Tales of King's Blades 02 - Lord of The Fire Lands

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Tales of King's Blades 02 - Lord of The Fire Lands Page 12

by Dave Duncan


  One day I could not ride because my mare had

  foaled, so he gave me two horses. It is

  his way. He is truly throne-worthy, a leader

  fit to die for."

  Or kill for? Gerard thought that Leofric had not

  been told to make that speech; he really meant it

  and would back up his loyalty by doing anything at

  all for his hero.

  When he had gone, Gerard peered in the chest

  to see how much a giver of treasure provided for a

  man who had killed his half brother. Although he

  could not be certain of the weight of the coins, they must be

  worth at least twice what Lord Candlefen had

  paid him for a week's work and two weeks'

  travel. More important, they were lying on the

  lid of his precious document case, which he had

  never expected to see again.

  He took it over to the bed, where the light was

  best. The contents had been shaken about, which was

  hardly surprising after that voyage, and a couple of

  his pens had suffered, but the ink bottles had not

  spilled and nothing at all was missing. His best

  sketch of Charlotte, which he had placed at the

  bottom of the papers, was now on top. He sat

  and stared at it until his eyes blurred with tears.

  Twice in the next two hours Gerard felt

  the earth move. The second time he was in the city,

  busily spending his new wealth. He was

  impressed by the total lack of panic, even

  among small children. Cwicnoll's antics were

  ignored like a minor breach of manners in a

  genteel salon.

  At sunset the war horns' chilling wail

  summoned the fyrd to the feasting. By that time Gerard was

  ravenous. Dressed in his new Baelish garments

  and armed with his equally new knife and drinking

  horn, he headed purposefully to the great hall,

  but paused when he reached the paved yard to take

  stock. In Chivial he had visited houses where

  the main door was reserved for the nobility and even

  an artist-clerk from the College of Heralds must

  use a servants' entrance. Here he was much less

  than a clerk; but the Baels seemed to have no such

  rule, for all sorts of people were trekking in and out

  of the big archway, even slaves carrying

  provisions and barrels of ale to the feast. The

  only restriction he could see was that

  thegns had to surrender their swords to the cnihtas

  on duty in the porch. Reassured, he strode

  over the black flagstones, mounted the wide

  steps, and was allowed to enter unquestioned.

  He paused again just inside the door, letting his

  eyes adjust to the dimmer light, gaping at the

  barbaric splendor. In truth the hall was no more

  than a shed on heroic scale, but its soaring roof

  was supported by an intricate trellis of

  spidery smoke-blackened rafters, and the high

  walls were festooned with antique weapons and

  ancient war trophies, anonymous under layers

  of soot and grease. Its only door was the one

  by which he had entered; its only windows were the two

  gable ends, left open so wind could waft away

  smoke. Along either side stood tables and benches

  for feasting, with a gap in the center for four great open

  hearths, set safely distant from the walls and

  manned by sweating thralls turning whole carcases

  on spits, exactly as the old tales demanded.

  A low platform at the far end supported another

  table that must be reserved for the nobility, for it was

  furnished with stools and a high-backed throne. He

  felt as if he had been misplaced several

  centuries in Chivian history; he reminded

  himself sternly that this was now and a slave's wergild

  was trivial. The advice Gu`edlac had

  stressed above all was that annoying a thegn-born

  could be a fatal mistake; being a loet was still

  better than being just plain dead.

  When the scent of cooked meat put him in

  grave danger of drowning on his own saliva, he

  headed for the nearest tables. There was plenty of

  space and the thralls served anyone who sat down.

  In moments a trencher loaded with thick slabs of

  bread and crisp-roasted pork and beef was thumped

  down before him. He began to gorge. A woman

  filled his horn with cold bitter ale and the world

  got even better.

  He was starting to see that apparent misfortune could

  be turned into opportunity. In Baelmark an

  earl's counselor might live very well.

  A well-dressed couple entered with an

  entourage of armed followers, all heading for the high

  table, but no drums or horns announced them and

  none of the diners paid much attention. The man took

  the throne and so must be Earl Ceolmund. He was

  about forty and had a marked stoop. Put him in a

  sword fight with Aeled and the money would all be on

  the tanist. His silver-haired companion

  seemed about twenty years older than he, but that was

  normal, a sign of many children.

  Few people were yet ready to eat, apparently, for the

  hall remained remarkably empty, far below

  capacity. Atheling Cynewulf strutted in,

  nodding in bored fashion to friends, and took a seat

  at the high table. Aeled must belong up there also,

  but he might be planning a hero's entry for

  later.

  "What is the world coming to?" inquired a voice

  at Gerard's back. "There's dirt on this

  bench!"

  "And on the table too," said another. A

  sword flicked Gerard's trencher into his lap,

  food and all. It clattered down to the flagstone

  floor.

