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    King's Blades 01 - The Gilded Chain

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      simple Blade in the Royal Guard, wanting

      nothing more in the world, when life had been pleasure

      from dawn till dawn.

      "You missed an interesting display of

      swordsmanship, Commander!" The King was enjoying his

      Guards' collective dismay. "Another

      Durendal legend, I fancy."

      "Take it, my liege!" Montpurse was on

      his knees in the mud, offering up his sword.

      "Take it. Cut off my useless head if you

      want, because I certainly--"

      "Stand up, man! Keep your sword.

      You won't escape that easily. Well, perhaps

      I need to borrow it for a minute."

      A nearby copse exploded with an

      earth-shattering roar, hurling branches and rocks

      everywhere. The King ignored it, although some of the

      debris went dancing past his feet. The river

      plain was pockmarked with craters, most of them now

      full of water. The honey-colored walls of

      Waterby were in worse shape, with half the towers

      in ruins; but archers on the battlements had been

      sending arrows this far. Not accurately,

      fortunately. Another thudded into the turf close

      to Chefney, who jumped.

      Bewildered, Durendal was examining Harvest.

      That was fresh blood on her and those were dead men on

      the ground, but the last few minutes had vanished in

      a confused blur of leaping and slashing and parrying.

      Four?

      "What was your family name, Sir

      Durendal?"

      "Family ... Roland, sire." He had not

      spoken the word in a dozen years. He almost had

      to think to remember it. Of course a King could ask

      questions that others must not, but what on earth was

      Ambrose after now?

      The King frowned. "The Rolands of

      Mayshire?"

      "Who? Oh, no, sire. Dimpleshire, very

      minor gentry. My grandfather held lands in

      tenancy-in-chief from the Priory of

      Goodham." Why ask? And why was Montpurse

      pressing a hand on his shoulder so heavily?

      Then realization--the Commander was signaling him

      to kneel. Mystified, he dropped to one knee and

      then to two as full understanding came. Oh, no!

      He felt the mud cold through his hose.

      Oh, yes! The blade came down on his

      shoulder. Then on the other.

      "Arise, Baron Roland of Waterby."

      He arose. Montpurse grabbed his hand and

      pumped it, hugging him with the other arm. The rest of the

      Blades started a cheer and gathered around to thump

      him on the back.

      "My liege! I--I thank you, Your

      Majesty. But I do not deserve--"

      "Deserve?" Hoare bellowed. "Four dead

      men and you don't deserve? The rest of us ought to be

      hung, drawn, and quartered--every day for a month."

      One of the towers of Waterby dissolved in a

      ball of stones and dust that floated

      leisurely to the ground. Everyone looked quickly

      to the battery where the conjurers of the Royal Office

      of Demolition were at work, to see if they had all

      survived, because sometimes they blew themselves out of the

      octogram as well as the shot. Then came the

      sounds--first the distant cheering of the army, second the

      roll of thunder over the plain.

      Durendal turned back to face the King's

      smug smile. "But, Your Majesty ... I

      trust that this does not mean ... that I don't have

      to ..." How could a peer belong to the Royal

      Guard? Unthinkable!

      Chuckling, the King returned Montpurse's

      sword to him. "Not unless you wish. We grant you

      leave to retain your present style at your own

      pleasure."

      That was honor indeed! He could retire at will

      and be a lord. Not that he ever would, of course. A

      noble must live nobly, which required vast amounts

      of money.

      Another explosion showered mud and pebbles. They

      all ducked, and one or two swore at being

      struck.

      "They are finding the range, sire!"

      Montpurse said angrily.

      "True. Well, let us proceed to the

      battery and hear how Destroyer General views

      his progress." The King set off at a

      leisurely stroll, anxious not to appear to be

      retreating. With much relief his Blades

      accompanied him.

      Hoare edged close to Durendal to whisper,

      "My lord, may I kiss your backside?"

      "No. You aren't worthy."

      "I know that. I was just hoping."

      Baron Roland of Waterby. Meaningless,

      really. He could never afford to use the title,

      even if he would ever want to.

      That evening, as the new peer was whetting Harvest

      to remove a few recent nicks, a herald

      came to the tent and presented him with an official

      notice from Chancery. The honor and lands of

      Peckmoss in Dimpleshire had been estranged

      from the royal demesne and granted in freehold

      to Baron Roland of Waterby; said lands would be

      henceforth administered to the avail, benefit, and

      profit of the said baron, pending his further

      instructions.

      He was rich. It didn't matter.

      He was more worried about getting the bloodstains

      off his jerkin.

      Those were the great days. In the four years between his

      second and third visits to Ironhall, he was

      never far from the King. Of the hundred or so

      Blades in the Royal Guard, five or six

      were especially favored; and Sir Durendal was

      one of them, companion at both work and play.

