King's Blades 01 - The Gilded Chain

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by Dave Duncan


  The Night of Dogs had been only the start.

  Fortunately, Ambrose IV had never been a

  coward. The more they attacked him, the more determined

  he became. No chancellor ever had better

  backing.

  "I'd like to hear some of those stories, my lord."

  "Ah, old man's rambling! Ancient

  history. The point is that we won. The King

  brought conjuration under the rule of law, and a lot of

  other countries envy us now. He did very well out

  of it, of course. He sold off the lands,

  usually; but sometimes he made gifts of them, and

  Ivywalls was one of those. He gave it to me like

  a huntsman throwing the entrails to his dog."

  "My lord! No! You weren't his dog. You were his

  army."

  "Not I, lad, nor the Guard, either. It was the

  Old Blades we called back who were his army,

  and Lord Snake was his general. I was just the spider

  in the attic, plotting where we would strike next.

  In time we ran out of enemies and life became

  much less exciting."

  After a moment, Quarrel coughed politely.

  "It wasn't exciting this evening?"

  "Indeed it was!" Durendal said, abashed.

  "Please don't think I am not grateful. You

  may have set an Ironhall record--saving your

  ward only three days after your binding."

  "I didn't even draw!"

  "You did exactly what was required, neither more

  nor less. Few Blades ever draw in anger.

  No, I am very grateful when I think where I

  would be now without you."

  Emboldened, Quarrel said diffidently,

  "Then ... I know a Blade should never question, but it

  does seem ... I mean I don't see ..."

  The poor kid wanted to know why he was going to have

  to die.

  "You're wondering why the King assigned a

  Blade to me last week and today sent Kromman

  to charge me with treason?"

  "It puzzles me, my lord, if you don't

  mind my--"

  "I don't mind at all. It puzzles me,

  too. Being unpredictable is an attribute of

  princes, I suppose. His Majesty

  certainly did not mention assigning me a Blade

  the last time I saw him." To leave the story there

  would be a snub. "I went to visit him just before

  Long Night. You know he's at

  Falconsrest."

  "I've been told of it, my lord. There's a

  house on a crag and some other buildings below it in

  the valley." Quarrel was demonstrating that

  Ironhall's political lessons were up

  to date. "Only the King and his intimates stay

  at the lodge."

  Only idiots went there at all in

  midwinter, but Ambrose had shut himself up at

  Falconsrest a month ago. Was that the action of a

  completely rational man?

  "He did not mention Blades. To be honest,

  he was not at all pleased with me. Bestowing honors

  on me was very far from his mind. He was rather curt,

  I'd say."

  He was also dying, but no one said that.

  As Sir Bowman came twitching and shambling

  across the scenic spread of the Chancellor's office,

  Durendal rose to greet him. He honored

  any fellow Blade that way, and the deputy commander

  was always amusing company. He was a gangly,

  sandy-haired man, who gave an impression of

  extreme clumsiness, as if all his limbs were

  moving in different directions; but this was pure

  illusion, as he had proved by twice winning the

  King's Cup. He usually seemed ready to burst

  into tears, yet he had a sense of humor

  to rival Hoare's--whom no one remembered

  anymore, of course.

  "Pray be seated, brother."

  "How may I assist, my lord?" Bowman

  flopped into the chair as if he had tipped himself out

  of a sack. He peered morosely across the desk

  at the Chancellor.

  "A couple of things. First, I'm trying

  to locate a place called Wizenbury. No

  one seems to know where it is. But you have Guards from

  all over, so if you wouldn't mind asking around

  the--"

  "Appleshire," Bowman said gloomily.

  "I was born near there." Blades never discussed

  their past, but he had still a trace of the west in his

  voice.

  "Ah, thank you." The Chancellor had found the

  sheriff he needed for Appleshire, and he

  suspected that Bowman knew perfectly well

  why he had asked that absurd question. "The second

  thing is a little harder. I must go and visit the

  King. Do you think you could find a couple of

  patient souls who might bear the tedium of

  walking their horses beside my palfrey?"

  Bowman uttered a moan of ironic

  disbelief. "Suicidal daredevils who might

  just be able to keep up with you, you mean? I think I

  have some crazies who may accept the challenge.

  The entire Guard," he added with an abrupt

  descent into ever deeper melancholy.

  Five days before Long Night, the palace of

  Greymere ought by rights to be bespangled with

  decorations and throbbing with jollity. This year it was

  a drab barn of boredom, and the longest faces were

  the Blades'.

  "You miss His Majesty. We all do."

  "Mice don't play when the cat's away,

  my lord. They die of irrelevancy. I wish

  Dragon would let us rotate the men, but he's

  stopped doing even that. Useless wear and tear on the

  horses, he said. He doesn't think of the rust

  on the men."

