DargonZine | Volume 12, Number 7 |
Author's note: This first tale of the Talisman's rejoining takes place about 120 years after Talisman Zero. As the might of the Fretheod Empire fades in the wake of the destruction of the Yrmenweald and the loss of their primary advantage, the anhekovel, outlying territories of the Empire have become independent in all but name. But not all of these territories are content to let the Empire fade away.
ralidan, heir to the Duchy of Grahk, shone his lantern down the
dusty corridor lined with shelves, and groaned. The catacombs under
Plethiss, the ducal mansion-turned-castle, seemed to go on forever and
even though he had assigned himself the job of thoroughly exploring the
ducal archives stored there, he wished that it had turned out to be a
smaller job.
As he lit another candle and affixed it to a cleared-off shelf, he
reflected that this particular task was turning into another failure.
Though only twenty two, he was finding the prospect of assuming the
ducal coronet more and more of a burden. He was still years from
becoming duke, as his father was hale and enjoyed vigorous good health,
but he still feared the day that Grahk became his to govern.
Ever since turning sixteen and being confirmed as heir according to
Fretheodan tradition, Bralidan had been trying to find within himself
the makings of the duke he must become. First he had explored the
military requirements by learning what it took to be a commander. And he
had done well in the traditional training exercises, first leading a
single squad of teraehran, and then groups of squads, and finally entire
armies. But his satisfaction in his accomplishments was dimmed when he
discovered that the skills to command fellow teraehran did not work
outside of the structure of the military. He quickly came to see that
even the servants employed at Plethiss required different communication
and governing skills. He had gained much from the experience, but not
what he had been looking for.
Next, Bralidan had attempted to learn his father's job by watching
Duke Bralevant at work. Unfortunately the effort was undermined by two
things. First, the duke seldom announced the reasons behind his actions
or decisions, and even though he made a few attempts in order to help
his son, he usually forgot quickly and went back to his normal way of
doing things.
The second problem was that Bralevant took more interest in the
details of running both Plethiss and all of Grahk than was normal. At
times, he acted more like a castellan than a duke. In fact, Plethiss no
longer had a castellan of its own. That only made Bralidan even more
worried, as he knew he had no aptitude for that kind of work. He felt
that, although he was learning some things from watching his father, he
couldn't use Duke Bralevant's methods as a guide for his own actions
once he became duke.
It was the suggestion of his younger brother, Biralvid, that
Bralidan turn his preoccupation with the archives into another learning
experience. Bralidan had always spent an inordinate amount of time in
the dusty catacombs, an activity encouraged by the former keeper of the
archives. Old Norissey had enjoyed his 'young protege', as he called
Bralidan, and fed the young heir tome after tome of somewhat
sensationalistic histories of the glorious Fretheod Empire.
Norissey had died about five years earlier. The new keeper, a young
man named Rajath, had no time for the adolescent heir, which didn't stop
Bralidan from haunting the catacombs, although he'd had little purpose
in doing so until his brother's suggestion. Biralvid's idea was that
maybe somewhere within the volumes of information contained in the
archives was what Bralidan needed to tell him how to be duke.
Systematic exploration of the catacombs and the archives had, oddly
enough, not met with Rajath's approval even though Bralidan hadn't
requested the keeper's time or assistance in doing so. The mystery of
why Rajath didn't want him down here still bothered him, but only in an
idle curiosity kind of way: it wasn't among the keeper's powers to bar
the heir of Grahk from the catacombs.
Intending to be exhaustively thorough, Bralidan set about walking
down each and every row of shelving, examining the contents of each
shelf and making notes as to what was where. Half map, half index, half
almost-travelogue, his notes were getting rather copious. He had started
just that winter, about four months ago. Now it was spring, and he
hadn't quite explored half of the archives so far.
But he had looked at enough scrolls and bound leaves of paper to
know that the possibilities of finding some kind of treatise on exactly
how to be the best duke possible were very small. All he had found so
far were domesday rolls of the populace for every year since long before
Grahk was a separate duchy, detailed lists of provisions for each season
for almost as many years, and a few dry, boring historical documents
about terribly uninteresting times. The sensationalized, and therefore
interesting, histories that Norissey had fed him had all been stored
near the entrance. He had yet to uncover any lost masterpieces.
