Luck in the Shadows (17 page)

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Authors: Lynn Flewelling

BOOK: Luck in the Shadows
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“And they had the necromancers,” Alec interjected. “And their armies of walking dead, you said.”

“I see that certain subjects stick in your mind. I believe I said that legends mention
rumors
of such things. The Plenimarans are known for their brutality and thoroughness both during battle and after. It’s a short step from there to monsters, wouldn’t you say?”

Noticing that Alec looked a little crestfallen, he added kindly, “But it’s important to have a good ear and a sharp memory; you’re well equipped in those respects. In our trade you have to sift every tale, separate the true weave from the embroidery, as it were.

“But to resume my tale, things looked quite hopeless that tenth winter of the war. In desperation, Thelátimos resolved to consult the Afran Oracle. This meant making a long, dangerous journey to Afra, which lies in the hills of central Skala. But he reached the precinct by the solstice and asked what he should do. The royal scribe who accompanied him took down the Oracle’s
reply word for word. Thelátimos later had it inscribed on a golden tablet that is displayed to this day in the throne room at Rhíminee. It reads: ‘So long as a daughter of Thelátimos’ line defends and rules, Skala shall never be subjugated.’

“Those words changed the course of history forever. Since the Afran Oracles were renowned for the accuracy and wisdom of their prophecies, Thelátimos, though rather surprised, decided to follow the edict. The divine covenant was proclaimed and his four sons duly stepped aside in favor of their sister Ghërilain, a girl just your age and the youngest of his children.

“There was a great deal of controversy among the generals as to whether the Oracle meant for an untried girl to take over the actual leading of the armies. Thelátimos meant to follow the letter of the prophecy. Declaring his daughter Queen, he instructed his commanders to prepare her for war. As the story goes, they had other ideas. They gave her a bit of training, dressed her up in fine armor, and stuck her in the center of a sizable bodyguard at the rear of the army. During the next battle, however, young Ghërilain rallied her guard, led them to the front, and personally killed the Overlord Krysethan the Second. Although the war continued another two years, her actions that day bought Skala and her allies enough time for the Aurënfaie to arrive. From that day no one doubted Ghërilain’s divine right to lead.”

“And there have been queens ever since?” asked Alec. “No one ever questioned the Oracle’s words?”

“Some did. Ghërilain’s son Pelis secretly poisoned his sister when he was passed over as king, then took the throne, claiming that the Oracle had really meant ‘so long as the daughter of Thelátimos rules’ rather than ‘a daughter of the line of Thelátimos.’ Unfortunately for him, there was a devastating crop failure during his second year of rule, quickly followed by an outbreak of plague. He died, along with hundreds of others. As soon as his niece, Agnalain, took the throne things began to improve.”

“But what if a queen had no daughters?”

“That’s come up a few times over the last eight hundred years. Queen Marnil was the first. She had six fine sons but no acceptable successor. In desperation she journeyed to Afra where the Oracle instructed her to take another consort, specifying that she choose a man on the basis of bravery and honor.”

“What about her husband?” asked Alec.

“That did present a problem, since the Oracle wasn’t very specific. Since then, various queens have interpreted the directive in a number of ways. Some even used the office as a sort of reward. Queen Idrilain’s grandmother, Elesthera, had more than thirty ‘consorts,’ but even the Skalans considered this rather eccentric.”

“How could a queen produce legitimate heirs if she slept with any man who took her fancy?” Alec exclaimed, looking scandalized.

“What does legitimate mean, after all?” Seregil said with a laugh. “A king may be cuckolded if his wife can fool him into thinking that her lover’s child is his own, not a difficult thing to do. But any child a queen bears is her own, no matter who the father was, and therefore a legitimate heir.”

“I guess so,” Alec conceded with obvious disapproval. “Were there any bad queens?”

“The usual mix over the years. Divinely instituted or not, they’re still human.”

Alec shook his head, grinning. “All these stories and histories. I don’t see how you remember all that!”

“One has to, to do any sort of business among the Skalan nobles. Importance is judged by which branch of the line one is related to, how far back you can trace noble blood, which consort one is descended from, whether your ancestor was directly descended from a female or male branch, whether or not they were legitimate—I could go on, but you get the idea.”

