Professor Glenn Reynolds, the inimitable Instapundit, very kindly posted a plug for my books yesterday in the early afternoon.
As a result, I sold three times as many books in the next 12 hours as I had sold in the previous 3 weeks.
That, ladies and gentlemen, is the power of individuals with strategic reach on the Internet. Somebody ought to write a book about that phenomenon.
Oh, wait...someone DID!
Tales of a rag-tag company of adventurers confronting both dungeons AND dragons in the sprawling, magnificent multiverse of Anuru. And consuming lots of beer and chips along the way.
18 May 2012
16 May 2012
ELVEHELM: Starmeadow III - The White Flower of Northvale
Domus
Casia, Starmeadow, 10 Vintersdyb (Today)
“So,” Breygon said, tapping a finger
impatiently on the table.
“So,” Amorda murmured. She gave him a long look. When his expression changed not at all, she
sighed softly and glanced down at her hands.
They were sharing a late supper at Domus Casia, and were alone. Thanos and Joraz, with Karrick and Valaista
along for the ride, were still out in town, engaged on some errand or other;
while Lööspelian, to Breygon’s astonishment, was still in the garden. It had begun to snow in late afternoon, and
the half-elf had thought to check on her; but when he had ventured near, he had
found her precisely where they had left her earlier that morning, sitting on a
grassy mount near an ancient morbannon tree.
She was still contemplating the tree with an easy, expressionless stare
– and despite her protestations of mortality, showed no evidence of discomfort
at the chill slush that rained down upon her, soaking her thin clothing, and
drenching her hair into a sodden, dripping mass.
Her obvious plight notwithstanding,
the ranger was loathe to disturb anyone who looked to be so deeply at one with
the green...or with something, anyway.
Since she was evidencing no signs of distress, he decided to leave her
alone, and returned to the house’s master suite.
Which of course brought him face to
face with his sponsa. And with the ghost from her past that had,
for reasons which still boggled his mind, roused them from their shared dreams
of the morning.
Labels:
Dramatis Personae,
Elvehelm,
Non-Player Characters,
Starmeadow,
Synopses
14 May 2012
Thanks, Raven
Somebody going by the handle "Raven" has just posted this review of The Running Girl on Amazon.com, giving it 5 out of 5 stars:
For the record, I've been writing for scholarly purposes for more than 20 years. I've published more than 100 papers in dozens of international newspapers and journals. I passed my doctoral dissertation on first reading, have made presentations all over the world, and have won dozens of awards for academic work.
And I've never felt quite like this.
Thanks, Raven. I hope you enjoy the next two.
By Raven
Amazon Verified Purchase
I can't believe that I'm the first person to review this book.
It's a cross between the Hobbit, Harry Potter, and has elements of Star Wars.
The main character, a female elf, is likable and believable. Her wonder at the
Dwarven world is delightful. The writing is well done and puts you right into
their world. I rarely pay more than $1 for a Kindle book but this is worth every
penny, including the $6.99 that I just paid for the sequel. If you're looking to
escape into another time and place then you will greatly enjoy this read. It's
appropriate for young adults and adults alike.
For the record, I've been writing for scholarly purposes for more than 20 years. I've published more than 100 papers in dozens of international newspapers and journals. I passed my doctoral dissertation on first reading, have made presentations all over the world, and have won dozens of awards for academic work.
And I've never felt quite like this.
Thanks, Raven. I hope you enjoy the next two.
Labels:
Daughter of Dragons,
Dweorgaheim,
Kaunovalta,
Novels,
The Running Girl,
Woo-Hoo
12 May 2012
ELVEHELM: Starmeadow II - Rites, Modes and Jitters
“So,” Breygon said idly, “you were
telling me about the choices I have to make.
The rite, and the mode.”
“Mmm,” she murmured sleepily.
They were in bed – so to speak. Shaivaun’s divine power had restored their
health, and they had dined quietly with their friends, making plans for the
morrow, and speaking as little as possible about the terrible creature they had
defeated. Breygon had kept a close watch
on his sponsa’s face; he was
exhausted by the day’s events, and could only imagine how Amorda must have been
feeling. As soon as was decently
possible, he had excused himself to his comrades, taken her hand, and led her,
unresisting, back to the private quarter of the house.
There he’d faced a dilemma. Unable for reasons of propriety (and health, he snorted to himself) to
make use of his new bride’s bedchamber, and yet also unwilling to cede either
the privacy of the master suite or a night in her arms, the ranger had suggested
that they make up a nest on the floor of the study. It wouldn’t be comfortable, but he’d slept in
worse places.
Amorda had proposed a different
plan. Gathering an armload of blankets
from a convenient storage room, she had led him back out into the garden and
along the back wall of the house proper.
The darkness was complete; it was a cloudy night, and the moons had not
yet risen, and Breygon – his superior vision notwithstanding – found himself
having to watch his footing on the flagstones.
