Royal assassin uk, p.27

  Royal Assassin (UK), p.27

Royal Assassin (UK)
Select Voice:
Brian (uk)
Emma (uk)  
Amy (uk)
Eric (us)
Ivy (us)
Joey (us)
Salli (us)  
Justin (us)
Jennifer (us)  
Kimberly (us)  
Kendra (us)
Russell (au)
Nicole (au)



Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  


  Ver­ity smiled to him­self. ‘And basins of wa­ter, too, with pond lilies in them, and fish, and even tiny frogs. The birds came there of­ten in sum­mer, to drink and to splash. Chiv­alry and I used to play up there. She had little charms hung on strings, made of glass and bright metal. And when the wind stirred them, they would chime to­gether, or flash like jew­els in the sun.’ I could feel my­self warm­ing with his memory of that place and time. ‘My mother kept a little hunt­ing cat, and it would lounge on the warm stone when the sun struck it. His­spit; that was her name. Spot­ted coat and tufted ears. And we would tease her with string and tufts of feath­ers, and she would stalk us among the pots of flowers. While we were sup­posed to be study­ing tab­lets on herbs. I never prop­erly learned them. There was too much else to do there. Ex­cept for thyme. I knew every kind of thyme she had. My mother grew a lot of thyme. And cat­mint.’ He was smil­ing.

  ‘Kettricken would love such a place,’ I told him. ‘She gardened much in the moun­tains.’

  ‘Did she?’ He looked sur­prised. ‘I would have thought her oc­cu­pied with more … phys­ical pas­times.’

  I felt an in­stant of an­noy­ance with him. No, of some­thing more than an­noy­ance. How could it be that I knew more of his wife than he did? ‘She kept gar­dens,’ I said quietly. ‘Of many herbs, and knew all the uses of those that grew therein. I have told you of them my­self.’

  ‘Yes, I sup­pose you have.’ He sighed. ‘You are right, Fitz. Visit her for me, and tell her of the Queen’s Garden. It is winter now, and there is prob­ably little she can do with it. But come spring, it would be a won­drous thing to see it re­stored …’

  ‘Per­haps, you your­self, my prince,’ I ven­tured, but he shook his head.

  ‘I haven’t the time. But I trust it to you. And now, down­stairs. To the maps. I have things I wish to dis­cuss with you.’

  I turned im­me­di­ately to­ward the door. Ver­ity fol­lowed more slowly. I held the door for him and on the threshold he paused and looked back over his shoulder at the open win­dow. ‘It calls me,’ he ad­mit­ted to me, calmly, simply, as if ob­serving that he en­joyed plums. ‘It calls to me, at any mo­ment when I am not busied. And so I must be busy, Fitz. And too busy.’

  ‘I see,’ I said slowly, not at all sure that I did.

  ‘No. You don’t.’ Ver­ity spoke with great cer­tainty. ‘It is like a great loneli­ness, boy. I can reach out and touch oth­ers. Some, quite eas­ily. But no one ever reaches back. When Chiv­alry was alive … I still miss him, boy. Some­times I am so lonely for him; it is like be­ing the only one of some­thing in the world. Like the very last wolf, hunt­ing alone.’

  A shiver went down my spine. ‘What of King Shrewd?’ I ven­tured to ask.

  He shook his head. ‘He Skills sel­dom now. His strength for it has dwindled, and it taxes his body as well as his mind.’ We went down a few more steps. ‘You and I are the only ones now to know that,’ he ad­ded softly. I nod­ded.

  We went down the stairs slowly. ‘Has the healer looked at your arm?’ he quer­ied.

  I shook my head.

  ‘Nor Burrich.’

  He was stat­ing this as fact, already know­ing it was true.

  I shook my head again. The marks of Nighteyes’ teeth were too plain upon my skin, al­though he had given those bites in play. I could not show Burrich the marks of the Forged Ones without be­tray­ing my wolf to him.

  Ver­ity sighed. ‘Well. Keep it clean. I sup­pose you know as well as any how to keep an in­jury clean. Next time you go out, re­mem­ber this, and go pre­pared. Al­ways. There may not al­ways be one to step in and aid you.’

  I came to a slow stop on the stairs. Ver­ity con­tin­ued down. I took a deep breath. ‘Ver­ity,’ I asked quietly. ‘How much do you know? About … this.’

  ‘Less than you do,’ he said jovi­ally. ‘But more than you think I do.’

  ‘You sound like the Fool,’ I said bit­terly.

  ‘Yes. Some­times. He is an­other one who has a great un­der­stand­ing of alone­ness, and what it can drive a man to do.’ He took a breath, and al­most I thought he might say that he knew what I was, and did not con­demn me for it. In­stead, he con­tin­ued, ‘I be­lieve the Fool had words with you, a few days ago.’

