A King for Hothar
A serial novel written
exclusively for Sabledrake
Magazine
Vol. XII - The Rightful Heir
A light
dusting of snow had turned the hills of baronies Plesvar and Ryannt into a
scenic landscape of rolling white. A few leaves still clung to otherwise
bare branches, their russet hues rimed with frost.
It was all
very pretty and picturesque … away from the road.
On the road,
the snow had churned into muddy sludge that caked Alkath Halan's boots
nearly to the knee and made the hem of his cloak drag behind him in a
sodden, heavy mass. The men with him, occupied by their own thoughts,
barely spoke as they continued along their way. The only sound but for the
occasional call of a bird was the regular sucking squish of their feet and
those of their pack-beasts sinking into and pulling out of the mud.
The low clouds
jostled like an impatient crowd against the mountains, pressing down on
the lower lands in an ominous grey ceiling. The smell of impending snow
was unmistakable, and Alkath hoped they'd reach the estate before it
began.
He was at once
gladdened and dismayed by the prospect of seeing his parents again. It had
been several weeks since their turbulent departure from Hothar City, and
to the furious disgust of the baron, Alkath had elected to remain behind
and continue carrying out his duties as High Commander of the Golden Eagle
Army.
His days had
been filled with his work. There were soldiers to train and equip,
supplies to arrange, battle plans to be drawn up. The prospect of a
springtime invasion by the Kathani could no longer be denied. Jherion's
scouts had returned with reports of a camp already massing north of the
great Dolga river.
Yes, his days
were filled with work and passed quickly, but his nights were endless and
ruled by bitter self-reproach.
It didn't
matter that Jherion and all else concerned assured him that the Kathani
would have attacked anyway. Perhaps they would have, perhaps they
wouldn't. But now that they had his dear Idasha in their clutches, there
could be no question. Knowing that Jherion was not the right-born king of
Hothar, and having the true heir in their clutches, those things would
give the Kathani an additional impetus.
And whose
fault was it that they had Idasha? Who had failed her? Who had, mere
moments after holding her so tenderly in his arms, had been unable to
prevent the merciless Felin Kathak from abducting her? Who had chased
fruitlessly after and returned empty-handed?
None other
than Alkath Halan.
Her foster
brother, Seric, the Stragest of Westreach and thus Alkath's counterpart
and equal in rank, insisted they had done all they could. To continue
their search would have only led to their own deaths. And so they had
turned back, abandoning Idasha to her fate.
The guilt of
that deed lay like a stone on Alkath's heart. It was the duty, the place,
the right of a gentleman knight to lay down his life on behalf of a
lady. Especially the lady that he loved! To forsake her and save his own
hide smacked of the lowest of cowardice.
Ahead of them,
the road branched. The left fork led deeper into Plesvar, toward his
ancestral estate. The right fork wended its way higher into the hills,
toward the mountains. Toward Deathstone Pass and Westreach beyond.
Alkath paused,
letting the line of men and beasts trudge past him and down the left fork.
He raised his head into the chill wind, looking at the cloud-masked peaks
and remembering the previous summer. Climbing that steep road with Ithor
and Gedren on their mission, meeting Idasha at the top of the pass.
A princess in
the guise of a sentry … he should have realized from the beginning that
there was more to her than met the eye! Only later, only after they'd
shared a night of passion, had he learned that she'd been raised in the
royal house. And only much later, only after she was kidnapped, had he
learned who she truly was.
Now she was
gone, and it would be better to believe, as Seric did, that she was dead.
Seric felt that Idasha would never submit to the Kathani, would never
allow herself to be used as a tool of conquest and a brood mare. But
Alkath knew that Seric was only grasping at faint hopes. Strong and fierce
though Idasha was, she'd be no match for the barbaric Kathani.
His sigh
plumed his breath into mist, and he followed the others toward the
baronial manor.
They reached
the gates as the first grainy flecks of snow were beginning to fall.
Servants rushed out to meet them, taking charge of the pack-beasts and
ushering the men into a long low bath-house. Alkath divested himself of
his travel-stained clothes, bathed, and made himself presentable. Then,
alone, he entered the family wing and sought out his parents.
He found his
mother in her sitting room, gazing out of the window with her embroidery
resting untouched in her lap.
Her frailness
shocked him to the core. She had been struck down by a terrible melancholy
after the death of his sister Arayse, but now she was even thinner, paler,
her eyes dulled blue orbs ringed by sunken hollows. Her hair, once the
same finespun silvery blond as his, had gone brittle and ivory in just
these few weeks.
"Mother?"
Alkath finally ventured when she gave no sign of seeing him in the
doorway.
Emrana Halan
started in her seat. The needle she'd been aimlessly holding jabbed into
the ball of her thumb, bringing a bead of blood. Alkath went to her and
plucked the needle from her grasp, pressing his handkerchief against the
tiny wound.
