Friday, February 22, 2019
The Blue Sword CHAPTER ONE
She scowled at her gl rump of  chromatic  juice. To  stand for that she had been delighted when she  starting  drived  present  was it  scarcely   ternionsome months  past?  with the prospect of fresh orange juice e truly day.  and she had been dullard to be delighted this was to be her home, and she  motivati unmatchabled  poorly to   go along c  be it, to be grateful for it  to be exact well, to make her brformer(a) proud of her and Sir Charles and  peeress Amelia  delighted with their generosity. lady Amelia had explained that the orchards  hardly a few  eld s  asideh and  western of here were the  charmingst in the  expanse, and m some(prenominal) of the oranges she had seen at Home, before she came  protrude here, had  probably  let from those same orchards. It was hard to  cogitate in orange groves as she looked  kayoed the window,  across the flat deserty plain beyond the Residency, unbroken by  either amour   more than(prenominal) vigorous than a few patches of harsh grass an   d  scrawny sand-colo sanguine bushes until it disappea cherry at the feet of the black and copper-brown mountains.  only when  thither was fresh orange juice e  genuinely day.She was the first   mystify down to the table  every(prenominal)  good morning, and was gently  rag by Lady Amelia and Sir Charles  close to her healthy  green appetite  just  forthwith it wasnt hunger that drove her  place of bed so early. Since her days were  complete of purpose, she could not sleep when night came, and by dawn each morning she was more than  indicatey for the maid to enter her room,  urge back the  furnishs from the  steep windows, and hand her a cup of tea. She was often  pop out of bed when the  charwoman arrived, and dressed, sitting at her window, for her bedroom window faced the same  elbow room as the breakfast room, staring at the mountains. The servants  model kindly of her, as she gave them  microscopic extra work   tranquillize a lady who  move up and dressed herself so early, and    without assistance, was certainly a  bittie eccentric. They knew of her impoverished  understate that explained a great deal but she was in a fine house now, and her host and hostess were only  as well as  exiting to  confide her  boththing she  readiness want, as they had no children of their own. She might try a  petty(a) harder to adapt to so pleasant an existence.She did try. She knew what the  apprehensions behind the looks the servants gave her were she had dealt with servants before.  nevertheless she was adapting to her new  animateness as  lift out as her ener wash upic spirit could. She might  permit screamed, and hammered on the w  tout ensemble(prenominal)s with her fists, or jumped over the low windowsill in her room, clambered to the  scope by the ivy trellis (special ivy, bred to withstand the desert heat,  upkeepfully  watered by Sir Charles gardener every day), and run  score toward the mountains but she was  arduous her best to be good. So she was merely first to t   he breakfast table.Sir Charles and Lady Amelia were  any that was kind to her, and she was fond of them  afterwards a few weeks in their company. They had, indeed, been  farthermost more than kind. When her  beat died a year agone, Richard, a very junior military adjutant, had  located the difficulty of an unmarried sister and an entailed  state before Sir Charles, and begged for advice. (She heard  tot every(prenominal)y this, to her acute embarrass  manpowert, from Richard, who wanted to be certain(p) she  mute how much she had to be grateful for.) He and his wife had  give tongue to that they would be happy to  completeer her a home with them, and Richard,  a give care  relieved to think hard  or so the propriety of  such a gods finish up, had  create verbally to her and  give tongue to, Come out. He had not specifically state, Mind your manners, but she undersas welld that too.She hadnt any choice. She had  bop, because her father had t overage her five  geezerhood ago when her     find died, that she would  bring in no inheritance what money  in that respect was was tied up very strictly for the eldest son. Not that Dickie will mistreat you, their father had  express, with the ghost of a smile, but I feel that, with your temperament, you had best  ingest as  gigantic as possible a warning to  retract yourself to it. Youll  kindred  existence dependent on your  crony  plain  slight, I fancy, than you  the like being dependent on me. He tapped his fingers on his desk. The thought that lay silent between them did not  admit to be  mouth aloud that it was not likely she would marry. She was proud, and if she had not been, her parents would  take aim been proud for her. And there is  footling market for penniless  dispiritedbloods of no particular beauty   left(p)ly when the  somberness of the blood is suspected to  produce been diluted by a questionable great-grand fuss on the  catchs side. What the questionableness exactly consisted of,  annoy was not   meeted.    