914 lines
44 KiB
TeX
914 lines
44 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{kingfisher-ii}{%
|
|
\chapter*{Bonus Chapter: Kingfisher II}\label{kingfisher-ii}}
|
|
|
|
\addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{\nameref{kingfisher-ii}} \chaptermark{Bonus Chapter: Kingfisher II}
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``A wise man fears heroes not for their nature but for what they
|
|
were made to fight.''}{King Edward III of Callow, the Fratricide}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\emph{Learn this well, nephew}, the Prince of Brus had told Frederic.
|
|
\emph{All pretty things are lies.}
|
|
|
|
Was this to be the bitter truth of the world, then? That men and women
|
|
gilded the ugliness of their works and smiled at each other, in tacit
|
|
accord never to pick at the paint? It was a foul thought but those
|
|
words, among others, echoed still in the boy's ears even as he was
|
|
formally proclaimed the heir to the Principality of Brus. The Florian
|
|
Basilica was an exquisite piece of work, at the heart of it a great
|
|
circle of stained glass windows tall as two men each and enchanted to
|
|
chance colours with the seasons, yet the pews that could have seated
|
|
five hundred bore less than a fifth of this. Frederic's prince uncle had
|
|
arranged for a brisk ceremony without frills, so that the unfitness two
|
|
rule of his two sons would not be lingered on even as they were formally
|
|
stripped of their right of inheritance. One of the Holies had deigned to
|
|
attend in person and even signed the act of disinheritance instead of
|
|
Brother Antoine, the appointed shepherd of the basilica.
|
|
|
|
Frederic was rather thankful for the attendance of the Holy, as
|
|
otherwise Cousin Nathanael might well have thrown a fit: even now he was
|
|
not bothering to hide his fury, though it was kept mastered. Even
|
|
Nathanael was not fool enough to indulge in a tantrum before such an
|
|
influential priestess as the one who had come, for the House's
|
|
disapproval was a weighty thing to even one of royal blood. The Holy One
|
|
personally saw to the appointment of Prince Amaury's new successor, a
|
|
gesture of great respect that Frederic could not help but see as two
|
|
great beasts scratching each other's back. His uncle borrowed the
|
|
authority of the Gods to see his own carried out, while the Holies were
|
|
recognized as having the right to grant that authority to begin with.
|
|
All benefited, the fair-haired boy whimsically thought, save perhaps the
|
|
Gods Above themselves. \emph{But when faced with silence, what can men
|
|
do save fill it?}
|
|
|
|
Frederic Goethal was anointed with blood and water, then draped in a
|
|
fine cloak bearing the colours of his house. The priestess led him in
|
|
swearing the ancient oaths -- \emph{he was to be true, to be brave, to
|
|
pursue the grace of the Heavens in all things} -- and afterwards he rose
|
|
to his feet the heir to the Principality of Brus in the eyes of Gods and
|
|
men. How strange, that he felt no different before and after. Almost as
|
|
if a crown was only ever a crown when seen in the eyes of others.
|
|
|
|
If Frederic caught sight of wings in red and blue high above in the
|
|
rafters, he kept it to himself.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The years passed and the Principate of Procer continued to eat itself
|
|
alive.
|
|
|
|
He'd been too young to understand it, but he was fourteen now and there
|
|
was more to his world than the walls of the palace and the few lessons
|
|
that took him beyond them. \emph{Princess said she had a right}, the
|
|
people sang in the streets, growing quiet when riders passed by them.
|
|
\emph{Princess said it'd be a fight}, the words picked up when the sound
|
|
of hooves passed. \emph{Now princesses are all aflight, and the pot it
|
|
is boiling}. The irony of it, Frederic had come to decide, was that this
|
|
war had already been won half a dozen times. It'd been won at the Battle
|
|
of the Swallows near the border of Orne, again at the Sack of
|
|
Lullefeuille in Creusens, at the Waltz of Fools in Brabant and even the
|
|
Treachery of One Mile just outside the Salian border. All victories that
|
|
should have broken the spine of causes, yet though the faces and the
|
|
friends changed the war kept marching on unabated. When even victory was
|
|
not enough to win a war, Frederic sometimes wondered, what was left to
|
|
it but \emph{losing}? Yet his unease did not matter, for the House of
|
|
Goethal had had already picked its man for the throne, Prince Dagobert
|
|
of Lange. The cause seemed promising, it had to be said, as the Prince
|
|
of Lange had lately become the preeminent crown of the northwest and
|
|
perhaps even beyond.
|
|
|
|
The year before Frederic was first brought to the palace had seen the
|
|
final death of the other great alliance in the north, the coalition with
|
|
Cleves and Hainaut that had formed around Prince Fabien of Lyonis. A
|
|
victorious pitched battle near the capital of Lyonis had forced Prince
|
|
Fabien into the fold under Prince Dagobert as well as inflicted grievous
|
|
enough casualties that -- at least for now -- the principalities of
|
|
Hainaut and Cleves had withdrawn from the Ebb and the Flow. Peace had
|
|
not followed, naturally, for victory ever brought danger with it. Now it
|
|
was the Malanzas of Aequitan that were turning their gaze north, eyeing
|
|
the southernmost ally of the coalition: Segovia. Though Princess Aenor
|
|
of Aequitan was no great general, she'd brought great numbers to her
|
|
side through skillful diplomacy. So far caution had kept her coalition's
|
|
attention on the eastern alliance under Princess Constance of Aisne, but
|
|
now Princess Aenor was wary of allowing Prince Dagobert to consolidate
|
|
his position in the northwest without Lyonis and its allies acting as a
|
|
check on his expansion.
|
|
|
|
Frederic learned all of this from his uncle, whose steady hand at the
|
|
keel had kept Brus out of the worst of the wars while reaping great
|
|
benefits. He could admire the man, even if he would never love him.
|
|
|
|
``An offer has been made for your hand by the Malanzas,'' Prince Amaury
|
|
told him one evening.
