Skirmish: A House War Novel (88 page)

BOOK: Skirmish: A House War Novel
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It was, word for word, the question Duvari had asked, but in tone and texture it was very, very different.

If Jewel had one unfortunate weakness—a weakness, given the patriciate, that would attract vultures for miles—it was for elderly women. Gabriel was uncertain as to why; he had never asked. There was very little that he had directly asked Jewel Markess; most of his information came
by his indirect observation—he watched Teller, listened to Teller. Teller, who now slid between the shoulders of House Council members accustomed to a great deal more space, to reach the side of the young woman he had always considered his leader.

Amarais had known. Gabriel was certain that Barston did not—a deliberate oversight on the part of a man who made sight his vocation.

He noted that Jewel’s expression did not change as Teller approached, and he allowed himself a smile, wondering as he did, if Teller would one day occupy the office of right-kin. He would have to find himself his own Barston, however; Barston was due a graceful and well-deserved retirement.

But Jewel did not take time to converse with Teller, and Teller asked no questions or spoke no words that required it, aware that the Exalted’s question now demanded the whole of her public attention.

Lifting her chin, Jewel said, “I protected my House.” The words were spoken like a soft challenge.

The Mother’s Daughter nodded. “You did, ATerafin. For the moment—but I fear your reach extended far beyond that.”

Jewel did not hesitate. “Not my reach, Exalted, but my words. Words travel beyond their speaker even in the streets of the hundred holdings, but the speaker is not held responsible for the distance at which they might be heard.”

“No; he—or she—is simply held accountable for the content, should the content be considered a genuine threat.”

“And were my words considered a threat?”

Gabriel winced; he held his peace, however.

“Not in content, ATerafin. And in my case, not in intent—but there is a reason why the Twin Kings are always direct descendants of the Lords of Wisdom and Justice. Intent exists entirely within the context of a given moment, and it is subject to change with the passage of time and bitter experience. I ask you again, what have you done?”

Jewel squared her shoulders. She lacked the training of the patriciate; her movements said at least as much as her words. She had, over the years, refined the use of the words themselves, but Gabriel accepted that no amount of effort would instill in her the visceral understanding of the language of motion. As he thought it, he saw that her hands had gathered into loose fists; they were shaking slightly.

Teller, however, was completely motionless. He had taken up a position
to her right, and at a distance that Gabriel himself might have occupied had she been The Terafin. To her left stood Angel, and between them, the great, white cat.

“I have claimed these lands as my home,” Jewel replied.

“They are indeed your home; they are home to many, many citizens of the Empire.”

“Then I have not done more. I have not declared myself King—” a whisper went up around her in a spreading circle, a wave of quiet words. “Nor have I declared myself Queen. I have taken no authority upon myself except that claim.”

“You have forbidden egress to those who—”

Jewel lifted both of her hands, then. “I told the water, the wind, and the earth that they were to listen to no voice but mine in these lands. I won’t apologize for that. There shouldn’t be any voice they can even hear, if I understand what the Guildmaster of the Order of Knowledge has said.”

“They should not, according to the same guildmaster, hear yours,” the Son of Cormaris said, deigning at last to join what could only barely be considered conversation. “Yet it is clear to all present—all, ATerafin—that they did. It is clear, as well, that your voice was heard across the breadth of the Isle when you spoke those words; the priests in our cathedrals and in our service heard them, and what they heard, our Lords hear. In the expert and considered opinion of Sigurne Mellifas, you are not mage-born come very late into your talent; in the expert and considered opinion of the Bardmaster of Senniel College, you have no bardic talent.

“Either the mage-born or the bard-born might—at great risk to themselves—make their voices heard in such a fashion. Yet you have demonstrably done what they could only barely do, and you stand among us.”

Snow took two steps forward, his claws gathering carpet in their passage. Jewel reached down—without looking—and placed her left hand firmly across the middle of his head, slightly flattening his ears; the cat hissed, but stopped. No one else in the hall would have dared; she had, and she had done so without fear.
Be cautious, Jewel
, Gabriel thought.

