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Then, Doretia realized with a shock that Radamantahad been trained by the numbers. Every move came straight out of books, with no variation. Doretia's attempt at a Valvlol undercut was answered by the Bellatrix thrust and riposte. Any Fermor hack attack was followed by the Rancour spin and parry.
Radamanta did it all perfectly, as did her muscular friends. But that was their downfall. Doretia felt for the first time as if her six brotherswere there behind her. a.s.suring her battles never went the way the teachers told her they would, they constantly threw every alternate situation they could at her during sword practice, until she stopped reading the manual, and started reading her opponent. Radamanta was an only child. Doretia felt sorry for her.
Backing in a circle around the cobbled yard, Doretia began to throw in variations in her attack. After a Drakeney thrust she stepped left instead of right, or double-thrust before leaping back. Her ploy fl.u.s.tered Radamanta. The princess's perfect golden complexion flushed with an unpleasant red hue, rendering her orange. She began to make mistakes.
To Doretia's left and right, her friends were catching on to the same tactic. Goana screamed the war cry that had made her house feared throughout the known kingdoms.
"Scar their faces!" she screamed, leaping with sword held high at the large blonde maiden, who recoiled, throwing a mailed arm up before her face. Fomentia's sword licked out like a snake. The Oligarchans formed a solid line of flas.h.i.+ng metal that drove the Hermeticans backward, up the stairs, into the castle, and on up toward the guest room. Zoraida hurried up and stood behind the door. As soon as Radamanta and her warrior women were safely inside, she threw the lock and spelled the door shut. At once the Hermetican women started pounding to be let out, and Doretia heard a voice behind the door begin a weird keening. Zoraida c.o.c.ked an ear. The hasp started to slide.
"They've got a Junior Enchantress in there, too," she exclaimed. "Hurry." She started chanting. The lock slid back, just in time.
Doretia didn't waste a moment. "Find that scribe," she shouted.
The little man came out of his hiding place in the audience chamber without hesitation. Doretia thrust the letter at him.
"Did you send this?"
"Yes, madam," the wretched man said, jumping at the sound of the banging from above. "The prince was so kind."
"Prince?" Fomentia asked, opening large eyes at the scribe. "Prince Felxin of Catania. They'd be betrothed by now if it wasn't for her greediness. It was all very unfair." He lowered his voice to a whisper. "She's very unreasonable. I knew she wouldn't ever let him go. So he wrote the note and I sent it. Was that wrong?"
"Not at all," Doretia a.s.sured him. "Take us to him."
* * *The gaoler did not need a sword at his throat to open the cell door in the noisome prison beneath the castle tower. The sound of chains clanking began when the gaoler preceded them in with his lantern. The captive prince had risen to greet his rescuers.
Felxin was a head or more taller than Doretia, with smooth black hair, green eyes like a cat's, broad shoulders tapering down to a slim waist, and a smile as bright as a cathedral full of candles. In his prison he had still kept himself in shape, neat and clean, no easy task when burdened with a hundredweight of iron chain fastened to his neck, wrists and ankles. He was more handsome than Doretia could ever have dreamed. She staggered backwards, feeling like she'd been hit in the stomach by the arm of the family quintain.
"A ton of bricks?" Promese asked, shaking her purple locks knowingly.
"Two tons," Doretia breathed. The handsome prince knelt at her feet.
"My lady, thank you for your courage. Not everyone has the fort.i.tude to face down Radamanta."
"Oh, he's dreamy," Fometia squealed. Indeed he was, Doretia thought, and wrenched her mind away to the matter before her.
"Why is Radamanta holding you prisoner?" she asked.
Felxin shrugged his broad shoulders, causing the hanks of gray chain to clatter a protest. "She wanted to rule my country as well as her own, and yet would not allow the same courtesy to me. I can admire independence in a woman, but she must have all or nothing. I am prepared to stand side by side with my queen, not a step below her." Doretia regarded him curiously. He sounded almost too good to be real. A man with whom she didn't have to fight for equality. He made a sour face. "She not only wouldn't break off the engagement, but locked me up until I should give in."