"Alkath
… welcome home, my son." Her smile wavered, making him think of
death-foretelling water spirits imprisoned beneath the surface of a
rippling pond. When she brushed a kiss on his cheek, her lips were dry and
cool.
"It is
good to be home. Where is Father? I have news."
"Here,"
said his father, coming into the room. "They said you'd
returned."
Alkath rose
and faced him. They had parted badly, not with harsh words but with
disagreements and injured feelings on both sides, and he did not want to
begin badly. "Father. How fares Plesvar?"
"Well
enough." His father hesitated long enough for Alkath to take a
tentative step toward him, then fired off, "How fares your
pretender-king?"
Biting back a
retort, Alkath inclined his head. "Quite well. Preparing for Year's
End Court."
"In the
days of the Lendrins," the baron said, putting sharp emphasis on the
name to make it clear he did not consider Jherion worthy of it, "the
Year's End Court was customarily a time for the lords and barons to air
any grievances. That practice fell a bit out of fashion during the reign
of the Kathaks --"
Because
Oldered, and Davore after him, would answer any grievances on the Day of
Executions, Alkath thought but did not say.
"And so
did most of the Court itself," his father continued. "Now,
though, I see no reason not to resume. Should one perchance had a
particular grievance to air. I've heard that most of the highborn plan to
attend."
"Yes,
that is true," Alkath said, trying to hold down the welling anger
that bubbled up inside of him. With a tight smile, he added, "In
fact, that is when Jherion and Olinne plan to make the formal
announcement."
His mother
gasped. "A baby? Is it a baby, Alkath?"
Taking a
certain grim pleasure in his father's slapped, shocked expression, Alkath
nodded. "To be born next summer."
"Oh,
Maragon, how wonderful!" Her eyes brimmed with happy tears. "Our
little Olinne, to make grandparents of us!"
"No!"
snapped his father. "She is disowned, remember? Both of our daughters
are lost to us! I will have no tie of blood to the get of a
hog-drover!"
"Magician
Ephes has divined that it will be a boy," Alkath said. "A
fair-haired boy."
"Hearty
peasant stock!"
"How can
you do this, Father? Olinne is your daughter! My sister!"
"You may
call her that if you wish, but she is none of me!" His gaze narrowed
and pinned Alkath. "I will not be challenged in this, Alkath. You are
my son, my heir, my only remaining child. I am willing to overlook quite a
bit, but do not push me far."
"Or
you'll disown me as you did Olinne?" He straightened his back.
"I won't trade my sister for my inheritance. I was named High
Commander in my own right, just as Jherion is king in his own right! I'll
have that even if I am never a baron."
"You say
that now, oh, such bold talk! But what will happen when your precious king
is sent back where he belongs? Will you stay loyal to him then, on his
farm? High Commander of hogs? General of geese? Lord of livestock?"
"Maragon,
please!" Emrana sobbed.
Alkath took a
deep breath and looked away.
"Aha,
see, as I thought! You'd come crawling back then, wouldn't you?"
"Your
outrage has had the better of your reason, Father. I pray one day you'll
realize that and be as ashamed of yourself as the rest of us are ashamed
of you."
His head was
snapped to the side by the force of his father's strike. His hip banged a
table and knocked two vases and a bowl to shatter musically on the floor.
Emrana moaned
as if she'd been the one to take the blow, but Alkath made no sound. He
straightened up, bringing his fingertips to his throbbing jaw, and
examined the blood that had been drawn from the corner of his mouth.
His father was
dumbstruck, staring from his hand to Alkath's face. "Son …"
"I shall
stay with my men, in the barracks-house," Alkath said in a voice
devoid of emotion. "Expecting only the courtesy and hospitality due
the king's army. Good night, lord baron, lady baroness."
"Alkath!"
his mother wailed. "Don't do this! Alkath, don't go!"
He steeled
himself against giving in to her pleas, and left without looking back.
**
The great hall
of Hothar Castle was bustling with activity. Under the supervision of
Olinne and Gedren Ephes, many servants were hard at work adorning the
walls and windows with the traditional draperies and decorations of the
Year's End Court.
Gone were the
autumnal themes that had dominated the hall through the past few months.
The long harvest season was done with, and the land dozed in winter
spirits' sleep, the days short and the nights long to the point of seeming
endless.
Wood had been
collected for the torches and bonfires, and to let a flame extinguish was
to invite the worst of ill luck. From the highest to the lowest, every
home in Hothar would be brightly lit to welcome back the life-giving sun.
Jherion had
been told that this was normally supposed to be a time of quiet and rest
throughout the kingdom. That usually, only a handful of the nearest
highborn nobles bothered to leave their estates and make the cold journey
to the city.
Such was not
to be the case this year. He riffled his thumb along the edge of a stack
of parchment and vellum, and shook his head ruefully.
Gedren caught
him at it, and smiled so that the dimples in her cheeks deepened.
"Oh, now, we all know that it would have been a large Court anyway.
The first of your reign and all."
