Chapter 45: Feill Fadalach

Chapter 45: Feill Fadalach

The first matter that needed attending was the dukes wound. The mans own shirt did nicely for a quick bandage, and his coat was of fine enough quality to tie it in place, once Rose had cut it into strips. Between the dukes belt and Aarons own, the girl was able to truss the man securely, hand and foot. She seemed to derive grim satisfaction from Aarons impromptu lesson on securing prisoners. He certainly didnt need to coax her into making things tighter.

The next order of business was his own wrist. Probably. It should be, at least. Delaying it did not help matters; he knew that. In fact, it quite made things worse, since a splint would hold the bones in place. But getting it made

His daggers sheath would do well enough as a splint for now. He talked Rose through the process, and corrected her, here and there, through gritted teeth. Further strips of the dukes proud argent coat secured the sheath in place, and others made for a rough sling. It would do. It need not last long.

Are you all right to stay here? he asked her. He didnt get to his feet yet. He needed just a little time to breathe.

Her eyes narrowed, and her hand tightened around the silk-wrapped hilt of her knife. Im coming with you. I can handle it.

Thats not what I meant. He nodded over towards the prone Duke. Are you all right to stay here with him? One of us needs to watch him, and one of us needs to go tell your brother whats happened. The one who goes needs to be fasttheres probably still fighting out there, and theyll need to get through it without getting caught up. The one who stays needs to be able to handle themselves in a fight, if the duke wakes up and tries something. Which of us would you have go, and which would you have stay?

The girl considered this for a moment, seeming to search for any insult in his words. Finding none, she nodded. Go. Ill be fine.

He took a deep breath. Then, tucking the dukes sheathed sword under his injured arm and gripping his dagger in his good hand, Aaron got back to his feet, and ran. He took the first exit he came across. It led to the grounds, letting out close to the north gardens.

Banshees. The banshees were still keening, in that continuous mournful wail. Hed forgotten them behind the stone of the old ways, but they had not been neglecting their duties out here. Theirs was the first sound that assaulted him. The second was the clash of blades. The place where hed stepped out was peaceful; the castle itself was anything but. From the main courtyard, he could hear the sounds of battle. How long had he been in the old ways? It was still dark outsidethat was all he knew. Someone from the upper town might have been able to look at the stars, or the position of the moon, and rattle off the time. Nonetheless, he could feel it: he hadnt been gone long. It was the fight at the barracks he was hearing. They were still subduing the dukes men. They had not yet even begun to work their way up to the guest floor, and the other nobles in the dukes party.

Where would Orin be?

In the middle of the fighting, of course. Aaron didnt need to think long on that answer. He checked the strap of his sling, and readjusted the unicorn horn sword where it had slipped. He rolled on his bare feet, from toe to heel and back again. Then he took off running.

Things were a bit of a blur from there. He paid no attention to allegiance: wherever men clashed, he gave as wide a berth as possible. Where Deaths gathered, appearing with rather more alarm on their faces than he found comforting, he skirted their rapid conversations with the nonchalance of a cutpurse past chatting militiamen. Wherever men were casting appraising glances around the torch lit yard, their last opponent at their feet, he redoubled his pace.

It was easier to do on the grounds. Those he flew through, protected by speed and the dark. Inside the castle was trickier. Much. There, he had to start paying attention again: it suddenly mattered very much whether a soldier was supporting the king, and it mattered very much that they knew he did, as well. Especially with all the ducal argent he had wrapped about him.

The prince, he gasped, holding up his good hand, stopped short at the point of a sword. It would have been a better gesture with both arms, and without the dagger in his palm. But its sheath was playing doctor, and he had no desire either to lose it or to impale himself by tucking it in his sling. All in all, it was not the completely harmless gesture he was aiming for, but it gave the guard pause long enough for him to be recognized.

Aaron? the man asked. He was wearing that obnoxious plate armorAaron didnt know his voice, and couldnt see his face. It didnt matter.

The prince? I have a message, he panted. Rather urgent.

The man raised a gauntlet, and pointed down a long hall. What happened to you?

The duke, he replied simply, and was off running again.

He found the prince in the main barracks, mopping up the resistance there. Hed lost his helmet somewhere, and was engaged in one-on-one combat with some member of the dukes party. Someone important, by the looks of him. It seemed the sort of fight that honorable men dreamed of: evenly matched, each taking careful measure of the other, the other men around instinctively giving them space to test each other.

Frankly, Aaron didnt care. With Rose as his most excellent role model, he did not halt his pace. He simply used it to send his shoulder straight into the lord from behind, knocking him flat.

Orin had his sword tip pressed to the mans throat within the same heartbeat. It was that utter unflappability that Aaron admired about the prince.

Stay down, Orin said to the noble, though his eyes were on Aaron. His gaze swept over such trivial details as the dusty state of his clothing, his gasping breaths, and his broken wrist, and found the only item of import on his person: the dukes sword.

The banshees continued their wailing. They were like the sound of a waterfall, or a summer storm: once his ears had heard them for long enough, his mind blocked them out of conscious thought. Their voices were beautiful, really. Mournful, but mournful in the way that a death ought to bethe way that showed him where his loss was, and sang into the space left behind, knitting up the torn edges.