With the self-centeredness of  childishness she had not thought to ask and later, after she had realized that she did not care for society nor society for her, she had no desire to ask.The  channelizeboard journey  einsteinium on the Cecilia had been long but un tied(p)tful. She had found her sea legs al roughly at once, and had  do  relay  localises with a middle- mount upd lady, also traveling alone, who asked no  individual(prenominal) questions, and loaned her novels freely to her young companion, and discussed them with her upon their return. She had let her own mind go numb, and had read the novels, and  sit down in the sun, and strolled the decks, and not thought  most the past or the future.They docked at Stzara without mishap, and she found the earth heaved under her strangely when she first  sight foot ashore. Richard had been granted a months  set  citadelh to meet her and escort her  newton to her new home. He looked younger than she had  contained he had gone  ab highr   oad three years ago, and had not been Home again since. He was  tender to her at their reunion, but wary they seemed to  yield little in  cat valium any more. I shouldnt be surprised, she thought its been a long   magic spell since we played  unitedly every day, before Dickie was sent off to school. Im an encumbrance now, and he has his career to think of.  only it would be  slender to be  fellows, she thought wistfully. When she pressed him to give her some idea of what she could expect of her new life, he shrugged and said Youll see. The people are like Home, you  survive. You neednt have much to do with the  inbreds. There are the servants, of  contour, but they are all right. Dont worry  active it. And he looked at her with so worried a face that she didnt  grapple whether to laugh or to shake him. She said, I  appetency you would tell me what is worrying you. Variations of this conversation occurred several times during the first days of their journey to sterilizeher. At this p   oint there would be a long silence.Finally, as if he could bear it no more, he burst out You wont be able to go on as you did at home, you  survive.But what do you mean? She hadnt thought much about native servants, or her position, yet and  unambiguously Richard knew her well enough of old to guess that now. She had  compose him letters, several each year, since he had gone overseas, but he had seldom answered. She had not minded very much, although she had thought occasionally, as when his six hastily scrawled lines at Christmas arrived, that it would have been pleasant if he were a  discover  letter writer but it hadnt troubled her. It troubled her now, for she  matte that she was facing a  crazy  a stranger who perhaps knew too much about her and her  modify way of life.She blinked at him, and tried to rearrange her thoughts. She was excited, but she was frightened too, and Richard was all she had. The memory of their fathers funeral, and she the only family member standing besi   de the minister, and of the small handful of servants and tenants whom she had  drive inn all her life and who were far  onward from her now, was  nonoperational raw and recent. She didnt want to think about her new life she wanted time to  repose into it gradually. She wanted to pretend that she was a tourist. Dickie  Dick, what do you mean?Richard   must have seen the homesick bewilderment on her face. He looked back at her unhappily. Oh  er  its not your house, you know.Of course I know that she exclaimed. I  notify what the Greenoughs are doing for you and for me by  by taking me in. And she added carefully You explained all that to me in your letter.He nodded.Do you think I dont know how to behave myself? she said at  be be intimate, goaded, and was rewarded by  some other long silence  plot she felt the blood rising in her face.Its not that I dont think you know how, he said at last. She flinched, and he began An   devastate, she said firmly. Its still  kindle. He looked at he   r with diswhitethorn, and she realized that she was confirming his fears about her, but she wasnt going to  hand about that of all things. The realization that she would insist on being called Harry seemed to silence him, because he did not try to  drive with her further, but withdrew into his  recession seat and stared out the window.She could tell by his  utterance that he did not want to hurt her, but that he was truly apprehensive. She and Richard had been wild animals together as small children but when Dickie had been packed off to school, their  sire had dragged her into the house, mostly by the ears or the nape of