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Report
Their signal had been seen. The evidence lay before them in the cove: a three-masted Wilberforce-class frigate, wide and flat save for a small forecastle and roomier stern deck. Sir Kevin MacNeil, Lord MacNeil, Major of Dragoons, winced at the sight: It would have been crowded for a full patrol, but for his remnant it would be almost roomy.
The lookout in the crow’s nest – there were no crows here, but if there had been every officer of Her Majesty’s Navy would have recognized one, thanks to Sir Homer Lyle of the First Crew, who had committed to paper everything he could recall of naval lore and terminology, including sketches of creatures and places related to any parts of a ship – waved a gray flag: ship moving in. No sails went up; the movement was accomplished by winches with cables run to heavy posts on shore. Cranking in a ship of that size took strength, but more, it took patience. The patrol was just reaching the stone shelf carved out painstakingly by hundreds of men over twenty-five years for the sole purpose of receiving a boarding bridge, when that device lurched out over the water, extended, and thumped onto the solid rock. The three sections bounced, just once, then the latches locking them into place caught, transforming it into a solid bridge.
“Lead them in, Alfred”, MacNeil instructed wearily. He was weary of far more than patrolling, than injured men requiring the column to go slowly, than rationing their water because there hadn’t been any rain, just frost and some snow flurries. An odd year, it was, when the weather skipped fall and went straight to winter – though on the other hand, it was better than being soaked to the skin despite oiled leathers, something he’d experienced more often than he had saddle sores. Those he had again; it was stop-and-go riding that caused those, for him.
His gentleman’s gentleman, of no rank bestowed by Her Majesty but ranked highly by the rating that counts, the esteem of his fellows, touched his cap and led onto the bridge. His lord would be last; no grasper at privilege, he, but like his father, a stickler for duty, and honor. Every man going past their commander was greeted by name; these men were like family to MacNeil. When all had passed, Kevin sat looking out at the plains around their sea. You took from me, he silently told the Aliens. But I find I agree with Earl FitzWin: you are enemies of us all. I will be back, to take from you. The British earl turned toward where his fallen lay in their cramped coffins, and saluted. Sleep well, lads – mayhap with the Earl, we’ll make an end of your killers.
The bridge began rising even before he was off. The ship’s captain himself came to take the Earl’s horse. “Welcome aboard, Kevin.” The bushy red beard and bright red pony tail penetrated MacNeil’s weary haze.
“Angus! Angus O’Rourke, what chance brings you to haul us?” MacNeil swung out of the saddle with a grin, taking the proffered forearm and clasping it as aid in landing.
“No chance, laddie. I knew ye’d be low on supplies, so I swapped sailin’ wi’ a friend, so here I was when ye signaled. Now, none o’ this ‘nomads’ nonsense – tell an old friend God’s honest truth.”
“Clear your deck”, the Earl recommended, looking at the poop. “We can talk there.”
“Wantin’ no ears, is how it is – aye, I’ll clear me deck, once we’re away from this wall and into proper water. A moment, Kevin.” O’Rourke turned and scanned the activity on the ship. Some days he hoped for some mistake; this wasn’t one – today he was proud, watching his crew do their tasks quietly and efficiently.
“Raise fores’l!” the first officer barked out, beginning the process of warping away from the shore and out into the deep. Men swarmed up the rigging and hung waiting. The foresail caught a wisp of breeze, the pitiful breeze that had merely tortured the patrol with hopes of being cooled – on a day when they woke to light snow, but by late morning were roasting in their lightest clothing. “Up tops!” came the cry, and men already high above the deck moved to respond. Satisfied, O’Rourke nodded toward the stern and led the way.
“I’ll take that, lad”, he told the second officer nearly twenty minutes later. They were finally away from the shore and picking up a good wind. The wind wasn’t blowing the direction they wanted to go, but Her Majesty’s Navy knew its business; they could sail across and make headway despite the wind’s will. The leftenant nodded and gave a quiet, “Aye-aye, sir”, releasing the wheels to his superior. MacNeil watched him descend the ladder to the afterdeck before giving his attention to Angus.
“You managed to get the Reginald, I see”, he observed. “How is the old fellow?”
“Not good, lad. They turned him out to pasture, an’ he’s a-wastin’ from it.” The subject or Kevin’s concern was his father, Duke Steffinghom, Lord Peel, the very Reginald for whom the ship was named.
“He doesn’t get to Parliament?”
Angus shook his head. “Nay, tho’ it is sore needed he is.”
