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Swordheart

Page 39

by T. Kingfisher


  “No, it’s fine,” she said, sounding a bit faint. “Truly. Err…are you done?”

  He resisted the urge to beat his skull against the headboard. “No. I’m not done. It goes on for awhile yet, unless you don’t want it to.”

  “That’s fine.” She wiggled under him, adjusting her position, in a way that tested his self-control enormously. Just the feel of her breasts against his chest was probably going to kill him.

  At this rate, it may not go on for much longer at all. Although if it goes on for more than two minutes, I’m already ahead of the game.

  Besides, I’d like to see how any other man would manage, after a few hundred years of celibacy…

  In the end, he did not last nearly as long as he’d like. When she gasped in his ear, he came completely undone.

  When he could manage coherent thought again, he propped himself up on his elbows. “I could have managed that better,” he said.

  “I’m just glad you’re here,” she said.

  “So am I, but it was not my intent to…ah…manhandle you.”

  “As long as you don’t intend to throw me into a ditch.” She chuckled, which did interesting things to various muscles and focused Sarkis’s attention immediately.

  “No ditches,” he said. He slid his hand down between their bodies and began to touch her in ways that did even more interesting things. “But it would be unforgivably rude to take without giving back.”

  “If you say—so!” The last word came out as a squeak, and Sarkis set out to make sure that both of them were well pleased.

  It was the middle of the night. The fire had burned down and the bird had woken in its sleep to shout loudly about death and the worm, then gone back to sleep. Halla was half-asleep against his chest, and Sarkis stared down at the fine lines etched across her eyelids and the corners of her eyes.

  Great god, he’d almost lost her. No, he had lost her. It was by Halla and Zale’s doing, not his, that she was here in his arms. He had failed her. How could he keep from doing so again?

  She opened her eyes and frowned. “You’re upset.”

  “How can you tell?”

  “You’re scowling. The sad scowl, not one of the others.”

  He filed the notion that he had different types of scowl away for later.

  “Forgive me,” he said. He freed one hand and brushed the hair out of her eyes. “I’ve failed you. I didn’t protect you, and I didn’t tell you all the truth. I don’t deserve…this. I don’t deserve you.”

  “You didn’t deserve to be stuck in a sword for five hundred years, either,” she said tartly.

  “Well, perhaps not.” He flopped back down on his back, staring at the ceiling. “So…err…now what?”

  Halla considered this. “Well. I suppose you are stuck with me, now that I’m the wielder again.”

  He smiled up at the ceiling. “So I am.”

  “And as I am now a wealthy enough widow to be automatically respectable, I do not need to worry about having a very handsome lover lurking around the house.”

  “I’ll kill him,” said Sarkis.

  “I meant you, wretch.”

  “I am not very handsome. I am scarred and irritable and, unfortunately, immortal.”

  “Yes, but you carry it well.” She propped herself up on one elbow. “I mean it, though. The neighbors will gossip, but…well, it’s not fair, but there you are. I will be eccentric instead of a pariah.”

  He scowled at her, clearly deep in thought, then said, “Marry me.”

  Halla blinked at him, not sure if she’d heard correctly.

  “If you marry me, you won’t be eccentric. No, dammit, this is coming out wrong. Marry me to marry me, not because of your neighbors. I’ll kill your neighbors.”

  “I’d rather you didn’t,” said Halla, focusing on the one bit that she could make sense of. “I like most of them.”

  “Fine, then I will glare at them. But you should still marry me anyway. I mean, you shouldn’t, really, you can do much better, although given what I’ve seen of the men in your land…” He trailed off, muttering something under his breath, in which Halla caught only the words decadent and torch.

  “Are you asking me to marry you?”

  He gave her an exasperated look. “Yes. Of course. Because—oh, great god’s balls, I don’t even know how to marry you in this country.”

