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1913 lines
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From WHITE@DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU Tue May 12 10:34:11 1992
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Received: from DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU by eff.org with SMTP id AA26814
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(5.65c/IDA-1.4.4/pen-ident for <RITA@EFF.ORG>); Tue, 12 May 1992 10:34:02 -0400
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Message-Id: <199205121434.AA26814@eff.org>
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Received: from DUVM by DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU (IBM VM SMTP R1.2.2MX) with BSMTP id 3303; Tue, 12 May 92 10:30:33 EDT
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Date: Tue, 12 May 92 10:30:22 EDT
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From: "Avid Reader - Fledgling Writer" <WHITE@DUVM.OCS.DREXEL.EDU>
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To: RITA@EFF.ORG
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Status: OR
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1 /
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DDDDD ZZZZZZ //
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D D AAAA RRR GGGG OOOO NN N Z I NN N EEEE ||
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D D A A R R G O O N N N Z I N N N E ||Volume 2
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-=========================================================+<OOOOOOOOO>|)
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D D AAAA RRR G GG O O N N N Z I N N N E || Issue 6
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DDDDD A A R R GGGG OOOO N NN ZZZZZZ I N NN EEEE ||
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\\
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\
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- DargonZine Volume 2, Issue 6 11/03/89 Cir 861 --
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- Contents --
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Trial Before the King M. Wendy Hennequin Seber 5-12, 1013
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Knight in Shining Armor M. Wendy Hennequin Seber 24-Ober 7, '13
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1 Trial by Fire
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Part IV
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Trial Before the King
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by M. Wendy Hennequin
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(b.c.k.a. HENNEQUI_WEM@CTSTATEU)
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At the sound of a warrior's scream, Sir Edward Sothos lurched
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awake and grabbed his sword, ready for the attack. The air was dark
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and not lit by moon or stars. Light streamed from a low crack.
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The ship, that's right; they were on the ship bound for Magnus.
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Luthias was having nightmares again. Edward crossed the room and
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gently called the Baron's name. There was a gasp as Connall woke. "You
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should have the High Mage make you a sleeping potion," Sothos advised.
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"You haven't slept well at all on this trip."
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Luthias stared at Edward as best he could in the dark. Luthias
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hadn't slept well in weeks, not since the heat wave had hit western
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Baranur and Luthias received the job of Duke's Advocate. That job now
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took him from his Barony and his ward Myrande. It brought him to this
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ship, which in turn would bring him to Magnus to try his cousin and
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his Castellan for treason. Was it any wonder he couldn't sleep? Every
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time he closed his eyes, visions of horror and war erupted on his
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eyelids.
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"You might as well stay awake," Edward counseled. "We'll arrive
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in Magnus before dawn. We'll go to see the King right away."
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"King Haralan accepts visitors this early?" Luthias wondered,
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reaching for his book, "History of the Beinison Emperors."
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"He's received the message by now that we were coming," Edward
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speculated. "And his doors are always opened to the Knight Commander
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and the High Mage."
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"Will he want to see me?"
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"Most likely. You are prosecuting the Duke and the Castellan."
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Luthias grimaced at the reminder and glanced at the locked, iron
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chest which contained all the physical evidence pertaining to the
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case. He had pored over the contents time and again with Marcellon,
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who was defending Clifton Dargon and Ittosai Michiya. Both had been
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looking for some hole in the evidence, some clue to lead them to the
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real traitors. There had been none, and there had been no hints from
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the crystal ball over which Marcellon had brooded in silence.
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Crystal ball indeed. As if magic could help them now. If only
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Roisart were here, Luthias thought for the thousandth time, he would
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find the hole, reason it all out, help me through this. But Roisart
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was dead, Myrande was in Connall, and Luthias was alone.
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"I'm sure it will end well, Luthias," the Knight Commander
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addressed him sympathetically. "Not many in this Kingdom will think
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Clifton Dargon a traitor."
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"What do they matter?"
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"The King hears all opinions on the case after the evidence is
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presented to the court. Rest assured that I will support your cousin
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and your castellan." Edward smiled so widely that his scar danced.
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"Believe me, the opinions of the Knight Commander and the High Mage
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won't be taken lightly. And I'm sure that Clifton's relatives will
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support him."
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"The evidence is very convincing, Sir Edward," Luthias reminded
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him. It had almost convinced Luthias at one point. Thank God for
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Sable, who had brought him back to his senses. Luthias smiled to
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himself. Thank God for Sable, period.
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Luthias glanced at the box again. All that evidence, and he
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wasn't convinced. Some Duke's Advocate he was, his heart not truly in
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his duty or his case. Let me go home, Luthias wished, looking out the
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porthole to see the towers of the King's castle in Magnus pierce the
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1sun like a score of spears. Although Luthias had always wanted to see
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Magnus, now all he wanted was to return to Connall. Go home and be a
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baron--he had never wanted to be a baron--and stay with Sable,
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assuming she had forgiven the fact that he, drunk and despairing, had
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tried to force himself on her.
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He had thought much about that last night in Connall. He wished
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he could remember it more clearly, but the brandy had smudged the
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memory irrevocably. He didn't get far with Sable--thank God he
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remembered that much!--but he had toyed with her, as his father had
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strictly prohibited two years before. "If you toy with her body,
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you'll toy with her heart! I forbid you to touch her!" His father had
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actually scared him. Luthias couldn't fathom why Sable allowed it to
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go as far as it had; she had told him before--not in so many
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words--that she wanted no man but her beloved to touch her. Yet she
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had allowed Luthias' touch.
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Luthias shrugged at himself and lit a candle to read by. He hoped
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Sable had forgiven him. She must have, Luthias concluded; she tried to
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say good-bye, but he in his shame and guilt could not face her. But
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still, Luthias did not know for certain.
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All he wanted was to go home and find out. Again he wished, Let
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me go home.
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King Haralan, as Edward had predicted, admitted the party from
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Dargon immediately, despite the early hour. "Marcellon!" was the first
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person the King greeted. "How good of you to return!" Haralan
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exclaimed, only slightly sarcastically. Good mages are rare and
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difficult to find. "Good morning, Edward," the King said the Knight
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Commander. Edward bowed. The smile vanished. "I received your message.
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The Duke of Dargon is accused of treason?" The High Mage nodded
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gravely. "By whom?"
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The Baron of Coranabo came forward. "At the trial of Ittosai
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Michiya, the witness said the accused and a Bichanese merchant spoke
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of a plot by Bichu to take Dargon with the help of the Duke."
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"A Duke," Luthias interrupted.
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"Who are you, sir?" the King addressed him sternly.
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"I am Luthias Connall, your majesty," he replied proudly. He
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knelt, as his father had taught him was proper.
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Marcellon gestured to Luthias and added, "The Baron of Connall is
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the Duke's Advocate, your majesty."
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Slightly amused at Luthias' gesture, the King motioned Luthias to
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rise. "You are the Duke's Advocate?" Luthias nodded. "We shall
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question you, then, Baron. First, who is this Ittosai Michiya who was
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tried?"
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"He is a man who left Bichu because he won a duel of honor and
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was sought by the dead man's family," Luthias explained. "He has lived
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in Dargon for two or three years. He once worked for Lord Dargon and
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then went on a quest in the countryside." Luthias paused, then added,
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"He is now my Castellan, your majesty."
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The King's eyebrows rose. "Indeed. Was Castellan Ittosai found
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guilty by the Tribunal?"
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Baron Vladon stepped forward to answer. "We never came to a
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conclusion, your majesty. We brought the case to you, as it involved
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Duke Dargon."
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"There is evidence, Baron?" the King addressed Luthias again.
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Luthias nodded. "Is there anyone to defend Duke Dargon and Castellan
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Ittosai?"
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"I shall, your majesty," Marcellon replied. "The Baron of Connall
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has been kind enough to allow me to go over the evidence."
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"Very well," the King concluded. "Well, we have already summoned
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the nobles. Are the Duke of Dargon and Castellan here?"
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1 "They are on the ship, sire," Edward told him. "I've already sent
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a detachment to escort them to the Keep."
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"Very well. We will begin this afternoon." The King nodded to
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Baron Vladon, Rish Vogel, Baron Coranabo, and Luthias in dismissal.
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The older men filed out of the room, but Luthias lingered a
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moment, attempting to decide. Now was the time; there would be no
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other chance, and he couldn't do this thing. Ask the King, Sable had
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said, and maybe she had been right. He turned, but was uncertain how
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to begin.
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Luckily, the King saw him. "You wish to speak, Baron Connall?"
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"Yes, your majesty," Luthias began after a heavy sigh. There was
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only one thing to do, and he would do it. "I wish for you to put Baron
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Coranabo or Baron Vladon in charge of the case against the Duke of
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Dargon and Ittosai Michiya."
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"Why? You are the Duke's Advocate; you know the evidence and
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circumstances better than they," the King argued. "That is why the
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Duke's Advocate is summoned as well, to try the case."
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"I know, your majesty, but I cannot try the Duke of Dargon or
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Ittosai Michiya."
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"Don't you understand the evidence?" the King prompted. "I knew
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your father, Baron Connall; you cannot be uneducated or stupid. Why--"
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"Because Ittosai Michiya is my friend. He has been loyal and good
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to me. He saved my brother's life," Luthias began, his tone desperate
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but his voice quiet. Beneath the words, Edward heard the screams of
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Luthias' nightmares. "Because the Duke of Dargon is my cousin and has
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been like a brother to me for as long as I can remember. He is my only
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living kinsman, and I--my brother is dead and so is my father. I can't
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do this, your majesty."
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The King gazed at Luthias thoughtfully, and the young Baron of
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Connall stared at the monarch with a mixture of calm and strength.
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Luthias knew he must be a sight: his well-formed face disfigured by
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lack of sleep and tension more than it ever had been by the slight,
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white scar above his right eye; his bearing a mixture of fatigue and
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strength; and his words a mixture of bravery and desperation. Well, he
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and Roisart had always been a pair of paradoxes...
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"You are the Duke's Advocate," the King repeated. "Go and do your
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duty, Baron Connall."
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Fire blazed beneath Luthias' brown eyes a moment; the flames
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quickly died, and Luthias' face turned to stone. He bowed stiffly,
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turned, and left without another word.
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The King turned to his High Mage, who raised an eyebrow, then to
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his Knight Commander, who was openly seething. "His only living
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kinsman, Haralan!" Edward protested through his teeth. "He doesn't
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deserve this from you!"
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"He is Fionn Connall's son, is he not?" the King inquired calmly.
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"The one whom Fionn Connall wanted you to train, the one you wish to
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make a Knight?"
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Edward nodded. "He'll be in no condition--"
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"I agree," Marcellon interrupted. "Unless you have an excellent
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reason for keeping him as prosecutor, I would remove him from the
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strain. It isn't an easy thing for Luthias to try men he thinks
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innocent, men who are like brothers to him. He's already lost one
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brother this year, your majesty. Through this trial he may cause the
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death of his cousin and friend. I'm not sure how he'll handle the
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stress."
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"If he cannot do so, he doesn't deserve Knighthood," Haralan
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argued casually.
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"Luthias will be knighted, all right," Edward argued, "but he'll
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never be the same." The Knight Commander turned to his King again.
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"Haralan, Luthias Connall is one of the finest fighters I've ever
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1seen. There is a war coming; I'm certain now. Think whom you may be
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turning against you."
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Haralan smiled at the scarred Knight Commander. "I don't want a
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Knight who will turn on me, Edward. If he turns, he'll turn now, when
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I've oppressed him. I would rather know now what he's made of than
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wait until his loyalty is crucial." The King's face waxed thoughtful.
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"His loyalty is worth having. I want him to prove I have it. His
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loyalty for me has to come before any other."
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Edward shook his head. "I don't like it, Haralan."
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"Nor I, your majesty," Marcellon added. "He is the only living
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kinsman of the Duke of Dargon; Clifton's maternal cousins are all
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dead. If Clifton is proven guilty, Luthias will become Duke Dargon,
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despite the fact that Clifton has fathered an unborn child. Luthias
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doesn't want the Duchy--"
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"Still, people will expect that he does," the King argued easily.
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"And if Baron Connall cannot prove Dargon guilty with that motivation,
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people will accept the Duke's innocence more easily." The King rose.
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"And now, gentlemen, if you would join me for breakfast, I would be
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much obliged. There is much that we need to discuss."
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Luthias stormed through the halls of Crown Castle. How dare he!
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Clifton was the only person Luthias had left, the only living
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kinsman...oh, he had a few female cousins on his mother's side, girls
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he had never met, but Clifton was a brother! And Michiya, Michiya his
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friend and rescuer and teacher! And he would have to try him; the King
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so ordered. "Your first duty as a Knight is to your country, your
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home, and family," Sir Lucan had told Luthias long ago, in that hot
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summer when he, his wife, and Clifton's parents had died. "After
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these, you must serve the King." For the second time in his life,
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Luthias found himself not wishing for Knighthood.
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"Connall?" a soft, female voice called him, and slowly, Luthias
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turned. Facing him was a tall, statuesque woman of middle age, with
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auburn hair streaked by white.
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Luthias stared at her, confused and not remembering. The woman
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looked familiar, but he couldn't place it. The lady laughed. "I know
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you don't remember me; I haven't seen you since you were a small boy.
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You look so like your father that I recognized you. You are Luthias,
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are you not?" The Baron of Connall nodded. "I am your Aunt Tornia."
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That was it. She looked like his mother, that laughing face on
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the portrait in the study. She was his mother's sister, the Duchess of
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Asbridge. Luthias could remember when she last visited; he had been
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five years old, and she had brought him and his twin a box of wooden
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soldiers. Luthias bowed to her, unable to speak.
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Tornia Asbridge reached out and touched Luthias hair with
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maternal concern. "You don't look well, Luthias. Are you ill?"
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"No, Aunt Tornia," Luthias replied breathlessly. "I'm...tired,
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that's all." It was true; Luthias felt exhausted. Well, almost true:
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it wasn't all.
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"Are you here because of the trial of the Duke of Dargon?" the
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Duchess asked, taking her nephew's arm. "He is your kinsman; are you
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here to defend him?"
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Luthias' throat felt like sand. "I'm the Duke's Advocate. I must
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try to prove him guilty." Suddenly, the Baron of Connall stopped
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walking and turned to his aunt. "How did you know I was Luthias, and
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not Roisart?"
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The Duchess' blue eyes looked at him quizzically. "Your seneschal
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sent me a letter--on your orders, I assume--which told me of your
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father and brother's death."
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Yes, that was right; after Roisart's death, he hadn't wanted to
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handle all that, so Sable took care of it. Suddenly, Luthias' mind
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1could only see his brother's corpse, ripped by the two bolts. "Aunt
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Tornia, could you take me to the Keep?"
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"Whatever for?" the Duchess of Asbridge asked in surprise. "The
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worst of noble criminals are there."
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"I want to see my cousin."
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Built four hundred years ago on the southern edge of the Royal
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Quarter of Magnus, the Keep stood five stories high, with six towers
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two stories taller. For a hundred years, it had housed the King. After
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that, it became home to nobles convicted of horrid crimes less hideous
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than treason. Now, the top of the southeast tower was prison to
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Clifton Dargon and Ittosai Michiya. Although exhausted, Luthias
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climbed the stairway while his aunt Tornia waited for him below.