|
|
|
|
After turning thirteen, it had become custom for Frederic to spend one
|
|
evening every week in the Prince of Brus' solar to discuss lessons and
|
|
politics. Sometimes these discussions were only between the two of them,
|
|
but other evenings saw his uncles' favourite advisors and the powerful
|
|
men and women of Brus invited to share brandy and talks. Frederic had
|
|
grasped, without needing to be told, that he was being introduced to the
|
|
same faces he would need to use and be wary of when he came to rule.
|
|
Cousin Nathanael had savaged a salon with a knife in a fit of rage when
|
|
he'd heard of the invitations become regular. Frederic now had a taster
|
|
for his food and drink.
|
|
|
|
``Princess Aenor of Aequitan has daughter and a son,'' the fair-haired
|
|
boy recited by rote. ``Rozala and Hernan, with Rozala the eldest of the
|
|
two.''
|
|
|
|
``It is her hand that was offered,'' Prince Amaury told him, sounding
|
|
amused. ``She has a few years on you, though I am told she is a handsome
|
|
girl.''
|
|
|
|
Which added value to the match, though not as much as the fact that
|
|
Rozala was the heiress to Aequitan. Though it was true and Brus and the
|
|
other principality were far apart and that marriage alliances between
|
|
ruling royals always complicated matters of succession, the offer was an
|
|
attractive one. Most likely Rozala would follow her mother to Salia,
|
|
being groomed for a Malanza dynasty on the high throne, while her
|
|
younger brother served as Prince of Aequitan in all but name. Frederic
|
|
himself would be expected to come to Salia as Rozala's husband and his
|
|
uncle's man in the Highest Assembly, the two of them arranging matters
|
|
of succession so that the House of Goethal would be stable at home while
|
|
keeping a foot on the high throne. It was a tempting offer, befitting of
|
|
a woman of Aenor Malanza's reputation.
|
|
|
|
``If we turned on Prince Dagobert while his armies are gone south to
|
|
battle the Malanzas, this alliance might well collapse,'' Frederic
|
|
noted.
|
|
|
|
``Lyonis is still looking for a way to start another bid for the
|
|
throne,'' his uncle agreed, sounding pleased. ``And Luisa of Segovia is
|
|
too clever a woman to remain on a sinking boat.''
|
|
|
|
``Yet you'll refuse,'' the fair-haired boy said.
|
|
|
|
``Dagobert has daughters as well,'' Prince Amaury smiled. ``A hint of
|
|
the offer ought to open the dance for blood ties there.''
|
|
|
|
Without soiling Brus' reputation or risking quite so much, Frederic
|
|
grasped. And as he was young, he would be betrothed yet not wed:
|
|
betrothals could be broken, should the situation change. Prince Dagobert
|
|
was a proven military commander besides, in contrast to Princess Aenor's
|
|
shoddy record there, and marriage alliances from principalities far
|
|
apart were notoriously unstable besides. Brus and Lange were neighbours,
|
|
blood ties there would create a powerful bloc in the northwest that
|
|
might well serve as the foundations for a dynasty in Salia.
|
|
|
|
``Mind you, in matters of land the most eligible woman in Procer dwells
|
|
further north,'' his uncle mused.
|
|
|
|
``Cordelia Hasenbach,'' Fredric recited. ``Prince of Rhenia, heiress to
|
|
Hannoven.''
|
|
|
|
``Fine soldiers, the people of those lands,'' Prince Amaury said. ``Yet
|
|
I wager Old Klaus will want his niece wed to one of his kin, so that one
|
|
child can be a Hasenbach and the other a Papenheim. Lycaonese rarely
|
|
marry out, regardless.''
|
|
|
|
Frederic put the notion out of his mind, and the Lycaonese as well, as
|
|
their disdain for playing the Ebb and Flow meant were only ever
|
|
witnesses to its proceedings. Instead he began to correspond with
|
|
Perenelle Griffeu, Prince Dagobert's eldest daughter, at the tacit
|
|
invitation of the man himself. His uncle had, once more, navigated his
|
|
way to great gains. Perenelle was pleasant enough, and of a certain wry
|
|
humour that Frederic appreciated, so the cultivated relationship took
|
|
well. Frederic believed it was in part as a reward for this that Prince
|
|
Amaury invited him to sit at council when ambassadors from Rhenia were
|
|
entertained. The expectation was that, with relations tightening between
|
|
the four Lycaonese principalities, an effort was being made by them to
|
|
secure better trading rights in the south by negotiation as a faction.
|
|
Still, there was opportunity for profit there and there was palpable
|
|
excitement at the possibility of securing some Lycaonese soldiery as
|
|
\emph{fantassins}.
|
|
|
|
Yet there was little discussion of trade, when the ambassador was
|
|
entertained. Frederic found he agreed with his uncle's scorn when the
|
|
Rhenian envoys were laughed out of the room. Prince Cordelia Hasenbach
|
|
-- not even a \emph{princess}, that one, northern savagery at its most
|
|
glaring -- had sent warnings of Praesi gold pouring into Procer through
|
|
brokers, that if civil strife continued unchecked the Principate might
|
|
well splinter. The ramblings of a young Lycaonese fool, Prince Amaury's
|
|
councillors dismissed. Prince Klaus Papenheim would have been worth
|
|
indulging to an extent, if he could be roped in as an ally, but who
|
|
cared about the dubious doomsday prophecies of some slip of a girl at
|
|
the edge of the world?
|
|
|
|
The same councillors advised patience and composure, when the Neustrian
|
|
army began to muster. There would be raids, they said, as there'd always
|
|
been raids, but only that. The Lycaonese were a miserly people: they
|
|
always retreated after a slew of casualties was inflicted, fleeing back
|
|
north with what little wealth and warmth they'd managed to steal. The
|
|
garrisons of northern Brus had been thinned to fill the field armies,
|
|
true, but the fortress walls were tall and well-kept. The Neustrians
|
|
would retreat soon enough and the House of Goethal would make them pay
|
|
for their perfidy after Prince Dagobert of Lange became \emph{First}
|
|
Prince Dagobert of Lange.
|
|
|
|
When Frederic turned fifteen and the first fortresses fell, though, the
|
|
silence from the councillors was deafening. Word filtered in from the
|
|
north and the faced grew darker for it was not the Neustrians alone
|
|
who'd come: Rhenia, Bremen and Hannoven all flew banners as well. The
|
|
entire north had gone to war, and every day brought word of a fresh
|
|
defeat as the weakened and surprised defences of Brus utterly collapsed.