The back wall of Domus Casia was riddled with doors and
windows. At the extreme northern end of
the house, however, there was an open chamber; a small room, only half a dozen
paces square, tucked in beneath a roof supported by intricately carved marble
pillars. The room contained nothing but
a raised dais topped by what appeared to be a large, circular stragulum. It was concealed from view from the rest of
the garden by...by...
Labels:
Dramatis Personae,
Elvehelm,
Non-Player Characters,
Starmeadow
10 May 2012
Daughter of Dragons!
Just published Kaunovalta Book III - Daughter of Dragons on Amazon Kindle!
As soon as the link is available, I'll put it in.
UPDATE - Here it is:
Kaunovalta Book III - Daughter of Dragons
This is the last book in the Kaunovalta series. Next up - Bjorn's Saga. I should have that one available by mid-June at the latest.
For those (i.e., both) of you following this blog, as soon as Daughter of Dragons propagates to all of the Amazon sites, I'm going to launch a 5-day promotion where Book I - The Running Girl will be available for free in order to suck potential readers in.
Thanks for follow, folks. And if you happen to pick one or more of these up, I hope you enjoy them. I certainly enjoyed writing them.
UPDATE #2 - Book I, The Running Girl, will be available for free download at the Amazon.com Kindle Store from Friday 11 May to Sunday 13 May. Enjoy!
As soon as the link is available, I'll put it in.
UPDATE - Here it is:
Kaunovalta Book III - Daughter of Dragons
This is the last book in the Kaunovalta series. Next up - Bjorn's Saga. I should have that one available by mid-June at the latest.
For those (i.e., both) of you following this blog, as soon as Daughter of Dragons propagates to all of the Amazon sites, I'm going to launch a 5-day promotion where Book I - The Running Girl will be available for free in order to suck potential readers in.
Thanks for follow, folks. And if you happen to pick one or more of these up, I hope you enjoy them. I certainly enjoyed writing them.
UPDATE #2 - Book I, The Running Girl, will be available for free download at the Amazon.com Kindle Store from Friday 11 May to Sunday 13 May. Enjoy!
09 May 2012
ELVEHELM: Starmeadow I - Domus Casia
“This is…quite something,” Breygon murmured. The master suite of Domus Casia was enormous, elegant beyond words, and not a little
labyrinthine. The ranger felt as if he
had wandered into a fairy-story.
From the private gardens of the House, where they had
appeared from their flux-leap and vanquished the dread apparition that had
intercepted them, Amorda’s servants had led Breygon’s companions down one broad
hall. His bride had taken him by the
hand and led him down another, smaller one.
This had debouched onto a well-lit and exquisitely appointed study
complete with walls of bookshelves that stretched from floor to ceiling, a pair
of large desks, comfortable chairs, tables, and a floor strewn with magnificent
carpets. Apart from that through which
they had entered, there were three doors in the walls, nestled between the
bookshelves.
“This is the library,” she explained
unnecessarily. “That door leads to our
private dining room, the lounge, and beyond to the rest of the house; that one,
to my boudoir; and the last, there, to my bed-chamber. Ours, now.”
She was pale, even more so than usual, and he could see that her hands
were trembling slightly.
He took her hand and held it. “You’ll have to give me a tour at some
point,” the ranger said, an uncomfortable grin etching its way across his
cheeks. He felt horribly out of place
here. This was luxury on a scale that he
had only ever heard about, and could never have imagined experiencing for
himself.
“I’ll have Cayless show you around,”
Amorda replied. “When you meet her,
though, remember that you’re bound to me, sponsa.” She smiled, blinking rapidly. “You can look, but you’d better not touch.”
Breygon stared at her. There was an odd lilt to her voice. He realized that her hand was still quivering
in his grip. With his other hand, he
felt her cheek, her neck. “You’re not
well,” he murmured.
Labels:
Dramatis Personae,
Elvehelm,
Non-Player Characters,
Starmeadow,
Synopses
05 May 2012
Dweorga-tastic!
Just saw this: the Amazon list of Dungeons & Dragons related books published in the last 30 days.
Dweorgaheim is right next to R.A. Salvatore's "War of the Spider Queen".
Yeah, I know - he'll sell a lot more of his than I will of mine. But that's still really, really cool.
Also, somebody just bought another copy of The Running Girl. That's two! I can now afford a (domestic) beer to celebrate.
This is fun.
Oh, and Daughter of Dragons should be ready by the end of next week. As a special bonus, I'm including a map that tracks Ally's travels through Erutrei. Some of you might recognize parts of the map...
Dweorgaheim is right next to R.A. Salvatore's "War of the Spider Queen".
Yeah, I know - he'll sell a lot more of his than I will of mine. But that's still really, really cool.
Also, somebody just bought another copy of The Running Girl. That's two! I can now afford a (domestic) beer to celebrate.
This is fun.
