The Deed of Paksenarrion (98 page)

Read The Deed of Paksenarrion Online

Authors: Elizabeth Moon

Tags: #Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Science Fiction/Fantasy

“That’s why I don’t want to join a company,” said Suli. “Staying all together, never on my own. I already know how to live on my own—and I can help you with that.”

“You fight too much,” Paks said. She had heard that from Mal and the others. Suli blushed. Paks went on. “My old sergeant said soldiers were fools to get in brawls. Most folk don’t like soldiers anyway, and you get a reputation for causing trouble, they’re glad enough to see you in the lockup or sold to slavers.”

“We don’t have any slavers here,” muttered Suli.

“No, but you’ve got a lockup.” Paks drained her mug. “Look, Suli, that’s beside the point. It’s not you. It’s me. I’m not ready to take on someone to train. I was looking for more training for myself. If I were just adventuring, it’d be different, but I’m not. I want—”

“But I’ll never have another chance,” Suli burst out. “Nobody pays any attention—I’m just a crazy girl, that’s what they think. I thought you would help—you’re a woman, after all—and I’ll never get out of this place if you don’t—”

Paks slapped the table. “That’s just what I’ve been telling you, Suli. How to get out and get the training you need. But you don’t want to do it the right way. You want it to come all at once. I can see it in your eyes—you look at my sword, and my mail, and that big horse, and see yourself. What you don’t see is the years in between, the years it took me to get all that. And there’s no other way. Yes, I was lucky—I got some of it by a lucky chance. But the experience, the fighting skill, no. That came from years of just what you say you don’t want—daily drill, daily work, battles that
you
call dull. That’s what gave me the skill to take a chance when it came. You can’t just leap from being a village girl with a knack for swordplay to—” she paused, uncertain how she would describe herself honestly.

“It could happen,” said Suli. “It could. If you had found someone before you joined the company, she could have taught you everything you needed. You might have been rich and famous before now.”

“I might have been dead before now, too. And Suli, knowing what I know now, I wouldn’t have hired myself back then. It took the Duke’s recruit company months to train any of us.”

“But I’ve been training, with the Marshal. You’ve seen me—I’m not a beginner.”

Paks sighed. She wondered if she had seemed so—so young, when she’d joined the Company. All that eagerness. At least she had taken Jornoth’s advice, had not just run away to search for adventure on her own. She was trying to frame an answer, aware of Suli’s intense gaze, when a shadow fell on her. She looked around. One of the senior yeomen nodded to her.

“Lady Paksenarrion? Marshal Cedfer would like to speak with you in the grange.” He smiled at Suli, who reddened. “They say, Suli, that you fought well with this lady.”

“She did,” said Paks.

“We’ll have to see about transferring you to the senior rolls,” said the man to Suli. “Might make a yeoman-marshal, might she?” he asked of Paks.

“I—don’t know how you choose yeoman-marshals, but Suli is a good swordsman.” Paks stood up. “If you’ll excuse me, I’ll get my cloak—” The yeoman sat down and began talking to Suli; Paks was relieved.

* * *

The Marshal’s office was slightly cold; Paks wondered why he had lit no fire in the small fireplace. Then she saw that the Kuakgan stood leaning in the corner, quiet as a shadow.

“Come in, Paksenarrion,” said the Marshal. “We’ve been talking about you.” She glanced quickly at the Kuakgan, who said nothing. What had they said? The last talks with the Marshal had been painful enough; she knew he no longer blamed her for Ambros’s death, but she still blamed herself. She sat down when he gestured at a chair; the Kuakgan moved forward to take another.

“You will be wondering why,” the Marshal went on. “I, as you know, would like to see you join the Fellowship of Gird. As a Marshal of Gird, I am interested in all soldiers, as well as the cause of right. In your case, something more moves me. It is for this that I contacted the Kuakgan, and talked with him about you.”

“Yes, sir,” said Paks, when he paused as if for some comment. She didn’t know what else to say.

“Before we go on, would you mind telling me whether you have accepted Suli’s service? I know she wants to be your squire, or some such—she’s been wanting a way out of Brewersbridge for the last three years.”

“Marshal Cedfer, I was talking to her when your yeoman asked me to come here. I don’t—I know I’m not a knight, and have no way to use a squire. I’m not a wandering free sword—which she seems to think—and I don’t need a companion. I told her that.”

