Wine of the Gods 08: Dark Lady (27 page)

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Authors: Pam Uphoff

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BOOK: Wine of the Gods 08: Dark Lady
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Chapter
Forty-nine

Wednesday, April 7, 3494

East Heights, Arrival

 

East Heights came to terms with the loss of the their Baroness rather easily. Rumors of Liz's wedding plans and far distant territory helped.

The paperwork surrounding a royal wedding had arrived with the Grants of Legitimacy. Three of them. His disinheriting official, Raulph got into rather a lot of fights, and if he started getting more careful about who he fought with, he also learned to take an insult with a better show of humor, and by spring was almost capable of swaggering when called a bastard.

Felix had had an easier time of it. Once bullied by Raulph and friends, he was now the only legitimate son and the consequences of hitting him were suddenly worse. He got a lot of attention around town. Automatic respect from the city watch. He basked in it, but didn't seem inclined to follow in his brother's footsteps.

Last year having been the fourth year, crop yields had been smaller than most years, but not dangerously so. There was plenty of wheat to last to the next harvest, and the early fruits were blooming and setting with no late frosts.

Liz, remembering Jeram, talked to merchants and craftsman about pest proof grain storage. Some concrete bunkers were discussed, with charcoal smoke blown in before they were sealed to kill rodents and bugs.

Then they packed up and returned to Arrival.

"
Ordinarily, I'd stay and mind the state while Millicent brought the children to town for The Season."

Liz balked a bit.
"The social season? Balls and expensive dresses?"

"
Exactly." He smiled down at her. "Liz, I have enjoyed getting to know you. And I am going to enjoy showing you off this one year."

Liz braced herself.
"In that case, I'd better see a seamstress about some gowns."

 

Chapter Fifty

Late Spring 1377 PE

Rip Crossing, Kingdom of the West

 

Rustle returned to Rip Crossing to find the Inn empty, no more parties. There was a gate to another world on the canyon wall. The track to it veered from the road up to the eastern plains
, just past the Inn. It clearly got a lot more traffic than the main road.

"So, Quail Quicksilver, are you ready to explore yet another world?"

Quicksilver pointed at the gate.

"Hmm, I wonder what you see? Or if you know what that is? I don't know if all this gating and corridoring is good for a baby."

"Big Girl!"

"Oops, sorry, I don't know if this is good for a big girl." But she leaned that direction and Phantom trotted through.

On the far side of the gate, it was after noon, instead of early morning. And warmer. Spring grass had matured into lush pastures in the deep rich soil.

Quicksilver kicked happily and reached out like she was trying to capture the sunshine.

"Wow, no wonder everyone moved here. It's a lot different than the New Lands. I think." she trailed off. "Isn't it? I don't remember it very well."

A snort behind her.
Havi, standing in a half mown hayfield. "That's because you were in a hurry. I doubt you ever spent more than an hour at a time here."

He sounded so much like Dydit . . . Rustle tucked a smile away.

"Who cut the hay? Or . . . " a faint something nudged her memory.

Havi waved a hand and the tall grass fell over. "Slice. It's not just for woodworking and desperate battles."

"Oh. Right." She swung down and waved a careful hand. Grass flew every which way. "Oops."

Havi laughed. "For once, I'm better at something than you are." He thumped her shoulder, familiarly, then jumped and caught Quicksilver as she dived
off Phantom at him. "Hey Q. You went away and got bigger,
again.
What's your Mom feeding you?"

"Doduts!"

"Ooo! Yeah, she makes good ones. Tell her to teach Ask." Havi pointed behind Rustle. "So I get donuts more often, too."

"Ha!" Ask
trudged through the thick grass to hug Rustle and snatch Quicksilver. "Tell your Uncle Havi that he's in big trouble, and isn't going to get any more donuts until he apologizes. Because I taught your mom how to make donuts."

Rustle laughed with the others, trying to keep her doubts silent. She knew how to tell the Wolf's kitchen "reformulator" to make donuts.
Perhaps I ought to relearn how to make them myself.
Then she shrugged off her worries and let the witch lead her off to "their sections."

They had o
ne house and one barn near the common corner. Whoop waved from a window, then Verse herded two three-year olds out ahead of her.

"
We've got these four big square 'claims.' It hardly matters." Ask chattered away. "Since the whole world has a population of about eighty. Half of them kids. Anyway, as a pyramid, we've got four miles by four miles. You own the southwest claim."

"I do?"

Whoop walked out, her daughter over her shoulder. "You do. You bought a share of the original land grant company. Since you were missing, we grabbed that area for you, and no one dared argue."

Verse nodded. "You can change it, if you want. Personally, I was thinking a
bout moving south. You know, a tropical beach or some such." Her dimples deepened. "And traveling back and forth would be so easy, if
someone
could be persuaded to make a corridor all the way down to the tropics."

