Princeps ip-5

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Princeps ip-5 Page 44

by L. E. Modesitt Jr.


  “I was thinking about that, and a bit more.”

  “You usually are, dearest. You can tell me later.”

  Quaeryt was glad for the softening in her voice, but still worried about her reactions to Bhayar’s ordering her to Solis.

  The raised stone road ran along what was effectively a levee from the west bridge over the Telexan River for almost a mille, so that on the north side of the road were marshes, and on the left was the River Aluse. Then the road passed through a cut in a low bluff and entered the town. Above the roofs of Tresrives hung a grayish haze, but Quaeryt couldn’t determine what had caused it because the weather was warm and he knew that there were no metalworks near the town. Nor could he think of any other cause.

  The other aspect of the town that struck him immediately, despite the fact that the day had been sunny and the sun had not yet quite touched the western horizon, was that Tresrives itself looked gray, even though the wooden dwellings and buildings were more like faded brown.

  As they neared the river piers, Quaeryt could see that Taenyd had been right. In fact, the captain had been generous in his description of the “staging barracks.” A low stone wall, barely chest-high, separated the west end of the dockyards that serviced the river piers from a rough brick-paved space between the wall and the stables. West of the stables were three long two-story buildings whose brick walls carried the soot of years. Farther west was a smaller building, the officers’ quarters, Quaeryt presumed, and beyond that structure some twenty yards was a low building that might contain the troopers’ mess.

  A ranker rode toward Quaeryt and Vaelora, reining in his mount. “Governor, sir, Lady Vaelora, Commander Skarpa would like to invite you to join him, in order to make quarters assignments.”

  “Thank you,” replied Quaeryt, before turning to Taenyd. “And thank you, Captain. If you will excuse us.”

  Taenyd nodded. “It has been my pleasure.”

  Skarpa had reined up opposite the building that Quaeryt thought contained the officers’ quarters. He turned his mount slightly to face Quaeryt and Vaelora when they joined him so that he didn’t have to turn in the saddle. “The officers’ quarters aren’t much, sir and Lady,” said Skarpa. “There are two larger rooms for commanders, and I thought you should choose the one that suits you best. The officers’ quarters are in the building between the last barracks and the mess building by the wall, and the commander’s rooms are on the river end.”

  “You’re most kind, Commander,” said Vaelora. “I do appreciate that.”

  “And all the officers would appreciate your joining us for the evening meal.”

  “We would be pleased.” Vaelora smiled pleasantly.

  A ranker followed them as they rode toward the quarters building, in order to take their mounts back to the stables, so that they would not have to carry their gear past the three barracks buildings.

  “We’ve slept in worse,” murmured Vaelora. “Too many times.”

  “And just as you begin to get things the way you want them…” Quaeryt let his words hang.

  “Exactly, dearest.”

  Quaeryt couldn’t blame her, even if he didn’t know what else he could have done in Extela. Or what else you could have done and lived with yourself.

  One thing he did know. He wasn’t the kind of man who was comfortable in using the law to justify doing nothing when people were being hurt or killed. But … that might just mean you’re the wrong kind of man to be governor for any length of time.

  59

  On Lundi morning, Vaelora sat up in the bed barely big enough for the two of them and yawned, then looked at Quaeryt. “I am not staying in these quarters for two days. Or even close around them.”

  Given how lovely she looked, Quaeryt tore his eyes away from her before he said something that was inappropriate and looked toward the shuttered window. “What do you have in mind? Tresrives is not exactly Extela or Solis, and we can’t use the horses.”

  “I wouldn’t mind walking. Anything but sitting around here.”

  “We can do that, I’m certain.” Quaeryt rose and strode to the window, adding, “If it’s not raining.” He eased open the inside shutter slightly and discovered that it sagged so much he feared it would rip out of the casement. Then he peered through the hazy glass. “It’s not even cloudy.” He gently lifted the shutter back in place.

  “It wouldn’t matter if it were.”

  Quaeryt nodded sympathetically.

