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    King's Blades 01 - The Gilded Chain

    Page 37
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      eyes were wide. He was still eating, though.

      "Perhaps he keeps her chained in a tower,"

      Kate remarked.

      "The Dark Chamber spies say not. She

      seems healthy and happy and popular. Baelmark

      is not nearly as primitive as most Chivians

      believe, and Ambrose knew that. We assume

      that when he dies she will come home to claim the

      crown, but this may be wishful thinking. Her oldest

      son is almost eighteen, so she may send him in

      her stead. The only thing certain is that she will not

      tolerate me as her chancellor for an instant. I

      knew my term of office was drawing to a close

      even before Hagfish came to call today."

      "Hagfish, my lord?"

      "Chancellor Kromman. He was nicknamed that

      by ... an old friend of mine." Montpurse

      again! Durendal's conscience hadn't died after

      all. Today it had taken on a new lease of

      life. Fertilized by fear, no doubt.

      The conversation veered to lesser matters then, because

      Caplin returned, alerted by some stewards'

      telepathy to the need to refill Sir Quarrel's

      plate. The life-and-death question was whether

      Kromman and Malinda were already in cahoots. Was

      today's sudden dismissal the start of the Princess's

      revenge?

      When the meal was over, Durendal settled

      into his favorite seat by the fireplace and

      watched Kate spin. Quarrel pulled up a

      chair between them. It would feel strange having the

      lad hanging around all the time, almost as if Andy

      had never gone. But Andy was thirty now, wrestling

      trade winds in the Pepper Islands. And this

      quiet home life was not going to last very long

      anyway.

      "Durendal, my love," Kate said, without

      looking up from her busily whirring wheel, "you

      described the Princess's career in great

      detail for Sir Quarrel, but you did not

      explain why it involves him."

      "Ah! Forgive me! Well, a few days

      ago, the King sent that warrant assigning a

      Blade to me, with no explanation. I was

      puzzled. Angry, in a way. I eventually

      decided he was offering me a sort of farewell

      present. There are very few rewards he has not

      bestowed on me. I have declined many more, for

      excessive honors attract enemies. We have

      fought and argued bitterly for twenty years, but I

      always served his interests as best I could. Even when

      he was most enraged at me, he knew that. Rank

      and lands and wealth--everything he had to give, he

      gave me. One exception was a Blade."

      Quarrel nodded, frowning slightly. At his

      age, Wolfbiter had been led off by his ward

      to the ends of the world, but he had to sit here and listen

      to social gossip and talk of grandchildren.

      Durendal could not forget the dismay that had flashed

      across the boy's face when he turned to greet his

      future ward. He had found an ancient,

      broken-down politician, destined for the scrap

      heap very soon. Although he had hidden that reaction

      instantly and skillfully--and ever since had shown

      no sign of resentment whatsoever--it must still

      rankle. Antiquated Lord Roland could not be as

      bad as the Marquis of Nutting, but he was hardly

      a cause to dedicate a life to. What could a

      fresh-minted Blade care about colic and teething

      troubles?

      "It seemed that he was warning me not to count on his

      protection much longer. If he was admitting that,

      then he must have accepted the gravity of his condition

      at last. I decided to accept, mostly

      for his sake. I could have refused, because he is too

      sick to fight me now, but I could not bear to. I

      hope you will understand and forgive me."

      "There is nothing to forgive that I know of, my

      lord!"

      "Flames, I do not need a Blade, lad!

      When I look at you I see a thoroughbred

      harnessed to a broken-down tinker's wagon."

      "I see one of the great men of the age, my lord,

      and my heart swells with pride that I may serve

      you."

      No comment was possible except, "Thank you."

      How could one so young be such a polished liar? It was

      disconcerting.

      Quarrel's eyes gleamed. "And with respect,

      my lord, I think you do need a Blade. The King

      thinks so. Aren't you in danger? Isn't that what

      her ladyship meant? Wasn't Hagfish

      threatening you in your office this afternoon?"

      "You can't fight the government all alone,

      Sir Quarrel, and Kromman is the government

      now."

      "Flee the country!" Quarrel said

      triumphantly. "It is no shame, my lord.

      You have done nothing wrong."

      A jaunt to Samarinda, perhaps? It was close

      to midnight, so Everman must be almost as old as

      Durendal, heading fast into his morning senility.

      But at dawn he would be restored to youth--like

      Quarrel: supple, vigorous, beautiful.

      Of course, Quarrel knew nothing of

      Samarinda. Travel to him meant exotic

      adventure, endlessly receding horizons.

      To Durendal it implied purposeless exile,

      waiting to die in some queer little foreign town, with

      no company but strangers and Kromman's

      assassins lurking in doorways. Flee the

      country he had served so long?

