Kestrel’s command.
Firekeeper was busy as well. Elise rather suspected the king had
given the wolf-woman some task or other, for she often vanished for
entire half-days. One of the tasks Firekeeper was almost certainly
performing was scouting, and Elise doubted that Firekeeper remained
on Hawk Haven’s side of the river or that all the reports she
delivered were restricted to the ostensible enemy’s
readiness.
Yet it was Firekeeper who made certain to check with Elise several
times a day and Firekeeper who had not forgotten in the new turmoil
that within their own camp, a few long paces away from the pavilion
in which Elise herself slept, was one who might be more dangerous
than any army.
Now Elise bent her head over the finished necklace that Wain
Cutter proudly spread out upon a piece of white velvet for her
inspection.
“I finished it early this morning,” he said,
“rose before the dawn. Couldn’t get it off my mind,
dreamed of it even. I got the feeling that it wanted to be made and
that I shouldn’t be holding it up.”
Elise nodded comprehension, though she didn’t really
understand such obsession.
“It’s lovely,” she said honestly, admiring the
gentle curve of silver with the five diamond-shaped pendants hanging
down, “but the silver looks just the slightest bit
scratched.”
“Patina,” Wain explained hastily, rubbing his pate in
quick circles as if polishing the baldness. “That’s what
that’s called. It makes a piece of jewelry look not so new.
Soft metals like silver and gold often acquire a patina after
they’ve been worn for a time.”
He colored and Elise knew why. If you were asked to duplicate a
famous—even notorious—piece of jewelry by people who
swore you into secrecy, it wasn’t a great jump for even a slow
mind to guess that maybe a substitution was planned. And Wain Cutter
was not a slow man at all. He hurried on, talking fast as if to cover
an awkward pause in the conversation that hadn’t yet
occurred.
“Of course, if you’re wanting it looking bright and
new, I can shine it up and buff out the patina.”
Elise smiled at him. “No, the patina is perfect.
You’re right. It gives the piece the look of an old family
heirloom rather than something commissioned by that market woman who
discovered she was the only heir to a duke.”
There was a popular comic song about that very situation. For
generations tavern drunks and small children alike had enjoyed
reeling off the long list of the things the market woman had ordered
when she had discovered that she was to be a “duchess
fine.”
The words of one verse rose unbidden from Elise’s memory and
she had to resist the urge to hum along with the jaunty tune: A sweeping gown of fine brocade, A long-maned, elegant pacing jade, An ivory board on which games were played, For these all in future coin she paid, That soon to be duchess
fine!
But resist Elise did, for Wain was unhooking the sapphire pendant
and showing her its catch.
“Getting these right was the biggest trick,” he was
saying, “for you told me that each pendant needed to be
removable with some ease, yet remain firm set the rest of the time. I
appreciated those sketches you made for me.”
Elise nodded acknowledgment. It hadn’t been at all easy to
see how the pendants were held in place and had meant spending far
more time in Lady Melina’s company than she had desired.
Fortunately, Lady Melina, like everyone else, was eager to
demonstrate her support of King Tedric’s war and had spent many
hours in the infirmary.
There Elise’s persistence had been rewarded. She had
contrived to tangle into Lady Melina’s necklace a stray end of
linen thread from the bandage strips she was cutting, snagging both
the opal and ruby pendants. Greatly annoyed, Lady Melina had rebuked
her sharply, then permitted her to untangle the mess to make
amends.
Afterward, Elise had nearly fled the infirmary to sketch the
details before she forgot them. She didn’t doubt that Lady
Melina believed she scurried off to sob at the harshness of Her
Ladyship’s words, but in the interest of the greater good,
Elise could live with a little loss of dignity.
“Very fine work, absolutely marvelous,” she said,
meaning every word of her praise. “I am amazed you could do
such complex work from an amateur’s sketch.”
“There’s a logic in it, my lady,” Wain said
complacently, “that guides a crafter through the job. Your
sketch was a map, but my skill taught me to make sense of
it.”
“Then the necklace is ready for me to take?” Elise
asked.
“It is.” With a final proud and affectionate glance at
his creation, Wain tucked it into a little bag of dark red
velvet.
Elise paid him in a mixture of credit tokens, some bearing the
Archer mark, others that of the Eagle, still others the local guild
mark. Before he had been called to other duties, Derian had changed
the Kestrel tokens he and Firekeeper possessed into local marks,
thereby muddying the trail should any wonder why Lady Elise had spent
such a great sum. Some Archer marks were necessary, however, for
Elise had excused her frequent visits on the grounds that Wain was
making her a bracelet to bring back to Lady Aurella.
Wain gave her the bracelet as well, a pretty thing of cut
gemstones set upon a heavy silver band. He had adapted it from a
design he had been working on before their new commissions had
distracted him. It was complex enough to excuse Elise’s visits
and yet not too expensive for her already strained purse.
Thanking the jeweler, Elise forced herself to visit several more
shops before returning to camp. There she settled herself to rolling
bandages and listening to the anxious gossip of the noncombatants
while waiting for Firekeeper to make an appearance.
The wolf-woman glided into Elise’s pavilion late that night,
long after Elise had snuffed out her candle.
“You have it,” she whispered after she had woken
Elise.
“I do.”
“And you will put sleeping herbs into Lady Melina’s
food and that of Opal and the nurse?”
“I’ll try.” Even though she was whispering,
Elise could hear the note of doubt in her own voice.
“You must,” Firekeeper urged. “When you do this
leave this stone…”
Elise felt something flat and vaguely oval-shaped set next to her
on the cot.
“… on the ground outside of your pavilion just the
other side of your sleeping. I will find it there and know that we
may hope that they are sleeping deep.”
“I will,” Elise whispered. “It may take a few
days to find an opportunity.”
“I know. That’s why I bring the stone. Good luck. I
know you will be brave.”
There was a faint stirring of air and Elise knew she was alone
again. For a long time she lay awake, staring into the darkness, and
wondering if she was indeed the least bit brave.
Allister Seagleam knew something that no one else knew. He knew which
of the rumors about Queen Gustin IV was true. He knew, but the
knowing brought him little comfort. Tench had returned the evening
before—cautious, worried, little Lord Tench who was Lord Tench
rather than Tench Clark because of his service to Her Majesty, first
as her secretary when she was Crown Princess Valora, later as a
trusted member of her diplomatic corps.
And with him Lord Tench had carried letters: letters commanding
generals to hold fast and obey Allister Seagleam as they would her
royal self; letters to other nobles in the entourage who might not
think this a good idea; letters to Allister’s children telling
them to obey their father and be the firm deck under his feet in this
tossing storm. Lastly there was a letter to Allister himself telling
him much the same and assuring him of the queen’s support.
This was the letter for public eyes, for possible spies. Allister
Seagleam doubted that even Lord Tench had read it—though he was
certainly privy to the contents of the others. Gustin IV had left
nothing to chance, however. This letter was triply sealed and
encoded. The key to this code had been given to Allister by Gustin
herself when he had departed Silver Whale Cove to meet with King
Tedric. She swore that no one else knew it and Allister believed her.
From a small girl, Gustin had been good with numbers and puzzles. She
was quite capable of constructing and employing a code without any
assistance.
Once he had decoded the letter, it read: “Dear Cousin, “I wish I could come to your side—and indeed to
the forefront of this battle that has been thrust upon our people.
Sadly, I cannot. What Stonehold accuses us of may indeed be true as
they see things. There are secrets known only to the monarchs of
Bright Bay. To share them even with you, cousin, would be treason. If
in some mysterious fashion Stonehold has learned one of these
secrets, I certainly cannot confirm the rightness or wrongness of
their knowledge by rushing to Good Crossing at their command as might
a kitchen maid called to task by cook for breaking a
platter. “So here I remain. Soon you will hear tales that pirate
activity on the coast forces me to remain in the capital. Part at
least will be true. Here I must remain until either you come home
victorious or Stonehold’s generals batter down my
door. “Tench tells me that King Tedric has offered his
alliance for the nonce and that you in my name have accepted it. I
shall support you in this, even before those who whine about your
foreign blood. They are asses. You did the only thing you
could—accept a new ally when an old turned against
you. “Standing fast is only part of your duty. You must drive
Stonehold out. I realize that military command was never your
ambition, but I know you well. You have a fair mind and will weigh
the advice given to you by those who do know that art before deciding
a course of action. “As soon as this war is resolved, I will reward you as
you deserve. For now, I fear you will need to settle for my
thanks.”
The formalities which ended the letter were fluff and vanity.
Allister stared at the missive for quite a long while before folding
it into thirds, smoothing it flat, and tucking it into the interior
pocket of his waistcoat. Then he headed outside to attend to the
duties assigned to him, not altogether certain that Queen Gustin IV,
guardian of dark secrets, was as worthy of his loyalty as she clearly
believed she was.
In the midst of this martial preparation, Lady Elise Archer, heiress
to a barony earned by her grandfather in battle, went into the fray
herself, but her battleground was a dinner party and her weapon a
flask of fine-ground powder.
It had been easy enough to arrange the party. Ever since the entry
of Duke Allister Seagleam and his brood into the competition for the
throne of Hawk Haven, the alliance between the family of Rolfston
Redbriar with that of Baron Archer had been strained. Nor had Jet
Shield’s failure to behave as a properly betrothed young man
should helped the situation.
So when Lady Elise had chosen not to spend overmuch time with her
betrothed, she had been well within her rights. Equally so, when she
invited her betrothed and his family, including sisters and father,
to dine with her in the sumptuous Archer pavilion, they were not
likely to refuse.
Baron Archer dined with them, but before the sweets and cheese he
returned to his command. Lord Rolfston, never wishing to seem less
the warrior than his rival, excused himself soon thereafter. Soon Jet
and Sapphire also departed, each having accepted temporary military
posts. Sapphire now rode with the cavalry under the command of Earl
Kestrel. Jet was learning to hate drilling with the foot soldiers and
to hate even more their sly smiles as they invited him night after
night to join them on visits to the camp followers’ tents.
Elise was glad to see them go. Sapphire’s pain was obvious
to her though her cousin hid it bravely. Elise feared that her own
sympathy would seem too knowing and so guarded her own words and then
worried that she seemed cold. Every word Jet spoke, every courtly
gesture he made infuriated Elise, but this fury was directed not at
him, but at herself for allowing romanticism and ambition to
overwhelm her native good sense.
Their departure left Elise with Melina and Opal just as she had
planned. She brought out a cunningly crafted miniature game board.
For a while they played hopping pegs and gossiped just as if they
were at home. When Ninette brought out elegant goblets of strongly
flavored mint cordial, Elise dissolved the sleeping powder into two
of them. Lady Melina and Opal, absorbed in counting the score and
arguing over the values of various strategies, never saw her.
When Melina drank her goblet to the last honey-green drop, Elise
felt like dancing. Opal, ever her mother’s shadow, did the
same. Glancing at Ninette, Elise hid a smile at the sign the other
woman made her. As planned, Ninette had shared her mistress’s
hospitality with the sour crone who waited on Lady Melina. The signal
meant that Nanny too had drunk the sleeping draught. Elise’s
part in the exchange of the necklace was completed.
And indeed after another round of their game, Lady Melina yawned,
delicately patting her lips with a beringed hand.
“I apologize, dear Elise. It must be all your good food on
top of rising with the sun. I am so tired I can hardly keep my eyes
open.”
Opal blinked owlishly. “Me, too. May I beg to be
excused?”
Elise feigned drowsiness herself. “Of course. Let me walk
you back to your pavilions. Ninette will dash ahead and tell Nanny to
expect you.”
She escorted her guests back and returned to her own tent,
brimming with triumph. Then she set in place the river cobble
Firekeeper had brought her the night before. It was a pretty thing
when seen in daylight, greyish white, veined with black,
smooth-polished by the rapidly flowing waters of the Barren.
Elise settled in to wait for Firekeeper to arrive and claim the
substitute necklace. Surfeited with success, she worked a piece of
embroidery near a lamp to pass the time.
Time passed. Ninette finished cleaning up from the dinner party
and came in to help Elise braid her hair for bed. More time passed.
Ninette went into her own curtained alcove and blew out her candle.
Still more time passed. Elise finished one rose and began on another.
She heard the guards change shifts and fought sleep.
After the second guard shift, Elise was no longer tired. She
realized that something had happened to delay Firekeeper, perhaps for
the entire night. It need not be that the wolf-woman was in any
difficulty. Undoubtedly she had been sent scouting. She might not
return before dawn. Elise pricked the canvas and drew some pink
thread through, her mind racing.
She could not hope to give Lady Melina the sleeping drug twice and
go undetected. Perhaps it was her own nervousness, but the more she
remembered the sorceress’s gaze the more it seemed to her that
beneath the drowsiness there had been a hint of suspicion. The
embroidery canvas dropped unheeded into Elise’s lap. She knew
what the only course of action left to her was, but she took another
several minutes to work herself up to it.
Then, moving like one in a dream, Elise rose from her cot. Among
her clothing were some riding breeches dyed dark forest green and a
matching long-sleeved blouse. Donning these, Elise then stepped into
the soft leather house slippers she wore around the tent, for she was
no Firekeeper to go barefoot. Lastly, she tucked the substitute
necklace into the band of her breeches.
Walking softly on the carpeted floors of the pavilion was easy.
She left her lit candle on the table, protected by a tin shield, and
stepped into the night.
Outside, the stars and moon were dimmed by light high clouds that
raced along, pushed by a wind unfelt by those on the ground. Elise
waited until her eyes adjusted to the dimmer light, then moved
purposefully toward the Shield encampment.
There were many more tents here than in her own doss: a smallish
one for Jet, one large enough to stand in for Sapphire and Opal, a
square-bodied one for Lord Rolfston, and a fine pavilion for Lady
Melina. Sometimes Opal slept with her mother. Other times Nanny did
so. Only Lord Rolfston must negotiate to share his wife’s
sleeping space. Lady Melina claimed he snored.
When she passed his tent Elise had to agree. The deep, steady
vibrations shook the air even through the muffling of thick canvas.
Within, the noise must be terrible. Elise fought down a nervous
desire to giggle. Then the realization of what she was about to do
hit her and she sobered instantly.
Reaching Lady Melina’s pavilion, Elise ducked inside before
she could lose her nerve. The air was thick and muggy with trapped
breath. The interior of the pavilion seemed so dark and close that
she nearly panicked and ran outside again, never mind her mission.
Then she stilled herself.
Over the last several days she had been in here many times,
usually fetching something Lady Melina had forgotten. Opal hated
running errands for her mother and such a menial task was beneath
Nanny’s dignity. Both had been happy that the newly dutiful
daughter-in-law was willing to do it.
Now Elise called the floor plan into her mind’s eye, counted
the steps as she had done earlier when she had intended to pass the
information on to Firekeeper, never dreaming she would need it for
herself. At six steps, just as she had estimated, her hand touched
the curtain. Another three steps and she could hear Lady
Melina’s breathing. There was no mistaking the characteristic
scent of lilacs that permeated her bed linens.
Firekeeper claimed to know how to see in the dark, but Elise had
no such skill. Instead, she moved her hand to where the top of
Melina’s head should be. Slowly, carefully, she brought it down
until she touched ever so lightly the top of the older woman’s
head. Tracing her fingertips along the sleeping woman’s hair,
Elise estimated where her throat must be.
The next step was something she never would have dared if she
hadn’t known Melina was drugged. She touched her again, hoping
to feel the body-warmed silver of the necklace. Instead she felt
skin. Again. Again skin. A desperate terror rose within her. What if
Lady Melina took the necklace off after all and stowed it away? What
if this was all a terrible mistake?
Resisting the impulse to flee, Elise tried again. On her fourth
try, she touched metal. A sob of relief rose unbidden in her throat.
She swallowed it before she made any but the faintest sound, then
stood like a stone, listening. All she heard was the steady, distant
roar of Lord Rolfston’s snoring.
Reaching with both hands now, Elise slid her fingers along the
necklace until she felt the clasp. Undoing this without being able to
see it proved nearly impossible. Her hands fumbled until she
pretended that she was reaching up behind her own neck, undoing a
similar clasp as she had hundreds, even thousands of times before.
The clasp opened and she slipped the necklace off.
Grasping the necklace in her teeth, Elise quickly took the
counterfeit from her waistband. Thankfully, it was warm from contact
with her body. She placed it against the sleeping woman’s
throat. Melina stirred restlessly, muttered something.
Hurriedly, Elise fastened the clasp. The original necklace still
held between her teeth because she did not trust herself not to drop
it, Elise turned slowly, walked three steps, and found the
curtain.
The doorway out of the pavilion was comparatively easy to find,
the variance between dark and darker easy for her adjusted eye to
see. Six steps and she was to the pavilion door and outside. Not
wanting to cross the Shield compound again, she slipped behind Lady
Melina’s tent. Now she dropped the necklace into her hand,
holding it so tightly the metal dented the skin. Elise was nearly
back to her own tent when she realized someone had followed her.
Sapphire Shield, clad in a long sleeping gown that looked black in
the faint starlight but was almost certainly dark blue, stood in the
open ground in front of the Archer tent watching her. She motioned
Elise into Elise’s own pavilion. Elise obeyed, not because
Sapphire held her bare sword in her hands but because she wanted the
relative privacy. Her father and his man were with Baron
Archer’s command. Only Ninette was within and she knew
everything of importance.
When they were inside, Sapphire said in low tones:
“I saw you coming out of my mother’s tent.”
“Yes,” Elise said calmly, revealing what she held in
her hand. “I’ve stolen your mother’s
necklace.”
Sapphire’s eyes narrowed in suspicion. Even in light from
the single candle on the table, Elise could see her hand move
restlessly along the hilt of her sword. A pang of pure terror soured
Elise’s stomach. What other controls might Melina Shield have
put on her children? But Sapphire said only a single word.
“Why?”
The truth rose unbidden to Elise’s lips. “I want to
set you free.”
Sapphire’s eyes widened. “How much do you
know?”
“Enough. Enough to know about pain that never fades from
wounds that seem to be healing and about the biting of
ants.”
“We must do it tonight,” Sapphire said. “Before
my mother learns anything is different.”
“I left a substitute,” Elise said with pardonable
pride.
“I’m certain it is beautifully crafted,”
Sapphire said, “but can we be certain it is enough?”
Elise shook her head. “No, we can’t, but I know
nothing about how to perform a disenchantment.”
A husky voice spoke from the doorway. “Hazel Healer may
know. We must ask her.”
Firekeeper stood in the doorway, the oval river rock in her
hand.
“I only just come,” she explained, “from across
the river. I see this, then I hear. You not need me after all,
Elise.”
Elise nearly crumpled, her knees suddenly weak as she realized
that all her risk had been for nothing. Then she straightened.
“I handled it,” she said simply. “And my cousin
is right. We need to do something with this as soon as
possible.”
Firekeeper turned. “Then I am away to Hazel. Can you two
come to her house or do I bring her here?”
Elise glanced at Sapphire. Sapphire frowned thoughtfully.
“The road to town is going to be watched and we’ll be
obvious. There’s no rule against our going to town, but
I’d prefer not to raise comment. These tents with their canvas
walls are as public as a street.”
A wicked grin lit the wolf-woman’s face. “Why not the
forest? I think every sort of thing goes on in that forest. I meet
you there with Hazel.”
“Do you think she’ll come?” Elise asked.
“Oh, yes,” Firekeeper grinned again, and Elise found
herself thinking what a predatory thing a smile could be. “I
will ask her very nicely.”
Elise took advantage of the walk to the edge of the forest to tell
Sapphire everything she knew, including what they had learned from
Hazel about both trance induction and enchantment. In return,
Sapphire told her a little about what it was like being a daughter of
Melina Shield.
“I’m not certain I have ever had a choice of my own in
my entire life,” Sapphire said. Her tone was blunt, without a
trace of whining. “And much of the time I’m not certain I
even minded. While others worried about what color to wear, I always
knew. My jewels, my horses, my pets, even my playmates were all
neatly chosen within two parameters: whether they were blue and
whether they fit the traditions and mystique of my noble
ancestors.”
“And you never minded?” Elise asked hesitantly.
Sapphire shrugged. “It didn’t seem much different from
how everyone else I knew lived. My parents didn’t encourage us
to cultivate friends outside of the Great Houses. There was even some
debate about your suitability, you know.”
“Oh?”
“Yes. Archer is a lesser house, but in the end Mother
decided that the close relationship to the Crown could not be
ignored. Moreover, your mother is a Wellward and intimate with the
queen.”
“I see.”
Sapphire’s tone was so matter-of-fact that Elise found it
easy not to take offense. Her cousin was reporting history—past
history—not getting in a subtle dig.
“When did you start,” Elise asked, changing the
subject, “resenting your mother’s control?”
“Not until recently,” Sapphire admitted, “not
until you and Jet pushed me down in the running for the Crown and
diminished me in her eyes. Then I got angry at her as well as at
you.”
“Not at your father?”
“Father,” Sapphire said in those same level tones,
“doesn’t matter. He has never mattered. He may be the
king’s nephew, the only son of Grand Duke Gadman, but he
doesn’t matter—except that he has good connections and
came with generous holdings.”
They had reached the forest trail by then. Casting about with the
narrow beam from their lantern, they found a fallen tree trunk set
alongside the path several paces within the fringe of trees. The lack
of bark and low polish along its upper surface testified that they
were not the first to employ it as a bench.
Once they were seated, they turned the lantern low so as not to
waste oil. A chance play of light touched the faceted sapphire set in
the band on Sapphire’s forehead.
“I never asked,” Elise said, “but I’ve
always wondered, doesn’t that headband get
uncomfortable?”
Sapphire laughed softly. “You know, I don’t even
notice it, no more than you notice your shoes if they fit well.
I’ve been wearing it—or one like it—since I was a
year old. I’d feel strange without it—naked.”
“You wear it even to sleep or bathe?”
“Always,” Sapphire assured her. “The only time I
haven’t worn a headpiece like this is when I removed one to
replace it with another.”
“Does your mother make any sort of fuss then?”
“You’re thinking of sorcery, aren’t
you?”
“Well, yes.”
“She does, actually,” Sapphire admitted. “The
stone from one headband has to be set into the new one—even our
family can’t afford to replace precious stones of the first
water as fast as children grow.”
Snob! Elise thought defensively. Then she felt rather bad.
Sapphire was taking a stand against her mother, the person who had
defined every waking moment of her life. Certainly, she had the right
to hold on to some scrap of pride. Then an uncomfortable thought
slipped its way in beneath Elise’s sympathy. What if she isn’t taking a stand? What if she’s
just trying to learn what we know and then plans to turn us over to
Lady Melina?
Unbidden, Elise’s hand touched her lips as if already the
fiery bites of red ants were lacerating the tender flesh. And
Sapphire continued, her voice soft but steady in the darkness:
“Mother had studied how to set the stones herself and while
she did so I had to sit by and wait. She always gave me something to
drink, something rather sweet, that made me feel dreamy. After a
while, I’d stop feeling anxious about the funny feeling along
my brow where the sapphire should rest.”
Sapphire paused for a moment, then whispered, her words barely
audible, “When I was very small, I thought I stopped existing
when the stone wasn’t there. I was Sapphire—somehow that
stone was me—when it wasn’t touching me, I was no longer
myself. I wasn’t anyone.”
“It hasn’t always been the same stone,” Elise
said, “has it?”
“No.” Elise felt her cousin shudder so violently that
the log vibrated beneath them. “Until I was about
Citrine’s age it was a different stone, a smaller one. Then
Mother decided that the smaller one didn’t make the same
impression. I still remember when she took the band off and, instead
of removing the stone to set in the new band, put it to one side.
“I screamed when she started setting the new stone. What I
felt was raw panic. I shook. I was nauseated. Tears nearly choked
me.
“Only when Mother let me hold the little stone did I calm
down. For a while, she let me carry it in an amulet bag like the
common folk use. Then she took it away. By then I was comfortable
with the new stone, even liked it better. The color was more vibrant
and the cut better. People admired it. I didn’t miss the old
stone anymore.”
“And the new stone,” Elise asked, “that’s
the one you’re wearing now.”
“That’s right.”
“I hope you can give it up,” said Hazel Healer,
stepping out from the shadows, Firekeeper a pace behind her,
“because that is going to be the first step, whatever we
do.”
The cousins jumped and Sapphire asked, “How long have you
been there?”
“Longer than you have,” Hazel answered easily.
“Firekeeper was probably to my house before you changed out of
your nightdress and found a lantern. She is very direct, she is. My
mare is used to night calls, and I keep my bag packed and beside her
in the stables. Even with taking the road around the camp, we made
good time. No one stops a healer, you see, not even army
pickets.”
Elise felt Sapphire relax slightly and smiled. Her own heart was
thudding in her chest but she was obscurely relieved now that someone
else was there to share the responsibility.
“You were doing so well,” Hazel continued,
“telling Elise about your mother that I didn’t want to
interrupt, but time is running short. The sleeping draught Elise gave
your mother should last all night, but varying metabolisms react
differently to drugs. Therefore, I interrupted as soon as our course
of action became clear.”
“Clear?” Elise asked.
“That’s right.” Hazel didn’t elucidate
further. “Firekeeper said there is a glade a bit deeper in
where a light wouldn’t be seen so we can turn up the lanterns.
She’s gone ahead to kindle a fire.”
