520 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
520 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
The Melting of the Snowflake
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The harem-mistress had belonged to the old king, who gave her
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to his son. By then she was past her prime of beauty. Prince Sharvic
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had dismissed her from his bed and put her in charge of his small
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flock of young concubines. It was her duty to keep the women cleaned,
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plucked, dressed, and made-up to the prince's satisfaction, fed but
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not too much so, and empty of children.
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The prince's latest acquisition would be a challenge on most
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counts.
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The mistress eyed Valmere, the former queen of Fel, where she
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stood in rent armor, dripping mud and a little blood onto the delicate
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Keshlan carpet. Valmere was tall and ice-pale, with cropped hair the
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color of fire-lit gold and eyes like cloudy gemstones. Her body, when
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the women had stripped her and washed away the marks of her last
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battle, was lean and taut as a bow. Her hands were nearly spoilt with
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calluses, and her skin marked by the steel claws of war. It was a
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waste of such rare beauty, thought the mistress, to send this woman
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into battle.
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"Mind you please the prince," counseled the mistress, as two
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women trimmed the nails of Valmere's hands and one woman between her
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legs singed off her immodest brush of pubic hair. "Be pliant. Keep
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your eyes on the ground at his feet. Don't speak unless he asks of
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you. Endear yourself to him, and he will ask for you again and again.
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Defy him and he will have you beaten."
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Through all of this Valmere was silent. The mistress began to
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doubt that the barbarian woman could even understand her speech.
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The servant women dressed her in a gown of pale yellow, and
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softened her severe face and short hair with a fine net of gold and
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pearls. A string of pearls was hung also at her throat, and her
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rough hands encased in white gloves. They left her barefoot, for she
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was nearly as tall as the prince, who was himself not small. He might
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see her lofty height as an affront.
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"Hurry," the mistress urged her women. "We must present her
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to the prince before sunset."
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They had Valmere completed, like a confection from the
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kitchen, just as the soldiers pounded on the outer door. The mistress
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stepped back to appraise her work. She called for a bit more powder
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to cover the cut on Valmere's cheek. Then as the mistress once more
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opened her mouth to admonish her charge, the words died unsaid. The
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once-queen's eyes had returned from the distance. Her gaze cut the
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mistress with such bitter-edged contempt that she stepped back,
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stammering. Then the men outside were pounding upon the door again.
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The women of the harem opened it up and, hastily pushing Valmere out
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into the hall, slammed it shut before they could be seen.
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The soldiers formed rank around Valmere, two in front, two
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behind, and four on either side. Their weapons were sheathed, for the
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once-queen was unarmed and barefoot, no threat to them now. Valmere
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had slain many of their comrades with her own hands, shaming the army
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utterly. Any of the soldiers would have given gold for the chance to
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shame her in turn. Well, that was the prince's privilege. They
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looked at her sideways to see if she would struggle and give them an
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excuse to lay hands on her.
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Silent yet, Valmere stepped forward with them through the
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stone hallway. A heavy door separated the living quarters from the
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rest of the palace. As they proceeded, their boots rattling on the
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floors and her bare feet making no sound, the inner walls of the small
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palace began to open outward. Great stone planters of winter trees
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grew larger and more elaborate. The unglazed windows, open to the
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cold sun, gave way to arched gateways of ivy and holly. The ceiling
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vanished. The paving stones beneath their feet bloomed into a
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delicate pattern of garden path, lined with small evergreens. At last
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the winter garden spread before them up to the very edge of the
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two-hundred foot cliff that overlooked a frozen lake. Only a low
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stone wall separated tended walkway and fatal fall.
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Prince Sharvic of Teluron awaited them on the terrace, framed
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by sunset and storm clouds. He wore black leather and chainmail under
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his red-emblazoned surcoat. His hair, a dark stallion's mane of it,
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stirred in the slight breeze. He was strikingly handsome and wanted
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everyone else to know it.