“I stand among you,” she replied, “because I am Jewel ATerafin, member of the Terafin House Council. I stand among you because today is the first of the three-day rites that mark the passing of The Terafin, the person I respected most in the world. I’m a citizen of the Empire; I owe allegiance
to Terafin, and to the Kings Cormalyn and Reymalyn. I am what I have always been.”

“And have you always been able to command, so easily, the elemental forces of nature?”

“I don’t know. None of them have ever attempted to tear up my home and destroy the ceremony meant to honor and respect my Lord, before now.”

The Exalted exchanged a glance, and the Son of Cormaris fell silent. The Exalted of the Mother now continued to speak. “Do you not understand what you have done?”

It was not the question Gabriel expected; it was not, clearly, the question Jewel expected either. She seemed to lose some of her steel under the steady and watchful gaze of the older woman. “I understand what I did,” she said, in a quieter and less measured voice. “But I don’t have the words to explain it all. Daughter of the Mother, they were going to destroy my home. Left to run wild, they would have killed everyone on these grounds, and hundreds—thousands—of people outside of them. Someone
else
gave them permission—no,
orders
—to do exactly that.

“Everything I’ve ever valued, everything I love, is here.” She turned her face toward the grounds, as if she could see through the walls that separated them; Gabriel had an uncomfortable feeling that it was not impossible. “There are old, old roads that were carved and built on this Isle long before there were Kings, Exalted, or Jewel ATerafin. They’re hidden roads, ancient roads, wild roads. But sometimes—sometimes people who are merely mortal step onto them by accident.”

“That was not an accident.”

“No, Exalted, not today. I didn’t know, before I went South, that the roads existed at all, but in the South—” she shook her head. “In the South, I walked those paths.”

“And you came to understand them?”

Jewel shook her head. “I came to understand what
home
means to me, there. I came to understand that on those roads, the force of that certainty
has
power. Even there, even in the South. I could make my stand on those roads because of that. But here? This
is
home.”

“And it is not your intent to claim home as your personal kingdom or Empire.”

Jewel shook her head. “My House is mine—but I belong to the House just as much. My kin are mine; I’m theirs. Before they died, I lived with
my mother, my father, and my Oma. Their home was my home, but the rules were their rules. I don’t see this as different.”

The Exalted of the Mother’s smile was almost pained. “I believe that,” was her quiet reply. “But what you see and what others see will of necessity be different.” She turned back to the Son of Cormaris and spoke a few low words.

“The Terafin was
my
Lord,” she continued, her voice dangerously close to breaking. “If I could give my life in exchange for hers before I took another breath, I’d do it. I can’t.”

“She would not have allowed it,” the Mother’s Daughter said, and this time—in front of the gathered witnesses, she lifted a hand to Jewel’s cheek and held it a moment, as if to offer comfort.

“No,” was Jewel’s soft reply. “But I mean for the rites to continue. If we put them off now, we’ll never hold them. The rains have stopped. The grounds are safe.”

“There are several dead,” the Exalted of the Mother said gently.

“Yes. I understand the gravity of those deaths—but there are also people now dead in the streets of the hundred holdings who would be dead regardless. We would have paid our respects to our dead, because we were simply unaware of those deaths, and willing to be so.”

“It is not your decision to make.” Gabriel closed his eyes as Haerrad’s voice—loud, militaristic—echoed in the vaulting of the ceiling.

“No, indeed, Councillor,” the regent now said, entering a conversation in which both he and Haerrad were almost entirely superfluous. “It is mine. The Kings may choose to repair to
Avantari
; the Exalted may choose to return to their cathedrals—there is undoubtedly much they must now do. Some of the guests,” he continued, lifting his voice, “who have honored Terafin by their presence and their choice to pay respects to the woman who ruled the House for so long, and with so much wisdom, may likewise choose to depart.

“But the members of House Terafin will perform the rites. We owe far more to Amarais Handernesse ATerafin than any to whom she did not offer the protection and honor of the House Name. We deeply regret the interruption and the danger our guests have faced today. As a House, however, we have faced similar in the past, and we are still standing; while we stand, we honor our own.” Judging by the expression that briefly crossed Haerrad’s face, very few of Gabriel’s words had registered; the fact that Gabriel, not Jewel, had spoken them, however, mollified
the Councillor, inasmuch as Haerrad would allow himself to be mollified.

