Quaeryt looked hard at Nalakyn, feeling almost like imaging his disgust and anger.
The master scholar paled … then swallowed. His voice was barely audible as he replied. “Whatever you say, sir.”
“Nalakyn,” Quaeryt said gently, “I went out of my way to save the scholarium when most of Tilbora was ready to burn it and all of you because of what Zarxes, Phaeryn, and Chardyn-oh, and Alkiabys-were doing. Lord Bhayar and Telaryn need safe places for both scholars and imagers. Not just scholars. Not just imagers. Both.”
Yullyd glanced at Nalakyn.
“I understand, sir, It’s just that…”
“We all have to change with the times. I wouldn’t be surprised if, in a few years”-if not even sooner-“Lord Bhayar will need imagers.”
“You mean if Rex Kharst conquers Antiago and captures the Autarch’s imagers?” asked Yullyd.
“That’s certainly a possibility,” agreed Quaeryt. “It would be useful to have some imagers who could create Antiagon Fire or combat it.” Not that Quaeryt had any idea of how to do that himself.
“How … would they combat it?”
“Image sand over it, I suspect. That usually damps most fires, even bitumen fires.” That was a guess on Quaeryt’s part, but he thought it would work, since stone and earthworks were impervious to Antiagon Fire. “I’ll have those draft rules to you within a week, sooner if I can. Tell the holder-what’s his name … his son’s name, too?”
“His name is Kryedt. The boy’s name is Dettredt.”
“Tell Holder Kryedt that the boy is accepted, under the usual provisions requiring good conduct and obedience to scholars.”
“Yes, sir,” replied both scholars. While Nalakyn’s tone was not quite resigned, Yullyd’s was more enthusiastic.
“Now … I’ll wait outside in the main hall while you draft that letter to Holder Rhodyn.”
Quaeryt stepped out to rejoin Vaelora, noting several students hurrying away as he neared. One he knew-Lankyt.
“What did young Lankyt have to say to you, dearest?” asked Quaeryt quietly, not wishing his voice to carry beyond Vaelora.
“Which one was he? The slim brown-haired one with the shy smile?”
“How did you know that?”
“I didn’t, but you wouldn’t have known who he was unless he stood out in some way. He was the most respectful and well-spoken.”
“His father is the holder in Ayerne.”
“Rhodyn, is it?”
“Yes. He was most kind when I escaped the ship reavers and was recovering.”
“He spoke highly of you when we spent the night there.”
“He’s a good man. I just hope…” Quaeryt went on to explain.
Vaelora listened, then nodded. “You’re offering a strong suggestion, but not demanding.” She smiled mischievously. “You are suggesting, between the lines, that he’d be a fool not to agree.”
“What else could I do?”
“You could let him do as he pleases without saying a word … but that’s not who you are. You’ve proved that in dealing with my brother.”
Quaeryt shrugged.
“The chorister? Gauswn … he was most complimentary. Is he the one who was an undercaptain?”
“He was.”
“He said that it was almost a shame you hadn’t been a chorister, but that he’d seen you were destined for greater deeds.”
Quaeryt winced. “I fear he thinks I’m another Rholan.”
“Would that be so bad, dearest?”
“For a man who doesn’t know whether there even is a Nameless, it would be.” Quaeryt shook his head.
“You’re too hard on yourself.”
“Not in that.”
Vaelora shook her head.
Shortly, Yullyd reappeared with the letter. “Sir?”
“Thank you.” Quaeryt read it, then nodded, took the pen from the scholar princeps, and signed the missive. “Very good, Yullyd.”
“Thank you, sir.”
After the ink dried, helped by Quaeryt’s holding the paper near the stove, he folded the sheet and slipped it into the inside pocket of his jacket.
In less than a quint, they were on the road back to the Telaryn Palace, riding directly into the wind, which seemed to be slightly stronger than on the way to the scholarium.
“Are you still glad to be accompanying me?” asked Quaeryt dryly.
“Yes. It was good to get out.”
“What did you think of the scholarium?”
“Everyone was most polite,” observed Vaelora.
“You might have noticed all the deference was to you, my dear lady. Quite manifestly obvious, I would say.”
“That might have been, but the respect was for you. Master Scholar Nalakyn looked somewhat chastened when he bid us good day.”
“He was reluctant to take on another paying student because the boy is an imager.” Quaeryt snorted. “As if the boy will not have enough problems. An education will help.”
“It helps some, dearest. Others it is wasted on.”
“True. But if he’s one of those, he goes back to his father. He deserves the chance. What he makes of it is up to him. Did Chaerila ever write or say anything about the Autarch’s imagers?”
“Not to me.” Vaelora frowned in concentration. After a moment, she said, “I remember, though, something that Aelina said. Chaerila complained in a letter to her that she was almost a prisoner in the palace, but at least she wasn’t walled up in a compound with metal behind the walls, the way the Autarch’s imagers were.” She paused. “What are you going to do?”
“Write up a set of rules. Then you’ll read them and tell me what to change and improve?”
“You aren’t asking me.” A mischievous smile appeared. “Isn’t that a form of disrespect?”
“I respect your judgment and intelligence so much that I know you’d want these rules to be as good as we can make them.”
Vaelora laughed.
Quaeryt smiled happily-until the next gust of bitter wind whipped around and through him, and he shivered almost uncontrollably.
And this is a warm day for winter.
3
Another storm had buffeted Tilbora beginning on Samedi, and Quaeryt and Vaelora had remained within the palace walls. While the snowfall stopped by early on Solayi, the rankers of the regiment were still clearing snow in midafternoon, and Quaeryt was in his official study struggling with the draft rules he had promised Nalakyn and Yullyd.
He glanced up as the study door opened wide.
“What are you working on, dearest?” Vaelora asked as she stepped from the anteroom into the study.
“Rules for young imagers at the scholarium.”
“Why didn’t you have Nalakyn or Yullyd write them up and then just review them?”
Quaeryt had told her why earlier, but he didn’t comment on that. Vaelora never asked a question, he’d discovered, without a purpose. “He’d write them, and they’d sound wonderful and mean nothing. Then Yullyd would rewrite them, and the poor youths would feel that they were in prison, and that would make their schooling worthless.” His breath did not quite steam in the cold air of the study. “I thought you were practicing with Eluisa. That’s why I came here. I’d already started work on this on Vendrei.”
Vaelora walked around the desk to stand at his shoulder and read down the document. Then she smiled. “From those rules, one might think you had lived among imagers for your entire life…” She did not quite finish the sentence, but left the words hanging.
“I did spend several years at the scholarium, with Voltyr and, for a time, with Uhlyn, you might recall.”
She looked down at the document and began to read, picking out a phrase from the middle of the sheet. “Imager scholars must not, under any circumstances, attempt to image metals. While there is always the temptation to image coins, the effort to image silvers and golds has often proved to cause great illness or death, even to older imagers.…”
Quaeryt nodded. “That’s true.”
“I don’t doubt it’s true, dearest.” She smiled again, warmly. “What I have some doubts about is how you might happen to know that.”
“I told you…”
“Dearest … I know that you would never tell me something that is not true or based in truth. I also know that, upon occasion, you have”-she paused-“been less than forthcoming about the details of certain events.”