King's Blades 01 - The Gilded Chain

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King's Blades 01 - The Gilded Chain Page 9

by Dave Duncan

reported to be expecting another child, although

  Princess Malinda was still a few days short of

  her second birthday. The Countess was rarely

  seen at court anymore. Gossip had it that she

  would soon be banished completely.

  A trumpet stilled the crowd, sounding

  unpleasantly muffled inside Durendal's

  padded helmet. The umpires bowed to the

  King. The contestants raised their swords in

  salute, which seemed no small concession,

  considering what they weighed. He turned himself

  to face his opponent, seeing again the kid's

  confident smirk from inside the cave of steel

  encasing his head. The bigger they are the harder they

  fall.

  The harder they hit, too. Durendal's

  shoulder still throbbed from this morning's saber bout, where

  a padded plastron had not completely absorbed the

  Earl's vicious blow. The broadswords were

  blunt, but his armor would crumple like parchment when

  Muscle Brat started beating on it. Because a

  Blade could not guard his ward if he were injured,

  Durendal's spiritual binding might compel him

  to escape the dilemma by losing the match. He must

  gamble everything on a very quick win.

  This was not a fair fight.

  "My lords, prepare!" cried the senior

  umpire. Aldane raised a gauntlet the

  size of a bucket and closed his visor.

  Durendal did nothing.

  "Prepare, my lord!"

  "I'll fight like this. It's hot in here."

  Fighting with an open visor was rank insanity, but

  it was also a bluff. Aldane would be sorely

  puzzled, wondering what exotic technique his

  Ironhall opponent knew that he did not.

  The umpire hesitated, glanced at his

  colleagues and even across at the King's box, and

  then shrugged.

  "May the spirits preserve the better man. Do

  battle!"

  The umpires scuttled out of the way. The

  contestants lumbered forward over the grass.

  Durendal aimed his sword like a lance and tipped

  himself forward into a near run. Aldane copied him

  at once, for if they collided he would

  contribute twice Durendal's weight and

  knock him down like a skittle. Soon he was

  sprinting in full armor, an awesome display of

  strength. He raised his blade, aiming at that

  temptingly open visor.

  Of course, he could not see very well. He must

  have been sorely puzzled when his opponent

  disappeared.

  Durendal dropped to hands and knees in front

  of him. That act alone was reckless, for armor was

  no place to try gymnastics and he might

  injure himself before taking a single blow.

  As a tactic, it was insane. If he failed

  to trip the Earl, he would be at his mercy. If

  both of them were knocked prone, he would have gained

  no advantage. Its only merit was that no one

  had ever done that before.

  Aldane pitched headlong over him, striking the

  ground like a falling smithy. Fortunately his

  weight neither toppled Durendal nor came down

  on top of him--it just tried to push the Earl

  into his own helmet. The bout was reduced to a question

  of which man could regain his feet first and start

  hammering the other into scrap metal. As Aldane

  was at least momentarily stunned, Durendal had

  no difficulty in clanking himself erect and

  setting a foot on the kid's back. He put

  the point of his sword at a suitable gap in the

  armor.

  "Yield, miscreant!" he declaimed.

  The umpires went into a hurried consultation.

  The crowd's jeering was a constant roar, like a

  mountain torrent.

  Aldane began screaming, "Foul!" and tried

  to rise. Durendal poked him in the kidneys with a

  dull edge--a fairly dull edge. After that the

  noble earl just lay and beat mailed fists on the

  turf, still yelling muffled protests.

  The umpires waved a flag to declare a

  victory. The crowd became even noisier.

  The contestants clattered side by side toward

  the royal box with their helmets tucked under their

  arms. Aldane was demonstrating a virtuoso

  command of indecent language.

  "Did they teach you those words at Steepness?"

  Durendal inquired sweetly.

  The kid glared down at him with the beginnings of

  two lush black eyes. His nose had not stopped

  bleeding yet, and his purse would bleed even harder

  to pay for all the expensive healing he would need.

  "Did they teach you to cheat at Ironhall?"

  "Look, you've got another twenty years

  ahead of you. Making the semifinals at your age

  is a wonderful feat."

  "Losing the match doesn't matter, you oaf!

  It's the flaming money!"

  Not being a gambling man, Durendal had

  forgotten that side of the tournament. "What odds?"

  "I was taking thirty to one at

  lunchtime," the Earl admitted.

  It was very hard to sound sincere. "That's a

  shame."

  "There are hundreds of losers out there. You'll

  be lucky to leave the palace alive, you

  blackguard peasant!"

  Not so funny.

  The King was not amused either. When the contestants

  came to halt in front of the royal box, he

  leaned back in his chair of state and glared at

  Durendal. At the King's side, the

  diminutive Duke of Gaylea was an alarming

  gray color. How much had he wagered on his

  baby boy? Indeed, most of the nobles present

  seemed to have bet on the favorite, but Blades

  in the background were grinning like pike.