|
|
Prince Amaury Goethal grew sour, his moods darkened, and when Princess
|
|
Mathilda Greensteel was found to have led a host through the famously
|
|
treacherous Guiseron swamplands, the aging Prince of Brus led his
|
|
soldiers out of the city to break her army before it could rejoin with
|
|
the rest of the Lycaonese. Prince Amaury never returned, his life
|
|
claimed in single combat by the renowned warrior-prince Manfred
|
|
Reitzenberg.
|
|
|
|
Frederic did not yet know this, when he was woken up in the middle of
|
|
night with a blade to his throat.
|
|
|
|
``What is the meaning of this?'' he indignantly asked the soldier.
|
|
|
|
``Prince's orders,'' the man said.
|
|
|
|
``Prince Amaury?'' Frederic blinked, taken aback.
|
|
|
|
``Prince Nathanael,'' the soldier smiled as a floor of armed traitors
|
|
filled the room.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The armies of Rhenia and Hannoven had marched south with blinding
|
|
swiftness, Frederic learned, and had begun to prepare for the siege if
|
|
the city. By then he was in a cell, naturally, but dear Nathanel did
|
|
like to chat after savaging him. The fair-haired boy of fifteen tasted
|
|
blood in his mouth as his cousin retreated panting yet bright-eyed,
|
|
Frederic's bruises having been built on bruises -- the pain had been
|
|
atrocious, at first, now he felt almost divorced from it all. As if he
|
|
were stranger looking at his own body, at this entire farce.
|
|
|
|
``Are you weeping?'' Nathanael -- not Prince Nathanel, never prince,
|
|
Frederic would rather \emph{choke} on his tongue first -- asked,
|
|
sounding so very pleased.
|
|
|
|
Was he? The boy blinked, and found tears going down his cheeks. The salt
|
|
stung his bloody cheekbones, making it impossible to ignore.
|
|
|
|
``I weep at what you are,'' Frederic decided, which was untrue but
|
|
pleasing to say.
|
|
|
|
``The victor is what I am,'' his cousin laughed. ``But take heart,
|
|
little usurper. You'll be away from my tender care soon enough.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{All pretty things are lies}, Frederic thought, and being away from
|
|
Nathanael would be pretty thing indeed.
|
|
|
|
``Am I to be executed, then?'' the boy said, voice shaking through his
|
|
nonchalance. ``How very predictable.''
|
|
|
|
There was an ugly glint in his cousin's eye at having been denied the
|
|
pleasure of stripping away hope, but it passed.
|
|
|
|
``I would never kill one of my own kin, Frederic,'' Nathanael smiled.
|
|
``Dear me, cousin, think of my \emph{reputation}. But when I open the
|
|
gates of the city to Hasenbach, handing you over the Lycaonese as
|
|
Father's accomplice in foolishly disregarding the offered hand of the
|
|
savages ought to earn me some trust. I do wonder what manner of grim
|
|
execution they'll have in mind for you.''
|
|
|
|
Stepping out of this, looking at it like a stranger, Frederic almost
|
|
admired the wicked man across from him. Nathanael had acted effectively
|
|
to reclaim the birthright he considered himself unfairly deprived of,
|
|
seizing the opportunity with both swiftness and ruthlessness. Perhaps,
|
|
Frederic mused in the most darkly, his cousin was the true Goethal
|
|
between them after all. Who was the true child of opportunity, between
|
|
the one chained and the one standing? His cousin advanced towards him,
|
|
smiling.
|
|
|
|
``I'll have you moved to more fitting accommodations and healed,''
|
|
Nathanael mused, patting his cheek. ``Do complain I mistreated you, it
|
|
will do wonders to make you seem a liar.''
|
|
|
|
``You've such a pretty future ahead of you, cousin,'' Frederic smiled.
|
|
|
|
Nathanael's hand withdrew, then returned as a slap across the face.
|
|
Blood filled his mouth again, but Frederic pushed down the pain and gave
|
|
his tormentor nothing. Why, he was an Alamans prince of the blood: if he
|
|
was to die, it would be having had the last word.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The morning of what was to be Frederic Goethal's last day on Creation,
|
|
he was woken up by the light coming through the open windows of his old
|
|
rooms in the palace. He rose without attendants around him, padding all
|
|
the way to the open glass and letting the warm morning breeze caress his
|
|
face. There would be no escape from here, he knew. There were guards at
|
|
the door and in the gardens below, with orders to cripple him should he
|
|
attempt to flee. But it was such a pleasant morning. Some part of him
|
|
was not surprised, when he looked at the apple tree across from him and
|
|
found waiting there the slight silhouette of a kingfisher. It truly was,
|
|
he thought, a beautiful creature. The long beak and bright plumage, the
|
|
clever eyes watching him just as he watched them.
|
|
|
|
``Come to escort me on my way out?'' Frederic asked.
|
|
|
|
The bird looked at him for a long moment, as it had when he'd been a
|
|
boy. And then it took flight, leaving him with the same taste of
|
|
esoteric failure in the mouth he'd first tasted as a boy of five.
|
|
|
|
``Still unworthy, am I?'' he bitterly whispered.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps he was. He'd lost, after all, without ever having lifted a
|
|
sword. And now he was going to die. And so, as a son of the House of
|
|
Goethal, he put on his best and combed his hair so that he would at
|
|
least perish while presentable. The guards that came to get him he did
|
|
not recognize in the slightest, which meant they were likely
|
|
\emph{fantassins} hired by his cousin. Was he finding it difficult to
|
|
secure loyalties? How amusing. Frederic really ought to needle him over
|
|
it before he was handed over the Lycaonese for execution. Yet when he
|
|
was ushered into a parlour, there was only one person waiting for him.
|
|
Mute with surprise, Frederic was served wine and had a pleasant
|
|
conversation with a very dangerous woman.
