Authors: Elizabeth C. Bunce
“Take cheer, Lady Meri,” said Morva. “It means your lord parents will be here for your
kernja-velde
, and they’ll be wanting to take you home with them again.”
I perked up. The
kernja-velde
— a girl’s passage into adulthood on her fourteenth birthday — was a cause for celebration for any Llyvrin family: fine food and presents for hosts and guests alike, including a traditional gift of seven coins from everyone in attendance to build the girl’s dowry. Seventh Circle
kernja-veldes
meant coppers and strikes; a nob’s had to be a festival like nothing I’d ever seen. Fountains of gold. I could almost
smell
the coins.
“Where’s home?” I interjected.
“Caerellis,” Merista said. “But my birthday’s not for
months
.”
Pox.
“Aye, and you’ll spend those months as girls in this family have spent them for generations: in seclusion with your family,” said Morva.
“Yes,” said Phandre. “They need to turn you into a proper lady.”
Merista flushed, and Morva gave Phandre a short, hard look. “As if the likes of you would know anything about being a proper lady.”
I
liked
this kitchen drudge.
Merista just poked at her food after that until Durrel finally stood up from the table. “Where’s my father now?” he asked.
“Still at table. With the Taradyce, I might add.”
I saw Durrel nod. “Fair enough. Come, lad and lasses!” He grabbed a flagon and some goblets from the table. “Let’s serve up our own punishment, shall we?”
Merista fell in line easily, but Phandre scowled heavily. I took my cue from her. “Maybe I should just stay here.”
“Oh, no, no, no,” Raffin said, yanking me to my feet. “In for a finger, in for a fist. You’re one of us now, Celyn.”
That’s what I was afraid of.
We followed Durrel from the kitchens to the dining hall. Torchlight threw leaping shadows against the low stone ceiling, which was black with years of smoke, making the room feel even more closed in. Even I hunched a little.
A handful of men and one or two women looked up at our approach. Seated at the very center of the high table, like a vast golden lion, and holding court as if this was
his
familial manor, was Raffin’s father.
“Stop.”
We froze in a ragged line at the sound of that voice. It came from a man at Hron Taradyce’s left hand. I swallowed hard, sure I had been discovered.
“Lord Durrel.”
Durrel stepped forward. “Yes, sir.” Somehow, even carrying a silver ewer and goblets like a servant, he managed to look noble. With a slight bow to his head, he set the pitcher on the long table.
The diners seemed to part around the man with the cold voice. He was obviously Durrel’s father; the younger Decath would look like that in another twenty-one years or so.
“Lord Durrel, do you care to explain your actions of the last two days?” His voice was like a knife of ice.
Durrel did not move. “No, sir.”
“ ‘No, sir’?” Lord Decath echoed. “You removed two girls from the care of their guardians and took them on a drunken orgy in a stolen boat, and all you have is ‘no, sir’?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Lord Decath, I think I can explain —” Raffin’s silver voice cut through, and he stepped toward the table, bowing deeply. “You see —”
“Shut up.”
Raffin reeled back as if he’d been struck. Hron Taradyce was leaning his golden bulk over the table toward his son. I could imagine how Raffin felt; Taradyce was like a small sun burning at the center of his own universe — too easy to get singed in his presence.
But I couldn’t spare much sympathy for Raffin. I was too busy staring at a small crack in the stone of the floor, letting the dim light of the hall keep my face in shadows. Anyone in this room had the power to send me straight to King Bardolph’s gaol, but only Hron Taradyce had a good reason for it. A few forged patents, an incriminating letter or two. This was . . . inconvenient.
“I’m sure you find this all very amusing, boy,” Taradyce was saying, as Raffin shrunk a good few inches. “But I’d like to remind you who owns that boat you’ve been cruising about in. Who owns that wine you reek of.”
“You do, milord,” Raffin said miserably.
“And then who?”
His head bowed, he spat out the word. “Stolo.”
“That’s right. Your brother. And
if
you don’t manage to get every harbor brat between here and Yeris Volbann with child before you come of age, you miserable waste, then there
might
be something left over for you. But until then, you will not treat my property as if the city is your own personal plea sure garden.”
