Jack Vance, page 8
“Go.”
Lady Desdea sat still and stiff for ten minutes. Then, abruptly, she rose to her feet and marched to the queen’s boudoir. She found Sollace sitting with her hands in a slurry of powdered chalk and milk of milkweed, by which she hoped to mitigate the effects of the country water.
Queen Sollace looked up from the basin of slurry. “So then, Ottile! What a face you show me! Is it despair, or grief, or simple intestinal cramp?”
“You misread my mood, Your Highness! I have just spoken with Princess Madouc and now I must make a discouraging report.”
Sollace sighed. “Again? I am becoming apathetic when her name is mentioned! She is in your hands. Teach her the proprieties and a few graces, together with dancing and needlework; that is enough. In a few years we will marry her off. Until then, we must bear with her oddities.”
“If she were only ‘odd’, as you put it, I could deal with her. Instead she has become a full-fledged tomboy, and is intractable to boot. She swims the river where I can not venture; she climbs the trees and hides from my call in the foliage. Her favorite resort is the stables; always she stinks of horse. I know not how to control her.”
Sollace pulled her hand from the slurry and decided that the treatment had worked its best effect. Her maid started to wipe away the paste, prompting an outcry from Sollace: “Take care, Nelda! You are flaying me alive with your strenuous work! Do you think I am made of leather?”
“I am sorry, Your Highness. I will be more careful. Your hands are now truly beautiful!”
Queen Sollace gave a grudging nod. “That is why I endure such hardships. What were you saying, Ottile?”
“What shall be done with Princess Madouc?”
Sollace looked up blankly, eyes large and bovine. “I am not quite clear on her fault.”
“She is undisciplined, free as a lark and not always tidy. There are smuts on her face and straws in her hair, if that flying red tousle deserves the word. She is careless, impudent, willful and wild.”
Queen Sollace sighed once again and selected a grape from the bowl at her elbow. “Convey my displeasure to the princess and explain that I will be satisfied only with her proper deportment.”
“I have already done so ten times. I might as well be talking to the wind.”
“Hmf. She is no doubt as bored as I. This rusticity is maddening. Where are the little maids who attend her so nicely at Haidion? They are so dainty and sweet and nice; Madouc would surely profit from their example.”
“So one might imagine, in the ordinary case.”
Queen Sollace chose another grape. “Send off for two or three of these maidens. Indicate that they are to guide Madouc in a gentle and discreet fashion. Time rushes on, and already we must look to the future!”
“Just so, Your Highness!”
“Who is that little blond maiden, so winsome and full of pretty wiles? She is like myself at her age.”
“That would be Devonet, daughter to Duke Malnoyard Odo of Castle Folize.”
“Let us have her here at Sarris, and another as well. Who shall it be?”
“Either Ydraint or Chlodys; I think Chlodys, who is somewhat more durable. I will make arrangements at once. Still, you must expect no miracles.”
A week later Devonet and Chlodys arrived at Sarris and were instructed by Lady Desdea. She spoke dryly: “The country air has affected Princess Madouc strangely, as if it were a vital tonic, perhaps to her excessive invigoration. She has become careless of decorum, and is also somewhat flighty. We hope that she will profit by the example you set for her, and possibly your carefully phrased advice.”
Devonet and Chlodys went to join Madouc. After long search they found her perched high in a cherry tree, plucking and eating plump red cherries.
Madouc saw the two without pleasure. “I thought that you had gone to your homes for the summer. Are they tired of you so soon?”
“Not at all,” said Devonet with dignity. “We are here by royal invitation.”
Chlodys said: “Her Highness feels that you need proper companionship.”
“Ha,” said Madouc. “No one asked me what I wanted.”
“We are supposed to set you a good example,” said Devonet. “As a start, I will point out that a lady of refinement would not wish to be found so high in a tree.”
“Then I am a lady of refinement well and truly,” said Madouc, “since I did not wish to be found.”
Chlodys looked speculatively up into the branches. “Are the cherries ripe?”
“Quite ripe.”
