Authors: Mercedes Lackey
Daren ran a hand through thick blond hair and sighed gustily. “I was afraid that he might be sicker than anyone had told us,” the Prince said with relief. “He’s—he’s a good boy, but much too inclined to hide his hurts, I think. Listen, I intend to overturn every attempt by Jarim to make any accusations against Karal in the Grand Council meetings. If he won’t come around, I’ll exercise my prerogative as the Queen’s proxy and dismiss the meetings altogether.” He smiled grimly. “We can afford to do without these meetings for a week or two. The real work is being done by Kerowyn, the mages, and the artificers anyway. Frankly, we’ve been going through with them partly because we must keep the people appraised of our progress, and partly out of hope that something new might come out of them. I must admit that I would not mind an excuse to cancel these time-wasting exercises for a while.”
Greatly daring, An’desha decided to ask a question that he had no right to ask. “Highness, have you heard from High Priest Solaris? I cannot believe that she does not know of all of this. She has had her ways of knowing things immediately before this.”
Daren looked at him strangely. “I have,” he said, slowly, “This very morning, a message from her lay among the correspondence on my desk, and it had not been there last night, nor did a page or a messenger bring it. And I believe that you should tell Karal what I have been sent. It was only two words long.” He
paused, and an odd, unreadable expression passed across his face. “It said, ‘Karal remains,’ and was signed by Solaris herself.” He shook his head. “I am not certain what to make of it, but the meaning is plain enough.”
An’desha nodded. “Karal is still her chosen representative. She could simply be keeping him in place, though, until this current crisis is over so that it does not look as if she is replacing him because of guilt.”
“I hope so.” Daren was too well-schooled to pace, but he shifted his weight uncomfortably from foot to foot. “We have done all we can to bolster his authority, but there is only so much we can do when he has to deal with people who have not known him from the moment he arrived here.”
An’desha grimaced, and quickly changed the subject. He and the Prince discussed what they could do to try to redeem Karal’s reputation, but both admitted that they were handicapped by Jarim’s prejudice.
“I will see what I can do to have him recalled and replaced by a Sworn or a shaman,” the Prince said finally. “But that will take time, time during which he is free to poison minds.”
“And we must try to find an antidote to that poison.” An’desha hesitated, then shrugged. “I can think of nothing more to say or do at the moment.”
“Nor I,” the Prince admitted. “But thank you for coming to me. You have given me reasons to do things I had wanted to do in the first place. Jarim is not a bad person, but he is a miserable failure as an envoy. I suspect the Shin’a’in have not had much experience at selecting people to represent their interests off the Plains.”
An’desha laughed as he rose to his feet and made his way toward the door. “I would make a better envoy than he, I’m afraid.” At Daren’s look of sudden interest and speculation, he added in warning, “They would never accept me unless I were to be made a shaman. I possess magic, and as such, I could never be said to represent them. No Shin’a’in can practice magics but the shaman, and there is an end to it.”
“As one who practices magics and has endured more than a hundred warriors, you have an understanding that Jarim sorely lacks,” Daren retorted dryly.
An’desha shook his head, thanked Daren for his time and patience, then took his leave, secure in the knowledge that the Prince-Consort would keep Jarim on a short leash.
He returned to the
ekele
to find that Karal was awake and sitting sleepily in the sun in the garden. Warm golden sunlight streamed through the eastward-facing windows, making a green-gold glory out of a scrap of lawn surrounded by flowering shrubs with aromatic leaves. Karal had made himself a soft place to sit with a rug purloined from among An’desha’s things, a few cushions, and a blanket from the bed.
“What are you doing down here?” An’desha asked sternly, gazing down at him with both hands planted on his hips. “The Healer said you were to stay in bed!”
Karal looked sheepish, but he did not look away from An’desha’s face. “I couldn’t sleep anymore,” he said. “I won’t go anywhere else, and I’ll drink everything except the sleeping potions, but I can’t stand being so muzzy-brained.” He looked pleadingly into An’desha’s eyes. “I promise that I will take naps if I can, but I don’t want to be forced into it. The drugs—” now he faltered, “—they’re making me dream of—of the Iftel border.”
