She shivered, but with delight and anticipation, not dread. Oh, no, definitely not
dread.
Not like she'd felt with every other would-be suitor that had presented himself or been presented so far.
Now, wait and see,
she cautioned herself.
Don't start chasing hares until the hounds have the scent. Orthallen could be misreading this. He might just be very kind.
But if he
was
courting herâit was just a bit difficult to be loverlike when he never saw her except in the company of ten or twenty other people.
The question was, did she
want
him to court her? Actually, more to the point, did she want to marry him? She thoughtâperhapsâbut she still wasn't entirely sure. It probably wouldn't be too much of a battle to convince the Council, but the rest of her subjects might not care for the idea of a foreign Consort. And while he had beautiful manners, and was extremely sympathetic, it was all words so far. She had no idea if he was truly attracted to her, Selenay, or was just being properly diplomatic and sympathetic to the Queen.
He
was one of the handsomest men she had ever seen, but how did she look to him, really? And how would he ever be able to say what he really felt with the constant audience that was around her?
If only there was a way to get rid of the audienceâthe courtiers, the ladies, all of them. If only there was a way that she could just slip away from them all, long enough for the two of them to be alone for just a little.
And then, she had an idea. It was a terribly romantic idea. And it just might work.
I'll have a masquerade,
she thought with delight.
I'll have it when the year of mourning is officially over. Out in the gardens, spread out everywhere, with everyone in costume and masked. I'll have the same costume made up for me and all of my ladies, except I'll let him know by some little token which one is me. If he can't manage to get me alone for a little, then he won't be trying.
Yes, that would do it. That would do it indeed. She chuckled at her own cleverness.
And meanwhile, she had tomorrow to look forward to, a half a day and all evening with nothing before her but to relax and enjoy herself. And perhaps Karath would show something more of his intentions.
She went to her bed and fell asleep, still smiling.
There were three stands set up along the three sides of the triangular playing field; the best one, reserved for the Queen and her Court, was on the side between the Scarlet and Green goals with a good view of both. Out on the field, the two teams faced each other, Scarlet and Green goalkeepers standing warily alert on their respective goals, the two goalkeepers on the neutral, third goal, watching each other as much as the teams.
There was a tension-filled silence as one of the referees placed the ball on the ground between the two teams, then ran off, well out of the way of what was coming.
A trumpet blastâ
A single shout swelled a thousand throats, and the game was on.
“Explain to me what I am seeing, please,” Karath asked, watching as the tide of riders collided, the ball somewhere under the churning hooves of the Companions. One half of the riders were wearing Bardic scarlet, the other, Healer Greenânot because they actually were Bards and Healers, but because the two teams had been “sponsored” by the two other Collegia. It would; after all, have been impossible to tell which rider was on which team, otherwise.
“The players are all Heraldic Trainees, and they usually wear gray,” Selenay said, as there was a loud
crack,
and the ball suddenly seemed to fly out of the scrum on a pair of invisible wings. “This came out of a game the Trainees made up over the winter, called Hurleeâ” She interrupted to cheer, as the Bardic goalkeeper made a last-minute save, her Companion rearing and pivoting on hind hooves, letting her catch the ball in her net. The goalkeepers had nets, rather than club-ended sticks.
“Anyway, we wouldn't be able to tell the teams apart, so Bardic Collegium sponsored the team in red, and Healers the team in green.” She shouted again, as the Bardic goalkeeper threw the ball back into play, and one of her own people caught it while it was still in flight and sent it whizzing toward the Healer goal with a mighty blow of his stick. The whole field went charging after it.
“But how are the horses so well-trained?” Karath asked.
“They aren't horses, they're Companions,” she answered automatically. “Umâthey'reâ” she searched for a way to explain it to an outsider. “They have Mind-magic, and so do the Trainees, and it's like having a partner. They can speak to one another.”
“Ah, magic,” Karath said wisely. “Of course. Like the Hawkbrother mages who control their birds in the strange places in the Pelagirs.”
Actually, it's not like that at all, she thought,
but that was probably as close as he was going to get until he'd been here a while, and saw for himself. Or until a Companion Chose him. “That's close enough, I suppose,” she said instead, and turned her attention to the game.
It was absolutely vicious in its way; Alberich had insisted that the original version of Hurlee be played with no holds barred, and nothing short of murder against the rules, and this version was no different, with one single exception. No one was allowed to deliberately thrust a stick among the legs of the scrumming Companions. The idea of a Companion with a deliberately broken leg was just too horrifying. But the Companions were
certainly
allowed to ram each other, and shoulder each other out of the way; the riders could hit at each other with their sticks, and try to pull each other out of the saddle. Companions and riders alike wore hard helmets of leather over steel; the Companions wore neck guards, the riders wore padding and guards of their own.
It was war out there; Selenay, who had seen war first-hand, recognized it for what it was. Relatively bloodless, perhaps, but nonetheless, war. Which was why both Weaponsmaster Alberich and the new Equitation Instructor, Herald Keren, approved of it. You could study mounted combat all you liked; you could even practice as much as you dared, but you got no
sense
of what combat was really likeâ
Well, the fourth- and fifth-year Trainees certainly were now. By the time the first third was over, that was obvious. There was plenty of danger; one player was already out with a broken arm, and a second sidelined while the Healers made sure that the crack on the head hadn't resulted in a concussion. A third was playing with a broken nose, and there were two with black eyes, and no one would know until it was over how many bruises and strains there were. No Companions were injured, but that was always possible, too.
