Protector of the Small Quartet

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Protector of the Small Quartet Page 53

by Tamora Pierce


  Raoul came to the tent after a light midday meal and changed clothes behind a screen. Wearing breeches, hose, and a loose white shirt, he walked to the center of the room. As he pulled on his quilted gambeson, Kel fit and buckled the leg plates of his armor. Piece by piece they went, Kel snugging the leather straps comfortably, checking the fit of each plate with him before they went on to the next.

  “If it were Jerel alone, I’d stick to the padded stuff, not all this clank,” Raoul said as he raised his arms for the breastplate. “He knows exhibition rules. But Myles says a couple of charmers from Tusaine are threatening to give me a try. And one of the conservatives has put it about that he’ll bash my head in because I, oh, what was that phrase? Encouraged your pretensions, that’s it.”

  “Then I should fight him, sir” Kel tightened a buckle.

  “Nonsense. I’ll ram some manners into him and tell the king I can’t attend the banquet because I pulled a muscle.” When Kel didn’t reply, Raoul gripped her shoulder and waited until she met his eyes. “Please don’t deny me my fun,” he said with a smile. “Conservatives haven’t found the, er, courage to joust against me in years. Now they’ll come out of the woodwork. They think the gods will withdraw their favor from me because I picked you. Haven’t you ever noticed that people who win say it’s because the gods know they are in the right, but if they lose, it wasn’t the gods who declared them wrong? Their opponent cheated, or their equipment was bad.”

  Kel grinned. She had heard something like that.

  “And the money I win from them in penalties will buy armor for you. That’s rather fitting, don’t you think?”

  It was fitting, put that way. Kel still shook her head at him. What could she say? He clearly loved to joust; just as clearly he hated the artificiality of the progress. Who was she to deny him some entertainment? When he let go, she picked up a pauldron, or shoulder piece. “Left arm, sir,” she told him. Obediently Raoul lifted the requested limb.

  Kel watched the jousting from the field itself, where she waited in case Raoul needed her. Cleon, Merric, and Owen kept her company. For the first time in her life she saw knights and squires vie against one another with a variety of weapons.

  Competitions like this served more than one purpose. They gave knights who did not live in troubled areas a way to keep their battle skills sharp. Squires got a chance to hone their fighting techniques in a warlike setting. A squire who won combats might earn enough in prize money and penalties against the loser to buy horses and outfit himself and his mount. Monarchs and nobles who spent their time at court could see which of the country’s warriors possessed unusual ability and courage: such warriors might be invited to guard the kingdom for the Crown. Nobles settled quarrels at tournaments as an alternative to blood feuds that might last for generations. Noble families showed off marriageable daughters, and the people saw another aspect of the monarchs.

  Until nearly ten years ago tournaments, with their padded, guarded weapons and elaborate ceremonies, were seen as interesting but useless exhibitions of old-fashioned skills and a risk to the lives and limbs of those who competed. Then the immortals began to reappear in the human realm. Suddenly tournaments were vital, a way to find those who could best protect the realm. Kel wasn’t sure that she liked these contests with their possibilities for injury. At the same time she knew how important this practice was. She gave up trying to decide how she felt and simply prayed that no one got hurt.

  Raoul and Jerel of Nenan had their exhibition match. Raoul knocked his friend from the saddle easily. That afternoon he beat one of the two knights from Tusaine, unhorsing him even more swiftly than he had Jerel. A conservative challenged him, Wayland of Darroch. He remained in the saddle after the first charge; Raoul’s lance broke. On the second charge Wayland’s lance shattered. On the third pass Raoul knocked the conservative from the saddle and collected fifteen gold crowns from him.

  “In the old days you could keep the armor and horse of the man you beat,” Owen said to Kel. Living in Tortall his whole life, he had seen plenty of tournaments. “Now, though, most people would druther pay in coin.”

  “It’s simpler,” Cleon replied absently. It was his second comment of the afternoon, the first being, “Hello.”