“Emmerton?”
“Nay – Creevy and his vermin.”
MacNeil let his eyes shut. Lord Henry Creevy, Earl Berwick, was Her Majesty’s Minister of Settlement. The office had been mostly symbolic for several generations, as the last untamed parts of the islands had filled. Now, though, it had revived and gained increased visibility and influence as Creevy sought to move the poor out of the cities into a realm on the mainland.
The man dithered. Lord Richard Grenville, Duke Radcliff, urged renewal of the effort to settle on the eastern shore, despite the escarpment; the ramps and their switchbacks from the ill-fated effort two generations earlier were still there and sound, the harbor and docks still clear and solid. On his own, the Duke had hired a ship and investigated, finding the fortress at the top intact, hardly touched but for rats and spiders – the ordinary kind of spiders, not those which looked like the severed head of an Alien. Against Radcliff stood Lord Percival Sidmuth, Grand Earl Wenham, who called for settlement of the west coast of the sea, where access demanded no steep ascent. Minister Creevy, his family’s fortunes a tad bit down, held the office where the choice ought be made – but he did not choose. Due to the political situation, Her Majesty dared not step in and make that choice, and so she provided both sides with permission to pursue investigations pursuant to making their case.
Thus the patrols so far out on the west side. Wenham wished to show there were no dangers, and yet because he needed allies in Parliament, he had consented to a request for orders mandating that any humans who might be encountered be turned away – despite the fact that the only ones of which they had knowledge were the Escobars in their hill realm, a people who rarely ventured so much as an hour onto the savanna.
So for reasons of state – more pressures in Parliament! I find myself exiled to this far shore, ordered to the thankless task of patrolling nothing – except it was not “nothing” which I found, hardly “nothing” which killed thirty-two good men, MacNeil complained to himself, unwilling to name that “reason of state”..
“If the encounter had happened to another, Master Kevin, you would have suffered envy for multiple seasons”, came Alfred’s voice, interrupting his melancholy meditation.
Kevin MacNeil favored his longest-standing friend with a teasing, scolding look. “Alfred, should I die before you, you could keep the kingdom ignorant of it, saying I was secluded. For you could issue orders in my name, and they would be the same decisions I would make.”
“A poor gentleman’s gentleman I would be, could I not think your thoughts, and so anticipate your needs. Moreover, do not forget that you do surprise me from time to time.
“So tell me, old friend, what am I contemplating just now?”
Alfred smiled, tipping his head as he always had when he thought his charge a bit out of line. “As since you were eight, you desire to swim unclad, to ease your tensions. Yet I dare say the Reginald is faster.”
Kevin laughed. “Exactly right! And I dare say she is, most especially with friend Angus in command.” His face grew serious; he sighed. “Nor would I make any delay. I wish Her Majesty to know certain things swiftly. Some of the knowledge could even be of use to her.”
“Certainly it may! Having encountered Aliens no great distance off the shore could serve to stir ‘Cautious Creevy’ to make a choice.”
Kevin shorted. “I doubt that. He will wish more patrols, and Sidmuth will urge it. Parliament will deadlock, merely turning louder in its debates. No, but Her Majesty may find a way to use this knowledge, a way you and I fail to see.” They stood together, unspeaking, until evening and dusk overtook them.
“Arl MacNeil, stand fast!” A man on pony was bearing down on them as Kevin and Alfred stood while Kevin’s men unloaded horses, saddling and loading only once on solid ground.
Alfred put him in the man’s way. “Ardry Phelps, take yourself elsewhere – Lord MacNeil is not here.”
Sir Ardry Phelps gaped. “There he stands, filling my eyes!”
Alfred turned and looked across the dock area, eyes coming to rest on Kevin, who was ignoring them. “I see none but Major MacNeil of Her Majesty’s Dragoons”, he stated. “As he is on business, none may interfere – except one as might wish to answer to Her Majesty.”
“It’s the same man!” Phelps exclaimed. “I’m no daft, old man.”
Kevin’s face turned dark and cold. In three long strides he was at Alfred’s side. “It is not becoming of a gentleman to insult a gentleman’s gentleman. Will you apologize?” He put his hand on his sword, almost itching for the fool to refuse.
He knew it wasn’t going to happen; Phelps sputtered, his fright making his pony jittery. “I misspoke, nothing more.” He bowed awkwardly to Alfred.
