Toby Bishop - Horse Mistress 03

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by Airs of Night


  She dusted her hands against her divided skirt, and stepped out into the yard. When he drew close

  enough, she raised her hand, and called, “Francis! Welcome to Marinan!”

  Francis smiled down at her as he reined in his horse. “Philippa,” he said. “I’m glad to have found you at last.” He threw his leg over the saddle and slid easily to the ground.

  “I’m always glad to see you, Francis,” she answered. “And especially now. Esmond has been my only visitor all these months. What brings you to Klee?”

  He looped his mare’s reins over his arm. “I had a mission for Prince Nicolas in the capital, and I met a young Klee lord there, Esmond’s nephew.”

  “That must have been Niven,” she said. “The Viscount’s son.” She took his horse’s rein, and led the way toward the barn. “A great favorite of Esmond’s.”

  “That’s the one. He knew of our adventure in Aeskland, apparently, and confided to me that you were here. Rys had given him permission.”

  “It was good of you to make time to visit.” Philippa led the black mare into a stall, and Francis began to unbuckle her cinches. “How long can you stay?”

  He glanced at her over his shoulder. “I have to get back to Osham soon,” he said. “This trip was a special favor for the Prince, but I’ve been working in the White City since last winter. My lord brother—” He lifted the saddle and hoisted it up onto the stall gate. He leaned on it a moment, his elbows against the smooth leather seat. His tone was wry. “My brother, Philippa, has stopped attending Council meetings. It falls to me to represent the Ducal Palace.”

  Philippa handed Francis a towel. “I’m surprised William allows that,” she said, as he turned to begin rubbing the mare’s sweat-stained back.

  He gave a humorless laugh. “Oh, William doesn’t mind,” he said. “As long as I make no decisions. Or the Council Lords either, for that matter. He refuses to sign any ruling of any significance.”

  “That’s not government, is it?” Philippa said.

  “Indeed not.”

  They worked in silence for a time, laying out hay and oats for the mare, spreading fresh straw beneath her feet. Sunny whickered from her stall, and Philippa went to pat her before she and Francis walked back out into the cool sunshine.

  “A beautiful place,” he said, tipping his head back to admire the old house.

  “It is indeed,” Philippa said. “You see how steep that roof is? It’s because of the snow. We had drifts higher than my head last winter. We were snowbound. No one stirred from the place for entire weeks.”

  Francis gave her a sympathetic look. “That must have been lonely.”

  She shrugged. “I confess, Francis, I enjoyed it. Something of a holiday.”

  “Marinan reminds me of Deeping Farm,” he mused, as they walked in through Lyssett’s fragrant kitchen and on into the dining room. “Bigger, of course, and more elegant. But that same air of age and—I don’t know—reverence.”

  Philippa smiled. “The Ryses are noble, and the Hamleys are farmers, but the families are not so different.

  They respect their heritage. And each other, too, which is no small thing.”

  He gave her a lopsided smile. “I think you rather liked Brye Hamley.”

  She turned her back on him to straighten a crooked curtain and to hide the heat in her cheeks. “Larkyn is the most fortunate of girls to have such a brother.”

  “You and I were not so lucky in our brothers.”

  “No.” She composed her features and turned back to him. “Quite the opposite.”

  Lyssett bustled in with a teapot and a platter of tea sandwiches, eyeing Francis as she set them down.

  “Lyssett,” Philippa said. “This is Lord Francis Fleckham, of the Duchy of Oc in Isamar. He’s a friend of the Baron’s. Francis, Lyssett has been cook and housekeeper here since before Esmond was born.”

  Lyssett curtsied. “My lord,” she said.

  Francis, who had taken a chair, rose and bowed to her before sitting down again. Lyssett colored and smiled as she poured out the tea and set the plates, then disappeared into the kitchen. Francis took a sandwich and devoured it in three bites.

  “It’s so gratifying, Francis,” Philippa said, “to see you completely restored to health.”

  He gave her a boyish grin. “I didn’t dare die of that woman’s blade,” he said. “William would never have

  let me forget it!”