Elise looked around and, indeed, the wolf-woman had
disappeared.
“Still with us?” she asked Sapphire.
When Sapphire bent to pick up their lantern, Elise saw that her
cousin was dreadfully pale beneath her tan, but when she replied her
voice was steady. “I’m with you. I’ll walk first
with the lantern. Let Mistress Healer come last leading the
horse.”
In the glen where—as Elise would later learn—Prince
Newell and Lady Zorana lingered for dalliance and met with disaster,
Firekeeper had a steady fire burning within a ring of river rocks. A
small copper pot— hardly larger than an apple and polished so
bright as to look almost pink—was slung over the flames.
“From my emergency kit,” Hazel explained, tying her
mare, a brown horse unremarkable for anything but its calm, to a
bush. “You won’t believe how often you need hot water
fast and the best thing available is a kettle large enough to make
stew for an entire harvest crew and cast of thick iron besides. Now,
let’s get comfortable.”
Under her calm authority, Elise positioned her lamp and two more
from Hazel’s gear so that, without shedding undue light outside
of the glen, they had enough that they could read each other’s
expressions. Firekeeper brought over a couple of logs to act as
benches and when the water boiled Elise brewed rosehip tea. Sapphire
set more water to heat and then Hazel indicated that she was ready to
continue.
“From what you told Lady Elise,” she said to Sapphire,
“the sapphire—indeed the entire headpiece—is
symbolic to you of the identity which your mother has crafted for
you. Is that right?”
Sapphire nodded. “Of who I am.”
“And who you are is someone under Lady Melina’s
control,” Hazel stated unapologetically. “And don’t
try to deny it. I saw how you favored your side while you were
helping set up our little parlor here. I’ve spoken at length
with Sir Jared about his talent. Your injury should be mending now
without pain. The wounds were superficial, though ugly, and were
treated almost immediately.”
Sapphire bit her lip, then nodded stiffly. “It has been
fourteen days. Very well. I accept that my mother has the ability to
inflict pain on me, pain I shouldn’t feel. I’ll even
admit that she’s done it other times, though I never remember
feeling this angry about it before. What I want to know is do you
think this is sorcery or that trance induction that Elise told me
about?”
Hazel sighed. “I wish Elise hadn’t told you quite so
much. It will make our task more difficult. To be blunt, I
don’t know. However, I don’t think it
matters…”
“Doesn’t matter!” Sapphire said with a fury that
Elise realized was mostly fear. “It doesn’t matter
whether my mother is a sorceress or merely skilled in some form of
controlling the mind? How couldn’t it matter?”
Hazel ignored the anger and answered the question. “Because
the tool which she used to effect her control is the same in either
case. It doesn’t matter because if we can—if you
can—destroy that means, then the hold should be
broken.”
I wonder, Elise thought uneasily, just how much Hazel is bluffing.
She didn’t seem to know this much when we consulted her ten
days ago.
“I’ve been reading about related matters ever since
Elise brought her own problem to me,” Hazel said as if in
answer, “and have consulted most privately with various
colleagues. Lady Melina’s fondness for the showy
gesture—for using her power over you to enhance her own
reputation rather than keeping it quiet—may be her undoing.
However, I can only show you the way. I cannot do any
more.”
“What,” Sapphire said, “as if I can’t
already guess, do I need to do?”
Hazel ignored her for a moment. Removing the boiling water from
over the fire, she poured some into a round pottery cup, then shook
in powder from a folded paper packet. This done, she covered the cup
and asked:
“Elise, how much trouble did you have telling Sapphire about
your discovery of Lady Melina’s powers?”
“Not much,” Elise replied, slightly puzzled at this
change of subject. “I felt shy, of course. It’s hard to
admit you’ve been spying on people, even by
accident.”
“But you didn’t feel any pain? No ants biting your
tongue?”
“No!” Elise was surprised. “But why should I?
Sapphire already knew the truth.”
Hazel turned to look at Sapphire. “Tell me, is that the
usual way with your mother’s curses? Do they work only when you
try to talk to the uninformed?”
Sapphire shook her head. “I haven’t really tried, not
for years, but we never could talk about what she had forbidden, not
even to each other, not without bringing down the curse.”
“So, you see, Elise,” Hazel said, “what you did
is remarkable.”
“Do you think it’s because we replaced my jet
piece?” Elise asked eagerly.
“Yes, I do. When you removed the means by which Lady Melina
had laid her hold on you, that hold was broken.”
“Then all I need to do,” Sapphire said, her disbelief
evident, “is take off my coronet?”
“I fear not,” Hazel said sadly. “Lady
Melina’s control over you is of much greater duration and her
curse laid upon you directly. For you to break her hold, not only
must you remove the sapphire from your brow, you must destroy
it.”
There was a long silence. When Sapphire spoke her voice was no
longer that of the confident, even arrogant, warrior and noblewoman
but of a very young girl.
“I can’t!” she wailed.
“Then you are doomed to remain bound.”
“Wait!” Elise said. “Sapphire was talking to me
before with no trouble. Maybe the hold is already broken.”
“No,” Hazel said sadly. “Think back. She told
you about very general things. The closest she came to anything
sensitive was when she mentioned her panic whenever the sapphire was
removed—she said nothing that couldn’t be dismissed as
superstition. I’d guess Sapphire knows her own limits very
well.”
“I do,” the other admitted dully.
“Perfectly.”
Firekeeper, who had hovered at the edge of the firelight, her back
to them so as not to diminish her night vision, spoke for the first
time.
“So we are ended before we begin?”
“No,” Sapphire replied with sudden stubborn
decisiveness, “I won’t let myself be.”
Her hands rose to the elegant band about her brow, rose, fell, and
rose again. Elise could see them shaking as Sapphire rumbled for a
catch.
“It’s beneath the stone setting,” Sapphire said,
her voice a weak semblance of normalcy. “Nice bit of design,
really.”
Hazel strained the mixture in the pottery cup and offered it to
Sapphire. “It will calm you. I suspect it’s similar to
what your mother gave you.”
“Then I don’t want it!” Sapphire snarled.
With a violent tug she snapped the strap. Elise heard a slight
metallic ping as the silver wire parted.
The torn strip dangling from her hand, Sapphire asked, “And
now?”
“And now,” Hazel replied, “I’m afraid
you’re going to need to crush or break the stone. That
won’t be easy. Sapphires are quite hard, not as hard as
diamonds, but almost.”
“Gem cutters manage,” Sapphire said, the words
sounding torn from her. Unable to speak further, she put out her free
hand in a mute request for tools.
Hazel said apologetically, “I couldn’t get a gem
cutter’s wheel in the middle of the night, but I do have a
hammer with a steel head. We can use a large river cobble for an
anvil.”
Firekeeper brought the latter, pausing to put her hand on
Sapphire’s shoulder. Even this slight delay had started
Sapphire trembling again, but she stiffened at Firekeeper’s
touch.
Elise wondered if Sapphire could not bear pity—or what she
perceived as pity—from a potential rival. For whatever reason,
Sapphire steadied enough to kneel and place the damaged headpiece
flat across the cobble, the blue gem in its center glittering like a
single eye in the lantern light.
Raising the hammer, Sapphire swung with all the power of muscles
trained to use of sword and shield. A thin cry slipped out between
teeth locked in a death’s-head grimace. The bright steel arced
down, a blur rather than a solid thing. There was the sound of metal
hitting rock, a sharp stink as of sulphur, a crack…
Elise stared in disbelief. Sapphire’s blow had struck the
cobble, not the sapphire, splitting the rounded stone in two. Bending
forward, her long black hair masking her face, the hammer clutched in
both hands, Sapphire was whimpering hysterically:
“I can’t, I can’t, I can’t… It will
kill me if I do. My soul… I can’t.” The
repetitious rhythm of her chant was more terrifying than any scream
could be.
“You must!” Elise pleaded, hearing her own voice
shrill despite her efforts to keep it level. “You
must!”
“I can’t!” Sapphire snapped, sitting straight in
a sudden motion like an arrow shot from a bow. “I
can’t…”
And her voice sank again.
In the shocked silence, Firekeeper’s return with a new
cobble seemed as prosaic as a shopkeeper polishing counters on a slow
day. She crouched beside Sapphire, removed the split cobble, and
placed the headpiece in the new cobble’s center.
“I think,” the wolf-woman commented sardonically,
“that you are like the Whiner in my pack. She is great hunter
except when anyone bigger face her. She even afraid of me!”
Firekeeper’s laughter made plain how ridiculous she found
the thought of any wolf fearing a naked, clawless, fangless creature
like herself.
“I’m not afraid of you!” Sapphire gasped, her
gaze still downcast, safe within the sheltering tent of her hair.
“I not say you are, but your mother, she the great One of
your pack and never will her pups rise to challenge her. Never even
will they disperse to found their own packs. You are poor, sad
creatures: can’t piss, can’t eat, can’t breed
without mama’s word.”
That “mama” was said with a rich sneer to
Firekeeper’s voice, a sneer that Elise noted did not reach her
face. Sapphire only heard the mockery and some faint shred of pride
in her responded.
Raising her head, she glared at Firekeeper. “You dare! I am
a Shield and grandniece to a king.”
“You are a weak-spined, mewling pup,” Firekeeper said
savagely. “You dine only on the regurgitated pap from your
mother’s gut. You crouch so in her shade that you fear a blue
rock! A rock!”
She laughed, a cruel sound from deep in her belly, and from the
shadows Blind Seer sniggered agreement.
“I’ll break your head!” Sapphire shouted,
leaping to her feet and swinging the hammer at Firekeeper.
Firekeeper blocked her, hand grasping the descending forearm and
squeezing, forcing the infuriated woman to face the glimmering blue
eye of the sapphire on the rock.
“A pup,” Firekeeper said steadily, “attacks a
butterfly to show how big he is. So you attack me naked and unarmed
as I am—you with steel death in your hands—because you
are a pup. If you are so terrible, smash that blue stone.”
“I thought you said,” Sapphire retorted, twisting but
unable to get free, “that it was just a stone.”
“Then why,” came the reasonable voice, just showing
the edge of the effort Firekeeper was exerting to hold the larger
woman in place, “don’t you break it?”
She let go then and Sapphire’s own twisting spun her to the
ground in front of the makeshift altar with its mute sacrificial
victim across it. With one hand Sapphire caressed the faceted surface
as if it were the face of a lover, perhaps recalling the years during
which it had adorned her brow, the fairest gem of its type in all the
land.
Then Sapphire grasped the hammer with two hands, raised it above
her head, and brought the steel head down with the force not only of
her arms, but of the entire weight of her body behind it.
Elise surged to her feet, unable to look away, unable to remain
still, knowing in her heart that if Sapphire missed this time, if the
gem refused to break, if she lost courage at the last moment, that
there would never be another attempt, that this was the last chance
and if it failed everything—even the stealing of Lady
Melina’s necklace—would have been for nothing.
When the hammer rose, a fine blue dust littered with tiny
fragments of gemstone sparkled on the river rock, brighter even than
the tears that glittered in Sapphire Shield’s eyes. But
Sapphire did not weep, only said:
“I guess I’d better have the matching stone from
Mother’s necklace. We’d better do a thorough job of
this.”
Elise wrenched the pendant holding the sapphire from the band. Not
bothering to remove the gemstone from the silver that framed it,
Sapphire smashed it, her first blow breaking the diamond-shaped
stone, her second thoroughly flattening the silver and breaking the
gem to pieces.
Rising to her feet a bit unsteadily, Sapphire looked at
Firekeeper. “Still think me a pup?”
“I think you a great woman,” came the reply, and
Firekeeper bowed low. Beside her the enormous grey wolf bowed as
well.
Hazel said then, “Do we destroy the rest of the necklace
here and now, or should we preserve it for the others?”
“I think,” Sapphire said, “that it must be
preserved as proof that this can be done. It’s going to be hard
enough to convince my brother and sisters as it is.”
“And you,” Hazel asked, “how do you
feel?”
“Like I’ve jumped off a cliff only to be caught by
water at the bottom and nearly drowned. My knees are shaking, my head
is throbbing, and,” Sapphire grinned, “my side has
stopped hurting. I don’t think I’ve felt better in a
long, long time.”
“How do you plan to hide from Lady Melina what you’ve
done?” Elise hardly recognized her own voice when she
spoke.
“I don’t. It’s time Mother realized that her
control of me is over and here in this camp with King Tedric near at
hand she should moderate her response to what she will see as my
rebellion.”
“Do you plan to tell her what… what we… what
you… suspect?”
Sapphire shook her head. “Not at all. There’s no need.
I think I’ll just tell Mother that I got tired of her taste in
jewelry.”
The laughter that followed this announcement was too loud, too
ragged to be cheerful, but it held a bravado more warming than the
bright yellow-orange flames of the campfire.
XXIV
Prince Newell Shield noted his sister Melina’s
outrage when Sapphire stopped wearing the gem-studded headpiece that
had been hers since she was small, and thought Melina’s
reaction disproportionate.
Certainly a young woman of twenty-three—one who had been her
mother’s cat’s-paw for her entire life—should be
expected to rebel at some point. Melina should be grateful that
Sapphire had chosen to discard a piece of jewelry rather than, say,
one of the numerous titled young men Melina had betrothed to her,
only to break the engagement when one more advantageous seemed
possible.
He told Melina as much and her rage was so great that he deemed a
retreat advisable. Calling for Rook to saddle the red roan, Newell
went out to look for signs of war.
Things seemed promising. From Keen, who was recovering from his
cut face hidden in a tavern in Good Crossing, Newell had learned that
Bright Bay’s troops were nervous and demoralized, trusting no
one, not even—as the five days following the first battle with
Stonehold produced no sign of Queen Gustin or her young husband, King
Harwill—their own monarchs.
Allister Seagleam’s role as commander in chief provided the
troops no particular comfort. The duke had no great reputation as a
warrior on land or at sea—although he had done nothing of which
to be ashamed, either. Moreover, they resented him somewhat. The
Stalwarts had marched out on a mission that should have been mostly
play, to escort the Pledge Child to his uncle. Never had they dreamed
that they might need to fight and, though Duke Allister was not
responsible for the current situation, they blamed him
nonetheless.
Additionally, knowing too much about a strong opponent was never a
good thing for any army—and Bright Bay’s Stalwarts of the
Golden Sunburst knew far too much about Stonehold’s Rocky Band.
After all, until a slight eight days before, Stonehold’s troops
had been not only comrades under the same banner, but also the source
of most of Bright Bay’s noncommissioned officers: the sergeants
and corporals who made things work when idealistic officers gave
impossible commands.
The Stalwarts must feel, Newell thought, cupping his hand around
his pipe and striving to light it despite a freshening wind from the
north, rather like children who suddenly found themselves challenging
their teachers. He liked the image and played with it as he gave up
on the pipe and cantered Serenity along a road running west then
turning south along the edge of the rough foothills west of Good
Crossing.
If Stonehold was bringing in reinforcements, they might be visible
from this general direction. Stonehold’s border with Bright Bay
was the Fox River, a river as broad and difficult to span as the
Barren itself. Indeed both the Fox and the Barren had their source in
Rimed Lake, high in the mountains to the west. The same volcano whose
eruption long ago had split Rimed Lake into two fat lobes had spilled
molten rock down its eastern side, creating the Barren Lands, a place
where nothing grew but those determined plants that could subsist on
dirt caught within crevices in the basalt.
Even at the foot of the flow, where Newell now slowed Serenity to
a more cautious pace as the road roughened, the volcano’s
influence could be seen, but here trees had managed a roothold and a
struggling forest had grown up. He felt secure continuing south under
the cover of the trees, knowing that Hawk Haven had posted scouts
throughout this area.
Moreover, the day was pleasant. Here, away from the river’s
immediate influence, Newell noted a kiss of autumn in the air. Good
campaigning weather, but the harvest would be ripening, making
foraging easier for both sides.
He was thinking about how he would handle an extended campaign
through this area when a flicker of motion caught his eye. Drawing
Serenity up, Newell was poised either for flight or to take cover
when a rather grubby woman stepped from cover. She wore the green
uniform of the scouts, her arm banded in Kite blue with a chestnut
stallion embroidered upon it.
Newell didn’t recognize her, but she clearly knew him.
“Prince Newell,” she said, her voice was rusty, as if
she hadn’t spoken for hours. “I am Joy Spinner, scout
under the command of Earle Kite, posted to this point. May I ask your
business here?”
“I came to check the situation,” Newell said honestly.
“I grew restless in camp. There were no signs that Stonehold
would make a major push today so I decided to see if there were any
signs of why they were waiting.”
Finishing his speech, Prince Newell unscrewed the top of his wine
flask and offered Joy Spinner a pull of the dry white wine within.
The scout accepted, then looked at him squarely with eyes the color
of violets.
“Your timing is fine, sir,” she said. “My
ancestors must have put you on the road. You see, not long ago I
spotted something interesting to the south. I don’t dare leave
my post to report it—we’ve had trouble with Stoneholders
trying to slip through here—but I think King Tedric and Duke
Allister should know.”
“And your relief?”
“Not due for hours. Even the officer who’s checking
the posts isn’t due for a while.”
“What have you seen?” Prince Newell asked, a tingling
in his breast making him certain that this very moment was the
beginning of his time to be a hero, even as he had dreamed.
“Let me show you,” Joy said. “Your horse will be
safe here.”
They crept through the brush to the basalt outcropping from which
Joy had been keeping watch. It was a good lookout, set higher than
much of the surrounding area but offering perfect concealment. Joy
checked something with her long glass, then handed the glass to
Newell.
“Look there, just where I was. Site along the road as it
leaves the field along which Stonehold is encamped. The road itself
vanishes when the land dips, but it heads roughly south, bending a
bit east. I won’t say more—I want to know if you see what
I do.”
Prince Newell did as Joy had requested, finding the road easily
enough. Over the past five days he had pored over the superior
interior maps of Bright Bay supplied by Duke Allister over the
grumbling protests of some of his advisors. These maps, added to the
information Newell had already memorized from Hawk Haven’s own
maps, came to him as he obeyed Joy Spinner’s instructions.
One of the reasons that the Fox River made such an effective
barrier between Bright Bay and Stonehold was that it flared out into
a broad marshy delta many miles before it met the ocean. In the
summer these marshes bred disease. Even in the winter one had to be
an expert to navigate them without grief. No large force, especially
one with horses and armored troops, could cross through them.
The middle stretches of the Fox were too broad and deep to be
forded, even in the autumn when there was no snowmelt to augment the
flow and when irrigation of fields had lowered the river further. The
Fox was bridged in several places, the nearest of which was due south
and east of Good Crossing.
Mason’s Bridge was hardly close—indeed, miles of
Bright Bay-held lands lay between their current battlefield and the
bridge. Reports from the south, however, informed them that Stonehold
had secured Mason’s Bridge before the local Bright Bay
pickets—hardly more than toll collectors—even knew there
was trouble between the countries.
Since then, the other bridges across the Fox—or at least
their northern ends—had been secured or destroyed by troops
sent out from Silver Whale Cove. These now patrolled the Bright Bay
side of the Fox, reducing the chances that Stonehold would abandon
their attack on Good Crossing and strike for the capital. This
necessary expenditure of troops had further reduced those
reinforcements which Bright Bay could bring to the immediate battle
and had increased the low morale of the Stalwarts, who once again
found themselves the lesser part of an army defending their own
country.
Now Newell traced the road more by memory than by sight, quickly
spotting what Joy Spinner had seen. The Stoneholders weren’t
foolhardy; they knew that the less their opponents could see the
better. The troops marching along that road showed no metal that
might flash in the sun; their wagons were tarped over to conceal what
they carried. The road they traveled was packed, but even so many
feet raised a thin column of dust.
Prince Newell drew in his breath with a sharp hiss. “So
Stonehold sends reinforcements to augment those who currently hold
the ground south of Good Crossing! Surely Bright Bay’s people
will rise against them!”
Joy Spinner spat eloquently. “The folk of Bright Bay look to
the ocean, not the land. Too long have they relied on Stonehold
mercenaries to keep Hawk Haven from claiming their lands for our own.
All those poor farmers and herders will look to defend will be their
harvest and flocks. If Stonehold’s Rocky Band will cross and
leave their livelihood unmolested, then they will let them
pass.”
“And judging from the supply wagons,” mused Prince
Newell, “the commanders are wise enough to not give the common
folk of Bright Bay reason to turn soldier. Stonehold’s Rocky
Band is well disciplined. They won’t loot the lands through
which they pass—especially if they know that supplies await
them at the end.”
“And with the supplies being protected by columns of
troops,” Joy added, “no farmer will be tempted to turn
bandit. They’ve thought it through all right. Some of their
reinforcements may travel more slowly, but everything will get here
intact.”
Prince Newell handed Joy the long glass and turned back toward
where Serenity waited.
“I wonder,” he said thoughtfully, “just when
those wagons started their trip?” He shook himself. Now was a
time for action, not speculation. “Scout Spinner, trust my
horse and myself to carry the message as swiftly as we can. I think
the time for stealth has ended.”
Joy nodded. “Good. I will keep my post. Ride safely, Prince
Newell. Doubtless someone else has seen the signs, but we may be
first.”
Newell smiled. “First or last, the news is still
important.”
As Newell swung into the saddle, Serenity pawed the ground,
catching his rider’s excitement and eager to be away.
“I will see you in Hope!” Newell cried. Touching his
heels to the red roan’s flanks, he was away.
He did not look back, nor did he doubt in the least that he cut a
perfectly dashing figure. Serenity was nearly fresh, for the
morning’s ride had been easy and the gelding was in good
fettle. Newell pressed his mount to speed wherever the road
permitted. No matter what he had said to Joy Spinner, he wanted to be
the first with the news. Even if he was not, eagerness would count
for something.
Both Newell and Serenity were nicely sweated and covered with road
dust when they arrived outside of the commanders’ pavilions in
the encampment outside of Good Crossing’s walls. Stumbling from
the saddle on legs tired and sore, Newell tossed Serenity’s
reins to the first guard he saw. Then he gasped:
“The king, where is he?”
“Within,” the guard replied, “in consultation.
What…”
Newell looked sternly at him. “Tend my mount, good man. My
news is urgent and for King Tedric’s ears alone.”
Such vagueness was certain to start rumors. Prince Newell trusted
that his dutiful discretion would have the troops swearing to each
other that Stonehold was arriving within the hour, armed with war
machines meant to batter the walls of Good Crossing until one stone
did not stand on another. Why else would a prince ride so hard and
look so grim?
Sir Dirkin Eastbranch paused in his steady pacing about the
perimeter of the king’s pavilion to nod to his subordinate.
“Let the prince pass,” he said.
Pleased, Newell pushed back the curtain door, knowing that in a
few minutes he would be able to collapse into a comfortable chair
while servants pulled his boots off his aching feet and put a glass
of wine into his hand. Such pleasures were good indeed, especially
upon what might well be the eve of war.
Two men listened while Prince Newell gave his report. It was a
small enough audience, but as one of these men was King Tedric and
the other was Duke Allister, the prince felt sufficiently rewarded
for his hard ride. He even forgot that his aching feet had not been
tended. King Tedric had apparently dispensed with servants for the
moment.
When Newell finished his report, King Tedric frowned:
“Estimated numbers?”
“I’m not precisely certain, Your Majesty,”
Newell replied. “I was catching glimpses through the trees.
Several companies, well armed, I believe. I’d guess that when
they’re added to those Stonehold has pulled from their recent
service throughout Bright Bay they’ll be a match for what we
have gathered here.”
“Your report,” the king said, “confirms
speculations that we have had from our spies—reports that to
this point have been but rumors. You have done well,
Newell.”
The prince bowed and tried to look humble rather than
gloating.
Duke Allister managed a wry grin. “Evidently Generals Yuci
and Grimsel doubted that Stonehold could defeat us with those forces
they already had in place so they risked our own reinforcements
arriving while they brought in their troops.”
King Tedric nodded wearily. “A reasonable risk for them to
take. The distance from Hope to Eagle’s Nest is easily as far
as that to Mason’s Bridge. Troops from my more northern lands
have even farther to travel. True we can and have drawn troops from
the more southern parts of the kingdom, but we cannot strip our
border with Bright Bay any more than you can strip yours with
Stonehold.”
Duke Allister nodded, accepting that despite Hawk Haven coming to
his country’s aid perfect trust would not occur instantly.
Leaving this issue unspoken, he added thoughtfully:
“And what use would a victory be to Stonehold if she lacked
the forces to occupy Good Crossing after her troops had taken it? Now
they have their greater force and supplies to sustain them. Doubtless
their commanders have left troops back along the road south so that
further reinforcements can be brought through as needed.”
“I wonder,” Prince Newell said, attentive despite his
honest weariness, “how those wagons managed to come so far so
fast?”
Duke Allister sighed. “I suspect that many crossed
Mason’s Bridge and began the trip north days before the troops,
maybe even as early as the very day that Queen Gustin was sent
Stonehold’s ultimatum. We have active trade with
Stonehold—indeed, much of our steel and iron comes from there,
for the Barren Lands are metal poor and block our access to the Iron
Mountains your own nation mines.”
“So,” Newell frowned, “not even a heavily laden
wagon would seem curious—not even if it clanked with quantities
of finished metal.”