“Have you any complaint of her?”

“No. None at all. She fought bravely against the hool, as I told you, and did well against the priest’s guards. But, sir—she’s not ready to be a soldier, I don’t think. And I’m not the one to train her. I need more training myself, to be what—what I’d like.”

“Do you know yet what that is, Paksenarrion?” asked the Kuakgan.

“No—not exactly.” Every time she tried to imagine herself in some noble’s troops—even the Tsaian Royal Guard—the picture blurred and blew away. “Not a mercenary—what people think of as a mercenary. Not a caravan guard the rest of my life.”

“A knight?” asked Marshal Cedfer. “A captain, perhaps?”

“Maybe.” Paks looked at her hands. “I am a soldier, I enjoy swordplay, I want that kind of life. But not just for—for fighting anything, or for show. I want to fight—”

“What needs fighting?” suggested the Kuakgan.

Paks looked at him and nodded. “I think that’s what I mean. Bad things. Like the robbers in Aarenis that killed my friends, or Siniava—he was evil. Or that—whatever that held the elf lord. Only I don’t think I have the powers for that. But I want to fight where I’m sure it’s right—not just to show that I’m big and strong. It’s the same as tavern brawling, it seems to me—even if it’s armies and lords—”

The Kuakgan nodded. “You’ve learned a lot, Paksenarrion, besides what most soldiers know. I thought so before, but now I’m sure. Do you know anything of the rangers in Lyonya?”

“No.” Paks frowned. “Why?”

“You have fought with the elfane taig. It may be that you can sense the taigin, and if so you would be able to work with them.”

“Master Oakhallow—” the Marshal began. The Kuakgan waved him to silence.

“Marshal, I don’t question the sincerity of Girdsmen. You know that. We honor the same gods. But some fighters have abilities Gird does not use. She may be one of them.” He turned back to Paks. “Paksenarrion, we agree that you have shown ability to fight evil. You have shown a desire to know more of good, and to fight for it. We both think you have been touched by the evil you’ve fought—not to contaminate you, but in such wise that you should not go back to ordinary soldiering. Do you agree?”

Paks was too bewildered to answer. Marshal Cedfer spoke up.

“Paksenarrion, when you came you said your Duke had recommended additional training—even toward a captaincy. We are prepared to guide you toward such training, but you must choose. I can give you a letter to the Marshal-General at Fin Panir; she will probably take my recommendation and let you study with the training order there. From that you can become a knight in either of the two Girdish orders—or even a paladin, if Gird’s grace touches you.”

“And I can give you introduction to the rangers of Lyonya,” said the Kuakgan. “If you satisfied them, they might recommend you to the Knight-Commander of the Knights of Falk. That would be a few years away, however. But in either case, you would use your skills only in causes of good. If that way of fighting did not appeal, you could always leave.”

“You could not take Suli with you, either way,” said the Marshal. “That’s why I asked. If you had contracted with her, the gnome merchants have told me that they can get you a contract from the gnome prince of Gnarrinfulk. Something in the way of soldiering, I don’t know what. But if you aren’t taking Suli, then—” He stopped and cocked his head, waiting for her answer.

“But I’m not Girdish,” she managed to say. Nothing else came out.

“No. But I daresay that in Fin Panir, at the High Lord’s Hall, after training with others of the faith, that Gird would make plain his interest in you.” The Marshal leaned back a little in his chair. “I think he has already, Paksenarrion. When I think of the things you have come through—” Paks thought to herself that he didn’t know the half of it. She had not told him all about Aarenis. She remembered what the priest of Achrya had said: “near enough a paladin. . . . Achrya will be pleased if I interfere in the growth of a paladin of Gird . . .” And the training at Fin Panir was famous throughout the north. She might become a knight—or even a paladin—she pushed the thought away. It was for the gods to think of such things, not a soldier. But the other way. Rangers—she knew nothing of them. The thought of more powers like the elfane taig daunted her, though she hated to admit it. And years of service, before she might think of the Knights of Falk.

She looked at the Kuakgan again, meeting his dark eyes squarely. “Sir—Master Oakhallow—I honor you—”

“I know that, child,” he said, smiling.

“If you have a—” she stopped, knowing what she meant, but not how to say it. If he demanded it, in return for releasing her from guilt for the snowcat’s murder, she would go. She saw understanding in his eyes.