The current section under scrutiny was five shelves high, just like
most of the others in the catacombs. And also like the most of the
others, the top two shelves were empty: they were too high off the
ground to reach comfortably. It was as if the shelving had been
constructed with some kind of portable stair in mind, which had then
either been forgotten about, or lost in the ensuing years.
Bralidan started on the third shelf, opening plain wooden and metal
scroll boxes and leaf cases, and scanning the contents. He was glad that
the animal skin used for the parchment had been properly and well cured,
since even the oldest scrolls he had found were in excellent condition.
Some of the scrolls he was unrolling and scanning presently were two or
three hundred years old, yet the ink was clear and dark, and there was
no drying or cracking of the parchment itself.
Bralidan reached the bottom shelf without finding anything of
interest. There were only two scroll boxes down there, but one was
different enough to catch his attention. He lifted it onto a higher
shelf and looked at it in the light of his lantern.
It was wooden, and highly carved, though its decorations were very
unlike the simple carving on most of the other wooden scroll boxes he
had so far come across. The style was very ... different, somehow not
Fretheodan at all. The dominant motif was of foxes, which made him think
of his father, who always wore a small, stylized fox pinned to his
chest. In fact, these foxes were somewhat similar in style.
Bralidan opened the lid of the box, and then lifted out the single
scroll it contained. He looked at the band that held the parchment roll
closed but instead of foxes, the metal circle bore the insignia of Grahk
itself. Bralidan knew that only important documents were banded like
this. He carefully extracted the scroll from within the band, and
unrolled the document.
The title startled him. "Treaty of Rihelbak" was written in an
ornate hand across the top of the scroll. The title was surrounded by
small, neat decorations -- leaves and vines, mostly -- such as were used
on important official documents. If this had been a display copy, the
decoration would have been larger and more colorful. It seemed as if
this was the original copy of the treaty. Why would this document be
almost hidden away in the depths of the catacombs?
Bralidan scanned the scroll, and then read it word by word,
disturbed by what he thought he had noticed. He read the parchment over
carefully for the third time, and he still couldn't believe what it
said. But there could really be no doubt; the writing was in perfectly
plain Fretheodan. It *was* the Treaty of Rihelbak. And by the terms
written in front of him, it was about to be broken by default.
Bralidan decided that this had to be brought to his father's
attention as soon as possible. He couldn't understand how this could
have happened. His father had to know the terms of the treaty -- his
signature was the last one displayed. So why weren't they being
followed? People had died for this treaty -- including his own
great-grandfather! And yet it was being ignored. Something strange was
going on, and he wanted to find out what.
Bralidan slid the scroll into his carry-sack, somehow forgetting
about the fox-carved scroll box completely. He lifted his lantern, blew
out the candle he had set, and turned back the way he had come. The
candle would stay where it was to indicate how far he had come. He
followed the trail he had left of burning, or in some cases guttering,
candles back toward the entrance.
A dozen paces brought him to the next candle. He plucked it from
the shelf -- he would only need the one behind him to mark his place --
but as he lifted it towards himself to blow it out, he accidentally
dripped hot wax on his hand. The sting made him flinch and the lit
candle flew into the back of one of the shelves.
He scrambled after it; the preservation treatment of parchment made
it very flammable, and not every document was protected by a case. As he
grabbed the candle, which had extinguished itself, his hand pushed
against some kind of projection at the back of the shelf. With a click,
the entire section of shelves swung away from him.
Intrigued, Bralidan lifted his lantern and peeked behind the
swung-away shelves. A small room was revealed, lined with more scrolls,
scroll boxes, and a few other odds and ends. He lifted a box off of a
low shelf and used it to prop open the secret door, and went into the
small room.
His eyes scanned the supposed treasures in scroll form that lined
the shelves within this hidden room. But instead of pulling down a few
examples to see what kind of information needed to be hidden away like
this, his attention was drawn to one particular shelf that had three
objects resting on it.
