Destiny’s Conflict: Book Two of Sword of the Canon. Janny Wurts
“Rough times have returned,” Cosach allowed softly. “Town-born strays are apt to be head-hunters’ spies. Best give us your reason for slinking into the free wilds.”
The stranger’s response cut past Siantra’s protest. “I would have your name before I confide.” Head tipped upwards in dangerous inquiry, he laced his limbered fingers.
The realm’s caithdein showed teeth and responded with all of his titles. Then, mocking, he inclined his head and acknowledged the witness of Laithen s’Idir.
“Ah!” Wheaten eyebrows rose with brazen amusement. “By all means, I’ll endorse Sidir’s lineage for probity. Provided, of course, the lady serves also as unimpeachable oversight for my case in turn.” Clasped fists hardened, the rogue leaned aggressively forward. “I am known by Iyat-thos Tarens.” In flawless Paravian, he repeated Cosach’s state titles, added Laithen’s full name with deference, then declared, “Mind your impeccable tradition since I will deliver the tidings I bring on my feet!”
He shoved erect then, palpably angered as the armed guard behind slapped a hostile grip on their weapons.
Cosach’s barked order defused the attack. Equally matched in height and broad stature, he had not misread the capable stamp of the farmer. Yet the balanced stance wearing the guise of a crofter pitched more than his scouts onto prickling edge. Cosach acknowledged the fighting trim on a man whose business screamed primal danger.
Tarens invoked clanbred etiquette, crossed his wrists at the heart, and continued. “I bring word of your own. Be it known to s’Valerient kin that my best effort could not avert tragedy. Your boy, Khadrien, crossed the Wheel in Scarpdale in the brave service of Rathain’s prince.”
Laithen made a sound, hands pressed to her mouth, while Cosach’s chopped signal enforced her silence. “Town-whelped upstart! How dare you presume.”
“To your shame, on the contrary,” Tarens replied. “Explain why three youngsters not grown to majority left the safety of Halwythwood to shoulder a perilous cause for the realm. The answer you give better satisfy, obligated as I have been by the shade of your titled ancestor, Jieret s’Valerient. His outraged memory as a clan chieftain demands a reckoning in full.”
Cosach purpled.
“He’s telling the truth!” Siantra pealed, desperate.
Which shocking breach impelled Laithen to break protocol. A diminutive brown sparrow swooped in to scold at an eagle’s threat to the nest, she flung herself between the insolent stranger and Rathain’s incensed caithdein. “Sit down, both of you!” Her open palm slapped Cosach’s barrel chest, while she spun in chastisement on Tarens. “Don’t condemn the harsh choice you know nothing about. Ath above! If your claim of connection is genuine, then find the civilized reason to air both sides of the matter before you cause bloodshed.”
When Tarens folded back onto the hassock, face masked behind shuttered hands, she pealed over his shoulder to one of the scouts. “End this cruel falsehood. Now! I will not abide! You’re sent. Yes, at once! He’s assigned at the horse picket.”
Yet the person she summoned required no messenger: a sheepish cough and a crack in the privacy flap disclosed the eavesdropping presence of a gangling scamp in trail leathers, the carroty wisp of yesterday’s clan braid gnawed between nervous teeth. “I’m here, actually,” confessed Khadrien, singed red for the prank played on his aghast companions. “Sorry about that. But who could resist? Since you thought I was dead, you deserved the comeuppance for leaving me.” He managed no more, overturned with a yelp as Siantra and Esfand pounced both at once, knocked him flat, and pounded him breathless.
Amid bemused commotion, Laithen transferred her repressive scowl from Cosach. Sympathy moved her to grip Tarens’s wrist as she realized his shaken clasp masked relieved tears.
She said quickly, “We had word from a Sorcerer, yes, within days. The youngsters should have been informed straightaway. Since our miscreant carelessly lost the heirloom sword and the horse, the Fellowship decided he had no further business mucking about in the Kingdom of Havish. Asandir dispatched Khadri home from the focus circle at Fiaduwynne. As you see, he has suffered less than he deserved. I’m so sorry! No one meant to be callous. We had no idea that you’d shouldered a harrowing trip and misplaced anguish in our behalf.”
Cosach recoiled and roared at Laithen, “Dharkaron’s grief, woman! What insanity prompts your trust in an outsider whose outrageous claim is not verified?”
Laithen paused. Rod thin, she glared upwards at her chieftain: who backed off a step, hiked one hip on the trestle, and perched in stonewalled confrontation.
Laithen’s whiplash grin followed. “Likely I’ve seen the same thing as my daughter. This man shares your lineage in truth. You’re not convinced yet? Let me show you proof.”
She bent once more to the town-born on the hassock, stunned yet in mortified after-shock. “Here’s the filthy secret to dealing with Khadrien. If his exploits bother your conscience again, understand that fecklessness runs in his blood. As our High Earl’s family descends from Barach, here’s the flip side of history: Khadri’s branch springs from the sister, who wed Sevrand s’Brydion.”
Tarens lowered his hands. “You say Jeynsa married the bullheaded nephew of Alestron’s warmongering duke?” Through an unembarrassed sheen of stalled tears, his expression showed genuine horror. “The minx! Was she mad to breed with that clutch of rife trouble?” He winced. “Though fiends plague the hindmost, nobody else owned the cast-iron bollocks to deal with her spitfire nature.”
All at once, he succumbed to the irony, threw back his blond head, and laughed.
When finally Iyat-thos recovered his breath, he bypassed the shield of Laithen’s acceptance and tackled Cosach’s recalcitrance directly. “I’ve been endowed with Jieret’s memories and the full measure of his trained skills. Not to supplant your sworn charge as caithdein, but to grant Arithon a reliable ally to access his forgotten past.”
Cosach fielded the remarkable statement, prepared to seek disposition. “This is an appeal?”
“Perhaps,” Tarens ventured. “I came to help your effort to contact his Grace and restore his connection with Rathain’s feal clans. As a friend, I entreat your council to weigh my attributes in good faith. My background bought your youngsters safe passage through Backwater.” Through the distraction of Khadrien’s glib talk, and Siantra and Esfand’s recounted experience, the outsider offered, “A town-bred crofter might move freely where clansfolk would face deadly risk.”
Granted his own shrewd angle of insight, Cosach spun and accosted the youngsters in cahoots by the curtained alcove. “I’ll have your opinion before your report! Do I rely on this fellow to keep the integrity of our affairs?”
As observer, Laithen interpreted two boys’ crest-fallen consternation, then lost her breath, chilled by the uncanny depth in her daughter’s regard. “Surely we must.” She brushed off her chieftain’s disgruntled surprise. “Well, how else can we hope to thwart these three miscreants from trying their next lame-brained escapade?”
But Cosach’s assessment of the errant trio belied her dismissive remark. The stunning expansion of Siantra’s talent, offset by Esfand’s obdurate commitment and Khadrien’s hot-headed impulses, suggested that the three together posed something greater than their individual destinies.
“Ath wept!” muttered Cosach, jellied by a fore-running tremor of prescience. He folded onto the nearest hassock and dismissed the scouts’ guard from the tent. His capitulation called upon Laithen to scrounge someone’s brandy and a suitable vessel.
“Iyat-thos!” he concluded in outright demand. “You’re prepared to swear a guest’s oath of amity?”
Shown the man’s unreserved acquiescence, Cosach’s broad gesture invited the townsman to claim a proper seat at the trestle. “Let’s hear your story. Leave nothing out! You say our dead ancestry has seen fit to provide