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The Ethical Swordsman

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by Dave Duncan




  The Ethical Swordsman

  A Tale of the King’s Blades

  By Dave Duncan

  Five Rivers Publishing

  www.fiveriverspublishing.com

  Published by Five Rivers Publishing, 704 Queen Street, P.O. Box 293, Neustadt, ON N0G 2M0, Canada.

  www.fiveriverspublishing.com

  THE ETHICAL SWORDSMAN, Copyright © 2019 by Katanji Arts Inc.

  Edited by Robert Runté.

  Copy-edited by Lorina Stephens.

  Cover Copyright © 2019 by Jeff Minkevics.

  Interior design and layout by Éric Desmarais.

  Titles set in Dauphin Normal and Oldstyle serif font used for titles.

  Text set in Gramond Regular released in 1989, it was designed by Robert Slimbach for Adobe Systems, based on a Roman type by Garamond and an italic type by Robert Granjon.

  All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of the book.

  Publisher’s note: This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Published in Canada

  Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

  Title: The ethical swordsman : a tale of the King’s Blades / by Dave Duncan. Names: Duncan, Dave, 1933-2018, author.

  Canadiana (print) 20190080507

  Canadiana (ebook) 20190080515

  ISBN 9781988274638 (softcover)

  ISBN 9781988274645 (EPUB)

  Classification: LCC PS8557.U5373 E84 2019 | DDC C813/.54—dc23

  Contents

  Foreword By Lorina Stephens5

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 216

  Chapter 327

  Chapter 438

  Chapter 551

  Chapter 657

  Chapter 765

  Chapter 872

  Chapter 983

  Chapter 1090

  Chapter 1197

  Chapter 12108

  Chapter 13116

  Chapter 14121

  Chapter 15130

  Chapter 16139

  Chapter 17147

  Chapter 18155

  Chapter 19165

  Chapter 20170

  Chapter 21182

  Chapter 22190

  Chapter 23197

  Chapter 24206

  Chapter 25213

  Chapter 26216

  Chapter 27225

  Chapter 28234

  Chapter 29241

  Chapter 30248

  Chapter 31255

  Chapter 32268

  Chapter 33277

  Chapter 34284

  Chapter 35293

  Chapter 36301

  Chapter 37316

  Afterword: The Blades Saga319

  About the Author322

  Foreword

  By Lorina Stephens

  I received the manuscript for The Ethical Swordsman from Dave Duncan early in 2018. He was quite keen about it. I think The King’s Blades series had been Dave’s favourite world, one of swashbuckling characters, Errol Flynn hijinx, and utter escapism.

  That Dave was still writing was a wonder to me, as he’d suffered a stroke two years previous, and was chaffing over the concept of retiring. I remember clearly in one correspondence of ours him lamenting that he might very well have to shelve his pen and discover what retirement would look like.

  Having witnessed what happened to many of my acquaintances and friends upon retirement, I suggested moderation was perhaps the more prudent course, that he couldn’t very well turn off what he was—a writer—but that he might want to slow down a bit, enjoy time with his wife and beloved of 59 years, because we, none of us, were getting any younger. Time, or the lack of it, is an imperative which simply cannot be ignored.

  That conversation happened in August 2018. Dave, still writing, left the world in October.

  And in the wake of that sudden and astonishing event, The Ethical Swordsman remained on my desk, part way through a final edit. It was to originally be published February 1, 2020. But now all of that seemed ridiculous. What were schedules and time constraints in the wake of the reality that Dave was not here to fuss over editorial suggestions?

  So I did some fussing of my own, spent a few sleepless nights, wondering how on earth to do homage to the man who had spent his life as a writer of fantasy and science fiction after being a petroleum geologist? How to do justice to the individual who had been a founding member of SFCanada, and had been inducted into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame?

  It seemed to me the only way to do justice to Dave, and to offer an insight for his many, many thousands of fans worldwide, was to publish this novel, The Ethical Swordsman, the eighth of the King’s Blades series, as Dave had written it. Although the manuscript had first edit by Robert Runté, it has only been copy-edited since arriving in-house in the interest of consistency and the strictures of the English language. What you’re going to read is pure, unadulterated Dave Duncan.

  There will be further audiobooks released in the coming months and years, all productions of his previous work. There will also be a number of other novels which were bequeathed in an unfinished state to Robert, who has taken on the daunting task of completing Dave’s work, so there will be co-authored Dave Duncan novels.

  But The Ethical Swordsman is the last original Dave Duncan novel you will ever escape into, because there are no more.

  Cheerio the nou, Dave. Lang may yer lum reek.

  Lorina Stephens

  Publisher, Five Rivers Publishing

  November 2018

  Chapter 1

  You are asking for a super-human being, but we do have one mortal in the seniors’ class who might come close to meeting your preposterous requirements.

  grand master in a letter to lord hedgebury

  Niall squeezed into the flea room and pushed the door shut, then rose on tiptoe to scan the crowd. Being two inches over the standard maximum height for Blades, he was the tallest man present. There should be ten people altogether, namely Grand Master Parsewood, Commander Bowman of the Royal Guard, six candidates of the seniors’ class due to be bound, Niall himself, and—most important—Queen Malinda, whose grandiose coach stood out in the yard, draped in snow that had fallen overnight.