      He seemed to have arrived back where he had

      started. Could that be exactly what the King had had

      in mind? But ...

      Kate said, "You have not explained to me why, after

      all these years, the King should suddenly promote

      Kromman to chancellor."

      "Because I don't know why. I can only

      suppose that the man's whining finally wore him

      down. They are shut up there together in

      Falconsrest--have been for weeks. Or it may

      be that he thinks a new chancellor will have better

      luck making the Princess see

      reason."

      She snatched up a skein of wool and hurled

      it at him. "Durendal, you are being

      excessively stupid!"

      "My love?"

      Quarrel's surprise flashed to high

      amusement and then polite inattention.

      Kate's cheeks were flushed, which they had not been

      a moment ago, so it was not the fire's doing. "There

      is far more to this than you admit or even see. When

      Kromman brought that warrant, did you touch it?"

      "Of course. I opened it and read it."

      "Have you handled anything else unusual today?"

      What in the world was troubling her? "Dearest, you

      talk in riddles."

      Kate hugged herself as if she felt chilled.

      "Your hands smell of enchantment," she said.

      About a hundred possibilities flashed through

      Durendal's mind and were discarded. "What sort of

      enchantment?"

      "I don't know, but I certainly do not like it!

      I have met it before somewhere. Sir Quarrel, my

      husband was not entirely truthful with you, but then I

      have not been entirely truthful with him. A week


      ago, when the warrant for your assignment appeared,

      he brought it home to show me. In twenty-five

      years he has never once discussed state

      business with me, because he is bound to secrecy

      by his privy councillor's oath, but this was a

      personal matter." Kate was obviously

      annoyed that she had to make such excuses; she must

      have a very good reason for doing so. She had never

      behaved like this before!

      Quarrel nodded eagerly. Perhaps he thought the

      Roland household was always this exciting. "Of

      course."

      "He did not decide to accept the Blade the

      King offered. I decided. I talked him into it."

      "I am very glad you did, my lady."

      Nobly said! Quite convincing.

      "There was enchantment on that warrant, too."

      The men said, "What!" simultaneously.

      Kate clenched her lips angrily for a moment.

      "I should have told you, dear, but it was very faint, so

      I was not quite sure of it. I am now, because it was the

      same enchantment I detected on your hands when you

      came home tonight. Whatever it is, it is

      no conjuration that ought to be around the court."

      "Some new healing?" Durendal suggested, but the

      glare he received dismissed his question as an insult

      to her intelligence.

      Quarrel's mind was more nimble or less

      hidebound. "Are you saying that these documents are

      fakes, my lady, or that the King himself has been

      enchanted? Is he the source of the conjuration?"

      "I am saying that there is something seriously

      wrong, and now Kromman has had my husband

      evicted from court." Kate never galloped off

      on wild byways of imagination like this.

      He must believe her. "Could Kromman be the

      source of the enchantment?"

      She shrugged. "If he is, he should not be

      allowed near the King. What are the White

      Sisters doing?"

      "The King is at Falconsrest."

      Kate put a hand to her mouth in shock. "So

      he is!"

      Quarrel glanced from one to the other anxiously.

      Kate explained. "The lodge had been used

      as an elementary. What they did there I shudder

      to think, but it absolutely reeks of conjuration.

      The octogram is still there. I can't go near it,

      even yet. No White Sister can."

      Candles were starting to gutter, and the library grew

      dim. Durendal threw another log on the

      fire.

      "I don't recall seeing any White

      Sisters at Falconsrest, but I probably

      did and just didn't register them. There must be

      some!"

      "In the village, not the lodge," Kate

      said, frowning.

      "But if enough enchantment is leaking out for you

      to detect it here, then they would have to be aware of it,

      surely?"

      She nodded reluctantly. "That sounds

      logical. I wish I could remember where I

      met it before. It is horribly familiar. One

      of the suppressed orders, I suppose. You

      took me to a few of them."

      "Can you go back to Falconsrest, my lord?"

      Quarrel asked quietly.

      "I'm technically under house arrest."

      Kromman would use any such move as an

      excuse to have Durendal thrown in the Bastion--not

      that Kromman needed any more excuses. He

      tried to envision what might happen if

      he did go. Would Kromman be there or at

      Greymere? How would Commander Dragon react?

      Even if Ambrose was informed that his former

      chancellor had arrived--which was by no means certain--

      would he not just assume that Lord Roland had come

      crawling on his knees to ask for his job back?

      "The King would not receive me."

      "Where is Mother Superior?" Kate asked.

      "At Greymere or Oakendown?"

      "I have no idea."

      "You can't go to the palace, so I must go

      to Oakendown. I'm the one who's blowing

      trumpets, after all. If she isn't there

      I'll dump the problem on the Prioress."

