“An excellent point, and it seems that you are as much lawyer as fighter.” The King looked across Kero at his brother. “You did warn me, didn't you, Daren?”
“I did. About her scholarship
and
her skills. I said that Tarma called her a ânatural' when we were learning together. I said I didn't think she'd let any of her skills slip just because she was a Captain. And you kept saying I was exaggerating.” Daren shrugged expansively. “Will you believe me when I tell you something now?”
“I suppose I'll have to. You keep telling me âI told you so' at every opportunity.” Faram turned his attention back to Kero, as his horse shook his head. “What I would really like to know is how you learned to shoot so wellâwe both had the same teacher, but you never seem to miss. I'd suspect you of magic if you weren't so entirely unmagical.”
Kero bit her lip as if she was trying to keep from laughing, and replied, “My lord, the fact is that you have never been either on the front line or dependent entirely on your own skill to keep your belly full. I think you'd find that the two harshest teachers in the world are survival and hunger. I've had both, and trust me, they make a difference.”
“On the whole,” Faram admitted, “I think I'd prefer to skip that sort of lessoning. I'm too old for those teachers.”
“You're too fond of your comforts, brother,” Daren jibed. Faram was about to retortâbut at exactly that moment, the head of the boar-pack belled, and the entire pack started off. Daren's mount lurched from a walk into a gallop, and as he passed the huntsmen who were whistling in the retrievers, he grinned.
This was a hunt meant to supply the Court with meat for the Sovvan Feast tonight. If Sovvan hunt-luck meant luck for the rest of the winter, as the old folks said it did, the winter would be a prosperous and easy one. Already they'd brought down a half-dozen deer this morningâseveral bachelor bucks and a couple of does that everyone agreed were past their bearing prime. That was enough venison that Faram had sent back the deerhounds and brought up the boar-hounds. The Queen and her ladies were coursing the woods and meadows nearer the Palace, taking their hawks out after birds and hare.
Most of the ladies, that isâ
He looked back over
his
shoulder, to see that the handful of women who'd ridden out with the King's party were still there, keeping up valiantly, and already outdistancing the likes of the Lord Baron.
Last year there hadn't been any women with the King's party, but since Kero's arrivalâand exampleâthere were a respectable number of ladies exchanging their skirts for full-cut breeches, and riding neck-and-knee with the men. And some of those ladies were
not
young; Lady Sarnedelia, who had a formidable reputation as a rider on her own estate, had hailed Kero's “innovation” with relief and enthusiasm. She was right up there beside the best of the riders, proving rumor to be truthâand she was fifty if she was a day.
I can't help but wonder how many others would have joined us, but weren't willing to risk losing suitors or enraging husbands. I know the Lord Baron's daughter looked as if she 'd rather have been with us. His granddaughter is, and I'll bet that's what kicked off that tirade about “disgrace.” Of course, she's safely wedded to young Randel, and she can snap her fingers at what her grandfather thinks, since her loving spouse thinks that everything she does is wonderful. And if I could find a lady that suited me as well as she suits him, I'd probably think the same. Huh. Wonder whatever happened to that little prig Daren, who was horrified at the notion of “Lady Kerowyn” riding to hunt exactly like this? Maybe he grew up.
He leaned forward into his horse's neck, ducking a low-hanging tree limb. He saw a fallen trunk just ahead of them, and braced himself for the jump.
The gelding took it, but stumbled; he recovered quickly, but not before he'd made Daren's teeth rattle.
They broke through a screening of bushes into a clearing, and ahead of him Daren saw Kero's big, ugly mare sail over another fallen tree-giant with a twinge of envy. The Shinâa'in-blood was taking rough ground with a contemptuous ease that left most of the other horses faltering or outright refusing. About the only ones that were keeping up with her were himself, the King, and the huntsmen.
And probably only because we have Shinâa'in-breds, too. Though not like
that.
No wonder people would kill to get a warsteed.
This boar was leading the hounds a merry chase; he was obviously fast and canny.
I hope he's the one they wanted us to go after; he's surely acting as if he was the bad one.
The local farmers had reported some trouble with an unusually large and evil-tempered boar to the King's huntsmenâa boar who had already killed one swineherd and wounded others, stealing their herds of pigs for his harem when they took the beasts into the forest after fallen acorns. That was why they'd hunted stag this morning; to give the horses a chance to run off any skittishness before going after such a dangerous beast as a boar.
That's the one time I've seen Kero back down from something,
he thought, as the trail wound deeper into the forest, and the horses were forced to slow their headlong gallop.
When she said she'd stay a-horse, even Faram was surprised. But then she's never fought on foot, and she didn't even bring a proper boar-spear with her, just that saddle-quiver full of lances.
Curious weapons, those; Daren had never seen anything like them. She had told him that they were used by the Shinâa'in, and it was obvious that they were
not
intended for gameâthose were man-killing weapons, with narrow, razor-barbed metal heads as long as Daren's hand.
Well, maybe if it runs, she can sting it with one of those and turn it for us.
The pack was belling ahead of them, and the huntsman sounding the “brought to cover” call on his horn. The horses emerged into a tiny clearing before a covert; that was obviously where the boar had holed up, and now they were going to have to flush him into the open.
While Kero stayed on horseback as she'd pledged, the rest dismounted and went ahead on foot. The pack was still ahead of them, and the huntsman sounded the “broken cover” call. Daren broke into a trot; he heard Kero's horse behind him, eeling through dense brush that even he was having trouble with, afoot.
The sound of the pack changed, just as the huntsman sounded “brought to bay.”
Daren vaulted a tangle of roots, and burst out into a clearing. The boar was standing off the pack; he was an enormous brute, with a wide, scarred back.
Not
a wild boar at all, but a domestic beast gone feral.
