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    King's Blades 01 - The Gilded Chain

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      right after, when the ex-Brat had insisted on taking

      the sacred name of Durendal. Master of Archives

      had warned him what would happen if he defied a

      tradition hallowed by three hundred years'

      observance. Well, they hadn't broken him. He

      had survived, struggled to be worthy of the great

      name, won the grudging respect of the masters and his

      peers. And he was worthy--the best of them all.

      By tomorrow night he would be Prime and Byless

      Second. Byless wouldn't be able to handle the

      juniors.

      Not Durendal's problem.

      What was his problem was Harvest's appalling

      silence. He must have been expecting the question, because

      he had been Second when Pendering was called.

      What choice did he have? Did any man ever

      refuse? Presumably he still had the choice

      all candidates had, the dismal election of walking

      out of the gate forever; but to contemplate surrender after

      so many years of effort--it was unthinkable, surely?

      The only sound in the room was a faint

      crackling as Grand Master crumpled a sheet of

      parchment in his massive fist. The wax of the royal

      signet broke off in fragments. After five

      years of learning to read Grand Master's moods,

      Durendal knew that now they were proclaiming

      hurricane! Enforced absence from the feast might

      explain some storminess, but not so much.

      Harvest spoke at last, almost inaudibly.

      "I am ready, Grand Master."

      Soon Durendal would be saying those words. And

      who would be sitting in the second chair?

      Who was there now? He had not looked. The edge

      of his eye hinted it was seeing a youngish man, too

      young to be the King himself.

      "My lord," Grand Master said, "I have the

      honor to present Prime Candidate Harvest,

      who will serve you as your Blade."

      As the two young men turned to him, the anonymous

      noble drawled, "The other one looks much more

      impressive. Do I have a choice?"

      "You do not!" barked Grand Master, color

      pouring into his craggy face. "The King himself

      takes whoever is Prime."

      "Oh, so sorry! Didn't mean to twist your

      dewlaps, Grand Master." He smiled

      vacuously. He was a weedy, soft-faced

      man in his early twenties, a courtier to the

      core, resplendent in crimson and vermilion

      silks trimmed with fur and gold chain. If the

      white cloak was truly ermine, it must be worth a

      fortune. His fairish beard came to a needle

      point and his mustache was a work of art. A fop.

      Who?

      "Prime, this is the Marquis of Nutting, your

      future ward."

      "Ward?" The Marquis sniggered. "You make

      me sound like a debutante, Grand Master.

      Ward indeed!"

      Harvest bowed, his face ashen as he

      contemplated a lifetime guarding ... whom? Not the

      King himself, not his heir, not a prince of the blood,

      not an ambassador traveling in exotic lands,

      not an important landowner out on the marches, not a

      senior minister, nor even--at worst--the head of

      one of the great conjuring orders. Here was no ward

      worth dying for, just a court dandy, a parasite.

      Trash.

      Seniors spent more time studying politics than

      anything else except fencing. Wasn't the

      Marquis of Nutting the brother of the Countess

      Mornicade, the King's latest mistress? If

      so, then six months ago he had been the

      Honorable Tab Nillway, a younger son of a

      penniless baronet, and his only claim

      to importance was that he had been expelled from the

      same womb as one of the greatest beauties of the

      age. No report reaching Ironhall had ever

      hinted that he might have talent or ability.

      "I am deeply honored to be assigned to your

      lordship," Harvest said hoarsely, but the spirits did

      not strike him dead for perjury.

      Grand Master's displeasure was now explained.

      One of his precious charges was being thrown away

      to no purpose. Nutting was not important enough to have

      enemies, even at court. No man of honor

      would lower his standards enough to call out an upstart pimp

      --certainly not one who had a Blade prepared

      to die for him. But Grand Master had no choice.

      The King's will was paramount.

      "We shall hold the binding tomorrow midnight,

      Prime," the old man snapped. "Make the

      arrangements, Second."

      "Yes, Grand Master."

      "Tomorrow?" protested the Marquis querulously.

      "There's a ball at court tomorrow. Can't we just

      run through the rigmarole quickly now and be

      done with it?"

      Grand Master's face was already dangerously

      inflamed, and that remark made the veins swell

      even more. "Not unless you wish to kill a man, my

      lord. You have to learn your part in the ritual. Both

      you and Prime must be purified by ritual and

      fasting."

      Nutting curled his lip. "Fasting? How

      barbaric!"

      "Binding is a major conjuration. You will be in

      some danger yourself."

      If the plan was to frighten the court parasite

      into withdrawing, it failed miserably. He merely

      muttered, "Oh, I'm sure you exaggerate."

      Grand Master gave the two candidates a

      curt nod of dismissal. They bowed in unison and

      left.