Oh, and Daughter of Dragons should be ready by the end of next week. As a special bonus, I'm including a map that tracks Ally's travels through Erutrei. Some of you might recognize parts of the map...
Labels:
Daughter of Dragons,
Dweorgaheim,
Kaunovalta,
Novels,
The Running Girl,
Woo-Hoo
Elvehelm Maps
I've been posting a lot of material on Elvehelm, and thought it might be a good idea to post the maps, to enable anyone reading this blog to track the story.
And here are some larger-scale versions (the above map divided into quarters scaled for letter-size printing):
Hope these come in handy!
04 May 2012
ELVEHELM: Novaposticum X - Farewell to Newport
“They were staying at the Four
Seasons, were they not?” Amorda asked.
Breygon nodded. “It’s a little ostentatious,” he said, “not
to mention a little pricey, but Thanos felt we’d have more privacy there then
at that place where we slept a few nights ago.”
“The ‘Blessings Bay’?” Amorda
laughed. “You had plenty of privacy, as
I recall. Nobody wants to come within
sword’s reach of a troupe of ill-tempered dragon slayers.” She reached down and ruffled his hair,
adding, “Although it might have had more to do with the way you – we – all smelled after the battle.”
The ranger snorted, mildly annoyed
at the familiar contact. She always
seemed to be touching him, at every conceivable opportunity – a brush of the
hand against his, a gentle nudge of the hips, and, whenever the opportunity
presented itself, a raven-haired head on his shoulder. That last was a little odd; he’d been sure
that Amorda was close to his own height, and yet she always seemed to be able
to tuck herself under his arm.
I’m
just not used to it, he told himself.
In the spirit of ‘learning by doing’, as she’d put it the previous
night, he laid his left hand on her thigh.
His reward was a sweet smile, and her small hand atop his own. His heart seemed to give an especially heavy
thud, as if he’d been struck in the breastplate by a catapult stone.
Hmm. Maybe there was something to this, after all.
Clasping hands as they were was
possible because the ranger was walking, while the lady was perched
uncomfortably on horseback. The beast -
a docile enough chestnut mare with a white star-shaped blazon between its eyes,
that had been loaned to Amorda by her hostess – would have been a reasonable
mount under normal circumstances. Lady
Danoria, however, had a number of peculiarly old-fashioned notions about what
constituted appropriate conduct for a lady, and had sent the creature over to
them already fitted with an elaborate side-saddle.
Breygon had heard of the things
before, but despite having squired innumerable ladies of station through the
Æryn woods (had it really been less
than a year since he’d left that trade?), he’d never seen one, much less one
that had been crafted in the high elven style.
When the groom who had appeared with
the animal had smiled a little too eagerly when offering to assist Amorda into
the contraption, Breygon had growled at him, sending the man scampering. His reward for that indiscretion had been a
merry smile, coupled with a quick peck on the ear. “How savage!” the elf-woman had whispered.
“Bloody cheek,” he’d muttered,
glancing after the fleeing groom.
“Don’t think I’m not flattered,
love,” she’d returned, laying a long-fingered hand on his forearm, “because I
am. But if you’re going to snarl and
bare your fangs at every man who leers at me, you’re going to be too busy for
–” she’d given his wrist a gentle squeeze “- other pursuits.”
“There’ll always be time for that,” he’d replied, dropping a wink,
and struggling to overcome his sudden ill temper.
“Actually, I was talking about
saving the world,” she’d said slyly.
“But I like the way your mind works.”
She’d nodded at the horse. “May I
have your hand, my lord?”
After a brief struggle, he’d managed
to get her seated. Amorda weighed hardly
anything at all, but the saddle was a bizarre and complex contraption. In order to remain balanced, she had to cross
her legs at the ankle.
“Are you going to be able to stay up
there?” he’d asked, concerned.
“I’ve ridden one of these things
before,” she’d replied, grimacing a little.
“I’ll manage.”
“It looks uncomfortable.”
“After yestereve’s ride, my lord,”
she’d replied, eyes twinkling, “no
saddle would be comfortable.”
They took their time. Despite his fears, the mare had an easy,
relaxing gait, and was as biddable as he could have asked. Breygon walked alongside the beast, reins
held lightly in his free hand. The
morning air was a balm; he’d gotten virtually no sleep the previous night, nor
even a moment’s trance; but he did not feel tired. If anything, he felt invigorated, alive. The winds were from the south, bringing the
scent of salt and the sea to their nostrils, and driving the city’s panoply of
odours – even elven cities could not entirely eliminate the unavoidable stinks
of habitation – further inland. He
caught a whiff of the dragon’s horrid stink, no more than that; evidently the
water had consumed the foulness that had leached into it, as the seas had done
since the world was made. Horses and
cattle, pigs and ducks, fresh bread and blackwine, the tangy sting of berries
and pine buds and orange blossoms...he could even smell the grease on the wagon
axles, and the earthy musk of the dust raised by their passage.
