i
Seymour followed Byron’s gaze. Through the crowd Seymour caught a glimpse of a familiar brown and tan uniform, and then saw another. He swallowed and pressed his hands together. He hadn’t seen that uniform since the day Dakin had led him to the hounds. Seymour had thought the next time he saw it, he would die. That feeling was very still very strong. “What do we do?”
Byron shrugged. “Risk passing him, I guess. Why don’t you wait here? If something happens to me, there’s enough money in that valise to take care of you.”
Seymour didn’t want to be by himself, especially with stolen merchandise on his arm. “I can’t let you go alone–”
“We have to go separately. Together we’ll be too conspicuous. I’ll divert his attention and then you run past. We’ll meet at that side street down there.” Byron pointed to a street that veered off behind the retainer.
Seymour shook his head, about to protest again, when the cries of “Carriage! Carriage!” rose. People scurried aside. A woman pushed against Seymour in her haste, knocking him against Byron. She nodded at Byron, her face flushed, “Sorry, milord,” she said as she passed.
Byron took Seymour’s arm and led him to the side of the road just as the white carriage rumbled past. Seymour felt the wind from its wheels, smelled the rich leather of its frame. A young boy stood in the carriage’s path, but it didn’t slow. A merchant grabbed the child away just in time.
The carriage stopped near Lord Dakin’s retainers. The crowd remained near the side of the road, moving forward again but giving the carriage and the retainers a wide berth. The carriage rocked for a moment, and then the door opened and a woman stepped out.
She wore a long white day gown that accented her dark hair and skin. She was tiny, perhaps half Seymour’s size. Her hair cascaded down her shoulders in ringlets. She carried a small white fan which she swung like a knife.
Byron took a few steps forward. Seymour followed.
“You are one of Lord Dakin’s retainers?” Her voice carried above the noise of the crowd.
“Yes, ma’am.” The retainer bowed and stayed down until she tapped him on the shoulder with her fan.
“Who is she?” Seymour asked.
Byron stared at her. The tension seemed to have returned to his body. “The Lady Almathea Jelwra. She is one of the richest and most powerful nobles in the kingdom. Her mother used to be on the council.”
“Do you know where Lord Dakin is?” the lady asked.
The retainer stood. “He plans to be here shortly, ma’am. He had a bit of trouble back at the great house.”
“Trouble?”
“With an execution, ma’am.”
“Those damned dogs again,” she said. “How barbaric.” She slapped her fan against her palm. “Tell your master that if he hasn’t shown up by this time tomorrow, I shall leave. If I do not see him, I will consider our business concluded and I will so notify the palace.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
The mention of the hounds sent shivers through Seymour. He touched Byron’s arm. “Let’s go now, before they notice us.”
Byron’s eyes were hooded. Seymour could read no expression on his face. When he spoke, his tone seemed reluctant. “I suppose we should hurry.”
This time Seymour grabbed Byron’s arm, and pulled him past the beggars, minstrels, and merchants lining the streets. Seymour crouched as he moved, hoping to stay hidden in the masses of people. The crowd noise lessened, but he lost track of the conversation behind him. Gentry everywhere, and Lord Dakin coming to the city. They had to get out as quickly as they could.
Once Byron’s attention had been diverted from the lady, he moved rapidly. Seymour glanced over his shoulder. The retainers had their backs to Byron and Seymour. The lady was gesturing with her fan, then she began to climb the stairs to her carriage, but stopped when a man approached her.
“Oh, no,” Seymour whispered.
“Come on, Seymour,” Byron said.
Seymour nodded. “We’ve got to get off this street.”
“That’s what I’m trying to do,” Byron said.
“No, you don’t understand. Our benefactor is standing over there.”
Byron looked at the carriage and swore under his breath. “Lord Kensington.” He tapped Seymour on the arm and then loped toward the side street. Seymour had to run to keep up.
