"You underestimate him," Magnus claimed, though more out of loyalty than a desire for accuracy. "However, you cannot deny that Cordelia is subtle enough."
"True," said Catharine, "but she would tell Alain straightaway, and he would go to confront the man openly—and take a knife in his back for his pains." The mother's worry underscored her words.
"Besides, though your sister is capable of being subtle, she is also apt to explode into anger if she discovers treachery," Tuan said, "or kill the fellow out of hand when more might be learned from him. You, however, are both devious and patient."
Magnus couldn't deny it—but he stalled. "How can you speak so of my qualities, Majesties? It has been ten long years since you have seen me!"
"We knew you well enough as a boy," Catharine said, "and you comported yourself well in several demanding situations. Your father's boasting makes it clear that those sterling qualities have only grown."
"Scarcely sterling," Magnus said. "Perhaps pewter—but I must admit I have honed my skills. Very well, Majesties, I will set inquiries in motion, though you will understand I cannot make them myself."
"You would be somewhat conspicuous," Tuan said with a smile of amusement.
"Yes, the penalty of standing nearly seven feet tall," Magnus admitted. "I do hope, though, that you will not expect me to command my sibs simply because I am the eldest. They have made it clear they will not stand for my lording it over them."
"We would not expect any such thing," Tuan said, this time with a straight face.
"Of course not," said Catharine, "but if there is indeed a rebellion brewing, you might mention it to your brother Geoffrey when the time for action is ripe—without making it an outright order."
"I think Sir Magnus is tactful enough for that," Tuan agreed.
"No, Majesty, devious," Magnus said. "You had the right of it the first time."
CHAPTER TWENTY
Magnus was waiting when Alea came back to their suite, and he held up a basket. "If you haven't had too much of the outdoors, we might try a picnic."
Alea stared for a moment, then laughed. "As though you and I had not eaten by a campfire more often than not! Growing restless indoors, are you, Gar?"
"It's good to hear that name again," Magnus said with a smile. He stooped to go out the door. "You're as insightful as ever, Alea. In fact, I begin to grow weary of towns, not merely the insides of houses! Let us find some honest trees to shade us."
Alea waited until they were out of the gate and halfway across the meadow before she asked, "Was the chat with your parents' old friends so bad as that?"
Magnus's face twisted for a moment. "Simply a matter of their wanting me to check up on some intelligence reports they've had—because I'm devious enough."
"I wouldn't have put it that way," Alea said slowly, "but I suppose they're right. You certainly have presented yourself as things you aren't."
"Yes, a knight passing himself off as a trooper," Magnus said wryly, "or a madman, or a sage."
"Or a wanderer who took a wounded lass under his care." Alea touched his hand. "And never imposed on her, even when she wished it."
Magnus darted a look of astonishment at her. Alea laughed, perhaps a little too quickly, and took her hand away. "Still, you've usually worked alone, Gar, or with only one companion. Can you truly adapt to becoming a spymaster?"
"That's not so much of a problem. We have a host of spies here on Gramarye, all of whom owe allegiance to my family. They'll report soon enough, I'm sure." Magnus paused under an oak and looked around. "Will this spot do?"
"Perfectly." Alea took the cloth from the basket, shook it open, and laid it on the ground.
Magnus helped her to straighten it, then to lay out the food. "How was your walk?"
"Very refreshing; the woods always are." Alea sat and took out her dagger to slice the bread. "I let my mind wander and let the cares fall away—no promises to keep, no lists of things needing doing. It was a pleasant morning." She frowned, pausing as she turned to slice the meat. "Though somewhere on the way, I overheard someone talking about a young couple in trouble." Her brow furrowed. "Now, who could have been saying that?"
"You relaxed your mind?" Magnus asked.
"Oh, yes! That was the most refreshing part of it—not having to keep on my public face for the people I met, not having to guard my tongue—or my thoughts."
Magnus nodded. "Then your mind was open and receptive. You probably overheard the thoughts of some cottagers nearby as they gossiped—or of a merchant on a nearby road. What troubled this young couple?"