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The guards at the door halted him. "No one's allowed, my lord.
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You can question them at the trial this afternoon. High Mage's orders,
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my lord."
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"I am the Duke's Advocate of Dargon," Luthias explained. "I have
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come to see the Duke. Surely the High Mage would allow it. It is
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imperative."
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"We can't forbid the Advocate," the second guard argued.
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"You want to tell the High Mage?" the first returned.
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"Let him in!" Marcellon's voice echoed amiably from the room
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beyond the guards. "Baron Connall is permitted, by order of the King."
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Odd, Luthias thought as the guards admitted him. He walked into
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the half-circle room lit by the noontime sun. Ittosai stood upon
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seeing his lord; Marcellon and Clifton nodded.
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"How are you doing, manling?" Clifton asked, trying to sound like
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he was teasing, but the words came out harshly, impatiently, and
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angrily. "You don't look very well."
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"The King won't take me off the case," Luthias blurted. "I'm
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sorry." The Duke's Advocate glanced sorrowfully at Clifton, then at
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his friend Michiya. "I tried. There's nothing I can do. I--"
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"Do what you must," Michiya told him gently, his eyes
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understanding.
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"But I know that neither of you is guilty!"
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"Don't say that!" Clifton snapped, abruptly standing. "I don't
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want you pulled into this too, Luthias. If--" The Duke of Dargon
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looked away to face the horror. "I want you to take care of Lauren if
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nothing can be done to save my life."
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"Clifton--" the Baron began to protest. He didn't even want to
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think about that possibility anymore.
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"He's right, Luthias," Marcellon interrupted gently. "He may die.
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There may be nothing I can do to convince the King and the nobles of
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his innocence and Lord Ittosai's. You must keep yourself free of this
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madness."
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Luthias sighed and collapsed into a chair tiredly. "I want to do
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something. But there's nothing--" He looked away. "And I'll have to
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stand by and watch you die, just as I had to watch my father die, and
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Roisart die. And again, there will be nothing I can do."
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"Hey, manling," Clifton said softly, "you can't fight the King."
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Well, he could, but it wouldn't be Knightly. What would Sir Lucan
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||
|
have done, what would Sir Edward do? "I'm sorry I have to do this."
|
||
|
"Do the best you can, manling," Clifton advised him with a
|
||
|
half-smile. "I want to be proud of you."
|
||
|
Luthias tried to laugh, but it came forth a snort. With
|
||
|
difficulty, he rose to leave. "I'll see you soon," he mumbled over his
|
||
|
shoulder.
|
||
|
"Take care, Luthias-sama," Michiya said as the Baron left the
|
||
|
room.
|
||
|
"I'm worried about him," Clifton said quietly after the door
|
||
|
1closed behind his cousin. "He doesn't look well, Father, and I'm not
|
||
|
certain--"
|
||
|
"I'll do what I can to take care of him, no matter what happens,"
|
||
|
the High Mage promised his son-in-law.
|
||
|
"Make certain that he marries Myrande," Ittosai Michiya suggested
|
||
|
with the tone of a command. "That will be the best for him, and she
|
||
|
will take care of him."
|
||
|
Clifton smiled. "I should order him, as Duke, to do that, in case
|
||
|
we die."
|
||
|
"I will do what I can to make certain that doesn't happen,"
|
||
|
Marcellon promised sincerely.
|
||
|
"There is no hope for us," Michiya snapped.
|
||
|
"You must learn to trust in God," the High Mage gently advised.
|
||
|
"God!" spat Ittosai Michiya disdainfully. "There is no such thing
|
||
|
as gods!"
|
||
|
Marcellon looked at the Bichurian Castellan and raised an
|
||
|
eyebrow. "I have been both mage and physician for thirty years,"
|
||
|
Marcellon told him. "I have seen things impossible for medicine or
|
||
|
magic, Michiya."
|
||
|
Ittosai laughed contemptuously. "So I have as well. I once
|
||
|
thought I was led and protected by a god. I roamed the countryside,
|
||
|
doing and seeing miracles. And then this--god--led me back to Dargon.
|
||
|
And for what?" Michiya snorted with disdain. "To see a boy murdered,
|
||
|
to see the man who was once my lord tried for treason, to be accused
|
||
|
of a crime I have not committed, and to see Luthias-sama go mad with
|
||
|
the strain! There is no such thing as gods!"
|
||
|
"We shall see," the High Mage answered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Two long days. Luthias was beginning to wonder exactly how
|
||
|
exhausted he could become before he collapsed dead. That would be
|
||
|
nice: Fionn Connall, dead from a fall on a horse; Roisart Connall,
|
||
|
killed by assassins; Clifton Dargon, beheaded for treason; and
|
||
|
Luthias, dead of exhaustion from the trial. It would be the end of the
|
||
|
family line.
|
||
|
At least he had managed well, he thought. Marcellon had
|
||
|
complimented his presentation of the evidence, as had Baron Vladon.
|
||
|
Luthias presented the evidence--all the evidence--impartially, as if
|
||
|
he didn't care one way or the other what became of the Duke of Dargon
|
||
|
or the Castellan of Connall. Calmly, he questioned Danal the merchant.
|
||
|
Luthias called forth Rish Vogel to prove that the man indeed could
|
||
|
understand Bichanese (which, unfortunately, he did). Luthias presented
|
||
|
the document to the King. Haralan reviewed it, then had the piece of
|
||
|
refuse read aloud for all the Court to hear. The Baron of Connall
|
||
|
questioned Barons Coranabo and Vladon, who had found the document in
|
||
|
the Duke's office. And Luthias himself corroborated that it was indeed
|
||
|
Clifton's handwriting.
|
||
|
Throughout it all, Luthias was impartial as he was with such
|
||
|
cases in his history books. Clifton was sober and agitated; Ittosai
|
||
|
Michiya was stone calm, as if he hadn't heard a word. Marcellon seemed
|
||
|
simply to be biding his time.
|
||
|
Then, it was the High Mage's turn. He questioned Ittosai Michiya,
|
||
|
who swore on all he held holy that he would never do such a thing, and
|
||
|
that he had not. Michiya told of the swords he bought, and the chop
|
||
|
sticks for Myrande. Clifton, on the stand, said he was surprised at
|
||
|
the findings in his desk and also swore he knew nothing of this
|
||
|
so-called plot. The Duke also revealed that a thief had broken into
|
||
|
his keep a few months ago. They had found the thief where they had
|
||
|
found the document: in the Duke's study.
|
||
|
The High Mage questioned Luthias, too, and the Baron of Connall
|
||
|
corroborated that he had received as a gift a katana, and that his
|
||
|
1seneschal, Myrande, had been given the chop sticks. Then Marcellon
|
||
|
questioned the nobles of the duchy who had come, every single one,
|
||
|
except Luthias. And each said that they never would have expected that
|
||
|
Clifton Dargon would betray the Kingdom. Half of them said they didn't
|
||
|
believe it now.
|
||
|
Of course, Luthias was unsure of who spoke truth. He had his
|
||
|
doubts about that slimy Danal, and he had never quite trusted the
|
||
|
Baron of Coranabo. Oh, all had been sworn in by the Master Priest
|
||
|
himself, but the Baron of Connall knew that oaths did not bind
|
||
|
dishonorable men, and the King would not permit Marcellon to cast a
|
||
|
spell that would insure that only truth was spoken. The King believed
|
||
|
in honor, as did Luthias, but the King, Baron Connall thought, trusted
|
||
|
too much that all people possessed it.
|
||
|
And on the third day, the King stood. "We are soon to decide the
|
||
|
fate and guilt--or lack of it--of the Duke of Dargon and the Castellan
|
||
|
Ittosai Michiya." Couldn't *any*one in this Kingdom say his name
|
||
|
right? Luthias wondered. "We will hear our nobles' opinions."
|
||
|
The Duchess of Narragan rose. "Your royal majesty, I advise you
|
||
|
to behead the traitors. The evidence which the Duke's Advocate has
|
||
|
presented removes all doubt."
|
||
|
"I doubt the Duke of Dargon is guilty," Edward Sothos replied to
|
||
|
this.
|
||
|
"How well do you know him?" argued Dame Martis Westbrook, one of
|
||
|
Sir Edward's two Knight Captains. She was tall, of light brown hair,
|
||
|
and hazel eyes.
|
||
|
"Dame Martis is correct," said the Duke of Pyridain, the King's
|
||
|
Royal Treasurer. "We have the evidence here before us, but we don't
|
||
|
know the Duke of Dargon well enough to know how much credit to give
|
||
|
his story."
|
||
|
"True," Baron Vladon agreed. He stood. "Your majesty, Duke Dargon
|
||
|
has been a Duke for six years. When Lek Pyle, who had the late Baron
|
||
|
of Connall and the current Baron's brother murdered, went to trial, he
|
||
|
spoke of a conspiracy going on for about as long as Duke Dargon has
|
||
|
ruled. How are even we, the nobles of his Duchy, to know if he hasn't
|
||
|
been involved all this time?"
|
||
|
"Quite so," Coranabo interjected. "We didn't grow up with him. He
|
||
|
spent most of his time with tutors, or at the University. And we only
|
||
|
see him at state functions."
|
||
|
"None of us know him well enough to judge," Dame Martis
|
||
|
concluded.
|
||
|
"The Baron of Connall would," Duchess Tornia Asbridge supplied,
|
||
|
smiling. "He grew up with the Duke, and he knows Castellan Ittosai
|
||
|
well. Tell me, Baron," Aunt Tornia began, facing her nephew, "do you
|
||
|
think Duke Dargon committed this crime? And what of Ittosai Michiya?"
|
||
|
Tiredly, Luthias rose. "Your grace," he addressed his aunt, then
|
||
|
turned to the King. "Your majesty, I am a practical man. I have
|
||
|
evidence, physical evidence, which proves the Duke of Dargon guilty. I
|
||
|
have witnesses who have sworn oaths and have testified to the guilt of
|
||
|
Ittosai Michiya." Luthias paused, looked King Haralan in the eye. He
|
||
|
suddenly felt that his exhaustion had left him, and what remained was
|
||
|
strength and certainty. "Your majesty, my cousin has not committed
|
||
|
treason, nor has my castellan betrayed the country which has sheltered
|
||
|
him."
|
||
|
The collective court murmured at the confidence of his voice and
|
||
|
of his conviction. "You sound very sure, Advocate," the King noted
|
||
|
calmly. "You do not believe the evidence?"
|
||
|
"No, your majesty, I do not. I believe the Duke and the
|
||
|
Castellan."
|
||
|
"I can understand trusting their words above that of the merchant
|
||
|
and of Lek Pyle," the Duchess of Narragan commented, "but above
|
||
|
1physical proof? How can you be so sure?"
|
||
|
"Madam," Luthias answered calmly, looking at the pretty Duchess,
|
||
|
"I know Clifton Dargon, and I know Ittosai Michiya."
|
||
|
"But the documents," began the Duke of Northfield. "Baron
|
||
|
Connall, surely you can't ignore them. You yourself said that the
|
||
|
document was in Duke Dargon's handwriting and seal."
|
||
|
"I did," Luthias agreed. "That didn't mean that Clifton wrote it
|
||
|
or sealed it."
|
||
|
"You contradict yourself, sir," Martis Westbrook pointed out.
|
||
|
"Not at all," Marcellon easily disagreed. "A forger could
|
||
|
reproduce Duke Dargon's hand, and as the incriminating document was
|
||
|
found locked in the Duke's desk, the criminal who broke in and might
|
||
|
have put it there could have easily used the Duke's own seal upon it."
|
||
|
"This is quite an impasse," the King commented, and the people in
|
||
|
the great hall immediately quieted to hear him. "We have convincing
|
||
|
evidence that Duke Dargon and Castellan Ittosai have indeed betrayed
|
||
|
this country." Behind Luthias, a door opened. A herald scurried past
|
||
|
the Duke's Advocate and the High Mage and knelt before the King. The
|
||
|
King motioned him forward, but continued speaking. "We have equally
|
||
|
convincing testimony and logic which prove the opposite. Therefore I
|
||
|
order a trial by combat."
|
||
|
There was a loud murmur. "Baron Connall," the King continued, "as
|
||
|
Duke's Advocate, you must summon the Ducal champion to fight for the
|
||
|
Duchy's good."
|
||
|
"I am the Ducal champion, your majesty," Luthias announced
|
||
|
quietly.
|
||
|
"I see," the King said slowly. On his left, Sir Edward grimaced.
|
||
|
"You must fight for their conviction." King Haralan turned to his High
|
||
|
Mage. "You, with the Duke of Dargon and the Castellan of Connall, may
|
||
|
name a champion to fight for your cause."
|
||
|
Ittosai Michiya stood and bowed toward the ruler. "Your royal
|
||
|
majesty," the Castellan began slowly and with dignity, "with your
|
||
|
permission and the permission of the Court and the Duke, I will fight
|
||
|
for our innocence."
|
||
|
Luthias closed his eyes in despair and anger. Yet once again he
|
||
|
would be pitted against his friend! He would have to fight for
|
||
|
something he didn't believe in, perhaps cause Michiya's death--
|
||
|
But then he remembered the Sy tourney and exhaled in relief. The
|
||
|
duel would be to the death--his own death. Ittosai could beat him, and
|
||
|
they both knew it. Luthias was unsure that Michiya would actually kill
|
||
|
him; however, at least Clifton and Michiya's innocence and release
|
||
|
would be guaranteed.
|
||
|
But, Sable...he hated the thought of dying and leaving her--
|
||
|
He stopped the thought swiftly and angrily. Never mind. Clifton
|
||
|
would take care of Sable, and she would take care of herself. "When
|
||
|
shall we fight?" Luthias inquired quietly. I'm sorry, Sable, but it
|
||
|
has to be done.
|
||
|
The herald whispered something in his sovereign's ear. "An
|
||
|
ambassador has arrived from the Beinison Empire," the King announced
|
||
|
suddenly. A buzz of curiosity rose from the crowd of nobles. An
|
||
|
ambassador from the Emperor of Beinison? Here? "Therefore, we postpone
|
||
|
combat to hear him. After that, there need be no delay, if you are
|
||
|
ready, Baron Connall." Luthias nodded. "And you, Castellan Ittosai?"
|
||
|
Michiya bowed his head with respect. "Let the ambassador come
|
||
|
forward."
|
||
|
Pages strenuously pulled open the heavy double doors leading into
|
||
|
the great hall of Crown Castle. Walking nervously but with dignity
|
||
|
came two men. One was a blond, blue-eyed boy--he can't be more than
|
||
|
seventeen! Luthias thought in surprise--who must have been the
|
||
|
ambassador from the Beinison Emperor Untar II. The other young man,
|
||
|
1Luthias knew, was not the ambassador; he was Tylane Shipbrook, Sable's
|
||
|
cousin. The young Baron of Connall wondered what he was doing there.
|
||
|
As Tylane passed Luthias, he gave the young Baron a pained look which
|
||
|
injected panic in Luthias' heart. Sable!
|
||
|
The young ambassador bowed to King Haralan, who nodded
|
||
|
respectfully in return. "Greetings," King Haralan spoke to him. "We
|
||
|
welcome you to our home. I am told you are the Count of Tyago?"