  She chuckled, but the memory still pained her. Francis had come perilously close to dying of his wound.

  Only the country air and good food of Deeping Farm had wrought the miracle of his healing, and she would always be grateful, for the Duchy and for herself, that the friend of her childhood had survived.

  “So,” she said, picking up her cup and shaking off her brief nostalgia. “What news do you bring? I’ve heard nothing but rumors all these months, passed to Lyssett by the grocer or the fruit-vendor.”

  “What rumors?”

  She shrugged. “Some are wild—Nicolas threatening to invade, or even William disbanding the Council. I couldn’t believe those.”

  “No, there’s no truth in those stories.” Francis took another sandwich and ate this one more slowly. He cradled the teacup in his sun-browned hands and let his eyes stray to the hills beyond the window. “But I’m afraid it’s true that William and Nicolas are in collusion.”

  Philippa put her own cup down. “Why do you think so?”

  “Nicolas sent a thousand militiamen to Oc.”

  “Kalla’s teeth! What are they for?”

  “William has posted militia in every town,” Francis said. He drank his tea and set the cup in its saucer with a click of porcelain. “To enforce his extraordinary tax.”

  “But, Francis—that’s martial law!”

  “It is very like.”

  “Surely the Council Lords will not stand for this!”

  “You would think not.” He turned in his chair, and leaned toward her. “The temptation is too much for them,” he said in a low tone. “For some of them, in any case. They want to see their Duke as a visionary, someone who will usher in a new day for Oc.”

  “In which men fly winged horses,” Philippa said in a flat voice.

  “Precisely so.”

  “And we horsemistresses? The Academy of the Air?”

  Francis hesitated, then said, “I can’t pretend there’s no risk. Some have said—openly, in the Rotunda—that closing the Academy would go further toward building the Fleckham School than levying the extraordinary tax.”

  She closed her eyes briefly, assailed by a wave of the fatigue she thought she had banished months ago.

  “Why does it make Oc stronger to take the winged horses away from women?” she asked.

  “It doesn’t,” Francis answered. “It makes William stronger.” She opened her eyes again, and looked into his gentle face, so like and yet so unlike his elder brother’s. “It shocks me, Francis. I’ve always placed my faith in the wisdom of the Council. And now . . . this is misogyny, is it not? A resentment that women hold any power.”

  “I doubt they think of themselves as misogynists.”

  She snorted. “Do you know another word for it?”

  “No.” He leaned back, his eyes on her face. “Is it possible, Philippa? For men to fly?”

  She shook her head. “No. I believe it is not.”

  “But if William succeeds in flying this filly of his,” Francis said, “there are young men waiting to be bonded. There is already a list, being kept by—” He broke off, coloring faintly. He cleared his throat.

  “Well. Let’s just say by one of the lords.”

  “Oh, do let me guess,” Philippa said. “My brother Meredith.”

  He gave her a gentle, rueful smile. “Yes. Sorry.”

  “Do these young men know what they will be asked to do?”

  “There is talk of a potion. But no one seems too worried about it. Some feel that because men don’t conceive in any case, there is
less risk to the winged horses to bond with men.”

  “Then they haven’t seen their Duke’s swelling bosom or noted his beardless chin.”

  “He has managed to stay out of sight.” Francis shrugged. “But he can’t hide forever.”

  “If he is to fly,” Philippa said, “it could be soon. She was a winter foal. She’ll be coming two before long.”

  A little silence fell. Lyssett came in to take the empty teapot, and Philippa looked up to see with some surprise that evening had fallen around Marinan while they talked. There were voices in the kitchen, the shepherds and the narders gathering for their supper.

  “You’re staying, of course, Francis,” Philippa said.

  “If that’s acceptable. It was a long ride up from the capital.”

  “I’m sure Lyssett has already prepared a room for you, and no doubt is cooking up one of her wonderful meals.” Philippa stood up. “I’ll go and ask.”

  Francis stood up, too. “I should see to my mare. Should I blanket her?”

  “The nights are cool here,” she said, “but she won’t need a blanket. The barn is as well built as the house, and the shepherds keep a little close stove going in the feed room.”

