{"id":6522,"date":"2026-01-10T10:11:32","date_gmt":"2026-01-10T10:11:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/deryni-chronology-13-the-bishops-heir-kurtz-katherine\/"},"modified":"2026-01-10T10:11:32","modified_gmt":"2026-01-10T10:11:32","slug":"deryni-chronology-13-the-bishops-heir-kurtz-katherine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/deryni-chronology-13-the-bishops-heir-kurtz-katherine\/","title":{"rendered":"Deryni Chronology 13 &#8211; The Bishop&#8217;s Heir &#8211; Kurtz, Katherine"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class='book-preview'>\n<h3>Book Preview<\/h3>\n<div class=\"calibre2\">\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none\">THE BISHOP\u2019S HEIR<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none\">PROLOGUE<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s2\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none1\">And he put on the garments of vengeance for clothing, and was clad with zeal for a cloak.<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none2\">\u2014  Isaiah 59:17<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Edmund Loris, once the Archbishop of Valoret and Primate of All Gwynedd, stared out to sea through the salt-smeared windowpanes of his tower prison and allowed himself a thin smile. The rare display of self-indulgence did nothing to diminish the fury of the wind shrilling at the ill-fitted glass, but the letter secreted in the breviary under his arm gave its own grim comfort. The offer was princely, befitting even the exalted status he had enjoyed before his fall.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Exhaling softly of his long-hoarded bitterness, Loris bowed his head and shifted the book to hold it in both hands, wary lest the gesture seem to make it too precious in the eyes of his jailers, who could look in on him at any time. For two years now they had kept him here against his will. For two years his existence had been defined by the walls of this monastic cell and the token participation permitted him in the life of the rest of the abbey: daily attendance at Mass and Vespers, always in the company of two silent and all-too-attentive monks, and access to a confessor once each month \u2014 seldom the same man twice, and never the same one any two months in succession. Were it not for one of the lay brothers who brought his meals, whose fondness for intrigue Loris had early discovered, he would have had no contact whatsoever with the outside world.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The outside world \u2014 how he longed for it again! The two years spent in Saint Iveagh\u2019s were but an extension of the outrage which had begun a full year before that, with the death of King Brion. On just such a chill November day as this had Brion Haldane met his doom \u2014 blasted from life by the hell-spawned magic of a Deryni sorceress, but leaving an unexpected legacy of forbidden powers to his son and heir, the fourteen-year-old Kelson.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Nor had young Kelson hesitated to seize his unholy patrimony and use it to overturn almost everything Loris held sacred, not the least of which was the Church\u2019s stand against the use of magic in whatever form. And all of this had been done under the guise of his \u201cDivine right\u201d to rule and his sacred duty to protect his people \u2014 though how a king could justify consorting with the powers of evil to effect that protection was beyond Loris\u2019 comprehension. By the end of the following summer, with the help of the Deryni heretics Morgan and McLain, Kelson had even managed to turn most of Loris\u2019 fellow bishops against him. Only the ailing Corrigan had remained true \u2014  and his faithful heart had given out before he could be subjected to the humiliation Loris finally endured. The rebel bishops actually believed they had done a great kindness by allowing Loris to attend the travesty of a trial at which they stripped away his offices and banished him to a life of forced contemplation.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Bitter still, but heartened by the prospect of a chance to set things right, the former archbishop tapped the edge of his book lightly against his lips and thought about its secret contents  \u2014  yet another communication from folk with similar cause to feel uneasy at what the new king had wrought. The wind whining in the roof slates of Saint Iveagh\u2019s sea-girt towers sang of the freedom of the open seas whence it came, bearing the tang of salt air and the cries of the wheeling gulls that circled the abbey during all but the darkest hours of night, and for the first time since his imprisonment, Loris allowed himself to hope that he, too, might soon be free. For many, many months, he had feared never to taste freedom again except in death.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Oh, he was not fool enough to think there would not be a price \u2014 but he could afford to promise anything, for now. With care and craft, he might play more than one side to his advantage, perhaps eventually becoming even more powerful than before his fall. Then he would make himself the instrument of God\u2019s retribution, driving the cursed Deryni from the land once and for all.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">And the Deryni taint was in the very blood of the king \u2014 perhaps in <\/span><span class=\"none1\">all<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> the Haldane line, not in Kelson alone. In the very beginning, Loris had thought Kelson\u2019s forbidden magic strictly the legacy of his Deryni mother \u2014  that poor, conscience-hounded lady who even now kept strict seclusion in another remote abbey, praying for the soul of her Deryni son as well as her own and devoting her life to penance for the evil she carried. She had confessed her guilt before them all, that solemn day of Kelson\u2019s coronation, prepared to sacrifice life and even soul to protect him from the sorceress who had already been responsible for his father\u2019s death.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But Queen Jehana, though she had the will, had not the power to fight Kelson\u2019s battle for him; and in the end, the young king had had to face the challenge with his own resources \u2014 prodigious resources, as it happened, easily equal to the challenge, but frightening in their implications. While granting that his mother\u2019s Deryni blood might have made its contribution. Kelson had publicly claimed sacred right as the source of his newfound abilities. Loris had feared otherwise, even at the time, for he remembered stories about the boy\u2019s father.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">In fact, the more Loris thought on it \u2014 and he had had ample time for <\/span><span class=\"none1\">that<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> in the last two years \u2014 the more convinced he became that Brion and hitherto unsuspected Deryni ancestors were as much to blame for Kelson\u2019s condition as Jehana. The full extent of the taint could only be guessed. Certainly both Brion and his father before him had harbored Deryni at court from time to time. The detested Morgan and McLain were but the most recent and blatant of many such \u2014 and the latter a priest all the while, hypocrite to the core  \u2014  on both of whom Loris wished only the vilest of fates, for the two were largely responsible for his present situation.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As for Brion, who could deny that the late king once had faced and killed a Deryni sorcerer in single combat? Loris, then but a parish priest of rising prominence, had heard of the incident only at second and third hand, but even in the first throes of public jubilation at the king\u2019s victory, he had been chilled by the recurring suggestion that Brion\u2019s opponent, father to the woman eventually responsible for his death, had fallen not alone to Brion\u2019s sword but to strange powers wielded by the king himself. In the taverns for months afterward, haunted eyewitnesses with tongues loosened by ale whispered fearfully of magic worked upon the king by young Morgan before that fateful confrontation \u2014 the unleashing of awesome forces which Brion <\/span><span class=\"none1\">said<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> were benign, the royal legacy of <\/span><span class=\"none1\">his<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> father \u2014 but even that admission cast grave suspicions on the king, so far as Loris was concerned. Though a man of honest if rigid religious conviction, he was not naive enough to concede that purity of intent and fervence of faith \u2014 or Divine favor to an anointed king \u2014 had been Brion\u2019s salvation, though he kept his misgivings to himself so long as Brion lived.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Now Loris knew that only power such as the Enemy himself wielded could have given Brion victory against such odds, and over such a foe. And if that power had been granted, or even merely released, by one of the accursed Deryni, then its source was clear: an evil legacy from years of dark alliance with that unholy race. The double inheritance of evil from Brion and Jehana was doubly damning in their son. Kelson was beyond redemption, and must be eliminated.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Nor, by the same logic, were Brion\u2019s brother Nigel and his brood to be spared \u2014 for though uncontaminated by Jehana\u2019s blood, still they, like Kelson, traced their ancestry back through the generations of Haldane kings who had carried forward some other variant of Deryni curse from the time of the Restoration. The land must be freed of this evil, cleansed of the dark Deryni taint. A new royal line must be raised to rule in Gwynedd \u2014 and what better source, and who with better legal claim, than the old royal line of Meara, human to the core, one of whose supporters even now offered assistance to Gwynedd\u2019s rightful Primate, if that Primate would support Mearan independence?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">With a shiver, Loris slipped his breviary into the breast of his homespun woolen robe and drew his meager cloak around his shoulders \u2014 he, who had worn fine linen and silk and furs before being deprived of his office! Two years of the sparse, simple fare of the <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Fratri Silentii<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> had pared a handspan from an already trim waist and honed the hawk-like features to even sharper definition, but the hunger which gnawed at Loris now had nothing to do with physical appetites. As he laid one hand flat against the window glass, his eye was caught by the amethyst on his finger \u2014 sole reminder left him of his former rank \u2014 and he savored the words of the letter next to his heart.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">Meara will bow no more to a Deryni king<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, the missive had said, echoing his own determination. <\/span><span class=\"none1\">If this plan meets with your approval, ask shriving of a monk named Jeroboam who shall come within the week to preach, and be guided by his advice. Until Laas\u2026.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Laas. The very name conjured images of ancient glories. It had been the capital of an independent Meara a hundred years before the first Haldanes came to Gwynedd. From Laas, sovereign Mearan princes had ruled as proudly as any Haldane, and over lands by no means less fair.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But Jolyon, the last Mearan prince, had sired only daughter? by the time he lay dying a century before, and the eldest, Roisian, was only twelve. To prevent the rending of his lands by avaricious guardians, regents, and suitors, Jolyon willed his coronet and the hand of Roisian to the strongest man he could find: Malcolm Haldane, newly crowned King of Gwynedd, a respected former adversary.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But Jolyon\u2019s final act found little favor with Meara\u2019s native sons; the prince had read his nobles well. Before Malcolm could even bed his young bride, dissident Mearan knights abducted both of the queen\u2019s sisters and proclaimed the elder, Roisian\u2019s twin, Meara\u2019s sovereign princess. Malcolm put down the ensuing rebellion in less than a month, capturing and hanging several of the ringleaders, but he never did locate the stolen princesses \u2014 though he encountered their heirs many times in the years which followed. He moved Meara\u2019s territorial capital from Laas to the more central Ratharkin the following summer, both for greater ease of administration and to lessen the importance of Laas as a symbol of former Mearan sovereignty, but the ancient city remained, from time to time, a rallying point for cadet lines of the old royal house which waxed with each new generation and as swiftly waned whenever Haldane expeditions swept into the principality to quash the beginnings of revolt \u2014 and execute pretenders. Malcolm and his son Donal were scrupulous about their periodic \u201cMearan housecleaning,\u201d as Donal called it, but King Brion had taken such action only once during his reign, shortly after the birth of his own son. The venture, while necessary, had been so personally distasteful that he had avoided even considering the need for a repeat campaign a generation later.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Now Brion\u2019s softness was likely to cost his son a throne. The current Mearan Pretender had no cause to love King Kelson, for she had lost a husband as well as a child the last time a Haldane flexed his strength in Meara. It was even rumored in Meara that an impassive Brion had watched the baby prince put to the sword \u2014 a lie promulgated by Mearan dissidents, though it was true that the child had died. Soon afterward, the self-styled Princess Caitrin of Meara, descendant of Queen Roisian\u2019s twin, took as husband and consort the ambitious younger brother of one of Gwynedd\u2019s earls and disappeared into the mountains to breed rebellion and more pretenders \u2014 until Brion\u2019s death brought them out of hiding. It was one of Caitrin\u2019s agents who had contacted Loris.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Sighing, Loris pressed his nose against the glass of his prison and watched an autumn squall-line crawl toward the shore from the northwest, well aware that many would regard what he was about to do as treason. He did not. It was a means to an end. If he had learned one thing in more than half a century of service to his faith, it was that the integrity of Holy Mother Church depended upon temporal dealings as well as spiritual ones. Higher loyalties than those binding him to any temporal lord bound him to his future course, for as bishop as well as priest he was duty-bound to root out evil and corruption. Inevitably, the source of that corruption lay in the devil\u2019s brood called the Deryni.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The Deryni must be eradicated \u2014 every last one of them. The time was past for leniency, for trying to save their souls. Though Loris\u2019 mind recoiled at the thought of raising hand against an anointed king \u2014 Kelson, whom he himself had crowned \u2014 the thought of not raising hand against a servant of darkness on the throne repelled him even more.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The boy had put on a bold charade, but blood would always run true, in the end. For the sake of every soul in Gwynedd, the Deryni heresy must be stamped out \u2014  and Edmund Loris would use whatever means he must to accomplish that end.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none\">CHAPTER ONE<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s2\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none1\">He made him a lord of his house, and ruler of all his substance: to bind his princes at his pleasure.<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none2\">\u2014  Psalms 105:21-22<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The Bishop of Meara was dead. In more stable times, that fact might have elicited little more than academic interest on the part of Duke Alaric Morgan, for his duchy of Corwyn lay far on the other side of Gwynedd, well beyond the reach of any Mearan prelate\u2019s influence. Bishops there were whose passing would have meant a personal loss to Morgan, but Carsten of Meara was not one of them.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">This is not to say that Morgan had regarded Carsten as an enemy. On the contrary, even though the old bishop had been of a very different generation, bred in an age when fear of magic had made far greater men rabid in their intolerance of such as Corwyn\u2019s Deryni duke, Carsten had never succumbed to the open hostility displayed by some. When, on the premature accession of Kelson Haldane to the throne of Gwynedd, it had become increasingly clear that the young king was somehow heir to magical abilities which the Church had come to condemn as heretical over the years \u2014 powers that Kelson intended to use for the protection of his kingdom \u2014 Carsten had retired quietly to his episcopal holdings in Meara, rather than choose between his fanatically anti-Deryni archbishop and his more moderate brethren who supported the king despite the questionable status of his Deryni soul. The king\u2019s party had eventually prevailed, and the deposed Archbishop Loris languished even now in the secure Abbey of Saint Iveagh, high in the sea cliffs north of Carbury. Morgan himself thought the sentence far too lenient to balance the harm Loris had done human-Deryni relations by his venom, but it had been the recommendation of Loris\u2019 successor, the scholarly Bradene of Grecotha, and was actively supported by the majority of Gwynedd\u2019s other bishops.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">No such majority prevailed in the consistory Morgan now watched in the chamber below, assembled in Culdi to elect old Carsten\u2019s successor. The unexpected vacancy in the See of Meara had touched off old, old controversies regarding its tenure. Mearan separatists had been agitating for a Mearan-born prelate for as long as Morgan could remember, and had been agitating in vain through the reigns of at least three Haldane kings. This was the first time that young Kelson had had to face the ongoing argument, but with the king less than a fortnight past his seventeenth birthday, it was not likely to be the last. Even now, he was addressing the assembled bishops in the chamber below, outlining the factors he wished them to consider in weighing the many candidates.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Suppressing a cough, Morgan shifted forward on the hard stone seat in the listening gallery and eased aside the heavy curtain to peer down. He could see only Kelson\u2019s back from this angle, stiff and formal in a long scarlet court robe, but Conall, Prince Nigel\u2019s eldest son and second in line to the throne after his father, was visible in profile to Kelson\u2019s right, looking very bored. The bishops themselves seemed attentive enough, but many of those watching from the tiered benches along the walls wore stormy faces. Morgan could identify several of the principal aspirants to the vacant Mearan See.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWe wish, therefore, to reassure you that the Crown will not interfere unduly in your election, my lords,\u201d the king was saying, \u201cbut we enjoin you to consider well the candidates who shall come under your examination in the coming days. The name of the individual eventually chosen matters little to us, personally, but the peace of Meara matters a great deal. That is why we have spent this past season progressing through our Mearan lands. We recognize that a bishop\u2019s principal function is to provide spiritual guidance \u2014 yet we would be naive in the extreme if we did not also acknowledge the temporal power wielded by the incumbent of any such office. All of you are well aware of the weight your opinions carry in our own secular deliberations.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He went on, but Morgan released the curtain with a bored sigh and folded his arms along the railing, allowing his attention to drift as he laid his head on his crossed forearms and closed his eyes.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">They had gone over all of this before. Morgan had not been along on the royal progress, having business of his own in Corwyn, but he joined the king as soon as word arrived of old Carsten\u2019s death. His first night back in the royal entourage. Archbishop Cardiel had briefed him on the political ramifications and acceptable successors, while Kelson listened and Duncan occasionally added .his own observations. Duncan was down there now at Cardiel\u2019s side, poised and attentive in his clerical black \u2014 at thirty-one, young even to be serving as a bishop\u2019s secretary, much less an incipient bishop himself, though he had shown sufficient promise even a full five years ago to be appointed the then &#8211; Prince Kelson\u2019s chaplain and given the rank of Monsignor.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Not that Duncan would be Carsten\u2019s successor \u2014  though many might have feared that, had they known of his impending change of status. Fortunately, most did not. The bishops knew, of course. Cardiel had determined to make Duncan his assistant even before Carsten\u2019s death, and had spearheaded his election as one of the first items of business when the convocation convened a few days earlier.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But partially because Duncan\u2019s secular status already presented complications in the deliberations ahead, and partially because he wished to delay his formal consecration until the following Easter, no public announcement had yet been made. Duncan\u2019s very presence at the convocation, ostensibly as secretary for the proceedings, had been enough to raise eyebrows among the Mearan clergy and lay observers in attendance.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Nor did Mearan uneasiness spring from the fact that Duncan, like Morgan, was Deryni \u2014 though the Deryni question had certainly presented problems of its own in the beginning, and doubtless would continue to be a factor of varying importance. For nearly two centuries, no known Deryni had been permitted ordination to the priesthood. Discovery that <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Duncan<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> was Deryni and <\/span><span class=\"none1\">had<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> been so ordained had sparked a panicked flurry of ecclesiastical speculation as to how many <\/span><span class=\"none1\">other<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> Deryni might have served in the clergy secretly, to the possible detriment of uncountable human souls to whom they might have ministered \u2014 and how many might be serving now? No one knew how virulent the infection might be, if Deryni consorted unbeknownst with decent Christian folk. The very thought had sent men like Edmund Loris into near-apoplectic fits on more than one occasion.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Fortunately, cooler logic than Loris\u2019 had eventually prevailed. Under the physical protection of a part-Deryni king, both Duncan and Morgan had managed to convince a majority of the ecclesiastical hierarchy that <\/span><span class=\"none1\">they<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, at least, did not fit the image of evil for so long attributed to Deryni \u2014 for surely evil men would not have put themselves so thoroughly at risk to save their king and kingdom from another of their race.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But while Morgan could quickly return to a status not unlike that which he had enjoyed before the death of Brion \u2014 known and sometimes feared for what he was, but nonetheless grudgingly respected, if only for the threat of what he might do if provoked \u2014 Duncan\u2019s situation required more delicate handling. Once he and Morgan had made peace with the bishops, the Deryni priest had spent many agonizing weeks reconciling his own conscience on the matter of having accepted ordination to the priesthood when he knew it was forbidden to Deryni. He had resumed his priestly function only after Kelson\u2019s victory at Llyndruth Meadows.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">In Duncan\u2019s favor, at least, was the fact that few outside the confines of consistory and court definitely <\/span><span class=\"none1\">knew<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> he was Deryni; and whatever rumor and innuendo might be whispered beyond that circle of intimates, scrupulous avoidance of any public display of magic had enabled Duncan not to confirm anything. He was not known to <\/span><span class=\"none1\">be<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> Deryni by most; he was only known to <\/span><span class=\"none1\">consort<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> with them \u2014 Morgan and the king, in particular. Arilan, now the Bishop of Dhassa, was Deryni too; but among the bishops only Cardiel knew that \u2014 as did a meager handful outside the episcopal ranks \u2014 for neither Arilan nor Duncan had had to reveal their powers against Wencit at the Llyndruth Meadows confrontation two years before. Morgan did not fully trust Arilan, but he was sure he and Cardiel were largely responsible for Duncan\u2019s cautious acceptance among the clergy. Certainly, Duncan could not have been elected bishop without their support.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">What gave the Mearans cause to distrust Duncan, then, had almost entirely to do with Duncan\u2019s secular status; for following his father\u2019s death without other heir, Duncan had assumed the ducal and county titles of Cassan and Kierney \u2014 titles which had once belonged to Old Meara. To Mearan separatists, working to establish a powerbase for a Mearan restoration, a Cassani duke loyal to the crown of Gwynedd was merely a political annoyance across the northern border, to be worked around and watched, as Duncan\u2019s father had been watched for years; but if that duke was also a high-ranking priest, and Meara\u2019s only bishopric fell suddenly vacant, matters instantly became more complicated. A Cassani royalist duke who <\/span><span class=\"none1\">also<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> became Bishop of Meara would wield both spiritual and temporal authority over <\/span><span class=\"none1\">two<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> vast areas.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Indeed, Duncan\u2019s election to <\/span><span class=\"none1\">any<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> bishopric would be viewed with suspicion in Meara; for even if he himself had no aspirations in that direction, his politically motivated wishes could carry great weight in the selection of the man who <\/span><span class=\"none1\">was<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> chosen to occupy the Mearan See. Monsignor The Duke of Cassan represented a threat, then, for all that he seemed to be an innocuous-looking priest-secretary seated quietly beside the Archbishop of Rhemuth.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Smothering another cough, Morgan glanced down at the consistory chamber again \u2014 Kelson was winding up his speech \u2014 then allowed his gaze to drift lazily over his own form, reflecting on the effort which had gone into making <\/span><span class=\"none1\">his<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> image less threatening in the past two years. Gone was the somber black attire which a younger, more arrogant Morgan had affected in those days as Brion\u2019s shadow and confidant. Cardiel had told him quite frankly that such affectations only tended to reinforce the sinister notions most people still entertained about Deryni.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhy dress as the Adversary?\u201d Cardiel demanded. \u201cYou\u2019ve shown amply by your actions that you\u2019re a servant of Light, not Darkness. Why, with your pale hair and fair features, you could have come off my chapel ceiling: one of the Lord\u2019s messengers \u2014 maybe even blessed Michael himself!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">And Lord Rathold, his wardrober at Coroth, had badgered him no less mercilessly about his ducal image.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou <\/span><span class=\"none1\">must<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> think of your people. Your Grace!\u201d Rathold had said stubbornly. \u201cYou dress like a common soldier, when you have your way. No one wishes to think he serves an impoverished master \u2014 or to have others think it! \u2018Tis a matter of pride!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">And so, unless there was a need for stealth, the sable leathers had been put aside and replaced with color: a deep burgundy cloak at first, as a self-conscious concession to his rank as King\u2019s Champion \u2014 he could not bring himself to adopt the crimson Kelson favored \u2014 but worn over muted, conservative grey, with little embellishment. Deep blues followed, and eventually greens and golds and even particolors \u2014 the rich jewel-tones rather than bright shades. Eventually, he even learned to like them.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">His body squire had chosen verdant hues for him today: a blue-green cloak collared and lined in silver fox drawn over a nubby wool robe in a slightly lighter shade, ankle-length and slit front and rear for riding. The borders and cuffs were stiff with dozens of his Corwyn gryphons worked in gold bullion, the throat clasped with a silver penannular brooch which had been his mother\u2019s.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He still wore a mail shirt beneath his finery, as he always had: fine, supple chain which would turn aside all but the most direct dagger thrust. But where once the metal would have gleamed openly at wrists and throat, boldly belligerent and just a little to ready for trouble, now it was hidden beneath an undertunic of rich, slubbed silk, with soft wool between the chain and his skin. The scabbard of the sword at his left hip was mounted with silver-set Cassani cairngorms the size of a man\u2019s thumbnail \u2014 Duncan\u2019s birthday gift to him two months before: civilized splendor, even if the blade the scabbard sheathed was as serviceable as ever.