  Halla felt her lips twitching. He sounded so distraught, she didn’t want to laugh at him. “Well, we go before a priest…Zale would probably be happy to perform it…and say vows and then…”

  Sarkis shook his head. “But you have no family to set your price. And even if you did, I could not pay it.”

  “Price?”

  “The marriage price. What your husband pays your household, to make up for your loss.”

  Halla raised her eyebrows. “We do it the other way around. The woman provides a dowry so that the husband will take her.”

  The resulting mutter was louder and sounded a bit like Silas’s bird. “How barbaric.”

  “Well, I haven’t got a family and you haven’t got any money, so can’t we just ignore that?”

  He bristled. “I will not steal you!”

  “Err…but I’m agreeing to it?” Halla did not know whether to laugh or cry. “Sarkis, I’ve chased you from pillar to post and then you had to fall on your sword and—and—can’t this all just cancel out?”

  She could tell by his scowl that it did not, in fact, cancel out. He got to his feet and stomped around the bedroom, dragging his hands through his hair.

  This is just my luck. I worry that he’ll hate me, but instead he wants to marry me except that he can’t because…because…

  “All right,” she said, tucking her feet up under her on the bed. “Explain this to me so I understand.”

  It was, she had to admit, rather fascinating. It made sense, in a land where you lived and died by social standing. Not like this one, Halla thought wryly, where if you have no standing, you go work as someone’s housekeeper, and if there’s a hint of scandal, he turns you out and you end up scrubbing floors in a nunnery. Hmm, yes. Wildly different, those.

  Hell, maybe Sarkis’s people have the right idea. Put a material price on people so everybody knows what they’re worth.

  “Why does somebody need a high price? Aren’t you just bankrupting your husband before you marry him?”

  “No, no. A high marriage price means higher standing for both husband and wife. The wife because her family values her highly, the husband because he can afford to meet it. Most of the goods will go with the couple. If land is offered, they may live on it, or it will be held in trust for their children.” He shook his head. “If it isn’t…well, we have fought clan wars over less.”

  Halla rubbed her forehead. “What if her husband can’t meet her price?”

  “Then they do not wed.”

  “What? Seriously?”

  He looked uncomfortable. “Well…she can agree to be raided away. It causes a great deal of upheaval, but if two people are obviously in love, sometimes their families will turn a blind eye, or…ah…pursuit will be symbolic. But she still has her price, you understand. Everyone knows her status. That is not lost. And her children cannot then inherit her husband’s wealth, because she is still a member of her parent’s household, in absentia. Her children are fatherless, to all intents and purposes, though they may know their fathers well.”

  Halla rubbed her temples. “What if two men or two women wed?”

  “Whichever one is being taken from their household must be paid for. If they are both leaving a house, then they will each set a price and their families will negotiate. Between two women of high standing, for example, particularly if one or more has proven that they can bear children, negotiations can stretch on for months. Frequently both families will cede land, or one will cede land and the other build a house on it, and feel that both have gotten off lightly.”

  “So how do we figure out my price?” she said, “I run
my own household now, so do I get to name my own?”

  “Absolutely not,” said Sarkis. “No one names their own price. You can’t determine what you’re worth to other people.” For the first time since bringing up the price, his scarred face cracked into a smile. “Besides, I know you. You’ll undervalue yourself terribly.”

  Halla didn’t know whether to be flattered or annoyed by the accuracy of this observation. “Well, my family’s dead.”

  “Only the first family is blood. The rest are made by time or love or battle.” He frowned, tapping a nail against his teeth. “Zale. Do you value Zale?”

  “I’d jump in front of a charging horse for them,” admitted Halla.

  “Then they will set your price.” He nodded firmly. “They are a crafty negotiator. They will drive a hard bargain.”

  “But you said you can’t pay it!”

  He leaned his forehead against the bedpost. “There’s that. Perhaps I could work as a mercenary for a time, or…”

  “Oh no!” Halla glared at him. “I just got you back! I’m not losing you again! And anyway, maybe you don’t age, but I don’t want to waste any more of the years I’ve got left.”

