The Deed of Paksenarrion (82 page)

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Authors: Elizabeth Moon

Tags: #Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Science Fiction/Fantasy

BOOK: The Deed of Paksenarrion
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“Ah,” he said. “We’re all here, then. Have a seat, Councillors, have a seat. Let’s get on with this.” He looked at Paks. “So you’re the young woman I’ve heard so much about? Paks—” He looked down at a sheet before him. “Paksenarrion Dorthansdotter? Of Three Firs?”

“Yes, sir.” said Paks. The others were all taking seats around the far side and ends of the table.

“Good. Let me introduce you to the Council. I’m the mayor, Brewmaster Ceddrin. You saw my place on your way to the grange. You know Marshal Cedfer, and Master Oakhallow, and Master Hebbinford already. Captain Sir Felis Trevlyn, our count’s military representative—” Sir Felis nodded shortly; in this light Paks could tell that he was a lean, weather-beaten man somewhat shorter than Duke Phelan. His beard was carefully trimmed. “—and Master Zinthys, the mage—” Paks looked at the slender, handsome young man in a long velvet robe lavishly banded with braid. He had rings on both hands, and a great polished crystal hanging by a silver chain on his chest. Master Zinthys smiled. The mayor went on. “This is Master Feddith, the stonemason, and I believe you also know Master Senneth, the moneychanger.” He looked up and Paks nodded. “Also with us tonight are past Councillors: Master Hostin, our miller, Trader Garin Garinsson, and Master Doggal, the smith. Eris Arvidsdotter is here representing the farmholders.” Trader Garin wore merchants’ robes, and Eris Arvidsdotter wore a wool gown and cloak. She was as tall as Paks, and broad-shouldered; her gray hair was in a braided coil. The mayor paused until Paks had nodded at each of these. Then he picked up a heavy gavel lying on the table and rapped three times; the table boomed.

“The Council of Brewersbridge is in session,” he said loudly. “I ask the protection of all the gods, and the guidance of all good spirits, to be over us in this meeting. May wisdom and truth prevail. In the name of the High Lord, and all the powers of light.” It sounded stilted, as if he didn’t open the Council formally that often.

“May it be,” responded the others.

“We are met,” he said in a lower tone, “to learn what we can of a traveler here, one Paksenarrion Dorthansdotter. We have heard disturbing things all this year of trouble in Aarenis. We will examine this person to see what her business is here, and how it may be bound in with what has happened there.” He waited, and Paks noticed that both the mage and the Marshal were taking notes. “Does anyone object to my asking the questions?” asked the mayor. Heads were shaken around the table. “Very well, then. If you have other questions, when I’m through, just say so. Now—is Paksenarrion Dorthansdotter your true name?”

“Yes, sir, but I’m called Paks, since I left home.”

“I see. And you come from Three Firs? Where is that? In Tsaia?”

“I—I’m not sure. The closest larger town was Rocky Ford; that’s where I joined Duke Phelan’s company—”

The Marshal cleared his throat. “Excuse me, Mayor, but Rocky Ford is just within Tsaia, near the Finthan border in the north.”

“I see. Three Firs was small, then?”

“Yes, sir. Much smaller than Brewersbridge. My father’s land was a half-day’s sheep drive out on the moors. We went to Three Firs rarely.”

“And Rocky Ford?”

“I’d never been there before I—I ran away to join the company.”

“So you went directly from home to Duke Phelan’s company—hmm. And what was your father?”

“A sheepfarmer,” said Paks. Then, anticipating the next question, she added, “I learned about mercenary companies from my cousin Jornoth; he’d left several years before, and came back with a horse, and gold, and said he was in the guard.”

“Where? In Tsaia?”

“He didn’t say, sir. But he said I couldn’t go directly to a job that good. He said I’d have to start somewhere else, and he told me what to do.”

“Hmm. Not common, for a girl from a remote farm to join an army.”

“No, sir. But I’d always wanted to be a warrior—”

“As a mercenary?” put in the Marshal.

Paks blushed. “Not—exactly, sir. But Jornoth said that was the way to start.”

The mayor took control again. “You say you were trained at Duke Phelan’s stronghold, and went from there to the wars in Aarenis?”

“Yes, sir.”

“How long were you in Aarenis?”

“I was there for three campaign seasons, and in winter quarters in Valdaire.”

“You must have had a short season this year,” he said, looking at her sharply. “Why did you leave your Company?”

Paks hesitated. “The war—Siniava had been killed, and my two years were up.”

