by Sharon
“It relieves me to see you moving to consolidate your strengths,” he murmured. “I counsel, if it does not offend, that Korval can afford to be generous. When one wishes to acquire a jewel beyond price … “
“I concur,” Daav said.
Perhaps he spoke a bit too sharply, for Guayar inclined his head and said no more.
They began to meet other guests. Daav made his bow to Lord Andresi, another of his mother’s staunch allies, and to Nasil ter’Gasta Clan Idvantis. Seeing him on Guayar’s arm, neither detained him long, and soon they were comfortable again, just the two of them.
“How does Clonak go on?” Daav asked.
Guayar moved his shoulders. “I assume he thrives, as the Scouts have not notified me of his attaining a less satisfactory condition. One never does hear from Scouts when they are at duty, you know. Your mother and I had used to speak of it, often.”
“Indeed,” Daav said, properly chagrined. “One might suppose I would be accustomed to that circumstance by now.”
“When the heart is anxious, the mind grows forgetful,” Guayar murmured, and slid him a sidewise look. “In my experience.”
Daav inclined his head.
“Ah, at last! The wine table! Let us turn you up sweet, young Korval. Have some of Ilthiria’s canary; it is excellent.”
He took the older gentleman’s advice, finding it good, as it so often was, and mingled with the guests who lingered in the area, pausing to speak with Thodelm Wespail regarding the latest vagaries of the market in aleut and the sudden popularity of vya among the Terran ports.
When he next glanced about him, Guayar was gone.
*
Aelliana and Lady yo’Lannamet quite a number of people in the course of their unhurried stroll. Aelliana had done her best to commit faces to memory, as she would memorize the faces that filled each new class. Most pleasantly, they had spoken with Len Sar Anaba Clan Gabrian, who was a trader, and knew Er Thom well; and exchanged bows with Lady Sera tel’Kai Clan Vakmont. Vakmont, Aelliana told herself, with a certain feeling of pleasure for knowing it, was High House.
“Do you mean to keep Korval on your string very long?” Lady yo’Lanna asked.
Aelliana felt her temper spark, and took a careful breath.
“Ma’am, I fear you are misinformed,” she said quietly. “Daav had said you were his mother’s best and oldest friend, so I have no hesitation in telling you that he and I are natural lifemates. We stand each at the side of the other because we must. That lifemating, ma’am, cannot be undone.”
“I had wondered if that were the case, given the clan’s history,” the lady said smoothly. “But there are other matters, Pilot, which may only be captured correctly by paper and ink. I cannot imagine why Chi’s son has not yet cemented his advantage.”
“He has been convenable and patient,” Aelliana murmured. “There were those things which I needed to find of myself, for myself, before I would allow even discussion of contracts.”
“Ah. And now?”
Aelliana smiled. “Mr. dea’Gauss is speaking with Mizel now.”
Lady yo’Lanna did not go so far as to smile, though she did press her lips together for a brief moment.
“That is excellent news,” she said. “May I be the very first to wish you happy.”
“The contract is not set yet,” Aelliana protested.
The Lady laughed softly. “My dear Pilot Caylon, with the dea’Gauss in negotiation, success cannot be far behind.” She used her chin to point at a man in a very fine tunic, coming toward them up the path.
“Now, here we come upon my good friend Etgora. You will doubtless find him pleasant enough, but pray be aware that he will look first at your rings and calculate from there.”
Aelliana glanced down at her hands. She wore her Jump pilot’s cluster and the silver puzzle ring she had from her grandmother.
“I have no shame in my rings, ma’am,” she said composedly.
“No,” Lady yo’Lanna said, sweeping forward, “nor should you.”
*
” … it was Plemia lost an elder pilot in the Out,” yo’Taler was saying. “The most curious affair imaginable. She had delivered her cargo, and taken on the return, went onto the port for a bite and a glass—and never returned to her ship. It was like the port swallowed her up.”
“The ship?” Daav asked.
