All he really knew was how such situations would have been handled in the far past, as recounted in the history books he spent so much time perusing. In the days of long ago, there had
been less time and leisure for long plots and political machina¬tion. The Elvenlords of old had dealt with problems with their own kind in ways that "human barbarians" would find perfectly familiar.
If one of the First Lords chose to deal with the insults instead of tamely accepting them, he would have called his enemy out for a duel-by-magic.
That makes a satisfying fantasy these days as well—provid¬ing you picture yourself as the winner rather than the loser.
In law, that was still an option, but it was one that very few ever took anymore. More than ninety-nine times out of a hun¬dred, insults were answered and arguments settled by proxy, in the arena, at the hands of human gladiators like the ones below. Hardly fair, since clearly someone whose means were limited couldn't afford to keep and train as many fighters as someone of greater rank and power, but someone of greater rank and power would also be much stronger in magic than a lesser lord—so it wouldn't make a great deal of difference to the out¬come, whether it was settled by combat or magic duel.
It's even possible for someone with weak magic to become wealthy enough to afford first-quality fighters, or to gain an ally with access to such fighters, but nothing increases the power of the magic that someone is born with. I suppose combat-by-proxy is marginally more fair than combat-by-magic.
It wouldn't be quite as viscerally satisfying, though.
I wonder how I'd fare if I decided to challenge one of the charmers behind me to a magic duel? Have any of them even bothered to practice and train their power? There was no way of judging how strong they were by the way they were acting, and he really didn't know how strong his magic was in compar¬ison with theirs. Going into such a challenge blind would be the stupidest thing he could do.
He didn't use magic except when there was no way to ac¬complish something without it. He really didn't have much use for illusions, so he'd never really practiced them, but there was no reason why even an illusion couldn't be used as a weapon. Other Elvenlords seemed to waste a great deal of power on out¬ward appearances—for instance, as Aelmarkin had, turning his
manor into an impossible confection that hardly resembled a dwelling at all. But was that the waste that it seemed to be?
Is it a kind of bluff—or even a way of demonstrating power without the risk entailed by combat?
For a moment, he felt a flicker of concern that he hadn't done likewise; should he have created an opulent illusory costume like theirs? What would these people think if they saw his un¬adorned home? Did they think him weak, and of little account, because he didn't create and maintain fantastic illusions?
It doesn 't matter, he told himself quickly. No one ever comes to visit who needs to be impressed, and I'm not the only one here wearing ordinary clothing.
He reminded himself that his status, and that of his family, remained secure—because they produced what others needed, and they had no power that anyone else coveted. It was a reas¬suring thought, and one that calmed his new-born concerns. He wanted to look harmless and inconsequential; he'd nearly for¬gotten that. He wanted people like these friends of Aelmarkin to underestimate him and his family.
He gave himself a mental shake. These people were contami¬nating him—he hadn't been among them for even half a day, and already he was thinking about challenges and status, worrying because they thought he was a provincial, insular bumpkin! So what if they did? That was what kept him and his safe! Let them jockey with each other he reminded himself. Let them ignore us. As long as they consider us politically insignificant, but too use¬ful to disturb, we 'II remain secure and safe.
Unless, of course, the family holdings looked so prosperous that they became a choice plum, ripe for picking. Certainly Ael¬markin thought so; was it possible that some other, more dan¬gerous opponent would come to share that belief?
Perhaps—perhaps he ought to consult with Lydiell when he returned home. Maybe it was time to create a few carefully-crafted bluffs. Lydiell was clever; surely she would be able to concoct an excuse for Kyrtian to demonstrate his powers in such a way that would make it appear that Kyrtian had incredi¬ble ability. Or, at least, that he had enough magical power to make challenging him more costly than the prize was worth.
Something to make it appear that it isn 't worth upsetting the way things are now, that's what we need. Something to show that there is nothing to be gained and a great deal to be lost in a direct confrontation.
It might be all to his advantage that most conflicts were set¬tled in the arena. He knew for certain that in strength and agility, his own worst fighters were the equal of even the best of the fighters down there on the sand—and were superior to most of the men waiting to fight. If it came to a challenge-match like this one, Kyrtian was confident that his side would not lose.