“You have told Marshal Cedfer and Master Oakhallow what happened to you; we also would like to know, from your own lips.”

“Yes, sir.” Paks gathered her wits. She hurried over the first part of the trip with Macenion, merely mentioning his half-elf ancestry and the knowledge he claimed of the mountains. Then she described the valley of the elfane taig as they had first seen it, and the dream that came to both of them. The Councillors listened without interrupting as she described the underground passages, and the chamber where they’d found the elf lord. Through the battle with him, the burning, and the running fight with the orcs, and the last struggle that ended, beyond her comprehension, with her alone on the surface, no one spoke or stirred. “Some sickness came on me,” she said finally. “I couldn’t go far along the trail; a snowstorm came down off the mountains, and I fell. Then it was that the elves came. They healed me, and entered the valley to see whether I had told them the truth. When they returned, they told me how to find my way here, and gave me messages to Master Oakhallow and Marshal Deordtya. I was to say that the elfane taig had awaked, and the elf lord was freed.” Paks stopped, and looked up and down the table. The faces were intent, but no longer hostile.

After a moment’s silence, Sir Felis turned to the mayor. “If you don’t mind, I’d like to ask a few questions.”

“Go ahead.”

“Paksenarrion, you say you served three campaign seasons. How soon after you joined the regular company were you made private from recruit?”

“The first battle, sir.”

“What was your file position?”

“File second, the first year, sir, and the second. This past year we moved around a lot, but at the end I was file leader.”

“I’m not clear on something. You’ve spoken both of leaving the company, and of being on some sort of long leave. Are you still the Duke’s soldier, or not?”

Paks sighed. “Sir, the Duke had reason to give me a long leave. He and others had suggested that I might leave the company for a year or so. For other training, or experience, they said. But the Duke said I would be welcome back any time. I hadn’t decided yet, sir, how soon to return.”

“But you have no complaints against Duke Phelan, or he against you?”

“I have none against him, sir, and as far as I know he has none against me. And the Company is all I’ve known. I miss them.”

“Have you any sort of token or pass from your duke, that might prove what you say of his opinion?”

Paks remembered the ring he had given the survivors of Dwarfwatch, and reached into her pouch for it. “Here is a ring—” She handed it to the mayor, who peered at it, and passed it along the table. When they had all looked at it, the mayor passed it back.

“Dwarfwatch,” the mayor said. “Isn’t that the name of that Sorellin fort on the south end of Hakkenarsk Pass?”

“So the traders say,” said Master Senneth.

“So. Those rumors, last spring, of a major battle there—” mused Hebbinford. “You must have been there. Why were you so angry with the merchants, Paksenarrion, for mentioning it?”

Paks glanced quickly at Sir Felis and the Marshal, then back to Hebbinford. “Sir, it is the Duke’s business. I don’t talk of it with merchants. But—by treachery, most of my—of a—cohort was lost at Dwarfwatch, to Lord Siniava. Most of a cohort of Halverics, too. For those of us who lived, the Duke had these rings made.”

“So he’s fought understrength this past year,” commented Sir Felis. “And the Halveric too, I presume.”

The Marshal was not deflected from the original story. “What was it, a siege, or what?”

“If she considers it her duke’s business, Cedfer—” began the Kuakgan.

“Nonsense. Anything that’s happened almost a year ago is public knowledge in Aarenis, and we’ll know the details here sooner or later.”

Paks took a deep breath and tried to shove her private memories back into hiding. All the mercenary companies in the south knew the story; Cedfer was right. She gathered her wits and began. “One cohort of the Duke’s company was detached from the siege of Rotengre—the Guild League cities had joined in that—and garrisoned Dwarfwatch while the Sorellin militia, who had been there, helped with the grain harvest.” She paused, and they all nodded. They listened intently as she described Halveric Company’s approach, the surrender, the departure of all but a guard cohort of Halveric’s and Siniava’s attack, the fate of the prisoners marched away toward Rotengre, and the desperate defense of the few who held the fort.

“And you were in that. I see.” Marshal Cedfer glanced at the Kuakgan and back to Paks. “Were you one of those sieged in the fort, or were you taken prisoner?”

“Neither, sir. Three of us were not taken—by chance, we were gathering berries in the brambles and they didn’t see us. We took word to the Duke.” Paks stopped there and looked at them. Sir Felis was leaning forward, alert and eager; the Marshal’s eyebrows were up; the Kuakgan was frowning slightly. The rest merely looked interested.

