Chapter Twenty-three
I woke up to a sun-filled room, and I groaned. Every joint hurt and my mouth tasted like I had done a tavern crawl, licking the floors clean. I sat up, and lay back down quick to keep my head from falling off. Then my stomach let me know it was feeling neglected and threatened to erupt. I was holding still, hoping that everything would calm down, when the door opened and Jeff walked in carrying the captain’s tea service.
“How’re you feeling?” Jeff asked.
I croaked.
“That good?” Setting the tray down, Jeff shoved something under my head and shoulders, raising me up. “I brought you some tea. Hold on a moment.” He left the room but returned quickly with screens of different sizes.
I croaked again.
“These? One of the lads found them in a small closet tucked away under a staircase. Must have been missed by whoever cleaned this place out.” Coming back to my bedroll, Jeff lifted the teapot and poured a cup. Dropping in several lumps of sugar, he stirred it before handing me the cup. I gulped it down as Jeff took the large screens and fit them over the windows. He then took the smaller screens and placed them over the ventilation openings. “They’ll keep out any garden visitors that might come calling,” Jeff said as he returned. He took the cup. “More?”
“Yes, please,” I whispered.
Jeff poured another cup and added sugar to it. “So, what happened? The captain just said you were taken sick.” He watched me gulp down the tea again, and poured another cup.
“The heat,” I whispered.
“Oh,” Jeff said, his face telling me how weak he thought that was. But he decided not to hold it against me and added, “It has been pretty hot, I guess. I thought I was going to melt when I went outside yesterday.” He saw my look of inquiry. “Suiden took me with them to the bank since you couldn’t go.” He grinned as he dropped sugar in the cup. “Never saw so much marble.”
“Groskin didn’t go?” I whispered, taking the cup. I drained it once more.
“Yeah, he went,” Jeff said. He gave a faint frown. “Thought he’d come back up here to check on you, but I saw him taking off with Slevoic.” Jeff shrugged, dismissing the doings of lieutenants, and grinned again. “You should’ve been there, Rabbit. The banker was full of how he couldn’t accept Border coin and how he couldn’t give the ambassador credit. Something about reciprocal—”
“Reciprocal agreements. The Border and Iversterre have no banking treaties with each other,” I said, my voice stronger.
“Yeah.” Jeff took my cup and filled it the fourth time. “The ambassador let him talk until he ran out of words, then he pulled out a sack from his carry pouch and dumped jewels in front of the banker.” He handed me the cup. “Captain Suiden said later that they were all of the first water, whatever that means.”
“Top-notch,” I said, my voice almost normal. I emptied the cup again.
“Well, with all the pretties glittering on his desk, old windy-bags sure changed his tune fast.” Jeff poured again.
“Probably from Dragoness Moraina’s hoard,” I said, speculating.
Jeff’s eyes widened. “A dragon’s jewels?”
“Probably,” I said again. “They’re the only ones with enough gemstones that they can give out sacks and not miss any.” I held out my cup. “So, the banker was dazzled?”
Jeff emptied the pot into it. “He almost had palpitations. He did have palpitations, though, when the ambassador pulled out a letter of credit.” Jeff watched me drink the last of the how very strong tea. “It was from the Qarant.”
I nodded and managed to lean over to set my cup down on the tray. “Trading partners.”
“Come again?”
“My ma’s weaving would make a grown man weep, especially if he had to wear it. But my sisters, Harmony, Sage, and River Rain—”
“Sheesh, Rabbit,” Jeff said.
“—sell their work to trade factors who then either resell it in the cities or to the Qarant.”
“Cities,” Jeff said. “Here?”
“No. Border cities—the elfin ones, mainly.” I saw Jeff’s face. “We’re not all in the woods. The elves build incredible cities.” Including, according to them, Iversly.
The tea had eased the ache in my head and settled my stomach, and I sat up. “So we’re using the Royal Bankers?”
