Which was by no means a bad thing. Not at all.
4
J
ADUS returned about noon, as Alberich and Dethor were picking up the discarded bits of armor and practice weapons in the salle and putting things away. With Jadus was a young man in yet another sort of uniformâthis time including a tabard with the Valdemar winged horse on it belted on over his clothing. A servant? It seemed so, since the fellow was carrying a set of stacked metal containers that fitted neatly into a common woven-straw cover. Jadus and Dethor led the young man through the door into the living quarters, while Alberich put the last few bits in a cupboard and followed them.
The young man opened up the straw cover and took out the metal containers one by one, and opened them in turn to disclose the components of their meal, kept hot. Clever, that; Alberich admired the arrangement. Certainly the Collegium was seeing to it that Dethor didn't suffer for taking his meals away from the rest.
By Alberich's standards of camp cookery, it was a sumptuous meal. All of it was laid out in the sitting room, with cutlery and plates that Dethor produced out of a cupboard that Alberich hadn't noticed until Dethor opened it. The servant departed, but Jadus did not; evidently he intended to share their meal. There were four different dishes, plus bread and butter; Alberich took an equal portion of each. Something like a stew, some sliced vegetable, beans, and what appeared to be baked apples. The flavors were goodâwhen in the hands of the Healers, he'd first noticed that the food was goodâbut not quite familiar. The spices were all different; flavors he was used to were missing, new ones added. And these people didn't seem to use as much spice as Karsites did. It
was
good butânot exactly right. Even the bread was lighter in taste, texture and color than Karsite bread, and not as chewy. As much as the language, the
food
brought it home to him that he was on alien soil.
“Your classes won't start for another three days, Alberich,” Jadus said, when the edge had been taken off Alberich's hunger. “Dethor, up at the Collegium we've decided that you should establish a schedule with Alberich first, and we'll work his classes in around that.” The Herald sighed gustily. “At the moment, there are so many classes he will need to take, it won't be a problem to work a schedule of three in around whatever you set him up for.”
Dethor nodded, and refilled all their cups. Alberich was mildly surprised to find that they were drinking, not beer or common wine, but some rather tasty herb tisane. Tisaneâwell, that just wasn't what a soldier generally drank. Not that Alberich had any
objections
to the beverage, after all, most of the beer he'd gotten over the years was indifferent at best and vile at worst, and all of the wine had been harsh and rough. Stillâtisane. It conjured up images in his mind of little old ladies puttering at sewing and gossiping.
Perhaps it was meant to serve as a good example to all those children populating the place. If soâwell, if he was allowed to leave this place, he suspected he would be finding a tavern fairly soon.
Perhaps, if he asked, someone would find him a little cask of some good strong ale.
“At any rate, you won't be seeing nearly as much of me, Alberich,” Jadus continued, “You've got another guide coming, a fellow called Elcarth, a bit of a scholar. You see, we reckoned he'd be the best one to help you over some of the classes I'm hopeless at. I'm to bring him around to meet you in the morning.”
:Which really means, what?:
he asked Kantor.
:What isn't he telling me?:
:That you aren't everyone's favorite Trainee,:
Kantor replied promptly.
:Elcarth is in line to become the Deanâthat's the headâof the Collegium within the next ten years or so. He doesn't look like much, but he's as sharp as a poniard, and nothing gets past him. If he approves of you, no one is going to openly contest your being here.:
Kantor paused, and Alberich “felt” him ruminating.
:Our Kings and Queens, you see, don't rule so much as
reign,
and not at all autocratically. King Sendar will probably have trouble over you with his Council for some time to come. But Elcarthâwell. Elcarth comes from one of the most powerful families in the land,
and
he has a reputation for sharpness, as I told you. The Dean has a traditional place on the Council, but Elcarth is the one who's actually taking the seat for the Dean
in absentia.
