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by David Weber


  She paused and smiled at Leeana, possibly with a tiny edge of compassion.

  “Any questions?” she asked then.

  “Ah, no, Hundred Erlis,” Leeana replied after a moment spent womanfully throttling the dozensof questions she wanted to ask.

  “Good.” Leeana thought she might detect a trace of approval in Erlis’ eyes, but if she had, the hundred let no sign of it show in her voice or expression. “In that case, I’ll leave you with Garlahna.”

  She nodded briskly, turned on her heel, and strode away, leaving the two young women alone.

  * * *

  Leeana stood gazing at Garlahna while butterflies seemed to circle one another in some sort of intricate dance in her midsection. She felt a fluttery-pulsed uncertainty she was not accustomed to, and none of the social formulae or skills she’d been taught as a baron’s daughter offered her any hint about what to do next.

  “So, Leeana,” Garlahna said before the awkward pause could stretch too long. “I suppose we’d better see about your room assignment and getting you settled in.” she smiled. “Trust me—you won’t have time to do any of it tomorrow!”

  “That’s how it sounded to me, too,” Leeana admitted with a wan smile.

  “Oh, don’t let Hundred Erlis’ act fool you,” Garlahna said cheerfully. “It’s lots worse than she makes it sound!”

  “Oh, thank you!” Leeana replied, and found herself sharing a tension-soothing laugh with her “mentor.”

  She stood back mentally to give Garlahna a quick examination. She’d already noted the other young woman’s broad, somewhat rustic accent, although Garlahna’s grammar was much better than she would have expected from that accent. Garlahna was from somewhere in the eastern part of the West Riding, she guessed, near the Spear River, and her parents had probably been small freeholders, or the retainers of one of her father’s minor lords. As such, the social gulf between their births could not possibly have yawned wider, yet Garlahna seemed totally unaware that she was speaking to the only child of the Lord Warden of the West Riding. Which, Leeana conceded, was as it ought to be, because she no longer was her parents’ child—not legally, at any rate. But it was still interesting that Garlahna could manage that disassociation between who she now was and who she once had been.

  “You’re welcome,” Garlahna told her, once their shared laughter had eased. Then she waved one hand in a small, dismissive gesture.

  “Don’t worry about it too much, Leeana. All of us have had to survive it somehow. In some ways, it’s almost like a kind of ceremony—a trial by combat, I guess you might call it—before we’re really war maids. Actually,” she wrinkled her nose as she gave Leeana a critical, evaluating glance, “I kind of suspect you’ll do better than most of us. At least you’ve got the legs for speed, which is more than I ever did. And,” she grinned again, “you’re nowhere near as top-heavy as I am!”

  Leeana felt the very tips of her ears heat and was just as happy her hair covered them. There was, she noted, just a hint of complacency in Garlahna’s voice.

  “I hope I won’t disappoint you,” she said after a heartbeat. “But, not wanting to change the subject, or anything, I do have one other question.”

  “Ask away,” Garlahna invited.

  “What do I do about my horse?”

  “Your horse?” Garlahna sounded surprised.

  “Yes,” Leeana said. “My horse.”

  “You’ve got a horse?” Garlahna shook her head.

  “What’s so surprising about that?” Leeana asked, her voice just a bit cautious.

  “Is it really yours?” Garlahna countered, and for some reason, she sounded even more cautious than Leeana had.

  “Of course he’s mine. Why?”

  “I mean, does he belong to you, or to Baron Tellian?”

  “He—” Leeana began, then paused. “He was a gift from my—from … Baron Tellian,” she said after a long moment. “On my twelfth birthday.”

  “Did he actually give you its ownership papers?” Garlahna’s tone had taken on more than a hint of sympathy, and Leeana shook her head.

  “No,” she admitted, feeling tears sting the backs of her eyes. “Boots has been my horse for over two years now. Everyone knew it. I guess … I guess the Baron never saw any reason why he had to formally present me with his papers.”