Mostly, though, he could smell the
woman that rode at his side. She was a
symphony of scents, from the soaps and oils she had bathed with – sandalwood
and olive and lime – to the floral bouquet of her perfume: not only the the
scent she wore, here and there about her person (he had noted and registered
each of the one-and-twenty places where she customarily daubed it), but also
the long fall of ivy and chrysanthemums that she had worked into her coiffure
and veil.
He closed his eyes, and she was
still there, as clear as ever in his mind’s eye. Somehow he knew that, even blindfolded, he
would be able to pick her out of a crowd of women at a hundred paces. Denied his sight, he noticed something else
as well; another scent, something deeper, hidden almost. A sweet, musky air, heavy and rich with
meaning. It was...delicious. Sweeter than
wine, and far, far stronger.
He smiled to himself. No one but a walker of the woodlands, one who
knew the ways of beasts better than those of his own folk, would have known
what that scent was, and what it meant. Or
who it was for.
But he knew.
He was wearing the same dark,
unobrtrusive clothing that he had worn the previous night. The castle’s staff had laundered his
undergarments in quick order, a relief after the exertions of the previous few
days. The dark hues muted his presence;
with his cloak swirling around his ankles, he all but vanished in the horse’s
shadow.
Amorda could not have offered a
greater contrast. Only one in four of
her garment chests had survived the near-destruction of the Odergrav and the subsequent soaking of
the bilge by the dragon’s disgusting bile; but that had still left her with two
hands of trunks packed with all manner of attire. In honour of the morning’s chill, and the
fact that, further north, it was likely to be colder still, she had chosen a
high-collared gown of a startling scarlet silk, festooned with floral patterns
wrought in threads of gold and a deep, rich sapphire hue. He was a little surprised that she seemed to
have eschewed her usual flair for the risqué; although it hugged her form
delightfully, the dress buttoned all the way to her slender throat. Apart from the veil and flowers, which were
secured by a pair of braids at the back of her head, her hair was mostly loose;
and rather than her customary heeled shoes, she was wearing, beneath her
skirts, high boots of soft leather.
She’d thrown a costly travelling cloak of silver-gray silk over the
whole affair. Altogether, she looked
like a porcelain doll, and much less the fritter-headed socialite than usual.
She caught him staring up at her,
and smiled warmly. “Do I please you that
much, love, that you cannot take your eyes off of me?”
“You’re stunning,” he replied in
complete honesty. “As usual. It’s just that...well, I’d expected something
a little more...”
“Revealing?” she grinned.
Breygon laughed. “Not to put too fine a point on it, but yes.”
“It’s cold,” she replied, glancing
up at the lowering clouds. “And it’s
liable to be colder still in the capital.
This late in winter, there could be snow.” She glanced back down at him and winked. “I prefer to save the low-cut fripperies for
well-heated ballrooms. And bedrooms.
“I’d’ve thought you’d’ve noticed
this, though,” she added reproachfully.
Releasing his hand for a moment, she held up the ends of a long scarf of
scarlet silk that lay draped over her left shoulder like a baldric, and that was
secured by a complex interwoven series of knots at her right hip. “It’s for you, after all.”
Breygon’s eyebrows drew
together. “If I’ve slighted you, I’m
sorry,” he said. “I don’t know much
about the social conventions of the Homelands.”
“But this is important!” she
pouted. Her merry eyes belied her sad
expression.
“I hope you’re more convincing than
that when you’re practicing your trade,” the half-elf laughed. “Either you’re slipping, or I’m developing an
immunity to your charms.”
“Hara forfend! Either would be disastrous!” Amorda replied,
smiling again. She held up the end of
the sash. “This is called virga sponsalis, my darling. It means I’ve accepted a promise of
betrothal. It’s meant to inform would-be
suitors that I’m no longer available.”
“Like a ‘sold’ sign on a house or a
wagon,” Breygon nodded.
“How charming,” she said
flatly. “But yes, that’s more or less
the idea.”
“I’ve seen something similar,”
Breygon mused aloud. “The princess...”
“Aunty Mya?” Amorda chuckled.
Breygon shot her a warning
glance. “Not in public. I beg
you.”
She nodded her contrition. “Mya’s been wearing the virga lætitia,” she said.
“It symbolizes fertility. A
woman’s prayer to Hutanibu to bless
her and her lifemate with children.” She
wrinkled her nose. “Like this one, it’s
pretty uncommon. You won’t see the virga in the capital. Hardly ever.
Not in any shade.”
“There are other shades?” he asked,
curious.
“White for mourning,” she replied,
“and black for a vow of vengeance.”
“That one might come in handy,” he
mused aloud. “If they’re traditional,
then why are they so rare?”
She snorted. “The great houses consider the virgae to be uncouth,” she replied. “A contrivance of the common folk, and a
vestige of humbler times.”
