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    King's Blades 01 - The Gilded Chain

    Page 4
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      no bizarre improbabilities afoot. As he

      gathered them up again, he nodded to the Brat, who

      strutted forward to play his small role. So fast

      was the King calling for Blades now that this Brat

      had done it three times already. He was still a long

      way behind Durendal's record, if it was a

      record. Piping out the dedication in his reedy

      soprano, the boy laid the cat's-eye sword

      on the anvil. Harvest had never touched or even

      seen that sword before, but the skilled armorers of

      Ironhall had wrought it to be a perfect fit for

      his hand, his arm, and his favored style.

      Everything was going as it should, yet Durendal was

      worried by the two principals. Neither seemed quite

      right, somehow. Most Primes approached their

      binding with a glow of excitement and fulfillment, but

      Harvest looked miserable and unsure. The

      Marquis's air of contemptuous bored amusement

      might be an acceptable affectation at court but was

      no way to approach a dangerous elementary

      ritual. He still seemed to expect some meaningless

      fakery.

      Master of Rituals nodded to Byless, who

      stepped over to remove Prime's shirt for him.

      Only a week ago, Durendal had done that for

      Pendering. If Harvest was a borderline

      Blade, young Byless needed at least a year's

      training yet. Surely Grand Master must soon

      advise the King that the supply of ready

      candidates was running out? And in that case, if they

      wanted to keep at least one in reserve for

      emergencies, how long might Durendal have

      to wait for his own call?

      Prime turned. Durendal went to him,

      smiling cheerfully and trying to ignore the pale

      lips and eyes stretched too wide. Oh, let

      that only be an illusion of the firelight! He

      put a thumb on Harvest's hairless chest

      to locate the base of the sternum, although all the

      bones were clearly visible. He made a mark with a

      piece of charcoal directly over the

      heart. He went back to his place at earth

      point.

      Harvest stepped forward and took up the sword,

      barely sparing it a glance. He jumped up on the

      anvil and raised the blade in salute as he

      swore the oath--to defend Nutting against all

      foes, to serve him until death, to give his own

      life for his ward's if need be. Words that should have

      rung through the Forge like glorious trumpet notes

      came out as a mumble. Durendal disliked what he

      saw on Grand Master's face.

      Prime sprang down and knelt before the

      Marquis to offer the sword--which Nutting accepted

      with an air of bored indifference--and then backed

      away and sat on the anvil. The Marquis

      followed to aim the point of the sword at the

      smudge of charcoal. This was the culmination of the

      ritual, but even now he seemed to be expecting

      some sort of trickery. Durendal and Byless

      closed in to assist. Harvest took several deep

      breaths, raised his arms. Durendal took a

      firm grip on one and Byless on the other, together

      holding him steady for the thrust. The Marquis

      hesitated, glancing around at Grand Master as

      if suddenly realizing that what he had been told

      must happen was not some elaborate joke or

      fake.

      "Do it, man! Don't torture him!" Grand

      Master snarled.

      The Marquis shrugged and spoke his three words

      of ritual: "Serve or die!" He poked the

      sword into Harvest's chest.

      No matter how good the conjuration, that must hurt.

      All Blades admitted that the binding had hurt,

      although briefly. In this case, the prospective

      ward did not strike very forcefully, for the point

      failed to emerge from Harvest's back, and yet the

      spurt of blood was much heavier than usual.

      With a faint moan, Harvest let his head droop.

      He did not wrench back at the friends supporting

      him, which was what Pendering had done the previous

      week. Instead he pulled forward, causing them

      to stagger off balance. He pulled harder and harder,

      as if he was trying to double over. What was the fool

      playing at? Had he fainted? Durendal and

      Byless resisted, took the strain, then stared at

      each other in horror as the awful truth dawned.

      Three knights ran forward to help them lower the

      body to the floor. Nutting screamed shrilly and

      dropped the sword.

      The conjuration had failed.

      Now it was Second's turn to try.

      The candidates were warned early in their training that

      binding could kill, and there were even records of

      Second dying as well. The conjurers blamed such

      failures on mistakes in the ritual, but

      Durendal had witnessed a hundred bindings now and

      was certain he would have noticed any deviation from

      standard procedure. He assumed the problem had

      been lack of will. Harvest had been reluctant

      to serve, Nutting skeptical and indifferent.

      Harvest had distrusted his own ability, while

      Nutting had wanted a Blade as a plume in his

      hat to flaunt around the court, not as a vital

      defender. Two unenthusiastic principals had

      combined to create disaster.

      Durendal's first concern was to look at the wound.

      The charcoal mark he had made had been blotted

      out by the blood, but the hole in poor Harvest was

      exactly where it should be, so the error had not been

      his.