The gentleman’s gentleman looked Phelps over as one might if inspecting a new chest of drawers, looking for flaws. Sir Ardry grew increasingly nervous. Finally Alfred spoke. “In light of the duress you suffer, I shall let it pass”, he said, not quite a statement that he had not been offended, or that the apology set things right.
Sir Phelps looked flustered. “Duress?”
“Why of course”, Kevin said, stepping to Alfred’s left, a bit ahead. “Most clearly I heard you claim Lord MacNeil was here! In fact, it is only I, Major MacNeil of Her Majesty’s Dragoons, on my way to Far Londinium to make a confidential report to Her Majesty.” Kevin couldn’t resist. “Since you are here, might you oblige Her Majesty by clearing the way for our swift passage?”
“This will not stand”, Phelps hissed at Kevin. “You are the same man!”
“He is none but Major of Dragoons MacNeil”, Alfred answered in a low tone. “Would you like to hear the law and precedents? Why, the first was with your namesake, King Ardry, in the year after....” Phelps had turned and was riding off, fuming, his pony stomping for him. The two watchers turned to each other and solemnly shook hands. A moment later they couldn’t contain it any longer, and burst into laughter.
“‘Might you oblige Her Majesty’”, Alfred quoted. “Well struck, Master Kevin, well struck!”
“Does precedent really go back to King Ardry?” Kevin inquired. “I know it only from Prince Kyle.”
Alfred wagged a finger at Kevin. “It is not becoming of a gentleman to accuse a gentleman’s gentleman of lying”, he scolded. The two shared another laugh. “I would never mis-cite the law, and you know it”, he went on. “Good King Ardry stood on his title as Baron Highdale, that he might not have standing to negotiate with the Greeks, when he met them. He was accused of deception, in Council, but the High Court ruled that since he was indeed Baron Highdale, he could act in that office and set aside his other. The challenger argued that he had no authority so to do, but the lead justice noted that as the king may settle and withdraw titles, he had royal authority.
“The case was cited later, noting that for the king to authorize his baron to speak with the foreigners but not have authority to negotiate, the king and baron were clearly two distinct persons under law, however much they might wear but one pair of breeches.”
“And Prince Kyle established that a noble of any rank may set aside his higher rank and act in the capacity of the lesser, by virtue of the hierarchy of rank”, Kevin finished. “An interesting progression. Do you know the rest if the chain, if there are other links?”
“Certainly, Master Kevin! You wish to hear them?”
“What I wish is to know and understand them. Phelps was easy to stand at; I will surely face greater lords.”
“With brains in their head”, Alfred agreed, “not in their bowels.”
Ardry Phelps did nothing to aid their journey, yet even so they got help: Captain Angus O’Rourke had some favors to call in, so when they departed late that afternoon, a port herald and four knights of the Order of St. Michael led the way. If any had dared challenge a mere Major of Dragoons, or wished to make an issue of Kevin’s legal identity by armed force, no one would interrupt a member of the Herald’s Guild, especially on his – actually, in this case, her – way to the capital city, and most especially when the herald’s banner bore the red and gold streamer of the House of Stuart-Bóruma.
The city of Blackpool behind them, Kevin led them that half day and two more before stopping for a half-day in Selkirk. The town, just a long day from the capital, was known for its quick-working tailors.
“By morning, Major?” the chief tailor at Overby’s asked in dismay. “For all these men?”
“An extra shilling per man, if you manage”, Kevin told him. “And an extra per uniform.” It was the last item that would persuade; the extra shilling would barely cover the extra cost of paying tailors to work through the night, but the shilling per uniform bonus would go straight to the master. The master hesitated. “If it would help, I will have dinner sent up, and a good wine”, the Earl added.
Now the master smiled, and agreed. Having that good wine would make men more likely to work for him at a moment’s notice in the future, and even if he had to provide it again he’d easily make it up in the price for quick work.
Next morning, the company of Her Majesty’s Dragoons that rode out of Selkirk didn’t look at all like the one that had ridden in. Gone were the patches from wound and wear, gone the frayed edges, gone the stains. Each man kept his old uniform; it could be useful in the future if a dirty job arose.
So when they reached the outskirts of the capital late that evening, no one seeing them had any reason to suspect that they had lost half their number in action, and that against beasts so ghastly they had to be seen to be believed. Thanks to the herald, they took over an entire inn; the guests who got displaced were given full refunds, and a night of different rooms paid for – by the Crown.
The next morning, the exits from the inn’s stables and courtyard were blocked by armed men. Alfred went out to meet those blocking the stables. “Good morn, Lord Teed”, he said. “Have you come to block a herald bound for the palace?”
