DargonZine | Volume 12, Number 5 |
rlebb had hoped that the extra tenants at Wudamund this winter
would offer him some opportunities for interesting diversions, but he
had been wrong. Perhaps he shouldn't have set his sights on that
interesting trio of Captain Eldinan, Alkant Kendil and Terant Nikkeus.
As soon as they had taken up residence together in the master suite
of the Green Tower, Orlebb had set his network of spies to gathering
information for him. Of course, his network of spies was only his staff
of pages and aides, cleaners and cooks, and the few artisans and
crafters who worked for the Lord Keeper and thus for him, but they were
still effective. Spread throughout the keep doing menial tasks, they
were most often treated as though they weren't there, and therefore they
overheard all kinds of things.
This overheard information was one of the things that made Orlebb
such a superb castellan. Sometimes his spies heard plans being made and
so was able to ensure that provisions and supplies were ready and
available when requisitioned. He learned everything there was to learn
in the keep and the village beyond it, and he used that information to
make himself indispensable to everyone. Unfortunately, indispensable
didn't mean well liked. He might have been the most well informed person
in the keep, but sometimes he was sure he was the loneliest as well.
As if the request for the bed that Captain Eldinan had made wasn't
enough confirmation, his spies made it clear that the three people in
that master suite were sleeping together. When he'd heard about them
using food in their sex play, he'd been sure that with the right moves
he could get himself invited into their group. They seemed more than
open-minded and experimental enough to extend their companionship to a
worthy fourth, right?
And so he had attempted to make some overtures to the captain when
he had found her alone in the great hall. He'd gotten her to blush a few
times, but he had done his best to reassure her that he hadn't been
trying to embarrass her, just point out his interest in her and her
lovers. He had walked away absolutely sure that it was but a matter of
time before he'd be spending his evenings on the sixth floor of the
Green Tower.
And then the next day while he had been disciplining one of his
pages, Eldinan had intervened and defied his authority over the children
in his employ. While he knew that she was technically overstepping her
bounds, she had enough rank and enough support, if only from her own
crew, to make her threats real. It didn't help that the Lord Keeper was
more interested in fantasies of fighting off invasions with her toy
armies than in running the keep, because that left him with no higher
power to appeal to.
Angry and frustrated, he had let her win the confrontation. But he
knew that she wouldn't hold his professional manner against him
personally. So he was fond of the lash, that was only part of his job.
He continued to expect an invitation into their room, or at least some
exploration of his interests.
But the days passed, and nothing happened. He kept his informants
on the job, gathering every tidbit of knowledge about the trio that
could be wrangled from anyone. He learned about how the three of them
had met aboard Captain Eldinan's ship, _Typhoon Dancer_, first Nikkeus
and Kendil, then Kendil and Eldinan, and then, to the amazement of
everyone on board, all three of them together. He learned of the
multiple times Kendil had been intruded upon in the ship's shower by
people attempting to ensure that elements of the trio weren't being
coerced into their relationship by magic. He also learned about the
assault upon Nikkeus by drug-affected alkaehran, and what had happened
to them.
He delved into the pasts of the trio, learning where they had been
born, where they had grown up and entered service, who their families
and friends back home were.
He spent so much time in his research, devising methods for his
servants to extract more information from the various people in the
keep, that he forgot all about the solstice krovelathan ceremony until
the morning before it was supposed to happen. It was a tribute to his
organizational skills that the ceremony came off without a hitch, even
if it was somewhat simplistic. As a compensation, he made sure that the
post-ceremony party was well supplied with food and especially drink,
using up all of the supplies that wouldn't keep over the winter and even
dipping into the winter surplus stocks.
But even that potential disaster couldn't shake him out of his
growing obsession. He'd had six of his people assigned to do nothing
else at the party but watch the trio, two to a person. He had a list of
everything each of them had eaten and drunk, and another list of
everyone each had talked to. He circled the names on the second list of
people whom he thought to be attractive, and did his best to make sure
that none of those people were in a position for continued contact with
his trio. If a fourth was going to be added to the set, that fourth was
going to be him!
