"What boots it?" Wildfire put her hands on her hips and set her stance. "I love common men as well as nobles." She smirked at Ilira. "I shall fight you for him! Choose the game."
"Very well." Ilira nodded serenely. "You are a brave and bold student, Alondra," she said. "But let us see how good a student you are. You will tell me whether I speak a lie or the truth, and if you are right, he is all yours." She winked at Kalen. "Gods help him."
Wildfire straightened her shoulders. "I accept!"
Ilira closed her eyes and breathed gently. Serenity fell in that moment, and the dancers and gossipers and servants around them grew hushed and seemed far away.
The elf opened her eyes again, and they seemed wet. "I wear this black in mourning," she said. "For my dearest friend, who was taken from me long ago through my own cowardice."
Wildfire looked positively stunned, as though Ilira had smitten her with a mighty blow.
"Oh, my lady," she said. "I'm so sorry-I did not know…"
Ilira looked away. "It seems you believed me," she said. "Aye?"
Wildfire nodded solemnly, and Kalen saw tears in her eyes. The rest of her face revealed nothing though, and he marveled at what must be self-discipline like iron. Like Araezra.
Ilira smiled. "What a pity." With that, she led Kalen toward the center of the dancers.
"What?" Wildfire colored red to the base of her silvered hair. "What?"
But they were safely protected from any fury she might have wrought, blocked by a living wall of nobility clad in the finest costumes and brightest colors coin or magic could buy. And on Lady Ilira's arm, Kalen could see no one else.
It completely escaped him, moreover, that a dance with her might attract exactly the sort of attention he didn't want.
"Olive Ruskettle and…" the herald looked at Fayne, who just smiled. "Escort."
Arm in arm, Cellica and Fayne looked out into the courtyard full of revelers and song. The dancing-the music-the colors-the gaiety! Cellica, in a word, loved a.
"I'm so glad you came by an invitation," the halfling said. "Funny you didn't dress as anyone in particular, though. I was sure-"
"Pay it naught," Fayne said, her eye drawn to the dancers in the courtyard. She stiffened, as though she saw someone familiar.
"What?" Cellica asked, straining to see, but everyone was too tall. "Who is it?"
"No one," Fayne said. "No one of any consequence."
"One moment." Fayne let go of Celiica's arm and skipped away through a mass of nobles-roaring drunk and dressed as fur-draped Uthgardt barbarians.
"What? Wait!" the halfling cried. "Fayne!"
But Fayne was gone, leaving Cellica lost in a forest of revelers.
With a harrumph, she started looking for Kalen or Myrin.
Not bothering with the servants' stairs, Fayne made her way immediately to the grand staircase that led to the balcony on the second floor. There she'd find the rooms of worship and splendor-where her mark waited, preparing for her dance at midnight.
On the way, she nestled something amongst the statues of naked dancers that flanked the stairs. The item was a small box her patron had given her-a portable spelltrap-into which she had placed an enchantment of her own, one of her most powerful. The item gave off only a faint aura when inactive, and with a courtyard full of woven spells and the temple wards, no one would notice until it was tripped. And by then, enough chaos would be caused.
Two jacks, descending the stairs hand in hand, looked at her askance, but she just nodded. "Sune smile upon you," she said.
They replied in kind and joined the throng.
Fayne, managing to keep herself from giggling like a clever child, strung the privacy rope between the statues' hands and nodded to the watchmen, who smiled indulgently and knowingly. Just a reveler off to some tryst.
Oh, yes, fools-oh, yes.
Fayne skipped up toward Lorien Dawnbringer's chamber. No guards milled about-why would they, when all were below, at the revel?
Fayne knocked gently, and a womanly voice came from within. "Who calls?"
Then Fayne remembered, and swore mutely. She had almost forgotten-dressed in these ridiculous clothes-a face to go with the attire.
She ripped off her fox mask and passed her wand over her body, head to toe. She shrank herself thinner and a little shorter, her face slimming and sharpening, and she became the elf to whom this outfit belonged-the one Fayne remembered in her nightmares.
Fayne always committed herself fully, throwing herself into danger with wild abandon.
The door opened, and Lorien peered out, blinking in genuine surprise. "Lady Ilira?"
Fayne gave her a confident wink, then she leaped into Lorien's arms. She kicked the door closed as they staggered inside.
TWENTY-ONE
It was a trick," Kalen said as Ilira led him toward the dancers. "What you told her." "Whar, saer?"
"It was borh true and false," Kalen said. "Your face is covered, and I couldn't tell from your voice or your eyes, but I saw it in your throat. You lied, in parr, and rold true in another."
"How inrriguing, good Sir Shadow." Lady Ilira looked at him with some interest. "When you become more… familiar with moon elves such as myself, you will note that our ears tell lies more clearly than anything else."
Kalen's heart beat a little faster at the thought of becoming familiar with this woman. "Will you solve the mystery, then?"
"I did lose my dearest friend long ago," she said. "But I do not dress in black for him."
"A half-truth, shrouded in lie." Surprisingly, he could feet her hand-very warm-in his.
"Like a paladin shrouded in night," she said. "Light hidden in twilight, aye?"
A song was ending-a gentle Tethyrian melody, with decorous dancing to match. Kalen knew styles of music-he had once romanced a traveling bard of Cormyr-but dancing was quite beyond him. He hoped he did not disappoint the graceful elf.
As though she read his thoughts, she smiled again. "Never fear, saer-I shall teach you."
Lady Ilira released his hand-he felt the loss of her touch keenlyand presented herself before him. She offered an elegant, deep bow, which Kalen returned.
They waited for the applause to die down and for the lordlings to select new partners. Most of this was according to rote, already long established. Many envious glances fell on Kalen and Lady Ilira, who was clearly one of the most beautiful and graceful ladies in the ballroom. In particular, one sour-faced elf lord was glaring at him. That one wore a long false beard and black robes, making him look like a dark sorcerer. Gloves of deep red velvet gleamed, and Kalen could see his fingers tapping impatiently. Kalen felt unsettled.
"Ruldrin Sandhor," she said. "I imagine he does not like to see me dance with a commoner. But I dance with whom I wish-I always have."
Kalen smiled wryly. "How did you know I was not noble, lady?" he asked.
"The way I know / am not." She chuckled. "It is obvious."
"Your husband does not make you noble?" Kalen offered. "Lord Sandhor, mayhap?"
"Oh, good saer." She showed him that she wore no rings over her gloves. "No husband."
Then she took his hands and placed his right on her hip and kept his left hand in her right. "You are fortunate," she said. "As a man, the dance is easier."
The bards played the first few strains of what sounded like a vigorous refrain, then paused to give the dancers a chance to pair off in preparation.
With her left hand on Kalen's shoulder, Lady Ilira reached up for his brow, and his heart leaped at the thought that she might remove his helm and kiss him-but her hand only touched his mask. For some reason, he thought of Fayne, and wondered where she might be.
"Who are you thinking of, I wonder?" she asked as they bowed to one another.
That snapped him back to the ball. "Ah, no one…" Kalen floundered.