Protector of the Small Quartet Page 7
Oakbridge was on her like a cat. “What amuses you, probationary page?”
Can’t he pretend I’m just like everyone else? thought Kel as she got to her feet. “Nothing, sir.”
“But you are amused, it was quite clear. You must share the joke with us, probationary page, now, if you please.” He stood before her desk, one fist planted solidly on a hip. She could hear his foot tapping briskly.
“Master Oakbridge—”
“Lord Wyldon shall school you properly in the matter of excuses. I will accept no more evasion, probationary page!”
Kel opened the book and pointed to the author’s name. “Sir, the writer is my father.”
The master of ceremonies snatched the book away and scowled at the title page. “What of that?” he demanded. “The child does not have all of his father’s knowledge.”
All of her father’s knowledge, thought Kel irritably.
“Excuse me, Master Oakbridge,” Neal said in his friendliest voice, “but Kel doesn’t have all of her father’s knowledge. Not his.”
Dropping her blank Yamani mask-face, Kel glared at him.
Oakbridge also glared at Neal. “The majority of you are lads. Proper usage calls for male pronouns when males are part of the group.”
“Except that you addressed Kel alone, which then demands the exact term.”
Kel clenched her hands behind her, where Master Oakbridge could not see them. She promised herself that from now on she would try to sit as close to Neal as possible. She could not kick someone eight chairs away.
Oakbridge gave Neal a look that would have stripped paint, then turned back to Kel. “You have not answered me,” he said. “Have you your father’s knowledge? You are but a child.”
“Yamani etiquette is serious,” Kel replied, her face once more Yamani-calm. “Especially at the emperor’s court. People have their heads cut off if they don’t bow right.”
Oakbridge stared at her for a moment. Then he pursed his lips. “Review this entire volume tonight, probationary page Keladry,” he announced. “Tomorrow you will report on those parts that are familiar to you, and which parts, if any, are not. Should I be satisfied as to the breadth and depth of your knowledge, I may call on you to assist me in preparing for courtesies to the Yamanis.” To the pages he explained, “As I am certain his highness is well aware”—he looked at Prince Roald, who nodded—“their majesties have arranged for a state visit next fall by Princess Chisakami of the Yamani Empire. When she arrives, we shall know how to greet her and her attendants properly, according to their own custom. To that end—”
The final bell of the afternoon rang. Kel gathered all her papers and books and followed the other pages out of the room.
Neal was waiting. “So, probationary page...” He grinned as Kel made a face. “How long did you live with the Yamanis?” They headed back to their rooms.
“Six years,” she replied. “Longer than I’ve lived in Tortall, actually.”
“Can you speak—” Neal began as they stopped before Kel’s door. He interrupted himself to sniff the air. “What’s that smell?”
Kel leaned closer to her door and sniffed. “Urine,” she said. There was a pool of yellowish liquid on the threshold. “I’d better clean it up.”
“No,” ordered Neal. “You have to change for supper. I’ll tell Salma and meet you in the mess hall. Get moving.” He trotted away, shaking his head.
Kel juggled her school materials until she could pull out her key, then opened the door. At least none of the urine had leaked into the room; that was a blessing.
She closed the door with a sigh. What a disappointing day! Parts of the morning’s exercise had been interesting, but the classwork was simply tedious. What good would etiquette do a knight? And how could she be expected to stay awake all afternoon when she’d been running all morning? Couldn’t she just do the physical training and forget learning a whole new set of bows?
It is not your place to question what the masters want you to learn, she told herself. Your place is to obey. It was what her Yamani teachers would have said if they had heard Kel’s unhappy thoughts.
I just wish obedience was more exciting, she told them silently as she began to change her clothes for supper. Is that so much to ask?
Once they had filled their trays, Kel and Neal went to the spot they had claimed as their own and sat. Kel picked up her fork, but Neal shook his head. She looked around. All of the boys had taken their places, but no one had begun to eat. She raised her eyebrows at Neal, who whispered, “No Stump.”