“Oh, yeah,” Jeff said. “Windy-bags did a song and dance about how he’d been misled and that everything seemed proper and that he could handle all our needs. Especially when Suiden presented his letter of credit from the Lord Commander.”
“Misled,” I said.
“Yeah, the captains caught that too. Javes said something about Lord Gherat trying to put a spoke through the ambassador’s wheels—and ours. That the Treasurer does not like the Lord Commander, especially because the army doesn’t have to account to him for its funds.” Jeff started to tidy the tray. “We spent the rest of the day getting supplies and victuals. Basel must’ve hit five different markets, and took notes about others. Captain Javes is going shopping for furnishings today.” He gave a sneer. “I mean, old fellow, who better, what?”
“Careful, Jeff,” I said vaguely. “Javes is not the ass he seems to be.” Jeff shrugged, also dismissing captains who acted like twits.
“You know, maybe I should go with Javes,” I said, calculating my purse’s contents against next quarter day. “He probably could do with some help.” Jeff smirked as he stood and picked up the tray. “Captain Suiden said you’d try to go the moment you heard there was going to be shopping.” Jeff didn’t wait for my response. “Well, the captain did say that if you could get downstairs and eat breakfast and keep it down, that maybe you can go with Javes.”
By holding onto the banister, I managed to get downstairs without falling. Jeff waited while I ate breakfast; then, after a meal of dry toast and coddled eggs, he freed me from Basel (who tried to spoon-feed me) and took me to the same room I fled from yesterday. I hesitated at the door, peering at Captains Suiden and Javes, who were seated at the same table. My desire to get out of the house was stronger than any reluctance to enter, though, so I crossed the threshold, relaxing when nothing happened.
“Before he got out of bed, sirs,” Jeff said, entering behind me.
A faint smile passed over Javes’ face.
“How are you, Lieutenant?” Suiden asked.
“I’m fine, sir.”
“Good.” Suiden stood up. “Thank you, trooper.” He waited until Jeff left the room, shutting the door behind him. “Actually, you look like hell, Lieutenant.”
“Sir, I’m sure I’m up for a small trip—”
Captain Javes picked up something from the table and handed it to Suiden, who held it up—the mentha leaves I had dropped on my bedroom floor yesterday. I stopped in midsentence, my gaze traveling between the two captains.
“Groskin found them by your bed,” Suiden said.
“Was the ambassador right, Rabbit?” Captain Javes asked. “Are you a mage?” I looked out the windows to the courtyard and watched a yellow and black bird with an orange-feathered throat flit through the trees. A slight breeze was stirring and I could hear the rustling of leaves.
“You were asked a question, Lieutenant,” Suiden said.
“No, sir.” The bird settled on a branch and trilled a challenge.
“No, what?” Javes asked.
The bird trilled again, then, satisfied it had driven off all competition, began to preen. Behind it, a large spider crept down the tree trunk.
“Lieutenant,” Suiden said.
“No, I’m not a mage. Yet.” The spider reached the branch and eased closer to the bird. The bird raised one wing and worked on its feathers.
“I see. And those leaves?” Javes asked.
The spider moved a little closer, one slender leg by the bird’s foot. The bird started working on its tail feathers. “As Laurel Faena said, sir, they’re given to those who are starting to come into their full mage powers. It can be— traumat
ic, and mentha alleviates the symptoms.”
“Like the symptoms you’re having?” Suiden asked. “Are you coming into your powers, Lieutenant?” The bird raised its head to clean another part of its body, saw the spider and, squawking, tried to take off.
“I—” The spider shot up and grabbed the bird by the throat. After a brief tussle, the spider carried the bird, still feebly flapping, back up the tree trunk.
“Lieutenant.”
A few yellow feathers floated to the ground.
“I ran away,” I said. “Broke my indentures.”
The captains were silent while they worked at my statement. “You were apprenticed to a mage, Rabbit?” Suiden asked after a moment.
“Yes,” I said.
“Why did you run away?” Javes asked.
“I was afraid.”
“Of what, Lieutenant?” Suiden said.