|
||
|
That boy, a Count? An astonished murmur spread through the Court
|
||
|
as quickly as the Red Plague. Why, no man Baranur could hold that
|
||
|
authority without having reached twenty-one years! A boy, a Count?
|
||
|
Luthias regard the younger man coolly. Well, he held himself well, for
|
||
|
a man so young, but the Baron of Connall was certain that Count Tyago
|
||
|
was no warrior. He stood incorrectly for that. He was a scholar,
|
||
|
Luthias somehow knew. Something in the innocence in Tyago's face
|
||
|
reminded Luthias of his twin, and the Baron of Connall looked away as
|
||
|
Count Tyago spoke to the King.
|
||
|
"I greet you, your royal majesty, in the name of his Imperial
|
||
|
majesty, Emperor Untar," the Count began in a heavy accent. "I come
|
||
|
bringing tidings of peace in this time of war."
|
||
|
"War?" King Haralan questioned. "What mean you, sir? Baranur is
|
||
|
not involved in a war."
|
||
|
"Your royal majesty," the boy-Count began again, "his imperial
|
||
|
majesty knows well of the danger you suffer from the heathens in
|
||
|
Bichu." Luthias grimaced at the implication; Michiya's eyes narrowed
|
||
|
at the insult. "The Emperor has sent me to represent him here in your
|
||
|
royal majesty's Court, and to make an offer to you."
|
||
|
Something was nagging at the edge of Luthias' brain, but he
|
||
|
couldn't focus one it. Tylane sent the Baron of Connall another
|
||
|
stricken glance. Luthias worried.
|
||
|
"As ambassador, we welcome you," the King replied. "It is good of
|
||
|
the Emperor to send you. What is this offer he proposes, Count Tyago?"
|
||
|
"As you will, most likely, soon be at war, your majesty," the
|
||
|
Count of Tyago explained innocently, "his imperial majesty, Untar,
|
||
|
offers you a hundred thousand men, troops to protect you from Galicia
|
||
|
and the other countries to your east when you send your men to war in
|
||
|
Bichu."
|
||
|
The nagging tug turned into clanging bells and war drums. Luthias
|
||
|
darted from his chair to where Rish Vogel, the Chronicler, sat. "Does
|
||
|
this place have a library?" he hissed at Vogel, who was here acting as
|
||
|
Scrivener. Confused, the Chronicler nodded. "Do you know where it is?"
|
||
|
Again, Vogel nodded. "Go there, quickly, and bring me a book--'History
|
||
|
of the Beinison Emperors.' Now. Go!"
|
||
|
"Why?" Rish Vogel asked, leaning toward Luthias annoyingly. "What
|
||
|
for?"
|
||
|
"Don't ask. Do it!" Luthias demanded, shoving the Chronicler out
|
||
|
of his seat violently. Vogel gave Luthias the look he might have given
|
||
|
a madman, but he scurried out of the room in obedience. Luthias stood
|
||
|
straight, noticed Sir Edward giving him a strange stare, and returned
|
||
|
to his own seat before the King.
|
||
|
"That is truly a gracious offer," the King was saying as Luthias
|
||
|
sat. Apparently, the Count Tyago had elaborated, but Luthias hadn't
|
||
|
heard a word. Vogel had better hurry with that book! "We will indeed
|
||
|
consider it. For now, Count Tyago, accept our thanks and our welcome.
|
||
|
We will have rooms prepared immediately for you and your companion."
|
||
|
"I thank you, your majesty," said the boy-Count of Tyago, bowing.
|
||
|
"I also thank you, your majesty," his companion said, "but I have
|
||
|
relatives in Magnus. My father, the Baron of Shipbrook, sent me to
|
||
|
guide the Count Tyago."
|
||
|
"He did well," the King praised Tylane's father. "Our thanks,
|
||
|
Lord Shipbrook. Welcome to the Court." Tylane bowed in gratitude. "If
|
||
|
1you would be so kind, please escort the Count to the guest rooms. We
|
||
|
will hold a feast in your honor tonight, Count Tyago. You are, of
|
||
|
course, invited, Lord Shipbrook."
|
||
|
Both of the young men bowed and were escorted out of the throne
|
||
|
room. Rish Vogel collided with Tylane on the way in. The Court was
|
||
|
making a noise which reminded Luthias of a hornets' nest. The Wasp
|
||
|
King, coming to get us! a hysterical part of Luthias thought
|
||
|
gleefully.
|
||
|
"What think you, Knight Commander?" the King was saying to his
|
||
|
advisor. "A generous offer--"
|
||
|
Panting, Rish Vogel dropped a heavy tome on Luthias' table.
|
||
|
Without asking permission to speak, Luthias rose. "Your royal
|
||
|
majesty," the young Baron of Connall spoke urgently, "do not accept
|
||
|
the offer!"
|
||
|
The King turned toward the daring young noble. "You sound rather
|
||
|
sure of yourself, Baron Connall," he observed, smiling slightly, as if
|
||
|
he knew a secret. "What is the matter with it?"
|
||
|
"It's a trick, an old one," Luthias informed him, his voice quick
|
||
|
and concerned. "Listen, your majesty." Luthias opened the heavy book
|
||
|
before him, flipped a few pages until he found what he needed. "'In
|
||
|
this time, the Emperor Radnok VIII wished to take the country of
|
||
|
Alannor. It was a great and powerful country, and to take it would
|
||
|
involve great losses. The Emperor sent many men to the country, and
|
||
|
with them, began a rumor that Alannor's neighbor, Jardrine, would soon
|
||
|
attack. When Alannor sent troops to Jardrine, the Emperor offered
|
||
|
troops to Alannor's King, to help hold the country against Jardrinian
|
||
|
invaders. When the troops were settled, the Emperor had effectively
|
||
|
occupied the territory.'" Satisfied, Luthias closed the book.
|
||
|
"I've never heard of this Alannor, or Jardrine," the Duchess of
|
||
|
Narragan protested.
|
||
|
"No, of course not, your grace," Luthias answered her. "They were
|
||
|
both...absorbed into the Beinison Empire centuries ago." Luthias
|
||
|
turned his attention back to the monarch. "Your royal majesty, this is
|
||
|
an old trick. I can cite at least eight other examples of Beinison
|
||
|
doing this. Now they are trying to convince that Bichu will attack us.
|
||
|
Then they'll move their troops in here and never leave."
|
||
|
"That's preposterous!" the Baron of Coranabo protested. "We know
|
||
|
that the Bichanese are going to invade any day. The document--"
|
||
|
"Is probably a forgery," Marcellon finished. "Your royal majesty,
|
||
|
if Baron Connall is correct--"
|
||
|
"Yes, I see, High Mage. If Baron Connall is correct, then the
|
||
|
Beinison Empire has been trying to make us believe Bichu would attack.
|
||
|
We then would attack Bichu, and while we were there, the Beinisonians
|
||
|
could invade us. Yes, Lord Marcellon, I understand what this means,"
|
||
|
Haralan finally answered the High Mage's unfinished question. The King
|
||
|
turned back to Luthias. "Pray continue, Baron Connall."
|
||
|
"Your majesty, this is ridiculous!" Coranabo interrupted. "You
|
||
|
have seen the document."
|
||
|
"It is forged. It means nothing," Luthias asserted scornfully.
|
||
|
"You cannot prove it forged," Coranabo reminded the Duke's
|
||
|
Advocate. "Baron, this is only speculation. May I remind you that as
|
||
|
Duke's Advocate, you must prosecute this case?"
|
||
|
"Baron Coranabo," the King spoke, and the buzzing comments of the
|
||
|
Court ceased. "What is important is the truth. Knowledge of the truth
|
||
|
of this matter is crucial to the Kingdom. As he has presented the
|
||
|
evidence, it is now Baron Connall's right and duty to seek the truth."
|
||
|
Grateful, Luthias smiled at the King, but Coranabo desperately
|
||
|
continued, "The future of this country is an attack from Bichu! Look
|
||
|
at the document!"
|
||
|
"I did not write that document or order it written," Clifton
|
||
|
1Dargon asserted firmly. "Your majesty, it is a forgery."
|
||
|
"Of course you protest your innocence," Coranabo scoffed. "It is
|
||
|
true. You are a traitor. You cannot prove it a forgery."
|
||
|
"I can prove it simply enough," Marcellon offered, standing
|
||
|
placidly. "Your majesty?" At the King's nod, the High Mage reached out
|
||
|
and took the document. Silence covered the Court as Marcellon
|
||
|
whispered a spell. The document glowed. Marcellon smiled. "As Baron
|
||
|
Connall conjectured, your majesty, a forgery."
|
||
|
"Of course you would say that!" Coranabo shouted. "He is your
|
||
|
daughter's husband, and you are defending him! We grieve for the
|
||
|
effect his crimes must be having on you, but you must not--"
|
||
|
"I am willing to accept the High Mage's word," the King
|
||
|
interrupted quietly but very firmly. "Lord Marcellon does not lie."
|
||
|
"What of the merchant's testimony?" Coranabo pressed urgenty. He
|
||
|
was turning a purple shade of red.
|
||
|
"He could be lying," Luthias argued quickly. "I suspect he is.
|
||
|
He's a greedy snake, waiting to strike. And the merchants would profit
|
||
|
by a war with Bichu. That's why Lek Pyle hired the assassins to kill
|
||
|
my father and my brother."
|
||
|
"They were hired to kill you, boy, and your cousin, and had they
|
||
|
not bungled the affair we wouldn't be in this tangle now!" Coranabo
|
||
|
screamed.
|
||
|
The court gasped collectively. "What mean you, that the assassins
|
||
|
were to kill Baron Connall and Duke Dargon?" the King demanded
|
||
|
ominously.
|
||
|
"That's nothing, your majesty," Luthias remarked, moving with
|
||
|
confidence and strength toward the Baron of Coranabo. "It was revealed
|
||
|
in Lek Pyle's trial that the assassins were to have killed the Duke of
|
||
|
Dargon and me. However," Luthias concluded, standing menacingly
|
||
|
directly before Coranabo, "I would like to know what he means by this
|
||
|
'tangle.'"
|
||
|
"It was a slip of the tongue, nothing," Baron Coranabo supplied
|
||
|
quickly.
|
||
|
"I have this feeling that you are not telling the truth," Luthias
|
||
|
answered him. If Roisart were here, he would have figured everything
|
||
|
out by now. As it was, Luthias didn't think he was doing so badly. He
|
||
|
thought he was beginning to see.
|
||
|
"I have the same feeling," Marcellon agreed, standing with
|
||
|
unhurried grace. "I can read your mind, Coranabo."
|
||
|
"You lie!" Coranabo accused.
|
||
|
"I do not lie," Marcellon returned. The High Mage turned toward
|
||
|
his King. "With your permission, your majesty, I will ensure that
|
||
|
Baron Coranabo does not lie, either."
|
||
|
Gravely, King Haralan nodded his approval. Coranabo leapt over
|
||
|
his table, tried to run, but Luthias caught him easily, looped his
|
||
|
arms below Coranabo's armpits, and locked his hands behind his head.
|
||
|
Then he lifted the Baron of Coranabo five inches off the floor.
|
||
|
"Proceed, High Mage," Luthias invited, smiling grimly.
|
||
|
"I do not lie!" Coranabo protested.
|
||
|
Clifton Dargon stood. "Then why did you run?"
|
||
|
"Be seated, Lord Dargon," the King commanded. "Be seated, my
|
||
|
lords and ladies." Everyone except Luthias, Coranabo, and Marcellon
|
||
|
sat. "Lord Marcellon?"
|
||
|
The High Mage closed his eyes and murmured a chant. Luthias felt
|
||
|
static electricity in his hair. Marcellon opened his eyes and looked
|
||
|
directly at the Baron of Coranabo. "Now tell His Majesty and the
|
||
|
Court," Marcellon ordered, "of your involvement with this Beinisonian
|
||
|
plot."
|
||
|
Coranabo opened his mouth, but closed it suddenly, as if he felt
|
||
|
that he now could not lie, and looked away.
|
||
|
1 "I advise you to answer," the King ordered quietly. "The Baron of
|
||
|
Connall looks to the strength and leverage to break your back. If you
|
||
|
are, indeed, involved with the plot against his brother and father, I
|
||
|
am sure I will have no problem convincing him to do it."
|
||
|
Luthias grinned the smile of an anticipating assassin. "Oh, yes,
|
||
|
your majesty, you would. It is too quick." He looked at Coranabo. "Did
|
||
|
you have my father and brother killed?" When Coranabo didn't answer,
|
||
|
Luthias shook him ungently. "Did you?"
|
||
|
"Your father--yes. Your brother was to have lived when you and
|
||
|
Dargon died. He would have become Duke. We could have trapped him into
|
||
|
war," Coranabo spat defiantly. "I would have married Danza to him, and
|
||
|
when the Beinisonians came in, I would have taken, by right of age and
|
||
|
family, the Duchy of Dargon."
|
||
|
"You pretentious--" Luthias hissed. "That is why you tried to
|
||
|
marry Danza to me!"
|
||
|
"What of this treason trial?" the King inquired calmly.
|
||
|
"We had to get rid of Duke Dargon. He advised too much against
|
||
|
the war with Bichu. We chanced that we could have convinced Baron
|
||
|
Connall." Luthias wanted to squeeze his neck.
|
||
|
"And Castellan Michiya?"
|
||
|
"A tool," Coranabo answered defiantly. "Just to accomplish our
|
||
|
plot."
|
||
|
"Who," the King demanded, "is 'we?'"
|
||
|
"I and the Beinisonians."
|
||
|
Luthias growled. "You see, your majesty, I was right. They were
|
||
|
planning to invade. They were trying to advise your majesty to invade
|
||
|
Bichu, so that they could easily take the country." The Baron of
|
||
|
Connall jostled Coranabo again. "Am I right?"
|
||
|
Coranabo was silent for a few more jostlings. "You are right!"
|
||
|
Coranabo screamed finally. The Court gasped. "And you would have been
|
||
|
mine, you would have married Danza had it not been for that whore of a
|
||
|
seneschal of yours--"
|
||
|
Abruptly, Luthias thrust the Baron of Coranabo from his hold.
|
||
|
Coranabo landed hard on the stone steps of the King's dais. The King
|
||
|
motioned the guards forward, but they did not take him. Their eyes
|
||
|
were instead on the Baron of Connall.
|
||
|
Luthias had never burned with such white rage. His hands were
|
||
|
clenched so tightly that Marcellon feared for the bones, and Clifton,
|
||
|
for the first time in his life, realized just how dangerous and deadly
|
||
|
his cousin was. Flames raged behind the Baron of Connall's eyes, and
|
||
|
when he spoke, his words were furious and rough. "You had better thank
|
||
|
God that you and I are in the presence of the King!" Luthias shouted.
|
||
|
"You would have paid dearly for that insult otherwise!"
|
||
|
Coranabo laughed malevolently. "I kill your father and brother,
|
||
|
and nearly succeed in killing your cousin and your friend, and you
|
||
|
worry over an insult!"
|
||
|
"The King's justice will take care of the others," Luthias spat
|
||
|
at him, his words hard and sharp as steel swords. "But that you dare
|
||
|
to call a lady in my protection, my ward, my seneschal--" my Sable!
|
||
|
"You would have paid dearly."
|
||
|
Coranabo laughed disdainfully.