The side street was smaller, the road narrower. The smells were less thick here, and the noise dimmer. The crowd seemed different, a bit rougher, filled with people like the one Seymour had encountered the day before.
He looked back at the main road. The lord still spoke with the lady, and the retainers watched. No one had followed. He and Byron were safe.
ii
Afeno huddled in a doorway, watching the street. His stomach ached. He hadn’t had a decent meal since Magic left two weeks before. He sighed, wishing he could get enough energy to do some work. But Magic had been his partner. The old man had taught Afeno everything. They worked as a team, Afeno attracting the attention because his young legs could carry him quickly, and Magic taking the money. Only last time Magic had taken the money and had never returned.
A merchant’s cart rumbled by, stacked with food. A long, fat sausage hovered on the edge, then toppled into the road. Afeno sprang forward. He pushed his way into the road and dove on the meat, wrapping his arms around the casing when someone hit him in the jaw. Afeno winced. A ragged boy grabbed the sausage and pulled. Afeno pulled back. He wasn’t going to let anyone take his meal, especially not some young kid. Afeno twisted his foot around the boy’s ankle and yanked. The boy toppled into the dirt, losing his grip on the sausage. Afeno got up, but the boy grabbed his calf. Afeno slipped and fell on his knees. Pain shot through his legs and made his eyes water. Dust got into his mouth and he felt as if he were choking. The boy jumped on top of Afeno and began pounding his back with his small fists. Afeno clung to the sausage. If he survived the attack, he would eat again. Eating was worth this.
The kid hit Afeno’s ear, and the shooting ache made Afeno roll over. He kneed the boy in the groin and the kid fell over. He heard applause. Afeno glanced up. A group of street fighters and retainers had gathered around them. Coins glinted. They were betting on the fight.
The betting made Afeno even angrier. He hugged the sausage and started to run, but the kid tackled him. Afeno rolled until he faced the kid, then he kicked and bit. The kid pummeled Afeno. Tears were running down the kid’s face, leaving tracks in the dirt.
Afeno pushed the kid off with his feet, and ignored the cheering. He gripped the sausage like a sword and as the kid stood up, took a swing. The kid ducked.
Suddenly someone grabbed Afeno by he scruff of the neck. His feet dangled above the ground. He clung to the sausage, wondering if he dared drop it and fight his way free. Damn those fighters. They were in the way.
The kid was still within reach. Afeno kicked him. The person holding Afeno’s neck shook him. “Stop it. Stop it now.”
The man’s voice was soft and deep. He didn’t yell, but his tone seemed menacing. Another man came from behind and held the kid’s shoulders.
“Hey! You got no business here!” one of the fighters yelled. The man was brawny, with arms the size of the sausage. Afeno turned his head from side to side, trying to see his captor.
“Let go of the sausage,” said the man holding Afeno. Afeno held on tighter.
“Let go,” the man said, “or I’ll free it myself.” His grip tightened. The collar of Afeno’s ripped shirt dug into his neck. He dropped the sausage. His stomach growled and he felt even more discouraged than he had before. The sausage thumped at the kid’s feet.
“You have no right!” the fighter yelled.
“When you address me, you say ‘sir.’” The man lowered Afeno to the ground, but kept a firm grip on his shoulder. Afeno turned and saw his captor for the first time. He wore a black cape and pants made from a rich material. Lace decorated his wrists and his collar. But his face was covered with scratches and his skin was too pale. Deep circled ran under his eyes.
“I don’t call anybody sir, especially not a lordling in lace and velvet,” said the fighter. The man was big, with thick forearms and a tattoo on his hand. The other fighters closed around him. Afeno wriggled, trying to get free. The sausage wasn’t worth being in the middle of this kind of fight. Magic had told him that no one would win with one of these. If Afeno did get away, he would try to grab some of the coins as he ran.
