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Authors: Sherwood Smith

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BOOK: Banner of the Damned
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“Is Hannik the Herskalt’s brother, then?”

“No. He’s the Herskalt himself, using a family name, he says.” Ivandred flashed a brief smile at my astonishment. “He kept his identity a surprise. Said he knew I’d be pleased at the discovery, and his purpose was to bring my training to the north. Foster unity of purpose among the Marlovens. The rivalry with the south could be put to use on the training field. We are only as worthy as our opponents. I know that from my own training days.” He indicated my tower. “So your orders are clear: finish those wards. Leave the military training and commanders, to me.” He left.

Was he angry with me? I had to know—and so I turned to the dyr. By the time I got to Darchelde and my listening post, he’d gone to Lasva. I found him just as he crushed her in his arms, whispering, “I had to be back for Kendred’s Name Day visit.” When he began kissing her, I left them.

Later on, I revisited to find them lying side by side, Ivandred running his fingers up and down her ribs to her hip, a gentle but absent gesture. She was instantly minded of Kaidas’s clever fingers that gave pleasure as well as took it, but such thinking only cut deeper into her heart.
I have to send him away

tomorrow. The weather is too bad now
.
It would be terrible for his son. I can be strong.

Ivandred said, “I’m going to take all four divisions of the King’s Lancers north to meet the Herskalt—Hannik—and the northerners, soon as spring clears the plains. I wish you would come with me.”

“If it’s a peace mission, I would most happily accompany you. But if your purpose is another of your interminable war games, I fear I would make myself a nuisance.”

“Lasva, I will tell you again, I mean to keep the peace, but—heh! Was that a cat just now, running into your wardrobe?”

“Her name is Anise.”

“Colendi?”

“From Colend, yes. I do not know ‘anise’ in Marloven.”

“Someone sent you an orange cat all the way from Colend? We do have cats in Marloven Hesea.” He smiled.

“I know. And perhaps you will see two Marloven tabbies when you go in to breakfast, as Patter is fond of egg. The runners named them Patter and Tuft. But yes, Anise was brought from Colend.”

“Brought? By whom?”

“Kaidas Lassiter. Who now works in the stable, along with Herald Martande. Back with us again.”

“Why would a stable hand bring a cat across the continent? Who sent it?”

“It was his own idea.”

Ivandred rose on his elbow, frowning in perplexity. “A Colendi comes all the way here to work in our stable and brings you a cat.” His brow lifted. “He brought it for
you
.” His tone changed. “A former suitor, or lover?”

Lasva had hoped that this conversation would never take place. But hope always betrayed one. “He was never a suitor,” she said. “Being at the time an indigent baron.”

“I don’t remember meeting any Lassiter. But then I’ve forgotten most of their names.”

“You were not introduced.”

Ivandred said slowly, “There is one I remember. The day we scuffled with that northern king. The man who met us on the way back to your palace.”

“That is he.”

“A former lover, then. Here to see you.”

“I believe so,” she said steadily.

He sat up. There was a new scar on one shoulder, angry red, slanting below his collar bone. She had not even known that he had been wounded. Again. His hair fell over it. She brushed the lock aside and traced her finger gently over the length of the scar, murmuring, “I think our souls scar as our bodies do.”

Ivandred stared at her, wary, perplexed. “Your soul is free of… of scars and tarnish. I need that, Lasva. I need you.”

“My soul is scarred, too,” she whispered. “But I am here.”

Ivandred let his breath out. “Do you see him? Lassiter?”

“See?” she repeated, thinking of the many varieties of the word in our language, and the dearth in Marloven. So she defined it. “Yes. Every morning, when we Colendi practice the Altan fan form. Then each of us goes about our daily tasks.”

Ivandred gazed intently at her, then passed a hand over his face. “I do not want to become my father,” he said and reached for her. “If it pleases you to practice your fans with Colendi stable hands, including a former lover, then so be it.” She sat unresisting as he gripped her shoulders. “Lasva. Give me another child.”