“That I’d get eaten alive.” I pulled my mind away from the feast in the tree and realized that I had moved to the courtyard doors. I turned to face the captains and felt my lips twist as I remembered a street drama I had seen. “Oh, he’s not a dark mage or a dread lord. He isn’t out to conquer the world by opening the nether gates and flooding us with his demon minions.” I paused. “But he’s not out to bring heaven on earth either.”
“What is he out for?” Javes asked.
“Himself.”
It was quiet again; then Captain Suiden pulled a chair out from the table. “Sit, Rabbit. You look like you’re going to keel over.” He sat down himself, laying the leaves on the table.
Javes picked them up. “So you’re a runaway apprentice mage who is coming into his power, whatever that means.” He paused. “What does it mean?”
I looked at my hands. “There are those who are born with the talent—”
“You mean magic?” Javes asked.
“No, sir,” I said. “The entire Border is what you’d call ‘magic’ ” Despite myself I gave a faint smile. “Look at honored Laurel—he’s a talking mountain cat who walks on two legs. And carries a big stick.” My smile faded. “But there are those who can shape a … a force—”
“Wizardry,” Suiden said, his eyes intent. “You’re able to summon and command the elements.”
I nodded. “Yes, sir. Eventually. It takes years of study to get there.”
“Yet all this is happening to you now,” Javes said. “Why?”
I looked out the window again, but couldn’t see anything in the tree. “Twice in a mage’s life the talent kind of takes over. Once during late childhood when it first manifests, and then just at the beginning of adulthood, when the mage’s aspects become apparent.” I remembered my family’s startlement when, after recovering from a sudden fever, I’d walk into a room and stuff would fly off shelves and fires lit by themselves. Then Magus Kareste showed up, promising to teach me how to control my burgeoning adolescent talent. Which he did. But he also taught me how to fear.
“Aspects,” Javes repeated, his brows knitting.
“Air, water, fire and earth,” Suiden said. “Is that what happened yesterday, Rabbit? Your aspect became apparent?” I remembered the roaring sound of wind, while the trees remained motionless. “Partly,” I admitted.
“Partly?”
I shifted in my chair. “I think my master found me.”
“And?”
“I think I forced him away again.”
“The thunderclap,” Suiden said.
I nodded again, staring at the floor.
The captains were quiet again.
“You do look like hell, Lieutenant Rabbit,” Suiden said, “but we think that it would be good for you to get out. So you will go on this shopping trip.”
I lifted my head.
“You will stay with me at all times,” Javes said. “No wandering off, no matter how pretty the clothes in the window, what?” I nodded again and Captain Javes laid the leaves back on the table.
“You say that the Faena has nothing to do with the strangeness that’s been happening,” Suiden said. “Perhaps that’s true, but it’s very coincidental that it started just when he showed up, including all that is going on with you.” He paused. “And lord or not, newbie mage or not, runaway apprentice, pacts and feathers, smuggling and threats of war, you are still under my command. Is that clear?”
“Yes, sir.”
Chapter Twenty-four
Suiden declared that Jeff would also go with Javes, and sent both of us back up to our bedroom where we discovered new hot-weather uniforms waiting for us. Instead of the usual helm or cap, there was a hat with a broad brim in the front to shade the face, and a flap in the back to protect the neck from the sun. The uniform itself was made of a material that was very light, allowing any stray breeze to wrap around the body before going on its way. We both sighed with relief when we donned the new uniforms, as the ones from Freston felt, in the humid heat, like a wet blanket.
“It’s cotton, Lieutenant,” a southie trooper said when he overheard me wonder what it was.
It was still early, the sun just clearing the roofs as Jeff and I followed Captain Javes out of the embassy to our waiting horses. Javes was wearing the same broad- brimmed hat and cotton uniform we wore, but he had augmented it with his Habbs boots, his gold filigreed sword, and a light cape. And of course, his quiz glass, hung by its ribbon around his neck.
We mounted our horses and Javes turned his to face us.
