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From: nostrumo@nienor.s.bawue.de (Nostrumo)
Subject: TG: "Milady's Wiles"   by Brandy Dewinter  (07/22)
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Hi.

  This is the latest story of Brandy DeWinter. A story about war and
the casualties of war.

  As always: I DIDN'T write this story and haven't any claim to it. If
you have some useful hints or some good comments, your mail is welcome.
Flames, you know, will be piped to /dev/null.

  If you are an author and wish to remain anonymous or just try to
avoid the replies to your work. I offer you the chance of posting your
stories and collecting the response for you. This offer only stands
for story postings and for nothing else.

Enjoy the story.

Ciao
	Nostrumo

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> cut here with a sharp knife <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<

Milady's Wiles
by Brandy Dewinter


Chapter 7 - A Dangerous Sunset

     Lyonidas quickly demonstrated that his disdain for court functions
was not a passing whim.  At the next scheduled petition review he arrived
on time, nodded politely to Queen Selay, and listened attentively to the
first case.

     Or tried to.  It was another longwinded review of some minor matter.
That was actually surprising to me.  Typically, the Chamberlain would have
taken care of these less important issues, except for a token few peasant
petitions at each session.  In the past the peasant petitions had come
near the end of the session, as they had been the day that Lyonidas had
returned.  However, for the first full session Lyonidas attended as
Regent, peasant petitions came first.

     The issue at hand dealt with a complaint that a farmer's hens had
quit laying eggs when the defendant's dog had treed some sort of animal
near their pen.  Both the dog's barking and the creature's threat had
frightened the stupid chickens.

     Lyonidas had learned at least part of his lesson.  His first question
for the plaintiff was to ask what the man would like to have done.  Here
was another surprise.  The man had been stuttering and stammering and
took forever to get anything out, until that question.  In contrast, this
answer was immediate.  He wanted restitution, not revenge.  Lyonidas
nodded as though this were a wise request but then stood pensively.

     He looked at Queen Selay.

     She smiled back quite serenely.

     He looked at me.

     I struggled to match Mother's quiet smile.

     A bit of twitter started up among those in attendance and I could
see a flush start to creep up Lyonidas' neck.  I knew I shouldn't help
him until Mother offered, but . . . well, I don't know why . . . I just
couldn't let him stand there unsupported.

     "Milord Regent, if I may be so bold as to ask a question," I said
quietly.

     His nod was so full of gratitude that I now felt worse for having let
it go so long.

     I spoke to the plaintiff. "Do you know the defendant very well?"

     He answered shyly, but without the painful slowness of his earlier
testimony, "Yes, Your Highness.  We have been neighbors for years."

     "What skill does he possess that you most admire?" I continued.

     "Well, he's pretty good with animals.  He spends a lot less time
whackin' on his mule to get it to do what he wants than I do on mine."

     This caused a titter of laughter to go through the throne room,
which in turn caused the man to shuffle uncertainly.  His poor hat,
which he had removed when he entered the chamber, had already been twisted
as he testified.  Now his white-knuckled grip threatened to destroy it
entirely.  I was about to offer a solution to the case but something made
me stop.  Instead, I just looked at Lyonidas, smiled another quiet smile,
and stepped back to my place by Queen Selay's side.

     His eyes first widened when he saw me yield the floor to him, then
softened in a way that was most . . . unsettling.  Now it was my turn
to blush and look at the floor, but when I raised my eyes to his, they
were still looking at me with that strange expression.

    Lyonidas straightened up and looked directly at Queen Selay, whose
expression seemed not to have changed a whit.  Now, Lyonidas had a con-
fident smile of his own to match her serenity.

     "You," he said, pointing at the defendant, "will trade mules with
this man until you have trained the one he currently has as well as your
own.  In addition, keep that dog under control.  If you're such a good
animal trainer then that should be within your grasp."

     "Is this acceptable to you?" he asked the plaintiff, whose head
jerked in a marionette nod.