“I have no commands for you, Paksenarrion,” he said softly. “You have served Brewersbridge well; you have fulfilled my trust in you, and my hope for you. Go with my blessings, whichever way you go.”

“Then—” She looked back at the Marshal. Was it for Ambros, who had trusted her with his fears and died beyond her help? Was it for Canna, who had left her the medallion? Or for something else, something she felt dimly and could not define? “I would be glad, sir, of your recommendation,” she said formally. The Marshal shot a triumphant glance at the Kuakgan; Paks nearly took her words back. But the Kuakgan’s smile was open and friendly. He spoke to her alone.

“Paksenarrion, the Kuakkganni treasure all life created in the first song. We study, we learn, but we do not order a creature from its own way. And the creature itself knows its own way best, unless it is sorely hurt. If the other way had been best for you, you would have known.” He turned back to the Marshal. “Marshal Cedfer, we are no more rivals than two men who plant a seed neither of them knows, and argue until it sprouts whether it will be fireoak or yellowwood. The seed knows itself; it will grow as its nature demands, and when the first leaves open, all arguments are over.”

To Paks’s surprise, the Marshal looked shamefaced. “You’re right, Master Oakhallow. I have no right—but I was hoping so, for some good to come of Ambros’s death.”

The Kuakgan nodded gravely. “And yet you know that good has come of it. The webspinner’s priest is gone, and you will clean that filthy place from end to end. Ambros has shown that your training prepares untried lads for the worst of wars, and the best of ends. You live in constant combat, Marshal, and it makes you alert to each advantage—but the gods move in longer cycles, as well. Be at peace, honest warrior.” He rose and left the room. For a long silent time, Paks and Marshal Cedfer sat in quiet, contented. Then the Marshal shook himself like a wet puppy and snorted.

“Gird’s grace, that fellow could cast a spell on stone. He may have time enough, but I live a normal span, like any man. Paksenarrion, I will write my letter this afternoon. When will you be fit for travel?”

“In a day or so. I’d like to get everything cleaned up.”

“Good. I think you should not linger; winter will close some roads soon, and it makes bitter traveling to the northwest. About Suli—do you want me to talk to her?”

“I told her she should talk to you, but she—”

“She doesn’t want it; she knows what I’ll say. I’ve said it before. All right. I’ll say it again. I can send her to another grange—a larger one—with more women training. Let her know what she can work toward—yeoman-marshal, or something like that. Tell her to come, if you see her.” Paks wondered if it would help, but said she would.

Chapter Eighteen

As autumn darkened into winter, Paks rode north and west, into Vérella of the Bells, and west along the Honnorgat, through one town after another, as the river narrowed. She passed from grange to grange, enjoying the hospitality of each, as the Marshal’s letter opened the doors. She thought of turning aside at Whitemeadow, and following a branch of the river north to Rocky Ford, and then on to Three Firs. But had her dowry arrived yet? Would she be welcome? She decided to wait until she had her knighthood, and ride home with Gird’s crescent on her arm. As she neared Fintha, she tried to think of a more elegant name for the black horse, something suitable for a warhorse, but she had thought of him as Socks from the first, and it stuck in her mind.

Frost whitened the ground the morning she first caught sight of Fin Panir. She had been on the road before dawn, the saddle cold as iron beneath her, and her breath pluming out before. When the sun rose into a clear cold sky, the ground sparkled in rose and gold; the tree branches interlacing overhead glittered with frost. It was like riding inside a pearl. A little wind blew the sparkling frost in swirls before her. Paks found herself grinning, and nudged the black horse into a trot. He squealed and kicked out before settling down. She laughed aloud.

Then the forest broke apart, and she saw across a bend of the river the spires of the High Lord’s Hall, gleaming in silver and gold against the blue sky. Beneath lay a tangle of roofs and walls, multi-colored stone, tiles, sliced into fantastic shapes by the sharp shadows of a winter sun. She rode toward it, yearning.

Within an hour she could pick out the gates. Between her and the walls, a small company of horsemen rode, armor glittering and banners dancing above. When she was near enough, they hailed her.

“Ho! Traveler! Where are you bound?” The leader was deep-voiced, a man of middle height in chain mail with a blue mantle bearing Gird’s crescent.

“To the Hall in Fin Panir,” said Paks. “I have a letter from Marshal Cedfer of Brewersbridge.”

“For the Marshal-General?” he seemed surprised.

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