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Sharvic was only twenty years old and already owned the world,
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or as much of it as he cared to. He had built this isolated castle
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into an impregnable fortress and trained the largest standing army
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seen in centuries. His father, the old king, would not approve. The
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king, however, was wintering on the coast, two week's hard ride away.
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His army was a mere ceremonial guard. If the king were wise, he would
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lend his retroactive blessing to Sharvic's ventures.
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The blood of Sharvic's heart heated as he looked upon Valmere.
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With the conquest of her country, at last he had some land other than
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that grudgingly given by his father. He had acclaim, notoriety, all
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the riches of plundered Fel, and women other than his father's
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cast-offs. He'd caught himself a queen.
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Sharvic extended a hand. One of the soldiers prodded Valmere,
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who stepped forward. She seemed to Sharvic more translucent than the
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snowflakes that had just begun to fall about them, silvering the
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terrace. She, once the Ice Queen, the leader of armies, was now
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merely another ornament in Sharvic's garden. And if this one lacked
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the soft and pretty looks of his other concubines, then perhaps she
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would be well compensated in spirit. Valmere was a warrior. Breaking
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her would be a most delightful challenge.
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Her feet left wet prints where the snow melted beneath her.
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She stopped a foot away from the prince's extended hand. Her eyes, he
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saw, were empty. Dazed.
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"Welcome to the presence of your new master," Sharvic said.
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"From now on your only joy is to serve me. My smile is your sun. My
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displeasure is your darkest pain." He reached for her face.
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Valmere snapped forward like a bough released from a weight of
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snow. One fist hammered Sharvic's ribs with a force that he felt even
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through the chain. The other slammed into his crotch. Sharvic
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howled.
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His guard had drawn their weapons and rushed forward. Sharvic
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knew with a cold certainty that he had to finish this before they
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reached him, or be shamed forever in their eyes. His fists were
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mailed with steel, and one of them broke her shoulder. She kicked.
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Sharvic seized her and slammed her head down against the wall. A
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single drop of blood flew loose and vanished in the distance between
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terrace and lake.
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"Yield, or I'll slay you now," he said.
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Valmere spat.
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Sharvic looked into her eyes, really looked for the first
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time. In them he saw the gleam of something burning, of steel, of
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fangs, and in fact nothing at all he wanted in his bed. As the guard
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reached him, he heaved Valmere over the wall.
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The ice of the lake gave a thunderous crack, but held her
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body. A dark stain filled the fissures in the ice, sketching a bloody
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snowflake in the vanishing evening.
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"My lord?" said the guard captain, then stepped back hastily
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as Sharvic whirled upon him. The captain swallowed and began again.
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"Would you like us to retrieve the body?"
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"No. Leave her there." In the silence, Sharvic took a couple
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of steps toward the castle. "Send someone to bring my meal to my
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chamber," he called over his shoulder. "I'll dine alone."
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Queen Keluria of Avel was nearly six feet tall, though so
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proportioned that one didn't notice her height until standing beside
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her. Her hair was red and cut to shoulder length. She was not old,
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but her face was too worn with care to be pretty. Her subjects adored
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her, foreign armies feared her worse than plague, and the gods smiled
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on her with favor. Fair and generous, she had never been known to
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slay the bearers of ill news. At least, so the messenger hoped.
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The messenger was panting hard, dripping sweat in the frigid
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hall. She knelt and handed a scroll to the queen. Keluria thanked
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her. Attendants stepped forward to usher the spent woman off to a
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bath and some food while Keluria read.
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Artere watched her open the scroll. He was as pale and golden
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as Valmere, though a little older, and he lacked her warrior's grace.
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Artere struck the observer as decorative, but painfully nervous, as if
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he always expected to be beaten, and all the more so as Keluria's
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hands began to shake. The expressions that twisted her face made him
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want to sneak away into some dark corner to hide. Instead he waited
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for her to finish and took the scroll in turn.
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Fel was taken, it told him. Sharvic slew Valmere. Artere's
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world had effectively ended.
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Artere slumped against one of the glazed windows. His cheek
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melted the patterned frost. Behind him the queen let out a long sigh.