  Sarkis sat down on the bed and wrapped his arms around her. “Are you certain you wish to marry me at all? You’ll grow old, and I will not. Will you hate me in time?”

  She gave a very loud and un-ladylike snort. “I spent the last decade tending an old man,” she said. “The fact I won’t have to do that again is not a hardship.” She tilted her chin up to look at him. “Will it be too hard for you, watching me age?”

  “It will gut me,” he said calmly. “But everyone watches the one they love age. At least I can know that you will not be alone. And I would rather be here, for as long as you live, than out in the world, worrying about you.” He smiled abruptly. “Besides, I know you. You’ll still need someone to pull you out of trouble when you’re ninety.”

  Halla let this bit pass because he had just said something unexpected.

  Everyone watches the one they love age.

  The one they love.

  “Love?” she said.

  “Yes?”

  His tone of polite inquiry was so at odds with what Halla expected that it took her a minute to sort out the reason. He thinks that was an endearment. Is the magic in his head translating things strangely?

  “Sarkis, this is important. I don’t know if the words are coming out right. You said…well, implied, I guess…that you love me.”

  “Oh. Did I?” He pulled back so that he could look her in the face. “Is that a problem?”

  “No, but…I…” She rubbed her forehead and decided that all this hedging around was making her head hurt. And what’s the point anyway? To not be the first person to admit you’re in love so that you don’t feel like you’re pathetic if the other person doesn’t love you back?

  “Sarkis, I love you. Or I’m in love with you. Or both. Both seems likely?”

  “That does explain why you want to marry me, given my obvious flaws.”

  “Flaws? What flaws?”

  “Immortality. Manhandling.”

  “You’ve got better about the manhandling.”

  “I try.” He frowned. “Ah—I’m in love with you, too. Did I say that already?”

  “No, you didn’t.”

  “Oh. Well, I am. For quite awhile now. I don’t just gut myself for any wielder, you know.”

  Halla winced. “Hopefully you won’t need to do so again.”

  “I am looking forward to a long stretch of being human, married to you, and not acquiring too many more scars. And perhaps—oh great god, you’re crying.”

  “It’s all right,” said Halla, wiping the tears away with the heel of her hand. “It’s fine. It’s really fine. Yes, I’ll marry you. We’ll work out the rest somehow.”

  He kissed her then, and for a little while, neither of them worried about prices or the future at all.

  Chapter 60

  Zale listened to Sarkis’s explanation of marriage price, nodded seriously, and proceeded to ask most of the same questions that Halla had. Then they steepled their fingers and considered.

  “On the face of it, it seems obvious,” they said. “Halla has considerable wealth, so her price should be quite high. You, on the other hand, are an itinerant swordsman and also dead.”

  Sarkis inclined his head to acknowledge both of these points.

  “On the other hand, you come attached to a magic sword, the value of which is considerable.”

  “That shouldn’t matter.”

  “Hush. You ask the Rat to stand as kin, and the Rat will do so in his own fashion.” Zale frowned. “Now, what constitutes a fair price among your people? You have been expressing things in terms of land and trade goods, but the relative value of trade goods to your people may be different than ours, depending on scarcity and distance to sources. We do not even have an agreed upon exchange rate between our respective currencies.” They rolled their sleeves up. “I am afraid, my dear Sarkis, that we are going to have to do a great deal of math.”

  Sarkis put his head in his hands.

  “You gentlefolk enjoy yourselves,” said Halla. “I’m going to go feed the chickens.”

  Sarkis and Zale spent three days negotiating, arguing about comparative values of precious metals, and during one particularly exhausting period, comparing the trade routes of spices to determine their relative cost between Archenhold and the Weeping Lands. Since Halla also had Sarkis carrying heavy furniture and beating rugs, this meant that much of the negotiation was shouted across the house.

