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The Lion of Senet

Page 6

by Jennifer Fallon


  “Oh, Goddess!” she breathed. “It can’t be!”

  “It’s him, my lady.”

  “But...” Morna found she couldn’t speak. Her mind was such a confusion of emotions that she was unable to form a single articulate thought.

  “You’d better sit down,” Helgin suggested.

  He tugged on her arm and led her back into the other room, closing the bedroom door before sitting her down on the settee. He left her there for a moment and moved away, returning with a large shot of dark liquid that he thrust into her hands. Morna was trembling so hard that she could barely hold the cup, but he forced her to drink it. The liquor burned down her throat, focusing her attention—on breathing, if nothing else.

  “How? ...” was all she found herself able to ask.

  Helgin shrugged. “How he got here is not important, my lady. It’s how we’re going to get him out of here that matters.”

  Panic filled her. “Oh, Goddess, Helgin . . . Tovin’s here. If he finds out... and Wallin...”

  “Take a deep breath, my lady.”

  Morna did as the physician ordered, surprised to find that it helped. “I’ll be all right. I’m just... shocked.”

  “As am I, my lady. Unfortunately, we don’t have time to adjust to the news.”

  Morna nodded, feeling a little more in control. She took another sip of the burning liquid and looked at Helgin. “Who else knows he’s here?”

  “Only you and I, at present.”

  “But the others in the rescue party? Tovin was there when you brought him up from the beach. And Dirk . . . oh, Goddess, Helgin, Dirk was there . . .”

  “Dirk has no idea who he is, my lady,” Helgin assured her, “any more than the men who rescued him. Tovin saw nothing but a battered, half-drowned sailor, and once I realized who it was, I made certain he didn’t get a closer look at him. For the time being, at least, he is safe.”

  “We have to get him out of here.”

  “I agree. However, he’s badly injured and I would prefer not to move him.”

  “And even if we did move him, where do we take him?” She jumped to her feet and began to pace the small sitting room. “Damn, if only Tovin wasn’t here! He was making noises about visiting the survivor at dinner.” She stopped abruptly and turned to Helgin. “He might come here tonight!”

  “And I will turn him away,” Helgin promised. “But I can’t deter him for long. You have to decide what you want to do, my lady.”

  “That’s simple! He has to die,” she announced decisively.

  “I beg your pardon?”

  “You have to announce that the survivor died,” she instructed, resuming her frenzied pacing. “That you were unable to save him. Say that he had terrible internal injuries or something of that nature. That should throw Tovin off. Then we can move him somewhere safe and I’ll find a way to get him back to his . . . friends.”

  “After all this time, do you even know how to contact his friends, my lady?”

  “There are still Dhevynians loyal to his cause. The Draitons of Derex. The Seranovs of Grannon Rock...”

  “Yes, well, we won’t get into what I think of the Seranov family, my lady,” Helgin muttered. Then he shook his head. “But even if you were certain of their aid, do you know the risk you would be taking if your husband or Tovin Rill discovered you making contact with Senet’s enemies?”

  Morna was silent for a moment, then turned to face the physician. Her expression was bitter.

  “What other course is open to me, Helgin?” she asked. “The alternative is to inform my husband that the miraculous survivor of the Goddess’s tidal wave is the most wanted man in all of Dhevyn and Senet.”

  Chapter 7

  Eryk watched Dirk mutter impatiently to himself as he worked out the incomprehensible mathematical problems Helgin had set for him. It seemed to take his young master only as long as it took to write down the answers.

  Eryk was in awe of Dirk Provin’s ability to solve things like that. Actually, he was in awe of Dirk generally. Since being rescued by Duchess Morna, his life had taken such a dramatic turn for the better that sometimes his former life seemed like a bad dream. He never went hungry anymore, he had a real bed to sleep in and people treated him with respect. Even the stable boys who tormented him so often when he was smaller didn’t bother him these days. Not since Rees had quietly taken Derwn Hauritz and Taril Longbottom and their friends aside after that episode with the horse trough. Eryk didn’t know what the older Provin brother said to the other boys, but nobody in the castle had picked on him since that day. But he still stayed clear of the town; even Dirk was not certain he would be safe alone down there. Derwn Hauritz, the butcher’s son, bore long grudges.