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">A shorter blade was thrust into his right boot-top, the hilt never far from his gloved hand, and he still carried a narrow stiletto in a wrist-sheathed strapped along his left forearm, underneath the mail. Around his neck he wore the gilded captain-general\u2019s chain Kelson had given him at last year\u2019s Christmas Court, each link engraved with Haldane lions and Corwyn gryphons chasing one another\u2019s tails. The old Morgan would not have understood the joke.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He sighed and shifted, and the sound of the chain chiming against the stone railing brought him back to awareness of his surroundings. Kelson\u2019s voice in the chamber below had been replaced by another while Morgan day-dreamed, and a quick glance between the curtains confirmed that the speaker was Archbishop Bradene. Seconds before the door latch lifted, Morgan sensed the king approaching even as he quested outward with his mind. He was already rising to incline his head in a slight bow as Kelson stepped inside.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, no sense trying to take you by surprise,\u201d the boy remarked with a rueful smile. \u201cYou always seem to know it is I. How did I do?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan shrugged and returned the smile.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThe part that I heard was fine, my prince. I must confess that my attention wandered, toward the end. We went over this so many times in Droghera.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI know. I nearly bored myself as well.\u201d Kelson flashed a more wistful grin as he drifted over to peer through the curtains as Morgan had done. \u201cStill, it had to be said.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAye.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As the king stood there poised and listening, Morgan was reminded once again how much had changed in the past three years. Kelson had grown more than a handspan since that day Morgan had come to help a grief-stricken boy of fourteen keep his throne. The boy was a man now \u2014 still not as tall as Morgan, but already taller than his father had been, if more slightly built. In other ways than size, he would also be a bigger man than Brion. Already he knew more of his magical heritage than Brion ever had, and more of the ways of people.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The eyes were the same, though \u2014 the grey Haldane eyes that could pierce all subterfuge and read a man\u2019s soul, even if the vigor of merely human potential were not enhanced by Haldane magic. The silky black hair was Brion\u2019s, too, though Kelson wore it far longer of late than his father ever had \u2014 short across his forehead, but almost brushing his shoulders on the sides. A golden circlet chased with an interlace design bound the long part off his face, but the back was rumpled where it had caught the high-standing collar of his formal court robe. Kelson raked the fingers of one hand through the snarls and glanced aside at Morgan with a mischievous grin as he let the curtains fall back into place.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019ve a mind to do something that I know will vex you,\u201d he said, beginning to shrug out of his heavy outer robe. \u201cWould you be terribly cross if I went off and left you here for a few days to supervise the bishops?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Adopting the bland expression as well as the stance of a valet, Morgan caught Kelson\u2019s robe before it could slip to the floor and laid it aside, gathering up the fur-lined cloak of scarlet that the king had worn earlier in the day.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI shan\u2019t deny that listening to a pack of bishops argue is among my least favorite occupations \u2014 or that I should prefer you didn\u2019t go too far afield, this close to Meara,\u201d he said neutrally. \u201cOn the other hand, you generally have good reasons for the things you want to do. Where, specifically, did you plan to go?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Still grinning, the king took off his circlet long enough to rub his forehead where the band had pressed, before turning to back into the cloak Morgan extended. In the process, one long strand of hair caught on the wire of the great ruby winking in his right earlobe, and he tossed his head to free it as he settled the circlet back on his head.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhy, Morgan, you\u2019re beginning to sound like a true courtier,\u201d he said, adjusting the cloak on his shoulders and snapping the clasp as Morgan freed his hair from the sable collar. \u201cI need to go to Trurill, though. I\u2019d planned to include it in my progress this summer, but Carsten\u2019s death interrupted that, as you know. It occurs to me that this might be my last chance to poke about before the rains start.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhy Trurill, in particular?\u201d Morgan asked. \u201cDo you have reason to suspect trouble there?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo. But if Meara should go more sour than it already has, I\u2019d like to be certain of my border barons. Brice of Trurill <\/span><span class=\"none1\">says<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> he\u2019s loyal \u2014 <\/span><span class=\"none1\">all<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> of them do, when I\u2019m nearby and they\u2019re this far from Rhemuth \u2014 but in another few weeks, he\u2019ll be beyond my reach until the spring.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan grimaced, personal distaste for the job Kelson was leaving him giving way to very real concern for the royal safety.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAre you sure this isn\u2019t just an excuse to get out of an onerous job?\u201d he murmured. \u201cI hasten to remind you that the troops we brought from Rhemuth are not accustomed to the ways of the bordermen. Up here, they fight an entirely different kind of skirmish. If Brice <\/span><span class=\"none1\">isn\u2019t<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> loyal \u2014 \u201c<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIf he <\/span><span class=\"none1\">isn\u2019t<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> loyal, then I need to know,\u201d Kelson interrupted. \u201cI\u2019m taking Duncan\u2019s Jodrell as guide. He\u2019s familiar with the area.\u201d He paused to grin. \u201cAnd of <\/span><span class=\"none1\">course<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> it\u2019s an excuse to get out of an onerous job. You don\u2019t think I\u2019d be fool enough to go into the borderlands without you if I really thought Brice was vacillating, do you? You taught me better than that.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI should like to think so,\u201d Morgan returned, little reassured. \u201cI just hope you\u2019re as good a judge of character as you think you are. I\u2019ve met this Brice. He\u2019s a tricky devil.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cTricky enough to lie to me and get away with it?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cProbably not. But he might not tell all the truth, either. Half-truths can sometimes be more dangerous than outright lies \u2014 and Truth-Reading isn\u2019t much defense against that.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson shrugged. \u201cThat\u2019s true. But I fancy I know enough to ask the right questions.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan said nothing, but he was thinking that sometimes Kelson did now know quite as much as he thought he did. The boy was more experienced than many other young men of far more years, and mature for his age. God knew \u2014 he could not have survived the past three years if he were not \u2014 but he sometimes tended to take his newly gained maturity for granted and to overestimate what could be done. Age and further experience would compensate for that in time, but meanwhile, the king sometimes gave Morgan the odd, anxious moment.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Still, Morgan supposed that Kelson could not get into too much trouble this close to Culdi, and with the local barons aware that the king\u2019s champion was not far away and expecting a prompt return. In all ages, fledglings must be permitted to try their wings \u2014 even if the trying sometimes turned their mentors prematurely grey. Morgan was suddenly grateful that his hair was already light, so Kelson would never know the extent of the anxiety he caused.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou aren\u2019t really worried, are you?\u201d Kelson asked after a few seconds, when Morgan did not speak, apparently sensing the other\u2019s reservations. \u201cNothing is going to happen. Ewan is dying to get away to the mountains for a few days \u2014 I think he dislikes being cooped up at court even more than you do \u2014 and I thought I\u2019d take Conall along, as well. Maybe a little patrol work will teach him patience. It\u2019s a courtesy call, Alaric \u2014 that\u2019s all. I want to see how Brice operates when he isn\u2019t expecting me to see.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDo as you wish, then,\u201d Morgan muttered. \u201cYou will, anyway. I don\u2019t know why I bother worrying.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson grinned, a boyish quirk of a smile which was quite at odds with his regal attire and bearing.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI think you do. <\/span><span class=\"none1\">I<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> do, if you don\u2019t. And the day you stop worrying is the day I\u2019ll start.\u201d He touched Morgan lightly on the shoulder.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cJust keep our wayward bishops in line for me, Alaric. I\u2019ll be back in a few days.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">By the following afternoon. Kelson was beginning to wonder whether he had truly gotten the better end of the bargain. He had expected the weather to hold for at least another week; but as he and his warband rode west along the river toward Trurill \u2014 a full two dozen knights and men-at-arms, in addition to squires and servants \u2014 the air grew increasingly still and oppressive. An annoying drizzle set in just before noon, dampening dispositions as well as armor and equipment. Conall, riding beside his royal cousin, spent nearly all of their brief meal-break complaining about the weather, but at least the more important grumbling of the men was mostly good-natured. The road was still good, the rain only settling the dust as they resumed travel. At midafternoon they entered an area of sparse forest, where the drizzle subsided to a less irritating drip as it filtered through the trees.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">They heard the sound of fighting long before they came upon it. The shrill whinnies of horses in distress warned them first, setting their own blooded warhorses to prancing and snorting with anticipation. As shouts and the clash of steel began to reach them. Duke Ewan signalled a halt and sent two advance riders spurring on ahead to investigate. Kelson, who had been chatting with several of\u2019his younger knights halfway back along the column, eased his mount forward at once, tugging distractedlyat a gauntlet cuff.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cJodrell, were you expecting any activity along here?\u201d the king called softly, as he drew rein beside their guide.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The young Kierney baron only shook his head, still poised in a listening attitude. When the outriders did not return within a few minutes. Kelson silently signalled Saer de Traheme to begin stripping the waterproof cover off the Haldane battle standard.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat are we waiting for, Ewan?\u201d Conall fretted, standing in his stirrups to peer ahead into the forest gloom. \u201cIf there\u2019s trouble, we should try to stop it!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Old Ewan, sitting his horse ahead of the two Haldanes and at right angles to them, squeezed his eyes to calculating slits as he glanced in their direction, armored hand already fingering his sword hilt. His bushy red beard protruded beneath his helmet quite without discipline of razor or scissors.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Their<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> trouble, not ours. Your Highness \u2014 unless, of course, we insist upon charging into things without knowing what we\u2019re about. Hush ye, now, so I can listen.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Still the silence was broken only by the continuing sounds of the distant fighting and the closer noises of the Haldane greathorses held in check, bits and chains jingling, leather creaking, mail clinking softly as the knights strained to hear. Kelson surveyed the two dozen mounted knights settling helmets on heads and taking up shields behind him, then shifted his attention back to Ewan.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat do you think?\u201d he whispered.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Ewan slowly shook his head. \u201cI dinnae know yet, Sire. We\u2019re on the edge of Trurill holdings, eh, Jodrell? That means that Trurill levies are likely on one side of whatever\u2019s dusting up.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The border baron nodded. \u201cAye, Your Grace \u2014 though it\u2019s God\u2019s good guess who\u2019s on the other side. I\u2019d wait for Macaire and Robard, if I were you. Sire.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI fully intend to.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBut, can\u2019t we \u2014 \u201c Conall began.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo, we can\u2019t,\u201d Kelson murmured, giving Conall a warning look as he twisted to take the shield that his squire had brought forward. \u201cJodrell, check the men, please.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Conall started to object again as Jodrell reined his horse out of line and headed quietly back along the column, but another sharp look from Kelson silenced him. The prince, only a few months younger than Kelson, had been along on the Cardosa campaign two summers before, but he still had much to learn about strategy and the art of command. It was a common failing, and not entirely Conall\u2019s fault, for though Gwynedd common law declared fourteen to be the legal age of manhood, in fact few boys were actually called upon to function as adults for several more years.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Chivalric custom recognized this, even if the law did not, denying the knightly accolade to those under eighteen except on rare occasions. Even Kelson, who could have made himself such an exception as king, had declined to be knighted until his eighteenth birthday. If Conall gained sufficient experience in the coming year, his knighting <\/span><span class=\"none1\">might<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> be moved forward a few months to coincide with Kelson\u2019s; but meanwhile, he remained in the subordinate rank of squire, royal though he was.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">That was little comfort to Kelson just now, weighing Conall\u2019s inexperience against the possible dangers of the coming skirmish. He could not help remembering Morgan\u2019s warning about the difference of fighting styles and wondered whether the Deryni lord could have known he was foretelling the future. Border fighting favored quick, lightly mounted and armed raiding bands, not the heavier horses and armor to which Conall was accustomed and with which the warband was equipped. Should the terrain ahead boast closer maneuvering room than what lay immediately around them, the inexperienced among Kelson\u2019s company might find themselves at the disadvantage despite their numbers and superior armor.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Still, Kelson supposed he could let his untried cousin at least <\/span><span class=\"none1\">think<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> he was performing an important function, while still keeping him relatively safe and under watchful eyes. As he adjusted the angle of his helm and secured the chin strap, he cast a stem glance at the impatient Conall, then relented and nodded to Traheme. Immediately, Conall was kneeing his charger between the two of them and reaching out for the royal standard, tight-jawed but triumphant as his gloved hand locked around the polished staff.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo heroics, now,\u201d Kelson warned.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDon\u2019t worry.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The crimson of the banner\u2019s field seemed almost subdued against the deep green of the surrounding forest, but the golden Haldane lion shimmered like a living thing as Conall gave the silk a shake and set the butt of the staff in his stirrup rest. The prince\u2019s grin was infectious, and Ewan and Traheme as well as Kelson found themselves smiling in response as muffled hoofbeats approached. Kelson cast about for hidden dangers as a returning scout burst through the trees and reined his horse to a sliding halt, but he sensed nothing other than the body of men ahead.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cLiveried men-at-arms. Sire \u2014 lightly mounted, against what appears to be a band of brigands,\u201d the man reported. \u201cMaybe twenty on a side, but none of them are particularly well armored.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhose livery?\u201d Kelson demanded.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cTrurill, Sire. Two swords in saltire over a third in pale, all on a blue field.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson glanced at Ewan, who nodded confirmation. \u201cThose\u2019ll be Brice\u2019s lads, right enough. Do we have maneuvering room, son?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAt least as good as here. Your Grace. Part of the area is an open glade. Robard has stayed to watch they don\u2019t shift while we\u2019re planning.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell done.\u201d Kelson drew his sword and glanced back at his waiting men. \u201cVery well, gentlemen, I think it\u2019s time to show ourselves. If we can manage without bloodshed, so much the better. Traheme, I want you on Conall\u2019s other side. Jodrell, you ride on my right. Ewan, deploy the men.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">With an economy of silent hand signals, Ewan gave the necessary orders. As ever. Kelson was impressed with the efficiency and polish which came with more than thirty years\u2019 experience as a field commander. The jingle of harness and the wet, sucking sound of the horses\u2019 hooves on the moss-covered forest floor temporarily covered the battle sounds as the knights peeled off to either side and fanned out in perfect parade ground formation, Ewan and one of the senior knights each taking a wing. Kelson urged his bay forward at the trot, sword at the ready, he and his escort marking the center of a deepening crescent intended to engulf attackers and defenders alike. Ahead, through the trees, he began to see the signs of battle.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYield, in the king\u2019s name!\u201d he heard Ewan cry, as the royal knights burst upon the skirmish. \u201cHold, in the name of Kelson of Gwynedd!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none\">CHAPTER TWO<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s2\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none1\">They all hold swords, being expert in war: every man hath his sword upon his thigh.<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none2\">\u2014 Song of Solomon 3:8<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson\u2019s first impression, as he and his warband burst into the clearing, was one of brawl rather than battle. Though most of the Trurill men were armed with swords or the short horse-spears favored by bordermen, their opponents seemed limited to cudgels, quarterstaffs, and the occasional dirk. Nor did the Trurill men appear inclined to overpress their advantage. Even as the Haldane ring tightened. Kelson saw a Trurill retainer grab his opponent\u2019s plaid and yank him off his pony, cracking him across the back of the head with the pommel of his sword when he just as easily could have killed him. Several of both sides lay unmoving or groaning feebly on the ground, but few seemed seriously injured.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Trurill livery and leathers swirled and surged chaotically around Border tartans strange and familiar, loose ponies and an occasional terrified highland sheep creating additional hazards for the few men who continued to fight from the ground. The ponies\u2019 whinnying and the frantic bleating of the sheep made vocal counterpart to the grunts and exclamations of the struggling men.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The confrontation was quickly over. With shouts of \u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">A Haldane<\/span><span class=\"none2\">!\u201d the royal knights closed, shouldering their greathorses deftly between the smaller, lighter border mounts to break up individual skirmishes, flat-blading recalcitrants who tried to keep on fighting, and sometimes bowling over horses and surprised riders of both sides. Kelson and the rest of the royal party held back as a reserve, but their help was never necessary. The closest Kelson came to action was the startled leap his horse made when one of the sheep suddenly bolted between its front legs.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Soon the brigands began dropping their weapons and raising their arms in surrender. With a shout, the Trurill men rallied to surround them. As Kelson\u2019s warband pulled back to sit their horses quietly at the perimeter of the clearing, still encircling captors as well as prisoners, the Trurill men began ordering the prisoners to dismount and to bind them, a few starting to see to the injured. Ewan, scanning his own command for injuries and seeing none, kneed his charger to Kelson\u2019s side and saluted with upraised gauntlet.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, that was a pleasant enough romp. Sire,\u201d he said in a low voice, nodding toward the borderers. \u201cYou there \u2014  Trurill Sergeant\u2019\u201c he called in a louder voice. \u201cAttend us at once!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">At his command, one of the older, better armored Trurill men glanced back at him, then broke away from the rest of his band and rode slowly toward the royal party, eying the Haldane standard with something akin to suspicion. He gave perfunctory salute with his sword as he reined in before them, glancing first at Kelson and Conall, then at Ewan.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou are well come, sir,\u201d the man said, sheathing his sword. \u201cBy your plaid, I make you a highland man. Would you be The Claibourne, then?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But before Ewan could reply, the man glanced less certainly between Kelson and Conall once again. \u201cAnd you, my lords \u2014 I thank you for your assistance. We see few Haldanes this far west.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">And doubtless wish to see fewer still<\/span><span class=\"none2\">. Kelson thought sourly, as he also sheathed his sword and removed his helmet.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He supposed he should not be annoyed that the man did not recognize him. Other than his own brief foray into Culdi two years before for the ill-fated wedding of Kevin McLain and Morgan\u2019s sister Bronwyn, Kelson doubted any other Haldane had penetrated this deep into the western borderlands for several years before his father\u2019s death. His progress of the summer just past had been confined primarily to Meara itself, and the flatlands of Kierney and Cassan. And even were bordermen not notorious for their indifference to lowland titles of nobility, how could a mere border sergeant be expected to know his king by sight?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI am Kelson,\u201d he said patiently, pushing back a sweat-stained arming cap from damp black hair and handing off his helmet to a waiting squire. \u201cIt appears that the presence of this particular Haldane was rather timely. You are \u2014 ?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The man dipped his head in dutiful if chilly respect.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cGendon, my Lord King, in service to the Baron of Trurill.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson favored the man with the same sort of cool, impersonal nod which he himself had received, then scooped damp tendrils of hair from his face with the back of one mailed gauntlet as he glanced over the prisoners being secured by Gendon\u2019s men. How to unbend the man?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cGendon, eh?\u201d he said neutrally. \u201cTell me, Master Gendon, what brought about this little set to? Actually, I\u2019m not sure you needed our help at all. They weren\u2019t very well armed.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThey\u2019re outlaws, my lord,\u201d came the surprised reply, as if that explained everything. \u201cThey raid across the borders for livestock \u2014 sometimes even women and children.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cOh?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, we try to stop it, of course, my lord,\u201d the man went on a little defensively. \u201cThe baron posts a regular patrol, as is his duty, but a man can slip off into these hills with half a dozen sheep and never be seen again. The young Laird MacArdry says this particular lot have been plaguing Transha as well.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThe young laird \u2014 you mean Dhugal, the chief\u2019s son?\u201d Kelson asked, his more personal interest suddenly piqued.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Gendon raised one eyebrow in surprise. \u201cYou know young Dhugal, my lord?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou might say that,\u201d Kelson replied with a grin. \u201cI don\u2019t suppose you\u2019ve seen him lately?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cLately? Aye, my lord. Every blessed day.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But as Gendon gestured toward his men and twisted in his saddle to look, clearly taken aback at this lowland king\u2019s apparent recognition of highland relationships, Kelson had already spotted the object of his inquiry: a slight, ramrod-straight rider wrapped in a grey, black, and yellow plaid which only partially hid the russet leather of a neat Connaiti brigandine. He was talking to a Trurill man balancing on one leg beside his horse, gesturing for someone else to come and assist the man. A mail coif partially obscured the hair which would have made a beacon of his presence out of war harness, but the shaggy brown-and-white spotted border horse he rode was well known to Kelson, though its markings were common enough not to be remarked during the heat of battle \u2014  doubtless the reason Kelson had not noticed them earlier.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The MacArdry heir became aware of the royal scrutiny at about the same moment Kelson first saw him. One look at the riders sitting beneath the royal standard was enough to make him break away and urge his mount into a trot toward the king, grinning hugely.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDhugal MacArdry, what the devil is <\/span><span class=\"none1\">that<\/span><span class=\"none2\">?\u201d Kelson shouted, pointing a gauntleted finger at the other\u2019s steed and grinning almost as widely as he. \u201cSurely, \u2018tis no <\/span><span class=\"none1\">horse<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> that looks so strange!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The young MacArdry drew rein and almost flung him self from the saddle, pushing his coif back from bright copper-bronze hair as he thumped to both knees before the king\u2019s horse.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhy, \u2018tis the beast who threw Your Grace the first half-dozen times you tried to ride her!\u201d Dhugal replied. His sword hung from a baldric over his left shoulder, rigged to be drawn from the left, but he half-drew it with his right hand and offered the pommel in salute, face glowing with pride.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWelcome to the borders \u2014 my King! It\u2019s been too many years.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAye, and I shall trounce you for a knave if you don\u2019t get off your knees at once!\u201d Kelson said happily, signalling the other to rise. \u201cI was your brother before I was your king. Conall, look how he\u2019s grown! Ewan, you remember my foster brother, don\u2019t you?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAye, Sire \u2014 and the mischief with which both of you used to terrorize my pages\u2019 school! \u2018Tis good to see you, Master Dhugal.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd you. Your Grace.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As Dhugal let his sword slip back into its scabbard and stood, and Kelson jumped down from his tall R\u2019Kassan stallion, Conall also nodded in tight-lipped response to Dhugal\u2019s slight bow in his direction; the two had been rivals in those earlier days. Though nearly as tall as Kelson, the young border lord looked hardly older than when he had left court four years before, a sprinkling of freckles across his nose and cheeks only adding to the childlike first impression. Large, square front teeth flashed bright white as his face creased in a pleased, open grin, the smudge of reddish mustache across his upper lip hardly more than adolescent down. But the eyes which met Kelson\u2019s were no longer those of a child.