“The only people who would look at those wagons would be the
toll collectors, whose interest would be in judging how much each
wagon should pay for crossing into Bright Bay,” Duke Allister
said. “We can send a pigeon to our garrison near Mason’s
Bridge for confirmation, but I think we have enough of a working
theory to plan upon.”
King Tedric unrolled the best of the maps of Bright Bay.
“Even if,” he said, tracing his finger along the road
south, “Stonehold has brought in fresh troops and more
supplies, the length of their supply line home remains their greatest
weakness.”
“Yet we can’t get our army around the mass of their
army to get to those supplies or that road,” Newell put in
practically, rather enjoying pointing out the worst aspects of the
situation. “Our troops would be spotted too easily as they
crossed the open zone around Good Crossing. Generals Yuci and Grimsel
did not strike me as tactically dull. They, too, must realize that
their supply line is their vulnerable point and will be alert to
efforts to harm it.”
“They must,” Allister agreed, “and yet they will
wait to lessen their dependence on supplies from home until they have
no choice. Looting and pillaging would awaken a new enemy all around
them. Farmers armed with pitchforks or old spears scavenged from the
family’s ancestral shrine may not be much of a threat to a
prepared army, but they could become a dangerous nuisance.”
“And with the harvest ready to come in,” Tedric added,
“those farmers will be more easily enraged. No one, not even
the most peaceful grower of wheat, likes to see an entire
year’s work vanish into someone else’s mouth.”
Prince Newell cleared his throat and asked anxiously, “How
long do you think the Stoneholders will give us before they
attack?”
“Until tomorrow,” Tedric replied bluntly.
“Perhaps they will wait until the next day, but from what you
reported their troops were marching steadily, though not at a forced
pace. Most should be ready for action after a night’s
rest.”
“Might they attack tonight?” Allister asked.
“I think not,” Tedric said after a moment’s
thoughtful pause, “but if they do, we will have ample
warning—warning beyond the usual sounds or lights of their
approach.”
The king’s thin smile held a hint of the indulgent grin he
reserved for one favored person.
With a surge of envy, Prince Newell realized that Tedric meant
that he expected Lady Blysse to bring Hawk Haven warning.
Newell’s envy turned into a peculiarly uncomfortable form of
fear as he realized that the wolf-woman must have been scouting for
the king ever since this war had been declared—and perhaps even
before. What might she have seen?
He endeavored to look bluff and hearty.
“It’s good to know we’ll have warning, Sire. Our
men will sleep better for the news.”
“Whatever news you are envisioning spreading, Newell,”
the king ordered sternly, “keep it to yourself. One reason that
Allister and I have kept our conferences as small as possible is that
we cannot be certain who—especially among Bright Bay’s
forces—may still feel allied to Stone-hold.”
“You must remember,” Allister said a touch sadly,
“that until a mere handful of days ago most of my
nation’s troops viewed Stonehold as a friend and her army as
teachers. Although most are angry and offended by the recent
betrayals, still, there must be some—maybe even some
officers—who retain loyalty to those who taught
them.”
“And,” Newell added bluntly, “who still hate
us.”
“Well,” Allister said, “you were the
enemy.”
King Tedric sighed. “Newell, go gather the officers.
It’s time we gave a briefing.”
“Yes, Your Majesty!” Newell replied, saluting
smartly.
As he was leaving he heard the king say to Allister:
“I have a thought how we might deal with that supply line.
Tell me what you think of this…”
Race Forester came to Derian Carter late that afternoon while Derian
was checking the shoes and feet of the horses who—if all
progressed as anticipated—would carry their riders into battle
tomorrow.
At Earl Kestrel’s express command, Derian himself
wasn’t going to fight. He didn’t know whether he felt
relieved or angry. For the first time since Firekeeper had been given
into his charge Derian felt as if he’d been demoted from a
man’s place to that of a boy.
Because of this, the sight of Race, clean-lined and military in
his scout’s uniform, made Derian scowl and dig at the stone
lodged in Ox’s bald-faced chestnut’s shoe with rather
more intensity than he should. The normally placid horse shuddered
his skin and muttered equine warning. Queenie, who had been sniffing
around the horse’s heels, flinched away.
“Good afternoon to you, too, Derian Carter,” Race
said, leaning against one of the hitching posts and scratching
Queenie behind the ears.
“Oh, Race,” Derian said, flinging the stone away and
pretending to notice the scout for the first time. “I
didn’t see you coming.”
“And no wonder with that mountain of horseflesh hanging over
you,” Race said easily.
Derian, knowing he had been being rude, felt rather embarrassed.
He pulled out a curry comb and began grooming the chestnut’s
coat.
“Ready for tomorrow, Race?”
“I suppose so,” Race said. “For a bit there I
thought I might be drafted into the archers at the last
moment—someone had been bragging about how good I am with a
bow—but the commander of scouts insisted he couldn’t
spare me.”
“Great.”
“Yes, it is rather nice having people argue over who will
get your services.” Race paused. “Isn’t
it?”
“I wouldn’t know,” Derian said stiffly.
“Oh?” Race drew closer and lowered his voice.
“Then I must be the first to get to you. Derian, how do you
feel about going into battle tomorrow?”
Derian kept his voice equally soft, though he felt like shouting
in surprise and indignation.
“Me? I can’t. Earl Kestrel has demanded that I stay
with the horses. He says that both his and Duchess Merlin’s
units are short of farriers and my skill with horses far outweighs my
skill with a sword.”
Despite himself, Derian heard the bitterness in his voice.
“As if,” he added, “Earl Kestrel has even
noticed how I’ve kept in practice all these
moon-spans.”
“He’s noticed more than you might imagine,” Race
said, “and he’s said no more than the truth. There are
few men—especially of your years—who are as good with a
horse.”
Derian grunted, accepting the compliment but not being
particularly graceful about it. Race punched him in the shoulder with
affectionate bluster.
“Young idiot,” Race said. “Did you ever think
that Earl Kestrel might want to keep you alive? King Tedric has made
you one of his counselors. That’s important not only to the
king, but to the earl. Norwood’s been preening ever since you
were named—pointing out to his peers whenever he can that he
knows how to pick a good man. But whether or not he wants to keep you
alive, that’s all out with the wash. There’s been a
change of plans.”
“Change?” Derian suddenly felt frightened. It was one
thing to scowl and brood about being overlooked when you were safely
out of danger; it was quite another when that danger was immediate
again.
Race nodded. “I was to tell you quietly if my commander
hadn’t gotten to you. I guess he hasn’t. Are you about
done with those nags?”
“About.”
“Meet me at our camp,” by this Race meant the new
Kestrel camp on the southern bank of the Barren, “when
you’re done. Make sure you finish up properly because you might
not make it back here tonight.”
Derian did as Race had suggested, going over each horse carefully
and consulting with the farrier from Hope—the same from whom he
and Doc had bought medicine just days before—as to the
strengths and weaknesses of the war mounts. These were huge, fierce
horses, often intolerant of any but their handler, and working with
them took special consideration.
Only when he was certain that he had discharged his duty to Earl
Kestrel did Derian head for the camp, but he did so at a quick trot
that was nearly a run. Overhead he heard Elation shrill something
like laughter. The great peregrine had taken to following Derian
about more often now that Firekeeper was scouting for the army and a
beacon overhead would be neither welcome nor wise.
Arriving at the Kestrel camp, Derian found Race and Valet waiting
for him. As before, their camp’s location had been selected to
permit Firekeeper to come and go without Blind Seer panicking the
rest of the army. Backed against the Barren River, downstream from
Good Crossing, they were the farthest group east but for the pickets
who patrolled the camp’s border.
Across the river, Derian could see lights glowing in the Watchful
Eye and along the northern side of the river. For the first time he
realized that evening was gathering. Tomorrow if all rumors were
correct, there would be battle, a massive thing that would make the
battle a few days before—now called the Battle on the
Banks—look like a minor skirmish.
And he might be in it. Not wanting to introduce the matter, Derian
commented:
“I always meant to ask why we built the Watchful Eye on our
side of the river but Bright Bay never built any similar fort on
their side.”
Valet poured him a cup of mulled cider and commented, “When
the Civil War ended, Bright Bay received Good Crossing. Hope
didn’t exist then—just a few houses and farms as I
understand it. The Watchful Eye was built to house the garrison that
would protect this newly vulnerable point.”
He fell silent, having been far more talkative than was his wont.
Race added:
“Good Crossing had a watchtower—it’s part of the
walls now—and was a whole lot bigger. Hope grew up pretty fast,
though, what with smuggling and tolls and soldiers to supply.
I’ve heard that when it got to be a town rather than a cluster
of houses they called it Hope because folks there hoped they
wouldn’t get attacked.”
“My father,” Derian said, “told me it was named
for a hope for peace and reunification.”
“Maybe,” Race shrugged. “I’m no historian.
Anyhow, thanks for getting here so quickly, Derian. I’ve got
your marching orders, if you’ll take them.”
Derian nodded, swallowing cider despite the lump that suddenly
appeared in his throat.
“Go on,” he said.
“I was told to tell you that this was a request, not an
order,” Race began. He stopped, scratched his beard and started
again. “Sorry, I’m not much good at speeches.”
Derian wanted to strangle him, but waited with what patience he
could muster.
“It’s been decided,” Race began again,
“that Stonehold’s biggest weak spot is that they’ve
got a long way to go to get in their supplies. The king and the duke,
though, they don’t want to send the army after those supplies.
They figure it would be too easy for Stonehold to defend
them.”
“Would it?” Derian asked.
“Well, I haven’t been over there myself,” Race
said, “but from reports we’ve got they’ve got their
wagons drawn up alongside the road that leads back to Mason’s
Bridge. They’re keeping the road mostly open, but their camp is
all along there as well as along the southern end of the field
outside of Good Crossing.
“Now,” Race continued, “if our army does succeed
in breaking Stonehold’s lines and going through we’ll get
those supplies, no question. The thing is, we may not break those
lines, at least not right away. It might take days of
fighting.”
Derian refilled his mug, mostly to hide a shiver.
“And during those days,” Race said,
“they’ll be bringing in more supplies and maybe even
build good defenses for what they have. So, what King Tedric and Duke
Allister have decided is that at the same time the main armies are
hitting each other out on the field, a small group—one that
could circle wide around the eastern fringes of the Stonehold camp
and come in where they’ll only have guards, not a whole
army—that small group could come in and destroy as many of the
supplies as possible.”
Derian nodded. “That makes sense. If the group could get
through, they could do real damage.”
“Right.” Race nodded. “Now, the problem is that
the king and the duke figure that there are spies in the main
army.”
“Our army?” Derian asked, a little shocked, even
though his common sense told him that this must be so. After all,
didn’t Hawk Haven have spies around Stonehold’s army?
“If the spies got wind of this flank maneuver,” Race
said, “they would certainly tell their chiefs and perimeter
patrols would be beefed up. So the raiders are being drawn from
people who have the skills but aren’t part of any regular
units. Take me, for instance. I’m with the scouts, but I
haven’t given up my primary allegiance to Earl Kestrel.
There’s another scout—one who came with Earle
Kite’s group—who’s also
semi-independent.”
Derian could see where Race was heading. He decided to anticipate
it.
“And me? I’m one of Earl Kestrel’s people,
too.”
“Right.” Race puffed his chest a bit. “I told my
commander that you’d learned a lot from me on the trip
west—and more from taking care of Firekeeper.”
“Is Firekeeper part of this, too?” Derian asked,
momentarily dismayed that his true worth was actually as a watch on
the wolf-woman.
“Actually,” Race seemed embarrassed,
“she’s not. They discussed it and decided that Blind Seer
would spook the Stonehold animals. It’s happened a time or two
already, when Firekeeper’s been scouting for the king, but it
hasn’t mattered then because the two of them just took off
before the guards could be sure of anything.”
“Whereas we need to stay,” Derian said.
“Another reason is that Firekeeper,” Race shrugged,
“just doesn’t know how to pick a target. She
wouldn’t know how to figure out what’s valuable and
what’s not. She’s also fairly reluctant to kill
people.”
“A good thing,” Derian said dryly, “given how
good she is at killing game.”
“True,” Race agreed hastily, “but we can’t
have someone distracted by needing to give her orders or clarify a
target. All the raiders need to be capable of initiative. King Tedric
has spoken with Firekeeper already and she’s agreed to stay
out.”
“I hope she listens to him better than she does to
me,” Derian said, recalling how Firekeeper had followed him and
Doc into town.
“I think she will,” Race said. “I think this
entire concept of war has her rather confused.”
Valet added quietly, “I agree. She is most
distressed.”
“I hadn’t noticed,” Derian admitted,
“mostly because she’s been away so much and I’ve
been with the cavalry mounts where she doesn’t dare
come—not with Blind Seer.”
“Talk with her,” Valet urged. “You will have
time before our departure.”
“Our?” Derian looked at him. “Are you going
along on this raid, too?”
“Earl Kestrel,” Valet said with a faint sigh,
“has requested I join, recalling how Race praised my woodcraft
when we were seeking Prince Barden.”
Derian grinned, assured despite himself. It seemed impossible that
anything could go wrong if Valet was taking part.
“Who else?” he asked. “Us three, the scout Race
mentioned, and… ?”
“About a dozen other people chosen for both their skills and
their certain loyalty,” Race said. “It’s not been
easy to find what we need, especially on short notice and with most
of those assigned to the army ruled out lest they be missed. Still,
scouts are harder to pin down and my commander has found clever ways
to cover for those we’re taking. The other members are personal
attendants on various of the nobles who have arrived with their
troops. You’ll see them all at a meeting tonight.”
“Meeting?” Derian asked. “Won’t that be
risky?”
“We’ve a safe place,” Race assured him.
“Anyhow, it would be more risky to go in without a chance to
plan, practice, and meet each other.”
Derian thought fleetingly of Prince Newell’s man Rook and
hoped he wasn’t being included. The times their paths had
crossed—which hadn’t been often—he had not liked
the man any better than he had liked his master. Derian decided not
to ask. If Rook had been ruled trustworthy, then it was not
Derian’s place to question.
Instead he looked out across the camp, watching the glow of the
campfires, listening to the rise and fall of voices, the sound of
weapons being sharpened, of meals being prepared. In the middle
distance, a clear baritone voice began a mournful song. It’s for real, Derian thought. I’m going
to war.
He rose then and went to check his own armor and weapons. There
wasn’t any time to waste.
XXV
Good Crossing was the westernmost town in Bright Bay.
The reason for this was that no one could live in the Barren Lands.
Out of the Barren Lands flowed the Barren River, widening as soon as
the waters reached less rocky land, like a broad-shouldered man
stretching after a day in a cramped coach.
Long ago, those rapid-flowing waters had carried enormous boulders
downstream. These, over even more time, had collected other rocks,
dirt, and detritus, becoming small islands that would one day entice
colonists to rest the supports for a bridge upon them. Around the
bridge a town would grow up and someday the bridge itself would be a
town. Firekeeper found the ways and reasons for human settlement
astonishing. It was so unlike the roving ways of the wolves, like but
unlike the nesting of certain birds who would return to the same tree
or cliff edge year after year.
She thought about this as she stood with Derian on the hills to
the west of Good Crossing, hills that were themselves the last
remnants of the Barren Lands. Because the soil here was rocky, these
hills had never been cultivated. Because the trees that grew on them
were stunted and twisted, they had never been cut for lumber and only
rarely thinned for firewood. Since the soil east of the Barren Lands
had been enriched by the ash from the long-ago volcanic eruptions, it
produced not only good timber but good farming. So this poor excuse
for a forest had been left alone.
Surrounding Good Crossing there was a large, cleared area. In
happier days, this had provided public grazing for the town, the
place where market wagons clustered before the opening of the city
gates, and the home of the horse fair held once in the spring and
once in a autumn.
Until a few days ago, Firekeeper had crossed those fields almost
every night while gathering information for King Tedric. Now she was
amazed at how different the place seemed—transformed since the
almost impulsive Battle of the Banks into an acknowledged
battleground.
After that battle, Stonehold’s forces had retreated as far
as the southern edge of the field, arraying themselves along the
field and spreading to either side of the broad north-south road that
would ultimately arrive at Mason’s Bridge. The road had a
grassy margin along it, bordered here and there with saplings or by
hedges protecting farmers’ fields or by orchards.
Firekeeper looked back and forth between the two camps. In the
camp outside of Good Crossing, the scarlet and white shields borne by
Hawk Haven’s rank and file blended with the sea green and
yellow of Bright Bay. On the other side of that cleared area, which
to Firekeeper’s eyes looked no different from any other patch
of cleared ground, neither scarlet and white nor green and yellow
could be seen, but only the triple chevronels of Stonehold—red,
purple, and blue on a field of white.
Even through the long glass that Derian had borrowed from Race,
the array of flags and pennons was confusing. Ever since King Tedric
had departed from Eagle’s Nest to meet with Duke Allister,
Firekeeper had been studying various insignia, trying to learn how to
tell person from person by their signs, and occasionally regretting
her refusal to learn to read and write.
Her memory was good, far better than that of most humans she had
met, but it was schooled to recall scents and sounds more than visual
images. Notes would help her to remember, or at least provide a
better sense of how human symbols worked.
“I don’t understand, still,” the wolf-woman
admitted to Derian. “The simplest, yes. Hawk Haven’s
soldiers bear the shield split side to side on the slant: red and
white. King Tedric’s colors.”
“Scarlet and silver are the preferred heraldic terms for
those colors,” Derian said teasingly, “but red and white
will do.”
“And those of Bright Bay carry shields of green and yellow,
split on a similar slant, but opposite,” Firekeeper gestured,
miming a line that started high on the left and dropped to the
right.
“Very good. Sea green and gold—yellow in this
case—are the colors of the royal house of Bright Bay,”
Derian said.
“And Stonehold soldiers,” Firekeeper continued,
“have on their shields what looks like three skinny mountains
against a snowy sky, colored one each red and purple and
blue.”
“Yes.”
“But some shields—no matter the color of the
background—have something drawn on the middle of the shield. A
star—or what you call a star—or a flower—though I
have never seen such flowers—or animals.”
Firekeeper’s snort showed what she thought of these last as
representations of the true beasts and beside her Blind Seer
laughed.
“The basic shields,” Derian explained with the
enthusiasm of a youth raised in the capital city for whom heraldry
meant not just symbols but real people—some of them heroes,
“are carried by the rank and file. The shields with a simple
blazon—the star or flower or animal—are carried by the
officers.”
Firekeeper nodded. “This so those they command may know them
when helmets are pulled low, but Earl Kestrel is an officer and yet
his shield is different yet more so. It bears the same blue and red
bands set side by side with the golden hunting horn that he shows on
his flag and even on his clothing.”
“That’s because he’s heir to a Great House and
entitled to bear his own house’s colors instead of those of the
king,” Derian said. “If you look to where Elise’s
father stands with his archers you will see that his shield is
different again: white with an archer upon it shooting a scarlet
arrow from his bow.”
Derian pointed. “If you look you’ll see that there are
others carrying Earl Kestrel’s red and blue stripes. These are
troops raised from his lands, his local militia. There aren’t
many of these because Norwood lands are all the way cross Hawk
Haven—in the area bordering New Kelvin. Most of his troops have
stayed home to patrol banks of the White Water River, just in case
the New Kelvinese get to wondering if we’re watching our
flanks. Still, there were some based at the Kestrel Manse in
Eagle’s Nest and they’ve come along so that Kestrel can
demonstrate its support of the king.”
Firekeeper nodded, noting that what Derian said of the Kestrel
colors was true of the other Great Houses as well. She resigned
herself to confusion, wondering how anyone could keep all of this
straight. In addition to those devices she had come to know there
were so many new ones: mostly devices designating military companies
or personal devices such as Sapphire’s gem-blazoned shield. “I have a new respect for heralds,” she said to
Blind Seer. “When we were in at the castle they seemed stuffy,
self-important sorts. Now I see how useful their knowledge
is.” Blind Seer grunted agreement . “I wonder what keeps one
soldier from carrying another’s shield or stealing a great
noble’s banner?” “A good question.” She repeated it to Derian, who
replied: “In the heat of battle one soldier will often seize
another’s shield, especially to replace one lost or damaged.
However, the imposture couldn’t continue after helmets were
removed.” “But deliberately change,” Firekeeper pressed,
“to make oneself more important.”
Derian laughed. “That would be its own penalty, for those
with reputation enough to merit a personal coat of arms are usually
the target of many soldiers. Killing a common soldier is useful, but
killing an officer or a noble may strike fear in those who depend on
his or her commands.”
“I see,” Firekeeper frowned. “You speak lightly
of killing and even laugh. Have you ever killed anyone?”
Derian sobered. “I have not. Honestly, I’m wondering
if I’m a great coward for being so glad that my place will be
off the main field.”
“I don’t think you’re a coward,”
Firekeeper said, looking out over that strip of empty land and
thinking of the coming battle as Derian had described it to her.
“I think you show great good sense. What will they fight for?
How will they know who has won?”
“Our troops fight to defend their position and to drive the
others away,” Derian explained. “Their troops fight to
take ground and make our soldiers lose heart.”
“Then we will win,” Firekeeper said confidently.
“We are here already and have nowhere to go. It is easier, too,
for more of King Tedric’s troops to join this army
here.”
“True,” Derian said, “as far as that goes. But
the damage done to land and property is all ours to take. If this war
stretches on, we are hurt by those damages.”
“Long? I thought this war was to be this
afternoon!”
“This battle,” Derian said heavily. “Wars are
made of many battles or sometimes of only one.”
“Which is this to be?”
“I wish I knew,” he said. “I bet King Tedric
wishes that he knew, too.”
“Is there any way to make the war end without many
battles?”
“Never start,” Derian said, then regretted the
flippancy in his tone. “I take that back. If that quick wisdom
was true our country and Bright Bay would not have been spatting
these hundred years and more. Sometimes a war is needed to clear the
enmity as a thunderstorm clears a late-summer sky—or so they
say.”
Firekeeper grunted, politely noncommittal about what she thought
about this bit of human wisdom.
“The other way wars are won,” Derian continued,
“is if one side captures a place or person so important that
the other side will surrender rather than risk their destruction: a
king or queen or perhaps someone like Duke Allister Seagleam, who has
taken his queen’s place here. I have heard that in New Kelvin
there are buildings so revered that the New Kelvinese honor them more
highly than any living thing.”
“Buildings?”
“So they say,” Derian shrugged, “but then New
Kelvinese are mad for old things and older customs.”
Firekeeper caught her breath in excitement. “Do the
Stoneholders have a king here? Where is his sign?”
Derian shook his head. “It’s not so easy, Firekeeper.
Stoneholders are ruled by two people, not one, and by a council in
addition. Moreover, none of those august personages are here as far
as I know. They’ve left Generals Yuci and Grimsel and their
troops to fight the battles for them.”
“I don’t,” Firekeeper admitted,
“understand.”
“I’m beginning to think,” Derian replied,
reaching over and squeezing her shoulder, “that neither do
I.”
Within a few hours, a field battle was no longer a thing to be
imagined. High in the concealing branches of a twisted oak on the
hilly ground west of Good Crossing, Firekeeper watched.
She was alone now but for Blind Seer. The wolf was prowling at the
base of the tree trunk, too nervous to sleep, though the early
afternoon was filled with lazy sunlight. Like her, he had come to
care for many of their human friends—to love them as an ersatz
pack—and to see these friends risk their lives so lightly for
so little was maddening.
Derian had gone to his post—to join the raiding party from
which Firekeeper herself had been asked to keep clear. She had
agreed, reluctantly acknowledging the wisdom of King Tedric’s
arguments, but at Firekeeper’s request, Elation was with
Derian, providing both guard and messenger should their friend come
to harm.
Both Elise and Doc were serving in the hospital tents erected to
the rear of the Hawk Haven-Bright Bay lines. Ox was at Earl
Kestrel’s side; Race and Valet were with Derian. Sapphire and
Jet were both bearing arms on the field. Even Lady Zorana was pulling
a bow under her brother’s command. Various spare nobles had
been delegated to run the king’s messages to the commanders on
the field.
Alone of all those she had befriended, Firekeeper had no place in
this war. Her skills with sword and shield, while admirable for the
scant training she had been given, were not good enough for her to
serve in the ranks without being more of a liability to her allies
than to the enemy. Although she was more skilled with a bow, she
could not bring herself to do as Baron Ivon’s archers would
do—stand in a line and loose arrows on command, hoping to hit
some anonymous figure on the other side. Slaughter so impersonal made
the wolf-woman shiver and feel sick.
Through the long glass, Firekeeper saw Duke Allister near the
center of Bright Bay and Hawk Haven’s allied
armies—riding out among them as chief commander of all those
assembled. She wondered how Duke Allister felt about his tasks and
the deaths that would occur upon his word. She wondered if King
Tedric regretted not being out there himself—he had seemed so
very angry when the physicians had adamantly refused to risk him any
nearer to the battlefield than a tent at the rear of the lines. She
wondered if she was even human to so little understand war.
And troubled by such thoughts, she watched from the limbs of her
towering oak. A thin shrill blast as from a hunting horn pierced the
air. This was followed by a flight of arrows, one coming so rapidly
after the others that the horn call seemed the source of that
black-shafted hail.
