DargonZine | Volume 12, Number 10 |
endra rose from the table along with everyone else, as the
servants started to clear the plates and serving platters away. The
dinner had been full of memories for her. She recalled when she had sat
at the high table with the duke, presiding over dinners and
entertainments, parties and ceremonies. The celebrations among the
Siizhayip were seldom as elegant as a formal dinner in Plethiss, but
those formal dinners were seldom as wildly exuberant as even the
smallest Siizhayip gathering.
The tables were cleared away, except for the one holding the
desserts, everything from syllabub to delicate pastries, from cakes to
marzipan molded in fanciful shapes. The musicians in the gallery on the
second floor, overlooking the hall, began to play dance tunes, and a
section of the hall cleared as couples and sets gathered. And, when the
music came around to the beginning, the dancing started.
Kendra watched the revelry from a spot by the wall. She noticed
Nikorah leave the hall, and she saw her son Bralidan leave a while
later. She watched the dancers, she watched the musicians, she watched
the nobles talking to each other in constantly shifting groups. But most
of all, she continued to delay making her decision.
Eventually, Duke Bralevant would reappear, and the delegation from
the Siizhayip would be summoned to the formal audience chamber again.
And once he made his decision known -- once he denied the petition to
grant access to the Rihelbak Plains to the Siizhayip -- then she would
be too late. The mission she had been set by the Elder Speakers to
ensure, by whatever means required, that the Treaty of Rihelbak was
canceled, would be over. Unless she acted first.
Finally, Kendra left the room. Too much noise, too much revelry --
whatever the reason, she couldn't think in there. Her feet instinctively
traced a path to a location that was almost guaranteed to be isolated,
and she found herself atop the outer wall of the mansion's defenses,
looking out across a landscape brightly lit by the light of both moons
to the village which rested at the foot of the hill that Plethiss stood
on.
She pulled a small phial out of her belt pouch and stared at it. It
had been secreted inside a puzzle box that morning, awaiting her
assessment of the need for its use. Duke Bralevant had to die, and she
had to kill him. And she still didn't know if she could do it.
If it had meant only killing a man, she would have had no qualms,
even if that man was someone she had loved once. Even if that man was
the father of her only child. Death was a natural part of life on the
steppes. The herds had to be thinned for the good of all life on the
steppes. Sometimes, even the grasses had to die, had to be burned, in
order for new life to continue.
But killing Duke Bralevant wasn't a sure solution. The Elder
Speakers believed that the duke's successor would grant access to the
Rihelbak Plains. But that successor was her son, Bralidan. Who was in
love with, and loved by, Nikorah. If Bralidan had to become duke, then
the love between Nikorah and him was doomed, just as the love between
her and Bralevant had been doomed. The Siizhayip couldn't live for long
within the stone walls that the Kuizhack, the People of the Stone,
seemed to require. Bralidan, as duke, would never be able to leave
Grahk, and Nikorah could never leave the steppes.
Beyond that, of course, was the question of whether Bralidan would
really rescind the Treaty of Rihelbak. Being in love with a Siizhayip
didn't necessarily mean understanding the Siizhayip. And even though he
had Siizhayip blood in him, Bralidan had been raised to be his father's
heir.
There was the essence of her dilemma. Was killing Bralevant really
the only means of gaining the extra territory that the Siizhayip needed
to sustain their growing numbers? Would the duke's death actually grant
them the Rihelbak Plains?
Kendra held the phial of poison in her clasped hands and raised her
eyes to the sky. She called out into the darkness, "Oh Great
Anhilizharnoh, speak to me. Give me guidance, grant me wisdom. Tell me,
am I doing your will?"
She waited, her heart and mind open, knowing she wasn't a shaman,
knowing she wasn't a Speaker either. Two heartbeats of silence passed,
and then the sky changed.
Something was different. She looked around, and saw that Wykuza's
Attendant, the smaller of the two moons, was on fire.
The Siizhayip believed that Wykuza was one of the Sky Lords, the
Anhilizharnoh. She was embodied by the larger moon. Her Attendant, the
smaller moon, was a lesser Sky Lord, a servant to the rest. When the
long spear of flame shot from one side of the Attendant, the Siizhayip
believed that the servant was entertaining its master.
But in this case, it meant something more, at least to Kendra it
did. Even though she wasn't a shaman or a Speaker, she knew that
Wykuza's Attendant was telling her that she was doing the right thing.
She couldn't have asked for a clearer sign.
