Michelle West - The Sun Sword 02 - The Uncrowned King (9 page)

BOOK: Michelle West - The Sun Sword 02 - The Uncrowned King
11.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

An Osprey was, after all, a bird of prey—you could fly it, hunt it, give it freedom in which to take its kill, and even force it to feed from your hand, but the relationship was a delicate balance of will and mastery, a subtle acknowledgment that, at the right time, the bird's flight was the bird's flight, and all the more breathtaking for the uncertainty it inspired.

But the Black Ospreys were more than just captive killers; they had their pride.

Duarte was no fool. When Fiara burst into the room, her eyes narrow and cool enough to freeze water where it stood in the pitcher on his desk, he knew exactly what was coming, and wondered briefly if holding both halves of the conversation—if such an encounter could be graced with that word—would make his point. He doubted it.

"Sentrus." A warning, of sorts.

She snorted. "Duarte," she began.

"Sentrus."

It stopped her, but not cold. "
Primus
Duarte."

"Better."

"Duarte—"

He sighed. "What?"

"Every company in Kalakar is recruiting in the streets of this city. Every company in Kalakar is going to be recruiting in the West—and in the North—after the King's Challenge." Fiara, dark-haired and dark-eyed, was an anomaly; she came from the Northern kingdoms where a sword served as well as most speeches, and the people were as pale as the ice and snow that surrounded them for so much of the gods-cursed year. Duarte had done his time in the North, and had no desire to return to it; the ice had crept into his hair there, and the wind had frozen lines into his skin.

/
am not a young man
, he thought, accepting it as truth although it troubled more than his vanity. War was coming.

"I
am
aware of that, Fiara. It may surprise you, but as Primus and therefore commanding officer of this company, I actually do manage to hear a few words before the rest of you do."

She had the grace to flush, but that was about as much grace as he could hope for; she was an Osprey, after all. They all were. Misfits, killers, mercenaries more than soldiers—their only real law was the loyalty they held to each other. And, by extension, to the Kalakar House Guards. He had gathered them; they were his.

But it had been well over a decade since he had pulled their hoods from their faces to let them see the light of the open sky. To let them catch sight of their quarry.

And that, he thought, was taking the analogy about as far as it could go without losing it entirely.

"Sentrus," he said quietly, in a tone that brooked no interruption—even from an Osprey. "the time for peace is almost past. If you wish to be offended by The Kalakar's order, be offended
in silence
. What I accept from you in peace, and what I accept from you in time of war are, of necessity, two different things. It's been long indeed if you've forgotten it."

"Primus," she said, tapping her chest with the curled tips of her fingers.

He closed his eyes a moment. House Guards were expected to drill
and
present. Even the Ospreys. Given their reputation, probably especially the Ospreys.

Still, no war had been declared, and the Callestan Tyr, or so rumor had it, was certain that
if
war was to be declared, it would be declared by the height of the Festival of the Sun. The eighth day of Lattan had come and gone; it would be two days yet before word could be expected to arrive in Averalaan, carried most likely by members of the bardic college. The Kingdom had time to mobilize.

No doubt that was what the Dominion intended to do as well.

"Primus Duarte," Fiara said, her voice rather chilly, "permission to speak?"

"Granted."

"We've never been allowed up to our full tally. We took the brunt of the slaughter in the valley—"

"We were one of three companies, Fiara."

"We were the only company that counted, as far as the Annies were concerned."

"Ah, Alexis. I was wondering when you would decide to join us." His smile never started. "The term
Annies
is not to be used under this particular tour of duty." His tone and his expression indicated clearly that they'd both agreed to this at least a dozen times.

Nor did she argue now. "News," she said grimly.

"What news?"

"You aren't going to like it."

"Alexis."

"Do you want to finish with Fiara?"

Fiara's dark gaze had started to drill a small hole in the side of Alexis' face—or it would have, if eyes had that particular strength. Alexis, apparently, did not notice. Which fooled neither the woman standing beside her nor the man sitting in front; she was sharp as a Maker's blade; she missed nothing.