  It was Thirdmoon already, but the sun now rising over Starkmoor was harsh and unloving. Ironhall’s thick stone walls did little to keep out the cold, and the bleak little chamber known as the flea room was colder than anywhere, for its windows were unglazed and its fireplace empty. It should warm up soon, though, being now packed almost to capacity.

  Niall caught Grand Master’s eye and nodded to show that all the nervous bladders had been voided and everyone summoned was now present.

  The flea room was only ever used for the two most important events of a future Blade’s life. It was where Grand Master interviewed prospective recruits, mostly pre-adolescent delinquent misfits. Five years of discipline and sword training later, it was here that the boys he had accepted, now suave expert swordsmen, met the wards they would swear to defend to the death. But the binding ritual itself
was not without danger, because tonight it would not be hoary old King Ambrose wielding the swords, for he had died just after Long Night, in a fire at his Falconsrest hunting lodge. Tonight, the chosen seniors must swear to his heir and daughter, Queen Malinda. What did a woman know about thrusting a sword into a man’s heart? If she missed by even one hair’s breadth, the conjuration would fail, and he would die.

  On the other hand, at least the seniors gathered here this morning knew that they were going to join the Royal Guard. For more than a year, old Fat Man had been too sick to come to Ironhall, so he had been giving seniors away to noblemen or ministers as private Blades. Being a private Blade instead of a member of the Royal Guard did beat dying, but not by much.

  Error! There were eleven people present. Grand Master was flanking the Queen on her right, but a fancily-dressed man of middle years stood on her left. Who was he? Where had he come from? He made the prospects even worse. The only possible reason for the Queen to have brought that unknown man along was to let him bind one or more of the candidates as his private Blades.

  Hereward was Prime and must lead. Poor Hereward! He was keeping his back straight and jaw tight, but his face was pale as the wintery sky under his mop of orange hair. As Prime, he had been present at the last binding, when Lord Chancellor Roland had bound Quarrel—another who had died in that grisly night at Falconsrest. Hereward’s heart would be the first that the Queen would try to skewer some time around midnight tonight.

  Everyone was watching Grand Master, trying not to stare at the Queen. She was tall and strongly built—no dainty damsel she! Her jaw needed no beard to impress. She had the amber eyes of the House of Ranulf, but as deeply inset as a man’s. They were steady, and she clearly knew who was in charge. She had survived twenty years of marriage to the pirate king of Baelmark, giving him three sons. Moreover, she had responded to news of her father’s death by crossing the ocean in an open boat during Firstmoon. She must be as tough as any of her notorious Ranulf ancestors.

  Chivial had never put up with female rulers for long, but Niall suspected that Malinda might be going to change that, and reign for much longer than either Adela or Estrith had managed. Her speech at dinner last night had included strong hints that she intended to do exactly that.

  Nevertheless, the cheers had been tepid. The visiting guardsmen of her escort had confirmed that the Queen had disposed of Commander Dragon with an earldom somewhere, to reward him for bringing the news of her accession across the raging sea to Baelmark; she had promoted Deputy Commander Bowman in his place. That was good, but she had also thrown Lord Chancellor Durendal in jail, which was unforgivable. For forty years every Blade had worshipped him as the greatest of them all. And now he was locked up in the Bastion? Just who did she think she was?

  She was wearing the same robe she had worn at dinner last night. Cuthbert had said it was sea otter fur, but Cuthbert was often full of wet air.

  Grand Master Parsewood cleared his throat noisily, although the room was already silent. By and large, both candidates and masters approved of their current Grand Master. He was fair, patient, and understanding. He was developing a stoop, though, and had lost so many teeth that he mumbled a lot and sprayed when he talked loudly.

  “Welcome all! Congratulations on reaching your apotheosis. I am sure that you all know exactly what happens at these little ceremonies. They can’t have changed in centuries. Well, this time we are going to make a slight addition. Her Majesty has some words to say.” He gave her a hint of a bow.

  Malinda had a strong, clear voice, much more distinct that his. “I only want to reassure you brave gentlemen that my husband has coached me well in the art of lunging with rapier or sabre. Just before I sailed, he obtained the corpse of a man who had been hanged for sheep stealing and had me practice on him. It, I mean.”

  Her gaze flitted to and fro as she noted the varying expressions that her words provoked. Her husband, King Radgar, had trained at Ironhall, many long years ago, but instead of entering King Ambrose’s service afterward, had gone home to Baelmark, seized the throne, and then launched a long and bloody war against Chivial. For her to mention the hated pirate here was extremely tactless. So was her talk of savaging a corpse.

  Interesting lady!

  “You may proceed, Grand Master,” she added.

