Confirmation Council
A flurry of snow made the view ahead blurry. Rigel turned in the saddle and looked back on a clear road occupied by a column of five hundred troops, all mounted. In two gaps spaced not quite evenly among the mounted men rolled the cannon- now six of them, on their new two-meter high wheels, gun crews riding in the supply wagons that rolled with them. Rigel didn't expect to need artillery; his decision in bringing it had been that he didn't want it anywhere at all except under his eye.
Peripheral vision caught the motion to the rear as he turned to the front; he reversed immediately. It was one of the scouts from the rear detail under Oran, coming up at, Rigel judged, a canter -- not catastrophic, probably not urgent, but important. From the intermittent glimpses of the sun they had, he judged it nearly time for a break. Stopping would give Oran's messenger a shorter ride. "Austin, let's break", he said, and let his squire pass the orders.
Only the alert teams remained mounted. With a party of their numbers, the precaution was about as necessary as fire insurance for a scuba diving expedition, but both Rigel and Tanner believed in habit -- good habit, anyway. The rest got down to stretch, sit, lie down, whatever helped them relax for the continued ride. As for Rigel, he rode with Austin back toward the rear, to intercept the scout messenger.
"We're supposed to be breaking", Austin noted when their paths converged. "Ride slower."
"Ride more slowly", Rigel corrected, doing an imitation of Rita. Austin laughed, Rigel joined in -- they rode more slowly.
The message was simple: "De Cadiz. Oran says de Cadiz coming, that hill trace, gonna catch us, run into us maybe."
"Catch us -- so we're probably ahead?" It was a rhetorical question, Rigel thinking out loud. "Then we ride to the intersection, and wait." His memory went back.....
. . . .
"I will end your name on the earth! I will take the Seat and make fierce war upon your realm!" De Cadiz continued to rant; Rigel made no effort to interrupt him or give any sign of response, schooling his face to an interested calm -- and making note of a few uses of words his knowledge of Spanish didn't cover. After all, he couldn't blame the man for being irrationally upset at returning home and finding it had been captured in his absence. The lord ran down after several minutes, and sat facing the man who had taken his castle.
In his original world, Rigel would have asked, "Feel better now?" as a taunt; now, that seemed petty and childish. So far, the conversation had consisted of few words: "Lord Cadiz." "You!" "I hold your castle." ... and the tirade, the lord's torrent of words. Rigel considered, having learned a great deal from Rita, that de Cadiz' words weren't really directed at him, so he didn't take them personally -- and so stuck to business. "You were supposed to ask what I wanted", he pointed out calmly. "Then we're supposed to negotiate."
De Cadiz stared at him, fuming, silent, for the better part of a minute. His fury faded before a practical recognition of reality, a practicality Rigel had expected from a man who ran so tidy an estate. "Very well -- what do you want?"
"You and your vassals to stand for Osvaldo, recognizing him as Heir. And as many of your allies as you can convince." De Cadiz flew into a rage again.
"Father!" Marcos seemed embarrassed for his sire
De Cadiz recognized his son. "Have you betrayed me?! I will see to it no one gives a daughter for marriage! Why are you here, and not the man I left in charge?"
"He's dead, father", Marcos informed his father. "He threatened a herald."
De Cadiz froze, his visage grew hard and cold. "Then you killed him?"
Marcos shook his head. "No", he answered bitterly. "You bade me follow his command in matters of defense, and he ordered me to remain in the great tower. He was prevented from dishonoring us more by Lord Rigel's... sharpshooters." He stumbled a little over the unfamiliar word, introduced from English -- along with various others, because the Spanish of Escobar and Quistador had no terms to meet the need. "He lies dead on the wall, untouched now for eight days. The herald he threatened claimed his sword."
De Cadiz nodded almost reflexively. "That is just. He may have the armor as well. As for the body...."
"He's already rotting, father. No one will venture near even to repair the battlement."
That made the lord take note. He turned slowly to regard Rigel. "What force did you bring to this task, that you could spend men tearing holes in battlements!"
"No men", replied Rigel. "Just cannon. I think you were listening when I described them to Lord Perez. The crews did some fine aiming that day."
"You did not harm the towers, did you?!" The structures were plainly standing, the portions visible above the walls apparently unharmed, but de Cadiz looked at them intently as though almost hoping to see damage.
"Well... yes, but it was repaired. Every stone is back in its place. Five were cracked, but thanks to my Druid, all are whole again. The needle towers stand whole."
De Cadiz spat on the ground between their horses. "'Every stone is back in place.' No man could know that!"
"The Sword of Escobar remembers. I studied the towers for more than a day, to be certain I knew all the stones."
"So." De Cadiz glared. "FitzWin, I could raise an army and take my castle back."
Rigel nodded. "You could. And I could put it to the torch before you got back." He tipped his head as a thought struck. "Though I'd want to evacuate the de Medina quarters first."
De Cadiz swore and threw a dagger. Rigel tried to grab it, but it passed seemingly between his fingers and struck Marcos. The second son gasped and sagged, the blade deep in his chest. "Stand fast!" Rigel ordered in a yell. Out of old habit when frustrated, he lifted his hand to scratch his head -- and froze, remembering his signals.
Idiot, not realizing that! he scolded himself.
You almost killed the man! "Lumina!" he called over his shoulder as he drew the Sword of Escobar and set it across his knees. "Lord de Cadiz, I will forgive your foolishness this time because your anger is understandable. But at the moment, your son is under my blade. If he is seriously hurt, you will pay for it -- dearly."
"He is no son of mine! No longer!"
Rigel sighed. Old world honor wasn't exactly his thing in novels; when faced with it, it truly grated. He started to choose words carefully.
"Father, he swore... swore to pro... to protect them", Marcos gasped out.
"Shut it and hold still!" Lumina snapped. "Rigel, his lung's punctured and his heart's cut. I need help."
Without turning, Rigel responded. "If Lord de Cadiz does anything else to harm his son, shoot him -- but don't kill him", he ordered without turning his gaze from the man. "Hedraing, can you immobilize Marcos?"
"It is not as easy with a man as with a horse", the Druid replied, already moving, "yet I can but try. Marcos, think of lying still in bed, not desiring to move yet", he instructed.
De Cadiz' face was set in stone; he hardly moved, his eyes dashing from one rifleman to another -- though he didn't realize that none of them were the real threat; Rigel's "insurance policy" rested in trees, sights already on the lead members of the lord's party. "Why should I believe you would keep such an oath?" he demanded. "You are a foreigner, an outlander, and intruder here! You do not know our ways, or honor our customs, or understand honor!"
Rigel considered how to reply. One course would be to take it all as an insult, and proceed to engage in beating at the man with metal. In fact... "I think I understand your ways and customs enough to know that by your code, you just disparaged my honor, and I could demand 'satisfaction' in a duel. But my sense of honor says its not honorable at all to take advantage of a man who isn't thinking clearly, or to risk that the life of one or another intelligent and skilled man be tossed away over such a petty thing as words.
