LVIII
THE TALL MAN smooths his velvet tunic before stepping into the tower room.
"You do honor to receive me, Lady Ellindyja," offers the tall trader.
Lady Ellindyja steps back from the door and offers a slight head bow. "I do so appreciate your kindness in coming to see one whose time is past." She slips toward her padded bench, leaving Lygon to follow.
As she turns and sits, she picks up the embroidery hoop, and smiles as she finds the needle with the bright red thread.
"Ah .. . my lady, you did-"
"Lygon, you are a trader, and you have dealt fairly with Lornth for nearly a score of years."
"That is true." Lygon runs his hand through the thinning brown hair before settling into the chair opposite Ellindyja. "I would like to believe I have always been fair. Firm, but fair." He laughs. "Firm they sometimes take for being harsh, but without a profit, there's no trading."
"Just as for lords, without honor, there is no ruling?" asks Ellindyja, her needle still poised above the white fabric of the hoop.
Lygon shifts his weight on the chair. "I would say that both lords and traders need honor."
"What weight does honor add to a trader's purse?" asks Ellindyja, her tone almost idle.
"People must believe you will deliver what you promised, that your goods are what you state they are."
"Do you tell people what to buy?"
Lygon frowns before he answers. "Hardly. You cannot sell what people do not want."
"I fear that is true in ruling, too," offers Ellindyja, her eyes dropping to her embroidery as the needle completes a stitch. "The lords of a land have expectations. Surely, you are familiar with this?"
"I am a trader, lady, not a lord." Lygon shifts his weight.
"I know, and you would like to continue trading in Lornth, would you not?" Ellindyja smiles.
"Lady . . ." Lygon begins to stand.
"Please be seated, trader Lygon. I am not threatening, for I certainly have no power to threaten. I am not plotting or scheming, for I have my son's best interests at heart. But, as any mother does, I have concerns, and my concerns deal with honor." With another bright smile, Ellindyja fixes her eyes on Lygon. "You are an honorable man, and you understand both trade and honor, and I hope to enlist your assistance in allaying my concerns." She raises the hand with the needle slightly to halt his protestation. "What I seek from you will neither cost you coin nor ill will. I seek your words of wisdom with my son, at such time as may be appropriate. That is all."
"I am no sage, no magician." Lygon rubs his forehead.
"I have little use for either," answers Ellindyja dryly. "As you remarked at the dinner the other night, my son faces a difficult situation. Lord Ildyrom has created some difficulties to the south, while the demon women have seized part of his patrimony in the Westhorns. These women are said to be alluring, not just to men, but to malcontented women here in Lornth." She pauses. "And all across the western lands, even in Suthya. Would you want women leaving Suthya to create a land ruled by women? How would you trade with them? Would they not favor traders from, say, Spidlar?"
"I could not say. I have not heard of such." Lygon licks his thick lips.
"Let us trust that such does not come to pass, then." The needle flickers through the white fabric. "Yet how can Lord Sillek my son support such a cause merely because it would benefit the traders of Suthya?"
Lygon's brows furrow. "If you would go on ..."
"It is simple, honored trader. My son is concerned that the honor of merely regaining his patrimony is not enough to justify the deaths and the coins spent. His lords are concerned that their daughters and the daughters on their holdings do not find the wild women alluring, but they cannot speak this because they would be seen as weak or unable to control their own women."
Lygon shakes his head. "What has this to do with trading?"
Ellindyja's lips tighten ever so slightly before she speaks. "We have few weaponsmiths, and armies require supplies. If the honor of upholding your-and our-way of life is not sufficient for you to speak to my son about the need to uphold his honor, and that of his lords, then perhaps the supplies needed in such an effort will offer some inducement. Except you need not speak of supplies to Lord Sillek. That would be too direct, even for him."
"My lady . . . you amaze me. Lord Sillek is fortunate to have a mother such as you."
"I seek only his best interests, trader. Happily, they coincide with yours."
"Indeed." Lygon's eyes wander toward the door.
Lady Ellindyja rises. "You must have matters to attend to more pressing than listening to an old lady. Still, if you could see it in your heart to offer your observations about honor and about how you see that lords would not admit their concerns publicly . .. why, I would be most grateful."
Lygon stands and bows. "I could scarcely do less for a mother so devoted to her son."
"I am deeply devoted to his best interests," Ellindyja reiterates as she escorts the tall trader to the door.
The tower door opens, and Lygon steps into the hallway and strides toward the steps to the lower level, his face impassive, his eyes not catching the blond woman who is descending from the open upper parapets.
As she follows the trader down the steps, Zeldyan's eyes flick to the door to Lady Ellindyja's room, and her mouth tightens.
LIX
IN THE CORNER of the woodworking area of the tower, Nylan slowly traced the circular cuts he needed to make in the scrap of poorly tanned leather. That way, he got longer thongs and could use the leftover scraps. Even so, his makeshift net was turning into a patchwork of cord, leather thongs, and synthcord.