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"I will avenge your sister," she said.
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When Artere did not answer, she lay gentle hands on his
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shoulders, and her lips on his neck. She smelled of horses, hay and
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leather, he thought idly.
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"Come with me."
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Artere followed his queen a measured two steps back, which
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wasn't easy since her legs were longer than his. She brought him from
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the hall up to the living quarters, and even to the threshold of her
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chamber. The attendants hastily awoke and pulled open the door for
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them. One ran ahead to light torches and a fire.
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The cold room came to life. Flames splashed from the mirror
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and the crystal. The attendants vanished swiftly, shutting the door
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behind them.
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Any other time Artere might have rejoiced at being invited to
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Keluria's bed. But grief was too sharp, and he wept when she kissed
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him. Her fingers skillfully undressed him upon the fur-covered bed,
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and at last she found means to still his tears, and make him cry in
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another way.
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It was a most diplomatic transaction, Artere thought
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afterwards, when the queen thought he slept. She had done the one
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thing that might reassure Artere of his position at her side, though
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likely she wouldn't bear a child out of this lying-down either. Her
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orgasmic cries had been, as always, artfully faked. His hadn't.
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Artere's life and happiness depended on his ability to please
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someone else. His mother had made that clear as soon as he could
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understand, and she had made sure he knew that someone wouldn't be
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her. She had wanted a daughter to take up her crown, and when Valmere
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was born, she had sent Artere out to foster. After mother's death,
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when Valmere was queen, she had gotten her brother the best marriage
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in the land. Queen Keluria of Avel wanted safe passage to Fel's
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seaports for her rich caravans, and so Artere had been packed off to a
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foreign court to seal the bargain.
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That Artere could not please Keluria made his hands shake with
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worry. She was fair enough to him, never beat him, and saw that her
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consort had almost anything he wanted. And if she did not often lie
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with him, she at least encouraged him to take lovers. He did,
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sometimes, preferring the men or the very young girls, who would be
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awed at the attentions of the queen's consort, and less likely to
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laugh at him.
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Valmere was dead. This left Artere as the nominal heir of
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Fel, or what was left of it. Since he was married, the land would
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pass to Keluria's hands. Therefore she didn't need him anymore. She
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had borne no children to him. She was free to cast him aside and make
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another marriage.
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Valmere had been kind to Artere. He missed her.
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The queen had dressed and left. Artere stretched under the
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blankets, then leaned over the edge to snatch up his tunic. A tray of
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warm bread and meat had appeared at some point during their passion,
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or afterwards. He picked at the food as he dressed.
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Keluria's chamber was rather small, the better to hold heat in
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the winter. Artere built up the fire and looked around. There were
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the usual piles of fine horse tack that she cleaned and oiled herself.
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There were boots against the wall, and bits of silver, and a row of
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whips hanging from pegs.
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Artere took down one of the whips. It had a short, silver
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handle and supple leather tails, nine of them. Artere drew them
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through his fingers. That was odd. Keluria was an avid horsewoman,
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and he'd never seen her strike an animal. Carefully returning the
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whip, he shrugged and got his cloak. Keluria would be back that
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night, probably with her preferred bed companion, and would want him
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gone by then.
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Weeks passed, and Avel prepared for war. It would be a just
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and fitting war to free the sister land of Fel from cruel bondage and
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to avenge the death of a queen. The priestess read favorable omens
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from the entrails of dead animals. The gods were pleased. The people
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were taking no chances.
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Avel's armies were small, at best, so Keluria saw to the
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hiring of a company of Keshlan mercenaries. Though some of her
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captains expressed distaste, Keluria had chosen wisely. The Keshlani
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were brave and loyal to those who paid on time. Though her armies
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disliked fighting on the same side as men, it was men who could
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negotiate best with Sharvic of Teluron. He had been known to dismiss
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unheard women sent as heralds. Besides, some of the Keshlani could be
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left to guard the stay-behind farmers against bandits and the
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desperate flank actions of a defeated army, leaving Avel's forces the
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glory of open battle.
