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    King's Blades 01 - The Gilded Chain

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      chamber, making a final curtsey with one hand on

      the doorknob and the other clutching files. Her

      age was a state secret, for a black gable

      headdress concealed her hair and her pale moon

      face bore no wrinkles. She turned and began

      to cross the anteroom in the shuffling,

      flat-footed walk of the grossly fat, black

      robes whispering around her ankles. Her fishy

      gaze swam from face to face as she went, noting

      exactly who was present and who sat next

      to whom. No one would look her in the eye except

      the Blades, who stared back coldly--a point

      of honor, to prove they had nothing to hide.

      The Chamberlain gathered up more papers and

      hastened in to learn His Majesty's pleasure.

      Durendal headed for the desk.

      Words whirled in his head: Your Majesty,

      I crave a boon. Utterly ridiculous!

      Sire, may I humbly beg a favor?

      Better. The King would certainly consent. Married

      by royal prerogative!--it would amuse him.

      He loved to flaunt his power, especially if the

      demonstration did not cost the Exchequer anything.

      Durendal was, after all, one of his

      favorites. Montpurse should have been advised

      beforehand, but would understand. Married! To Kate! No

      doubts, no hesitation. What a woman! But

      first, of course, he must get by the Chamberlain.

      "I seek a brief audience with His Majesty

      concerning personal business." Personal business

      might take months! He certainly must not try

      to bring it up when it was his turn to stand guard in the

      council chamber itself. That would call down royal

      thunderbolts, even on him.

      The Chamberlain emerged, but he hung onto the

      handle and peered shortsightedly around the

      anteroom. "Ah, Sir Durendal!

      Thought you were here. Just the man. His Majesty

      wants you."

      Even for a Blade who prided himself on his fast

      reflexes, this afternoon was moving a little too quickly.

      He straightened his doublet and his shoulders, then

      walked into the inner sanctum.

      The council chamber was a square room,

      poorly lit by mullioned windows at the far

      side and made gloomy by paneling of black

      walnut and a dozen dark leather chairs set around

      the walls. One of them was piled with an untidy

      heap of red dispatch boxes and a snowdrift of

      spilled documents. The two high fireplaces

      were white marble, but neither was lit.

      The chairs were sometimes offered to foreign

      ambassadors. Everyone else--ministers,

      officials, petitioners; high and low, male or

      female--remained standing because the King did.

      Hoare, the Guard humorist, maintained that if the

      King sat down, you tried to remember when you had

      last updated your will, but if he began to pace it

      was too late to worry. He was an erratic

      worker, driving his ministers to desperation by refusing

      to look at a single paper for weeks, then working

      them for days and nights until they were half dead of

      exhaustion. He could snatch the substantive

      points out of a long-winded report like a sparrow

      hawk taking sparrows. His memory for detail was

      legendary, his temper even more so, his tenacity

      infinite. He made the policies. His ministers

      found ways to carry them out. Or were carried out

      themselves, Hoare said.

      The lamps had not been lit. He was brooding

      by the window, peering out at the sunset and darkening the

      room like a hay wagon. Durendal walked to the

      center of the room, bowed to that massive royal

      back, and then waited. Never before had he been more

      than a single pace from the door.

      The King swung around and grunted as if

      surprised. He pointed vaguely at a group

      of chairs. "Sit. I need to think."

      Fire and death and more fire! Durendal

      obeyed, although his scalp prickled. He could not

      recall anyone sitting when the King stood.

      Invalids, no one else, not ever.

      The King put his hands behind his back and began

      to shuttle--door, window, door. "I made a

      mistake once. Now I'm going to make

      another."

      Silence was the only possible comment.

      Window, door ... "I suppose I'm just

      pigheaded. Hardest part of being a King--being any

      sort of leader--is knowing when to quit. You've

      wounded the quarry, you've tracked it all day, and

      now night is coming. Do you give up and go home?

      Lose all that effort? Or do you push on, knowing

      you'll have to spend the night in the woods and may

      gain nothing? Hmm? How do you decide?"

      He seemed to be speaking to himself, but he

      suddenly stopped and peered at his uneasy

      Blade.

      "Hmm? Well? Which?"

      "I've never known Your Majesty to give up

      when there was any hope at all."

      Grunt. "Pigheaded, you mean. You're

      probably right. If I send you, can you go?"

      "Huh? I mean--"

      The King snarled impatiently. "You will be gone

      some time. Can you stand it, or must I release you

      first?"

      Release? Durendal shivered. Blades

      notoriously resisted being released from their

      bindings, although most of them were very relieved to be

      free of them afterward. Unexpectedly faced with that

      dread prospect, he felt a surge of

      panic. Of course, he would then be able to snatch

      up his barony, marry Kate, do all sorts of

      things with his life. ... No, unthinkable!