  Eryk was inclined to be forgiving toward Taril and his cronies, though. If not for a beating that left him half dead, Master Helgin would never have brought him to the attention of Duchess Morna, and she would never have taken him into the Keep and he would never have been made Dirk’s servant. He would still be the smallest, stupidest boy on Elcast who spoke with a lisp and was the butt of all the pranks and torments that the apprentices in the town could devise.

  Eryk knew he wasn’t very bright, but being around Dirk made him realize that everyone had someone who was smarter than they were. Except Dirk. In Eryk’s humble opinion, Dirk was the smartest person on the whole of Ranadon. Even Master Helgin thought he was clever, and he’d lived on other islands where there were lots of smart people.

  “Done!”

  “That was quick,” Eryk remarked, then added a little doubtfully, “Wathn’t it?”

  “Wasn’t it,” Dirk corrected automatically.

  “Wasn’t it?”

  “I suppose.” Dirk blew on the ink to hasten the drying process, then snatched the page off his desk. “I don’t know what Helgin was on about. If these are the worst problems he can come up with, then I think the scholars on Grannon Rock who slaved over them for so long must have been drunken morons to a man.”

  Eryk grinned at the comment, following Dirk to the door. “You’re cleverer than them, Lord Dirk.”

  “I seriously doubt that, Eryk.”

  “You’re smarter than me,” Eryk reminded him, then he shrugged. “Actually, everybody in the whole world is smarter than me.”

  “Don’t be silly, everybody in the whole world is not smarter than you, Eryk.”

  Eryk smiled at the reassurance, but knew better than to believe it. He knew that Dirk didn’t consider himself particularly gifted. His young master thought the duchess was just a trifle overprotective and Master Helgin just a tad senile. When pressed, Dirk would admit, begrudgingly, that he didn’t have much trouble with any of the work the old physician gave him in his dual role of tutor and apprentice master, but insisted that it didn’t prove he was the genius his mother liked to think he was. Eryk knew Dirk found the whole subject of his intelligence just a little bit embarrassing, and fervently wished his parents would stop being so proud of him for it.

  They hurried down the stairs to Master Helgin’s rooms. Although Helgin had been anxious to be rid of them earlier, Eryk figured that with Dirk’s studying complete, they would be allowed to stay and tend the unnamed sailor. Eryk ran down the stairs behind Dirk, determined not to miss a minute of this unusual event. Nothing like this had happened in the Keep before. The most exciting thing that had happened to Eryk lately was getting a new pair of boots for his birthday.

  The sailor’s injuries made an interesting change from the normal, everyday ailments that Master Helgin dealt with in the Keep, and the man was lucky that he had been thrown ashore on Elcast, where a physician of Master Helgin’s caliber was on hand. The breaks in his leg and arms had been clean breaks, so Helgin claimed, and the old physician had let Dirk and Eryk watch as he stitched the cut on his forehead so carefully it wouldn’t even leave much of a scar. With a bit of judicious manipulation his dislocated shoulder had popped back quite smoothly, and once he awoke from his poppy-dust-induced coma, the man wo
uld probably heal quite rapidly.

  Eryk was anxious to be there when he woke. Dirk had said the man looked like he might come from the Baenlands. He wanted to ask the Baenlander about his ship. He wanted to ask about the Baenlands, too.

  “Where are you off to in such a hurry, lads?” Wallin asked, as Dirk and Eryk almost collided with the duke and Tovin Rill on the third-floor landing.

  “We were just going to see Master Helgin, sir.”

  “As are we,” Tovin informed him. “We’ve come to see how our lucky sailor fares.”

  “He’s probably not awake yet,” Dirk told them. “Master Helgin gave him poppy-dust for the pain.”

  “Never fear, we’ll not disturb him.”

  Just as anxious to check on the patient, Dirk led the way along the hall to Master Helgin’s room. He depressed the latch. Surprised to find it locked, he fished his own key out of his pocket and unlocked the door, stepping aside to allow his father and the governor to enter.