  “You’re being condescending…”

  “Yes, dear.” He ducked and caught the pillow flung in his direction, hiding a smile.

  “You can be most difficult, dearest.”

  “You knew that before you married me.”

  “I didn’t marry you. Bhayar did, and I had no choice in the matter.”

  Quaeryt grinned and tossed the pillow back in her direction. “You weren’t complaining last night. Not at all.”

  “You’re not just difficult. You’re impossible.”

  But she was smiling.

  After he dressed, while Vaelora finished readying herself, Quaeryt sought out Skarpa. He found the commander in a small conference room adjoining the mess, by himself, looking over maps with a set of calipers in his hand.

  Skarpa looked up. “Yes, sir?”

  “Any word about anything?” asked Quaeryt.

  “Only a dispatch from Submarshal Myskyl stating that our presence is needed and requesting that Third Regiment take no more than two days rest in Tresrives before setting out for Ferravyl.”

  “He’s a submarshal now?”

  “That’s what the dispatch says, sir, and who am I to argue?”

  “Neither one of us is in a position to argue at the moment,” replied Quaeryt warmly. “And since I’m no longer governor, and since I never was comfortable with you calling me ‘sir,’ please don’t argue with me when I tell you to stop it.”

  “I could say, ‘Yes, sir,’” replied Skarpa, returning the smile, “but I won’t.” After a pause, he went on. “I know you haven’t received any dispatches, but do you have any idea what Lord Bhayar has in mind for you? After you get to Ferravyl?”

  “Besides report? No. The last time I saw him, he was talking about what I needed to learn as princeps of Tilbor. He wrote a letter or two to Vaelora while we were still in Tilbora, but none of that mentioned me, except in passing. I haven’t heard anything since the dispatch I showed you.” Quaeryt shrugged.

  “I was just curious.”

  “As for today, I’d thought that we might ride around Tresrives, except I realized that wouldn’t rest the horses. So we’ll walk.”

  “You can see it easily-the parts that you and the lady would like to see. Take the main avenue behind the middle of the piers.” Skarpa snorted. “There’s little enough here these days, except a lot of empty dwellings and buildings. I’m not sure there’s been that much for years, not since Bhayar’s family unified Telaryn.”

  “That should make a comfortable walk.”

  “I’ll send some rankers as an escort.” Before Quaeryt could protest, Skarpa went on. “You may not be governor any longer, but your wife remains the Lady Vaelora, and she’s Lord Bhayar’s sister. I’m not about to risk my neck by not protecting her.”

  “I won’t argue that.”

  “Good.”

  “How long will it take to reach Ferravyl?”

  “With good weather, at least a week. If it rains … who knows?” Skarpa looked at the maps again. “Planning where to stop gets tricky because we’re going in high water time and there are so many swamps and marshes along the river road-for the first hundred milles or so. After that, past the Great Bend, it’s just flat.”

  “That should make traveling quicker, then.”

  “If…”

  “It doesn’t rain,” finished Quaeryt, smiling.

  “I’ll have the rankers waiting outside the mess.”

  “Thank you.” Quaeryt stepped out of the chamber and went to rejoin Vaelora.

 
After eating breakfast in the mess, Quaeryt and Vaelora set off, walking eastward toward the piers, followed by four rankers at a distance of several paces.

  The piers were largely empty, with only a single barge and one flatboat tied up at the second pier. A single guard appeared to be watching both.

  “It’s almost sad,” said Vaelora. “It’s as if part of the town isn’t here. Why aren’t there more people here if Bhayar’s mustering troops in Ferravyl?”

  “There’s no point in having them here. It’s too far from where the regiments are to support them and too close to Solis that it offers much of an advantage.”

  The first shop opposite the foot of the westernmost pier was, unsurprisingly, a chandlery, if one whose weathered front siding suggested it had seen far better days. Quaeryt and Vaelora walked past it and past a second building, shuttered and seemingly deserted, then turned northward on what looked to be the main street Skarpa had mentioned.