      Harvest clattered quickly down the stairs and

      strode off along a corridor that led to nowhere

      except the library. Durendal, with his longer

      legs, had no trouble keeping up with him. If the

      man wanted to be alone, he could say so; but if

      he needed support, then who else should offer it but

      Second?

      The glow of a lamp appeared ahead as someone

      approached the corner. Harvest muttered an oath

      and moved into a window embrasure. Leaning on the

      stone sill, he thrust his face against the bars, as

      if trying to fill his lungs with fresh air.

      "You go back to the hall, Second.

      Take--" His voice cracked. "Sit in my

      chair. So they'll know."

      Durendal thumped a hand on his shoulder. "You

      forget that I have to fast also. Look on the bright

      side, warrior!" You can always cut your throat,

      which is what I would do. "You might have been gifted

      to some tinpot princeling in the Northern Isles.

      As it is, you'll live at court, romancing

      all the beautiful maidens. What a sinecure--

      wenching, dancing, hunting, and not a worry!"

      "An ornament?"

      "A long, quiet life is better than a

      short--"

      "No, it isn't. Never! Five years

      I've slaved here, and I'm being wasted.

      Utterly wasted!"

      This was so obviously true that

      Durendal found himself at a loss. He turned

      hopefully to the lamp approaching and saw that it was

      being carried by Sir Aragon, who was even older

      than Grand Master. He contributed nothing

      to Ironhall these days except
    a glorious

      reputation, for he had been Blade to the great

      Shoulrack who had pacified Nythia for

      Ambrose III. He was reputed to have been the

      general's brains as well as his personal sword

      and shield.

      "Leave me," Harvest howled to the sky. "For

      spirits' sake, Second, leave me, go away, and

      let me weep like a crazy woman. Like that

      dissolute, useless namby who is going to own my

      soul."

      Durendal stepped back. Aragon came

      shuffling closer with his lamp in one hand, a cane in

      the other, and a thick book under his arm. He was

      frail, but he had not lost his wits. He took

      in the situation at a glance.

      "Bad news, lad?"

      When Harvest did not answer, Durendal said,

      "Prime is a little shocked, sir. He has

      been assigned to the Marquis of Nutting."

      "Who, by the eight, is he?"

      "The brother of the King's current mistress."

      The old man pulled a hideous face, all

      wrinkles and yellow stumps of teeth. "I trust

      you are not implying that a private Blade is in

      some way inferior to a member of the Royal

      Guard, Candidate?"

      Huddled in his cloak of misery, Harvest

      mumbled, "No, sir."

      "It is a rare honor. There are a hundred

      Blades in the Royal Guard all going mad with

      boredom, but a private Blade has his work

      cut out for him, a lifetime of devotion and

      service. I congratulate you, my boy."

      Propping his cane against the wall, he held out a

      gnarled claw that would never again draw the sword

      hanging at his side.

      "Congratulate?" Harvest shouted, swinging around

      but ignoring the proffered hand. Two red lines

      framing his face showed where he had been leaning on

      the bars. "Nutting is a nothing, a bag of

      dung! What need has he for a Blade?"

      "The King must think he has need, Candidate!

      Do you presume to overrule your King? Do you know

      things that he doesn't?"

      Nice try, Durendal thought, but it

      wouldn't console him, were he in poor Harvest's

      half-boots.

      Prime shuddered and made an effort to control

      himself, although he was obviously close to tears now.

      "The King knows what he is doing! Grand

      Master's told him I'm not good enough for the Royal

      Guard, so he's palming me off on a worthless

      buffoon, a panderer. He isn't even a genuine

      noble."

      Aragon's shock seemed genuine enough. "You

      are raving, Prime, and you know it! Neither Grand

      Master nor anyone else ever passes judgment

      on the candidates like that. Anyone who fails

      to measure up is thrown out long before he becomes

      a senior--you know that, too. I am well aware

      that you can't fence like Durendal here. Who can? That

      does not mean that all the rest of us are useless!

      The reason the King always takes the first in line is

      because even a below-average Blade is fields

      ahead of any other swordsman anywhere. It

      doesn't matter how you rank in Ironhall,

      you're first-class by the world's standards. Now stop

      making a fool of yourself." The rheumy eyes

      glanced briefly at Durendal. "If Grand

      Master were to hear of this exhibition, he might

      indeed change the assignment--but he would do it

      by striking you off the roll completely!"

      Then Durendal would have to take his place, but

      he was more concerned for his friend than he was for himself--or

      hoped he was. Harvest's trouble was that he

      wasn't quite ripe. He did not have his emotions under

      adult control yet. He needed to do some more growing

      up.

      He had twenty-four hours to do it.

      Durendal said, "You're an Ironhall

      Blade, the deadliest human weapon ever

      devised--loyal, fearless, and incorruptible.

      How long since anyone died in a binding, Sir

      Aragon?"