Rustle snickered, and remembered carrying a corridor while scouting out the Arbolian army. "Let me show you the easy way to travel." She reached and grabbed a handy bubble. "If I stick one end down here, and the other end to these four rocks . . .
You
can carry this end with you, and in the evening, set the rocks up, ride through and sleep in your own bed. You can even make other people help. Switch horses. Take a day off."

Whoop fumbled with the rocks, got them to stick on the side of the house in the right order, and stepped through—and out of the same side of the house a few feet
away. The three year olds . . . Madder and Navy, if she remembered right . . . started running through the sides of the house, giggling madly.

Whoop shook her head.
"That is weird, even for you, Rustle. So . . . what are you going to be doing while I'm taking these rocks for a nice long trip?"

"I . . ." She looked around at the clatter of hooves.

Xen on his big gelding. "Dad says, can you come look at something at Harry's?" His eyes were bright, alarmed but curious. "Some witches killed some people. Maybe from the world you visited."

 

***

 

One body was hideously misshapen. Rustle edged over to look at the other four bodies. Strangers all, thank the old gods. She fingered the oldest man's jacket, then the shirt under it. "They're Arbolians. Feel the shirt. They call it cotton."

The three gods all straightened in surprise.

Harry shook his head. "Damn. I'd forgotten all about cotton."

Rustle pulled the jacket off, turned it inside out. Altered, crudely. "See this tiny stitching? And then here, big fast cobbles. They cut down the sleeves to what is fashionable here."

She walked over and eyed the strange corpse. "It's ugly in an entirely different way than the god thing I killed over there."

Gisele reached out and touched the body. "Wizard X, Storm Y." She walked back to the old man. "I don't know what this
odd Y would do . . . "

Rustle closed her eyes, sank into a spell of "seeing" things
. . . enlarged . . . larger. The Y chromosome . . . and off center, an addition. Her head started aching. She tried to look in even more detail and it all wavered and fell apart. She jerked her hand away from the body, and looked over at Gisele. "Could it pull magic from other magic users? That would explain the setup in Arbolia, where the Priests keep their Gods, and breed them."

The Auld Wulf growled. "I wonder how close they have to be. We need to catch our two fugitives and ask them some questions."

"Catch them carefully." Rustle said. "We don't want to hand them one of you to use for a source. At an absolute minimum, any magic users in a fight with them need to not touch or be touched."

The God of War tapped his fingers for a long moment, then strode out of the room.

"Damn all gods." Rustle swore.

Dydit leaped after her, hands twitching as he resisted grabbing her. Nil was on his heels, and Never right after.

Rustle stopped and watched the Auld Wulf step through the gate. He didn't return.
Either no trouble, or lots.
She strode up the hill and jumped through. Wolf was alone, standing with his eyes closed. Glowing.
Reaching out and searching. . . And it doesn't hurt!

His eyes snapped open and met hers. Deep brown, nearly black, a reddish rim in the light of the rising sun. "Sorry. I didn't think."

"I think I'm finally recovering."

A faint growl from behind her. "Despite all of us?" Her father walked up and scanned the hills.

"Kurt said it would probably be at least a year before they made it back out here." Rustle looked worriedly around the bare green hills. "Maybe they couldn't find it."

"
He's a Prince. It probably took him a year just to get married." Wolf looked around in turn. "I suppose we could build a tower, make the location a bit more obvious."

Rustle hesitated. "Perhaps we ought to wait a bit—not tell the Arbolians where it is, either."

Wolf nodded. "Although they seem to know. I think we've done all we can about this incursion, until they show up again."

Rustle nodded reluctantly. "I'll leave you to it, then
, and see what the children have gotten into. I just hope Liz and Kurt didn't already run into these guys."

He touched her cheek, gentle and concerned. "They'll come. And I'm sure Harry will call you."

Chapter Fifty-one

Thursday,
April 15, 3494

City of Arrival
, Arrival

 

"Well, Kurt. Your year with us is winding down. You've spoken very little to me of your faith."

Kurt sighed and folded him arms.
"Father Miles, I apologize in advance for insulting you. But my faith is quite secure, and always has been. The church, on the other hand, has consistently gone out of its way to misunderstand what I say, and flaunt its authority over me. Only my respect for God, and my sincere hopes that the church will cease these power plays and truly live as they preach keep me here.

"
Now. If you need something to report to the archbishop, please tell him that if he can keep up a façade of civility, I expect Uncle Charlie will sell him the Cathedral properties for ten million crit and he can dispense with the charade, which
ought
to be a blot on his soul and a shame to the church's upper hierarchy."

"
Prince Kurt. How long do you wish to remain in penance?"

"
Father Miles, how long do you wish the church to remain defiled by sham marriages and false imprisonment for monetary gain?"