"But couldn't you fight free of her?"
Felxin looked abashed. "She's by far the better sword, and you don't have to know her long to find out how underhanded she can be. She tricked me. Now she holds me by stealth, by chain, and by magic."
He shook his bonds. The crowd of ladies keened in sympathy.
"We'll free you right away," Doretia said. She seized the chain hanging from the collar around his neck and started searching along its lengths for the locks. It had none. The bad magic she had suspected was here. She drew her sword. Cold iron would dispel an evil charm. She took aim, preparing to strike. The prince's cry arrested her. He clasped his hands.
"No, fair lady, don't! If you break the links the magic backlash will kill me. It's a chain of logic, and cannot be opened by force."
Doretia frowned but dropped the links. "We can't break them. We can't unlock them. What will free you? It said nothing in your letter."
"The letter!" Felxin exclaimed. "Do you have it?"
It was still in her belt pouch. Doretia took it out. "Complete the conditions of the letter, I beg you." Felxin looked around at their faces. "Has anyone got a pen?"
"A pen!" said Delia. "You need a locksmith."
"In this case, a pen is mightier, and less fatal," Doretia said, suddenly understanding.
"Take mine," the little scribe said, holding out a quill dripping black at the tip. Doretia hadn't even seen him take out a bottle of ink. She made a mental note to take him with her-someone who was a quick draw like that would be of value in her menage. With a flourish she wrote her name beneath the last one on the list, Promese's, and waited. Nothing happened.
"Nothing happened," she said, disappointed. "What did I do wrong?"
"It's a chain letter!" Felxin said urgently. "You must pa.s.s it along."
"But there's no one else . . ." Doretia began, then smiled. But therewas . She thrust the doc.u.ment at Fomentia, who seized it happily.
"At last!"
There was a flash and a boom in the small cell, as all the chains binding Felxin burst apart and fell to the floor in a rain of individual links. Felxin flexed his wrists and stretched his shoulders.
"At last!" he exclaimed. "Thank you, thank you, good lady."
A yelp came from above, accompanied by the sound of metal falling on stone. Zoraida came running down the stairs.
"You will enjoy this," she said, a catlike smile on her face. "Radamanta and all her gang are now clapped in chains. It just happened."
"The curse recoiling," said the prince. "How perfectly apt." He took Doretia's hand and kissed it. "My lovely rescuer, I owe you my life. How can I thank you?"
"Um," said Doretia, looking up into his s.h.i.+ning green eyes. Her brain seemed to have frozen. "I, uh, liked your letter. You write so nicely. Perhaps you could write to me again someday?"
"She's not affianced," Fomentia called over her shoulder, teasingly. Felxin's beautiful eyes widened with interest.
"No?" he asked. "Then, first I might write to your father, to ask if I might call upon you."
"Any time," Doretia told him, wondering why she felt so breathless, as if her perfect-fitting mail was suddenly too tight. Felxin swept her into his arms and kissed her warmly on the lips. She fell back, gasping in surprise, but not at all displeased.
"I am so sorry, fair lady," the prince said, with a twinkle in his eyes. "It was a chain reaction."
This one is for all of those women out there who have ever had to juggle career and family, to say nothing of what happens to the juggling act when the nest empties out and there's a hole in your resume big enough to drive a dragon through.
Cross CHILDREN Walk
Esther M. Friesner
"And how was your work day, dear?" Garth asked his wife. He meant well.
"Youknow how it was!" Zoli flung her spoon down into the dish of Seven Berry Surprise pudding.
Sugary globs splattered everywhere. "Nothing's the same since the water-dragon disappeared. No excitement, no adventure. I spend my days hoping someone will fall in, just so I could rescue them, but the Iron River's so sluggish it'd be as thrilling as fis.h.i.+ng kittens out of a washbasin. Ihate my job!"
"For Gnut's sake, Zoli, it's not like anyone'sforcing you to be a crossing guard."
As soon as the words escaped his lips, Garth regretted them. He clamped his hands over his mouth, but too late. He'd done the unthinkable: He'd spoken his mind to his wife. He was doomed.