“Are they good?”
“Very good indeed.”
“Since they are handy, you might pick a few for us.”
Madouc selected two cherries and dropped them into Chlodys’ hands. “Here are some the birds have pecked.”
Chlodys looked at the cherries with a wrinkled nose. “Are there none better?”
“Certainly. If you climb the tree you can pick them.”
Devonet tossed her head. “I don’t care to soil my clothes.”
“As you like.”
Devonet and Chlodys moved to the side, where they settled themselves carefully in the grass and spoke in low voices. Occasionally they glanced up toward Madouc and giggled as if at some ludicrous consideration.
Madouc presently climbed down through the branches and jumped to the ground. “How long will you stay at Sarris?”
“We are here at the queen’s pleasure,” said Devonet. She looked Madouc up and down, and laughed incredulously. “You are wearing a boy’s breeches!”
Madouc said coldly: “If you found me in the tree without, you might have more cause for criticism.”
Devonet gave a scornful sniff. “Now that you are on the ground, you should instantly go change. A pretty frock would be ever so much nicer.”
“Not if I should decide to go out with Tyfer for an hour or two.”
Devonet blinked. “Oh? Where would you go?”
“Most anywhere. Perhaps along the riverbank.”
Chlodys asked with delicate emphasis: “Who is ‘Tyfer’?”
Madouc gave her a wondering blue-eyed stare. “What odd things must go on in your mind! Tyfer is my horse. What else could he be?”
Chlodys giggled. “I was a bit confused.”
Without comment, Madouc turned away.
Devonet called out: “Where are you going?”
“To the stables.”
Devonet screwed up her pretty face. “I don’t want to go to the stables. Let us do something else.”
Chlodys suggested: “We can sit in the garden and play ‘Tittlewit’ or ‘Cockalorum’!”
“That sounds like fine sport!” said Madouc. “You two start the game. I will join you presently.”
Chlodys said doubtfully: “It’s no fun with just two!”
“Besides,” said Devonet, “Lady Desdea wants us to attend you.”
“It’s so that you may learn proper manners,” said Chlodys.
“That, in fact, is the way of it,” said Devonet. “Without a pedigree you can’t be expected to come by such things naturally, as we do.”
“I have a fine pedigree somewhere,” said Madouc bravely. “I am certain of it, and one day I will make a search—perhaps sooner than later.”
Devonet gave a choked gurgle of laughter. “Do you go now to search the stables?”
Madouc turned her back and walked away. Devonet and Chlodys looked after her with vexation. Chlodys called: “Wait for us! We will come with you, but you must behave properly!”
Later in the day Devonet and Chlodys reported to Lady Desdea. Both were thoroughly annoyed with Madouc, who had acceded to none of their wishes. “She kept us there forever while she groomed her Tyfer horse and braided its mane!”
But worse was to come. Madouc finished with Tyfer and led him away, but failed to return. The two girls went to find her. As they picked their way fastidiously around the stable, an exit gate swung open without warning, thrusting them from the stone coping into the drainage sump, so that both stumbled and fell. At this point Madouc appeared in the opening and asked why they were playing in the manure. “This is not what I consider ladylike behavior,” Madouc told them haughtily. “Have you no regard for decency?”
Lady Desdea could only deplore the misfortune. “You should be more careful. Still, Madouc need not lavish so much time on that horse. Tomorrow I shall see to it! We shall sit to our needlework, with honeycakes and sangaree for us all to enjoy.”
At twilight the three girls supped on cold fowl and onion pudding in a pleasant little room overlooking the park. Prince Cassander came to sit with them. At his order, the steward brought a flask of pale sweet wine. Cassander sat back in his chair, sipping from the goblet and talking largely of his theories and exploits. On the morrow he and his comrades intended to ride north to Flauhamet, a town on Old Street, where a great fair was in progress. “There will be jousting,”1 said Cassander. “Perhaps I will take up a gage or two, if the competition is fair; we do not wish to compete against yokels and ploughboys; that goes without saying.”