The large burly man on an extra-large pony growled back. “The herald may go. I want Earl MacNeil.”
“Earl MacNeil is not here”, Alfred declared. “Hear me out!” he ordered when Teed opened his mouth. He proceeded to recite the law and precedent as he’d taught them to Kevin over the last few days.
“Then bring me Major MacNeil!” the lord demanded.
“I will go speak with him.” Alfred turned and left. The moment he was out of sight of the gate, he ran.
Kevin grabbed an arm and helped his man into his saddle. “He’s waiting for you?”
“Yes. Are we all ready?”
“Absolutely.” Kevin grinned. “This should be fun.” Alfred rolled his eyes and looked heavenward. “Doors!” ordered Major MacNeil. Four stable hands pushed hard, swinging the doors open fast. The herald charged out, with his four escorts. Reflexively the men outside made way for them – and Kevin’s company charged through, right on the herald’s heels. The escorts for the herald then slowed to drop to the end of the line. When the two armed groups caught up with them, they stated quite bluntly that the entire party ahead was part of the herald’s message, and that should any interference be contemplated, the two lords should know that it would be taken as an affront to the Order of St. Michael.
“I have no orders; I cannot let you in”, the leftenant at the lower palace declared. MacNeil looked to the herald in appeal.
“Leftenant, might I have your name and rank, and the name and rank of your commander?” the herald asked in a quite businesslike fashion. It confused the leftenant.
“My – for what cause?”
“That I might file a charge of interference with a herald bearing a message for Her Majesty.”
“Take your message in – I’m not holding you!” the officer responded, flustered and on the edge of panic now; such a charge would ruin his career.
The Herald sighed. “My message is not in written form, leftenant. It is these men, concerning whom you say you have no orders. I tell you they need no orders, for they are the message I bring. They must come with me.”
Kevin felt sorry for the leftenant; it was a situation outside his – or possibly anyone’s – experience. He looked trapped, staring ahead, looking back at the guard house, seemingly hoping an answer would appear.. Suddenly he looked relieved; he’d hit on something. MacNeil just hoped it would work.
“Could I have that in writing, sir? It is a most unusual sort of message, and I really think I ought to record it... its entrance.”
The herald suppressed a smile. It was an elegant solution for the poor man: messages were to be passed, events out of the ordinary were to be logged – so he would log this message as an event out of the ordinary – and it certainly qualified! So the herald drew out his log book, wrote out a specification of the contents of his message, giving the number of men with ranks, but no names. By the designation “Major of Dragoons”, he wrote “confidential message, word of mouth, H.M.’s ears only.” He signed it and passed it to Kevin, who signed his name under his rank before passing it on to the leftenant. When he’d read through it, the guard officer looked content, his world back in place. They rode into the palace of Her Majesty, Queen of Lost Britain, Duchess of Three Emerald Isle, Head of the House of Stuart-Bóruma, Countess of Tara Hold, Lady of the Rose, Lady Captain of Amazons, Elizabeth III.
“I hate court”, confessed Kevin MacNeil to the Michaeline knight serving as his escort. “Lots of talk when a few words would do.”
The knight chuckled. “We are men of direct action, my lord. I think perhaps that is one reason that the Court, or many in it, do not like you.”
“If they liked me, I wouldn’t get to stand here chatting with another man of action”, MacNeil noted. “Besides, the lot of them are so full of hot air they could heat the palace in winter just by talking.”
His turn came. The Master of Entrances – a lazy position, since the man had no duties most of the hours of every day, yet a serious one: he had to know the ranks and titles of all the nobles in the kingdom. Today Kevin got announced as “Major, of Dragoons”, nothing else.
He approached and knelt, as officers serving the Queen were privileged to do. “You come bearing news”, the Queen said. “Is it for the ears of this gathering?”
“Some is, your Majesty.”
“Then rise, and tell us.”
Kevin stood. What he wanted to do was go to Elizabeth and hold her tight, but not only was that forbidden, it would also send the wrong message to the wrong factions. “We are not alone, as some feared – and others hoped”, he added drily. “While on patrol of lands near the Sea, we encountered nomads. We turned them away, but learned enough to judge them friendly.”
“Nomads. Seeking a new home range, perhaps?” the Queen wondered. “Tell us, did it seem they might have anything for which we might wish to trade?”
He nodded. “I judged it so. I ought speak with your Ministers, to be certain, before speaking my thoughts.”