      Then, while knights and seniors milled around,

      removing the body and making ready for the next

      attempt, he headed for the Marquis, who was down

      on his knees near the door, miserably retching

      between frantic protestations that he could not

      possibly go through all that again. Grand Master and

      Master of Rituals stood over him, blocking

      any further effort to flee, lecturing him before he

      had even recovered his wits.

      "With so many spirits assembled, we have raised the

      potential to levels where discharge of the elemental

      forces--"

      That sort of talk wouldn't work on a

      pseudo-aristocratic pimp.

      "Excuse me." Durendal elbowed the two

      knights aside in a way he would not have believed

      possible even five minutes ago. Detecting the

      preliminary intake of breath that would become a

      roar from Grand Master, he said, "This is my

      problem!" He hoisted the Marquis to his feet

      by his padded jerkin, spun him around, and steadied

      him before he toppled over.

      Nutting rolled his eyes in honor when he

      saw who was manhandling him. Even in the ruddy

      light of the Forge, his cheeks were green. "No! Not

      you, too! I can't, you hear? I can't.

      The sight of blood nauseates me." His boots

      scrabbled on the rock, but he did not go anywhere

      with Durendal holding him.

      "You prefer to die?"

      "Argk! Will-what do you mean?"

      "You killed one of our brothers. You expect


      to walk out of here alive?"

      The aristocratic vapidity made a croaking

      noise. Master of Rituals opened his mouth

      to protest, and Durendal aimed a cow kick at

      his shin.

      "You only thought you needed a Blade

      yesterday, my lord. You most certainly need one

      tonight. Without a Blade you can't possibly leave

      Ironhall alive. Do you want me or not?"

      "Leave him, Prime--we'll let the

      juniors have some sport with him." Grand Master

      had caught on. Master of Rituals, who had

      not, looked as if he were about to have a seizure.

      "Please?" whimpered the Marquis. "I need

      protection! I'm no good with a sword."

      "Come then, my lord." Durendal hustled him

      through the crowd of sullen watchers to a trough where

      water trickled endlessly from the rocky wall.

      "Rinse your mouth, drink, compose yourself." He

      gestured at the onlookers--the dismayed and the enraged

      --waving for them to leave. He ducked Nutting's

      head, pulled it up, and wiped the splutters

      away with his sleeve. By that time the others had moved

      more or less out of earshot. He put his nose very

      close to Nutting's.

      "Now listen, my lord! Listen well. The King

      wants you to have a Blade and now I am Prime.

      My name is Durendal, in case you've

      forgotten, a name revered for more than three hundred

      years. I chose it so I would have to live up to it

      and I did. I am the best to come through Ironhall

      in a generation. If you want me, I am yours."

      The Marquis nodded vigorously.

      "I would rather see you die to avenge poor

      Harvest," Durendal said truthfully, "but I

      won't feel like that after I'm bound. I can get you

      out alive if I have to fight our way out, and

      probably not even Grand Master could say as

      much." He wondered if he was flying too high

      now, but Nutting seemed to be believing every word of this

      rubbish.

      "What went wrong?" he moaned.

      "Mostly Harvest wasn't quite ready. I

      am." Was this human chicken even capable

      of playing his part in the ritual? He was shaking like

      a broom out a window. "And you did not strike

      hard enough."

      "What?"

      "You didn't strike as if you meant it, my

      lord. Next time--when you put the sword in my

      heart--remember you are fighting to save your own

      life. Ram it all the way through, you hear? That's

      how the King does it. Push till the point comes

      out of my back."

      Nutting moaned and began to retch again.

      Somehow love point seemed inappropriate

      for the still-sniveling Marquis, but he was back there.

      Now Durendal stood opposite, at death.

      He was flanked by Byless and Gotherton. He

      wondered if they would be strong enough to restrain him when

      his reflexes took over, and if a man could cut

      himself to shreds from the inside out. The singing was over.

      The Brat had trilled the dedication, whey-faced

      and staring at Prime with owlish eyes, as he laid

      another sword on the anvil.

      Master of Rituals had invoked the spirits, and

      either he had summoned far more than before or else

      Durendal was just more attuned to them. He sensed the

      haunted chamber quivering with power. Spirituality

      fizzed in his blood. Strange lights dancing

      over the stonework made every shadow numinous. His hand

      itched to take up the superb weapon gleaming on the

      anvil.

      The Marquis had shrunk till he looked like

      a shivering, cowed child compared to the awesome Grand

      Master. Could a real man serve such a craven

      nothing all his life without going crazy? Could

      Durendal endure to be only an ornament, as

      poor Harvest had put it? Yes, by the spirits! This

      was what he had aimed for, worked for, struggled

      for--to be one of the King's Blades. If his ward

      was useless in himself, then he would still have the finest

      protector in all Chivial. Perhaps a man

      might make something out of that worthless human rag

      if he tried hard enough, or perhaps the King had some

      secret, dangerous mission in mind for him. With

      real luck, there would be a war, when a young noble would

      be expected to raise a regiment and his Blade

      could go into battle at his side.