  The Marquis was there, being guarded by Hoare.

  He was smiling, which was something he did only in

  public now. He had been seated three rows behind

  the King, almost in among the baronets, and likely

  would not have been admitted at all had his Blade

  not been fighting, because the entire Mornicade

  family was seriously out of favor at the moment.

  He had been dismissed from his naval office; his

  uncles and cousins had all lost their sinecures

  and privileges.

  "You disapprove of broadswords?" the King

  inquired menacingly of Durendal.

  Tricky! "I do prefer rapiers, Your

  Majesty."

  "My liege!" Aldane bleated. "I

  protest the decision!"

  The royal glare was turned on him. "We

  did not address you."

  The Earl made unpleasant noises, as if

  gargling blood.

  The King looked back at Durendal. "And

  what is it you prefer about rapiers?"

  "Um. I suppose it is the greater element of

  skill, sire."

  "I see. Well, we saw no evidence that

  brawn triumphed over brains in this instance." The

  amber eyes had begun to twinkle.

  "Your Majesty flatters me."

  "You won a duel without striking a blow! You have

  created another legend. It seems to be a

  habit of yours. Congratulations."

  R
elieved, Durendal managed a small bow

  without falling over.

  "And as for you, my lord, I applaud

  your remarkable showing in our tournament. You and your

  honored father will dine with us tonight, of course."

  Aldane stepped forward to the barricade. The

  King rose and hung a ribboned semifinalist's

  star around the giant's neck, even he having to stand

  on tiptoe to do so. Everyone else was upright also,

  of course, applauding politely.

  The Marquis had not been invited to dine. When

  the royal party had left, he came down to the

  barricade and beamed at his Blade, undoubtedly

  for Hoare's benefit. He had grown plump in

  the two and a half years Durendal had known him.

  He was seldom sober.

  "Well done, my man! How soon can you get

  out of that bear trap?"

  Displaying his habitual cryptic smile,

  Hoare said, "I will be happy to attend his lordship

  until you are ready, Sir Durendal."

  "About ten minutes, my lord."

  "Hurry, then. I have business to attend to.

  Meet me at the coach yard."

  As Durendal trudged off to the marquee, the

  crowd began booing again.

  Nutting was waiting beside his carriage with the

  footmen and driver already in place. What

  business could be so urgent? His only occupation these

  days was supervising the decoration and furnishing of the

  grandiose mansion he had built, and his wife

  invariably overruled his decisions. He drank

  excessively and wandered the halls at night.

  Durendal nodded his thanks to Hoare, who

  rolled his eyes sympathetically, bowed to the

  Marquis, and strode off. Nutting scrambled

  aboard. The carriage began to move as

  Durendal followed him in.

  "That was very well done!"

  "Thank you, my lord. I should not have lost to him this

  morning, though."

  "Yes, but you will be pleased to hear that I had

  faith in you. It has been a most lucrative

  afternoon for me."

  It might prove less profitable if an

  angry crowd was waiting outside the palace

  gates. As it happened, the few spectators

  there confined themselves to booing. The Marquis did not

  seem to notice, and the carriage rumbled

  unmolested into the cramped and dirty streets of

  Grandon.

  After several minutes of idyllic silence, he

  said, "Unfortunately, the odds will be less

  favorable on tomorrow's match. You are the

  favorite, at four or five to one."

  "I do not deserve so much. Sir Chefney is

  a brilliant fencer."

  "Um, yes." The Marquis chewed his lip for a

  moment. "I hate to mention a subject as

  sordid as money, Sir Durendal ..."

  The title was meaningless, but he had never used it

  before. Durendal felt a sharp stab of worry.

  What was coming? He had absolutely no money of

  his own. He was given his board and his clothes but

  never wages. He sponged his recreations off the

  Royal Guard--horses and ale. The only

  purpose for which he would have liked to have some cash was

  to give presents to women, but pride forbade him

  to ask for it. They had to be satisfied with the

  legend, which fortunately they always seemed to be.

  "My lord?"

  The coach rattled over cobbles, making slow

  progress through the crowded streets. It seemed

  to be heading for a very seamy part of the city.

  "Nutting House has cost considerably more

  than I anticipated, you see."

  "If I win the cup tomorrow, then of course it

  belongs to your lordship, as my patron." As he

  had taken last year's, the skinflint.

  "Yes, but ..." The Marquis's eyes wandered

  shiftily, not meeting his Blade's. "I'm

  afraid a hundred crowns is a drop in the

  gutter. My winnings today are in the thousands and I

  have staked them all on the finals."

  Death and flames! "Am I to infer, my

  lord, that you are counting on winning tomorrow? I am by no

  means certain that I can beat Sir Chefney.