Though slim and light in the air, the arrows landed to deadly
effect. Firekeeper cringed as on both sides soldiers crumpled and
screamed. After a few more volleys, archers slung their bows across
their shoulders and lifted their fallen fellows, carrying dead and
wounded alike toward the rear lines. Then she heard the trumpet call
signaling the next movement in the battle.
From the flanks rode out the cavalry. Mounted on a dark sorrel far
heavier than familiar Coal, Earl Kestrel led the right wing onto the
field. Riding slightly behind him on a bald-faced chestnut selected
more for strength than for beauty or grace was Ox. The big man bore
the Kestrel banner in one hand and a sword in the other.
Ox has no shield, Firekeeper thought anxiously. No shield but the
speed and skill with which he wields his sword. Yet I could swear
that he is laughing and urging the others on.
Her gaze turned then to the other flank, where a woman she had met
only in passing led the left flank of the cavalry charge. This was
the Duchess Merlin, a woman young for her position—barely
twenty-four. Her grandfather and father had both died in their
forties.
There had been those who had argued that House Trueheart would do
better with an older, steadier person at its head to help young Grace
learn her way about her responsibilities—among those had been
Zorana Archer, who had nominated her husband, Aksel Trueheart, the
duchess’s uncle. Grace, however, had been twenty-two when her
father died and so was legally eligible to take her place among the
heads of the Great Houses.
Many had expressed surprise when Duchess Merlin had arrived
personally leading the reinforcements raised from those who usually
patrolled her lands. Derian had reported that the king had said that
the young duchess needed to prove herself and that she fully
understood the risk she was taking. On her arrival Duchess Merlin had
presented the king with a document not unlike the king’s own
will, naming a regent for her year-old son should she die on the
field.
And how many others, Firekeeper mused, watching the slender
duchess on her sturdy dapple grey charge into the opposing line of
mounted soldiers, are out there fighting not because they believe in
preserving Bright Bay’s territory from Stonehold, but because
they have something to prove? Surely Sapphire Shield fights to earn
glory rather than for Bright Bay. And perhaps Jet hopes that valor in
battle may remove the ignominy of his behavior on the night of the
brothels.
When Sapphire Shield had requested to join Earl Kestrel’s
company, the earl had welcomed her, not so much, Firekeeper knew, for
her skill— though Sapphire rode as well as many of the cavalry
troops—but because the soldiers loved her for appearing like a
figure out of legend: for the blue steed she rode, for her dyed and
enameled armor.
Sapphire’s renunciation of the stone that had glowed so long
on her brow had done nothing to lessen the tales growing up around
her. Though two days had passed, the skin where the headband had
rested for so long remained as white as new-fallen snow. Already some
whispered that Sapphire had battled evil sorcery and won. And yet, even those who shiver deliciously at the tales
don’t believe them, not deep inside. How strange.
The infantry waded into the gaps left by the clash of cavalry.
Here was where Rolfston Redbriar fought and here was where he died,
slain by a practiced sword slash from a grim-faced woman with a
dogwood blossom painted above the triple chevronels on her shield.
Neither Sapphire nor Jet, each elsewhere on the field, knew that they
were now fatherless. Melina was right when she told Rolfston Redbriar not to be a
fool and join the battle, but he would have nothing of her
wisdom—not when Ivon Archer fights both as an archer and then
on foot. I wonder if somehow Lady Melina will turn even this tragedy
to enhance her reputation.
In the infantry was where many other people Firekeeper had met
were fighting: men and women with whom she had tossed dice or who had
proven their courage by stroking Blind Seer’s head. It bothered
her that she could not tell one from another even with the long
glass. Helmets and armor, combined with shields held to protect vital
spots, turned each figure into a blood- and dirt-smeared variation on
the rest.
Firekeeper found herself watching the cavalry instead, for horses
were distinct where humans were not.
She watched, fingernails digging trenches in her palms, as Earl
Kestrel’s sorrel was belly-wounded and tumbled screaming to the
ground. Had Ox not been near to lift the body from his earl, Norvin
Norwood, too, would have died there. As it was, Earl Kestrel
struggled to his feet and eschewed his own safety to cut his
horse’s throat before turning to face those who saw an unseated
cavalry officer as fair game.
Prince Newell, mounted on a rust-colored steed splashed with white
on legs and face, rescued Earl Kestrel by dashing close enough to
shield-bash the soldier who was raising his sword to strike, though
this left Newell himself vulnerable.
Ox tended to the soldier who would have stabbed Newell, receiving
in return an ugly slash that laid open one side of his jaw. Ignoring
the red rain that came forth, he beat his way back to the little
earl’s side, finally shoving him into the saddle of his own
sturdy chestnut. Then, scooping up the banner pole, Ox raised the
Kestrel crest so that the earl’s troop would take heart from
the knowledge that their commander was safe.
Once unremarkable, now the little scrap of land was watered with
blood, mostly in trickles and dribbles but sometimes in terrible
gouts where soldiers or steeds had been mortally wounded. The hot,
coppery stink came even to where Firekeeper sat and soon she thought
she could bear no more. Yet she remained anchored to her perch, held
by a fierce desire not to cheapen the sacrifice of those who were
fighting by hiding like a rabbit.
So she was there to see when Duke Allister’s aide, a man she
vaguely recalled as Lord Tench, was slain by an arrow meant for the
duke.
Duke Allister’s group was mostly afoot now—perhaps to
make the duke less visible. Had Allister Seagleam not turned to
answer some request from a bloodied retainer, had Tench not moved to
listen to what was being said, the arrow might have landed unnoticed
in dirt already churned by many feet, already littered with countless
arrows from earlier attacks. But the arrow hit Tench squarely in the
back, a mortal wound that left the others in his vicinity scattering
for cover. And Firekeeper was down from her sheltering oak before
Tench hit the ground.
“That arrow could only have come from near here,” she
cried to Blind Seer. “That was no chance shot! Let us find the
archer. I have no love for those who kill brave soldiers from a
distance and from cover.”
Blind Seer gaped his fanged jaws in a vicious smile. “I
am with you, Little Two-legs, but the smells of blood and sweat and
fear thicken the air. I cannot find this ‘archer by scent
alone. Use your knowledge of the archer’s craft and find him
for us.”
And Firekeeper nodded, calling to mind every trace and trick for
use of the bow that Race Forester had taught her. Her teacher’s
skill had been honed by the need to live by his hunting and her
enthusiasm for his lessons had been avid; otherwise she might not
have found the place from which the assassin’s arrow had been
shot. But having all her life—at least her life as she
remembered it—needed to survive by dint of quickness and
cleverness, Firekeeper remembered precisely the path of that arrow as
it had streaked through the fair sky.
“It is not so unlike finding the lark’s nest by
recalling how she darts into the sky from cover,” she said to
Blind Seer, mentally tracing the arrow’s path. “We will
find the archer there in that clump of maples— ahead a bit,
closer to the battlefield. Doubtless he has hidden in the tree boughs
as I did here.” “The ground between is opener than I like,” the
wolf replied, already lowering himself to slink close to the earth as
the pack would when stalking a herd of elk. “I mislike how
your tall two-legged shape will stand out.”
The feral woman stroked his thick ruff. “There is no
avoiding that risk. We can only hope this archer’s thoughts are
for his prey alone. Keep to what cover you can, dearest one. Remember
his skill with the bow!”
Together they left their shelter. Blind Seer, belly so close to
the earth that the stubble groomed his fur, took the most direct
line, but Firekeeper dropped back to approach the clump of maples
from behind. Once in the open, she ran like a deer or a
wolf—for one was much the same in short bursts; it must be for
the one to live by hunting the other. And it was doubtful that even
if the archer in his lofty blind had seen her he would have been able
to fit arrow to string in time to take aim.
Despite having more ground to cover, Firekeeper arrived slightly
before the wolf. No scent betrayed the archer, but the scuffed bark
of the largest tree in the clump testified to his presence. Blind
Seer crouched below as she leapt onto the tree trunk, scrabbling
upward like a squirrel, her bare feet finding purchase where most
climbers would have found none. “If he jumps down,” Firekeeper called to her
companion, “catch him, but leave the killing to me. I liked
not how the humans looked at you in fear when you killed the one who
would have slain Sapphire in the town that night.”
Blind Seer howled softly in agreement and this gave the archer
warning of Firekeeper’s coming. He was well placed on a
platform jury-rigged across two thick boughs and traded bow for knife
as Firekeeper’s hand emerged from the leaves, casting as if
searching for a firm hold to continue the ascent.
A human would have died without seeing the hidden archer’s
face, but Firekeeper was not a human in such things. Though the
archer had moved with stealth, she had heard the soft tap as the bow
was set down, the slight scrape as knife left sheath. The questing
hand had been a feint to draw his attack.
Her Fang was ready in her free hand, her feet securely braced on a
lower limb. When the archer’s knife flashed to where her arm
should be, her Fang met his own arm right at the shoulder joint.
Though the archer wore armor, it did him no good. The Fang pierced
the light leather in the interstices between the heavier sections,
drawing both blood and a cry of pain. Yet the archer kept both his
balance and his blade. Stumbling back onto the platform, he seized
his quiver. When Firekeeper leapt onto the branch, he hurled it at
her. She parried with one hand, keeping the Fang ready to bite again
in the other.
They faced each other then and Firekeeper knew the man. This man
had taken care to be unobtrusive in his comings and goings about the
Hawk Haven camp, but she had taken equal care to know something about
the entourage of each noble.
“Rook!” she exclaimed, startled, for what was Prince
Newell’s manservant doing here, attacking his master’s
commander?
Rook’s reply was to lunge forward, perhaps hoping to take
advantage of her momentary surprise. Firekeeper’s defenses,
though, were as automatic as breathing—they needed to be, for
in the wilds she would not have breathed long if she needed to think
about defense. She dodged the blow and counterstruck. Already she
knew that she did not want to kill Rook—alive he could
talk—but he had no such consideration for her.
Rook was larger and had better footing. He might be stronger,
though Firekeeper was discovering that she was stronger than most
humans she encountered. However, stronger or not, Rook outmassed her,
not a trivial consideration in a duel where one could win merely by
making the other fall. But Firekeeper was at home in the trees,
almost as much at ease as she would be on the ground, especially in a
spreading, broad-branched old tree like this maple. Reluctant to
leave the sure footing of his platform, Rook was greatly
handicapped.
Below, Blind Seer leapt into the air, snapping his jaws loudly. He
could not reach the upper branches where the two humans tussled, but
Firekeeper saw how his growls and snarls unnerved her opponent.
“Surrender,” she suggested, nicking Rook’s
forearm on the underside so that the blood ran from between the
lacings. “You cannot run. Blind Seer will wait for you, even if
you defeat me. Surrender and I swear you will live to speak with the
king.”
Rook considered and even glanced out at the battlefield as if
expecting to see King Tedric there. Unwilling to risk killing him,
Firekeeper did not press beyond nicking Rook again, this time along
the back of his neck where his helmet and collar did not quite
meet.
Perhaps it was this, perhaps it was a foreboding that surrender or
not he would eventually become her prisoner, but Rook snarled:
“I surrender! Do you promise you or that beast will not kill
me until I have seen the king?”
“Seen and spoken with,” Firekeeper agreed, “if
King Tedric wishes to speak with you. And if you surrender
faithfully.”
“I will,” Rook said, laying down his long knife.
Not trusting him overmuch, Firekeeper bound Rook with his own
bowstring there in the treetops.
“This can be your prison,” she said, “until the
battle is done.” “Seal his mouth!” Blind Seer called, leaping
and snapping still for the pleasure of it. “He may call for
help otherwise.”
Firekeeper agreed. As she bound Rook’s mouth with cloth torn
from his shirt, she thought she saw dismay as well as anger in the
man’s eyes. “A good reminder,”she said to the wolf as she
dropped down beside him and rubbed his head. “I wonder if
his master knows of his treachery?”
She looked out over the still raging battlefield, hunting for
Prince Newell and his rust-red steed. Duke Allister, she noted in
passing, was back in command, framed by four soldiers who must be
very brave because they intended to intercept any arrow meant for
their commander—with their own bodies more likely than not. Sir
Dirkin East-branch was one of these four, doubtless participating in
today’s battle at his king’s express command.
Lord Tench’s corpse lay on the ground to one side, still
facedown, though the arrow had been broken off, probably in a
desperate attempt to stanch the blood and save his life.
“I don’t see Prince Newell,” Firekeeper
said, puzzled. “Nor is his war mount among the dumb brutes
lying dead on the field. Where could he have gone?”
“Perhaps he has retreated wounded to the
hospital,” Blind Seer suggested.
Firekeeper turned the long-glass in that direction, but saw no
sign of the rust-red horse or its rider. Troubled now, she cast wider
and finally, at the very rear of the line, she located the horse.
Prince Newell’s shield hung from the saddle harness, confirming
that she had not been mistaken.
“Newell is with King Tedric,” she said.
“Perhaps he reports on the progress of the
fighting.”
But something troubled her even as she offered this explanation.
She remembered how Rook had scanned the battlefield before
surrendering. Recalled how he had insisted on speaking with
“the king,” not with “King Tedric.” Little things, she thought, but a strong bird’s nest can
be built with nothing but slim twigs and rabbit fluff. Beginning to run, she called to Blind Seer, “Come away
with me, sweet hunter. Suddenly, I am very afraid.”
No one but a few frightened horses seemed to notice when woman and
wolf came running down the hillside and went darting through the rear
lines toward the scarlet pavilion pitched as a command center for the
aged king.
As Firekeeper closed with that pavilion, however, she noticed a
strange thing. The guards who should stand flanking the door to the
pavilion or pace a patrol outside of it were standing a good number
of feet from the structure. Standing there as well were some of those
who had been acting as messengers for King Tedric: nobles and castle
staff alike.
Lady Zorana raised her bow when Firekeeper would cross the
perimeter around the pavilion, her expression grim.
“No one may interrupt the king, not even you, Lady Blysse.
He is in deep and confidential conference.”
“No!” Firekeeper swallowed a snarl of frustration.
“Not with Prince Newell?”
“That’s right.” Lady Zorana looked slightly
puzzled, but her bow and that deadly arrow remained steady.
Other of the guards were drawing weapons as well. Realizing that
even she and Blind Seer could not take out so many—especially
when she wished these people no harm—Firekeeper decided to risk
the arrow. Feinting left, then ducking in the other direction, she
dashed for the pavilion. She hadn’t reckoned on the skill of
the daughter of Purcel Archer.
Lady Zorana corrected her aim while Firekeeper was still pounding
across the open ground. The wolf-woman heard the bowstring sing out
and leapt up, but Zorana’s aim was true. Only the fact that
Zorana had not wished—despite, or perhaps because of, her
political rivalry with the king’s presumed heir—to kill
Firekeeper preserved the young woman’s life. The arrow plowed
across the flesh on the outside of Firekeeper’s left thigh,
cutting a deep furrow through skin and muscle.
Ox’s courage when she had seen him wounded sprang to mind,
balancing but not diminishing the searing pain. Firekeeper had been
hurt many times before, but most of those injuries had been of the
pummeling variety. When she had been cut, it had rarely been deep.
Nothing in her experience had prepared her for the sensation of
muscle being neatly sliced and of control vanishing.
Yet she leapt forward on her strong leg, relying on her arms as
she had when a pup. Carried by momentum, she pitched through the
pavilion’s door. Blind Seer bounded beside her, alert, though
whimpering his concern.
Firekeeper nearly surrendered to the pain when she saw what
awaited her within. Prince Newell bent over the high-backed chair
from which King Tedric had commanded his forces. The king’s
form was still upright; his hands still grasped the carved arms of
the chair, but his eyes were shut. There was a pallor to the
king’s face that Firekeeper did not like at all and he did not
seem to be breathing.
Prince Newell straightened when he saw her.
“Lady Blysse,” he said, his tone for a moment as
casual as it had been when they met at the ball. Then it altered,
filling with concern and shock. “You’ve been
wounded!”
“The king,” she said. “What have you done to the
king!”
“Nothing,” he responded. “I was telling him
about the attempt to assassinate Duke Allister when His Majesty
collapsed. I fear the news was more than his heart could take. I was
attempting to revive him.”
Firekeeper knew nothing of medicine’s deeper mysteries, but
it did not seem to her that Newell had been reviving the king. Why
then was the king’s wig knocked to one side? Why was there none
of the sharp stink of stimulants that she recalled from her visits to
the king’s chambers? Why were the king’s pale lips slowly
shaping one word?
“Help…” Tedric hissed.
“He lives!” she said to Blind Seer.
“Quickly! Get Doc!” “But Prince Newell!” the wolf growled in protest.
“He reeks of treachery!” “Go!” Firekeeper repeated. “You must not be
here when I deal with him.”
And the great grey wolf slipped beneath the edge of the
pavilion’s scarlet fabric and was gone. From without Firekeeper
heard cries of alarm, but she could not attend to them. Her argument
with Blind Seer had taken half the time it would have in human words
but still she had wasted too much time.
“I think,” Newell was saying, already drawing his
sword and lunging at her, “the shock of your death, little
Blysse, will finish my job for me.”
Firekeeper leapt back, knowing that she could hope for no
assistance, even if those outside overcame their reluctance to
disobey the prince’s orders. They would see her as the attacker
and Newell as the bold defender. Yet she could not abandon the king,
unarmed and lightly armored though she was, not after the proud old
Eagle had asked her for help.
She leapt back, stumbling on her wounded leg. Normally she could
have gotten clean away, but slowed as she was the sword’s sharp
point deeply scored the leather armor across her belly. Silently
Firekeeper thanked Derian, who had insisted that she wear the
stifling stuff, even if she was not to be in combat.
Drawing her Fang from its Mouth, Firekeeper dropped low, coming
within the compass of Prince Newell’s arm, too close for him to
bring the sword to bear. He was more heavily armored than she was,
but she jabbed the blade between two metal plates and through the
leather. It grated against a rib, then slid in.
Her reward was a grunt from Prince Newell and a kiss of warm blood
on her fingers. The prince jerked back before she could pull the
blade free, leaving her unarmed, her only weapon damming the wound in
his side. Not only weapon, she reminded herself. Have I not called
myself a wolf?
More cautious now, Prince Newell held his sword as much to guard
as to attack. He must indeed regret the shield he had left hanging
from the rust-red charger’s harness.
Blood loss was making Firekeeper light-headed, but she remained
enough herself to know that she could not charge again. Instead she
lifted a small table. The papers that had covered it fluttered to the
ground and began sopping up her blood from where it puddled on the
rugs.
Throwing the table, then a footstool, Firekeeper took advantage of
Prince Newell’s dodging to close a few more steps. Her leg
didn’t even hurt now; the pain was as much a constant as her
unwavering desire to protect the old man in his high-backed
chair.
In the background she heard the sound of someone entering the
tent. From the corner of her eye, she glimpsed one of the
King’s Own Guard. Knowing that in any moment she might have
another enemy, Firekeeper grabbed a medicine bottle, a carafe
half-filled with red wine, a tray, and hurled them one by one with
the pinpoint accuracy of one who had lived by that skill.
Prince Newell was wholly on the defensive now, unable—or
perhaps merely unwilling—to close as long as she had
ammunition. An angry red mark spread on one cheek where a heavy
pottery goblet had broken against the bone. His lower lip was
bleeding.
There was the sound of more people entering the pavilion, but thus
far no one interfered. Firekeeper’s vision was beginning to
blur now: fading in and out so that she had moments of great clarity
and others where she could hardly see the man whom she no longer
recalled by name, recalling only that he was her prey and that this
was the most important hunt of her life.
On the periphery of her attention, Firekeeper heard shouts and
screams. Considered that they might be important, dismissed the
thought as a distraction from her task.
Relentlessly, she dragged herself after her prey, throwing
whatever came to hand: scraps of pottery, bits of blood-soaked paper,
a solid metal box. Then, suddenly, the tips of her fingers scrabbled
vainly in the plush of the rugs. For the first time, she realized
that she was on the floor, her weight resting on the knee of her
sound right leg and on her right arm. Her left hand quested blindly
after something to throw.
A shadow fell over her. In one of those moments of perfect clarity
of thought and vision, Firekeeper recognized Prince Newell, battered
and bloodied but still alive. Grasping the hilt in both hands, he was
raising his sword to pin her to the ground, thus to end her crawling
forever.
A dark red eye, bright and wet in his side, looked down at
Firekeeper—the garnet set into the hilt of her Fang. With her
last strength, the wolf-woman surged just high enough to grasp the
knife handle. Shoving the blade in with desperate power, she twisted.
The force of Prince Newell’s own descending thrust ripped the
Fang free.
Then hot, terrible pain forced her face into the bloodied rugs.
She knew nothing except that faintly, at the very edge of her
hearing, a wolf was howling as if his heart must break.
XXVI
Even before the thin wail of the trumpet signaled the
first exchange of arrows, Derian and the other raiders had been long
gone. They had left via Good Crossing’s river gate huddled
beneath a tarp on the deck of a cargo boat. To an observer, theirs
would, appear to be just one of many small boats filled to capacity
with those who had decided that it was safer to be away from the
city, just in case the defenders did not hold.
However, unlike most of these boats, which went downriver to land
at the usually placid hamlet of Butterfield, their boatman carried
them only as far as a small cove hidden from the city—and, they
hoped, from any observers—by a thick tangle of willows.
Derian felt dreadfully exposed as he climbed from the boat onto
the shore, uncomforted by the fact that not even most of the river
traffic seemed to notice their detour. Rationally, he knew they were
invisible, but he fully expected a roving band of Stoneholders to
leap out upon them.
His back tensed against this imagined threat, he steadied the boat
as the others climbed ashore. Each raider carried a bow and arrows, a
knife, and a hand weapon of choice. Each was lightly armored, any
metal dulled, any light tanned leather rubbed dark with soot. None
carried a shield, for these would slow them and the raiders had to
move quickly and use what cover they could.
Traffic on the road east from Good Crossing, a road that roughly
paralleled the Barren River, was nonexistent. In an effort to keep
Stonehold from pressing east should they break the army at Good
Crossing, the road had been barricaded with fallen trees where it
left the open grounds around the city. In any case, no coward or
refugee was going to chance a land journey when the river was so
near.
Race Forester led them away from the riverbank and across the
road, then through a gap in a hedgerow bordering a farmer’s
fields. The grain was high and—Derian thought—close to
being ripe. It made an admirable shield from anything.
He glanced up, catching a glimpse of what he thought was Elation
lazily riding the air currents far above. Firekeeper had told Derian
that the falcon would be there keeping an eye on him and that she
would bring Firekeeper if needed. Otherwise, the bird was to stay
high enough that she would not draw attention to herself or to the
raiders.
Derian thought it was nice that his death would be avenged, but
other than that he didn’t think the great peregrine would be
much help. Realizing that he was woolgathering, Derian forced himself
to pay attention as Race reviewed their plans.
“We’re going to make our way back,” Race said,
“just about all the way that boat carried us, but this time
we’ll angle inland south and west. Jem”—the scout
nodded toward a burly, bent man who looked as if his nose had been
hit with a potato masher—“has done a good deal of
scouting over on this side of the Barren and is going to take us
through orchards and fields.”
“And folks’ barns,” Jem grunted. “We
won’t touch a road and the Stoneholders”—he
spat—“won’t see us until we choose.”
Between practice sessions last night, Derian had talked for a
while with Jem, the only Bright Bay scout in their strike force. Jem
passionately hated Stonehold because of how a Stonehold sergeant had
violently beat him some years before. His smashed nose was only the
most visible of his injuries.
When he had recovered enough to walk, Jem had defected to Hawk
Haven and by now was well known and well trusted by the garrison at
the Watchful Eye, who knew him for a smuggler who would smuggle
information as well as goods.
“I know not all ‘holders are like that
sergeant,” Jem had told Derian. “I know it in my head,
but in my heart I hate ’em.”
Derian dragged his attention to the present.
“Stay out of sight,” Race reminded them. “The
army’s providing a distraction for us, but that won’t
mean everyone’s staring toward the front lines like kids
watching a puppet show. Some will remember their duty to guard, some
won’t want to watch, others will have jobs that will take them
through the camp. Still, they won’t be watching every wagon and
supply dump. Those are our targets.”
Derian nodded, his mouth dry. Then he fell into place. In front of
him was Joy Spinner—the scout from House Kite—and behind
him was another scout, a man called Thyme. Valet was toward the back
and Jem out front. Race, nominally in command though this raid
demanded initiative as well as obedience, moved alongside Jem, ready
for trouble.
Jem’s chosen route, however, was clear. Those who owned the
farms they crossed were either absent or reluctant to notice an armed
group that was so evidently just passing through. The barns they cut
through were empty of any livestock other than the occasional chicken
or cat. In a surprisingly short period of time the raiders were
behind the Stonehold lines and drawing up on their encampment.
In the near distance, shouts and commands, the clash of metal, and
the screams of the wounded confirmed that battle had been joined.
They came sharply to Derian as he closed on his own battlefield, a
reminder of the penalty for failure.
Jem led them through an orchard, the upper boughs of the trees
heavy with unpicked fruit, the air smelling of cider. It came up
right to the edge of the Stonehold camp. Doubtless even the strict
rules against pillaging hadn’t kept the soldiers from stealing
the more easily picked fruit.