  “Then he’s not legally yours, Leeana,” Garlahna said gently. She shook her head and reached out to lay a sympathetic hand on Leeana’s shoulder. “It happens, sometimes,” she went on quietly. “Most of the time when someone gets here with a horse, there’s someone chasing her who can hardly wait to take it away again. And it always turns out that legally, she never owned it at all.”

  Leeana stared at her while she tried to cope with a sudden, vicious stab of pain. She’d known she would be giving up her entire life, everything she’d ever owned and everyone she’d ever known. Yet, somehow, she’d never thought about giving up Boots. He was … he was part of her life. Her friend, not “just” her horse. And … and …

  And part of all she’d left behind, she thought wretchedly. She’d managed somehow to overlook that. But perhaps she hadn’t overlooked it. Perhaps she’d just pretended that she had. Because deep inside, she’d known—she’d always known. It was just the suddenness of being forced to confront the knowledge, she told herself. The abrupt amputation.

  “I—” She shook herself. “I never thought about that,” she said in a valiantly normal tone which fooled neither her nor Garlahna. “Do you think I could have a few minutes to tell him goodbye before they take him away?”

  “We can ask,” Garlahna promised her. “But I wouldn’t get my hopes up too much. Your fa—” It was her turn to stop herself short. Her eyes met Leeana’s, and she smiled apologetically. “Baron Tellian will probably be in a hurry to head home, Leeana.”

  She paused again, then looked around, as if to make certain no one was within earshot, before she leaned closer to Leeana.

  “I really shouldn’t tell you this,” she said conspiratorially, “but Baron Tellian was furious when the Mayor told him he couldn’t see you because of your probationary status. We’re not supposed to know about anything that went on between them, but one of my friends had an errand to run to Sharral for Hundred Erlis. She was in Sharral’s office when the Baron got here, and she could hear him through the door.”

  She grimaced and rolled her eyes.

  “Actually, I think everyone in the building could probably hear him! That happens pretty often in a case like this. In fact, when someone from a new war maid’s family turns up, they’re usually spitting lightning and farting thunder—” her eyes twinkled at something in Leeana’s expression “—as Hundred Erlis would put it,” she finished the sentence demurely. Then she shook her head.

  “But that’s normally because they’re so pissed off that she’s run away from them and gotten to one of our towns before they could catch up with her. And that wasn’t why the Baron was mad. He was mad because they wouldn’t let the two of you say goodbye to each other. Or, that’s what my friend Tarisha said, anyway.”

  Tears flooded Leeana’s eyes, and Garlahna squeezed her shoulder.

  “The thing is,” she continued gently, “that I don’t think he’s going to stay even overnight. I don’t think he’ll want to be this close to you when you can’t even speak to each other. So I’m afraid he’ll be gone before you could say goodbye to your horse, either.”

  “I see,” Leeana half-whispered. Then she wiped her eyes with her hand, quickly, almost angrily. “I see,” she repeated more normally. “And … thank you for telling me.”

  “You’re welcome,” Garlahna said. “Just don’t tell Hundred Erlis I did!” She grinned hugely. “She’d skin me out and tan my hide for shoe leather if she knew I was blabbing to a probationary candidate about something like that!”

  “Oh, we couldn’t have that!” Leeana reassured her with a watery giggle.

  “Thanks. And, I know it may not make you feel any
better about your horse—Boots?—but it’s probably actually for the best, you know. I never had a horse of my own, but I know how much work they take. And how much they cost to feed!” Garlahna grimaced. “If you got to keep him, you’d have to take care of him yourself.”

  Leeana felt herself stiffen slightly, and Garlahna shook her head quickly.

  “I’m not saying you didn’t already do that at home. Although, I’d be willing to bet you probably didn’t have to muck out his stall yourself, did you?” she added shrewdly, and Leeana felt herself forced to shake her head.

  “Well, you’d have to do that, too, here,” Garlahna told her. “And, believe me, you’re not going to have enough time to breathe, much less take care of horses, for the next couple of weeks! And even if you were, I’ll bet you don’t have any money with you. Or, at least, not enough to pay for a horse’s stable space and food.”