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The two young men embraced exuberantly, thumping each other on the back and then drawing apart to study the other more soberly. Kelson did not resist as Dhugal took his hand and pressed fervent lips to the back of the gauntlet in homage before looking back at him.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHow are you, Dhugal?\u201d he murmured.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI am well, my prince, now that you are here,\u201d Dhugal replied softly, in the cultured court accents he had learned so many years before. \u201cWe have heard stories here in the west, of course, but \u2014 \u201c He shrugged and grinned broadly. \u201cWell, frankly, I did not think to see Your Grace in person until the day I came to claim my earldom. The borders and highlands have never been a favorite haunt of Haldane kings.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThe borders are loved by <\/span><span class=\"none1\">this<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> Haldane,\u201d Kelson said, flashing with fond remembrance on the image of Dhugal\u2019s elderly father, who had fostered Dhugal to court when he was seven and Kelson nine. \u201cAnd praise God it did not take your father\u2019s death to bring us back together after all. How <\/span><span class=\"none1\">is<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> old Caulay?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHe does as well as one might hope,\u201d Dhugal replied, a trifle more subdued. \u201cHe\u2019s not travelled since your coronation, though. I\u2019ve spent the past three years standing in for him, learning a proper border soldier\u2019s trade. I \u2014  don\u2019t suppose my apprenticeship can last much longer now.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHis illness is worse, then. Dhugal, I\u2019m sorry,\u201d Kelson murmured. But before he could continue, Gendon, the Trurill sergeant, cleared his throat.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYour pardon, Lord King, but young MacArdry does have duties. Dhugal, there are wounded.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAye, Sergeant, I\u2019ll see to them directly.\u201d Dhugal gave Kelson a short bow of apology. \u201cBy your leave. Sire.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cOf course. My men will assist.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Most of the injuries were slight \u2014 the minor cuts and bruises expected of any rough and tumble altercation \u2014  but a few of the men, Trurill and prisoners alike, sported more serious wounds. One man was dead, despite the apparent restraint shown by all. Kelson detailed his battle surgeon and the squires to work with the bordermen and, when it became clear that Gendon did not intend to return to Trurill that night, gave orders for camp to be made. Conall he assigned to Ewan\u2019s supervision, to observe how the old duke integrated his command with Gendon\u2019s.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson himself wandered in the forming Trurill camp with only Jodrell for escort, saying little but watching everything with interest. Recalling Dhugal\u2019s comment about the \u201cstories\u201d which had come westward in the past three years, he wondered what preconceptions these highland men might have about him as a result. In the eyes of men such as these, that Kelson was a Haldane was reason enough to suspect him. What further suspicion might have been generated by tales of his magic?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But when he tried chatting with a few of them, he sensed that their reticence had as much to do with his lowland origins as with his rank or any vague uneasiness they might have because he was part Deryni. They were respectful enough, in their rough, border way, but they offered no more than was asked for, never volunteering information.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The prisoners volunteered no information either, though that was hardly surprising. Nor was the information which <\/span><span class=\"none1\">was<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> extracted, sometimes forcefully, of anything but local interest. Kelson Truth-Read a few of them while others asked the questions, but there seemed no point in flaunting his Deryni abilities when the interrogators were getting exactly the same answers he was. The distance between these men and himself had little to do with magic, but the loneliness was just as real. Eventually he found himself .watching Dhugal from behind and signalled Jodrell not to speak.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal was kneeling beside the most seriously wounded of his own men. Kelson\u2019s squire Jatham assisting him, unaware of the royal scrutiny. His plaid lay discarded in a heap beside him, sword and baldric atop it, and Kelson could see that he had unbuckled the front of his brigandine for greater ease of movement as he bent to his surgeoning duties.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal\u2019s patient was a sturdy mountain lad hardly older than himself but half again as large, sporting a gash from wrist to elbow which would probably render him useless as a swordsman in the future, if he even kept the arm. His other brawny arm was pressed across his eyes, the bearded face beneath it drained of color. As the squire poured water over the wound and Dhugal loosened the tourniquet above it just slightly, bright blood pumped from deep within. Even from where he stood. Kelson could see that the cut had severed deep muscles and probably arteries.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDamn!\u201d Dhugal muttered under his breath, tightening file tourniquet again and muttering an apology as his patient sucked in breath between his teeth in pain. Neither he, his assistant, nor his patient seemed to notice Kelson\u2019s presence as he picked up a needle trailing a length of gut threat.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYe must n\u00e0\u00e5 move now, Bertie, if we\u2019re tae save yer arm,\u201d Dhugal said, his earlier court accents blurred with the lilt of the highlands now, as he positioned the bloody arm to his liking and shifted Jatham\u2019s grip. \u201cHold him steady as ye can, lad.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As Bertie braced himself and young Jatham clamped down at wrist and bicep. Kelson touched the squire\u2019s shoulder and nodded as he looked up, startled. Dhugal, too, blinked as he suddenly became aware of Kelson\u2019s presence.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhy don\u2019t you let me take over here, Jatham?\u201d he said to the boy, smiling and signalling him to move aside. \u201cHe\u2019s a little big for you to hold. Go with Baron Jodrell.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As Jodrell and the boy withdrew. Kelson dropped to his knees across from Dhugal and rinsed his hands in the basin of clean water near the patient\u2019s head, permitting himself a little smile as Dhugal stared at Mm in amazement.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI was beginning to feel useless,\u201d Kelson explained. \u201cBesides, it looked as if young Bertie, here, nearly outweighted you both. Hello, Bertie,\u201d he added, as their patient uncovered his eyes to squint at him suspiciously.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, then,\u201d Dhugal grinned, the lilt of the highlands muted to only a slight blurr as he shifted to court dialect. \u201cLast I heard, you weren\u2019t a battle surgeon.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cLast I heard, neither were you,\u201d Kelson countered. \u201cI suspect we\u2019ve both learned some things in the past few years. What would you like me to do?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal made a grim attempt at a chuckle. \u201cHold his arm steady, then \u2014 just there,\u201d he said, repositioning the arm and guiding Kelson\u2019s hands into place as his patient continued to stare.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cUnfortunately,\u201d Dhugal went on, \u201cbattle surgeoning isn\u2019t one of the things I\u2019ve had time to learn as well as I\u2019d like \u2014 more\u2019s the pity for friend Bertie, here. Just because I\u2019ve made something of a reputation patching up horses, he\u2019s convinced I can put <\/span><span class=\"none1\">him<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> back together, aren\u2019t ye, Bertie?\u201d he added, lapsing into border dialect again for just a few words.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAch, just watch who yer comparin\u2019 to a horse, young MacArdry,\u201d Bertie replied good-naturedly, though he hissed through his teeth and then tried to curl up on his side in reflex as Dhugal probed in the wound.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Moving nimbly, Dhugal helped Kelson immobilize the arm and again attempted to place his first suture, shifting from court speech to border dialect and back again with ease, though his face reflected the strain of the other.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBertie MacArdry, ye may be as <\/span><span class=\"none1\">strong<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> as a horse, in smell if not in muscle,\u201d he ranted, \u201cbut if ye wish sommat besides a sleeve-filler, ye <\/span><span class=\"none1\">must<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> lie still! Kelson, you\u2019ve got to keep his arm from moving, or it\u2019s little use. I can\u2019t control his bleeding if he thrashes around.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson did his best, slipping easily into the old camaraderie he and Dhugal had enjoyed so long ago, as boys, and which remained so comfortable now that they were men. But as Dhugal continued to probe, and Bertie gasped and tensed again. Kelson glanced over his shoulder and, in a moment of sudden decision, shifted the back of one bloodied hand to the man\u2019s forehead, reaching out with his Deryni senses.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cSleep, Bertie,\u201d he whispered, slipping his wrist down over the man\u2019s eyes and feeling the tense body go limp. \u201cGo to sleep and remember nothing of this when you wake. No pain. Just sleep.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal\u2019s hand faltered and paused in midstitch as he sensed the change come over his patient, but when he looked across at Kelson there was only wonder \u2014 not the fear the king had come so often to expect in the past few years. After a few seconds, Dhugal returned to his task, working more quickly now, a faint smile playing across his Ups.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou have, indeed, learned a few things in four years, haven\u2019t you. Sire?\u201d he asked softly, when he had tied off the last of the internal sutures and cut the gut thread close to the knot.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou didn\u2019t use my title when we were boys, Dhugal, and I wish you wouldn\u2019t in the future, at least in private,\u201d Kelson murmured. \u201cAnd I would have to say that you\u2019ve teamed a few things yourself.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal shrugged and began rethreading his needle with bright green silk. \u201cYou probably remember that I was always good with animals. Well, after Michael died and I had to come home from Court, one of the things they had me study was surgeoning \u2014 part of the training of a laird, they said: to be able to patch up one\u2019s animals and men.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He flushed out the partially sutured wound again, pausing when Bertie moaned and stirred a little \u2014 and Kelson had to reach out with his mind once more \u2014 then dusted the raw flesh with a bluish grey powder and had Kelson press the lips of the wound together from either side. Carefully, meticulously, he began drawing them together with neat, green silk stitches.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIs it true that Duke Alaric healed himself at your coronation?\u201d Dhugal asked after a moment, not looking up from his work.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson raised one eyebrow, wondering why Dhugal was asking.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIs that one of the stories that\u2019s come west?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd others \u2014 aye.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, it\u2019s true,\u201d Kelson said, a little defensively. \u201cFather Duncan helped him. I didn\u2019t see it happen, but I saw the result \u2014 and I <\/span><span class=\"none1\">did<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> see him heal Duncan later on: a wound that should have killed anyone else.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou actually <\/span><span class=\"none1\">saw<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> this?\u201d Dhugal asked, pausing to stare at Kelson.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson shivered a little, and had to look away from the blood on his own hands to shake the memory.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThey took a terrible chance,\u201d he whispered. \u201cWe needed to convince Warm de Grey that Deryni weren\u2019t necessarily evil. Warm claims that his own healing comes from God, so Duncan decided to show him that Deryni can heal, too. He let Warm wound him in the shoulder, but it was almost too severe. I hate to think of what would have happened, if it hadn\u2019t worked.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat do you mean, \u2018if it hadn\u2019t worked?\u2019\u201c Dhugal asked softly, his needle half-forgotten in his fingers. \u201cI thought you said he and Morgan could heal.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThey can,\u201d Kelson replied, \u201conly they don\u2019t really know how they do it, and the gift isn\u2019t always reliable. Maybe that\u2019s because they\u2019re only half-Deryni. From Father Duncan\u2019s research, we now believe that some Deryni were able to do such things on a regular basis during the Interregnum, but the art apparently has been lost since. Only a small percentage of Deryni had the healing gift, even then.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBut that Warm fellow can do it?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYes.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd he isn\u2019t Deryni?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson shook his head. \u201cNot so far as we\u2019ve been able to tell. He still insists his gift comes from God \u2014 and maybe it does. Maybe he\u2019s a genuine miracle-worker. Who are . we to say?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal snorted and resumed his work. \u201cThat sounds more capricious than being Deryni, if you ask me \u2014 working miracles! For myself, I think I\u2019d gladly settle for being able to do <\/span><span class=\"none1\">your<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> trick.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">My<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> trick?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cTo knock out a patient painlessly before trying to work on him. From a battle surgeon\u2019s point of view, that\u2019s a blessing, no matter <\/span><span class=\"none1\">where<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> the ability comes from, though I suspect ecclesiastical opinion would argue the point. No reflection on friend Bertie\u2019s courage, but if you hadn\u2019t done \u2014 whatever you did \u2014 he wouldn\u2019t have been able to hold still for me to do this. I suppose it <\/span><span class=\"none1\">was<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> some of your\u2026Deryni magic?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Almost hypnotically. Kelson watched the bloody hands move up and down, drawing the wound closed with Dhugal\u2019s own almost magical ability, and he had to shake his head lightly to break the spell.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI think you have your own kind of magic,\u201d he murmured, looking across at Dhugal in admiration. \u201cAnd thank God you don\u2019t seem to be intimidated by mine. You have no idea what a relief it is to be able to use my powers for something like this \u2014 which is what they were intended for, in the beginning, I feel sure \u2014 and not have you be afraid.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">With a smile, Dhugal tied off the last of his sutures and cat the thread, then looked up at Kelson with a keen, frank appraisal of the borderman.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI seem to recall that we once swore a blood-oath to live as brothers all our lives,\u201d he said softly, \u201cand to do whatever good we might. Why should I fear my brother, then, simply because he has been given the means to do greater good? I know you would never harm me \u2014  brother.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As Kelson caught his breath in surprise, Dhugal ducked his head and returned to his work, sluicing clean water over the sutures and then binding a handful of dried sphagnum moss over the wound.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">That, at least. Kelson felt he understood, as he washed his hands and dried them on a corner of their patient\u2019s tunic. He was not sure he understood the other kneeling across from him, but he did not think he cared to question what had just passed between them. He had forgotten what a comfort it could be to confide in a friend of his own generation. Conall was his age, and Payne and Rory only a little younger, but that was not the same. They had not been tempered with adult responsibilities the way he and Dhugal had. Morgan and Duncan understood, of course, and perhaps his Uncle Nigel, but even they were somewhat removed by age and experience \u2014 and they were not always around. He found himself heaving a sigh of relief as Dhugal finally rinsed his hands and dried them on a blood-stained grey towel.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThat\u2019s it, then,\u201d Dhugal said, peering tentatively under one of his patient\u2019s eyelids and glancing at Kelson inquiringly. \u201cI think I did one of my better repair jobs, but only time will tell for sure. He\u2019s still lost a lot of blood. Best if he simply sleeps through the night.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWe\u2019ll see that he does then,\u201d Kelson said, touching the sleeping man\u2019s forehead and making the necessary mental adjustments. \u201cI\u2019d have someone rouse him every few hours to drink some wine \u2014 Duncan says that helps to restore the lost blood faster \u2014 but otherwise, he shouldn\u2019t stir until morning.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As the two of them stood, Dhugal gathering up his sword and plaid. Kelson signalled one of his men to attend. Dhugal gave brief instructions, but then he and Kelson moved off slowly toward the edge of the camp which had formed around them while they worked; Wordlessly, Kelson took the sword and plaid while Dhugal began adjusting his armor.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The two were nearly of a height, side by side. Kelson perhaps a few fingers taller and a little heavier, though neither had yet come into their true man\u2019s growth. Before, Kelson had thought Dhugal\u2019s copper-colored hair cut short, but now, as Dhugal pulled off his mail coif and ran fingers under the neck of his brigandine in the back to free his hair. Kelson saw that it was even longer than his own, drawn to the nape of the neck in border fashion and plaited in a short braid tied with a leather thong. He took the coif as the young borderman began buckling the front closures of the brigandine, leaning against a tree to watch indulgently until Dhugal, with a roguish grin, reached out to finger a strand of Kelson\u2019s shoulder-length hair.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cSo that\u2019s what comes of having no wars for the past two years,\u201d Dhugal said, dropping the lock and taking back the sword to loop its baldric over his shoulder. \u201cDecadently long hair, like any common borderer. I wonder how you\u2019d look in a border braid?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhy don\u2019t you invite me home to greet your father and sample highland hospitality, and perhaps you\u2019ll see,\u201d Kelson returned with a smile, giving him back his plaid and coif. \u201cIf I haven\u2019t already scandalized my men simply by being Deryni, then playing at being a wild border chieftain will surely turn the trick. You\u2019ve changed, Dhugal.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cSo have you.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBecause I\u2019ve acquired \u2014 magic?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo, because you\u2019ve acquired a crown.\u201d Dhugal lowered his eyes, fingering the leather-lined mail of the coif. \u201cDespite what you said before, you <\/span><span class=\"none1\">are<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> the king now.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd does that make a difference?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou know it does.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThen, let it be a positive difference,\u201d Kelson said. \u201cYou yourself admitted that with the power I\u2019ve been given, both temporal and \u2014 other \u2014 I now have the power to do greater good. Perhaps some of the things that we only dreamed about when we were boys. God knows, I loved my father, and I miss him terribly, but there are things I\u2019d have done differently, if I\u2019d been faced with some of the things he had to face. Now I have that chance.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd does <\/span><span class=\"none1\">that<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> make a difference?\u201d Dhugal asked.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson shrugged. \u201cI\u2019m alive \u2014 and my father is dead. I\u2019ve kept the peace for two years now.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd the peace is being threatened in Meara. That\u2019s part of what this was all about, you know.\u201d Dhugal gestured around him at the resting men and the knot surrounding the prisoners across the glade. \u201cWe\u2019ve always had a raiding problem in the highlands \u2014 it\u2019s part of our way of life \u2014 but some of these men, on both sides, are at least sympathetic to the Lady Caitrin\u2019s cause.\u201d He made a face. \u201cShe\u2019s my aunt, you know.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson raised an eyebrow. \u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Is<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> she?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAye. My Uncle Sicard\u2019s wife. Sicard and my father haven\u2019t spoken for years, but border blood runs thick, as you know. Some wonder that we don\u2019t support them, being so far from central Gwynedd and all. I\u2019m surprised you didn\u2019t catch some inkling of that during your progress this summer. Isn\u2019t that the sort of thing you\u2019re supposed to be able to do now, with your new powers?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The question was not at all hostile, but it was clear that Dhugal was fishing for reassurance, as uncertain as any of his men about just what a Deryni king could and could not do.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019m not omnipotent, Dhugal,\u201d Kelson said quietly, looking the other in the eyes. \u201cI can tell whether a man is lying, with very little effort \u2014 it\u2019s called Truth-Reading \u2014 but to actually learn the truth, I need to ask the right questions.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI \u2014 thought that Deryni could read minds,\u201d Dhugal whispered. And though he did not break eye contact, Kelson needed no Deryni senses to know what courage that took, operating from ignorance as Dhugal was. That Dhugal trusted him, there was no question; but despite his earlier protestations that he was not afraid of what Kelson had become, certain fears could only be allayed by experience \u2014 and that, Dhugal did not have yet.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWe can,\u201d Kelson murmured. \u201cBut we don\u2019t, among our friends, unless we\u2019re invited. And the first time, even among Deryni, it almost requires some kind of physical contact.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cLike the way you touched Bertie\u2019s forehead?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYes.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal let out an audible sigh and lowered his eyes, self-consciously wrapping his plaid around his shoulders like a mantle and fussing with a brooch to secure it. When he had adjusted it to his satisfaction, he gave Kelson a brief, bright smile.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, then. I suppose we ought to see whether the others have gotten anything else out of the prisoners. You won\u2019t forget what I said about highland loyalties, will you?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson smiled. \u201cI told you how I go about learning whether a man is lying. How do <\/span><span class=\"none1\">you<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> do it?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhy, we highland folk have the Second Sight, don\u2019t you know?\u201d Dhugal quipped. \u201cAsk anyone in my father\u2019s hall about Meara, and her greedy would-be princess.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, then, if it\u2019s Meara, I suppose I\u2019d better be back there, come spring,\u201d Kelson replied. \u201cAnd with men beside me who understand what\u2019s happening. Maybe even men who have this \u2014 Second Sight. Would your father let you come to court, do you think?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIf you asked it as king, he\u2019d have no choice.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd what is <\/span><span class=\"none1\">your<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> choice?\u201d Kelson asked.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal grinned. \u201cWe were like brothers once. Kelson. We still make a good team.\u201d He glanced over his shoulder at the sleeping Bertie and back again. \u201cWhat do <\/span><span class=\"none1\">you<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> think?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI think,\u201d said Kelson, \u201cthat we should ride up to Transha in the morning and find out what he\u2019ll say.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none\">CHAPTER THREE<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s2\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none1\">And thou shalt put the mitre upon his head\u2026<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none2\">\u2014  Exodus 29:6<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The rain which had been only an annoyance to Kelson, in Transha, had turned to storm by the time it reached Culdi the following afternoon. Stamping mud from the soles of thigh-high riding boots, Morgan paused just inside the doorway to the guest apartments at Culdi Abbey to shake more water from his streaming leather cloak. He and Duncan had intended to ride in the hills nearby as soon as the afternoon session of the consistory adjourned, but the unexpected storm had neatly stymied that plan. Now the iron grey R\u2019Kassan stud moping down in the bishop\u2019s barn would have to wait another day, and perhaps longer, he and his master both growing surly and restless from the forced inactivity. It hardly seemed fair, especially with Kelson out enjoying himself.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Blowing on gloved fingers to warm them, Morgan stalked on along the corridor toward Duncan\u2019s temporary quarters and indulged a brief fantasy about a rainstorm in Transha, too. The notion brought a smile to his lips. None of the servants were about when he let himself into the common room Duncan shared with his master, Archbishop Cardiel, so he built up the fire himself and set wine to mull, spreading his sodden cloak on a stool to dry and shedding cap and gloves. Half an hour later, Duncan found his friend ensconced in a deeply recessed window seat which overlooked the cloister garth, boots propped indolently on the stone bench opposite and a steaming cup all but forgotten in one hand. His nose was pressed to the rain-streaked window glass, free hand shading his eyes against glare.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI see I was right,\u201d Duncan said, casting off his black cloak and rubbing his hands briskly before the fire. \u201cWhen I saw how hard it was raining, I guessed that even you wouldn\u2019t choose to ride in this kind of weather. What <\/span><span class=\"none1\">are<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> you looking at?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThe ambitious Father Judhael,\u201d Morgan replied, not moving from his vantage point. \u201cCome and see.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Duncan needed no second invitation, for Judhael of Meara was probably the single most controversial candidate being evaluated by the bishops. Though unimpeachable on ecclesiastical grounds, and personable enough as an individual, his family connections inspired more suspicion than confidence among those aware of the politics which went with the Mearan See, for Judhael was nephew to the Pretender Caitrin. Just now, he was standing outside the door to the chapter house, deep in conversation with old Creoda of Carbury, Bishop of the new See of Culdi since last winter and host for this convocation. Only when the two had moved off down another corridor and disappeared from sight did Duncan draw back from the window.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI don\u2019t like that,\u201d the priest said softly, glancing at Morgan with tight-lipped disapproval. \u201cOld Creoda can change with the wind. You remember how he stayed by Loris almost to the end, two summers ago. When the bishops decided to phase out his old see, I thought for sure they\u2019d retire him. Who would have guessed they\u2019d give him Culdi instead?