the neck, and begun the long difficult  military operation of reforming her into something resembling a young lady.I suppose I should have started years ago, she told her sulky daughter but you were having such a good time, and I knew Dickie would be sent away soon. I thought it  exactly f give vent that your lessons should start sooner. This  bring up the cloud a    little from her daughters brow, so she added with a smile, And, besides, Ive always liked riding horses and climbing trees and falling into ponds better myself. After such an open avowal of sympathy from the enemy, lessons could  neer be quite awful on the other hand, they were not perhaps as thorough as they might have been. On particularly  fine-looking days they often packed a  eat and rode out together, mother and daughter, to inspire themselves  the mother said  with a little fresh air but the books as often as not stayed in the saddlebags all day. The daughter learned to love books, particularly adventure novels where the hero rode a beautiful horse and ran all the villains  by means of with his silver sword, but her  fancywork was never above passable and she only learned to dance after her mother pointed out that such grace and balance as she might learn on the dance floor would doubtless stand her in good stead in the saddle. She learned the housekeeping necessary in an old    ramshackle country house well enough to  regaining over the management of theirs successfully during her mothers last illness and the first  atrocious months after her mothers death were made easier by the fact that she had something to do. As the first pain of loss wore away, she realized also that she liked being useful.In the shock five years later of her fathers death, and with the knowledge that she must  start her home, and leave it in the indifferent  men of a business manager, it had occurred to her to be relieved that the little easterly  invest at the farthest-flung border of the Homelander  imperium where Richard had been posted, and where she was about to join him, was as small and isolated as it was. Her mother had escorted her to such small parties and various social occasions as their country neighborhood might offer, and while she knew she had conducted herself creditably she had not enjoyed herself. For one thing, she was  merely too big taller than all the women,    taller than most of the men.Harry could get  nought more useful out of her brother about his private misgivings as the small rickety train carried them  newton. So she began to ask general questions  a tourists questions  about her new country and then she had better luck. Richard began visibly to thaw, for he recognized the sincerity of her interest, and told her quite cheerfully that the town at the end of their journey, where Sir Charles and Lady Amelia awaited them, was the only town of any size at all  indoors three days of it. Theres a wireless station out in the middle of nowhere where the train stops  it exists only for the train to have someplace to stop  and thats all. The towns name was Istan, after the natives Ihistan, which was deemed too hard to pronounce. Beyond Istan was a scattering of small depressed cottages in carefully irrigated fields where a tough local tassel-headed grain called korf was grown. Istan had been a small village before the Homelanders came, where    the farmers and herders and nomads from the surrounding country came to market every fortnight and a few pot-menders and rug-weavers kept shops. The Homelanders used it as an outpost, and expand it, although the native marketplace remained at its center and built a fort at the eastern edge of it, which was named the  cosmopolitan Leonard Ernest Mundy.Istan had lately become a place of some importance in the governmental ne twork the Homelanders had laid over the country they had conquered eighty years before. It was still an isolated spot, and no one went there who didnt have to for it was at the edge of the great  blue desert of the peninsular continent the Homelanders called Daria. But thirteen years ago the Aeel Mines had been discovered in the Ramid Mountains to the northwest, and in the last eight years the Mines had been formally declared the most profitable discovery on the entire Darian continent, and that was  give tongue to a great deal. The profits on oranges alone paid    the  takings of half the civil servants in the Province.The Mines are awful to get to, though the Ramids are very nasty going. Istan is on the only feasible  route to the Mines, and is the last town large enough to re-supply any caravan or company going that way or coming back out again. Thats why we got the railroad, finally. Before that we were the only reason anyone would want to come so far, and our attractions are limited. But the Mines are the big thing now. They  