  Lady Morna and Master Helgin froze as they entered, their conversation halting midsentence, their whole stance proclaiming some terrible guilt, although about what, Eryk could not imagine. The door to the other room was closed. The cluttered sitting room, with its numerous piles of books, scrolls and jars, was on the eastern side of the Keep. The sun infused the room with warm red light that lent the scene a surreal atmosphere.

  “Wallin! Lord Tovin! What... what are you doing here?”

  “We came to check on Master Helgin’s patient, my lady,” Tovin replied.

  “You can’t!” Morna declared.

  “He can’t be disturbed,” Helgin announced at the same time, stepping in front of the bedroom door.

  Tovin stared at the duchess and then the old man suspiciously. “What is going on here?”

  Morna took a deep breath and smiled. She looked outwardly calm, but her fingers were knotting and unknotting the gold cord tied around the waist of her gown. Eryk had never seen her do that before.

  “What do you mean, my lord?”

  Tovin stared at the duchess for a long moment, and then looked at the physician. “Show me your patient, old man,” he ordered.

  “He cannot be disturbed,” Helgin repeated firmly.

  “Helgin, stop being so stubborn,” Wallin said impatiently. “Lord Tovin merely wants to check on the man. He won’t disturb him. He won’t even wake him.”

  “I’m afraid I can’t allow it, my lord. The patient is very ill. It’s doubtful he will make it through the night.”

  “Has he taken a turn for the worse?” Dirk asked in concern.

  “You said he’d be fine before dinner,” Eryk reminded him helpfully.

  Tovin glanced at Eryk curiously, then turned his attention back to Master Helgin. “Well, old man? Is he dying? Or is he fine?”

  Helgin didn’t answer him. Wallin was sufficiently annoyed by now to push past his wife and the physician and open the door himself. He took a step inside the bedroom and stopped dead, then looked back over his shoulder at Morna. The look he gave her was filled with such pain that Eryk thought Duchess Morna was going to cry.

  “Well?” Tovin demanded impatiently.

  “I think perhaps you’d better see for yourself, my lord,” Wallin said. He looked away, as if he suddenly couldn’t bear the torment in Morna’s eyes.

  The governor crossed the threadbare rug and stepped into the bedroom. From his place near the door Eryk couldn’t see the expression on the Senetian’s face when he saw the sailor, but there was no mistaking his tone when he bellowed, “Call the guards!”

  “You can’t move him!” Helgin protested. “Please!”

  Tovin pushed his way back into the sitting room to confront Morna. “You may consider yourself under arrest, my lady.”

  “Mother?” Dirk cried in bewilderment. “Father? What’s going on?”

  Tovin rounded on Dirk angrily. “Did you know about this, too? Are you part of the plot to conceal his presence from me?”

  “Plot? What plot? What are you talking about?”

  “Go to your room, Dirk,” Morna ordered. Her voice was flat and unemotional. “And take Eryk with you.”

  “No! I want to know what’s happening. Why are you under arrest?”

  “Dirk,” his father said, “do as your mother says. Leave us.”

  “Lord Tovin?” Dirk seemed to think that if his parents weren’t going to tell him what was going on, then perhaps the Senetian Governor would.

  “Your mother is harboring a criminal, Dirk. I’ve no doubt that we interrupted her and her accomplice preparing to spirit him away somewhere.” Tovin turned to Morna, as if he were mightily pleased with himself for uncovering such a dastardly plot. “That was the plan, wasn’t it, my lady? Claim the man had died during the night, before I got a good look at him? What then? A message to his pirate cohorts to get him off the island? Or perhaps you knew he was coming? Is that what his ship was doing near your coast, my lady? Was he coming to visit you?”

  “You can’t arrest my mother!” Dirk objected. The Senetian turned to stare at him in surprise.

  “Stay out of this, son,” Wallin warned.

  Dirk ignored him. “My lord, you can’t arrest my mother for harboring a criminal. If anyone is guilty of that crime, it’s you.”

  “Dirk!” Morna cried anxiously.

  “No, my lady, let him continue,” Lord Tovin said, his eyes dangerous. “It seems you have quite an advocate. Please, Dirk, carry on.”