  "Would you consider a suggestion?"

  "Very happily, my lord--from you."

  "Your livery's frowzy and old-fashioned. I

  can say so, because I designed it myself, but that was

  years ago. Something more modern would make them

  feel better, liven them up."

  Bowman gave him an especially lugubrious

  look. "You think His Majesty would approve it?

  He doesn't even like to change his socks these

  days."

  "No, I don't suppose he would, but ...

  Never mind."

  "Yes. Well, my lord, I will very gladly

  provide you with an escort. When?"

  "An hour before dawn. We'll be back for the

  festivities."

  The Blade sighed. "I doubt if you'll

  miss much if you aren't. Nothing more?" He began

  to lurch upright.

  "Not for me. Anything I can do for you?"

  Bowman sagged back again quickly, as if he had

  been hoping for such a question. His voice dropped to a

  confidential murmur. "Well ... it isn't

  really any of my business, my lord,

  nor of yours either, and I know you'll pardon my

  presumption saying so, but I know that Grand Master

  has seniors stacked up to the roof. I just thought,

  if you get a chance to sort of drop a word to the

  King, maybe? We could use some young blood in the

  Guard; but even if he doesn't want to go there

  himself just now, he might assign them to others,

  perhaps?"

  Durendal shrugged. It certainly was not his

&nbs
p; business, because he was government and the Order was in the

  King's personal prerogative. Ambrose was

  very touchy about that distinction. "I'll see what I

  can do. You don't have to tell me that he doesn't

  answer his mail."

  At first light, Durendal rode out of the

  gates on Destrier, in the company of three

  boys. They would be furious if they knew he

  thought of them as that, but their ages combined would not

  exceed his by much. Their names were Foray, Lewmoss,

  and Terror, and they were all glad of a chance to seem

  useful. He noted that they were well mounted and all

  had good seats, which meant that Bowman had sent his

  best horsemen--probably with strict orders

  to prevent any repetition of the embarrassing

  incident that had marred the Chancellor's last

  journey to Falconsrest, when a certain

  geriatric Chancellor had shown certain young

  Blades his heels. Well, he would see how

  he and Destrier felt on the way back.

  A miserable wind moaned under a dreary sky,

  once in a while throwing snowflakes just to warn that

  it had plenty in hand. Falconsrest was an

  all-day ride from Grandon, but they could stay

  overnight at Stairtown if the weather turned

  worse. Going two by two, his guards took

  turns riding at his side, courteously wheedling

  tales of the past from him, flattering him by asking about

  the Monster War or even the Nythia campaign

  --none of which ancient history could possibly be

  of any interest to them.

  They were all hoping that Commander Dragon would

  let them stay on at Falconsrest, relieving

  three of the dozen or so men he kept there.

  Durendal found this ambition amusing, because there was

  absolutely nothing in those wild hills that should

  attract spirited young men in the middle of winter. It

  was their binding talking. They pined at being kept

  away from their ward. When Foray even had the

  audacity to ask why the King had shut

  himself up in such a burrow over Long Night,

  Lord Roland sternly suggested he ask the King

  himself. The answer, alas, was that he hated people

  watching him die.

  He questioned them about recent news from

  Ironhall. They would not realize that it was none of

  his business; as a knight of the Order, he was

  expected to be interested. They confirmed what

  Bowman had said about a surfeit of seniors

  waiting for assignment.

  Between chats, he pondered the unfamiliar

  future that lay beyond the King's death. For the first

  time, he would be free to do what he wanted.

  Travel, probably, because Kate wanted

  to travel. He had friends and correspondents

  all over Eurania now, and standing invitations

  to visit. He would be a private citizen, but a

  famous one, welcome in a dozen great cities.

  Thanks to Ambrose, he was rich. It would seem

  very strange.

  He led the way into the valley as the winter afternoon

  faded out in despair. The group of thatched

  buildings cowering under the snow-covered hills was

  commonly known as the village, although it consisted

  entirely of overflow accommodation. The lodge

  on the rock that loomed almost directly above it was

  the palace proper, but it had only four rooms.

  There was something bizarre about the court of Chivial

  sheltering in sheds.

  While he shed his cloak and stamped snow off his

  boots, he was greeted by Commander Dragon, who

  was a beefy, thickset man by Blade standards,

  with a luxurious black beard and a swarthy

  complexion that made him seem older than his

  twenty-eight years. In complete contrast to his

  deputy, Dragon had no sense of humor at

  all. He was a plodder who would never question an

  order or think for himself, which was precisely why the

  King liked him.

  "Much the same, my lord," he said before

  Durendal could ask the inevitable first question.

  "I'll send someone to tell him you're here. A

  posset to warm you now?"