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Artere saw little of the arming, and less and less of Keluria.
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When she visited the palace, she would eat with him once, then vanish
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into her chamber. He passed his time with the bored mercenaries
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assigned to guard him, sparring with wooden swords.
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Spring arrived.
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Unnoticed, the ice of the lake, no longer stained red but now
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dirty gray, broke apart in the warming sun. That which had been
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Valmere slipped through, into the water, vanishing without a trace.
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"If you'd been born into another life," said Sandry, "You'd
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have made a fine swordsman. You have the reach, and the eye. Look
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for me in Kesh if the queen ever tires of you."
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"That isn't funny," Artere said, putting aside his wooden
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sword. The day was unseasonably warm, and both men were panting hard.
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Sandry shrugged. "Suit yourself."
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"Even if I'm not happy here, I won't leave for some place
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where men keep women like sheep and cattle."
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"Not all lands on the other side of the river are like
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Teluron, and not all men are Sharvic. In some places I've seen men
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and women fight and farm and love as equals. I must say, I like those
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lands best of all. I'd rather have a girl please me for her own joy
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than out of fear. And the cavalry women always have the strongest
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legs." Sandry grinned widely.
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It was hard not to like him. Like most of the Keshlani
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mercenaries, he was adept at blending into local custom, and drawing
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kind laughter in any language. Rumor had him bedding with a couple of
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the officers of the forward army, and those women had their choice.
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Artere enjoyed his company because he need do nothing to please him,
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only be well and safe.
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Sandry pulled three knives out of his pile of cloak and
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clothing. Tossing them spinning into the air, he wove them into
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breathtaking patterns.
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"Aha!" Sandry declared, raining knives about his feet with
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seeming carelessness. "You do smile. And here I thought all royalty
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had their sense of humor removed at birth."
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Artere's smile, suddenly made self-conscious, vanished in an
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instant. "I must bathe and dress now."
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"In a hurry to leave?"
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"The queen may ask for me tonight."
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Sandry heaved the elaborate sigh reserved to address the
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self-deluded. "If you insist. Come by the weapons yard tomorrow, or
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the next day, and play."
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After Artere had left, loneliness settled about his throat
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like an executioner's cord, cutting his breath and dimming his sight.
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The queen, as usual, would not be asking for him. But Artere had a
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plan to follow now, and even if it didn't work, it was something to
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do.
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Whom did Keluria bed, and what did she do with them? Chances
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were, most of the palace except Artere knew. He had only to persuade
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one of them to tell him. So he spent the next two days in and out of
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the kitchen, the laundry, the stables, asking innocuous questions,
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waiting for someone to come to him, and at last someone did.
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Artere bought his precious information face-down upon the bed
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of one of the bakers. The man was rough, but not unkind, and he
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seemed to enjoy Artere more than Keluria did. After the payment was
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tendered, the baker brought Artere up a back stairway, through a
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narrow hall, and up to a small slotted screen. There the baker left
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him, telling him to wait and watch.
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There was no light from the room on the other side of the
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screen. Artere crouched uncomfortably in the passage. Well after
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dinnertime, when his fingers had gone numb in the cool air, there came
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a noise of doors opening. Someone lit torches. Artere blinked,
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startled.
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He was looking into the queen's chamber, through a latched
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doorway to one side of her bed. This was clearly the passage by which
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the kitchen staff made food appear or disappear, and perhaps where the
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laundry took the sheets away. Artere leaned forward and adjusted his
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eyes to the light.
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The queen entered, and with her one of the young captains, a
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tall woman with long, thick, dark-bronze hair. Most of the soldiers
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wore theirs cut short, though this one was clearly no less a warrior
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for her hair, which so much enhanced the beauty of her face. The two
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of them were speaking too softly to be heard. Both wore riding
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clothes.