“I will and gladly,” she said steadily. “As soon as I know that that child will be born into a kingdom at peace. I do not feel it now.”

“Nor do I,” he admitted. “That’s why I’m going north in spring. I want to see Danrid and the rest of them face to face. In the field. Every day. Not in a crowd for New Year’s Week. Find out what’s galling them under their saddles, and form them into unity of purpose, as Hannik says. He will be there to help. Strange, to think of the Herskalt as having a name. If it is his name. When I asked, he said that the name Hannik would suffice. A strange man, he is. Not ten years older than I am, yet he’s so knowledgeable. So good with command. Stronger than a tree, too. Sometimes I wonder why he isn’t a king.”

Lasva had no interest whatsoever in Hannik. She took Ivandred’s hands from her shoulders and pressed them between hers. “Bring me peace, Ivandred. And I will do my best to keep it and to raise your children to propagate it.”

 

Two days later, crowds lined the stone walkways around the palace. I hadn’t realized how highly people regarded the little prince. Rather than squeeze into the crowd, I took myself to Darchelde, and thence the garden, to watch with the dyr.

I oriented myself through Lasva’s gaze, as she stood beside Ivandred to watch the Academy gate open. But her thoughts were turbulent, a dizzying mix of erotic memory, sorrowful awareness of Kaidas somewhere in the castle, and anxiousness to see her son after a year.

Kendred walked out, thin, even weedy, his upper lip lengthened as he tried to suppress a self-conscious smile; I shifted to his thoughts. They were turbulent, too. He was pleased, but shy of all those staring eyes, after a year with only the Academy. His heart pulsed with baffled love when he spotted his parents. His mother with tears in her eyes. His father tall and strong. But neither had saved him from Them. (Image of towering instructor brandishing a withy cane.)

Then he caught sight of Vasande—a boy his age, one he didn’t know—among some of his own castle friends, and his interest sharpened before
his mother’s arms closed around him, and she smothered him with kisses.

I disengaged, stepped out of that airless garden, and set down the dyr. As had become habit, Adamas Dei’s words about the idle eyes in the Garden of the Twelve prompted me to practice the mental shield. I already had the habit of shutting out the world, so the conscious building of a mental wall from within had come easy. Then I turned my attention to the magic over the dyr, but I assessed it using Adamas Dei’s magical approach.

This time I could see the layers clearly. I could even have removed them, with no more difficulty than snapping a series of spider webs. If the Herskalt were to set that as a lesson, I would prove my prowess as a mage!

After these experiments, I checked back with Kendred. He was not with his parents at all—his vantage made me dizzy as he lay on his stomach in a tower crenellation, his elbow jammed up against someone else as he stared down at the neat alignment of rooftops. “… and there. That last one? That’s where the scrubs sleep. Everybody is ten except me, but we’re supposed to have seven-year-olds in spring.” Kendred flushed with morose triumph. “I’ll still be a scrub, but they’ll be lower.” He envisioned himself thrashing a younger boy—faceless, weeping loudly.

“We don’t have any academy. Not like that.” It was Vasande—and they were speaking in Kifelian.

“Truth?” Kendred’s foremost emotion was scorn but under that was envy.

“We have lessons at home.”

“You must lose all your wars.”

“We win them.”

“All? Mother wouldn’t talk about wars, except that King Martande the First won against the Chwahir.”

“All,” Vasande repeated, and though Kendred was not looking at him, so I couldn’t see his face, perhaps Vasande saw some of Kendred’s resentful anger, because he added, “My Aunt Tatia tried to kill me. That’s why I am here.”

“She did? I only had one aunt, and she was
old
. How did she do it? Sword? Knife? How did you fight her off?”

“I wasn’t there.”

“Oh.” Kendred’s disappointment verged on disgust.

“So show me how tough you are,” Vasande said. “Cam says you’re supposed to come out of there tougher than anyone. Let’s scrap.”

“Behind the bake-house is where we always go.”

