Moons' Dreaming (Children of the Rock) (20 page)

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Authors: Marguerite Krause,Susan Sizemore

BOOK: Moons' Dreaming (Children of the Rock)
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Nocca wrinkled his long nose.

No one would want you now.


Just as well, then.


Have you asked the king?

Stubborn child. Dael turned and leaned back against the bar.

Not yet.


Why not?


I

ve been getting drunk. Why must I always state the obvious to everyone?

He was beginning to get annoyed. It wasn

t safe for him to be annoyed. Dangerous things tended to happen. So he stopped being annoyed, and sighed.

What am I supposed to ask the king?


About traveling with father,

Nocca answered with the patience one used to speak to the simpleminded.

Dael suddenly remembered what Nocca was talking about. After the king had refused to let him take a troop or two to clean out the bands of Abstainers reported along the roads to White Water, Dael had thought of something clever. His father had valuable cargo to transport. If Abstainers heard of a goldsmith traveling with some of his wares, he was sure to be attacked. Which was what Dael wanted, since he planned to accompany Loras

s wagon with a troop of his best people. The king couldn

t object to a training exercise, couldn

t object to Dael being a dutiful son. A perfectly good plan. Of course, he

d have to sober up to put it into effect.


How

d I get here?

he asked, abruptly annoyed, with himself and his brother and the king, and others he was probably too drunk to think of, for wasting time.


You walked,

his brother answered dryly.

You gave command to Sergeant Hamer and told him to leave you alone. He

s left you alone.

Dael nodded. It made him dizzy. He swallowed.

I

ve lost the mood for keeping order in Rhenlan.


Well, you

d better get it back.

He stood up and put his hands on his brother

s shoulders.

It

s because of Vray, you see. She constantly annoys the king. She would make him give me the guards I need to serve the kingdom. Gods, I miss her.

Nocca removed Dael

s hands from his shoulders.

Is that what this is about? The princess?


No. Of course not. It

s no business of mine. I

m just the Captain of the guard. Why should I care for a girl I raised?

Nocca looked thoughtful.

Father said she

s taken Milla

s place for you. Please come home, Dael.

Nocca wouldn

t remember their dead sister very well. Besides, it wasn

t true. Vray was herself. Too much. Headstrong child. Dael rubbed his forehead. His head hurt

probably the result of trying to use it.

I

m going to be sick.


Good. Maybe then you

ll sober up.

Once he was sober he

d start thinking again, and he wasn

t sure that was what he wanted. Unfortunately, it seemed he no longer had a choice.


Take me home,

he said, and let Nocca guide him out into the bright day.

Chapter
11

Doron

s house was too small. Given the time and energy
,
Pirse would happily have rebuilt it, beginning by doubling the size of the foundation. But as a recovering invalid he

d had to content himself with minor items such as chimney repair and window caulking; now
,
with the return of his strength, time had run out. The house would have to remain as it was.

Pirse sighed and pulled off his shirt as he stepped into the steamy heat of the bath house, a low-ceilinged structure attached by a doorway to the main building in a manner common to the mountain villages. Inside were wooden tubs of appropriate sizes for washing people or their clothing, and a few shelves for soap, wash paddles, and brushes. The squat water tank atop its iron-enclosed fire dominated the room. He chose a tub and slid it into place over the drain set in the smooth wooden floor, then opened the spigot from the tank. Perhaps it wasn

t a matter of the house being too small. What was important was that it was adequate for the woman

s needs, safe and comfortable. Too comfortable. He

d been entirely too self-indulgent lately. He

d allowed himself to begin to like it here.

He kicked off his trousers and reached across the tub to turn off the water. A cool breeze touched his naked back just before Doron

s voice said,

Pirse.

He turned. One hand on the half-open door, the other balled into a fist at her side, Doron glared at him.

Since when does anyone take a bath in the middle of the afternoon?


I

ve earned it. I split the last of the firewood. Would you mind closing the door? There

s a bit of a draft.

To his surprise she stepped further into the room before swinging the door shut. She was wearing a simple, long-skirted dress of pale green with no sleeves, stained here and there by the products of her shop, in spite of the apron tied at her waist. He noticed that her face was flushed. The warmth of the room, or perhaps the exertion of her climb up the road from the dye shop.