  “No,” Leeana admitted, “I don’t. But,” she added gamely, “I’m sure I could find some way to earn it!”

  “Welllll, I suppose it’s possible,” Garlahna allowed. “There’s always extra chores that need doing, and we can usually pick up the odd extra kormak for doing them. But like I say, it’s not like you’d have time to be doing them.”

  “You’re probably right,” Leeana sighed.

  “No ’probably’ about it,” Garlahna snorted. “I am right about it. But,” she continued more briskly, “we shouldn’t be standing here chattering away. Hundred Erlis will kick my backside if I don’t get you squared away before dinner, so come on! Over to Administration for your room assignment first, and then over to Housekeeping for bed linens. And,” she grinned wickedly, “to get rid of those tacky clothes you’re wearing and get you measured for your own chari and yathu.”

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  At least Chemalka seemed to have decided to take her rainstorms somewhere else.

  Kaeritha grinned at the thought as she stood on the porch of the Kalathan guesthouse with a mug of steaming tea and gazed out into a misty early morning. Tellian and his armsmen had refused the war maids’ hospitality and departed late the previous afternoon. They probably hadn’t traveled far—there was a largish posting inn at the crossroad with the high road to Magdalas, about three miles from Kalatha, and she felt confident they’d stopped there to rest their horses for at least a day or two. However urgently he might want to return to Hanatha at Hill Guard, Tellian was a Sothoii. He would not damage a horse if he had any choice at all about it.

  She felt equally certain that the baron hadn’t declined Yalith’s offer out of anger or pique, but it had probably been as well he had. Whatever he might feel, the attitudes—and anger—of several of his retainers would have been certain to provoke friction and might well have spilled over into an unfortunate incident.

  Her grin vanished into a grimace, and she shook her head with an air of resignation before she took another sip of tea. Tellian’s warning that many of his followers were going to blame Kaeritha for Leeana’s actions had proved only too well founded. All of them had been too disciplined to say or do anything overt in the face of their lord’s public acceptance of the situation, but Kaeritha hadn’t needed the mage power to recognize the hostility in some of the glances which had come her way. She hoped their anger with her wasn’t going to spill over onto Bahzell and Brandark when they got back to Balthar. If it did, though, Bahzell would simply have to deal with it. Which, she thought wryly, he would undoubtedly manage in his own inimitable fashion.

  She drank more tea, watching the sun climb above the muddy fields which surrounded Kalatha. It was going to be a warmer day, she decided, and the sun would soon burn off the mists. She’d noticed the training field, and an extensive weapons salle, behind the town armory when she passed it on the day of her arrival, and she wondered if Balcartha Evahnalfressa, Yalith’s senior guard officer, would object to her borrowing the salle for an hour or so. She’d missed her regular morning workouts while she and Leeana pressed ahead as rapidly as possible on their journey. Besides, from all she’d heard, her own two-handed fighting technique was much less uncommon among war maids. If she could talk some of them into sparring with her, she might be able to pick up a new trick or two.

  She finished the tea and turned to step back into the guesthouse to set the mug on the table beside her other breakfast dishes. Then she looked into the small mirror—an unexpected and expensive luxury—above the fireplace. Welcome as the guesthouse bed had been, the communal bathhouse had been even more welcome. She actually looked human again, she decided, although it was still humid enough that it had taken her long, midnight-black hair hours to dry. Most of her clothes were still drying somewhere in the town laundry, but she’d had one decent, clean change still in her saddlebags. There were a few wrinkles and creases here and there, but taken all in all, she was presentable, she decided.

  Which was probably a good thing. It mighteven do her some good in her upcoming interview with Yalith.

  Then again, she thought ruefully, it might not.

  * * *

  “Thank you for agreeing to see me so early, Mayor,” Kaeritha said as Sharral showed her back into Yalith’s office and she settled into the proffered chair.