“Be free to do so. And stay after; we would hear of your other news.” It was a dismissal. MacNeil backed the required three steps, turned smartly, and left. Eyes throughout the great hall speculatively, many of those eyes belonging to Members of Parliament. A few would guess there was far more to the news he brought – he doubted any would guess the worst.
The sound of the door opening woke him; Kevin rolled out of the chair and came to attention, then dropped to one knee. “Your Majesty”, he said.
“Get up, you lump”, Elizabeth ordered. “Does this look like court?”
“Well, you are wearing that shiny jeweled thing.” He stayed on one knee, but rested an elbow on the other, a mock serious look on his face.
She laughed, and pulled the item out of her hair. “It’s a tiara – and there, it’s gone.” Almost negligently the Queen of Lost Britain tossed the lesser symbol of her rank on a side table. “Now come greet me properly.” Neither of them paid any attention as a piece of jewelry rich enough to pay for building a ship like that which had brought MacNeil from his patrol spun and came to rest hanging from the table’s edge.
It was a long, intense embrace, but it had to end, to the regret of both. Elizabeth pointed to a chair, then in most un-queenly fashion pulled another close. “So – what really happened on your patrol?”
“Did you see my unit outside?” He’d had them line up where she couldn’t have missed them.
“Yes. Did you send half on leave?”
He kept the pain of command from his voice. “What you saw is what’s left – half never came home, except in boxes.” Kevin looked his queen straight in the eye. “We met outsiders. I bid them depart, and they did. A bit later we sighted Aliens. We didn’t have the power to stop them, so we prepared to sell our lives dearly.
“Then the outsiders came back” The wonder and gladness of that moment colored his voice. “Between us and them, we ground the Aliens into the dirt. They did most of the work, really; we played anvil to their hammer. They rode horses – not ponies, but real horses, big enough for and trained for war! It was strange – they had lances, and I thought that was daft until I saw what men on horses can do to Aliens with lances! They don’t kill them straightaway; they skewer them through and leave them thrashing, chopping at their fellows. And they had crossbows; those rode in after the lances, piercing any the lances missed. Then with the foe wounded and hardly moving, hardly aware of anything but their pain, a wave with sabers rode by, slashing!”
He leaned forward. “But that was a small thing next to their most potent weapon: they have rifles, effective at half again the range of ours! Their rate of fire is nearly twice ours.”
“They came to your aid, after you turned them away?” she exclaimed. “Noble men, indeed!”
“Their leader said it is his duty to fight the Aliens everywhere. But a greater shock came next: Elizabeth, they have Healers! Like Elzbeth Kennessee! Without her, a third of my men outside would be in boxes as well.”
“Horses, lances, rifles – and Healers”, the Queen whispered. “Thank the gentle Lord that they proved friendly!
“Indeed. I believed I would never see you again – then they came charging in. After, I got a good look at them.” He shook his head, still having trouble believing. “Most were Celts. But there were Spanish among them, and some I think were Italian. They spoke English, albeit a bit strangely! Indeed, the name of their leader was strange: ‘Lord Rigel FitzWin.”
Elizabeth laughed. “It sounds as though someone took the front of Fitzsimmons and the front of Winham and patched them together!”
“So I thought, except I imagined Fitzgerald.”
Elizabeth pondered these things for a while. “What rank does he hold?”
“He was introduced as an earl. He had a number of knights with him, and the Healer, and an advisor designated ‘Wise Woman’. There was also a Druid!”
“Celts with a Druid, Spanish, Italian, a Healer, rifles better than ours, actual warhorses, lances – what other surprises have you?” she teased.
“Only that they conversed in English, Spanish, and Gaelic, all mixed and twined. A rifleman would speak in Gaelic, an officer would answer in English. A squire spoke in Spanish, and was answered in English. And they said the Druid can bestow languages he knows!” MacNeil stood and started walking back and forth. “Elizabeth, what sort of place must it be that an Earl has Celts and Spaniards and Druid and Healer among his retainers? Our histories speak of trade with the Spanish, and battles with the Celts – but we know nothing of any Italians! This world is growing outside us, apart from us – we must meet it, join it!”
“You’re hiding something”, the Queen accused. She gazed on him intently; that has always worked when they were children.
The Earl turned and gazed at a wall hanging showing a sixteen-gun sloop pounding a shore with a crude village, which was answering with rocket fire. “What are your biggest problems in the kingdom?” he asked, turning back, his gaze seemingly going past her and through the walls to the city outside.
