The Sword of the Lady (16 page)

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Authors: S. M. Stirling

BOOK: The Sword of the Lady
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″Ú-Maer, ú-Maer,″
Ritva Havel murmured fretfully in Sindarin, the special language of the Dúnedain Rangers her Aunt Astrid had founded a few years before she was born. ″Not good, not good.″
″That place is as bad as the dungeons of Dol Guldur,″ Mary Havel agreed softly, staring northward from the balcony towards the harsh metallic gleam of Iowa′s citadel.
Then beneath her breath:
″Olthon o le, Ingolf.″
Somewhere in there was Ingolf Vogeler, Mary′s friend, her companion on the trail since they left the Willamette Valley to cross the Cascades, and for the last six months her lover. Ritva′s twin touched one finger lightly to the black patch that covered her left eye socket, a habit she′d acquired since a Cutter sorcerer-priest slashed the eye out of her head in the mountains of eastern Idaho late last year.
They′d been identicals, before Mary lost the eye. It still gave Ritva an absurd pang now and then to realize they couldn′t play games with people′s heads by switching identities anymore. They′d been doing
that
since about the time they learned to walk. It had been useful in more serious business now and then too. Mary′s face showed only a cool in tentness, but when Ritva put her hand on her shoulder it was quivering tense.
We′ve always been able to read each other′s souls,
Ritva thought.
I′ve been envying you all this time for winning that game of papers-scissors-rock we had over who′d get a try at Ingolf. Now I don′t, sis. At least, I don′t if I′d have come to really love him—and we′re alike enough I think I would have. It′s bad enough knowing he′s in there when I just like him as a friend.
″We
will
rescue you, my beloved.″
″You said it, sis,″ Ritva replied stoutly.
She raised the monocular to her eye and lowered it again. Staring at those smooth granite-sheathed concrete battlements and towers, the multiple welded-beam steel gates, the ranked firing ports for murder machines and flamethrowers, was just too depressing. Even the golden dome of the old State Capitol behind it seemed like a taunt.
Impressive
, she thought grudgingly; and she′d seen Castle Todenangst, and the walls of Boise.
Not so much the height, but the circumference. And that′s just the ruler′s citadel! The ones around the city aren′t as high . . . quite . . . but the quantity!
She′d never seen anything on this scale, and the Rangers traveled widely—that was a major reason she and Mary had left Larsdalen and moved in with Aunt Astrid.
Besides the fact that we Dúnedain are just
so cool
, of course.
″Well, we weren′t planning on
bashing
our way in, anyway,″ Mary said. ″As Aunt Astrid says, bashing is
crude
.″
″Uncle John says there′s always a place for it.″
″John Hordle is six-foot-seven and weighs three hundred and twenty pounds,″ Mary pointed out. ″He carries a sword with a four-foot blade. Of
course
he likes to bash. We′re sneaks. That′s what′s bothering me. I can′t think of any way to do
that
, either.″
″They′ve probably paid a lot of attention to security, too,″ Ritva said, with reluctant thoughtfulness. ″These tyrant types generally worry a lot.″
And the Heasleroads have been busy as beavers on their citadel for longer than I′ve been alive, and with all of Iowa to draw on.
There were
millions
of people in the Provisional Republic, nearly as many as there had been in the state before the Change; Ignatius said they had somewhere between a tenth and a fifth of all the human beings left in North America, and on some of its richest land. Usually the places where the Change killed the least had been those that had the fewest to begin with, remote ranching and farming country. More people meant more cities, and above a certain size cities had meant death for themselves and the land around them when the machines stopped.
Portland was a partial exception, but from what she′d heard that was because Norman Arminger and his dreadful consort had managed to get most of the inhabitants to leave, one way or another. Sandra had spread rumors that the State government had answers, or huge stocks of food and medicine, and had her Judas-goat organizers lead scores of thousands southward to die in the plague-ridden refugee camps around Salem. Norman himself had just burned great swaths of the city down, turned off the gravity-flow water system, or had his goon squads prod people out to die at the point of improvised spears.
He′d also hanged the former mayor and chief of police from meathooks outside the building he′d taken for a palace, just to make a point about who was in charge.