"Have I
drummed up so many grievances already? Or is the mere fact of my being
here grievance enough?"
"For
some." She lowered her voice, glancing about to be sure Olinne wasn't
within earshot. "You'll have trouble with one, at least. But not even
Baron Halan would be so unwise as to try and oust you with a Kathani army
sitting on our border, no matter how strongly he feels."
"I think
you underestimate the baron." Jherion likewise checked that his wife
was not overhearing.
His mood
lightened as he caught sight of her, his beautiful Olinne. With the glow
of merriment in her cheeks, and her dark hair tied back in a winter-white
ribbon, she was more maiden than queen. Lovelier than she'd been the day
they'd met.
"So, tell
me truthfully, Dame Gedren," he continued with a jovial glint in his
eye. "What will they do to me? Denounce me? Strip me naked, beat my
back bloody, and throw me in a pig wallow? Your husband has been more
close-mouthed than ever about his divinations, unless it is to go on about
my imminent son."
Gedren sighed.
"I fear he's told me little more than he's told you, and what he's
been seeing makes little sense to him. He's making a wreck of himself
trying to find out what has become of Idasha and what the Kathani are up
to, and gets only bewildering omens in return."
"Does she
live?"
"That
much, at least, he seems sure of."
"I don't
know if that news would please Alkath or not," Jherion said.
"I'm worried about him. He blames himself too much."
"He's not
the only one. Cassidor and Queen Chian feel it's their fault. But how
could any of us have known about Nerrar, about Felin, any of it? Even so,
we couldn't have kept her under lock and key."
"What am
I to do, Dame Gedren? I've agreed to carry on, but when you cut to the
bone of it, Baron Halan is right. I'm not a Lendrin. Who am I to deny
Idasha what is hers by birth?"
"It
wouldn't be hers anyway, not with the Kathani involved. They're not
seeking to restore the Lendrin line. All they'll want from Idasha is to
get a child on her, and then there'll most likely be a tragic accident,
leaving a helpless, motherless babe with a Kathani father as regent."
"I can't
let that happen. But what if the lords and barons don't see it that
way?"
"Well,
we'll know soon enough what they think. Nearly all of them mean to come to
Court. Even the Premier of Narluk is sending his son as ambassador
again."
"Yes,
they all want to see what I'll do. Will I admit to these rumors of my
lowly birth? Will I stand tall and proud and announce that I won Hothar by
might of arms and I mean to keep it nonetheless? They'd overthrow me in
the blink of an eye."
"And
leave us without a king when the Kathani invade? Or plunge us into civil
war as they fight among themselves for the throne? They may be pompous and
greedy, but I'd hate to think they were that great of fools."
Olinne
approached with a bundle of dried sweetgrass stalks in one hand and a
spray of fresh snowberry in the other. "Which for the mantles, Dame
Gedren?"
"Sweetgrass
on the mantles, snowberry on the windowsills. How's the stomach?"
"The
tonic you made me is a miracle!"
It was far too
soon for her pregnancy to be showing itself yet, but the aura of her
happiness wreathed her in a nearly visible glow. Jherion sometimes
expected to see the same glow around himself.
He slid his
arms around his young wife, smiling at the thought that soon it would be
much more of a reach. Neither of them doubted but that conception had
occurred the night they'd spent at the Iron Kettle, a night of such gentle
passion that it made the scene upon their return to the castle the next
day easily bearable.
Oh, how
everyone had been in an uproar! The king and queen both gone missing
without a word, and Baron Halan livid because he'd planned to leave with
his daughter in tow! Ithor and Will had borne the brunt of the lecturing,
for being so irresponsible as to sneak them off to an inn unannounced and
unguarded.
Gedren and
Olinne had finished their discussion of the various odds and ends of
childbearing for the nonce, a discussion that Jherion realized with some
bemusement he'd managed to non-hear just as utterly as Olinne could
non-hear him talking about armsmanship with Alkath and Seric.
Leaving Gedren
to finish overseeing the decorations, Jherion curled Olinne's arm through
his and they strolled along the high, covered walkway that looked out onto
the courtyard and the Great Square beyond. Once, fortress-tall walls had
ringed in the Square, but those walls had been torn down and the area was
now a bustling marketplace.
Although the
meager sunlight was blocked by dark clouds, torches blazed and a festive
bonfire crackled at the center of the Square. The shops and stalls were
likewise undergoing holiday adorning, merchants and their families
stringing garlands of sweetgrass and hanging their doors with gold and
white swags of cloth.
"It's all
so wonderful," Olinne said, leaning her head against his shoulder.
"To think that what was once a site of such ugliness could be so
bright and pretty! You have done so well, my love!"
"We
have done well together," he said, burying his face in the clean
midnight of her hair. "But all of the most precious things in the
world to me, I hold now in the circle of my arms."
"You'll
not lose that, never," she promised.
"Are you
happy, Olinne? Honestly?"
"Of
course I am!"