As obsessed and single-minded as he was about his trio, he was
almost knocked back to reality by the news that began to filter back to
him a couple of days after the solstice ceremony. Against all accepted
tradition, and against explicit imperial law, his trio had gone and
gotten bond-promised. He had been brought some discarded sketches by the
cleaning staff. Scribblings on the sketches revealed that they were
designing a krovelathad of impressive dimensions. The drawings showed a
large, tripartite disk that looked more like a talisman of nature fit
for a temple wall. It didn't have much in common with the simple, small
krovelathads that were usually exchanged at a krovelathan ceremony.
Bonded! His trio, securing their relationship together! He could
hardly imagine it, especially as it didn't include him. He didn't have
much time to work his way into that group. The spring equinox was three
months away, but his deadline was the completion of the talisman. If
they finished it without him, he was out of luck. He had plans to put
into motion, starting now!
Kendil closed the door to the quarters of Zawk behind him as he
left and slumped against it in relief. Zawk was the local erlantrielk;
the Clear Fire Weaver for Wudamund Keep. The erlantrielk were some of
the most feared people in the empire due to their mastery of the most
powerful magics known. That Wudamund had one was somewhat unusual, but
fortunate. Without the services of Zawk, which Kendil had just secured,
the creation of the talismanic krovelathad that they were designing
would have been much, much more difficult.
And that design was surely grand, Kendil thought as he began to
walk back toward the Green Tower to let Elin and Nikk know that Zawk had
agreed to the challenge. It was to be patterned after the nature
talismans of Nikkeus' own people, though somewhat smaller. Instead of
being painted onto the side of a building to bring fortune to those
inside of it, this would be something to be held in the arms, a talisman
of depth and weight, made of stone and metal and glass. A work of art as
well as a work of love.
Zawk's part in its creation was twofold. The most basic part of the
talisman would be a disk three feet in diameter and nine or so inches
thick at the center, somewhat thinner at the edges. The material it
would be made out of would be mostly stone, but their intention was to
add various other elements to the stone to make it unique. Zawk had to
make a magic crucible that would melt stone as well as any other
material they intended to add to the mix, and then make a mold out of
magic or reinforced by magic that would receive the melted mix from the
crucible and form it into its disk-lozenge shape, where it would cool
and harden.
Zawk had taken some convincing, but Kendil got the impression that
the white haired man was just playing with him. Kendil had been rather
bored before this krovelathad project had come up, and he imagined that
Zawk was as well. Zawk had at first refused such a paltry challenge as
beneath his talents, but even then there had been a glimmer of interest
in his face. A little bit of haggling over an exchange of gold, then
some more haggling about the specifics of the mold, and the deal had
been made. In about a week, everything would be ready.
Kendil was thinking about some of the talisman's design elements,
when he heard a voice say, "Pardon me, Alkant Kendil?"
He stopped and turned, to find Orlebb walking toward him from a
connecting corridor. He frowned for a moment. Elin had told him about
her two encounters with the man, and he had formed an unfavorable
impression of the castellan. Then he figured that he had no actual
reason to be rude to the man who ran the keep, so he smiled a bit and
said, "Yes, Castellan?"
The tall man appeared to be a bit overdressed for the middle of an
average winter day. His tunic was of a rich fabric, and he wore a
heavily embroidered undershift beneath it. His belt buckle shone like a
mirror, even though the belt it fastened squeezed the slightly plump
middle of the man somewhat unflatteringly. He wore fine hose that were
tight about well-turned legs, and his boots were well polished and
fashionably ankle-high. A chain bearing the key of his office hung about
his neck, and the only other jewelry he wore was an ornate ear-cuff on
his right ear that extended some kind of figure along his temple almost
to his eye, and another figure -- or part of the same figure? -- below
the ear along his jawbone. His raven black hair was swept back tightly,
showing the squareness of his face, again somewhat unflatteringly, and
there was the beginnings of a moustache and beard, almost more grey than
black just yet, around his mouth and chin. A somewhat hooked nose
separated those mismatched eyes, blue and brown, that had disconcerted
Elin. And that thin-lipped mouth that didn't smile, even though every
other feature of his face seemed to be doing so.
All taken together, the man didn't look all that bad. His fashion
sense might need some work, but overall, he presented an interesting
image. Someone that Kendil might have taken the time to get to know if
not for Elin's assessment of his character.