Since when do you come home before sunset?

he counter challenged.


The village of Alder has been attacked by Abstainers. One of their people has arrived, looking for advice. We

re gathering in Tamik

s barn to talk to her.


Alder. That

s the other side of the range, isn

t it?


Aye. Four days

travel when the roads are clear.


On foot. That would be less than one day by horse.


You don

t own a horse.


I

ll borrow the potter

s.

They stared at one another. She said,

Why do we bother to argue when each of us knows what the other is going to say?


Do we?

he asked.

If you know how I feel about Abstainers and don

t want me to leave, why were you so eager to tell about Alder?


The woman has come for advice, not a swordsman.


But my advice when facing Abstainers is a swordsman. Several, if you can find them.

He stepped impulsively forward and kissed her on the cheek. He intended it as a gesture of gratitude and acknowledgment of the care she

d shown an unwelcome stranger. He was also not without hope that such an act of effrontery would end the discussion, and quite possibly their relationship, very neatly. But she did not flinch away. She didn

t even slap him.

Her face beneath his lips felt hot. He was the one to pull back, startled, abruptly reminded that only a few layers of thin summer linen separated them, none of it his. She had one hand on his chest, but not to push him away. With his breath quickening, he kissed her again, properly this time, his hands finding her hips and pulling her close.

Once her dress was off and added to the mound of his clothes, he could barely feel the hard wooden floor beneath them.

* * *

Sweaty. Sex in the bath house was always sweaty. Doron stuck out her lower jaw and blew a sharp of puff of breath upward, fanning the damp hair away from her forehead. Pirse, sprawled on his back beside her, opened one eye.

A bit warm?

he asked.


We shouldn

t have done this.

He rolled onto one elbow, facing her, all suggestion of lassitude gone.

By the mothers, why not? If it

s your dead husband you

re thinking of
….”

Mention of Betajj brought only a distant sweet ache. She reached up and tugged at his ear.

I was thinking of the fact that we haven

t time to bathe. We

ll be missed.

A puff of daf
fodil-
yellow smoke near Pirse

s feet coalesced into a black-robed woman, her pink face fringed with short, oat-brown hair. She smiled fondly down at them while they scrambled for their clothes.

Oh, good. I told Morb you should be feeling better by now.

Pirse got quickly to his feet. The pleasant haze induced by their love-making gave Doron a last impression of the young prince

s physical grace and poise, even looking embarrassed and slightly put out; then cold reality smashed down on her and she saw only a muscular but too-thin, too-pale lad with too many smooth white scars marring his skin.

Don

t Dreamers respect privacy?

she snapped.


No, they don

t,

Pirse answered for the woman.

Doron, this is Savyea.

To Doron

s discomfort the Greenmother beamed at her.

Oh, I know Doron. A fine, strong family. Normally I wouldn

t dream of intruding, children, but I told Morb better me than Aage.


Morb is in need of me?

Pirse accepted the trousers Doron held up toward him, his puzzled gaze never leaving Savyea

s face.


He

s grown far too used to your work. Sene

s son could manage a dragon or two for a change.


Dragons? Where?

The black cloak rustled as Savyea made a soothing gesture with both hands.

Now, dear, don

t get excited. Morb dwells too much on monster-slaying in my opinion. But I won

t say he

s not practical about it. That

s why he

s asking after you now, so that you

ll have plenty of warning.


Greenmother,

Pirse paused in the lacing of his tunic.

Is there or isn

t there a dragon?


There are always dragons,

Savyea returned with equal patience.

At present Morb thinks you

ll be concerned about one that is moving along the coast. He asked me specifically to tell you that it will be hunting on the shore due north of Dundas in three ninedays, if unopposed.

Doron dressed, berating herself for a fool. Dragons and Dreamers marked the boundaries of Pirse

s existence. Admittedly, he

d extended himself a bit since arriving in Juniper Ridge, but only because he was a dutiful Shaper. The villagers

Keepers throughout Dherrica

were right to respect him. That didn

t mean they should presume to love him.

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