|
|
|
|
``Nathanael Goethal,'' Cordelia Hasenbach pleasantly told him, ``was
|
|
seventeen thousand thrones in debt to the Pravus Bank. He entertained
|
|
envoys from them on the day of his `coronation', seeking further
|
|
loans.''
|
|
|
|
Cousin Nathanael, Frederic aptly deduced from the context, had been met
|
|
with an unfortunate accident. Auguste's mental illness made him highly
|
|
unsuitable to rule, and so the Lycaonese were turning to him as a
|
|
candidate to secure Brus. He was hardly the only choice, given that
|
|
there was another branch of Goethals, but he could be said to be the
|
|
\emph{natural} choice. He was certainly Prince Amaury's heir by right,
|
|
should the northerners care the slightest whit about upholding these. He
|
|
could not know, not when those terrifyingly -- beautiful -- cold blue
|
|
eyes were studying him without giving away anything going on behind
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
``I owe no debts,'' Frederic told the fair-haired woman.
|
|
|
|
``You would owe one,'' Cordelia Hasenbach coolly corrected.
|
|
|
|
And thus the game was played, the ancient song of Ebb and the Flow. He
|
|
could rise, if part of her alliance. So be it.
|
|
|
|
``My uncle's was a fair death, dealt in open battle,'' Frederic
|
|
admitted. ``There would be no disgrace in swearing myself to you.''
|
|
|
|
``You misunderstand me, Frederic Goethal,'' the Prince of Rhenia said.
|
|
|
|
She was not beautiful in the way that ladies of Brus were, slim and
|
|
delicate and sophisticated. Prince Cordelia was\ldots{} regal. It was
|
|
intoxicating, from up close.
|
|
|
|
``A crown is not a privilege,'' Cordelia Hasenbach calmly said, meaning
|
|
every word, ``it is a duty. You will owe a debt to your people, to
|
|
Procer itself. See it is paid pack in full, Prince Frederic.''
|
|
|
|
Frederic Goethal looked into the blue eyes of the Lycaonese princess and
|
|
something burned in his blood. Something demanding that, one day, he
|
|
would get to look there again and find \emph{respect}.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Three days after Prince Frederic of Brus was crowned, one of his uncle's
|
|
councillors praised him for having tricked the Lycaonese brutes and
|
|
suggested that the principality should now pledge its faith to Princess
|
|
Aenor of Aequitan in secret. Fredric idly wondered if the man had
|
|
suggested the same thing to Nathanael, before. He could not quite
|
|
remember running his sword through the councillor's stomach, but as he
|
|
ripped it free he cast a cool gaze on the pale-faced men and women he
|
|
still needed.
|
|
|
|
For now, anyway.
|
|
|
|
``Cordelia Hasenbach will be First Prince of Procer,'' Frederic said,
|
|
and it rang like an oath.
|
|
|
|
Never again did any of them speak of treason to him.
|
|
|
|
The Prince of Brus readied himself for the war that would end the war,
|
|
the peace by the sword, and brought to heel the commanders sworn to his
|
|
crown. Even as he did the Lycaonese armies trampled Lange, Lyonis
|
|
betrayed Prince Dagobert to the northerners without batting an eye and
|
|
Segovia began negotiating its entry into the alliance before the gates
|
|
of Lange's capital were even breached. All of Procer trembled at the
|
|
swift turn in fortunes, the great princesses of the east and the south
|
|
beginning to muster their armies in fear -- fear enough, Frederic knew,
|
|
that they might just ally long enough to bury the Lycaonese together.
|
|
But before the Prince of Brus could bring his steel to the Rhenian
|
|
cause, there was one last matter to see to. One last debt left
|
|
unbalanced.
|
|
|
|
When he sent for his father, it was not to receive him the throne room.
|
|
Frederic ordered for a seat to be brought at the edge of the great pond
|
|
in the depths of the royal gardens and he sat there, looking out into
|
|
the water. Herons hunted for fish, ducks slumbered in the shade and an
|
|
odd peace reigned over the place, as if the chaos and war of the outside
|
|
world was prevented by some ancient enchantment from reaching here.
|
|
Robert Goethal was brought to him and his father was visibly miffed by
|
|
the fact that no seat had been prepared for him, but he held his tongue.
|
|
Frederic gestured for the guards to withdraw far enough the conversation
|
|
would remain private.
|
|
|
|
``Your Grace,'' Robert Goethal said, bowing.
|
|
|
|
``Father,'' Frederic replied.
|
|
|
|
He said nothing, after. Silence stayed.
|
|
|
|
``It is a pleasant sight,'' his father finally said, sparing a glance
|
|
for the pond.
|
|
|
|
``Is it?'' Frederic mused. ``You are right, I suppose. I shall offer you
|
|
better, however.''
|
|
|
|
He felt the man tighten with anticipation, at the though of years of
|
|
patience and offering his own son -- his property, in the man's eyes --
|
|
to his brother. Finally, finally his day in the sun would come.
|
|
|
|
``There is summer house on the shores of Lake Pavins,'' the Prince of
|
|
Brus said. ``It has, I am told a most beautiful view. It is yours.''
|
|
|
|
Robert Goethal was not the cleverest of men, but even he would not
|
|
forget the house he had sent his wife in exile to.
|
|
|
|
``The death truly \emph{was} an accident, Frederic,'' his father
|
|
insisted. ``I would not have-''
|
|
|
|
``And you'd begun so well,'' Frederic mildly said. ``\emph{Your Grace}
|
|
is the proper address. You will not be reminded again.''
|
|
|
|
The man's mouth closed. Frederic could glimpse the fury in them, the
|
|
same that would have seen his cheek stinging as a boy. And had he not
|
|
dreamt, over the years, of the many revenges he would take in this man?
|
|
Of the torments he would inflict, the pains and humiliations. And yet
|
|
now he thought of Nathanel's bright eyes as he struck the arrogant boy
|
|
who'd stolen his birthright, of how righteous he must have felt when
|
|
unleashing his wrath. And so the fair-haired boy wondered: would he have
|
|
that same feverish glow in his eye, taking his revenge from Robert
|
|
Goethal?
|
|
|
|
``It is a beautiful view,'' the Prince of Brus repeated. ``Though I
|
|
suppose in time you will tired of it.''
|
|
|
|
``You can't mean to-''
|
|
|
|
``There will be only one way you are ever allowed to leave that house,''
|
|
Frederic Goethal said, and then he turned to smile at his father. ``And
|
|
that is by going swimming.''
|
|
|
|
He never spoke another word to Robert Goethal.
|
|
|
|
The Prince of Brus turned his eyes to the pond, after, but there was no
|
|
flicker of red or blue to be found. He was, it seemed, entirely own his
|
|
own. But then, was that not ever the way of princes?