I disengaged. The prince had obviously rejected the day of activities that Lasva had planned, and with the unthinking selfishness of children, had run off on his own pursuits. No matter how much it hurt her, she would never constrain him. I did not want to hear her emotional pain, so I listened to Kaidas, who was on duty. He and the stable hands were busy with the newly arrived horses, the latter bragging about the exploits of the First Lancers.

Kaidas’s thoughts veered. He remembered the single glimpse of Ivandred he’d had so far, when Lasva rode on his horse after the rescue from the king of the Chwahir. Now a king of a huge kingdom that was about to become bigger, if the gossip was right.
If I can see them together, I’ll know what hope I have
, that was the gist of Kaidas’s thoughts, over and over. The rest was a confusion of what he’d say in this instance or that…. I left him, as by then my head was panging.

But the yearning to see more had not abated. So I worked through the layered wards on the dyr again, a soothing task, until the headache abated enough for me to look again.

To be hit with Lasva’s heightened distress as she stared down at Kendred, who said proudly, “He’s nine, he’s bigger’n me, but I thrashed him good.” He turned his head, and she reacted with pain at the blossoming bruise on his cheek. “Da, what They teach us, it works, it
works.

“Did this boy challenge you?” Ivandred asked. “You did not attack him?”

“Yes,” Kendred said. “He said, let’s scrap. He said he didn’t think the Academy was any good.”

Lasva left them. She ran down to the stable, where she found Vasande being cleaned up by his father. Kaidas gazed at her over Vasande’s head, but she did not address him.

She knelt down beside Vasande. “I beg your pardon on my son’s behalf,” she said, working hard not to let him see the sorrow that filled her heart. “You are a guest. Fighting is uncivilized behavior.”

Vasande had been holding a cloth to his bleeding nose. “I said we should scrap,” he mumbled. “I didn’t think he would hit so hard, he’s so puny.”

Lasva looked at Kaidas and Carola’s child, helpless, grieved.

It was this grief that Kaidas saw.

Lasva sensed his scrutiny. She turned her attention to the boy’s wide black eyes framed by long lashes, fair hair, bones already showing the planes of his father’s, the same cleft in his chin. “Are you happy here?” she asked, though she hadn’t meant to.

The parallel to Kaidas’s thoughts unsettled him, and he walked out in search of healer’s steep.

Vasande jerked up a shoulder. “I hate my mother,” he told Lasva calmly.

Her throat ached. How unbearable it would be if her own dear son said such a thing! Guilt for sending her own son to that horrific Academy, combined with memory, prompted her to say, “Please don’t hate her. I know she loves you, though maybe you do not yet see it.”

The boy regarded her steadily, his face unchanged—
melende
. “She hates everybody,” he said. “She hates
you
.”

“I think she did,” Lasva responded and then spoke a secret thought, and not about Carola, whom she had never known. “Sometimes… ah-ye, how to say it. Sometimes hate is misplaced love.”

But she just confused the boy. “Did she lose love? For you?”

“Not for me, though I did try to become her friend. But I wonder how much love she learned from her father. Though she inherited great wealth, as you know. Perhaps it makes more sense to say it this way, that I think her inheritance of love was very small. You probably know that when people have little of a thing, it’s soon spent. And they cannot find any new.”

“We don’t have any money,” Vasande stated, in the same matter-of-fact tone he’d said
Let’s scrap
. “Not anymore. We did in Alarcansa. My father says that maybe I can go back and be a duke, but he can’t go back.”

“Do you want to go back?”

“My Aunt Tatia tried to kill me.” Now he was bragging, though his tone was morose. “Ow.” He winced when he daubed his nose. “I’m supposed to have healer steep.”

“Your father went to get some. Shall we find him?”

As they walked out together, I left them, as by then black spots swam before my eyes. I stumbled out of the garden and put my head down on the table. It took a long time to recover enough to transfer. I’d listened far, far too long with the dyr.

The next morning, I felt as if I’d fallen down stairs, but I forced myself to the fan practice so that no one would remark on my absence.

The result?

BOOK: Banner of the Damned
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