      He smiled at her admiringly. Even the

      short carriage ride today had fatigued her,

      yet now she was blithely talking of the much longer

      journey to the White Sisters' headquarters, and in

      midwinter, too. "A letter would suffice, dearest.

      We can send Pardon with it." Quarrel would be

      better, but Quarrel could not leave his side.

      "The King was quite normal when you saw him, my

      lord?"

      "Not unless you call dying normal. But if

      something happened--and I'm not convinced yet that

      anything has happened--then it must have been about

      Long Night itself, after my visit

      to Falconsrest and before he issued the warrant for

      your binding." The handwriting on that had been

      surprisingly firm and legible, he recalled.

      Was that significant?

      "Well," Kate said, "we must sleep on

      it." She rose, the men jumping up also. "We can

      sleep more soundly knowing we have a Blade to defend

      us from burglars." She took up a candle and lit

      it at another.

      Quarrel chuckled gleefully. "When you have the

      second Durendal beside you, ma'am? He would

      slaughter the whole gang of them before I could draw

      Reason from her scabbard. It is well known that

      that's why the King never bothered to waste a Blade

      on his lordship."

      "He did have a Blade once. Didn't you

      know?"

      "Well, yes. He died overseas somewhere,

      didn't he? I haven't heard any

      details."

      That innocently smiling young scoundrel had been

      trying to worm the story out of his ward since they

      left Ironhall. Kate did not know

      that. What she did know was that Durendal had

      written a detailed account of the Samarinda

      adventure to be placed in the Ironhall

      archives after his death. She was the only person who

      had ever read it.

      "Up there," she said, "that black volume. You

      can reach--"

      Durendal snapped, "No! I forbid it!"

      He was still bitter that Wolfbiter had not received the

      honor he deserved, but to spell out for his present

      Blade how he had failed his first one would be an

      intolerable humiliation. He turned to snuff out the

      candles.

      Like the deadly bolt he was named for, Quarrel

      flashed across the room and caught Kate as she

      fell, scooping her up in his arms and stamping on

      the candle she had dropped before Durendal had

      taken a step. He strode over to the couch and set

      her down.

      "Just a faint, I think, my lord. A healer

      ... but she can't, can she? Perhaps a cold

      compress? Summon her maid to loosen her, er,

      bodice, my lord?"

      "Ring the bell." Durendal knelt at his

      wife's side, alarmed and furious at his own

      dismal performance and even more furious that he was

      worrying about that just now. All his life he had

      been fast and proud of it.

      "No, I'm fine!" Kate said. "Don't,

      please,
    Sir Quarrel. Just a slight dizzy

      spell." She made a brave attempt at a

      smile and reached down to adjust the rumpled gown

      over her farthingale.

      "Wine!" Durendal said, jumping up.

      Quarrel beat him to the decanter.

      "A cushion for my head, dearest? Thank

      you." She was still pale, but she laughed and squeezed

      her husband's hand. "My, it is nice to have men

      dancing attendance on me like this. Relax, dear!

      I'm not having a baby."

      Quarrel almost spilled the wine he was offering

      her. In a moment, though, Lady Kate was

      sitting up, composed and insistent that she was

      recovered.

      Durendal sat on the couch beside her. "I've

      never known you to do that before."

      "Neither have I! And you won't again." She

      pressed her lips together for a moment, thinking. "I

      got up too quickly. And the shock, I suppose.

      I remembered."

      "Remembered what?"

      "Where I met that enchantment before. Give me

      your hand again." She held it to her cheek. "Yes.

      It comes from Samarinda."

      Durendal's mind shied away from the

      implications. His flesh crawled. Not that horror

      again, surely? Here in Chivial? "That's what you

      sniffed? How could you possibly know?"

      She set her chin as she did when she was not to be

      moved. "Because when you came back, you stank of it

      for weeks. If I hadn't loved you so much and

      wanted you so much, I couldn't have borne to be near

      you. It faded eventually, but I remember it."

      "It was the gold. The gold bones."

      "I don't care what it was." Kate

      shuddered. "Ghastly! But whatever contaminated you then

      is back on you now, and I smelled it on the

      King's warrant, too."

      It was Quarrel who fitted the last piece in

      the puzzle, but that came in the morning.

      Not for many years had Durendal found trouble

      sleeping, but too much had happened too quickly that

      day. As he lay wide-eyed in the darkness,

      listening to Kate's soft breathing, he remembered

      the book and knew that Quarrel would be tempted

      to pry. The youngster had been officially given the

      dressing room outside the bedchamber as his own, but

      a Blade had no use for a bed. He might be

      anywhere in the house by now.

      Which would be worse--having him learn all about

      Wolfbiter's death or letting him know that his ward

      was too nervous to sleep? Could Durendal

      possibly get to the book first without being

      detected? He slid gently from beneath the sheets,

     


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