"I will keep my oath because I made it. I would expect you to keep an oath you made. Why? Because you are a man who commands loyalty, who stands by an ancient commitment, who runs his estate well, who has raised a sensible son -- not things I would expect of a man who does not keep oaths."
"More: he cannot break it." The voice was Hedraing's, as he pushed his horse to the fore. "Lord, Marcos will live -- the knife is out, the heart sound. The Healer is exhausted; healing tissue as a blade is withdrawn is taxing. His lung must be restored by ordinary methods. But he is no longer in danger." He cocked his head at the Earl. "So you will not need to exert yourself chastising Lord de Cadiz for his folly.
"Now you", he said to de Cadiz, not only turning but urging his steed forward till nearly nose-to-nose with the lord's, "heed me: I have studied this blade. It was fashioned by a man of smooth and steady intellect, wrought by him and other men, of intellect and passion. It was entrusted to a man of both intellect and passion, an unfinished thing, charged to grow and become what was needed.
"I assure you by my life, no oath sworn on it with bare hand on metal, and the shedding of blood, can be broken. Lord FitzWin would keep his oath anyway, for he is that sort of man, but he cannot break it, even should he so wish. He masters the Sword, and gains from it, but it also masters him, forging him into what is needed. For him to be an oath-breaker would deal a sore blow to its purpose, and so it will not permit him to break such an oath. Even had he sworn with it merely on his person, breaking an oath would require effort beyond most mortals. But with his blood on the blade, the blade is in charge in this: the oath belongs to the Sword of your ancestor. If you cannot trust Lord FitzWin, trust your Ancestor: his will is in the Sword, and he will not allow Lord FitzWin to do other than keep this oath."
De Cadiz stared at Hedraing with a frown. Rigel jumped in. "Hedraing, just when did you study my sword?!"
Hedraing chuckled, something which seemed almost alien to him. "When you slept, lord. Some nights, you cried out in your sleep. I undertook to remedy this, as it distressed the guards. When I saw that it was when in your sleep you touched the Sword, I undertook to calm your cries, but not the thoughts behind them -- your mind could cry out, but not your voice. Then I kept watch, feeling your mood, reading the life of the Sword.
"And I tell you both this: the Great Druid who wrought this blade set in motion more than he knew. It has a life of its own, a life devoted to a single goal, and power to serve that goal. That power, and that life, frighten me. Lord Rigel, it is a terrifying thing you bear on your hip. Were I you, I would see to my task quickly, and be rid of it."
Austin looked over at the Sword, then up at Rigel. He didn't move his knees, but Titanium eased away from Tornado.
"Okay, you don't have to be afraid of me", Rigel told them all. "I told the Snatcher I'd burn Anaph's staff to be free of It, and I can tell the Sword I'll bury it and finish the mission myself if I need to."
Hedraing shook his head slowly. "Be not so certain, lord. It called you once."
"I hadn't been warned against it", Rigel told him. "If it wants my help, it has to play nice, just like the Snatcher.
"Anyway... Lord de Cadiz, I'll keep your secret, if you want. But I'd rather see the de Medina in their own lands, not having to hide. I know the history, so I understand why you've been hiding them all this time -- and I'm impressed; it's quite an accomplishment. I know why they were persecuted, and the stupidity that had them proscribed. I also know that their history is real; their past truly is different from yours, and from mine, and from the Celts to the north, as all our pasts are different.. I don't know why that is, but I do know it doesn't have anything to do with deception by the devil or demon activity or lies. Their faith is as real and solid as ours -- at least Nazreena's is, or even more solid!
"Or if you want I'll come to the Council and beat heads together. But they have the right to be out like other men, on their own land, not having to apologize for who they are, not having to hide in closets."
De Cadiz turned to Hedraing. "The Sword will not let him break this oath? You know this?" Hedraing nodded solemnly. De Cadiz sighed. "Then perhaps there is a reason for him to keep it after all." He looked past Rigel to gaze on the battlements of his captured castle. "Very well. Let us discuss the return of my castle."
. . . .
Tanner objected. "You weren't there", was all Rigel told him. "We can trust de Cadiz. His reasons for opposing Osvaldo and his father were honorable -- misguided and not too bright, but honorable." So forty-five minutes later the two columns joined.
It made a huge procession, for besides de Cadiz and his men there were ten vassals and/or allies, all committed now to stand for Osvaldo. That was a secret limited only to those who had been party to the meeting, for de Cadiz had not re-entered his castle, though some of his people had; he had remained apparently displaced -- a status he'd used to visit his vassals and then allies to tell them of events, and either command or request their standing with him. No lord had less than forty men; the entire joined column totaled nearly eight hundred people.
The great surprise was the presence of Nazreena's brother. "It was sister's idea", he said that night in Lord de Cadiz' tent, when he was revealed as Jaspar de Medina. "Our House was proscribed by the Heir, but that was never acted on by the Council. Our standing still counts. So long as standing is not by call of rank, no one will know other than that a country lord has come to stand for the Prince Heir."
"And if they call by rank?" Austin asked.
Jaspar answered solemnly. "Then I am but a country knight come with lord de Cadiz."
Austin chuckled. "That's good. Then what?"
"Then I seek agreement from this Heir Osvaldo, to lift the proscription set upon my House." Jaspar spoke calmly and dispassionately,
"I think he'll be willing", Rigel commented. "He seems fair and just."
"You know him well?" Jaspar asked.
"Better than anyone in this tent", Rigel replied. "We are allies."
De Cadiz regarded him curiously. "It was said he went with you south, for safety. I would think he returned, to attend the council, and conclave."
"He served well, on that trip", Rigel answered. "He joined with his own people, though. But I think he'll arrive safely to San Tesifón. Yet -- don de Cadiz, you know things here better than I: will another stand forth?"
"Some might. If Osvaldo arrives safely, they may fail in courage. If he does not.... don FitzWin, who might you support, if he does not?"
"Any of the three Osvaldo nominated for Regent -- no one else. Does it matter/"
"It could come to force. If Osvaldo does not arrive, there could be a handful of claimants. Without a strong force behind one, fighting could last years."
Rigel shook his head. "It's hard to believe Refuge has come to this. Lord Escobar's heritage is truly watered down." No one said anything. Rita held her breath; such a statement could have been taken as a serious insult.
"When people see no future", Chen mused, "honor becomes all, or honor becomes nothing." He looked directly at de Cadiz. "When honor is all, some are noble, some are foolish."
"You do not find me noble", de Cadiz observed.
"Not really", Chen answered. "Your honor and dedication are amazing -- for generations risking your own House, protecting another. Yet did it never occur to you or your father or his before him or his before, and on, to just seek audience with the Heir, and ask the proscription be lifted? I have ridden with Prince Heir Osvaldo, and if the father was much like the son, the last Heir would have heard you."
