It was probable, Bahzell thought, that the majority of Norfressans still felt that way about it, but not the Sothoii. Not anymore.
It hadn’t happened overnight, although it probably seemed that way to many. It had actually begun with Krahana’s attack on the Warm Springs coursers, he knew, although he wasn’t surprised no one really seemed to have noticed at the time. Shigu’s strike at the Quaysar Temple of Lillinara and the war maids had been far less disturbing to the Sothoii in general than the murder of so many coursers, yet not even the coursers’ deaths had been enough to pull most of the Sothoii away from their concentration on their hatred for their more traditional enemies at the foot of the Wind Plain. Not even the Hurgrum Chapter’s role in freeing the coursers’ souls had been enough to change that. Not quite.
But like the first stones in an avalanche, those events had started something far greater than anyone would have guessed at the time. Not all of the Sothoii had gone peacefully back to sleep afterward. Some had started paying attention, and when Tellian, Kilthan, and Bahnak had begun their great canal scheme, others had paid heed, as well. Not all of them happily, perhaps, but it had gotten them looking in the right direction.
And then had come the Battle of the Hangnysti and the proof-the proof no one could ignore-that the threat of the Dark remained only too real…and that the Dark was determined that those trying to bring peace between hradani and Sothoii would fail.
They were a stubborn people, the Sothoii. It wasn’t in them to change their minds quickly or easily. Indeed, they were uncomfortably like Bahzell’s own people in that regard. But whatever else they might be, they weren’t stupid. No one doubted that the Dark had been involved in the attempt on Markhos, as well, especially since the mage investigators probing that plot had already confirmed that Cassan had been involved with at least one dark wizard. And if the Dark who’d tried to murder their King also wanted to prevent them from somehow achieving a just peace and friendship with the hated hradani, why, the Sothoii were more than stubborn enough to do just that and laugh in the Dark’s teeth.
A bitter price, Trianal’s army had paid, but what it had bought-what it was buying-was worth the cost, and he knew it. Not in his heart, where the aching emptiness of so many missing friends was still unhealed, but in the considered judgment of a champion of Tomanak who knew victory when he saw it.
“Aye,” he told Wencit now. “Aye, it’s the folk who died as made this come together. But not a one of them had the doing of it for fame or bards’ tales any more than me…or Vaijon.”
“Of course not,” Wencit said gently, reaching up to put a hand on Bahzell’s shoulder, and smiled crookedly. “Don’t you think I, of all people, understand that? ”
The wizard shook his head, and Bahzell snorted softly as the question put his own discomfort with the songs already circulating about his “mighty deeds” at the Hangnysti-not a one of them, curiously, by Brandark Brandarkson-into perspective. He’d been at this championing trade for less than ten years, after all; Wencit had been in the legend-making business for over twelve centuries.
“On the other hand,” Wencit continued, almost as if he’d just read Bahzell’s mind, “you do seem to do things in more…concentrated doses than I do. I really wouldn’t object if you slowed down just a bit for, oh, a decade or two.”
“I wouldn’t really object to that, either, Bahzell,” Leeana chimed in, and Bahzell chuckled.
“No more would I,” he assured them.
“That’s what you say,” Wencit said darkly, “but I’ve noticed these things tend to seek you out.”
“Well, at least this time you’d no need to be getting involved,” Bahzell pointed out affably, and Wencit smiled.
“No,” he agreed, glancing at Leeana. “No, this time I didn’t have to get involved at all. Very peaceful, it was.”
“For some,” Leeana said tartly, and the wizard gave her a small, ironic bow.
“Have the war maids decided how they’re going to select their delegate to the Great Council?” he inquired by way of a change of subject.
“Not really.” Leeana shook her head, accepting the change. “Some of us are still too deeply in shock that the Kingdom’s lords warden haven’t all dropped dead from apoplexy at the mere notion for us to think very constructively about it ourselves yet. I know we’re going to have to come up with a solution, but it would have helped if the King had decided to give us some guidelines.”
“Actually, I think it was much wiser of him to leave it up to you,” Wencit disagreed. “Whoever you end up nominating is going to have to have Crown approval, but you war maids aren’t really accustomed to the top-down way the Kingdom as a whole does things. Better for you to come up with your own way of choosing your nominees. Besides,” the old wizard grinned suddenly, “I’ve been around long enough I’m accustomed to taking the long view, and I’m thoroughly in favor of opening the door-just a crack, you understand-to the notion of the kind of Parliament the Axemen have.”
“Mother, Wencit!” Leeana laughed out loud. “You would have the lords warden dropping in droves if you suggested something like that! ”
“Which is why I have absolutely no intention of doing anything of the sort, even-or perhaps especially-to Markhos or Sir Jerhas.” The wizard snorted. “Not that I’d have to mention it to your father or your father-in-law, my dear. Trust me, they’re already thinking about it.”
“Aye, like as two peas in a pod, they are,” Bahzell agreed, glancing back down at the courtyard where several days ago the first hradani prince ever to be received peacefully on Sothoii soil had exchanged bows with the first Sothoii king who’d ever greeted a hradani without a sword in his hand. “And not done scheming yet, either of them, I’ve no doubt at all, at all.”
“I’d be disappointed if they were,” Wencit told him cheerfully. Then he gave himself an obvious mental shake.
“I’d be disappointed,” he said more briskly, “but I really didn’t come up here to discuss politics with the two of you.”
“No?” Bahzell said a bit warily.
“Oh, don’t worry, Bahzell! I have no fell designs on you, your wife, or your time together.” Wencit smiled at them. “I only wanted to ask if you’ve given any thought to a proper wedding gift for Sharlassa and Trianal?”
“Why?” Leeana asked.
“Because if you haven’t, I have a suggestion.”
“That sounds ominous.”
“Don’t be silly.” The wizard looked at her severely. “It’s just that you’re now sept to Clan Huraka by marriage, courtesy of your husband’s adoption by Duke Jashan. That being the case, I thought you might ask your sister-in-law Zarantha to give them exactly the gift they need.”
“Zarantha?” Bahzell’s ears twitched in surprise, and his eyes narrowed. “And what gift would that be?”
“Training for Sharlassa,” Wencit said in a suddenly much gentler tone. “She’s a mage, you know.”
“ Sharlassa? ” Leeana stared at him, and he shrugged.
“I suspect she has only one talent, or possibly two, and they’ve been late manifesting, Leeana. But trust me-I know more about recognizing the mage talent than most. I don’t think her talents are strong enough for her to have a very severe mage crisis, but I do think it would be a very good idea for Trianal and her to honeymoon at Zarantha’s academy.”
“Thank you,” Leeana said after a moment. She gave her head a shake. “Thank you very much!”
“You’re very welcome.” Wencit smiled. “I’ve had quite a strong interest in the magi for quite some time, you know. Part of that long view of mine, I suppose. And now, I have to run. I promised His Majesty I’d put in an appearance at this afternoon’s conference. More sitting around ominously in the background, I imagine. It’s really quite amusing, you know. I don’t actually have to say anything. I’ve discovered over the centuries that most of your normal, bickering aristocrats really know what they ought to be doing; they just have no interest in actually doing it. All I have to do is sit there and look at them sternly and they suddenly start falling all over themselves to do what they ought to have done all along.”