Recluce Tales

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Recluce Tales Page 23

by L. E. Modesitt Jr.


  “Shierra, wake up.” Dalyra shook me. “Wake up,” she hissed. “You’ll rouse everyone with that moaning and muttering. They’ll ask what you were dreaming. Guard captains don’t need that.”

  “I’m awake.” I could tell I was still sleepy. My words came out mumbled.

  “Good,” whispered Dalyra. “Now go back to sleep.” She padded back to her pallet in the adjoining alcove.

  I lay there in the darkness under the thick woolen blankets of a single guard captain. I’d never wanted a consort. Not in Westwind, and it wasn’t likely I’d ever be anywhere else. Even if I left Westwind, where would I ever find one strong enough to stand up to me? The only man I’d seen with that strength was Creslin, and he’d been little more than a youth when he’d escaped Westwind, and far too young and far too above me. Unlike Fiera, I knew what was possible.

  Yet what had the dream meant? The Tower Black of my dream hadn’t been the tower I knew. Tower Black was the oldest part of Westwind. Its smooth stones had been cut and fitted precisely by the ancient smith-mage Nylan under the geas of Ryba the Great before he had spellsung the traitor Arylyn to free him and fled with Arylyn to the world below the Roof of the World. The great hall, the Guard quarters, the stables, the craft buildings, all of them were far larger than Tower Black. Yet none of them conveyed the solidity of the far smaller Tower Black that they dwarfed.

  I finally drifted back into sleep, but it was an uneasy slumber at best.

  The next morning, Aemris mustered all the guards, and even the handfuls of consorts and the guard captains, in the main courtyard of Westwind. She stood in the gusty spring wind and snowfall, the large fat flakes swirling lazily from the sky. Beside her stood the healer.

  “The Marshall of Westwind has learned that Lord Creslin made his own way to the Sub-Tyrant of Sarronnyn,” the Guard Commander began. “They were wed in Montgren, and, as a token of his esteem, the Duke named them co-regents of Recluce. They are expanding the town of Land’s End there on Recluce, and the Marshall will permit some from Westwind to join them in Recluce. The healer will explain.”

  Aemris delivered her speech without great enthusiasm. Even so, everyone was listening as the healer stepped forward.

  “My name is Lydya. I am a healer, and I bring news of Creslin. He crossed much of Candar by himself and unaided. For a time he was imprisoned by the white wizards of Fairhaven, but he escaped and made his way to Montgren. He and Megaera are co-regents of Recluce. They are building a new land, and there is opportunity for all. The land is much warmer and much drier than Westwind, but there are mountains and the sea.” She smiled crookedly. “The mountains are rugged, but much lower and not nearly so cold. For better or worse, neither men nor women rule, but both can prosper, or suffer, according to ability…”

  Somehow that did not surprise me, not from a youth who had crossed much of Candar alone. What puzzled me was that he had married the woman he had left the Westhorns to avoid being consorted to. That suggested that Megaera was far more than he or anyone had expected.

  After the healer finished speaking, Aemris added a few words. “Any of you who are interested in accompanying the healer to Recluce remain here. That includes consorts.”

  Perhaps forty guards out of three hundred remained in the courtyard. I was the only guard captain.

  Aemris motioned for me to come forward first.

  “You, Shierra?” asked the Guard Commander. “You have the makings of an arms-master or even Guard Commander in years to come.”

  How could I explain the dream? That, somehow, an image of Creslin kept me walled within Westwind? I could only trust the dream. “Someone must bring his heritage to him,” I finally said.

  Aemris looked to Lydya. The healer nodded.

  “She’s the most senior guard who wishes to go,” Aemris said. “She should be guard captain of the detachment.”

  “That she will be.” The healer smiled, but I felt the sadness behind the expression.

  In the end, Aemris and Lydya settled on twenty-five guards and ten consorts with five children—all boys under five.

  For the two days until we rode out, Fiera avoided me even more pointedly than before, walking away when she could, giving only formal responses when she could not. She could have volunteered, but she had not. Instead, she had asked to accompany a trade delegation to Sarronnyn. She hadn’t told me. I’d discovered that from others—as I had so many things.