      Ambrose was a ferocious horseman still, in

      spite of his ever-increasing size, and rode in mad

      hunts. He hawked and followed hounds. He

      danced and attended masques. He went on

      progresses through town and country, while the

      crowds roared their loyalty. Seldom, if ever,

      had Chivial loved a monarch as much as this one.

      He repaired highways and built bridges,

      fostered trade, wenched notoriously, and kept the

      nobility under control. He had managed

      to conclude a treaty with Baelmark, ending a war that

      had dragged on for fourteen years, so now the

      coasts no longer lived in dread of Baelish

      raiders. Almost the only complaints ever heard in

      Parliament concerned the lack of a male heir, so

      when the King divorced Queen Godeleva and

      married the Lady Sian, the country rejoiced and his

      popularity soared even higher. From any

      viewpoint, he loomed larger than life. The

      fickle spirits of chance were his handmaids in those days,

      and Durendal was there to share in the glory.

      When the King did not need him, he never lacked

      for recreation. There was Rose, soon after he

      joined the Guard, but Rose's father disapproved and

      married her off to a man of better breeding.

      There was Isolde. They spoke seriously of

      marriage until the rebellion in Nythia

      called him away. He had thought they had an

      understanding, but on his return he found her betrothed

      to another.

      That summer of th
    e Nythian Rebellion was perhaps

      the finest time of all--living with the army, fighting a

      war. Apart from the vague few minutes when he

      earned his barony, he experienced little real

      battle, for the days of kings in armor leading charges

      had long gone. Only very hard talking

      by Montpurse kept Ambrose out of several

      skirmishes, though; and even Montpurse could not

      stop him on the day Kirkwain fell.

      Then the King rode through the breach directly behind the

      vanguard with his Blades around him. Four were

      killed, a dozen wounded, but they gave more than they

      took. Harvest alone avenged the four, and the

      legend of the second Durendal crept a little

      closer to the legend of the first.

      Then there was Kate.

      He had seen her around the palace many times, but

      never close. He took a long time to find the

      resolution to address her, for he feared rejection

      --not from most women, for he knew his abilities,

      but from her--because he still remembered the last time he

      had presumed to approach a White Sister. One

      evening, while he was considering whom to invite to a

      masque, he saw her on the terrace, admiring

      the swans. Her robe and tall hat were the same

      snowy white as they, and the blossoms overhead

      matched as well. ... A little rejection would not

      kill him.

      He walked closer and closer and closer, and

      she did not sniff inquiringly and turn around

      to glare. She just watched the swans. He saw that

      she was smaller than he had realized; the tall

      hennin was deceptive. Size did not matter when

      everything else was perfection. When he judged the

      distance to be about right--interest, but not threat--he

      rested his forearms on the stone balustrade, to bring

      his eyes nearer to the level of hers.

      "Ugly brutes!" he said.

      She turned her head with a frown. "I think

      they're beautiful."

      "You're not standing where I am."

      He had always been puzzled by the fact that he

      could never predict a person's laugh until he

      heard it. The largest men might titter and the

      smallest women guffaw. She had a wonderful

      laugh, like birdsong.

      "You are flattering me already, Sir

      Durendal!"

      "You know my name?" He pretended surprise,

      although everyone knew his name.

      "You have quite a reputation." She had a lovely

      smile, too, and eyes of cornflower blue.

      He presumed her hair would be the same gold as

      her eyebrows, but it was hidden by her veils and

      hat.

      "What sort of reputation?"

      "I don't think we should both indulge in

      flattery. It might be dangerous."

      "I spurn such danger." He

      proved it by moving closer.

      "That's part of the reputation."

      This was definitely promising, but before his hopes

      soared any higher he must discover if his binding

      made him repugnant to her. "I have been told

      that White Sisters can detect Blades at a

      considerable distance."

      "Thirty paces or so. Less in a crowd."

      "Upwind or downwind?"

      She laughed again. "Any wind. I could

      detect you behind a wall, too, or in the dark.

      Your binding is a powerful enchantment."

      "Detect how? You really sniff?"

      She smiled. "That's an old superstition. Not

      by smell nor sight nor touch nor sound, and yet

      by all of those. Explain color to a blind person."

      "I asked you first. What does a Blade

      look like, otherwise than other men?"

      She considered, head tilted cutely. "More

      intense. A Blade in a group seems more

      solid, more important, I suppose.

      Detecting conjurements is my duty, after all,

      and my skill. A dagger in a box of kitchen

      knives."

      "This is very interesting. And hearing? You can tell

      by my voice?"

      "Even when you are silent. All the time. Like the

      highest note on a trumpet, very high, very

      clear. ... That sounds unpleasant, but it

      isn't. Sort of rousing."