The first object that he picked up he immediately threw into a
corner -- it was a dead rat that had probably starved in the sealed
room. The second item he lifted from the shelf he knew had to be an
anhekova, one of those magical staves that had been the secret to the
military superiority of the Fretheod Empire years ago. But no longer: in
the aftermath of the civil war and the destruction of the Yrmenweald, it
was nothing more than a rather plain wooden staff with an irregular lump
of whitish crystal affixed to the top. He wondered who this might have
belonged to, since it wasn't the General's Staff, which hung on the wall
of the great hall.
But his interest in the origins of the staff faded when the light
from the lantern fell on the last object on the shelf. Bralidan felt
himself drawn somehow to the item. He set his lantern beside it and
reached out to touch it tentatively. When it didn't bite him, or send a
tingle through him, he lifted it off the shelf and examined it.
The object seemed to be a fragment of a sculpture of some kind. It
had a single smooth edge that held a slight curve, and two sides that
sloped jaggedly towards each other. In fact, it looked like a piece of
pie that someone had ripped out of the rest rather than cutting it. The
sloped edges were ragged and uneven, and it was broken off well short of
where those edges would have come together had it really been a slice of
pie.
One face of the foot-and-more long pie-slice was as smooth as its
curved edge, but the other was an intricate, if fragmentary, piece of
art. Most of a carved falcon took up much of the piece, which was an
interesting coincidence, since he had taken a falcon as his own personal
symbol. Connected to the falcon was a band of glass that ran across the
surface of the pie-piece before ending at a jagged edge. Also running
across the piece were ribbons of a dull silver metal and a bright
brass-like metal. The pattern looked like part of a larger work,
probably of Geronlel knot-work, that kind of woven-line decoration that
the natives of that north-eastern province favored. The falcon itself
was also stylized in Geronlel fashion, and it looked like it had been
interwoven with another beast, which might have been a dog; it was hard
to tell without the head.
"I wonder what this was," Bralidan muttered to himself. "It might
have been part of a wall decoration. No, then its back wouldn't be so
smooth. Some kind of projection on a statue? Maybe a warrior's shield?
That could be it."
Bralidan found that he liked the fragment very much, regardless of
what it had been. The falcon was exactly what he had tried to describe
to the flag maker when having his banner crafted. The result had been
acceptable, but now he could actually *show* Diggseth what he wanted.
And then he would put the fragment in his room, where he could look at
it and explore it. And maybe his survey of the archives would eventually
answer his questions about where it had come from and what it was.
Bralidan had a moment's pause as he slipped the carving into his
shoulder sack. Suppose there was something bad or dangerous about this
carving? After all, it had been shut up in this secret room for who knew
how long. But he dismissed those thoughts almost immediately. What
threat could a stone, glass, and metal sculpture fragment possibly pose?
He slipped out of the secret room, and resumed his trek for the
entrance to the catacombs. He left a candle stub on the shelf where the
secret switch was, and picked up all the rest except one more to tell
him which aisle to look in.
As Bralidan made his way out of the archives and up floor by floor
to his father's quarters, the heir thought about the Treaty of Rihelbak.
For hundreds and hundreds of years, Grahk had just been a small
administrative division within the Province Krelinlel of the Fretheod Empire.
Nominally, it still was, but in the increasing chaos since the
civil war more than 120 years ago, Grahk had been forced to do more and
more defending of its borders without help from elsewhere in the empire.
At the same time Plethiss, the country mansion of the administrator of
Grahk, had been turned into a very well fortified castle. Eventually, as
the central authority of Province Krelinlel dissolved, the various
districts within it took upon themselves more autonomy, and the Duchy of
Grahk, among others, was born.
To the northeast of Province Krelinlel stretched a vast territory
of grasslands and plains called the Great Steppes, which were home to
one of the few nations that the mighty Fretheod Empire had never been
able to conquer. The Siizhayip, or People of the Grass, were a loose
association of nomadic clans who wandered the Great Steppes with
complete freedom.
At the western edge of the Great Steppes was a vast plain of
grassland that, while usually considered part of the steppes, only
joined with them along a narrow strait between southward thrusting
mountains on the north, and the plateaus and mesas to the south. It was
within that plateau land that Grahk was situated, and its northern
border encompassed the land adjacent to the narrow neck connecting the
Plains of Rihelbak with the rest of the Steppes.