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Keluria walked towards the fire, out of Artere's line of
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sight, possibly to sit in one of the chairs. The captain stripped off
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her clothes. She was broad-hipped and small of breast, the sort of
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figure favored by artists who painted nymphs and young goddesses. It
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seemed she undressed for herself, for the mirrors to adore her, and
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for the firelight to caress her body. She brought her hands up
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towards her own nipples, which were already small and hard in the
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night air. A word of command stopped her. Grinning, she turned and
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stood at the foot of the bed, reaching up to hold the loops of the
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decorative rope that dangled tassels from the ceiling, and
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incidentally providing Artere a breathtaking view of the front of her
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body.
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Keluria appeared then behind her shoulder, holding the same
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whip that Artere had handled. She reached over to tickle the woman's
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breast with the tails, and to fold her hair forward over her shoulder.
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Already the woman's head was thrown back, her breath deep and steady.
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Stepping back, Keluria measured the distance, and struck.
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Artere covered his mouth with his hand. Clearly the blow had
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upset him more than the woman, for she was grinning widely. He
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couldn't see her back, but such a light tap might hardly have reddened
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her skin. Keluria struck again and again, alternating blows with
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caresses. Her face was rapt, eyes narrowed and gleaming. The other
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woman panted. Her legs were spread wider now. The cords of the whip
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wrapped around and between her thighs, leaving pink stripes.
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Keluria began to hit harder. Her partner sobbed. When the
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queen took that as a signal to slow down, the other said clearly,
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"More."
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That word was repeated twice more, between screams and ragged
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gasps. The arc and snap of the queen's arm entranced Artere, who had
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never seen such beautiful cruelty. And when the woman at last let go
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of the ropes and collapsed into Keluria's arms, Artere was far more
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aroused than frightened. The two of them tumbled onto the bed out of
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Artere's sight, leaving him with nothing but their rising moans for
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company.
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"Artere, greetings. It's been near a week since I've seen
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you."
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It was raining outside, and the queen was seated by the fire,
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drinking something hot. She wore a court gown half-unfastened, as if
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she'd spent all day in the company of diplomats and courtiers, and
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only just had the chance to sit down.
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Artere bowed, formally. It had taken him days of patience to
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get this audience, and he wasn't about to spoil it by being hurried.
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"Are you well?" asked Keluria.
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"I am most well. I missed you sorely."
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She nodded. "The war is days away at this point. I'll be in
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the field tomorrow, and until we have won. This war is for your
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family's honor as well, so I appreciate your patience."
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"I am patient, and I only ask one favor before you ride into
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battle."
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"And that is?"
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Artere went to the wall when the tack was hung, and took down
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the silver-handled whip. The tails swished as he turned. His breath
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quickened as he steadied body and mind against the pain he would
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demand.
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"Let no one say say I cannot please you as you wish to be
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pleased."
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Keluria's jaw dropped. She shot him a look of utter
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confusion.
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"Artere, no."
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"Don't you understand?" he asked, his voice rising to an
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inelegant shout. "I'm nothing if not yours. If you turn your head
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from me, I may as well be dead as Valmere!"
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Keluria's eyes were sad, her manner once more controlled.
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"You are not what I want."
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Artere stepped forward and knelt at her feet. He lay his head
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on her knee and offered up the impossible weight of the whip with one
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shaking hand.
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"Then punish me for my failing."
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In a whisper of fabric, Keluria stood and slipped from under
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him. Moments later he heard the door click shut. Only then did
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Artere raise his head and look at the mockingly empty room. He
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replaced the whip on its peg and left by the servants' door where
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there was, thankfully, no one watching.
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The war was fought in three days. Though many had denounced
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the prince of Teluron, none could fault his courage.
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Sharvic's armies were caught in Fel, unable to retreat past
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the river rising in spring flood. His supply trains were rapidly
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decimated, and the hostile land yielded him no provisions. Still he
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fought, desperately and deviously, until his last troops were
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surrounded on a little wooded hill with no water or food.