Derian didn’t need Race’s hand signal to remind him to
keep to cover. As on the banks of the Barren, he felt dreadfully
exposed, even though he knew that as long as he kept his movements
slow and steady only the most alert guard would be likely to spot him
through the intervening apple trees.
He knelt behind one of the trees, studying the camp through the
veil of low-hanging branches.
The Stoneholders had not unloaded most of the recently arrived
wagons. That made sense. If the Rocky Band won today’s battle,
they would be moving forward to take new ground. If they failed, they
needed to be ready to retreat. Many of the tarps covering the wagons
had been thrown back, probably to inventory the contents and to haul
out what was immediately needed. Those wagons that remained covered
clearly contained fodder, for hay poked out at either end. There’s my target, Derian thought. I’m sure
I can hit a haystack and even slightly green hay will burn
nicely.
He gestured his choice to Race and the scout nodded. A few moments
later, he signaled for them to string their bows. Each raider carried
several arrows specially prepared for fire. Five of their
number—Valet was one—carried clay pots containing coals.
As they had rehearsed the night before, they broke into clumps of
three and set their arrows tip-down into the coals. First, Derian reminded himself, light the arrow. The smell of
burning shouldn’t alert the guards, because they’ll have
campfires of their own. Wait for Race’s signal to shoot. Shoot
all your prepared arrows. Then decide whether you can constructively
do more or whether the best thing you can do is clear out.
Neat orders. Tidy. Simple when they were just diagrams drawn in
the dirt rather than directed toward a living camp that looked far
too much like the one you had left behind.
The Stoneholders didn’t look like monsters, just like
soldiers. The guards were alert, scanning the orchards though more
than one spared a glance toward the battlefield where their comrades
were fighting. Some of these guards were clearly walking wounded,
reassigned after the Battle of the Banks.
A few had dogs with them, heavy, thick-bodied brutes meant for
guarding not hunting. Derian was glad that Race had left Queenie
behind. The bird dog wouldn’t have a chance against these
animals. They might even give Blind Seer a good fight. The dogs had a
better chance than the guards of spotting the group creeping through
the orchard, but the light wind blew from the north and
Stonehold’s camp was rich with odors so the dogs hadn’t
scented the raiders.
In addition to the guards, there were other Stoneholders in the
camp, men and women who hurried about purposefully fetching stuff
from the wagons, darting in and out of tents, hurrying along with
serious expressions on their faces. There was even a fat woman
washing socks in a cauldron slung from a tripod over a fire.
I’ve been around Firekeeper too long, Derian thought. People
just look like people.
The arrows in the pot had just caught when Race’s signal to
shoot came. Derian fired, fumbling a bit because—despite
practice the night before—he’d never fired a burning
arrow with any speed. To his right, Valet shot off two shafts with
neat precision before Derian had readied his own second arrow. When
Derian tried to hurry, Valet said softly:
“Make it count.”
Derian slowed. His first arrow had landed in his chosen haystack
and fire began to catch the hay. He sent another arrow at the same
stack— after all, you didn’t use just one piece of
kindling to start a cook fire.
As he reached for a third arrow, Derian realized that
Valet—having finished with his own prepared arrows—had
been poaching Derian’s. Momentarily angry, Derian would have
laughed at himself if he hadn’t been so nervous. What did it
matter who fired the arrows as long as they were shot?
Only as he was lowering his own bow did he realize that one of the
dogs from the Stonehold camp was charging toward him. Its
long-muzzled face was set in an ugly, fang-barring snarl that
reminded Derian of Blind Seer.
If this had been a ballad, Derian would have reached for an arrow
from his quiver and smoothly fired, dropping the vicious canine in
its tracks. Instead, Derian yelled and swung his bow. The string
popped, stinging as it slapped against his face, but the solid shaft
hit the dog soundly along head and neck. The dog reared back on its
haunches, yelping in surprise and pain. By the time it attacked
again, Derian had dropped the bow and drawn his sword.
Here the practicing he had done with Firekeeper and Blind Seer
came to his aid. He knew how the dog would attack; indeed, he nearly
misjudged because he expected one of Blind Seer’s more subtle
feints. This animal didn’t feint or dodge. It came straight in,
trusting its speed and ferocity.
Derian’s sword laid it open along one flank. His second
stroke took off its head.
“Very good, sir,” Valet said from beside him.
“And thanks.”
Derian grinned, feeling wetness on his face where dog blood had
spattered. Excitement made his own blood race and his head feel
light. He might have dashed foolishly to where the Stoneholders were
turning to face the dozens of fires blazing throughout their camp if
Valet hadn’t held him. Suddenly, he realized that the attack
had come to them.
Stonehold guards were surging into the orchard, determined to find
the source of the fire arrows. A short distance away from where
Derian and Valet were half-hidden by the same tree, the scout Thyme,
who had shared their pot of coals, was trading sword blows with a
Stoneholder. Race was entangled with another, disadvantaged by his
lack of a shield. Joy Spinner lay curiously still on the ground, an
arrow in her back and one of the dogs sniffing at her pooling
blood.
The excitement left Derian as quickly as it had come. He glanced
at Valet.
He wanted to yell, “Let’s get out of here!”
Instead he managed, “What next?”
Valet pointed. Fire was spreading through the Stoneholder’s
supplies. In some places it had been beaten out or drenched with
water from one of the butts distributed with military order among the
tents. In other places it had spread to the saplings and shrubs that
bordered the road. Hot leaves and twigs dropped down, rekindling the
blaze.
Derian looked where Valet had pointed. At the west edge of the
Stone-holders’ camp was a makeshift corral holding, at rough
estimate, at least two dozen draft horses. The fire was spreading
near them, feeding on the fodder in the wagons parked conveniently
close and on the wagons themselves. The huge, normally placid animals
were panicked, rolling their eyes, wheeling and plunging, screaming
like frightened women or small children.
Kicks from powerful hind legs had broken out sections of the
corral, but mostly the horses had simply crowded as far as possible
from the flames. They were strong, but not brilliant, bred to trust
people to do their thinking for them.
“Loss of those horses,” Valet said, “would hurt
Stonehold badly.”
Without a second thought, Derian headed for the horses. Never mind
that the Stoneholders’ cause would be hurt! Those horses had
done nothing but haul wagons. He couldn’t let them burn to
death—especially not in fires he had set.
Even in his sudden fury, Derian didn’t forget he had to
cross most of the Stonehold camp to reach the imperiled horses. Joy
Spinner with the arrow in her back was reminder enough of the risk he
was taking.
But in this case, fire and the chaos it had engendered actually
helped Derian. Once he slunk past the closest guards and entered the
Stonehold camp, most people didn’t look twice at him. His light
armor wasn’t banded with any crest. Rubbed with soot as it was,
Derian looked as if he’d been fighting the fire.
That’s just what he did as he darted through the camp, Valet
a few steps behind. He stomped out a grass fire where a hot twig
fell, tipped the kettle of socks—somehow forgotten until
now—onto a heap of burning laundry. He was just a red-haired
youth with a scared look on his face, running toward the fire. The
enemy was outside. Am I the enemy? Derian thought. Not to those horses.
Others had noticed the horses by now, but they were more
interested in combating the fire rather than dealing with the massed
equine terror. One grizzled sergeant actually gave Derian a quick
grin of praise when he saw him heading into the corral.
“Take care, son,” he shouted, never turning from where
he was throwing water onto some hay. “They’re fair
panicked and won’t know friend from foe.” Icertainly hope they don’t, Derian
thought.
Glancing around with a practiced eye, he quickly spotted a horse
that seemed marginally calmer than the rest—a big, black
gelding with white stockings and a broad white blaze. Derian could
feel the horse’s strength when he grabbed his halter and
tugged. The horse balked and Derian, remembering what he’d been
taught, grabbed a rag—doubtlessly used to rub down the
horses—and blindfolded the animal.
The horse didn’t magically become unafraid, but now it was
at least willing to be led. Even better, several of the other horses,
seeing that there was a human in charge, seemed inclined to
follow.
Derian grabbed Valet by the arm and shoved him at the black
gelding.
“Take this one out!” he ordered, shouting over the
crackling of the fire and screams of the horses. “I’ll
see what I can do to urge the others on.”
Ever efficient, Valet produced a bit of rope from about his waist
and slipped it through the horse’s halter as a makeshift lead
line. Feeling the tug at his head and Derian’s hand slap his
haunch, the black permitted himself to be led by the small man.
Derian’s self-appointed task was nearly impossible, but
Derian had been around horses since before he could walk. His mother
had carried him slung from a saddle when he was an infant—him
on one side, a saddlebag on the other. His first job had been in the
stables, the first present he could remember had been a pony. There
were times Derian believed he could think like a horse—and he
tried to think like one now.
Horses feared and hated fire like any intelligent creature should.
Derian offered them a way out. He pulled at their halters, turning
their heads away from the nearby flames, urging them away. They might
not understand his words, but they understood that a human was taking
charge. And being herd animals, once the first few were heading
somewhere, the rest wanted to follow. Ancestors! Derian thought. We’re actually getting away
with this!
“What do we do with them?” Derian asked Valet when the
little man returned to help. “Won’t the Stoneholders just
recapture them when the fire’s out?”
“I suspect,” Valet said, slipping his lead rope
through another halter, “that the local farmers will be happy
to give the horses new homes.”
Derian nodded. Although his eyes streamed from the smoke, he could
see that the newly released horses were heading into the stubble of a
harvested oat field on the west side of the road, equal parts eager
to escape the fire and to settle down to some interesting foraging.
Stonehold might reclaim a few of their horses, but not many—not
if the farmers who owned that field and others like it had any
say.
As he eased the last horse out of the corral, Derian glanced back
over his shoulder. The Stoneholders were getting the fire under
control. The fodder for their horses was gone, though, along with
bedding, many tents, and a good bit of food. There were dead guards
on the ground, too. Not all of the raiders had contented themselves
with stealing horses.
Not all of the raiders had gotten away, either, Derian learned
when he and Valet rejoined the others at the barn that had been
designated as their meeting place. Joy Spinner was dead; so were
three other scouts whose names Derian hadn’t even learned. Jem
was missing; so was another of the scouts.
Race was there, his arm in a rough sling. Thyme lay on a stretcher
made from a horse blanket and the shafts from two spears. He was
unconscious and there was blood on his lips. Most of the other
raiders bore wounds, though none so grave.
Derian was surprised to find that his broken bowstring had raised
a huge welt across his face and that he had burns on his hands. He
hadn’t felt any of it during the action. Still, he was better
off than many of the others.
Taking one end of the stretcher holding Thyme, Derian tried to
keep his tired feet steady as Race led them back toward the river
road. Several of the scouts had their bows out, ready for ambush.
None came.
The battle still raged and the fires still burned in the infirmary
tent, Elise wrapped a bandage around a newly stitched wound in the
forearm of a cavalry officer from Duchess Merlin’s company. The
face she saw in front of her was not that of the wounded woman, but
of her cousin Purcel as she had seen him only a few minutes before:
still, white, and dead.
He had been brought in by bearers from the battlefield. A glance
at the blood soaking the stretcher’s taut canvas and running
from the young man’s slightly parted lips had told the story,
but the bearer, perhaps knowing her Purcel’s cousin, perhaps
merely to assuage his own grief and shock, had blurted out:
“He was alive when we picked him up, Lady Elise. Laughing a
little even, trying to buck up our spirits. We moved him
careful-like, very careful. Then he gave a soft cry and coughed. Just
like that, he was gone.”
Elise had started to cry, had wanted nothing more than to sit
there beside the still, cooling body. Who would tell Kenre? What
would Aunt Zorana do? A firm hand had touched her arm. She had looked
up to see one of the field medics, a man she didn’t even know
by name though today they had worked as closely as brother and
sister.
“I’m sorry,” he had said, “but you could
best honor this man by saving some of those who served with him. We
are so very short of trained hands that we can’t spare even a
pair.”
And Elise had staggered to her feet, knowing that Purcel would
understand. By the time she reached the infirmary, she had blinked
the tears from her eyes, but their stiff, dry tracks remained.
Remained as she picked up bandages and began wrapping fresh wounds,
remained as she murmured calming words she didn’t even hear,
remained as if they had been seared onto her face.
Suddenly, Elise’s patient drew her breath in sharply.
“Did I hurt you?” Elise apologized, fearing that in
her preoccupation she had been clumsy.
“No!” the woman gasped. “Behind you. A
wolf!”
Similar murmurs, whispers, and even a few screams sounded beneath
the hospital canopy. Elise turned and saw Blind Seer standing at the
edge of the canopy, his head up and his tail wagging.
Everything about the beast shouted: “I am not here to
hurt,” but Elise saw hands searching for weapons and several of
the wounded trying to get out of their beds.
“Stay still,” she called, remembering her own first
reaction to the enormous blue-eyed wolf. “That wolf is a
friend.”
Leaving her patient, she crossed to Blind Seer. Behind her she
heard the regulars, those who had been with King Tedric since he left
the capital, explaining to the new arrivals: “That’s Lady
Blysse’s wolf. He’s safe. Well, not safe, but he
won’t hurt us. See how he wags his tail at Lady
Archer?”
Elise ignored them and spoke directly to the wolf. “What do
you want? Where’s Firekeeper?”
Blind Seer whined, groveled, then tugged delicately at the edge of
her skirt.
“I’ll come with you,” Elise assured him.
Immediately, Blind Seer dropped the fabric and began to trot toward
one of the surgeries.
These were partially enclosed tents meant to keep out dust and
distraction, not like the convalescent shelters, which were left open
to light and air. Not until they ducked through the door of one did
Elise realize who Blind Seer wanted. Sir Jared was busy with a
critically wounded man. His face was strained, as he pressed his
hands to a savaged abdomen and visibly willed the sutured flesh to
heal.
Healing talent can help, but not when the person is already dead,
Elise thought. Oh, Purcel!
Sir Jared turned just as Blind Seer nudged her and whined.
Elise called to him, “Sir Jared?”
Hearing her voice, to her amazement, Jared Surcliffe actually
smiled.
“Yes, Lady Elise?”
“Blind Seer wants you rather urgently. Please come or
I’m afraid he’ll drag you with him.”
Sir Jared did not ask questions, but obeyed. A few of the other
physicians looked as if they might protest, but the combined prestige
of baronial heir and knight silenced them.
Outside the tent, Blind Seer barked once and trotted in the
direction of the king’s tent, Sir Jared at his heels. Elise was
about to follow when a familiar voice—almost shrill with
strain—shouted:
“Elise! Sir Jared! Medic!”
Sir Jared hesitated, causing Blind Seer to growl, his hackles
rising. Elise pushed the knight between the shoulder blades.
“Go!” she urged. “I’ll handle
this.”
Grabbing one of the emergency kits from a long line stacked on a
bench, Elise hurried toward the voice. Wounded were being carried off
the battlefield on every side, but one pair crystallized her
attention. Sapphire Shield was helping a young man off the field. It
took Elise a moment to realize that her cousin’s companion was
Shad Oyster.
Sapphire’s showy armor was streaked with blood—at
least some of which seemed to be her own—caking field dust into
clumps. Shad was nearly unconscious. Still, his limbs were all intact
and he was not gushing blood, making him, no matter his social
standing, a lesser priority than many others.
Elise guided them to a prep area explaining, “Unless he is
in danger of death or of losing a limb, he must wait.”
“Right,” Sapphire said, and assisted Shad to something
resembling comfort on the dirt. Folding her cloak under his head, she
patted his hand reassuringly.
“The Blue and I were on the south flank,” she said,
turning some of her attention to Elise. Words spilled from her lips,
though her gaze remained distracted.
“We fought for I don’t know how long. Then there was
one of those gaps that happen. I heard someone saying that Lord Tench
had been shot. I looked in the direction of Duke Allister’s
command center. Everyone there was taking cover, but I didn’t
like the look of a group of Stonehold cavalry that was pushing that
way. Earl Kestrel didn’t either and shouted for us to get
between them.
“We did. Somewhere in that, I was unhorsed. The Blue
panicked— I hope he got away. I kept my sword and shield,
though and kept backing toward the command center. That’s when
I met Shad doing pretty much the same thing.”
She started helping Elise undo Shad’s armor. When they
lifted the breastplate off, Elise was relieved to see no evidence of
an abdominal wound. She’d already learned how ugly those
were—and how hard to treat.
Purcel!
Sapphire continued talking as she worked. Elise wondered if the
flow of words was meant to stem similarly horrific thoughts. Did
Sapphire know yet that her father was dead? Did she know about
Purcel? For the first time, Elise remembered that Jet, too, was out
there on the battlefield. Love must be dead—if ever it had
lived—for her to have forgotten him so entirely.
With an effort, she focused on Sapphire’s words:
“Earl Kestrel and his group stalled the cavalry charge or I
wouldn’t be here, but some Stonehold infantry took advantage of
the horses kicking and milling to slip around the edges. They were
heading for the commander again and no wonder. Duke Allister may have
taken his training at sea, but he has tactical sense. Our side might
have cut and run if they learned he was down—nearly did when
the rumor came that he had been shot. Shad, though, he bellowed just
like he was on deck in a storm, telling everyone that Duke Allister
was alive.”
Mopping blood from the young man’s pale face, Elise found it
difficult to believe that Shad could summon that much force. He
looked exquisitely fragile now. Still, there was no blood on his lips
and his gut was sound.
“How can I help?” Sapphire said, interrupting her own
account.
“Try to get a little water into him,” Elise said,
“but slowly. There may be injuries I can’t
see.”
Sapphire took the proffered water bottle, reminding Elise in her
gentleness of the days they had both nursed dolls. Then the regular
bustle of hospital and distant battle was pierced by a deep, mournful
howl.
“Blind Seer!” Elise gasped, keeping herself to her
duty with effort. “Something has happened to
Firekeeper.”
“I hope not,” Sapphire said, but she too remained
where she was needed.
Perhaps to distract herself from how the water dribbled down
Shad’s face or from the implications of that mournful howl,
Sapphire continued:
“I’m not bragging, but it got down to few enough of
us. Then a lucky blow slipped through and caught Duke Allister in the
head. Shad went crazy, slashing at the man who’d done it. The
commander was only stunned though. Someone got a bandage around his
head and tried to get him to command from the rear but he insisted on
staying. That’s the kind of courage Duke Allister has. He knew
what would happen if he left.
“I was crossing blades with some Stoneholder when Shad went
down so I don’t know exactly how it happened. Afterwards,
someone told me that he took the flat of a sword squarely on the side
of his head. I guess it’s lucky that it wasn’t the edge,
but whatever did it, he went down like a bull under the hammer.
“Duke Allister ordered me to get his son off the field and I
did. The duke wasn’t playing favorites—not a
bit—but I knew he couldn’t very well fight a war with his
son dead or dying at his feet. How is he?”
For a confused moment, Elise thought her cousin meant the duke,
but then she recovered:
“He’s breathing. His brain has obviously been shaken.
Still, I see no deep wounds. I’m no doctor, but I think
there’s hope.”
Sapphire smiled and got wearily to her feet. “Then I must
report back. The commander will need to know. And…”
Her voice trailed off. “What is that?”
Elise looked where Sapphire was pointing, seeing a thick cloud of
dark smoke rising in the west.
“Fire?” she said. “What does that
mean?”
“It means,” Sapphire said, straightening her helmet
and arraying her much dented shield, “that if we press now the
battle may be over.”
Elise looked after her cousin as she ran toward the battlefield,
understanding.
“The battle,” she whispered, hardly daring hope,
“and maybe even the war.”
Then she remembered Blind Seer’s howl and, calling for an
aide to tend to Shad Oyster, she ran in the direction of the
king’s pavilion.
A splatter of blood on the ground outside the pavilion heralded
the scene she found inside. Elise’s overshift of bloodstained
raw cotton (no medical uniform could be found for her when she
volunteered) was her passport past the guards, for it marked her as
someone from the hospital. Only after she was heading through the
door did she hear one comment to the other:
“Was that Lady Archer?”
Within, the pavilion was crowded with those who had been delegated
to stay near the king. Elise saw Aunt Zorana, Opal Shield, and Nydia
Trueheart among the faces, but despite this usually talkative
company, the pavilion was curiously silent, all attention fixed on
the middle of the room. There Sir Jared knelt over a patient lying on
one of the several carpets that had been spread for the king’s
comfort.
King Tedric himself held the lamp that lit the medic’s work
and Elise did not need to see Blind Seer pressed flat on the ground
near the patient’s head, whimpering with rather more pathos
than one would expect from such an enormous beast, to know that the
woman facedown on the floor was Firekeeper.
The crowd parted to let Elise through. She moved immediately to
Sir Jared’s side and asked:
“What can I do?”
“Hold this open,” he said, not even glancing at her.
“I need to make certain it’s clean before I stitch it
up.”
Elise grasped the separators as she had been taught earlier that
day, holding open a deep and ugly slice in Firekeeper’s left
thigh. While Jared sloshed something pungent into the raw opening
Elise glanced at Fire-keeper, but though the wound must have burned
horribly, the younger woman did not stir.
Firekeeper’s eyes were not so much closed as not open. A
faint white line could be seen beneath the shuttered lid. An ugly
wound in her back near her left side testified that a mere leg wound
alone hadn’t felled the wolf-woman so profoundly. Her armor and
clothing had been partially removed, the sword cut cleaned, but
little else had been done.
“Firekeeper saved my life,” King Tedric explained, his
voice quavering. “Prince Newell came. I believe he hoped to
shock my heart into bursting, but failing that I think he would have
taken more direct means. I don’t know how Firekeeper knew, but
she came charging in here— Newell had sent everyone away,
saying he had something for my ears only and who was I to doubt him?
There are state secrets he knew because of his marriage to
Lovella.”
“Knew?” Elise asked, letting the wound close when
Jared signaled and then holding the edges in position so he could
stitch.
“He’s dead,” the king said. “Firekeeper
killed him even as he stabbed her in the back.”
“Didn’t anyone try to help her?” Elise asked
indignantly.
“I was unable to do so.” The king sounded as if he was
apologizing. “Newell came closer to bringing on a heart attack
than he will ever know. When the guards came in, I could not get the
breath to speak. All I could do was keep them from interfering. Sir
Jared, how does your patient?”
“There’s not much I can do about the back
wound,” Jared said, his hands busy. “I think the sword
blade missed most of the vitals, but I don’t like the blood on
her lips. A lung may have been nicked. Still, my talent may help keep
internal damage from worsening.”
Blind Seer moaned and sniffed Firekeeper’s hair.
Elise asked, “But this on her leg doesn’t look like a
sword cut.”
“Arrow,” Jared said briefly.
“I did it,” Lady Zorana said, coming forth and taking
the lantern from King Tedric’s hand. “Sit, Uncle. Do you
want Lady Blysse’s valor to end for nothing?”
The king reluctantly obeyed, leaning forward to keep watch over
the proceedings. Zorana went on to Elise:
“Lady Blysse came charging up and without any explanation
insisted on going into the tent. We told her the king was in
conference, but she wasn’t having anything of it.”
“So you shot her?” Elise heard the incredulity in her
voice.
“You may be comfortable with feral women and wolves,”
Zorana said in angry defense, “but some of us are
not.”
“She’s also Lady Blysse and has lived with us for
moon-spans now!” Elise protested.
Sir Jared glanced up. “Elise, please fight with your aunt
later. I need you now.”
Elise complied, but her anger didn’t diminish. Only later
would she calm enough to wonder if Purcel’s death might have so
shaken his mother that sane judgment had failed her.
At last, Sir Jared lifted his red-stained hands. Unasked, Elise
poured water for him from a carafe, noticing for the first time how
everything portable seemed to have been thrown about. Her gaze fell
on Prince Newell’s corpse, on the ugly red mark on the side of
his face, and she thought she knew how the mess had been made.
Sir Jared said, “Your Majesty, I don’t think
Firekeeper should be moved except perhaps from the floor onto a cot.
I’ll need to commandeer your pavilion.”
“It is hers,” the king said. “I would remain
here to guard her, but I fear I have a war to fight.”
Elise realized that King Tedric knew nothing of the fire to the
west. “Sire, if you’re strong enough, you should go out
and see what messages may be waiting. Just before I came here it
seemed as if the enemy camp might be on fire.”
“Lend me an arm, Opal,” the king said immediately,
turning to his grandniece. Elise noted absently that he didn’t
seem surprised by her news. “I’m strong enough if I have
someone to lean on.”
“The rest of you,” Jared snapped, clearly expecting to
be obeyed, “get out. Two of you take the corpse with you. Get
me a cot, clean bandages, and more water.”
The gathered nobles, even Lady Zorana, obeyed. Zorana, however,
paused long enough to hang the lantern from one of the pavilion
beams.
“Whatever you think,” she said to Elise. “I do
regret my part in this. I thought I was right—that’s all
I want you to realize—but I was wrong.”
Elise nodded. When Zorana turned to go, Elise said to Sir Jared,
“I’m not leaving.”
“I didn’t mean you,” he said.
“You’re medical staff.”
Warmed by his confident assumption that she had a right to be
there, Elise confided, “I would have never thought I could do
this work. I hate hawking or hunting, get all squeamish. My father is
quite fed up with me.”
“Squeamish?” Sir Jared shrugged. “Not when it
counts. I’ve found you a steady assistant. It’s a pity
you’re to be a baroness. I’d like to see what would
happen if you had further training.”