Ordinarily, the Siizhayip and the Fretheodan left each other alone.
Even after the might of the Fretheod Empire was reduced to what amounted
to individual protectorates around the perimeter of the Great Steppes,
the two groups of people ignored each other. Until a time seventy years
ago, when, for a reason no one had recorded in the histories Bralidan
had read, seven small clans of the Siizhayip had banded together and
attacked Grahk.
The conflict had been bloody and short. Grahk's troops were used to
fighting in the terrain of their homeland; incursions by people trying
to claim their own piece of the crumbling empire had grown more and more
frequent. Not that the Siizhayip were completely unskilled at battle,
but they hadn't been able to stand up to the organized tactics of this
particular remnant of the empire's might. Within but a single month, the
majority of the nomads of the seven clans were dead.
Even though the attack of the seven clans had not been sanctioned
by the clan council of the Siizhayip, there had still been danger of
retaliation by others among the clans. So, the Sun clan had stepped in
and called for a truce. The One of the Sun, the person elected by the
clan council to speak for all the clans when such was required, had sat
down with the duke of the time, and a treaty had been worked out.
Duke Branvor had been perfectly willing to cease hostilities as
long as the Siizhayip ceased as well. But his father, Duke Bravid, had
been killed in the senseless fighting, and Branvor had wanted to make
sure that the Siizhayip never thought to attack Grahk again. He had to
come up with a penalty that would mean something to them. And that
something was land.
The treaty that resulted granted the Plains of Rihelbak to Grahk.
The histories made mention of the reverence that the Siizhayip had for
the land, and that they didn't believe in ownership of land, but did
believe in territoriality. However each side understood it, the Plains
of Rihelbak had been forbidden to the clans of the Siizhayip forever
more.
But somehow, an important part of that treaty had been left out of
the history that Bralidan had learned: there was supposed to be a
confirmation ceremony every five years! The terms of the treaty
indicated that a representative of Grahk and of the Sun clan would meet
at the boundary of Rihelbak and confirm the treaty at the appointed
times. If that confirmation ceremony didn't occur five times in a row,
the treaty would be invalidated and the land would return to the control
of the Siizhayip. The last time the treaty had been so ratified, as
indicated by the dated signatures, was in 2322, twenty-five years ago.
The fact that that last signatory for Grahk was Bralevant only made
it harder for Bralidan to believe that his father had let the terms of
the treaty be forgotten for so long. It was part of the duties of a duke
to ensure that things such as this were taken care of, wasn't it? How
could Bralevant have just ignored these requirements?
Bralidan finally arrived at the door to his father's quarters on
the upper floors of the east wing. He pulled the braided rope and heard
the bell inside jingle. Almost immediately, Osirek, the duke's personal
aide, opened the door, his face stiff and bland in his most businesslike
manner. But when the man saw who stood at the duke's door, his face
crinkled up with a heartfelt smile and he gestured the youth inside.
"Ah, welcome, master Alin! You've been in the catacombs again,
haven't you? Just look at all that dust and grime." The old man, who had
at least fifteen years on the duke and so was almost like a grandfather
to Bralidan, produced a small hand broom from somewhere. "Now, let's get
you cleaned up a bit before you see your father. You did come to see
him, yes? Something you found in those caves, yes? Good, good, right,
just a moment and I'll let the duke know you're here."
Osirek fussed about Bralidan for a few moments, brushing dust off
of his shoulders, cobwebs out of his hair, neatening up his outfit as
much as possible. Then he said, "Now, just a moment, Alin. The duke is
reviewing some inventory lists, just checking how Plethiss fared the
winter. I'm sure he'll not mind an interruption from that task, but it
wouldn't do to startle him and make him lose count or something. I'll be
right back."
The old man darted quietly through the doors on the other side of
the small antechamber, and Bralidan stood, absently fidgeting with the
treaty scroll. Osirek poked his head back into the antechamber and
beckoned to him. Bralidan stood and walked slowly over to the doorway,
while Osirek straightened up, held the door open, and announced in an
official voice, "Heir Bralidan to see you, your grace."