De Cadiz looked down with a sigh. "Our tradition allowed no dispute: the main Escobar line was tainted, and could not be trusted. The man was mad, to proscribe a faithful ally; madness infested the line, so it must be resisted. To my great grandfather, that came to mean the main line must be overthrown. So he allied with the de Soto, and my father with Perez. To me these were great men, and as sons are like their fathers, I held the sons also to be great." Almost wearily, he lifted his head. "I have carried on the fight, without questioning, until you, don FitzWin. You disturbed my world, and finally made me ask what is honor, and loyalty, you who gave more of each to my son than I, and saw the honor of my cause without embracing the... " He glanced at Chen.
"Foolishness", Chen supplied. "And so?"
"Yes, foolishness", de Cadiz went on, as though he'd needed Chen t say it first before the word would fit in his mouth. "And so I saw that honor did not require all the beliefs we had added to it. Friend Jaspar and sister Nazreena saw better than I; she showed Marcos, Jaspar showed me, and now I see he is right: we who are sworn to protection must go with Jaspar to the Heir. Our presence will give weight to his words."
"And your soldiers will give weight to your presence", Austin suggested. Silence hit hard.
Then de Cadiz chuckled. "Truth, yet one is expected to not say such things, squire."
"Riding in with a small army sort of says it anyway", Austin pointed out.
Chen snorted. "Only if other lords have left their small armies home." Austin made a silent "Ohhh".
"So the city could become a battlefield", Jaspar concluded, "because of me and my House".
Rigel frowned. With a troubled voice, he asked, "Don de Cadiz, are assassinations likely?"
"They are possible." The lord shrugged. "If they happen, they happen -- they cannot be stopped." Rigel had other ideas about that, but said nothing -- then. Afterward, he sought out his three best marksmen for a quiet talk.
"Time for bed, my lord?" asked the guard at the tent door.
"Definitely. Lend a hand?"
"Of course."
Rigel sat on his cot and let Austin tug at his boots while the guard unhooked the scarf that had shielded his face against the cold. "You need more coals", the guard observed.
"Austin can go for them, mister Prince Heir. You rotated position pretty quick."
Osvaldo shook his head. "You were talking longer than you thought -- I've been here nearly half an hour, and I didn't move till a third of an hour after you left de Cadiz. You talked to the marksmen?"
Rigel chuckled. "Yes. Though something Captain Aodh said once makes me think they won't be needed.
"Anyway -- what do you think of de Cadiz? If you guessed about the riflemen, you could hear well."
"I missed some moments, by cause of the wind, and a group going by laughing", Osvaldo admitted. "But not so much I cannot decide. I will rescind more than the proscription -- I will rescind the banishment."
"You'll look weak", Austin asserted, "unless you have a really good reason."
Osvaldo considered that. "Miguel might have said the same." He sighed. "I could wish I had not sent him... on errands."
"He'll join us tomorrow", Rigel reminded the Prince Heir, "or the next day. With good news, I hope. So -- you think de Cadiz can be trusted." Osvaldo nodded. "So do I", Rigel agreed.
"Now, I have a question: the Council I know, but what's the 'conclave'?"
Osvaldo set his boots by the brazier and took Rigel's from Austin to place beside them -- properly, between brazier and tent wall, to help keep heat inside, not reflecting it away from the occupants. "The Council meets, and if enough stand for me, I become recognized as Heir. A conclave is the Council transformed to consider whether the Heir may be named Lord. One was held when a false claim was put forward to having the Sword again; the claim was disproved, but the claim also failed because there was no evidence no Escobar lived in the north." He held his hands over the coals and glanced pointedly at Austin. The squire scowled at him, but headed out for more coals. Osvaldo grinned after him. "As you say, lord Rigel, 'anyway', when Lord de Cadiz spoke of a conclave, he indicated he is certain I will be confirmed as Heir -- for I hold the Horn, and you, my ally, the Sword, and he knows we will surrender them to no one."
Rigel nodded slowly, sinking back on the hot and lifting his feet toward the coals. They smelled, but after walking on frozen ground he wanted them warmed. "Do you want to be named Lord?"
Osvaldo shook his head unhappily. "No. Were I twenty-one, it would be different. Yet I think I must. Confirmed as Heir, I will have authority and power, but it would be a dance, the maneuver and scheming of the Council always like chains on my feet. But as Lord, the enthusiasm of the people and the hidalgos will move enough in the Council that with those moved on their own, there will not be any room for maneuvering or scheming: I shall command, and it shall be done." He stared through the tent wall toward the lead city of the Constant Hills. "Had things been different, the maneuvering and scheming might have made an entertaining game. But things now are truly different, since you came, and more different, knowing the British are there in truth, and a power" -- he looked Rigel straight in the eye -- "and since you aim to bring us all together and make harsh war on the Foe."
"'Harsh war'?" Rigel quoted, questioning. "No, Prince Heir, not 'harsh war' -- final war. Harsh war is for an enemy who might learn, or who might be subdued to live with you in peace. But the Foe will never do such. To them, you and Austin and others who march with us, and many others your age, and all who are younger, and nothing but food -- and the rest of us, breeders of food. One does not surrender to food, or make treaties with it; one corrals and herds and eats it.
"Nor does food make treaty with the eater: to be free, it does not drive back the eater, not inflict punishment on it -- it destroys the eater, that it may never eat again. Thus there is no longer food, nor eater, only free beings."
"'Final war' -- so there may be no more." Osvaldo plucked a piece of dry grass from his pant leg and dropped it in the coals. "End them -- throw them in the fire, till they are no more." He looked at Rigel, his eyes haunted. "Do they have children, as we do? Have they family, and tribe, and House?"
"It doesn't matter", Rigel answered. "They see us as food. We see us as us. If we would be us, we must not be food. To not be food, we must... remove them." A strong urge to continue speaking welled up in him.
Not time, he told the ghost, his companion since the day they ventured to gather metal on an ancient battlefield,
not yet.
The next night they saw two other camps, by their fires. "I call it three-twenty there", Chen pronounced as they took turns viewing one with telescope's. De Cadiz grunted. "Perhaps three-fifty. There are five large tents; others may cook for them, which means not as many fires." Chen conceded the point.
The other, they agreed was five hundred or a little more. "Well, we meet one of them tomorrow, after noon or evening", Chen pointed out, tracing routes on their map. "Which do we want to meet first?"
A messenger came during the first watch. He was a Celt, on one of Rigel's own horses, so he had no trouble getting admittance. The message was written, for Rigel.
Lord: need came. camp abandoned. all gone to Bilbao for safety. meet at Council. -- Captain Aodh
"The logic of conflict", Chen said happily. Rigel had chosen to meet the smaller group first; if both were hostile, it would be better, he'd thought, to overwhelm the smaller first, then battle the larger; if the first were friendly, they'd be all the stronger for meeting the larger.
"The logic of the Game", de Cadiz disagreed. "Now we must comport ourselves." They straightened in the saddle and waited for the arriving party.
"Lady Escobar", Rigel greeted, bending over her hand and kissing it. "I'm happy to find you well."
"I'd be happy to find my son", she replied, her tone gracious. "I left him in your keeping."