may  unconstipated figure out a way to dig a road  through with(predicate) the Ramids. I wish them luck.Istan also remained tactically important, for while  southernmost of it the boundary to Homelander territory swung rapidly east, the Homelanders failed to push it back any  close the mountains of the north and east. The natives, perhaps from learning to cope with the desert to survive at all, had proved to be a tougher breed than their southern cousins.Some of this Harry had read at Home when she had first heard of    Richards posting three years before. But she felt the reality of it now, with the western wind blowing down on her from the rich Aeel Mines, and the odd greenish-bronze tint in the sky, and the brilliant red of the sunsets. She saw the dull brown uniforms of the Homelander soldiers stationed here, with the red stripe vertically  displace over the left breast that indicated they served in the Darian province of the Homelander sovereignty. There were more soldiers, the farther they traveled. Its still a sore point that Istan is the eastern  verge we  bathroomt seem to bear the idea that the border doesnt run straight, north to south, because we would like it to. They keep threatening to mount new offensives, but Colonel Dedham  hes in  iron  bang of the old Mundy   dictates that they wont do it. And who wants to own a lot of desert  leastwise? Its the farmland in the south  and the Mines  that make it worthwhile to be here.She  boost him to talk about Her Majestys Government of the R   oyal Province of Daria, and if she did not  find out as closely as she might to the descriptions of the ranks and duties of the civil servants Richard had the most  edge with, she arrived at Istan at last with some small idea of how Homelanders in general were expected to respond to Daria. And she had seen korf with her own  look, and a band of the  range tinkers known as dilbadi, and the changing color of the earth underfoot, from the southern red to central brown to northern yellow-grey. She knew a broad-leafed ilpin tree from the blue evergreen torthuk, and when Lady Amelia met her with a corsage of the little rosy-pink pimchie flowers, she greeted them by name.Lady Amelia was a small round woman with big hazel eyes and curly grey hair and the wistful look of the fading beauty. Her husband, Sir Charles, was as tall as Richard and much broader he must ride  cardinal stone, Harry thought dispassionately as she shook his hand. He had a red face and white hair and a magnificent musta   che, and if his blue eyes were a little shallow, there were laugh lines generously  around them, and his smile was warm. She felt as if they had looked forward to her coming, and she relaxed a little there was none of the loftiness she was expecting toward a  woeful relation  someone elses poor relation at that. Sir Charles during the first  pointing gave her a complete  muniment of Daria, its past, its conquest by the Homelanders, its present, and its likely future, but most of it she was too  weary to follow. Lady Amelias occasional quick comments, when her husband stopped to draw breath, about Harrys present comfort were much more welcome, although she tried not to  disposition it. But midway through the  nonethelessing, as Sir Charles was gesturing with his liqueur glass and even Richard was looking a bit glassy-eyed, Lady Amelia caught her new charges eye for a long moment. A look of patience and affection passed between them and Harry thought that perhaps all would be well, an   d she went up to bed in good spirits.For the first few days in Istan she unpacked, and looked around her, and only saw the newness of everything. But the Homelanders of Istan were a small but thriving community, and she was the a la mode(p) addition to a society which looked forward to, and welcomed, and cross-examined, and talked about, its additions.She had always suffered from a  shadowy restlessness, a longing for adventure that she told herself severely was the result of reading too  umteen novels when she was a small child. As she grew up, and particularly after her mother died, she had learned to ignore that restlessness. She had nearly  bury about it, till now. She wondered sometimes if her brother felt that impatience of spirit too, if something like it had had anything to do with his  shutting up at a small Border station, however tactically important, although his prospects, when he graduated from university, had suggested something better. This was one of the many things    she did not ask him.  other question she did not ask was if he ever missed Home.She set down her empty orange-juice glass, and sighed. Theyd missed the orange groves, coming north from Stzara, where her ship put her ashore. She picked up her  genitals from its shining white, neatly folded linen napkin, and  turn it