      The alternative, though, seemed to be to be

      absent from his ward for an extended period, and that

      might be torture unendurable. But at least it

      would be temporary, and the other permanent. He

      wiped sweat out of his eyes. "I think I can

      trust Commander Montpurse to take care of you,

      my liege."

      The King beamed. "Good man! Remember

      Everman?"

      It took a moment. It had been six years.

      "Candidate Everman? Three behind me at

      Ironhall."

      "That one. The one who got the job I wanted

      you for."

      No reply was required except a faster

      heartbeat.

      "He's still alive," the King said. "We have an

      agent in Samarinda. Sends reports in every few

      years. This time he reports that there's a

      Chivian-- You don't know any of this, do you?"

      He peered suspiciously at Durendal.

      Fortunately, it was possible to answer

      as truthfully as if he were being put to the Question.

      "Nothing at all, sire. There were rumors that he

      had been bound to a mysterious gentleman whom no

      one had ever heard of and they both disappeared. Nothing

      more."

      "Master Jaque Polydin, merchant,

      adventurer, perhaps a trickster." The King cleared

      his throat uneasily. "It's a long story.

      Grand Inquisitor will provide you with the

      details. There were reports that the knights of

      Samarinda owned the p
    hilosopher's stone--the

      gadget that turns lead into gold and lets you

      live forever. If you ever breathe a word of this around

      court, my boy, I will have you shortened by a head!"

      "I understand, sire." The King had been younger

      then, and every man was entitled to a few youthful

      follies. He'd been older than Durendal was

      now, though.

      "Grand Inquisitor will explain. I assumed

      they were both dead, but apparently Everman is still

      alive, fighting as some sort of gladiator. Of

      course, the news is two years old, so he

      may be dead now. But I won't have it, you hear?

      I won't have one of my Blades turned into a

      performing bear! Go and get him back."

      "Yes, sire." Durendal rose to his

      feet, but he felt as if he were falling.

      What else could a man say when the bottom

      dropped out of his world? It was the challenge of a

      lifetime. Where was Samarinda, that news took

      two years to arrive? Not even in Eurania.

      Oh, Kate! He could not refuse an order from

      his liege. He could protest and explain, but

      something as strong as the binding prevented that--pride.

      What a fool Kate had been to fall in love

      with a Blade!

      The King studied him for a moment and then smiled

      grimly. "Or at least find out what happened.

      Create another legend! I don't want

      to lose you, but I can't think of any other man

      to choose. Only you. See Grand Inquisitor

      in the morning. She'll assign one of her own men

      to accompany you. And Privy Purse will

      provide all the money you need. May the spirits

      favor your cause."

      Dismissal--so easily may a prince send a

      retainer to his death.

      How? When? Where? Who else? Take

      what? All those matters were being left to his

      discretion. It was Ambrose's way.

      Mind racing, Durendal said, "One question,

      sire?"

      "Ask Grand Inquisitor."

      "Your orders, sire? Am I to bring him

      back whether he wants to come or not? And further

      ... what about the philosophers' stone?"

      The King opened his mouth and seemed to think better

      of what he had been about to say. "Use your own

      judgment. I can't make decisions at the other

      side of the world. That's why I picked you. It's

      your enterprise; do what's best. Oh, yes, before

      you go ..." He stalked over to the paper-littered

      chair and began to rummage in a flurry of

      vellum and parchment.

      Kate, Kate, Kate ...

      Other side of the world?

      He could resign! He had a barony in his

      pocket, and the King had given him the right to claim

      it at any time. No, his binding would not let him

      exercise that right, as the King had known all along.

      And to mention Kate now would seem like cowardice and

      weaseling out.

      "Ha!" The King had found what he wanted

      down on the floor. He heaved himself upright again.

      "I keep meaning to amend the Ironhall charter.

      Allowing boys of fourteen to choose their own names

      is utter ... Ahem. Nothing personal, you

      understand. Nothing wrong with your name, and you have amply

      lived up to it. You may be the Durendal by the time

      you're finished."

      "Your Majesty is gracious."

      "Sometimes. When I have my foot in my mouth,

      I am. But what about Sir Snake, for

      example? Now we have Candidate Bullwhip.

      Young idiots! The current Prime is

      Candidate Wolfbiter."

      Durendal had planned to be Bloodhand if

      they wouldn't let him be Durendal. "I believe

      there are precedents for all those names, sire."

      "Yes, or Grand Master wouldn't have allowed

      them. Anyway, Grand Master says this

      Wolfbiter is the best thing they've produced

      since you. I've been saving him for something

      special. Now he's turned twenty-one and

      he's tearing the walls down."

      Hardly surprising! "I look forward

      to meeting him."