Bralidan stepped into his father's secondary receiving room. The
chamber was outfitted for reception as well as work; an ornate throne
stood against one wall, between floor to ceiling windows, curtains, and
an impressive collection of all manner of weapons mounted on the wall as
a decoration. In another corner stood a desk, its top covered with
sheets of ledger-ruled parchment. Bralidan knew the duke spent more time
behind that desk he was just rising from than in his throne.
Bralevant was a large man, about half a head taller than Bralidan
and weighing maybe half again as much. Once the duke had been fit and
trim but these days, Bralidan realized, the floor length robe he wore
bulged more than a bit in the middle. He wondered what would happen if
his father had to take to the field of battle; had his armor been kept
matched to his shape?
And that robe -- yet another new piece of clothing. The duke never
wore the same garment twice, though the cloth of one garment normally
became parts of other garments eventually. The only constants in his
clothing were the narrow band of gold he wore about his head, and that
carved wooden fox-shaped brooch that he always wore on his chest.
Bralevant's most striking feature, aside from the paunch of good
living, was not his pale skin nor his raven black hair. Rather, it was
his eyes. The left one was blue while the right one was brown.
Bralidan's eyes were a misty grey, and in most other respects he bore
little resemblance to his father. His own hair was reddish brown, not
black. His face was narrow, rather than broad and square like the
duke's. His skin was a more natural tone, and he was both shorter and
thinner than Bralevant.
Biralvid, on the other hand, was a little copy of their father,
except for his eyes which were both blue. Bralidan had once envied his
little brother that resemblance, believing that his father would prefer
Biralvid to him. As it turned out, the duke was far more interested in
running Plethiss and Grahk, and both his brother and he had been raised
by servants. As far as he could tell, both were equally regarded by
Bralevant -- when they were regarded at all.
Bralevant stood and said, "Well, hello there, son. Osirek tells me
you have been poking around in the archives again. I'm glad to see that
you're taking your future responsibilities so seriously, though I must
say that I never found myself drawn to the catacombs the way you do. I
doubt that I could find anything in there without the keeper, a detailed
map, and several wilderness guides!" He laughed heartily, then
continued, "Osirek also says you have something I need to see. What is
it, son? What have you found?"
Bralidan said, "Yes, father, I have found something disturbing in
the archives: the Treaty of Rihelbak!"
The duke frowned. "So, son? The Treaty of Rihelbak was signed years
ago. What relevance could it have today?"
"But father, what about the confirmation signings?"
"Well, ah ..." Bralevant looked confused for a moment. His hand
rose to his chest and he stroked the fox brooch with a finger. "I don't
... don't know ... What are you talking about, boy? Have you been
breathing spider webs too long?"
"Father, you must know. Twenty five years ago, you confirmed the
treaty as required. Since then, nothing."
"When? Confirmation signing? What?" Bralevant's hand was clutched
over the fox-brooch and he was frowning as if he was in pain.
"Here, look. Right here. Every five years, the treaty has to be
confirmed. If it goes twenty-five years without being confirmed, the
treaty is broken. And Father, it was last signed twenty-five years ago
this year!"
Bralevant squinted at the parchment that Bralidan held up. He
scanned the whole thing as if he couldn't see anything written where his
son was pointing. He closed his eyes and gasped something that sounded
like "Ke ..." His hand jerked, and with a slight tearing sound he pulled
the brooch free of his robe. The duke opened his eyes again and seemed
able to see the words his son was indicating. He read them closely,
mouth gaping. He finished reading, and closed his eyes again, slumping
back onto his stool with a short gasp of something like pain.
Osirek dashed over to the duke and said, "Alev, are you all right?
What's wrong?"
Bralevant opened his eyes and reassured his friend. The fox-brooch
was laid on the desk, and was promptly forgotten.
The duke said, once he had recovered from whatever had gripped him,
"Good work, son. I don't know how I could have forgotten about that part
of the treaty, or even how the treaty could have ended up in the
archives. It should be on that shelf over there, with the other vital
documents.
"Well, it looks like we have an outing to organize, doesn't it? The
treaty signing is in two weeks, and this year I will be there. And so
will you, son. And so will you. After all, if not for your squirreling
through the catacombs, the treaty would have been broken, right? I just
don't know how this could have happened ..."