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One fine and breezy morning, Sharvic rode out, unarmed and
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unarmored, to surrender himself to the captains of Avel. His men were
|
|
all paroled. Sharvic himself was bound and tossed into a wagon for
|
|
transport to Avel palace.
|
|
That was where Artere saw him at last, standing alone in the
|
|
midst of the Avel hall of state. He was surrounded by a broad ring of
|
|
armed women, who acted more to keep the furious citizens from rending
|
|
him apart than to prevent an escape.
|
|
Escape was the last thing they need worry about. Sharvic was
|
|
caught, and he knew it. Ever vain, he had no wish but to die in a
|
|
manner that might inspire an epic song. He would sooner be gelded
|
|
than turn tail and run from his proper and destined end.
|
|
Artere watched from a place in the lower balcony of the hall
|
|
with Sandry and the rest of the men who cared to watch, but need stay
|
|
out of sight. The Council of Barons were seated in full ceremony.
|
|
Every woman who could fit had packed into the floor, hoping for a
|
|
display of legally sanctioned violence. Keluria herself was seated on
|
|
a bench at the sidelines, dressed in a simple tunic, britches and
|
|
boots. Anyone who didn't know to look for her would have missed the
|
|
queen completely.
|
|
"They are the law-keepers," Artere whispered to Sandry. "The
|
|
whole Council is needed to pass judgement on a murder case."
|
|
"This is not much of a trial," Sandry remarked.
|
|
"Yes, but he surrendered, and that's a legal admission of
|
|
guilt. Shhh."
|
|
The Council president stood up and tapped a scroll on the
|
|
table before her. When she spoke, her voice carried to the furthest
|
|
corners of the perfectly-shaped hallway.
|
|
"Your father, the august king of Teluron, has declined to
|
|
intercede on your behalf."
|
|
There was a wave of laughter from the assembled crowds. The
|
|
king had other sons, and must be delighted to have such a troublesome
|
|
heir removed from the picture.
|
|
The president glared about in warning, and continued.
|
|
"This court has heard no pleas for clemency from any citizen.
|
|
The oracles are silent. You are granted one final chance to speak in
|
|
your own defense."
|
|
Sharvic raised his eyes. "I'll have no words with whores, and
|
|
less than none with the queen of whores."
|
|
Not a word, not a gesture, not a brush of fabric on skin broke
|
|
the stillness in the hall. Artere saw Keluria lean over to whisper to
|
|
her captain, the same woman he'd watched her beat in the bedchamber.
|
|
The captain sped around the perimeter of the room up the back
|
|
of the Council dais. She whispered in turn to the president, who
|
|
nodded. Then the captain raised her hand in a signal.
|
|
Two soldiers seized Sharvic's wrists and bound them in heavy
|
|
leather straps, then in turn to ropes that trailed from the center
|
|
columns of the hall. They tightened the bonds until he stood nearly
|
|
on tiptoe with his arms spread out widely. One of them ripped off his
|
|
tunic. They left him standing there in a square of late sun, with the
|
|
sweetly proportioned muscles of his body racked and straining to best
|
|
advantage.
|
|
Sandry tapped Artere's shoulder. "What are they doing?"
|
|
"Shh."
|
|
Someone had brought out a brazier set up on a tripod. It was
|
|
filled with coals and glowed ever hotter as a soldier worked the
|
|
bellows. At last the captain took up the long handle of the iron
|
|
brand that rested in the fire.
|
|
Sharvic could not see, and neither did he try to turn. When
|
|
the captain laid the brand against his shoulder, he moved only as much
|
|
as someone stroked with a feather. An aroma of burnt flesh wafted
|
|
through the hall. The assembled crowd murmured in disappointment.
|
|
The president spoke: "By the authority of this Council and the
|
|
will of the gods, you are branded a murderer and remanded to the
|
|
perpetual custody of the queen."
|
|
"How utterly barbaric," Sandry muttered. "They should have
|
|
hanged him."
|
|
The captain handed the brand to someone who carried it away.