  He twisted around to face a pair of

  red-haired youths, both armed and grinning. The one

  who had drawn had not yet sheathed his sword.

  Now, too late, Gerard registered the slaves

  and servants sitting on the ground just inside the

  door and knew where he should be dining.

  Gu`edlac had warned him.

  "On the floor, slave!" said the tall one.

  "Dogs eat down there."

  Gerard considered his options, which did not take

  long. "I am Aeled's captive," he said--

  Ic eom Aeldes hoeftniedling. That was

  what Aeled had told him to say, but now that he

  knew the language he could see that while

  hoeftniedling certainly meant prisoner, it

  also meant slave. So did wealh and hoeft

  and niedling. Clearly Baels made little

  distinction between prisoners and slaves, and these two

  cnihtas obviously did not, for their eyes were

  gleaming at meeting refusal, with its obvious

  opportunities for sport. Gerard spoke again,

  at a slightly higher pitch. "The tanist gave

  me quarter in Cynehof because I am thegn-born in

  my own land. Do you seek to overrule the tanist?

  Is that how you treat guests in Catterstow?"

  The boys' confidence wavered slightly. "You

  lie, ni`ed'-+!" said the one holding the

  sword, but he took a quick glance at the high

&
nbsp; table to see if Aeled was watching.

  Aeled had still not arrived, unfortunately.

  "I slew Waerferh`ed Fyrlafing, the

  tanist's brother, and the tanist honors me as a

  warrior. He appoints me his wita, but you

  insult me. Are you so much greater than

  Aeled Atheling?"

  The cnihtas exchanged worried glances.

  Gerard gambled on a chuckle, hoping it would not

  emerge as a nervous snigger. "I will forgive your

  ignorance this once. You did not know. See, the

  thralls have brought food. Come, sit, and, while

  we feast together, thegns, I will tell you of the fight

  in Ambleport, when I slew the atheling."

  They clearly disliked the thought of sitting beside a

  foreigner, but the prospect of hearing his news

  overcame their scruples. Warily they sat,

  both on his left and farther away than courtesy

  would normally dictate. If their friends discovered

  them, they could deny being with him.

  The crisis was over for the moment, but Gerard's

  hand shook when the ale woman filled his drinking

  horn; he emptied it in one long gulp. He

  introduced himself, and so--reluctantly--did

  Wulfward Wulfwining and Boehtric

  Goldstaning. Between mouthfuls he told the story of

  Waerferh`ed's death, spinning it out, making a

  fight out of it but not downplaying his own crushing

  humiliation at the hands--or knee--of Aeled.

  By that time the ale was working its way up under the

  carroty hair and they found that ending very funny

  indeed.

  But puzzling. "He really appointed you his

  wita?" demanded Wulfward, the tall one.

  "Why would the tanist expect wisdom from a

  Chivian ni`eding?" asked Boehtric,

  oblivious of the possibility that a foreigner might

  resent an insult that would have him on his feet

  instantly, sword in hand and ready to die.

  "When he arrives you can go and ask him. I'll

  introduce you, Goldstaning. But I am not

  familiar with your customs. Will scops sing tonight of the

  tanist's foering?"

  The ale was potent. The sons of Goldstan and

  Wulfwin explained as well as they could shout

  while chewing that to welcome home the victors there

  would certainly be songs and speeches and distribution

  of treasure and drinking to oblivion.

  "Is it possible," Gerard said uneasily,

  glancing around the hall, "that the tanist will decide

  to challenge the earl tonight?"

  "Never!" Wulfward proclaimed. The night

  after a ship returned was always a night for jollity

  and feasting.

  Why was the hall so quiet then?

  "Tell me what happens when he

  does choose to challenge."

  Then, the cnihtas explained, talking in

  counterpoint, the tanist would march in bearing arms.

  He would refuse an offer of mead. He would

  recite a formula, which they quoted, couched in such

  archaic Baelish that Gerard's enchantment failed

  to translate it, although the boys might not have it

  right. After that, they explained, the earl would set a

  date for the thegn moot to meet, usually the next

  day, and then the fyrd would decide whether the earl

  must answer the challenge in person. The vote was

  literally a siding, each man going to stand by the man

  he supported, so a head count could decide the

  issue.

  The boys began arguing over the earl's choice

  of champion.

  The hall was even quieter. Men were moving around

  --gathering in little knots or even walking out the

  door. Atheling Cynewulf rose, bowed

  to Ceolmund, and strutted out. That one would know a

  sinking ship when he saw one. Others followed.

  This was to be the night.

  "Thegns," Gerard said, and managed to catch their

  attention at the second repeat. "You think a

  Chivian cannot be wita? I offer you wise roed

  --go now, go quickly. Where is the tanist? Where is

  the fyrd? I think you should be on the winning side,

  thegns."