That realization made him relax a little. Really, he was wor¬rying for no reason. As long as issues were settled by human gladiators like those below him, he had nothing to fear.
In fact, the more he studied those fighters, the more confident of that fact he became. It was odd; those gladiators all seemed a good bit younger than he would have expected. This was an im¬portant match, or so he had been led to believe. So why weren't the two antagonists fielding their older, more experienced glad¬iators? What is it that Gel says? "Experience and duplicity will overcome youth and energy every time."
He had managed to lose track of what the gossips behind him were chattering about while he mulled over his own situation and studied the combatants. When he turned a fraction of his at¬tention back to them, he discovered they were placing bets on the outcome, not only of the whole combat, but on the fortunes of individual fighters. Mildly intrigued, he eavesdropped with¬out shame.
"You must know something, if you're betting that high," the drawler said suspiciously. "Don't take the bet, Galiath! He's too confident! I think he bribed the trainers to tell him something!"
"Nonsense, he doesn't know anything—he's just bluffing, and I've wanted a chance to get that horse for ages!" replied a new voice, one that Kyrtian thought was slurred just a little with drink. "I'll take that bet; your racehorse against my red-haired concubine and two jeweled armlets that the one with the two swords draws first blood before he's marked!"
It took a moment for the sense of what they were saying to
sink in, and when it did, he felt a little sick. The idea of equat¬ing the value of a human with that of a horse—no, as less than that of the horse ... it hit him with the force of a blow to the stomach just how foreign their way of thinking was to his. He'd known it intellectually, of course, but this was the first concrete example he'd witnessed. Up until now, Aelmarkin's slaves hadn't behaved any differently than his own servants at their most discreet.
I truly am the alien here. If they knew how we treat our hu¬mans, they wouldn 't hesitate for a moment to bring us all down. He would be considered a traitor to his race, and worse than the Wizards and the wild humans. He had to remember to keep his guard up!
The two feuding parties finally arrived, with great fanfare, at exactly the same moment. With each of the Elvenlords came an entourage of glittering, fancifully-costumed hangers-on. There were box seats at either end of the arena, directly above the two doors that had disgorged the combatants; those boxes were now occupied by the newly-arrived lords and their entourages. Kyrt-ian found that he could not for the life of him remember their names and Houses—not that it really mattered to him. He would, if he was introduced later, congratulate the winner and be properly sympathetic to the loser. It wasn't likely, though, that Aelmarkin would make such an introduction, unless he thought he had a way of making Kyrtian lose face.
How they took their seats and in what order was clearly as choreographed as an elaborate ritual. Neither of the Lords wished to be seated first, and there was much arranging of the chairs and jockeying of seating before the two Great Lords sat at precisely the same moment. They glared at each other across the span of the arena, before turning away with studied indiffer¬ence to speak with a companion.
Now Aelmarkin, as host, stood up; Kyrtian caught the move¬ment out of the corner of his eye, and turned j ust enough so that he could watch his cousin without being obvious about it.
"Most noble Lords," Aelmarkin said, his smooth and imper¬sonal words carrying effortlessly above the whispers of those
seated all around him, "You have determined to settle your dif¬ferences in trial-by-combat, and have accepted my offer to host this venture. Are you still of the same mind to accept the out¬come of this combat as the settling of your feud?"
He of the azure serpent replied with a gruff, "Aye" while he of the white alicorn simply nodded.
"Very well," Aelmarkin said calmly. "Let the record show that both agree to be bound by the outcome here below us. Let all who ye assembled here so bear witness."
"We so bear witness," came a chorus of voices, some indif¬ferent, sxjme full of tense excitement. A hush came over them; all whispers and movement stopped. So profound was the si¬lence that the slightest rustle of fabric came as a shock.
As if this had been a signal, the fighters below tensed.
Aelmarkin surveyed the two opposed lines of fighters for a moment, an odd smile on his lips. "Very well," he said at last, into the stillness. "Begin."