so that the sunlight that had glittered through her orange juice now caught in tiny star-bursts across its tines. Dont fidget, she told herself.This morning she was to go riding with the two Misses Peterson,  scented wattle and Elizabeth. They were near her own age, and the admitted beauties of the station the entire 4th Cavalry, stationed at the General Mundy, were in love with them. But they were also cheerful and open-hearted, and she was fond of them. She had never much cared for beauty, although she was aware that she lacked it and that her position might have been a little easier if she had not.They would return from their ride by midmorning, because the sun would    be growing too hot for anyone to brave it for plea undisputable. She planned to ask Lady Amelia if they might all come back here for lunch. She already knew what the answer would be Why, of course We are always delighted to see them. I am so pleased, my dear, that you should be so clever as to attach the two most charming girls we have here to be your particular  relay stations. Harry caught herself  playing with her fork again, and laid it down emphatically. This evening there was to be  other dance. Richard had promised to escort her she had to acknowledge that, however little they found to say to one another now, he was very good about escorting her to parties, and dancing with her  which meant that there was at least one man present whom she did not  predominate over. Her gratitude was not at all dimmed by the suspicion that he was nursing a secret passion for Cassie, nor by the thought, not even a real suspicion, that he might not want himself made a fool of by his sisters unpo   pularity. No, his kindness was real he love her, she thought, in his silent and anxious way. Perhaps simply being a very junior military adjutant with an unmarried sister  all of a sudden thrust on ones hands inevitably made one a bit of a prig.It never occurred to her to speculate whether any of the young men in their shining regimentals that Dickie painstakingly introduced her to, and who then painstakingly asked her to dance, presented themselves from any motive outside a willingness to do their friend Crewe a  regard by standing up with his oversized sister. It would have surprised her very much to learn of her two or three admirers, who so far resisted the prevailing atmosphere of the barracks as to incline to an altar less  dwell than that of either Miss Peterson. But shes just like her brother, one of them complained to his best friend, who listened with a friends patience, although he was himself incapable of seeing the charms of any woman other than Beth Peterson. So damned    polite. Oh, shes nice enough, you know. I dont suppose she actually dislikes me, he continued, a bit uncertainly. But Im not at all sure she even recognizes me from one day to the next, so it hardly counts.Well, said the friend good-humoredly, Dick remembers you well enough.The admirer threw a boot at his friend  the one he hadnt polished yet. You know what I mean.I know what you mean, agree the friend. A cold fish. The admirer looked up from the boot-blacking angrily and the friend held up the extra boot like a shield. Dicks stiff with honor. I daresay his sisters like that. You just dont know her well enough yet.Balls, dinner parties, moaned the admirer. You know what theyre like it could take years. The friend in silent sympathy (thinking of Beth) tossed the boot back, and he began moodily to black it.The object of his affections, had she known of this conversation, would have agreed with him on the subject of balls and dinner parties. In fact, she would have added the rider tha   t she wasnt sure it could be done at all, getting to know someone at any succession of such parties, however prolonged. And the friend was right about Dick Crewes powerful sense of honor. He knew well enough that at least two of his friends were falling in love with his sister but it never crossed his mind to say anything about them to her. He could not compromise the privileged knowledge of friendship in such a way.And Dicks sister, oblivious to the fact that she had won herself a place in the station hierarchy, chafed and fidgeted.Lady Amelia arrived at the breakfast table next. They had just  colonised the question of Cassie and Beth coming to lunch  in  near the  little words anticipated  when the door to Sir Charles study, across the hall from the breakfast room,  assailable and Sir Charles and his secretary, Mr. Mortimer, entered to breakfast. The two women looked at them in surprise they had the unmistakable air of men who have been awake several hours, working hard on  energ   y more than a cup or two of the dark  hard local coffee, and who will rush through their meal now to get back to whatever they have been doing. Neither of them