     Then, in tones obviously matching those Mother had used previously he
said to her, "If, that is, this judgment is acceptable to the Queen?"

     She nodded with grave acceptance, then glanced at the Chamberlain.
Hugh called out for the next petition to come forward.

     When it was apparent that this would be another minor peasant squab-
ble I was even more surprised.  I had been attending these petition days
since I could walk and I had never seen so much time spent on so little
substance.  The sigh Lyonidas released when the context of the case became
apparent was almost as comical as the previous plaintiff's nervousness.
He stood there quietly though, hearing the case through.

     After once again determining that this plaintiff wanted restitution
as well, he asked the newest question in his judicial arsenal and deter-
mined that the defendant's wife made excellent bread.  Lyonidas assigned a
penalty of providing her hitherto secret recipe to the plaintiff's wife.
The plaintiff's pleasure at this verdict was obvious to all, but I thought
the defendant's horror was more interesting.  I made a mental note to meet
his wife some day.

     Yet a third pair of peasants came forward and this was just too much
for Lyonidas.  He glanced around as though looking for some sort of escape
from overwhelming enemies, to once again find his gaze captured by the
Queen's serene smile.

     Though I wasn't looking at her I could feel a tension in her shoulder
where my hand lightly rested.  Her voice, when she spoke, was quiet but I
could hear the power within it.

     "Prince Lyonidas, I'm afraid these proceedings are taking up a lot
of your time.  Perhaps I could continue in your stead in order to allow
you to take care of your other duties."

     There had been a slightly glazed look in his eyes while she spoke,
but as she concluded his head nodded with the same marionette motion we
had seen earlier on the first plaintiff.  Then he jerked and nodded more
naturally.

     "Your Majesty, if I could impose on you to carry on here, I must
make preparations for the arrival of additional nobles from High Canyon.
King Kragdle desires that more of our people should learn some of the
skills for which Achaiea is famous."

     Then I heard a mutter that I don't think he really intended to reach
either my ears, or Mother's, "Though courtly formality is certainly not
one I intend to export back to High Canyon."

     "Of course, Milord Regent, as you wish," Queen Selay replied, then
looked over at Julia.  "Julia, please escort the Regent."

     Julia roused from wherever her mind had taken her and looked up with
a bright smile at Lyonidas.  His own smile answered hers and they swept
from the room with more energy than combined in all those required to
remain.

     It was only after they had left that I realized that there were no
High Canyon nobles left in the room, only a couple of faceless guards
interspersed with our own Achaiean soldiers in a joint detail.

     Queen Selay's next glance was to the Chamberlain and he nodded brief-
ly.  Instead of letting the peasants present their own case, Hugh summa-
rized it and recommended a resolution.  Mother nodded and the case was
disposed of within minutes.  The next case was much more substantial,
dealing with the allocation of lands among the survivors of nobles killed
in the recent war.  Queen Selay decided that with dispatch but imme-
diately after she had elevated a young lord to a newly defined barony, she paused.

     "Baron Spencer, will you swear fealty now?" she asked, but in a tone
that made it an order.

     "Of course, Your Majesty," he answered, moving to kneel before her.

     "No" she interrupted him, "my position is temporary.  You must swear
fealty to the Princess."

     He was surprised but not unwilling.  Actually, from the look of as-
sessment he gave me I wondered if he actually preferred the gesture.  His
father had been one of the outlying nobles and we had never before met.
To the best of my knowledge he knew nothing of our masquerade.  Certainly
his demeanor betrayed no hint that he thought I was anything other than
what I appeared when he knelt and offered his hands to mine.

     As I stepped forward I felt a strange tension again, like what I had
sensed when Mother had spoken to Lyonidas.  It was as though the white-
cold mind were gathering energy, but distant somehow.  Before I had felt
like a sword heated to blinding brilliance, hovering before an equally
brilliant field of snow.  Now I felt as though I watched that same sword
from just far enough away to avoid the heat, yet still it moved under my
command.  I took Spencer's hands within my own, their dark strength
contrasting sharply with my own pale fingers, and looked in to his eyes.