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Frederic Goethal, Prince of Brus, was sixteen years old when he fought
|
|
his first battle.
|
|
|
|
It was not a glorious affair: his vanguard accidentally ran into Prince
|
|
Etienne of Brabant's just north of the fortress of Saregnac, leading to
|
|
a quick and confused engagement. Frederic followed the advice of his
|
|
uncle's generals of and of his old teacher Captain Ghyslaine of the
|
|
\emph{Lances Farfelues}, trading three charges of horse with the
|
|
Brabantines and getting the better of the last two. It was enough to
|
|
have the enemy withdraw, as Brabant was fresh to the cause of Constance
|
|
of Aisne and less than eager to bleed on her behalf. Perhaps three
|
|
hundred people died on the field, in the span of an hour that Frederic
|
|
spent mostly trying to find out what was happening. He never even drew
|
|
his sword. Half a month later he led his retinue in relieving a Lyonis
|
|
force further east that'd been ambushed by Brabantines and took three
|
|
lives in the struggle, two by lance and one by sword.
|
|
|
|
Soldiers told him, after, that he was one the finest lances in the north
|
|
and devil in a fight. It surprised him, for steel in hand war was never
|
|
more than a blur. They were all chewed out by the Iron Prince for having
|
|
strayed from the planned march and skirmishing unnecessarily ahead of a
|
|
battle, but the grizzled old general then slapped his back and praised
|
|
him for being acting decisively. His soldiers took to him after that, as
|
|
much for the deaths to his name as the praise by a famous general, but
|
|
Frederic found himself unmoved. Sometimes he thought of the third man
|
|
he'd killed, up close with his sword. Of how shoddy the equipment had
|
|
been, of the fear in his eyes when a boy wearing armour worth more than
|
|
he'd earn in a lifetime had come at him with a \emph{gilded} blade. He
|
|
thought of it still, astride his horse as thousands upon thousands
|
|
slowly lined up on the plains to the northwest of the capital of Aisne.
|
|
There must have been near a hundred thousand men facing them, between
|
|
the coalition armies of Princess Constance and Princess Aenor.
|
|
|
|
How many of them were soldiers, instead of shopkeepers in ill-fitting
|
|
armour?
|
|
|
|
The Battle of Aisne would be marked as a famous one in the histories of
|
|
Procer, for it had all the ingredients for exciting interest: one side
|
|
badly outnumbered, two princes and a princess changing sides halfway
|
|
through, valour from soldiers of all sides and a clear-cut ending:
|
|
bloody, overwhelming victory for Cordelia Hasenbach and her allies.
|
|
Frederic remembered little after he'd dismounted and gone to fight with
|
|
the ranks, ceding command to more seasoned hands: it was all streaks of
|
|
blood and mud and sweat, cut through by spurts of crimson. When darkness
|
|
fell that night he returned to the field, though, to watch the carpet of
|
|
corpses spreading as far as the eye could see.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{A horse and a fall was all it took},'' Frederic softly sang,
|
|
looking at the dead.
|
|
|
|
He did not hear company approaching until it was close, and belatedly
|
|
laid his hand on his sword.
|
|
|
|
``Easy now, princeling,'' Prince Klaus Papenheim said.
|
|
|
|
``My apologies, Your Grace,'' the Prince of Brus said, dipping his head.
|
|
|
|
``Klaus is enough, after today,'' the old soldier said. ``You fought
|
|
well.''
|
|
|
|
``Did I?'' Frederic murmured.
|
|
|
|
He could hardly remember. All evening he'd been lauded for having
|
|
scythed through enemy ranks lance and sword in hand, for his bravery,
|
|
but they might as well have been singing the praises of another man
|
|
entirely.
|
|
|
|
``I was told this would be a glorious thing, Iron Prince,'' he found
|
|
himself saying. ``I was raised to \emph{fight} this war, to earn acclaim
|
|
through it. And now\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
He spat on the muddy ground.
|
|
|
|
``All it took was a horse and fall,'' the Prince of Brus said, ``for us
|
|
to make ourselves into the great charnel yard of this world.''
|
|
|
|
It was a pretty thing, the dream of Procer. Of the greatest nation of
|
|
Calernia, proud and powerful and righteous. And like all pretty things,
|
|
it was a lie. \emph{The ugly truth of us lies on this field, being
|
|
picked at by carrion under night's veil.} The Prince of Hannoven said
|
|
nothing, standing by his side in silence. Death spread out around them
|
|
in every direction, like weeds devouring the earth, like an open maw
|
|
breathing out poison. Frederic felt his throat close, his vision swim.
|
|
Was it the wind he was hearing, of a chorus of moans whispering:
|
|
\emph{up and north, south and down}, \emph{Ebb or Flow, we'll still
|
|
\textbf{drown}.}
|
|
|
|
``How do you do it?'' Frederic croaked out. ``How can you see a smile
|
|
without seeing a skull, how can you sleep? How do you suffer \emph{even
|
|
an hour}?''
|
|
|
|
``When I close my eyes,'' Klaus Papenheim gently replied. ``I dream of
|
|
spring. Of the green in the ground, of the singing rivers, of the fawns
|
|
on the mountainside. Of the warmth that chases out the cold.''
|
|
|
|
``Springs is the season of war, for your people,'' Frederic said.
|
|
|
|
With the melting of the snows the Chain of Hunger came south, even
|
|
Bruseni knew this.
|
|
|
|
``And so I open my eyes,'' Klaus Papenheim said, ``knowing I am what
|
|
stands between war and that dream.''