Osirek started to reassure the duke, who was still looking shaky.
Bralidan immediately felt left out as the two old friends chatted
together, and he turned and left without any ceremony. But he kept hold
of the treaty. He knew his father would organize the confirmation
signing, but Bralidan was going to see to it that it didn't get
forgotten again.
Nikorah was riding her horse, Red Mist, when she saw them. Six
riders and a wagon were approaching the camp from the Rihelbak. They
were coming this year!
She rode back to camp and jumped off of Red Mist's back in front of
her father, Demahh, the One of the Sun clan and thus the One of the Siizhayip. "Father! They're coming!"
"Who's coming, Nika? Who did you see?"
"Them, father. The Kuizhack of Grahk. They're going to sign!"
Nikorah felt elation; this meeting wouldn't be in vain like the last
one. The people from Grahk were going to sign!
She saw that her father was frowning, and wondered why. Then, as
she thought about it, she realized what the signing meant. "Oh, I
apologize, Father. I wasn't thinking. This means that the Rihelbak will
be barred to us again. And it was almost ours! I wonder why they didn't
sign for so long. Did they do it on purpose? To torture us or something?
I hope not. Maybe they just forgot."
Demahh's frown softened as his daughter rambled on. When she ran
down on her own, he said gently, "Yes, there is more bad than good in
your news. But their coming was in the hands of the Anhilizharnoh. And
only they, the Lords of the Sky, know why this year was different than
those previous."
With a heartfelt sigh, he continued, "Go gather the others. The
sooner this task is completed, the sooner we can rejoin the clan. Off
with you!"
Nikorah gave her father a teasing bow, and hurried away to spread
the news. She tried to temper her enthusiasm, but it didn't matter what
the signing meant ultimately; it was still a ceremony, an event. And she
would get to witness it.
She quickly gathered the other four members of their delegation,
finding the senior herd keeper Kendra last, who was whittling away at a
piece of wood as usual. Only Kendra reacted badly to her news, her
swarthy features blanching almost white. She got a furtive look in her
eyes, and said after a moment, "Nika, dear, ah ... tell Demahh that some
of the horses are restless. I had better stay with them, keep them calm.
I am not needed at the ceremony."
Nikorah shrugged, nodded, and gave Kendra a hug. She had always
treated the herd keeper like an aunt, and she wondered what was
bothering her. Then she went racing back to the other side of the camp
as fast as her feet would carry her. The riders would have arrived by
now, and she was eager to see the Kuizhack, these strange people who
actually lived in houses of stone.
There was a great deal of milling around going on next to the low
wall that the Fretheodan Kuizhack had built across the entrance to the
Rihelbak Plains. Only two feet high, the wall couldn't physically keep
anything out of the Rihelbak, but it served as a symbol of the treaty
which had kept the Siizhayip out of those plains. The riders from Grahk
were unloading the wagon they had brought with them and, with the help
of the four Sun clan members, were getting ready for the ceremony. Large
rugs were placed on the ground on the steppe side of the wall, upon
which a high table was set. The legs were so tall that Nikorah wondered
how they were going to see the top of it as they sat on the ground
around it. And then chairs -- strange things all made of wood, not like
the mostly canvas or hide chairs the Siizhayip used -- were set all
around the table. "That answers that," thought Nikorah.
The top of the table was covered with an embroidered cloth, and
then a small square of wood was placed on top of that. A scroll was
placed on the square of wood, and two quill pens were placed to each
side of the scroll.
The chairs were jostled around. Strange stands were placed around
one side of the table, upon which were hung more rugs. Nikorah realized
that the people of Grahk were trying to turn the openness of the steppes
into some kind of enclosure with all of their rugs and stands and tables
and such. She laughed at their strange quirks. Why close out the
horizon? Why cut off long vistas and views? Then again, why live in
unmovable houses of stone?
Finally everything was ready, at least as far as the people of
Grahk were concerned. Nikorah knew that her father would just as readily
have squatted on the bare earth, traded a few words, and scratched his
mark on the proper line with no more bother than that, but he was going
to do whatever the Kuizhack wanted. This ceremony was dictated by the
Fretheod Kuizhack, and Nikorah's father saw the need to accommodate them
even though the freedom of the Siizhayip was limited by it.