     As I repeated the standard words I realized another aspect of
Mother's plan.  This oath bound Spencer to me as his King, even if he
didn't realize it at the time.

     "Spencer, Baron of North Vale, do you swear fealty to Achaiea and to
her Monarch?  Do you swear to lay your fortune at her feet and if need be,
to sacrifice your life on the altar of her protection?"

     I felt the strange new aspect of the white-cold mind flow from my
eyes to his as Spencer answered, "I swear."  With whatever senses Mother
had shared when she impressed her mannerisms upon me, I knew that Baron
Spencer was now loyal with a force beyond words.  His life now belonged to
me, personally.

     Then he blinked and grinned and I knew he didn't find the prospect of
belonging to me, personally, at all distasteful.  Or, at least, he didn't
think it would be.  I smiled in reflex and saw his grin widen to something
almost childlike in its pleasure, though there were undercurrents that of-
fered promises decidedly not appropriate for children.

     And that awoke within me feelings that I definitely didn't want to
examine right then.  I let his hands drop and stood back to my place,
feeling his eyes on me even as my own eyes looked at Mother.  She nodded
slightly to reassure me that this was acceptable to her then glanced at
Hugh to call for the next petition.

     A dozen barons were confirmed that day, each swearing fealty to the
realm, but through my hands and so to me as well.  Each time I felt the
power build within me as I took their oath, channeling through them into a
much tighter binding than they might have thought they were going to be
making.

     Yet all these acts took surprisingly little time, less actually than
had been spent on just the two cases that Lyonidas had personally re-
viewed.  This was more like the petition audiences that I remembered:
focused, efficient, and purposeful.  After a short but busy time, Queen
Selay stood.

     "Cherysse, please accompany me," she ordered, which amounted to a
dismissal of the others in attendance.

     I followed her to her chambers, where she sat in her accustomed
chair and waved me to a nearby stool.  Greyshadow was in her lap before
she could speak but as soon as the cat was settled she challenged me.

     "What did you observe today?"

     "Lyonidas doesn't have a chance.  Kragdle doesn't have a prayer," I
answered bluntly, if obliquely.

     Queen Selay laughed, but nodded as well.  It was good to hear her
laugh.  She'd done precious little of that since Father had died.  Another
nod urged me to continue.

     "Is that what you meant about using the white-cold mind without being
consumed by it?" I asked, again with a comment that would have seemed
irrelevant to most of those who had attended the audience.

     "Yes," she replied.  "You don't need, in fact don't want the con-
suming anger if all you are doing is reinforcing a desire the target
already possesses.  Yet the reinforcement is strong.  I don't think
Lyonidas will be back to hear more petitions.  And you need never doubt
the loyalty of those who swore fealty to you today."

     I mused, "The next time you have a council meeting I assume Hugh will
have trivial issues lined up until once again Lyonidas escapes."

     This made her smile again, pleased that I had noticed the irregular
agenda, "Yes.  We'll use the rest of the time to reinforce the oaths of
fealty of the council members.  We need to get that in before these new
nobles that Lyonidas referred to arrive and become involved."

     "Mother, do you play me with the same skill you use on Lyonidas?"

     "What do you think?" she didn't answer.  I recognized the technique,
but didn't know exactly what to do about it so I answered her question
instead.

     "I don't know.  Everything I do seems perfectly reasonable," then
I had to giggle, "well, except for wearing dresses.  But sometimes I
look above my head for the strings you're manipulating."

     A somber look appeared on her features.  She nodded to me in confir-
mation of my perception and of respect for my insight.

     "Dear child, there are things that you need to do that I don't think
you could do without my help.  Things that I don't think I want you to
be able to do on your own.  Yet they are necessary if Achaiea is to sur-
vive, if you are to survive.  When the time comes that you recognize all
that I have done to you, please don't hate me."