"Yes," he said at last, hoping that he'd remember to tell her that, as Sentrus, she was being unconscionably rude—hells, as Decarus, before she'd been busted down a rank, it would still have been poor behavior among Ospreys. Of course, correcting Alexis in public had its own special consequences. It made Duarte uneasy a moment. This woman was his companion, as much of a soul mate as he had ever allowed himself to find. But that bond had been built
after
the war's end—formed in the fires and grime of the Annagarian dead. Formed, he thought, by a need to escape the war's cost, the war's loss.

They had never faced combat together as a couple; he'd half-thought they never would. And he wasn't at all certain that the shift from peacetime friction to wartime rule wouldn't destroy what they'd built. He wondered, idly, if she ever thought about it.

"Duarte?"

"My pardon. Sentrus," he said, turning to Fiara AKalakar with a grimace, "You might recall that not one of these soldiers came to me without passing through the ranks of either the House Guards or The Berriliya's regiment first. You might, if you care, further recall that more than a handful of those that
did
come to me were given, without pause, to the Kings' Justice.

"I built the Ospreys. I know how to build the Ospreys. But they're built out of war,
in
war. They cannot be tempered in any fire weaker than that. The Ospreys are mine, Fiara. It appears that you've forgotten that."

She stared impassively at his face for a moment; he thought she was actually going to argue the point. And then her face cracked into a sudden grin. Her salute was far less feeble—if far from perfect.

"It seems that
Sentrus
Alexis also has her concerns, and I would like to take them in private."

"Primus."

How the hell was he going to beat them back into army standard? And had they ever really been up to army standard, or was his memory being exceptionally—and uncharacteristically—kind? He leaned back in his chair and gazed up into Alexis' neutral expression. It was the one he least liked. Temper, if unpleasant in every other way, lent a color and a richness to her face. Also a certain deadliness, but as Duarte had founded the Ospreys, he was not a man to shy from danger.

"Well?"

"It involves our… current tour of duty."

She was right. He didn't like it at all. The current tour of duty was one that most of the Ospreys were not completely confident in to begin with: instead of killing, covertly or otherwise, they had been assigned to preserve and protect. And the boy—which, as he was fully of age, was an unfair word, but used regardless— whom they'd been assigned the protection of had already tangled with one of the Ospreys, been wounded, and kept his mouth shut, placing, by that action, one foot across the circle that separated the Ospreys from outsiders.

Unfortunately, it was a tour of duty that couldn't be failed. There had only been one assassination attempted since they'd taken over their role as personal guards. It had cost them one life; it wasn't an amateur attempt.

It had its value, though. If it wasn't war, the single death of one of their own cemented their dedication—such as it was. It made the shadow enemy a real one. He waited for Alexis to continue. Waited a bit longer.

He hated these games, small though they were. "Alexis…"

"I'm not certain if you're aware that the Kings' Challenge is just around the corner. You've been kept so busy," she added sweetly.

"Alexis." She knew damned well he was aware of the Kings' Challenge—there wasn't a House raising troops for the Kings that wasn't. All of the hopeful young men with any brawn and little enough brain made their trek across the continent in search of a challenge, a way to make their names, and a golden reward. Those men, disappointed in their attempt to reap a greater glory, were often easy pickings for army recruiters.

As a mage-trained scholar, Duarte had avoided recruitment; as a man indentured to Kalakar by the cost of the Order of Knowledge's training, he had not.

"You've too much on your mind, Duarte. Let me spell it out for you.

"First: Take the Kings' Challenge. Big contest, full of young men with more brawn than brain. Contestants arrive from as far away as the Western Kingdoms and the Southern Terreans of Oer-ta and Sargasso—even this year, when war is so close, and the Kings should damned well know better than to risk the influx of spies or assassins. But I digress—and that's your trick. So, take the Kings' Challenge, in which everyone without a real brain feels he should try to prove himself to every other person without a real brain.

"Next: Take one young, very fast, very competent man, who's been sword-trained and dagger-trained, born to the saddle and gods alone know what else. Make him a man who, of all these entrants,
does
have something to prove." She smiled as Duarte went suddenly pale.

"Alexis, if this is a joke—"

"Not even I have a sense of humor this grim." She waited, and then, when Duarte did not deign to interrupt her silence, added, "Valedan kai di'Leonne has undergone the trial, before judges, and has been chosen as one of the hundred men who will undergo the King's Challenge."