      "Before my time. Sixty years ago, at

      least."

      "There you are. You're not afraid, are you?"

      Harvest flinched. "Curse you, no! I'm not

      a coward!"

      "It's beginning to look like it."

      "No!"

      "Well, that's all right, then." Durendal

      laid a friendly but powerful arm around Prime's

      shoulders and propelled him bodily along the

      corridor.

      Aragon stared after them wistfully.

      The secret, sacred heart of Ironhall was

      the Forge, a vast and echoing crypt watered by its

      own spring. The eight hearths around the walls--

      each with its own bellows, anvil, and stone trough

      --were where the magnificent cat's-eye swords

      were made; but the focus of power was the coffinlike

      slab of iron in the center, for there the human

      Blades were tempered. Puberty alone would have

      transformed the boys into men, but few of them would have

      become the superb swordsmen who graduated. The

      King's Blades were all stamped with the same die

      --lean, well-muscled athletes. When Harvest

      had stopped growing too soon, conjuration had

      coaxed his body into another effort. When

      Durendal had been in danger of growing too

      big, then he in turn had lain on the anvil

      while Master of Rituals invoked the

      appropriate spirits to come to his aid. The final

      drama, the binding of a Blade to his ward, must

      inevitably be consummated among the fires of the

      Forge.

      On the day of a binding, the echoing cavern was

      relinquished to the participants, who were required

      to meditate there, starting before dawn. By the end of a very

      long day, Durendal was still not sure he had

      succeeded, because meditating wasn't something he'd ever

      tried before; but if boredom was the measure of

      success, he had done splendidly. Harvest

      sat and chewed his fingernails to the elbow, while the

      Marquis paced, fretted, and whined about hunger.

      Once Master Armorer came in and asked

      Harvest what he wanted to name his sword.

      Harvest muttered, "Haven't decided." The

      man shrugged and went away.

      At sunset Master of Rituals appeared and

      ordered the three of them to strip and bathe in four of the

      eight troughs, in a particular order. After poking

      a finger in the icy spring water, the Marquis

      squawked and refused so vehemently that a pathetic

      smile briefly warmed Harvest's pale face.

      Alas, offered alternatives of calling off the

      binding or being forcibly stripped and dunked by four

      smiths, Nutting decided to cooperate; but he

      must have set a record for the shortest bathing on

      record.

      Close to midnight, the knights and the rest of the

      candidates filed in to begin the ritual.

      Bright flames frolicked in the hearths, but the

      shadows of six score men and boys made the

      crypt dark and creepy. As the chanting soared

      amid strange acoustics and the metallic beat of

      hammers, Durendal sensed the spirits ga
    thering. Some

      spirituality always lingered there, for any forge sustained

      all four of the manifest elements--earth from the

      ore, fire from the hearths, air from the bellows,

      water from the quenching troughs. Of the virtual

      elements, the swords attracted spirits of death and

      chance, while time and love were essential

      ingredients of loyalty. Binding was a very potent

      and complex conjuration.

      His fast had left him vaguely light-headed,

      yet he was buoyed up by the surging powers. Hard

      to believe after so long that his life in Ironhall

      was almost over. Soon he, also, would be bound and

      stride out into the world behind his ward, whoever that might

      be. He could not possibly draw a shorter

      straw than poor Harvest had.

      The procedure was very familiar. He had first

      played a role in a binding on his third day in

      Ironhall, because one part of the ritual was

      assigned to the Brat. As the spirits of chance had

      caused him to remain the Brat so long, he had

      assisted no less than eight Blades at their

      bindings, which might be a record, although a petty

      one to be proud of.

      Now he had emerged from the chorus to play a

      major role once again, gathered with the other

      participants inside the octogram. The locations

      were obligatory: Prime stood at death point,

      directly across from his future ward at love and

      flanked by Second at earth and Byless, the next

      most senior candidate, at air. Chance point was

      always given to the Brat. The three who performed

      most of the conjuration took the remaining points--

      Master of Rituals as Invoker at fire,

      Master of Archives as Dispenser at water, and

      Grand Master as Arbiter at time.

      Dispenser chanted the banishment of death, casting

      grain across the octogram, grain being a symbol

      of life. Banishing all death spirits when there was a

      sword present was an impossibility, of

      course; and the element of chance was fickle

      by definition. When he had completed that second

      revocation, Invoker began summoning spirits

      of the required elements. The onlookers joined in

      the triumphant dedication song of the Order, a

      paean to brotherhood and service that made the

      Forge throb like a great heart. Although the chamber was

      stiflingly hot, Durendal felt the hair rise

      on the back of his neck.

      Grand Master went forward to scatter a handful of

      gold coins on the anvil. He peered at their

      distribution and seemed satisfied that they hinted at

     


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