"Earth."
"Oh, great."
"It shouldn't be too much of a difference for you, you've Sung earth before."
"Not often. There isn't anything you can do with earth. Except maybe grow things."
"I warned you about that Mother-goddess shit," Stasya snickered.
"Shut up, Stas! Captain, there's got to be something I can do."
"Bit late in the cycle for gardening."
"Shut up, Stas!"
Liene bit down on a smile. "Well, to begin with, I suggest that you stay off the roof. And then, you should ask Terezka some questions. Her Bernardas is just two; she should still remember what she went through. Don't ask anything of Edite, she hasn't forgiven Dasa for choosing to live with her father."
"But that happened five years ago."
"I know."
Annice shook her head. At least she wouldn't have to worry about that.
"Sarlote just left to spend Fourth Quarter with her family—Hard to believe that Ondro's almost ten, isn't it?—but she'll be back before you're due and you can talk to her then. Speak with Taska and Ales if you want, but they're grandmothers now and I'm pretty sure their memories of the experience have been gentled by time."
Stasya made a face. "Oh, I can't see why. Puking and pains are memories I'd want to hang on to."
Smiling sweetly, Annice kicked her in the shin. "Good," she said. "Remember that."
"They know, don't they?"
"What are you talking about?" Stasya asked, mopping up gravy with a thick slice of bread. "Who knows what?"
"The fledglings, at the end of the other table. They're looking at me."
Stasya swiveled around on the bench and the three youngsters immediately became interested only in their dinners. Sighing theatrically, she turned back and shook her head at Annice. "Of course they're watching you. They got here while you were Walking and now you're back they're checking to see if you match the songs. Every new kid for the last ten years has done the same thing. I thought you were used to it by now."
"You're sure that's all it is?"
"Yes, I'm sure." She shot another glance over her shoulder. "And with any luck that blonde'll grow into her nose."
"Stas…"
"She looks like she should be wearing a hood and jesses."
"Stasya!"
"What?"
"You are being really cruel."
Stasya grinned. "And you are really being an idiot."
Annice pushed a boiled bit of something around on her plate. "I know. I'm sorry." She put down her knife, picked it up again, and stabbed at a piece of meat. "It's just that when I walked into the dining room, I felt…"
"Sick?"
"Exposed. Like I had a purple 'p' painted on my forehead or something."
"No one knows but me and the captain, Nees, but you've got to get used to the fact that they're all going to find out."
"All of them? Why all of them?"
She looked so startled that Stasya reached for her hand. "Nees, sweetie, you're going to get—how can I put this delicately?—bigger. Bards are trained to observe. They'll notice."
"I hadn't thought of that."
You haven't thought of much, Stasya realized, but she kept it to herself. "I can't believe I haven't asked you this yet, but who's the father?"
"This isn't to go into any songs."
"I swear. I'll have it witnessed if you like." She pitched the word "witness" to carry.
Of the nine other bards in the dining room, only Terezka, busy picking bits of carrot out of her son's hair, didn't turn.
Teeth clenched, Annice waved them back to their meals. "Don't be such a jerk," she muttered.
"You're the one who cast aspersions on my discretion." Stasya bracketed her plate with her elbows, cupped her chin in her hands, and leaned forward. "So tell."
"Pjerin a'Stasiek."
"Never heard of him."
"He's the Due of Ohrid." Stasya continued to look blank so she added, "Remember 'Darkling Lover'?"
"That Due of Ohrid? You're kidding."
Annice flushed. "Why would I kid about something like that?"
Stasya shrugged. "I don't know. Why would you sleep with the Due of Ohrid?"
"Well, for one thing, the song's right—he's absolutely gorgeous. And for another…" Annice frowned as she remembered violet eyes and a thick fall of ebony hair and a night that very nearly blew the roof off the keep. "Actually," she said thoughtfully, "there isn't another. Pjerin a'Stasiek is the kind of man you don't mind going to bed with…"
"You don't mind going to bed with," Stasya corrected acerbically.
"… but you wouldn't look forward to facing over breakfast the next morning."
CHAPTER THREE
Pjerin a'Stasiek, sixth Due of Ohrid, slid his grip up the smooth wood of the haft, drew in a deep lungful of cold air, and slammed the maul down. The split round of ash exploded away from the chopping block, one of the pieces slamming into an outbuilding just as a small, dark-haired boy ran around the corner. The child cried out and fell.
"Gerek!" Throwing the maul aside, Pjerin dove toward his four-year-old son.
Scowling at the wedge of wood, Gerek scrambled to his feet. "I'm okay, Papa," he insisted, kicking indignantly at a rock sticking up through the snow. "I just jumped back from the noise and that tripped me."
Pjerin checked anyway, his hands engulfing the skinny, wool-covered shoulders as he turned the protesting boy around. There didn't appear to be any damage, so he brushed off a snow-covered bottom and stared seriously down into eyes the same dark violet as his own. "Ger, you know better than to come around the shed like that. What have I told you to do when someone's at the woodpile?"
"Go 'round by the other side so they can see you and stop chopping." Gerek managed to repeat the entire instruction on one long-suffering sigh. "But Bohdan sent me to get you. 'Cause that man is with Aunty Olina again."
"You're certain this will work?"
"Not entirely, no." Albek took a sip of mulled wine and peered at Olina over the edge of the thick pottery mug. "But anything worth achieving carries with it a certain amount of risk. Don't you agree?"
Olina smiled tightly at him and turned to kick at a smoldering log with one booted foot. "That depends on how much risk you consider a certain amount to be. As much as I despise the current situation, I have no intention of losing my head."
"Far too beautiful a head to lose," Albek agreed with polished sincerity.
"Don't change the subject." Nails tapped out her impatience on the mantelpiece. "How great is the risk?"
He set the mug down on the round table drawn up beside his chair. "We now know, thanks to record keeping that borders on the compulsive, that what we plan has either never been attempted or the attempt has never been discovered. It doesn't really matter which as both will serve us equally well. We also know that in the eight generations since Prince Shkoder sailed from the north and founded the country that so originally bears his name, high court procedures have not changed. Our plan will use the court's own formula against it."
"It still seems too simple."
"All the best plans are."
"Don't be facetious, Albek," she warned. "To use a bardic skill…"
"A skill that bards make use of," the Cemandian corrected, spreading his hands and smiling reassuringly up at her. "Not a talent, not an innate ability, just a skill. A skill that in Shkoder is confined to bards and to healers but in my country is used by anyone with enough interest to learn." While that wasn't the entire truth, it was close enough to be believed.
Olina frowned, brows sketching an ebony vee against pale skin. "And the bards can't detect it?"
"Of course they can. If it occurs to them to look for it." Albek leaned back, stretching his feet toward the fire, and reaching again for his mug. "But it won't occur to them. Especially when everything they discover will match exactly with the information they'll already have from young Leksik."