Sweep of the Blade Page 2
“I couldn’t agree more,” the Knight Sergeant said.
She let out a small breath of relief.
“Unfortunately, my nephew took it upon himself to inform his mother already.”
What? She kept her voice calm. “He did?”
“Oh yes,” Lord Soren said, his face looking like he’d just bitten into a lemon. “He sent the message via an emergency jump-drone, two days before we left the planet, announcing that he would be bringing a bride and to make sure adequate accommodations were prepared.”
Damn it, Arland. “He didn’t ask her blessing?”
“No. I believe he commanded the household to make themselves ‘presentable.’”
Because his mother would never find that offensive. Maud closed her eyes for a tiny moment.
“Then he sent a second message, stating that you turned him down, but you would be joining him anyway.”
Arland had accelerated. He was looking at her as if she was the lone light in a dark room.
“Did his mother reply?”
“Yes.”
Maud steeled herself. “What did she say?”
“Just five words,” Lord Soren said. “Can’t wait to meet her.”
Great. Just great.
Soren reached over and awkwardly patted her arm. “It could be worse.”
She couldn’t for the life of her to see how.
Arland reached them. “Lady Maud.”
His voice sent a soft rumble through her. She hated that. It was weakness, but she had no idea how to compensate for it. She wished she could be immune.
“Lord Arland.”
Lord Soren discreetly stepped away and strolled closer to the arch of the summoning gate. Helen abandoned the fish and the water and brought her bag over. Arland held out his hands, but Helen stayed by Maud’s side.
“No hug?” he asked.
“Mommy said to be polite.”
“There are certain appearances that must be observed, my lord,” Maud said.
“I never cared much for appearances,” he said. His eyes were soft and warm. Inviting.
She needed to get her head examined.
“Unfortunately, some of us are not in the position to not care.”
The summoning gate turned crimson. Lord Soren stepped into the light and vanished.
“My lady.” Arland indicated the gate with his hand.
He reached for her bag, but she shouldered it out of his reach. They walked toward the gate.
“What’s bothering you?” he asked quietly.
“You told your mother.”
“Of course, I did. You’re not some shameful secret I’m going to hide.”
“No, I’m a disgraced exile who had the audacity to turn down a proposal from the most beloved son of House Krahr.”
He considered it. “Not the most beloved. My cousin is much more adorable than me. He is two and his hair is curly.”
“Lord Arland…”
His eyes sparked with humor. “You could always remedy it and say yes.”
“No.”
Helen was looking at them. Maud realized they were standing in front of the summoning gate and bickering.
“You remember this?” Arland asked her.
Helen nodded and eyed the gate. “It makes my tummy sick.”
“Do you want to hold my hand?” Maud asked.
“We have to do it quick, like charging a castle.” Arland reached out, swung Helen onto his shoulders, and roared. Helen roared with him. They ducked through the gate and vanished.
“Arland!” Maud snapped.
They were gone.
She was on her own on the arrival deck with half of Arland’s crew gaping at her. She clenched her teeth and walked into the crimson glow.
Chapter 2
The crimson glow of the summoning gate died behind Maud. She blinked, fighting the vertigo, and walked away from it on autopilot, to keep from blocking other arrivals.
To the right, about twenty-five yards away, Arland stopped to speak to three vampires. He’d taken Helen off his shoulders – thank you, Universe – and she gaped at the spaceport.
Maud looked around and stopped to gape, too. She stood in a cavernous rectangular chamber. Daylight flooded it through long, narrow rectangular windows, cut in the grey stone walls twenty feet above. She turned slowly, trying to take it all in.
To her left, the summoning gate glowed, about to release another traveler into the spaceport. To her right, small craft, sleek fighters and a few light civilian vessels, perched on the floor, and beyond them enormous hangar doors stood wide open, filled with blue sky. Above the hanger doors, a stone relief depicted a snarling krahr. The massive predator, its wide head a cross between a bear and a tiger, roared at the visitors, its maw gaping open, its sabretooth fangs a fatal promise. A thin crack down the krahr’s left side had chipped a bit of stone fur from its jaw. Nobody had fixed it.
It hit her. House Krahr was an old House.
Melizard’s House, House Ervan, was much younger. Noceen was a prosperous planet, with a gentle climate, colonized only two hundred years ago, and House Ervan had emerged as one of the prominent vampire clans due mostly to sheer luck. They had arrived to the planet to colonize it and the land they’d claimed contained rich mineral deposits. Their wealth bought them weapons, equipment, and infrastructure. Everything on Noceen had been of the highest quality, modern and slick, especially the spaceport, where the traditional vampire stone was a veneer and the wood had been artificially distressed. She’d thought it rather grand when she first saw it. But this… this was the real thing.
All vampire spaceports were castles. Easily defended to allow for evacuation to orbit, easily contained if a threat were to arrive via the summoning gate. The spaceport of House Krahr had been built hundreds of years ago. The weathered stones under her feet, the massive wooden beams above, darkened by time, the thick stone walls, all of it emanated age. This was a stronghold, raised when strongholds had a purpose. Here and there modernization showed, but its touch was subtle and light: upgraded windows of transparent plasti-steel, sensors high in the walls, and the massive blast-proof hangar gates. But the stronghold itself breathed an overwhelming sense of ancientness. It spoke to the visitors without uttering a word.