Heasleroad Sr. must have been a lot like the Lord Protector Arminger,
she thought.
Except that there was so much food here he could keep a lot more population alive to work for him, and fewer people fought him.
Then she sneezed, not liking the coal smoke that made your eyes water here . . . not that any of them did, being country bred. Des Moines had a great many factories and foundries and furnaces worked by water power or even the low-pressure steam engines that still functioned in the Changed world, and coal came in piled in barges on the river and cars on the horse-drawn railways.
″We
could
cross the Mississippi and join up with Rudi and Edain,″ she said carefully, when the silence had grown a little uncomfortable.
Usually I
know
you′re not going to do anything stupid and reckless. Smart and reckless, yes . . . but is your judgment still good, sis?
Aloud she went on judiciously: ″Get the wagons, get them back to the river, and the Bossman promised Ingolf and Matti and Odard would go free.″
Mary Havel sniffed, and tossed her head; the wheat-blond fighting braid bobbed behind her long shapely face.
″And how are we supposed to
find
Rudi there? His trail will be cold, and the Bossman′s men are watching all the city gates. Besides which, that assumes the Bossman will
keep
his bargain. Would you care to bet on that?″
″No,″ Ritva sighed. ″We′ll have to do something ourselves.″
So we have me and Mary, who are the sneakiest of all Rangers,
Ritva thought.
There′s Father Ignatius . . . well, yes, a man of many skills. There′s Virginia Kane, who′s . . . oh, well, she′s a good enough woman of her hands and she grew up on a ranch, so she′s a good rider and shot, but even more out of place in a city than we are. Middling with a blade, even those meatchopper shetes these easterners use. And there′s Fred Thurston, who′s just nineteen and a likely lad, and has connections . . . which would be useful back in Boise, where his father was President-General, if it weren′t for his brother Martin wanting to kill him because he knows
who
assassinated their father. Not much of a storming party to take a fortress in a foreign land!
She turned back into the room. They had the top floor of this . . . place . . . to themselves, which meant four chambers and a narrow hallway, since it was a tall pre-Change brick house; they used this one as common, she and Ritva shared another, Ignatius had the third, and Virginia and Fred had set up together in the last. When the twins turned away from the balcony, Virginia and Fred were sitting at the table holding hands and smiling at each other, their meal forgotten, a brown-haired young woman and a man of nineteen years with skin the color of old oiled wood and tight-curled black hair.
Ritva could feel something halfway between grief and pure pain shoot through Mary. The other Havel sister closed her eye for an instant, and murmured a prayer of those Dúnedain who followed the Old Religion:
″Oh, Lady, You descended through the Dark Gate for Your lover, and where You danced even evil′s self was pierced to the heart. All life and love is in Your gift. Bring my man back to me! Lord of the shining mountain, who loves the warrior′s courage and craft, bless my sword that fights for him!″
″So mote it be, sis,″ Ritva said. ″Now come on and eat something. We′re going to need our strength.″
Fred looked up. ″No ideas?″
″Not beyond walking up to the gate and asking them to put us in the next cell,″ Ritva admitted as she sat and reached for the bread knife.
″Anthony Heasleroad is a walking argument against hereditary monarchy,″ Mary growled.
The two Rangers signed their plates and murmured the Invocation and blessing. Ritva′s mouth twisted a little. In a bard′s tale fear for your beloved drove out everything else, but she could hear her sister′s stomach growling, now that she′d dragged her in and made her notice the body′s needs, and she was ravenous.
About to drool down my jerkin, in fact. Well, the Histories agree that a good dinner now and then is an important part of Questing.
″Well, Fred here′s a good argument
for
it,″ Virginia said, in her Wyoming rasp.
Fred Thurston winced; he′d ended up on the run because his elder brother
did
believe in sons following fathers . . . and had killed their sire to avoid inconvenient elections in Boise.
″Dad always said you couldn′t hand a country down like a farm,″ he said.
″Why not?″ Ritva said. ″It seems to be the way most people have always done it, if you listen to the stories.″
″It does seem natural,″ Mary agreed. ″After all . . . most people do what their parents did, don′t they? You learn how as you grow up. I mean, we′re fighters—so was our father, and our mother. And they were both rulers.″
″I just can′t see myself as the picture of a Crown Prince,″ Fred said.
