“You like doing that?” asked Rahl.
“Much more than being a consort and doing all the cooking and chores, not that I don’t have to fit some chores and cooking in. Some of the older men aren’t sure I should be running the chandlery, but they don’t say much.” She laughed. “You can tell, though, the way they get all stiff and ask where my father is. I just tell them it’s their good fortune to deal with me since Father’s far less compromising.”
Rahl had the definite feeling that it might be easier to dicker with her father. He also found her interesting, but her directness was more than a little unnerving. When she looked at him, her eyes seemed to focus intently on him, as if she were cataloging all his abilities and thoughts and racking them somewhere in her brain.
Abruptly, Fahla turned and lifted two small pouches. “Nuelya…it took a while to dig it out, but here’s that cobalt powder you wanted, and the scarletine, too.” She slipped away and headed toward the kitchen.
Before Rahl could follow, he heard a timid knock on the door, and he sensed that the person knocking had to be Jienela.
Sevien looked to Rahl. “Why don’t you answer it?”
“It would be nice,” murmured Delthea, just loud enough for Rahl to hear.
He slipped around the three to the door and opened it.
Jienela smiled up at him. “Sevien said you’d be here. I hoped so.”
He half bowed and gestured her to enter.
“This is nice,” said Jienela as she stepped into the common room. “I’ve never been inside. Jaired and Jeason always come for the cider jugs.”
“They may not have been in here, either. Sevien only invites his friends.” Rahl guided her toward the others. He watched Faseyn’s watery blue eyes fix on Jienela from the moment she turned and moved toward the group.
“Jienela,” Rahl said, “this is Fahla and her brother Faseyn. Their father took over the chandlery, and they help run it.”
Jienela nodded shyly.
“Jienela’s family has the big orchard to the north and east of here.”
“It’s the only one,” protested Jienela, “and it’s not that big.”
“The pearapples are the best, though,” said Sevien with a laugh, “and the cider.”
“You grew up here, didn’t you?” Fahla asked Jienela.
“Father’s family’s been here since the first. He says that the soil was so bad then that the first trees didn’t fruit for years.”
“Sand on top and hard clay below,” added Sevien. “That’s why there have always been potters around Land’s End.”
“Are you going to be one, too?” asked Fahla.
Rahl frowned inside at the question. Why would she ask that? If Sevien hadn’t had the inclination and talent, he would have been apprenticed out years before. Besides, most children followed either the craft or lands of their parents or their consorts’ parents-if they had the talent. That was the custom, certainly.
“Haven’t your parents always been factors?” asked Sevien.
“Mother was the mate on a trader. Father took up factoring after her ship was burned by pirates.”
For Sevien’s sake, Rahl almost wanted to shrink into the mortared gaps in the gray stone walls. How were they supposed to know that?
“Are you all ready for some pie?” Nuelya’s voice rose over the conversation.
“We’ve been drooling all along,” Rahl called back cheerfully.
“Then come over and get a piece.”
Nuelya had slices cut and set on small crockery plates, with the reddish juice oozing out from the golden brown crust. “Take a plate and one of the small beakers, and settle at the long table over there. We have a bit of watered ale for you young people. Not enough to upset your folks but enough to go with the redberry pie.”
Rahl maneuvered things so that he was seated beside Jienela and across from Fahla. Mostly he listened as the others chattered.
“…Quelerya’s always looking for something she can tell…like amouser…”
“Not so bad as Widow Wylla. She peeks through her shutters so that no one knows she’s looking…”
As he listened, Rahl took his time eating the redberry and spaced out his sips of the ale.
After he took the plates back to the pails in the kitchen and washed both his plate and Jienela’s, he eased back to where she stood at one side of the other four.
“Good cheese is hard to find, the kind that will keep,” Fahla was saying. “So are good knife blades, especially here on Recluce, Father’s always saying…”
Rahl touched Jienela’s forearm. “This way…toward the lamp.”
“But…”
“I just want to see if something is as I thought.”
After a moment, Jienela took several steps forward.
Rahl glanced from her eyes to the lamp and back again. He smiled. “I thought so.”
She offered a puzzled frown.
“The yellow-gold flecks in your eyes are the same color as the yellow in the lamp flame. Maybe that’s why your eyes always look so alive.” He reached out and squeezed her hand, gently, and only for a moment.
V
By late morning on threeday, Rahl had finished copying another two of the stories within Tales of the Founders and was beginning on the next. He also had bruises on his right shoulder and his left thigh from the early-morning sparring session with his father.
The workroom door opened, and Kian stepped inside, closing the door behind him. He carried an ancient leather folder. “What do you think of the book now?”
“It’s interesting.” So far the stories were more like terrible or boring, but Rahl didn’t want to say what he really thought. Creslin had been an idiot to flee Westwind to avoid a pleasant life in Sarronnyn. Instead, he’d had to try to build a land on what had been a huge desert isle. He’d almost died a half score of times, and he’d been blind for much of his life and died younger than he should have. While Rahl was glad Creslin had succeeded, for his own selfish reasons, he didn’t have to approve of what Creslin had done. He knew his father would hardly appreciate his comments. “Where have you been? I didn’t see you leave, but you were gone when I got back from checking the ink.”
“I was over at Alamat’s. He wanted me to write a letter to his son in Valmurl.”
“Valmurl? That’s in Austra. How…” Rahl didn’t ask why Kian had gone to the weaver rather than having Alamat come to the scrivener. These days, scriveners couldn’t be too choosy.
“By ship. It will cost two silvers, and Lieran will have to pick it up at the port-master’s at the harbor there.”
How did a weaver’s son end up in Valmurl? Rahl wondered. “Two silvers for just a letter?”
“How else can he keep in touch?” asked Kian. “Lieran insulted Magister Rustyn. Rustyn told him to behave. Lieran told Rustyn that he was a useless flea on the back of the mangy dog that was the Council. They put him on the next ship out. He was lucky it was bound to Austra, and not Candar or Hamor.”
“Oh.” Lieran didn’t sound terribly dangerous. Stupid, but hardly dangerous to the Council. “When did this happen?”
“Nine years ago. Alamat finally got the first letter from Lieran something like three years ago. It took a while for the boy to get settled, but he’s a weaver in Valmurl now.” Kian shook his head. “When Lieran talked to Rustyn, he’d had too much hard cider and not enough sense to go home and sleep it off. Quelerya was on her way from Feyn. They were to be consorted, but Lieran was gone before she arrived.”
“And she just stayed?”
“Why not? Alamat’s not as young as he used to be, and Lieran was their only boy. Quelerya’s a good weaver. Your mother says she never wanted children anyway. If she were younger, she’d be a good catch for you.”
Ax-faced Quelerya? Whose tongue was as sharp as her nose and eyes? Rahl repressed a shudder.
“I’d like you to take the letter down to the portmaster right now. Alamat’s already paid for it, and Hyelsen is expecting it from either you or me. There’s a Suthyan trader coming in, according to the ensign she’s flying, and they usually run straight from here to Brysta, then Valmurl.”