For once, there wasn’t anything silly in his expression as his eyes rested on Jeff and me, and we straightened in our saddles as we gave him our full attention. A breeze stirred the captain’s cape for a moment, then was still.
“We are about to go into places fraught with pitfalls and snares, lads, which have destroyed better men than us.” We nodded, wide-eyed.
“Our enemy is swift and crafty, and you will meet with cunning beyond comprehension.”
Our eyes grew wider.
“It’s therefore imperative that, one, you stay in the middle of each shop we enter and not—I repeat—not touch anything. Two, you will keep silent until I give you permission to speak. Three, no matter what the shopkeeper may claim to have in his back room, you will not go in there. And, four, you will not accept any offers of sisters, daughters, cousins, nieces, or any other female relative, no matter what the inducement offered.” Jeff and I looked at each other, desperate to know what was in the back rooms and what did the female relatives look like.
Javes smiled. “Unless, of course, you want to get married.”
Scratch the sisters.
The captain led us through broad boulevards and avenues, our horses’ hooves clopping on the cobbled streets. There were others about and the closer we got to the market streets, the busier it became, as people conducted their business in the cool of the morning. Soon our horses were on a street full of just opened shops. I craned my neck, trying to find a tailor.
“Patience, Lieutenant,” Javes said, riding beside me. “First things first.”
“Yes, sir.” I ignored the rude noises behind me.
We rounded a corner and in the shop windows were elaborately carved chairs, tables, and cabinets. Javes read the discreet signs that hung over the doors, stopping at one that said GUAREZ AND SONS and beneath that in smaller letters BY ROYAL APPOINTMENT. We dismounted and entered, a bell ringing over the door as we opened it. Instead of the instant appearance of the shopkeeper, though, we were left alone to appreciate the fragrance of beeswax and lemon, the feel of a soft, deep-pile carpet, and the ambiance of quiet elegance. Jeff and I huddled in the middle of the room while Javes strolled about, looking over the pieces.
After a little while, a rear doorway curtain parted and a smiling, silver-haired man entered. “What can I do for you, gracious sirs—” His smile faltered as he took in Jeff’s common soldier uniform, but it collapsed completely when he looked at me. “My lord?”
“Hallo,” Javes said from a corner, with his bugger me silly smile. “Guarez?”
The man no
dded, still staring at me.
“I am Captain Javes and this is my aide,Lieutenant Lord Rabbit Chause e Flavan—”
My face froze.
“—and we are here to purchase furnishings for the new Border embassy.” Javes patted around his body. “Hang on, I’ve got a letter from the bank somewhere.” He found it and handed it to the furnisher, who accepted it with a limp hand. Javes allowed him to scan it, then filched the letter back. “But first, do you use Border wood?”
“Uh, no.”
“Oh, splendid.” Javes beamed. “Cause the ambassador is a little touchy about it on account of when you cut down a Border tree, you kill its sprite.” He looked around the shop. “I’d hate to bring back one of your excellent pieces and have him say it’s the body of an old friend, what?”
The furnisher now stared at Javes. “We use no material from the Border.”
Javes cranked his smile up another notch. “Then you won’t mind if Lord Rabbit takes a gander, eh?”
I took my cue and began to walk around the shop, examining the furniture. “He’s from the Border too, you know,” Javes continued, his voice confidential. “Fourth son of Lord Rafe ibn Chause and Lady Hilga eso Flavan, right, Lord Rabbit?”
I paused in my circuit. “I am their seventh child, sir.” Damn if I’d let him dismiss my sisters.
“Oh, yes,” Javes said. “There are eight altogether.” He looked as if he had just remembered the secret of life. “Looks awfully like his papa, doesn’t he?”
“His grandfather,” Guarez said. I felt his eyes sweep over me, taking in how my uniform hung on my lean frame. “He even wears his clothes the same.”
I finished and shook my head. “There’s no Border wood here, sir.” I looked at the curtained door that probably led to the workshop and Javes waved a hand.
Covenants (v2.1) Page 12