“Ah, there’s Korval! No, sir, you’ll rejoice to hear that the ship was unharmed. It paid the docking fees until its account ran dry, which is when Port Admin noticed something amiss, and by then the pilot’s trail was cold. No one came forward with her ID or a ship key, or any likely tale for taking what they knew was aboard. Nor could anyone recall seeing the pilot after she left with another, before port middle night.”
“She might as easily have fallen into the lake,” Wespail murmured. “Pilots do get drunk.”
“Did anyone find her companion?” someone asked.
“Yes. And he was as astonished as any other to learn that she had vanished. He was employed by the yard where her ship was docked and had come to tell her that there might be need of a rebalancing. Left her at the gate, is what he told the proctors, and none to disbelieve him.”
“The pirates are getting bold,” Len Sar Anaba said. “Even here in Solcintra, there are cargoes going missing as a regular thing—from beneath the noses of trained guards! Down in the Low Port, it’s said that the Juntavas rules all. Pilots are in particular peril, and many never return to their ships.”
Daav looked up, warned by a sense he had not known he had.
Aelliana and Lady yo’Lanna were walking toward their little group, escorted by Delm Etgora. He murmured an excuse and moved out of the intent knot of discussants.
“Daav, the gardens are quite beautiful!” Aelliana greeted him, abandoning Lady yo’Lanna’s arm for his.
“Yes, they are very fine. Glavda Empri wins awards every year, for its artful and pleasing displays.”
Aelliana moved her hand, showing him Etgora.
“This is Ber del’Fordan, who has the honor to be Etgora.”
“We have met,” Daav said, giving his fellow delm the courtesy of the bow between equals. “It has been some time, sir.”
“It has. You are looking well, young Korval. Pilot Caylon, please, call upon me at any time.”
“Thank you, sir,” Aelliana said.
“Yes, all very well,” Lady yo’Lanna said. “Etgora, I am thirsty. Pray find me a glass of the canary.”
“Certainly, Ilthiria.” He inclined his head and led her to the wine table.
Aelliana sighed, and wilted a little on Daav’s arm.
“How do you go on?” Daav asked her. “Do you wish to leave?”
“Not just yet,” she said. “We must give Mr. dea’Gauss time to work! But I would like a glass of wine. It is a vast garden, Daav! And I think I must have walked every step of it.”
“In that case, you must, by all means, have wine, and perhaps even a small plateful of food. Let us see what delights are laid for us.”
As he turned with her toward the buffet, he saw several pairs of eyes following, not him, but her.
Aelliana conquers all, he thought, and only just managed to keep his smile to himself.
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Nothing is as easy as it looks.
—Terran Proverb
Mr. dea’Gauss was not happy; Aelliana knew it immediately they entered his office. How she knew it—well, likely the knowledge was Daav’s, whose fingers were interlaced with hers.
“Your lordship. My lady. May I bring you refreshment?”
“Thank you, no,” Daav said gently, as if the apprehension she felt from him did not exist. “I think you had better just tell us, sir. Has Mizel refused our offer?”
There was a pause—and a sigh.
“Not … precisely, no.”
Mr. dea’Gauss moved his hand, showing them chairs, and did not take his own until they were seated. “Mizel has produced a … cou
nteroffer, your lordship. Quite an extraordinary counteroffer.”
Daav had taken his hand from hers as they were seated, but Aelliana felt a flutter of hope on her own behalf. A counteroffer. Surely, that was only expected? Contracts were after all about negotiation, and compromise.
“If they are still talking, then there is hope,” Daav murmured, in echo of her thought. “With what have they countered?”
Mr. dea’Gauss drew his notepad to him and touched the screen.
“They ask … ” He cleared his throat. “They ask high for the life-price, though had that been the only obstacle I might have counseled your lordship to accept, in order to have all done soonest. They ask, also, for the life-price of a nadelm, and they—” Mr. dea’Gauss looked up, but it was her eyes he sought, not Daav’s.
“They demand, my lady, that you return to your clanhouse until the negotiations with Korval are complete.”
“No!” She raised her hand, fingers spread. “That I refuse.”
Mr. dea’Gauss looked even more unhappy.