That gives us a majority if we need it.:
Alberich kept his face straight and showed no sign that Kantor had imparted this amazing information to him, but he had a very hard time doing so. The Priests of Vkandis had things so completely under their hands and wills that he couldn't imagine a ruler who
didn't
rule completely. Oh, of course, there was a King in Karse, too, but he was no more than an impotent figure who didn't rule so much as preside over a gaggle of wealthy aristocrats and would-be aristocrats with nothing better to do with their time than vie for position in a do-nothing Court that was little better than an elaborate social club. It was the Son of the Sun who held the real reins of power, and behind him, so far as Alberich knew, ranged the solid phalanx of the Sunpriests, who fulfilled the Son of the Sun's orders with nary a murmur of discontent.
Then again, what do I know of what goes on behind the closed doors of the Temple? It might be the same there.
Really, the most astonishing thing might not be so much that there was contention in the King's court, but that ordinary people seemed to know about it.
That
would be unheard of in Karse.
So much had happened to him in a few short marks. This morning he had been quite willing to walk out of here forever; now he wasn't merely a Trainee, he had a real position here. It felt a bit dreamlike, as if days had passed in the course of the morning. He had gone
straight
into the life of this place without a pause for breath. That wasn't
like
him. It made no sense. There was only one way to account for it. That blasted Kantor.
:Me?:
his
(his!)
Companion replied, oozing innocence.
:Don't go laying your so-called conversion at
my
doorstep. I gave you every opportunity to escape. I even had Talamir tell you the great secretâthat you could have shaken our bonding loose if you really decided you couldn't bear this life. How many people have been told that in the course of our history?:
:How should I know?:
Alberich asked rhetorically.
:I was about to tell you. No more than a dozen, that's what. You're here nowâ:
:Because you laid a trap for me, you and your precious Heralds, and baited it with the one thing I'd find irresistible.:
“Then that leaves him free, this afternoon?” Dethor asked, gesturing with a slice of buttered bread. “Good. We'll start you in as my assistant right now, Alberich. Get the youngsters used to seeing you as my assistant first before they start hearing rumors about the evil Karsite Trainee.”
Alberich nodded. Well, what else was he to do? He
knew
it was going to happenâthe “evil Karsite Trainee” business. How could it not? If the situations were reversed . . .
Not that they could be. The first sight of a white uniform, and the wearer of that uniform would find himself the object of target practice. Thoughtfully, he bit off a hangnail.
“The difference, I see not,” he offered. “The Weaponsmaster, if good he be, always hated is.”
Dethor smiled wickedly. “Better to have 'em hating you as the tyrannical Weapons Second, the brutal taskmaster. That way there'll be no room in those rattling little skulls for the evil Karsite Trainee.” He finished his bread in a way that suggested the devouring of small children.
Alberich smiled, just a little. The Weaponsmaster was absolutely right, of course. Childrenâand, to be fair, a great many adultsâwere apt to label people and stick with the first label they'd come up with. “A brutal taskmaster, I surely will be, as ever,” he replied, with a touch of grim humor. “My recruits, ask.”
Dethor rubbed his hands together. “I'll keep the small ones, but youâah! You, I intend to unleash on the older ones. I've been easy on 'emâtoo damned easy, tell the truth.
I
can't bout 'em anymore, and there's never anyone here consistently that can give 'em proper workouts. Andâoh, glory!â
you've
fought real fights. None of this court fencing, oh no! That's the trouble with the teachers the highborn have; they learn to duel, to do fancy court fighting, but not how to
fight.
Plenty of Heralds do, of course, most of 'em trained by me, but they're needed out
there,
and can't be spared.” He shook his head reluctantly. “And, truth to tell, it takes more than knowing how to fight to make a Weaponsmaster.”
Kantor put in a few words of his own.