|
||
|
"Take him," the King commanded the guards. Swiftly, the guards
|
||
|
laid hold of the Baron and presented him to his King. "You are guilty
|
||
|
of treason," King Haralan pronounced gravely and clearly, so that all
|
||
|
the Court could hear. "It is our duty as King to serve justice." The
|
||
|
King's face softened, and he smiled at the young Baron of Connall. "It
|
||
|
would seem to us that the most just of punishments for you, Coranabo,
|
||
|
would be to turn you over to the Baron of Connall." Luthias flashed
|
||
|
the King a wicked, grateful grin. "However, it would hardly serve the
|
||
|
law. We therefore strip you of your lands and sentence you to death."
|
||
|
1 Luthias paled, thinking of tiny Danza Coranabo and Tylane
|
||
|
Shipbrook. "Your majesty, please wait," Luthias called out. The King,
|
||
|
puzzled, looked at him. "His death I don't dispute," Luthias explained
|
||
|
quickly. "He deserves that surely." The young Baron of Connall
|
||
|
frowned. "He deserves it many times over. But his daughters are not
|
||
|
guilty of any crime. Don't take their dowry from them, your majesty.
|
||
|
They do not deserve any punishment."
|
||
|
His royal majesty the King raised his eyebrows at the precocious
|
||
|
Baron. "You speak wisely, Baron Connall. Bring us a map," he ordered
|
||
|
an assistant. The servant promptly brought the King a map of the Duchy
|
||
|
of Dargon. "You own the strip south of the Coldwell," King Haralan
|
||
|
remarked to the prisoner. "We will divide your land in half," the King
|
||
|
determined. He took a pen and drew a line along the river that
|
||
|
separated Coranabo into two parts. Then, he crossed out the border
|
||
|
between Connall and the southern half of Coranabo's barony. He stood
|
||
|
straight and faced the Court. "I now pronounce that the Duke of Dargon
|
||
|
and the Castellan Ittosai Michiya are innocent of all charges and free
|
||
|
of the Court."
|
||
|
Luthias closed his eyes, and his shoulders relaxed. He smiled,
|
||
|
and put his head on his hands tiredly. Free. He had freed them. He
|
||
|
felt weak with relief and shaky with joy.
|
||
|
Across the aisle, Ittosai Michiya was smiling at the
|
||
|
announcement. Clifton laughed like a boy. Marcellon sat, looking
|
||
|
satisfied.
|
||
|
The King turned angrily to the Baron of Coranabo. "We pronounce
|
||
|
you guilty of treason, Coranabo. You are stripped of your title, and
|
||
|
of your lands south of the Coldwell. You are sentenced to death." The
|
||
|
King looked at the guards. "Release your hold, but do not allow him to
|
||
|
escape. Baron Connall, come forward."
|
||
|
Slowly, Luthias obeyed and knelt. Haralan looked at him
|
||
|
benevolently. "We forced you to try this case," the King revealed. "We
|
||
|
wanted to test you. You have surpassed the test, Lord Connall, and you
|
||
|
have shown wisdom and control beyond your years." The King raised his
|
||
|
eyes to behold the entire Court. "In years past, our ancestors were
|
||
|
wont to give the title of Count to those who served them well and
|
||
|
loyally." King Haralan unsheathed the decorative sword that hung at
|
||
|
his side and touched each of Luthias' shoulders with it. "We pronounce
|
||
|
you now, Luthias of Connall, in reward for your loyalty and service,
|
||
|
Count of Connall, with the lands of your ancestors and those we have
|
||
|
taken from Coranabo to support that title."
|
||
|
Shaking, Luthias stared at the King with weak astonishment. Him,
|
||
|
a Count? But the title Count was given only to those who had served
|
||
|
the King in the highest manner. It was so rare--the last of the Counts
|
||
|
had died two hundred years ago! And he had done nothing outstanding.
|
||
|
He had only done what any man would have.
|
||
|
"Rise, Count Connall," the King ordered. His legs feeling
|
||
|
rubbery, Luthias did so. "Because of your wisdom, we also appoint you
|
||
|
a our ambassador to Beinison, to reject their proposal and represent
|
||
|
us in the Beinisonian Court." King Haralan then spoke directly to the
|
||
|
new Count. "It is rare to find a man who so trusts the King's
|
||
|
justice," Haralan remarked. "We will serve all Coranabo's other crimes
|
||
|
by severing his head. We give you leave, Count Connall, to avenge the
|
||
|
insult to your ward."
|
||
|
Luthias smiled calmly and bowed his gratitude to King Haralan. He
|
||
|
turned toward Coranabo.
|
||
|
Sir Edward suddenly spoke softly. "Remember, Count Connall, that
|
||
|
you may not draw a sword in the presence of your King."
|
||
|
Luthias smiled at the Knight Commander. "I do not need one, your
|
||
|
Excellency," the Count of Connall stated placidly, and without taking
|
||
|
his eyes off of Edward Sothos, Luthias slammed the back of his hand
|
||
|
1against Coranabo's jaw. His jaw snapped loudly, and he flew fifteen
|
||
|
feet into the waiting arms of the King's guards.
|
||
|
"Thank you, your majesty," Luthias said, and he went to his
|
||
|
cousin and his friend.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Giddy with happiness, the new Count of Connall was drinking that
|
||
|
evening at the feast. His cousin, the Duke of Dargon, was laughing,
|
||
|
happy that it was over. Messengers had already been sent to the
|
||
|
Duchess of Dargon, and to Myrande. Everything was finally all right.
|
||
|
Sir Edward watched Count Luthias with the eyes of an older
|
||
|
brother. Perhaps young Luthias could actually get some sleep tonight.
|
||
|
And then, by pronouncement of the King, Luthias would return to his
|
||
|
home and quickly leave it for Cabildo, the capital of the Beinison
|
||
|
Empire.
|
||
|
"You did it, Luthias-sama," Ittosai Michiya said to his lord.
|
||
|
Michiya was grinning, ecstatic at his release, and at his appointment.
|
||
|
The King of Baranur had honored Luthias' castellan by making him a
|
||
|
royal emissary to Bichu. "And now, I may go home."
|
||
|
"Yes, but you have to take that idiot Chronicler with you,"
|
||
|
Luthias pointed out jokingly. The King had mandated that Rish Vogel
|
||
|
accompany the Ambassador to Bichu. Ittosai Michiya rolled his eyes.
|
||
|
"You will come back?"
|
||
|
"In the spring, when you return from Beinison," Michiya promised.
|
||
|
"We will compete in the Melrin tournament, and perhaps, this time, I
|
||
|
will not allow you to win." Luthias grinned and pushed on the
|
||
|
Bichurian's arm.
|
||
|
"Maybe I'll give you both baldrics and save us all the hassle,"
|
||
|
Clifton muttered good-naturedly. "You two are the best we've got."
|
||
|
"The father speaks," Luthias mused, his smile lop-sided. "Watch
|
||
|
Lauren give birth to seven full-grown Knights. Dargon will be well
|
||
|
protected." Luthias became serious. "Clifton, will you be regent of my
|
||
|
lands while I'm away?"
|
||
|
"Of course." The Duke of Dargon looked into his cousin's eyes.
|
||
|
"What do you plan to do about Myrande?"
|
||
|
"I'm giving her a choice," Luthias announced. "Either she marries
|
||
|
the man she loves or--"
|
||
|
"Good evening, gentlemen," came an even greeting. The Duke of
|
||
|
Dargon, his cousin, and Ittosai Michiya stood as the King approached.
|
||
|
He was accompanied by the High Mage and the Knight Commander. The
|
||
|
three man bowed to the monarch. "I see you are enjoying yourselves.
|
||
|
You look much better, Count Connall; I am glad."
|
||
|
"Thank you, your majesty," Luthias returned, bowing again.
|
||
|
"You have told me, Lord Ittosai, that you will enjoy returning to
|
||
|
Bichu," the King prompted.
|
||
|
"Indeed, your majesty," Michiya replied, bowing and grinning. "I
|
||
|
can now return to my family with immunity."
|
||
|
"And how do you like your reward, lord Count?"
|
||
|
Luthias appeared to think about it, although there was no need.
|
||
|
"I never wanted it, your majesty. I never wanted to be Baron or Count
|
||
|
or Ambassador. I only wanted to be a Knight."
|
||
|
King Haralan laughed. "So does my elder son, Kalien; yet he too
|
||
|
must bear a title. Sir Edward assures me, however, that you will be
|
||
|
Knighted eventually." The King came forward and put a hand on Luthias'
|
||
|
shoulder. "I must confess, Luthias, that the reward I gave you is more
|
||
|
to my benefit than yours." The Count of Connall gave him a serious
|
||
|
look. "You receive the land, certainly, and you will become one of the
|
||
|
richest men in your Duchy, if you aren't already. But the title Count:
|
||
|
it isn't that you don't deserve it, but I cannot send Beinison a
|
||
|
nobleman of less rank than the one they sent to Baranur." Luthias
|
||
|
nodded his understanding. It was a wise move. "And, Count Connall,
|
||
|
1your skill in war will make you useful to me there." Again, the Count
|
||
|
Connall nodded. "Your knowledge and your control will make you a good
|
||
|
ambassador, Count Connall."
|
||
|
"He will make you proud, your majesty," the Duke of Dargon
|
||
|
assured his King. "He has always made his lords proud."
|
||
|
Luthias smiled gratefully at his cousin, then turned back to the
|
||
|
King, who had not removed his hand from Luthias' shoulder. "As the
|
||
|
rewards are as much to your benefit as mine, Luthias, is there nothing
|
||
|
your King can give you that would be to your benefit alone? Is there
|
||
|
something, besides the Knighthood that you must earn, that you want?"
|
||
|
Luthias gazed at the floor and sadly shook his head. "No, your
|
||
|
majesty. What I want you cannot give me."
|
||
|
Haralan raised his eyebrows. "Ask. As King I have quite a bit of
|
||
|
power."
|
||
|
"You cannot give me the lives of my father and twin," Luthias
|
||
|
stated flatly.
|
||
|
"That is a bit difficult," Haralan admitted with amused
|
||
|
ruefulness, "even for a King."
|
||
|
"That is a bit difficult even for a mage," Edward remarked
|
||
|
cheerfully.
|
||
|
"Difficult for a mage?" laughed Marcellon. "That's difficult for
|
||
|
a god!"
|
||
|
"What else would you want?" the King pressed. "There must be
|
||
|
something."
|
||
|
"I want to go home," Luthias sighed, "but you cannot let me do
|
||
|
that; you need me in Beinison." Luthias took a heavy breath. "The only
|
||
|
other thing I want is for Sable to be happy."
|
||
|
The King appeared confused. "Forgive me; who is Sable?"
|
||
|
"My ward, Lady Myrande."
|
||
|
"Ah, the seneschal whom Coranabo maligned so blithely," King
|
||
|
Haralan said. "And to make her happy is beyond my power?"
|
||
|
"Yes, your majesty," Luthias affirmed. "I cannot tell you how to
|
||
|
do it. She loves someone who doesn't love her."
|
||
|
The King appeared grim. "I think," Ittosai Michiya ventured, a
|
||
|
knowing smile on his visage, "that I could tell you how."
|
||
|
"Yes, your majesty," Clifton added. The Duke of Dargon apparently
|
||
|
shared insight. "I know how."
|
||
|
"Well, then, my lords," the King began, "if--"
|
||
|
A rough pull tugged Luthias' face away from the King. A frantic
|
||
|
Tylane Shipbrook stood there. "Luthias!" he cried. "Thank God I've
|
||
|
found you!"
|
||
|
The Count of Connall gripped Tylane's shoulders. "What is it?"
|
||
|
Luthias inquired, the worry he had felt previously returning. Tylane's
|
||
|
eyes were as pained as before. "What is it? What's happened?"
|
||
|
"My father's got Myrande," Tylane began. "He took her and is
|
||
|
going to marry her to Oleran on the twenty-fourth."
|
||
|
All the blood seemed to disappear from Luthias' face. Luthias
|
||
|
felt his chest go numb, and he stared like a madman at his friend. He
|
||
|
shook Tylane's shoulder in panic and frustration. "How? I had her
|
||
|
guarded-- My God, they'll kill her!" Sable! What would they do to her?
|
||
|
If they-- Daydreams of rape, torture, and pain filled Luthias' mind.
|
||
|
Wildly, he tried to put her away and listen.
|
||
|
"Father drugged her and took her with guards. I doubt your archer
|
||
|
Macdougalls even knew there was anything wrong."
|
||
|
Luthias face was ashen, and his eyes were wild. Voices seemed far
|
||
|
away and unreal--my God, Sable!--but the shoulders were warm. Again,
|
||
|
he shook Tylane. "Drugged her? Then he'll drug her again! She'll marry
|
||
|
Oleran and he'll--My God--!" Sable! And I am supposed to protect her!
|
||
|
Sable!
|
||
|
"No, she's not eating," Tylane explained.
|
||
|
1 "Not eating?" Luthias' voice rose to a squeak. A vision of
|
||
|
beautiful Sable, ravaged by hunger till she was little more than a
|
||
|
skeleton covered with skin, flashed before his eyes. He released
|
||
|
Tylane and shot a frantic hand through his hair. "Not eating? My God,
|
||
|
she'll starve before I can get her--she'll die--" My God, Sable dead!
|
||
|
"No--Warin's sneaking her food," Tylane explained. "But--"
|
||
|
Luthias had turned to Clifton and gripped his cousin's shoulders
|
||
|
desperately. "We've got to go get her, Clifton!"
|
||
|
"I know, I know," Clifton attempted to soothe Luthias. "We're
|
||
|
leaving in the morning."
|
||
|
"No, now!" Luthias demanded. "God knows what they--Oleran--my
|
||
|
God!" he finished, his oath powerful. "My God-- Michiya," he turned to
|
||
|
his castellan.
|
||
|
"I will help you," Ittosai vowed. "If they have harmed her--"
|
||
|
"Harmed her?" Luthias repeated with incredulous anger. The Count
|
||
|
Connall's face became a fiery mask of fury. His voice became rough and
|
||
|
ferocious. "If they hurt her," he began, seething, "if they even touch
|
||
|
her, I'll kill them!"
|
||
|
"So you *are* in love with her," Edward's soft chuckle
|
||
|
interrupted the Count's tirade. Luthias turned to the Knight Commander
|
||
|
and stared in panicked astonishment. "I had thought so, but--"
|
||
|
"Of course I'm in love with her!" Luthias shouted. "Do you think
|
||
|
I'd be--" As if he had been slapped, Luthias abruptly stopped and
|
||
|
blinked. He turned slowly to Clifton and Ittosai Michiya. "Did I just
|
||
|
say," Luthias asked deliberately, "what I think I just said?"
|
||
|
Ittosai's grin was completely unmerciful. "Yes," he answered with
|
||
|
simplicity and triumph.
|
||
|
"And it's high time, too, manling," Clifton growled.
|
||
|
"I've got to go get her," Luthias was mumbling. "I can't let
|
||
|
them--"
|
||
|
"I can give you her hand," the King offered.
|
||
|
"Your majesty, I'm her guardian," Luthias reminded the King. "I
|
||
|
don't need you to give me that. But you can give me this, your
|
||
|
majesty: allow me to leave immediately."