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHmmm, I shan\u2019t argue that,\u201d Morgan agreed. \u201cHe certainly wouldn\u2019t have been <\/span><span class=\"none1\">my<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> choice for a see so closely associated with a Deryni saint. But perhaps they thought Carsten would balance him, with Culdi being so close to Meara. I doubt anyone expected that Carsten wouldn\u2019t last out the \u00f3 ear.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Duncan raised an eyebrow. \u201cNo? But then, no one asked me. Carsten\u2019s health had been frail for some time. Everyone in Kierney and Cassan knew that. Still, there was no real trouble in Meara while he was alive. Now that he\u2019s gone, most of the Mearan clergy are suddenly talking about Judhael for his replacement. Now, <\/span><span class=\"none1\">that\u2019s<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> one I certainly don\u2019t fancy being appointed to the See of Meara.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cJudhael?\u201d Morgan toyed with one of the links of his captain-general\u2019s chain, tapping the engraved gold against a front tooth as he nodded. \u201cNor do I. It\u2019s entirely too much like a real throne. Even by separatist standards, he\u2019s too far down the succession to press his own claim to the Mearan coronet, but as Bishop of Meara, he could certainly exert a great deal of influence for his aunt and <\/span><span class=\"none1\">her<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> sons.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThose sons \u2014 \u201c Duncan snorted. \u201cSometimes I think we\u2019d be better off if old Malcolm had killed off all the other Mearan heirs when he took the coronet and married Roisian. Perhaps that sounds cold and unpriestly, but it might have prevented a lot more bloodshed later on.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAye. And our Mearan princelings are only a little younger than Kelson: just old enough to be ambitious about asserting their mother\u2019s claim. And Judhael on a bishop\u2019s throne could be the foot in the door. The very thought gives me the shakes.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou\u2019ll get no argument from me on <\/span><span class=\"none1\">that<\/span><span class=\"none2\">,\u201d Duncan replied. \u2018The sad thing is, he\u2019s well qualified for the job. His record as a priest is spotless, and he has all the right administrative abilities to make a very good bishop.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cOr the focus for a separatist revolt,\u201d Morgan said. \u201cStill, credentials like his will make it very difficult to ignore his candidacy. And let\u2019s face it: the man had no more say about being born into a cadet royal house than you and I did about being born Deryni.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cMore\u2019s the pity.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">With a sigh, Duncan turned away from the window and sat down in a high-backed chair whose shadows nearly swallowed his black cassock, stretching out his legs toward the fire. Morgan followed him, lifting mulled wine in wordless question and only refilling his own cup when Duncan shook his head. As Morgan sat in another chair beside him, Duncan rolled his head in Morgan\u2019s direction and looked at him searchingly, folding his hands and tapping joined forefingers against his cheek as he rested his elbows on the chair arms.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019m beginning to be really concerned, Alaric,\u201d the priest said softly. \u201cWe\u2019ve interviewed a lot of candidates, but none of them match up to Judhael. Oh, some are better in one area or another, but none of them average out as well.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat about that one they interviewed this morning?\u201d Morgan asked. \u201cWhat was his name \u2014 Father Benoit? He seemed well qualified to me.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Duncan shook his head. \u201cA fine priest, but far too naive to cope with the Mearan situation. He\u2019s someone to keep id mind for the future, and he can be groomed for the episcopate in some subsidary post, but that doesn\u2019t help us now. No, what we need is a good compromise candidate \u2014 and I\u2019m not sure he exists. He needs to be the king\u2019s man, but he also ought to have at least some familiarity with Mearan politics. The only men who seem to fill both. requirements are either too young or too inexperienced. They can\u2019t all be like Arilan, I suppose: auxiliary bishop at thirty-five, and with his own see before he was forty.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo, I suppose not,\u201d Morgan said. He took a thought-fill pull at his wine, then cocked his head at Duncan. \u201cHas it occurred to you that perhaps the bishops have expanded the episcopal structure a little too quickly? \u2014 reviving three old sees and only abolishing one \u2014 that you\u2019ve used up your reserve of men qualified to promote? Plus, you\u2019ve, lost \u2014 what? \u2014 four bishops in the past two years? Five, if you count Loris.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Duncan grimaced. \u201cCount that a blessing, not a loss, cousin. Anyway, he\u2019s safely locked away at Saint Iveagh\u2019s, so I don\u2019t think we need to worry.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cLet\u2019s hope not. Wouldn\u2019t <\/span><span class=\"none1\">that<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> muddy the waters, if he got out?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDon\u2019t even think it. They say he hasn\u2019t changed a bit, you know,\u201d Duncan went on, in a more confidential tone. 1 hear he nearly had apoplexy when he heard Arilan had been made Bishop of Dhassa.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDid he, now?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cOh, you needn\u2019t pretend to be surprised,\u201d Duncan replied with a droll grin. \u201cWho, of all the so-called rebel bishops, was largely responsible for his fall, after all? And even if Loris doesn\u2019t know for <\/span><span class=\"none1\">sure<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> that Arilan\u2019s Deryni, think about it. A suspected Deryni in one of the oldest sees in Gwynedd? It would have been bad enough if he\u2019d only stayed the assistant in Rhemuth.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As if the mere mention of Arilan\u2019s name had conjured his presence, the door opened at that moment to admit Bishop Denis Arilan, closely followed by Cardiel. The two looked inordinately pleased with themselves as Duncan and Morgan divested them of their soggy cloaks, Cardiel shaking rain from his steel grey hair and smoothing back little wings of it over his ears with both palms as he sat in the chair which Morgan held for him. As the darker-haired Arilan also sat, leaning forward lazily to poke at the fire with a piece of kindling, Cardiel glanced at Duncan, who was setting new cups on the hearth by the pot of mulled wine.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDuncan, a messenger\u2019s just arrived for you in the inner courtyard,\u201d he said. \u201cA lad wearing your ducal livery. He\u2019s taken an amazing number of dispatches off a packhorse.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Grinning, Duncan turned over his hosting duties to Morgan and rose.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAh, well, I suppose they\u2019ve found me. I was rather afraid the correspondence would catch up with me, if I stayed too long in Culdi. Will you excuse me for a moment, sir? I suppose I really ought to see what he\u2019s got.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Cardiel said nothing as he waved permission, but as Duncan left the room, Morgan was once again struck by an undercurrent of something brewing beneath the surface, another hint of the self-satisfaction he had sensed when the two first entered. He wondered about it as he handed Cardiel a steaming cup, aware, as their fingers brushed, that Cardiel was the source of most of it, but he did not even consider probing deeper with Arilan present. The Deryni bishop had a knack for knowing when he or Duncan were using their powers in ways of which he did not approve \u2014 in almost any way, it sometimes seemed. Of late, it often made Morgan ill-at-ease even to be around Arilan, though that was not the case today.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, I\u2019m glad Duncan\u2019s messenger arrived when he did,\u201d Cardiel said, as Morgan passed Arilan a second brimming cup. \u201cWe wanted to discuss something with you privately, very quickly before he comes back. What would you think of Duncan being consecrated bishop a little sooner than we\u2019d planned?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan nearly dropped the cup he was refilling for himself.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou\u2019re <\/span><span class=\"none1\">not<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> thinking of making him Bishop of Meara lifter all, are you?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo, no \u2014 not of Meara,\u201d Cardiel reassured him quickly. \u201cJust my assistant, as we\u2019d already decided. We <\/span><span class=\"none1\">have<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> found a candidate for Meara, however. If we take him, I\u2019m going to need Duncan\u2019s help more than ever.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan made no attempt to hide his sigh of relief. Still shaking his head slightly, he hooked a three-legged stool closer to the two and sat, his back to the fire.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cSweet <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Jesu<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, I confess I thought you\u2019d taken leave of your senses for a moment there. Are you <\/span><span class=\"none1\">really<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> going to pass over Judhael?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNot \u2014 exactly,\u201d Cardiel replied. \u201cThat is, we\u2019re not going to consecrate someone else bishop instead of him. We\u2019ve been aware from the beginning that any bishop not to the Mearans\u2019 liking was going to have his hands full, trying to learn his job and cope with Mearan hostility both at once. But suppose we were to put someone in Meara who\u2019s already experienced? That would eliminate half the problem from the start.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou\u2019d transfer an existing bishop, then,\u201d Morgan guessed, running swiftly down the list of prelates in his mind.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Arilan lowered his cup to nod. \u201cThat\u2019s correct. And there can be no question about passing over Judhael in favor of a man who already knows how to run a diocese.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cExcept that all your diocesan bishops are already occupied,\u201d Morgan said, even more mystified. \u201cWhere are you going to find this paragon?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Cardiel smiled. \u201cHenry Istelyn, Bradene\u2019s assistant.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAh.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHe\u2019s already been handling a great deal of work behind the scenes for Bradene for the past two years,\u201d Arilan said. \u201cFurthermore, when he was first made an itinerant bishop, several years ago, he spent a great deal of time in Kierney and the border areas. He probably knows the people better than anyone besides Judhael himself \u2014 or Duncan, of course. But we\u2019ve already agreed that he\u2019s to be otherwise occupied.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan nodded thoughtfully. From Gwynedd\u2019s point of view, the selection of Istelyn made perfect sense \u2014 but simply choosing a logically qualified candidate did not eliminate the very practical political repercussions which were likely to result if anyone besides Judhael were posted to Meara.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou\u2019re saddling Istelyn with a heavy responsibility,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat makes you think the Mearans will accept him? They have their minds set on Judhael.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThat\u2019s true,\u201d Arilan agreed. \u201cHowever, even if they object \u2014 \u201c<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhich you know they\u2019re going to do, if it\u2019s anyone else \u2014 \u201c<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Even<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> if they object,\u201d Arilan continued, \u201cit\u2019s too late in the season to mount any kind of major military campaign to try to oust him. Ratharkin will be secure enough through the winter, if we leave him a detachment of episcopal troops for local security. And with the king planning to campaign in Meara next year\u2026\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">At Morgan\u2019s still-doubtful expression, Cardiel spread his hands helplessly.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThere isn\u2019t going to <\/span><span class=\"none1\">be<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> a perfect candidate, Alaric \u2014  not one who will please every faction. And we could certainly find a lot worse than Istelyn. Incidentally, when is the king due back? Naturally, we\u2019d like his concurrence before we go ahead with any formal announcement.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan raised an eyebrow, still unconvinced. \u201cI had word this morning that he expects to be back in a few days. He\u2019s headed north to see the Earl of Transha.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cTransha \u2014 that\u2019s The MacArdry?\u201d Cardiel asked.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Arilan nodded knowingly. \u201cI remember when his \u201ceager son was fostered at court a few years ago: a bright, about Kelson\u2019s age, as I recall. What was his name?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDhugal,\u201d Morgan replied. \u201cIn any case. Kelson apparently ran across him over Trurill way, so he\u2019s decided to tide back to Transha with the boy and pay a courtesy call on the old man.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, I suppose a few days won\u2019t make any difference, one way or the other,\u201d Cardiel said. \u201cThere are still details to work out on Istelyn \u2014 such as finding out whether he\u2019s even willing to take on Meara. This assumes, of course, that Kelson has no objection.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Before Morgan could reply, a sharp cry and the sounds of a scuffle in the corridor outside suddenly intruded, punctuated by a mental scream: Duncan\u2019s. Morgan was on his feet and moving before the others could even glance in that direction. As he burst into the corridor, he saw Duncan struggling with someone at the far end, but by the time he could reach them, Duncan was letting the body of his attacker slide to the floor. There was blood everywhere.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAre you all \u2014 \u201c<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDon\u2019t touch me,\u201d Duncan gasped, cradling a bloody right hand against his equally bloody cassock and wobbling to his knees. \u201cThere was <\/span><span class=\"none1\">merasha<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> on the blade.\u201d He glanced woozily at his motionless attacker. \u201cChrist, I\u2019m afraid I killed him.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">Merasha<\/span><span class=\"none2\">. The very word took Morgan back for just an instant to a chapel that was no more, and a barb on an altar rail gate, and the terror of being in the drug\u2019s grip, helpless to use his powers, at the mercy of men who would have killed him because of what he was. Duncan had gotten him out and nursed him through the worst of the physical effects of the ordeal, but the memory had never been fully exorcised, especially that final, haunting image of the stake wrapped with chains, which they had passed as they made their escape. It had been intended for him.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNever mind him,\u201d Morgan replied, stepping over the body to crouch cautiously beside the wounded priest. \u201cWhere are you hurt? How much of that blood is yours?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Drawn by the disturbance, others were congregating in the corridor to gawk, servants and priests and even a few guards from the courtyard outside, forcing Cardiel and Arilan to push their way through to reach Duncan\u2019s side. White-faced, Duncan only shook his head and drew in his breath between clenched teeth as he gingerly eased open his right hand. The palm was slashed almost to the bone where he had tried to ward off his attacker\u2019s knife with his bare hand, but more terrifying, by far, was the wave of queasy disharmony that he radiated as Morgan reached out in instinctive mental probe and as quickly recoiled.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cCareful of the blade,\u201d Morgan warned, though Arilan had already stopped with his hand poised above the knife as he, too, sensed the drug\u2019s effects.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Taking care to avoid the blood, which might carry traces of the drug to affect them as well, the two Deryni turned over the dead assassin. Bright scarlet stained the front of the blue Cassani livery and steamed where it had pooled on the cold stone beneath the body, welling from a second mouth which gaped beneath a beardless chin. The bloody face could not have been more than fourteen.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhy, it\u2019s a boy!\u201d Cardiel murmured.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAs God is my witness, I had no choice,\u201d Duncan whispered, closing his hand again and slumping back to sit on his heels. \u201cUntil he actually cut me, I thought he was legitimate.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou don\u2019t know him?\u201d Arilan asked.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo \u2014 but I wouldn\u2019t expect to recognize every last page or squire in my service. And with \u2014 with the <\/span><span class=\"none1\">merasha<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> in me, I was afraid that if I didn\u2019t kill him while I still could, he might be able to outwait me, until I was helpless with the drug. Why did he do it?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan shook his head, reaching out gingerly with his mind as he slid a hand around the back of the boy\u2019s neck, where there was less blood. Sometimes it was possible to readjust a little from a dead man\u2019s mind, if he had not been dead too long, but Morgan could detect nothing beyond a few hazy images of dim childhood memories, fading even as he read them. While Arilan and a monk began gathering up the scattered dispatches, he carefully searched the body for anything which might give them a clue as to the boy\u2019s identity or origin, but there was nothing. Duncan was beginning to weave as Morgan glanced over at him again, his blue eyes glassy from the drug, keeping them open only by the sheerest force of will. Cardiel had an arm around his shoulder to support him, but it was obvious that Duncan was slipping fast into the chaos of the <\/span><span class=\"none1\">merasha<\/span><span class=\"none2\">. Whoever the assassin had been, he had known his quarry to be Deryni.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThomas, why don\u2019t you take Duncan back to your quarters and see to his wound?\u201d Arilan suggested softly, touching a hand to Cardiel\u2019s shoulder and including Morgan in his glance. \u201cI\u2019ll see to the clean-up here and try to find out more about our boy-assassin.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Cardiel nodded, he and Morgan helping Duncan to stand.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cVery well. You might check with the guards who let the boy into the compound. Perhaps someone may have recognized him. It would also be interesting to know whether he was the original messenger sent with the dispatches, or if the real one is lying dead in a ditch somewhere \u2014 or, at the least, relieved of his livery.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Duncan went completely limp as Cardiel finished speaking, and Morgan and the archbishop together had to carry him back to the episcopal apartments. An hour later, washed and bandaged, Duncan was sleeping soundly in his own room, an exhausted Morgan running himself through a brief spell to banish fatigue.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019ll try to heal him in the morning, when he\u2019s over the worst effects of the drug,\u201d Morgan whispered, as he turned at last from Duncan\u2019s bed. \u201cIt\u2019s a nasty wound, but I didn\u2019t think it was a good idea to put my fingers into all that <\/span><span class=\"none1\">merasha<\/span><span class=\"none2\">.\u2019\u2019\u2019<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">His hands were trembling as he took the cup of wine which Cardiel gave him, for going into Duncan\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"none1\">merasha<\/span><span class=\"none2\">-muddled mind had been a great personal trial, as well as a physically taxing one, forcing him to relive much of his own terrifying experience. He still kept flashing on the worst of it, unless he kept his mind on short leash. He knew he would have nightmares for days to come.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But Cardiel\u2019s touch on his shoulder conveyed genuine compassion and even understanding as he guided Morgan to one of the cushioned chairs beside the fireplace. Morgan guessed that the archbishop was remembering his own part in the later aftermath of that ordeal, when Morgan and Duncan had come to him and Arilan in Dhassa and disclosed all in desperate confession, seeking to make peace with the Church which had declared them excommunicate for what they had done to escape.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan sat and sipped silently at his wine for several minutes, staring blindly into the fire and feeling himself gradually unwind, then laid his head against the back of the chair and closed his eyes until Arilan returned. The fatigue-banishing spell did not seem to have worked very well, even though he tried it several times.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019ve been questioning some of the guards,\u201d the Deryni bishop said, sitting beside Morgan after he had looked in on their patient. \u201cApparently the boy came from Ballymar, up on the north coast. He was trained in Duke Jared\u2019s household and page to one of the local barons for a while, but was dismissed. One of my informants seemed to think it had to do with Mearan sympathies.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cMearan sympathies?\u201d Cardiel murmured. \u201cHow old is the lad?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cOlder than he looked,\u201d Arilan replied, \u201cand old enough to risk paying for his actions with his life. What puzzles me is why he tried to kill Duncan. It can\u2019t be over the Mearan bishopric. Everyone knows that Duncan was not a candidate.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Duncan and Meara. Suddenly Morgan sat up straighter, remembering the conversation he and Duncan had observed between Judhael and old Creoda. They had assumed that Judhael was campaigning for his coveted bishopric. What came to Morgan now was an oblique approach to Judhael getting what he wanted, but its further potential was yet more chilling.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo, it wasn\u2019t about the bishopric \u2014 at least not directly,\u201d he said softly, reviewing the genealogical relationships in his mind just to make sure. \u201cBut Duncan is Duke of Cassan and Earl of Kierney. That makes him almost a prince in his own right \u2014 and his lands have not always gone by their present names.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Arilan\u2019s deep blue-violet eyes lit in sudden comprehension. \u201cThe other half of ancient Meara,\u201d he said with a nod. \u201cNow, wouldn\u2019t <\/span><span class=\"none1\">that<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> be a power base, if one wanted to break away from one\u2019s overlord and establish an independent holding? The two Mearas reunited!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd Duncan has no direct heir,\u201d Cardiel added, catching the gist of what they were suggesting. \u201cWho <\/span><span class=\"none1\">is<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> his heir-at-law, Alaric? You? You\u2019re cousins, aren\u2019t you?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan grimaced. \u201cNot in the right degree for this, I fear \u2014 and I say that not out of any greed to amass more titles and land, but out of concern about who comes ahead of me. There are three, actually \u2014 though I\u2019d only thought about the first two until today. Neither Duncan\u2019s father or his grandfather had any brothers, but his grandfather had two sisters. The younger, my paternal grandmother, produced one son: my father. The elder sister also produced a son, however; and he married the Princess Annalind of Meara.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cQueen Roisian\u2019s twin sister,\u201d Cardiel whispered. \u201cThen, Caitrin\u2019s eldest son is Duncan\u2019s heir!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan nodded. \u201cIthel; and after him, his brother Llewell. The girl isn\u2019t in the succession, though any eventual son others would be, if her brothers failed to produce heirs.\u201d He paused to moisten his lips as the two bishops stared at him expectantly.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou\u2019re still wondering who the third heir is, then. I\u2019m surprised you haven\u2019t guessed.\u201d He paused. \u201cCaitrin also had a sister, and that sister had a son. Who else could he be but your good Father Judhael of Meara?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As Cardiel\u2019s jaw dropped in disbelief, Arilan slapped an open palm against the arm of his chair and swore softly.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019m not saying he had anything to do with the attack on Duncan, mind you,\u201d Morgan went on. \u201cI simply point out that if it had succeeded, Judhael and his kin certainly stood to gain. All we really know about his politics at this point is that he wants very badly to be Bishop of Meara. If one of his Mearan cousins were Duke of Cassan and Earl of Kierney, that might make the whole thing fall together. The Bishop of Ballymar would have no choice but to support the candidate of his new duke\u2019s choice: Cousin Judhael. And with Judhael in the bishopric, that\u2019s added leverage to put his aunt on the throne of Meara \u2014  a united Meara, once she\u2019s gone and her son succeeds her in the south. It\u2019s ingenious, really.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIts diabolical, if you ask me,\u201d Cardiel muttered, \u201cnot to mention treasonous. Denis, there must be something we can do. Perhaps we ought to call Judhael in and question him.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Arilan considered the suggestion, running his pectoral cross back and forth distractedly on its chain, then lowered his gaze.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cOn what grounds, Thomas? We\u2019ve been interviewing the man all week. Other than the fact that he\u2019s ambitious, he almost shimmers, he\u2019s so pure. What Duke Alaric has just outlined is a theory only \u2014 an incredibly brilliant one, if we were Mearan \u2014 but we have no proof it has occurred to Judhael.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, use your powers to find out, then!\u201d Cardiel blurted. \u201cWhat good are they, if you don\u2019t use them?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As Arilan sighed patiently, preparing to go into the argument he had used so often when trying to explain things Deryni to Cardiel, Morgan forced himself to put the temptation from his own mind. He had wrestled with this particular ethical problem before, not always successfully.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cUltimately, it\u2019s a matter of ethics,\u201d Arilan finally said, echoing Morgan\u2019s rationale. \u201cI <\/span><span class=\"none1\">have<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> used my powers all this week, Thomas \u2014 to gauge whether our candidates were lying about their qualifications. That I could do without their knowledge, and without revealing myself as Deryni.\u201d He smiled, \u201cBesides, they suspected Duncan was Deryni, and that helped to keep them honest: wondering whether he could read their minds \u2014 which he couldn\u2019t, of course, under those conditions, but they didn\u2019t know that.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThen, let Duncan be present, if you feel you need a decoy,\u201d Cardiel insisted. \u201cOr Alaric, since Duncan is temporarily out of action. Between the two of you, you should be able to get at the truth.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd if he really is just a godly man, with ecclesiastical ambition but no interest in politics?\u201d Arilan asked. \u201cThen we\u2019ve made another enemy for Deryni.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u2018Then, make him forget, afterward, if he\u2019s innocent!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd that begins to enter <\/span><span class=\"none1\">really<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> hazy areas of conscience,\u201d Arilan replied. \u201cTruth-Reading is one thing. Using our powers to detect whether a man is lying can be justified, since it doesn\u2019t force action against a person\u2019s will. To <\/span><span class=\"none1\">make<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> someone tell the truth, however \u2014 well, I think that requires more than just a vague suspicion that he may be hiding something. So does making him forget. Sometimes such measures can be justified in a life and death situation, or where the subject is willing, but where does one draw the line?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAre <\/span><span class=\"none1\">you<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> so unsure of that line, then?