Demahh motioned to his people, and Nikorah joined him at the table.
The hard wooden chair was uncomfortable, but she wouldn't be here for
too long, she hoped.
The one in charge, the one with that bright metal band around his
head, said, in Fretheodan of course, "Welcome, People of the Grass, to
this confirmation signing of the Treaty of Rihelbak. I am Duke
Bralevant. This is my eldest son and heir, Bralidan. And this ..."
But Nikorah didn't hear anything else the man said, nor any of the
words her father traded with the duke person. She didn't notice when the
quills were picked up, finally, and the treaty confirmed and witnessed
and dated. She noticed none of this because she was too busy noticing
the duke, and more importantly, his heir.
She found herself fascinated with both of them. There was something
familiar about them both, but she had a different feeling about the duke
than about the younger Bralidan. She found herself not liking Bralevant,
for no reason that she could detect. His pale skin didn't bother her,
nor did his very black hair or the tiny moustache and beard he sported
just around his mouth and chin. Not even his eyes, one blue and one
brown, specifically bothered her. It was something else, something
distant, almost a memory. Almost.
But nothing at all bothered her about the heir, so she put the duke
out of her mind for a time and concentrated on the one called Bralidan.
He was good looking, almost handsome but not quite. His reddish brown
hair that hung to his shoulders was very enticing, though, as were his
mysterious grey eyes. There was something about him as well, but not
something unpleasant. Still like a memory or dream, but definitely a
pleasant one. She wondered what he looked like in just a tunic, and then
she wondered what he looked like in nothing at all. She wondered if
these people of Grahk would want to stay for evening meal. She wondered
if she might get to talk to Bralidan. She wondered what she might say to
him if she did. She didn't know anything about the kind of life he must
lead, always in the same place, cut off from nature by walls of stone.
But he had been riding a horse. Maybe they would talk about that.
Even in the midst of her distraction, she noticed that both the
duke and his heir were also looking at her. The heir in particular was
spending more time glancing her way than paying attention to her
father's -- or his own father's -- words. They only made eye contact
once, and it had been so intense, so full of a meaning that she just
couldn't quite fathom, that she had made sure not to look into those
grey eyes again.
At last, everyone was standing up from their chairs. She had been
so absorbed that she hadn't even noticed how numb her rear end was now.
She leaned on the table and worked the feeling back into her legs,
keeping her eyes on Bralidan. But it soon became apparent that the
Kuizhack were not staying. They took down their meeting table and its
cloth walls, and in far less time than it had taken to set it all up.
Soon, the entire collection of table, chairs, rugs, and frames was back
in the wagon, and with some courteous words of parting, the Kuizhack
rode away. Nikorah stood and watched after them, and she was sure that
the heir, Bralidan, looked back several times before details were lost
in the distance.
She returned to her ghur in the encampment and slipped inside the
low, dome shaped structure of hides covering bent poles woven together
at the top to form a smoke and air hole. She was glad she had earned her
own ghur last year upon reaching her sixteenth summer, because all she
wanted to do at the moment was think about Bralidan.
Nikorah settled herself on some pillows that were placed atop the
rugs that formed her ghur's floor. She reached into a small chest and
pulled out her favorite flute, the one with two bells that she had
crafted herself. She dug around in another chest, and finally dragged
out one of her favorite keepsakes and set it in front of her. While she
slipped off her moccasins and rummaged in the first chest for the
special hammer, she stared with pleasure at the hunk of rock.
The keepsake had been a gift from her father. A tinker, one of
those wandering vendors of trinkets and repair work, had happened by the
clan's camping ground seven winters ago. Nikorah remembered the stir he
had caused; anything different in the middle of winter was a welcome
diversion. She also remembered the first time she had seen her little
stone cat, lashed to the side of the box wagon the tinker pulled. It was
a fragment of something else, since its two straight sides were jagged
and broken, and the strips of gold, iron, and glass that ran across its
surface looked torn apart where their paths met those irregular sides.
The bulk of the foot and a half long fragment was taken up by a stylized
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