She bowed her head over her still-clasped hands, and said a prayer
of thanks to the Anhilizharnoh. Then she turned away from the spectacle
in the sky and set herself to completing her mission.
Kendra's first destination was the great hall. When she reentered
it, she was surprised to find it almost totally quiet. No music, no
dancing, no chattering nobles. Everyone was clustered around two people
in the center of the room.
She moved closer, and saw that those people were her son, Bralidan,
and his brother Biralvid. The room was quiet enough that she could hear
what was being said.
Biralvid said, "What?" His face, that looked so much like
Bralevant's, wore a look of utter disbelief.
Bralidan said, slowly and clearly, "I want to abdicate my position
as heir to you."
Biralvid shook his head. "You can't be serious. Why would you want
to do something stupid like that?"
Bralidan just smiled. He said, "Because I have finally admitted
what I have known all along: I don't want to be duke. I might make a
passable ruler of Grahk, with hordes of counselors and advisers
surrounding me and essentially making my decisions for me. But you,
brother, you have the makings of an excellent duke. We took the same
classes, learned the same things. But beyond that learning, there is an
instinct in you that is not in me. I want to correct the accident of the
order of our birth. That's all."
Biralvid looked around at the assembled nobles and visitors,
somewhat nervously. Kendra thought she saw a change come over him as he
stood there and surveyed his listeners. He straightened up, and the
general air of party attendee he displayed evaporated into a more
serious expression, one of studiousness and concentration.
He said, "Bralidan, you can't just do this on a whim. There have to
be reasons. Good reasons --"
"Yes, I know. And aside from the very good reason, to me at least,
of my incompetence for the position, there is also the reason that I am
leaving Grahk to go live on the steppes with my intended mate, Nikorah."
Bralidan glanced over his shoulder at the blond Siizhayip and smiled.
Biralvid shook his head. "Those aren't acceptable reasons, brother.
As happy as I am for you and our pretty visitor, these are still whims.
The law doesn't allow for whims, and you know it."
"You are beginning to sound like father," Bralidan said, a hint of
disdain in his voice. "Tradition reserves this law for only the most
serious of circumstances, like a crippling accident, or a mortal wound
on the battlefield. However, if you recall the letter of the law, no
such stipulations exist. The means for transfer are set down, but no
restrictions on the reason. I suppose that our ancestors felt no one
would simply wish to give up their position voluntarily."
Biralvid was silent for a moment, and then a smile spread across
his face. "You are correct, brother. So much of our heritage is
tradition, based on how it was always done, that I let those traditions
color my memory of that law. It seems that the only way I could get you
to remain heir would be by refusing to participate in the ceremony."
Biralvid paused, then continued with a laugh, "Which I won't do. I
accept your reasoning, and will accept your role. Begin the ceremony. We
have plenty of witnesses."
Kendra watched the ceremony of transfer begin with elation. She had
trusted to the Anhilizharnoh, and they had been right. Her son, who had
found love with Nikorah, would not be trapped by her actions. And
Bralidan felt his younger brother would make a good duke. She only hoped
that Biralvid would be the kind of duke who was sympathetic to the
Siizhayip's problems. But that was for the future that she was on her
way to create.
Kendra quietly walked over to the dessert table and grabbed a
bottle of wine and two stone cups. She left the great hall and started
walking toward the ducal quarters. Halfway there, she stopped for a
moment in order to empty the phial into the wine. She continued on her
way, taking another moment to drop the empty phial down a garderobe.
Finally, she arrived at her destination and knocked on the door.
Osirek opened it as usual. He said, "Oh, ah ... greetings, Lady
Kendra. I don't believe the duke was expecting you. He is just about
ready to return to the great hall for the formal announcement ..."
"Yes, yes, I know," she said, pushing her way into the antechamber.
It was normally Osirek's job to keep unwanted people out of that
antechamber, so Kendra could only assume that either he was still more
used to her being a resident, as she had been twenty-five years ago,
than a visitor, or she was not an unwanted guest. She continued, "I have
some business with the duke that has a bearing on the announcement. Why
don't you go on down to the party? I'm sure that any last moment
preparations Bralevant requires won't be beyond my skills."
Osirek protested, but it didn't take much to persuade him to take
his leave. Once the personal aide had left, Kendra took a deep breath
and walked through the reception room and once again into the duke's
quarters.
