Read A Fall of Princes Online

Authors: Judith Tarr

Tags: #Judith Tarr, #Fantasy, #Avaryan, #Epic Fantasy

A Fall of Princes (59 page)

At last she spoke. “We have been searching for you since the
morning.”

“I was riding.” In spite of all her efforts, Elian knew she
sounded sullen. “Then I had an hour with the Hawkmaster. Will you be keeping me
long, Mother? The embassy from Asanion will be arriving today, and Father has a
council just before. He bade me—”

“At your insistence.” The princess’ voice was soft but
unyielding. “He is the most indulgent of fathers. Yet even he would not be
pleased to see you as you are now.”

Elian battled an impulse to straighten her coat. “I would
not attend council in this state, my lady.”

“Let us hope that you would not,” said the princess. “I have
heard that you have done so in garb but little more proper. Breeched and booted,
and at your side a dagger.”

The princess continued her embroidery, each word she spoke
as careful and as minutely calculated as the movements of her needle. “When you
were still a child, I suffered it, since your father seemed inclined to
encourage it. There were some who even found it charming: Han-Gilen’s willful
Lady trailing after her brothers, insisting that she be taught as they were
taught. You learned fighting and hawking and wild riding; you can read, you can
write, you can speak half a dozen tongues. You have all the arts of a Gileni
prince.”

“And those of a princess as well!” Elian burst out. “I can
sew a fine stitch. I can dance a pretty dance. I can play the small harp and
the greater harp and the lute. I have a full repertoire of songs, all charming,
all suitable for a lady’s bower.”

“And some scarcely fit for a guardroom.” The princess set
down her work and folded her hands over it. “My daughter, you have been a woman
for three full years. When I was as old as you, I had been two years a wife and
nigh three seasons a mother.”

“And always,” muttered Elian, “a perfect lady.”

The princess smiled, startling her a little. “Nay, daughter,
I had been a famous hoyden. But I had not so doting a father, nor so lax a
mother. With the coming of my woman’s courses, I had perforce to put on a gown
and bind up my hair and accept the husband my family had found for me. I was
fortunate. He was scarce a decade older than I; he was comely; and he was kind
to me. The man chosen for my sister had been none of those things.”

Elian’s hands were fists. She kept her voice level with an
effort of will, so level that it was flat. “I have another suitor.”

“Indeed,” said the princess with unruffled patience. “One
whom you would do well to treat with something resembling courtesy.”

“Have I ever done any less?”

The princess drew a slow breath: her first sign of temper.
“You have been . . . polite. With utmost politeness you rode
with Lord Uzian the Hunter, and brought back two stags for his every one, and
slew the boar that would have destroyed him. You saved his life; he remembered
an earlier betrothal and departed. When the two barons Insh’ai would have
dueled for your hand, you offered most politely to engage each one and to
accept the one who bested you. You defeated them both, and thus they lost you
with the match. Then I call to mind your courtesy to the Prince Komorion. Lover
of scholarly debate that he was, you engaged him in dispute, demolishing him so
utterly that he retreated to a house of the Grey Monks and forsook all claim to
his princedom.”

“He was more than half a monk already,” Elian said sharply.
“I had no desire to wed a saint.”

“Apparently you have no desire to wed at all.” Elian opened
her mouth to speak, but the princess said, “You are the daughter of the Red
Prince, the Lady of Han-Gilen. Hitherto you have been permitted to run wild,
not only because your father loves you to the point of folly; I too can
understand how sweet is freedom. But you are no longer a child. It is time you
became a woman in more than body.”

“I will wed,” said Elian, speaking with great care, “when I
find a man who can stand beside me. Who will not stalk away in a temper when I
best him; who will be able, on occasion, to best me. An equal, Mother. A king.”

“Then it were best that you find him soon.” The velvet had
fallen aside at last, baring steel. “Today with the embassy of Asanion comes
the High Prince Ziad-Ilarios himself, heir to the throne of the Golden Empire.
He has sent word that he comes not only to propose a new and strong alliance
with Han-Gilen; it would be his great pleasure to seal that alliance by a union
with the Flower of the South.”

Elian had never felt less like a flower, unless it were the
flameflower, that consumed itself with its own fire. “And if it is not my pleasure?”

“I encourage you to consider it.” The princess raised a
slender hand. “Kieri. Escort my lady to her chamber. She will prepare herself
to meet with the high prince.”

oOo

Elian stood stiff and still in a flutter of ladies. They
had bathed her and scented her. Now they arrayed her in the elaborate gown of a
Gileni princess.

A tall mirror cast back her image, mocking her. She had not
been a pretty child: awkward, gangling, all arms and legs and eyes.

But suddenly, as she grew into a woman, she had changed. Her
awkwardness turned to a startling grace, her thinness to slenderness, her
angles to curves that caught many a man’s eye. And her face—her strong-jawed,
big-eyed face, with her mother’s honey skin and her father’s fire-bright
hair—had shaped itself into something much too unusual for prettiness. People
looked and called it interesting; looked again, much longer, and declared it
beautiful.