  Raoul went to his tent to drink a pitcher of water and change his clothes, Kel following while Owen and Cleon stayed to watch more contests. Once Raoul left for a bath, Kel hung out his sweat-soaked garments and went to Drum. Lerant was there already. Drum was spotless, testimony to a long grooming. Kel met Lerant’s possessive glare with a friendly nod and cleaned the horse’s tack. Lerant might think they competed for Raoul’s time, but Kel knew better. Her relationship to her knight-master was simply different from, not better than, the standard-bearer’s.

  The next day she and Raoul did the same tournament routine. She watched him alone as Owen and Cleon entered other competitions. Kel had no interest in risking her own bones to prove her skill. She was content to wait on her knight-master.

  She watched the second Tusaine knight tilt against Raoul and lose, wincing in pity every time Raoul’s lance smashed into his foe’s shield. It looked as painful as she knew it felt. She could have warned Raoul’s challengers, but they didn’t think to ask her.

  Stigand of Fenrigh also lost: he was carried off the field. Once they returned to their tents, Raoul dispatched Kel to check on him.

  Duke Baird, chief of the royal healers, was in Stigand’s tent. Though the servants refused to talk to Kel, Baird did after he left his patient. “A cracked skull, that’s all,” Neal’s father told Kel. “You’d think it was a thrust to his heart, the way he carried on. He’ll be fit to ride in the morning.”

  “I didn’t think anything could open up Stigand’s head,” Raoul said when Kel brought the news back to him. “It just shows, miracles still happen.”

  Once Raoul was napping and his armor was clean, Kel went to visit the Yamani ladies. They served her green tea, played with the sparrows and Jump, inquired after the griffin back in Kel’s tent, and talked. Finally Shinkokami stood and asked, “Anyone for a game of fan toss?”

  “I haven’t played in years,” Kel demurred, but she followed the Yamanis outside.

  Shinko produced a fan, offering it to Kel. The shukusen was as heavy as she remembered, cherry-red silk on thin, elegantly pierced steel ribs that were dull at the base, razor sharp on the ends. Kel opened the fan, thought a prayer, and tossed it up, giving it a spin to flip it over. She caught it, the base thunking neatly into her palm.

  “See?” asked Yuki. “Your body remembers.”

  “My body also remembers days in the saddle in the rain,” Kel said, straight-faced. “That doesn’t mean I like it.” The ladies hid their smiles, but their eyes crinkled with amusement. They liked Kel’s humor.

  The four young women formed a circle on the grass outside Shinko’s tent. They started by throwing the fan low. Kel missed the proper flip twice, sending the open fan edge-first into the ground. She retrieved and cleaned it, hiding embarrassment while the ladies hid smiles.

  On they played, throwing the fan a little higher each time it completed a circuit of the group. It looked like a giant scarlet butterfly as it turned and spun in the air. The Yamani ladies were as graceful as dancers, Shinkokami in a pink kimono for the afternoon, Yuki in pale blue, Lady Haname in cream with bamboo printed in green. Kel didn’t try to be as graceful. She stood well braced, her eyes on that whirling crimson silk. At last she found the rhythm and was catching it one-handed herself.

  When they had it ten feet in the air, Shinko gave the Yamani command, “the blossom opens.” Now they could throw to anyone in the circle. The fan went from one to another, the players speeding up until it was a crimson blur. Shinko called the word for “sinking sun.” They slowed. Now they dipped as they caught the fan, whipped it around both hands, then dipped again before wafting it to the next player. They had a chance to breathe, and the slower pace was a different kind of exercise.

  �
��This is the prettiest thing I’ve ever seen,” Kel heard Neal remark. “May I play?” He stepped among them to catch the fan. There was no time to stop him. The women gasped—and Neal caught the shukusen base down. He nearly dropped it, not expecting the weight of steel.

  “What is this thing?” he demanded, staring at the fan with wide green eyes.

  Yuki walked over to him. “There is a saying in the Islands,” she told him stiffly. “Beware the women of the warrior class, for all they touch is both decorative and deadly.” Taking the fan, she went to a pile of tent poles and picked one up. She carried it back to Neal, unfurled the fan with a snap, and slashed the open edge across the pole. A piece of wood dropped to the ground. She folded the fan with another snap and entered the princess’s tent.

  Shinkokami and Lady Haname followed her, bowing politely to Neal as they passed, their eyes crinkled with hidden laughter. Neal still had not recovered from the sight of the pretty fan slicing the pole like sausage.