"Ah," began Orlebb, "I found something that I thought you might
find of use. It is a set of carving chisels." He slipped a small, flat
leather bundle from the back of his belt and handed it to Kendil. "It
turned up when we were inventorying a storeroom. It must have been left
by a former resident. It doesn't belong to the keep, at least."
Kendil opened the bundle to reveal a set of woodworking knives and
chisels of all different shapes and sizes. This was a master crafter's
toolkit, like the one that his father used. He had always wanted one,
and knew that someday his father's would be his, but now he had one in
his hands and he just wanted to go carve something with it.
"Thank you, Castellan. You don't know how much this means to me!
These tools are works of art in themselves. I can only hope that my
skill can live up to their potential. You are sure that they belong to
no one? It would be a tragedy to lose tools of this quality."
"No, no, I assure you that they belong to no one now resident here.
Except you, if you accept them."
Kendil looked at the castellan, who was still not smiling with his
mouth, but was in all other ways looking happy and eager to please.
There was something about that voice, though. Well, no matter. "I thank
you for this gift, Castellan. Perhaps I could find the time to carve you
something in return."
"Oh, only if you wish to, Alkant Kendil. I'm glad you find pleasure
in my gift.
"And now, I must return to my normal duties. Farewell."
That voice again! Was he really hearing that emphasis on 'pleasure'
or was it just the castellan's accent?
In any case, Kendil knew he needed to get the feel of these tools,
and that they might be of use in constructing the talisman. So, a
practice figure or two was in order, after he gave Elin and Nikk the
news about Zawk. As he continued his journey toward his quarters, he
chuckled at an odd coincidence; he had just been talking about his
father's crafting tools the other day with one of the keep's carpenters.
The next day, Kendil found himself with some free time, so he took
his new tools down to the woodworking room. He was surprised to find it
empty -- usually at least one of the staff carpenters was at work in the
large room. He had just selected a block of wood that felt right for
carving when Orlebb walked into the room.
"Ah, you have found that time to practice with your new tools I
see," the castellan said. Kendil noted that he was wearing almost
exactly the same thing as yesterday, save that each article of clothing
was a different color. Except the undershift, which was still white, but
which had a different pattern and color of embroidery on it.
"Well, yes. They were calling to me, in a way. So, where are the
carpenters today?"
"Oh, called away. Some repair or other in the village I believe.
Did you have anything in mind to carve first?"
"No, actually. This block wants to be something else, but I don't
yet know what."
Orlebb had come up to stand right next to him, and Kendil caught
the hint of some kind of perfume from the man: faint, musky, masculine,
but still a little odd. He had never taken to the Child of Aelther
custom of wearing scent, and he was surprised that Orlebb, conquered
native of Cherisk that he was, had done so. Still, it was a nice enough
scent, all in all.
The castellan reached out and touched the block of wood without
quite touching Kendil's fingers. He said, "Do you do figures?
Statuettes?"
Kendil nodded, and Orlebb continued, "From life?" Kendil nodded
again. "Do you think you could carve me?"
Kendil looked thoughtfully at the block, and then at the castellan.
A glance at those tools decided him. "I think so, but those clothes
would be a little complicated to put into a practice piece like this."
Before Kendil could continue, Orlebb spoke up. "You mean, you would
prefer to do a nude statuette of me?" There was an odd eagerness in his
voice, and his mismatched eyes gleamed, but his mouth never moved upward
from its straight across line.
Kendil took a step back from the man standing right next to him,
startled by that eagerness. "Uh, ah, n ... that is ... if ... no. No, I
don't think I'm up to that. How about a bust instead?"
Kendil didn't wait for an answer, but went back to the bin to
search for a larger piece of wood. He found it, a nice blond type of
wood that would match Orlebb's pale skin nicely. He returned with it to
the work bench and said, "If you could just stand there, I'll rough this
in quickly. Then you can get back to your duties while I put the
finishing touches on it. Good?"
"You could carve the details of my face from memory? How
flattering," said Orlebb as he struck a pose.
Kendil was about to say something about the pose, since the bust
would only be of the head and shoulders, but that remark struck an odd
note with him, and so he let the castellan posture and started to carve
away with his largest chisel.
He chipped away at the block of wood. It was somewhat soft, so he
made rapid progress, working down through two smaller chisels before he
turned to the still posing castellan, and said, "There. I think that's
enough detail to let you get back to your duties."