\u201d Cardiel snapped.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cOf course not. At least I pray to God that I\u2019ll never be tempted to cross over and misuse my powers. But it was abuse of power that gave us the atmosphere of the past two hundred years. It\u2019s what the Camberian Council was created to prevent.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan looked up sharply at that, for Arilan had scrupulously avoided discussion of the mysterious Camberian Council for the past two years. His reaction apparently reminded Arilan that he was beginning to speak of things best left unsaid to humans, even one as close as Cardiel. The Deryni bishop paused to regroup, shaking his head as he laid a hand on Cardiel\u2019s arm.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cListen to me, Thomas. I\u2019m flattered at your confidence in me, but you mustn\u2019t think all Deryni are like me, or Alaric, or Duncan, or you may get hurt one day. We\u2019ve tried to be very careful not to do anything which might frighten you unduly, but you have to admit that we\u2019ve made you more than a little nervous on more than one occasion \u2014 and you know and trust us. Think about the ones who don\u2019t have a strict moral code like the one we follow. How many feet in the door does it take to produce a Charissa or a Wencit of Torenth? Or an Interregnum? Alaric knows what I\u2019m talking about, don\u2019t you, Alaric?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Grudgingly, Morgan had to agree, though sometimes Arilan\u2019s scruples seemed to him to be rigid almost to the point of crippling. But in front of Cardiel was not the place to pursue that old argument. Cardiel himself required additional persuasion, but eventually he, too, had to admit that forcing Judhael to the question was premature.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI still think Kelson should be told what has happened,\u201d Cardiel said stubbornly. \u201cAnd I don\u2019t think it should wait until he gets back in three or four days, either. That was fine when we were only talking about Istelyn, but now \u2014\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">For that, at least, Morgan had a Deryni solution.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNot <\/span><span class=\"none1\">all<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> of our powers are forbidden. Excellency,\u201d he said quietly. \u201cIt\u2019s possible I might be able to reach Kelson in his sleep, later tonight. He won\u2019t be expecting it, but I can try.\u201d Cardiel nodded happily as Morgan went on. \u201cIf that doesn\u2019t work, I\u2019ll leave for Transha in the morning, after I\u2019ve seen to Duncan \u2014 unless you have a better idea, sir?\u201d he queried, glancing at Arilan.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The Deryni bishop shook his head. \u201cNo, none. Given the bond I know binds you and Kelson, I shouldn\u2019t be at all surprised if your plan works. However, I also know how difficult it is to make the link at such a distance and without preparation at both ends. If you don\u2019t succeed, we\u2019ll make the time you need to get there physically.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Arilan\u2019s confidence in his ability helped to take the edge off Morgan\u2019s earlier resentment at having to back off on questioning Judhael, but now that his own course was set for the next few hours, he needed some time alone. When he had assured himself that Duncan was resting more easily, and slipped briefly inside the priest\u2019s mind to deepen his sleep, he took his leave of the two prelates and headed for his own quarters. He tried not to think about how close Duncan had come to death, or the mortal helplessness Duncan had suffered under the influence of <\/span><span class=\"none1\">merasha<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, concentrating instead on the calm he would need if he hoped to succeed in reaching the king.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But distraction in the form of Judhael of Meara met him as he passed the open door of the chapel in the guest wing. Morgan stiffened as he saw him, mentally berating himself for even having glanced inside. Judhael and another vaguely familiar-looking priest were just coming out. The temptation at least to test whether Judhael had heard about the attack on Duncan was too enticing to resist.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYour Grace,\u201d Judhael murmured, as Morgan loomed in the doorway and blocked his exit, all diffidence and courtly courtesy to the king\u2019s champion.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cFather Judhael,\u201d Morgan acknowledged. \u201cI wonder whether I might have a word with you in private,\u201d he said, glancing pointedly at Judhael\u2019s companion. \u201cPerhaps we could step back into the chapel.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Judhael looked puzzled and a little uneasy, but he agreed readily enough. When one aspired to high office in the confirmation of the king, one did not decline the invitation of the king\u2019s friend and confidant. He watched dispassionately as Morgan closed the chapel door behind them, inclining his head and preceding him down the short aisle when Morgan gestured toward the front of the chapel. Both men genuflected and signed themselves when they reached the altar rail, Morgan and then Judhael easing onto the kneelers which lay along its length. Morgan bowed his head for a moment as if in prayer, letting Judhael\u2019s curiosity and apprehension grow, then glanced at the priest sidelong.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou\u2019re acquainted with my cousin. Father Duncan McLain, I believe,\u201d he said softly.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Judhael cocked his head and stared at Morgan in surprise.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhy, I\u2019m aware that he is secretary to the Lord Archbishop of Rhemuth, Your Grace. He\u2019s been keeping the accounts of the interviews this week.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThat he has,\u201d Morgan murmured, opening his mind to Truth-Read. \u201cAre you aware that he was set upon by a boy with a knife earlier this evening?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Judhael\u2019s eyes widened at the news, then shuttered behind a quickly composed mask of concern.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cFather McLain is a priest like myself. Your Grace,\u201d he said in a low, uninflected voice. \u201cI am sorry to hear that someone would attempt his sacrilegious murder, but it grieves me far more to think that you might believe me involved in any way.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou have no knowledge of it, then?\u201d Morgan asked, a little taken aback to realize that Judhael was telling the truth.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNone, Your Grace.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI see.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">No knowledge whatsoever. Judhael really had not known. Morgan gazed searchingly into the priest\u2019s eyes for several seconds, not doing anything but looking \u2014  though Judhael might construe what he liked, and hopefully panic enough to let slip some additional bit of information \u2014 but Judhael met his gaze with no more uneasiness than anyone might have exhibited when stared at by a Deryni, the extent of whose powers were uncertain.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cJust one more question, then,\u201d Morgan said, choosing his words carefully. \u201cWhen was the last time you heard from your aunt?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Judhael hardly batted an eye.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cLast Christmastide, Your Grace. Why do you ask?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Last Christmastide, long before Meara\u2019s bishopric became vacant, Morgan noted. Nor was there any duplicity in Judhael\u2019s answer. Not only was Judhael innocent of knowledge about the attempt on Duncan, but he did not seem to be involved in any machinations his aunt might have planned for his insertion into a bishop\u2019s see \u2014  though Judhael surely had his own ambitions.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Morgan dared not push the issue any further, however. Judhael was beginning to look more anxious, and the only way to go from here was to actually force a deep reading on the priest \u2014 and Arilan would very likely skin him if he got wind of it, after his earlier lecture to Cardiel.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cVery well. Father. I\u2019ll leave you, then. Thank you for your time. If you\u2019ve a mind to ease a soul, you might whisper a prayer for the boy with the knife. I\u2019m afraid he died unshriven.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He signed himself slowly and deliberately, not taking his eyes from Judhael\u2019s, then rose and glided back up the aisle. Judhael was still kneeling, face buried in his hands, when Morgan glanced back just before going out.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He walked for a while after that, reviewing what he had done and finally inquiring among the guards as to what had happened to the body of Duncan\u2019s attacker. He found it in the infirmary, covered with a blanket, and he stared at the face of the dead boy for some time, wondering who had sent him.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none\">CHAPTER FOUR<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s2\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none1\">Thou hast made us to drink the wine of astonishment.<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s2\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none2\">\u2014  Psalms 60:3<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Farther north and east of Culdi, nearer the coast, an early dusk began to settle as Kelson and his warband urged their weary horses along the final stretch approaching Castle Transha, cloaks pulled close against an increasingly bitter drizzle. Dhugal, riding at the king\u2019s side, had set them a brisk pace since leaving the Trurill patrol at midmorning, pushing to reach the shelter of his father\u2019s castle before dark. They slowed as the grade of the road got steeper, Dhugal expectantly searching the rain ahead until the vast pile which was Transha gradually took shape, almost black against the darkening sky. The young border lord grinned as he glanced aside at the king.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWe\u2019re nearly there now,\u201d he said cheerily. \u201cMy father\u2019s castellan should have everything prepared. We\u2019ve been observed for the past hour, you know.\u201d\u2019<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cOh?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Surprised and a little taken aback. Kelson turned to look at Dhugal in question, for he had been scanning the craggy hills with Deryni senses as well as sight for nearly that long, and had detected nothing.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDon\u2019t worry,\u201d Dhugal went on with a chuckle. \u201cI didn\u2019t see them either. But then, I\u2019m not as experienced as Ciard yet. He signalled me when we made our last rest stop.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Ciard. Of course. He had been the only other MacArdry retainer riding with the Trurill patrol, so of course had come with them. Kelson remembered him well from the days of Dhugal\u2019s fosterage at court. Glancing back thoughtfully at the middle-aged gillie riding a few ranks behind, he recalled being told that Ciard O Ruane had been made Dhugal\u2019s personal attendant and bodyguard by the MacArdry chief himself, shortly after Dhugal\u2019s birth. Kelson had never known him to be far from his young charge\u2019s side. The man\u2019s almost uncanny ability in the field had mystified Kelson even in the old days; and Deryni perceptions gained since their last contact had added no further explanation.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cCiard. I might have known,\u201d Kelson muttered aside to Dhugal, as he returned his attention to the narrowing trail ahead. \u201cI suppose next you\u2019ll be telling me he does it with that borderer Second Sight you mentioned yesterday.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhy, I thought your kind knew all about such things,\u201d Dhugal replied with another chuckle. \u201cYou really needn\u2019t worry, though. I personally guarantee my people\u2019s loyalty \u2014 though I should warn you not to be surprised if your welcome seems a little cool at first. Even if you weren\u2019t the king, you <\/span><span class=\"none1\">are<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> a lowlander. Both make you an oddity this far west.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">And being Deryni makes me odder still<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, Kelson added in his own mind, completing what Dhugal had not said. Despite Dhugal\u2019s assurance, he could not suppress a faint itch between his shoulderblades.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The air tasted increasingly of salt as they approached the castle\u2019s outer defenses, and the gulls screeching overhead gave odd counterpoint to the dull clop of mud-clogged hooves and the muted jingle of harness. Ewan and Conall followed directly behind, the rain-soaked Haldane standard flapping wetly against Conal\u2019s gloved hand and occasionally lifting enough on the rising wind to actually be read. Dhugal had advised them not to furl it, so that there could be no mistaking their identity. The rest of the warband also followed by twos, Ciard with one of Ewan\u2019s gillies and then Jodrell, Traheme, and the rest of the column \u2014 knights, squires, and servants.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">They came within easy bowshot of the outer curtain before Kelson at last spotted lockouts manning the battlements high above, barely silhouetted against the grey sky. Torchlight flickered at some of the arrow slits piercing the stone of the barbican gate, betokening human habitation there as well \u2014 a suspicion confirmed by Kelson\u2019s Deryni senses \u2014 but no one appeared at closer hand. The column slowed almost to a stop as they neared the gatehouse.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThey know who you are, but not why you\u2019re here,\u201d Dhugal murmured, as the heavy doors swung outward and chains clattered on windlass drums, raising the heavy portcullis. \u201cOne can hardly blame them for being wary.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI suppose not.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As soon as there was headroom beneath the portcullis, Ciard kneed his pony past them with a scrambling of unshod hooves and jogged into the gatehouse passage, seizing a torch from a wall bracket before leading on across the drawbridge beyond. He reined in and looked back as he reached the other side, gesturing for them to follow, and Dhugal set heels to his own pony at once. Kelson glanced upward as he and the rest of the column followed Dhugal through the gatehouse, and was rewarded with a glimpse of a red-cheeked border face watching from a murder-hole high above. The man gave a nod and touched two fingers to the front of his highland bonnet before disappearing, but Kelson sensed that the salute was as much for Dhugal as for him.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The hollow clatter of the horses\u2019 hooves on the drawbridge gave way to the more solid ring of steel on flint paving as they reached the other side of the ditch protecting the outer ward, and as they resumed climbing, Kelson reflected that if ever a castle had been designed to take all advantage of its natural defenses, Transha was it. The road spiraling upward to the left rapidly became a steep, narrow killing zone, the seaward side sheering off in a heart-stopping plunge to the surf crashing far below. On their unshielded right, the keep itself rose forty feet above their heads, the gaps along the crenellated wall providing easy vantage points from which to bombard an approaching enemy. The way was wide enough for two border ponies side by side, but the Haldane greathorses were obliged to go single file. Sea gulls swooped in for a closer look at the intruders, veering off with angry cries when a horse would snort or a cloak would flap. The smell of the sea was strong, even when they had passed beneath a second gatehouse.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBring light for the young master and his guests!\u201d Ciard cried, turning his pony in a tight circle and waving his torch as the Haldane column clattered into the inner ward. \u201c\u2018Tis I, Ciard O Ruane. Th\u2019 young master is home. Where is Caball MacArdry? Bring light, I tell ye!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">His voice brought immediate response. As torches flared all around the perimeter of the yard and voices began to buzz, a breathless stableboy came scurrying to take his pony. Kelson sat his greathorse beside Dhugal and the spotted pony and watched Ciard stride toward them. Behind them, the yard was filling with the rest of the Haldane warband, but Kelson signalled them to remain mounted before himself swinging to the ground. Dhugal was already there to take his reins, giving both their animals over to Ciard before setting his hand under Kelson\u2019s elbow to guide him toward the stair leading up to the great hall.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHo, Caball!\u201d Dhugal called, as the door to the hall opened and a knot of tartan-clad men began to descend the stair. Some of them had pulled an edge of plaid over their heads against the rain, and a few bore torches. The leader wore the two feathers of a clan chieftain in his cap, and his bearded face split in a pleased grin as he came hurrying down to meet the unexpected visitors.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cMaster Dhugal!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cMy father\u2019s castellan,\u201d Dhugal murmured aside to Kelson, as the men reached the bottom of the stair. \u201cCaball, is all prepared to give fair guesting to the King\u2019s Majesty? Sire, I present my kinsman Caball MacArdry, who speaks for the clan and The MacArdry. How is my father, Caball?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThe MacArdry\u2019s leal greeting. Lord King,\u201d Caball replied, touching his cap in salute and making his nod include his young master as well as his sovereign. \u201cDhugal, Himself will be heartened to see ye hame sae unexpectedly.\u201d He returned his attention to Kelson. \u201cWe cannae offer more than simple border fare on sae short a notice, but The MacArdry looks forward tae greetin\u2019 ye himself, when ye hae refreshed yerself, an\u2019 extends his hospitality tae yerself an\u2019 yer men tae sup with him in his hall.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cPlease tell the MacArdry that I look forward to seeing him as well,\u201d Kelson replied, inclining his head graciously. \u201cI\u2019ve not had that pleasure since he came to see me crowned, and Dhugal tells me he\u2019s not been well of late. I\u2019m sorry to hear that.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The castellan dipped his chin in clipped acknowledgment, rain dripping from his beard.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAs for the fare,\u201d Kelson went on with a disarming smile, \u201cwe\u2019ve been in the field for several days. Any hot meal and a roof over our heads will be most welcome.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Caball seemed to unbend a little as he glanced back at Dhugal. \u201cI think we can do that much for ye, sir \u2014 an\u2019 perhaps a mite better. Dhugal, we\u2019ll bed th\u2019 King\u2019s Grace an\u2019 such others as he wishes in yer quarters. The men can sleep in the hall with our own garrison, when supper\u2019s done.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cPrince Conall will be with us, then,\u201d Dhugal replied, looking to Kelson for confirmation, \u201cand perhaps Jodrell and Traherne \u2014 or Duke Ewan, of course, unless they\u2019d prefer to sleep with the men. Will that be satisfactory, Sire?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cEwan of Claibourne?\u201d Caball murmured, head jerking up to search the riders behind the king. \u201cBy yer leave, sir, I\u2019ll make th\u2019 rest of the arrangements with him. Dhugal, take His Grace in out of the rain.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He and his henchmen were already moving past them before Kelson could do more than nod, border affinity for another highland man drawing the castellan instinctively toward Ewan\u2019s distinctive tartan mantle, his casual salute in Kelson\u2019s direction almost an afterthought. Kelson was only bemused, used to the brusque manners of bordermen from his dealings with Dhugal and his attendants as a boy, but an affronted Prince Conall kneed his greathorse nearer the king in shocked outrage.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDo you intend to let him treat you that way?\u201d he demanded in a loud stage whisper, bending beneath the dripping Haldane standard to peer at Kelson. \u201cHe dismissed you like a servant!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHe asked my leave. Don\u2019t make a scene,\u201d Kelson warned, as he laid a hand on his cousin\u2019s reins. \u201cThe man has a job to do.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYes! To show proper respect for his overlord!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo disrespect was intended,\u201d Kelson replied, \u201cand standing in the rain is no time for formality. I am not offended.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But Conall was, and he continued to fume and mutter to himself all the way up the newel stair behind Dhugal and Kelson, not ceasing his complaints even when the three of them reached a snug little room at the top of the tower. Kelson\u2019s squire came to help them off with their boots, but Conall continued to reiterate his displeasure about border disregard for rank and precedence, ending with a graceless remark about the accommodations. Kelson sent the squire out of the room before taking Conall to task, afterward apologizing to an uncomfortable Dhugal. The air was charged with resentment as the three young men began stripping off rain-sodden harness and tunics to wash for supper.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">In the sullen silence of the next little while. Kelson could not help noticing the contrast between Dhugal\u2019s casual dismissal of the incident and Conall\u2019s petulant formality. His cousin\u2019s behavior had embarrassed him greatly. The squire soon returned with their meager baggage and helped Conall dress in a fresh court tunic which was far too ornate for this casual highland setting, but when Kelson tried tactfully to mention that to Conall, his cousin renewed his tirade about stiff-necked bordermen and declared that he would show them all how a proper prince behaved, donning a silver circlet of rank as he stalked out the door. Kelson sent the squire after him, hoping he could prevent Conall from insulting any other bordermen he encountered, and pulled a clean woolen singlet from his own pack in silence.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI really am sorry about Conall\u2019s boorishness,\u201d he said after a moment, as Dhugal\u2019s head emerged from the neck of a saffron-colored shirt. \u201cI hope it\u2019s only the folly of youth.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYouth?\u201d Dhugal made a rude noise, his courtly veneer vanishing in border frankness. \u201cKelson, he\u2019s a year older than I am. If respect is what he values, he\u2019ll never win it with behavior like that. He\u2019s second in line for the throne, too.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson crouched to help his foster-brother finish arranging the pleats of a great kilt on the floor, unable to disagree.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThat\u2019s true, in theory,\u201d he said, watching Dhugal lie down on the kilt to belt it around his narrow waist. \u201cThank God his father comes first \u2014 and I\u2019ve never heard anyone say an unkind word about Nigel. Perhaps by the end of next year there will be a new heir altogether. Still, you\u2019re right about youth being no excuse for rude behavior. Conall can be a terrible boor.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal, sitting up to brooch part of the plaid to his shoulder with an amethyst the size of plover\u2019s egg, looked up from the gem\u2019s clasp with a start to stare at the king.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBugger Conall! What do you mean, a new heir? Kelson, you aren\u2019t betrothed, are you?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo, no, not that, yet,\u201d Kelson replied with a chuckle. \u201cBut don\u2019t look so shocked. I\u2019m seventeen and I\u2019m a king. It\u2019s expected. Nigel and Aunt Meraude have been badgering me for over a year, and Morgan nearly as long.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cMorgan, too?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson shrugged wistfully. \u201cWell, all of them are right, of course. The succession has to be secured. I\u2019ve lost count of the princesses and countesses and other eligible girls I\u2019ve had to inspect in the last year. Every lordling in Gwynedd with a marriageable daughter or sister between the ages of twelve and thirty has been finding some excuse to bring her to court. Even Morgan is threatening to trot out some R\u2019Kassan princess for Twelfth Night. She\u2019s a relative of his wife.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHis wife?\u201d Dhugal stared even harder, though now he, too, was grinning. \u201cSo that\u2019s what it\u2019s all about! Morgan\u2019s gotten married, so now he thinks everyone else ought to be. Who\u2019s the lady?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson shook his head and grinned. He kept forgetting how isolated Transha was from the capital and its doings.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou <\/span><span class=\"none1\">are<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> out of touch, aren\u2019t you? You <\/span><span class=\"none1\">did<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> know I\u2019d made him Lord Protector of the South, didn\u2019t you?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDid you know that Torenth has a regency again?\u201d Kelson ventured.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cA regency? What happened to Prince Alroy?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson sighed, trying to keep at least some of the old worry out of his voice.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cA fall from a horse, around Midsummer. He broke his neck. From what I\u2019ve been able to gather, it was clearly an accident, but he\u2019d just come of age. So some folk are saying I arranged it \u2014 the way Charissa <\/span><span class=\"none1\">arranged<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> my father\u2019s death.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou mean, with magic?\u201d Dhugal whispered.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson nodded. \u201cThey don\u2019t know me very well, do they?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBut, what possible motive could you have, even if you <\/span><span class=\"none1\">were<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> able to \u2014 <\/span><span class=\"none1\">are<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> you able to kill someone with magic, Kelson?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIf you mean, do I have the ability to kill someone with magic, the answer is yes \u2014 I have the power and the knowledge to do so,\u201d Kelson said quietly, \u201cI\u2019ve \u2014 had to do it once already. I killed Alroy\u2019s father and uncle that way \u2014 and the Earl of Marley. I\u2019m not proud of it, but there was no other way at the time. And I\u2019d do it again to protect my kingdom.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He swallowed uncomfortably. \u201cAs for motive. I\u2019m afraid I have that, too. Keeping a minor on the throne of Torenth lessens the chance that Torenth will move against me in anything but border skirmishes, at least until the new king is of age. Liam, Alroy\u2019s next brother, is only nine. That gives me nearly five years to get things settled in Meara, before I have to worry seriously about Torenth again \u2014  maybe more. I didn\u2019t kill Liam\u2019s brother, though.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI believe you,\u201d Dhugal said.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The three words were spoken quietly, with little inflection, but Kelson knew that they were true. Four years had passed since he and Dhugal last had met, but he could sense that the old closeness had not weakened with the passage of the years and all that had gone on during them. He glanced down at his hands, the hands which literally held the power of life and death over so many, then shook his head, knowing he would never be able to put aside the knowledge of his power.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBut, enough of all this,\u201d Kelson continued more brightly. \u201cYou asked about Morgan, and Morgan\u2019s wife. He married Richenda of Marley a year ago last spring. They have a little daughter who\u2019s nearly a year old now. Briony, she\u2019s called.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cFor your father,\u201d Dhugal murmured, nodding approvingly. \u201cI like that. But Richenda of Marley \u2014 wasn\u2019t she the Countess of Marley? Didn\u2019t you just say you\u2019d had to kill her husband?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYes. But she wasn\u2019t responsible for her husband\u2019s treason,\u201d he said softly, \u201cNor was their son. I confirmed young Brendan in the Earldom of Marley when he turned six this past summer. I\u2019ve made him Morgan\u2019s ward, until he\u2019s of age, and Richenda his regent.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd what will he say when he\u2019s older, and he leams who killed his father?\u201d Dhugal whispered. \u201cSuppose he comes to hate you for it?