  “You ordered the rescue of the sailor, my lord, and it was your men that brought him here to the Keep, when they could just have easily taken him to the garrison in town. My mother didn’t even know he was in the Keep until you brought it to her attention.”

  Dirk waited expectantly. Eryk had no idea who the sailor in the next room was, or what was really happening, but if Dirk was so sure Tovin Rill couldn’t arrest Lady Morna for it, then Eryk believed it, too.

  “And what of Master Helgin?” Tovin asked. “Do you have an excuse for him, too?”

  “Master Helgin is a physician, sir, and sworn to do no harm.”

  Eryk was very proud of Dirk. He wasn’t scared at all. Eryk would have given a great deal to have just a tiny bit of Dirk’s courage.

  “As you obviously wish this man serious harm,” his young master continued, “he could be considered to be merely upholding his oath.”

  Tovin smiled suddenly and turned to Wallin. “Where did you educate this boy, Wallin? In the tribunals of Senet?”

  “I did warn you he was a bright lad,” Wallin reminded him. “He is also very lucky I haven’t throttled him for disobeying me. Leave now, Dirk, and stay in your room until I send for you.”

  Dirk might be prepared to face down the Senetian Governor on a point of law, Eryk noted with interest, but he wasn’t quite ready to defy his father when he used that tone of voice.

  “Yes, sir,” Dirk replied meekly. He turned toward the door with Eryk close on his heels, then stopped and looked back over his shoulder. “May I ask one question, before I go?”

  “Is there any way of stopping you?” Tovin muttered.

  “The sailor. Who is he?”

  Tovin looked at him doubtfully, as if he thought Dirk should know the man’s identity. The duke didn’t look at him at all. Master Helgin was chewing nervously on his bottom lip, something he only did when he was very worried. After a long moment of heavy silence, it was Lady Morna who finally answered him.

  “He is Johan Thorn,” she said softly, a wealth of unspoken emotion in her voice. She looked squarely at Tovin and added harshly, “And he’s not a criminal.”

  “Johan Thorn? Isn’t he a pirate or something?”

  “He’s a traitor,” Tovin agreed. “And as soon as I get word to Prince Antonov, he will die a traitor’s death.”

  “Why? Because he’s a pirate?”

  “Because he is the true King of Dhevyn,” Lady Morna said.

  Chapter 8

  When the vast city of Avacas came into view
, Belagren breathed a sigh of relief. They had made good time from Omaxin, but every day she had spent away from the capital since the eruption was another day for people to start putting their own interpretation on events. Her urgency to return to Avacas had consumed her, and she had driven her escort hard to get back before too much damage could be done in her absence.

  She halted her entourage on the rise overlooking the city as they emerged through the last of the mountain passes, thinking it looked unchanged from when she had last seen it several weeks ago. She could only hope that her first impressions were correct. It was nearly three weeks since the eruption, and a lot could have happened in that time without her.

  “Shall we head for the palace, my lady?” the captain of her guard asked, interrupting her train of thought.

  “No,” she replied, “we shall return to the Hall of Shadows.”

  “As my lady commands.”

  The captain wheeled his horse around, ready to give the order to move on. Belagren desperately wanted to go straight to the palace, but it was important that Antonov not see her like this, travel stained, weary and unattractive as a result of the forced ride from Omaxin. It was important that he only see her at her best, particularly now that she was getting older. The Lion of Senet had a notorious wandering eye, and Belagren had never fooled herself that she could hold him exclusively to her. He’d had plenty of affairs over the years, but none of the women remained a threat for long. She had seen to that personally. The High Priestess managed the problem by ensuring that she controlled the young women who caught his eye. That way there were no scenes, no awkward explanations and most important, no bastards.

  “You’re not going to the palace?” Madalan asked beside her.

  Belagren glanced at her friend. “I need a bath. And besides, it might be better if Antonov comes to me.”

  Madalan shook her head. “Don’t you ever worry that he’ll tire of playing your games, Belagren?”

  The High Priestess smiled. “I am the Voice of the Goddess, Madalan.”

 

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