"This is
insane
. The boy's sun-mad!" Ramiro kai di'Callesta felt the chill of the night winds stretching across a continent. Here, in these so-called Annagarian halls, there was water and wind and the touch of the open sky. And men who did not wish to risk the scouring of the wind stayed inside, in safety. An old adage.

This day, this single day, he would have given much for the company of his wife, the Serra Amara, known across the width and breadth of the Dominion of Annagar for her gentle qualities. But although they stood beneath the warmth of the same sun, toiled beneath the blue of the same sky, the boundary that separated them, one from the other, was more than mere distance: She resided within Callesta, the city of his ancestors, in the heart of the verdant and much-prized Averda—and he, he stood as honored guest within the palace of the Imperial Kings, Reymalyn and Cormalyn. A nation stood between them, and the ghost of each old war that had moved the boundary of Annagar or Essalieyan by mere tens of miles every few decades or so. He wished her momentary advice and her silliness—for she, alone of many, could evoke laughter from his dourest mood.

But she was there. He was here. He made do. "The boy doesn't realize what he risks."

His brother, Fillipo par di'Callesta, nodded grimly. "Perhaps he will listen to the Wolf of Callesta, where he would not listen to a mere par." He leaned back into the shadows cast over the fountain by the light of morning sun; his hair, removed from the glinting light, was as dark as his brother's, his eyes as narrow. There was, between these two, a very strong family resemblance; it had often been said that the clan Callesta was doubly blessed: first, for being graced with two men of such high caliber and second, for the real affection and loyalty between them. Both were true.

Ser Kyro di'Lorenza snorted. He ran a hand through age-paled hair before returning it to its customary repose atop sword hilt. He was Annagarian bred and born, a man with little taste for politics and much for war. "I fail to see the insanity in it, Tyr'ag-nate," he said, his tone neutral with respect. He was both beholden to this man—they all were, for his coming had sealed their survival—and suspicious of him. Ramiro di'Callesta was known across the Dominion as the Imperial Tyr.

And he knew it. His smile was brittle indeed as he acknowledged Ser Kyro's comment. "Baredan?"

"I am not in a position to comment," the General Baredan di'Na-varre replied. "But if the boy succeeds—"

"There is no chance that he will succeed, brother," Fillipo said quietly.

"If he fails, he will lose more than he gains if he succeeds. Why take the risk?"

It was Ser Kyro who answered, and at that, only after the shadows of the day had grown visibly shorter. "There are clansmen here who will take that same test. They need only know that he can best them, and they will be impressed."

"It is not as simple a thing as that, Ser Kyro."

"It is
exactly
as simple a thing as that, Ser Ramiro. You play a Tyrian game, and you play it exceptionally well. I do not. And although it might pain you to admit it, most of the men—the Lord's men—do not. We see clearly because we desire simple things: A good horse. A good wife. Strong sons, a strong sword, a battle worthy of killing and dying in. But more than this, a leader worthy of following."

Even Baredan had the grace to wince slightly at Ser Kyro's words. Ramiro grimaced. "Thank you, Ser Kyro."

Ser Kyro frowned. He started to speak, stopped, started again. "General. Tyr'agnate. You must, of course, feel free to speak with the boy. But I tell you now that he will not listen. He has made this decision.

"I will also say that the—that his guards, his
Imperial
guards, find the situation at least as distasteful and questionable as you do."

Cold comfort indeed, to be in agreement with the Black Ospreys of the Kalakar House Guards. For a moment, an old anger caught him by surprise; he felt pain, heard the cries of the dying across a bridge of years made of memories too strong for a single lifetime to shake. He did not speak; the cloud passed.

"Baredan," he said at length, "what does the boy do?"

"He trains," the General replied evasively.

The evasion was not lost upon the Tyr'agnate. His eyes narrowed.
Is this the way it is to be
? he thought, as his eyes glanced off the General's. But again, he did not speak. Baredan was the Tyr'agar's General, and Ramiro di'Callesta, in time of peace, the Tyr'agar's subtle rival. They had their duties and their roles.

BOOK: Michelle West - The Sun Sword 02 - The Uncrowned King
11.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Inquisición by Anselm Audley
Soul and Blade by Tara Brown
The Apeman's Secret by Franklin W. Dixon
Dead Reckoning by Linda Castillo
A Clue to the Exit: A Novel by Edward St. Aubyn