Duke Bralevant stood in front of a silver-backed mirror that stood
on the floor in an ornately carved wooden frame. He was carefully
inspecting his clothing and how it fit. Kendra said, just slightly
dryly, "Your tailor continues to outdo himself, Alev. Your new clothes
look quite nice."
Bralevant turned and smiled, still posing as if for the mirror. He
said, "Ah, welcome, Kendra. You've left your decision quite late,
haven't you? I must admit that I had almost given up on you. What made
you change your mind?"
Kendra wasn't surprised that the duke assumed she was here to give
in to his demands. What other reason could he expect her to have for
visiting him in his quarters like this? She played on his expectations,
and said, "You left me no choice, did you? I waited until after dinner,
just in case, but finally I had to surrender to the inevitable."
Bralevant walked over to her, smiling in a smug way. He took the
wine bottle and cups out of her hands and said, "I suppose that your
status as my soon-to-be mate excuses the rudeness of your lack of
enthusiasm. At least you brought something to celebrate with. Shall we
drink a toast to our joining before I go downstairs to cancel my planned
announcement?"
Kendra forced a smile, and said, "Of course, Alev. But why cancel
your announcement? I thought that if I agreed to your terms, you would
cancel the treaty."
Bralevant had taken the bottle over to a small table set beneath
one of the windows in the bedroom. He opened and poured the tainted
wine, then carried the cups back to where Kendra was standing before
replying. "Of course I will cancel the treaty now ... but not before we
are joined. It will have to be a temporary joining at first, of course.
We can't hold the proper krovelathan ceremony until the summer solstice,
and that's still a month away. Once your capitulation is official, I
will honor my side of the bargain. But not before.
"So, drink up! Drink to tomorrow, when your delegation will get
what it came for. Drink to tonight, when I get what I want. Drink to the
future, and may our future together fare better than our past together."
Bralevant grinned a self-satisfied grin and drained his cup in one
gulp. Kendra could see the triumph in his eyes. She knew that he thought
he had completely fooled her. He had always underestimated her. Like
when he had been carrying on with Omelli, thinking that he could keep it
from her. Kendra might have been raised in a way that he considered
barbarian, but she was no fool and she had come to know him very well.
She pretended to drink to his toasts, but didn't let even a drop
pass her lips. The poison was powerful, and she wanted to be there when
her son and Nikorah were paired. Bralevant walked back to the table and
poured another cup of wine, and downed it in three long swallows.
He said over his shoulder, while pouring a third cup of wine, "I
should get downstairs now, Kendra. They're holding back the best of the
evening's entertainment until I've made my speech. Why don't you make
yourself comfortable on the bed and ... uhn!" Bralevant grimaced in
pain, and staggered slightly against the table.
Continuing to play her part, Kendra said, with as much false
concern as she could muster, "Are you all right, Alev?"
The duke set the bottle and cup back on the table and turned
around, a look of confusion on his face. He said, "I ... uh, I don't ...
ah!" Another grimace was followed by him doubling over, clutching at his
stomach. He knocked into the table in the process, and the wine bottle
teetered, and then fell over. Wine spilled out as the bottle rolled to
the edge of the table, and fell to the floor with a crash of shattered
glass.
Bralevant's confusion was short lived. Kendra saw his head lift,
pain still in his eyes as they stared into hers. "You!" he hissed
between clenched teeth. "Poison! How could you?!"
"It's only one life, Alev," she said calmly. She didn't actually
feel as calm as she sounded, though. Death she could accept, but this
was almost like torture. But she wasn't doing this for revenge, or for
any personal reasons. She was acting for the Elder Speakers, and she
wanted to carry herself in a suitable manner.
Bralidan straightened up and started toward her. His feet splashed
through the spilled wine, and Kendra stared at the puddle around his
feet with an odd fascination. She wasn't worried; judging from his
reaction at the table, the poison was even stronger than she had guessed
and he would surely succumb to it any moment.
He was on her before she realized that he wasn't falling down. His
hands closed about her neck and began strangling her with startling
alacrity. This wasn't supposed to happen. She wasn't supposed to be part
of the sacrifice. She had things to live for. Her son was getting
paired!
Kendra looked into Bralidan's mismatched eyes, blue and brown,
staring with a murderous intent into her own eyes. She saw his struggle
with the pain of the poison, and his fight to stay alive long enough to
take her with him.
She drew her knife and thrust it into his chest as her vision began
to narrow. She struggled to breathe, but the duke's hands were clutched
tight around her neck. She started to kick and scratch him when it was
obvious that the knife in his chest wasn't hampering his efforts to
strangle her, but nothing had any effect.