|
||
|
"Go pack your things," the King granted, and Luthias dashed off
|
||
|
with dragging Ittosai Michiya in much the same way he would have taken
|
||
|
Roisart. "Duke Dargon, come with me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Just as the ship was docking to take Luthias back to the Duchy of
|
||
|
Dargon, the King summoned the new Count to a private audience. Luthias
|
||
|
wanted to tear his hair in frustration at the delay, but he went, his
|
||
|
walk quick and frantic.
|
||
|
The King sat in his private chambers in a comfortable chair.
|
||
|
Opposite him sat the High Mage and the Duke of Dargon. The Knight
|
||
|
Commander stood nearby. Luthias bowed breathlessly and hastily. "You
|
||
|
are ready to leave then, Count Connall?"
|
||
|
"As soon as I can collect my cousin, Lord Ittosai, and Rish
|
||
|
Vogel," Luthias confirmed, his voice as hurried and breathy as his
|
||
|
movements. "I ask your majesty that you allow the High Mage to come as
|
||
|
well." The King raised his eyebrows. "He is a physician; they may have
|
||
|
hurt her." And Luthias grimaced. He hated thinking about that. What
|
||
|
they could have done to her in all this time...
|
||
|
"I have searched for her in my crystal," Marcellon told Luthias.
|
||
|
"She is in a tower, but she is unhurt."
|
||
|
"Still--" Luthias began.
|
||
|
"I have no objection, Marcellon," the King cut the Count off.
|
||
|
"Go; it will give the Count some peace of mind, and the Baron of
|
||
|
Shipbrook and the Baron of Oleran may indeed hurt Lady Myrande."
|
||
|
Marcellon smiled and assented with a nod. "Now," King Haralan
|
||
|
continued, returning his attention to the anxious Count, "to business.
|
||
|
1I have given your cousin the Duke authority in this matter. If your
|
||
|
ward is unhurt, the Barons of Oleran and Shipbrook are to be sent here
|
||
|
to the Keep. If they have harmed her in any way, they are to be
|
||
|
executed. I will not tolerate this sort of behavior in my Kingdom."
|
||
|
Luthias nodded and wished with all his might that King would
|
||
|
hurry. The more time they wasted--!
|
||
|
The King smiled at him. The King seemed to be full of smiles, and
|
||
|
Luthias wished to leave. They had to get Sable! "You love this young
|
||
|
woman, do you not?" To expedite matters, Luthias nodded once. "Will
|
||
|
you marry her?"
|
||
|
"Yes, your majesty," Luthias answered confidently. Clifton
|
||
|
grinned. Luthias followed suit. "Perhaps even if she refuses me."
|
||
|
Clifton laughed loudly at the idea.
|
||
|
"Very well. Take this." King Haralan offered the Count a piece of
|
||
|
parchment. "You asked me to gain Lady Myrande's happiness. The Duke of
|
||
|
Dargon has explained to me how this lady loves a man, unknown to him.
|
||
|
Ask her to marry you, Count Connall. And if she refuses you, give her
|
||
|
this paper. It will, I hope, insure the happiness you seek for her."
|
||
|
Luthias took the parchment but gave the King a puzzled look. "It
|
||
|
orders that she marries the man she loves."
|
||
|
"But I don't know who--"
|
||
|
"It's all right, manling," Clifton assured him. "I know."
|
||
|
"Now, if you give me leave, your majesty--" Luthias began
|
||
|
hastily.
|
||
|
The King laughed. "I hope that you will allow this your bride to
|
||
|
come to the War Council I have called. Duke Dargon, see if you can
|
||
|
bring her. She must be quite a lady to have caused this much of a
|
||
|
panic."
|
||
|
Clifton laughed, and Edward confirmed, "A veritable Alana, your
|
||
|
majesty."
|
||
|
"Alana?" laughed the King.
|
||
|
"What better consort for the war-god?" chuckled Marcellon. "She
|
||
|
is Alana indeed."
|
||
|
"Have you gotten her the moon-jewel, then?" the King asked
|
||
|
Luthias, his blue eyes twinkling.
|
||
|
"Moon-jewel?" Luthias questioned. "What are you talking about?"
|
||
|
"It's this legend," Clifton explained. "You see, the war-god--"
|
||
|
"A legend? You sit here telling me stories, and Sable could by
|
||
|
dying!"
|
||
|
"Get him out of here, Dargon," the King laughed. "God speed you.
|
||
|
Marcellon, take care of them. And, Count Connall," Luthias, half out
|
||
|
the door, turned. "I can give you two weeks once you reach Dargon. No
|
||
|
more. A fortnight after you reach Dargon, I want you on a ship bound
|
||
|
for Cabildo."
|
||
|
"Yes, your majesty," Luthias assented, and he raced to the ship.
|
||
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
1 Trial by Fire
|
||
|
Part V
|
||
|
Knight in Shining Armor
|
||
|
by M. Wendy Hennequin
|
||
|
(b.c.k.a. HENNEQUI_WEM@CTSTATEU)
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We'll reach Shipbrook Harbor an hour after dusk," Clifton Dargon
|
||
|
informed his cousin as he approached. Luthias was leaning on the side
|
||
|
of the ship, staring at the ocean. "It should only take a half an hour
|
||
|
or so to reach Shipbrook's keep from there."
|
||
|
"The sooner the better," his cousin replied, not taking his eyes
|
||
|
from the calm, vibrant water. "It's been too long already."
|
||
|
"Can't make the wind blow any faster, manling," Clifton remarked,
|
||
|
leaning on the edge of the ship with his cousin.
|
||
|
"Don't be flip, Clifton. She may be dead already," Luthias
|
||
|
snapped. Angrily, he threw a bit of wood at the water. "When I think
|
||
|
of what Oleran and Shipbrook must have done to her--"
|
||
|
"Easy, manling," the Duke of Dargon soothed, placing a hand on
|
||
|
Luthias' shoulder. "If she were in that much danger, Lauren would have
|
||
|
sensed it and let Marcellon know by now. Besides, Tylane said Warin
|
||
|
was looking out for her."
|
||
|
"Well, knowing Shipbrook, Warin's been kicked out of the estate
|
||
|
by now, and Sable--"
|
||
|
"It'll all be well," Clifton assured him. "Don't worry, Luthias.
|
||
|
We'll take care of it. And if they've hurt Sable--" The Duke of Dargon
|
||
|
grimaced; he didn't relish the thought of Myrande's being hurt. He had
|
||
|
grown up with her, and he cared for her as if she were his sister.
|
||
|
"Then we'll do as the King says and execute the pair of them."
|
||
|
"Won't bring her back," the Count of Connall pointed out, tossing
|
||
|
another bit of wood at the silent waters. "Didn't bring Roisart back."
|
||
|
"Don't worry," Clifton repeated. "We'll be in Shipbrook within an
|
||
|
hour and a half. I've sent messengers to Lauren, and she and some of
|
||
|
my forces will meet us there. We'll get Sable and you married within
|
||
|
the week." Luthias allowed himself to smile a little.
|
||
|
The Count of Connall was silent for a moment. "I still can't
|
||
|
believe it."
|
||
|
"Believe what?"
|
||
|
"That I'm in love with her." Luthias appeared puzzled. "I know
|
||
|
that I'm in love with her, but I don't believe it." He shook his head
|
||
|
against the thought. "I don't feel any different about her than I ever
|
||
|
did, than I did last week, last month, or before my father and Roisart
|
||
|
died. It's--strange."
|
||
|
Clifton laughed merrily. "Come on, Luthias," he choked, "you've
|
||
|
been in love with her for years! Of course what you feel for her
|
||
|
hasn't changed. You just finally found the right word for it." Luthias
|
||
|
gave his cousin a sobering look. "Why are you so surprised about it,
|
||
|
anyway? Myrande is very special; she's..."
|
||
|
"A consort for the war-god," Luthias finished, repeating
|
||
|
Marcellon's words. He finally looked at his cousin the Duke. "What was
|
||
|
that legend you and the King were talking about?"
|
||
|
"Legend?"
|
||
|
"Something about a moon-jewel."
|
||
|
"Oh, that," Clifton chuckled. "It's about the war-god Gow and the
|
||
|
night-goddess Alana. They used to be worshipped here--still are, in
|
||
|
some parts of Baranur, and in most of the Beinison Empire." The Duke
|
||
|
turned toward his cousin and lounged against the side of the ship.
|
||
|
"The war-god fell in love with the night-goddess, and to woo her, he
|
||
|
slew this terrible monster, and brought the night-goddess back the
|
||
|
treasure: the moon, as a jewel to wear around her neck, and the stars,
|
||
|
as a mantle for her hair."
|
||
|
1 "Moon-jewel," Luthias repeated, slightly contemptuous. He flung
|
||
|
another piece of wood into the water. "I probably won't even have time
|
||
|
to get her a betrothal ring."
|
||
|
Clifton smiled. "It won't matter to Myrande; believe me,
|
||
|
Luthias." Luthias gazed seriously at his cousin. "Come on, manling,"
|
||
|
the Duke invited, putting his arm around Luthias' tired shoulders,
|
||
|
"we've got a damsel to rescue."
|
||
|
Luthias smiled slightly, tossed the last bit of wood into the
|
||
|
river, and followed his cousin to their cabin below.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Myrande opened her eyes as Warin Shipbrook entered her room at
|
||
|
the top of the highest tower in Shipbrook Keep. She had been sleeping
|
||
|
much lately. She had never been so lazy--or sleepy--in her life. It
|
||
|
came of having only one meal a day, the one Warin brought her before
|
||
|
dawn each morning. She sat as her cousin approached, reached for a
|
||
|
brush, and began to stroke her hair with it.
|
||
|
"I didn't mean to wake you," Warin apologized as he approached.
|
||
|
Myrande smiled him serenely; the nap had done her good. "Father wants
|
||
|
you to prepare for the wedding." He looked away, then abruptly set the
|
||
|
goblet he had brought on the table. "Here is some wine."
|
||
|
"Did your father send it?" Myrande asked, struggling with a snarl
|
||
|
in her dark locks.
|
||
|
"I wouldn't have brought it if he did," Warin answered
|
||
|
scornfully. He stared at his cousin's ebony eyes. "I don't know if
|
||
|
you're thirsty, but you may want it anyway."
|
||
|
The snag in her hair finally loosed itself. Myrande resumed the
|
||
|
rhythmic brushing. "Why?" she asked. "I don't want to be drunk for
|
||
|
this, Warin."
|
||
|
"You want to have your wits about you when you marry Oleran?"
|
||
|
Warin wondered.
|
||
|
"Yes. In the ceremony, I am asked to accept the bridegroom,"
|
||
|
Myrande explained patiently. "If I don't accept Oleran, there's no way
|
||
|
I can be married to him."
|
||
|
"This won't make you drunk," Warin rushed. "It will make you
|
||
|
dead."
|
||
|
Myrande stared at him, shocked. "You want me to kill myself?
|
||
|
You've been risking your inheritance for weeks to keep me alive!"
|
||
|
"I thought Luthias would have come by now," Warin retorted. "It
|
||
|
seems he has more important things to do."
|
||
|
"Luthias does what he has to," Myrande retorted, her black eyes
|
||
|
snapping at the insult. "If he could be here, he would be here." She
|
||
|
tossed her head proudly. "He will come to get me as soon as he can."
|
||
|
"Well, he isn't here, and I think he'd rather see you dead than
|
||
|
married to that monster Oleran."
|
||
|
"Maybe so," Myrande returned calmly, still brushing her hair.
|
||
|
"And, barring no other solution, I would rather be dead than married
|
||
|
to a man who will beat me and rape me." Myrande rose, set the brush on
|
||
|
a table, and faced Warin. "But I won't kill myself. Luthias has lost
|
||
|
too many people already. The Duke of Dargon and Ittosai Michiya may be
|
||
|
dead by now. I'll be the only person he has left."
|
||
|
"Your life will be hell," Warin warned her seriously. "You should
|
||
|
see what Oleran does to the horses and the servants!"
|
||
|
"Better my life is hell than Luthias'," Myrande said firmly. She
|
||
|
went to the mirror, picked up the brush again, and began to pile her
|
||
|
hair on the back of her head. "Luthias will overturn the marriage,
|
||
|
assuming I can somehow be tricked into accepting Oleran. If I'm
|
||
|
dead--" Myrande remembered how Luthias had been when Roisart died. If
|
||
|
she were dead, would he then love her? There was no way to know, and
|
||
|
no way she would leave Luthias. She had promised, on that night when
|
||
|
he had kissed her and she had pushed him away, that she would always
|
||
|
1be there for him. Married or single, she would be.
|
||
|
"Take it away, and let me dress," Myrande ordered Warin gently.
|
||
|
Stiffly, Warin bowed and took the wine away. As the door shut, Myrande
|
||
|
slipped the chop sticks into her hair.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alarm bells were clattering as Luthias, Count of Connall,
|
||
|
Clifton, Duke of Dargon, the High Mage Marcellon, and Ittosai Michiya
|
||
|
arrived on horseback at Shipbrook Keep. Luthias was armed, as was
|
||
|
Michiya; the Duke had said that he didn't expect a fight, but the two
|
||
|
warriors thought it best to be prepared. Michiya had even brought a
|
||
|
crossbow.
|
||
|
Luthias and Michiya were different than the other men. Marcellon
|
||
|
was serene, if somewhat amused; Clifton seemed grim but placid. The
|
||
|
men-at-arms that had come from Dargon were grim, as was their Duke,
|
||
|
but they were somewhat jovial about it, as if the rescue of Lady
|
||
|
Myrande Shipbrook were nothing but an excuse to celebrate at a later
|
||
|
time. But Luthias was insanely worried and furiously angry and deeply
|
||
|
frightened. Ittosai was also worried and as hell-bent as Luthias on
|
||
|
revenge if Myrande had been hurt. Riding to Shipbrook Keep, Luthias
|
||
|
had idly wondered aloud, a bent smile on his face, "Are you in love
|
||
|
with her too, Michiya?"
|
||
|
Ittosai looked away, as if the matter were beneath him. "Do not
|
||
|
be silly."
|
||
|
Then they arrived, and the warning bells clanged to announce
|
||
|
them. Frightened guards of Shipbrook Keep saw the force coming and
|
||
|
hastily shut the main gate. "Surround the walls," Clifton ordered.
|
||
|
"Leave the largest detachment here at the gates with myself and the
|
||
|
Count of Connall." The Duke of Dargon turned to his cousin. "Here
|
||
|
goes, manling."
|
||
|
"Hurry it up, Clifton," Luthias snapped. "They were supposed to
|
||
|
marry her to Oleran today! If the beast has touched her--"
|
||
|
"Easy, Luthias," Marcellon ordered with stern equanimity. "All
|
||
|
will be well."
|
||
|
"Who comes?" bellowed a man from the top of the walls.
|
||
|
"The Duke of Dargon," Clifton shouted his answer, "and the Count
|
||
|
of Connall. I demand to speak with the Baron of Shipbrook and the
|
||
|
Baron of Oleran!"
|
||
|
"I will fetch them, your grace," the man promised.
|
||
|
"Hurry!" Luthias screamed at him.
|
||
|
"We could break the gates," Michiya was suggesting. "Do we have
|
||
|
a...how do you say it?...a battering tree?"