|
|
She drew a long, curved knife from her side and laid it against
|
|
Sharvic's throat. His head turned involuntarily as the blade stroked
|
|
his skin. The audience was rapt, for so many of them would have
|
|
begged to trade places with the captain. How many, ashamed and
|
|
silent, would have wished for the fate of the captured prince? How
|
|
many would have traded their souls to be so beautiful and brave,
|
|
adored and hated?
|
|
The knife made love to the curve of Sharvic's shoulder before
|
|
vanishing beneath his luxurious mantle of hair. His eyes opened wide
|
|
with abrupt understanding, and he made a soft sound of protest. The
|
|
captain flicked the edge of the knife backwards. Sharvic screamed, as
|
|
if the hair she severed short had nerves.
|
|
The captain spoke: "That is payment for the insult you
|
|
rendered the Council." She retired into the circle of warriors.
|
|
Keluria rose then, unadorned and splendid in her commanding
|
|
height and manner. She stood before the bound prince and took from
|
|
her belt a heavy, braided length of oiled leather. Forcing up his chin
|
|
with the handle, Keluria said: "This is payment for your insult to
|
|
me."
|
|
Sharvic met for the first time the eyes of the queen who had
|
|
staged this entire scene, the woman who owned him now. There passed
|
|
between them a moment of complete understanding. For were they not
|
|
alike? They each loved cruelty, and a challenge. And each had found
|
|
the one person in the world who truly deserved his or her most devoted
|
|
attention. Sharvic dipped his head and kissed the whip handle in a
|
|
gesture that passed unappreciated by everyone else in the hall.
|
|
Except for Artere.
|
|
"No," he said. "Not Sharvic. Not Valmere's murderer."
|
|
"What?" Sandry whispered.
|
|
Keluria had ducked under the binding ropes and uncoiled the
|
|
whip with a snap. Sharvic let his head hang down and tensed his
|
|
exposed, branded back.
|
|
Crack.
|
|
Sharvic went up on his toes, breathing a ragged gasp.
|
|
Crack.
|
|
The audience cringed.
|
|
Crack.
|
|
Sharvic was grinning, his body arched and eyes shut tight. He
|
|
gleamed with sweat and the transfiguration of pain as the blows grew
|
|
harder. His skin gave way and bled well before he broke and cried.
|
|
But by then Artere had pushed his way back out of the balcony
|
|
and down the stairs. The sounds of Keluria's whip and Sharvic's
|
|
screams grew fainter as he went.
|
|
Sandry was beside him in a flurry of footsteps. "What's
|
|
wrong? I don't understand."
|
|
Artere sighed. "I do. It's only about time for it."
|
|
|
|
The gods consented to the annulment, and the legal details
|
|
were swiftly hammered out. Artere was given a substantial amount of
|
|
gold, most of which he left with a trusted trader who could provide
|
|
him a note of credit.
|
|
Sandry's company was discharged shortly thereafter.
|
|
"I meant it when I told you to come to Kesh," he said. "It's
|
|
quite nice this time of year, before the heat sets in." His horse
|
|
pulled at the bit as its companions formed up in line in the
|
|
courtyard.
|
|
Artere considered. "I'm going first to pay my respects at
|
|
Valmere's resting place. It's quite safe to travel, and someone
|
|
should say the prayers over her, even if she didn't get properly
|
|
buried. But after that, who knows?"
|
|
They parted in a cloud of dust and galloping horses. Artere
|
|
had packed, and the only thing between him and leaving was a final
|
|
farewell to his queen.
|
|
She received him in her chamber, which was exactly as he
|
|
remembered, save for the smouldering-eyed prince who sat at her feet,
|
|
collared in black leather and diamonds, like some treasured pet.
|
|
Keluria stood and gave Artere her hand.
|
|
"I'll miss you," she said, "But I cannot tell you I'm sorry."
|
|
Artere shrugged. "I wouldn't want you to be. Shouldn't
|
|
everyone get what they want thus, and be so happy with it?"
|
|
When no one answered him, Artere bowed and took leave of the
|
|
queen.
|