Zoli rested one still-muscular arm on the dinner table and leaned towards him withthat look in her eye.
He knewthat look. It was the same one he'd seen when they'd first met, right before she decapitated the Great Ogre of Limpwater, thereby saving Garth's bacon.
"Well," she said in a deceptively soft voice. "And have we, perhaps, forgottenwhy I became a crossing guard in the first place?"
"No, dear," Garth mumbled. "It was the only job for you in this town." He did not addBesides keep house . He knew better. He'd been married to Zoli for twenty years, but he still recalled how she'd dealt with the Great Ogre, and he was still very much attached to his bacon.
"Oh, so youdo pay attention. And why is it that I, Zoli of the Brazen s.h.i.+eld, have no other job opportunities?"
"Because-because you scare people hereabouts."
"So I do. Which means no one in this dratted little backwater will employ me for labor befitting a grown woman. I've seen the blacksmith and the carter and the rest all eyeing the strength of my arms and back, but I know what they're thinking: 'I'd love to have her toil for me, but if it doesn't work out, where will I ever find the b.a.l.l.s tofire her?' Thatis what they say of me, isn't it?"
"Nearly." Garth had indeed overheard his fellow townsmen discuss Zoli's unexploited strength in those very words, with one exception: They didn't worry about where to find the b.a.l.l.s to fire her so much as where they'd findtheir b.a.l.l.safter they fired her. So far the most popular theoretical answer that had come up during open debate at the Crusty Boar was "Up a tree." "Down your throat" ran a close second.
Zoli tilted her chair back and swung her feet up to rest among the dinner dishes. Old habits died hard, and most of hers had been formed in the barrack room, the war camp, and the forbidden temples of halfa dozen a.s.sorted snake G.o.ds. "So I am a crossing guard, for want of any better employment, because I fell in love with you andyou insisted on retiringhere. "
"It's my home town," Garth defended himself. "Anyway, youmade me retire and settle down when you got pregnant!"
"Are you saying it'smy fault I'm unhappy?" Zoli hadthat look in her eye again. Garth shut up fast. "It was different when the kids were small," she continued. "But now they're grown and gone it's either mind the ford or go mad with boredom." She sat up straight and began chunking her dagger into the tabletop slowly, methodically, and with a dull viciousness born of deep frustration. "Why did the dragon have to vanish? While he was here, the townsfolk respected me because I protected their brats. But now? Kids learn from their parents. Some of them lob spitb.a.l.l.s at me, others make snide remarks about how tight my armor fits. Which it does, but they don't have to say so."
Garth came around the table to stand behind his wife, his hands automatically falling to the task of ma.s.saging tension from her shoulders. "You know, sweetheart, maybe the problem isn't that you're a crossing guard, but that you're aschool crossing guard."
"Tell me about it," she grumbled.
"I could have a word with Mayor Eyebright, get you a transfer to the toll bridge."
"Likethat would be so much more exciting." She shrugged off his kneading hands impatiently and stuck a heaping spoonful of pudding in her mouth.
Garth frowned. "I'mtrying to help. On the bridge, you wouldn't have to deal with those snotty kids."
Again Zoli slammed her spoon into the pudding, this time splattering herself and her husband, except she was too worked up to notice. "When have you ever known me to run fromany battle?" she demanded.
"Even one for these yokels' respect? I may have let my members.h.i.+p in the Swordsisters' Union lapse, but I've still got my professional standards.I will not surrender !" This said, she flopped back down into her chair and ate what little Seven Berry Surprise pudding was left in her dish.
AndIwill never again ask how your day was , Garth thought as he too resumed his seat and tucked into his dessert. They finished their meal in silence.
Meanwhile, at the far end of town, Mayor Eyebright was enjoying his own dinner while at the same time doing what he did best, namely ignoring his wife and seven children. His evening monologue droned on and on, not only between mouthfuls of food but straight through them.
