The wagon master raised a ham-sized hand. “Didn't say nothing about hauling.” He propped a muddy boot on the spoke of a wooden wheel, worked his quid, and spat another liquid streak. “Never been to Arshessa land, much less across the Ardnamursâ”
“Not all the way. Only about half.”
“I heard you the first time.” He cocked an eyebrow. “What will we haul back? Can't make money hauling one way empty.”
“Furs and amber. Silks. Some jewelry and precious stones. You will receive a tenth.”
Greed flared in the wagon master's eyes. “You have the King's License for all that?”
Harred answered the way Lord Gillaon had instructed if the question was asked. “Your job is to haul the wool and then return with the other. The rest is in our hands.”
“You have a guide for the mountains?”
“We be passing through areas I hunted as a boy,” Elmar said. The wagon master chewed furiously, lost in thought. His face was the color of old leather; deep crow's-feet wrinkles surrounded his eyes. “We'll be a long way from anywhere in those mountains. A lot can happen.”
“My men and I will be with you every step, there and back,” Harred said.
The wagon master spat and chewed.
In the distance, Harred heard the din of happy clansmen. Their wool was sold, and the fair was in full swing. Eager buyers crowded merchants. Horse races and contests of strength and skill were underway. Acrobats, jugglers, acting troupes, and puppeteers plied their specialties as well.
Struggling to keep his features blank, Harred waited impatiently while the wagon master continued his contemplation of Lord Gillaon's offer. If this one refused, then it was to do all over again with someone elseâand that much longer before he tracked down Breanna in the crowd.
He had to find out why she had taken his breath away at the Rogoth pavilion. Never had a woman affected him like this. How could she so easily remove from his mind all thoughts of Rhiannon, who was clearly the more physically attractive of the two? He wanted to pick Breanna up, bring her face level with his, and gaze into those warm dark eyes from now until the sun went downâ
The wagon master pushed away from the wheel and stood straight. “Tell your Lord Gillaon he has a deal. We will start loading his wool at first light.”
“She be so short,” Elmar said, head swiveling as they both dodged a group of running, giggling children, “we could walk right by and never know. You sure she be here and not back at the inn?”
“She's here,” Harred stated with more confidence than he felt. They had checked the merchant booths, the sword bouts and archery area, and the cooking pits. Nothing.
“You eat anything yet?” Elmar half trotted to keep up with Harred's long strides.
“Not enough to matter. You wouldn't believe all that was going on inside that pavilion. I understood about a third of it.” Harred kept scanning the crowd. There!âno, it was a young girl about Breanna's size wearing a yellow dress.
“Have one of these.” Elmar unrolled a cloth containing two fat links of sausage.
Harred took one. Elmar took the other but waited expectantly.
“Are they any good?” Harred asked, as if he didn't know what would happen if he bit into it.
“As good as your mother's,” Elmar said with exaggerated innocence.
“You've tried them?” Try as he might, Harred's lips begin to twitch into a smile.
Elmar realized it wasn't going to work. “These Dinari,” he snorted in disgust. “You've never seen such laughter. My mouth still be burning.”
They came to a large crowd standing in a semicircle around the puppet stage. Shrew Wife was onstage by herself, grousing loudly about her husband. The crowd roared at a particularly tart comment.
“I'll look to the left,” Harred said. “You take the right.” They scanned the crowd once, then again. Breanna was not among the puppet watchers.
“If they be at the inn, packing to leave . . . ” Elmar said.
Harred sighed. She had to be here among the crowd where he could talk to her without her father intervening. At the inn, that would be next to impossible.
Then it hit him. “Have you noticed any loretellers?”
They found the loretellers in a quiet area behind the sprawling Fawr pavilion. Four loretellers, Breanna's father included, sat in a row of chairs listening to apprentice loretellers. A smallish crowd had gathered behind the chairs to listen, but Breanna was not among them. Harred slapped his leg in frustration. At least when he did find her, she would be away from her father.
Then movement at the back of the Fawr pavilion caught his eye. Breanna entered carrying a tray of food and a mug. Watching her approach, Harred was again struck by the smooth grace of her movements.
As Breanna came closer, her gaze came to rest on him. She smiled full at him, and Harred felt the impact down to his toes. She stopped behind her father's chair, handed the food and drink over his shoulder, then stood directly behind him.
A new apprentice got up and began the familiar tale of Destin and Meagarea at the first Rite of Presentation:
Unmarried when he took the throne, Destin knew he needed a queen and a male heir. He summoned all six High Lords. “Choose from among your noble women those you think suitable for a queen. Look not for comeliness alone. Seek maidens of pure heart and high intelligence who love the Eternal as I do . . . ”
Breanna eased back a step and caught Harred's eye. Lowering her gaze, she made her way toward the edge of the small gathering.
Harred moved to join her. His feet hardly seemed to touch the ground. His heart pounded; his mouth was dry. How could a young womanâgirl, reallyâhave this effect on him? He sensed she possessed a sweet nature, but what had twisted her around his heart like no female before?
When you have gathered these maidens, I will come and have you present them . . .
He halted before her, and Breanna's dark eyes searched his face. With her head tilted up to his height, her expression had an openness, a questioning wrapped in vulnerability.
I will trust the Eternal to show me the one he has prepared . . .