|
||
|
"Ram," Luthias corrected. "It would work, but we'd have to fight
|
||
|
our way through."
|
||
|
"I am not afraid," the Bichurian said.
|
||
|
"Nor I," Luthias assured him, "but it wouldn't be practical. It
|
||
|
would take too much time to find Sable. By that time, they'd have her
|
||
|
out of the castle."
|
||
|
"True," Michiya agreed.
|
||
|
"Why do you come, Duke Dargon?" Shipbrook's voice echoed from the
|
||
|
walls. He appeared as a shadow above the gate. Two other shadows, a
|
||
|
slight one and a heavier one, stood with him. Next to Clifton,
|
||
|
Marcellon murmured a spell, and a great light shone on the top of the
|
||
|
walls. Shipbrook, Warin, and--Luthias assumed--the muscular Baron
|
||
|
Oleran, shielded their eyes. "You are not invited to my niece's
|
||
|
wedding."
|
||
|
Luthias was about to shout something defiant, but Clifton held up
|
||
|
his hand. "Quiet, and let me handle this." The Duke focused on the
|
||
|
Baron of Shipbrook. "Open your gates and allow us to take Lady Myrande
|
||
|
away."
|
||
|
"I have a right to marry my nice to Oleran," Shipbrook returned.
|
||
|
1"I am her kinsman--"
|
||
|
"I advise you not to resist," Dargon shouted angrily. He waved
|
||
|
the sealed parchment that Haralan had given him. "I have orders from
|
||
|
the King for your arrest and Oleran's."
|
||
|
"On what charge?" Shipbrook asked pompously.
|
||
|
"Kidnaping, for one," Luthias shouted. He stared at Shipbrook,
|
||
|
his eyes burning. Suddenly, he realized that Oleran was no longer
|
||
|
there.
|
||
|
"If you resist," Clifton continued, "you will be put to death.
|
||
|
Allow us entrance!"
|
||
|
"Never!"
|
||
|
"I am quite serious, Shipbrook," Clifton emphasized. "I will have
|
||
|
you put to death if you do not allow us entrance peacefully."
|
||
|
"You cannot enter by force," Shipbrook challenged.
|
||
|
"Would you like to see us do it?" Luthias countered. "You have my
|
||
|
ward, Shipbrook; you have no claim on her. If you do not return her to
|
||
|
me, I am quite prepared to take her from you."
|
||
|
"You have no right to trespass on my grounds," Shipbrook
|
||
|
returned, his voice veiling a warning that scared no one. "I--"
|
||
|
Suddenly, he turned to Warin and shoved him away. "Let them in? You're
|
||
|
no son of mine! Get away from me!" Warin stood still for a moment,
|
||
|
then walked away, anger evident in his step. Shipbrook turned back to
|
||
|
his unexpected guests. "You may also leave."
|
||
|
"You defy the King's justice?" Clifton asked haughtily.
|
||
|
"I'll defy anything opposed to my family's honor!"
|
||
|
"Fool," Clifton muttered to his father-in-law. He shouted to
|
||
|
Shipbrook, "We will force ourselves in, then." Again, he turned to
|
||
|
Marcellon. "Can you open the gates?"
|
||
|
"Line up the men," Marcellon commanded, "and give me room. I'll
|
||
|
take care of it."
|
||
|
The men-at-arms shifted back and drew their weapons. Luthias and
|
||
|
Ittosai dismounted and placed themselves at the very front with
|
||
|
Clifton. Michiya loaded and cocked his crossbow; Luthias drew his
|
||
|
sword. In front of the soldiers, Marcellon raised his arms.
|
||
|
The doors slowly opened, as if affected by the spell that
|
||
|
Marcellon was about to cast.
|
||
|
Puzzled, Marcellon lowered his arms slowly. "Even I am not that
|
||
|
good," he muttered. He turned to Clifton and his army. "They are
|
||
|
letting us in!"
|
||
|
Without further words, Luthias sprinted into the gates. Warin was
|
||
|
waiting with the gate key. "You opened it?" Clifton asked, not far
|
||
|
behind his cousin.
|
||
|
Warin gave the key to the Duke. "He is a fool," young Shipbrook
|
||
|
admitted, "but I have no wish to see him dead. He is, after all, my
|
||
|
father."
|
||
|
Luthias snatched Warin's arms roughly. "Where's Sable?"
|
||
|
"In the tower," Warin explained swiftly, casting a hurried look
|
||
|
over his shoulder at five of Shipbrook Keep's towers.
|
||
|
Furious at the ambiguity, Luthias shook him. "Which one?" he
|
||
|
hollered. "Where is she?"
|
||
|
"The center one!" Luthias released him abruptly and sprinted
|
||
|
toward the high, center tower which bordered on the courtyard which
|
||
|
the Ducal forces were quickly filling. Michiya rushed with his lord,
|
||
|
and Warin hurried to follow.
|
||
|
"The highest room!" Warin shouted as Luthias threw open the door.
|
||
|
Without even acknowledging the direction, Luthias began to fly up the
|
||
|
stairs, taking them two or three at a time. It was too important not
|
||
|
to waste any time. Those monsters-- Slightly less frantic as Luthias,
|
||
|
Michiya followed slightly more slowly; his legs were shorter than tall
|
||
|
Luthias'. Warin, who was in poorer shape than the warriors,
|
||
|
1accompanied them as best he could.
|
||
|
Luthias was bolting, the wind in his ears. He didn't truly see
|
||
|
where he was going. All he knew was that he was going to the highest
|
||
|
room. Sable would be there. The young Count strained to hear the sound
|
||
|
of Myrande's voice. Was she dead? What if she were hurt? Where was
|
||
|
Oleran? Oh, God, if she is hurt--if they have--Sable!
|
||
|
Luthias collided with the door. It was bolted from the outside,
|
||
|
and it had a heavy lock on it. With a bestial cry, Luthias threw the
|
||
|
bolt off the door and tried to open it. Locked. The Count of Connall
|
||
|
grimaced briefly, then threw his shoulder against the door. It didn't
|
||
|
budge. He battered it again, feeling no pain in his shoulder. The door
|
||
|
remained solid and unmoved. Well, damn it, he'd break the thing into
|
||
|
splinters before he allowed them to hurt Sable! With obstinate
|
||
|
determination, Luthias threw himself against the door. It better move!
|
||
|
"Luthias-sama!" Michiya's voice called him. It didn't register in
|
||
|
Luthias' ears. He assaulted the stubborn door again. Ittosai grabbed
|
||
|
the Count's arms. "What are you doing?"
|
||
|
"I'm breaking the God-damned door down!" Luthias screamed. "Get
|
||
|
out of my way!"
|
||
|
"It is too slow," the Bichurian complained. "Stand aside; I know
|
||
|
a better way."
|
||
|
Luthias, blind with fury and purpose, somehow managed to move
|
||
|
aside. Michiya backed up two or three steps on the landing and made
|
||
|
himself ready.
|
||
|
"Wait!" Warin called, a dozen steps below. "I have the--"
|
||
|
With a Bichanese war cry, the Castellan of Connall raged forward
|
||
|
and landed a solid, powerful kick directly beneath the lock. The door
|
||
|
flew open. Without waiting, Luthias barreled through the door,
|
||
|
thinking wildly that he would have to have Michiya teach him that
|
||
|
trick. Ittosai nearly stepped on Luthias' heels in his haste to follow
|
||
|
the Count.
|
||
|
"Key," Warin finished weakly.
|
||
|
Luthias found himself in the top tower room, a round, stone room
|
||
|
with a canopied bed and some tables and a fireplace. Across the room
|
||
|
was a stone staircase leading to the flat, round ceiling of the room.
|
||
|
Being dragged up the staircase by an irate Oleran was--
|
||
|
"Sable!" Luthias screamed, rushing forward with his sword drawn.
|
||
|
She turned and stared at him, her black eyes wide, and then she smiled
|
||
|
at his very presence. Oleran saw the grin and hit Myrande hard across
|
||
|
the temple with the pommel of a very large dagger which he held in his
|
||
|
free hand. Myrande made no sound, but Luthias saw a trickle of blood
|
||
|
flow, like a tear, down her cheek.
|
||
|
"Oleran, you son of a bitch!" Luthias screamed. Sword in his
|
||
|
right hand, Luthias dashed across the round room to the stairs and
|
||
|
proceeded to take them four at a time. He saw Oleran yank Sable
|
||
|
through a trap door, then it slammed shut, almost hitting Luthias'
|
||
|
head. Without thought, he pushed through to the roof of the tower and
|
||
|
rushed forward to make an end to Oleran.
|
||
|
"I suggest that you stop where you are, your Excellency,"
|
||
|
Oleran's urbane voice greeted him. Luthias, for some unknown reason,
|
||
|
stopped in mid-step and slid until he was still. Oleran stood on the
|
||
|
edge of the roof by the waist-high crenolations. He held that large
|
||
|
dagger's point at Myrande's breast. "Thank you, your Excellency. I am
|
||
|
sure that neither you nor I wish Lady Myrande harmed. But I assure
|
||
|
you, your Excellency, that I will do just that if you come any
|
||
|
closer."
|
||
|
Luthias stared at the man: Oleran was tall, muscular, and
|
||
|
handsome, despite the fact that he more than twice Luthias' age. His
|
||
|
left arm held Sable's waist securely; the right hand confidently held
|
||
|
the dangerous dagger. Uncertain of what action to take, Luthias kept
|
||
|
1his body still as his brother Roisart's, but he did not release the
|
||
|
sword. Behind him, the trap door crashed open, but Luthias did not
|
||
|
look to see who came.
|
||
|
"Now, sir," Baron Oleran continued, "you will make it possible
|
||
|
for me to leave here with Lady Myrande." Luthias opened his mouth to
|
||
|
make a scornful reply, but Oleran added, "And I do suggest that you
|
||
|
order your Bichanese friend to lower his crossbow. By the time the
|
||
|
bolt reaches me, your Excellency, Lady Myrande will be dead."
|
||
|
Without turning or removing his eyes from Oleran's, Luthias held
|
||
|
out his hand. Luthias felt Michiya lower the crossbow behind him.
|
||
|
Luthias took a step closer; Oleran pressed the point; a drop of blood
|
||
|
appeared on Myrande's blue dress. Luthias halted. Oleran removed the
|
||
|
dagger and pointed it at the Count.
|
||
|
"Better, your Excellency," Oleran praised, smiling. "And now--"
|
||
|
Myrande suddenly collapsed double over Oleran's left arm. Angry,
|
||
|
the Baron slammed his dagger's pommel into the back of her neck.
|
||
|
"Stand! What do you think you're doing, woman?" the enraged Baron
|
||
|
demanded.
|
||
|
Myrande appeared to retch. "I'm afraid of heights," she cried
|
||
|
pitifully, putting her hands over her dark hair as if she were
|
||
|
panicked by the altitude. Nervously, she played with the piled
|
||
|
tresses.
|
||
|
Heights? Luthias thought wildly.
|
||
|
"You will, your Excellency," Oleran was saying, holding Myrande
|
||
|
twice as securely, "procure for us horses--"
|
||
|
"Let's see who can climb highest," an eight-year-old girl named
|
||
|
Myrande had once challenged the twins. She had climbed the tallest
|
||
|
trees in Connall. Sable, afraid of heights?
|
||
|
Behind Luthias, Michiya smiled.
|
||
|
Fast as a whirlwind, Myrande turned, buried one of the Bichanese
|
||
|
chopsticks two inches deep in Oleran's right side, and pushed herself
|
||
|
away from him. "You bitch!" Oleran screamed, raising his dagger to
|
||
|
murder her. Luthias dove for his ward, caught her in his arms, and
|
||
|
twirled away, putting himself between Sable and the dagger. Myrande
|
||
|
screamed his name. There was a burning in his back, and Luthias heard
|
||
|
the crossbow snap with deadly finality. Oleran cried out once.
|
||
|
Luthias held Sable tight, and she clutched him desperately. She
|
||
|
was warm, alive, all right. Oh, God, she was all right. All right.
|
||
|
Luthias buried his head in her loose hair and whispered, "Marry me."
|
||
|
Then he cursed himself. Damn it, he should have been more
|
||
|
romantic, more like Roisart, moonlight and roses, something. He could
|
||
|
have done better for her. Sable deserved better.
|
||
|
But she didn't seem to mind. "When?" she whispered back.
|
||
|
Luthias tried to laugh, but it left him as a shaky pant. "Next
|
||
|
week," he cried, "next month, tomorrow, I don't care. Soon."
|
||
|
"Tonight?"
|
||
|
Again, Luthias attempted laughter, but it came out like sobs. "A
|
||
|
little too soon, Sable." He held her away from him a little, smiled.
|
||
|
She smiled back, but she was pale and uncertain. He felt her
|
||
|
unconsciously move her hand up and down on his back. "You deserve
|
||
|
better."
|
||
|
Gingerly, Michiya approached, the crossbow empty and relaxed now
|
||
|
that it had done its work. "Myrande," he began, "Luthias-sama, are you
|
||
|
all right?"
|
||
|
"Fine, Michiya," Luthias answered. The Count Connall remembered,
|
||
|
belatedly, that there was an enemy to contend with. Luthias scanned
|
||
|
the roof. "Oleran--?"
|
||
|
Ittosai grinned like a child. "I shot him in the neck. He went
|
||
|
right over the edge. If he was not killed by the bolt--"
|
||
|
Suddenly, Myrande gasped and jumped backwards, putting a hand
|
||
|
1over her mouth. "Sable, what's wrong?" Luthias asked. Then he felt the
|
||
|
pain of the wound on the right side of his lower back. Warm blood
|
||
|
dribbled on his skin.
|
||
|
Ittosai and Myrande sprang to look at the wound. While Myrande
|
||
|
inspected her betrothed's injury, Michiya retrieved the dagger which
|
||
|
had clattered to the stones unheard. "It cannot be deep," Michiya
|
||
|
reported, scrutinizing the blade. "It has blood only on the edge."
|
||
|
"No, it's not deep," Sable confirmed. She reached into her gown's
|
||
|
pocket and produced a handkerchief. She folded it and applied pressure
|
||
|
to the slash.
|
||
|
"Don't fuss, Sable," Luthias requested briskly. "I'm all right."
|
||
|
He was better than he had been in weeks. He reached back, put an arm
|
||
|
around her, then held out his hand to his friend. "Thanks, Michiya."
|
||
|
The Bichurian smiled and took it. "Do not thank me, Luthias-sama.
|
||
|
What is it you say...that is what friends are for."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Somehow (Luthias was never sure how, and quite sure he didn't
|
||
|
want to know) Marcellon got the Count Connall and his bride, the Duke
|
||
|
of Dargon, the former Baron of Shipbrook, and Ittosai Michiya back to
|
||
|
Dargon Keep in less than an hour. There the High Mage examined
|
||
|
Luthias' back and Myrande's bruises. He turned Myrande over to his
|
||
|
daughter and sent Luthias to bed with a sleeping potion. "You need the
|
||
|
sleep," the High Mage told him. "You haven't slept well in weeks, and
|
||
|
there is much to be done in this fortnight, Count Connall." The High
|
||
|
Mage grinned, rejoicing in using the young man's earned title.