  She turned toward the kitchen, and Francis followed. After a brief conference with the excellent Lyssett, Philippa led the way to the barn.

  Francis sniffed the air. “Everything smells of lavender,” he said, and smiled. “Although perhaps you can longer smell it? You must be used to it by now.”

  “I can smell it, and I like it.” She stopped just outside the feed room and stood for a moment, tracing the pattern in the wooden wall with her fingers. “Francis—if William fails—could all these troubles just go away?”

  “He has gambled everything on his success,” Francis answered gravely. “It’s my belief that my brother will either fly this filly—Diamond, he calls her—or die in the attempt.”

  PHILIPPAslept poorly that night, plagued by nightmares as she had been when she first came to Marinan. She dreamed of that awful day in the Rotunda when William had ordered her into confinement at Islington House, parting her from Winter Sunset and condemning her mare to a certain death, from heartbreak or madness. She dreamed of soldiers at the Academy, her students fleeing, their horses screaming alarm in the stables. In one of these dreams, the frantic neighing seemed so real that it shocked her out of sleep, and she sat bolt upright in her comfortable bed, stunned and relieved to find that Marinan was quiet as always. Not even the rooster had yet announced the morning. The first streaks of light had just begun to paint the eastern sky in shades of blue and gold and pink. She got up to splash water on her face, brush her hair, clean her teeth, and dress.

  She crept downstairs, hoping not to wake anyone else, and was startled to find Francis already in the kitchen. He was measuring tea leaves into a pot, and the kettle had begun to steam.

  “Good morning,” Philippa said.

  He looked up. “You couldn’t sleep, either.”

  She crossed to the big stone sink and looked out the kitchen window toward the barn. “And you? I’m sure your bed was comfortable.”

  “I have worries enough to make any bed hard.”

  “It’s a shame.” Philippa propped one lean hip against the edge of the sink and watched him pour boiling water into the teapot and wrap a cozy around it. “You seem to have acquired some domestic skills,” she said.

  He smiled at that and pushed his pale hair back from his face. He had cut it very short, in the Isamarian style, and it made him look boyish and rather dashing. Half-consciously, Philippa smoothed her own graying red hair, wound as always into the rider’s knot.

  “I learned a few things at Deeping Farm,” he said as he reached into a cupboard for teacups. “I can cook a bit, and I can till a field and chop a cord of wood.”

  Philippa allowed herself to ask, “Do you know how they are? The Hamleys?”

  His face hardened. “It’s the extraordinary tax,” he said. “William saw to it that the tax on Deeping Farm was much too high to pay. And so Nick—the youngest brother—has been impressed into the militia.”

  “And Brye?” she asked.

  “Brye is well,” Francis said. “But he’s furious.”

  “Of course he would be,” Philippa said. She toyed with the end of a tea towel. “If he knew that William had tried to hurt his sister, there would be no controlling him.”

  “I know. I worry that—” Francis broke off as he poured out the tea.

  “What, Francis?”

  He picked up his teacup. “William would love any excuse to confiscate Deeping Farm,” he said. “And not just because of Larkyn.”

  “Because of your sister,” Philippa said wearily. “Because he’s afraid she’ll expose him.”

  “Precisely so.” He sipped his tea and gazed past her to the day brightening over the lavender fields. “I’ve thought of exposing him myself, except that such a scandal would only further divide the Council, to say nothing of ruining what’s left of our house’s reputation. Whether William forced Pamella or not, if I tried to accuse him, half of the Council would refuse to believe me, and the other half would take up arms against him. Such a disgrace would leave the Duchy with no leadership at all. Oc would fall apart.”

  They drank their tea in silence after that until Lyssett came down. She shooed them out of her kitchen, tutting over their having had to make their own tea. They went out to stand on the gravel walk, breathing the chilly air of the autumn morning.

  Francis said, “Even my pillow smelled of lavender.”

  “It’s lovely, isn’t it?”

  “It is.”

  “I will be sorry to leave it.”

  “You mustn’t leave, Philippa. It’s not safe for you to come back to Oc. You have to stay here, where you’re safe.”