      "Rousing?"

      "In a military sense," she said hastily.

      "And as for smell, you know that dry sort of odor

      from very hot iron?"

      "The smell of the Forge, I expect." He

      laid a hand on hers. "And how do I feel?"

      She stiffened. He feared he had moved too

      soon, but she did not snatch her hand away. She

      turned it over, so that they were palm to palm.

      "Strong."

      "So a Blade is not too horrible to be with?"

      "One could get used to it."

      "Would you begin by accompanying me to the masque

      tomorrow?"

      She looked up in astonishment. "Oh, I should

      love to! You mean it?"

      They parted an hour later, when he had to go on

      duty. He had forgotten to ask her name. He

      knew it by the end of the masque the next night, and

      he also knew that this was a fish he wanted

      to land. He must play his line very carefully.

      Kate had other ideas. On the afternoon following

      the masque, as they strolled hand in hand under the

      spring blossoms, she said, "This dramatic

      sword-through-the-heart ritual, does it leave a

      scar?"

      "Two--one front and one back. I have

      four."

      "I should like to see those."

      Earth and fire!

      He led her to his quarters--a small room,

      poorly lit and cramped by an oversize bed.

      He locked the door, for the Blades had informal

      ways among themselves, but she did not protest. She

      turned to peer at the lithographs on the wall,

      while he went over to stand in the light under the

      window. As he removed his doublet, then his shirt,

      he could feel his heart pounding as it had not pounded

      for a woman in years. Then she turned. He

      held out his arms; she came to them.

      She ignored his scars completely.

      He knew very soon that she had no experience of

      lovemaking. He did, though. He was skilled

      and, in this case, extremely careful. And

      extremely successful.

      Later, as they lay entwined, he said many things,

      but one of them was, "You astonish me. We have

      only known each other for two days."

      She snuggled even deeper into his embrace.

      "I have loved you for months. For weeks I have

      been putting myself in your path and you never seemed

      to notice me."

      "I did notice you. I was always frightened that you

      would think ... that you might find a Blade

      unpleasant at close quarters."

      "Very pleasant."

      "Trumpets and hot iron, daggers ... what

      am I now?"

      "Mm?" She stroked the hairs on his chest.

      "Like being in bed with a sword."

      "A naked Blade, you mean?"

      "Exactly."

      "Months, you say? Then I have a lot of

      catching up to do."

      She sighed and stretched her body against his.

      "Begin now."


      He was on duty in the antechamber the following

      day with Parsewood and Scrimpnel,

      surreptitiously rolling dice on a cushion

      so they made no noise, while pointedly

      ignoring disapproving stares from the officials who

      waited endlessly in the big brocade chairs and

      understood perfectly that the Blades would not

      misbehave like that if there was anyone of real

      importance present. Dusk was falling, pages

      were lighting the lamps, the Chamberlain fussed with

      papers at his desk. From time to time a secretary

      would shuffle in and out again.

      The antechamber was boredom incarnate.

      Eavesdropping on what went on in the King's

      presence could sometimes be interesting. At least one

      Blade was normally present when the King granted

      audience, but at that moment he was receiving Grand

      Inquisitor, and not even Blades overheard her

      reports.

      The outer door opened a handbreadth to admit a

      pint-sized page, who scurried over to Sir

      Durendal and handed him a note, thus prompting

      sarcastic whispers about billets-doux from his

      insubordinate subordinates.

      Must see you. Very urgent. K.

      It had better be urgent! Cataclysmic!

      Ignoring all the curious and disapproving

      stares, he went over to the door and peered out. She

      was right there, with the two men-at-arms scowling at her.

      Montpurse would have him racked for this, but his anger

      melted as he saw her pallor. She would never

      weep, but something was very wrong.

      "Quick!"

      "I've been reassigned!" she whispered.

      "First thing in the morning."

      "No!" Then quieter, "To Oakendown?"

      "No. To Brimiarde. It's a new posting."

      "How long?"

      "Probably forever."

      To lose her so soon? It was unbearable. "Will

      you marry me?"

      "What?"

      "They won't transfer you if you're married.

      Marry me."

      "But, but ... but we can't! There isn't time.

      It takes days, weeks. ... I need

      permission from--"

      Parsewood coughed. Durendal glanced around and

      saw the door to the council chamber already opening.

      "No, it doesn't. I'll ask the King

      to declare us man and wife. Then it'll be done. You

      agree?"

      She gasped, took one breath. ... "Oh

      yes!"

      "I adore you!" He closed the door and

      moved away from it, aware of amused grins from

      Scrimpnel and Parsewood and wondering what the

      men-at-arms thought.

      Grand Inquisitor backed out of the council

     


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