  V

  The ride to Armat took almost four eightdays. We rode through the Westhorns to Middle Vale and then down into Suthya by the road to the north of the River Arma. Until we reached Suthya, in most places, the snow beside the roads was at least waist-deep, and twice we had to help the road crews clear away new-fallen snow. In Armat, we had to wait another eightday for the ship Lydya had engaged with the letter of credit from the Marshall.

  While we waited, she continued to purchase goods in one fashion or another. When the Pride of Armat ported, I was surprised to discover it was one of the largest vessels in the harbor, with three tall masts. The ship was heavy-laden indeed by the time its master lifted sail and we departed from Armat three days later. Lydya and I talked frequently, but it was mostly about the cargo, about the guards and their consorts, and about how we would need to use all the wood-working and stone-working tools to build our own shelter on Recluce. That bothered me little. All Guards knew something about building and maintaining structures. Westwind could not have endured over the centuries without those skills. I tended to be better with stone. Perhaps I lacked the delicate touch needed for woodwork.

  After more than an eightday of hugging the northern coasts of Candar, the ship had finally left the eastern-most part of Lydiar behind, swallowed by the sea. For the first two days, we’d been followed by another vessel, until Lydya had suggested to the captain that he fly the banner of Westwind I had brought. About halfway across the Gulf of Candar, the war schooner eased away on a different course.

  Lydya and I stood just aft of the bowsprit, at the port railing.

  “Do you know what to expect in Recluce, Shierra?”

  “No, except that it will likely be hot and dry and strange. We’ll have to build almost everything from nothing, and there’s a garrison of savage men we’ll have to deal with.”

  Lydya laughed. “They’ll have to deal with you. None of them are a match for your least trained guards. That’s one of the reasons why Creslin needs you, and why the Marshall permitted some of you to come.”

  “But she drove him out, didn’t she?”

  “Did she?”

  The question made me uneasy, especially asked by a healer. “Why did you come to Westwind?”

  “To ask the Marshall for what might be called Creslin’s dowry. For obvious reasons, he cannot ask, and he would not even if he were physically where he could.”

  For that, I also admired him. “How did you come to know him?”

  “I was a healer in the White road camp where they imprisoned him. After he escaped, Klerris and I followed him, not to Montgren, but to Tyrhavven. That is where he and Megaera took the Duke’s schooner that brought them to Recluce. Klerris accompanied them, and I traveled to Westwind.”

  “Is he really a mage?”

  “Yes. He may become one of the greatest ever. That is if he and Megaera survive each other.”

  “Healer … what is the Sub-Tyrant like?” I did not wish to ask the question, but I had to know, especially after Lydya’s last words.

  “She has hair like red mahogany, eyes as green and deep as the summer seas south of Naclos, fair skin, and freckles. She is also a white witch, with a kind heart, and a temper to match the most violent thunderstorms of summer.”

  “Is she…”

  “She is as beautiful and as deadly as a fine dagger, Shierra. That is what makes her a match for Creslin, or him for her.”

  What could I say to that, except more pleasantries about the sea, the weather, and the cargo we carried?

  VI

 
Another day passed. On the morning of the following day, a rocky headland appeared. I could see no buildings at all. There was no smoke from fires. As the ship neared land, and some of the sails were furled, I could finally make a breakwater on the east side of the inlet between the rocky cliffs. At first, I wasn’t certain, because it wasn’t much more than a long pile of stones. There was a single short pier, with a black stone building behind it, and a scattering of other buildings, one of them clearly half-built. A dusty road wound up a low rise to a keep built out of grayish-black stones. On one end was a section that looked to have been added recently.

  The captain had a boat lowered, with a heavy rope—a hawser, I thought—attached to the sternpost. The men in the boat rowed to the pier and fastened it to one of the posts, and then the crew used the capstan to winch the ship in toward the pier. As we got nearer to the shore, I could see that very little grew anywhere, just bushes.