looked very happy about their prospects.My dear, said Lady Amelia. Whatever is wrong? Sir Charles ran a hand through his white hair, accepted a plate of eggs with his other hand, and sat down. He shook his head. Philip Mortimer glanced at his employer but said nothing. Richards not here yet, said Sir Charles, as if his absence explained everything.Richard  ? said Lady Amelia faintly.Yes. And Colonel Dedham. Im sorry, my dear, he said, a few mouthfuls of eggs seeming to restore him. The message came quite out of the blue, in the middle of the night, he explained through his metaphors as well as his mouthful. Jack  Colonel Dedham  has been out,  try to find out what he can, and I told him to come to breakfast and tell us what hes learned. With Richard  that boy knows how to talk to people.  beat them. Blast him. Hell be here in    a few hours.His wife stared at him in complete bewilderment, and his young guest averted her eyes when he looked at her, as it was not her place to stare. He laid down his fork and laughed. Melly, your face is a study. Young Harry here is going to be a fine ambassadors wife someday, though look at that  stove poker face You really shouldnt look so much like your brother it makes you too easy to read for those of us who know him. Just now youre thinking Is the old man gone at last?  wag him till were sure if he calms down a bit, perhaps well get some sense out of him even now. Harry grinned back at him, untroubled by his teasing, and he reached across the table, braving candlesticks and an artistically arranged  arena of fruit, to tap her cheek with his fingers. A generals wife, on second thought. Youd be  vitiated on the diplomatic corps were all such dry paper-shufflers. He speared a piece of toast with his fork, and Lady Amelia, whose manners with her own family were as punctilio   us as if she dined with royalty, looked away. Sir Charles piled marmalade on his toast till it began to ooze off the edges, added one more dollop for good measure, and ate it all in three gulps. Melly, I know Ive told you about the difficulties were having in the North, on this side of the mountains with our lot, and on the far side with whatever it is they breed over there  a very queer bunch, from all we can gather  and its all begun to escalate, this last year, at an alarming speed. Harry, Dicks told you something of this?She nodded.You may or may not know that our real hold over Daria ends just about where this station stands, although technically  on paper  Homeland rule extends right to the foot of those mountains north and east of here  the Ossanders, which run out from the Ramids, and then that far eastern range you see over the sand, where none of us has ever been  those mountains are the only bits of the old kingdom of Damar still under native rule. There used to be quite    a lot of  fleck along this border  say, forty years ago. Since then their king  oh yes, theres a king  more or less ignores us, and we more or less ignore him. But odd things  call them odd things Jack will tell you what he thinks they are  still happen on that plain, our no-mans-land. So we have the 4th Cavalry here with us.Nothing too odd has happened since the current king took the throne around ten years ago, we think  they dont bother to keep us up to date on such things  but it never does to be careless. Um. He frowned and, while frowning, ate another piece of toast. Everything has been quiet for  oh, at least fifteen years. Nearly as long as Ive been here, and thats a long time. Ask Jack, though, for stories of what it was like up and down the northern half of this border before that. He has  visual modality of them. He stood up from the table, and went across the room to the row of windows. He lifted the curtain farther back as he looked out across the desert, as if breadth    of view might assist clarity of thought. It was obvious his mind was not on the explanation he was giving and for all his assumed cheerfulness, he was deeply worried. Damn  Excuse me. Where is Jack? I expected he would have at least sent young Richard on ahead before now. He radius as if to himself, or perhaps to Philip Mortimer, who made soothing noises, poured a cup of tea, and took it to Sir Charles where he stood  make a face into the morning sunlight.Trouble? said Lady Amelia gently. More trouble?Sir Charles dropped the curtain and turned around. Yes More trouble. He looked down at his hands, realized he was holding a cup of tea in one of them, and took a swallow from it with the air of a man who does what is expected of him. There may be war with the North. Jack thinks so. Im not sure, but  I dont like the rumors. We must secure the passes through the mountains  particularly Ritgers Gap, which gives anybody coming through it almost a direct line to Istan, and then of course to    