Again, Harred found himself tongue-tied. This was his chance, perhaps his only chance. But with her before him, he faltered. This was not the way of courtship. But something rare and precious was happening, and he could not ride away without an effort. She knew nothing of him and his family. Or he of hers. What to do? Something inside urged total honesty. And for the first time with a female, he found himself doing just that.
He stepped to her and led her a small distance back from the gathering. “I looked everywhere. I feared I would never see you again. Then it came to me about the loretellers.”
“I knew you would come.” Breanna continued to regard him with that same open vulnerability. “During my prayers this morning, I felt strongly this day would not end without us talking.”
Harred's heart surged. He should have tried honesty sooner. He heard himself saying, “I intend to ask your father's permission to bring suit.” Then he cringed inwardly, afraid she would think he was too forward.
But Breanna simply nodded. She cocked her head sideways. “Do you serve the Eternal, Harred Wright?”
For a moment, he was unnerved. “When I was a boy,” he began, “my grandmother and I prayed. I bowed the knee to the Eternal and, uh . . . ” he groped to remember the phrases, “asked him to indwell me. I pledged my life . . . I pledged to serve him.”
Breanna's liquid black eyes searched his face. “My mother says once the Eternal puts his mark on a person, it cannot be removed. His presence seemed particularly strong on you in the stable. I have wondered what happened before my father and I came in.”
“High Lord Maolmin had just left. He was talking to Lord Tellan's daughter . . . I interrupted them.”
And came within a heartbeat of being run through
, he finished silently, still in awe of how fast the man had whirled and drawn his sword.
At the mention of Maolmin, a shadow crossed Breanna's features. “My father has changed so much since accepting the High Lord's offer. Mother begged him not to, but he went against her wishes. She cannot bear to be in Maolmin's presence. That is why I accompanied my father on this trip.”
Then Harred realized how quiet it had become. He turned back to the loretellers.
Breanna's father, Abel, was striding toward them. Beside him waddled Ryce Pleoh, the big-bellied Sabinis merchant. The crowd had turned around and was watching with open curiosity.
“Leave this Arshessa!” Abel demanded, his thin face pinched. “And come with me. Now!”
Angered at the tone, Harred stepped between Breanna and her father. “I hear concern in your voice, loreteller. Do you fear I seek to dishonor you daughter?”
The look on Harred's face halted Ryce in his tracks.
Abel came two strides furtherâbut no closer. “Breanna. Now!”
As Breanna stepped around and went to her father, Harred raised his voice until it carried to the rest watching and listening. “The reason I ask, Loreteller Abel, is to make sure before we leave this place that honor has been satisfied. If you have ought against me, state it now before these witnesses that I might respond in like manner.”
Ryce fingered his cloak and sneered. Abel was opening his mouth when the bandy-legged Rogoth loreteller hurried up.
“I am Girard, Lord Tellan's loreteller. Is there a problem . . . Harred, I believe it is?” He turned to face the loretellers and other people coming. Elmar's was the only friendly face. “This Arshessa is here under Rogoth covering,” Girard said. “If there be ought against him, Lord Tellan will see justice done.” Then under his breath to Harred, “If there is, I'll have your guts for bowstrings.”
“I have treated the maiden with honor, loreteller.”
Girard studied him long and hard. Then, seemingly satisfied, he spoke formally. “Loreteller Abel Caemhan, have you fear this man has harmed your daughter in action or word?”
Abel looked like he could have bitten a nail in half, but he turned to Breanna and followed the time-honored formula: “Breanna en Erian de Caemhan, do you have ought against this man? If so, state it plainly and know he will not be able to touch you now or ever.”
“No, Father,” Breanna said quietly, eyes downcast. “He was telling me he wanted to present suit. I would be honâ”
“Enough.” Abel turned to his fellow loretellers. “Be it known that I have accepted bride price for my daughter from Ryce Pleoh. She will meet him at the Maiden Pole during the Dinari Presentation Gathering and there be married.”
Breanna's expression showed surprise. Abel took his daughter by the elbow, and they left. Ryce smirked at Harred and followed.
Harred felt as if a mule had kicked him. This frog-eyed, sowbellied Sabinis would carry Breanna to the bridal bed? A delicious heat begin to build.
Not while I draw breath. But what can I do?
Heartbroken, he watched her walk away.
The rest of the people drifted off to other activities. Girard remained with Harred and Elmar.
Girard said, “My sympathies, clansman. Breanna seems a rare one.”
You don't know the half of it,
Harred thought with deep sadness. Her father had spoken, and Harred knew he stood little or no chance to change that decision.
Or did he?
“Loreteller, does Dinari honor allow for a
Wifan-er-Weal
?”
Girard's eyes widened, then narrowed. “Be not hasty, clansman. It has been generations since a
Wifan-er-Weal
was allowed.”
“My great-uncle fought one for his wife. She was Landantae. Clan rivalry made that the only way.”
“With Breanna, there will be ramifications.”
“How so? Is Dinari lore that different?”
“I will explain.” Girard's voice deepened as he took on the familiar loreteller cadence: “
Wifan-er-Weal
is from the Old Tongue and translates roughly as âMarriage-or-Death.' This trial by personal combat takes place when two clansmen present suit for the same maiden. If she and her father agree on the same suitor, then the other is driven from the Maiden Pole by stoning. If, however, the maiden chooses one suitor while her father declares for the other, then our lore allows the maiden's choice to demand a
Wifan-er-Weal
to settle the matter.”