Elise raised an eyebrow. “There is no law against a baroness
learning medicine. It could be quite useful.”
He coughed. “I apologize.”
Two guards came in then with the requested cot and gear. As they
were setting it up, there was a shrill, avian cry from above.
“Elation,” Elise said. “Then
Derian…”
The tent flap all but flew open and the redhead dashed in. He was
sweaty, reeking of smoke and horses. Blind Seer greeted him with
another whine.
“Is she going to be all right?” Derian asked, flinging
himself on the rug next to Firekeeper.
Jared said, “I hope so, but it’s too early to tell.
She’s taken several bad wounds and lost a lot of
blood.”
Derian groaned. “I tried to get here faster. We heard Blind
Seer howl, but we were still quite a ways off. Then we had trouble
getting through the camp. Everyone was running here and there—a
new push was on— fresh soldiers were needed. I nearly got
hauled out there myself, but Elation kept diving at everyone who came
close. What happened?”
They told him as, with his help, they moved Firekeeper onto the
cot. Blind Seer promptly positioned himself directly under his pack
mate and no one dared try to move him. The fierce desperation in the
wolfs blue eyes was more eloquent than words.
“Poor guy,” Derian said, doing what no one else had
dared and actually patting the wolf on the head. “She’s
going to make it, fellow. After everything Firekeeper has survived
she isn’t going to let a couple of pompous noble-born asses
kill her.”
He glanced at Elise. “I’m not going to apologize for
calling your aunt pompous.”
“Just as long as you don’t include me in that
assessment of the nobility.” Elise forced a laugh.
“Not you,” Derian promised. “I don’t even
think it.”
“Now that we’ve got her on the cot,” Sir Jared
said, “we should get the rest of Firekeeper’s clothes off
of her. Lady Elise can…”
Derian interrupted. “I’ve seen Firekeeper naked plenty
of times. I think the minx used to do it on purpose to make me blush.
Elise can chaperon if you want, but I’m here and I’m not
leaving.”
Jared patted the younger man. “Why do you all think
I’m trying to get rid of you? I’m grateful for your help.
Do you think you could tell Blind Seer not to bite us? Firekeeper may
cry out as we move her.”
“I think he understands,” Derian said, taking out his
knife and carefully beginning to cut away leather and fabric.
“I just wish we could understand him better. He could tell us
how Firekeeper knew the king was in trouble.”
To his complete surprise, Blind Seer crept out from under the cot
and, going to the door of the pavilion, barked once sharply. They
heard Elation cry response; then the wolf returned. To
everyone’s astonishment, the peregrine falcon was walking with
deliberate care after him.
She shrilled softly, almost cooing as she inspected Firekeeper.
The wolf, busy fitting himself back under the cot, gave a low bark.
Elation came to Derian and tugged at the cufFof his riding breeches
with her beak.
“No,” the young man replied. “I will not follow
you. I’m staying with Firekeeper. Do you want someone to go
somewhere with you?”
The peregrine drew her entire body up, then down, bobbing her
torso in a fair facsimile of a nod.
Derian stepped to the door of the pavilion.
“Guard, get me Valet, Earl Kestrel’s manservant. If
you can’t get him, I’ll settle for Ox or Race
Forester.”
When it seemed that the guard might protest, Sir Jared snapped,
“Do it!”
Derian returned to his task, saying to the falcon in passing,
“Just a couple minutes. I’d have sent you after them, but
I think you need someone to explain.”
Grinning rather weakly, he looked at his friends. “You try
tending to Firekeeper for nearly five moon-spans and see if
you’re not talking to animals at the end.”
Elise saw the tears that filled Derian’s hazel eyes as he
looked at the unconscious woman, and politely pretended not to
notice.
Valet arrived almost immediately. Elise noted that the usually
immaculate manservant was nearly as grubby as Derian.
“That guard said you desired my presence,” Valet said
politely.
Derian nodded. “Follow Elation. I think she knows where
something important is. I don’t know more. Can you go in
safety?”
Valet nodded. “The battle is over. The fire demoralized
Stonehold’s troops. To their credit, they didn’t like
fighting soldiers who were in many cases their friends. General
Grimsel—the big blond woman—had been killed, earlier. Not
much was needed to break their morale. General Yuci surrendered to
Duke Allister a few moments ago.”
The rush of relief that filled Elise was so powerful that her
hands started shaking. Biting down on her lip, she steadied herself
and continued with the delicate task of removing Firekeeper’s
undergarments without leaving fibers in the wounds that might later
encourage infection and scarring.
“So it’s over,” Derian said for all of them.
“Not yet,” Sir Jared replied with the sad wisdom of
one who had been through fighting before. “That battle is
ended. Now we need to know if the war is over as well.”
XXVII
ALLISTER SEAGLEAM BRUSHED PEARL’S HANDS away
from straightening the bandage that still wrapped his head.
“Enough, dear,” he said firmly. “I realize it is
hardly approved head gear for an audience with the queen, but the
doctors say I must keep the wound lightly covered. There is too much
risk of infection, especially here where the horses attract so many
flies.”
Pearl folded her arms over her chest, just slightly pouting.
“I only wanted you to look your best for your meeting with
Queen Gustin, Allister. This is the first time in the two days since
her arrival that she has granted you a private audience. Given all
you have done for her, that is hardly just!”
Allister patted his wife’s hand, thinking that for an
arranged marriage really this one had worked out remarkably well.
Pearl was actually concerned about the slight to him, not because
it was a slight to herself or to her family, but because of her
fondness for him. How many couples could claim that after twenty-two
years of marriage and four children?
“My dear,” he said, bending to kiss her round cheek,
“Queen Gustin wants to play down her debt to me. You
cannot have forgotten her reception when she arrived at the head of
her marines, can you?”
“And I hope I never will!” Pearl laughed, her good
humor restored. Then she frowned. “Though perhaps the townsfolk
throwing rubbish at her from the walls was a bit much.”
Allister nodded. “It was, but who could blame them? They are
simple folk who place their trust in the Crown. This was not the
first battle fought in the shadows of those walls—only the
biggest.”
“And the only one where Hawk Haven fought beside us rather
than against us,” Pearl mused. “Yes, when an enemy turns
out to be a friend, is it any surprise that late-coming friends
suddenly seem like enemies?”
“No, it is not.” Allister paused thoughtfully.
“My dear, what I want to say to the queen today may put me on
the list of those she sees as enemies. One word from you and I will
hold my tongue.”
Pearl raised an eyebrow. “That bad?”
“That bad.”
“Have you spoken to the children about it? Shad, at least,
is old enough that you should consider his opinion before doing
something that will affect his future.”
“I have. He encourages me.” As he should, Allister thought, for if I pull this off it will
make his fortune.
“And have you spoken with Tavis?”
“A little. Right now he is still adjusting to the realities
of war. He did not fight, but in acting as runner he saw plenty of
bloodshed. The concept that true heroism and true horror can and do
exist together is a large one for a romantic fifteen-year-old to
grasp.”
Pearl nodded. “It is. I had wondered at him spending so much
time with the soldiers all of a sudden. At the ball he avoided them;
now he sits by their firesides for hours, listening to stories and
asking questions.”
A discreet knock at the door reminded Allister that the time had
come for him to depart for his appointment.
“Do you really want me to do this?” he asked, putting
on his tricorn at a rather rakish angle over his bandage.
“Perhaps you should tell me just what it is you plan to
do,” Pearl sighed, but something in her shrewd gaze made him
think she had guessed.
Allister turned back from the door he had been about to open and
said softly, “I plan to tell Queen Gustin that she must make me
her heir and, if I predecease her, that my surviving eldest must take
over as crown prince.”
Pearl stood on tiptoe to kiss him, her eyes very bright.
“You saved her kingdom. What else would be reward
enough?”
But as Allister went out the door he could not fail to see that
Pearl was trembling and knew that she feared she would never see him
again. Queen Gustin was not always a just monarch—only a
successful one.
After the second battle of what people were calling
Allister’s War, the grateful town of Good Crossing had made
much of her defenders. Needing a secure command center, Allister had
accepted the loan of a mansion from a real-estate speculator who had
imagined all his investments torched and battered by
Stonehold’s invading army.
Flanked by his bodyguards, Duke Allister trotted briskly down the
mansion’s broad, stone front steps. Cheering greeted him the
moment he passed into the sight of the people gathered outside his
temporary headquarters.
Day and night, idlers waited outside the place, hoping for a
glimpse of the Pledge Child, the valiant commander in chief. Winning
the battle had made Allister a hero—nor had it hurt the
duke’s prestige that both himself and his eldest son had been
injured fighting in defense of Bright Bay.
However, what had helped Allister Seagleam’s reputation the
most was that Queen Gustin IV had not been present for either battle.
When rumors had spread that she had not been fighting pirates but had
been within a day’s ride of Good Crossing for several days
before the fighting began, escorted by a host of blooded marines
drawn from her best ships, Allister’s reputation had soared
even as hers had plummeted.
Waving to his admirers, Allister accepted a hand up into the
carriage that would rattle him through the cobble streets to where
Queen Gustin resided in sumptuous quarters in the Toll House. In the
carriage, he made casual comments that he could not remember a moment
later, his thoughts focused on the meeting to come.
It was not as if he hadn’t seen the queen in the days since
her arrival. There had been countless meetings: with King Tedric and
his officers, with General Yuci of Stonehold, with members of the
local guildhalls. During all of them Queen Gustin had been
faultlessly courteous, deferring to her cousin’s greater
knowledge of the situation while making clear that she was his ruler
and that she believed that his triumph was best seen within the
context of her reign.
Allister supposed it had been that attitude—that combined
with the current situation regarding King Tedric’s own
heir—which had made him consider what he would demand as reward
for his services. He knew that he was being foolhardy, but he also
knew that he could not go back to his former situation. It had taken
him over forty years to be something more than a failed pledge. The
need to continue building the bridge between Hawk Haven and Bright
Bay was a desperate fire within him, hot in breast and mind.
Cheering admirers ran alongside his carriage and greeted him as he
dismounted from it at the Toll House. Even while acknowledging their
good wishes, Allister knew that those noisy praises were doing him no
good with the queen.
Arriving at the tower room where Queen Gustin IV was holding
audience, he was admitted at once. Queen Gustin rose from her
paper-strewn desk, holding out her hands to greet him in a familiar
embrace.
“Welcome, cousin,” she said. “I am so glad that
matters of state at last relent enough to permit us a private
talk.”
Queen Gustin IV was regarded by many as a lovely woman. Certainly
her eyes were the blue of oceans and her hair the red-gold of honey
just as the ballads said, but a calculating expression rarely left
those blue eyes. At twenty-eight her figure was still firm and buxom
and her smile merry, but that smile came infrequently these days and
to him, who had known her since she was a child, it possessed a
studied cast.
“I am glad to see you, too,” he replied.
“And Shad, is he recovering?”
“Nicely. He took a solid blow to the head, but several of
the medics possessed the healing talent. Give him a couple days bed
rest and he will be up and about—though the doctors suggest he
do nothing too strenuous for a moon-span or so if at all
possible.”
“I am glad to hear he is doing so well. Sit down, Cousin
Allister. We have much to discuss.”
Allister did so. An unobtrusive servant took his hat and set out a
tray with peach cider and cups.
“Leave us now,” Queen Gustin ordered.
The man—a marine, Allister thought—bowed and
departed.
“I don’t know how to thank you for the work you have
done for me these past days,” she began. Here is where you could make your demands, Allister, he
thought, but all he said was:
“Thank you. Bright Bay is my country, too.”
“There are those back at court who are remembering that Hawk
Haven is your country, as well,” Gustin said, just a bit
slyly.
“My mother’s,” he replied. “I have never
crossed its borders, not even as far as over this bridge.”
“Yet report is that King Tedric embraced you like a
long-lost son.”
“King Tedric was kind to me for his sister’s sake and
for the sake of peace between our nations,” Allister
replied.
“And has he made you any offers?”
“We had not reached that point before Stonehold grew nervous
and our negotiations were suspended.”
“ ‘Grew nervous’—that’s an odd way
to say ‘Declared war.’ ”
“They did not declare war,” Allister said,
“until it was evident that Your Majesty was not going to treat
with them.”
“They had no right to meddle with a completely internal
issue!”
“I agree, Your Majesty. I was merely responding to your
statement.”
Queen Gustin IV glowered at Allister, reminding him irresistibly
of the autocratic little girl with whom he once had played at
make-believe. She hadn’t liked being criticized then
either—not even by implication. That very well might be the problem of raising someone to know
that she can expect to rule someday, Allister thought. Of course, the
opposite problem is what King Tedric faces—choosing a successor
from those unprepared for the responsibility.
“Negotiations with Stonehold are progressing,” Queen
Gustin said, “slowly, but progressing. A pair of ministers
empowered to sign a treaty should arrive tomorrow. They are bringing
with them a fine sum to compensate us for our losses in soldiers and
goods. If all goes well, Stonehold will begin withdrawing the
following day.”
“Very good.”
“Although we have promised her a share of the compensation,
Hawk Haven is being a bit more difficult about stating exactly when
her troops will withdraw,” the queen continued thoughtfully,
“and I am not in an advantageous position to set dates and
times. Even with the reinforcements I brought with me, the Stalwarts
of the Golden Sunburst are less impressive without Hawk Haven’s
army intermingled with them. Without Hawk Haven’s support,
Stonehold might decide not to depart after all.”
Allister forbore from commenting.
“Indeed, I would have Hawk Haven’s troops remain until
Stonehold’s are gone and Mason’s Bridge secured, but I
can extract no promise that they will withdraw at all.” Queen
Gustin frowned. “Have you any suggestions as to how we might
resolve this problem?” This is it! Allister thought, taking a deep breath.
“Yes, I do,” he said, and was amazed that his voice
did not shake. “Hawk Haven has proven a true friend to us. They
need equal proof that we will be a true friend to them.”
“And,” Gustin said, her tone just a touch sardonic,
“do you have any idea what we might do to give them this
assurance?”
“Make me your heir,” Allister said coolly, “for
I have shown myself their friend. In the event I predecease
you—as is likely—my heir must take my place as your
heir.
“In return, I will convince King Tedric to wed to his own
heir one of my children—who I will immediately designate my own
heir. Thus, upon Tedric’s death—which sadly cannot be too
far away—a child Bright Bay born will sit upon the throne of
Hawk Haven. When I become an ancestor, the reverse will be true. By
then our nations will have grown accustomed to—perhaps even
come to anticipate—the idea of a union between our peoples and
all should progress smoothly.“
Allister managed to complete this long speech mostly because Queen
Gustin was far too astonished to interrupt. When he stopped, she
exclaimed:
“I should make you my heir? Why should I care for a
union?”
“Promise of a union will permit us to forge an alliance with
Hawk Haven, an alliance that will give King Tedric’s people the
incentive to provide Bright Bay with military support without taking
the further step of becoming conquerors—a thing that is
otherwise far too tempting.
“If my plan is followed, you will reign as long as you live.
Then I— or more probably my heir—will assume the throne.
Since that same heir will quite likely already be king or queen of
Hawk Haven, our kingdoms will be reunited under one ruler and my
royal grandparents’ dreams will at last come true.”
Queen Gustin was too self-disciplined to start out of her chair,
but she did slam her cup of peachy down with such force that the tray
rattled. “This plan is insane! I forbid you to mention it to
anyone.”
“I’m sorry, Your Majesty,” Allister replied
levelly. “I have already discussed something like this with
King Tedric in the context of my permitting one of my children to
marry his unnamed heir.” That’s stretching the point a bit, he thought, but the
clerk who attended the meeting will not be able to say for certain
that something of the sort was not discussed in private. There is no
need for her to know that I’ve written Uncle Tedric telling him
my plans and nearly begging for his support—and for sanctuary
for me and my family if I fail.
“Oh, you have…” She fell into thought.
“And has this tasty bit of treason been mentioned to anyone
else?”
Allister answered calmly. “Not in so many words, but several
of my callers these past days have expressed hope that some such plan
may be in the making. I have only been able to say that I believed
Your Majesty a good and wise ruler with the best interests of her
nation at heart.”
“Oh, you have…”
“I could hardly say more when Your Majesty and I had not yet
spoken in private.” So there! he thought with what he knew was childish
vindictiveness. Ah, well. Her neglecting to give me a private meeting
was equally childish.
Still, he was privately embarrassed. He was a grown man of
forty-four, not a child.
Queen Gustin had not seemed to hear the reproof in his retort.
“We had not, had we? And if I do not agree to make you my heir?
What will Hawk Haven do then?”
“I couldn’t say.”
“But that doesn’t mean you don’t know…
and their troops already on our soil and the local people lauding
them as saviors.”
Allister replied sternly, “Hawk Haven deserves such praise.
Their army fought and many died in defense of Good Crossing. We could
not have held the city without them. The Battle of the Banks would
have been our disgrace, not the first action in a victorious
war.”
“Perhaps,” Gustin said hotly, “they merely
fought to keep Stonehold from crossing at Bridgeton and threatening
their own lands.”
“Don’t be an idiot,” Allister retorted sharply.
“Stonehold was already stretched to the limits of their supply
line. If anything Hawk Haven stood to benefit economically by
Stonehold’s conquest of Good Crossing.”
Queen Gustin’s cheeks had flared hot and red at the
sharpness of Duke Allister’s words, but his fame as the hero of
the recent war protected him. She could have him neither executed nor
arrested without bringing the rage of the local populace down upon
her.
Allister, who had regretted his lack of tact as soon as the words
slipped out, saw the red fade from the queen’s cheeks to be
replaced by an ivory white pallor that was no less furious.
“Economically?” she replied, the word coming out as a
cough. “I suppose you mean by supplying Stonehold’s
army.”
“I do,” Allister said, watching her guardedly. Queen
Gustin seemed to be under control now, so he went on pedantically,
giving her more time to cool. “The raiders who burned
Stonehold’s supplies performed an act that was as decisive an
element in General Yuci’s decision to surrender as anything
done on the battlefield. All of them, by the way, were residents of
Hawk Haven.”
“Including among their numbers,” Queen Gustin said,
cooler now, but needing to vent her fury, “a carter, a
manservant, and a criminal, if I read the report
correctly.”
“Yes, I suppose you could say that,” Allister replied,
deciding not to protest too strongly. “Earl Kestrel permitted
several members of his personal entourage to take part in the
battle.”
“Kestrel…” Gustin murmured as if trying to
place the name, though Allister did not doubt she knew precisely of
whom they spoke.
“Kestrel,” Allister repeated dryly. “The man who
led the left wing of the cavalry charge and fought bravely despite
ribs broken when a horse fell on him.”
“I remember him now,” Queen Gustin said. “Norvin
Norwood. He’s also the man who brought back some foundling and
tried to claim she was King Tedric’s granddaughter,
right?”
“Yes. There is some evidence in favor of his claim.
I’ve met the young woman. She’s quite
remarkable.”
“Rumor said she’s nearly dead from injuries taken when
she assaulted Prince Newell Shield.”
“At last report,” Allister replied, a trifle more
sharply than he had intended, “Lady Blysse is expected to live,
though she will be convalescing for some time. Prince Newell, as you
may have heard, was attempting to assassinate King Tedric. From what
one of the late prince’s servants confessed, Newell had planned
to have himself declared king.” And I don’t suppose we’ll ever know just how much
you knew of his plans or whether you would have supported them. Oh,
Valora, I wish I could trust you!
“We can’t treat with Stonehold from a position of
strength,” the queen mused aloud, “without the support of
Hawk Haven. Now you tell me—or at least imply—that Hawk
Haven’s continued support is contingent upon my naming you my
heir. Tell me, why shouldn’t I make my treaty with Stonehold,
get them gone, and then dismiss Hawk Haven?”
“Well, Your Majesty, they might be difficult to
dismiss.”
“True. And they might even ally themselves with Stonehold
and complete the conquest. Our army could not withstand them
both.”
Allister nodded. “I do not like to dwell on the idea, but
the possibility has occurred to me. Still, I believe that King Tedric
would prefer to ally himself with us with eventual reunification in
mind. We share a common heritage—common ancestors—so to
speak.”
“Yet he could be a conqueror with half our lands as his
booty,” Queen Gustin said, “far more quickly than if we
travel the route you suggest.”
Allister Seagleam shrugged. “True. However, conquered lands
might be hard to hold. Once secure with part of Bright Bay, Stonehold
might decide she wants the whole. We have the ocean ports their own
land lacks.”
Queen Gustin laughed bitterly. “Stonehold might want the
whole, just as Hawk Haven has decided she wants the whole. Yes, I can
see how King Tedric might take warning from his own example. Tell me,
Allister, why shouldn’t I just prolong negotiations until King
Tedric dies? His new heir might prove more tractable.”
“Or he or she might not,” Allister countered,
fascinated despite himself with this weird byplay. He could feel
Gustin hating him for the position in which he had put her, yet she
persisted in asking for his advice. “And King Tedric, while
possessed of a weak heart, is not in any immediate danger. Some have
suggested that the stimulation of this journey has actually
strengthened him.”
“Delightful…” Gustin IV sank her polished white
teeth into her little finger, as if pain was the only distraction
that would keep her from screaming. “So my only choice is to
make you my heir.”
“I never said that, Your Majesty,” Allister replied
firmly, “only that I thought that solution provided the best
way to secure an alliance with Hawk Haven that will prove for our
mutual benefit.”
Queen Gustin fell silent for a moment, then looked across at him,
her face eerily expressionless, a portrait cast in clean, white
porcelain.
“You may leave, Duke Allister,” she said with cool
formality. “Thank you for your services. Send my commander of
marines up to me as you are leaving.”
Allister did as ordered, wondering what thoughts had lain behind
that lovely mask and dreading that he must soon learn.
Derian sat at firekeeper’s bedside occupying the restless
patient by drilling her in the alphabet—alternating these
lessons with basic heraldry when she grew frustrated.
Annoying as the wolf-woman’s impatience could be, Derian
took it as a good sign that she had energy enough to get angry. For
two days following her struggle with Prince Newell, Firekeeper had
lain still and silent, hardly responding to any stimulus, no matter
who her caller or what news she was told.
A few things had sparked her interest: praise from Earl Kestrel,
who had knelt by her bedside holding her hand, tears actually running
down his cheeks into his neat black and white beard; learning that
Rook had been taken and had confessed—in return for a promise
of imprisonment rather than execution—the extent of Prince
Newell’s plotting; the story of Derian’s own adventures,
told with great enthusiasm by Race Forester.
But for most of those two long days she had simply lain still,
neither restfully sleeping nor truly awake, suffering with every
breath. Derian or Elise or Doc had kept vigil by her cot, wiping the
bloody spume off her lips, moistening her throat with dribble of
water, and talking to her when it seemed she might actually hear.
On the third day, Firekeeper had begun to recover, reacting with
small signs of pleasure when Doc had ordered her cot moved out into
the warm autumn sunshine. Today—the fourth day since the end of
the decisive battle of Allister’s War—she was sitting
propped against carefully positioned pillows and fretting because Doc
would not let her get up— and because Blind Seer and Elation
had nominated themselves enforcers of the physician’s
orders.
Doubtless Doc’s healing talent had been instrumental in
assisting Fire-keeper’s recovery, but he had refused to take
full credit. Indeed, he had confided to Derian that without her own
indomitable desire to live, Firekeeper—like so many of those
wounded on the battlefield—would have died.
Derian had taken his turn digging graves for the dead of both
sides. The continuing warmth of early autumn would not permit the
bodies to be carried home to their families, but still the
dead’s spirits must be properly honored. Sitting by Firekeeper
as she had slept, Derian had lettered temporary
gravestones—wooden plaques that would be set in place until the
stonecutters could finish the permanent headstones.
As he worked, Derian was inexorably reminded of those anonymous
graves west of the gap. Now he knew two more of the names that should
be there: Sarena Gardener and Donal Hunter. Silently, he vowed that
he’d learn the other names and return someday to set a
permanent gravestone in that burned glade.
“Scarlet beside forest green blazed with…”
Derian was prompting Firekeeper when footsteps crunching up the path
announced callers.
Elation squawked and Firekeeper said:
“Sapphire Shield and Shad Oyster.” A wicked twinkle
lit her dark eyes. “Elation say they were holding hands when
they were farther, but have let go now.”
Derian wagged a finger at the peregrine falcon.
“You’re a worse gossip than any market-wife.”
The falcon, who continued to follow Derian about his errands until
Derian couldn’t decide whether he felt honored or pestered,
screeched at him and Firekeeper chuckled, stopping abruptly as if the
intake of air still hurt her damaged lung.
“We can’t precisely knock,” Sapphire called,
halting a short distance away, “but Elise said that Firekeeper
was entertaining callers.”
“As long as she stays in bed,” Derian said, rising and
bowing. “Would you like me to withdraw?”
“Not for my sake,” said Shad in a pleasant light
baritone. “I’ve wanted to meet you. That was a brave deed
you did, Derian Carter.”
He offered his hand as if he were not a duke’s son, but just
another man. Derian accepted the handclasp.
“The real credit should go to the scouts,” Derian said
firmly. “They fought the enemy. I shot a few arrows and freed a
few horses.”
“Not having killed doesn’t alter the courage you
showed in going behind the lines,” Shad insisted, and Sapphire
nodded agreement. “And given that the diversion caused by the
fire probably saved my father’s life I am particularly
grateful.”