|
|
|
|
Frederic Goethal closed his eyes and though he dreamt of nothing, he
|
|
could almost hear the beat of wings. It was not spring, he thought, but
|
|
it was something. It would have to be enough. The Prince of Brus fought
|
|
fiercely through the rest of the war, he was told, brought honour to his
|
|
house and his subjects and the cause he had come to support.
|
|
|
|
If sometimes his gaze lingered strangely on the kingfisher embroidered
|
|
on his banner, no one ever said anything of it where he could hear.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The same year Cordelia Hasenbach was crowned First Prince of Procer,
|
|
Princess of Salia, Warden of the West and Protector of the Realms of
|
|
Man, she received him in a cozy little parlour within the palace that
|
|
had now become her own. This conversation had been coming for some time,
|
|
they both knew. Frederic had brought into his circle the last kin he
|
|
cared to claim and among them his surviving uncle's eldest daughter,
|
|
Henriette, showed great promise. As an heiress-presumptive, he was
|
|
satisfied with her. Yet he was young and unwed, and there was no reason
|
|
he could not have a child of his own siring should the proper wife be
|
|
found.
|
|
|
|
``An invigorating brew,'' Frederic said, after having taken a sip of the
|
|
offered tea.
|
|
|
|
``I am fond of the spices,'' Cordelia Hasenbach said, gracing him with a
|
|
smile.
|
|
|
|
It was measured, as were most things with her, but that did not
|
|
necessarily make it untrue.
|
|
|
|
``I will not waste too much of your time, Your Highness,'' Frederic
|
|
said. ``I not unaware that my hand in marriage is not so tempting as
|
|
some offers you might be entertaining. Still, I can offer hunting and
|
|
fishing rights for Lycaonese in the swamplands, waiving of all tariffs
|
|
for your people in Brus and my services as intermediary with
|
|
\emph{fantassin} companies.''
|
|
|
|
Compared to the full coffers and untouched lands allying with the
|
|
Milenans of Iserre would bring, the great fleet and foodstuffs that
|
|
taking Princess Luisa's son Alejandro as a consort would secure or even
|
|
simply the docile husband, prince and vote in the Assembly that choosing
|
|
the debt-ridden Louis Rohanon of Creusens would acquire, his suit was
|
|
hardly worth a second look. The First Prince sipped at her cup,
|
|
seemingly pensive for all that this should be the easiest decision in
|
|
the world.
|
|
|
|
``I had expected,'' she slowly said, ``that you would speak instead of
|
|
the battles you fought under my banner. Of the support you have given me
|
|
in the Highest Assembly.''
|
|
|
|
Frederic Goethal still heard the beat of wings when he closed his eyes.
|
|
Even now, and perhaps he would until the day he died. But when they were
|
|
open, sometimes he glimpsed spring and it bore the face of Cordelia
|
|
Hasenbach. She was knitting back together a realm decades in the
|
|
wounding, one step at time, running roughshod over southern royalty in
|
|
the Assembly just as her armies had over theirs in the field. She did it
|
|
so politely, though, that half the time they'd not even noticed it
|
|
happened.
|
|
|
|
``That I cannot offer you now,'' Frederic said, ``for it was already
|
|
promised to the payment of another debt.''
|
|
|
|
He would not quibble now and pretend the woman seated across from him
|
|
was the not the best thing to happen to Procer in many years. This time,
|
|
he thought, there was less measure to the smile she offered him.
|
|
|
|
``I do not intend to wed, Prince Frederic,'' the First Prince gently
|
|
said. ``But if I did, the words you just spoke would have made you a
|
|
finer suitor than any other I have entertained.''
|
|
|
|
The moment passed and though he left that parlour as unmarried as he
|
|
expected to, Frederic found he'd somehow been eased into a rather
|
|
lucrative arrangement to transport steel into Neustria that would nicely
|
|
fill the coffers of Brus. And likely quiet any talk back home of
|
|
ungrateful Rhenians, he realized with a start of amusement as he
|
|
returned to the Goethal manse in the city. It seemed, though, that he
|
|
was not to be freed of politics for the day: before evening came, he was
|
|
called on unexpectedly by another royal. Prince Amadis Milenan of Iserre
|
|
was a rising man these days: wealthy, ambitious and not afraid to use
|
|
the former in the service of the latter. He was handsome enough,
|
|
Frederic found as they sat together and drank a lovely Creusens white by
|
|
the window, yet there was something about him\ldots{} \emph{For this
|
|
impiety, the Gods Above punished them}, he heard in his mother's voice,
|
|
telling the old story again\emph{, turning their three sons into
|
|
beasts}. \emph{The eldest into a wolf, the youngest into a bird\ldots{}}
|
|
|
|
Amadis Milenan smiled and complimented Frederic's deeds at the Battle of
|
|
Aisne.
|
|
|
|
\emph{And the second into a snake}, the Prince of Brus finished in the
|
|
privacy of his own thoughts. Oh, there was a forked tongue behind that
|
|
smile. Prince Amadis spoke of the peace, of the many changes the First
|
|
Prince was bringing to Salia. Some, perhaps, were ill-advised. Brought
|
|
by ignorance -- quite understandable, if unfortunate -- of the way
|
|
things were done, here in the south. The Prince of Iserre spoke of the
|
|
great costs of war, of keeps that need be rebuilt from the ravages of
|
|
Lycaonese warmaking, of trade arties disrupted and merchants yet afraid.
|
|
Amadis Milenan spoke then of his daughters, the second oldest of which
|
|
was yet unwed, and of the trust that could only be had by ties of blood
|
|
in these uncertain times. Did gratitude not fade so very quickly? Why,
|
|
was the Prince of Brus himself not unwed? \emph{You are everything my
|
|
uncle wanted to be and more}, Frederic thought, admiring, but also:
|
|
\emph{how many shopkeepers would you force into ill-fitting armour, to
|
|
get even a step closer to the throne?}
|
|
|
|
``You speak such pretty things to me,'' Frederic said, ``Alas, I must
|
|
confess my heart has been broken. I simply cannot conceive of marriage
|
|
until such grief has passed.''
|
|
|
|
Amadis Milenan's pleasantness trailed down his face like rainwater.