"I know
how it's hurt you, your parents --"
"The loss
is theirs. Yes, it grieves me, and I yet hope they might have a change of
heart although I know how proud and stubborn my father is. But I have you
and our son, and Alkath, and our good and loyal friends. It is more than
enough for me."
He kissed her,
not caring that they were in full view of everyone in the Great Square.
"It's cold out … you shouldn't take a chill in your condition.
Let's go to our room and warm ourselves by the fire."
**
Baron Halan
kept his head high and his back stiff as he walked into the audience hall.
Like the rest
of the castle and the city, it was all done up for the festival of Year's
End. The baronial boxes were arrayed with gold-edged white bunting, the
ceremonial candles emitting their fragrance. Below, the tiered seats for
the lords, ladies, and knights were draped in linen and strewn with
snowberry petals. The rows of benches at the rear of the room, open
seating for any who cared to come, were covered with woven sweetgrass
mats.
At the head of
the audience hall, on a raised dais large enough to park a four-beast
wagon with ample space to turn it around, the royal thrones sparkled in
the light of thousands of candles. Other regal chairs fanned out around
them, and Baron Halan's lips tightened a bit as his gaze fell on the one
that might otherwise have been his.
The formal
Court had not yet gotten underway, but several of the attendees had
already filed in and taken their places. A crowd of commoners at the rear
was being entertained by Jherion's witless jester - that should have been
their first hint that the so-called king wasn't all he was supposed to be!
Anyone who could find those crude jokes and lewd songs amusing …
"Oh,
doesn't everything look nice!" Emrana said wistfully.
"It looks
like a fancified barn raising." He sat down and smoothed the front of
his tunic, nodding curtly to others of his rank.
As more people
entered the room, the undercurrent of curiosity and tension began to grow.
They all knew what was coming. Their 'king' was to be taken to task,
called upon to address the woeful truth about his heritage. Rumors would
be made reality.
This gross
injustice could not be allowed. No matter what else, the basic fact of the
matter was that Jherion, for all his kingly name and knightly prowess, was
as lowborn as the man who brought the milk, or shoveled the stable.
A modest
flourish of trumpets quieted the room, and all eyes went expectantly to
the dais. The curtains at the rear of it parted.
Jherion and
Olinne emerged together and moved to their thrones as the lords applauded
politely and the commoners whistled and cheered. They wore matching
mantles of simple white fur, over garments of golden cloth. Olinne's hair
was swept up and caught in a net of gold sparking with jewels. Jherion's
blond hair fell in shiningly-brushed waves to the nape of his neck, and a
plain gold crown with oval-cut diamonds glittering at the points rested
atop his head.
Emrana voiced
a sound somewhere between a sigh and a moan. "Maragon, look at her,
she's radiant!"
The other
notables of their court followed after. Magician Ephes, looking pale and
unwell as if he hadn't slept in weeks. His temperamental wife. Old Ithor
Drok, scowling and impatient with the nonsense as usual. Alkath … the
bruise he'd given his son was still visible on his jaw, fading from purple
to yellow.
Next came the
foreign visitors. The dowager queen of Westreach with her second son and
his family, the son of the Premier of Narluk, the grand duke of Torgotha,
even an ambassador from Erri. Nearly all of Ilgrath was represented.
Turning out,
Halan knew, not in homage to the new king but to witness his downfall.
They wouldn't allow him to continue this sham, which went against
everything monarchies were founded upon.
The last two
chairs, that should have been his and Emrana's, remained empty. Baron
Halan couldn't decide which would have been the greater insult, to have
them so conspicuously ignored, or have them filled by others.
Jherion
stepped to the edge of the dais, his thumbs hooked into his gilt belt. The
precise way he doubtless stood when surveying his fresh-slopped hogs.
"There is
no point in dancing around it," he said, his words carrying clear and
strong even to the back of the room. "You've all heard, and yes, it's
true. I am not the natural son of Meryve Lendrin. My father was a soldier,
my mother a chambermaid."
He waited
until the surprised chatter died away - surprised not that he was,
but that he'd come right out and admit it.
"What
does that make me?" he went on. "A false king, an imposter? An
usurper? I don't know. In my own defense, I say to you that I did not
learn of the circumstances of my birth until well after the coronation. I
would ask her highness Chian of Westreach to tell her tale once more, if
she is willing."
The dowager
queen stood up, her hands folded gracefully before her. When she finished,
an uproar ensued.
Jherion
gestured for quiet and finally got it, though it was a sullen and
disrespectful quiet with much grumbling and muttering among the highborn.
"When I
agreed to come here and fight Davore, I believed that it was in the best
interests of Hothar. I have tried always to conduct myself in that spirit,
in the spirit to which Meryve raised me. But the point remains. I am not
her son. Not royal. I have no Hotharan blood. It isn't for me to know what
is best for Hothar. It is for Hothar to know, and to decide. And for
Ilgrath to honor that decision or not."