Even at her relatively early age, Devonet was always ready to test her skills. “You must be very brave, to take such risks!”
Cassander made an expansive gesture. “It is a complicated skill, comprised of practice, horsemanship and natural ability. I flatter myself that I run a good course. You three should come to Flauhamet, at least to see the fair. Then, should we joust, we will wear your ribbons! What do you think of that?”
“It sounds splendid,” said Chlodys. “But Lady Desdea has other plans for tomorrow.”
“In the morning we will sit at our needlework in the conservatory, while Master Jocelyn sings to the lute.” Devonet darted a glance toward Madouc. “In the afternoon the queen holds court and we will all attend her, as is proper.”
“Ah well, you must do what Lady Desdea thinks best,” said Cassander. “Perhaps there will be another occasion before summer is over.”
“I do hope so!” said Devonet. “It would be most exciting to watch you vanquish your opponents, one after the other!”
“It is not so easy as that,” said Cassander. “And there may be only bumpkins on plough horses to ride against. Still, we shall see.”
2
In the morning, early, with the sun still red in the east, Madouc rose from her bed, dressed, took a hasty breakfast of porridge and figs in the kitchen, then ran around to the stables. Here she searched out Pymfyd and commanded him to saddle Tyfer, and his own horse as well.
Pymfyd blinked, yawned and scratched his head. “It is neither entertaining nor sensible to ride out so early.”
“Do not attempt to think, Pymfyd! I have already made the decisions. Merely saddle the horses, and without delay.”
“I see no need for haste,” growled Pymfyd. “The day is young and the day is long.”
“Is it not clear? I want to avoid Devonet and Chlodys! You have heard my orders; please be quick.”
“Very good, Your Highness.” Pymfyd languidly saddled the horses, and led them from the stable. “Where do you intend to ride?”
“Here, there, up the lane, perhaps as far as Old Street.”
“Old Street? That is a goodly distance: four miles, or is it five?”
“No matter; the day is fine and the horses are eager for their run.”
“But we will not be back for our dinner! Must I go hungry on this account?”
“Come along, Pymfyd! Today your stomach is not important.”
“Perhaps not to you of the royalty, who nibble at will upon saffron cakes and tripes in honey! I am a vulgar lout with a gut to match, and now you must wait till I find bread and cheese for my dinner.”
“Be quick!”
Pymfyd ran off and returned a few moments later carrying a cloth sack which he tied to the back of his saddle.
Madouc asked: “Are you ready at last? Then let us be off.”
3
The two rode up Sarris Way across the royal parkland: past meadows sparkling with daisies, lupines, wild mustard, flaming red poppies; past copses of ash and birch; through the shade of massive oaks where they overhung the lane.
They departed the royal domain through a stone portal and almost immediately encountered a crossroads, where Sarris Way became Fanship Lane.
Madouc and Pymfyd rode north up Fanship Lane, not without grumbling from Pymfyd, who could not understand Madouc’s interest in Old Street. “There is nothing to see but the road, which runs to the right and also to the left.”
“Just so,” said Madouc. “Let us proceed.”
The countryside presently became marked by evidence of cultivation: fields planted to oats and barley, marked off by old stone fences, an occasional farmhouse. After a mile or two, the lane ascended a long easy slope by slants and traverses, finally, at the top of the rise, intersecting with Old Street.
Madouc and Pymfyd pulled up their horses. Looking back across the panorama to the south, they could trace the entire length of Fanship Lane to the crossroads, and beyond, across the king’s park to the poplars beside the River Glame, though Sarris itself was concealed behind trees.
As Pymfyd had asserted, Old Street continued in both directions, over the downs and out of sight. Fanship Lane, crossing Old Street, proceeded onward toward the somber loom of Forest Tantrevalles, at this point little more than a mile to the north.
At the moment Old Street was empty of traffic: a fact that seemed to excite Pymfyd’s suspicions. Craning his neck, he stared first in one direction then the other. Madouc watched in puzzlement, and finally asked: “Why are you searching so carefully, when there is nothing to be seen?”