  “Lydya … it doesn’t look like we’ll have much use for that wood-working equipment. All I see are a few bushes.”

  The healer laughed. “Those are trees, or what passes for them.”

  Trees? They were barely taller than I. I swallowed and turned back to look at the handful of people waiting on the pier. One of them was Creslin. I could tell that from his silver hair, lit by the sunlight. Beside him on one side was a black mage. On the other was a tall red-haired woman. That had to be Megaera.

  Once the ship was tied fast, the captain scrambled onto the pier, bowing to Creslin and Megaera. I just watched for a moment.

  “Shierra … you’re the guard captain,” said Lydya quietly. “Report to the Regents.”

  I was senior, and I would have stepped forward sooner, except …

  There was no excuse. I vaulted over the railing and stood waiting behind the captain. Once he stepped back, I moved forward.

  “Guard Captain Shierra, Regent Creslin, Regent Megaera,” I began, inclining my head in respect to them.

  “Did you have any trouble with the wizards?” Creslin asked.

  “No, ser. But then, we insisted that the captain fly our banner. One war schooner did follow us. It left halfway across the Gulf.” I couldn’t help smiling, but felt nervous all the same as I gestured to the middle mast where the Westwind banner drooped limply.

  “You seem to have a full group.” Creslin smiled, but he didn’t seem to recognize me. Then, why should he have? Fiera had been the one who had kissed him.

  “Two and a half squads, actually.”

  Creslin pointed westward toward the keep. “There are your quarters, rough as they are. We’ll discuss other needs once you look things over. We might as well get whatever you brought off-loaded.”

  “Some carts would help, ser. The healer”—I didn’t wish to use her first name, and what else could I call her to a regent?—“was apparently quite persuasive…” I went on to explain everything in the cargo holds.

  “Now, that is true wizardry.” Creslin laughed.

  The sound was so infectious, almost joyful, that I ended up laughing with him. Then, I was so embarrassed that I turned immediately to the guards. “Let’s offload!”

  I forced myself to concentrate so much on the details of getting the guards and consorts and the children off the ship and then making sure with the ship’s boatswain that the holds would be unloaded in the order on the bill of lading that I did not even sense Megaera’s approach.

  “Guard Captain?” Her voice carried, despite its softness.

  I tried not to jump and turned. “Regent Megaera.”

  “Once you’re ready, I’ll escort you up to the keep.” She smiled, almost humorously. “They’ll have to walk. We’re a bit short on mounts. It’s not that far, though.”

  “We have enough mounts for the guards, and some spares.” I paused. “But they’ll have to be walked themselves after all the time on ship.”

  It took until early afternoon before we had even begun to transfer cargo and to walk the horses up to the crude stables behind the keep. Once I had duties assigned to the guards, I stayed at the keep, trying to keep track of goods and especially weapons. The wallstones of the outbuildings being used as stables were so loosely set that the stalls would have filled with ice on a single winter day at Westwind. The storerooms on the lower levels of the keep were better, but musty.

  I blotted my forehead with my sleeve as I stood outside the stable in the sun, checking the contents of each cart, and directing the guards.

  After the cart I had checked was unloaded and Eliera began to lead the old mare back down to the pier, Megaera appeared and walked toward me.

  “Guard Captain … I have a question for you.”

  “Yes, Regent?” What could a white witch want of me?

  “Recluce is a hard place, and it is likely to get harder before it gets easier. Could you instruct me in the use of blades?”

  “Regent…” What could I say? Westwind Guards began training almost as soon as they could walk, and Megaera was nearly as old as I was, I suspected. Beautiful as she was, she was certainly older than Creslin.

  She lifted her arms and let the tunic sleeves fall back, revealing heavy white scars around both wrists. “I can deal with pain and discomfort, Guard Captain. What I cannot abide is my own inability to defend myself with a blade.”

  But … she was a white mage.

  “Magery has its limits.” She looked directly at me. “Please … will you help me?”

  How could I say no when she had begged me? Or as close to begging as a Sub-Tyrant could come.