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI suppose I hope that by then, he\u2019ll have learned why I had to do it,\u201d Kelson said with a sigh. \u201cBran Coris\u2019 was one of the first lives I had to take. Unfortunately, it won\u2019t be the last. At least I\u2019ve learned a few things since then \u2014  not that they\u2019d make any difference if I had to do over again.\u201d He sighed again, a gesture of finality.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBut that\u2019s done. There\u2019s no sense brooding about something I can\u2019t change. One thing I hope I can change is the reception I got when I rode in here an hour ago.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal laughed aloud, the solemnity of the past few minutes dispelled.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNow, that <\/span><span class=\"none1\">will<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> be magic, if you can accomplish that. You saw them. Kelson. They\u2019re bordermen. Most of them have never been to court, and never will. You can\u2019t expect to earn their respect overnight.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNot overnight, no. But I do have an idea for making a start, perhaps.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Half an hour later, two young bordermen emerged from the tower room where only one had entered. Dhugal\u2019s comment about his long hair the day before had given Kelson his inspiration. He had decided not to hazard a great kilt such as Dhugal himself wore, for he was disinclined to trust a garment which depended on only a belt to discipline so many pleats, so he had chosen a set of Dhugal\u2019s rust-colored border leathers instead \u2014 close-fitting trews and sleeveless doublet over a saffron wool shirt like Dhugal\u2019s. A length of grey, black, and yellow. MacArdry plaid was caught across his chest baldric style and secured at the left shoulder with a deeply chased silver ring brooch, and soft indoor boots of buckskin encased his feet in comfort. Instead of the golden circlet which would have adorned his head at any normal court function, he wore a border bonnet like Dhugal\u2019s. His black hair made a borderman\u2019s braid shorter by a handspan than Dhugal\u2019s copper one, but that, plus the clothing, transformed the king from a polished young lowland noble into a darker echo of the chief\u2019s son. Now, if only old Caulay would play along.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He began to hear the skirl of pipers tuning as he followed Dhugal down the newel stair and along the passage toward the castle\u2019s great hall \u2014 dissonant and whining at first, but then catching and carrying a traditional border air, one of the few he knew. The music put a new spring in his step as he and Dhugal emerged near the entrance to the hall, and he could hear Dhugal whistling softly under his breath.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Border henchmen, servants, and a few Haldane men alike milled in the anteroom outside the open doors to the hall, but in Dhugal\u2019s company, dressed as he was, no one paid Kelson any particular notice. Seizing a torch from a fire-blackened cresset, Dhugal led him through the press and quickly through a nondescript wooden door just beyond the entryway, signing for silence as he continued up a steep, narrow intramural passageway which paralleled the great hall. When Kelson judged them to be about halfway along its length, Dhugal stopped and uncovered two narrow squints cut at different angles in the stone, carefully holding his torch below and close to the wall to shield its light. Using each squint in turn. Kelson could see nearly all the length of the hall below, though the entrance and the dais at the other end were out of range.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIt looks like most of your men who aren\u2019t on duty are already seated,\u201d Dhugal murmured, gazing downward with Kelson. \u201cYou can see how they\u2019ve all kept to themselves, though. A lot is going to depend on how you\u2019re received.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson nodded as he studied the hall. Since, by border custom, all clansmen were more or less of equal rank, there were no separate arrangements for nobles and men-at-arms. He saw Duke Ewan moving down the hall with a surly-looking Conall \u2014 to be seated at the high table, Dhugal assured him \u2014 but other than them, almost all the rest of the royal entourage seemed to be crowded on either side of a long table parallelling one side wall \u2014 carefully isolated. Kelson noted, from the rest of the clansmen and their women. Hospitality, it seemed, had its limits.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He was thoughtful as he followed Dhugal farther along the passageway and around a bend, the pipers\u2019 jig hardly intruding at all now on his thinking as he gazed through another squint looking toward the high table. From there, he was able to survey everyone on the dias, including the Earl of Transha.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Caulay MacArdry had aged in the three years since Kelson last had seen him, but though time had robbed the old border chief of much of his mobility, it clearly had not touched his other faculties. A gillie had to help him into his chair at the high table, for he could no longer walk without assistance, but the arms emerging from his fine saffron shirt were still corded with muscle, tanned nut-brown from the high summer sun and wind of the Transha highlands. Kelson could see the muscles ripple as the old man hefted a full wineskin and drank unerringly from a stream of red without spilling a drop.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">His wiry grey hair was drawn back in a borderer\u2019s clout and bound with a ribbon woven in the colors of his clan, but the full beard flowing onto his chest still showed a little of the chestnut gleam of his youth. The brown eyes were clear and alert as he conversed with Duke Ewan, seated on the other side of Conall, at his left hand; but he kept glancing at the far end of the hall as if in expectation.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIs he looking for us?\u201d Kelson asked softly, glancing aside at Dhugal. \u201cHadn\u2019t we better go on in?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYes, but not in the way you\u2019re thinking,\u201d Dhugal replied. He grinned slyly as he seized a fold of Kelson\u2019s sleeve and drew him back into the passage. \u201cLet\u2019s go. Just follow my lead, and do what I do.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Soon they were emerging behind the screens which separated the kitchen from the dais in the great hall, Dhugal nudging the king through one of the bays to move with him among the gillies serving the high table. The men deferred to their chief\u2019s son, but they hardly gave Kelson a second look other than to avoid running into him as he stuck to Dhugal\u2019s side. They were too busy watching Conall, seated on the chief\u2019s left, and Jodrell, who had pulled up a stool at the end of the table to sit and speak to Ewan between them. The old Duke of Claibourne had been readily accepted among them, for he came of the same clan system as themselves and understood their customs, but the others were lowlanders, like the knights and men-at-arms seated in the hall below. Conall, defiantly aloof in court dress and the silver circlet of his rank, looked particularly out of place.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But Kelson sensed Dhugal\u2019s intentions now. As the younger boy worked his way closer to the high table, gesturing toward the place of honor at old Caulay\u2019s right and easing onto the bench to the right of that. Kelson controlled a smile and followed. With casual nonchalance, he slipped into the place between Dhugal and the old man and leaned an elbow on the table, merely raising an eyebrow at a gillie who ducked between him and Dhugal to pour wine for both of them and started to question.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Some of his own men began to recognize him at that, however, and as more and more of them got to their feet with much clatter and scraping of wooden benches against stone floor, the commotion caught old Caulay\u2019s attention. As he turned to ascertain the reason for it, he was astonished to see a strange young borderman sitting at his right hand. The pipers\u2019 skirling wheezed to a halt as all eyes turned toward the MacArdry chief.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThe Haldane gives fair greeting to The MacArdry of Transha,\u201d Kelson said gravely, inclining his head in respect as Caulay\u2019s jaw dropped. \u201cMy brother Dhugal bade me sit at your right hand, sir, and I am right honored to do so, for his father must be my father, since I have none anymore.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Stunned speechless, Caulay stared into the grey Haldane eyes as the buzz of questions grew among his people, seeing the strange mixed with the familiar. The last Haldane old Caulay had seen had been a boy of just fourteen, on the occasion of his coronation. The lad before him was young, but he was a man, with the frank, direct gaze of his other border chieftains. As he glanced beyond the stranger at his son, Dhugal rose and came to kiss his father\u2019s cheek with a grin.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019ve brought m\u2019brother home tae sup with us. Da,\u201d he said in his broad border accent. \u201cHe would count it a great favor if ye could put his other rank aside for a night, for he would do honor to our house an\u2019 blood for sake o\u2019 the bond he shares wi\u2019 me. Will ye n\u00e0\u00e5 greet him as a kinsman an\u2019 a son?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">For an interminable instant. Kelson feared that Caulay would not go along, that the close-knit bonds of border kinship would force him back into the royal role he was so often obliged to play. But then the old man\u2019s face split in a pleased grin and he held out a huge hand to Kelson, the brown eyes warming.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAye, and it\u2019s pleased that I am to see ye, son,\u201d he said softly. \u201cI left ye a boy, and ye\u2019ve come back a man. Will ye n\u00e0\u00e5 give yer old Da the kiss of peace?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Solemnly Kelson placed his hand in Caulay\u2019s and rose, inclining his head in proper salute, borderer to hosting chief, acutely aware of the eyes upon him. When he bent to kiss the old man\u2019s cheek, however, a ragged murmur of approval rippled among the bordermen and the pipes struck up a dutiful salute, this time punctuated by drums.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">It was not the most spontaneous of welcomes, but it was a start. Pretending not to notice Conall\u2019s sour looks farther down the table, and the confused expressions on most of the rest of his retinue. Kelson took his seat, smiling. Brion would never have done this, but Kelson was not Brion. They would just have to adjust to the fact that he was going to develop his own style. He laughed at a joke Dhugal murmured in an aside, and when Ciard came to serve them roast fowl and beef on a trencher of hearty highland bread, he dug in with his fingers in proper border fashion.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He and Caulay made casual small talk through the meal. Kelson touching on some of his experiences of the past three years and the old chief proudly recounting Dhugal\u2019s skill as a future border chief. Only passing comment was made on his own failing health.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Out of respect for his host. Kelson veered away from politics or any other subjects of possible controversy, intending to save such conversation for more private surrounds, perhaps later that night. But just before the sweet was served \u2014 a sticky confection of crushed almonds and biscuit and honey \u2014 Caulay made passing reference to his brother Sicard, whose wife was the Mearan Pretender.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat\u2019s she like, the Lady Caitrin?\u201d Kelson asked, trying to keep too much interest out of his tone. To his relief, Caulay was neither offended nor reticent, wine having loosened his tongue to the point of amiability.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAch, she nurses an old dream whose time passed lang ago,\u201d Caulay said. \u201cI did n\u00e0\u00e5 ever like her. She\u2019s of an age wi\u2019 me \u2014 no spring hen-chick, she \u2014 but she has fierce bairns an\u2019 a fiercer mate. She an\u2019 my brother \u2014 !\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He spat contemptuously, and Kelson raised an eyebrow in feigned surprise.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou and Sicard had a falling out?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYe might say that,\u201d the old man allowed. \u201cTruth is, he. an\u2019 I were never close. I\u2019m n\u00e0\u00e5 close to the bairns, either \u2014 leastways not the boys. Ithel an\u2019 Llewell, they\u2019re named \u2014 though I expect ye know that. About your age, they are \u2014 mayhap a year or so younger. The girl, though \u2014 \u201c<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNot another daughter,\u201d Kelson breathed, almost to himself.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Old Caulay immediately caught his drift, however, and laughed uproariously as he clapped Kelson on the shoulder.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAch, I see they\u2019ve been pushing ye to choose a mate, haven\u2019t they, lad? Well, a man could do far worse than sweet Sidana. Her name means \u2018silk\u2019 in the old tongue, an\u2019 she has all the grace the boys an\u2019 their mother lack. Pretty she is, as well as heiress to a great name, wi\u2019 fine sleek hair that reaches to her knees \u2014 brown as a chestnut burr it is \u2014 an\u2019 eyes like a bonnie fawn. Fair white teeth, too, an\u2019 hips tae bear a man many fine sons, though she can n\u00e0\u00e5 be more than fifteen.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou sound as if you\u2019re trying to marry her off,\u201d Kelson said with a smile. \u201cAre you trying to tell me something?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Caulay\u2019s shoulders lifted with a coy shrug, even though he was shaking his head no.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWeel, \u2018tis not I who\u2019d presume tae barter a bride for my king, son,\u201d the old man said. \u201cBut if a man wanted tae resolve an old, old rift an\u2019 bring peace tae his people, he could do far worse than marryin\u2019 Sidana. If I thought it would help, I\u2019d marry Dhugal to her \u2014 or praise God, if I were a younger man, an\u2019 could find a willing priest, I\u2019d marry her myself, an\u2019 she my own dear niece.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson smiled wanly, remembering what he once read about incest of an only slightly closer degree toppling a throne two centuries before \u2014 though there had been a Deryni question in the case of Imre and Ariella, as well.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But Caulay\u2019s theoretical solution would certainly have no such repercussions, even if it were to occur. For that matter, he supposed he and Sidana were distantly related \u2014 his eyes glazed a little as he tried to sort out the generations of cousins through a common great-great-grandfather \u2014 though they were certainly outside the bounds of consanguinity proscribed by the Church.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI don\u2019t think it will be necessary for you to make the sacrifice,\u201d he reassured Caulay, with a faint, droll grin.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAch, o\u2019 course not. Tis a Haldane husband she\u2019d be needin\u2019, not another borderer, tae muddy matters further. If not Yer Grace, than perhaps yer young cousin, there \u2014 \u201c<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The old man glanced down the table where Conall had moved to sit between Ewan and Jodrell, brooding over his wine cup.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNah, on second reflection, Conall would n\u00e0\u00e5 do,\u201d Caulay went on more soberly. \u201cShe would n\u00e0\u00e5 be happy with the likes o\u2019 him \u2014 though methinks yer young cousin has ambitions o\u2019 his own. Power can be a great temptation, son. But I need n\u00e0\u00e5 tell ye about that, do I?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Surprised, Kelson glanced at Conall and then back at Caulay.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cConall?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAch, I dinnae mean to cast a shadow on yer cousin, lad. But Sidana is a fair marriage prize, an\u2019 could give her husband a fair claim to Meara. With the right persuasion, from the right man, her brothers might even be moved to abandon their claims.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson chuckled grimly and shook his head, running a finger along the rim of his cup.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019m trying to avoid that kind of persuasion, Caulay,\u201d he said softly. \u201cI don\u2019t want to have to march into Meara the way my father and grandfather did, and solve things with a sword. But I don\u2019t intend to give up what\u2019s lawfully mine, either.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Caulay\u2019s bearded face clouded and he dropped his gaze to stare into the depths of his goblet. \u201cThat may be the only way, son,\u201d he whispered darkly. \u201cYoung Ithel wants a throne. He won\u2019t be content to rule over an exile court in Laas, once his mother is gone.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou speak as if that might be imminent,\u201d Kelson breathed, gently reaching out to read the truth of Caulay\u2019s words. \u201cIs Ithel plotting something?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI dinnae know particulars, I dinnae care to know.\u201d Caulay took a long pull at his wine and shook his head. \u201cIt\u2019s only some rumors I\u2019ve heard. What young man does not have ambition? I dinnae care to say more.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Chilled, Kelson nudged his cup aside and stared at Caulay. The old man was telling the truth, as far as he went, but what were the rumors he had heard? If Ithel of Meara was actively plotting a revolt\u2026<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI need to know, Caulay,\u201d he murmured, as he touched his wrist and started trying to Mind-See. \u201cIf you know something \u2014 \u201c<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI know nothing!\u201d Caulay whispered, eyes flashing as he yanked away his wrist. \u201cAn\u2019 if ye press me for nothing, then \u2014 \u201c<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The skirl of pipes began outside the hall just then, and Caulay broke off and shook his head apologetically, taking another deep draught from his cup. While Kelson searched for a tactful way to reapproach the subject, two pipers marched in from the far end of the hall, preceding a white-robed old man brandishing two evergreen boughs like bushy swords. Conversation died away as they entered, even the rowdier of the clansmen putting aside their cups to brush caps in salute as the old man passed. The women standing curtseyed, and even the children serving table stopped where they were to render appropriate respect.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cKinkellyan, the chief bard,\u201d Dhugal murmured in his ear, as the old man came between the two pipers and continued toward them. \u201cThis could be very important. Stay seated for now, but pay very close attention.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As the man reached the lowest step of the dais and stopped, crossing the boughs over his head in salute as he bowed, the music ended and Dhugal stood, raising a cup in answering salute to the man in white.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBright moon and starshine on thy path, noble bard. The MacArdry and all his kin welcome Kinkellyan to the hall of Transha.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The old man inclined his head and murmured a phrase Kelson did not quite catch, sweeping the narrow boughs in his hands to either side as if to open an embrace. Kelson thought he had heard his name, but he could not be sure. Dhugal replied with an answering phrase in the border tongue, then bowed and glanced at his father. Old Caulay seemed to have forgotten his previous agitation, and bowed low over his place at table as he, too, raised his cup in salutation.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cKinkellyan offers you his bardic blessing and asks that you be afforded the enduring friendship of the clan,\u201d Dhugal murmured to Kelson out of the side of his mouth. \u201cThe MacArdry has accepted on your behalf. Stand up and bow, and then do whatever seems appropriate after Kinkellyan and I have finished.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As Kelson obeyed, Dhugal bowed to his father and left the table, descending the dais to enthusiastic hammerings of fists on tabletops by all his kinsmen. Kelson\u2019s men looked mystified, except for old Ewan.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">In slow, almost ritual mime, Dhugal took the boughs from the old bard and bowed again, then crossed them in saltire above his head and pivoted slowly on the balls of his feet until he faced Kelson, bending to lay them that way on the floor as the pipers skirled a few introductory bars. The tempo changed as he straightened and set his hands on his hips, rising again on the balls of his feet, and Dhugal began to dance.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson felt his own feet stir as he watched, for the pipes seemed to beckon almost magically. For just an instant, as Dhugal moved from the first quarter to the second, his eyes locked with Kelson\u2019s in a linking so profound that memory surged across the link almost as surely as if Dhugal, too, had been Deryni and deliberately sent his thought winging into Kelson\u2019s mind \u2014 the two of them, half a lifetime ago, facing one another over crossed swords, not evergreen boughs, treading out the measures of the dance Dhugal now performed as it was meant to be done. All at once Kelson knew what Dhugal had meant \u2014 <\/span><span class=\"none1\">do whatever seems appropriate<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> \u2014 and he found himself edging out from behind the table and down off the dais to where Dhugal spun and leaped.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The pipers never faltered as the king came onto the floor. Kelson could sense the expectation of the audience all around, some pleased, some thoroughly mystified, but the old bard looked not at all surprised, though he raised a white eyebrow. Dhugal was just finishing the first set of measuring steps around the ends of the boughs, pivoting and rocking, with first one arm and then the other raised above his head, but when he saw Kelson ease into the quarter which was about to be opposite him, he grinned and gave a nod, setting balled fists on his hips to repeat the first set as he completed the figure. Kelson caught the very first step of the repeat by letting his feet carry him as they had so many years before, mirroring Dhugal a little stiffly at first, but then with growing confidence as those in the hall, clansmen and lowland knights alike, looked on in astonishment.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As they shifted into the next set of figures, beating out a more emphatic rhythm as they danced within the quarters instead of all around the edges, feet never touching the branches. Kelson could sense that throbbing link again, melding his movements with Dhugal\u2019s. With rare abandon, he let his world shrink down to flying feet and evergreens and Dhugal\u2019s joyous grin. He was only dimly aware when the men and women around them started clapping and stamping in time to the music, urging them on, sharing the magic which had nothing to do with being Deryni.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson was panting with exhaustion by the time they began the final set of figures, but he did not falter, springing lightly from quarter to quarter, heel and toe, until finally the rhythm changed, the music ebbed to a single sustained note, and he and Dhugal were bowing to one another on opposite sides of the evergreen cross, hands set on hips. The hall went wild.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The clansmen and their women continued to cheer as the two grinning young men half-collapsed against one another, both of them gasping for breath. Other than Ewan, most of Kelson\u2019s other retainers looked stunned, though a few had relaxed enough to join in good-naturedly, not the least of whom was Baron Jodrell. Conall sat sullenly between him and Ewan, his arms folded and lips set in grim disapproval, but at the center of the table the MacArdry chief was beaming, his earlier agitation apparently forgotten. As Dhugal and Kelson stumbled up the dais, arm in arm, he held out a newly filled cup in both hands.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Air do slainte!<\/span><span class=\"none2\">\u201d he cried, the others taking up the shout as Dhugal and then Kelson drank deeply from the cup. <\/span><span class=\"none1\">To your very good health!<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The cheering subsided as Dhugal held up an arm for silence, and he was still a little breathless as he turned Kelson to face his people, one arm still around the king\u2019s shoulders.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cKinsmen, this is my foster-brother. Kelson,\u201d he said with a grin. \u201cAs you can see, he is a brother of our blood, as well as one of my choosing. That he is also my king is a great joy to me, and I freely give him my allegiance as lord as well as brother and kinsman. Will you honor him the same, for my sake?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The renewed shouting and cheers were all the confirmation Dhugal needed. As Kelson stood back, pleased, still panting from the exertion of the dance and wondering just how he had managed to bring them around \u2014 these dour mountain folk who were usually so slow to admit a lowlander to their midst \u2014 Dhugal turned and knelt at his feet, slipping his joined hands between Kelson\u2019s and touching them to his forehead in homage.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">In ragged succession, Dhugal\u2019s borderers joined him in salute, sinking to one knee in their places. A few even smiled, inasmuch as any borderer did when obliged to follow lowland custom. A handful remained dour and grim, but all of them knelt. The rarity of the concession was not lost on Kelson.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cMy brother, I thank you,\u201d Kelson said, smoothly raising Dhugal and signalling the rest of them to rise. \u201cAnd to you, my border kinsman, my profound thanks as well. Please believe that I understand the honor you have done me. And if there be some of you who yet have your doubts about this upstart lowland lord who comes among you, I cannot blame you. Nor will I try to change your opinion by my words. My actions, I hope, will speak for me, in that I shall always strive to be your true and gentle lord.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">His own men pounded on the tables in approval, but Kelson held up his hand again for silence.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBut though I be lowland born, yet am I a borderer like yourselves, by choice and chosen blood, as my brother Dhugal has said. I would assure you, therefore, that whenever possible, I shall place the considerations of the clan above my own concerns, an\u2019 it be not against the interests of the other folk I have sworn to protect and defend. In token, therefore, I ask that you host me not as king tonight, but as kinsman, and that you join with me in toast to our noble chief: The MacArdry \u2014 long may he guide his children in peace and plenty. <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Air do slainte!<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">It was the one border phrase Kelson could remember, and he blessed old Caulay for having refreshed his memory earlier, but it produced the desired response. This time there was no restraining the men of Transha. The hall erupted in echo of the traditional border toast, even the most dour of the old chieftains raising their cups with more thoughtful expressions. Soon the pipers struck up another dance tune and the floor filled with other dancers eager to tread a few steps with their new young kinsman. Some of the girls were very pretty. Kelson answered their first few invitations with laughing good humor and an honest attempt to follow, but the dance with Dhugal had exhausted both his knowledge and his energy. He soon had to bow himself out and retreat to the safety of his place by the chief. Dhugal remained on the floor.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Caulay was jovial company for what remained of the evening, but he downed three cups of wine to every one of Kelson\u2019s and quickly began to show the effects. Any serious return to their discussion was impossible under the circumstances, so they were soon reduced to rambling exchanges about the dancers, Dhugal\u2019s escapades and prospects for the future, and an increasingly maudlin tendency on Caulay\u2019s part to dwell on his failing health. By the time people began falling asleep at table and bedding down in the hall for the night. Kelson had managed to diminish the effect of his own alcoholic consumption to a dull buzz, but Caulay was on the verge of passing out. Dhugal was less steady on his feet than Kelson, but not really drunk, either.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI think he\u2019s about had enough, don\u2019t you?\u201d Kelson murmured, when Dhugal returned to the table to refill his cup during a piper\u2019s slowly skirled lament.