Breygon stared up at her. “I thought the elves revered the Forest
Gods?” he said quietly. “All of
them. Especially Hutanibu!”
“In the past, maybe,” she
sighed. “These days, though, it’s all
about show. Worshipping Hara Sophus is considered the mark of
sophistication. So the nobles, and
anyone with their lips stitched to a high-born...er, posterior,” she amended
with a quick grin, “you’ll see them at the cathedral on Sîan Varrasday. Or at
Istravenya’s great temple; for some reason, she’s popular with the Duodeci
again. Probably why Shaivaun’s doing so
well these days. I can’t blame her for
squeezing the great Houses for every last groat, given how much rebuilding that
blasted temple after the fire must’ve cost.
“Those less concerned with image,
though, which is most of the common folk, still prefer the Protector.” She shook her head disapprovingly. “It’s just another way the bird-brained
nobles are dividing themselves from the people.
Stupid.”
“Stupid,” Breygon echoed, his
thoughts racing. He reached up and
touched her sash. “So this is your way
of telling the world that you’re taken?”
She nodded.
“And you’re not concerned that it’ll
make you look...that you’ll stick out?”
“Darling,” she said reprovingly,
“we’re already going to stick
out. Nobody’s going to mistake you for
one of the Duodeci, not up close.” She
took his fingers and gave them a squeeze.
“That’s the first rule of stealth,” she said firmly. “No half-measures. What you can’t hide, you must flaunt.”
The ranger nodded. “I suppose that makes sense. Nervous way to work, though.”
“But fun,” she said. She favoured him with another smile. “That reminds me. We’re going to have to make some decisions
about the wedding, and soon, especially if we want to hold the ceremony on the
Slaughter.”
“I’m not that keen on getting bound
on any day called ‘the Slaughter’,” Breygon commented. “Why are you so fixed on that date?”
“Because, as I said, of who and what
you are,” she replied with a throaty chuckle.
“Now that I’ve got my claws into you, there’s no way I’m going to
share.”
Breygon’s eyebrows shot
skywards. “What on earth does that mean?”
Amorda turned to stare down at
him. “Are you serious? You don’t know?”
“Know what?!”
The elf-woman stared at him for a
moment longer, colour rising in her cheeks.
At last she snapped, “Unh-uh. I’m
not explaining it to you.” She shook a
finger at him. “But understand this, lupino; either we marry on the
thirteenth, or I’m locking you in my vault that night, and standing guard over
you with a crossbow and a bucket of cold iron bolts.”
The ranger was so taken aback by her
sudden vehemence that he could think of nothing to say. Rather than stumble about blindly in
uncharted territory, he decided on discretion.
“Very well,” he said faintly.
“Either the Slaughter, or your vault.
I’ll leave it up to you.”
“Good,” she said firmly. “I’ll let you make precisely two decisions,
husband, and I’ll take care of the rest.”
“And they are?” he asked carefully.
“The rite,” she replied, “and the mode.”
Breygon hesitated. “What are my options?” he said at last.
She shrugged. “As I told you last night, the normal course
would be for us to wed at the cathedral of Hara
Sophus, at the Palace, and to ask Elcaradon, Archpriest of the Realm, to
officiate.”
“I thought he didn’t like
half-bloods,” Breygon frowned.
“He likes money,” Amorda shrugged,
“and I have plenty. A wedding at the
cathedral would have two advantages: it would scandalize the Duodeci; and it
would please the Queen.”
“Why would it please the Queen?” the
ranger asked, puzzled.
“Because,” she winked, “it would
scandalize the Duodeci. And because
getting married at the Palace would imply that you support her. As opposed to, say, getting married at the Protector’s
Grove, which would imply that you consider yourself a champion of the people,
and would be an implication of disapproval of the Palace, and therefore of the
Queen.”
Breygon blinked. “Do you ever do anything,” he asked, “without
first weighing the political implications?”
“Not if I can help it,” she
snorted. “The other option, of course,
is the temple of Istravenya, at the Lucum
Spaðacódru.”
“And what,” the ranger sighed,
“would that suggest to the gawkers?”
The elf-woman shrugged. “I’m not sure,” she replied carefully. “I like Shaivaun, and she’s certainly a
powerful and well-respected priestess.
But there’ve been rumours that the Lustroares
– you remember them, love, don’t you?
The fax albus, the so-called
Sons of the White Fire?”
“Oh, yes,” Breygon said darkly. “I remember that night very well.” He winked.
“It ended a lot better than it
began.”
“It did indeed,” she said, favouring
him with a wicked grin. “In any event,
the gossips suggest that those idiots have some sort of connection to
Shaivaun’s temple. It’s hard to imagine
that she’d put up with that kind of nonsense – she’s a little grim, after all,
and I’d’ve thought she’d shut that sort of thing down in short order, if it
ever popped up – but you never know.”
“Hmm,” Breygon commented. “Do you know anything else about them?
Amorda shook her head. “The Bird-Catcher has others looking into the Lustroares.”