An’desha shuddered; that was one experience he didn’t particularly want to recall either, and he knew it had been worse for Karal. “All right. I must admit that I’d feel better knowing you weren’t asleep and alone here. Herald Kerowyn has beaten enough self-defense into you that I think you can protect yourself if you’re awake. Assuming anyone or anything could get past all the Companions out there.” He paused for a moment. “Prince Daren asked me to tell you that he’s heard from Solaris. It was a two-word message; ‘Karal remains.’ Maybe you can make more out of that than I can.”
Karal only shook his head.
“I have a plan,” An’desha continued, “but it’s going
to take a few days to put into motion. Meanwhile, your friends are out there defending you; you haven’t been deserted. I think if I let them know that you’re up to seeing visitors, you won’t be alone here for long, either.” At the sudden interest and veiled hope in Karal’s face, he added, “I believe that Natoli in particular has plans to keep you company.”
Karal’s blush told him all he needed to know on that score. So, there
was
something brewing between them besides merest friendship.
Good. Very good. It’s about time, for both of them. Natoli has been ‘one of the boys’ for too long, particularly since she isn’t
she’chorne
any more than Karal is.
“And in the meantime, I have brought you books that have nothing to do with politics or wars or magic. Here.” He dropped the three books he had taken from the library beside his friend. “You read them and think of nothing. I shall go off and attempt to exercise my Shin’a’in craft and guile.”
Karal laughed at this, because of course the Shin’a’in were noted even as far north as Valdemar for being the least crafty and most direct people in the Alliance. “As straightforward as a Shin’a’in” was an old saying that An’desha had encountered more than once.
Perhaps that was because no one in the Alliance recognized how directness could be used as cleverly as guile nor did they realize how telling only part of the truth could be as deceptive as telling a full lie.
For three days, An’desha left the defense of Karal’s honor in the hands of Karal’s other friends and concentrated on Jarim himself. It had occurred to him that there might yet be a way to get to the man; he was not unlike the Chief Healer of Karal’s old Clan. Tor’getha was not a bad man, but he was quick to leap to conclusions, and quick to look for enemies outside his own folk. Yet when he was presented with enough evidence, Tor’getha had been known to change his mind.
So the first thing was to establish that he really
was
what he claimed, and not simply some rootless vagabond pretending to Shin’a’in blood as a door to
opportunities. Dressing conservatively, but unmistakably in the Shin’a’in style, An’desha hovered about the edges of any group that included Jarim. Karal’s actual whereabouts were not known except to those few of his friends who could be trusted with the information, so Jarim was not aware that An’desha was playing host to the young Karsite. After three days of near-constant attention, Jarim had stopped frowning and sneering whenever he saw An’desha, and was watching him with a puzzled expression, as if he was wondering just what An’desha wanted.
An’desha let him wonder; his plan depended on Jarim approaching
him
, not the other way around. He felt very much like those who hunted falcons and hawks, who would bury themselves in sand or leaves with a live, fluttering pigeon in one hand, waiting for their quarry to come and take the bait. When the hawk descended, it would be a fight to keep him—though hopefully
this
particular quarry would not realize there was a struggle going on.
At last his patience was rewarded; the quarry came to investigate the bait. Jarim intercepted him on the third afternoon of Karal’s absence, just as he was leaving the Palace, heading for the
ekele.
Jarim was actually waiting for him at the door to the path through the gardens. “An’desha. I wish to speak with you.” He paused awkwardly, looking puzzled as he groped for words. Dust-motes drifted in a shaft of sunlight from the window above the door, lancing between them like a wall. “You claim Shin’a’in blood, yet you do not look Shin’a’in, for all that you ape our dress and customs and speak our tongue freely. I—” His mouth twitched as he tried to find diplomatic words and came up with no diplomatic way to say what he wanted. “I am the representative of the Shin’a’in here, and I would have no impostors claiming to be of the Clans.”