  Kel patted his back. “Don’t worry,” she said. “Yuki cools off pretty quickly.”

  Neal looked at her. “She’s angry?”

  “I think you frightened her,” Kel replied. “You frightened me. Meathead.” She cuffed him lightly. “Didn’t your mother teach you not to grab things? You could have lost all of your fingers. I doubt your father, good as he is, could put them back on.”

  “What was that?” Neal demanded.

  “A shukusen—a lady fan,” Kel told him. “If a lady thinks she’s in danger, but doesn’t want to complicate things by openly carrying a weapon, she takes a shukusen.”

  “I want one,” the queen said. Kel looked around. They had gathered an audience during their game. It included her majesty, Buri, some local ladies who looked appalled or fascinated, and a stocky female a head shorter than Kel. She wore a dark blue silk tunic over a white linen shirt, full blue silk trousers, and calf-high boots. A sword and dagger hung at her belt: they looked expensive and well used. Coppery hair brushed her shoulders; she regarded Kel with violet eyes.

  Kel swallowed. Alanna the Lioness, King’s Champion, Baroness of Pirate’s Swoop and heir of Barony Olau, gave her the tiniest of nods, then walked into the crowd.

  Kel took a breath, remembering Queen Thayet’s comments. “I’m sure the princess would be glad to have one made for you, your majesty.”

  “I’m going to ask right now,” the queen said. She entered the princess’s tent.

  “You could have said the Lioness was here!” Kel whispered to Neal.

  “Well, I’m here, aren’t I? And I didn’t exactly have the chance,” he pointed out dryly. “We just rode in. Since when do you call me Meathead?”

  “Since you act like one,” retorted Kel. “Let’s find something to drink. I’m parched.” She dragged him to the food vendors’ tents as the crowd broke up.

  eleven

  CLEON

  The progress crawled south, then east. Kel discovered far more was planned than the introduction of the heir’s foreign bride-to-be and the production of noble spectacles. At the heart of every camp was a complex of tents where work was done: a new census, a survey of roads for a new, up-to-date map, and a study of local laws and medicines.

  The progress also gave the Crown a means to discipline noble houses that had proved troublesome in the past. Fiefs Tirragen, Malven, Eldorne, and Sinthya all were invited to host the monarchs at extremely expensive banquets. Raoul, Kel, and two squads of Third Company got to carry those invitations to less-than-happy recipients.

  On the road to Eldorne to deliver one such message, Kel asked, “Why do these fiefdoms have to pay? I thought the king’s careful not to burden the people he visits.”

  “Except to create an example,” Raoul explained. “Gary—Gareth the Younger—calls it ‘obedience through poverty.’ See, Jon’s grandfather, King Jasson, started it when his wars doubled the realm’s size. He let most conquered nobles keep their lands. To make sure they would be good boys and girls, he went on progress and made them pay for everything. When he was done, they couldn’t afford handkerchiefs, let alone raise money to rebel. Jonathan is being restrained. He hopes that with just the knowledge of these four draining their treasuries to host us, others who might try the same thing will reconsider.” He glanced at Kel. “It isn’t just that a girl is a squire or that Joren got a fine for kidnapping a servant. We’re all part of a quiet war that’s taking place across the Eastern Lands.” To Lerant on his other side he said, “If your grandfather Eldorne waxes too outraged, tell him Barnesh in Maren is cancelling all of his nobles’ royal land grants. They have to petition him to retain their titles and estates, and they get to pay through the nose.”

  Lerant winced.

  They delivered their remaining letters, then rejoined the progress near Fief Eldorne. Once again the train had set a proper camp under the Seneschal’s direction: they would be there for several days. Kel could see that preparations for a new tournament were underway. Riding to their part of the camp, she and Raoul wove in and out of a seemingly endless stream of servants, workmen, and vendors, all carrying burdens.

  Raoul reined up to let a group pass them in wagons loaded with wood for building grandstands. “Kel, when do you want to start taking part in tournaments?”