Amorda shook her head. “The Bird-Catcher has others looking into the Lustroares.”
The ranger nodded. “So, Hara, Larranel, or Istravenya? That’s it?”
“Well, we could take the torva route,” she grinned. “Strip down, run into the woods, find an oak
grove, have one of Hutanibu’s druids marry us, and then find a nice, dry pile
of leaves for the coniugum. That would be faster, cheaper, and a lot more
fun.”
“But it wouldn’t make a political
statement,” he murmured. Or would it?
“Think about it,” his bride
advised. “We’ve a day or two before we
have to decide.”
“I will,” he promised. “What’s the other decision I have to
make? The ‘mode’?”
“Ah,” she laughed. “That will come more naturally to you, I
imagine. Shall we approach the altar
clad all in white and green, as custom demands?
Or is it to be nuptia bellum?”
Breygon blinked. “Marry under arms? Like Kaltas and Myaszæron, you mean?”
“Precisely.”
“What would that signify?” he asked
immediately.
Amorda grinned again. “See, lupino? You’re learning already.
“A normal wedding, with normal
garb,” she said briskly, “would signify...nothing at all. Nuptia
bellum, however...” she laughed.
“Well, just think about it. If we
were to marry under arms, you would be signalling any number of things. Your respect for Kaltas’ judgement. Your support of his decision to summon his
array. Your kinship – spiritual, if of
no other sort –” she winked slyly “- with the princess. Your skill with blade and bow. Your determination to play a role in the
future of the realm.
“Moreover,” she added, looking a
little more serious, “it would signal subtle disapproval of the Queen’s failure
to address the threat posed by Eldarcanum.
It would, in effect, be a challenge to her to display the kind of
decisiveness that Kaltas has displayed.”
“That’s an awful lot,” he said,
dazed.
Amorda nodded. “You’re going to be in the public eye from
here on in, my love. And whatever else
you are, you’re a force to be reckoned with in the realm. You have to think about these things...even
down to the clothing, arms and accoutrements you wear.
“Which reminds me. I have something to give you.” She unbuttoned several of the pearl clasps at
the neck of her gown and reached into her bodice.
“I think you already gave me that
last night,” Breygon deadpanned.
The elf-woman coloured and swatted
him lightly on the head. From within her
gown, she drew a light silver chain.
Depending from it was a ring. She
pulled on the chain, rotating it until the clasp came into view; then she
unlocked it, pulled it out, and secured it again.
She held the chain out, the ring
swinging back and forth like a pendulum.
“Here,” she said. “This is for
you. Dota
sponsalis. My gift, in commemoration
of our betrothal.”
Breygon reached up and took the
chain. He inspected the ring
closely. It was bright, less like silver
than like polished steel, and was engraved with a complex pattern of interlaced
bands. It looked far too small to pass
over any of his half-human knuckles.
Amorda rebuttoned her gown. “Look inside,” she directed.
He looked. There was an inscription around the inside of
the ring, in letters almost too small to be seen. Coniunctum
in Æternum, he read.
He glanced up at her. “ ‘Forever joined’?”
“An heirloom,” she said, holding up
her right hand. An identical ring
glittered on her index finger. “One of a
pair. They were my mother’s wedding band,
and my father’s. The only bequest they
left me.”
Breygon weighed the thing in his
hand, saying nothing. It seemed
abnormally heavy, as if it were charged with implications he didn’t yet
understand. That’s an appropriate metaphor for this whole enterprise, he
thought darkly.
Her expression was unreadable. “What say you, husband mine,” she said
nervously. “Do you like it?”
Wordlessly, he handed the chain back
to her. Before her lip could begin to
quiver, he held up his left hand, fingers spread.
As he’d expected, her face broke
into a smile. She took the ring off the
chain and tried to slip it over his middle finger. It went an inch before sticking, also as he
had expected. He was entirely
unsurprised when it suddenly seemed to grow.
An instant later, it had slipped over his knuckle and lay seated against
his hand.
“It’s enchanted,” she said
unnecessarily. “Like the one you gave
me.”
Before she could withdraw them, he
caught her fingers and pressed them to his lips. “Thank you,” he said gravely.
Her eyes were wide, and he was
surprised to see her whole heart in them.
“I know what you are,” she whispered, “and what you do. It will help protect you. So I don’t...”
She looked away, and took a deep
breath. “So this doesn’t end,” she said
in a faint, distant voice, “before it’s had a chance to begin.”
Not trusting himself to speak, the
half-elf simply squeezed her fingers again.
They continued in comfortable
silence, enclosed in a bubble of contemplation that seemed to block out the
bustle of the city streets around them.