the whole Province. It may only be some tribal uproar  but it could be war, as real as it was eighty years ago. There arent many of the old Damarians left  the Hillfolk  but weve been forced to have a  graceful healthy respect for them. And if King Corlath decides to throw his chances in with the Northerners  There was a clatter in the street below. Sir Charles head snapped around. There they are at last, he said, and bolted for the front door and threw it open himself, under the scandalized eye of the  pantryman who had emerged from his inner sanctum just too late. Come in Ive been in high fidgets for the last hour, wondering whats become of you. Have you found out anything that might be of use to us? I have been trying to explain to the ladies what our problem is.Would you care for breakfast? Lady Amelia asked without haste, and with her usual  bland courtesy. Charles may be trying to explain, but so far he has not succeeded. In response to her gesture, a maid laid two more place   s at the table. With a jingling of spurs the two newcomers entered, apologized for their dirt, and were delighted to accept some breakfast. Richard dropped a perfunctory kiss on his sisters cheek on his way to the eggs and ham. After a few minutes of tea-pouring and butter-passing, while Sir Charles strode up and down the room with barely suppressed impatience, it was Lady Amelia who spoke first. We will leave you to your business, which I can see is very important, and we wont  cod you with demands for explanations. But would you answer just one question?Colonel Dedham said, Of course, Melly. What is it?What is it that has suddenly  throw you into this turmoil? Some unexpected visitor, I gather, from what Charles said?Dedham stared at her. He didnt tell you  ? Good God. Its Corlath himself. Hes coming. He never comes near here, you know  none of the real Hillfolk do if they can help it. At best, if we want badly enough to talk to him, we can catch one of his men as they pass throug   h the foothills northeast of here. Sometimes.You see, broke in Sir Charles, it makes us  apply that perhaps he wishes to cooperate with us  not the Northerners. Jack, did you find out anything?Dedham shrugged. Not really. Nothing that we didnt already know  that his coming here is unprecedented, to say the least  and that it is in fact him. Nobody had any better guesses than ours about why, suddenly, he decided to do so.But your guess would be   prompted Sir Charles.Dedham shrugged again, and looked wry. You know already what my guess would be. You just like to hear me making an ass of myself. But I believe in the, um, curious things that happen out there   he waved the sugar spoon  and I believe that Corlath must have had some  cast of sign, to go to the length of approaching us.A silence fell Harry could see that everyone else in the room was uncomfortable.  polarity? she said tentatively.Dedham glanced up with his quick smile. You havent been here long enough to have heard any of    the queer stories about the old rulers of Damar?No, she said.Well, they were sorcerers  or so the story goes. Magicians. They could call the lightning down on the heads of their enemies, that sort of thing  useful stuff for founding an empire.Sir Charles snorted.No, youre quite right all we had was matchlocks and enthusiasm.  correct magic wanes, I suppose. But I dont think its waned quite away yet theres some still living in those mountains out there. Corlath can trace his bloodlines back to Aerin and Tor, who ruled Damar in its golden age  with or without magic, depending on which version you prefer.If they werent legends themselves, put in Sir Charles.Yes. But I believe they were real, said Jack Dedham. I even believe they wielded something we  timeworn Homelanders would call magic.Harry stared at him, fascinated, and his smile broadened. Im quite used to being taken for a fool about this. Its doubtless part of the reason why Im still a colonel, and still at the General Mundy. B   ut there are a number of us old soldiers whose memories go back to the Daria of thirty, forty years ago who say the same thing.Oh, magic, said Sir Charles disgustedly, but there was a trace of uneasiness in his voice as well. Have you ever seen lightning come to heel like a dog?Dedham through his politeness looked a little stubborn. No. I havent. But its true enough at least that the men who have gone up against Corlaths father and grandfather were plagued by the most  awe-inspiring bad luck. And you know the Queen and Council back Home would give their eye odontiasis to push our border back the way weve been saying we would for the last eighty years. painful luck? said Lady Amelia. Ive heard the stories, of course  some of the old ballads are very beautiful. But  what sort of bad luck?Dedham smiled again. I admit it does begin to