  I fol­lowed him si­lently now, won­der­ing how he knew so much about so many things. The Skilling, of course. We came to his study and I fol­lowed him in. Charim, as ever, was already wait­ing for us. Food was set out, and mulled wine. Ver­ity set to upon it with a great ap­pet­ite. I sat across from him, mostly watch­ing him eat. I was not very hungry, but it built my ap­pet­ite to watch how much he en­joyed this simple, ro­bust meal. In this he was still a sol­dier, I thought. He would take this small pleas­ure, this good, well-served food when he was hungry, and rel­ish it while he could. It gave me much sat­is­fac­tion to see him with this much life and ap­pet­ite to him. I wondered how he would be next sum­mer, when he would have to Skill for hours every day, keep­ing watch for Raid­ers off our coast, and us­ing the tricks of his mind to set them astray while giv­ing our own folk early warn­ing. I thought of Ver­ity as he had been last sum­mer by har­vest time; worn to thin­ness, face lined, without the en­ergy to eat save that he drank the stim­u­lants that Chade put in his tea. His life had be­come the hours he spent Skilling. Come sum­mer, his hun­ger for the Skilling would re­place every other hun­ger in his life. How would Kettricken re­act to that, I wondered?

  After we had eaten, Ver­ity went over his maps with me. There was no longer any mis­tak­ing the pat­tern that emerged. Re­gard­less of what obstacles, forest or river or frozen plains, the Forged ones were mov­ing to­wards Buck­keep. It made no sense to me. The ones I had en­countered seemed all but bereft of their senses. I found it dif­fi­cult to be­lieve that any one of them would con­ceive of trav­el­ling over­land, des­pite hard­ships, simply to come to Buck­keep. ‘And these re­cords you’ve kept in­dic­ate that all of them have. All of the Forged ones that you’ve iden­ti­fied seem to be mov­ing to­wards Buck­keep.’

  ‘Yet you have dif­fi­culty see­ing it as a co­ordin­ated plan? Ver­ity asked quietly.

  ‘I fail to see how they could have any plan at all. How have they con­tac­ted each other? And it doesn’t seem a con­cer­ted ef­fort. They aren’t meet­ing up and trav­el­ling here in bands. It simply seems that each and every one sets out this way, and some of them fall in to­gether.’

  ‘Like moths drawn to a candle flame,’ Ver­ity ob­served.

  ‘Or flies to car­rion,’ I ad­ded sourly.

  ‘The ones to fas­cin­a­tion, the oth­ers to feed,’ Ver­ity mused. ‘I wish I knew which it is that draws the Forged ones to me. Per­haps an­other thing en­tirely.’

  ‘Why do you think you must know why they come? Do you think you are their tar­get?’

  ‘I do not know. But if I find out, I may un­der­stand my en­emy. I do not think it chance that all the Forged ones make their way to Buck­keep. I think they move against me, Fitz. Per­haps not of their own will, but it is still a move against me. I need to un­der­stand why.’

  ‘To un­der­stand them, you must be­come them.’

  ‘Oh.’ He looked less than amused. ‘Now who sounds like the Fool?’

  The ques­tion made me un­easy and I let it slip by me. ‘My prince, when the Fool mocked me the other day …’ I hes­it­ated, still stung by the memory. I had al­ways be­lieved the Fool to be my friend. I tried to push the emo­tion aside. ‘He put ideas in my mind. In his teas­ing way. He said, if I un­der­stand his riddles aright, that I should be seek­ing for oth­ers who are Skilled. Men and wo­men from your father’s gen­er­a­tion, trained by So­li­city be­fore Ga­len be­came Skill­mas­ter. And he seemed also to say that I should be find­ing out more about the Eld­er­lings. How are they summoned, what can they do? What are they?’

  Ver­ity leaned back in his chair and steepled his fin­gers over his chest. ‘Either of those quests might be enough for a dozen men. And yet, neither is even suf­fi­cient for one, for the an­swers to either ques­tion are so scarce. To the first, yes, there should yet be Skilled ones amongst us, folk older than my father even, trained for the old wars against the Outis­landers. It would not have been com­mon folk know­ledge as to who was trained. Train­ing was done privately, and even those in a co­terie might know of few out­side their own circle. Still, there should have been re­cords. I am sure there were, at one time. But what has be­come of them, no one can say. I ima­gine that they were passed from So­li­city down to Ga­len. But they were not found in his room or among his things after he … died.’

  It was Ver­ity’s turn to pause. We both knew how Ga­len had died, in a sense had both been there, though we had never spoken much of it. Ga­len had died a traitor, in the act of try­ing to Skill-tap Ver­ity’s strength and drain it off and kill him. In­stead, Ver­ity had bor­rowed my strength to aid him in drain­ing Ga­len. It was not a thing either of us en­joyed re­call­ing. But I spoke boldly, try­ing to keep all emo­tion from my voice.