Everyone fidgeted; Kel’s stomach growled. At last the door opened. The squires jumped to their feet and bowed. Someone murmured, “The king.”
Then everyone was up and bowing as two men—the king and Lord Wyldon—walked up to Wyldon’s small table. Kel stared at the ruler whose domain she wanted to serve so much. King Jonathan was the handsomest man she had ever seen. He was an inch shorter than Wyldon, but the training master faded beside him. King Jonathan’s neatly trimmed hair and beard were coal-black, framing a face that was tan from a summer outdoors. His nose was straight and proud. His eyes were a deep, brilliant sapphire blue, framed by long lashes. On any other man those lashes might have seemed feminine; not on the king.
He grinned; white teeth flashed against the black of his beard. “Don’t let me keep you from your meal,” he said in a clear baritone voice. “I remember what it was like from my own days at those tables.”
“If your majesty will give the blessing?” asked Wyldon, half bowing.
The king nodded. He stepped up to the lectern, raising his hands. “Bright Mithros, Great Mother, all gods powerful and small, grant us your blessings and guidance, we humbly pray.” He brought his hands together, and his audience realized he’d finished.
“So mote it be,” responded the pages and squires raggedly. They had expected a longer prayer.
“Now eat,” said the king. “After you’re done, I’d like a word.” He and the training master sat at Lord Wyldon’s table. The fourth-year page whose task it was to wait on them rushed to put food before the two men.
Kel eased back onto her seat, her thoughts all in a jumble. She tried to sort them out as she ate. She wished she could ask the king why he had allowed Lord Wyldon to put her on probation for a year. In that original proclamation ten years ago, it was written that girls could try for their knight’s shield; probation had not been mentioned. It wasn’t fair, so why had he allowed it? Could she serve a king who wasn’t just with her? Chivalry worked two ways: you gave good service to your overlord, and in return your overlord honored your service and treated you honestly. None of this adding extra conditions when all you wanted was the same chance everyone else got.
I suppose I’ll never find the courage to ask him why flat out, she thought sadly. I’ll just bow and be polite like a good ambassador’s daughter. I bet Neal wouldn’t hesitate to ask. She looked at her sponsor and smiled in spite of herself. Neal was eating his cake as his vegetables got cold on his plate.
When everyone had finished, the king went to stand at the lectern again. “Don’t get up,” he said as everyone began to rise. “If memory serves me, your legs are starting to get sore right about now.”
A number of the boys chuckled. Kel looked at her hands, which were curled into fists in her lap. If you can’t treat me properly, I’m not going to laugh at your jokes, she thought stubbornly.
“I won’t keep you long,” the king promised. “I really just wanted to look at you.
“We survived the Immortals War, as they’re calling it. We survived, but at a price. You know as well as I how many knights were lost, how many crippled. Thanks to Lord Wyldon, you older pages and squires were also able to fight, to defend our people. You did well—but I can see there are faces gone from this room who were present last fall. We shall miss those who are gone.
“Our enemies tried to destroy us. They failed—but we are hurt. Inside these walls, I can tell you, we are hurt. Our heali
ng will be the work of years.”
No one spoke. No one moved.
“Most importantly,” he continued, speaking as he might to his closest friends, “it is the work of your years. Your studies, your bruises, your saddle sores, your nights spent doing mathematics, and history, and mapmaking. Your mastery of the arts of war, and of the laws of the realm.”
King Jonathan paused for a moment, his eyes exploring their faces. Looking at him, Kel thought grudgingly, All right, he hasn’t been fair, and he hasn’t made Lord Wyldon treat me like the boys, but he’s right about the work. I’ll show them—I’ll show him, and Lord Wyldon—that I’m as good for that work as anybody else. Like the emperor’s Chosen warriors. I’ll be an example. They’ll be sorry they ever treated me unjustly.