     "Mother, I could never hate you!" I denied, but she only looked
away in refusal to argue.

     When she looked up again, new resolution was in her eyes.  And a
new topic was on her lips.

     "Tonight we will have another formal dinner.  This time, since
Lyonidas has enjoyed Julia's company for the day we will focus his atten-
tion on you for the dinner.  You must, of course, wear your mourning
black, but I promise you that the black gown you wear will outshine any
other gowns no matter how colorful."

     True to her words, the gown she chose for me was breathtaking.  Or,
at least it would be breathtaking.  Since my infernal steel companion kept
me constantly breathless I had none for the gown to take.  Still, it was
beautiful.  Some subtle artistry of the designer had made it seem indecen-
tly revealing, while actually concealing everything.  A part of that was
the fit.  The skirts didn't start to expand until much lower on my hips
than usual and above that every curve was caressed with shimmer and shine.
Accents of golden thread and decorative jewels ran along the limits of
propriety for mourning, but with the Queen's acceptance no one else would
presume to judge otherwise.

     In contrast to the theoretically somber gown, the Queen instructed
the palace cosmetician to make my face vibrant and cheerful.  Which didn't
take much effort.  The gown was so pretty and the thought of an evening of
attention from Lyonidas was so . . . interesting, that I had plenty of
pleasure on which to build.  Still, it took a good deal of the afternoon
for the servants to prepare me to Queen Selay's satisfaction.  I was more
than anxious to go when she finally declared me ready.

     Her faithful servant Amy was sent to inform Lyonidas that we were
awaiting his pleasure to escort us to dinner.  As Regent he was required
to attend to the Queen.  This left his apparent second in command, Strane,
to escort me.  Olrin attended Julia and one of the new High Canyon
arrivals was escorting Duchess Amity when we met them.

     "I don't believe we've been introduced," Queen Selay observed when we
came close to Amity's escort.  He was a bit older, perhaps 45 to Amity's
40, yet still fit, spare with the look of campaign deprivations.

     Lyonidas made the introductions, "This is General Reynal.  It was
he that held High Canyon while my Father was, um, occupied elsewhere."

     Reynal's eyes observed my dress with a combination of appreciation
and distaste.  He was clearly not too old to enjoy the look of a pretty
girl, but the form-revealing fit was a bit too much for a man steeped in
traditions of flowing robes.  While his eyes were making their insulting
inspection of my body, I remembered that Mother wanted the relationships
as confused as possible.  So when his stare reached my face I let a little
smolder into my eyes to tease him.

     Teasing this man would likely be a highly hazardous pastime.  His
eyes sent a message of ownership my way, declaring that I was his for
the taking, anytime he felt like it.  It was not sensual, it was con-
suming.  He would use me for his pleasure whether it pleasured me or not.
All that passed in the space between heartbeats, in the tiniest twitch of
his thin lips and of his glittering dark eyes.

     But it still made me angry.  I was a Princess!  I was not a plaything
for him or any other jumped-up High Canyon thug.  Instead of cowering
before his power, I felt the white-cold mind building within me.  All that
I let out though, was the heat of apparent passion barely under control.
If he wanted me, he'd have to come take me.  It might be worth it, but it
wouldn't be easy.

     This counter message took only another heartbeat, over by the time
Mother had us moving forward again.  I tossed my hair dismissively as I
turned back to Strane and followed the Queen and Regent to the table.

       Most of the escorts were wrong, of course.  Queen Selay was un-
touchable as the widow of the late King, escorted by Lyonidas the Regent
as a courtesy.  Lyonidas was actually intended for me in Kragdle's plan
which bumped Strane to the next ranking maiden, Julia.  Poor Olrin fell
off the end of the train as odd man out.  Only Reynal and Amity were a
potentially correct pair.

     Hugh the Chamberlain knew how this game was played as well as anyone
so as we were seated the right pairs were appropriately arranged.  Mother
and Lyonidas sat together, but I sat beside Lyonidas, with Reynal on
mother's far side.  That was probably a good thing since the energy that
had flowed between the High Canyon general and me could quickly have
gotten out of control.