  “Clove oil is not that expensive!” shouted Zale from the front room, where they were working on the catalogue.

  “It’s worth its weight in gold!” Sarkis shouted back, dragging a particularly hideous nightstand out of the bedroom.

  “Not here, it isn’t! We’ve got a direct trade route with the Devilspine Islands. In your day, it had to go overland through about eight kingdoms and was marked up accordingly!”

  “Decadent southern trade routes!”

  “Behold the worm that chews upon the throne of the gods!”

  Halla put her face in her hands, and wondered if she actually did want to marry Sarkis that badly after all.

  I must, to be putting up with all this…

  On the fourth day, he stomped into the kitchen, slammed a small, clinking bag down on the table, and said “There!”

  “There what?” said Halla.

  “The marriage price. Zale negotiates like each coin is a childhood friend, but we’ve agreed.”

  “All right,” said Halla, gazing dubiously at the coins. “What do we do with it?”

  “If you accept it, then we can be wed.”

  “You know I don’t need this,” she said.

  “I need this,” he said. “Because otherwise I will never feel that I have done enough to deserve you.” He scowled. “I’m still not sure…”

  “A good marriage is one where both parties feel that they got the better deal,” said Zale from the doorway.

  A thought struck Halla. “Wait—where did you get the money?”

  “Courtesy of the Rat,” said Sarkis. He scowled. “I’ve agreed to talk to some of their scholars.”

  Zale coughed. “And to a dedicate of the Many-Armed God.”

  “Gods,” said Halla. “You’ll have earned it, talking to one of them. Obnoxious people.” She prodded the bag with one finger. It clinked. “So now what?”

  Sarkis took both her hands in his. “Will you accept me as a husband now?”

  “Yes?” said Halla. And then, realizing it sounded like a question, “I mean, yes. Definitely. Yes.”

  “Then we’ll be wed.”

  The priest of the Four-Faced God performed the ceremony in the end, because Zale said that they could stand for the bride’s family and the groom’s family, but not if they were also expected to lead the vows.

  “You should ride to the priest on one of my horses,” said S
arkis, as they approached the church.

  “You haven’t got any horses,” said Halla practically.

  He considered this. “Perhaps we still have time for me to steal one…”

  Halla laughed and took his arm. “And afterwards you can put the countryside to the torch.”

  “Naturally.”

  Zale, walking behind the couple, rolled their eyes.

  The ceremony was short, simple, and dignified. The priest beamed at both of them as he tied the red cord around their forearms, binding them together. In theory, a representative of each of the families was then to take one end of the cord and unwrap it at the same time, but since Zale was standing for both, they had to take an end in each hand and loosen the cord rather awkwardly.

  “It’s a good thing I have a lot of experience with being tied up recently,” they muttered. The priest of the Four-Faced God looked worried. Halla laughed. Sarkis scowled, but in a genial fashion.

  Brindle was pressed into service as a witness, which he bore with aplomb, and signed his name to the parchment by dipping two claws in ink and swiping them across the page.

  As soon as they left the church, the Widow Davey rushed up and soaked Halla’s collar with happy tears. “Oh, my dear! My dear! You’ll be so very happy together!” Halla patted the woman’s shoulder and gave Sarkis a helpless look. The priest of the Four-Faced God moved in and gently detached her.

  “She cornered me in the kitchen during the wedding supper,” said Halla that evening. “And she tried to give me motherly advice about the wedding night.”

  Sarkis, who was lying on his back next to Halla, enjoying the warm afterglow of his wedding night, choked and had to sit up and grab for the mug of water on the table beside the bed. He nearly knocked it over and Halla pounded his back enthusiastically while he wheezed.

  “She what?” he gasped.

  “I know, I know.” Halla shook her head. “I kept telling her I’d been married before, but she was determined to have her say. You’ll be happy to know that while it may be uncomfortable at first, you want to please me and it’s just a matter of nudging you in the right direction.”

 

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