We have built this. It endured for centuries. Countless generations of us walked across its threshold and still we have it, for no one is strong enough to take it away from us.
It wasn’t about money. It was a statement of power, harsh and brutal. It demanded respect, especially from a vampire, to whom tradition and family meant everything. It commanded awe and took it as its due.
She was so in over her head, it wasn’t even funny.
Arland strode to her, Helen at his side. “My lady.”
Clipped, formal words. The easy familiarity she’d become accustomed to was gone. She had expected as much.
“My lord.”
“I must apologize. There is a matter requiring my urgent attention.” He leaned closer to her. “Don’t go anywhere. I’ll be back in ten minutes.”
“As you wish, my lord.”
“I mean it,” he said. “Ten minutes.”
He seemed genuinely worried she would disappear. “Helen and I will wait for you.”
He nodded and marched away. The three vampire knights fell in behind him.
To the right, two vampire women followed him with their gazes. Both wore armor with the crest of House Kozor, a horned beast on red. One was lean and tall, with a waterfall of chestnut hair framed by elaborate braids. The other, curvier, her armor more ornate, left her corn-silk blond mane free. It fell all the way to her butt in shiny waves, and by the way she tossed her head, she was quite proud of it.
Interesting. “Would you like to see the shuttles?”
“Yes,” Helen said.
“Let’s go look at them.”
They drifted closer to the shiny shuttles and to the two vampire women. Helen went to look at the elegant fighter, painted pure wh
ite, and Maud watched her, keeping the two women on the very edge of her vision.
“… not the time to satiate your appetites,” the taller woman said.
Maud’s implant remained silent, but she understood regardless. Ancestor Vampiric. It was an older language, with dozens of regional dialects and variation. A lot of vampires could barely understand it, especially if it was spoken by a vampire from a different homeworld. Speech implants failed to interpret it, and outsiders didn’t speak it, but then she wasn’t an outsider. A lot of the great epics had been written in Ancestor Vampiric, and reciting them had been a point of pride for members of House Ervan. She had tried so hard to be the best wife for Melizard. She was fluent in a dozen dialects and could understand others easily enough.
“You have to admit, he’s a prime specimen,” the blonde said.
“He’s preoccupied with his human toy. That’s her over there.”
“Toys can be broken,” the blonde said.
Anytime you want to try.
“That is a beautiful child,” the blonde said.
“A halfer,” the brunette sneered.
“Still, a cute little mongrel. Do you think she’s his?”
“No. The woman is an exile from some no-name House. One of the nouveau riche from the frontier. She was married to their marshal’s son. He betrayed his House.”
“Interesting,” the blonde stretched the word.
“Apparently Arland found her on Karhari.”
“The Marshal gets around.” The blonde smiled. “You should let me play with him. It really is a shame to lose—”
“Be silent,” the chestnut snapped.
“Fine,” the blonde sighed.
“I mean it. Mind your tongue, Seveline. Too many people have done too much work for you to ruin it with your blabbering. The future of our House is riding on this.”
“I said, fine,” Seveline’s voice turned sharper.
Short fuse, that one. She could use that later.
Helen moved on to the next shuttle and Maud strolled past the two women.
“My lady,” the blonde said in Common Vampiric. “Pleasant day to you and your beautiful daughter.”
Maud inclined her head a neutral couple of inches. “Greetings, my lady.”
“I’m Seveline of the House of Kozor. This is my friend, Lady Onda, also of House Kozor.”
They treated her like she was an idiot who couldn’t identify crests. Perfect.
“I’m honored,” Maud said.
The two women smiled, showing the very edges of their teeth.
“Is this your first time enjoying the hospitality of House Krahr?” Onda asked.
“Yes.”
“You’re in for a treat,” Seveline said. “Their festivities are legendary. Once you are settled, do find me. I see us becoming the best of friends.”
“Indeed,” Onda said.
Two-faced bitches.
“I’ll do my best,” Maud said.
Arland was marching toward her with a grim look on his face.
“I must beg your forgiveness,” Maud said. “The Marshal requires my presence.”
“We wouldn’t presume to keep you,” Onda said.
“You are beyond gracious. Come, my flower.”
Maud took Helen by the hand and headed toward Arland. They met halfway.
“Sorry,” he murmured.
“Trouble?”
“Inconvenience. Are you ready to depart?”
“Yes.”
He led her to a small silver shuttle, a six-seater.
“Am I flying with you in your personal craft?”
“Yes,” he said.
“Is that wise?”
“I thought we established that I don’t care about being wise.”
Flying in his personal shuttle meant she’d face scrutiny at the point of landing, but it also meant she could speak to Arland in privacy.
Maud settled Helen into a soft blue seat and hopped into the passenger spot next to Arland. He touched the controls and the shuttle streaked through the hangar into the sky.
Arland was an excellent pilot.