     Strane sat next to me, but Julia was at his other side.  Poor Strane,
if I had any sympathy for someone from High Canyon, it would be for him.
The relaxed power that Lyonidas displayed so casually was almost Achaiean
in its openness.  Strane was at the other end of the personality spectrum,
a typical High Canyonite.  He was dark, brooding, no clearer to read when
his hood was back than when he was cowled.  No more hopeless romance could
ever have existed than his pursuit of the flame-haired Julia with her
mercurial moods, ready wit, and sharp tongue.  Yet he attended her with
ponderous duty, excruciatingly polite, totally unresponsive to her not-so-
gentle barbs.

     "So, My Princess, how did your day go after I left the audience of
endless petitions?" Lyonidas interrupted my musings.  In his tone was
a clear statement of possessiveness of a different sort than Reynal
broadcast.

     "It was duty, Milord Regent," I sighed.  Mother's ploy to keep him
from wanting to come back provided appropriate responses for me.

     "What did you do?" I asked in an attempt to change the near-term sub-
ject that was as obvious to Lyonidas as Mother's  long-term plan was
subtle.

     "Julia and I worked with the castle staff to find suitable quarters
for the new arrivals," he explained.

     "And did you find our secret arsenals of deadly new weapons in your
explorations of the castle?" I teased.

     He smiled to show he understood the humor, but then countered with a
serious statement, "There are no deadly weapons, only deadly men."

     "And deadly women," he concluded with a laugh, resuming the light-
hearted tone of the conversation.

     "Why, Milord Regent, in the short time I've known you that is the
second time you've made reference to deadly females.  It seems to be some-
thing of an obsession with you."  My grin had a challenge in it, though
not of physical confrontation.

     "If you had ever met my mother, you would understand," he chuckled in
return.

     "Much like your own mother, actually," he observed lightly, though
with enough voice that Mother overheard.

     "Not surprising," she replied.  "Giselle is my cousin."

     "Your cousin?" I exclaimed in unbelief.

     "Yes.   She was sent as envoy from my homeland, Vidalia, to the court
of High Canyon.  In time, a message was sent to Vidalia requesting her
hand for the crown prince, Kragdle.  We had never met the man, but the
alliance seemed appropriate.  Perhaps it has been.  At least Vidalia still
lives independent of High Canyon."

     "Please, Your Majesty, no recriminations tonight," Lyonidas pleaded.

     "I'm sorry," she replied.  "You're right, we must move forward."

     "So, what did you see on your tour?" I tried to return the conver-
sation to lighter topics.

     "More rooms than I have ever seen in one building before," Lyonidas
answered.  "You could spend your whole life without seeing the sun."

     The horror in his expression was overdone for comic impact, but I
could see the underlying truth into his heart.  It was one we shared.

     "I know what you mean.  I spend much time at my studies, my music,
and my art, but I try never to miss a sunset."

     "Did you know," I continued, "that from high enough up you can ac-
tually see the darkness flowing across the valley?"

     His eyes got a faraway look of nostalgia, "Yes.  I know.  I have
often watched it race along its appointed course.  From the mountains
of my homeland."

     "It must be beautiful," I mused quietly.

     All of the sudden his eyes cleared and he looked directly at me,
"Once upon a time I would have said it was the greatest beauty that
existed in all the world."

     I blushed at the intensity of his gaze, flattered at the same time I
was embarrassed.  Before I had to make a response, though, Julia's crystal
laugh caroled out as one of the strolling minstrels turned an especially
witty phrase.  Lyonidas looked at her with first automatic annoyance and
then a resurrection of the look of appreciation that had recently been
mine.

     I reached for a roll, letting my unbound gold flow forward.  It
happened to cut off his view of Julia.  He jerked at the interruption in
his concentration then grinned with a self-satisfied sort of complacency
that was infuriating at the same time it was challenging.