Baron Halan
rose, looking scathingly at the peasant in the garb of a king.
"Hothar will not be ruled by a base-born hog-drover."
Jherion
flinched only slightly, then again when a rumble of agreement came from
the throats of the other nobles.
Alkath shot to
his feet. "He is a knight! You always so conveniently forget
that, Father, but with your own hand, with your own blade, you knighted
Jherion when he had proven himself capable!" He stalked down from the
dais and past the row of seated gentry, singling out the other knights
with an intense stare. "Many of you fought beside Jherion, followed
him into battle against the Red Sword Army. Has he proven himself worthy
in your sight?"
They looked at
each other, nodded, murmured in assent.
"But he's
not one of us!" the baron of Lallon argued. "Not even Hotharan!
He's a Westreacher!"
Seric of
Westreach laughed.
Lallon
flushed. "What I mean … by which I mean … well, at least if he
were even a Lendrin bastard, that would be something! But a
commonborn orphan?"
The baron of
Trevale cleared his throat. "Say what you like, but when the Red
Sword Army meant to crush my land and people underfoot, that man led his
army to our aid. I say he's earned it!"
"You
can't just give it to him!" the baron of Eastreach called.
"That's how Oldered took Hothar, how our lands fell in the first
place!"
"What
about the true heir? It's hers by right!" Lallon said.
"But
she's been taken!" someone else pointed out. "And now the
Kathani have her and her claim as a weapon against us!"
"It
leaves us a difficult choice," said Baron Halan. "We cannot
submit to the Kathani again. Nor can we give the crown to a peasant. Yet
something must be done."
"By the
gods, man!" Trevale looked at him with loathing. "Your own
daughter sits there as queen with a babe in her belly, and you'd speak
against her husband?"
"They lied!"
roared Halan, thrusting his finger at the dais. "All of them have lied
to you! To all of us! Magician Ephes, you knew about this, didn't you? The
queen of Westreach brought you her story, didn't she? And you, acting all
on your own, elected to keep it a secret!"
"Yes,"
said Cassidor Ephes. "With the best of intentions, but yes."
Another uproar
ensued, as barons and lords and commoners alike all began shouting at
once. In the midst of it, a sudden crash brought everything to a halt.
A heavy bench
had been overturned, and when they all looked that way, a woman marched
into the center of the audience hall. She wore a cloak of silky-shaggy
white fur, the hood thrown back to reveal a long braid of burnished-bronze
hair. Her grey-green eyes swept the room, measuring them all with
contempt.
"Idasha!"
Alkath cried, overturning his own chair on the hem of his cloak in his
haste to rise. He raced to her. "Thank the gods, thank the spirits!
You're alive!"
Seric whooped
and slapped his palm on his thigh. "Escaped! I should have
known!"
"What
good fortune!" whispered Halan sharply to his wife.
When she
reached the center, she unslung a heavy sealskin sack from her shoulder
and threw it on the floor. "I have a way to solve this for you since
you arrogant fools aren't able to see for yourselves what's right!"
"The
Lendrin heir!" Lallon exclaimed. "All hail the rightful
queen!"
"No!"
Idasha barked before anyone could do so. "Hail me nothing! I am not
your queen, and having heard this strutting posturing rubbish, am
quite pleased about that!"
"Welcome
back, Idasha," murmured Chian of Westreach.
**
A torrent of
questions poured in, making Idasha want to cover her ears and block out
the din. But there was something she knew she had to do first, had to do
now. As painful a deed as it was, it'd only be worse if she waited.
So, under the
babble of hundreds of voices talking at once, she drew Alkath aside.
"Alkath
…"
"Please
forgive me! I promise you, I shall never let you out of my sight again.
I'll be there to protect you, always! All you need do is say that you'll
marry me, and we'll put all of this behind us."
She bit her
lip and spoke as gently as she could. "Alkath, we could never marry.
You would make of me something that I cannot be. A lady, a noblewoman …
that's not me, no matter my bloodline."
"I
understand your desire for freedom, for independence," he said.
"If I was
just the sentry you'd met on the pass, the thought of marriage would be
further from you than the world-belt from the earth," she said,
shaking her head.
"You make
me sound as petty and status-hungry as my father!"
"No, not
that," Idasha said. "Never that. But I'm not what you need, what
you want. You need someone who can be a lady for you, Alkath Halan. A
proper Hotharan lady. I'm not, and will never be."
"You …
you're breaking with me?"
"I'm
sorry."
"It's
because I failed you, because I gave up and couldn't rescue you, isn't
it?"
"No, that
isn't it. We're not right for each other, that's all."
"I …
I'm at a loss!" He lowered his head. "But if it's your wish,
Idasha … I'll abide."
Idasha knew
that what would come later would hurt him all the more, but it, too, had
to be done. But first, it was time to settle this once and for all.
"Let me
speak!" she called.
"Give her
silence!" commanded Jherion in a carrying tone.
"Thank
you," she said. "Spoken like a true king."