“But, Father —”
“You will address me in public as Lord Taradyce. Do you need another reminder?”
Raffin swayed on his feet. He was still a little drunk, and I hadn’t seen him eat anything all day. It would put the cap on his humiliation if he were to spew his gorge right here at his father’s feet.
Durrel put a hand on Raffin’s arm, but his friend would not look at him. Durrel stepped forward smoothly and cleared his throat.
“My lord Taradyce,” he said, and the note of iron was back in his voice. “You and your son are guests in my father’s home, and I must insist you show your fellow guests the same courtesy the Decath have always offered you.”
After a frozen moment when all the color drained away from Raffin’s face, Lord Taradyce roared with laughter. Seated again, he turned to Lord Decath. “Now there,” he said loudly, “is a son a man could be proud of.”
Raffin turned on his heel and ran out of the room.
Lord Taradyce gave a disgusted sigh and threw his napkin on the table. Decath leaned toward him and murmured something, and a moment later, Taradyce rose and gave the merest hint of a bow to the Decath. “Lord Ragn, Lady Amalle, if you’ll excuse me, I believe I have some property to reclaim. I shall see you both back in the city.”
“Indeed.” Lord Decath’s voice was a low, bemused murmur as he watched Lord Taradyce cross the stone floor with clipped, purposeful strides. He turned back to us when Taradyce had gone. “Well, now that that’s settled, it appears my son has a tale to tell us. If my understanding of the situation is correct, when you left home, your female companions numbered two. And now I see a third in your party. Step forward, girl.”
Durrel stepped aside, and Phandre gave me a brief push forward. I stumbled toward the high table, and leveraged it into a curtsy at the last moment.
“Explain.”
Did he mean me?
“I don’t care
who
,” Lord Decath prompted. “You, girl — look at me.”
With a thin breath inward, I tilted my head up into the light, just enough for Decath to make me out. Taradyce might be gone, but that didn’t mean I was safe.
“My lord, we, uh —” Durrel gave a chuckle. “Picked up a stray. Please welcome Celyn Contrare, gentlewoman of Gerse.”
Lord Decath’s mouth quirked. “I see. You know if you feed them, they’ll never leave.”
“Ah, too late then, I’m afraid. Morva had soup.”
“Well, then, Celyn Contrare, it looks like you’re ours for keeps. No, no — don’t slink away, girl. Give some accounting for yourself, and pray Tiboran made you a more entertaining storyteller than my son. And perhaps we won’t make you sleep in the scullery with the rats.”
“I’ve slept with rats before, milord.” Which didn’t sound
at all
like I’d intended.
Beside me, Phandre stifled a snort, and the woman at Lord Durrel’s left said, “How charming. Lord Durrel, your little friends grow more and more amusing every day. But she blushes very prettily, so we may just forgive her.”
Lord Decath’s eyebrows had quirked upward. “I see,” he said. “And just where did my son find you?”
I glanced around, taking in the stage for my second per for mance as jeweler’s daughter Celyn Contrare. “Outside the Celystra, milord. I — escaped.”
Lord Decath glanced between me and Durrel, and the corner of his mouth twitched. “Indeed? A runaway nun. That
is
entertaining. Quite a few rats in the Celystra, then, Celyn Contrare?”
“My lord, you have no idea.”
Decath gave a loud, choking laugh. “I did ask her to be entertaining,” he said. “I suppose I can’t fault her for obliging me. Celyn, be you welcome to Favom Keep. Now, it’s obvious the poor girl’s dead on her feet. Cossum! Find someone to show her and Lady Phandre to their rooms. Lady Merista, you’ll remain here for a moment; I have news you’ll be interested in. Good night.”
And like that, we were dismissed. Phandre grabbed me by the arm and practically dragged me out of there, though flight seemed the sensible next move to me as well. I couldn’t help one last look at poor Merista, standing before that panel like the condemned.