  “There’s no need to thank me,” Yalith replied briskly. “Despite any … lack of enthusiasm on my part when you handed me a hot potato like Leeana, any champion deserves whatever hospitality we can provide, Dame Kaeritha. Although,” she admitted, “I am a bit perplexed by exactly what a Champion of Tomanak’s doing here in Kalatha. However exalted Leeana’s birth may have been, I don’t believe we’ve ever had a candidate war maid delivered to us by any champion. And if that was going to happen, I would’ve expected one of the Mother’s Arms.”

  “Actually,” Kaeritha said, “I was already headed for Kalatha when Leeana overtook me on the road.”

  “Were you, indeed?” Yalith’s tone was that of a woman expressing polite interest, not surprise. Although, Kaeritha thought, there was also an edge of wariness to it.

  “Yes,” she said. Her left elbow rested on the arm of her chair, and she raised that hand, palm open. “I don’t know how familiar you are with champions and the way we get our instructions, Mayor Yalith.”

  Her tone made the statement a tactful question, and Yalith smiled.

  “I’ve never dealt directly with a champion, if that’s what you mean,” she said. “I once met a senior Arm of the Mother, but I was much younger then, and certainly not a mayor. No one was interested in explaining to me how she got her instructions from Lillinara. Even if anyone had been, my impression is that She has Her own way of getting Her desires and intentions across, so I assume the same would be true of Tomanak or any of the other gods.”

  “It certainly is,” Kaeritha agreed wryly. “For that matter, He seems to tailor His methods to his individual champions. In my own case, however, I tend to receive, well, feelings, I suppose, that I ought to be moving in a particular direction or thinking about a particular problem. As I get closer to whatever it is He needs me to be dealing with, I generally recognize the specifics as I come across them.”

  “That would seem to require a great deal of faith,” Yalith observed. Then she wrinkled her nose with a snort of amusement at her own words. “I suppose a champion does need rather more ’faith’ than most people do, doesn’t she?”

  “It does seem to come with the job,” Kaeritha agreed. “In this instance, though, those feelings He sends me already had me headed in this direction. As nearly as I can pin things down at this point, Kalatha was where He wanted me.”

  “And not just to escort Leeana to us, I suppose.”

  “No. I had some discussion with Baron Tellian before I left Balthar, Mayor. Frankly, the reports from his stewards and magistrates, which he shared with me, lead me to believe that relations between your town and its neighbors are … not as good as they might be.”

  “My, what a tactful way to describe it.” Yalith’s irony was dry enough to burn off the morning mist witho
ut benefit of sunlight. She regarded Kaeritha without saying anything more for several more seconds, then leaned back in her chair and folded her arms across her chest.

  “As a matter of fact, Dame Kaeritha, our ’neighbors’ are probably almost as angry with us as we are with them. Although, of course, my Town Council and I believe we’re in the right and they aren’t. I hope you’ll forgive me for saying this, however, but I fail to see why our disagreements and squabbles should be of any particular interest to Tomanak. Surely He has better things to spend His champions’ time on than refereeing fights which have been going on for decades. Besides, with all due respect, I’d think matters concerning the war maids are properly Lillinara’s affair, not the War God’s.”

  “First,” Kaeritha said calmly, “Tomanak is the God of Justice, as well as the God of War, and from Tellian’s reports, there seems to be some question of exactly what ’justice’ means in this case. Second, those same reports also seem to suggest that there’s something more to this than the sort of quarrels which usually go on between war maid communities and their neighbors.”

  Yalith seemed less than pleased by the reminder that Tomanak was God of Justice—or perhaps by the implication that in that capacity he might have a legitimate interest in a matter which she clearly considered belonged to Lillinara. But if that was the case, she chose not to make a point of it. Yet, at least.

  “I suppose there may be a bit more to it this time,” she conceded with a slightly grudging air. “Trisu of Lorham’s never been particularly fond of war maids in general. His father, Lord Darhal, wasn’t either, but at least the old man wasn’t as bad as his younger brother, Saeth. No one was as bad as Saeth Pickaxe, Milady! Talk about your bigoted, contemptuous, stupid—”

  Yalith cut herself off and grimaced, then shook her head. She pinched the bridge of her nose and drew a deep breath, then exhaled.

 

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