  There was a painful pause as the boys worked it

  out--as they realized that Cynewulf and his

  companions were almost at the door, with men rising

  everywhere to follow. Boehtric and Wulfward

  leaped to their feet and sprinted, dinner forgotten.

  Gerard retreated to the underlings' corner, where the

  coerls and loetu had gathered to watch the drama.

  It was probably very typical of Aeled to play

  by his own rulebook and not wait a few days as

  custom demanded. Ceolmund handled the situation as

  best he could--sitting alone with his wife at the

  high table, chatting peacefully and ignoring the

  empty benches. When only house thegns

  remained, he beckoned to them to come up and join

  him. His wife herself served them ale. The scene

  had time to grow quite poignant before Aeled marched in

  at the head of his werod. He was in full war

  gear, shining with gold and steel; the rest of the fyrd

  followed, several hundred of them, filling the

  hall. Big Brother Cynewulf and the one-eyed

  Leofric were near the front.

  Aeled halted when he reached the

  central hearths. The earl's silver-haired

  wife stepped down from the dais with a horn of mead,

  and came to greet him with admirable grace. He

  returned her smile but courteously refused the

  horn. She went back to her husband's side.

  Aeled called out the formula of challenge, but in a

  tone that showed it was only a formula and the personal

  insults were not intended to hurt.

  The stooped earl responded with equal

  dignity. He did not ask for the support of his

  fyrd, for the result of a siding would be a foregone

  inevitability. He straightened up as well as

  he could, then retraced his wife's path until

  he reached the tanist. There he knelt to clasp the

  upstart's hands and swear loyalty. The hall

  erupted with a noise that Cwicnoll might have

  envied. Aeled's closest followers lifted him

  shoulder high and bore him to the throne.

  Then began cheering and feasting, wholesale drinking

  and distribution of silver and gold, riotous

  celebration that went on beyond dawn. The hugely

  grinning new earl handled himself well, naming his

  predecessor as his chancellor and loading him with a

  minor fortune in bullion to salve his wounded

  honor and pay off his house thegns. Aeled made

  other appointments, too, the only two of which

  meant anything to the watching Chivian were Leofric

  as marshal and Cynewulf tanist. Of course an

  earl and his tanist should be close relatives and

  there was no one else. Besides--Gerard concluded

  cynically--if no one liked Cynewulf, he

  could not be a threat.

  After twenty years, a Cattering was Earl of

  Catterstow again. Now it was up to Gerard of

  Waygarth to make him King of Baelmark.

  CHARLOTTE

  III

&nb
sp; For the next three days Aeled was much too

  busy to interrogate his prisoner. He had

  to exchange oaths and gifts with every thegn in the

  shire, from landowners of enormous wealth to young

  sailors who did not own even their swords. He

  had to appoint his witan and enlist house thegns.

  Gerard wandered the city at will, thinking hard. He

  wrestled with his conscience until he wanted

  to scream or just punch a thegn on the nose and

  die. He went over the arguments a thousand times.

  He owed no loyalty to King Taisson! His mother

  had petitioned her royal kinsman several times,

  seeking office or advancement of some kind for her

  son, but the only response had been one terse

  note expressing His Majesty's best wishes,

  penned by some anonymous palace flunky. The

  Waygarth family was not merely not royal, but

  over the generations it had been tainted by various

  scandals until the House of Ranulf wanted

  nothing to do with it.

  Aeled, though, was offering him the chance of a

  lifetime. There were only two roads to security

  in life and a man without inheritance had to rely on

  the second one, an influential patron.

  To become advisor and close confidant to a

  future king of Baelmark would be incredibly good

  fortune, the sort of opportunity men dreamed of.

  Aeled himself was the sort of inspiring leader they

  dreamed of, too. Gerard's fortune would be made.

  More important--he would be able to rescue the

  woman he loved.

  On the fourth morning the sun rose into a blue

  sky and he was shaken awake by a cniht sent

  to tell him the Earl was coming. He had barely time

  to dress before he heard hooves and went out to watch

  Aeled ride up on a magnificent black,

  leading a saddled chestnut mare. Should it be a

  surprise that the Earl was as skilled with horses

  as he was with ships? He looked down on his

  captive solemnly, his customary wide grin

  totally absent.

  "Gerard of Waygarth, you owe me wergild for

  my servant Waerferh`ed Fyrlafing. In

  requital of that debt are you prepared

  to tell me of some feat that will raise me in the

  eyes of the earls so that the witenagemot will favor

  my challenge to King Ufegeat?"

  Unpleasantly aware of crossing a bridge

  that allowed no returns, Gerard said,

  "Ealdor, I can think of one such deed. I do

  believe it has a chance, although the risks would

 

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