Kyrtian's full attention immediately turned to the arena. The two lines of fighters leapt at each other, hurling themselves across the sand to meet in a clangor of metal and harsh male shouts. The noise echoed inside the arena, making Kyrtian wince involuntarily. Added to the noise of fighting was the clamor of shouts and cheers behind him and to either side of him, as the onlookers cheered the combatants on.
Kyrtian was still trying to figure out how Aelmarkin intended to score this combat, when the swordsman nearest him man¬aged to beat down his opponent's guard and laid open the other's sword-arm from shoulder to wrist with a single blow.
The rnan screamed, and dropped to his knees, a torrent of shockingly scarlet blood pouring from the wound into the sand as his blade fell from his slack fingers.
For one moment, Kyrtian was startled by how realistic the wound was—then he realized that it wasn't "realistic," it was real.
He felt as if someone had rammed him in the midsection and knocked all the breath out of him. He started to shake, as a wave of sick horror twisted his throat and stomach.
It's real—it's real. They're trying to really kill each other.
They 're dying, and all so a couple of idiots can settle an argu¬ment! Senseless—useless—insane!
Then, strangely, it all dissolved under a flood of blinding rage. He lost caution, lost focus, lost everything except the will to make it all stop. He rose abruptly to his feet.
"No!" he shouted, spreading his arms wide, his voice some¬how carrying above the noise of combat. His powers, leaping to answer his will, poured out; an angry and violent burst of magic tore out of him.
It flung the combatants to their own sides of the arena, and dropped every man in the arena to his knees—except the in¬jured one, who was frantically trying to close his gaping wound with his good hand.
The sudden silence, heavy with anger, seemed louder than his shout.
For a moment, no one moved—no one seemed able to be¬lieve what he had done.
Then in an instant, both of the Great Lords turned to stare at him with an anger as overwhelming as his. Kyrtian felt the weight of that anger, all of it directed solely at him, and came to his senses with a start.
This might have been a tactical error.. . .
The lord of the white alicorn was the first to rise from his seat; there was lightning in his gaze and thunder in his voice as he addressed, not Kyrtian, but his cousin.
"Aelmarkin," the Elvenlord said, enunciating each syllable with care, "I trust you did not anticipate this?"
Aelmarkin also rose, and his voice fairly dripped apology and concern. "Good my lord, I assure you, I had no idea that my cousin would indulge in such bizarre behavior! I do apolo¬gize, I would never have invited him if—"
Kyrtian, who had been staring down at the wounded fighter, now being aided by one of his companions, felt fury overcome his good sense again; he swung around to face his cousin, twist¬ing his lips into a snarl, a red haze settling across his vision.
"Bizarre behavior? Bizarre? I call it sanity—stopping utterly senseless and wanton waste! What—"
"Waste?" shouted the other feuding lord, furiously, the ice in
his voice freezing Kyrtian's words in his throat. "Waste? What do you know of waste, you impudent puppy? You provincial id¬iot, who let you in among civilized beings? I—"
"I apologize again, my lords," Aelmarkin protested, waving his hands about frantically. "Please, take your seats and the combat can resume—"
"Resume? Resume?" At that, Kyrtian's rage sprang to full and insensate life again, and grew until it was beyond anything, he had ever felt before. He went cold, then hot, then cold again, and a strange haze came over his vision. "Haven't you heard a word I've said? This idiocy will not resume, not while I'm standing here!"
"That can be remedied,'' muttered someone, as Gel finally put a calming hand on Kyrtian's arm. Kyrtian had the sense not to throw it off, but he was quite ready at that moment to snatch up a sword himself and take them all on single-handed.
"Don't back down," Gel muttered, "but get hold of yourself. Think fast—if you can't salvage this situation, we're going to have three feuds on our hands, two with them and one with Aelmarkin."
Aelmarkin was so angry he could scarcely think. When he'd in¬vited that fool Kyrtian here, he'd hoped the puppy would make some sort of blunder that would prove he was as foolish as Ael¬markin claimed. Well, he'd blundered all right—but he'd man¬aged to do it in such a way that now Aelmarkin was potentially in as much trouble as he was! How had he managed to stop the combat? Where did he get all that magic power?