The Queen took his apparent change of topic in stride. “Creevy, Grenville, and Sidmuth. But with Aliens returning, Sidmuth’s hopes are dashed. Then...” She sighed. “Kevin, Parliament means to make me marry. The only question is who will finally join together to pick my husband.”
He couldn’t believe what he just heard. “It’s gone that far?”
“Were you harassed on the way here? Did anyone try to stop you?”
“More than one”, he answered grimly. “I’d hoped that after being gone, that foolishness would have died down. Instead, it’s worse.” He rolled his eyes, looked upward, and spread his arms.
Elizabeth laughed. “You enjoyed tweaking them though, didn’t you?”
“Well, when the world tweaks you, I’ve always said, tweak it back. But to the settlement problem – I have an idea: do both.”
“But–“
“No, listen! Aliens are coming to the western shore. Now, in the histories, what one thing always draws them?”
“Besides the scent of human young? Positions humans try to hold.”
“Exactly! Make the settlement on the west shore one with a sole task: drawing Aliens so they can be killed. Not to be a town, not even really a port, though it will need a good harbor, but a killing place. It in, right by the harbor, make an even stronger keep.” He caught her eyes and held them. “And in that keep, families with lots of children, at first. Once the Aliens come, those families leave the keep, directly onto the docks and ships. Then we just start killing them.”
“You would use children as bait?” she whispered in disbelief. “How could you?!”
“By being sure the Aliens can’t reach them! Build the area around the keep to flood with oil. Coat the walls of the keep with oil! And build it with a ramp right to a separate dock, with a ship of the line always ready, and two to guard! And only long enough to attract Aliens. Once they know we’re there, no one but your soldiers remain”, he concluded in a calmer voice.
She stared at him for a while, then nodded slowly. “Very well, Kevin, I will think on this. Now, I can tell you have some notion for my other pressing problem.”
Lord MacNeil walked to the fireplace. He stood watching the small flames. “When we were small, the tutors required you to learn all sorts of things I thought were silly. Remember?”
“I remember you ruined lessons for me by pestering!”
“I never meant to ruin them”, he responded absently. “Then you started something I decided was mysterious, so I asked to learn, too. It became something special between us, because not many studied it.” He stopped and brooded over a candle flame that was dancing to the updraft from the fire.
“The Old Tongue”, she recalled. “How you struggled with it!”
“And it came naturally to you. I hated that.”
“It made you work harder. Tutor said it built character.”
“Yes, and that’s why I’m such a character”, he answered, finishing their childhood joke. “Remember one day when I got a silly grin and started reeling off phrases?”
Elizabeth nodded. “You said it all suddenly felt like you’d gone from a choppy trot to a smooth canter. After that it never seemed hard for you.” From this drawn-out introduction, she knew to be patient; he’d get to his point in time.
“It wasn’t. It wasn’t as easy as for you, but it felt... comfortable. Tutor said my brain had accustomed itself to the rhythm and pattern of the language. All I knew was that when you said something, it made sense, and without turning it into English in my head.” Now he turned and faced her. “I still keep up on it – I always carry my copy of the stories he gave us. And when someone speaks it, my mind tells me the sense, and only later do I turn it into English.” MacNeil looked troubled; she gave him time.
“After the battle, when all the Aliens were dead, the Healer moved among the wounded, doing just enough to save lives. It wore her out. She came and talked to me. When she left, I looked back at the wounded, and saw Rigel, Earl Fitzwin, moving among the wounded with no distinction between them. He gave sips of a tea the Healer had brewed, something to help the body heal itself better. I wondered at this lord who came back to aid us who had turned him away, and who now with his own hands treated all the wounded as though they were his own.
“An image came to mind, but I couldn’t bring it clear. It hovered there as a question, so I asked: ‘Just who is he?’” MacNeil stepped back to his chair but didn’t sit. “A young squire smiled at me and answered, but FitzWin’s ‘Wise Woman’ jabbed the youth in the gut with her elbow. Immediately I wondered what she didn’t approve of – but just as immediately I realized what he’d revealed about this Earl.”
Elizabeth waited, but he didn’t go on. A smile tugged at her lips; she was supposed to ask the right question, now. This one wasn’t hard: “So who is he, really? What did the squire say?”
“He called him something the advisor didn’t want that known”. MacNeil whispered. “But the youth, proud of who his lord really is, said it and it couldn’t be taken back. And it is not unheard of for a noble to travel under a lesser title.” His eyes looked directly into those of his Queen.
“He called him ‘Ard Righ’.”













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