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal looked down at his father, steadying himself on the edge of the table as he watched old Caulay bobble and grin, then signalled to a gillie who towered at least a head and a half above either him or Kelson. The man scooped up his chief with no more effort than Kelson might have picked up a three year old, and carried him tenderly out of the hall and up the newel stair with the two young men following behind, Dhugal with his arm linked in Kelson\u2019s for stability. When they had gotten the old man to bed and the gillie had gone, Dhugal sank down in a window seat and sighed, glancing up at Kelson with a tired grin.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, you certainly left your mark on Transha tonight. The clan will be talking about you all winter \u2014 and speaking well, too.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson smiled and leaned against the window embrasure, tossing his bonnet to the seat beside Dhugal. The climb to the laird\u2019s chamber had finished clearing his head, and now the considerations of earlier in the evening came flooding back. To have won the confidence of the clan was a fine thing, and part of what he had set out to accomplish, but he still had not learned all he needed to know about Caulay\u2019s Mearan kin. And if Ithel of Meara was plotting\u2026<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI wonder, will they speak well of me when they remember that I\u2019m part Deryni?\u201d he mused, trying to decide how best to approach what he wanted to ask. However he phrased it, Dhugal was going to be either frightened or insulted.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal frowned. \u201cWhat difference does it make? And what makes you think of it now?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIt isn\u2019t all a bad thing, you know \u2014 being Deryni,\u201d Kelson continued, testing. \u201cYou saw that when I put that trooper to sleep so you could sew up his arm. It does have its positive uses.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal swallowed with an audible sound, suddenly far more sober than he had been, not seconds before, all the gaiety gone.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhy do I have the sudden feeling that something very scary is about to happen. You\u2019re warning me, aren\u2019t you?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNot \u2014 exactly.\u201d Kelson glanced down at Dhugal\u2019s upturned face, then over at the sleeping Caulay.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDhugal, I\u2019ve never even been <\/span><span class=\"none1\">tempted<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> to take unfair advantage of a friendship before,\u201d he said softly, \u201cbut damn it \u2014 he hasn\u2019t told me everything he knows.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat do you mean?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson shook his head. \u201cOh, I don\u2019t mean to imply a deliberate deception. I think he just doesn\u2019t want to get involved \u2014 and one can hardly blame him. Sicard is still his brother, after all. Unfortunately, Sicard is also the father of a boy who may just try to take away my throne \u2014  and Caulay hinted of conspiracies at dinner, just before he clammed up.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cSurely, you\u2019re not suggesting he\u2019d keep such knowledge <\/span><span class=\"none1\">from<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> you, if there really were a danger?\u201d Dhugal asked.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI don\u2019t know,\u201d Kelson replied. \u201cI do know that your father has information I may need \u2014 and that I have the means to <\/span><span class=\"none1\">take<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> it, if I must, without his knowledge and without hurting him.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWith magic,\u201d Dhugal supplied. His face had stiffened to a taut mask as Kelson spoke, and now the honey-amber eyes reflected cold resentment, as well as a little fear.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cKelson, I can\u2019t stop you,\u201d he continued, after a long, slow breath. \u201cIf that\u2019s what you\u2019re determined to do, there isn\u2019t a thing I can do to prevent it.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI know that. That\u2019s why I\u2019m asking if I may. He wouldn\u2019t remember it,\u201d Kelson added. \u201cHe need never even know I talked with him tonight.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd if you had to use what you learned against him?\u201d Dhugal asked.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson sighed. \u201cI hope to God it never comes to that,\u201d he murmured, eyes downcast. \u201cYou know I would never deliberately do anything to hurt you or your family. But if information that I gained had to be used to stop a war, to save innocent lives \u2014 well, what would you do?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Only after a long pause did Dhugal\u2019s answer come: halting, reluctant \u2014 and resigned.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI suppose I \u2014 would do what I had to do,\u201d he whispered.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none\">CHAPTER FIVE<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s2\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none1\">They have set up kings, but not by me:<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none1\">they have made princes, and I knew it not.<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s2\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none2\">\u2014  Hosea 8:4<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">I would do what 1 had to do.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal\u2019s words put responsibility squarely back on Kelson \u2014 where it had always rested, with the other burdens of the Crown, but this particular responsibility was unique to a king endowed with magic. Kelson found himself wondering whether his father had ever had to make such a demand of a friend. Somehow he could hardly imagine Brion using his powers for much of anything, even though he knew his father had slain the Marluk with magic and obviously had taken the necessary measures to ensure that his legacy passed to Kelson.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But Haldane magic was not the same as that derived from being born Deryni \u2014 and perhaps that difference was the source of some of Kelson\u2019s uneasiness just now, for he had the limitations as well as the benefits of both sorts. The Haldane legacy came full-blown to each successive male heir in the senior royal line, its potential sealed by the previous king and triggered in the heir by ritual whose essential elements apparently had altered little in nearly two hundred years. It was of Deryni origin, to be sure, but it was a somewhat artificial construct, so far as Kelson had been able to learn, crafted by the great Saint Camber for the defense of Cinhil Haldane against mad Imre, to end the Interregnum, and perpetuated in Cinhil\u2019s descendants ever since.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Such magic dealt primarily with protection \u2014 holding and keeping what was Haldane. But it was power to be called up without training and without real understanding, a compendium of set spells whose use and, indeed, very existence generally became apparent only when the need arose \u2014 difficult to call to mind of one\u2019s own inclination. A few casual skills there were of Haldane origin, like Truth-Reading and extending one\u2019s physical endurance, duplicating some Deryni functions, but the more subtle and satisfying uses of magic \u2014 and the ones most open to abuse \u2014 lay within the province of Deryni only. Indeed, most of the magic readily accessible to Kelson came from his Deryni blood, not Haldane sources: mostly what Morgan and Duncan had been able to teach him about that aspect of his heritage \u2014 and much of that still lay in the realm of theory.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Now his meager experience with the two of them must be melded with the impersonal knowledge at his beck and call from Haldane sources, and techniques chosen to fit the very personal situation here before him. Several times in the past two years he had watched Morgan do this kind of thing \u2014 and had done it himself under Morgan\u2019s guidance once or twice \u2014 but this was different: himself, alone, questioning someone he cared about \u2014 not some hostile prisoner, from whom the truth must be dragged by force. With Caulay\u2019s natural discretion already lowered by the wine. Kelson was not too concerned about the actual .procedure, but he <\/span><span class=\"none1\">was<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> concerned about alienating Dhugal. The friends he could trust, who were not afraid of him, were few and precious.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIf it should come to that, then I suppose <\/span><span class=\"none1\">I\u2019ll<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> have to do what I have to do,\u201d he finally whispered, meeting Dhugal\u2019s eyes miserably. \u201cThat\u2019s one of the more unpleasant parts of being king. In the meantime, I\u2019m afraid <\/span><span class=\"none1\">this<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> is something I have to do.\u201d He paused a beat. \u201cYou don\u2019t have to watch if you don\u2019t want to. You can leave, or I could \u2014 put you to sleep, blur the memory. Neither of you has to remember.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal\u2019s jaw tightened visibly, the sun-amber eyes scared and a little desperate.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIf that\u2019s what you want, I\u2019ll \u2014 bow to your wishes, of course, but \u2014 dammit, Kelson, I <\/span><span class=\"none1\">won\u2019t<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> let myself be afraid of you! God knows, I don\u2019t understand what you\u2019ve become, and if you\u2019d rather I didn\u2019t watch, I \u2014 I\u2019ll let you put me to sleep or whatever you feel you have to do. I don\u2019t want to leave, though.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The courage and blind trust blazing in Dhugal\u2019s face as he looked up precluded all further discussion. Kelson\u2019s grateful \u201cStay, then,\u201d was more mouthed than said, but Dhugal understood. His shaky smile and Kelson\u2019s quick, answering grin were all the further comment necessary. Together they moved back into the room where Caulay slept. Kelson no longer worried.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The old man snored on obliviously as Kelson sat down on the right side of the bed and drew a few deep breaths to compose himself, centering as Morgan had taught him. He did not touch Caulay, for he did not wish to alarm Dhugal in these early stages. Dhugal, initially skittish, claimed a stool on the opposite side of the bed and settled down to watch; but gradually even he responded to the calm and stillness radiating from the king. Like Kelson, his breathing soon slowed to a shallow, even cadence, nimble surgeon\u2019s fingers intertwined passively in the lap of his kilt, thumbs brushing tip to tip.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Reassured, Kelson shifted attention from his own slow breathing to that of Caulay, gently spreading his right hand across the old man\u2019s forehead and letting his thumb and little finger rest lightly on the closed eyelids for a few seconds. He could sense the blur of the alcohol as he sent his consciousness cautiously into Caulay\u2019s, but he quickly bypassed that to make the necessary connections for what must be done, closing his eyes as he felt his way through wine-drugged dreams.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cListen only to me, Caulay,\u201d he whispered.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal\u2019s tiny start of surprise caused Kelson to glance up momentarily, and instinctively he sent a tendril of reassurance in the other\u2019s direction. He did not think Dhugal sensed it on any conscious level, but the young border lord seemed to relax again almost immediately, releasing a guarded sigh as he leaned forward to gaze at his father\u2019s placid face.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cStay deep asleep and hear only my voice,\u201d Kelson went on, returning his attention to the old man. \u201cYou can hear every word I say, even though you\u2019re asleep, and you\u2019ll want to answer my questions as fully as you can. Do you understand?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAye,\u201d came the blurred highland voice.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As Dhugal glanced up at him in wonder. Kelson sat back and gave him a faint smile, crossing his arms casually on his chest.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHe\u2019s going to do just fine,\u201d he murmured to Dhugal in an aside. \u201cThat\u2019s very good, Caulay. Let\u2019s talk about your brother, first of all. Do you know where Sicard is right now?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Caulay grimaced in his sleep. \u201cAye.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">A precise answer to the question asked, but nothing volunteered. Loosening control a little. Kelson reframed his question.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cGood. And where is that?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAch, I suppose he\u2019s in that keep o\u2019 his in Laas \u2014 he an\u2019 his schemin\u2019 wife,\u201d Caulay said. \u201cI didnae like her from the day I first set eyes on her, but he <\/span><span class=\"none1\">would<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> marry her.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">His voice was more animated now, the tone so casual and glib that he might have been back at table, confiding opinions over a cup of good ale, except that his eyes were closed.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThe Lady Caitrin?\u201d Kelson asked.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAye. Cate Quinnell \u2014 an\u2019 she callin\u2019 herself a princess!\u201d Caulay went on contemptuously. \u201cThey\u2019ve become a brazen lot, an\u2019 that\u2019s for sure \u2014 high an\u2019 mighty, where they think ye cannae see them. \u2018Tis said they keep court as if she were a queen, and not upstart pretender.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson nodded and relaxed control just a little more. He did not like the implications of what the old man was conveying, but the delivery was just about perfect.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAs if she were a queen, eh?\u201d he repeated softly.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWeel, surely ye knew, lad \u2014 an\u2019 ye must n\u00e0\u00e5 allow it tae go on. They say she takes liberties due only a sovereign. She that steals yer homage also steals yer honor.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson could sense Dhugal bristling indignantly, but he stayed him with a gesture. This was not the time for righteous outrage. If Caulay was using homage in its legal sense, the situation in Meara was even more serious than he had been led to believe. Homage implied the granting of land in return for service \u2014 the military service of knights. If Caitrin of Meara was receiving homage as suzeraine of Meara \u2014 <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cCaulay, what liberties has she taken?\u201d Kelson asked, glancing at Dhugal\u2019s stunned face.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cShe swears knights tae her service, wi\u2019 the promise o\u2019 land when Meara is free again,\u201d Caulay replied promptly. \u201cAn\u2019 new knights hae been made. Even the two boys hae been knighted, an\u2019 they younger than yerself!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson felt his own anger rising to match Dhugal\u2019s, and he had to push it down with a conscious effort.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWho knighted them?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cMy brother,\u201d came Caulay\u2019s response, though not quite so promptly, this time. \u201cI wouldna\u2019 hae thought it possible \u2014 my own kin, that swore faith tae yer father, God bless \u2018im. I couldnae believe it mysel\u2019, when I heard the news. Young Ithel brags that he is a knight now, and will one day be Prince of Meara of his own account. Would he hae died at birth! He is n\u00e0\u00e5 true MacArdry, an\u2019 that\u2019s for sure!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI see.\u201d Kelson probed gently for a physical image of the upstart Ithel. \u201cTell me about this Ithel, then. I want to know everything you can remember.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">And in Culdi, Alaric Morgan prepared to enter his own kind of grim, dark concentration, opening a red leather case half the size of his fist and dumping out a handful of polished cubes carved of ivory and ebony. They clicked against each other and the table top with solid, satisfying snicks as he set them down, reflecting dark and light as Morgan brought a single candle closer on the table before him.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Quickly he arranged the cubes in the traditional pattern: four white in the center, forming a single larger square; the four black set one to each corner, not quite touching. The champion\u2019s signet on his right hand gleamed as well, as he poised his fingertips above the center of the white square, but he ignored it for the moment as he set his thoughts in order.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The odd black and white dice were called Wards in the parlance of those who knew about such things, named, like the most secure perimeter fortifications of a castle, for their function of defense. To set wards was to create a magical sphere of protection encompassing the area defined by the four points at which the individual wards were placed, containing the energy within and restraining the entry of disruptive forces. Such protection was all but essential when one intended a magical operation such as Morgan planned \u2014  for to reach Kelson at such distance, and without prior preparation, would require that Morgan place his body in deep trance, oblivious to physical sensation or danger, while his mind ranged forth in search of the king.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Prime<\/span><span class=\"none2\">.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As he spoke the <\/span><span class=\"none1\">nomen<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> of the cube in the upper left comer of the white square, he touched it with his fingertip and sent power into its matrix. Instantly the cube began to glow from deep within \u2014 milky, opalescent white.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Seconde.<\/span><span class=\"none2\">\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The process was repeated with the cube at the upper right, with similar results.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Tierce. Quarte.<\/span><span class=\"none2\">\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He was halfway through his preparation, the four white cubes forming a square of ghostly white light. He could feel the power drain. Slowly and deliberately he drew deep breath: tangible cue to trigger the reversal of polarities from white to black, positive to negative, male to female, the other side of the balance. The pull this time would be subtly different, slightly more difficult to channel, but well within his abilities. Breathing out softly, he brought his fingertip toward the black cube resting near the upper left of the white square.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Quinte<\/span><span class=\"none2\">\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">A tiny spark jumped between his fingertip and the cube just before they touched, green-black fire kindling from within. Quickly, before his momentum was lost, Morgan shifted his attention to the upper right black cube, bringing his forefinger nearer.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Sixte.<\/span><span class=\"none2\">\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Again, the eerie glow.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">When the process had been repeated for <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Septime <\/span><span class=\"none2\">and <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Octave<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, all eight of the cubes shimmered with internal light, four white and four black. Now for the mating of opposites, the balancing of energies to build the watch-towers.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Rubbing a hand across his eyes, Morgan sighed and picked up <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Prime<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, shifting his balance points again and readjusting control as he brought the cube near its black counterpart, <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Quinte<\/span><span class=\"none2\">. He could feel the tug of the opposites attracting as he closed the distance, the black cube almost seeming to rise that last fraction of space to meet the white as he spoke the word of power.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Primus<\/span><span class=\"none2\">.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The two cubes fused in a single, silvery grey oblong. One down. Breathing deeply, Morgan pushed the completed first ward a little to one side and plucked <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Seconde<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> from its fellows, mating it to <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Sixte<\/span><span class=\"none2\">.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Secundus<\/span><span class=\"none2\">.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Again, the silver-glowing rectoid.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">When he had completed <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Tertius<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> and <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Quartus<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, he set the four wards on the floor around his chair like tiny, glowing towers and sat down again, feeling for the balance points in his mind a final time before he set things into motion. Commanding now, he pointed to each of the wards in turn and spoke the words, sensing the surge as the elements meshed and flared.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Primus, Secundus, Tertius, Quartus<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, fiat lux!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">It was like suddenly being inside a tent of pale, silvery light. The very air around him seemed to shimmer. As he lowered his arm and sat back in his chair, he could feel the wards like an insulating cocoon, shielding and protecting.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Satisfied, he adjusted the candle again and laid his hands along the arms of his chair, positioning the signet on his right hand to catch the light. It was a tangible symbol of the faith binding friend to friend, protector to sovereign; the golden Haldane lion etched on the curve of the gold-set onyx oval seemed to stare at him in the dimness. Morgan used it now as a focus, willing himself to still and center, conjuring the king\u2019s face over the lion\u2019s.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He could feel his breathing slowing, his pulsebeat steadying, and gradually his vision began to narrow until only the ring was in his gaze. Doggedly he held Kelson\u2019s image before his mind, letting his eyelids droop lower, lower, until they closed and the image of Kelson alone remained. Awareness of his body receded as the mental image sharpened, and as he stretched his senses northward, all his concentration was centered on the ring, the face, the mind.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">After a long while, almost at the limits of perception, he at last sensed what he had come to find.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">And in Transha, immersed in his questioning of Caulay and the concentration needed to maintain control, Kelson pushed aside the first vague brushing at his mind. He and Dhugal listened with horrified fascination as the old man wove a tale of treachery far more widespread than either of them had dreamed.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But as Caulay reiterated the rumors he had heard of knights gone over to the Mearan Pretender and of Ithel Quinnell\u2019s growing popularity, a hint of Morgan\u2019s urgency began to penetrate \u2014 though not its source, at first. The king tensed as it brushed for the first time at a conscious level, momentarily shutting out Caulay\u2019s rambling as he tried to track it down. When it proved too elusive, he laid a hand on the old man\u2019s wrist, shaking his head.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cEnough, Caulay. Hush for a minute,\u201d he whispered. He closed his eyes to listen better.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Nothing. Then the lightest of feather-brushes. He sensed it might be Morgan, but even when he turned all his concentration toward picking up the next touch, he could not be sure of more than the touch sensation.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat is it?\u201d Dhugal whispered, leaning closer on his stool. \u201cIs something wrong?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Carefully, Kelson shook his head, trying not to lose the all too tenuous contact hovering at the edge of consciousness.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNot here,\u201d he murmured. \u201cSomeone\u2019s trying to reach me, though \u2014 very far away and very faint. And it\u2019s urgent.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">A little catch of breath from Dhugal\u2019s direction, and the sense of awe and apprehension mixed. Then: \u201cDo you know who it is?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson nodded slowly, still straining to make it clearer. \u201cMorgan, I think, I can\u2019t \u2014 quite \u2014 pull it in.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cMorgan? But you said he was in Culdi.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHe is, so far as I know. And at this range, for me even to be aware of this much is incredible.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Slowly he opened his eyes to look across at Dhugal, though he kept tenuous touch with the continuing call. The sense of urgency persisted, as did the growing conviction that the source was Morgan. After all he had done already. Kelson knew he had no chance of bringing the contact through on his own, but there just might be another way. It was much to ask, however.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat is it?\u201d Dhugal breathed. \u201cWhy are you looking at me that way?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDid you mean what you said before, that you wouldn\u2019t let yourself be afraid of me?\u201d Kelson countered.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal turned a little pale beneath his coppery hair, and Kelson could sense the queasy apprehension rising in his chest.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat are you going to do?\u201d Dhugal whispered. \u201cNo, make that, \u2018What are you going to do to <\/span><span class=\"none1\">me<\/span><span class=\"none2\">? You need me for something, don\u2019t you? To help you reach Morgan.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYes.\u201d Kelson glanced briefly at the sleeping Caulay. \u201cI need one or both of you to augment my strength. His might be enough, but I\u2019d like you in the link as well.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal swallowed hard, making no attempt to hide his fear.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cM-me?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">With a sigh. Kelson managed a none-too-patient nod. He was finding it increasingly difficult to concentrate on reassuring Dhugal and still maintain whatever contact he had with whoever was trying to reach him, but a slightly different approach was already taking shape in his mind.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIt\u2019s the not-knowing that\u2019s the worst, isn\u2019t it?\u201d he guessed. \u201cYou see Caulay, obviously unconscious, and you\u2019re afraid of what might happen to <\/span><span class=\"none1\">you<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> \u2014 and that you wouldn\u2019t even know. Loss of control.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI \u2014 suppose so.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Nodding again. Kelson stood and came around the end of the bed, staying Dhugal with a gesture when he eased off the stool and started to back away.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cLet\u2019s try something a little different from what I originally had in mind, then, \u201c he said, climbing onto the stool and motioning for Dhugal to come behind him. \u201cThis shouldn\u2019t be nearly as frightening. I need physical contact to make my link with you, but there\u2019s no reason <\/span><span class=\"none1\">you<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> can\u2019t control that instead of me. It will make <\/span><span class=\"none1\">my<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> part a little trickier with you completely conscious, but I\u2019m willing to give it a try, if you are.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat do I have to do?\u201d Dhugal replied warily.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cJust stand behind me and put your hands on my shoulders. Let your thumbs rest on the back of my neck.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cLike this?\u201d Dhugal whispered, as he gingerly obeyed.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThat\u2019s fine.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson took Caulay\u2019s flaccid left hand and cradled it against his knee, then glanced over his shoulder as he straightened.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNow come a little closer, so I can lean against you for support. It\u2019s going to seem like I\u2019ve fallen asleep \u2014  rather like what I did to Bertie yesterday \u2014 and I don\u2019t want to fall off the stool. Don\u2019t laugh!