Finally, the light went out in Bralevant's eyes, but it happened
too late. The duke was dead, but Kendra found that she was too weak to
pry his hands from her throat. She tried -- it wasn't in her to give up
-- but it was so hard to lift her arms. And then once her hands were
hooked over his wrists, she couldn't manage to pull. Too little, too
late.
Her last thought was that she had been wrong: it hadn't been only
one life, it had taken two.
Bralidan thought that Biralvid looked good sitting on the throne in
the main audience chamber, wearing the ducal coronet. Bralidan stood
just behind the rank of Siizhayip, who stood before the Duke of Grahk,
awaiting the resolution of their petition.
Bralidan reflected that he had done the perfect thing in abdicating
his position as heir to his brother that night. The night his father,
and the mother he never knew he had, had killed each other.
He remembered how Osirek had come running into the great hall,
crying "He's dead, he's dead!" Bralidan had known who Osirek meant even
before the personal aide had been calmed down enough to speak
rationally. Both Bralidan and his brother had raced to their father's
quarters to find two dead bodies: the duke and Kendra. For some reason,
Bralevant had strangled Kendra, and it looked as if her futile struggles
to free herself had resulted in the duke's death in turn.
Bralidan had been grief-stricken at the death of his father.
Biralvid, despite his own grief, had taken up his duties as heir quickly
and competently. The investigation that followed was brief, but as
thorough as possible. The evidence was clear, even more so when Osirek
revealed that Kendra had once been the duke's wife and was the mother of
Bralidan. Their history, in addition to the tenseness of the situation
with the Siizhayip delegation, led to obvious conclusions about the
motives involved. Biralvid could have summoned a diviner to determine
the actual facts of the case, but he didn't see the need to send a rider
all the way to the next duchy and wait for their diviner to make the
return trip. No one objected when Biralvid closed the matter.
The duke's funeral had been carried out in full Fretheod ceremony.
Bralevant had been interred with all of the other rulers of Grahk, in
the section of the catacombs beneath Plethiss that were still fulfilling
their original purpose instead of housing the archives. Bralidan had
said farewell to his father in proper Fretheod fashion and had felt
better afterwards.
Kendra's funeral had been held outside the walls of Plethiss, in
proper Siizhayip fashion. Her wrapped body had been placed on a raised
platform, where it had lain for three days while mourners draped
embroidered or painted farewell cloths over the edges of the frame. Then
a fire was built under the platform, and Kendra's body and all of the
farewell cloths were burned amid invocations of and offerings to the Sky
Lords.
The ceremony was unfamiliar to Bralidan, but moving anyway. He had
never known his real mother, and hadn't had much opportunity to get to
know Kendra, but the manner of Siizhayip mourning still managed to help
him deal with her loss.
Biralvid had been confirmed as duke soon after the funerals. There
had been no opposition; everyone had seen the abdication ceremony at the
dinner. Two days had passed while the new duke sorted out the affairs of
Grahk: appointing a castellan, confirming counselors, affirming fealty
among the nobles. And just as soon as he was able to, Duke Biralvid made
an appointment with the Siizhayip delegation.
Bralidan listened while Nikorah restated the petition of the
Siizhayip delegation. Her words were well-rehearsed, and had been
refined over the last week and more through practice and his help. But
the essence of them remained simple: return the Rihelbak Plains to the
Siizhayip.
Duke Biralvid stood when Nikorah had finished, and stepped down
from the small dais the throne rested on. He strode toward the
delegation, and stopped in front of them. He placed one foot on the
white-banded orange rug, which had been explained to Bralidan, and
thence to his brother, as a symbol of petition. The foot placement was
the proper gesture in response to a petition.
Biralvid said, "I wish to apologize to this delegation for the
actions of my father, both in keeping you all here much longer than
should have been necessary, and for taking the life of one of your
number.
"My apology, though, has no bearing on my decision on your request.
If I thought that granting your petition was not in the best interest of
the duchy, all of the regrets in the world would not suffice to sway my
response.
"However, this is not the case. The Rihelbak Plains add nothing
except territory to Grahk, and it is territory that we do not need. So,
I hereby revoke and renounce the Treaty of Rihelbak."
An aide walked up to Biralvid then, carrying a scroll box carved
with the seal of Grahk. The duke opened the box and removed the scroll
within. As the aide walked away again, Biralvid slipped the metal seal
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