“There is custom behind it, my lady. Mizel’s qe’andra informs me that you had been called home by your delm ere this negotiation had begun. You are thus constrained, as a daughter of Mizel … “
“I will not return to that house!”
Panic clawed at her throat. That house, with Ran Eld behind every door, and her mother, with his ghost in her eyes! It would happen again—her life would be torn from her, the house would wear her down, they would demand—demand duty done, demand that she give Daav over, demand—
“No! I will not go back there to be ground down and destroyed! I will not be a prisoner to Mizel’s incompetence! I have appointments—engagements! I—”
“Aelliana.”
Calm and beloved, his voice. She shook her hair away from her eyes, startled to find herself standing and halfway to the office door. Her legs were shaking and her stomach was … quite unsettled. It came to her that she was weeping.
“Aelliana.”
Daav held his hands out, palms up, offering himself to her.
“We will find the route, Pilot. I swear it.”
Shakily, she stepped forward, put her hands in his, fully expecting to feel the force of his anger, but instead there was only and truly—
Calm.
She closed her eyes.
“Yes,” he murmured. “Take what you need.”
The panic wilted before this encompassing calmness. She felt peaceful, and alert …
“Mr. dea’Gauss,” she heard Daav say.
“Your lordship.”
“Korval perfectly comprehends Mizel’s natural wish to guard the well-being of one of its precious children. Further, it is Korval’s wish, as of course it is Mizel’s, that there be no coercion or threat brought to any of the principals of these talks. Pilot Caylon will therefore remove from Jelaza Kazone—”
“No,” she whispered, her fingers tightening on his, but he went on as if he had not heard her.
“She will remove from Jelaza Kazone, to Trealla Fantrol. If that discomforts Mizel, then to Glavda Empri. If yo’Lanna finds no favor with Mizel, then Pilot Caylon will go to Healer Hall in Chonselta City, remanded to the specific care of Master Healer Kestra. In no case will Pilot Caylon be a prisoner, held to her rooms, or forbidden to have visitors. She will be free to go about her business, honoring her appointments and her social engagements as an adult and fully responsible person.”
“I will see it done, your lordship.”
“Thank you, Mr. dea’Gauss,” Daav murmured. “Aelliana?”
“The price of a nadelm,” she murmured. “It’s blood money. For Ran Eld.”
There was a startled silence. Mr. dea’Gauss spoke first.
“Are you certain, my lady? It was told to me that Mizel named you as nadelm.”
“She did not,” Aelliana said, daring to take her hands away from Daav’s and approaching the table.
Daav slipped a hand under her elbow and helped her regain her seat before taking his own. He and the accountant shared a troubled glance.
“If—that is a dangerous precedent,” Mr. dea’Gauss said slowly. “It imperils the future negotiations of all, and muddles the lines between restitution made in Balance of a death, and the price paid to adopt a member of one clan into the ranks of another. As a Master of the Accountants Guild, I—forgive me, your lordship—I cannot allow that precedent to be set.”
“I understand entirely, Mr. dea’Gauss, and I would not ask it of you.” Daav sighed.
“Thank you, your lordship.” He sighed, and leaned back in his chair, pushing the notepad aside.
“Mizel’s qe’andra allows me to know that Mizel will deal in earnest when Korval’s good intentions are shown.”
Aelliana swallowed. “I must remove from our house before Mizel will begin to talk?”
“That is the essence, my lady.”
Aelliana closed her eyes.
“What do they have to gain?” she whispered.
Mr. dea’Gauss cleared his throat.
“If I may venture a guess … I believe that it may be that news of the attachment between yourself and his lordship has come to Mizel’s ears.”
“They hope that separation will disorder us,” Daav said. “Thus we will not negotiate as well or as carefully as we should, and Mizel will achieve an advantage.”
Mr. dea’Gauss inclined his head. “That is my belief, yes.”
“Well, then.” Daav put his hand over hers on the table. “We depend upon you to keep us careful, Mr. dea’Gauss, and to guard us from all harm.”
Chapter Twenty-Eight
The guest is sacrosanct. The welfare and comfort of the guest will be first among the priorities of the House, for so long as the guest shall bide.
