Long Paw
Albinkirk (Southford) – Ranald Lachlan
When Ranald Lachlan led his scouts down to the edge of the Albin River, he could scarcely believe his eyes.
Fifty great boats, like galleys, lay in the river opposite the landing. The river fleet covered the river in four long files of boats, and their oars went back and forth like the legs of water-running insects.
At his back, the Royal Standard of Alba fluttered in the breeze over the gate-towers of Albinkirk, and the fields by the great bridge were empty of foes. It was like a dream, because the familiar ground was so empty.
Ranald sat his horse, watching the big river craft row, and even as he watched, they turned, all together, at a flash of a great bronze shield, and suddenly the whole fleet went from four columns advancing west to four lines heading toward the north shore. His shore.
He walked his horse out onto the landing stage where the ferry had run, in better times, and waved.
A woman in the bow of the largest galley waved back. An awe-inspiringly beautiful woman in a flowing white overkirtle. It took an effort of will to tear his eyes away from her, and he knew her well, from his years in the south.
Queen Desiderata.
Unbidden, a smile came to his face, and he laughed.
Albinkirk – Desiderata
Who is that?’ Desiderata said to her maidens teasingly. She was standing in the bow, waving. ‘I feel I know him.’
Lady Almspend stood and waved. ‘Ranald the barbarous hillman, my lady,’ she said brightly.
Desiderata smiled at her secretary. ‘You seem happy enough to see him,’ the Queen said.
Lady Almspend sat a little too suddenly. ‘He – gave me the most wonderful book,’ she said haltingly.
The other ladies laughed, but not unkindly.
‘Was it a big book?’ one asked.
‘Very old?’ asked another.
‘Perhaps more like a nice, thick scroll?’ suggested Lady Mary.
‘Ladies,’ the Queen said. The oarsmen were losing the stroke, laughing so hard. But the bank was rushing at them, despite the current.
As they rowed into the landing, the Queen stepped lightly up on the gunwale and leaped onto the pier.
Ranald Lachlan, who she remembered perfectly well, bowed deeply and then knelt.
She gave him her hand. ‘It is a long way, since you were in my bridal guard.’
He smiled at her. ‘A pleasure, my lady.’
She looked past him, up the tall bank, where Donald Redmane had the lads dismounted. ‘You have a small army of your people here. Come to aid the king?’
He shrugged. ‘My cousin lost a small army, my lady. We’ve already fought the Outwallers. But I have a thousand head of beeves and some sheep, and I’m looking to sell them to the Royal Army.’
She nodded. ‘I will buy them all. What’s your asking price?’
If he was surprised by her tone or manner, he hid it well. ‘Three silver marks a head,’ he said.
She laughed. ‘You drive a hard bargain.’ She said. ‘Is it chivalrous for a knight to bargain with his Queen?’
Ranald shrugged, but he couldn’t stop looking into her eyes. ‘Lady, I could say I’m no knight, but a drover. And I could say I’m a hillman, and not in any way your subject.’ He grinned, and knelt. ‘But he’d be a rude bastard and no kind of a man, who ever failed to acknowledge you as his Queen.’
She clapped her hands delightedly. ‘You are the very spirit of the north, Ser Ranald. One mark per beeve.’
‘You, my lady, are the living embodiment of beauty, but for a mark a head, I could have sold them to the Keeper of Dorling. Two silver marks a head.’ His eyes flicked to something behind her, and his smile intensified.
‘You remember my secretary, the very learned Lady Almspend?’ she asked. ‘One and a half.’
‘One and a half, right here, on this side of the river?’ he asked. He made another deep bow, this time to her secretary, who was standing on the gunwale, beaming. ‘Two if I have to drive them over the river.’
‘What’s a kiss worth,’ sang Lady Almspend. She blushed, shocked at her own boldness.
‘Everything!’ he shouted back. ‘But these aren’t my beeves, so I can’t trade them for a kiss, my sweet,’ He relented. ‘Your Grace, my price is two, but I’ll drive them where you like, and pledge my lads to serve your Grace.’
The Queen nodded. ‘Sold. Fetch me my navarch. I have a thousand head of cattle to ferry over the river.’ She turned back to the hillman. ‘So despite your sordid money, you’ll do a deed of arms with me?’
She put extra effort into her voice. She saw a coldness in him – something absent, some terror recently passed – and her voice caressed it like liquid gold.
The hillman looked cautious. ‘What kind of deed?’
‘What knight asks what deed is required of him? Really, Ser Ranald,’ she said, and put her arm through his.
‘I’m no knight,’ he said. ‘Except perhaps in my heart,’ he added.
She smiled at Lady Almspend. ‘We must do something to rectify that.’
On the bank above them Donald Redmane watched his cousin with the Queen.
‘What’s happening?’ asked one of the boys.
‘We just sold the herd to the Queen,’ Donald said. ‘What’s an Alban mark worth?’ he asked, and then shrugged. ‘And now we have to live to spend it.’
Lissen Carak – Harmodius
Harmodius listened to the angry crowd and kept his head down. He was almost drained of power – needed more recovery time, and the last thing he needed was a confrontation with ignorant witch-hunters.
Let the boy handle all that.
He dressed carefully. The old Abbess had never been a friend of his – but now, in death, he had to admire her. She had disclosed power of a level she had never had in youth – and had deployed her power brilliantly. She’d held the Enemy for long moments, while he prepared his masterstroke.
Sadly, his masterstroke hadn’t quite come off. But she hadn’t died in vain. The fortress still stood. And the Enemy’s beard had been badly singed.
Again.
Harmodius imagined himself standing at the Podium at Harnford, staff in hand, lecturing on Hermeticism. I learned the underpinnings of the nature of reality in the middle of one war, he would say, and I learned to manipulate them myself in the middle of another. Or perhaps he would say, I saved the world for mankind, yes, but I only stood on the shoulders of giants. That was better. Quite good, in fact.
And now all of her secrets would go to her grave with her, and her soul would fly to her maker.
Harmodius ran his fingers through his beard.
What if-
What if all the power in the world came from a single source?
That’s what it was, wasn’t it? It was, in a way, a commonplace.
Green or gold, white or red? Power. It’s just power
And that meant-
No good. No evil. No Satan. No – no God?
Did it mean that, in fact? Were there really any fewer angels on the head of a pin, if all power came from a single source?
His head spun.
What if Aristotle was wrong?
He could hardly breathe. One thing to think it. Another to know it to be true.
He stumbled down the tight staircase to the common room of the dormitory, and then he forced one foot in front of the other as he walked toward the chapel.
Bad Tom appeared at the captain’s side. The captain was doing his damnedest to appear to be a member of the congregation. He had just sung a hymn. He had himself well in order.
She had wanted him to understand.
He knelt when the other attendees knelt. Sister Miram led the service in the absence of the priest, a matter that seemed to excite no comment.
I swear on my name and my sword that I will avenge you, my lady.
‘My lord?’ asked Tom, at his elbow.
‘Not now.’
‘Now, my lord,’ Tom said.
Glaring at his corporal, the captain stood, walked to the aisle and genuflected to the crucified figure that towered over him, and then backed down the aisle to the doors. Every head turned.