The p
riest stood and walked out, back stiff.

The archb
ishop walked in an hour later. An escort of priests stood in the hall behind him.

Kurt stood and bowed.

The archbishop closed the door. "So. You have met your ancestor."

"
Actually he informs me that I'm the descendant of his wife's foster sister, but he has given me permission to call him Uncle Charlie."

"
That old man says a great number of wild and unaccountable things." The archbishop said.

"
Perhaps we should all meet in the Cathedral, and we could all place our hands on the holy text, and we could all talk about this travesty you inherited from your predecessors."

"
The man is incoherent."

"
The man was kept perpetually sleep deprived, deliberately. I think you'll find him much recovered since he convinced his wife to stop disturbing him. Why don't we walk out there right now."

The
archbishop squared his shoulders. "Certainly.
I
have never been able to carry on a coherent conversation with the man." He walked out the door and Kurt followed him.

They were both silent all the way across the maze of gardens to the old man's domicile. Sister Barbara answered their knock on the door, still dressed and starched for the day.

"Is Uncle Charlie awake?"

"
Of course I'm awake. I'm eating dinner." Charlie's voice sounded from two rooms away.

Sister Barbara stepped back and waved them in.

The old man smirked at the reception. "So, has the boy told you I'm sick and tired of this crap? Just write up the damned contract. Ten million dollars, err credits or crit or whatever you call money these days. Either way, I'm walking out of here, and to Hell with the lot of you. I've caught up on my sleep and feel great, and you can't stop me any more."

"
Now, Brother Charles . . . "

"
Don't you dare 'Brother' me! You and your God have got enough to chat about after you die as it is. Ten million dollars or I'll take your Cathedral and sell it to the highest bidder." He waved his left hand. "Tell the truth."

"
You are an abomination and your presence here fouls the Cathedral. Your unholy life has forced awareness of unsavory, sinful behavior on generations of priests." The archbishop pressed his fingers to his mouth in shock.

"
Shocked to find truth on your tongue? Think about how it would sound in court. Come back with the contract, a lawyer, a legal representative of the Crown, and a clerk from the Exchange to open a bank account for me and transfer ten million dollars to it."

The
archbishop turned and walked out without another word. His followers looked around in puzzlement, shifted their feet uncertainly and followed. Sister Barbara was nowhere to be seen.

Halfway back to the main building, the
archbishop turned suddenly and confronted Kurt. "And you! I thought you loyal enough to accept your punishment and keep your mouth shut, you Eunuch. I can prevent this marriage your father is so pleased with."

"
What is your religious justification for such an action?" Kurt asked him. How far and how long would a spell of truthfulness last?

"
I don't need a religious justification, I can do it to put you in your proper place. However impotence will be sufficient."

"
Hmm, well. It might be a bit embarrassing to have to consummate my marriage in public, but I will if I need to." Kurt studied him. "However, since we've dropped all pretense of you being God's representative in this matter, consider this. You purchase the land the Cathedral is built on for ten million crit. I marry Liz. I persuade my illustrious uncle to move to West Hills Territory with me. Next year this time, it'll be like none of this ever happened."

"
Yes, it would be quite handy for you to have everything swept under the rug."

"
Yep. Everything will be quiet and peaceful, and you will have had a year of peace to contemplate your sins and return to the Grace of God." Kurt eyed the archbishop’s red face with some concern.

"
I am in the grace . . . I." The archbishop paled abruptly.

"
Perhaps you should go pray for guidance. This appalling situation should never have happened. Certainly a chance to end it right now should not be passed up." Kurt walked past him to his room.

 

The contract was signed the next morning. The remainder of Kurt's penance was waived and he escorted Uncle Charlie and Aunt Barbara off the premises. "Let's go surprise my father, eh? Then I have a bride to track down."

"
That's the spirit, Nephew!"

Sister Barbara had an expression as starched as her dress. Kurt handed her into the waiting carriage and respectfully allowed the old man in next.

He maintained an absolutely straight face as he escorted them in the side entrance used only by family and Very Important People who had immediate access to the King.

The guards on the door looked a bit uncertain, a
nd Kurt started grinning as he realized his guests weren't expected. Marcus Gaines hustled up, frowning. "Prince Kurt, we didn't realize you were bringing guests."

"
Sorry. I spotted the carriage and assumed you'd know everything. Could you please arrange a suite of rooms for Charlie Alpha and his wife?"

Kurt snickered as the man's perfectly open and welcoming face sli
pped a bit. "Yes, Marcus.
That
Charlie Alpha. He has tired of his quarters in the Cathedral complex."

Kurt glanced at his guests.
"Have you two had breakfast? Yes? Would you like a tour?"