He set his cup aside and stretched. “And now I think we’d both do well to turn in. I’ve a busy day tomorrow dealing with our good captain, and you’ve got your work cut out for you defending my honor!”

9
T
HE
L
ADY
I
S
I
NDISPOSED

S
eregil jerked awake just before dawn, a strangled groan crawling up his throat. He tried to choke it back, but the muffled croak was enough to bring Alec from his alcove.

“What is it? What’s wrong?” the boy whispered, groping his way across the cramped cabin.

“Nothing, just a dream.”

Alec’s hand found his shoulder. “You’re shaking like a spooked horse!”

“Strike a light, will you?” Seregil clasped his arms tightly around his knees, trying to quell the fit of trembling that shook him.

Alec quickly lit a candle at the companionway lantern and regarded Seregil with concern. “You’re pale as anything. Sometimes the quickest way to make a nightmare pass is to tell it.”

Seregil let out a long, slow breath and motioned for him to draw up the cabin’s single chair; he was certainly in no hurry to sleep again.

“It was morning,” he began softly, staring at the candle flame. “I was dressed and about to go on deck. I called for you but you weren’t around, so I went alone.

“The sky was a hideous, boiling purple, the light through the clouds harsh and brassy—you
know, the way it is just before a thunderstorm? The ship was in ruins. The mast was snapped off, with the sail hanging down over the side, the deck all littered with wreckage. I called out again, but there was no one on board but me. The river was black as oil. There were things floating in the water all around the ship, too—severed heads, hands, arms, bodies—”

He scrubbed the back of one hand across his mouth. “What I could make out of the shore was a desolate waste, the land burned and torn up. Smoke from ruined fields flowed out over the water and as I watched it seemed to gather itself, moving toward the ship in great coils and billows. As it came closer I began to hear sounds. At first I couldn’t make out their direction, but then I realized it was all around me. It was the—the things in the water. They were all moving, limbs flexing and kicking, the faces twisting into horrid expressions as they rolled in the water.”

He heard a small gasp of revulsion from Alec; to a Dalnan, there was nothing more horrible than a desecrated corpse. Seregil drew another shaky breath and forced himself to continue.

“Then the ship lurched and I knew that something was climbing up the torn sail. I couldn’t see what it was but it jerked the vessel around like a fishing float. I clung to the far rail, waiting for it. I knew that whatever it was, it was unspeakably vile—that the very sight of it was going to shatter me. Yet even in the midst of my terror, a small, sane part of my mind was screaming that there was something terribly important that I should be remembering. I didn’t know if it would save me, but it was imperative that I think of it before I died. And then I woke up.”

He managed a faint, self-mocking laugh. “There it is. Sounds rather silly, telling it like that.”

“No, it was a bad one!” Alec shuddered. “And you still don’t look too well. Do you think you can sleep some more?”

Seregil glanced at the brightening square of the window. “No, it’s almost morning. You go back to bed, though. No sense both of us losing sleep over nothing.”

“Are you sure?”

“Yes, you were right about telling it. It’s fading already,” Seregil lied. “I’ll be fine.”

•     •     •

As Seregil moved through the details of the morning, the nightmare did begin to fade, but in its wake came a strong sense of unease. His headache had returned, too, shortening his patience and unsettling his stomach. By noon he was so out of sorts that he retreated to his place by the cutwater, hoping to be left alone. Alec seemed to sense that he would do well to make himself useful elsewhere, but the captain was not so easily put off.

Traveling in disguise always posed complications, but Seregil was finding his current role more restrictive than usual. Rhal’s inopportune attentions were more than he felt up to dealing with in his present state. The captain found frequent opportunities to make himself available to Lady Gwethelyn, noting points of interest along the shore, inquiring after her comfort, suggesting innumerable diversions for her young squire. He accepted her apologies graciously enough, but was firm in his intention to entertain them at supper that evening.

Soon after the midday meal, Seregil excused himself and spent the remainder of the afternoon dozing in the cabin. By the time Alec roused him to prepare for dinner he was feeling considerably better.

“Sorry to leave you on your own up there,” he apologized as Alec worked at a knotted lacing on his gown. “Tomorrow we’ll find a way to get in some training. Lady Gwethelyn can keep to her cabin with her squire in attendance. Swordplay would be rather awkward down here, but I’m sure we can come up with something. More signing and palming tricks, maybe. That’s something you have to keep at or you’ll lose it.”