"Oh, what a day I've had!" he sighed, stuffing half a slice of bread into his cheek and keeping it there while he talked. "There was a terrible dust-up at the Overford Academy, a faculty meeting that ended in a scuffle and eviction. They actually summoned the town patrol! Why a bunch of wizards can't police themselves . . . I mean, we're paying them more than enough to teach our children, so why can't they hire their own security force instead of coming running tome every time there's a body wants booting into the cold-and-cruel? Do they think the patrol works for free? Those bloodsuckers charge the council extra for hazardous duty, which includes ejecting wizards. Theyclaim that it takes five men working as a team to subdue one wizard.Five ! A likely story. And what was it all about, I ask you?Tenure . Bah! Why should a frowzy bookworm be guaranteed a job for life?I say that the more of 'em get yanked off theacademic t.i.tty, the better men they'll be."
"Master Porfirio's not frowzy!" little Ethelberthina objected.
A gasp of astonishment gusted from the other members of Household Eyebright. An octet of horrified stares fixed themselves on the youngest daughter of the house, a pert, plump la.s.s of twelve summers.
Ethelberthina met her family's collective gawk with the same cool self-possession that had caused all of her teachers to write "A young woman who exhibits many potential leaders.h.i.+p qualities. If you don't beat them out of her, I will,"on her progress reports.
"Ethelberthina, howdare you interrupt your father!" Goodwife Eyebright exclaimed.
"Oh, poo," said the unnatural child, crossing her arms and looking for all the world like a tax a.s.sessor.
"Dad should know thereal story about the fuss at school. Those old buzzardssaid they fired Master Porfirio for inapt morals, but thetruth is he talked back to the dean."
"If he talked back to someone in authority, he got what he deserved," Mayor Eyebright opined, giving the girl a meaningful look. What it meant was:Don't push your luck.
"Poo," said Ethelberthina a second time. "Our philosophy master taught us that authority without virtue merits no obedience. Anyway, it all depends on what he talked back to the deanabout , doesn't it?"
Mayor Eyebright had long known that Ethelberthina was nothing like her two elder sisters. Mauve and Demystria were normal females, properly deferential. The closest Ethelberthina ever came to deference was knowing how to spell it correctly. Still, a father's duty was to make all his girls into proper women.
He had to try.
"You know, Ethelberthina," he said slowly, "you are a veryexceptional girl."
Ethelberthina knew what that meant. She stood up from the table with the weariness ofHere we go again upon her. "Another trip to the woodshed?"
Mayor Eyebright shook his head. "Not this time. No sense beating a dead horse. Thus, instead, I will be removing you from Overford Academy soonest."
"What?!" For the first time in her young life, Ethelberthina was actually attentive to her father's words.
"No need to thank me. I'm merely correcting an honest mistake for which I blame no one but your mother.And her meddling old Granny Ethelberthina. It wasthat woman who insisted we put you to school." Here he gave his wife a reproving look.
Goodwife Eyebright, pregnant with Number Eight, murmured almost inaudibly into her vanished lap, "You didn'thave to do what Granny said, dear."
Her husband scowled. "Of course I did; she was rich! I refused to risk offending her until she was safely dead and our inheritance secured." His scowl s.h.i.+fted to his youngest daughter. "Sneaky old cow."
"Daddy, Idid say I'd share Great-granny's money with you as soon as I'm old enough to get it out of the trust fund," Ethelberthina said sweetly. "And so I will . . .if I remember. Master Porfirio once taught that a broken heart affects the memory, and I would beso heartbroken if you took me out of school!" "There," Mayor Eyebright said bitterly. "That'swhat comes of educating females: Flagrant displays of logic at the dinner table! Well, my girl, you may be your great-granny's sole heir, with the money held in trust until you're sixteen, but theking's law says that if you marry before then it becomes your husband's property when you do. Perhaps you follow my reasoning?"
Ethelberthina's face tensed, but she maintained a brave front. "You'd force me to wed some local lout, exceptfirst you'll make sure he signs you a promissory note for most of my trust fund."
Her father smiled. "Youare a smart child."
"Smart enough. The king's law still requires aconsenting bride, and Iwon't ."
Mayor Eyebright looked casually up at the ceiling. "Dear," he said, "how much more is sixteen than twelve?"