  The buildings nearest the piers largely held crafters, including a smithy, a coppersmith, a cooper, a rope factor, and a cabinetmaker. At the end of the first block, where there was a small square, was an inn with a brick and timber front, kept in better condition than many of the shops, and across the street from it, a tidy-looking cafe with a wide front window flanked by reddish shutters. Two pots of hyacinths were set on each side of the door.

  “Given what you thought of breakfast and what you didn’t eat, we might want to come back later and eat there,” suggested Quaeryt.

  Vaelora’s eyes flicked behind them.

  “They could use a meal besides barracks rations,” replied Quaeryt. “It won’t be that expensive.” Besides the rankers need to know they’re appreciated with more than words.

  The main street continued northward past the square, and then angled slightly right, to the northeast. Quaeryt noted a narrow shop that looked to be that of a seamstress, but said nothing, although he noted his wife’s eyes flicked in that direction.

  “Even if she’s good, I likely couldn’t get anything finished before I have to leave.”

  “I imagine there are better seamstresses in Solis,” replied Quaeryt.

  “How would I know? I was never allowed to visit any. The only one I ever met was the one Aelina picked out, and she came to the palace.”

  Quaeryt decided not to comment on seamstresses again. Instead, he studied the more varied shops in the next block.

  Close to three glasses later, Quaeryt, Vaelora, and the four troopers were walking back down the main street toward the square. As they neared the small cafe, Quaeryt turned. “We’re going to eat there.”

  “Sir,” said the trooper with the insignia of a junior squad leader, “we’ll just wait outside.”

  “Absolutely not,” declared Quaeryt. “You four need to eat as well.” Seeing the dubious look on the squad leader’s face, he swiftly added, “I’m paying for it, and besides, if you’re worried about protecting Lady Vaelora, you won’t be doing her any good if you’re out here, and she’s inside.”

  “Sir … we’re not supposed to intrude…”

  “You can sit at another table. That’s the only concession I’ll make,” Quaeryt insisted.

  “Yes, sir,” the squad leader replied cheerfully.

  The six of them walked into the cafe. The public spaces consisted of a large front chamber with eight tables, and a back room with a handful of smaller tables. From what Quaeryt could see, the only patron was a large man seated in the back room, facing away from the door and the front room.

  A slender serving woman, barely more than a girl, appeared and bowed, gesturing toward the tables. Quaeryt and Vaelora took a smaller circular table on one side, near the wall, while the troopers took an oblong table against the other wall.

  The serving girl moved to a position between and back from Quaeryt and Vaelora.

  “What do you suggest?” asked Quaeryt.

  “The hunter stew is good, very filling. So is the domchana. We use our own grain-fed game hens. The lady might like the lace rice fries as well.”

  “Do you have skelana?” asked Vaelora. “With dark rice?”

  “Yes, Lady. That is my favorite.”

  “Then I’ll have that with whatever your best white wine is.”

  Quaeryt didn’t have the faintest idea what his wife had ordered. “I’ll try the domchana, but with some dark rice as well. And a pale lager.”

  “We only have amber, sir.”

  “That will do.”

  “It’s very good, and your meal will be, too.”

  “Oh … and I’m paying for the four over there.”

  As the server crossed the room to the troopers, Quaeryt looked at Vaelora. “What is skelana?”

  “It’s pulled lamb shredded and seasoned, then seared until barely brown, and warmed in a cucumber and heavy cream and lager sauce.” She smiled. “You can try a bite of mine to see if you like it.”

  “Thank you.” Quaeryt glanced up and toward the troopers.

  The serving girl had barely stepped away from the other table and headed toward the kitchen when Quaeryt heard the sound of something falling and turned.

  “He’s one of them! They’re both evil ones!” The burly gray-haired man charged from the back room, with something in his hand, lunging toward the table where Quaeryt and Vaelora sat. “Die! Pharsi scum!”

  Triggering full shields and extending them, Quaeryt leapt between the man and Vaelora, then anchored the shields to the floor.

  The attacker hit the shields with such force that the cudgel he wielded slammed into the shields and rebounded, tearing itself from the man’s grasp.