Just what had he lost? He didnt even know how closely the Sungs were related to the OShea line. It was something to ask Rose. Later. Not tonight. For tonight, he sat down in the servants hall off of where the princess and her family were in mourning, and rested his back against the wall. Mrs. White found him there. She climbed into his lap, curling her tail tip around until it touched her nose. He ran a slow finger through the fur under her cheek. She did not lean into the gesture, but she did not pull away. Cats were not allowed at the vigil; of all creatures, cats were not allowed. It was the cait sidhe who were known to steal mens souls. Being a puss-in-boots apparently did not clear her name sufficiently. She seemed resolved, as him, to hold the late wake in her own way.

This was what he knew about the man who lay silent in the room behind him, ringed by his small family and his sparse friends: that he had a puss as councilor, one of the last of her kind, even though it was the kings own grandfather that had ordered the extermination of her kind on their isle.

That he had been king for only sixteen years. Not nearly long enough to bury the crippling mistake of his first year: when he had decreed that the blood nobles would no longer offer up their children as forfeit to the dragons, but that mankind would fight to save those lives. He had broken the pact, and sent humanity to war. It was not a war they had won. Not a war they ever had a chance at winning: that was the entire reason the pact had been established in the first place. The dragons still came every spring. Where once they had plucked from the offered children like gourmets at a feast, now they trampled entire towns searching for suitable doppels.

The common people hated him for it. What use was a blood noble unwilling to shed noble blood? A waste of life, forced on them by the Wasting King.

When the kings father had died, his body had lain in state for a full day and night and another again as the line of mourners stretched out the castle gates. Even after the funeral pyre, still they came to pay their respects to an urn and a charcoal drawing of the Steadfast King. How many would do the same for his son?

This Aaron knew, too: that a name which had ruled in Last of the Isles in unbroken succession was left now with only three members. Three children. One of them might be a doppel, and his life forfeit. The next would be hard pressed to find a regent who wasnt trying to kill him. And the last? The last stood with the others in front of her fathers body, and didnt know whether she was his child at all. Didnt know, even, if shed been loved.

The king had been on his deathbed, and hed still tried to get Aaron drunk off the foulest burning concoction in his cabinet. Hed laughed like a man who still had time. Like a man who should have lived to see the sun rise. Aaron didnt understand him at all. He only knew this: the king had been wrong. A man who died drinking phoenix ash stayed as dead as any other.

Lochlann found him next. The guard seemed to have escaped the battle unscathed, if weary. He leaned against the wall opposite Aaron and watched him pet a cat who would not purr.

Adelaide Sung, he said. Aaron looked up, and met his gaze. The Ladys name: Adelaide Sung. Her daughter is named for her. Though you of course would know that, seeing as the Lady is your mother. Or can you even call her that, when youre the bastard she never wanted? Do you still think you know what youre doing, Markus?

The little cat flicked an ear. Aaron resumed petting her. He hadnt realized that hed stopped. Im his son. The dukes. Im not Markus, but Im his son. He must have had a woman in town.

Did the duke remember her? Her face, her name? He had a father now. Perhaps it was too greedy to hope for a mother, as well. Not knowing might be betterif he didnt know, then things couldnt end as poorly with her as they had with the duke.

Are you lying to me? the lieutenant asked. Aaron shook his head. There was nothing more to say. Lochlann ran a hand through his hair. Of course youre not. Of course youre his son; why not. He shifted, and let a moment pass. I just thought you should know. Her name, that is. I never got the chance to finish answering you, and it seemed rather important, given who they think you are.

Rose knows the truth, he said, running a finger down the coarse strip of fur over the white cats nose. I cant just leave her. Not right after this.

I wont be able to protect you if they find out, the lieutenant said. I dont know that Ill be able to protect myself, if they know I knew.

I wont tell them, Aaron said. He swallowed. Thank you. For even thinking about it.

The man frowned and cast his gaze to the side, though there was nothing there to see. Weve been over this, Aaron. If youre staying, then stay.

He didnt know how long the second lieutenant stayed with them in the servants hall. Awhile. They didnt speak further. Eventually, the man pushed off from the wall, and walked away.

Now Aaron knew this, too: that the king was a man who had loved his cousins wife. And she had loved him back. Maybe Rose was right, and Adelaide Sung really was her mother. It would make sense: especially as to why His Majesty had tolerated Aarons presence in the royal quarters for so long, and why Orin had not taken him to task for growing so close to the girl. Markus was the twins cousin. And the Lady had her own pair of bastards, to match her husbands.

Aaron looked down at the white cat in his lap.

Are you going to tell on me, Mrs. White?

The little cat turned her blue eyes upwards, meeting his with the unblinking stare of which all felines are master. She butted her head against his chin. He wrapped his good arm around her, and laid his head down in her fur. The banshees would cease their wailing at dawn: until then, they each had the other for company.

It wasnt until much later that he realized hed never seen his own Death. Not during any of this. He didnt know what that meant: that he hadnt been in danger of dying, or that his Death wouldnt always give warning when he was.