"I judged that if he were seen in my column, attempts might be made on him. And when word of my progress spread, some at least would come to seek him. So he is with certain people who can protect him well. Have no fears; he will arrive safely for Council."
"And for conclave", de Cadiz added. "Lady, I regret my former opposition. I have been... made aware than while I have been loyal and honorable, I have been less than intelligent and wise." Self-control kept him from glancing at Chen, but Austin's eyes darted that way. Lady Escobar noted it, and made a mental note to thank Chen, and whoever else had taken part in this change.
"So you believe there will be a Conclave?" she asked, offering him her hand.
He took it, and delivered a formal kiss. "I believe there must be", he affirmed, "and that it shall be called for -- and called for, called."
That night Osvaldo awoke to a warm body slipping in next to him on his cot. His hand let go his dagger when the tap-tap-tap of fingers on his neck told him it was Miguel. "What success?" he asked quietly over his shoulder.
Miguel rolled his cousin so they were cheek-to-cheek. "The Assassins in the north are no more -- they work for Ortega. From noon tomorrow, you are in territory where no killer seeking you can be safe."
"That's good. What else?" It wasn't what Osvaldo wanted to ask, but business came first.
"Two enemies of your father go to icy graves. I have hopes for their heirs."
"You killed them?"
"One had remorse for his wickedness, and fell on his dagger. The other fell in his wine cellar, and the bottle pierced his throat." He sighed theatrically. "I think I did well on the suicide note, and I made certain to choose not too fine a wine for the other."
Osvaldo was silent for a couple of minutes. He'd gotten adjusted to the idea that his friend didn't just kill for him in defense, but in cold blood, too. Whether he'd ever become accustomed to it was another question -- but if he was to be Lord Escobar, he had to be able to accept certain necessities. Maybe if his father had had a Miguel....
"How did you find me?" he asked. "I'm just a guard."
"Of course. A guard with six men keeping watch over him, a guard whose duty is always near the Healer's tent, a guard who stands by de Cadiz' tent while lords meet and soon moves to Lord Rigel's tent, and sleeps there." Miguel kissed him on the ear lobe.
"Is it that obvious?" Osvaldo's voice was stressed.
"I could see it. Maybe three of my teachers could have seen it. Possibly a third of the Shadows of Escobar -- they used to be assassins -- could see it. But an ordinary spy, or soldier, or lord's son? About as likely that I could sire a son on a sow."
The walls of San Tesifón were finally close enough ordinary humans could tell the difference between crenelation and guards at attention. Rigel still had scouts out, despite the fact that most of the lords with them thought it silly, since they were a body of over twelve hundred armed men -- and a few deadly maids. Chen had front, and it was the First Scout himself who came riding to meet them.
"You’re not going to believe who's riding out to meet us", he claimed, wheeling to ride beside Rigel.
"Try me", Rigel replied.
"Guardians", Chen informed him. "Bloody Guardians. Ortega has the uniforms different, some, and the job -- a lot. They're keeping the peace, and part of that is escorting in every group that shows up. They're making sure no lord takes excess soldiers into the city, and assigning spaces for camping so no enemies are near each other."
Rita laughed. "He found a use for some of them, anyway! Where are the rest?"
"Some are still locked up. Some went north to serve as 'border guardians' for Ryan. Some are hiding out in the southwest", Chen reported.
"Maybe they'll behave themselves", Rigel said, sarcasm thick.
"And pigs will fly", Austin quipped. "Lord Rigel", he added, with a small bow.
De Cadiz chuckled. "Put a pig in one of your cannon, and it would fly", he noted.
Rita caught Austin's attention and motioned him to drop back with her, for privacy. "You and Oran haven't been making your 'L'ard Ree-gel' cracks for a while. What's up?"
"He says you have sharp elbows", Austin answered. "Then it kinda stopped seeming funny. And if it bugged you that much...." He shrugged. "I thought you just didn't want him doing it front of the British earl."
Maybe they're growing up, she thought. "True", she admitted. "But Rigel was really getting tired of it."
And none of you thought through those particular syllables in one of the tongues we speak -- all we'd need is some of the older Celts hearing them!
The Council chamber was packed. Guardians bid lords leave extra companions, beyond one, outside; House Guards within enforced the regulation. Packed groups congregated here and there, centered on powerful or charismatic lords. It was a colorful assembly -- in language, not just clothing; emotions ran high and tongues ran free.
"Every poor hidalgo with a name is here!" Miguel noted. He was present as Osvaldo's one companion; Lumina was present as Lady Rosalina's, Rita as Rigel's, who was present as an authorized guest of Regent Ortega. Osvaldo no longer dressed as one of Rigel's guards; he was in presentable but not ornate clothes that had been fashionable in his father's youth. It was enough that no one yet had recognized him. He found it amusing, though he understood the principle: everyone was watching the city gates and walls, expecting him to make some grand entry or mad dash or clandestine attempt to arrive, so no one considered he might already have come. For that, he had Lord de Cadiz to thank, to a great extent; the man was known as a foe, after all, and when he vouched he had not seen Osvaldo in Rigel's company, it was believed -- and believable, because he spoke the truth he knew: with Osvaldo's skin darkened and features subtly changed by Lumina's application of certain substances to his face, and with the three centimeters of height he'd put on since leaving, de Cadiz had actually greeted him twice without realizing his identity.
"No one would miss this", Osvaldo responded. "A new Heir, and the question of ending that office by turning it to Lord." He savored the word; he wasn't as naively confident as he'd been before, but he was convinced it was within his grasp, now: he had allies no one suspected, and from Ortega's reports many lesser lords were tired enough of the factions and fighting that often served to keep them poor that they would stand for almost anyone at this point, just to have someone at the helm. With the Prince Heir -- himself -- alive and present, it wasn't likely anyone else was going to step forward.
"And things don't even start for two days", Lady Escobar, present as Seat of the House, pointed out. She frowned at some of the groups, with messengers dashing between, wooing this lord or that. "Allegiances are being bought and sold, here."
"There's no frontier for them", Rita commented. "They see the lands of the Hills as tamed -- so they maneuver and scheme to extend what is theirs."
"There's no honor in it", Jaspar de Medina asserted. Lumina's bag of tricks had lightened his skin, so the darker color wasn't so remarkable. "If they have conquered the physical and reached its limits, they should seek conquests in learning and knowledge."
Rita applauded softly. "But they won't see the value of knowledge until someone shows how it brings material power", she pointed out.
"Your lord is doing that with the edge", Jaspar responded. "The tale of how with only a hundred men he broke in and took Lord de Cadiz' castle has been heard by all, now." His face laughed, without sound.
"The number keeps getting smaller", Rita agreed. "But it was the cannon that counted. Have you heard it was just one, and it fired as fast as the best of archers?"
Jaspar nodded, chuckling. "And that your lord himself rebuilt the toppled towers with his own hands, not resting for seven days and nights as he searched out each stone and put it in its place." Wise Woman and advisor, Lord Heir and representative to the Council, looked at each other in shared appreciation for the silliness of what human beings will believe.