“Pick up your money and go,” the lord said. He pushed back his cape. A fine gold scabbard rested against his hip. The hilt of the sword sparkled with a hundred small jewels, enough to keep Afeno fed for years. “And give the boys some gold for the insult you paid them.”
“No.” The fighter drew a dagger from his belt. “But we may let them have some of your riches.”
The lord let go of Afeno’s shoulders. Afeno reached for the sausage when the man holding the kid grabbed him. “You wait.” Afeno glanced at the man. He wore dirty magician’s robes, and his face was covered with dust.
“Do you know that the penalty for attacking a gentleman in this city is death?” the lord asked.
The fighter shrugged. “They’ll never know who did it.”
The lord spread his legs to improve his balance. A larger crowd had gathered around them. Afeno thought he recognized a few faces. “They’ll know,” the lord said. “I’ve already sent one of my retainers for the mayor’s guards.”
The retainers who had been betting with the street fighters backed away. Afeno tried to wrench himself from the magician’s grasp. Afeno didn’t want to see the mayor’s guards. The magician held on tightly. “Just wait,” he said.
The leader waved his dagger. “They aren’t here yet, lordling.”
He lunged at the lord. Afeno stepped back, into the magician. The lord’s sword glinted as it appeared, and with a single clink of metal against metal, the fighter’s dagger spun into the crowd. People screamed and hurried out of the way. The lord held the sword at his side and faced the fighter.
“Anyone else?” he asked. The fighters shook their heads. The lord sheathed his sword. “All right, then. You owe the boys some money.”
The fighters tossed coins at the lord. The money shimmered and sparkled like rain in sunlight. The coins tinkled as they fell. The lord stood and watched; everyone stood and watched. Afeno held himself still. The minute the magician let him go, he would grab as much money as he could.
The fighters turned away and walked down the street. The leader picked up his dagger, rubbed its blade against his trousers, and stuck it in his belt. Then he followed the others.
The lord watched them with a slight smile. As soon as they disappeared, he said, “Thank you for the help, Seymour.”
The magician’s face flushed. “You could have got us killed.”
“Here.” The lord took Afeno’s arm and the kid’s. His fingers squeezed into Afeno’s flesh. “Would you pick up the coins and cut the sausage in half?”
“You said that’s ours!” Afeno tried to shake himself from the lord’s grasp. The grip was too tight–and Afeno was too weak from the last few weeks. His arm would be bruised.
“The sausage is yours,” the lord said. “But Seymour will divide it for you civilly–unless you want to continue fighting?”
The lord let go of Afeno then. Afeno rubbed his arm. He could try to take everything, but the lord was too quick with a sword. Or he could wait until the lord left and steal from the kid. That seemed best.
The magician gathered the coins. Afeno watched closely, trying to see if the magician pocketed any of it. But he just put the money in little piles.
The lord crouched in front of the kid and pulled out a lace handkerchief. He wiped blood away from the kid’s nose. The kid let him. Afeno would have pulled away. The kid sniffled a little. He looked too young to be scrounging on his own.
“Tell me what happened,” the lord said.
The kid glanced at Afeno. The kid’s brown eyes were large against his face. The kid hadn’t eaten well in a long time either.
“Which one of you stole the sausage?”
Afeno had stolen nearly everything he had ever had, but he hadn’t stolen that sausage. He and the kid spoke at the same time.
“I didn’t–”
“I never–”
“It just–”
“Someone–”
The lord laughed. His laugh seemed to run up and down a scale. “Who dropped the sausage?”
“It fell off a merchant’s cart,” the kid said. “I grabbed it and he took it from me.”
“I had it first,” Afeno said. “He was trying to get it from me.”
“So you both reached it at the same time and started fighting over it. Seymour, how much money have you got there?”
“Twenty gold pieces and seven rounds.”
“Rounds.” The lord sounded as if rounds were horrible. Rounds were fine with Afeno. They weren’t nearly as much as a gold piece, but they bought food on the street. “Ten gold pieces each. What are your names, boys?”