  ‘Do you think Regal would know where such re­cords are?’

  ‘If he does, he has said noth­ing of it.’ Ver­ity’s voice was as flat as my own, put­ting an end to that topic. ‘But I have had some small suc­cess in un­cov­er­ing a few Skilled ones. The names, at least. In every case, those I have man­aged to dis­cover have either already died or can­not be loc­ated now.’

  ‘Um.’ I re­called hear­ing some­thing of this from Chade some time ago. ‘How did you dis­cover their names?’

  ‘Some my father could re­call. The mem­bers of the last co­terie, who served King Bounty. Oth­ers I knew vaguely, when I was very small. A few I dis­covered by talk­ing to some of the very old folk in the keep, ask­ing them to re­call what ru­mours they could of who might have been trained in the Skill. Though of course I did not ask in so many words. I did not, and still do not, wish my quest to be known.’

  ‘May I ask why?

  He frowned and nod­ded to­ward his maps. ‘I am not as bril­liant as your father was, my boy. Chiv­alry could make leaps of in­tu­ition that seemed noth­ing short of ma­gical. What I dis­cover are pat­terns. Does it seem likely to you that every Skilled one I can dis­cover should be either dead, or un­find­able? It seems to me that if I find one, and his name is known as a Skilled one, it might not be healthy for him.’

  For a time we sat in si­lence. He was let­ting me come to my own con­clu­sions. I was wise enough not to voice them aloud. ‘And Eld­er­lings?’ I asked at last.

  ‘A dif­fer­ent sort of riddle. At the time they were writ­ten about, all knew what they were. So I sur­mise. It would be the same if you went to find a scroll that ex­plained ex­actly what a horse was. You would find many passing men­tions of them, and a few that re­lated dir­ectly to shoe­ing one, or to one stal­lion’s blood-line. But who amongst us would see the need to de­vote the la­bour and time to writ­ing out ex­actly what a horse is?’

  ‘I see.’

  ‘So, again, it is a sift­ing out of de­tail. I have not had the time re­quired to de­vote my­self to such a task.’ For a mo­ment he sat look­ing at me. Then he opened a little stone box on his desk and took out a key. ‘There is a cab­inet in my bed­cham­ber,’ he said slowly. ‘I have gathered there what scrolls I could find that made even a passing men­tion of the Eld­er­lings. There are also some re­lated to the Skill. I give you leave to pore through them. Ask Fed­wren for good pa­per, and keep notes of what you dis­cover. Look for pat­terns among those notes. And bring them to me, every month or so.’

  I took the little brass key in my hand. It weighed strangely heavy, as if at­tached to the task the Fool had sug­ges­ted and Ver­ity had con­firmed. Look for pat­terns, Ver­ity had sug­ges­ted. I sud­denly saw one, a web woven from me to the Fool to Ver­ity and back again. Like Ver­ity’s other pat­terns, it did not seem to be an ac­ci­dent. I wondered who had ori­gin­ated the pat­tern. I glanced at Ver­ity, but his thoughts had gone afar. I rose quietly to go.

  As I touched the door, he spoke to me. ‘Come to me. Very early to­mor­row morn­ing. To my tower.’

  ‘Sir?’

  ‘Per­haps we may yet dis­cover an­other Skilled one, un­sus­pec­ted in our midst.’

  TWELVE

  Tasks

  Per­haps the most dev­ast­at­ing part of our war with the Red Ships was the sense of help­less­ness that over­powered us. It was as if a ter­rible para­lysis lay over the land and its rulers. The tac­tics of the Raid­ers were so in­com­pre­hens­ible that for the first year we stood still as if dazed. The second year of raid­ing, we tried to de­fend ourselves. But our skills were rusty; for too long they had been em­ployed only against the chance Raid­ers, the op­por­tun­istic or the des­per­ate. Against or­gan­ized pir­ates who had stud­ied our sea-coasts, our watchtower po­s­i­tions, our tides and cur­rents, we were like chil­dren. Only Prince Ver­ity’s Skilling provided any pro­tec­tion for us. How many ships he turned aside, how many nav­ig­at­ors he muddled or pi­lots he con­fused, we will never know. Be­cause his people could not grasp what he did for them, it was as if the Farseers did noth­ing. Folk saw only the raids that were suc­cess­ful, never the ships that went onto the rocks or sailed too far south dur­ing a storm. The people lost heart. The In­land duch­ies bridled at taxes to pro­tect a coast­line they didn’t share; the Coastal duch­ies were la­boured un­der taxes that seemed to make no dif­fer­ence. So if the en­thu­si­asm for Ver­ity’s war­ships was a fickle thing, rising and fall­ing with the folk’s cur­rent as­sess­ment of him, we can­not really blame the people. It seemed the longest winter of my life.