Jherion froze.
"I … this is all yours. I have no claim on any of it."
"Not so
fast. There's a way out of this yet, that's to the benefit of all. Trust
me." She opened the sack, and dumped out something large, black, and
scaly.
It was the
head of a snake, half the size of a man but dried, cured into a gruesome
trophy with a mouthful of fangs.
The son of the
Premier of Narluk uttered a low cry, then fell to his knees and began to
sway and chant. No one paid him much attention, intent as they were on
Idasha as she pulled a milky-grey bundle from within the sack.
"Is that
what I think it is?" Seric asked. "Oh-ho, sister, I know what
you're up to!"
"Good …
have you a lhote? I've lost mine."
A man at the
back of the room laughed but quickly smothered it.
"I
have." Seric held up the double-edged pick-like weapon.
Jherion
frowned in confusion. "What is all this? What are you doing?"
"Trust me
and come here. Seric, give the lhote to the magician. He'll do
nicely."
Cassidor Ephes
accepted the weapon with all the dubiousness of a man being handed a dead
fish. "What am I to do with this?"
The
bewildering display held everyone rapt and blessedly quiet as Idasha
brought Jherion to stand beside her.
"Take an
edge of this," she told him, "and we'll lower it over us."
"What is
it?" His expression matched that of Cassidor as he gripped the edge
of the leathery, flexible substance.
"The
stomach of a snake," she replied, reasonably enough. "The Black
Snake of Westreach."
Working
together at her guidance, they stretched and lowered and squirmed into the
thing, until it bulged out around them. They must have resembled a lumpy
piece of furniture under a grimy dropcloth.
"Is it a
conjurer's work?" wondered one of the barons.
"Almost
as good," Seric said. "Magician Ephes, if you'd take the lhote
and slit open the snake's stomach? Carefully, mind you!"
"I don't
understand any of this," Jherion said.
"I'll
explain after, when it's too late for them to do anything about it,"
Idasha said. "Quickly, Magician! It's hard to breathe in here, and
the smell isn't the nicest."
"What
madness is this?" Baron Halan demanded. "It's some sort of a
trick!"
Cassidor Ephes
gingerly poked one point of the lhote against the side. "Are
you certain about this?"
"Do
it!" Seric said, grinning like a maniac.
The tip
pierced the leathery stomach and Cassidor sawed at it until he'd made a
gap large enough to admit a man.
"You
first, Jherion," said Idasha. "Out you go."
Jherion
squeezed out through the opening, still wholly confused, and turned to
help Idasha wiggle free herself. She looked expectantly at Chian, whose
smile was brimming with pride.
"And
born anew from the belly of the snake, so shall you be united as brothers
and sisters to one another from this day forward, of one blood, of one
family," Chian intoned. "Thus spake the first king of
Westreach, and by his law, by our law, so now are you siblings."
"What?"
Baron Halan wasn't the only one to shout it, but he was by far the
loudest.
Jherion,
stunned, looked from Chian to Idasha to the crumpled stomach of the snake.
"I remember that story …"
"It's the
Rite of the Black Snake," Seric said, hopping up on a chair to make
himself seen and heard. "It's been used before, in times of plague or
disaster, when bloodlines have been nearly destroyed. Combining their
families, combining their holdings and fortunes, they made themselves
strong again. As legally binding as a marriage, or any other bond."
"Which
means, Jherion," Idasha said, "now you are my brother, and I am
your sister." She raised her voice, turning to the crowd. "And I
hereby abdicate and yield any and all claim on the throne of Hothar to
Jherion, my brother, who is the elder of us and firstborn!"
The previous
outcries were nothing compared to this, a din so tremendous that it seemed
as if the roof would cave in from it. Jherion was still too astonished to
call for order, so at last Seric managed to bring the room under control.
"But this
is a law of Westreach!" the baron of Lallon said. "Not
Hothar!"
"She
can't do this!" a lord protested. "She can't pick and choose her
brother, and if she can, why him?!"
"Oh, for
pity's sake!" Gedren Ephes stormed to the middle of the room.
"What is the matter with all of you? Here is a sensible solution to a
very knotty problem! Idasha?"
Idasha said,
"Jherion loves this kingdom, has bled for it and risked his life. He
deserves it. He should have been Meryve's son. I'm only setting
right what nature made amiss."
"As it is
a law of Westreach," Chian said, "on behalf of my son Gethin,
the king, I acknowledge this tie of kinship to be true. As Idasha is my
foster-daughter, so now Jherion, her brother, becomes my foster-son."
"You're
giving up a kingdom!" Baron Halan was on the verge of
frothing. "Don't you understand what you're doing, you foolish
girl?"
"I
understand full well," she said. "I would have made a terrible
queen, and you already have a fine king. You're the one who should
question what you're doing, baron. And what you've already done."
"I say,
let it stand!" the grand duke of Torgotha proclaimed in his booming
baritone. "But I do disagree me that you'd be a terrible queen!