We left her there, following on the heels of an efficient manservant. I should have been paying attention, looking for exits or valuables, but I was too busy going over that scene in my mind. I still didn’t know whether Taradyce had recognized me. Tiboran watch me, I was racking up too many near escapes for one day.
Phandre dragged me upstairs, to a small firelit bedroom where I was unceremoniously stripped naked by two lady’s maids and plunged into a steaming vat of soapy water. Though my bruised knee and filleted arm sang with protest, for a few scalding minutes I felt the day’s concerns melt away as I was dunked and lathered and scrubbed like a saucepan. The maids whisked away my bloody clothes, but not before I managed to rescue my corset, with its lock picks hidden in the lining, and the packet of letters I’d stashed in the sleeve.
“Love letters?” Phandre said from the tub. Marau’s balls, but those kestrel’s eyes were
sharp.
Thankfully she was too wet — and too far away — to lunge for them, though I could see her longing to.
“I wish I knew,” I murmured, turning them over in my hands.
So clean I shone, redressed in a hideous gold robe, a soothing salve and neat dressing applied to the cut on my arm, I reflected that I’d managed to get nearly every thing I’d wanted that morning. I should count my blessings; how often does
that
happen?
I didn’t have a plan, but I knew it wouldn’t involve a long-term stay at Favom Court. I needed clothes and money and transportation to a port city like Yeris Volbann or Tratua, where I could hop a ship to Talanca or Brionry. Either city might even be far enough away, if I could snake my way in among the locals. I’d have to prove I was trustworthy, win a couple of fights, and probably perform some outrageous initiation. Pretty much like I’d done in the boat, really.
The bath had made me sleepy, but I had work to do, and Raffin’s purse wouldn’t get me to Talanca. As soon as Phandre and the maids disappeared, I went to the windows and looked out. We were on the third or fourth floor of the court’s central tower, and outside, the moons shone on a series of tidy gardens and beehive-shaped outbuildings.
Naming the seven moons was one of the earliest lessons any Llyvrin child, nob or common, ever learned. Bountiful Celys and black Marau, who held the constant perfect balance of life and death: one bright, the other in shadow, all through the long year. Small, smoky, mysterious Sar, spinning the wrong way in the night. The twins, Mend-kaal and Tiboran, as different as work and play. Bright, fiery Zet, who lit the way for hunters and kings. The Nameless One, a tiny, white hot dot of light coursing at Marau’s heels like a relentless hound, dealing out her horrible justice to sinners.
High above a thatched outbuilding, I could just make out a narrow slip of Tiboran’s moon. The only reliable thing about Tiboran was his moon’s fixed place in the sky, by which you could chart a course or read the hour as easily as by the sun.
Taking the chance that everyone was still roving about on nob or servant-of-nob business, I hiked up the long skirts of the robe and let myself out into the hallway. Some said it was risky to go working by Tiboran’s new moon, when the god’s back was turned and his eyes looking elsewhere, but that was probably just something somebody made up to discourage thieves.
Castles keep their secrets in the kitchens and the bedrooms, but their valuables can be anywhere. The Favom Court valuables, however, were elusive. I knew this was a working farm, not a palace, but the Decath seemed to live as spare and frugal a life here as any monk.
Not that I ever saw a poor monk.
I did find one silver button beneath a bed, and a pretty glass inkwell that I just liked and was small enough to slip inside my sleeve. With a defeated sigh, I finally decided to have a go at the kitchens. In the absence of trea sure, food is a worthy alternative. Besides, I’d liked that kitchen woman, Morva. She might tell me more about this place and its people — and maybe the Decath trusted her with their household accounting.
I headed down a wide corridor hung with tapestries of fruit and birds, trying to look purposeful and deliberate and like I belonged here. Near the end, I heard someone coming up the stairs — Raffin’s voice, turned curt and sullen, and the low, harsh tones of his father. Pox. I popped the nearest door and slipped inside, just as the argument carried past me down the hall.
When the corridor was clear again, I launched myself toward the stairs and followed the yeasty scent of tomorrow’s bread and brewing down to the kitchens. Shoving my way in ahead of my plan, I found myself face-to-face with Morva once more.