“That is what I want to see.”
“I don’t quite understand.”
“Naturally not,” said Pymfyd loftily. “You are too young to know the woes of the world, which are many. There is also much wickedness, if one cares to look, or even if one takes care not to look.”
Madouc inspected the road: first to the east, then to the west. “At the moment I see nothing either woeful or wicked.”
“That is because the road is empty. Wickedness often springs into view from nowhere, which makes it so fearful.”
“Pymfyd, I believe that you are obsessed by fear.”
“It may well be, since fear rules the world. The hare fears the fox, who fears the hound, who fears the kennelmaster, who fears the lord, who fears the king whose fears I would not have the impudence to think upon.”
“Poor Pymfyd! Your world is built of fear and dread! As for me, I have no time for such emotions.”
Pymfyd spoke in an even voice. “You are a royal princess and I may not call you a witless little fool, even should the thought cross my mind.”
Madouc turned him a sad blue-eyed glance. “So that, after all, is your concept of me.”
“I will say only this: persons who fear nothing are soon dead.”
“I have a fear or two,” said Madouc. “Needlework, Master Jocelyn’s dancing lessons, one or two other things which need not be mentioned.”
“I have many fears,” said Pymfyd proudly. “Mad dogs, lepers and leper bells, hellhorses, harpies, and witches; lightning-riders and the creatures who live at the bottom of wells; also: hop-legs, irchments and ghosts who wait by the lych gate.”
“Is that all?” asked Madouc.
“By no means! I fear dropsy, milkeye and the pox. Now that I think of it, I very much fear the king’s displeasure! We must turn back before someone sees us so far from Sarris and carries tales!”
“Not so fast!” said Madouc. “When it is time to return I will give the signal.” She studied the signpost. “Flauhamet is only four miles distant.”
Pymfyd cried out in quick alarm: “Four miles or four hundred—it makes no difference!”
“Prince Cassander mentioned the Flauhamet fair, and said it was very gay.”
“One fair is much like another,” declared Pymfyd. “The favored resort of rogues, cheats and cut-purses!”
Madouc paid no heed. “There are to be jugglers, buffoons, songsters, stilt-dancers, mimes and mountebanks.”
“These folk are by and large disreputable,” growled Pymfyd. “That is common knowledge.”
“There is also a tournament of jousting. Prince Cassander may take a turn in the lists, if the competition suits him.”
“Hmf. That I doubt.”
“Oh? How so?”
Pymfyd looked off across the landscape. “It is not fitting that I discuss Prince Cassander.”
“Speak! Your words will go no farther.”
“I doubt if he will risk the lists with so many folk to watch should he take a tumble.”
Madouc grinned. “For a fact, he is vain. In any event, I don’t care to watch the jousting. I would rather wander among the booths.”
Pymfyd’s honest face took on a set of mulish obstinacy. “We cannot ride into town so free and easy, to rub elbows with the bumpkins! Can you imagine Her Majesty’s disapproval? You would be chided and I would be beaten. We must turn back, since the day advances.”
“It is still early! Devonet and Chlodys are only just settling to their needlework.”
Pymfyd gave a cry of consternation. He pointed westward along Old Street. “Folk are approaching; they are gentry and you will be recognized! We must be gone before they arrive.”
Madouc heaved a sigh. Pymfyd’s logic could not be refuted. Reining Tyfer about, she started back along Fanship Lane, only to stop short.
“What now?” demanded Pymfyd.
“A party is coming up Fanship Lane. That is Cassander on the bay horse, and it is no doubt King Casmir himself on the great black charger.”
Pymfyd gave a groan of despair. “We are trapped!”
“Not so! We will cross Old Street and take cover up Fanship Lane until the way is clear.”
“A sound idea, for once!” muttered Pymfyd. “Hurry! There is no time to waste; we can hide behind yonder trees!”
Touching up their horses, the two trotted across Old Street and north along the continuation of Fanship Lane, which quickly became little more than a track across the meadow. They approached a copse of poplar trees, where they hoped to take concealment.