  “We thank you for this assurance, Ma’am. I am sure the candidates are comforted by it.” Parsewood switched to the normal flea room dialogue by nodding to Hereward.

  “You sent for us, Grand Master?”

  “I did. Prime, Her Majesty has need of a Blade. Are you ready to serve?”

  Hereward said he was. He should be, for his release was at least a year overdue. Grand Master formally presented him. The Queen offered her fingers to be kissed, her eyes noting his Baelish-like red hair. She did not comment on that.

  Instead she said, “Hereward! It was you who led the so-called Queen’s Men on that mad midnight ride to Falconsrest?”

  The room had already been hushed, but now it seemed to freeze. Niall’s heart skipped a beat and began racing like a scared chicken. For more than a year the seniors overdue to be bound had been calling themselves The Queen’s Men. It had begun as a jest, but technically to predict the King’s death had been treason. The mad ride to Falconsrest had been enough to get every one of them expelled from the school or even hanged, because a dozen people had died that night: five Blades, three seniors, one inquisitor, two servants, and the King. Paradoxically, the candidates’ intrusion might have prevented an even higher death toll. Their fate could only be decided by the monarch, and She had not been expected to arrive until early summer.

  But She had appeared in Grandon less than a month later and had taken charge of the government that very day. Only in the last week had her decision regarding her father’s death reached Ironhall, informing the culprits that no charges would be laid. She had issued no pardons, though, so the threat might hang over them for the rest of their days.

  Hereward spluttered and then whispered, “I really cannot say, Your Majesty.”

  That was literally true, because they had all been required to accept a conjuration that would prevent them from ever talking about the events of that chaotic night. Niall could remember everything that had happened perfectly well and assumed that the others could also. He could not ask them, and even if he could, they could not tell him.

  The Queen nodded as if satisfied and dismissed him with a perfunctory, “Welcome to the Guard, Sir Hereward. Next?”

  Next to be presented was Crystal. He stepped forward, bowed, kissed fingers. He was blond, blue-eyed, and had a lovely smile.

  Malinda then metaphorically slapped his face. “I understand from Grand Master that you have performed your duties as Second admirably. Those duties being what?”

  “Mainly to keep the juniors in line, Ma’am. Also—”

  “And why should my Royal Guard need a nanny?”

  Crystal’s mouth opened but no sound emerged. Finally, he mumbled, “I did not mean to imply that it does, Your Grace.”

  Niall was certain that Ambrose had never harassed the candidates like this, nor would he have repeated Grand Master’s confidential comments on them. Clearly Malinda was a nutcracker and was going to play by her own rules. Niall must try to remember all this. As the most junior of those summoned to the flea room, he was not due to be bound that day. The last man was always left behind to be the next Prime, poor devil, and one of Prime’s least important duties was to tell the next crop of seniors what to expect in here when it became their turn to be bound. In practice they already knew it all from talking with visiting guardsmen, but this hurtful disparagement was new. Ambrose had never done that.

  Next up was Bloodhand, and Niall held his breath. Probably everyone else was doing the same, for Bloodhand was liable to say anything.

  So was the Queen, apparently. “That is a ridiculous, childish
name! By now you must regret choosing it, surely?”

  Bloodhand displayed his ridiculous, childish leer. “Bloodhand, Your Majesty, was one of the very great Blade heroes, a century ago. I’m proud to bear it in his memory.”

  Bloodhand, of all people, had managed to parry the Queen’s attack!

  But she didn’t stop. Passington, Alan... the Queen harried them all. Parsewood had turned grey.

  That was all. Six accepted, and one left over. Why had Grand Master not named at least one candidate to be a private Blade to the mysterious stranger? If the man wasn’t there to accept a private bodyguard then why was he there at all? And why, when Ironhall was almost bursting at the seams with seniors ready for binding, was she only taking six? It made no sense.

  “And finally, Ma’am,” Grand Master mumbled. “Candidate Niall, who will serve you here as Prime.”

  Niall went through the bowing and finger-kissing part, wondering if She would consider him worthy prey or just insignificant scenery at the moment.

  “Grand Master tells me you are the best swordsman among the current candidates.”

  She wasn’t digging at him, but she was still slighting all the others.

  “That depends on how you define best, Ma’am!” Niall said cheerily. “I do enjoy having a self-fulfilling reputation.”

  Surprise made her pause for an instant.

  “Meaning?”

  “Meaning that battles are often won or lost before the fighting begins, Your Grace.”

  She raised the royal eyebrows. “I’m just a foolish, peace-loving little woman, so explain to me what that means.”

  Out of the corner of his eye, Niall noticed that Grand Master was about to have a fit. Everyone else, he sensed, had stopped breathing.

  “Just that one should always appraise one’s opponent in advance, and if I have the reputation of being the best, that is worth about three points before we even start.”

  “We? We! Are we having a battle, Candidate Niall?”

  “Just a contest, Ma’am.”

  “Are we? A contest to decide what?”

 

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