|
|
|
|
``Hasenbach's hound to the end, then,'' the Prince of Iserre coldly
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
\emph{Every time you speak}, Frederic kept himself from saying, \emph{I
|
|
can almost hear a thousand corpses from the fields of Aisne singing that
|
|
same old refrain.} The fair-haired prince laughed, instead.
|
|
|
|
``Woof,'' Frederic solemnly replied. ``I expect you can find your way
|
|
out, Prince Amadis.''
|
|
|
|
He did not bother to watch the man leave. On the windowsill, looking at
|
|
him, was perched a kingfisher.
|
|
|
|
``You are far from home, old friend,'' the Prince of Brus smiled.
|
|
|
|
The bird considered him, for a long moment, and then trilled once before
|
|
flying away. Frederic kept looking at the sky long after, in startled
|
|
fear and delight.
|
|
|
|
It was the first time one had ever sung for him.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Frederic Goethal sometimes thought he'd been born to fight a war, but
|
|
it'd simply not been the one he'd fought.
|
|
|
|
The Tenth Crusade seemed like it might just be that war, he mused years
|
|
later. The Dread Empire's conquest and rule of Callow was a blemish on
|
|
the face of Calernia, and it seemed like the old beast's hunger was not
|
|
yet sated: a city had been slaughtered, some sort of fearsome doomsday
|
|
fortress raised by a rebel Praesi noble and a fresh madness of undeath
|
|
unleashed on the world. A hundred thousand `wights', Gods save them all.
|
|
Yet the talk in the Highest Assembly, at the edges of conversation where
|
|
truths were whispered instead of lies proudly proclaimed, was not of
|
|
\emph{liberation}. Promises were being made of fiefdoms carved in the
|
|
Kingdom of Callow, and it left a foul taste in his mouth. He yet
|
|
remembered the endless stretches of death after Aisne, the cloying
|
|
choking smell of rotting flesh, and he would not brave this once more to
|
|
repeat old mistakes by new hands. Not even for Cordelia Hasenbach.
|
|
|
|
The Callowans rallied behind the Black Queen, on the other side of the
|
|
mountains, armies and knights and fresh devilries coming fresh out of
|
|
the earth with every stomp of her feet. They too glimpsed a spring when
|
|
they closed their eyes, Frederic thought when he heard, and Procer had
|
|
no part in it. That dream was a dangerous thing to fight against.
|
|
|
|
He sent one of his kin to command the Bruseni contingent he'd pledged to
|
|
the crusade, pulling strings so that it would be under the trusted
|
|
command of Klaus Papenheim where he would be able to learn the trade of
|
|
war without too much risk. The greater part of Brus' army, though, he
|
|
kept home. He may yet march it east when the war against the Wasteland
|
|
began in earnest, and he took to formally preparing his cousin and
|
|
heiress Henriette to hold a command should it be so, but instead the
|
|
invading armies of the Principate were struck by disaster north and
|
|
south. Prince Amadis had been beaten and taken prisoner, Rozala Malanza
|
|
retreating west with the salvaged remains of that army, while the Red
|
|
Flower Vales had held and instead spat out the Carrion Lord so that he
|
|
might ravage the heartlands while the Iron Prince dug his way back into
|
|
Callow. Madness and chaos, all the while Ashur played pirate against the
|
|
Wasteland's coasts and the Dominion dragged its feet.
|
|
|
|
Frederic ordered the army of Brus readied, upon reading the letters from
|
|
his people in Salia, but one more letter came before he moved south to
|
|
fight for the restoration of order. \emph{The Dead King marches}, it
|
|
said. \emph{Hannoven has fallen. All soldiers make for Twilight's Pass.
|
|
Ready yourself.} So wrote the brisk hand of Prince Manfred Reitzenberg,
|
|
who had years ago slain Frederic's uncle and predecessor. Something in
|
|
him shivered, when he read the words. A primal fear, an ancient terror
|
|
bred in the bones of men. \emph{The Dead King marches}, he thought, and
|
|
the world shivered with hum. Doom had come for Procer, had already
|
|
swallowed Hannoven while its armies were fighting far south. So were
|
|
those of Neustria, and while both Rhenia and Bremen would bring
|
|
reinforcements the Lycaonese had still been stripped of great strength
|
|
and their finest general.
|
|
|
|
``North,'' Prince Frederic of Brus told his captains, dropping the
|
|
letter on the table. ``We march north.''
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
The Bruseni made haste, but the Prince of Bremen was dead by the time
|
|
their host arrived.
|
|
|
|
So was the Princess of Bremen that followed him and the Princess of
|
|
Bremen that followed \emph{her}, all dying in the span of same night
|
|
carrying out the same unflinching charge. Now only one of the House of
|
|
Reitzenberg remained, bearing a red crown: Otto Reitzenberg, dour and
|
|
brooding and so transparently haunted by the thought he might not be
|
|
equal to the duty he had taken on. Frederic sympathized, yet only so
|
|
much. The first time he stood on the snowy grounds to meet the dead,
|
|
steel at his back and the back sea of the Enemy's horde in front, he
|
|
closed his eyes and smiled. Terror should have swelled in his breast,
|
|
for the armies of Keter made those of the Great War seem like the
|
|
mischief of children, but instead it felt like he was breathing fresh
|
|
air for the first time in his life. The banner of his house flew high,
|
|
the sun shone bright and even the cold felt \emph{crisp}.
|
|
|
|
The dead came and somehow Frederic laughed.
|
|
|
|
The strange joy that'd taken hold of him, though, had not spread
|
|
throughout his soldiers. In their eyes he saw fear, for this was not a
|
|
foe they had faced before and it was not a foe anyone with any sense
|
|
would ever want to face. It was his duty, as their prince, to replace
|
|
that fear with something else. Frederic dismounted, to show he would
|
|
fight with the foot that would not be able to flee if the tide turned,
|
|
and in silence of the mountain pass raised his voice to address his own.
|
|
|
|
``I see fear in you,'' Frederic Goethal called out. ``I offer no scorn
|
|
for it, for what sane man would blame you? Is it not a thing of horror,
|
|
this army of the damned?''