  I went from Ver­ity’s study to Queen Kettricken’s apart­ments. I knocked and was ad­mit­ted by the same little page girl as pre­vi­ously. With her merry little face and dark curly hair, Rose­mary re­minded me of some pool sprite. Within, the at­mo­sphere of the room seemed sub­dued. Sev­eral of Kettricken’s wo­men were there, and they all sat on stools around a frame hold­ing a white linen cloth. They were do­ing edge-work on it, flowers and green­ery done in bright threads. I had wit­nessed sim­ilar pro­jects in Mis­tress Hasty’s apart­ments. Usu­ally these activ­it­ies seemed merry, with tongues wag­ging and friendly banter, needles flash­ing as they dragged their tails of bright thread through the heavy cloth. But here, it was near si­lent. The wo­men worked with their heads bent, di­li­gently, skil­fully, but without gay talk. Scen­ted candles, pink and green, burned in each corner of the room. Their subtle fra­grances mingled scents over the frame.

  Kettricken presided over the work, her own hands as busy as any. She seemed the source of the still­ness. Her face was com­posed, even peace­ful. Her self-con­tain­ment was so evid­ent I could al­most see the walls around her. Her look was pleas­ant, her eyes kind, but I did not sense she was really there at all. She was like a con­tainer of cool, still wa­ter. She was dressed in a long simple robe of green, more of the Moun­tain style than of Buck­keep. She had set her jew­ellery aside. She looked up at me and smiled ques­tion­ingly. I felt like an in­truder, an in­ter­rup­tion to a group of study­ing pu­pils and their mas­ter. So in­stead of simply greet­ing her, I tried to jus­tify my pres­ence. I spoke form­ally, mind­ful of all the watch­ing wo­men.

  ‘Queen Kettricken. King-in-Wait­ing Ver­ity has asked me to bring a mes­sage to you.’

  Some­thing seemed to flicker be­hind her eyes, and then was still again. ‘Yes,’ she said neut­rally. None of the needles paused in their jump­ing dance, but I was sure that every ear waited for whatever tid­ings I might be bring­ing.

  ‘Upon a tower there was once a garden, called the Queen’s Garden. Once, King Ver­ity said, it had pots of green­ery, and ponds of wa­ter. It was a place of flower­ing plants, and fish, and wind chimes. It was his mother’s. My queen, he wishes you to have it.’

  The still­ness at the table grew pro­found. Kettricken’s eyes grew very wide. Care­fully, she asked, ‘Are you cer­tain of this mes­sage?’

  ‘Of course, my lady.’ I was puzzled by her re­ac­tion. ‘He said it would give him a great deal of pleas­ure to see it re­stored. He spoke of it with great fond­ness, es­pe­cially re­call­ing the beds of flower­ing thyme.’

  The joy in Kettricken’s face un­furled like the petals of a flower. She lif­ted a hand to her mouth, took a shiv­er­ing breath through her fin­gers. Blood flushed through her pale face, ros­ing her cheeks. Her eyes shone. ‘I must see it,’ she ex­claimed. ‘I must see it now!’ She stood ab­ruptly. ‘Rose­mary? My cloak and gloves, please.’ She beamed about at her ladies. ‘Will not you fetch your cloaks and gloves also, and ac­com­pany me?’

  ‘My queen, the storm is most fierce today …’ one began hes­it­antly.

  But an­other, an older wo­man with a moth­erly cast to her fea­tures, Lady Mod­esty, stood slowly. ‘I shall join you on the tower top. Pluck!’ A small boy who had been drows­ing in the corner leaped to his feet. ‘Dash off and fetch my cloak and gloves. And my hood.’ She turned back to Kettricken. ‘I re­call that garden well, from Queen Con­stance’s days. Many a pleas­ant hour I spent there in her com­pany. I will take joy in its res­tor­a­tion.’

  There was a heart­beat’s pause, and then the other ladies were tak­ing sim­ilar ac­tion. By the time I had re­turned with my own cloak, they were all ready to go. I felt dis­tinctly pe­cu­liar as I led this pro­ces­sion of ladies through the keep, and then up the long climb to the Queen’s Garden. By then, count­ing the pages and the curi­ous, there were nearly a score of people fol­low­ing Kettricken and me. As I led the way up the steep stone steps, Kettricken was right on my heels. The oth­ers trailed out in a long tail be­hind us. As I pushed on the heavy door, for­cing it open against the layer of snow out­side, Kettricken asked softly, ‘He’s for­given me, hasn’t he?’

 
Add Fast Bookmark
Load Fast Bookmark
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Scroll Up
Turn Navi On
Scroll
Turn Navi On