      The invocation ended. At last it was his move, his

      moment, his triumph--five years he had

      worked for this! He turned to summon Gotherton

      forward, felt Gotherton's fingers shake as he

      unbuttoned the shirt. He winked and almost laughed

      aloud at the disbelief he saw flood over the

      boyish face. In that oppressive heat, it was a

      relief to shed the garment, to flex his shoulders, and

      spin around. He winked at Byless also when he

      came, and this time was rewarded with a stare of open

      admiration. Why were they all so worried? Things

      only went wrong once every hundred years or so.

      He was not poor Harvest! He was the second

      Durendal, come into his destiny. He felt the

      thumb press on his chest, the cool touch of

      charcoal.

      Now for that sword! His sword. Oh,

      bliss! It floated in his hand. Blue starlight

      gleamed and danced along the blade and a bar of gold

      fire burned in the cat's eye cabochon on the

      pommel. He wanted to whirl it, caress it with a

      strop until it would cut falling gossamer,

      hold it in sunlight and admire the damask--but

      those luxuries must wait. He sprang up

      onto the anvil.

      "My lord Marquis of Nutting!" The echoes

      rumbled and rolled--wonderful! "Upon my soul,

      I, Durendal, candidate in the Loyal and

      Ancient Order of the King's Blades, do

      irrevocably swear in the presence of these my

      brethren that I will evermore defend you against all

      foes, setting my own life as nothing to shield you

      from peril, reserving only my fealty to our lord the

      King. To bind me to this oath, I bid you plunge

      this my sword into my heart that I may die if

      I swear falsely or, being true, may live

      by the power of the spirits here assembled to serve you until

      in time I die again."

      Then down to the floor and down on one knee.

      Sallow and trembling, the Marquis accepted the

      sword, seeming ready to drop it at any moment.

      Durendal rose and stepped back until he

      felt the anvil against his calves. He sat.

      Grand Master pulled the Marquis forward. He

      needed both hands to raise the sword this time. It

      wavered, flashing firelight, and the point made

      uncertain circles around the target--idiot! It

      would do no good if it missed Durendal's heart,

      no good at all. He waited until the

      terrified noble looked up enough to meet his eyes.

      Then he smiled encouragingly and raised his arms.

      Byless and Gotherton pulled them back,

      bracing them against their waists. He must try not

      to thrash too hard
    when the shock came. He

      waited. He could hear Nutting's teeth chatter.

      "Do it now!" he said. He was about to add, "Do

      it right!" but the Marquis shrieked, "Serve or

      die" and thrust the sword. Either he remembered

      Durendal's instructions or he lost his footing,

      for he stumbled forward and the steel razored instantly

      through muscle, ribs, heart, lung, more ribs, and

      out into the space beyond. The guard thudded against

      Durendal's chest.

      It did hurt. He had expected pain at the

      wound, but his whole body exploded with it. Through that

      furnace of agony he became aware of two

      terrified eyes staring into his. He wanted

      to say, "You must take it out again quickly, my lord,"

      but speaking with a sword through his chest proved

      difficult.

      Grand Master hauled Nutting back bodily.

      Fortunately he remembered to take the sword with

      him.

      Durendal looked down to watch the wound heal.

      The trickle of blood was astonishingly small,

      but then it always was--a heart could not pump when it

      had a nail through it. He felt the healing, a

      tickling sensation right through to his back, and also a

      huge surge of power and excitement and pride.

      Byless and Gotherton had released him. The Forge

      thundered with cheers, which seemed like an unnecessary commotion,

      although he'd always cheered for others in the past. A

      binding was routine, nothing to it.

      He was a Blade, a companion in the Order.

      People would address him as Sir Durendal, although that

      was only a courtesy title.

      "You didn't need us!" Gotherton gasped.

      "You barely twitched!"

      They could be thanked later, and the Brat, the

      armorers, and all the others. First things first. He

      rose and went to recover his sword before the

      glazed-looking Marquis dropped her. Now he

      could inspect her properly. She was a

      hand-and-a-half sword with a straight blade, about

      a yard long, the longest he could wear at his belt

      without tripping. She was single-edged for two-thirds

      of her length, double-edged near the point. He

      admired the grace of the fluted quillons, the

      delicate sweep of the knuckle guard, the finger

      ring for when he wanted to use her as a rapier, the

      fire of the cat's-eye pommel that gave her her

      balance, which of course was perfect, neither

      too far forward for thrusting nor so far back that he

      would not be able to slash. The armorers had created a

      perfect all-around weapon for a swordsman of

     


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