:The “older ones,” the best fighters among them, anyway, have been getting above themselves lately. We have a flock of them that are one, maybe two years from getting their Whites that were almost all out of the highborn, noble families. Before they were Chosen, they got private swordsmanship lessons, and those continued even after. They think they're masters of the sword now because they're so much better than the rest of the Trainees; Dethor can't give them the sort of workout they need to show them that they aren't.:
Alberich knew exactly what Kantor meant, and was beginning to warm to his new task. And as for Dethor, well, it was clear that he was doing more than merely “warm” to the task. He bordered on gleeful.
Alberich caught some of his spirit. It wasn't malicious, but there was a certain edge that suggested that there were a couple of these adolescent Heralds-in-training who were due for a comeuppance. Thought themselves immortal and invincible, and it would have to get pounded into their skulls that they weren't. The usual adolescent hubris, of course. Over and over, they came into the Sunsguard, sure of their skill, and thinking only of glory and fame. Time after time, if they
did-n't
learn that war against bandits was dirty, perilous, and inglorious, they got their fame by having their names inscribed on the Tablets of the Fallen in the Great Temple. At least none of
these
youngsters would be looking to make a name for himself by taking their officer out in a practice boutâor worse. Worse was an ambitious and unscrupulous recruit who was hoping to advance
himself
by removing the obstacle that Alberich represented. Or to do the same, at the behest of one of Alberich's under-officers.
“That sort, I have seen,” he said shortly, and left it at that.
But he did get a bit of a shock when they finished their mealâa relatively light one, appropriate for two men who would be doing very physical work, shortlyâand he followed Dethor out into the salle again. Of the six adolescents choosing practice weapons or limbering up, two were female.
Girls! True, one of the Heralds that had first found him had been a womanâhe vaguely recalled that nowâbut it hadn't really occurred to him intellectually, even though Kantor had reminded him of that fact, that he would be teaching
girls.
Females just didn't put themselves forward. Not in Karse, anyway. Females had very clearly defined roles in Karse, which did
not
include being fighters.
:Don't hold back with them,:
Kantor said instantly.
:You won't be doing them any favors.:
And when he still hesitated, Kantor added sharply,
:There are barbarians in the North, pirates and slavers in the West, and bandits in the South. And they will probably face all three before they're middle-aged, if they live that long. It will be one woman and one Companion out there, alone, and you
have
to prepare them for that.:
:Yes, I do see that.:
It made him feel a little sick, but Kantor was right; they
were
Trainees, they
would
be Heralds, and he would do them no favors at all by going easy with them.
In fact, he might well kill them. Or worse. There was always the probability of an “or worse.” It was a simple fact that the probability was higher for a female.
:Or both,:
Kantor added grimly.
:They can't be as strong as the boys; you'll have to give them skill to make up for that. If anything, the girls will need your skills more than the boys.:
“Well, Trainees, I have a little surprise for you,” Dethor said cheerfully. He gestured at Alberich, who lingered near the door. “This is my new Secondâand from now on,
he'll
be putting you through your paces, while I watch.”
Alberich had no difficulty in keeping his face expressionless. This was no different than facing a line of new recruits. Even the ages weren't
that
dissimilar; he guessed these youngsters to be between sixteen and eighteen years of age. He'd had recruits that young, although, since he'd been in the mounted troops, they'd all come from some background where they'd been riding since they could walk. And, mostly, the cavalry came from recruits rather than conscripts. He supposed Trainees probably fell under the same banner as recruits; surely
he
was the only Trainee who had ever felt as if he'd been conscripted against his will.
:Not exactly the only one, but very nearly,;
Kantor said.
In their turn, they eyed him without any shame. Mostly with curiosity, although two of the boys had challenge in their eyes. Well, they'd soon see what he was made of. They were the two oldest, he guessed. Definitely the two tallest. One very dark, muscular, and blocky, the other half a head taller, with brown hair and knowing eyes. Of the other four, the girls were a pretty creature, blue-eyed, with a smooth cap of brown hair cut no longer than her earlobes, and a smaller, lighter girl with blue eyes, a generous mouth, and blond hair done in a knot on the top of her head. The boys were both brown-haired, one of medium height and one short, both with grave faces.