Orlebb relaxed, and looked over at the carving. Kendil's gaze
turned to it as well. The block of wood had been turned into a
reasonable, if rough, facsimile of the castellan's face and shoulders,
minus the ornamentation of the tunic and undershift, and that ornate
winged lizard he wore as ear jewelry. "My health, that is an amazing
likeness, Kendil, and in such a short time! Those tools belong in your
capable hands if that is the kind of work you can do."
Kendil almost blushed at the praise. He thought he had done a
pretty passable job of capturing the man in wood, but it wasn't a piece
to sit in a palace entrance hall even with the finishing touches he knew
it needed. Still, it was good to hear praise like this, and it had a
different quality coming from a relative stranger rather than his
lovers.
That musky perfume came to his nose again, and the castellan was
suddenly next to him and clapped an arm around his shoulders. "Keep up
the good work, Kendil. Maybe when you lay down your sword when your
service is over, you can become some princeling's master woodworker.
Maybe even the Lord Keeper's."
Orlebb slapped him on the back as he drew away from the somewhat
astonished carver. As he walked to the door, he continued, "And if you
are ever *up* to carving that nude statue we spoke of, just let me
know."
Kendil stared after the retreating castellan and wondered if that
was what Elin had meant by 'smirking voice'. That last comment had
certainly sounded sexually suggestive to him.
He turned back to the bust and wondered if he should finish it. He
was worried about what the castellan might be thinking. Still, he hadn't
actually given the man any encouragement, and if Orlebb had fantasies
about him, that wouldn't do him any harm, would it?
Taking out one of the finer chisels, he started working on refining
the features of the bust. No, the castellan's fantasies were none of
Kendil's business. Idle thoughts and innuendo couldn't hurt him, or Elin
or Nikk either. Could they?
Eldinan looked at the drawing laid out in front of the fireplace
and sighed. Part of the sigh was at the beautiful elegance that Nikkeus
had sketched out, with help from her, and, to a lesser extent, Kendil.
But more was a sign of the misgivings she was beginning to have about
this.
The talisman, as Kendil had started calling the krovelathad, was
going to be beautiful, one of the most beautiful krovelathads ever
created -- and she had seen the krovelathad display in the Royal Museum
in Frethemak. Krovelathad were usually hand-crafted by the couple
forging the bond, but often when royalty was involved, some help was
permitted. Thus, the krovelathad in the museum were more often the work
of Master Crafters and Artisans. But those works of art were going to
pale next to this talisman. In her estimation, anyway.
But this talisman was more than a thing of beauty. If it was a
symbol of the love between Kendil, Nikkeus, and her, it was also a
symbol of the way their love defied tradition, convention, and law. Its
size, for instance, was larger than normal. And the design to be etched
into its upper surface was all in threes. Two sets each of three
different stylized animals in three different pairs, worked into a
three-strand design of Geronlel knot-work. Three, three, three.
Everything said there should only be two: two bonded by a traditional
krovelathan ceremony; two totem items customarily represented in some
fashion on the krovelathad. Two, two, two. It was the law ...
Eldinan was pure blooded Fretheod, and as much as she tried to
separate herself from that heritage, at times it wrapped itself around
her like a smothering blanket. This was one of those times. She loved
Nikkeus. She loved Kendil. She loved them both, but her upbringing told
her that she could only have one, that she had to choose between them.
And she really, truly, could not.
Suddenly restless, Eldinan stood up, looked down at the design
again, and then turned away. A need to move, to be away from here,
filled her, and she dashed out of the room, down the staircase, and out
of the tower. She needed someplace neutral to think; someplace within
the keep since she hadn't brought her cloak and it was snowing outside,
as well as bitterly cold. She was standing in the antechamber to the
tower, in front of the green door that gave the tower its name, when she
saw Castellan Orlebb walk through the archway into the room. He was
carrying a small covered box in front of him, and his face brightened
when he saw her standing there. Of course, his mouth didn't participate
in the smile.
"What good fortune, Captain Eldinan. I was just coming to find
you." He paused for a moment, but she didn't say anything in return. He
continued, "Ah, I discovered this while clearing out the house of one of
the casualties of the season down in the village, and I thought you
might have some use for it."