“Each one of you here is a gem, all the more precious because we lost so many. Combined, you are the treasure of the kingdom. Treat yourselves as such. Work hard, study hard, and know your value. Guard your strength, make it grow. Build your stores of learning. Do it not for yourselves or your teachers or your monarchs. Do it for the kingdom. Do it for us all.” He looked them over one last time, nodded briskly, then strode out of the hall. He was gone before any of them remembered to bow.
As unhappy as her thoughts had been, Kel still had to remember to take a breath once the king had left the room. His presence was even stronger than the emperor’s had been. She could see how people might fight and die for him, and how he could stir such fierce loyalty in calm and level-headed men like her own father. Just a look around the room showed her boys who were still caught up and breathless after what he’d said. Even Neal, who seemed so world-weary, looked eager.
When he realized her eyes were on him, he smiled. “Isn’t this a great time to be alive?” he asked. “Stormwings and spidrens to fight, beings from legends arrayed at our sides, people in need of protection and us being prepared to do it...Nothing happened in King Roald’s time, and everything’s happening now. We’ll be sung about, our names will be passed on to our descendants.”
“It’s going to take a lot of work, that’s for certain,” she replied with a shrug.
Neal propped his chin on one hand and gazed at her. “You aren’t a bit romantic, are you?” he asked, amused.
She sat back and stared at him. She was beginning to think that Neal required a keeper. He seemed to have the craziest ideas. “Romance? Isn’t that love-stuff?” she asked finally.
“It’s more than just love. It’s color, and—and fire. You don’t want things magnificent and filled with—with grandeur,” he said, trying to make her understand. “You know, drama. Importance. Transcendent passion.”
“I just want to be a knight,” Kel retorted, putting her used tableware on her tray. “Eat your vegetables. They’re good for you.”
When she returned to her room, Kel found a small package on her desk. She looked it over. It was wrapped in canvas and addressed to her. The writing was ornate yet readable, like the style that market scribes used. The twine and canvas both were cheap quality, available to anyone with a few coppers to spend.
She drew her belt-knife to cut the twine, sawing until the cord parted. Kel put the blade down with a sigh. She would have to sharpen it yet again. It got dull very quickly. She hadn’t thought to ask her parents for a new one before she left home.
Opening the canvas wrap, she found a plain wooden box inside. Shaking her head—she didn’t like mysteries of any kind—Kel opened the box. Inside she found a sheathed belt-knife. Like the box, the sheath was plain, made of the same kind of black leather that wrapped the hilt. The blade itself was a very different matter: it was steel as fine as anything that came out of the Yamani Islands, so sharp it would slice a hair. Kel knew that because the first thing she did was pluck one from her head and draw it lightly over the edge.
Underneath the knife was a small leather bag with a whetstone. Like the sheath and box, the bag was ordinary. The stone was high-quality goods. It would put on an edge even her old knife would hold.
Inside the bag was a parchment tag. Written on it, in that same common lettering, was “Goddess bless.”
Kel had to sit on the bed. Who would send such a fine gift? Anyone in her family would include a proper note. Neal was friendly, but she couldn’t see him spending this kind of money on her. She couldn’t see anyone doing it.
She thought it over until the first after-supper bell rang: she had classwork, and Neal had invited her to study with him. Fretting over the identity of the gift-giver would not be of much use for now. She removed her old knife and clipped the new one to her belt, smoothing it with careful fingers before she gathered her books. The gift had come the first day of real classes, which told her there was one thing she could be sure of: someone wished her well.
Kel smiled. Someone wanted the probationary page to succeed.
five
KEL BACKS AWAY
Five weeks after her arrival at the palace, Kel decided to write a letter to her family. It was hard to get started. That morning Peachblossom had stepped on her foot, bruising it even through her heavy riding boot. It seemed to hurt worse as the day wore on, distracting her in her classes and at supper. Only when she had propped the foot on a cushion placed on a stool did the throbbing ease enough to allow her to write.
Dear Papa and Mama,
Thank you for the package with the candied fruit and cakes. I shared with my sponsor, Nealan of Queenscove. He liked the cakes very much.