—Excerpted from the Liaden Code of Proper Conduct
Of course, Mizel had chosen the Healers. Aelliana supposed she ought to be relieved, that they had chosen at all.
She flew The Luck to Chonselta solo, and even on so short a lift bitterly felt the lack of his calm, solid presence in the other chair. But it would not have done, Mizel’s further condition being that she should have no congress with Daav yos’Phelium. If they were chance met, as say, at Kareen yos’Phelium’s formal gather, some weeks from now, they were to bow with appropriate courtesy and separate themselves as quickly as possible.
And it would not have been any easier, Aelliana thought, sealing The Luck and walking down the gantry with her bag over one shoulder, to leave him at Chonselta Port than it had been to leave him—at home.
“Three days, at most,” he had murmured into her hair, as they embraced for what she would not think of as the last time. “Now that this is begun, it should end quickly. I’ll wager you’ll be back home well before Kareen’s gather, and will not have the occasion to impose upon Lady yo’Lanna after all.”
Aelliana smiled slightly as she came to the ground and walked on in the direction of the main thoroughfare. Lady yo’Lanna had immediately fallen in with the suggestion that Aelliana’s dress be delivered to Glavda Empri, with Eyla dea’Lorn, too. Aelliana would then take herself there for dressing. “For,” Daav had said, with great common sense, “you would not want to crush your skirts in the pilot’s chair.”
She came out of the yard into a side street. Ahead, the sign for a taxi stand glowed gently against the afternoon light.
Scarcely had she touched the call switch than a car pulled up, back door open.
“Service, Pilot?”
“Yes, thank you.” She tossed her bag inside and slid in after it.
“Healer Hall, if you please.”
She was shown into a side parlor, with assurances that the guide to her quarters would be with her very soon, and left alone. Aelliana sighed, put her bag on the seat of the nearest chair and wandered over to the table. There were several decanters and glasses set ready, but she did not wish for wine. Continuing her prowl, she came to a bookshelf scantily filled with old novels and out-of-date
periodicals. She flipped through them, and had just decided that she ought to choose one of the garden magazines to while her time when the door opened and a woman whose face was immediately familiar to her entered the room and bowed.
“Kestra, Master Healer,” she said briskly, and straightened with a smile. “Pilot Caylon, how good it is to see you looking so well … ” Grey brows pulled sharply together.
It seemed to Aelliana that the Healer looked past her face, indeed, that her gaze was fixed slightly above her head.
“Yes,” Kestra said, considerably less brisk, “it is wonderful to see you looking so exceptionally well. This is beyond anything we had dared to hope for. How does your lifemate go on, if an old woman might inquire?”
Aelliana tipped her head. “He fares very well by my accounting. However, my eyesight is not so sharp as your own. It may interest you to know that it has not been given him to … experience me fully.”
“No? But surely—” The Healer sighed sharply and moved her hands in a gesture vaguely akin to forgive in hand-talk. “I am but seeing half the pattern. With the wholeness before me, I might see the flaw and the flow, but even then—perhaps not. There is a great deal of flash and brangle about your partner, which makes it difficult—but there! You are not here to satisfy my vulgar curiosities, though you must permit me to say again that it is gratifying to behold you thus. I had hoped that our work would give you some ease. That you have been able to take what we began and unfurl your wings so far … ” She bowed again, gently, as one who has beheld a wonder.
“Thank you, Pilot.”
“Surely, it is I who should thank you. Had you not made a beginning, I should—I should not have been able to build upon your work.” And, she added silently, she would not have been made privy to the complex, tricksy creature who was Daav yos’Phelium, without whom—
“We are both in debt to the other,” Master Kestra said.
“And so the debts cancel,” Aelliana said, and inclined her head. “When this current business is done, if you like, you may come to us at Jelaza Kazone, to view the whole of the pattern.”
“That at least would satisfy an old woman’s curiosity. However, you remind me, most gently, of our current business. Allow me to show you to your lodging.” She turned with a sweep of her hand and crossed the room to the door. Aelliana stretched her legs, snatched up her bag, and followed.