Breygon surveyed the scene absently, unconsciously maintaining his usual
vigilance against possible threats, but overwhelmingly aware of the distaff
presence at his side. Amorda was
attracting more than her fair share of admiring glances. The fact that they were holding hands, too,
he noted, caused more than one of the many elves they passed to shoot him a
disapproving, even hostile glance. In
other circumstances, he might have done something about that; but with his
fiancée at his side, he found that he was less concerned about redressing insults
than about ensuring her safe passage.
The novelty of the sentiment sparked several long moments of
introspection.
The commotion of the streets, the
comings and goings, the buying and selling, and the profusion of activity,
reminded him of something else. “You
know,” he said casually, “you’re going to have to tell me about your fief. There’s a lot I need to learn.”
“Our
fief,” she corrected. She seemed to have
doffed her melancholy and recovered her customary good humour. “All in due course, love. It more or less runs itself, and you have
more important things to worry about right now.”
He blinked. “How can a barony ‘run itself’?”
“With a steady hand at the helm,”
she replied. “Mine is called Tchimanga
Rees. He’s a former adventurer, a
sellsword out of Skywaters. You’ll like
him.
“Also,” she continued, “it helps to
allow a healthy dose of autonomy for the municipalities. That was something that Silas never
learned. He liked to meddle. When I took over the place, I spent the first
year sitting in baronial court for eight hours a day, three days a week,
listening to whining farmers and artisans complain about being shorted a
shilling here and a groat there. It was
maddening.”
“How’d you fix that?” he asked,
interested.
“Simple,” she replied briskly. “Every time a pair of idiots presented me
with a picayune squabble, I gave them a week to solve it themselves. If they failed to do so, I flipped a coin.”
Breygon turned to stare up at
her. “That’s madness! You can’t govern by chance!”
“Who said anything about chance?”
she replied, astonished. “The deserving
party always won. D’ye think I can’t control how a coin falls?”
He blinked. “Then...why the subterfuge?”
“To teach the morons self-reliance,”
she growled. “To show them that if they
couldn’t figure out how to solve a problem on their own, they would have to
trust to blind luck. Or at least to what
looked like blind luck. Knowing that your fate rests on the whim of a
struck shilling makes you more willing to compromise.
“Besides,” she shrugged, “nine times
out of ten, it’s the undeserving party that brings the complaint. And in my system, they always lose. Eventually, word
gets around.”
“That’s diabolically clever,”
Breygon grinned. The woman was
remarkable. “And it worked?”
“I’m here, aren’t I?” she
chuckled. “I manage to spend most of my
time in the capital, and only drop in on Arx Incultus a couple of times a
year.”
“Why so seldom?” he asked. “Is the weather that bad?”
“It’s not bad at all!” she protested. “The barony lies on the north face of the
homeland range, about halfway between Duncala and Portacaminus, the free city
that’s the last stop before Skywaters.
Our lands face onto the Waste, that’s true; but it’s just the western,
desert, part, not the awful, spell-struck eastern reaches. We’re protected from the worst of the winds,
and there’s plenty of water from snow-melt in the mountains.
“You’ll like it,” she promised. “High up in the hills, the trees are enormous,
and it’s positively stiff with wild-cats, elk and bears. But lower down, towards the sands, it’s arid,
and the croplands require constant irrigation.
We can grow just about anything.
Hells, in the town around the castle, the stone catches the sun
year-round, and bakes us like a bread-oven.
We’ve got the only palm trees in the realm north of Eldisle.”
That reminded Breygon of
something. “What were you doing in Eldisle?” he said suddenly. “If I may ask?”
“Keeping an eye on Kaltas,” Amorda
replied soberly. “Allymyn’s little
adventure in the royal gardens last summer ignited the capital like a
fireball. Everyone was scrambling to
prove their loyalty to the Queen, or to at least distance themselves from House
Aiyellohax. The Auceps decided that we had to know the truth about Kaltas: whether
he was loyal, or if he was making a move to ally with Eldarcanum. Or maybe contemplating rebellion, or a
coup. So he sent me to find out.”
“What did you report back?” Breygon
asked.
“Until you lot arrived,” the
elf-woman sighed, “I had nothing to
report. Except for guesses and
assumptions. Like the Bird-Catcher, and
for that matter the Queen, I’d always believed Kaltas was innocent. But I didn’t know anything about Ally, and absence of evidence isn’t evidence of
absence. There was no proof, one way or
the other.
“Of course,” she patted his hand
affectionately, “there’s plenty of proof now,
thanks to you and your friends. My next
report will set a lot of minds at ease.”
She grinned nastily. “And it’ll
help to tighten the noose around the neck of that corpse-loving harpy in
Eldarcanum.”
“You might even qualify for a
vacation,” Breygon smiled. “A chance to
visit your fief after a long absence. If you want to, that is.”
“I do,” she sighed, “and I want you
to come with me.”
He smiled, but didn’t say
anything. He feared making promises that
he might not be able to keep.
“The main reason I go back so
seldom,” she continued, “is the isolation.
It’s a long, tiring trek. But I
have to do it. I like to check up on
the books, and make sure my people aren’t skimming more than they’re entitled
to.