  The griffin snapped at Kel as she absently preened him with her fingers. “No,” she said firmly, smacking him lightly on the beak. “My lord, it seems a waste of time. Let’s face it, I haven’t beaten you, and I know your work in the saddle better than anyone’s. If I’m going to risk breaking my neck, I’d like to do it when I have a chance to win.”

  Raoul began to chuckle. “Kel, I haven’t been unhorsed in, Mithros, a decade.” He grinned at her. “I was born with lead in my behind, I know what I can do and what I can’t, and every buck who thinks he knows the lance comes to try me sooner or later. Before you start thinking you’re no good, get some other opponents.”

  It occurred to Kel that after her father, Raoul was the nicest man she’d known. He did his best by her, spoke honestly, and never treated her as anything but an equal.

  “Maybe so,” she replied. “But I’ll pick my time.” The griffin looked up at her and shrilled. “Hungry again,” Kel said wearily. “He eats more than I do, and at least I’m getting bigger.”

  “So will he,” Raoul told her. “Wait till you see an adult up close.”

  “If it’s not trying to kill me, I’ll look all I can,” Kel replied.

  They settled into the life of the progress. Kel practiced her weapons with her knight-master and other squires at stops. In camp she resumed glaive training with the queen, the Yamanis, her mother, and Buri. On tournament days she tended Raoul’s armor and weapons. She also made sure Lerant beat her in races to tend Drum after jousting, though she never let the jealous standard-bearer know that she let him win or that she liked the help. It never seemed to occur to him that with a griffin to mind, it was to her advantage to let him cover some of a squire’s traditional jobs.

  She continued to refuse offers to compete. Raoul did it because he was challenged to fight at every stop and didn’t mind showing people that his reputation was well earned. Kel was happy just to assist him and cheer when he rode Drum onto the tilting field.

  The weeks of social engagements were blurring together in Kel’s mind when the progress reached Fief Sinthya. She had already been here to deliver the monarchs’ “request” that its master, a boy of nine, and his mother, who had been spared the old lord’s fate when his treason was uncovered, put a lavish meal before their hosts. Kel was so used to the banquet routine that her mind was on other things as she carried the finger bowl and towel to Lord Raoul’s table. As she offered them to his female companion, she looked into violet eyes.

  Kel dropped the bowl, splattering Lady Alanna’s indigo skirts and Lord Raoul’s spruce green hose. “I’m sorry,” Raoul said wickedly as Kel mopped up the spill. “Should I have warned you?”

  Kneeling on the ground, Kel saw Alanna kick Rao
ul in the shin. “Don’t tease,” the Champion ordered. “Yes, you should have warned her.” To Kel she added, her voice barely audible, “Relax. It’s the only way I can say hello without a hundred people saying I put a good-luck spell on you.”

  Kel mumbled something; she didn’t know what. Bowing, she retreated to the service room for a fresh towel and bowl.

  “What’s this?” demanded Master Oakbridge, pressing cool, dry hands to her cheeks and forehead. “You are warm, and unusually clumsy. Are you ill?” Kel shook her head. For someone who fussed over the problems she presented, being neither a proper young lady or a proper squire, Master Oakbridge could be irritably kind. “If you are ill, tell me. You have no notion of how a summer cold can travel in a group of people like this.”

  “Thank you, sir, I’m fine.” Kel accepted a new bowl and towel from a servant. “I was just surprised by my lord’s dinner partner, that’s all.”

  “But surely you’ve met,” Oakbridge said, tugging her tunic until it was straight. Kel shook her head. “Well, she’s not demanding, so relax,” he ordered her. “At least no one can claim she’s magicking you to succeed, not with half the folk here being mages. Go. They’ll bring the first course up before you know it. Don’t forget you have four people to wait on.”

  She did, Kel saw as she returned: Harailt of Aili, dean of the royal university and one of Kel’s favorite civilians, shared the table; Lady Haname was his companion. “Forgive me, Master Harailt, Lady Haname,” Kel said, presenting the bowl to them in turn. “I don’t know what came over me.”

  They assured her that no offense was taken, and returned to an enthusiastic discussion of Yamani farming.

  Kel returned to the service room and took up the first dish, leeks and ginger in almond milk. She served it to all four adults without spilling a drop. “I understand you have the care of a griffin,” Alanna remarked, looking out over the room.

 

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