  “Evil protects him! Evil-” The man’s words stopped cold as one of the rankers slammed the flat of his sabre against the side of his head.

  Quaeryt contracted the shields so that they were almost against his body as two other rankers grabbed the attacker’s arms and threw him to the floor. The squad leader whipped out a short length of rope and bound the man’s hands behind his back. Then the two hoisted the groggy figure to his feet. The fourth stood with his sabre ready.

  An older woman, who had appeared in the doorway to the kitchen, glanced from the man pinned to the floor to Quaeryt, then Vaelora, and back to Quaeryt. The serving girl, her mouth open, stood beside the older woman.

  The silence was broken by the sound of the cafe door opening. A patroller stepped inside. At least, he appeared to be in some sort of uniform, despite splotches and spots on the khaki shirt and trousers, with black boots and a wide belt, from which dangled a truncheon on one side. “What seems to be the trouble here?”

  “Governor Quaeryt and his wife stopped here to eat,” answered the squad leader, turning toward the patroller. “His wife is the sister of Lord Bhayar. That man tried to attack them.”

  The patroller raked his eyes over Vaelora in a way that made Quaeryt think of imaging him dead. “Rush-high tale that is. Lord Bhayar can’t be no stinking Pharsi.” A snigger followed the words. “You boys just need to run along and take your friends back to the barracks with you, and there won’t be no trouble.”

  “I don’t think you understand,” said the muscular squad leader. “She is Lady Vaelora. That’s why we’re here. Now … you can take this piece of offal back to your station and throw him in a cell for a few days … or you can do anything else … and your relatives can decide what to do with your ashes.”

  The suddenly dough-faced patroller looked at the four rankers and their drawn sabres and then at Quaeryt.

  Quaeryt image-projected both authority and withering contempt.

  The patroller swallowed. “Ah … begging your pardon, Lady … Maybe I’d best be going.” He took a step back.

  “You need to take your friend here. He’d better stay in his cell for the next few days. Until the regiment leaves. You might tell your chief that,” added the squad leader. “He might not want a visit from the regimental commander.”

  One of the two rankers flanking the attacker sheathed his sabre a
nd half led, half dragged the still dazed man toward the local patroller, then practically shoved him forward.

  Neither local said another word as the patroller led the still-bound attacker back out through the front door, stepping to one side, once he was outside, to avoid the potted hyacinths.

  “The lost one…”

  At those words, Quaeryt turned, realizing that they had been murmured in the comparative silence by the older woman who still stood by the kitchen door. He thought about asking her why she’d made the comment, but didn’t want to raise that question in such a public setting, especially with the troopers nearby. Instead, after a moment, he smiled at the older woman and the younger server beside her. “I think that good meal you promised would suit us all now.”

  “Ah … yes, sir.” The server scurried toward the kitchen.

  The older woman nodded at Quaeryt, then bowed to Vaelora, before following the server.

  “The local people don’t care for troopers much, do they?” asked Vaelora.

  “That’s true in most places,” replied Quaeryt. “That’s why Governor Rescalyn effectively built the cafes and…”

  “Pleasure houses?” Vaelora raised her eyebrows.

  “Well … after the problems caused by his predecessor…”

  “It makes sense. I don’t have to like it. Just like Bhayar’s decision not to stand behind you. He’s fortunate not to be in Solis. I’d…” Vaelora broke off as the server appeared with a goblet and a large mug.

  The older woman followed with two platters, deftly sliding one before Vaelora and the second in front of Quaeryt. They returned to the kitchen and came back with mugs and platters of food for the troopers.

  “It looks much better than breakfast,” said Vaelora. “Even food on the road tasted better.”

  “The mess kitchens are old,” suggested Quaeryt. “Or maybe the provisions were even older.”

  His words brought a faint smile to Vaelora’s lips, before she took a bite of her meal. He picked up the batter-fried sandwich that held fowl strips, pepper slices, and cheese and took a bite, finding it hot and tasty, if not overwhelmingly so.

 

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