“And,” she sighed, “despite my
little rant about self-reliance, there really are some decisions that only I
can make.”
“Like what?” he asked, curious.
She frowned. “Tchimanga’s a good man, and I trust
him. But I don’t let anyone else judge
capital cases, or dispossess my people of their property. And I don’t let anyone else change tax rates
or regulations.” She grimaced. “That’s the easiest way to spark a revolt,
let me tell you.”
“That’s a long way to go,” he
commented, “just to deal with administrative matters.”
“Very long,” she agreed. “I usually pay the College to leap the flux.”
“That can get expensive, I’d
imagine,” Breygon frowned.
“Money isn’t a problem,” Amorda laughed. “Not for Arx Incultus. The Great Caravan Route sees to that.” She winked at him. “I’ll bet that makes you happy, sponsa mea!”
Breygon frowned. “Not especially,” he said, a little put
out. “I couldn’t care less about money.”
“Oh, I know that,” the lady
replied. “I just meant that I can help
you with the nymphaliceor.”
The ranger blinked. “ ‘Bride-bid’?”
Amorda nodded. “Technically, ‘bride-price’,” she
replied. “An ancient custom, from the
days of the elvii tribes. I understand torva suitors still offer their bride’s parents or guardians
weapons, or livestock. Here in the
homelands, though, it’s usually household goods or money. Among the lower classes, that is. The Duodeci tend to give land.”
“I don’t have any land,” Breygon
said nervously.
“No matter, darling,” the elf-woman
replied. “As I said, I can help you with
that, sub-mensum.”
Under
the table. “Money, eh?” the half-elf
mused.
“Objets
d’art are preferable,” Amorda shrugged.
“Or jewellery. But money is
acceptable. In fact, it’s probably
preferred, given who you’re paying.”
Breygon stared up at her. “And who is that, pray tell?”
“I’ve no parents or guardian,” she
replied with a smile, “and I’m head, even if only coniunctis, of House Olestyrian.
So, according to the Codex, that means you pay the bride-price to the
Crown.”
“I have to buy you from the Queen?” the ranger asked, his eyes
widening.
Amorda nodded. “That’s what Dîor’s Law requires.” She sniffed.
“Frankly, I don’t like the incentive structure very much; when the
Throne’s low on funds, all they have to do to bulk up the treasury is knock off
a few parents of budding brides, and let the cash flow in.”
“Has that ever happened?” Breygon
asked, horrified.
“No accusations have ever been
proven,” Amorda shrugged. “Not against
Ælyndarka, anyway. By the way, while she
likes jewellery – especially emeralds – she always
need money.”
“How much?” he asked faintly.
“That’s up to you and her,” the
elf-woman chuckled. “It’s considered bad
form for the bride to be involved in the negotiations. She might try to hold you up for more, seeing
as how you’re not of the Third House, and I can afford it.
“And just so you know,” she added
with mock severity, “the price you pay will be an indication, forever, of how
much value you set upon me.”
“That’s ludicrous!”
“Welcome to Elvehelm, my love,” she
grinned.
Breygon rubbed his brow, brushing
away a sudden sheen of perspiration.
“Can you give me a rough estimate?”
Amorda pursed her lips. “Well,” she said, considering, “when
Anaprestia Rao, the youngest daughter of Duke Varaita Æyllian, fell in love
with Ugulf Ironthew during her apprenticeship in Elder Delvin and refused to
return to her father’s house unless he consented to their marriage, the
bride-price that Ugulf offered was five magic rings: the Annulae Æylliana. He and
Anaprestia forged them together in the Deeprealm. It took them ten years, during which, for
honour’s sake and in accordance with Dwarven law, he did not once visit his
promised bride’s bed.”
Her eyes took on a far-away
look. “It’s said,” she sighed, “that
altogether, the Annulae are worth
more than ten thousand, thousand aureae.”
Breygon blinked several times. He made a show of checking his purse. “I may be a little short,” he said as evenly
as he could.
Amorda laughed aloud. She patted his hand. “Fret not, my love,” she chuckled. “That was during the Eon of Darkness. I’m not the daughter of a Duodeci household,
and I’m not marrying the most legendary dwarven master smithcrafter who ever
lived. Ugulf was wealthy beyond
imagining; he was credited with creating the first of the Iron Slaves. His mastery ensured that his arcane legacy
will live forever.
“And,” she added wistfully, “the
bride-price he paid engraved Anaprestia’s name into the annals of our lore for
all time.”
“Money still isn’t a measure of
love,” the ranger growled.
“You don’t know much about life
here, lupino,” she said sadly. “Sometimes, it’s the only tangible
measure.”
She gave his fingers a gentle
squeeze. “Not everyone is this lucky,”
she whispered.
A few minutes later, they entered
the courtyard of the Four Seasons. They
were still holding hands.
♦♦♦
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