That made him all the more dangerous. Daren pulled himself up before charging into the fray, and looked at his brother.
Faram read the plan in Daren's look and nodâthey'd hunted boar together for years now, and needed only a glance to determine what the other intended. This time Daren would be the bait.
The huntsmen pulled the pack back at his command, and while Faram moved quietly around the edge of the clearing, Daren shouted at the boar, getting ready to drop to his knee or dodge aside at any moment. The success of this tactic lay in the fact that once a boar this big began a charge, it had trouble changing direction quickly, and its poor eyesight interfered with its ability to follow anything moving in a way it didn't expect. You only had to avoid those slashing tusksâ
Only.
“Hey!” he yelled at it, stamping one foot. “Hey!”
It waved its head from side to side, nose up in the air, seeking a scent that the musk of the dogs coveredâthen saw him, and charged perfectly down the center of the clearing.
He leapt aside at the last possible moment; saw the flash of a tusk as it made a strike for him. Then he leapt back before it had a chance to change direction, jabbing down at the heart with his boar-spear, knocked off balance for a moment, as Faram ran in from the side a heartbeat later to plunge his own spear into the boar's back.
It shrieked in pain and anger, and struggled forward, tearing up the soft earth in deep furrows with its cloven hooves. But the two of them had it pinned between them; another moment, and its legs collapsed from under it, and it died, as one spear or both found the heart.
He started to look up, a grin of congratulation spreading across his face, when a human scream rang across the clearing, cutting across the cheer started by the huntsmen.
Movement and a flash of red caught his eyes-
One huntsman was down, his leg savaged, and standing above him, with her tushes dripping red, was a sowâa wild sow, as big as the boar they'd just brought down.
My gods. It had a mate....
She squealed once, trampled the huntsman, and then whirled to face them all.
And the first thing she saw was Faram.
She squealed again with rage, and charged.
Daren tugged futilely at his spear, but it was stuck fast in the boar, lodged as it was intended to do, and wouldn't come free. Faram was on his knees, and struggling to get up, but it was obvious he was never going to get out of the way in time.
Suddenly, there was a blur of gray,
flying
between the King and the charging sow.
The pig screamed, and turned aside; whirled and charged this new target, her eye streaming blood. The gray warsteed pivoted on a single hoof, and lashed out with her hind feet, sending the sow flying through the air. Two flashes of metal followed it, and the sow hit the ground and lay there, thrashing, two of Kero's lances sticking out of its sides.
The mare whirled again, but on seeing that the “enemy” was no longer a threat, snorted once and tossed her head. Kero dismounted, walked cautiously toward the convulsing beast with her knife in her hand, then dived in and slit the sow's throat with one perfectly timed stroke.
The beast shuddered and died.
Kero rose from the carcass, and wiped her knife carefully on the sow's hide. Only then did she look over to where Daren and his brother were sprawled beside the body of the boar.
“Survival, my lord,” she said mildly. “has taught me to always leave a mobile scout to the rear.”
Then she walked over to her mare, and mounted, leaving the huntsmen to deal with the carcass.
Twenty
Kero sipped at her watered wine, turned to the woman at her said, and said, “Honestly, it was mostly Hellsbane. I've never hunted boar before, and I didn't know what to expect. That was why I stayed mounted.”
Lady âDelia nodded. “A good horse is worth twenty armsmen, or so it seems to me. I've never seen a horse quite as well trained as yours, though. She follows and obeys you more like a dog than a horse.”
“So I've noticed,” Kero told her, without elaborating.
Let her wonder. She seems nice enough, but the less people know about warsteeds, the better off I'll be. Whether people overestimate or underestimate Hellsbane, I win.
“She's really the second horse of her line that I've had from the cousins,” she continued, which allowed Lady âDelia to elaborate on her own horses' lines, and ask which of the King's Shin'aâin-bloods it would be best to breed her hunters to.
Kero answered with only half of her mind occupied by the conversation; the rest monitored the feast and the peoples' reactions to her, a response as automatic as breathing. She couldn't help but contrast the reaction of the Rethwellan Court to that of her brother's. Despite the similarity of the circumstancesâthat she had personally rescued both Dierna and King Faramâin her brother's home she had honor without admiration. Here she had both; an embarrassment of admiration, in fact. Some of the young ladies of the Court, those in the hero-worshipping early teens, had even taken to dressing like her. Predictably, Daren found this very funny.
But better that than fear; she was as much feared as admired by many of the Court. King Faram's people had seen her in action and knew what she could do, now, where her brother's people saw her successes as being mostly luck.
On the other hand, .fear didn't bother her as much as it used to.
I guess I've gotten thicker-skinned. As long as the babies don't run screaming from me, I think I can handle a little fear.
King Faram impressed her as much as she had evidently impressed him.
I can see why Daren loves his brother,
she thought, watching the relaxed and easy manner they had between them, sharing jokes or admiring a particularly toothsome lady.
It would have been very easy for Faram to resent what I did for him, but there's absolutely no sign of any such thing.
In fact, he had ordered the sow's head prepared and served alongside the boar's head, and presented to her with a full retelling of the story. The Court Bard was a good one; with very little warning he'd done the tale up with bangles and bells, making her sigh, and wonder if this song was going to make the rounds the way “Kerowyn's Ride” had. He had promised her a boon when the song was over; right now she had no idea what she'd ask for, but something like that was worth taking time to think about.
The feast was a bit more than she was comfortable with, anyway. Her people ate well, but nothing like this. She didn't recognize half of what was served, and even though she did no more than nibble at what she did recognize, she was ready to end the meal when it was only half over.
Probably that was as much reaction as anything else, though. As always, she got her battle-nerves
after
the fact, when everything was over and done with.
If I was standing, my knees would be knocking together. And I never, ever would have been able to pull that one off without Hellsbane.