He glanced at the pieces of the unfinished cradle, then at the rocking-chair sections. Both needed more smoothing and crafting before he glued and joined them, but his hands cramped after much time with the smoothing blade-and Siret and Ellysia had a more urgent need to finish their cradles.
From the other side of the tower came the smell of meathorse meat, cooking slowly in the big oven. There was also the smell of bread, with the hint of bitterness that Huldran and others had noted.
Nylan found himself licking his lips-over horse meat?
It had been a long winter. For a few days, they'd eat well. And then they wouldn't, not for another eight-day or so. He tried not to dwell on the fate of the poor swaybacked and tired gelding and instead looked at the fragile-appearing net.
"How do you catch the snow hares?" Nylan had asked Murkassa.
"Weaving I know, and cows, and sheep, but not hunting. Men hunt, Ser Mage." The round-faced girl had shrugged, as if Nylan should have known such. Then she had added, "It is too cold to hunt here, except for you angels, and I must stay behind the walls."
Hryessa had been more helpful. "My uncle, he once showed me his snares and his nets .. ."
After listening to descriptions of snares and setting them, Nylan had decided nets were more practical in the deep snow of the Roof of the World.
Then, he hadn't considered the sheer tediousness of making the damned net. With a slow deep breath, he started cutting, trying to keep his hands steady, knowing that, as in everything, he really couldn't afford to make any mistakes, to waste any of the leather.
He rubbed his nose, trying to hold back a sneeze. With the dust left over from building and the sawdust from woodworking and the soot from the furnace, he wondered why they weren't all sneezing.
Kkhhhchew! Kkkchew! The engineer rubbed his sore nose again.
"It's hard to keep from sneezing," said Siret from where she smoothed the sideboards of her cradle. "I hate it when I sneeze, especially now."
Behind and around Nylan, guards worked on their own projects. Ayrlyn was attempting a crude lutar, using fiber-cabling from one of the landers as strings. Surprisingly, Hryessa also worked on a lutar.
As he knelt on the slate floor, Nylan caught a glimpse of boots nearing.
"It's getting presentable in size," said Ryba.
Nylan stood. "The net? Yes. Whether it will work is another question, but I thought I'd try for another niche in the ecological framework."
The marshal laughed. "When you talk about hunting, you sometimes still sound like an engineer."
"I probably always will."
"What else are you working on?" Her eyes went to the wood behind Nylan.
He gestured, glad that the cradle's headboard was turned so the carving was to the wall. While he couldn't conceal the cradle itself, he wanted some aspect of it to be a surprise.
"The cradle for Dyliess. A chair." He laughed. "Once the cradle's done, I'll have to start on a bed. Children grow so fast. But that will have to wait a bit, until the snows melt, and until we're in better shape."
"At times, I feel like life here is always a struggle between waiting and acting, and that I'll choose the wrong thing to wait on because we don't have enough of anything." Ryba forced a laugh. "I suppose that's just life anywhere."
"What are you doing?" he asked.
"Checking on what everyone else is doing. Then I'll start pulling out guards for blade practice."
"You're still doing that on the fifth level? It's dark up there."
"It works fine. They really have to concentrate. Besides, using a blade has to be as much or more by feel as by sight." Ryba cleared her throat. "Nylan ... you need practice with a blade. A lot more practice."
"Another vision?" he answered glumly.
"Another vision." There was nothing light in her voice.
"All right. After I get a little more done on the net."
"I'll be a while. I need to talk to Kyseen." Ryba's eyes passed over the back side of the cradle's headboard without pausing as she turned and crossed the space toward the kitchen.
Nylan's ears followed her progress.
". .. not a warm bone in her body ..."
"... like the queen of the world ..."
". . . even cold with the engineer . . . show him some warmth .. ."
"... she's not kept in a corner, caged up, like me," added Murkassa. "She can walk the snows."
Istril, almost like a guardian, touched the Gallosian woman's arm. "It is getting warmer. It won't be that long."
"... too long, already. The stones of the walls will fall in upon me..."
All the guards were getting worn and frazzled. Nylan hoped that Istril were right, that it wouldn't be that long, but he wasn't counting on it. That was why he worked on the net.
"... never loses sight of the weapons, does the marshal?" asked Siret, not looking up from her continued smoothing of the sideboards of the cradle she knelt beside.
"No, and she's right, even if I dread getting bruised and banged up."
"You do better than most, ser."
"You're kind, Siret, but she makes me feel like an awkward child, even when she's carrying extra weight and is off balance."
"What about me, ser?" asked the visibly pregnant guard.
"You're still sparring?"
"She says that the men around here could give a damn if I'm with child. Or have a babe in arms."
"She's probably right about that, too," Nylan answered slowly.
"Sad, isn't it?"
They both took deep breaths, almost simultaneously. Then Siret grinned, and Nylan found himself doing the same.