  He trounced Commander Montpurse very

  convincingly."

  "I was pleased to see-- What I am

  suggesting, Sir Durendal, is that you should lay a

  bet of your own."

  "I have nothing to wager, my lord."

  Nutting pointed at the sword breaker on his

  thigh.

  "No!" Seeing his ward flinch in alarm, he

  drew a deep breath. "I mean, I cannot in

  honor hazard losing a gift from the sovereign,

  my lord! He would most certainly

  notice its absence."

  "Bah! He will never know. You don't wear it

  to fence. You need only part with it until the match

  is over. I have a friend willing to advance six

  thousand crowns against it."

  "It's worth ten times that!"

  "Only as an outright sale, boy. This is

  merely a short-term loan."

  "And if I fail to win the match, what then?"

  The Marquis sniffed plaintively. "Your

  task is to defend me, yes?"

  "Of course. But only--"

  "Does debtors' prison rank as a

  specified peril? If I cannot raise certain

  amounts within days, Sir Durendal, then that is

  where I will be. I presume you must accompany

  me."

  "You poxed pig's bastard." Durendal did

  not raise his voice--shouting was unnecessary when stating

  facts. "You mean your harlot sister can't wring

  any more money out of the King?"

  Nutting's eyes glittered for a moment, then his

  air of dejection returned. "As you say. And

  no one will pay my debts, so we shall rot in

  jail for the rest of our lives. Men die quickly in

  Drain Street, Blade. Will you defend me

  against the coughing sickness?"

  "By the eight, I am a healthier man than you

  are! When you die, I can walk free--free of

  you and free of the worst duty ever laid upon an

  honorable swordsman."

  "As you please. We have arrived. Is that your

  final decision?"

  The carriage had stopped in an alley,

  gloomy and stinking and so narrow that men could barely have

  squeezed by. As if the visitors had been

  expected, a door opened in the wall

  alongside, revealing a fat, bald man, who

  smiled to show black and broken teeth.

  Durendal discovered that he was trembling

  violently. Never had the binding been so at odds

  with his personal inclinations. He wanted

  to strangle this human toad beside him and stamp his

  corpse into mud.

  "The King gave it to me!"

  "And you shall have it back."

  "Don't you trust me?" His voice cracked.

  "Do you fear I won't try my best? I

  swear, my lord, that I will fight tomorrow as if your

  life depended on it. I don't need

  talk of debtors' prison to keep me honest!"

  "But it is true. My life is at stake--

  indirectly, I admit, but very surely. I

  merely ask to b
orrow that thing on your belt for a

  day. Is that so much to ask of a man bound to defend

  me against all foes? Decide. Shall I signal

  the coachman to proceed?"

  It was true that life expectancy in

  debtors' prison was a matter of weeks. The

  binding might ignore a danger so indirect, but

  Durendal had sworn an oath. Sick at

  heart, he detached the sword breaker from his belt

  and handed it over.

  Smiling, the Marquis passed it down to the man

  waiting in the doorway, receiving a roll of

  vellum in return. He scanned it quickly,

  nodded his assent, and rapped on the window to the

  driver. The carriage clattered into motion. Not a

  word had been said.

  How had the turd arranged all this without his

  Blade knowing? Of course Durendal had spent

  much time fencing in the last few days, leaving his ward

  in the care of the Guard. There had been more letters coming

  and going than usual, so he should have suspected

  something evil was afoot. What difference would it have

  made? He could not oppose his ward in anything that

  mattered.

  "You realize," he said, his mouth dry, "that if

  I lose and the King asks me what happened to the

  breaker, I shall tell him the truth?"

  The Marquis of Nutting smiled slyly. "You

  will lose, dear boy, and he won't notice,

  because it will not be missing. We are betting on Sir

  Chefney, not on you. I can get odds of five

  to one and he will win. You must lose to get your

  sword breaker back."

  The autumn evening was fading into night when the

  Marquis arrived back at Nutting House, but

  he at once proceeded to inspect the gardens,

  complaining loudly to his Blade that the army of

  workmen had left without achieving anything during the

  day. Indoors, it was the same story. All those

  painters, artists, carpenters, and plasterers had

  obviously been idling since dawn, wasting his

  money.

  My money, Durendal thought. The King's

  money.

  The Marquise had been dispatched a few days

  previously to visit her parents, so the

  half-completed house was empty except for the

  fifty-two servants. Nutting screamed for his

  valets, demanding a shave and fresh clothes--

  bathing was a danger he seldom risked. While

  the lackeys tended his noble carcass, Durendal

  prowled restlessly around the grandiose dressing

  room.

  There was something wrong, something that should be obvious

  but remained maddeningly out of sight. Foul as the

  turd's explanations had been, the whole truth

 

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