“Thank you,” Derian replied, dismissing the topic of
his own heroism by turning to Firekeeper. “Have you met Lady
Blysse?”
“At the ball,” Shad said, “I believe I had the
pleasure of a dance.”
“No dancing now,” Firekeeper commented sadly,
“not yet. Your father is well?”
“If having Queen Gustin the Fourth furious with you can be
taken as well,” Shad said proudly, “yes, he
is.”
“And you,” Firekeeper said to Sapphire, “I was
told your father died. I am sorry.”
“Me, too,” Sapphire admitted. “I miss him more
than I had thought possible. Mother has already departed for home
with Opal. The dual blows of losing her husband and having her
brother proven traitor were too much for her. She said she will
retreat to our country estate for a time.”
“Good!” Firekeeper replied with such firmness that
Shad looked puzzled, but his manners were too good—or perhaps
he also had heard rumors about Lady Melina—for him to ask.
“What does Jet do?”
“Jet is a problem,” Sapphire sighed. “He
conducted himself well enough in the battle. Elise, however, has
petitioned her father for permission to break the engagement. Baron
Archer has asked Elise to wait until the current negotiations are
ended and she agreed—but only after insisting that the king be
told informally that the alliance is ended. So now Jet is questing
around, looking for someone or something to which he could attach
himself. I really don’t know what to do with him.”
Shad laughed. “In my country we’d send him to sea on a
‘prentice cruise. It’s amazing how quickly ambitious
young aristocrats learn just how little they matter when pitted
against a hurricane.”
“That’s not a bad idea,” Sapphire reflected.
“There’s good in Jet, but he’s been too influenced
by Mother.”
She brushed her fingers along the snow white mark on her forehead
as she said this, a tacit admission to those who knew her history
that Jet was not the only one who must overcome Melina Shield’s
influence.
“And peace?” Firekeeper said. “Is peace
found?”
“The talks continue,” Sapphire replied, “but in
great secrecy. King Tedric has not even called in his
counselors.”
Derian demurred. “That’s not quite correct. He calls
us together every afternoon and again every evening. However, I agree
wholeheartedly with his decision not to take a huge entourage with
him to these meetings. Forgive me, noble friends, but I have never
heard anything like dukes and duchesses, earls and…”
Here Derian paused for a moment, for the title for male and female
Great House heirs was pronounced the same, though spelled
differently. Then he shrugged and stormed on, “And earles all
arguing for positions that—no matter how they are
worded—are meant merely to advance their personal
causes.”
Sapphire didn’t look offended, neither did Shad. Derian
reflected that what he had said was no news at all to scions of Great
Houses. How had he ever been so naive as to believe that those noble
born were any different from the lowliest farmer or cobbler?
Derian continued: “And matters become worse the longer we
remain here. Queen Gustin’s entourage has been fattened by
representatives of all her Great Houses. King Tedric already had
members of most of his here, but those who felt they were not
represented by someone of high enough rank have sent along someone
else. The only ones who benefit from this proliferation are the
merchants in the twin towns. Hazel Healer said that profits are up so
high that even rumors that changes are in the wind bother no
one.”
“Changes,” mused Shad Oyster. “My father has
told us to expect such. I fear that no matter how these negotiations
are resolved, I will never again stand on the deck of a Bright Bay
ship. Father has made the queen his enemy.”
Given that such rumors had been current for several days now, not
even Firekeeper looked greatly surprised.
“This feels,” the wolf-woman said somberly, showing a
greater understanding of the situation than Derian would have given
her credit for, “like the prickle that fills the air before a
thunderstorm. We shall either see battle again to make the battle
before as nothing or…”
“What?” Shad asked, as transfixed as if she spoke
prophecy.
“I don’t know,” Firekeeper said, wincing as she
leaned back against her pillows. “I am only a wolf.”
XXVIII
Duke Allister Seagleam feared that despite his best
efforts Bright Bay would soon be at war again. The question was with
whom?
The ministers from Stonehold had arrived several days before with
the promised compensation payment. However, doubtless informed by
their spies of the tension between Hawk Haven and Bright Bay, they
were being remarkably coy about handing the money over and clearing
out their army.
The ministers’ excuses were ever so polite and ever so
practical. Stonehold’s wounded could not yet be moved. The army
was short of horses to pull their wagons. They needed to purchase
supplies for the march home since Queen Gustin would not permit them
to bring over supplies from Stonehold.
Neither Duke Allister nor Queen Gustin was fooled by these
excuses. What Stonehold’s ministers were really waiting to see
was how much longer Hawk Haven would continue to support Bright Bay
and, indeed, how much longer could Queen Gustin keep a hold on her
increasingly unhappy populace.
The degree of that unhappiness had been a surprise to the young
queen—although perhaps it should not have been. Crown Princess
Valora had ascended the throne of Bright Bay eight years before, on
the death of her long-lived father, Gustin III. Hers had not been an
easy ascension, complicated by events from many years before her
birth.
Duke Allister, seventeen years her senior and the result of much
intrigue himself, clearly recalled those events and the history that
had seemed to make them inevitable.
The net of intrigues, likes, and dislikes within the noble
families of Bright Bay was no less complicated than that within Hawk
Haven. At the time he established his new kingdom, Gustin I had
created five Great Houses. From the start, these had relinquished
their original family names and assumed new ones: Oyster, Dolphin,
Pelican, Seal, and Lobster. The members of the newly created Great
Houses had been encouraged to think well of themselves, to design
elegant coats of arms, to build fine estates.
This had almost certainly been because Gustin Sailor—unlike
Zorana Shield—craved pomp and circumstance. Indeed, at the same
time that Gustin I was giving names and titles to his Great Houses,
he had renamed his own family, shedding the pedestrian trade name
Sailor in favor of the lofty and poetic Seagleam.
But beneath his flourishes, Gustin I was practical when it came to
securing his ambitions for his young family. Before the end of the
Civil War, his wife Gayl Minter—later Queen Gayl—had
borne him two children. The eldest, a son named Gustin for his
father, was designated crown prince. The second became Princess
Merry. A year or so after the war had ended, Princess Lyra was born,
the first child to be born into the Seagleam name.
Gustin I would have rested content had not Crown Prince Gustin
died of pneumonia shortly after his sixteenth birthday. Driven nearly
mad with grief, Gustin I confirmed Princess Merry as his heir, but
decreed that upon ascending the throne she would be known as Gustin
in memory of her brother—and, the cynical said, of himself.
King Gustin died five years after his son, an embittered man of
sixty-five whose many successes could not console him for his one
great loss. Crown Princess Merry, aware that the first succession in
a monarchy is always the most uncertain, followed her father’s
commands and changed her name to Gustin, although she had been heard
to protest about being forced to bear what before had always been an
exclusively male name.
Although the new monarch was only nineteen, she was a
strong-willed woman. Queen Gustin II used her unmarried state to
explore the internal politics of her Great Houses and six years after
she had taken the throne she married wisely and well to Lord Amery
Pelican, a second son of that house. Their first child, a son, was
born less than two years later. Contrary to expectations, the queen
named the boy Basil, saying that two Gustins was too many. In this
way she unintentionally established the custom that the name Gustin
was only to be used by the monarch.
Queen Gustin II bore two other children, Princess Seastar and
Prince Tavis. Then she concentrated her efforts on ruling her
kingdom, efforts which included the idealistic but doomed marriage
arranged between her son Prince Tavis and King Chalmer of Hawk
Haven’s daughter Princess Caryl Eagle.
When he was twenty-six, Crown Prince Basil married Lady Brina
Dolphin, a union that was to have serious consequences for Bright Bay
and for Basil’s own unborn heir.
The marriage was unblessed with children. When this became evident
some suggested that Crown Prince Basil adopt an heir. Several Great
Houses thrust forth candidates—one of whom was young Allister
Seagleam. With an egotism suggestive of his grandfather, Gustin I,
Crown Prince Basil refused to settle for anything but an heir of his
body. His mother frowned upon a divorce—not wishing to anger
the Dolphin family, which had already been offended by her marrying
of Tavis to Princess Caryl—as it had suggested to them that the
children of their Brina might not succeed their father to the
throne.
But the Dolphins’ Brina bore no children and when at the age
of thirty-six Crown Prince Basil became Gustin III, he set about
finding a new wife. He did not do this quickly. Indeed, some said he
enjoyed sampling the eligible noblewomen quite freely. Others said
that his reasons for delaying were more practical—he needed to
gather support from the rising nobles of his generation before
declaring his divorce.
Whatever the reason for the delay, seven years after ascending the
throng Gustin III took the formal step of divorcing Queen
Brina—who reassumed her family name and title. Before the next
year ended, King Gustin III had married Lady Viona Seal, a woman of
only twenty— twenty-four years his junior.
Rumor said that the new queen was pregnant with the king’s
child when marriage oaths were exchanged. Rumor further reported that
Queen Viona miscarried shortly thereafter. Whatever the truth, Queen
Viona did not succeed in bearing a living child until seven full
years after her marriage to the king.
The birth of Crown Princess Valora was publicly celebrated with
dances, feasts, and songs. Privately, it was the source of much
wrath. The newly made Grand Duchess Seastar—for as the king now
had an heir she was displaced as Crown Princess—was wrathful.
Although of late Grand Duchess Seastar had ceased to believe she
would succeed her brother, she had come to believe that King Gustin
III must adopt one of her sons as his heir.
Nor was she the only one of King Gustin III’s nobles to feel
that the baby girl was too little too late. Some muttered that Crown
Princess Valora was not legitimate—that Gustin III’s
seed, not Lady Brina’s womb, had been at fault for their
childless marriage and that young Viona had in desperation found
another man to father her child.
Others, unwilling to publicly question Viona’s honesty, had
questioned the validity of Gustin Ill’s divorce. Still others
had urged the claim of Duke Allister Seagleam, saying that he had
been born to assume the throne and that the long delay in the
king’s producing an heir had been an omen in his favor.
All in all, Valora’s birth had awakened much spite, but King
Gustin III had turned a deaf ear to the murmurings, distracting
himself by watching his daughter grow and his people with military
ventures against Hawk Haven.
Crown Princess Valora proved to be a healthy child, astonishingly
free of whatever flaws had slain her brothers and sisters while still
in the womb. She grew strong, intelligent, willful, and even
beautiful. Her doting father was too wise to permit her to become
quite spoiled, but from the time she could talk, Valora knew she
would be queen. Unlike King Tedric, who could threaten to disown one
of his children, Gustin III had no such option—even should he
desire it. Nor did the crown princess ever believe her father would
wish it. He had striven too hard for her birth.
As Crown Princess Valora grew, the ambitious still dreamed that a
way to power would be opened to them—that King Gustin III would
die while his daughter was still too young to rule without a regent
and they could assume that privileged post. Yet King Gustin III
defied them all, remaining sound of mind until a weak heart claimed
him at seventy-one. By then Crown Princess Valora had passed her
twentieth birthday and was safely beyond any challenge that she was
disbarred by age from taking up her crown.
At the time of her coronation, some raised the old complaint that
Valora was not a child of Gustin III’s body, but this was a
weak argument by now. From Gildcrest, Bright Bay had inherited the
custom that an adopted child could inherit with the full rights of a
naturally born one. Even if Valora was not Gustin III’s
daughter, he had clearly raised her as such and the will of a king
served as adoption enough.
So Crown Princess Valora ascended the throne. In the pattern of
her grandmother, Valora continued the tradition of taking the male
name Gustin. Like her grandmother, she waited to marry until each of
her Great Houses could present its claim—and its best
candidate. Two years after becoming queen, Gustin IV married Lord
Harwill Lobster, a handsome, but untried man slightly younger than
herself. Some said that Harwill’s relative youth and lack of
achievement had been part of his attraction, for Queen Gustin IV
would accept no rivals. Others were kinder and said that there was
real affection between the two. And yet how quickly our queen forgets, Duke Allister thought,
how her very birth was resented, how her own aunt saw her as a
squatter on a throne destined for other—better—people.
Perhaps she doesn’t want to remember, but prefers to believe
that these eight years have erased ambitions that had over thirty to
grow. Whatever the reasons for her way of thinking, the
queen’s lack of decisiveness in this recent action has not
helped her position. Indeed, I think that noble and commoner alike
would support me over Gustin the Fourth if their choice was me as
king or more war to keep a woman who many think should never have
been born or ascended the throne.
Indeed, once rumors had been spread that Allister had requested
the queen name him her heir, representatives of several of the Great
Houses—starting with Pearl’s own brother, Reed, Duke
Oyster—had approached Allister, offering him their support if
he wished to force the queen to step down. King Tedric had also shown
his support for Allister—not publicly where the Stonehold
ministers might claim it invalidated agreements made with Queen
Gustin IV, but in a private meeting with Queen Gustin IV.
The queen had not been pleased, but no one was certain what shape
that displeasure would take. Would she force a war that might lead to
her kingdom’s destruction or would she step down?
Duke Allister didn’t know, but he suspected that the closed
meeting which had been called for this very morning at the Toll House
would resolve the question. the meeting room was crowded, for the
Toll House had not been designed to accommodate such events. However,
the international nature of the invitation list demanded that the
conference be held on something resembling neutral ground.
Both Bright Bay and Hawk Haven were represented not only by their
monarchs but by a single representative for each of their Great
Houses. Duke Allister Seagleam, although technically not a
representative of any Great House, was also present. Whether his
Bright Bay title, his relationship to King Tedric, or his recent
victory gave him the right was moot—not even Queen Gustin IV at
her most autocratic would have dared exclude him.
In addition to these fourteen people, there were bodyguards for
the monarchs—a matter, most hoped, of etiquette rather than of
necessity.
There were a handful of secretaries and clerks to take notes or to
supply documents as needed.
The crowding of not quite two dozen people made the stone-walled
room close and heightened the air of tension. Duke Allister Seagleam,
seated beside his brother-in-law, Reed Oyster, tried hard to look
impassive though his heart was beating at a frantic rate.
King Tedric, as befitted his years, made the opening
statement.
“We have gathered here,” the king said, “to
resolve certain matters that have arisen out of Stonehold’s
attack on Bright Bay. My kingdom came to Bright Bay’s aid when
she was attacked by her supposed allies. Although Bright Bay has
settled with Stonehold, she has not fully settled with me. Until this
is done, I do not believe matters with Stonehold truly have been
resolved.”
Queen Gustin IV, her red-gold hair cascading loose over her
shoulders from beneath her crown, looked pale and stern as she stood
to make her reply. As had King Tedric, she addressed her remarks to
the gathered nobles rather than to her fellow monarch.
“Bright Bay has offered Hawk Haven a half share of the
monies to be received from Stonehold as compensation for her
assistance in defending our lands. We believe this fair and even
generous for although both of our armies fought, Bright Bay’s
lands alone suffered damage. We have taken more than half of the
injury, yet we are prepared to give over a fair half of the
compensation in thanks to our recent ally.”
Whereas King Tedric’s speech had been met with neutral
silence, when Queen Gustin stopped speaking low, angry muttering
could be heard—mostly from where the Hawk Haven delegates were
seated. I wonder, Allister thought. Their people died in her defense
and yet she belittles their sacrifice. She doesn’t even repeat
the thanks she offered publicly and grudgingly upon her arrival after
the bloodshed had ended.
He noticed, however, that not all the Bright Bay delegates were
neutral. Arsen, Duke Dolphin, no great friend of the queen and enough
years her senior that he felt secure speaking out, stood to be
recognized. Gustin did so with a formal nod of her head.
“I wish to call to Your Majesty’s attention,”
Duke Dolphin stated with equal formality, “that according to
the heralds’ counts more of Hawk Haven’s soldiers died
upon the field than did our own. True, the number was close, but
their valor in giving up their lives for the security of your kingdom
deserves more than mere monetary reward.”
Duke Dolphin’s sly but certain emphasis of the phrases
“their valor” and “your kingdom” served as a
pointed reminder that Queen Valora had not been present to defend her
lands. The queen’s eyes narrowed, but her color did not
rise.
“We thank Duke Dolphin,” she said, “for his
reminder. We had not forgotten this fact, but the matter remains that
we had not asked for Hawk Haven’s aid. We feel she should
accept what reward we have to give, not barter like fish sellers in
the marketplace.”
This time the angry exclamations were more general and less
restrained. King Tedric, however, merely raised to his hand for
silence and said:
“Indeed, Hawk Haven was not invited initially, but after the
Battle of the Banks, Duke Allister did thank us and formally request
our continued assistance. It is my understanding that, although Your
Majesty was too busy to come and assess the situation for yourself,
you did feel comfortable designating Duke Allister your
representative, even to the point of urging your officers to support
him.”
“I did,” Queen Gustin said stiffly. She might have
said more, but King Tedric continued with a smoothness that made his
overriding her not even seem rude.
“We came to Bright Bay’s aid,” Tedric said,
“without any formal contract, nor did we come as mercenaries.
We came because I wished to support those who shared a heritage with
my people against a foreign aggressor. Moreover, Duke Allister
Seagleam is my own sister’s son. I could not face my ancestors
in good conscience if I refused him aid.”
“Yet,” Queen Gustin said bitterly, “you have not
worried about your ancestors’ reaction to the many battles you
have fought against my people in the past.”
“Those,” King Tedric said, “were family
squabbles such as the ancestors themselves have fought. No doubt you
planned to instigate a few yourself, perhaps once this old king was
gone and a monarch less certain sat upon the Eagle Throne.”
Queen Gustin’s cheeks flared sudden, unguarded red.
So that is what she did intend, Allister mused. Good tactical
sense, really, if anyone thinks about it, but her blush—whether
angry or embarrassed—makes her appear a ‘prentice caught
plotting to steal from the larder.
Duke Dolphin took advantage of Gustin’s momentary silence to
comment rather more loudly than necessary to his closest neighbor,
Earle Pelican:
“In my father’s day, our wars with Hawk Haven truly
were a continuation of our Civil War. Gustin the Third was the first
king to become dependent on foreign mercenaries. His daughter, our
queen, has continued the dependence.”
Wisely, Queen Gustin did not respond to this unofficial
commentary. However, as she did not seem quite prepared to speak,
King Tedric added:
“As I was saying, I sent my soldiers to Bright Bay’s
aid because I did not wish to see her fall to a foreign aggressor.
Whether or not I believe the compensation Your Majesty has offered to
us is just is not the real issue. The issue as I see it is, what do
you offer us to remain your allies?”
Queen Gustin had regained her composure and her reply showed even
a touch of humor.
“I don’t suppose that you’d continue to support
us out of kindred feeling?”
“My personal family feeling would not be enough,” King
Tedric replied. “My noble counselors do not have nephews among
your Great Houses. I would need to be able to offer them something
more if they were to send their sons and daughters to fight on your
fields.”
Queen Gustin glanced down at some papers in front of her, as if
consulting them. Then she said coolly:
“Stonehold found the benefit of money earned and a place to
train their forces compensation enough. In addition, we gave their
ships use of some of our ports. Would you consider a similar
contract?”
King Tedric shook his head.
“My people are my greatest treasure,” he said.
“I cannot sell their lives for mere monies. Moreover, New
Kelvin and Waterland are not as aggressive neighbors as those
Stonehold might find challenging their southern frontier if the Rocky
Band were not so well-trained. We have a port of our own, poor when
compared to the water wealth of Bright Bay, but serviceable, and
Waterland freely shares the northern oceans with our
vessels.”
“I heard,” Queen Gustin said acidly, “from
well-informed sources, that neither Waterland nor New Kelvin were
pleased that you had come to Bright Bay’s aid. Perhaps your
borders and vessels are not as secure as you think.”
King Tedric shook his head. “I am certain that if we offered
due apology and promised never to aid Bright Bay again—no
matter which foreign powers threatened—New Kelvin and Waterland
would forgive us. Waterland in particular might have other ventures
to occupy her time.” You walked into that one, Valora, Allister thought, listening
to the murmured consternation from the Bright Bay representatives.
That old eagle was playing such games when you were floating toy
ships in a garden pond. Now your own people see our increased
vulnerability.
For the first time, Queen Gustin looked momentarily panicked,
perhaps envisioning a Bright Bay embattled on land by
Stonehold—with or without Hawk Haven’s aid—while
Waterland preyed upon her from the sea. Until this point, Bright Bay
had been a fair match for the neighboring sea power precisely because
of Stonehold’s support against Hawk Haven on land. Gustin has been so busy concentrating on the immediate
picture, Allister thought, that she did not realize what other sharks
would start circling once they smelled our blood and thought us
wounded. Yet, if she had come to fight this battle, she would not
find herself needing to grant concessions. It is her own
cowardice—or prudence—that brought her to this
point.
For a fleeting moment the duke wondered what ultimatum Stonehold
had offered Queen Gustin that war had been preferable to reply.
Despite how attentively his spies and those of his allies had snooped
about, no one knew for certain. The best any could say was that
Stonehold’s letter had to do with events dating back to days of
Gustin Sailor.
Looking at the queen, sitting stiff and haughty in her high-backed
chair, Allister Seagleam was certain of one thing. The
ultimatum—no matter what it entailed—had meant less than
the fact that it had offended Gustin’s pride. She would not
rush to Stonehold’s bidding like a servant to cook, as she had
put it in her letter to him, no matter what the cost.
Although there was still a small glimmer of fear in her eyes,
Queen Gustin found her voice and addressed King Tedric:
“Your Majesty then agrees that what compensation we have
offered Hawk Haven for her assistance in the battles of these few
days past is sufficient.”
Tedric replied carefully, “I have said we will accept
it—I do not wish to discuss whether or not I consider the
compensation sufficient, not when there is a larger question to
settle. I ask you bluntly, Your Majesty, do you wish to continue in
alliance with Hawk Haven and if so, what is that alliance worth to
you?”
Queen Gustin hedged, “You have said you will not take money
nor use of harbors, that your troops need no training. What is the
price of your aid?”
“Nothing,” King Tedric said, “that you must
personally pay. I only ask that you name as your heir my nephew, your
cousin Allister Seagleam. I believe that he will work toward the
union of both our kingdoms, so that never again no such word as
‘alliance’ need ever be used to define our relationship
to each other.”
“You say,” Queen Gustin said, her voice rising,
“that this is no price to pay!”
“I do not ask that you step down,” King Tedric said
reasonably. “Only that you name Duke Allister Seagleam, son of
Princess Caryl Eagle and Prince Tavis Seagleam, your heir. You have
no son or daughter nor younger sibling. I am not asking you to
disinherit anyone, only that you choose Duke Allister out of all
those who could raise a claim to the throne and that you assure
his—or his own heir’s—succeeding you even in the
instance that a child is born to you.”
Duke Lobster, father of King Harwill and thus grandfather to the
yet-unconceived child of the queen, spoke out without bothering to be
recognized:
“Even if the queen has not yet born a child, there are those
within Bright Bay’s own nobility who should follow her. Grand
Duchess Sea-star’s eldest, Culver, holds the title crown
prince, though all understand that he will step down gracefully when
Queen Gustin the Fourth bears a child.”
“Then I,” King Tedric replied, smiling slightly as if
acknowledging Duke Lobster’s unspoken advocacy of his potential
grandchild, “am merely asking Crown Prince Culver to be
gracious a bit sooner than was planned.”
A few people laughed and Duke Allister noted that not all those
who laughed were from Hawk Haven.
Queen Gustin was not laughing, despite the fact that this proposal
came as no surprise. She had heard it before, both from Allister and
from Tedric—and probably from others. Her request that King
Tedric tell her what he wanted of her in return for his support had
been for the benefit of those representatives of her Great Houses who
might not have heard Tedric’s demands—and who hopefully
would be offended by them.
Doubtless what made the queen’s face so stern was that Duke
Lobster was the only one to raise a protest. There was no offended
hubbub as there had been when she slighted Hawk Haven’s
contribution to the recent war, only thoughtful silence.
Duke Allister was not so naive as to believe that this meant there
was near universal support for him. King Tedric’s people were
prepared to support him because of the near certainty that Stonehold
would withdraw once Hawk Haven and Bright Bay showed a united front.
Hawk Haven, therefore, would have won a victory none of their armies
had in over a hundred years—the promise of
unification—with no further bloodshed.
Among Bright Bay’s assembled Houses, Oyster and Dolphin
would support Allister’s claim with enthusiasm. Oyster because
of the prospect of seeing Pearl made queen—and the satisfaction
of seeing their long shot in giving Allister a bride pay off. Dolphin
would support Allister because of the old insult to Lady
Brina—an insult that still rankled so strongly that Dolphin had
risked its own interests to hinder those of the past two Gustins.
Dolphin had long ago forgiven Allister for the earlier offense of his
parent’s arranged marriage in the light of that greater
insult.
Lobster would support the queen. They must because King Harwill
was of their family. Pelican and Seal were more problematical. True,
Queen Gustin’s mother was a Seal, but that House had old
internal conflicts dating back to Viona’s marriage to King
Gustin III. Moreover, the Queen Mother Viona had not kept friends
with all of her kin. Pelican owned lands along the Stonehold border
and should be grateful for Hawk Haven’s support, but they might
prefer reconciliation with their closer neighbor. Do I really want to be Gustin’s heir? Allister asked
himself. Do I really wish this kettle of fish on Shad?