“We will attend,” King Reymalyn said. He did not speak quietly. His words filled the contours of the arches above the gallery, catching the attention of the delegates and guests who had otherwise not been party, or privy, to the discussion between Jewel and the Exalted of the Mother. “The Queens have also decided that they will remain to pay respects to a woman who exemplified all that was worthy of respect in our Empire.”

It was not the decision Duvari wanted; it was clearly the one he expected. He approached King Reymalyn, and the Justice-born King lifted a hand in warning. “There are forces gathered today,” he continued, when Duvari heeded the gesture and failed to speak, “that present a danger to our Empire; it is a danger that we will face. We will not ask more of our people than we ask of ourselves.” He glanced at Jewel ATerafin as he spoke. “How far, ATerafin, does your…determination…extend?”

She understood the question, and Gabriel saw her knees begin to bend. He also watched as she locked them, bowing only her head instead. “I am sorry, Son of Justice, but I am unable to answer that question.”

“Unable?”

“I can’t leave House Terafin, and I can’t be certain until I do. I will do so upon your command the minute the last of the rites have been observed.”

“Very well. We will wait, ATerafin.” He inclined his head and turned to King Cormalyn. To Gabriel’s surprise, he hesitated, and then turned once again to face Jewel. “We are in your debt, ATerafin. Only the very wise or the very headstrong attempt to place Empires in their debt.”

Her eyes rounded, but her mouth remained shut. Gabriel watched, assessing every gesture, every silence. “That was not my intent,” she finally replied. In a much quieter voice, she continued, “I am seer-born; the seer-born, in theory, can look clearly into parts of the future. I therefore consider the actions undertaken in
Avantari
at my command to be my duty to the future rulers of the Empire of Essalieyan.”

King Cormalyn’s lips twitched in a slight smile. “ATerafin,” he said. “You must now attend the regent; he is restive, and there is much to be discussed—and in very little time—before the magi return to us.”

The regent was not, of course, the only man to observe, nor the only man to measure Jewel ATerafin’s critical performance. In Haval’s opinion, Gabriel
ATerafin’s assessment was, by nature and desire, far too gentle. As a dressmaker, Haval was of course among the least significant of the guests; no one asked his opinion. Or rather, no one should have. He allowed himself a theatrical, if mild, grimace as Jarven ATerafin approached the tall and intricate plant beside which he now stood. The rather better dressed and better known head of the Terafin operations in the Merchant Authority grinned at Haval’s sour expression.

“Haval,” he said, inclining his head as he adjusted the position of his walking stick. “I hope I find you in good health? You are not notably dry.”

“I am an old man,” Haval replied, “and not prone to moving quickly merely to avoid rain.” He glanced at Jewel ATerafin, who had fallen uncharacteristically silent under the weight of so many stares. “I see you escorted young Finch to the gallery.”

“Indeed. An advantage to my position; she has to work with—and for—me.”

“I’m surprised Lucille allowed it; Lucille appears to have more sense.”

“Lucille was, unhappily, quite busy.” Jarven smiled broadly. “And, yes, I’m certain I will hear about it when the offices in the Authority are once again open for business. Finch is astute, and I would say, on the surface, more politically subtle than Jewel.”

Haval nodded. “A fair assessment. Jewel is not known for her graceful maneuvers in the political arena. You are concerned, Jarven. If you consider it not entirely unwise, I would be interested in your reasons.”

“They are, of course, the obvious reasons. She has certainly made no friend in the Lord of the Compact.”

“No head of a House of any import has a friend in Duvari.”

Jarven raised a brow. “That was unworthy of you, Haval.”

“I felt it was an appropriate level of response for the comment that preceded it.”

“Perhaps, perhaps. You are aware that we are now both out of our certain element?”

Haval nodded. “Only one of us, however, is looking forward to the new landscape with any enthusiasm.”

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