Wriggling out of the wrinkled garment, he lifted a fresh gown from the trunk and dropped it over his head. When Alec had pulled the lacings snug, he carefully draped a gauzy wimple over his hair, binding it with a silk cord and arranging the folds to spread gracefully over his shoulders. In addition to the garnet ring, he added a heavy chain of twisted gold and large pearl earrings.

“Illior’s Fingers, I’m famished,” he said as he finished. “I hope I can manage to eat in a ladylike fashion. What’s for supper? Alec?”

The boy was regarding him with a perplexed expression. Blushing a bit, he blinked and replied, “We’re having stewed fowl. I dressed out the birds for the cook while you were asleep.”
He paused, then added with a grin, “And from what I heard from the sailors today, this disguise of yours is working.”

“Oh? What did they have to say?”

“The cook claims he’s never seen the captain so taken with a woman. Some of the others are taking bets on whether he’ll have his way with you before we reach Nanta.”

“Highly unlikely. I trust you to see to your duty, Squire Ciris, until we’re safely ashore.”

Rhal opened the door at their knock. He’d donned a fusty velvet coat for the occasion and had given his beard a proper trimming as well. With an inward groan, Seregil presented his hand and allowed himself to be escorted in.

“Welcome, dear lady!” Rhal exclaimed, pointedly ignoring Alec as he drew Seregil’s arm through his own. “I hope you’ll find everything to your liking.”

A small table stood neatly set for three, the wine already poured, fine wax candles alight in place of the malodorous oil lanterns.

“Why, you look fresh as a spring rose at dawn,” he went on, seating Seregil with practiced courtesy. “It pained me to see you looking so peaked this afternoon.”

“I’m much better, thank you,” Seregil murmured. Alec gave him a quick wink behind Rhal’s back.

Both fowl and wine proved to be excellent. Conversation during the meal was somewhat strained, however. Rhal made little effort to include Alec, and replied somewhat stiffly when the boy made several pointed allusions to Lady Gwethelyn’s fictitious husband. Having grown accustomed to his part, Alec was clearly beginning to revel in it.

“You must give us news from the south, Captain,” Seregil interjected when a particularly grim pause threatened.

“Well, I suppose you’ve heard about the Plenimarans?” Rhal took a large, blackened pipe from a nearby rack. “With your permission, my lady? Thank you. Before we sailed from Nanta the week before last, news came through that the old Overlord, Petasárian, was ailing again and not expected to last long. That bodes ill for the rest of us, if you ask me. Being Skalan born, I don’t care much for the Plenimarans, but Petasárian has held to the treaties these last five years. That heir of his, young Klystis,
is another matter. They say he’s been ruling in all but name this last year, and it looks to most like he’s sharpening up the swords again. Rumor has it that he may even have a hand in the old man’s illness, if you take my meaning. What I pick up along the coast is that there’s a good many in Plenimar who think the Twelfth Treaty of Kouros should never have been signed, and that those who say so are anxious to get Petasárian out of the way so his son can set things to rights.”

“Do you think there could be a war?” Seregil effortlessly counterfeited feminine alarm.

Rhal puffed sagely at his pipe. “Skala and Plenimar hardly know what to do with themselves when they’re not killing each other off, though I hold the Plenimarans are generally the ones to kick the beehive. Yes, I think they’re getting ready to go at it again, and mark my words, this time it’ll be a bad one. Those that have business over that way say that there’s an uncommon amount of ship building going on in Plenimaran ports. The press gangs are out in force, too. Sailors are getting shy of taking shore leave there.”

This was fresh news to Seregil, but before he could pursue it further they were interrupted by the cabin boy who’d been sent in to clear the table. While the cloth was being changed, Rhal unlocked a small cabinet over his bunk and brought out a dusty decanter and three small pewter cups.

“Aged Zengati brandy. Quite rare,” he confided as he poured. “My trade connections in Nanta give me access to a good many luxuries of this sort. Come, Squire Ciris, let’s drink the health of our most excellent lady. May she continue to delight the eye and gladden the heart of those privileged to look upon her.”

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