I can’t believe that five whole weeks have gone. I am working hard. The teachers are strict. Master Oakbridge, the master of ceremonies, is teaching Yamani etiquette from Papa’s book. I have to show everyone the submissions so much that I get dizzy. My favorite class is mathematics. I think the teacher, Master Ivor, is pleased with my work.
Tell Tilaine there are no banquets until Midwinter Festival so I haven’t served the king at table yet. Pages get to practice serving Lord Wyldon and his guests at supper three days in a row. The new pages are last on the schedule so my turn won’t come until late this year. I won’t get to serve at the high table at Midwinter. Only senior pages get to wait on important people like the king.
I have a horse. He is a strawberry roan gelding named Peachblossom. He is too big for me, but I like him. He will be sold or killed if I do not keep him. He is very clever, and plays all kinds of tricks if I do not keep an eye on him.
Also, might I have some green tea from our stores? It is very expensive here, and I truly need something to drink at night as I do my classwork.
I did not pack enough dresses. We are allowed to wear our own clothes to supper unless there is a feast or something. Might I have some of my other gowns and some more shifts? And could they be let down an inch? I have grown a little.
Kel smiled at the last paragraph, knowing it would surprise her mother. She had always preferred breeches for wear at home, unless they had to don kimonos for an event at the emperor’s court. These days, however, Kel wore dresses whenever possible. She was not about to let the pages forget that there was a girl in their midst. Gowns at supper were just one way to remind them.
What else could she tell her family? Kel stared at her letter, drumming her fingers. She decided to leave out that sometimes Prince Roald sat with her and Neal at supper. For one thing, it seemed like bragging. After all, the prince had made it a point to sit at meals with each of the pages at least once during the weeks since her arrival. That he sat with her and Neal the most could simply be due to his curiosity about the Yamanis. Kel suspected that Prince Roald wanted no one to guess that he was fretting about his coming marriage to Princess Chisakami. Instead she wrote:
Does Mama still have her sketchbook from the Islands? Her pictures are better than the ones in books in the palace libraries. Neal wants to know what things look like.
That was true enough. Neal was curious about the Yamanis and how they lived, and if the prince also looked at the sketches, so much the better.
She would not mention the bad t
hings that happened, not the boys’ tricks or Peachblossom’s bad habits. That seemed too much like whining to her. Instead she shifted her foot to a better spot on the cushion and wrote on:
There are sparrows who come to me for bread and the seed I get from the stables. They are practically tame, and eat at my windowsill. One of them is a female with a pale spot on her head. I named her Crown. She scolds the others and she is always the first at the food, so I think of her as their queen. The sparrows get up before dawn, and it is nice to hear them chirp while I dress. There is an amazing lizard-bird skeleton that is actually alive in my class on plants and animals. He likes bread too. Lucky for me, Neal said we can ask the cooks for extra food so I am not forever trying to sneak rolls out of the mess hall!
What else could she say? They didn’t have to know that only Neal and the prince would talk to her, or that yesterday she had been doused in a bath of muddy water when she stepped out of her room. Thanks to that she had been very late to breakfast, causing the boys to growl as she came in. For her lateness, Wyldon had given her a week of mucking out the stables from the first bell after supper until the second bell. She would just finish her letter with the cheerful bit about the sparrows.
Once she had finished, she turned to get her sealing wax and seal from her desk drawer. Her bruised foot slipped from its pillow to bang on the floor. She yelped.
Someone knocked on her door. “Kel, open up. It’s me, Neal.”
“Drat,” she muttered, and went to let him in.
As he stepped into the room, he saw her lucky cats. “Why are those things waving?”
She smiled. “The legend is that a cat waving to the first emperor drew him out of the path of an enemy arrow. The Yamanis make hundreds of them. They’re supposed to bring luck.”
“Good thing you have so many, then,” remarked Neal, picking one up and examining it.
Kel made a face at him. “Very funny.” She hobbled over and put the cat back where it belonged.