“Colin,” the kid said.
Afeno swallowed. He found that he didn’t want to lie to the lord. “Afeno.”
The lord’s eyes widened slightly, as if he knew that Afeno hadn’t lied. “You have no family.”
Afeno snorted. His mother had been knifed by one of her clients when Afeno was Colin’s age, and he had managed to scramble on his own for a while. Then he had met Magic and they worked together until Magic disappeared with their money. “No family and no home. I make my way by stealing. Doesn’t that worry you?”
“No.” The lord smiled. “Not since I’m the one who caught you.”
Afeno flushed. His luck had turned poor. He was doing so badly that he didn’t notice an obvious mark because he had been fighting for a sausage.
“What about you, Colin?” the lord asked. “You’re alone too.”
Colin’s eyes filled with tears. He blinked hard and cleared his throat before he spoke. “My mother died of fever, and my father met Lord Dakin’s hounds. He managed to send me here to an uncle, but my uncle didn’t want me.”
The lord nodded. The magician put his hand on the lord’s arm. “No,” the magician whispered.
The lord didn’t seem to notice. “You boys will never survive in this city carrying ten gold pieces.”
“Yes, we will,” Afeno said. He could handle himself. The lord was going to cheat them after all. Afeno should have known better than to trust the man.
“I’ll make you an offer,” the lord said, as if Afeno hadn’t spoken. “I’ll pay you a copper per day over and above your gold if you travel with us. My friend and I need some companions to do the fetching for us.”
Afeno frowned. Lords had retainers. They didn’t need the help of beggar boys. “What happened to your men?”
The lord grinned. “I have no men. And I’m no gentleman.”
That explained the cuts on his face. He had stolen the clothes. The whole thing still made no sense, though. Why wasn’t he keeping the gold for himself?
“You bluffed the fighters?” Colin asked.
The lord nodded and tugged at the lace on his sleeve.
“In the name of the Old Ones,” Colin said. “They could have killed you.”
The lord shrugged. Afeno smiled in spite of himself. The lord had courage, even if he did things strangely.
“I’ll go with you,” Colin said.
Afeno hesitated. If he went with the lord, he would have food and money. Once he had accumulated enough of both and regained his strength, he could go out on his own again. He didn’t want to trust another companion so soon. “I’ll go too,” he said.
iii
The innkeeper gave them his last room. Seymour stopped at the door, while Byron went inside and set down the valise. The room was smaller than the one he had had in Dakin’s great house, but cozier. The pallet was wide and thick, and sat on a wooden frame. Large coverlets made the bed almost chest high. A table rested beneath a square window, and a chair leaned against the wall.
“I thought I’d never see a bed again,” Seymour said. He walked inside the room and collapsed on the coverlets. The pallet seemed even softer than the one he had had at the hut. He raised one foot in the air. With the money Byron had stolen that afternoon, he had bought Seymour new clothes and boots. Seymour wasn’t used to wearing trousers and the boots were stiff. They aggravated the blisters he had gotten on the walk to town.
He stared at the shiny, torturous boot and pulled it off. Then he repeated the procedure with the other foot. He curled and massaged his toes. “I may never walk again.”
Byron laughed. “You’ll get used to the boots, Seymour.”
Under his stockings Seymour found two more blisters. “Maybe.” He glanced up at Byron. “But I may never get used to you.”
“What do you mean?” Byron’s tone was casual, but his body tensed.
“When you address me, you say ‘sir.’”
Byron shrugged. “Nice line, huh?”
“You meant that when you said it. You know how to use a sword like the gentry, and yet you steal as if you’ve done that before too. Then you treat fighters with righteous anger when they wager on children.” Seymour propped a pillow against the wall and leaned back. “Why?”
