it. He saysâhe says we only have to get through Festival, then weâll take the horses afield and ride out to a hunting lodge he may have someday. He showed me the maps. And while weâre there, itâll be the Bryalt festival, well, at least the last of it, and he says we can put up evergreen and candles. Itâs five days. Just five days, and we can go.â
Paisi gave a deep sigh, as if that settled matters. âWell, if we ainât neck deep in snow by then, which itâs lookinâ like out there, tonight.â
âWeâll go, all the same. Weâll camp in the lodge and cook for ourselves and not worry about whoever might be listening, because it wonât be anybody but you and Aewynâs guard.â
âOh, now, you be careful wiâ that notion there, lad. If thereâs anybody reports to âIs Majesty, itâs that lot.â
âWell, but we wonât do anything to deserve reporting, will we? Weâll just eat sausages and holiday cakesâI think I can make them, myself, fair enough, if we have the makingsâand weâll have a good time and wear plain clothes, and you wonât have to call me mâlord there, either, because there wonât be servants. Iâll just be Otter again.â
Paisi grinned. âAinât no difference where we sit, Iâm bound to be your man, mâlord, until weâre back under Granâs roof, anâ who knows? Weâre still here, anâ things is goinâ right well for ye. If ye please your father anâ win them colors proper, maybe Iâll be your man after.â
âNever after, Paisi.â
âNow ye mind your words, there. You was born a kingâs son, mâlord, ye was, no question, anâ if justice is done, anâ if âeâs truly bent on sayinâ so in public, then, soâye ainât just Otter, ever again.â
âIâm not sure I want that, Paisi.â
âOf course you do. Anâ how âm I tâ stay with any kingâs son except Iâm a rare good servant? Which I was! I was Master Emuinâs helper, and Lord Tristenâs man, anâ it was Lord Tristen himself set me to watch you, wasnât it? So I ainât goinâ against his word, no, I ainât. Iâm stayinâ what I was told to be, âcause I ainât facinâ him to say no, no sir, I give up.â
It was a glum and sobering thought, never to be Otter again. But he was verging on a manâs estate, his voice already changed, and his upper lip needed just a touch of Paisiâs razor now and againâthere was no hope yet of more.
âWatered wine,â Paisi said, sliding down off the bed. âThereâs the proper cure for a troublinâ night and a howlinâ cold wind. Maybe wiâ just a little less water ân usual, it beinâ late. What dâ ye say?â
âIâd drink it,â he said. And Paisi poured it, with only a little water, andthey went back to the warmth of the hearthside and drank it, while Paisi heated coals in a bedwarmer, and took the pan to warm the sheetsâthere never was such a fine thing in Granâs house, but then, Granâs house was all one room, and the fireside never far, so their bed there never took such a chill as this one could, in its separate room. Paisi had a second cup, he added wine himselfâwhich was very much hedging Granâs strict instructions to keep the measure of water in the cup at two of water and one of wineâand they took themselves to bed.
To the same bed, there being ample room for both. It was the way they were accustomed to sleep at home in winterâall their lives were in that one room, the comfortable kitchen nook, their bed and Granâs. No sleeping in the guardsâ post for Paisi, though they mussed the bed there daily to make the servants think they had town manners, and laughed about it.
Tomorrowâs
Peter Lovesey
OBE Michael Nicholson
Come a Little Closer
Linda Lael Miller
Dana Delamar
Adrianne Byrd
Lee Collins
William W. Johnstone
Josie Brown
Mary Wine