The King caught up with them in the West wing. He gripped Kurt's shoulder in greeting, but his eyes were fastened on the old man.
"It really is you."

Charlie grinned.
"Better than ever. I'm afraid age does odd things to one on occasion."

"
I am sorry I didn't visit more often. I found your condition very saddening."

"
Heh. Not half as sad as I found it. Water under the bridge. This smart lad of yours spotted the problem and talked everyone into being reasonable about it. I believe I'll follow him out to these West Hills of his, get away from the city and, heh, not act my age for awhile." He turned to Kurt. "In fact, I believe you were saying something about hunting down a bride. Why don't you take care of that. Barbara and I do need to speak frankly with each other about the future."

The King pursed his lips.
"Since you are back early, we can announce the wedding tonight. Then the July fifteenth date won't seem quite so scandalously rushed. The Jamesons are back in town, and will be attending the ball here tonight. But go ahead and see her now, of course."

 

***

 

Liz's first thought was that he was even more handsome than she remembered. Her second was that he obviously hadn't been kept in a dungeon. Her third that they were probably scandalizing the household kissing like this and she didn't give a damn.

"
I don't suppose we could move up a wedding date to, say, an hour from now, could we?" He sounded as breathless as she felt, as he released her and eased back almost enough to be proper.

"
I don't think so." She registered an argument in the background. "Oh. Father has hired a governess to keep my . . . younger sisters in check. She thinks she should be ordering me around as well."

"
Well, your father seems to be telling her to leave you alone." His eyes twinkled. "But I will of course be perfectly proper at the ball tonight, as I monopolize you and Father makes an announcement."

"
Tonight?" She heard her voice squeak.

"
Tonight, since the Church has decided that I'm sufficiently penitent."

"
Humph!" Her father snorted. "In that case I may have to reconsider."

"
It could also be that the Church was afraid to see what else I might do in His service."

"
Oh?" Liz eyed him. "What did you do?"

"
Well, I don't know how public it is going to be, so perhaps I should just say that an elderly relative of mine has ended his residence in the Cathedral's retirement complex and moved to the Palace. I'll introduce you as soon as convenient. I rather like the idea of bringing Uncle Charlie with us to West Hills."

The Baron eyed
the prince. "I hope I get the joke, it appears to be an excellent one."

"
Oh yes. I'm actually ashamed of myself for a couple of pieces of it." His eyes were twinkling madly. But they softened as they returned to Liz. "So, I take it you haven't changed your mind over the last, umm, almost year?"

"
No, not a bit."

 

***

 

 

Kurt was relieved that the Lady's last gift hadn't been disturbed over the last ten months. Four perfectly ordinary little pebbles. He shifted them around until they were in the right order, then they formed the corners of a picture of a stone paved street, the wall of a warehouse . . .

He propped the top two up on his dresser, placed the bottom two on the floor, and stepped through to Jeramtown. Three people walking by barely spared a glance at the man stepping out of the wall of the stable.

Then one looked back in surprise. "Eh! It's
the prince!"

Heads popped out of windows
, and he was quickly surrounded by grinning people, townsmen and soldiers alike.

Franklin wined and dined him—at Master Corde's Inn of course—and brought him up to date. "It's boring without you. We've got a bratty ten year old as Baron, well, he's not bad, but everyone here thinks he's 'just precious' and treating him like their favorite grandkid. Hopefully it won't go to his head.
Baron Randal and Baroness Amelia have come to visit twice already. So, how about you?"

"I got sent for a year and a day of church service to get these heretical ideas out of my head. They kicked me out
early when I subverted an elderly relative of mine. I've got a territory to the west of here. I'm officially engaged to marry Liz in two months, and now you have no excuse to not be my Best Man."

"Using this magical transportation system? I'll be lucky to dodge a year and a day myself." Franklin grinned. "Do y
ou know what that corridor will do to the prices the locals can get for produce if, for some odd reason, you were to rent a warehouse in the Arrival merchant's district and stick your end inside it, where no one could see people and wagons full of grain coming and going in an uncanny fashion?"

Kurt sat back and bit his lip. "Hide it? Well, maybe long enough to get everyone out here who's coming with me,
so the church can't slow me down too much. They're bound to need at least five years to study the phenomenon."

Franklin nodded. "Think about the warehouse. I'll circulate rumors, so the farmers know about the possibilities." His grinned widened. "And of course there's that 'gate' to another world, which is most likely somewhere in your new territory. All we have to do is
keep quiet for the next two months. Then the Church can study it all they want."

 

***

 

A quiet Royal wedding. What a joke. Liz had never been so busy in her entire life.

Two and a half months of frantic seamstresses, florists, bakers . . . endless balls and introductions to sharp-eyed power brokers of government, church, and high society. And shoes. New shoes for every single ball gown, and a new gown for every single ball.

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