\u201d he added, as he sensed Dhugal\u2019s surprise. \u201cI really am going to be somewhat at your mercy.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He could feel Dhugal\u2019s whole body tense behind him. Then, in a very faint voice:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cKelson, I\u2019m not sure I can do this.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYes, you can,\u201d he said patiently. \u201cDhugal, there\u2019s absolutely no danger. If you <\/span><span class=\"none1\">should<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> freeze up, which is most unlikely, the worst that can happen is that I won\u2019t make the contact. Now, trust me, all right?\u201d He reached back to touch Dhugal\u2019s forearm in brief reassurance. \u201cTake a few deep breaths to relax now, and try to let your mind go blank.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He followed his own instructions and felt Dhugal\u2019s cautious response.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThat\u2019s right. Another deep breath now, and let it out slowly. Close your eyes. Imagine all the tension flowing out of your body as you exhale. Let yourself drift now,\u201d he continued, as Dhugal edged into light rapport. \u201cYou\u2019re doing just fine. Soon I\u2019m going to bring your father into the link, but if he can\u2019t provide enough power I\u2019ll need to draw from you as well. You may not even be aware of it. At most, you\u2019ll feel a slight sort of a tickling sensation in your head. Breathe again now, deeply\u2026.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">While he let Dhugal continue settling, Kelson turned his attention briefly to Caulay, reaching out tendrils of control as Morgan and Duncan had taught him and tying in the potential. He had not expected it to be enough, so he was not disappointed. At least he was able to confirm that it was Morgan he was seeking, and that Morgan sensed a mutual effort to bring the contact through. He could feel Dhugal\u2019s untapped potential towering at his back, fiercely supportive but still a bit too tentative for comfort, and knew he would have to go a little farther than he had told Dhugal he would.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Gently he reached out with his senses and brushed Dhugal\u2019s mind, keying the triggers which would enable him to slip Dhugal into a light control trance despite what he had said, for he could not afford to have Dhugal falter in midcontact. Gradually Dhugal\u2019s head nodded lower, lower, until finally his chin was resting against the top of Kelson\u2019s head, though he was not truly asleep \u2014 only drifting in a placid, twilight state.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">After another few heartbeats. Kelson turned his attention back to the waiting contact, opening his mind to fill with Morgan\u2019s message.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">Well done, my prince<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, came Morgan\u2019s whispered thought in his mind. <\/span><span class=\"none1\">I really wasn\u2019t certain I could reach you. Who else is in the link?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">Caulay and Dhugal<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, Kelson replied. <\/span><span class=\"none1\">And Dhugal is still partially conscious, so try not to let anything surge, or he\u2019s going to feel it and scare himself to death pulling out.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He caught the impression of laughter, like tinkling silver bells, and then a more sober note.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">A brave lad and a true friend<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, Morgan sent. <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Why don\u2019t you bring him back to Culdi with you?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">I\u2019m needed already?<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> Kelson queried.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">Aye. Cardiel asked me to contact you. He and Arilan have in mind to promote Istelyn to the See of Meara, and they\u2019d like your official opinion. I told them I thought you\u2019d approve, but you ought to do it in person.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The logic of the request was apparent, and the importance of the summons beyond question, but Kelson sensed something more, vague and less pleasant, lurking beneath the surface. Dhugal stirred, perhaps sharing some of that uneasiness, and Kelson had to tighten his control just a little.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">What\u2019s wrong?<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> he asked. <\/span><span class=\"none1\">What is it you haven\u2019t told me?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">Someone tried to kill Duncan earlier this evening \u2014  <\/span><span class=\"none2\">merasha<\/span><span class=\"none1\"> on the dagger.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">What?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">One of his own retainers \u2014 hardly more than a boy, really. Unfortunately, he\u2019s dead.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">And Duncan?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As his own shock and concern reverberated in the link, he could feel Dhugal tense and try to withdraw. Relentlessly he clamped down on the controls, determined to hold the link just a little longer, even if doing so frightened Dhugal.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none1\">He\u2019s all right!<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> Morgan\u2019s reassurance came lancing through. <\/span><span class=\"none1\">A bad slash on his palm that I can probably heal in the morning, and the expected aftereffects from the drug, but no permanent damage.<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Just get back as soon as you can.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The emotion behind Morgan\u2019s thought was controlled, but very powerful. Despite Kelson\u2019s attempt to buffer its intensity, Dhugal recoiled at the alien sensation; the link began to quiver. No longer trusting the luxury of worded communication. Kelson sent agreement and an urgency to break contact for Dhugal\u2019s sake \u2014 and was out of the link, as much pushed as of his own volition. As he twisted around to grab the trembling Dhugal by the wrists, he continued to catch the ragged after-echo of Duncan\u2019s pain as it had come through Morgan\u2019s perception \u2014 only now it was coming from Dhugal.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cStop it!\u201d he whispered harshly, giving Dhugal a shake and trying to force reason past the panic. \u201cLook at me, Dhugal! Take a deep breath and listen! Let it go! You\u2019re all right! <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Duncan<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> is all right. Will you \u2014 \u201c<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">As his mind probed at Dhugal\u2019s, bright pain seemed to explode behind his eyes, rebounding against his swiftly raised shields and somehow echoing back to Dhugal with even greater force. Dhugal cried out, doubling up and sinking to the floor despite Kelson\u2019s attempt to support him, then lay there sobbing blindly \u2014 dry, wracking heaves as he gasped for breath, rocking in Kelson\u2019s arms.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson was stunned. As he held the shuddering Dhugal and tried to comfort him, he could find nothing to account for the reaction. With the breaking of the link with Morgan, Dhugal should have felt nothing further.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But when Kelson at last tried another tentative probe, the reason became abundantly clear.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201c<\/span><span class=\"none1\">Shields!<\/span><span class=\"none2\">\u201d he whispered, withdrawing as quickly as he could and thrusting Dhugal far enough away to stare at him in shock. \u201cMother of God, Dhugal, where did you get shields? Can you hear me, Dhugal? You\u2019ve got <\/span><span class=\"none1\">shields<\/span><span class=\"none2\">! Dhugal, are you all right?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Groggily, Dhugal uncurled and managed to sit up, holding his head with one hand and leaning against Kelson\u2019s knee for support. Kelson did not press him for further response, only waited while Dhugal got his bearings and gradually raised his head, dragging a sleeve across his tear-stained face. His gaze was still a little glassy as he looked up at the king, and he seemed to be having trouble focusing.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDhugal, what happened?\u201d Kelson breathed.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal made a brave attempt at a smile. \u201cI was about to ask you the same question. God \u2014 my head hurts!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cSomehow you managed to pick up some of what Morgan was sending me,\u201d Kelson whispered. \u201cThen you slammed down shields on the link. How did you do that?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cDo what?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cShield. Most humans can\u2019t. Everything was fine until Morgan told me about the attack on Duncan, and the <\/span><span class=\"none1\">merasha<\/span><span class=\"none2\">.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"none1\">merasha<\/span><span class=\"none2\">?\u2019 Dhugal asked blankly.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cOh, sweet <\/span><span class=\"none1\">Jesu<\/span><span class=\"none2\">, of course you don\u2019t know. It\u2019s a drug. I don\u2019t know where it comes from. But it muddles Deryni senses so that we \u2014 can\u2019t use our magic. I\u2019ve never had it used on me, but Morgan has \u2014 and now Duncan. And I know it was used to make my father vulnerable to Charissa\u2019s magic, so she could kill him.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal shivered. \u201cIt sounds terrible.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cSo was what happened when you tried to back out of the link! And you\u2019ve got shields, for God\u2019s sake! <\/span><span class=\"none1\">He<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> doesn\u2019t,\u201d he stabbed one hand toward the sleeping Caulay in a gesture of frustration, \u201cand you didn\u2019t seem to, either, until we started getting that rebound from Duncan. What the devil happened? Can you remember anything at all?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal rubbed at his temples and winced. \u201cI can\u2019t think with you yelling at me.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019m not yelling at you, I just have to know what happened,\u201d Kelson said, a little less emphatically. \u201cYou scared the hell out of me.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI scared the hell out of me, too.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Cautiously Dhugal took a deep breath and let it out slowly, not looking at Kelson as he tried to ease himself back to memory of the pain.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIt\u2019s still mostly a jumble,\u201d Dhugal finally went on haltingly, \u201cbut I do remember that after you stopped talking, I got sort of \u2014 drowsy.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThat was my fault,\u201d Kelson muttered. \u201cI confess I did a little more than I\u2019d told you I was going to. But that shouldn\u2019t have made you react the way you did. What else do you remember?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI \u2014 have a vague impression of General Morgan laughing. \u2026 Something about bishops, too \u2014 and \u2014 and then a terrible pain in my head.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThat must have been Duncan and the <\/span><span class=\"none1\">merasha<\/span><span class=\"none2\">,\u201d Kelson said, nodding. \u201cSomehow, you got farther into the link than I thought \u2014 just enough to channel some of the emotion. I wasn\u2019t expecting shields, though. Caulay doesn\u2019t have them.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHe doesn\u2019t have my knack with animals, either,\u201d Dhugal countered, almost a little irritated, \u201cand he used to be as good a tracker as Ciard.\u201d He paused. \u201cMaybe it does have something to do with the Second Sight, though. Maybe \u2014 maybe shields go along with that.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cMaybe,\u201d Kelson replied.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But Dhugal\u2019s comment about the animals had struck a responsive chord in Kelson, so that the part about the Second Sight barely even registered. He recalled his father telling him how Morgan could charm deer to the very gates of the city if he wanted to, and some passing mention he remembered of Morgan\u2019s sister Bronwyn being able to call the birds from the sky. If their ability came of being Deryni, then what about Dhugal? Dhugal was also good with animals \u2014 and that would certainly account for the shields.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cLet\u2019s try this again,\u201d he said, slipping his hands to either side of Dhugal\u2019s head before the other could object. \u201cTry not to fight me. This is the only way we\u2019re going to find out more about what we\u2019re up against.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But Dhugal gasped and tried to pull away at once as Kelson\u2019s first probe clashed against the shields again.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cGod, what are you doing to me?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI don\u2019t want to hurt you,\u201d Kelson answered. \u201cTry to relax. I\u2019ll ease up while you do, but you\u2019ve got to help me. Don\u2019t fight me, dammit! The more you struggle, the more it\u2019s going to hurt!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">But the pain of Kelson\u2019s probe had already pushed Dhugal beyond reason again, contorting him into a shuddering fetal ball. Kelson tried several approaches, but the shields refused to budge. He could also sense Dhugal\u2019s heartrate rising dangerously. He would have to stop.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019m sorry,\u201d he murmured, as he withdrew altogether. \u201cGod, I wish I knew where you got those shields!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He doubted Dhugal had heard him, but he kept repeating his apology while he waited for Dhugal to come around, kneading the rigid shoulders until finally Dhugal stirred, uncurling enough to turn frightened, pain-dulled eyes on him.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019m sorry,\u201d Kelson said again. \u201cI didn\u2019t <\/span><span class=\"none1\">want<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> to hurt you. I really am sorry. Are you all right?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal nodded groggily and sat up with Kelson\u2019s help, lifting a hand in reassurance.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIt isn\u2019t your fault. It\u2019s mine. I did try to do what you asked, but it hurt so much \u2014 \u201c<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI know.\u201d Kelson glanced away, reviewing everything one more time, then shook his head and sighed.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWell, it isn\u2019t going to do us any good to just sit here and make apologies to one another. It\u2019s no one\u2019s fault. I certainly wish I didn\u2019t have to leave for Culdi tomorrow, though.\u201d He raised an eyebrow hopefully. \u201cI don\u2019t suppose you\u2019d consider coming with me?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBecause of \u2014 what just happened?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Kelson nodded.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI can\u2019t.\u201d Dhugal swallowed and turned half away, fiddling with a fold of his kilt. \u201cIt\u2019s my father. Kelson. You\u2019ve seen how he is. Winter\u2019s just beginning. I couldn\u2019t leave him here alone.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cHe wouldn\u2019t exactly be alone,\u201d Kelson ventured. \u201cYour sisters are here, and he has a whole clan family. Or is that really the reason?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal drew a deep breath and let it out slowly, avoiding Kelson\u2019s eyes. \u201cThat\u2019s most of it. If he dies \u2014 no, make that <\/span><span class=\"none1\">when<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> he dies \u2014 I\u2019m going to be Chief of Clan MacArdry, as well as Earl of Transha. I have responsibilities to my people. It \u2014 makes things very difficult if the new chief isn\u2019t around when the old chief passes.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Chilled, Kelson glanced up at the bed towering above them, though he could not see its occupant.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cCaulay\u2019s dying?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI doubt very seriously that he\u2019ll last out the winter,\u201d Dhugal said quietly. \u201cHe <\/span><span class=\"none1\">looks<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> strong, but his heart \u2014  well, let\u2019s just say that if he were a horse, I probably would have put him down months ago. There\u2019s \u2014 something wrong in his brain, too. He couldn\u2019t even talk for a while after he lost the use of his legs, though that came back after a few months.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019m truly sorry.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cSo am I.\u201d Dhugal gave a resigned sigh. \u201cUnfortunately, that doesn\u2019t change anything. I doubt even your Deryni healers could have done much for him. The least I can do is be here at the end, if that\u2019s possible. Of course, if he does last out the winter, I have another problem. Come spring, my place is at your side, leading the MacArdry levies.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cBut we\u2019ll worry about that then, if it happens,\u201d he concluded brightly. \u201cAs for the other, let\u2019s not worry about that until then, either, shall we?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">With a helpless shrug. Kelson rose and helped Dhugal to his feet.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIf you wish. Much as I\u2019d like to have you at court through the winter, I certainly can\u2019t fault your reasons for staying here. I don\u2019t suppose there\u2019s any real urgency about \u2014 what\u2019s just happened. Whatever\u2019s going on in your head has probably been that way for some time, so I doubt much will change by waiting until spring to find out more.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He and Dhugal moved silently back into the embrasure of the window seat, where Kelson pushed one of the moveable lights farther open and looked out to sea, inhaling deeply of the salt air as Dhugal stood beside him.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cStrategically, nothing much is going to happen until spring either,\u201d the king continued, after a few seconds. \u201cLook out there. The storms are already brewing. In another month, the rains will more than double the travel time in this part of the kingdom; in two, the snows will have doubled it again. Even your cousin Ithel, as much as he may want my throne, can\u2019t move any kind of effective army under those conditions. No, we have the winter to decide how to handle this. There may be some minor local disturbances, but no serious threat for at least five months.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Grim-lipped, Dhugal glanced back into the room, at the great bed wrapped in shadows and the man snoring noisily beneath the sleeping furs.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhen there is a threat, I shall be there, my brother,\u201d he said softly. And he held up his right hand with the faint scar etched across the palm.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">The gesture moved Kelson more than almost anything else which had happened that night \u2014 and there had been many moving moments. Wistfully he raised his own right hand and matched the faint scar across his own palm to the one on DhugaTs. The memory of the making of those scars came flooding back all in an instant, as if the two of them stood once more by the sacred well, high on a wind-scoured hilltop at the edge of Candor Rhea. Kelson had been ten, Dhugal nearly nine.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAre you sure you really want to?\u201d Dhugal had asked, as they washed their grimy hands in water from the well. \u201cMy people count an oath as strong as blood, when blood has been shed. And what will your father say?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI don\u2019t care what he says, after it\u2019s done,\u201d Kelson had replied. \u201cHe can\u2019t undo it, can he?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo. Nothing can undo it unless one of us is dead.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThen we don\u2019t have to worry,\u201d Kelson had said with a grin, \u201cbecause you and I are going to live forever, aren\u2019t we?\u201d He paused a beat. \u201cDoes it hurt much, do you know?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Dhugal had looked a little greenish under his freckles.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI dunno,\u201d he confided. \u201cMy brother Michael made blood-oath with his friend Fulk when they were younger than we are, and he said it hurt <\/span><span class=\"none1\">terribly<\/span><span class=\"none2\"> \u2014 but I think Michael makes things up to scare me sometimes.\u201d He swallowed. \u201cIt\u2019s only a little cut, after all. If we\u2019re going to be knights, we have to learn not to be afraid of getting wounded, don\u2019t we?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019m not afraid,\u201d Kelson had retorted, handing Dhugal his silver-mounted dagger. \u201cHere. Do it!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">He had actually been very much afraid, and so had Dhugal, but he had not allowed himself to flinch as Dhugal\u2019s inexperienced hand drew the blade across his flesh. Fascinated, Kelson held his wrist and watched the blood well in his palm, only dragging his eyes from it when Dhugal laid the black-carved hilt of his own dagger across Kelson\u2019s bloody fingers. The pommel had clasped a water-pale amethyst, and he remembered the blood staining it a darker hue as he drew the blade across Dhugal\u2019s palm in a wound to match his own.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cSay the words after me,\u201d Dhugal had whispered, clasping his bloody hand to Kelson\u2019s and looping a handkerchief to bind them. \u201cI take you as my brother, of blood and of life.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI take you as my brother, of blood and of life,\u201d Kelson had repeated.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI call to witness the four airts \u2014 those are winds,\u201d Dhugal added.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI call to witness the four airts,\u201d Kelson agreed.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThat so long as I have breath, I will stand by my brother with my life and my honor\u2026.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">With a little smile, the adult Kelson clasped his free hand around their joined ones and nodded.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI\u2019ll expect you in the spring, then, my brother,\u201d he said quietly, not wanting to break the mood. \u201cDo your filial duty through the winter, and keep the peace here in Transha for me, and then come to me at Culdi as soon as the passes are clear.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI will, my lord,\u201d Dhugal whispered. \u201cAnd God keep us both safe until then.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none\">CHAPTER SIX<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s2\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none1\">They only consult to cast him down from his excellency: they delight in lies: they bless with their mouth, but they curse inwardly.<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s2\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\">\n<span class=\"none2\">\u2014  Psalms 62:4<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">By special request of the Archbishop of Rhemuth, the bishops at Culdi met in closed convocation early the next morning. In Duncan\u2019s absence, Istelyn was drafted to serve as secretary for the proceedings. No one was more surprised than he when Cardiel proposed him as the next Bishop of Meara.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">To the relief of Cardiel and Arilan, support for Istelyn\u2019s candidacy quickly grew. Once the stunned Istelyn\u2019s praises had been sung by a bemused Archbishop Bradene, who had more cause than any other man to know Istelyn\u2019s work, hardly a prelate in the room did not join actively in his support, for Istelyn\u2019s nomination provided an elegant solution to the Mearan problem. By noon, when the entire community met for High Mass, Archbishop Bradene was able to announce a unanimous decision from the pulpit. With few exceptions, the news was received with relief and general approval.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">One of those who did not approve of the bishops\u2019 choice was Judhael of Meara, though his public reception of the news was gracious and obedient. As soon as was seemly after Mass, however, he tapped discreetly on the door of his patron, Creoda of Carbury. The bishop\u2019s secretary admitted him at once.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou could have warned me,\u201d he said, when the secretary had shown him into Creoda\u2019s presence and the formalities had been observed.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Sighing, Creoda motioned Judhael to take a seat across from him, staying the priest-secretary with a similar gesture. Judhael sat. He was a youngish-looking man of ramrod-straight carriage, with hair gone prematurely silver, in stark contrast to his clerical black. The pale, sea blue eyes measured Creoda accusingly, the hands also betraying his agitation as he played with a ring on his right hand.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThese things happen,\u201d Creoda muttered. \u201cIf it\u2019s any consolation, you reacted precisely as you should have. Cardiel sprang the recommendation on us at an early meeting this morning. There was no way to warn you between then and Mass. I\u2019m sorry.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cSo am I.\u201d Judhael worried at his ring a moment longer, then glanced aside at the fire in the stone fireplace. The silver signet on his hand was more befitting a secular lord than a cleric.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cWhat happens next, then?\u201d Judhael asked. \u201cIs this the end of it? Will the king ratify Istelyn\u2019s appointment?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cI don\u2019t know, to all three questions,\u201d Creoda replied. \u201cIstelyn has been in the king\u2019s favor for several years, so I doubt there will be any objection on the part of His Majesty. That does not necessarily spell an end to things, however.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cNo?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">Creoda snapped his fingers in the direction of the secretary and held out his hand for the folded square of parchment which the man immediately produced. Judhael sat forward expectantly, but Creoda took his time unfolding the missive.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cThis came late last night,\u201d the bishop said, holding it at arm\u2019s length and squinting at the text before handing it over to Judhael. \u201cThe gist of it is that our brother in Saint Iveagh\u2019s is prepared to support you, and awaits the guide who will escort him to freedom.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cAnd how much is that support worth, now that someone else has been chosen for the See of Meara?\u201d Judhael said bitterly, as he scanned the closely penned script.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cIt will be as useful as it needs to be,\u201d Creoda replied. \u201cAt very least, he can pull the ecclesiastical factions together for the reunification of Old Meara.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre3\"> <span class=\"none2\">\u201cYou really think he still wields that much influence?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<hr style='margin: 30px 0; border-top: 1px solid #eee;'>\n<p style='text-align:center;'>Read the full book by downloading it below.<\/p>\n<p><a href='https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/download-is-starting\/?url=https%3A\/\/mega.co.nz\/%23%21p9gXCbiS%21czzt-wliO8kcPMT70IkYaTE17tUxMel2_Fb9O5h35IQ' class='download-btn' target='_blank'>DOWNLOAD EPUB<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Book Preview THE BISHOP\u2019S HEIR \u00a0 PROLOGUE \u00a0 And he put on the garments of vengeance for clothing, and was clad with zeal for a cloak. \u2014 Isaiah 59:17 Edmund Loris, once the Archbishop of Valoret and Primate of All Gwynedd, stared out to sea through the salt-smeared windowpanes of his tower prison and allowed &#8230; <a title=\"Deryni Chronology 13 &#8211; The Bishop&#8217;s Heir &#8211; Kurtz, Katherine\" class=\"read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/deryni-chronology-13-the-bishops-heir-kurtz-katherine\/\" aria-label=\"Read more about Deryni Chronology 13 &#8211; The Bishop&#8217;s Heir &#8211; Kurtz, Katherine\">Read more<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":6521,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[427],"class_list":["post-6522","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized","tag-katherine-kurtz"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6522","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=6522"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6522\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/6521"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=6522"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=6522"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=6522"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}