"What do you think?" Rigel asked Lady Rosalina, who sat with furrowed brow, tapping a fancy jeweled dagger on her knee, ignoring the cup of wine by her left elbow. He took a seat looking up at her.
"I think some lords are missing", she pronounced. "Among them some friends."
"They haven't arrived yet, you mean?"
"No, I mean I think they have gone missing, been taken, been prevented from coming", she revealed. "From the south, near where I turned back."
RIGEL envisioned the Hills, and a grid of travel times. "Not much we can do", he conceded, though an idea lurked in the shadows. "Nothing", she agreed.
"What impact....?" he inquired.
"Fifteen or sixteen who would have stood for Osvaldo are not here or will not stand because others are not here. Twelve or fifteen more who likely would have stood for him will now stand for no one, because those who are not here will not be showing a lead." She stomped her foot. "I don't like this."
"How many lords are there? Who can claim a seat?"
"Three hundred seventy-eight", Rosalina replied. "Possibly two more."
"'Possibly'?"
"There are the Alfonso de Orofino, who lost their estates and went into the wild; they could still sit. And the de Medina, if they still exist." Rigel kept a straight face; she wasn't in on the secret. "The Alfonso de Orofino hated the Ortega; they might not stand for Osvaldo on that account. The de Medina hated the Heirs.... not without cause", she added in a softer tone.
"So three hundred eighty. Thirty lost because some are missing -- that's about eight percent", Rigel guesstimated. "A serious chunk, isn't it?"
"Quite serious." Rosalina sighed. "Damn them all!" she muttered, low enough only Rigel heard. "They see hardly farther than their noses!"
"Which are so high in the air they think they're angels, 'cause they can't see the ground, right?"
Rosalina smiled. "That is something your squire might say. And I think he would be in part correct. But some stand as they do for honor."
"Honor without intelligence", Rigel suggested, recalling the conversation with Jaspar.
The Lady looked sad. "Quite on the mark, friend Rigel -- quite on the mark." He didn't tell her who deserved credit for the idea.
"We have not enough!" fumed Lady Rosalina Escobar the next day. Lord Ortega had been persuaded to call a brief Council session, for a few "procedural matters", since the entire membership was within shouting distance. The results had been consistent in showing that something less than a majority would stand for Osvaldo, for whatever reason. Rigel wished he could reassure her by letting her know that de Cadiz was voting with his old fellow travelers sometimes, abstaining the rest, in order to keep his secret, but it wasn't time -- nor would it have given a majority.
Instead, he did his own complaining. "Who ever decided the Heir had to be confirmed by a majority?" he fumed. "Why can't you just inherit and be done with it?!"
Lady Rosalina smiled, barely. "Lord FitzWin, you know the answer to that: it is too easy for an heir to be a simpleton or fool. Doing it this way has saved us from more than one."
"And this time it's keeping you from getting a high-quality man in the job!"
She looked troubled. "But if we do not follow the statutes...." Rosalina groped for words.
Rigel sighed. "I don't mean that. But there's something wrong with the system when it keeps a good man who's the right one for the job from just stepping up and going to work."
"It's not the system, Rigel", Rita said.
Rigel jumped. "Don't do that! Warn me when you're coming!"
Both women laughed. "You were so intent, I could have blown a trumpet and you wouldn't have heard it", Rita told him.
That got a weak chuckle. "So long as it wasn't the Horn of Escobar", he corrected. "That would call me from a coma. Anyway -- what did you say?"
"It's not the system. The system was set up for sensible and honorable men. Men out there aren't being sensible or honorable or both. They're operating on feuds, and on habits, and on alliances that don't mean anything because key figures are dead or missing, and on pride." Rita paused, noting that Austin and Chen were listening; she motioned them closer. "No system will work when men are doing those things -- you can have a monarchy, a republic, a democracy, statutes, regulations, laws, a constitution, and none of it means a thing if men aren't acting in a rational, sensible way. When they get too focused on themselves, and not on those they lead or serve or on the whole, all systems break down."
"Like Congress was broken back home", Austin suggested. "It didn't matter who had the seats, they just kept doing the same things and the rich kept getting richer." Where Rita's more clinical explanation hadn't gotten through, Austin's down-to-earth comment did. Rigel grinned wryly.
"Okay -- it's the people. So, Lady Escobar, which ones should I insult and kill to change the numbers?" Rigel asked.
"How favorable would you like the numbers?" Rosalina teased back.
"Enough we can all go home after lunch tomorrow", Rigel told her.
"If you killed that many, we would still not go home after lunch -- the servants would need longer than that to clean the blood from the chamber." Lady Rosalina said it so calmly everyone laughed. It brought stares, along with dark looks and speculative ones.
"Oh, very good", Rita said softly. "Now they wonder why we can be so light-hearted. This would be a good time to leave -- and leave them wondering." She reached her hand to Rigel, who stood and offered an elbow. Chen escorted Lady Rosalina, and Austin led the way. As they passed a group of lords near the exit, one scowled. For no reason he could explain, that set Chen to laughing, and the others joined in.
Next day, it was real. Lord Ortega, delaying, stubbornly ran through every single item suggested by anyone. It grew tedious, to the point that it was only his prestige and the respect in which he was held that kept the Council in order. But finally it was all done. "I thank you for your indulgence", the Regent stated. "This may be a historic day -- no request, no petition, no suggestion for business, and no complaint has gone by unheeded. Now if perhaps I have missed anything?!" The Chamber broke into mingled protests and laughter.
"He has not lost his touch", observed Lady Escobar with admiration. "He has made them glad to have endured it all, focused them, relaxed them. If Osvaldo could not be Heir, we could do far worse than our old friend."
Ortega let the tumult subside. As it did, anyone with ears could tell that the background chatter was lighter, tension gone. But as he waited for quiet, a new tension began to build: everyone present began to realize that the matter for which they'd all gathered had now to be faced.
"I am Regent Heir of House Escobar", Ortega proclaimed when he was satisfied with the noise level. "I call this council to consider my replacement with an Heir, of the blood. Will any stand forth?"
Osvaldo shed the humble cloak he'd hidden under, handing it to Miguel. A few score exclamations sounded through the chamber, plus as many curses, since most had yet to gain even a hint he'd made it to the city safe and sound -- and more than a few were dismayed at the proof.
He wasn't an image of his father, this time. The hints were there, enough resemblance in dress and accessories to call his father to mind, but for those old enough to remember, there were also hints of his grandfather. Yet since riding with Rigel, he'd made a few things his own; the neckerchief adopted from the Scouts, the sash from the mounted riflemen, the second belt -- meant to hold a holster and revolver -- from the small group of privileged leaders, all marked him as different.
His choices were excellent, as well. Nothing clashed; it all worked as a whole, seeming to belong. Every item was immaculate, smoothed, pressed, polished to as much perfection as mortals may achieve. His skin was his own again, his hair back to his preferred style. He moved with the grace of a trained swordsman and fencer; added to it, the alertness of a cat.