You've spit and fire enough to rule Ilgrath!"
"I am
sure that I speak for his majesty the king of Erri when I second
that," said the ambassador. "And might extend the mention that
his majesty is yet unmarried --?"
"Say no
more," Idasha warned him, shooting the snickering Seric a withering
look. "I do not play the game of dynastic marriages."
"Well,
magician?" Jherion asked Cassidor Ephes, a tremor in his voice
displaying his nervousness.
Ephes handed
Seric back his lhote. "Much that the spirits had been seeking
to tell me is now made clear. I see it now. Let their will be done. I
embrace this course wholeheartedly."
The son of the
Premier of Narluk rose unsteadily to his feet. He pressed a kiss to his
fingertips and then to the patch of scales between the shrunken hollow
sockets of the severed snake's head.
"Although
at first this seemed a grisly mockery and sacrilege," the whip-thin
young man said, "I know that Nar would not give up the sacred body of
one of his own if not for a good cause. Nar has spoken through this
serpent. The Primacy of Narluk respects Nar's word, and supports Jherion,
brother of Idasha, as true king of Hothar."
"Most of
Ilgrath has come to agreement," Chian of Westreach said. "Does
Hothar accept?"
"Oh,
might as well," muttered the baron of Eastreach. "I can't afford
another set of coronation and wedding gifts!"
Mirth greeted
this, and it opened the gates of acquiescence. The commonborn responded
with resounding, overjoyed clamor as the knights, lords, ladies, and other
barons all indicated their agreement.
Baron Halan
approached, with Emrana trailing nervously after him. When Jherion and
Olinne saw them, a heavy hush fell and spread like ripples in a still
pond.
"I
believe I owe you an apology," the baron said. "Olinne, my
daughter--"
"Oh,
isn't that rich?" Idasha remarked, nearly as caustically as she felt.
"You disown her, and treat them both like something you've stepped
in, but now that he's the true king, you come licking around like a
dog!"
"Idasha!"
Alkath said, shocked out of his glumness.
"No,
she's right." Jherion crossed his arms and glared at the baron, and
in his golden garments, actually looked quite a bit like the eagle of the
Lendrins. "Do you think that what you've said, what you've done, is
so easily forgiven and forgotten?"
"I know
that I have wronged you both --"
"All you
ever cared for was having your grandchild be a king!" Olinne flared.
"Had none of this ever happened, and had I been unhappy married to
Jherion, you would have made me hold to it and do my duty for the sake of
that crown! But when I loved him and you thought him beneath us, you tried
to tear me away from him! How can I ever excuse that?"
"Olinne,
dear one, please!" Emrana said. "Your father --"
"He said
he had no daughters, so I must have no father!"
"Let me
make up for my harsh and hasty words!" the baron said.
Jherion
slashed his hand through the air, cutting off the baron's apology. "I
think it's best if you are away from this court for a time, Baron Halan.
We'll see how time heals the wounds your actions have caused, and speak
again at the next Year's End."
The baron's
mouth worked soundlessly as if he meant to protest, but in the end, he
only nodded curtly and led his wife out of their sight.
Olinne watched
them go, her breath hitching once or twice. But Alkath put a comforting
arm around her, and Jherion touched her chin and bade her smile.
"Diplomatically
done," Idasha said.
"For the
distress he's caused, I would have sooner pummeled him," Jherion
admitted. "But that'd hardly be noble, now, would it, Alkath?"
Alkath rubbed
his jaw. "Nobility didn't stop him from pummeling me," he said
wryly.
"Congratulations,
my brother," Idasha said, clasping hands with Jherion.
"Idasha,
I cannot begin to --"
"Don't
… you deserve this. I just found a way to help it along."
Olinne threw
her arms around Idasha in a sisterly hug. "But we must thank
you! If ever we can do anything for you, anything at all, only say
so!"
"Well …
there is one thing … one boon I'd ask." She couldn't bear to look
at Alkath, knowing what his reaction would have to be.
"Name it
and it's done," said Jherion.
"You've
not heard what it is yet."
"What,
then, is your boon?" asked Olinne.
"Immunity
and a pardon for someone who helped me get out of Kathan."
Jherion's
eyebrows went up. "You still haven't told us how you managed to
return. What happened, Idasha? Where were you?"
She took a
deep breath. "I was brought before King Deveran, and as his teeming
throngs of sons and grandsons were bartering over me like fishwives in the
marketplace, I escaped the fortress. One of his kinsmen helped me,
betraying his people and risking his life to do the right thing. He showed
me a secret way into Westreach, battled the Black Snake with me, and came
back to Hothar with me although he knew it might cost him his life. I'm
asking that you spare him."
"It
sounds as if that's the least I could do. Who is this man? Where is he?
Here?"
Idasha looked
over, and the man who had been waiting unnoticed came forward. He stopped
a goodly distance away, too far to be a threat, and threw back his hood
and cloak to show that he was unarmed.