|
||
|
Luthias went to the guest bedroom in Dargon Keep dutifully, but
|
||
|
he did not take the potion. There was too much to think about. For a
|
||
|
while, he stared at the fireplace, holding the document the King had
|
||
|
given him. Finally, he stood and walked to Myrande's room.
|
||
|
He boldly knocked on the hard door. "Who's there?" Sable's voice,
|
||
|
muffled, inquired.
|
||
|
"Luthias."
|
||
|
"Come."
|
||
|
The Count of Connall opened the door quietly and entered the
|
||
|
room. Her dark hair glowing from the light in the fireplace, Myrande
|
||
|
waited for him, her arms hugging her knees. She was wearing a
|
||
|
nightgown that was obviously intended for the tall Duchess of Dargon;
|
||
|
the cuffs fell past Myrande's thumbs, and the bodice draped lower than
|
||
|
it should have. Gently, Luthias approached her and sat on the bed. "I
|
||
|
hope I didn't wake you," he began.
|
||
|
"No, I couldn't sleep," Myrande confessed tiredly. "I'm not sure
|
||
|
I want to." She paused, stared at the flames. "I've never hurt anyone
|
||
|
before."
|
||
|
"You were marvelous," Luthias praised her. "You were wonderful.
|
||
|
I'm proud of you--and so is Michiya. You should have heard him
|
||
|
bragging to Marcellon."
|
||
|
"How is your back?" Sable asked, touching his arm lightly.
|
||
|
"Nothing serious," Luthias related. "Oleran just sliced the skin
|
||
|
a little." The Count Connall shrugged. "Marcellon wasn't worried. He
|
||
|
just bandaged it. There won't be a scar."
|
||
|
"You and your scars!" Myrande laughed, touching the (now) small,
|
||
|
white one above his right eye. "You're so vain!" She stopped laughing,
|
||
|
touched his cheek. "I'm glad you came, Luthias. I didn't want to be
|
||
|
alone tonight."
|
||
|
Luthias took her hand and pressed it to his cheek in the manner
|
||
|
of the Court. "I need to talk to you, Sable."
|
||
|
Myrande smiled. "You've been saying that since before the Sy
|
||
|
tournament." She withdrew her hand. "What's wrong?"
|
||
|
Unsure how to begin, Luthias looked away. He was silent for a
|
||
|
long moment; then, he reached out and took her hands. They were very
|
||
|
1small. "Sable," he started, "I don't know why you want to marry me...I
|
||
|
don't know why you agreed to it."
|
||
|
"Because I want to," she explained, happy but confused. "I want
|
||
|
to marry you."
|
||
|
"Look, Sable," he began again, "I want you to be happy. Here." He
|
||
|
handed her the parchment, heavy with the King's seal.
|
||
|
Myrande inspected it dubiously. "What is it?"
|
||
|
"It's an order from the King," Luthias told her quietly, not
|
||
|
looking her in the eye. "I--it's an order--look, Sable, I don't want
|
||
|
you to be trapped into a marriage you don't want. That royal decree
|
||
|
says that the man you love must marry you. I--" God, why was it so
|
||
|
hard to tell her he loved her? "I won't have you unhappy."
|
||
|
For a moment, Sable stared at him with confusion and
|
||
|
astonishment. "I thought...you knew," she said slowly, incredulously.
|
||
|
"I thought...when you asked me to marry you...I thought you knew..."
|
||
|
"Know what?" Luthias demanded, looking her in the eye. There was
|
||
|
pain in his face, but it was the brave pain of a lover willing to let
|
||
|
his beloved go free. "All I know is that I love you--" There. He said
|
||
|
it. "--but I also know that you're in love with someone else, and--"
|
||
|
"No!" she interrupted him with abrupt finality. Luthias shut his
|
||
|
mouth mid-word. "There is no one else."
|
||
|
"What?" asked Luthias, gazing at her as if she had lost her mind.
|
||
|
"There is no one else," she repeated, gripping his forearm.
|
||
|
"There never was anyone *else*. Only you." Myrande stopped suddenly,
|
||
|
timidly reached out to touch his face. Her hand dropped.
|
||
|
"Always...you."
|
||
|
"*What?*" Luthias squeaked. Unbelieving, he snatched the paper
|
||
|
from her and read the neat, formal words: "...We decree by Our Royal
|
||
|
Hand and Seal that Our vassal, Luthias, Count of Connall, take in
|
||
|
marriage Our subject, Lady Myrande Shipbrook, on account of their
|
||
|
great love...." He stared at the paper, then at his bride. "It was
|
||
|
me?" he questioned. "Me? But, Sable..."
|
||
|
"You," she confirmed. "I love you, Luthias."
|
||
|
"But...all these years...four years, Sable! And I never--"
|
||
|
Suddenly, he was flooded with memories of exactly what he had done
|
||
|
those four years that Myrande had loved him silently. "The women--I
|
||
|
was with so many other--"
|
||
|
"I know," Myrande reminded him without bitterness or judgment in
|
||
|
her voice. "I mixed the contraceptive potions, remember?"
|
||
|
"And my temper," Luthias continued, astonished. "I drink
|
||
|
when...Sable, you love me?"
|
||
|
"It isn't hard," Myrande told him, smiling. "You're a good man,
|
||
|
Luthias, and I don't mind your faults." He snorted in contempt.
|
||
|
"Besides, I have my faults, too."
|
||
|
"What faults?" Luthias made a dubious sound. "You're perfect."
|
||
|
(Hadn't Clifton said that about Lauren once....?)
|
||
|
"Well, for one," Myrande chanted as if it were a litany, "I'm
|
||
|
proud."
|
||
|
"Oh, yes," Luthias agreed with utter and complete sincerity.
|
||
|
"And stubborn."
|
||
|
"Don't I know it!" Luthias concurred.
|
||
|
"And I have one fault I know you never wanted in a wife."
|
||
|
"What's that?" Luthias wondered, rolling the decree.
|
||
|
"Virginity."
|
||
|
Luthias let the paper drop and stared at her, stunned for an
|
||
|
extended moment. Then, suddenly, he began to laugh. Chuckling, Myrande
|
||
|
watched as the Count laughed, the sound of wedding bells, until tears
|
||
|
of mirth rolled down his cheeks, until he released all the ills of the
|
||
|
summer, until the halls of Dargon Keep rang with the homecoming of the
|
||
|
Count of Connall.
|
||
|
1 Still laughing, Luthias finally gripped his bride's shoulders
|
||
|
gently. "Ah, Sable, Sable," he laughed breathlessly, kissing her
|
||
|
firmly on the mouth, "may I be able to cure all your faults as
|
||
|
easily!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Duke of Dargon was anxiously pacing the vestry adjoining the
|
||
|
chapel in Dargon Keep. He stopped suddenly and glared at his cousin.
|
||
|
"You could at least have the decency to be nervous!" Clifton exploded
|
||
|
at the seated, composed Count of Connall.
|
||
|
"But I don't have anything to be nervous about!" Luthias
|
||
|
protested, laughing.
|
||
|
"You're getting married," the Duke growled, resuming his rounds.
|
||
|
"Most people consider that enough to be nervous about."
|
||
|
Ittosai Michiya, leaning against a chair, chuckled and expanded
|
||
|
upon the Duke's concern, although his voice showed that he was too
|
||
|
jovial to share it. "After all, Luthias-sama, you're going to be
|
||
|
spending the rest of your life with her."
|
||
|
"But I've spent all but six months of my life with her already,"
|
||
|
Luthias countered. "It's been fine so far." The young Count shook his
|
||
|
head. "I don't understand what all the fuss is about, anyway. I don't
|
||
|
know why you and Lauren feel you have to throw this huge wedding, not
|
||
|
to mention the feast and the ball. I don't want it; Sable doesn't want
|
||
|
it."
|
||
|
"She deserves the fuss," Clifton grumbled. "Besides, it wouldn't
|
||
|
be right if she wasn't married off properly. You have to admit that."
|
||
|
"Granted," Luthias acknowledged, "but did we need to have
|
||
|
something this big?"
|
||
|
"You are a Count, manling," the Duke reminded him. "We have to do
|
||
|
things properly. That means inviting half the Kingdom."
|
||
|
"And receiving gifts from them," Luthias finished, rolling his
|
||
|
eyes. His town keep, two hours from Dargon Keep, was filled to the
|
||
|
ceilings with wedding gifts.
|
||
|
"Anything interesting?" Clifton wondered.
|
||
|
"Lord Winston of Gateway sent me some beautiful silver arrows,"
|
||
|
Luthias told him, admiration for the weapons in his voice. "He sent
|
||
|
Sable a silver jewel box. And we have this fine, Freothold tapestry
|
||
|
from a Lord and Lady Thorne."
|
||
|
"Who are they?" Ittosai Michiya wondered, feeling for the wedding
|
||
|
rings in his pocket. He was acting as Luthias' second in the ceremony,
|
||
|
and he took the privilege very seriously. "I do not know them."
|
||
|
"Neither do I," Luthias admitted. He paused. "The King sent us a
|
||
|
gift as well: our own house in Magnus."
|
||
|
"He's being very generous to you," Clifton remarked. "And to
|
||
|
Sable. He sent home with me twenty ells of indigo silk for her wedding
|
||
|
gown." The Duke of Dargon grinned. "I think he wanted to make up for
|
||
|
the fact that she has to give you up so quickly."
|
||
|
"It didn't work," Luthias laughed. Myrande had been quite unhappy
|
||
|
when she discovered that her husband-to-be would be leaving her
|
||
|
fourteen days after his return to the Duchy. "Sable's ready to rip him
|
||
|
apart."
|
||
|
"Why do you not take her with you?" inquired Michiya practically.
|
||
|
"I don't trust the Beinisonians," Luthias replied frankly.
|
||
|
Michiya grimaced, but nodded. He had as little reason as Luthias
|
||
|
to trust the Beinison Empire. Then he grinned. "This reminds me," the
|
||
|
Bichurian began, "that I have not yet given you a gift." The Castellan
|
||
|
of Connall reached behind him and tossed Luthias a book. With a sly
|
||
|
grin on his face, Michiya explained, "It is a pillow book."
|
||
|
"A pillow book?" Luthias echoed dubiously. He opened the tome and
|
||
|
read a few lines. His jaw dropped, and he threw the book back to his
|
||
|
Castellan with somewhat mock indignance. "What are you giving me this
|
||
|
1for? I don't need it! I'm not some amateur like Clifton!"
|
||
|
"What is it?" the Duke asked. Wordlessly, Ittosai Michiya handed
|
||
|
Dargon the book. Clifton opened it randomly, read a few words, then
|
||
|
blushed a fine shade a purple. "Who are you calling amateur?" he
|
||
|
demanded gruffly, shutting the tome quietly. "My wife is pregnant,
|
||
|
isn't she?"
|
||
|
"Accidents happen," Luthias quipped, smiling. He looked at his
|
||
|
still pacing cousin, who scowled at him. "How soon, Clifton? Can we
|
||
|
get this performance over with?"
|
||
|
"As soon as Lauren comes," Clifton assured him. The Duke stopped
|
||
|
mid-step. "You do have a wedding gift for her, don't you?"
|
||
|
"Of course." Luthias didn't know much about weddings, but he did
|
||
|
know that bride and groom received gifts from each other. He handed
|
||
|
Clifton an old, velvet box.
|
||
|
The Duke opened it and smiled at the sapphire necklace, broach,
|
||
|
ring, hair pieces, and bracelets. "I helped your father pick these,"
|
||
|
Clifton said. Although he had only been four at the time, Clifton
|
||
|
Dargon could still remember his uncle Fionn's wedding. "They matched
|
||
|
your mother's eyes perfectly." Dargon closed the musty box and handed
|
||
|
them to the bridegroom. "They'll look well on Sable."
|
||
|
There was a quiet knock on the door. "Clifton," the Duchess
|
||
|
called him, "you have a bride to give away."
|
||
|
Clifton smiled. Since Luthias, as bridegroom, was in no position
|
||
|
to give his ward in marriage, his Duke had pre-empted him by reason of
|
||
|
rank and kinship. "Let's go, manling."
|
||
|
The Count and his Castellan left the vestry and walked onto the
|
||
|
sanctuary. "What do we do now?" Michiya wondered as Luthias nodded to
|
||
|
the High Priest of the Duchy of Dargon.
|
||
|
"Wait," Luthias answered, handing his second the jewels. Then he
|
||
|
leaned close and whispered, "Did you get the horse ready?" The
|
||
|
Castellan nodded, and only then did Luthias take the time to look at
|
||
|
the chapel.
|
||
|
The high stone walls were decorated with "all manner of
|
||
|
sentimental stupidity," as Luthias had called it earlier. Evergreen
|
||
|
branches, to represent long life, adorned the walls and the altar.
|
||
|
Blazing torches, symbols of passion, burned brightly in the wall
|
||
|
sconces. Apples and bread, representing fertility and security, were
|
||
|
piled on the altar. Rose petals and autumn flowers were spread in the
|
||
|
aisle framed by the guests to soften the bride's steps into marriage.
|
||
|
Sentimental refuse, Luthias groaned internally. Roisart would love it.
|
||
|
Soon, Luthias heard the sounds of harps and singing announcing
|
||
|
his Sable's approach. At a nod from the High Priest, Luthias began to
|
||
|
walk the aisle toward the door. He glanced from side to side at the
|
||
|
guests; although they had invited the entire Duchy, Luthias had not
|
||
|
expected so many people to come. His Aunt Tornia, Duchess of Asbridge,
|
||
|
had sailed from Magnus for the occasion. The Duchess of Narragan and
|
||
|
Dame Martis Westbrook had come with her. Luthias almost sighed,
|
||
|
wishing briefly that Marcellon and Sir Edward could be here. Edward
|
||
|
couldn't leave the King, not with a possible war on the way, and
|
||
|
Marcellon, for the same reason, returned to Magnus and his duties as
|
||
|
High Mage soon after Myrande had been rescued.
|
||
|
There were other guests missing, too, a pair of kinsmen...and
|
||
|
Luthias missed them most sorely of all.
|
||
|
Slowly, the heavy doors of the chapel opened when Luthias and
|
||
|
Ittosai arrived. Behind them was the bridal procession: Bartol, the
|
||
|
Ducal bard, Lauren, and finally, surrounded by minstrels, Clifton and
|
||
|
Luthias' sable bride.
|
||
|
Her well-fitting wedding gown was of the indigo silk the King had
|
||
|
sent; her ebony hair, left mostly loose, was bedecked with sapphire
|
||
|
ribbons. Her onyx eyes were glowing softly, and she smiled shyly at
|
||
|
1Luthias, who returned the expression.
|
||
|
My God, she is beautiful.
|
||
|
Clearly, and without warning, the Duke of Dargon spoke the ritual
|
||
|
words: "Count of Connall, I give my kinswoman unto thee for thy wife."
|
||
|
"My lord," Luthias answered, "I thank thee." Confidently, Luthias
|
||
|
held out his hand. Myrande wordlessly put her small hand into his.
|
||
|
They turned and traveled the aisle, Myrande's full skirt and train
|
||
|
reaping rose petals. Michiya and Lauren followed.
|
||
|
The High Priest welcomed them by offering them his hands. The
|
||
|
couple knelt. "May the blessings of the Almighty God be upon you,
|
||
|
Count of Connall and Lady Myrande, upon the day of your marriage." He
|
||
|
made a sign of blessing above them, then helped them to their feet.