|
|
|
|
Corpses and monsters and worse, legions dark and darkly led.
|
|
|
|
``But I tell you now, there is nothing to be afraid of,'' the Prince of
|
|
Brus. ``I have already killed you all.''
|
|
|
|
The murmurs bloomed, uneasy.
|
|
|
|
``You stand at the edge of the world, sons and daughters of Brus,''
|
|
Frederic said. ``There is nothing but doom waiting beyond the horizon,
|
|
and with every beat of your hearts it crawls closer to you.''
|
|
|
|
And in the distance, as if to prove him right, the dead quickened their
|
|
pace.
|
|
|
|
``And yet there is nothing to fear,'' the Prince of Brus continued,
|
|
``for you are all dead and I share a grave with you. So I'll not offer
|
|
you gold or glory or even honour -- what are these worth to a corpse?''
|
|
|
|
He could feel in the air, now, and they must too. The weight, the scent
|
|
of steel about to be drawn.
|
|
|
|
``Instead I tell you this: we can claw our lives back from this day. All
|
|
it takes, Bruseni, is to \emph{win}.''
|
|
|
|
His voice rang out against the mountain pass, defiant.
|
|
|
|
``Win, and tomorrow you will be alive,'' Frederic Goethal said. ``Win
|
|
tomorrow, and you will push back death by one more day. Every victory
|
|
claws back one more hour, one more song, one more cup of wine.''
|
|
|
|
He bared his sword, raised it high, and ten thousand blades rose with
|
|
it,
|
|
|
|
``There will come a day,'' the Prince of Brus roared, ``where we who
|
|
stand beneath the banner of the kingfisher will falter. Where our swords
|
|
break, our shields splinter and valour flickers out like a candle in the
|
|
dark. Where the Enemy, at long last, keeps our deaths clutched too
|
|
tightly too steal back.''
|
|
|
|
He laughed, bright and merry and somehow he could feel the fear in them
|
|
vanishing like morning mist.
|
|
|
|
``But I ask you, Bruseni, you children of opportunity -- is today that
|
|
day?''
|
|
|
|
No, they screamed. No, they thundered, until it echoed down the pass.
|
|
|
|
``To doom,'' he screamed back, ``and glorious death!''
|
|
|
|
Doom, they screamed back, and glorious death. These loyal fools who had
|
|
followed him north to seek out the end of days and \emph{fight} it. It
|
|
was like a shiver that went through all of them, a fearsome and
|
|
intoxicating pride. \emph{We are here, King of Death}, they sang with
|
|
every swing of the blade as they drove back the dead, \emph{we are here,
|
|
so is this the best you can do?}
|
|
|
|
Frederic closed his eyes, just before the lines collided, and found he
|
|
could not hear even the slightest echo of the song he'd caught in the
|
|
wind after Aisne.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
From that day onwards, it was a dazzling dance of defeats with three men
|
|
leading the beat: somber Otto and smiling Frederic against the Dead
|
|
King, the pair never more than a missed turn or step away from utter
|
|
annihilation. Otto Redcrown grew on him, for the hesitant kindness
|
|
behind the rough manners and the solemn honour the man refused to
|
|
surrender even an inch of no matter how dark the days grew- and the days
|
|
grew dark indeed, for all that the nights were even darker. Yet it was
|
|
when Volsaga fell and the two of them together hammered an iron farewell
|
|
into the side of the mountain pass that Otto Reitzenberg ceased being an
|
|
ally and became a friend instead. He was, Frederic decided, the kind of
|
|
man it would be a pleasure to die with.
|
|
|
|
Loss after loss they were driven back to the Morgentor, Morning's Gate,
|
|
the last fortress between death and lowlands of the north. The last gate
|
|
between Keter and the Principate. And when even that last redoubt seemed
|
|
about to fail, in that last hour the dead withdrew: truce had been
|
|
forged, a breath before the last plunge. It was a magnificent courtesy
|
|
that the Black Queen had extended, Frederic mused. When death came, it
|
|
would be after he'd had time to properly arrange welcome for it: he and
|
|
Otto ran themselves ragged, preparing for the end of the three months.
|
|
Preparing themselves, Frederic sometimes thought, to die in the full
|
|
splendour of their ruinous pride. And so when the truce ended, when the
|
|
dead came again, Frederic Goethal was ready to perish slightly drunk on
|
|
fine wine and exquisitely dressed, as was only proper for a prince of
|
|
the House of Goethal.
|
|
|
|
They lost the eastern peak first, then the western. Frederic fought in
|
|
the same red haze he'd always known for the last peak, the last standing
|
|
stones in the way of the King of Death, and he knew deep down that he
|
|
was going to die. For he had met the snake, in the heart of Procer, but
|
|
know he knew at last the true face of the wolf: hunger unceasing, death
|
|
that would swallow whole the world. This was the last of his story, the
|
|
death that could not be snatched back, and he found himself at peace
|
|
with the notion.And yet in that smoky stairway where the dead howled and
|
|
soldiers died, among the torches and the flashing lights of desperate
|
|
sorcery, Frederic Goethal caught sight of wings in red and blue.
|
|
|
|
``One last time, is it?'' the Prince of Brus smiled, strangely moved.
|
|
|
|
His blood burned. Yes, he decided. One last time, in the face of the end
|
|
of the world. He sent for his horse, for his riders that the Lycaonese
|
|
had taken to calling the Kingfishers, and \emph{up} the stairs they
|
|
rode.
|
|
|
|
``Doom,'' Frederic screamed, chasing the beat of wings, and they
|
|
screamed it with him.
|
|
|
|
Through death and fire they charged, a whirlwind of steel and hooves,
|
|
until the dead broke and Frederic Goethal found himself at the summit of
|
|
the peak under the morning sun. The kingfisher trilled, but the sun
|
|
blinded his sight, and when he could see again he found only one of his
|
|
own banners trailing in the wind. But now, oh now\ldots{}
|
|
|
|
The Kingfisher Prince smiled. They won, and so the day after they were
|
|
alive.
|
|
|
|
It was a pretty thing and it was not a lie.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
In Brus there was a story every child knew, about the birth of
|
|
kingfishers.
|