  "Add some hot bran mash for my horse and

  I will be in your debt till the sun burns out.

  Although I think that may have happened already."

  "It will be back," Dragon assured him

  solemnly.

  Shack or not, the barn-sized room was

  bright and hot. Some amateur musicians were

  screeching out dance music. Strips of colored

  muslin added a seasonal gaiety above the long

  tables at which people were guzzling great slabs of pork,

  while the rest of the hog sputtered and sparked on a

  spit. Durendal's insides rumbled

  imploringly for attention.

  Sternly telling them to wait their turn, he

  sent for the royal physicians and conjurers. They

  would not commit themselves on their patient's condition,

  perhaps deterred by the law that declared imagining the

  King's death to be high treason. They certainly

  offered no hope. He looked around the ring of

  haggard, tight-shut faces and resisted the

  temptation to try a royal bellow on them.

  "I trust you will give me as much warning as you can

  of any change you foresee in His Majesty's

  condition?"

  They nodded in noncommittal silence. He

  went off to eat. Just when he was about to start on a

  high-piled platter, a Blade with snow on his

  eyebrows appeared to inform him that the King would receive

  him at once. On his way out he had to pass

  Foray, Terror, and Lewmoss, all chewing

  vigorously with grease running into their beards.

  He hoped they choked on their stupid grins.

  As he was donning his damp cloak at the

  door, Dragon appeared again, glancing around

  furtively.

  "My lord?"

  "Leader?"

  "If you get the chance to drop a word to His

  Majesty ... I know he listens to you, my lord."

  "Sometimes he does. What can I do for you?"

  "The Guard, my lord." The Commander was

  whispering, which was very unlike him. "I've got

  twenty men I want to release, you see.

  They're all well past due. I've mentioned

  this, but ... well, he won't even discuss it with

  me. It would be a nice Long Night present for

  them, I thought."

  Durendal sighed. "Yes, it would. I'll

  see what I can do."

  Obviously Ambrose was neglecting his

  precious Blades, and that was a very bad sign.

  Was he incapable of making decisions or merely

  clinging to the past, the old familiar faces?

  Huddled against the snow, the Chancellor rode a

  dogged little mountain pony up the steep track to the

  lodge. Where the village had been

  festive, the lodge was dreary as a tomb, although

  it was crammed full of men. To cross the

  guardroom he had to pick his way along a narrow

  path through a clutter of bedding and baggage, passing

  half a dozen Blades playing a morose

&
nbsp; game of dice by the light of a single candle. The

  stairs took him up to another dormitory, which was

  little brighter and so congested with men that it was hard

  to believe they would all find room to lie down

  later. They seemed to be grouped into three snarly

  arguments. He wondered who they all were:

  cooks, hostlers, valets, doctors,

  nurses, secretaries? He had seen no

  women, but he had not looked into the kitchen, which

  probably also served as a communal bathhouse and

  another bedroom. People swarmed on a king like bees

  on a queen--there might well be tailors,

  musicians, falconers, vintners, or even

  architects and poet laureates in attendance at

  Falconsrest. Every one of them would fight for the right

  to live in the squalor of the lodge rather than the

  relative comfort of the village, just to prove that he

  was of the indispensable elite. This is what happened

  when monarchs tried to escape.

  At least the King's bedroom was not stuffed like a

  fish barrel. It held a few chests and a great

  four poster, whose faded purple draperies

  rippled in drafts that rattled the shutters and

  baffled the best efforts of a roaring fire. The other

  rooms had reeked of bodies and overworked

  garderobes, but here those stinks were overwhelmed by the

  rancid stench of the suppurating ulcer that was killing

  Ambrose IV. He sprawled back on

  heaped pillows, a face of melted tallow above

  an enormous heap of furs. were those just shadows

  under his eyes or mildew?

  He had outlived four wives and his son; he

  had never seen his grandsons. After a reign of

  thirty-nine years, his realm had shrunk to this

  windy kennel, and every gasping breath was a noisy

  effort. Durendal knelt to him.

  His voice rasped disturbingly. "Get up,

  fool! Can't see you down there. Sorry ...

  drag you all this way such weather."

  "It is a pleasure to get some exercise,

  Your Majesty. They tell me that your health is

  improving."

  "Told you ... all I needed was a rest!"

  The King glared defiantly. He was still not yet

  admitting anything.

  With extreme annoyance, Durendal noted the

  odious Kromman standing inside the closed door,

  almost invisible in his midnight robes. He was

  stooped now, a sinister cadaverous scarecrow, but

  the fish eyes still held their sharklike menace.

  "What's this I hear," the King wheezed, "about

  you steeplechasing, beating my Guard?" The question

  showed, and was intended to show, that he had other sources

 

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