Raikuh grinned. “And you took to it as naturally and easily as an otter kit swims. In short months, you were one of the best swordsmen in my troop.”
“Only because I realized there was no way I could wriggle out of the situation … easily, and being a born coward, I wanted to stay alive. And the only way a warrior can be reasonably certain he’ll survive his next battle is to make himself a master of his weapons. But I am not, can never be, as you and Thoheeks Bili and those reared to the Sword. I don’t like fighting and killing, Pawl. I’ll never like it.
“At least, when I was simply a Freefighter, I had the solace that when the rebellion was crushed, I’d be able to return to being what I had always been. But now, since they did these unwarranted things to me, I’ll be expected to swing Steel the rest of my life and to rear any sons I happen to sire to pursue like lives.
“I say again, Pawl, I am no one’s lord. Rather am I a slave in detested bondage to an undeserved reputation, an unwanted title, a silver bauble and a couple of feet of sharp steel.”
A feeling of fatherliness swept over the fiftyish captain. He reached across the table to pat Geros’ clenched fist lightly. “Son, you’ll not feel so in a year. Others have been similarly upset by the sudden grant of nobility … I’ve seen such. As for being no one’s lord, that same year will put the lie to that statement, I’ll warrant.”
“Now what is that cryptic comment supposed to mean?” snapped Geros.
Tracing designs in a puddle of spilled wine and regarding the new noble from beneath bushy brows, Raikuh spoke slowly. “Why just this, Geros. Duke Bili is not so mean as to give a faithful man rank without maintenance. Your present title is but a military one, and as certain sure as steel cuts to bone, you’ll be at least a vahrohneeskos of Morguhn—with a fine town and croplands and kine—by this time next year, mark my words. Nor be that all, I trow—”
Raising cup to lips, he took a long draught of the fine, strong wine, then continued. “That fiesty little bastard Thoheeks Hwahltuh of Vawn be proud as a solid-gold hilt, and he’ll not forsake an opportunity like this. After all, he can truthfully attest that your deeds were done in his service, too, since we all are fighting on what are his lands. And don’t you forget the House of Lehzlee, either. There be no richer or prouder house in the south of Karaleenos than Lehzlee, and you saved the life—at great personal risk—of the man who will one day be archduke and chief of that house. They’re not likely to let such go unrewarded.”
Geros’ mind reeled. He had not even considered these possibilities. “But … but, Pawl, what will I do? I know nothing of farming.”
Raikuh chuckled. “Damned few nobles do, son Geros. You’ll do what they all do, of course. You’ll find and hire a competent provost and a few overseers and a score or so over-age Freefighters to see the peace be kept. Then you’ll spend your days riding and hunting and begetting. You’ll sit in judgment in your town on market days, meet in council with your overlord and peers once each moon and ride with them once each year to the archduchy council, where you will deliver up your taxes for the previous year to the High Lord’s deputy.
“And someday, Geros, when you’re a fat forty-odd, and your mind is filled with worry about the weather and the crops and outfitting your sons for the army and dowering your daughters well, then … mayhap, then, you’ll think on this eve. Think how foolishly you then thought, wished to once more be back with the Morguhn troop, swinging steel and taking blows as light-heartedly as you did twenty years before.”
Ere Geros could frame an answer, his big servant, Sahndos, entered, ushering in one of Raikuh’s lieutenants, Krahndahl. The junior officer slapped gauntlet to breastplate in salute and announced, “My lord Geros, captain, Duke Bili summons all his nobles and officers to his pavilion, immediately, if you please.”
II
“And so, gentlemen,” the grave-faced young thoheeks soberly concluded, “we may, even now, be proceeding on borrowed time. Winter has ever been the favorite raiding season of the mountain folk, so the first blow could fall at any moment anywhere along more than five hundred miles of borderlands. That is why ending this siege quickly is so imperative.”
“But Sun and Wind, Bili,” burst out old Komees Hari Daiviz of Morguhn, “to grant amnesty to my no-good brother and the rest of those treacherous, murdering swine? Whose harebrained idea was that?”
“The High Lord’s!” snapped the Morguhn. “Present your objections to him, if you wish, Hari. But, I warn you, mine own did scant good, nor did those of the Duhnkin or the ahrkeethoheeks”
Ever the apologist in all matters concerning the Confederation he had so long served, retired Strahteegos Komees Djeen Morguhn, the thoheeks’ sixtyish cousin-german, nodded sagely, stated stiffly, “My lord thoheeks, the High Lord dare not concern himself with but this single, relatively unimportant facet of the overall problem. You see, the entire Confederation be his responsibility. I like pardoning known backstabbers no better than Hari, but I also can appreciate Lord Milo’s position.”
Vahrohnos Spiros Morguhn, Bill’s second cousin, gingerly shifted on the padded litter which had conveyed him here, finally reaching down with both hands to ease his splinted and bandaged left leg into a more comfortable position. “But, dammit, Bili, how can we be expected to go traipsing off on a campaign into the mountains, or wherever, leaving our lands filled with unrepentant rebels and a batch of bloodthirsty priests? You’ve seen, the High Lord has seen, we all have seen what they did to Vawn. By my steel, they’ll not do the like to Morguhn!”
“They’ll not get a chance to.” Bili shook his head. “It’s been decided that most of the rebel fighting men will be dragooned into the campaign force; dribbled out, a few to this unit, a few to that. The amnesty is to exclude the priests and monks; those bastards will spend the length of the campaign enjoying the comforts provided by our Morguhnpolis prison.
“Noncombatants in Vawnpolis will remain there, as will a garrison of our troops. The city will be base supply for operations immediately west of Vawn.”
Pawl Raikuh sighed. “Fortunes of war, I suppose. All us Freefighters had been hopefully anticipating an intaking, a sack, a bit of booty, some old-fashioned rapine. Well, there’ll be other wars … for some.”
“How will we get word to the rebels that we now wish to treat?” This from Djaik Morguhn, Bili’s younger brother—war-trained, like Bili and all his other brothers, in the Middle Kingdoms; acknowledged, despite his bare fifteen years, as one of the three best swordsmen in all the besieging army.
Vahrohneeskos Ahndros Theftehros of Morguhn was but distantly related to Bili, actually being more closely related to certain of the rebels, but, like Komees Djeen, he was a former Confederation Army officer … also, he was in love with one of Bili’s widowed mothers. Nonetheless, he had been occasionally sullen since, disregarding his advices and wishes, Bili and the High Lord had seen fit to honor and enoble his former servant, Geros.
Smoothing back a lock of his raven’s-wing hair with a languid gesture, he put in, “Yes, Bili, there is that factor, too. We have been anything but cordial in our responses to the two or three peace overtures the rebels have made. If, during the High Lord’s absence, you and the High Lady had seen fit to heed the expert advice which Komees Djeen and I proffered you …”