″Sorry, sweetie,″ Virginia said. ″But you
are
, whatever your brother Martin′s like. Hell, so are Rudi and Mathilda. Seems to be pretty much a crapshoot, whether you go on who your daddy was or on a show of hands. Or those things they had before the Change, bullets.″
″Ballots,″ Fred said.
″Oh, way I heard it, sometimes it was bullets,″ Virginia said, and grinned.
She and Fred were both just short of twenty, but her plain strong face looked a little older than her real years to folk raised in the gentle lands west of the Cascades. The winter blizzards and wind-borne dust of summer on the High Plains had taken a little of the life out of her dark brown hair, and started little lines beside her dark blue eyes already.
Remember to use that lanolin stuff,
Ritva reminded herself.
The lines showed a little more as the rancher′s daughter smiled and went on:
″I won′t say anything about me bein′ a Princess.″
What a sappy smile,
Ritva thought, as Fred grinned at her and put his hand over hers again. Virginia′s father had been a prominent rancher in the Powder River country, until the Church Universal and Triumphant killed him.
And Princess just means your father was a King, like Mathilda′s, or Rudi′s and ours, not that you′re anything special in and of yourself. Or your father some sort of a sovereign, at least,
Ritva thought.
Which Virginia′s
was
, pretty well.
″In the Histories, it says the Numenoreans handed down the throne to the eldest child—man or woman,″ she said.
″Well, dip me in dung and fry me crisp, that sounds good to me!″ Virginia said.
Fred opened his mouth, looked at the three women, and closed it again.
″We′ll probably get some sort of job running a Ranger steading, or something, eventually,″ Mary added. ″Not that Aunt Astrid and Uncle Alleyne would give it to us if we were
stupid
or anything.″
″If you′re going to have a monarchy at all that′s the big problem,″ Fred said. ″I′m still not sure about that. And Kings . . . get flattered all the time.″
″Yes, but they expect it,″ Mary said. ″Look at Mathilda—can you imagine anyone putting anything over on
her
?″
″Not easily,″ he admitted.
″But ordinary people like flattery just as much as Kings, if anyone will give it to them,″ Ritva said. ″I mean, look at all those dreadful people the Corvallans keep electing, who promise them ridiculous things and tell them how smart and superior they are. Well, you′ve never been to Corvallis, but take my word for it. It′s no better when one man is flattering thousands than when thousands are flattering one man.″
″Never came at it that way,″ Fred said thoughtfully. ″But you′ve got a point.″
″You Rangers are Numenoreans, then?″ Virginia added. ″I never got that part straight. I′ve heard
of
those stories . . . Histories . . . but never read ′em.″
″Well, we′re descended from Numenoreans,″ Ritva said. ″That′s what Dúnedain means—′folk of the west.′ And Numenor was in the West. Well, west of Eriador, which was where Europe is now. Of course, things were different then. The Earth was flat, to start with.″
Mary′s mouth quirked, and she fell back into their habit of finishing sentences for each other: ″But that was two Ages of the World ago—at least. So probably
everyone
is descended from them by now.″
″Aunt Astrid thinks we′re
more
descended from them than most people,″ Ritva said. ″Because the Histories speak to our hearts, you see.″
″That′s logical. She′s very smart and learned,″ Mary continued.
Ritva nodded. ″Of course, some people think she′s also crazy.″
″Inspired.″
″Same thing.″
Ritva′s heart lifted a little at her sister′s smile; it was still a bit bleak, but better than nothing. They began to pass plates around; there was a joint of cold roast pork, potato salad, a dish of eggplant cooked with cheese and onions, a loaf of brown bread still faintly warm, butter and pickles and an apple pie, with little pots of ketchup, mustard and hot sauce; their host wasn′t stinting them. The jug of beer was even cold. Des Moines had Stirling-cycle ice machines, so the milk was fresh too; what passed for wine in Iowa was coarse musky stuff not worth the effort of drinking. She cut a slab of the bread and spread the butter; it was soft with the summer night, and almost melted as it sank in.

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