All of it served to accent that this was not the same man who had brashly presumed to dominate a Council met only months before. Here was no longer a mere boy hoping to stick his small feet in his father's large shoes, naively confident they would fit, but a man who had placed his father's shoes on a shelf and quietly put on his own -- which were now a few sizes larger than the time before. Here was one who knew his place, and while he realized that others expected to have a voice, had no doubt that the place was his regardless of what they said. Osvaldo came to a halt before Ortega, and bowed from the waist. "I stand forth", he declared.
"Give your name, and your lineage", Ortega responded in time-honored ritual. Nearly everyone in the room tuned Osvaldo out, then; most of them knew the line as well as he did, so they turned their attention to assessing the reactions of their neighbors, and of the greater lords.
Rigel devoted his time to a problem that had been nagging at him: if there were a quarter million Escobarians, and three hundred eighty lords, how was it that numerous lords commanded over a hundred men? As he understood it, five workers were needed to keep one armed man in the field, so a hundred men meant six hundred total, plus women, and children! But the average, as best he could figure in his head, was about halfway between six and seven hundred, and that was including women and children.
Rita whispered in his ear. "It's the hidalgos, Rye. The poor caballeros of rank yet without retainers or more than a plot of land. They are masters of barely enough to keep themselves equipped, but they count. A hundred of them means thousands of people who can be attached to other lords, and thousands in the cities. Other lords have only a manor, not a castle, and command only a few score people, perhaps a hundred. The ones with more than a score fighting men are not many."
Rigel didn't bother any longer how she did it; she just would have said, "I'm a wise woman". Instead he considered her words, and nodded: most had only a few, which meant some had many.
Osvaldo finished his formal recital from the Lord Manuel Jadriano Ferdinando Escobar who had sent his House to Refuge, and bowed to Ortega. "We welcome Osvaldo", Ortega began -- though it was clear from some faces that he wasn't welcome at all in a few quarters -- and went on with flowery phrases mostly ignored: the attention of those who were alert was on the reactions to this "welcome": some stood as Osvaldo walked back to his seat, some pointedly watched Ortega, and a smaller portion turned to chat with their neighbors or companions. Rigel would have considered it just a mix of behaviors, before; now, thanks to his various tutors, he saw lords supporting Osvaldo, lords opposing him, and lords whose attention was available.
"It lies in the hands of the uncommitted", Lady Rosalina whispered to him as Ortega droned on. With her mouth near Rigel's ear, she almost missed the House Guard messenger who came in to speak with Ortega. But she saw him in time to read the hand-sign.
"Urgent. Gate guard changed early. Gates closing." She frowned as she passed the words on.
Chen put things together. "Someone's grabbed the gates. Someone's coming they don't want here."
"Maybe we should go for a walk on the walls?" Rigel suggested.
"Wait", Rosalina cautioned. "To leave now would... not help." Rigel inclined his head to her, deferring to her knowledge of the society.
Ortega handled their difficulty nicely when he was through with his flowery response to Osvaldo's appearance. "This has been a long session", he declared. "I declare an hour withdrawal, for refreshment and converse."
Several dozen lords headed almost immediately for the walls.
"That's Aodh, all right", Chen confirmed. "Looks like he's been through a bit. Tanner's got his back, though. Now they're coming ahead." He looked to Rigel for orders.
"You have your signal flags?" the Earl asked.
"Always", Chen replied. With the introduction of telescopes, Chen had decided that scouts should carry small versions of the large semaphore arms, allowing them to report to towers without actually going to them.
"Awesome. Here's the message...."
Lord Ortega arrived ten minutes after the slowest Council lord. He spoke with the officer commanding the unit which was on the schedule to replace the gate guard just a dozen minutes earlier; he spoke with the officer in charge of the unit which had actually taken charge of the gates -- and closed them. He listened briefly as Miguel spoke urgently to him and Chen signaled Rigel's camp outside the walls. Chen finished first; as he stepped back, Rigel put his hands on top of his head and interlaced his fingers. Then Ortega was nodding, and turning.
"Teniente, I am the Regent Heir, and may command this city. Outside approach a group bound for the Council: I bid you open the gates and give them entry."
"I have been instructed not to do so", the officer replied.
"I outrank whoever instructed you so", Ortega pointed out. "Now, open the gates, or I shall have them opened for you."
"He can do it, too", Rigel pointed out, grinning at the man, elbows high due to his hands on his head.
The officer glared at Rigel, taking the raised arms as an affront. "Put your hands down!" he ordered.
"I'd rather not", Rigel answered.
"Put them down!" the man yelled.
Rigel shrugged and looked at Ortega, then glanced at the gate, then beyond it to where his six cannon were lined up. The Regent made the connection, and nodded. Rigel looked back to the officer. "Just remember, you asked for it", he said, and dropped his hands.
Six cannon fired in a time of less than two seconds. Four of the six rounds slammed into the gates, three of them shattering the one on the left, leaving splintered remains hanging, still blocking the passage; the other crashed into the right gate, cracking it at the top. Another round skipped of the ground and crashed into the wall half a meter from the right gate; the last hit just below the battlements where the officer stood.
"Why did they do that?!" the officer screamed, losing his cool.
"You made me tell them to", Rigel replied. "Dropping my hands was the signal to fire." He couldn't remember the rest of the poem, or the author, only that there were lines about "if I had dropped my hands down low, as I have held them high", or something like that. Maybe he had it backwards, but it had stuck in his mind, and it made a good signal, easy to see from a distance.
"What?" The officer was confused. While he was confused, his men stood waiting for orders. While they waited, two dozen Rangers who'd crept in close to the walls stood. Half of them fired over-large crossbows loaded with bolts with grappling heads. Eleven came sailing over the battlements and skidded against the stone as Rangers pulled. Nine held fast, and down below crossbows were dropped and Rangers began dashing up the wall, walking up with the face as a floor. Rigel knew they were moving fast, faster than most people would believe when they were essentially rope climbing and walking up a wall. Still, the officer needed distracted a bit more.
"Those things out there are called cannon", he said. "The Regent wanted the gate open, and I offered to help. When I put my hands on my head, that told the men with the cannon to get them ready. When I dropped my hands, it meant to attack the gate. So when you told me to drop" -- a head with a green and brown Ranger headband peeked between crenelations; Rigel smiled -- "you told me to give the order to smash the gates. Now in just--" The six guns boomed again. This time all six struck true; the left-hand gate's remains tumbled into a heap, and the right-hand cracked neatly in two, the hinge piece still hanging, the other falling flat, inward.
The Rangers weren't the only ones who'd been moving. Aodh had closed two-thirds of the distance to the walls since the first cannon volley; now, he and his company charged. When the gates crashed in, they yelled; and the officer turned to look.
Rigel drew the Sword of Escobar and slapped the man across the side of the head. He got the blade back into its scabbard in time to grab one arm; the first Ranger over the top grabbed the other.
"Thank you, Lord Rigel:, said Regent Ortega. He raised his voice. "Any who were under this man's command, please surrender!" he called.