"He'd been caught poaching, and she was on her way to his hanging," Alea said slowly.
"The forest laws!" Magnus said angrily. "Well, I'll have to establish some influence here before I can work for their removal. It's obscene that a peasant should be hanged for shooting a partridge!"
"Not a peasant." Alea's brow creased with the effort to remember details. "He's a squire—and it wasn't a partridge he poached, but a deer. Several deer."
"A squire!" Magnus's eyes widened. "He could have wriggled his way out of shooting a partridge—but not a deer! He's probably completely law-abiding except for that! I've half a mind to do something about that now! Where is this young man?"
"To the south," Alea said slowly, the details swimming up from the hidden part of her mind. "His wife has to go to Castle Loguire to see him hanged."
Something in the word "Loguire" rang an alarm in Magnus's mind. "Alain's brother Diarmid is duke there—by his right as son of the king."
Alea looked up, frowning. "Who did he displace?"
"His uncle," Magnus said, "who was attainted for treason—but he's Tuan's older brother, so Tuan interceded for him with Catharine. This was before they married, but Tuan had just led an army of peasants to help her soldiers defeat a rebellion, so she spared his brother's life, though not his title. Tuan appointed a steward to administer the estates until Diarmid came of age."
"While you were gone, of course."
"Yes." Magnus frowned. "I have missed a lot, haven't I?"
"Oh, you've found a lot, too," Alea said casually.
"Yes." Magnus smiled, gazing at her. "I have indeed."
Alea smiled back at him, then felt her face grow hot and looked back down at the meat she was placing between two thick slices of bread. "Here." She handed it to him. "Add some cheese to that and you'll have a meal. I'll have some cheese, too, if you don't mind."
Magnus was laying the yellow slice on her bread when a voice said, "How now, wizard!"
"I'll let you know when I find out." Magnus looked up with a smile, then saw Alea's dumbfounded stare. "Alea, may I introduce you to the real spy-master here? His name is Robin Goodfellow, but he goes by Puck."
Alea looked away, abashed, then back to Puck with a smile. "Pleased to meet you, Puck. Excuse my stares; you reminded me of someone I knew."
"Several someones, actually." Magnus caught the image of the dwarves of her homeworld that rose in her mind, then sank again.
"A pleasure to make your acquaintance, lady," Puck said with a smile.
"Spymaster." Alea frowned. "Don't tell me you have word of a rebellion already?"
"I do indeed," Puck said, and turned to Magnus. "Men from all over the land are indeed trooping toward Runnymede, their scythes and flails over their shoulders. It is as it was the year before you were born, wizard."
"Let us hope we can detour them before it comes to battle, then," Magnus said.
"So many in company will not be deterred long by any of my pranks," Puck said grimly.
"No, but there are other ways. See if the Wee Folk can learn who the leaders are, will you, Puck?"
"We shall have you a list ere long," Puck said, "but I think you would be wiser simply to track their movements and prepare for battle "
"I would never argue with the oldest of the Old Things," Magnus said slowly, "but I must try persuasion first."
"You will pit yourself against masters."
<
br /> "Oh, he's no mean adept himself," Alea said.
Puck turned to her in surprise. "I hope you speak from your own experience, lady!"
Alea stared at him a moment, then dropped her gaze, blushing again. "I'm afraid not—but I've certainly witnessed his efforts. The man could charm a pit full of snakes!"
"Let us hope," Puck said darkly, "that he can charm a field full of angry peasants."
After supper that evening and before the usual entertainments began, Magnus was able to take Cordelia aside for a few minutes' talk. After listening to a glowing report on the baby princess's progress, he said, "Let us hope she will remain so bright and sunny even if she has a little brother."
"What, one for Alain, and one for me?" Cordelia smiled, amused. "I hope we shall have more children than two!"
"Yes, I've always thought four was the right number, myself."
"Because there were four of us? Still, I would have liked to have had a sister—as now I do!"
"Quicksilver certainly seems to be completely in sympathy with you," Magnus said, amused.