The second third began after a brief pause for waterâboth drunk and poured over headsâand a quick change of players. Then they were off again, with no less vigor than before.
“It seems very dangerous!” Karath shouted to her, over the cheers and shrieks. She glanced at him; he seemed just as excited as everyone else. His color was high, and he had a wide smile of enjoyment.
“It is!” she shouted back. “Our Weaponsmaster is using it for war-training!”
“Aha!” He nodded vigorously, then cheered wildly with everyone else as the Scarlet and Green goalkeepers on the neutral goal got into a clinch, and a Scarlet rider nipped in right under their noses and slammed home a goal.
Hurlee on ice had been exciting. This was beyond excitingâthis was intoxicating. Even Selenay, who had been in the thick of war, was caught up in it, drunk as any of them on it, free to feel it, knowing that this time, there was no fear that anyone would die. One rider was actually knocked unconscious by the ball before it was over, and there was a broken wrist and a second broken arm, both caused by being unseated and falling badly. But Selenay knew that the Healers would soon put all of them to rights, and when the Healers were done with them, the congratulations they would get at the hands of the rest of the Traineesâand everyone else with an interest in the gameâwould soon make the pain just a memory. The Scarlets took the lead and held it for most of the game, but at the very end, in the final third, the Greens took the victory away from them by a single point.
When the winded and the exhausted winners and losers both had been mobbed and rushed off the field to their own celebratory feast, Selenay found herself hoarse with screaming and nearly as tired as if she had been out there on the field herself.
“My word!” the Prince said, his eyes still wild with excitement. “That's altogether more thrilling than any tournament I've ever seen! You say your Weaponsmaster is using this for war-training?”
Selenay nodded, and sat down so that everyone else could. Protocol, after allâwhile the Monarch was on her feet, no one else could sit. There was some little time before the
al fresco
dinner, which would be served out in the gardens, and she wanted to give her staff plenty of time to have it set up before she led the ravenous hordes toward the food. Meanwhile, pages were going around with wine and fruit, and she availed herself of both. Karath sat down in the place of honor beside her, though he still looked as if he would like to go find a Hurlee stick and try the game for himself.
Not Selenay. She enjoyed watching the game, but once it was over, she couldn't help but think about why Alberich was so in favor of it. She didn't want any of those youngsters to have to see what she had seen. There had been too many no older than they who had not returned from the Wars.
“Indeed, he is, Your Highness,” the Seneschal said, as both the Rethwellan Ambassador and the Ambassador from Hardorn leaned closer in order to hear. “He and the Equitation Instructor have found it an invaluable substitute for melee and skirmish training. They say they have found that both the mounted and foot versions are equally valuable. And it is all the better for the fact that the Trainees
want
to do it, and several of them spend a great deal of their free time in practice at it. We are restricting the mounted version to the final-year students, however, given the level of expertise required, and the danger involved.”
“Better a broken bone or two now, than something worse in combat,” Selenay said, sobered by her recollection of another spring dayânearly this time last yearâ
Then she shook off her melancholy. This was supposed to be a day given over to relaxation and pleasure, and she was not going to spoil it. “Well, gentlemen, you can tell your friends and kin back in your homelands that we here in Valdemar know how to provide both novelty
and
entertainment for our guests,” she said lightly. “I do believe that was the first ever public game of mounted Hurlee.”
“And I hope you will convey my admiration to your Weaponsmaster for finding so clever a solution for a training dilemma,” the Prince said with a smile. “Though I will confess, if
that
is the level that he trains to, he is fully as expert as our own Weaponsmaster at homeâthough perhaps not
quite
to the exacting standard of Swordmistress Tarma shena Tale'sedrin, the famed Shin'a'in who trained my father and older brother.”
“But not you?” asked the Hardornan Ambassador, and Selenay had the oddest sensation that
he
knew something about Karath that he would like very much for Karath to reveal. Something unflattering. . . .
Though
why
he would wish for such a thingâ
Ambassadors are always jockeying for favor. I suppose he thinks that if Karath appears less than perfect, I will lose interest in him. Absurd.
The Prince frowned, and for just a moment, a shadow passed over his face. But in the next moment, he was all smiles again, and Selenay wondered if she had even seen it. “Alas, no,” he replied smoothly. “The Swordmistress retired and closed her school before I was old enough in my mother's eyes to be sent away to it. And at any rate, from all I have heard, the lady is extremely ascetic in her ways and strict in her discipline; some might say, she is overzealous in both regards. And Iâwellâ” he shrugged. “I am not much like my brothers. While I feel that every man of breeding should be adept at the use of arms, I fail to see why he should undergo the same rigorous training as someone who intends to live by them. Personally, I am afraid that the Swordmistress and I would be doomed to perpetually clash, so perhaps it is just as well. It would be a terrible scandal for a Prince of the blood to be thrown out of a school for mercenaries as an abject failure, or worse, a
discipline problem.
”
The Rethwellan Ambassador laughed, politely, but it sounded strained. Selenay was baffled. If
that
was all the Hardornan Ambassador had been angling for, she failed to see what was so unflattering about it. Not even a Trainee who was unsuited to the martial arts was required to do more than learn how to defend him or herself. Why, look at Myste! Most of
her
training had been in the best ways of running away!