Gedren Ephes
cried out and clapped a hand over her mouth, thereby ensuring that
everyone who wasn't already surreptitiously following the scene now turned
to openly look.
The room rang
with alarm and consternation, the crowd surging as those nearest tried to
back away while those further out tried to get close for a better view.
Not that they were likely to need one; with his hair red as a battle flag,
there was no mistaking him.
Cassidor
sucked in a sharp breath. "Now it is all clear!"
"Idasha,
you can't be serious!" Alkath said. His hand leapt to his sword.
"That is Felin Kathak!"
"Hold,
all of you!" Jherion ordered as several guards came pushing through
with weapons at the ready. He regarded Felin with great interest.
"The Red Wolf."
"The
Golden Eagle," Felin acknowledged with a slight, respectful bow.
"We never had occasion to meet on the battlefield."
Alkath's jaw
was set. "This man is a criminal and an enemy! And a threat to your
crown, Jherion! If he's here, it's to kill you and take Hothar for
himself!"
"What say
you to this, Felin Kathak?" inquired Jherion.
"I do not
come to you as an enemy, Jherion Lendrin. I renounce and relinquish any
claim to Hothar and stand before you a man with nothing. No land, no home,
no family. Nothing but my life. All I ask is to keep it. In exchange …"
He knelt and bowed his head. "My swordarm and my fealty, I swear in
service to you."
**
The longest
night of the year was drawing to a close, the sky to the east touched with
a hint of dawn. Overhead, the band of the world belt stretched in an arc
from horizon to horizon, its countless individual orbs forming an
intricate pattern of pale light and shadow. The far and unimportant
spangle of stars dusted the blackness beyond.
The bonfires
and torches burning throughout the city looked small as candle flames from
the height of the tallest tower of Hothar Castle, hundreds of points of
light in the darkness. All around, the land spread in a quilted carpet for
as far as the eye could see.
"To think
this could have been the view I grew up with," Idasha said, her
breath making frosty clouds. "It's so open. Just countryside going on
forever, with no defensive ring of mountains to make it seem
invulnerable."
"Your
heart's that of a Westreacher," Felin Kathak replied. "Jherion's
opposite."
"And what
of you?" she asked. "Your blood is Kathani, but you lived
Hotharan … where do you belong, Felin? What's in your heart?"
"You
are."
"Even
now, after I gambled with your life? I hoped, I expected, but I couldn't know
that Jherion would grant my request."
"Your new
brother is a good man and a good king. He thinks first of what's best for
Hothar, and knows that I can be of more use to him alive than dead. As
Ithor pointed out, who better than a Kathani to know how to fight the
Kathani?"
"Because
they'll still come," Idasha said grimly, gazing to the north.
"It won't matter that Jherion legally holds the crown. They would
have come anyway."
He nodded.
"They'll come, but we will stop them. If your Alkath, the High
Commander, can stomach my counsel, and the rest of the barons hold to
their stated trust."
They both fell
silent, and Idasha knew that he was thinking of the lengthy and heated
debate that had followed his offer of fealty to Jherion. The initial
reaction had been horrified objection on the part of most of the highborn.
But Cassidor Ephes had informed them that he had seen many omens in the
cast-stones to this effect. And Baron Trevale had spoken well on Felin's
behalf, citing his honorable conduct during their military exchanges, and
in the end a reluctant approval had been given. Felin would be treading an
uneasy line for the next many years, his every move watched for the threat
of treachery.
Idasha herself
gave those things only a passing thought. She knew he could earn their
trust and respect. What still troubled her mind was poor Alkath.
"I regret
that I had to do it that way," she said, more musing aloud than
speaking. "But there wasn't time for gentleness. Deep down, he knows
I'm right. As lovers, we could overlook our differences, but as husband
and wife, we would have made each other miserable."
Felin pulled
her into his arms and brought the full warm folds of his snowbeast-pelt
cloak around the both of them. "Idasha, I have the feeling you'd make
any husband of yours miserable."
She laughed.
"I take it that's not a proposal, then!"
"I'm not
adverse to a little misery … or even a lifetime's worth."
Idasha looked
up into his forest-dark eyes and saw that he was in earnest. "I'll
need a while to consider that," she said.
"As long
as you need."
They kissed, a
warm and lingering kiss full of promise for the future. When they parted,
it was to find that they were no longer alone on the highest tower, but
that a bemused Jherion and Olinne had appeared.
"I see
we're not the only ones to seek out this private place," Jherion
said.
Idasha and
Olinne exchanged a weighted glance of many meanings, and the young queen
shook her head, smiling beatifically.
"No,
Idasaha, I'm not distressed about Alkath. He is my brother and I would
want to see him happy, but I've also learned that love cannot be
commanded. Nor can it be denied. We must, always, stand by those we
love."
The four of
them stood side-by-side, and watched the sun rise on the first day of a
new year in the reign of a king for Hothar.
**
The End.
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