  VII

  I was studying the practice yard early the next morning. The sun had barely cleared the low cliffs to the east, and the air was cool for Recluce, but dusty. I wondered if I’d ever escape the dust. Already, I missed the smell of the firs and the pines, and the clean crispness of the air of Westwind. The barracks were stone-walled, sturdy, and rough. From what I could tell, so were the Montgren troopers.

  I heard boots and turned.

  “You’re Guard Captain Shierra. Hyel, at your service.” As eastern men sometimes were, he was tall, almost half a head taller than I was, but lanky with brown hair. His hands were broad, with long fingers. Megaera had pointed him out the day before and told me that he was in charge of the Montgren troopers, such as they were, but with all the fuss and bother of unloading and squeezing everyone in, we had not met.

  “I’m pleased to meet you.” I wasn’t certain that I was, but his approach had been polite enough.

  “Are you as good as Regent Creslin with the blade?”

  How could I answer that question? There was no good answer. I forced a smile. “Why don’t we spar, and you can make up your own mind?”

  Hyel stiffened. I didn’t see why. “I only made a friendly suggestion, Hyel. That was because I don’t have an answer to your question. I never sparred against Creslin.” That was shading things, because Heldra had, and at the end, just before Creslin had ridden off, even she had been hard-pressed. I certainly would have been.

  “With wands?”

  “That might be best.” Best for both of us. If he was a master blade, I didn’t want to find out with cold steel, and if he wasn’t, I didn’t want to have to slice him up to prove a point.

  “I’ll be back in a moment.”

  Why had Hyel immediately sought me out, and before most others were around?

  In moments, he re-appeared with two white oak wands that seemed scarcely used. He offered me my choice. I took the one that felt more balanced. Neither was that good.

  “Shall we begin?” Hyel turned and walked into the courtyard. He turned and waited. Once I neared, he lifted the white oak wand, slightly too high. I was less comfortable with the single blade, but the shorter twin wooden practice blades were still buried in the storeroom where they’d been quickly unloaded.

  His feet were about right, but he was leaning forward too far.

  It took just three passes before I disarmed him.

  He just shrugged and stood there, laug
hing.

  I lowered the wand, uncertain of what to say. “Are you…”

  “I’m fine, Shierra. Might I call you that?”

  “You may.”

  He shook his head. “I always thought that what they said about Westwind was just … well, that folks believed what they wanted. Then, when Creslin slaughtered Zarlen in about two quick moves, well … I just thought that was him.”

  “No. He could have been as good as a Westwind arms-master … he might even have been when he left, but there are many guards as good as I am.” That was true enough. There were at least ten others. But Creslin … slaughtering someone? I’d known he was determined, but somehow, I’d never imagined him that way.

  “It wasn’t like that,” Hyel said quickly. “Creslin and Megaera came here almost by themselves. On the Duke’s small schooner with no guards and no troopers. Zarlen thought he could kill Creslin and have his way with her. Creslin saw what he had in mind and asked him to spar. Creslin disarmed him real quick, and Zarlen went crazy. He attacked Creslin with his own steel. Creslin had to kill him.” Hyel laughed ruefully. “Made his point.”

  That made more sense … but to see that a man wanted his wife … and to kill him like that? The Marshall would have acted that quickly, and Creslin was her son. I’d never thought of it that way. I lowered the wooden wand until the blunted point touched the stones.

  “Can you teach me?” Hyel asked.

  I could. Should I? “If you’re willing to work,” I answered, still distracted by what Hyel had told me.

  “Early in the morning?” A sheepish look crossed his face.

  “Early in the morning. Every morning.”

  I’d been in Recluce only two days, and I’d already committed to teaching Megaera the basics of the blade and to improving the skills of the Montgren garrison commander.

  VIII

  With the Regent Megaera, I had to start farther back, with an exercise program of sorts. I gave her stones of the proper weight to lift and hold, and exercises to loosen and limber her shoulders. After an eightday, she found me re-mortaring the stones in what would be the armory.

 

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