He nodded to himself. He did. The problems would exist whether or
not he was in a position to do anything about them. This way, he
would have some control. Indeed, Gustin would need to work with
him—or at least with Shad, as he would be her more probable
successor—from the start if she wished to see any of her
projects carried out.
“I am certain,” Queen Gustin said, seeing that no one
else was going to speak out in favor of her, “that Crown Prince
Culver would be gracious. I, too, wish to be gracious, but this is
much to ask.”
“Still, I ask it,” King Tedric said firmly, “and
I am making demands not only of you. I will expect Duke Allister to
prove his good faith to my people by wedding his heir to my
heir.”
There was murmuring at this, especially among the Hawk Haven
contingent. King Tedric had remained stubborn in his refusal to name
his heir in anything other than his sealed will. This last statement
offered some slight clue to who that heir might be for
Allister’s own heir was widely recognized to be Shad, so
Tedric’s heir would need to be female. However, as there were
three female candidates, this was hardly decisive.
Queen Gustin said silkily, “Duke Allister’s heir is
engaged to be married. Are you suggesting he name another child his
heir or that he break the engagement?”
“That,” King Tedric said, “is not my problem. To
satisfy my belief that I am securing peace with Bright Bay for my
kingdom, Duke Allister must wed his heir to mine. How Allister
chooses to arrive at this end is his choice.”
Earl Kestrel, quivering like his namesake bird about to launch
after prey, stood and was recognized.
“Your Majesty, does that mean you will name your heir
here?”
“If,” King Tedric said deliberately, “Queen
Gustin agrees to my terms, I will be naming my heir here so that
everyone will know how the succession is to be
established.”
Earl Kestrel bowed and sat, glancing at Allister as if wondering
how the duke would take to wedding his son to a feral woman who
apparently thought she was a wolf. I would wed Shad, Allister thought, or Tavis, if Shad’s
engagement cannot be broken—to any of the three young women
from whom King Tedric would select his heir and he would choose a
young one rather than his niece Zorana, of that I am sure. The male
candidates please me less since young Purcel Archer was killed, but I
do not think the king will choose one of these. Baron Archer would
not divorce his wife to marry an eleven-year-old; Rolfston Redbriar
is dead, and Jet Shield is disgraced.
Judging from the expressions on the faces of the Hawk Haven
representatives, similar conclusions were being reached. The
representative for House Goshawk looked vaguely disappointed, but
those for Peregrine, Kestrel, and Gyrfalcon were quite alert.
“Queen Gustin,” King Tedric said, “what is your
answer? I have given Bright Bay ample time to consider my offer.
Although this is the first time my terms have been mentioned in this
company, it is not the first time you have heard them.”
“It is,” the queen said, “a monumental decision.
Although this is not the first time I have heard your offer, it is
the first time some of my Great Houses have been informed. I ask to
have time to consult with them in private.”
“Take that time,” King Tedric said rising, “but
know this, I will not wait beyond this hour tomorrow. Moreover, I do
not think that Stonehold will wait. Already they see Hawk
Haven’s support as a negotiable commodity. I have given you the
chance to win our support, but it does not mean that it is not valued
by others.”
With these stinging words, the king pushed himself to his feet and
turned to go, escorted by his guards. His nobles rose in respect and
followed him from the room, trailed by the clerks for Hawk Haven.
The words that had been kept back lest Bright Bay look less in the
eyes of a nation that had been enemy, ally, and kin now flooded
forth. Representatives of the five Great Houses surged to their feet,
shouting, without waiting for recognition. Allister Seagleam listened
to the noise in consternation. Here, now, at last, it will be settled.
XXIX
From her cot high on a sunny hill, Firekeeper saw
movement around the pavilion in which the negotiations had been being
held. The cleared area around the pavilion, meant to keep
eavesdroppers at bay, suddenly swarmed with those privileged few who
had met with King Tedric, Queen Gustin, and the two ministers of
Stonehold. Everyone was visible but Queen Gustin and King Tedric.
They emerged some minutes later. Through the long glass, Firekeeper
saw that the faces of both were grim and fierce.
“Now it comes,” she said with certainty to Doc.
“Soon the call comes.”
“Call?” Doc said, looking up from the notes he had
been making on a bit of paper. “You mean they’ve settled
it all? Are you certain? I thought that was what yesterday’s
meeting at the Toll House should have done.”
In response, Firekeeper handed him the long glass and motioned
below. “If I have learned anything of humans,” the
wolf-woman said, “I have learned that when counselors look
upset and monarchs serious, a decision has been reached.”
The bright call of a trumpet followed almost as she finished
speaking and a herald’s voice was heard announcing:
“Peace is made! Peace is won!”
Cheering followed these simple words, drowning out what the herald
said next so that he must stop and wait. Firekeeper watched as men
and women smiled or wept, pounding each other on the backs,
embracing. She wondered at their simple joy. Couldn’t they
smell the blood that had been spilt? How could they rejoice at a
peace following a war that should never have been?
Once again she resigned herself to accepting that perhaps for
humans that battle did need to happen. Dangling her hand from the
edge of the cot, she felt Blind Seer lick her fingers.
Doc lowered the long glass, saying: “The herald has given up
trying to say anything more. I’m going to run down and learn
the terms.”
Firekeeper did not stop him, having plans of her own. As soon as
the physician was gone, she said to Blind Seer: “I smell Patience not far away.”
The wolf grunted agreement. “If you bring the horse to me, I will not need to walk
all the way down the hill.” “Who said you are getting out of bed?” the wolf
growled. “I have,” Firekeeper replied. “And as you
cannot stop me without hurting me further, I think you will get
Patience.”
The wolf snarled something about stupid, impulsive humans, but by
the time Firekeeper had sat up and swung her feet to the ground, he
was back, driving the snorting grey gelding in front of him. Patience
wore neither bridle nor saddle, but Firekeeper said to him: “Kneel down so that I may mount or I will bite
you.”
A bit awkwardly, Patience complied, having no doubt at all that
Firekeeper was completely in earnest. Wrapping her hands in the
horse’s mane and using the strength of her arms, the wolf-woman
hauled herself astride. Despite the pain, she kept her expression
carefully stoic, for she knew that at the first sign of weakness
Blind Seer would realize he could stop her without retaliation.
She must have succeeded in hiding the pain that stabbed her back
and groaned in the healing muscles of her thigh when she stretched it
around the horse’s barrel, for the wolf contented himself with
grumbling: “If Elation had not so taken to Derian, I would have her
fetch him here. He could stop you.” “I doubt it,” Firekeeper said cheerfully, adding
“Up!” to the horse. Patience rose stiffly, muttering
complaints about mad wolves. Firekeeper felt so good to be up and
moving she let the gelding have his say. “Down the hill,” shesaid, slapping her
steed’s neck, “to where the people are gathering. I want
to be there when the king makes his announcement. ” “What announcement?” Blind Seer asked, trotting
alongside. “Why, his heir,” Firekeeper replied blithely.
“I feel in my bones that now is the time.” “Do you expect him to name you?” “No, but I am no less curious for that.“ “Curiosity is a puppy’s vice.” “And a human virtue.”
Doubtless because Blind Seer moved to pad a few steps in front of
the grey gelding, a path cleared for them as they passed through the
army camp. Firekeeper sat as straight as she was able, but she feared
that she must look rather less than herself. Still, sporadic cheers
and friendly greetings met her progress.
The news of her coming must have flowed ahead of her, because as
she reached the area near the central pavilion Elation soared
screeching out of the sky, heralding Derian’s arrival a few
moment’s after.
“Firekeeper!” Derian exclaimed, the word protest and
question all at once. She realized how much she had learned in that
she could understand this. Once she would have thought it a simple
greeting.
“I wanted to hear the king’s announcement,” she
replied blandly.
“How did you know there was to be one?” he asked
teasingly. “Isn’t the herald’s news of peace enough
for you?”
Firekeeper replied as she had to Blind Seer, “I felt it in
my bones.” How else could she explain her growing awareness
that humans revealed their thoughts and intentions through little
signs even as wolves did?
Humans might lack tails and decent ears, but the signs were
present nonetheless.
Derian might have teased further, but he was too concerned about
her health and comfort. Given his height, he had no trouble checking
both the sword wound to her back and the stitches on her leg without
getting her down from Patience’s back. When he had contented
himself that she was not bleeding afresh and nothing seemed to have
pulled loose, he grunted:
“Well, you are here, you might as well stay. Are you
comfortable up there?”
“Enough,” she replied. “Though Patience has a
sharp backbone.”
Derian remedied this by commandeering a blanket to make her a pad.
Firekeeper leaned with her arms on Patience’s withers while
Derian slipped it under her. They’d just finished when Doc
joined them, glowered at Firekeeper, but said nothing more. He was
followed a few moments later by Valet, Race, and Ox. The latter
explained:
“The king has called most of his nobles to him. That’s
where Earl Kestrel has gone. Shouldn’t you be there,
Firekeeper?”
She shrugged. “I am comfortable here. If they want me, I am
easily found.”
But no one came for her and when the herald emerged from the tent
and the crowd fell silent she remained just one among many. After the
herald made a completely unnecessary call for quiet, he
continued:
“His Majesty King Tedric and Her Majesty Queen Gustin the
Fourth have several very important announcements to make. They demand
your complete and obedient attention.”
At this, the monarchs emerged from the pavilion. Each was trailed
by a small herd of nobles, each dressed in the best that could be
found at short notice. Earl Kestrel and Baron Archer, like most of
those who had seen recent military service, wore their uniforms.
Standing next to Sapphire Shield who was wearing her battered blue
armor, Lady Elise looked tranquil, if rather frail, dressed in the
same gown she had worn to the ball.
Firekeeper wondered if hers were the only ears sharp enough to
hear the sigh of longing and admiration that inadvertently slipped
from between Doc’s lips as he gazed at the young noblewoman.
Something about the slight but definitely compassionate twinkle in
Valet’s eyes made her think that hers were not.
A raised dais a few feet high had been hastily constructed and
side by side with measured tread, rival king and queen mounted to
stand where all could see them. Courage, Firekeeper thought with admiration. Until Prince
Newell’s attack on the king, I never realized the risks these
human Ones take whenever they are in public. Queen Gustin is not
loved here. How easily an arrow shot from afar could end her life!
Yet she stands there cool and even arrogant, like the senior doe of
some great herd.
This was the first time she had seen Bright Bay’s queen
close up and Firekeeper took a deep breath, hoping to catch something
of her scent. All she got was that of horse and hot humans, but she
did not doubt that the elegant young woman before her was scented
like some rich flower or perhaps an exotic spice.
The queen, Firekeeper decided as the herald blatted out a
completely unnecessary recitation of titles and honors, was furiously
angry but knew herself in no position to express that anger.
After the announcement of titles, King Tedric began to speak. His
every sentence was echoed by the herald so that even those at the far
reaches of the crowd could hear, but Firekeeper was close enough to
hear the old voice projecting with strength despite the shrillness of
age.
“Good people. As was announced a short time ago, we have
achieved peace between those who so recently contended upon the field
just west of this point. Stonehold has paid the promised
compensation. They will begin to withdraw their troops tomorrow
morning.”
He lifted a hand to forestall the cheer that began almost
inadvertently and continued:
“Compromise is the weapon of peace. As many of you know, I
first came here on my quest for a fitting heir. Part of my compromise
for peace was agreeing to name that heir publicly. But before I do
so, Queen Gustin has an important announcement of her own to
make.”
As the queen moved slightly forward to take over, a low murmur
rippled through the throng to be instantly quelled by her gaze.
“As Stonehold’s perfidy has demonstrated,” Queen
Gustin said in a firm yet musical voice, “neither Hawk Haven
nor Bright Bay is strong enough to exist alone. My greatest wish is
for an alliance between our kindred nations. In token of this, I am
stepping down as queen of Bright Bay in favor of my cousin, Duke
Allister Seagleam. As he was born as a pledge of our land’s
desire for mutual peace, I can think of no better proof of Bright
Bay’s goodwill toward Hawk Haven.”
Nothing could stop the noisy roar of acclamation that exploded
almost before her words were finished. Duke Allister nodded solemnly,
but something of how deeply he was moved showed in the line of color
that crept up from his collar to flush his cheeks. His wife, Pearl,
was less composed. When she burst into joyful tears, Duke Allister
was able to take refuge in comforting her.
The herald shouted the crowd to relative silence, and Queen Gustin
continued, her tones now icy:
“My cousin has agreed that I should not make this great
sacrifice for my people’s good without some fitting reward.
Therefore, the islands that have to this time been part of the nation
of Bright Bay will become my new realm. To guard and protect the
islands, I shall be taking with me a portion of Bright Bay’s
fleet. I hope that relations between my new realm of the Isles and
her sister nations shall be characterized by mutual
accord.” That last, Firekeeper thought, is as true as if Blind Seer
said he wanted all his fur shaved off. I doubt either King Tedric or
Duke Allister believe her. Neither are fools.
King Tedric stepped forward and resumed:
“I thank my noble sister and I shall devote my strongest
efforts in these last years of my life to maintaining mutual peace.
In the interests of this, I have decided that I can no longer delay
announcing my heir. At one point I had seriously considered Duke
Allister, but his new role as king of Bright Bay will heavily occupy
his time.
“I wish to state that my naming of one person as my heir
should in no way be taken as a slight to those who were not selected.
All of the men and women I considered had qualities that might have
made them good and able monarchs, but in the end, I could only select
one person. Unlike Stonehold, my nation cannot be ruled by a
committee.
“In the interests of furthering an alliance with Bright Bay,
I decided to pass over my niece Zorana Archer and my nephew Ivon
Archer. My other nephew, Lord Rolfston Redbriar, bravely gave his
life on the battlefield before this decision was resolved, as did my
grandnephew Purcel Archer.
“The next generation holds many fine young men and women.
However, in choosing between them I let my desire for peace between
Bright Bay and Hawk Haven dictate my choice to a certain extent. Duke
Allister has four children. His eldest and his heir is a young man,
the heroic Shad Oyster.
“My desire was that the reunification of our nations be
delayed no longer than absolutely necessary. Therefore, my heir must
be someone who could wed Shad Oyster. Together, they would rule Hawk
Haven after my death and—with Allister Seagleam’s
enthusiastic concurrence— upon Allister’s passing to the
ancestors, they would also rule in Bright Bay.
“This narrowed my choices considerably, for only two women
of near marriageable age are among my potential heirs. Both young
women have shown true courage and fortitude in different ways during
the battle. One of these candidates, Lady Archer, is the sole heir to
her family duties. She is also just eighteen—not quite of
marriageable age. However, these difficulties could have been
overcome. What made me decide to select Elise’s cousin,
Sapphire Shield, over her was an event that is already becoming
legend.
“By now all of you have heard how during the final battle of
this recent war, Sapphire risked her own life to preserve that of
Duke Allister and how, when Shad Oyster fell defending his father
from further attacks, Sapphire herself carried him from the field.
Such events forge deep bonds. I am not such a fool as to ignore the
promptings of the ancestors. Therefore, I here name with all of you
as my witnesses, Sapphire Shield the crown princess of Hawk
Haven!”
Now, clearly, was a time for cheering and none attempted to
restrain the thunderous applause that arose as Duke Allister led
forward his son and his daughter-in-law-to-be. As the young couple
stepped decorously forward to receive the acclaim of those who would
someday be their subjects, they clasped hands tightly. Firekeeper was
pleased to note that this was not mere form. From her elevated perch
she could clearly see that the knuckles on both hands were white from
the tightness of that grasp.
When the shouts and cheers faded to a happy murmur, King Tedric
continued, “My voice is old and weak. Therefore, I ask my
nephew, Allister Seagleam, to continue explaining the terms of
peace.”
Allister stepped next to the woman he had deposed and offered her
a deep bow. Queen Gustin IV, soon to be Queen Valora of the Isles,
was gracious enough, but the tight lines around mouth and eyes could
not be smoothed away by mere intention.
Allister held up his hand for silence. When he spoke, his strong
voice seemed emblematic of the promise of the new days to follow.
“My good people, tomorrow morning I shall depart for Silver
Whale Cove, the capital of Bright Bay. There, with the full agreement
of these nobles and the families they represent…” Here
he paused to gesture at the gathered representatives of Bright
Bay’s five Great Houses. “I shall be crowned king of
Bright Bay. However, I will not be made King Gustin the Fifth. The
name Gustin shall be allowed to rest. Nor shall I be King Allister
Seagleam. Instead, the name I will take is King Allister of the
Pledge, chosen as a reminder of what has brought us all to this
point.
“My son and heir, Shad, and Crown Princess Sapphire will be
married soon after, also in Bright Bay. Thereafter, together, they
will travel to Hawk Haven and renew their vows before their new
countrymen. When I pass on to the ancestors, Shad and Sapphire will
reunite the portions of our severed people. At that time, Bright Bay
and Hawk Haven will cease to exist, becoming instead a new nation
embracing the best of our peoples. To commemorate that change, a new
name will be taken. Uncle Tedric has suggested we call our new
country Bright Haven. What say you all?”
Firekeeper thought there could be no doubt of the people’s
approval. In keeping with the general festive atmosphere, even Blind
Seer threw back his head and howled enthusiastically.
“I want you to know,” Allister said, “that this
union of our kingdoms is not contingent upon chance. If something
takes Shad before me, Sapphire shall still follow me and
reunification continue. The same is true if Sapphire dies suddenly.
Shad is her heir, even as he is mine. The child of their bodies will
follow them—either of them—to the throne. Their lives
will not be easy for they must learn to govern wisely not one, but
two peoples. Yet our dream is that by the time Bright Haven is born
the people of that nation will no longer be two but one.
“I have spoken long enough. You gathered here have seen
history made. The realm of the Isles is born. Bright Haven is
conceived. Each one of you is witness to those births. Guard that
responsibility as you would any newborn child, knowing that you stand
as ancestors to those great events. Blessings on you all!”
As Duke Allister stepped back, Firekeeper joined in the new wave
of acclaim, a thunder of cheering and shouting that lasted until the
noble party had retreated from the dais. As the joyful noise faded,
the crowd surrounding them began to break up, flowing about their
little wolf-guarded group like a stream parting around a rock.
Looking down from her seat on Patience, Firekeeper saw that Derian
was looking at her, a quizzical expression on his face.
“You look awfully happy for someone who just learned she
isn’t going to be queen,” Derian said.
“I knew that I wouldn’t be for a time,”
Firekeeper replied. “I was glad then and am gladder now because
now Earl Kestrel won’t look at me that hungry, hopeful way
anymore.”
“I wonder what he will do about you?” Derian
asked.
Ox spoke up for his employer. “Kestrel adopted her. The earl
won’t dump her. He has too much pride of house for
that.”
Valet nodded agreement. “Firekeeper will never need search
for a home. She has one in Kestrel.”
Firekeeper thought about this as the group returned to the Kestrel
camp. On threat of Doc’s wrath, she was immediately returned to
a cot. The others began breaking down the tents and storing the
gear.
Some of Hawk Haven’s army—Race among them—would
remain in Bright Bay to make certain that Stonehold left as
scheduled, but Earl Kestrel had been released from his command to
tend his other duties. Immediately, he had arranged for a suite of
comfortable rooms at one of Hope’s better inns. Valet was
openly pleased.
“What if,” Firekeeper asked the five men, “I
already have a home? Am I to be Kestrel’s prisoner?”
Derian looked embarrassed, Ox and Race puzzled, Doc carefully
blank, but Valet understood and reassured her.
“You should have freedom to come and go,” Valet said,
his hands busy stowing polished cookware. “Even if you are
still nearly a child by Hawk Haven’s standards, you have lived
a very different life and Earl Kestrel will not wish you to be
unhappy. Tell me, do you intend to return to the wilds?”
Firekeeper shrugged. “Winter is hard in the wolflands, but
someday I would wish to see my pack, maybe in the spring. Then you
found me; then I could return.”
“Forever?” Derian’s voice sounded oddly choked.
He turned away and made himself busy stacking some blankets.
“Forever?” Firekeeper laughed. “After I go to
all such trouble to learn human ways! Of course I come
back.”
“I’m glad,” a new voice entered the conversation
as Earl Kestrel walked into the camp. His followers sprang to offer
him proper bows, but he waved them down. “Be at ease.
“I am glad,” the earl repeated, turning to Firekeeper,
“to learn that you plan to come back to us. Can I encourage you
to stay through the winter?”
Firekeeper nodded. “I was thinking that food is hard to get
in winter and, even with Doc’s help, I will be some time yet
making these cut muscles strong enough to run and hunt.”
“Very good.” Earl Kestrel beamed generally.
“Before I left the king’s presence, the new heir spoke
with me. Sapphire asked me to counsel her on the needs of my house.
Very prettily, she told me that until now she has concentrated solely
on those of her birth house.”
Earl Kestrel looked more serious. “Crown Princess Sapphire
also wished to make certain that I would not hold any resentment
against you, Blysse, for not being chosen as heir.”
“Do you?” Firekeeper asked bluntly.
“No,” replied the earl with equal directness.
“Given the situation, the king could not have chosen anyone
about whose heritage there was the least doubt. Moreover, as a public
sign of her favor, the heir has asked if you will be an attendant at
her forthcoming wedding.”
Firekeeper frowned. “Wedding attendant?”
Earl Kestrel actually laughed. “It is a formal-attire
occasion of the highest honor.”
“More honor than the ball?”
“More than a dozen balls,” Earl Kestrel assured her.
He glanced at Der-ian. “I believe that Counselor Derian could
teach you what you would need to know. Lady Archer will also be
attendant upon her cousin. I believe that the crown princess wished
to publicly demonstrate their amity.”
Firekeeper shrugged away the unfamiliar word, more concerned about
this new social challenge.
“Will you teach me, Derian? You and Elise?”
Derian nodded, pretending dismay. “I seem fated to act as
lady’s maid,” he said in resigned tones, but Firekeeper
saw the sparkle in his eyes.
Blind Seer saw it also. “More kings,” the wolf
grumbled, “and queens and formal attire. What shall I
do?”
Firekeeper scratched his great grey head. “Be with me.
Guard my back. There will be dangers there also.”
“Despite what Duke Allister implied today,” Earl
Kestrel said, unaware of the wolves’ conversation, “the
wedding and coronation cannot be held for some weeks. Queen Gustin
must be permitted to move her belongings from the royal dwellings at
Silver Whale Cove. Nobles from both Bright Bay and Hawk Haven must be
given time to prepare for the festivities. Duke Allister will take up
his responsibilities as monarch immediately—indeed, the last
thing we witnessed before the meeting ended was a representative of
each of Bright Bay’s Great Houses swearing loyalty to their new
king—but further formalities will wait.”
“I must return to Eagle’s Nest” Earl Kestrel
continued, “and then to the Norwood Grant. King Tedric has
asked that I take Prince Newell’s servant Rook into my custody.
Apparently, Lady Zorana wants him executed, no matter what promises
he was given in return for his confession. King Tedric might have
given Lady Zorana what she wished but this Rook claims that he is not
the one who took such liberties with Lady Zorana’s
person—he says another man, named Keen, was
responsible.”
“I think,” Firekeeper said slowly, “that Rook
tells the truth. I did not see faces, but I did see shapes and hair
and such. The man who pawed at Lady Zorana was not Rook. He was the
one who later I cut beneath the eye. I did not recall this at the
time, but once or twice I saw one who could have been this Keen near
Prince Newell’s tent.”
Earl Kestrel looked interested. “I doubt that such
information would change Lady Zorana’s feelings. She would
simply say that Rook stood by and permitted this Keen his abuses.
Still, I shall pass your report on to King Tedric. For whatever
reason, King Tedric is standing by his promise to Rook and has asked
that I secure the prisoner in the Norwood Grant, where Lady Zorana
would find it more difficult to do him injury.”
“My thought,” the earl went on, “is to have Lady
Blysse remain here in Hope to recuperate from her wounds. Not only
would it spare her a trip in a jolting wagon, but when she feels
better she will have woodlands near for her pleasure. I must take Ox
and Valet with me, and Derian will certainly wish to visit his family
and tell them about his new honors, but I thought that you, Jared,
might be willing to look after my ward.”
“That’s a good thought,” Doc said.
“I’ll stay and keep Firekeeper and Blind Seer out of
trouble. No one is waiting for me in Eagle’s Nest.”
Firekeeper heard the sadness in his voice. If Earl Kestrel did, he
didn’t comment.
“I may be speaking out of turn, Cousin Jared,” the
earl added, “but I was given the impression that you will be
invited to the wedding celebration in Silver Whale Cove—as well
as to the one in Eagle’s Nest. Shad Oyster appreciates how your
talent sped along his healing and that of his father. He wishes to
offer you this mark of favor before his people.”
Sir Jared’s smile glowed. Firekeeper knew why. Elise would
be at the wedding. The prospect of that meeting—not the royal
invitation—was the honor that lit his soul.
Firekeeper shook her head, wondering if she would ever feel so
intensely about a human. She could be fond of humans, yes. She was
fond of Derian, of Elise, of all those she thought of as her human
pack— even of Earl Kestrel. She would die for King Tedric as
she would for Blind Seer.
Her hand curled tightly in the woll’s ruff, knowing that her
silent wish was impossible, wondering nonetheless if somewhere,
somehow, there was magic that would transform her so that she might
run beside Blind Seer, wolf and wolf.