     Lyonidas used my silence for an opportunity to talk with the Queen
and Reynal for a moment while Strane was still trying to capture Julia's
interest.  So for a few minutes I was alone in the crowd, lost in my own
musings.  As I was about to try and return to the rest of the world, Queen
Selay stood.

     "Milord Regent, though the sun is only now setting there are other
duties that must be attended to before retiring.  Princess Cherysse has
her studies, as I know she told you, while Julia and I are still dealing
with the demands of administration since all our men have been taken from
us.  If we may be excused?"

     "Of course, please allow us to escort you back to your chambers," he
replied.  It was uncharacteristic of Mother to return to a topic after a
request to avoid it, but it was no accident.  She wanted Lyonidas to feel
the guilt and to recognize the cost to a once-prosperous society.  While
his tone was light and his actions brisk, I could see the hurt in his eyes
at her comment.  A part of me wished away that hurt, while another part
chided myself for not using my wishes to remove the cause of that hurt.

     We were soon back in the private part of the castle.  My claim to
watch the sunsets was a true one so before I removed the black gown I
climbed to the highest balcony of the central keep.  I had watched the
sunsets from there since before I could clearly remember.  The Chamberlain
had laughingly told me once that the people of the castle used the last
moment when the evening sun lit my golden hair as the official definition
of sunset.

     So it should have been no surprise when I found Lyonidas already
there when I arrived.  He could have heard the story anywhere, or even
determined for himself that this was the best place from which to watch
the declining sun.  When I stepped from the doorway he was seated easily
on the surrounding ledge, careless of the long drop so close beside.

     "So, you do watch the sunsets," he smiled, no real doubt in his
voice.

     "Yes, when I can."

      "It is very beautiful up here," he said softly, though he was not
looking over the valley when he said it.

     I just nodded, and moved to stand near the protecting ledge myself.

     It always surprised me how much the colors changed as the sun went
down.  Sometimes, the land turned a deep purple, others it just grayed
into oblivion.  Yet others, it seemed as though all colors appeared in
such quick succession that I didn't dare blink for I'd miss entire ranges
of beauty.  Those times always seemed magical, as though God were making a
special show of artistry just for me.

     This night was one of those, though this time the show was not just
for me.  Lyonidas had moved to stand beside me and watched as silently
transfixed as I was myself.

     The last golden glimmer finally disappeared over the western pass and
we were left with only the twilight afterglow.

     Lyonidas reached out to caress my hair from his position beside me.
His soft voice barely disturbed the quiet, "It's officially sunset."

     "So you've heard of that silly saying," I said as I turned to look at
him.

     "You look incredibly beautiful tonight," he said, still so softly I
had to hold my breath to hear him.  Or maybe I just found myself holding
my breath.

     "I thought you preferred redheads," I accused, and felt a little pout
forming as I remembered his look at Julia.

     Perhaps I shouldn't have called attention to my lips.  Or maybe it
was exactly the right thing to do.  Right then my emotions were so out
of control I couldn't possibly have judged good and bad, right and wrong.
All I knew was that his arms were around me, and his lips were crushing
the pout out of mine with fierce intensity.  His hands were caressing my
hair and I surrendered to the sensuality, letting his lips control the
kiss, his hands invade my tresses, his body define the curve mine must
take.  I felt one hand leave my hair and begin a slow, possessive caress
down the curve of my waist, down to the swell of my hips revealed by the
low flare of the skirts on this so-seductive gown.

     "Cherysse," he murmured into my hair, the word itself a caress.

     I turned my face back to his and offered my swollen lips in demanding
surrender.  My body swayed into his hand, begging without words for his
touch.  My heart was beating far too fast to support my frantic need and
that terrible device within my dress wouldn't allow me the breath I so
desperately cherished.  My world began to darken with more than the
absence of the sun and the last thing I remember is clutching at his broad
shoulders for support as I swooned into oblivion.



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