Byron pulled off his cape and folded it across the chair. Then he sat on the bed, took off his boots, and sighed. “I slapped an old woman once over a half-eaten piece of meat. She still managed to swallow it before I could grab it, and I was so hungry I could have killed her for it. I saw one of Lord Seritz’s men behead a child for picking a gold piece off the street. That’s when I decided I didn’t owe the nobility anything. If their clothes gave them license to do what they wanted, then all I needed was a fine outfit.”
“It’s not that simple,” Seymour said.
“Isn’t it? I don’t misuse the clothes, and I don’t steal unless I have to. Even then I don’t like it.” Byron closed his eyes. Within seconds his breathing was solid and even. Seymour rubbed his feet, finding more blisters. Then he propped himself on an elbow and looked at Byron.
His skin was pale with exhaustion, but the scratches were fading from his face. His fingers were long and slender–magician’s hands, Seymour’s father would have called them, but Seymour knew that Byron had no magic.
Byron’s eyes opened, and for a moment Seymour found himself being appraised in return. Then Byron sat up. “I can’t sleep just yet, Seymour. I think I’ll go down and get something to eat. Want to join me?”
Seymour frown, wondering what Byron had seen. An inept, broken-down magician, too old to have an eighth-level seal, wearing the wrong clothes and a perpetually frightened expression on his face. Now that they were in the city, Byron should have gotten rid of him. Instead he bought Seymour new clothes and talked about traveling to the palace together.
“I’ll come down with you,” Seymour said.
Byron smiled and stretched, then stood up. Seymour reached for his boots and slid them over his feet, wincing each time he hit a blister. When he stood, one of the blisters burst, and he limped to the door.
Laughter drifted up from the common room. The hallways smelled of ale and cooked meat. Seymour hadn’t realized how hungry he was. He walked down the stairs, gripping the railing the entire way. His feet didn’t bend properly in the boots. It felt as if he had strapped thick wood to the bottom of his feet. The trousers felt awkward too. They constricted his waist and rubbed against the inside of his legs. Seymour had worn magician’s robes his entire life. The soft shirt and tight trousers–squire’s clothing–made him feel like another person.
Only a few people sat in the common room. A table full of local merchants drank and laughed. A serving girl huddled near the hearth. At another table a woman and a man stared at their food as if using it as an excuse not to talk to each other.
Byron sat at a table near the door. Seymour sat across from him and resisted the urge to remove his boots again. Byron smiled sympathetically. Seymour realized that he hadn’t seen Byron limp since they stole the clothes.
Byron raised a hand, and the serving girl came to the table. “We’d like food and some ale,” he said. She nodded. In a few minutes, she returned with two large tankards of ale and plates overflowing with stew. The plates steamed, and the smell of beef and gravy made Seymour’s mouth water.
“Too bad we couldn’t bring the boys inside,” Byron said.
Seymour glanced up. He hated the thought of traveling with those children. “We can’t trust them in here.”
“Oh, we probably could.” Byron took a sip of his ale. “I’m just too tired to watch them, that’s all.”
The outside door opened, sending chill air inside the room. A thin, balding man dressed in white came in and held the door as the Lady Jelwra and another man walked through. The lady’s white gown glimmered in the firelight. The man with her was elderly, and he bobbed as he spoke.
“…decision, milady.”
“I don’t care,” she said. “If he doesn’t show up tomorrow, I will annex those lands. I have the right to do so. I was trying to be fair.”
The elderly man bobbed again. “Have patience, milady. The retainer could have been wrong.”
“I certainly hope so. Chasing men with dogs. Barbarous custom. Someone should stop that man before he kills someone he shouldn’t.” The lady stopped near the stairs. Her gown swished against the wooden floor. “I mean it, though, Usci. I will take the lands. It makes no difference to me whether I pay for them or annex them. And Lord Dakin doesn’t seem to mind either.”
“Milady.” The elderly man put a hand on her arm. His voice shook slightly. “If you annex the land, you could have trouble with Lord Dakin.”