He had continued to approach her, and she stared at him almost
blankly as he approached. He was dressed very well, better than he
normally did except for ceremonial occasions. His tunic was no more than
waist length and made of stripes of different material. The long-sleeved
undertunic he wore was made of softer hued, complementary colored
stripes. He wore particolored tights in the two main colors of his
tunic, and it was short enough that his codpiece, a triangular flap of
cloth, was revealed to be particolored in the opposite pattern. The
combination wasn't as unattractive as it might have been on him --
perhaps it had been fitted by a very talented tailor. He wore slippers
covered with cloth that was also counter-particolored to his hose.
His hair was down and was longer than she remembered it from their
previous confrontation, still well styled and suiting his face better.
He had grown a trim moustache and beard -- just around his mouth, down
to the point of his chin -- but it had the effect of making his face
just slightly more sinister than if it had been clean shaven. Still, it
added some character.
She continued to stare, somewhat befuddled by the situation. Orlebb
seemed to think her silence was a result of their earlier confrontation,
and he said, "Please, Captain, I regret our previous encounter. I admit
that your disciplinary practices have kept things running adequately. I
will not return to the lash when your protection is withdrawn upon your
leaving in the spring. However, this is more than just a conciliatory
gesture. I would have given this to you were we still enemies. I think
it belongs in your hands."
He was standing right in front of her now, and she noticed that he
was wearing perfume, some kind of spicy scent, somewhat rugged, but
rather nice. She looked into his eyes, wondering if she had been wrong
about him, and those mismatched eyes jarred her. A bit of traditional
Fretheod superstition surfaced in her mind: it dealt with odd-eyed
individuals, who were supposed to be able to cast curses. It was a
stupid superstition though, and she knew it. And she didn't want to be
ruled by stupid superstitions, or any traditions for that matter!
She took the box from Orlebb with a subdued, "Thank you." She
cleared her throat, and continued with a stronger tone, "And what is it,
Castellan?"
"Oh, open it, Captain. Open it yourself."
She balanced the small box on one hand, and lifted the cloth cover
over the top of it with the other. She gasped when the small ship was
revealed. She lifted the box, just a frame of wire over a wooden base,
closer to her face and looked at the exquisite detail on the small
model. Everything was there -- all the rigging, all the hardware. She
looked into the pilot house and saw a small wheel in there. Small
belaying pins ringed the main mast. This was fantastic!
She lifted the box further and looked at the bow. Sure enough,
there was the name, picked out in miniature. She gasped again. It read,
_Celene's Fire_. This was her grandfather's ship!
She looked again, and noticed details that confirmed it. The shape
of the poop deck, and the design painted on its deck. The lack of a
top-mast perch. The extra rigging between the bow and the foremast her
grandfather insisted on adding to every ship he sailed. This *was*
_Celene's Fire_ in miniature!
"You ... how ... This is a model of my grandfather's ship,
Castellan!" Eldinan's voice contained her astonishment at her discovery.
"How could you possibly know how much this means to me? Thank you,
Orlebb, thank you for delivering this to me. Where was it?"
The castellan's face was practically glowing, though, as usual, he
was not smiling. "As I said, Captain, it was part of the effects that I
was sorting through from the house of one of the poor unfortunates who
died recently from the weather. Some people refuse to ask for help in
bad weather, and some end up dying. I understand that he was the son of
one of the crew of _Celene's Fire_ who settled here upon their
retirement. When I saw the model I ... ah ... remembered the connection
between its captain and you, and so of course it had to come to you."
"Yes, thank you, Castellan. Thank you again." Eldinan was barely
thinking about anything but the model and her grandfather as she leaned
forward and gave Orlebb a kiss on the cheek. She turned around and
dashed back into the Green Tower, leaving the castellan standing wide
eyed and stretching his attire slightly out of shape.
Eldinan returned to her quarters and set the model on the mantel
over the fireplace. Her grandfather, owner and captain of _Celene's Fire_,
had been a risk taker all of his life. He had sailed all over
Makdiar, and had remained at his ship's helm for years after retirement
age. Because he actually owned the ship, he was able to do that, though
the empire made him relinquish his anhekova eventually. Her grandfather
had just sailed away one day when he was in his eighties, and was never
heard from again, nor was _Celene's Fire_ ever seen again either.