      "Well, you will. Here." The King thrust out a

      parchment sheet bearing the personal signet.

      "He's yours."

      Durendal bowed and closed the door. For a

      moment he just stood there, staring at the oak panel

      in front of his nose, sick with the thought of what he

      had done. Oh, Kate, Kate, Kate!

      He had given the king the best six years of his

      life and owed him nothing more. By any sane standard

      he should have demanded his release then and there and carried

      his beloved off to whatever that estate of his was called

      to happily ever after. The knowledge that his binding had

      overruled his own desires and judgment was no

      consolation at all.

      But what was done was done. He turned and

      beckoned the nearest page. He bent to whisper

      into a none-too-clean ear. "Go and find two

      Blades. I want them, the first two you see.

      Say please if one of them is Commander

      Montpurse, otherwise don't."

      The lad bowed and hurried off, impressed with his

      sudden ability to give orders to Blades. The

      Chamberlain bustled away into the King's presence.

      Durendal sat down at his desk, ignoring all

      the curious and disapproving faces. He selected

      a blank sheet of parchment and wrote out his will,

      leaving everything to Kate. Most Blades would have

      nothing to bequeath, but he owned a manor he had

      never seen. He had no idea what it was worth.

      Then he took another sheet.

      Grand Master:

      You are hereby authorized and requested

      to prepare Prime for binding on the night of the

      fifteenth instant.

      Done by my hand and in the King's name this

      fourteenth day of Thirdmoon, in the three

      hundred and fifty-seventh year of the House of

      Ranulf.

      Durendal, companion.

      He folded the papers, held wax in the candle

      flame, sealed them with his ring. He wandered over

      to rejoin Scrimpnel and Parsewood, enjoying

      their baffled stares and hoping his own face was not too

      scrutable.

      "Whose throw?"

      "Yours, obviously," Scrimpnel said. There

      were two groups in the Guard now, and he was one of the

      young ones, those who had not been in on the

      Nythia campaign. Good man with a rapier,

      though. "May spirits of chance favor you wherever you're

      bound."

      "Writing out your will?" asked Parsewood, who

      was newer yet, but a powerful saber fighter and

      clearly another good guesser. "You won't tell

      us a thing, you big bastard, will you?"

      Before Durendal could frame a reply with enough

      scathe, the door swung open to admit the most

      recent Blade of them all, although even he had

      several months' experience now--a reminder of just

      how long the King had kept the respected

      Wolfbiter dangling. Despite His

      Majesty's disapproval, Sir Snake's name

      was apt, he being about as long and as slender as a


      Blade ever was. He affected a thin mustache,

      a supercilious manner with a nose to match, and he

      sat a horse like the shine of its hide. He would

      do very well.

      Durendal sprang up and intercepted him before

      he could join the group. He passed him the letter.

      "Deliver this to Grand Master, no one else."

      The kid raised his eyebrows. "The Moor?

      Tonight?"

      "Yesterday. And keep your mouth shut, totally.

      Report to Leader when you return."

      "But tonight is the--" Snake took another

      look at the deputy commander's face. "At

      once, sir."

      As he went out, Chefney came in.

      Excellent! His luck was holding.

      "Take over from me here, please, brother?"

      Chefney nodded, curious but not questioning.

      Durendal followed Snake out, almost colliding

      with the returning page. Kate was no longer in the

      hall, but that was to be expected.

      He tracked down Montpurse as he left

      the fencing gym. A distinctly frosty stare

      suggested the Commander already knew there was something

      afoot and he had not been informed. He still looked

      no more than fifteen.

      "I've been detached for special duties,"

      Durendal said. "May be gone some time. Will you

      hold this for me--it's my will--and see my things are

      put in a safe place? The cups are worth a

      fair bit."

      The Commander's face went bleak. "Talk

      to Chancery. That's their job, and Blades can't

      always keep promises. Friend ... I'm going

      to miss you."

      "These things happen. He's the boss."

      "Yes." Montpurse's ice-pale eyes were

      asking how bad it was.

      "I'd like you to wear my sword breaker for me,

      though."

      "I'll see it's kept safe." He was not

      going to wear it, obviously, any more than his

      deputy would say where he was going. "Is this

      good-bye?"

      "I'll leave tomorrow." Durendal told him about

      Snake and the changes that would be needed in the duty

      roster. Then there was nothing more to say and nothing left

      to do except go and find Kate.

      He headed first for the White Sisters' quarters.

      Crossing the western courtyard, he saw her coming

      toward him. They both began to run, shocking

      several elderly sniffers and a few grandly

      dressed courtiers. Before they even met he

      watched the hope die in her eyes and wondered if

      his face was as readable to everyone or if women were more

      perceptive than men.

      They embraced in an impact that should have

     


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