“How far did you go?” asked Sir Felis. “Where was the Duke?”

“Outside Rotengre, with the rest of the company,” said Paks. She wished they would go on to something else. She didn’t want to think about that journey, about Saben and Canna,

“I can see,” said the Marshal, “why you would be trusted by Duke Phelan. Remarkable. Well, then—so the Duke relieved his force at the fort. And where was the Halveric? I should think he’d have been there too.”

“He had taken most of his Company toward Merinath,” said Paks. “They arrived the next day, too late to fight there: but they came to Rotengre.”

“And how many troops did Siniava have?”

“We thought about eight hundred, altogether—”

“But Phelan’s force is what—three cohorts altogether?”

“Yes, sir. He had help from the Clarts and Count Vladi—”

“And Gird, no doubt,” said the Marshal firmly. “Well, indeed. That’s quite a tale, but straight enough. Now, what’s happened this last year? We’ve heard of widespread fighting, open war from the mountains to the sea, armies marched clear from the Westmounts to the Copper Hills. What about it?” The mayor was watching the Marshal closely, but did not interfere.

Paks wondered where to start. “Sir, after the year before, the Duke and the Halveric were certain that Siniava meant to conquer all of Aarenis. The Guild League cities blamed him for the piracy of Rotengre, and other things as well. My lord Duke pledged to spend himself on a campaign against Siniava, for what he had done to us. He gathered most of the northern mercenaries to his aid. And the Guild League cities fought on their own lands, and sometimes marched abroad as well.”

“Aha!” Master Senneth was rubbing his hands together. “I always suspected the like, sirs, I did indeed. Too many caravans were robbed on the trade roads between Merinath and Sorellin, and none of the goods ever showed up here. They must have been taken on south. And I’d heard through—well, I’d heard that Siniava had bought into some of the guilds.”

Paks nodded. “We heard the same, sir, after Cortes Cilwan fell.”

“Cilwan fell?” asked Sir Felis sharply. “What happened to the Count?”

“He was killed,” said Paks. “But Vladi’s men got his heir out, the boy, and he’s safe in Andressat, the last I heard.”

“Succession wars,” muttered the Marshal. “They’ll have succession wars, as well as everything else.”

“Go on,” said the mayor, with a gesture that silenced the others. “What then?”

Paks shrugged. “I don’t know it all, sir; I was only a private, after all.” She described the campaign as best she could. Sir Felis and the Marshal listened intently, their fingers moving as if on maps. The others reacted more to descriptions of cities fallen, battles fought, factions implicated in this plot or that. Finally, dry-throated with the length of the tale, she came to that last few days, when Siniava’s remaining soldiers were neatly trapped with the help of Alured the Black. “We caught up with the last of them,” Paks explained, “in an old ruin where the Immer and Imefal meet.”

“Cortes Immer,” said the Kuakgan softly. “No one’s held that since the old duke’s line died.”

Paks looked at him. “Is that what it is? It’s still a great citadel, built into the living rock like Cortes Andres. Anyway, Siniava was killed, trying to escape secretly from the citadel, and after that his army surrendered to the militia.”

“I can hardly believe Siniava is truly dead,” mused the mayor. “How many years have we worried that he might gain control of Aarenis and come over the mountains? I remember the first word we had of him, don’t you, Master Oakhallow?”

“Indeed yes.”

“And now he’s gone. And no more agents of his will come through, trying to spy out defenses, such as they are.”

Chapter Eleven


If
she’s telling the truth,” said Feddith harshly. “If. ‘Twould be months before we could check her tale. She might be an agent herself.”

Paks tensed, but Sir Felis answered. “I don’t think so,” he said. “She carries the Duke’s ring, and showed it willingly. I know that crest.”

“It could have been stolen,” said Feddith stubbornly.

“She fights like a soldier trained in Phelan’s Company,” commented the Marshal.

“And as well,” said the mayor, with a look at the mage, “we have a way to tell if she lied. If Master Zinthys is willing—”

The mage looked at Paks, and smiled disarmingly. “I should say, if the lady is willing. Without any special arts, sirs, I see no liar there. An honest soldier, it seems to me, and I daresay to Captain Sir Felis.” He caught Felis’s eye, and the captain nodded. “I would not wish to cast a spell on her if she’s opposed, sirs; I would not indeed.”

The tradesmen of the Council looked taken aback. Master Oakhallow smiled faintly. Marshal Cedfer spoke up, brisk as always.

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