  She turned to face him, lifting her chin so that she could look straight into his face. “Francis, you’re like a brother to me—better than a brother, in my case. You know I can’t languish here, doing nothing, if the Academy is at risk.”

  “I’ll do all I can to protect it,” he said.

  “But how can you stop him?”

  “I don’t know,” Francis said heavily, “I wish I did.”

  “There must be something I can do.”

  He sighed and ran his hand through his hair. “I don’t know what it would be.”

  She looked away, out over the lavender fields dripping with dew. “Protect our girls, Francis. And our horses. Promise me.”

  He patted her shoulder. “I’ll do my best, Philippa.”

  She sighed. “That’s all you can do. All any of us can do.”

  FIVE

  WILLIAMrode toward the Academy on as direct a route as he could find. He knew what he had to do.

  He had tried it before, but a wise man learned from his mistakes. This time he would do it right. This time he would take them both. And when Philippa found out they were missing, she would hasten back to Oc from wherever she had gone to ground. She had foolishly allowed herself to become too attached to one of her students. He would hold her weakness up as an example, yet another reason that men should take charge of Oc’s most precious resource.

  Before riding out, he had spent an hour with Diamond, working her in the dry paddock with a longue line, picking up her feet and brushing the saddle blanket over her back as the horsemistress had taught him. It was boring, stultifying. He couldn’t think what such dry exercises had to do with flying. But the horsemistress swore these were necessary steps to prepare for riding, then for flight.

  The horsemistress, Felicity Baron, was boring, too, a plain, middle-aged woman. She did what she was told, but with ill grace. She didn’t even try to hide her objections to his bonding. He would have punished her for her bad humor, except he didn’t want to have to find another monitor for Diamond. Sometimes he eyed Mistress Baron’s bony back as she walked away from him and wished he could deal with her as she deserved. She didn’t know how lucky she was, for
the moment. Once he had flown, he would put

  her and her old gelding, Sky Baron, out to pasture, as far from the Ducal Palace as he could manage.

  After restoring Diamond to her stall, with a promise to be back before evening, he walked down the aisle to where his new saddle horse, a good-looking chestnut mare, waited in her stall. He missed his old brown gelding, but the horse had broken down, and Jinson had carted him off to some farmer’s field to rest. Had it been any other horse, William would have had him put down without a thought. The gelding, though, had served him well, and he knew he had been a demanding rider. He refused any feelings of guilt over it—everything he did was, after all, for the Duchy and for his people. The chestnut mare was not nearly as fast, nor as spirited, as the gelding had once been. Nicolas had promised to send a horse from his own stables, some tall, strong stallion who could tolerate William’s riding style. But William hoped, before such an animal arrived, that he would have no need of an earthbound horse. He hoped he would be flying.

  William put a bridle on the mare and led her down the aisle to the tack room. “I expect you to hold up better than my last mount,” he told her as he threw the saddle on her back and began to tighten the cinches. “I ride fast and hard, and I’m not going to change.”

  She didn’t respond, and he glanced longingly at the other side of the stables, where Diamond’s stall was.

  Wingless horses were infintely less interesting than winged ones.

  William swung himself up into the saddle and rode out of the stables and around to the back, where a grassy ride, browning now beneath the clear autumn sun, led through the park that surrounded the Palace. His stable-man came hurrying out to ask, “My lord? Don’t you want a groomsman to go with you? Or your valet?”

  “No, Perkins,” William said. “I’m going to have a few hours to myself.”

  Perkins stood where he was, wiping his hands on a rag. “Aye, m’lord. As you wish.”

  William looked down at him. “Tell Mistress Baron to look in on Diamond for me.”

  “Aye, m’lord.” Perkins gave a small bow and turned back into the stables. Did he, too, have an odd look on his face?

  It was infuriating to think that he could no longer trust even his stable-man. He didn’t trust his wife, but she hardly mattered. He had never known a woman he could trust, in any case. He felt uncertain about Jinson, with his lamentably soft heart and odd flashes of doubt about their purpose. And those clodheads in the Council! Only a fool would put faith in the wisdom of those doddering old men.

 

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