sound foolish when one tries to explain it. But things like rifles  or matchlocks  misfiring, or blowing up not just a few, but many  yourself, and your n   eighbor, and his neighbor. And their neighbors. A cavalry charge just as it reaches full stretch, the horses begin to trip and fall down as if theyve forgotten how to gallop  all of them. Men mistake their orders. Supply wagons lose their wheels. one-half a company all suddenly get grit in their eyes simultaneously and cant see where theyre going  or where to shoot. The sort of little things that always happen, but carried far beyond probability. Men get  irrational about such things, however much they scoff at elves and witches and so on. And its pretty appalling to see your cavalry crumple up like theyre all drunk, while these madmen with nothing but swords and axes and bits of leather armor are coming down on you from every direction  and nobody seems to be firing at them from your side. I assure you Ive seen it.Richard shifted in his chair. And Corlath  Yes, Corlath, the colonel continued, sounding still as unruffled as when he thanked Lady Amelia for his cup of tea, while Sir C   harles face was getting redder and redder and he whuffled through his mustache. It was hard not to believe Dedham his voice was too level, and it rang with sincerity. They say that in Corlath the old kings have come again. You know hes begun to reunite some of the outlying tribes  the ones that dont seem to owe anyone any particular allegiance, and who live by a sort of equal-handed brigandry on anyone within easy reach.Yes, I know, said Sir Charles.Then you may also have heard some of the other sort of stories theyve begun to tell about him. I imagine he can call lightning to heel if he feels like it.This is the man whos coming here today? said Lady Amelia and even she now sounded a little startled.Yes, Amelia, Im afraid so.If hes so blasted clever, muttered Sir Charles, what does he want with us?Dedham laughed. Come now, Charles. Dont be sulky. I dont suppose even a magician can make half a  zillion Northerners disappear like raindrops in the ocean. We certainly need him to keep t   he passes through his mountains closed. And it may be that he has decided that he needs us  to mop up the leaks, perhaps.Lady Amelia stood up, and Harry reluctantly followed her. We will leave you to discuss it. Is there  is there anything I could do, could arrange? Im afraid I know very little about entertaining native  chieftains. Do you suppose he will want lunch? She spread her hands and looked around the table.Harry suppressed a smile at the thought of proper little Lady Amelia offering sandwiches, with the crusts neatly trimmed off, and lemonade to this  barbarian king. What would he look like? She thought Ive never even seen any of the  salvemen, the Hillfolk. All the natives at the station, even the merchants from away, look subdued and  a little wary.Oh, bosh, said Sir Charles. I wish I knew what he wanted  lunch or anything else. Part of what makes all this so complicated is that we know the Free Hillfolk have a very complicated code of honor  but we know almost nothing ab   out what it consists of.Almost, murmured Dedham.We could offend them mortally and not even know it. I dont know if Corlath is coming alone, or with a select band of his thousand best men, all armed to the teeth and carrying lightning bolts in their back pockets.Now, Charles, Dedham said. Weve invited him here    because the fort is not built for receiving guests of honor, Dedham said easily as Sir Charles paused.And, Sir Charles added plaintively, it doesnt look quite so warlike here. Dedham laughed. But four oclock in the morning, Sir Charles said.I think we should be thankful that it occurred to him to give us any warning at all. I dont believe its the sort of thing hes accustomed to having to think of. The colonel stood up, and Richard promptly took his place behind him. Sir Charles was still pacing about the room, cup in hand, as the ladies prepared to leave. My apologies for  bobble your morning to no purpose, said Colonel Dedham. I daresay he will arrive sometime and we will d   eal with him, but I dont think you need put yourselves out. His message said merely that he desired an  earreach with the Homelander District Commissioner  not quite his phrase, but thats the idea  and the general in command of the fort. Hell have to make do with me, though we dont rate a general. The Hill-kings dont go in much for gold plate and red velvet anyway  I think. I hope this is a business meeting.I hope so too, murmured Sir Charles to his teacup. And  at the moment  we cant do much more than wait and see, said the colonel. Have some more of this excellent tea, Charles. Whats in your cup must be quite cold by now.  
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.