Cordelia started to speak of Allouette but caught herself in time.
"You have another brother now, too," Magnus reminded her, "though I suspect you rarely see Diarmid."
"Rarely indeed, since he was sent to administer the duchy," Cordelia said. "Still, he is pleasant enough when he is here, once you grow accustomed to his quiet ways."
"Surely you are accustomed already, having grown up with Gregory." Magnus frowned. "Or is Diarmid more quiet than ever these days?"
"If we saw him, we well might find him so," Cordelia said, "for I understand he has to judge his first capital case and is rather upset about it."
"Surely it would give him an excuse to delve into some other old books!"
"Perhaps," Cordelia said, "but the verdict seems clear enough, and I doubt that any moldy old volumes will show him any excuse to pardon the young man. He was caught poaching, after all—more than one of the royal deer—and Diarmid is not looking forward to carrying out the sentence. Still, he knows that, as duke, he must witness the hanging."
"The poor fellow!"
"Which?" Cordelia asked. "Diarmid or the felon?"
"Both. I trust Diarmid can postpone the matter for some months."
"Alas, he cannot," Cordelia said. "The young man must hang in four days." She shuddered and looked away, then brightened. "Look, the jugglers are about to begin! Let us watch and think of happier events!"
Magnus went with her, thinking furiously how he could manage to travel to Loguire to plead the young poacher's case while he was trying to find a way to forestall a peasant rebellion.
The clearing was wide enough for Rod to see a few stars between the tree-tops. He had pitched his tent in the center, the better to see anyone—or anything—approaching. So far, though, the night had been quiet, only the chirring of insects around him and, in the woods, the odd howl or shriek of the night-hunters or their quarry.
Rod plucked his harp, gazing into the campfire and letting his thoughts wander as he tried to pin down the cause of his vague unease. It could just be a quirk in his brain chemistry, of course, but he doubted that. Better to rule out events in the kingdom—but he couldn't think what they would be. He reviewed recent happenings, then let them sort themselves at the back of his mind while he tried an old folk song; maybe the odd correlation would make itself if he didn't try to work it out by logic.
"As I was a-walking one morning in May,
To hear the birds whistle, see…"
He broke off, alerted by some change in the night's sounds. Whoever was coming was very good—Rod couldn't hear his steps at all, only track him by insects falling silent around him, then starting their concert again when he was past. Rod opened his mind to scan and was doubly alerted by emptiness, the lack of mental activity of a shielded mind.
Strumming, he turned to his left just a little and made out the silhouette blocking the stars, a silhouette in the shape of a head. Whoever it was, he or she was very tall. He smiled, letting the strings fall silent. Sure enough, the voice came out of the darkness: "A new song, Dad?"
"New to you, yes, son. I don't suppose I've played it since you were a toddler."
Gwen sitting on a blanket spread over meadow grass with a picnic basket beside her, arms outstretched to the tow-headed toddler who was having great fun being obstinate about coming to her…
Rod winced at the pain of the memory of happiness and put it aside, sure he could recall it when he wanted. He concentrated on the living son who was here, allaying the ache of longing for the wife who wasn't. "Your stalking has improved; you're excellent now."
"I can't be, if you knew I was there." Magnus stepped into the firelight.
"Ah, well, you forget that I'm an excellent sentry." Rod moved over on the log. "Sit down and have a bite." He nodded toward the kettle of stew that hung near the fire.
"Thank you." Magnus took a bowl from Rod's pack and ladled it full, then brought it back to sit beside his father, toying with the spoon, then sampling the food and nodding approval.
Rod smiled, amused; he knew his own culinary limitations. "Someone taught you good manners."
Gwen, thirty-two and smiling as she showed her little boy how to hold his spoon, while his baby sister napped in her cradle…
The deep voice of the grown Magnus pulled him from the memory. "I just happened to be in the neighborhood."
Rod gazed at the huge dark man who had somehow grown out of that blond two-foot toddler and blinked his eyes clear. "Yes, I understand you have friends living down this way."