Men now confused and shocked by the sudden and rapid destruction of the gate, confronted with Rangers coming over the wall and their officer an unconscious prisoner, began dropping weapons and stretching out their arms, palms up and plainly empty.. Below, Aodh and a weary band rode triumphantly through the wreckage of the south city gates. In the middle of a group of grim-looking men rode nine figures in travel-stained cloaks. "Our missing lords", Rigel guess quietly as he watched them emerge from beneath the gate house and ride into the city. "Lord Ortega, if I may?" He gestured at the ragged column. Ortega nodded again.
"Rangers, give them an escort -- make sure those men make it to the Council. Chen, signal Tanner -- I want teams here to clean up the mess we made and build a new gate. Then signal Aodh's people still out there to join them.
"And I", he concluded, "want something stiff to drink."
Three hundred and seventy-eight lords took their seats, the number complete with the arrival of those escorted by Aodh. They'd been trapped in a town, essentially held captive by a siege conducted for precisely that purpose. Aodh had received word, taken the non-combatants from the unconventional loyalist camp to a safe town, and proceeded to send in Rangers to infiltrate enemy lines, then conducted a diversionary attack to give them and the rescued lords a chance to get out. They'd succeeded, at a cost of twenty-seven men. One lord had been severely injured, but Lumina had taken care of that.
What Rigel knew, and a few others, was that Jaspar de Medina was present, making three hundred seventy-nine. What he knew, and no one else in the hall but Austin, was that among the Rangers who'd ridden back with Aodh was one Tomas de Orofino -- his complete name: Tomas Martin Terens Alfonso de Orofino. They had their three hundred eighty lords, a complete council for the first time in... well, a long one. Five lords had ridden back from the lake where they were beginning settlement of their new lands, and even Perez and Ramos had representatives, their heirs.
A lord Rigel didn't know stood the moment Ortega laid his sword across the podium to signal taking his station as presiding lord, what any of the Snatched would have called the chair or president. Ortega took a moment to survey the chamber, then granted the floor.
"I set forth that the standings for Heir be closed." That simple statement made, he retreated to his seat.
One of the ragged bunch who'd come with Aodh was on his feet before the other sat. "I stand for the proposal." He remained on his feet. Then a lord on the far side of the chamber stood, and made the same statement.
Another lord stood. "I stand for immediate count." Another lord stood and seconded; then a third. After that other lords began to stand.
"Interesting, isn't it?" Rita whispered. "We have a motion and a second; they have a 'setting', a second, and a third." They'd watched the system before; Rigel decided she must actually be nervous, and talking because of it.
"Maybe it's not such a bad idea", he replied quietly. "Fewer silly proposals might get made."
De Medina and Alfonso de Orofino remained incognito, so the vote total came to three seventy-eight: one eighty-three standing, one seventy-seven opposed, eleven "with the assembly", the rest not taking a position.
"There is no decision. I declare the proposal unresolved", Ortega declared. "A glass' consideration, and I shall call by rank." That was within his discretion, but it brought hisses from many. It brought frustration from Rigel, who fidgeted until Austin took initiative and got a cold mug of fruity ale -- a very large mug, probably a liter or more. Once thus calmed, he undertook a question.
"Lady Rosalina" -- he dared not use the familiar form in public -- "the 'standing' had more -- why isn't it settled?"
"On a matter such as this, if there is no majority, a declaration of 'with the assembly' becomes a failure to stand for or against. Lord Ortega could have singled those out and demanded their position, but that would have offended them. So we consider, and watch the glass go by, and try to persuade those we might."
"You're not trying any persuasion", he observed.
She smiled. "None who might be swayed by me are uncommitted. I have done all I can." That Rigel understood, though it wasn't so long ago that he wouldn’t have, so he lifted his mega-mug in salute.
The roll call was tedious. At the end, it stood at an unsatisfactory one-ninety-one to one-eighty-four, with three taking no position. Ortega call a break of an hour -- an hour for bribes, threats, persuasion.
And for three assassination attempts. The Shadows of Escobar did their job, thoughas did Rigel’s snipers, to judge from a lone rifle shot two-thirds of the way through the break. Three unauthorized assassins were committed to the refuse heap.
Three shaken and angry lords took their seats. All three stood when Ortega's sword came to rest. Ortega looked at them one at a time, but he didn't nod. Instead, he lifted a sheet of paper. "Brothers, I have a report. Attempts were made on your lives. I wish no emotion in our consideration, so I will not give to any of you to speak.
"However, I have this to say to the Council: a single man was responsible for these acts. When his identity is established, I will impose the maximum penalty." A chill ran through the assembled lords, for the maximum penalty was death -- after stripping of titles and estates. If they were lucky, any sons might make a life as hidalgos. "I do not say this lightly", the Regent continued. "It is no light matter to make use of assassination. It is a very dark matter to do so in the election of an Heir. As this occurred while I stand here, it remains under my authority even once we have an Heir. Doubt not: I shall pursue this, and the penalty shall be paid."
"He knows who it is", Rosalina whispered. "He does not say so, because the lords would resent him taking one of their number from the Council while it sits."
"And some would think he's trying to reduce the number of votes on one side?" Rita ventured.
"That also", the Lady said grimly. "Some will be angry anyway. We have lost votes. But no matter what Lord Ortega did we would have lost votes. In that, this was well-played."
"Frakking stupid system where assassination attempts can be called 'well played'", Rigel growled. "So let's vote, already!"
"... discussion is closed", Ortega was saying. "Now, who stands for closing the standing for Heir?"
The result was one-eighty-nine to one-eighty-six, with three stubborn abstentions. Ortega sighed and looked around the chamber. He was going to call another recess, then another roll. Lady Rosalina knew the roll wouldn't change anything, and whispered so.
But the vote changed: Jaspar de Medina stood and walked to the middle, shedding his cloak. His clothes underneath were rich, splendor in style and execution and materials, a sight demanding attention. "I am Jaspar de Medina, son of Kenhar, son of Avram, son of...." He recited his lineage back to what his family called the Joining, when their isolated nomadic tribe had allied with the Escobars and become a House. "I claim standing in this Council."
Ortega's face lightened. It couldn't have been evident to many, but those near, and those who knew him, could tell. "I recognize the de Medina. Though proscribed by the Heirage, you are welcome in this Council. What say you?"
"I say that this Council has lost its way. The issue is clear: there is but one candidate for Heir -- if any would, I am able to recite the lineages. Delay is unconscionable. I stand for closing the standings for Heir."
Over a dozen angry lords leapt to their feet, yelling. Ortega turned his back. "He signifies that he does not see their misbehavior, so he does not have to judge them", Lady Rosalina explained. "He could expel them, but...."
"But it would make others angry", Rita finished, shaking her head. "This is crazy."
The chamber suddenly stilled. Rigel had recognized the hiss of steel on steel, the draw of blade from scabbard -- but not the sing of a fine blade; the sword wasn't all the way out. "Does one challenge my right to stand here?" Jaspar asked quietly, coldly... deadly. "Or more than one? The ancient way is the blade -- shall you be silent, or draw?"
