The King's Blood

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Authors: Daniel Abraham
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agreeing.
    “I know that the temple is your work, and I don’t want to take you from it… I mean I do, but I don’t.”
    “You wish the aid of the goddess,” Basrahip said.
    “I do. But I’m not comfortable asking. Do you see how that is?”
    Basrahip laughed. It was a rich sound, and filled the air like a thunderstorm. The high priest rose from the floor with the strength and grace of a dancer.
    “Prince Geder, you ask for what is already yours. You gave this temple to her. You brought her out of the wild and returned her to the world. For all this you are beloved in her sight.”
    “So it wouldn’t be too great a favor to ask?” Geder said, hope blooming in his breast.
    “It is already yours. I am your Righteous Servant. I will attend you at any time, or at all times. You need only keep the promise you made to her.”
    “Ah,” Geder said. “And which promise is that?”
    “In each city that comes beneath the power of your will, grant her a temple. It need not be so great as this. Do this for her, and I will never leave your side.”
    The relief was like putting cold water on a burn. Geder smiled.
    “I can’t tell you how glad I am to hear that,” he said. “Really. I’m really not cut out for court life.”
    The priest laid a huge hand on his shoulder and smiled gently.
    “You are, Prince Geder. So long as your Righteous Servant is with you, you are.”

Clara Kalliam, Baroness of Osterling Fells
     
    W
    inter was a different thing for men. She’d seen it for years. Decades now, and there was a thought. Decades. With autumn came the close of court, the ending of all the season’s intrigues and duels and political wrestling. The great houses folded up their belongings, put cloths over their furniture to keep the dust away, and returned to the lands that supported them. For a month or two, the lords worked their holdings. The tribute of the farmers and potters and tanners accepted in their name and absence were accounted. The magistrates they’d appointed would consult on whatever issues they’d felt the lord should decide. Justice would be dispensed, tours made of the villages and farms, and a plan drawn up for the management of the holding over the next year. And all of it as quickly as possible so that it could all be finished when the King’s Hunt began, and they all rushed off to one holding or another—or, if they were unlucky, prepared their own homes to act as host to king and royal hunters—and ran down boars and deer until first thaw.
    There was no time to rest, and Clara didn’t know how they managed it. How her husband managed it.
    For her, the short days and long nights were the time of year when she could rest. Recuperate. For weeks before and after Longest Night, Clara slept long and deep. She spent her days sitting before a fire, her fingers busy with their embroidering and her mind at rest. The stillness of winter was her refuge, and the thought of a year without it inspired the same dread as contemplating a night without sleep. She was an older woman now, the grey in her hair no longer sparse enough to bother plucking out. Her daughter was married and with a child of her own. But even when she’d been young, Clara had known that winter was her season away from the world.
    And spring was her return to it.
    “There have always been religious cults,” she said. “Lady Ternigan was brought up in the Avish mysteries, and it never seemed to do her any particular harm.”
    “I’m just concerned that there won’t be any silver left for the real priests,” Lady Casta Kiriellin, Duchess of Lachloren, said. “Your son’s in training for the priesthood, isn’t he, Clara?”
    “Vicarian,” Clara agreed. “But he’s always said there are as many ways to worship as there are worshippers. I’m sure if something new comes along, he’s quite prepared to learn those rites as well.”
    Lady Joen Mallian, the youngest of the group, leaned forward. Her skin was pale as daisies and

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