She glowered at it. Her gown dragged at her; a maid weighted
her with gold and jewels, while another arrayed her hair in the fashion of a
maiden, falling loose and fiery to her knees. Gently, with skillful hands, a
third lady began to paint her face. Rose-honey for her lips, honey-rose for her
cheeks, and a shimmer of gilt around her eyes.

A low whistle brought her about sharply, winning a hiss of
temper from the maid with the brushes.

Elian’s glare turned to laughter and back to a glare again
as her brother fell to his knees before her. “Ah, fairest of ladies!” he cried
extravagantly. “How my heart longs for you!”

She cuffed him; he swayed aside, laughing, and leaped to his
feet. He was tall and lithe, and as like to her in face and form as any man
could be. Unlike most men of the Hundred Realms, who reckoned their beards a
deformity and shaved or plucked them into smoothness, he had let his own grow
to frame his face. It made him look striking, rakish, and more outrageously
handsome than ever.

“And all too well you know it,” said Elian, tugging at it.


Ai,
woman! You
have a hard hand. And you so fair the god himself would sigh after you. Are you
setting yourself to melt the hearts of Father’s whole council?”

“If Mother has her way,” Elian said grimly, “I’ll win a
better prize than that. Prince Ziad-Ilarios is coming to have a look at the
merchandise.”

Halenan’s laughter retreated to his eyes. “So I’ve heard. Is
that why your anger is fierce enough to set me burning even in my lady’s
chamber?”

“Little help you need there,” she said.

He grinned. “I find marriage more than congenial. Even after
five years of it.”

“Don’t you?” She thought of his two sons, and of his lady in
her bower awaiting in milky calm the advent of their sister.

A love match, that had been, and it had startled most of
Han-Gilen; for his bride was neither a great lady nor a great beauty, but the
broad-hipped, sweet-faced, eminently sensible daughter of a very minor baron.
That good sense had taken her quite placidly from her father’s minute holding
to the palace of the Red Prince’s heir, and kept her there through all the
murmurings of the court, as the high ones waited in vain for her handsome
husband to tire of her.

With a sharp gesture Elian dismissed her ladies. As the last
silken skirt vanished behind the door, she faced her brother. “You know why I
can’t do as Mother is asking.”

“I know why you think you can’t.”

“I gave my word,” she said.

“The word of a child.”

“The word of the Lady of Han-Gilen.”

He raised his hands, not quite as if he wanted to shake her.
“Lia, you were eight years old.”

“And he was fifteen,” she finished for him, with very little
patience. “And he was my brother in all but blood, and people were plenty who
said he was that too, because no man could be the son of a god, least of all
the son of the Sun. And whether he was half a god or all a man, he was heir by
right to a barbarian kingdom, and when the time came, he went to claim his own.
He had to go. I had to stay. But I promised him: My time would come. I would go
to fight with him. Because his mother left him a kingdom, but his father begot
him to rule the world.”

Halenan opened his mouth, closed it. Once he would not have
been so kind. Once he would have said what he could not keep from thinking.

The thinking was cruel enough between them who were mageborn
and magebred. To Mirain their foster brother, son of a priestess and a god,
great mage and warrior even in his youth, Elian had been the merest infant: his
sister, his shadow, trailing after him like a worshipful hound. Wherever he
was, she was sure to be.

It was certain proof of his parentage, a wag had said once.
Who but a god’s son could endure such constant adoration?

And now he was a man grown, king in distant Ianon and
raising legends about his name. If he even remembered her, it would not be as a
woman who kept her word; it would be as a child who had wept to lose her brother,
and sworn a child’s heedless oath, more threat than promise.

“What will you do?” Halenan pricked at her. “Join his harem
in Han-Ianon?”

“He has slaves enough,” she snapped, the sharper for that
her cheeks had caught fire. “I will fight for him, and wield my magery for him,
and be free.”

“And if he has changed? What then, Lia? What if he has gone
barbarian? Or worse, gone all strange with the god’s power that is in him?”

“Then,” she said with steadiness she had fought for, “I will
make him remember what he was.”

Halenan set his hands on her shoulders. She came perilously
close to laughing. Even in the utmost of exasperation, he took care not to
rumple her gown. That much, husbandhood had done for him.

He glared at her, but half of it was mirth. “Little sister,
tell me the truth. You do all of this simply to drive the rest of us mad.”

“I do it because I can do nothing else.”

“Exactly.” He let her go and sighed. “Maybe after all you
should go to Mirain. He could make you see sense when no one else could.”

“I will go when it is time to go.”

“And meanwhile, you turn away suitor after suitor, and
refuse adamantly to tell even Father why you do it.”

“You don’t, either.”

“I keep my promises.” Their eyes met; his wavered the merest
fraction. He rallied with a flare of Gilen temper. “Maybe I should. Mother
would see the perfect resolution: a match between you and your oldest love.
With the Hundred Realms for a dowry, and Avaryan’s Throne for a marriage couch,
and—”

She struck him with a lash of power.

It stopped his mouth. It did not stop his mind. He was
laughing at her. He always laughed at her, even when she pricked him to a rage.

“It’s love,” he said, “and absurdity. And maybe
desperation.”

“You never were a match for me.”

He bowed to the stroke, utterly unoffended. “Come now, O my
conqueror. We’re late for council.”

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