For a moment, Rigel dared hope. But two lords nodded to each other, drew, and advanced. "That's not fair!" Austin protested.
"No, it isn't", Osvaldo responded. "If five came against him, it would be fair. Watch."
In under a minute, the whole Council knew the truth of his words: Jaspar waited until they were close, and moving to put one on each of his sides, when they were just too far apart to support each other, still too close for one to come at his back while he engaged the other. His speed was beyond belief, his blade a blur as he went from statue to force of nature in a fraction of the blink of an eye: wrist twisted, sword swept down, turned, cut up, and slashed the forearm supporting his opponent's sword before the other had hardly moved, then back to slap the sword from the man's reach. The Persian spun, dropping low, and met the other lord's blade on its way down; he slid it far to the side and rolled the other way, coming to his feet and without pause going straight into a lunge. He could have killed his opponent, blade deep in the gut and out the other side, but with a flick of the wrist he again slashed his foe's sword arm. Another time he spun, reaching the first lord's sword in time to slash his other forearm, scoop up the sword, and toss it upward, right toward Rigel. Grinning, Osvaldo jumped up on a bench, knocking a servant aside to catch the blade, at the cost of a deep cut on his left hand. Down on the open floor, Jaspar stood with the tip of his blade at the second opponent's throat. "Yield your life, and you may continue it", he declared.
The man stared, looked down at the blood from his forearm pooling on the floor, measured the distance to his blade with his eyes, scanned the assembly. "I yield", he said unhappily. "He is in effect a vassal of the de Medina", explained Lady Rosalina.
Rigel whistled. "High cost", he judged.
"For his life?" Rita asked. "Seems pretty fair, in this society. Think, Rye: it reduces such challenges; your life is on the line, and if an opponent grants it, you still pay a high price. It's checks and balances."
"I can see problems", he countered. "ways to game the system."
"There always are. And there are counter forces, in any stable society. Now watch."
Jaspar had approached the first man. The man spat at him. Jaspar's expression didn't change, but he looked the direction from which the man had come. "Is his heir present?" he called, a soft voice but pitched to be heard.
A shaking servant stood. "He is in the city", came the quaking voice.
Jaspar nodded. "I would not deprive the House a voice in Council. Presider, might he be summoned?"
Ortega had turned to witness the duel. Now he nodded. "Go to your heir, and say the Council requests his presence." No one moved; Jaspar's sword didn’t stray from its position pointing toward the fallen lord -- quite fallen, in fact, as his forearms wouldn't bear his weight to get up.
When the heir arrived, minutes later -- the servant was drenched in sweat -- he immediately looked to Ortega. Ortega pointed to the floor. Jaspar spoke. "You are his heir?"
"I am, but-- no!!!!" The young man charged forward, but not in time to prevent Jaspar's blade from puncturing the lord's back, and his heart.
"You now stand for your House", said Ortega wearily. "Your uncle was slain in honorable combat, by a challenge of his own choice. Do you know the customs and ways of the Council?"
"I do." The young man glared at Jaspar. "Demon!" he hissed.
"I reserve the taking of offense until after Council", Jaspar stated in the same calm voice he'd used throughout. "I will not deprive your House of a voice."
"Now both of you sit", admonished Lord Ortega. He didn't wait until they'd reached their seats. "We move to the matter of the Heir. I will call by rank."
Osvaldo handed Austin a piece of paper; the squire dashed to Ortega and delivered it. So it happened that in the course of the roll, an unexpected name was called: "Tomas Martin Terens Alfonso de Orofino, for House Alfonso do Orofino", Ortega read, a smile on his face. Tomas proudly stood, indicating support for Osvaldo.
Soon came the moment they'd waited for. "Lord Felix Stefan Amar de Cadiz, for House de Cadiz." Turmoil broke out when the powerful lord stood. Unasked, his vassals stood as well. Three allies joined them. Regent Ortega opened his mouth to call for order, but events were already out of his hands.
Jaspar had stepped forward again, dragging Osvaldo with him. "Is there still honor in Great House Escobar? Are you not all brothers? Will not all stand for the Heir of him who stood fast when all around played the coward and fled? Does not blood cry to blood?" He lifted Osvaldo's hand that had caught the tossed sword. "Here see the blood of Escobar! Will you sit for yourselves, as those not your ancestors did, or will you stand and be Escobar?!"
It began with the youngest, and with the rest of de Cadiz allies. They stood, and pulled neighbors to their feet, until a third stood. Ortega was ready to announce the result, but de Medina had another card to play: he turned to face Osvaldo.
"Your brothers have confirmed you Heir. By the Heirage, my House is proscribed. So I say this:" He held out his sword, still bloody, in both hands, and turned his palms down, a surrender of the weapon. "Take up my sword, the Sword of my House. If we are still proscribed", he went on, kneeling as he did, still holding up the blade, "strike off my head." He bowed that head to bare his neck.
Osvaldo swallowed hard, and took the sword. He rested the blade on his shoulder, and his own blood marked the hilt, for he had taken it with his left hand. He looked around the chamber. "We hold honor as the highest virtue. Some are born with it, some learn it, some never attain it. It is the same with wisdom: some have it inborn, others must acquire it, some few are fools all their days." He caught many of the eyes looking toward him, all those of the great lords. As he caught those of the heirs of Perez and Ramos, those men stood, too; young Perez tugged at a friend, then another, and they stood with him.
"One ancestor of mine was a fool. He proscribed a House for no other reason than a delusion. It is written that our Lord is a maker of worlds; who are we to say that He has not made others than that from which we sprang? Yet my ancestor claimed to tell our Lord what He might do -- and in this he erred.
"The de Medina are good Christians. They sprang of a world where Mohammed was obedient to Allah, which is another name for God. They came to us by His providence, in His plan. This I say as Heir. Unless the priests in convocation determine it false, it stands.
"And the de Medina have honor. Never have they raised violence against our House" -- all heard the emphasis that indicated he included all of them -- "even when we persecuted them. Even now, come to this Council by right, now that there is an Heir, they do not resist. Here kneels the lord of their House, ready to die if that is my will."
He raised his voice in challenge. "Who among us has remained obedient as far? His ancestors swore an oath, and he abides by it to the death! Would any of you come so, to show your loyalty, your obedience?!" An intense, tense silence was his answer. The Heir looked down.
"Jaspar de Medina, I will not have your life. You have shown us what honor is. Here is my reward: your House will be recompensed for all that was taken from it. More shall be given, for you would have grown in wealth in the time you have found need to hide. And I release you from your vows as vassal; I would be proud to call you ally." He bent and took Jaspar's hand. "And friend", he added, eye to eye. "Now take back your sword, and bear it always in honor." The two embraced, then Osvaldo turned to Ortega.
"Lord Presider, I believe we were standing, or not."
Ortega's somber face broke into a smile. "Indeed, lord Osvaldo." He looked around. "Do any others wish to stand for lord Osvaldo?"
One by one, all but three stubborn holdouts got to their feet.