The take-off was so smooth, Maud barely felt the acceleration. Instead of flicking on the autopilot, the shuttle’s equivalent of cruise control, he guided the small craft manually. The landscape rolled under them, a thick forest growth, the massive trees stretching their ancient branches to the sun. A moment, and the dense canopy abruptly fell away.
The spaceport sat in the middle of a mesa, and now they’d cleared it. Below, a sheer drop fell to dizzying depths, the bottom of it no longer forest, but a verdant grassland. A wide river wound through it, unrestrained by any dams. White mesas bordered it all, their tops dripping green and turquoise woods.
“Oooh,” Helen offered from the back seat.
“Do you like it?” Arland asked.
“It’s beautiful,” Maud said honestly.
“It’s home,” he said.
It could be your home, his glance added.
Too early for that.
He looked straight ahead, his face calm, and she found herself staring at the hard line of his jaw. Imagining running her fingers down its length…
Stop it, she told herself.
“Does it strike you as odd, my lord, that Kozor and Serak decided to bury the hatchet?”
“Alliances are broken and created all the time,” he said. His voice held no enthusiasm. He didn’t like it either. Her instincts rarely failed her, but it was nice to have a confirmation.
“True. But most Houses view such old rivalries as healthy.”
“Is that so?” he said.
“It is. Conflict keeps their forces sharp. The strong and talented emerge, weaker people are culled, and there are ample opportunities for heroism and much growling about duty and honor.”
Arland smiled, showing a hint of a fang. “And speeches. Don’t forget the speeches.”
“Their feud is generations old. There are dead and wronged on both sides. There must be some mutual advantage for them to set it aside. Are you aware of such an advantage?”
“No.”
“Then it must be a common enemy.”
Arland sighed.
She raised her eyebrows at him.
“Your reasoning is sound,” he said. “I’m not arguing with it. A month ago, I said pretty much the same thing at a strategy session where this wedding request was discussed.”
“And?”
“And I was told there was no graceful way to refuse the request. We are the dominant House in the quadrant. We have no evidence we are being lied to, and we have no excuse to deny it. We aren’t at war, and our House is enjoying unprecedented prosperity at the moment. Holding a wedding in a neutral territory had been done before, so the tradition is on their side.”
He’d said the magic word. “Tradition.”
“Yes. If we refused to host this wedding, there would be questions.”
“‘Is House Krahr so weak that they are afraid of allowing a mere two hundred wedding guests into their territory?’ ‘Is House Krahr worried about Srak-Kozor alliance?’”
He nodded.
Hosting a wedding was expensive. Tradition dictated that something had to be offered in return. “What was their offer?”
“Safe haven for our merchant ships.”
“House Krahr can’t protect its merchant fleet?”
He grimaced. “The sector bordering the Serak system is filled with pirates. Both Kozor and Serak have been fighting them for the better part of a century. There is a four-point warp near that system.”
Four-point warps were rare. It meant that a ship could enter hyperspace and choose any of the other three destinations. That stretch of space likely served as a major shipping artery. The multi-point warp was also part of the reason Earth enjoyed its special status. The Solar system contained the only known twelve-point warp in existence.
“Our armada is more than sufficient for the protection of our merchant fleets,” Arland continued
. “The pirates go after freelancers, courier ships, exploration-and-survey crews, and family miners and salvagers.”
“Anything too small to warrant an escort by a ship of war.”
“Exactly. The crews of these smaller craft are members of House Krahr and neighboring Houses. It’s been an ongoing thorny issue. We’ve gone after the pirate fleet a few times. Their ships are small and maneuverable. They simply scatter. We chase down one or two of their vessels and turn them to cosmic dust. Meanwhile the rest vanish. Kozor and Serak have the advantage of location and experience fighting them. They offered protection for our smaller craft, and we took it.”
To tell him about two Kozor women or not to tell him?
If he were Melizard, she would’ve held back until she had something more concrete.
That settled it. “I overheard a conversation in the spaceport. Two knights of House Kozor, Onda and Seveline.”
“Anything interesting?” he asked.
“Seveline appraised you like you were a side of beef. In her opinion, you’re a prime specimen and she wouldn’t mind taking a bite.”
He grinned at her. He had a terrible smile. It made him look predatory and slightly boyish at the same time. The combination was devastating.
“They called me a halfer,” Helen said from the back seat.
The smiled vanished, as if jerked away from his face. “You’re not a halfer,” Arland growled. “You’re a vampire and a human. Both and whole, not half and half.”
Maud could’ve kissed him. Instead, she plastered a cool expression on her face. “Seveline told Onda that she should be allowed to play with you, because it would be a shame to lose.”
“To lose what?”
“I don’t know, because Onda jumped down her throat and made her be quiet. According to her, too many people worked too hard for Seveline to ruin it. Whatever ‘it’ is.”
Arland’s eyes narrowed. “I don’t like it.”
Maud leaned back in her seat. “Neither do I. Later Seveline made it a point to flag me down and offer me some pleasantries. She believes we will become fast friends.”
Arland gave her a calculating look. “Perhaps you should.”
If only. She grimaced. “I can’t. For me to become her ‘friend,’ I would have to pretend to be weak and ignorant. Your mother didn’t come to greet you at the spaceport. She’s displeased.”