"Kin, actually." Magnus turned his gaze to the fire, frowning. "I suppose they are, now that Cordelia's married."
"Kin?" Rod frowned, then remembered Alain's uncle and smiled. "Well, the king may be your sister's father-in-law, but I'm not sure that makes his brother Anselm your uncle-in-law."
"A relative of an old family friend, then?"
"Yes, but I'm sure his feelings toward me aren't friendly."
"Because you were the key to defeating his rebellion? Or because you counselled mercy for him?"
"Both." Rod looked more closely at his son. "Not that you were coming to visit him—or is there trouble in the south?"
"There's trouble in all quarters of the land, Dad," Magnus sighed, "but only vague mutters of discontent—nothing I can really pin down to a single source."
So he needed to talk about threats to the Crown. Rod felt oddly flattered, even though it was a little disappointing that his son hadn't sought him out simply for company.
On the other hand, it was nice to know Magnus hadn't come to check up on his delusional parent.
Had he?
"Nothing specific, then. Has Alea heard any gossip you haven't?"
"No." Magnus turned to him with a frown. "Why should she?"
"Men aren't always privy to women's conversations—or interested enough to pay attention." Rod took a stick and reached out to stir the coals; flame licked up. "Then too, being new to Gramarye, she might notice some things that you and I would look right past."
"So used to them that we dismiss them." Magnus nodded thoughtfully, his gaze following Rod's stick back to the flames. "We talk constantly, and I'm sure she would have mentioned anything that seemed odd."
"She must be mentioning oddities every night."
"Well, yes." Magnus smiled, amused. "She's not used to elves, or to so many people with psionic talents. I do have to reassure her as to what's considered commonplace here."
"She certainly isn't."
"What? You mean being so tall that she seems a freak?" Magnus turned to him with a frown; it was a topic with which he was all too familiar.
"No, her perceptiveness and sensitivity." Rod put down the stick and looked up at his boy. "A very intelligent woman, son."
"Yes. She is that." Magnus allowed himself a small smile.
"Just a stray who followed you home?"
Magnus laughed.
Rod blinked in surprise at the rare sound, then smiled, thinking that Alea might be better for Magnus than he knew.
"A stray, perhaps," Magnus acknowledged. "Certainly a fugitive—but she scarcely followed me. In fact, she took quite a bit of reassuring and coaxing."
"Oh?" It was a side of Alea Rod hadn't seen. "What had made her skittish?"
"Her parents died," Magnus said, "and the neighbors she had thought were her friends turned away from her. On her home world of Midgard, the 'normal' people were reacting to the abnormalities of inbreeding by enslaving those they could and fighting those they couldn't—and she was too tall to count as normal."
"So they enslaved her?"
Magnus nodded. "Her parents' lands were given to their worst enemies, who proceeded to beat her or whip her for the slightest disobedience."
"Trying to break her spirit. They didn't succeed."
"No, but they might have, if she had stayed. The first night, though, the son made advances—if you can call assault an advance…"
"So she didn't stay around for a second night."
"She felt that a quick death was better than a lifetime of abuse," Magnus said, "so she took the chance to run and hoped she could escape the slave-catchers. She took her risks with the wild dog packs and the giants."
Rod shuddered. "Harrowing enough."
"Yes, but there's something more." Magnus frowned. "She has never spoken of it, but I'm sure there was a heartbreak there—and whoever broke her heart did it in the cruelest way possible."
Rod looked up at him. "Only a guess, though?"
"A guess, but the symptoms don't leave me much room to imagine anything else—unless it's something worse."
"So she took her chances with the forest's monsters instead of the human ones." Rod turned to gaze into the campfire. "Think she would have survived by herself?"
Magnus was still for a minute, thinking it over. Rod was surprised that his son didn't seem to have considered the issue before. "Not a relevant question?"
Magnus shrugged. "She met me before she met the wild-dog pack. I had to pretend to ignore her except to leave food where she could take it but still have a head start if I tried to attack."
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