“Nonsense. I’ll get the king’s seal. You know that’s both easy and legal. Boton can–” She stopped and stared at Byron. A slow flush rose in her dark cheeks. Taking a step toward the table, she took a fan from the folds of her skirt. The fan was closed, and she caressed it absently. “Who might you be, sir?”
Byron stood, took her free hand, and kissed it. He did not release it when he was through. “Geoffry of Kinsmail, at your service, milady.”
Kinsmail? Seymour pushed his full plate aside. The nerves that had prevented him from eating all day had returned. He had heard of Kinsmail, but the stories were vague and old, like a half-remembered dream.
The Lady Jelwra smiled. The look transformed her face, made her seem little older than the boys they had found on the street. “Kinsmail does not exist,” she said.
“Beg pardon, milady,” Byron said. “It did exist once.”
“Indeed?” Her expression remained innocent, but her tone was skeptical. “You look like a titled man. But you’re probably lying to me. You’re probably one of Lord Dakin’s sons, sent to spy on me.”
Byron smiled in return. He still held her hand. “Lord Dakin has no sons. And I am no friend of his. He holds the title to Kinsmail land. It seems he annexed it.”
The Lady Jelwra touched Byron’s cheek with her fan. “Lands are lost if the owner doesn’t protect them, Sir Geoffry.”
“It’s not quite that easy,” he said. “We have the Enos to think about.”
She pulled her hand away and stepped back. “I have never had any trouble with an Enos.”
“Not yet. But you’re young, milady.”
Seymour clasped his hands tightly. No one talked to gentry like this. If she caught Byron in his lie–
“I’m sure Lord Dakin’s Enos does not approve of his dogs,” the lady said.
“I’m sure,” Byron said.
She turned to her elderly companion. “Does this young man have a claim to Lord Dakin’s land?”
“If he is who he says he is,” the man said. “The Kinsmails and Dakins had one of the few land battles ever recorded in Kilot history. Seventeen men died defending Kinsmail land. They stopped it before it developed into a final time.”
“Mmm.” The lady tilted her head. Her ringlets fell away from her face, revealing diamond studs that ran along the outside edge of her ear. “Then if I’m successful in my bid against Lord Dakin, I would have to contend with you, Sir Geoffry. That would be ever so much more interesting.”
She gathered her skirts and started up the stairs, her small white shoes clicking on the wood. Byron didn’t move. He watched her with the same preoccupied expression Seymour had seen on his face earlier.
She stopped on the fifth stair and looked down at Byron. “Did I tell you that you look familiar?” She raised her eyebrows and her dark eyes sparkled. “Perhaps I danced with the Lord of Kinsmail and never even knew it.”
“Perhaps,” Byron said. She walked the rest of the way up the stairs. He didn’t move until the creaks stopped in the floorboards above.
Seymour reached for his plate. The food was cool now and he ate it automatically. The meat was chewy and tasteless, the gravy thick with flour. He ate because he didn’t want to talk to Byron, didn’t want to find out that Byron had been lying to him all along. Byron had been sent to the hounds because he was the Lord of Kinsmail, not because of some peasant uprising. That would explain his ease in the clothing and his understanding of the streets.
Byron’s chair groaned as he sat down. He grabbed his plate and began to eat without looking at Seymour.
“You lie well,” Seymour said.
Byron continued eating. He appeared to be swallowing without chewing.
“How did you think of Kinsmail so quickly?” Seymour let the sarcasm creep into his voice. “I would have been stammering something about shipping or–”
“We’ll have to leave in the morning.” Byron ran a hand over his face. “And I was hoping to buy a lute here.”
“Why so soon?” Seymour asked, surprised by the turn in conversation.
“Where the Lady Jelwra is, Lord Dakin will soon follow.”
“It’s more than that,” Seymour said. “She isn’t sure Dakin will show up.”
“I know.” Byron glanced up the stairs.
“Then why leave?”
“Because,” Byron said softly. “I don’t ever want to see the Lady Jelwra again.”