Thoughts of her grandfather bolstered Eldinan's confidence. She was
in love with two people, and she was going to do something about it.
Fretheod custom, tradition, and law could go hang. The talisman would
bind her and her lovers together, and that was all that counted. Three
was a perfect number, perfect for her and Kendil and Nikk, and for the
talisman that would symbolize their union come the equinox.
"Thanks, grandfather," she whispered. "Thanks, Orlebb." She smiled,
looked at the sketch of the talisman's design, and sighed again, but
this time there was no fear, no regret in that sigh. Just an
appreciation of the beauty before her on the floor, and the love it
symbolized.
Nikkeus was methodically rummaging through the waste bins of all of
the craft rooms, searching for suitable materials for the talisman.
Their plans might have been grandiose, but he was sure that Kendil,
Elin, and he wouldn't have any problems completing it. These waste bins
were providing all sorts of useful odds and ends. He had already
collected plenty of chips of stone -- marble, granite, even the kind of
gravel that paved paths in the village. More material would be needed
for the basic disk of the talisman, but he was working on that.
He was working now on metals for the banding of the knot work. The
totem beasts would be carved out of the material of the disk, but
instead of carving the knot work banding into the stone, he was planning
that indentations would be carved where the bands would go, sort of a
reverse image of them, and then each of these tracks, or channels, would
get filled in with different metals. Common metals for him, precious
metals for Kendil, and, if they could manage it, a glass band for
Eldinan. Grandiose plans, but the bins were providing all kinds of
starting materials.
He levered himself up out of the iron bin and dropped a few scraps
of that metal on the sledge he was using to collect his bits and pieces.
When he looked up Orlebb was standing in front of him with one hand
behind his back.
"Greetings, Nikkeus," he said. "Hard at work, I see. I hope you
have some time for a little diversion I have uncovered."
Nikkeus had heard the stories both Elin and Kendil had told, but
felt he should form his own opinion. He found that the man was dressed
well in an over-robe that went from shoulders to the floor, with a large
opening in the front that revealed the cushion embroidery on the front
of the tunic underneath the robe. He wore a hat that covered most of the
sides and back of his head -- not even his ears were visible. The dark
coloring of the clothes -- reds, browns, and blacks -- emphasized the
pale coloring of his hands and face. Those eyes were intriguing -- in
Nikkeus' homeland, odd eyes were a sign of good fortune, though he had
never seen a pair that were blue and brown.
Nikkeus said, "Diversion?"
Orlebb nodded, and brought his hand out from behind his back. In it
was a lute that was so highly inlaid and carved as to almost be
something to hang on a wall, not play music on. But to never play that
instrument would be a crime against nature; Nikkeus instantly saw that
it had all the hallmarks of an original work of Hrothgrim, one of the
greatest skaldrics of the empire.
Nikkeus reached out reverently and took the precious instrument
from the castellan. His hands moved into position on the neck and over
the bridge, and he gave it a tentative strum. It was perfectly tuned,
and the music that came from the sound box was astounding in its
clarity.
He didn't look up, but said a heartfelt, "Thank you, Castellan,"
before beginning to move his fingers across the strings in a sprightly
ayre. Music filled the room with happiness, every note clearly audible
equally across the entire room.
His fingers stopped moving as the song was completed and he looked
up. Orlebb was staring at the lute, and the corners of his mouth were
turned just slightly upward. The echoes of the music faded slowly, but
when they were gone, the castellan blinked and raised his eyes to
Nikkeus' face, his mouth a straight line again. "Masterful, Nikkeus. You
play that instrument like a reincarnation of Hrothgrim himself. I was
right that it belongs in your hands."
All Nikkeus could do was say, again, "Thank you." His hands moved
over the instrument, caressing the inlays, the carvings, the strings,
but his eyes stayed fixed on Orlebb.
The castellan stared back, and then moved closer. Nikkeus thought
he could smell a familiar perfume, a special scent of certain Nirmalel
flowers that he remembered Lessik wearing. Nikkeus just stood there as
Orlebb got closer and closer, and then he felt the robe pressing against
his hands on the lute, and the perfume was strong in his nose, and there
were lips on his, pressing ...
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