|
||
|
"Count of Connall, Lady Myrande: do you both come here of your own
|
||
|
volition?"
|
||
|
"I do," Luthias and Myrande answered. Luthias cast a glance at
|
||
|
the pompous priest; Myrande rolled her eyes, and Luthias somehow
|
||
|
managed to stifle his laughter.
|
||
|
"Do you both seek the blessings of God and of the Church?" the
|
||
|
priest continued in a ritual voice.
|
||
|
"I do," answered the bride and groom. This was taking too long,
|
||
|
Luthias thought. Couldn't that priest move any faster?
|
||
|
"Then you must both ask, each the other, to accept you," the
|
||
|
priest instructed. He didn't have to talk through his nose, Luthias
|
||
|
thought. He saw Sable biting her lip; she was stifling chuckles, too.
|
||
|
Luthias compressed his mouth. He knew he had to be serious.
|
||
|
And then the priest said something that surprised the Count
|
||
|
Connall: "If any here can give cause why the Count of Connall and Lady
|
||
|
Myrande should not pledge themselves to each other, let him speak now,
|
||
|
or speak never!"
|
||
|
So that was why Clifton wouldn't let him bring his sword! Luthias
|
||
|
tensed. If anyone tried to stop this--
|
||
|
But no one spoke, and Luthias realized that it was his
|
||
|
turn--finally!--to recite the ritual. He had memorized it hastily, and
|
||
|
hoped he wouldn't forget anything. "My lady Myrande," he began slowly.
|
||
|
Please, don't let me forget the words. "I ask thee to accept me as thy
|
||
|
husband, as the man I am. I am a man imperfect and faulted, yet this I
|
||
|
will promise thee: I will be a faithful and true husband to thee until
|
||
|
God takes one of us to Himself. With myself, I offer thee this gift."
|
||
|
Luthias hated that part; it seemed like he was trying to bribe
|
||
|
Myrande. But he handed her the sapphires. She opened the box,
|
||
|
recognized the jewels, and smiled. "Wilt thou take me, Myrande?"
|
||
|
"I will," she answered, smiling. Luthias felt like laughing with
|
||
|
joy, but it was his bride's turn to speak. "My lord Luthias, Count
|
||
|
Connall, I ask thee to accept me as the wife, as the woman I am. I am
|
||
|
a woman imperfect and faulted, yet this I will promise thee: I will be
|
||
|
to thee a faithful and true wife until God takes one of us to
|
||
|
Himself." Myrande reached out a hand; Lauren put a silk-wrapped
|
||
|
package into it. Sable offered Luthias her gift. "With myself, I offer
|
||
|
thee this gift." Luthias undid the ribbons; it was a well-done
|
||
|
portrait, the size of his palm, of Sable in her wedding gown. He
|
||
|
smiled and handed the portrait to Ittosai. "Wilt thou take me,
|
||
|
Luthias?"
|
||
|
"I will," he said firmly. Luthias was damned if he was allowing
|
||
|
argument on this.
|
||
|
The High Priest raised his hands ceremoniously. "May God the
|
||
|
Almighty bless and sanctify this union and keep them faithful and
|
||
|
true, one unto the other, until the day when He brings them unto
|
||
|
Himself." The High Priest relaxed his arms and looked expectantly at
|
||
|
Michiya.
|
||
|
"The rings!" Lauren whispered hastily. Ittosai jumped, properly
|
||
|
1embarrassed, and handed the priest the two golden bands.
|
||
|
The priest made a blessing sign over them. "May these rings,
|
||
|
symbols of your pledges, keep you one unto the other. Confirm your
|
||
|
troth."
|
||
|
As was custom, Luthias picked Myrande's ring from the priest's
|
||
|
palm. "With this ring," he recited, "I thee wed." It would just be his
|
||
|
luck, Luthias thought, to forget the words now. "This golden ring to
|
||
|
thee I give. With my body, I thee worship, and with my goods, I thee
|
||
|
endow." He touched ring to her thumb, her forefinger, her middle
|
||
|
finger, then finally slid the golden band onto her fourth finger. "So
|
||
|
be it."
|
||
|
Her voice strong, Myrande took his ring from the priest and
|
||
|
recited the words, repeating the ritual. She touched each of his
|
||
|
fingers, then put the ring on him. It gleamed like her eyes. "So be
|
||
|
it," she finished, smiling at him. Luthias squeezed her hand.
|
||
|
"Do you, Lauren, Duchess of Dargon, and you, Ittosai of Michiya"
|
||
|
Damn it, *no* one could say his name right! "witness this union?"
|
||
|
"I do," replied the Duchess and the Castellan.
|
||
|
"You are now in the eyes of God and the Kingdom husband and
|
||
|
wife," the High Priest finished authoritatively. He looked at Luthias
|
||
|
with irate expectancy.
|
||
|
Luthias gave him an amused look.
|
||
|
"Kiss her, stupid!" the Duke of Dargon called without any trace
|
||
|
of dignity.
|
||
|
Luthias laughed like a boy, leaned forward, and kissed his wife
|
||
|
firmly on the lips. As was custom, he suddenly took Myrande's hand and
|
||
|
dashed from the chapel in the symbolic attempt as escaping the feast
|
||
|
to be alone. With a cheer, the wedding guests followed in a confused
|
||
|
fashion.
|
||
|
Luthias was pulling his Countess along at a terrific rate.
|
||
|
Myrande was laughing like a girl. "You're supposed let them catch us,
|
||
|
you know," she playfully chided her husband.
|
||
|
"Like hell," Luthias responded. "Run!"
|
||
|
Myrande's eyes widened admiringly at Luthias' audacity, grabbed
|
||
|
her endless skirts, and ran. Luthias pulled her around the corner,
|
||
|
pushed on a loose brick, and yanked her into the secret passage. "Now,
|
||
|
let's hope that Roisart and I were the only ones who ever found this,"
|
||
|
the Count breathed, grinning at his bride. "Let's get out of here,
|
||
|
Sable."
|
||
|
Expertly, Connall led his wife through the dark passage, which
|
||
|
led eventually to the garden. There, near the exit, was Dragonfire.
|
||
|
"Thanks, Michiya," Luthias breathed. Abruptly, he took Myrande's waist
|
||
|
and lifted her onto the horse. He gracefully placed himself behind
|
||
|
her, took the reins, and galloped out of the courtyard.
|
||
|
Sable leaned against Luthias and laughed. "I don't believe you
|
||
|
did this!"
|
||
|
The Count put one strong arm around her waist. "I don't like that
|
||
|
bedding ceremony." He paused. "I don't want anyone undressing you but
|
||
|
me."
|
||
|
"Well," laughed Lady Connall. She shivered in the cool autumn air
|
||
|
and leaned against Luthias for warmth.
|
||
|
"Do you mind missing the feast?" Luthias asked her suddenly.
|
||
|
"Not one bit." Myrande twisted and kissed him. "I only have you
|
||
|
for a week more; I want as much time as I can get."
|
||
|
Luthias glanced behind him for pursuit; there was none. He
|
||
|
reigned Dragonfire and kissed Sable deeply. She pulled away, her arms
|
||
|
around his neck. "And now, my lord," she began, "where do we go from
|
||
|
here? The keep?"
|
||
|
"No," the Count Connall denied firmly. "That's the first place
|
||
|
they'll look." He steered Dragonfire into the woods. "We're going to
|
||
|
1Warin's town house, outside the city." His wife stared at him. Luthias
|
||
|
grinned. "Warin, Michiya, and I arranged this days ago. Don't worry."
|
||
|
"I'm not worried. I trust you."
|
||
|
"We'll go back tomorrow," Luthias told her. "I have some things
|
||
|
left to arrange with the trip and with the incorporation of Coranabo's
|
||
|
lands." He looked at her. "You'll be regent as soon as you turn
|
||
|
twenty-one."
|
||
|
"Whatever you like. How long will it take us to get to Warin's
|
||
|
house?" Myrande wondered after a pause.
|
||
|
Luthias grinned. "Afraid to be out after dark, Sable?"
|
||
|
"Not with you," she returned the banter.
|
||
|
"I won't let the ghosts get you," he promised playfully.
|
||
|
Sable laughed merrily. "Why should I be afraid of ghosts? They're
|
||
|
only dead people. What dead person would want to harm me?"
|
||
|
"Oleran?"
|
||
|
"Inconsequential," Myrande asserted. "There are too many dead
|
||
|
people who would want to protect me."
|
||
|
"Like whom?"
|
||
|
"My father and mother. Roisart. Your father."
|
||
|
"Father..." Luthias echoed, halting the horse. He stared into the
|
||
|
darkness, thinking something he had not allowed himself to ponder
|
||
|
before the wedding.
|
||
|
Myrande gently touched his jaw. "What is it?"
|
||
|
"My father wouldn't approve of this, Sable."
|
||
|
She stared at him quizzically. "Approve of what?"
|
||
|
"Our marriage." Luthias looked away. "He told me to stay away
|
||
|
from you, not to toy with you..."
|
||
|
Myrande looked as if she suddenly understood something. "And
|
||
|
that's why you never..." She smiled, turned his face toward her.
|
||
|
"Luthias, he was only trying to protect me. He wasn't sure you were
|
||
|
ready to love me as I loved you. He..." Sable shrugged. "He told me to
|
||
|
wait for you. He planned on us marrying, eventually. He was hoping for
|
||
|
it."
|
||
|
Luthias met her eyes. "Really?"
|
||
|
"Truly. I wouldn't deceive you."
|
||
|
The Count kissed his wife, then pulled away and looked at her
|
||
|
mutely. "Let's go," she whispered. "I only have a little time with you
|
||
|
left."
|
||
|
"I'll be back to dance with you at the Melrin Ball," Luthias
|
||
|
vowed, starting the horse forward slowly. Sable leaned tiredly against
|
||
|
him. "You're beautiful, Sable," Luthias told her, watching her in the
|
||
|
moonlight.
|
||
|
"Watch where you're going," she returned harshly.
|
||
|
Luthias halted Dragonfire abruptly and put his arms around his
|
||
|
wife. "Easy, Sable," he soothed her, "I won't be gone for long."
|
||
|
Myrande held his arms as if she never wanted to let go. "I'm
|
||
|
ambassador, Sable. No one's going to hurt me."
|
||
|
Myrande's eyes were hard. "If you believed that, you'd take me
|
||
|
with you."
|
||
|
Luthias cursed internally. Sable knew him too well, always had.
|
||
|
The Count turned his wife to face him. "Listen, Sable. Nothing is
|
||
|
going to keep me from returning to you. Do you hear me? Nothing. No
|
||
|
one." He then repeated, "I'll be back to dance with you at the Melrin
|
||
|
Ball."
|
||
|
"Even as a ghost?" she tried to play, but her voice sounded
|
||
|
choked.
|
||
|
"Don't be silly," Luthias quipped. "Ghosts don't dance." Myrande
|
||
|
smiled, and the Count hugged her tightly. "Better?" he inquired.
|
||
|
"I still don't want you to go," she said. "But there's no help
|
||
|
for it, I suppose."
|
||
|
1 "No," Luthias agreed, "and there's no use staying out here all
|
||
|
night in the chill when we should be home in bed."
|
||
|
Sable laughed gratefully and kissed her husband. "As you wish,
|
||
|
your Excellency. I would not think to dispute you."
|
||
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
1 QQQQQ tt
|
||
|
QQ QQ tttttt
|
||
|
QQ QQ uu uu aaaa nnnn tt aaaa
|
||
|
QQ QQ uu uu aa aa nn nn tt aa aa
|
||
|
QQ QQ uu uu aa aa nn nn tt aa aa
|
||
|
QQQQQQ uuu aaaaa nn nn tt aaaaa
|
||
|
QQQ
|
||
|
______________________________________
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Journal of Fact, Fiction and Opinion
|
||
|
______________________________________
|
||
|
|
||
|
Quanta is an electronically distributed magazine of science fiction.
|
||
|
Published monthly, each issue contains short fiction, articles and
|
||
|
editorials by authors around the world and across the net. Quanta
|
||
|
publishes in two formats: straight ascii and PostScript* for
|
||
|
PostScript compatible printers. To subscribe to Quanta, or just to
|
||
|
get more info, send mail to:
|
||
|
|
||
|
da1n@andrew.cmu.edu
|
||
|
da1n@andrew.bitnet
|
||
|
|
||
|
Quanta is a relatively new magazine but is growing fast, with over
|
||
|
two hundred subscribers to date from seven different countries.
|
||
|
Electronic publishing is the way of the future. Become part of that
|
||
|
future by subscribing to Quanta today.
|
||
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
1 ** ************
|
||
|
*** *********** **** **** ********* *** **** ***********
|
||
|
**** ** *** ** *** *** *** ** *** *** **** **
|
||
|
***** *** *** *** *** **** *** ****
|
||
|
****** *** ******** ****** ******** ****
|
||
|
*** *** *** *** *** *** *** **** *******
|
||
|
*** *** *** *** *** *** ** *** *** ****
|
||
|
********* ***** **** **** ********* **** *** ****
|
||
|
*** *** **** **
|
||
|
*** *** ------------------- **** ***
|
||
|
****** ***** The Online Magazine ***********
|
||
|
****** ***** of Amateur Creative Writing ************
|
||
|
---------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
>> What is Athene?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Athene is a free network "magazine" devoted to amateur fiction
|
||
|
written by the members of the online community. Athene does not
|
||
|
restrict itself to any specific genre, but will publish quality
|
||
|
short stories dealing with just about any interesting topic,
|
||
|
including (but not limited to):
|
||
|
|
||
|
science fiction, fantasy,
|
||
|
religion, mystery,
|
||
|
computers, humor,
|
||
|
psychology, sports,
|
||
|
politics, business
|
||
|
|
||
|
>> Distribution
|
||
|
|
||
|
Athene is published monthly (assuming stories come in at a
|
||
|
reasonable rate), and comes in two formats -- ASCII and PostScript.
|
||
|
For those who don't have access to a PostScript-compatible
|
||
|
printer, the ASCII distribution is a text-only file much like
|
||
|
the mail you are reading at this moment. The content of the
|
||
|
magazine is identical across both formats.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ASCII version usually runs about 1300 lines, and the PostScript
|
||
|
edition typically generates about twenty pages.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To subscribe, send mail (no interactive messages, please)
|
||
|
to me at:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jim McCabe
|
||
|
MCCABE@MTUS5.BITNET
|
||
|
|
||
|
Please remember to indicate which format (ASCII or PostScript)
|
||
|
you would prefer to receive.
|
||
|
|
||
|
>> Miscellaneous
|
||
|
|
||
|
Back issues can be ordered on request by sending mail to me at
|
||
|
the above address. An index is also available upon request.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Please contact me at the above address for further information
|
||
|
concerning Athene's story submission policy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jim McCabe
|
||
|
Editor, Athene
|
||
|
MCCABE@MTUS5.BITNET
|
||
|
1------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
(C) Copyright November, 1989, DargonZine, Editor Dafydd
|
||
|
<White@DUVM.BitNet>. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
|
||
|
not be reproduced or redistributed save in the case of reproducing the
|
||
|
whole 'zine for further distribution without the express permission of
|
||
|
the author involved.
|
||
|
|