An’desha smiled mildly. This was exactly what he wanted, to establish his credentials. “My father was Le’kala shena Jor’ethan,” he replied steadily. “My mother was an Outlands woman, a weaver, dwelling at
Kata’shin’a’in. My father, they say, had a need to wander, which took him often to the edge of the Plains, most often to Kata’shin’a’in, where he would see and mingle with the largest number of foreign folk.” He licked his lips. “My mother died at my birth, and he brought me into the Clan to be raised there as a son of the Bear.”
“Halfblooded, then—” Jarim began dismissively, clearly preparing to deny him true Clan status. An’desha inter rupted him.
“I have more of the blood than most of Tale’sedrin,” he replied boldly. “You cannot deny that. When did the Goddess create hair of gold and russet among the Clan, or eyes of green? Those are the legacy of Kethry shena Tale’sedrin, and if you would deny Tale’sedrin to be of the Blood, then you must answer to Kal’enel, for She decreed Kethryveris to be blood-sworn into the People.”
Swallow that, old man. There is not a Shin’a’in on the Plains who would dare say Tale’sedrin was less than wholly of the People, yet the Clan-seed came from a man and a woman who never even heard of the People until they were full grown.
Caught without an answer, Jarim grimaced, his eyebrows drawing together into a frown. “When did the Goddess decree that the People might boast eyes as slitted as a plains-cat’s?” he finally said. “Or hair bleached to silver by magic?”
Quickly, An’desha weighed all the possibilities and decided on the boldest course. “Will you close your mind because of what your eyes see, as if you were an Outclansman who believes only in what he has before his face?” he asked. “Or will you hear my tale and learn what happened when you were not there?”
Jarim reared back a little, his head coming up, his spine going stiff. He had not been challenged like this since he had arrived here, and An’desha was well aware of this. But he had phrased his challenge very carefully, appealing to blood and clan, and the tradition that a Shin’a’in would
always
hear out a fellow Clansman before he made a judgment.
Finally the envoy grimaced and jerked his head sideways. “Come to my rooms, then. I will hear you.” He headed toward a nearby staircase, and An’desha followed him willingly.
Jarim’s rooms were precisely as An’desha had thought they might be; spare by Valdemaran standards, with most of the furniture gone, but quite luxurious by the standards of one who lived all of his life in a tent. At Jarim’s gesture, An’desha took a seat on a flat cushion on the floor, automatically dropping into the cross-legged position of anyone born in the tents. Jarim’s mouth twitched; obviously he had not thought An’desha could even manage the seat on the cushion, much less the posture that marked a Shin’a’in the moment he sat.
Interesting. I could almost believe that this man has not bothered to learn a single thing about any of the people here! Is that possible? Can he have been sent off so ill-prepared?
Perhaps that was why he had been so willing to jump to conclusions about Karal and An’desha. If so—and if he would listen with his mind open at least a little—this might be easier than An’desha had thought.
“What do you know of me?” An’desha demanded.
Jarim paused, then shook his head, as if to say that there was not much he could state truly. “That you claim Shin’a’in blood, that you are paired with that too-pretty Tale’edras sorcerer, that you have the white hair of a sorcerer yourself. That allegedly you had a hand in building the protections which now keep the mage-storms at bay.”
An’desha closed his eyes for a moment.
He knows nothing. We assumed too much. We thought that someone would have told him about all of us, and yet he has been working in complete ignorance, using whatever he happened to pick up in conversation and working it into the skewed and incomplete view of the situation he has built with poor information.
It seemed impossible, insane that anyone would have sent an envoy off so poorly briefed.
Then again, this was a
Shin’a’in
envoy. There were
plenty of folk among the Clans who viewed anyone dwelling off the Plains with suspicion. He might not have felt it necessary to actually learn anything about the people with whom he was working. He might have decided that since his only duty was to represent the needs of the People, any such details were unnecessary.
But how to tell him what he needed to know in a way that would make him believe it?
He is less like the Healer and more like that stiff-spined old bear, Vor’kela, the shaman of my Clan.
Then he knew how to present his story—and Karal’s—in the one way that such a close-minded individual would listen to.
He altered his position a trifle, taking the poised, yet relaxed seat of a shaman about to tell a traditional history; Jarim responded automatically to the posture without thinking, taking a counter-attitude of subservient reception.