lent them, with Captain Uwen Lewenâs-son and Tristenâs bodyguard attending, all climbed the hill in a lazy fall of fat lumps of snow.
That families were asleep and shutters were drawn and latched up and down the streets lent welcome anonymity to their passageâ¦for by day the sight of the duke of Amefel riding in company with the red-haired former duchess and her sister would have alarmed the town.
As it was, their small party reached the Zeideâs West Gate and dismounted with little fuss. The stableboys turned out dutifully, bleary-eyed with sleepâuntil they discovered their lord had brought two visitors they never wished to see again. Then young eyes grew wide, and the boys moved fearfully and quickly about their business.
The gate-guards, who had come inward bearing torches to light the stable yard, also recognized the visitors by that light and seemed utterly confounded to know who the women were. So with the west stairs guards, who came down in their turn and stopped in their tracks.
âHereâs your own lord!â Uwen Lewenâs-son said to the gawkers. âAnâ heâs giâen refuge to these ladies, on account of some damn godless bandits has burned down the nunnery at Anwyfar. They walked here in the storm, half-dead and near frozen, which ainât their choice, nor His Graceâs. Donât gawp, there, man! Help their ladyships inside! Anâ you, Edas! Run up to Master Tassand anâ tell him come down anâ get âis orders! Haste about it!â
Tristen himself was only too glad to have turned over Petellyâs reins to a stableboy. Now he climbed the west stairs, taking charge of his guests.
âWhere shall we lodge?â Orien Aswydd asked him haughtily, turning and standing fast at the landing a step above him, and only a breath later did Tristen realize she was none so subtly inquiring after her former rooms. Those rooms happened to be the ducal apartmentâ his apartment.
And little as he liked his lodgings, green velvet draperies and all the heraldry of the Aswydds into the bargain, he had no intention whatsoever of allowing these women that symbolic honor of place. The ducal apartments were not merely rooms: they were an appurtenance of high office, a place from which the dukeâs orders flowed to all Amefel, and no , and twice no, Orien Aswydd should not have them.
Nor should she have any other such stately rooms, now that she made a demand of it, not a decision of spite, but rather of realization that nothing he granted her was without consequence in the view of those watching him. Her deserts were in fact the West Gate guardhouse and the headmanâs block: King Cefwyn had stripped title and lands from her, but spared her life, despite the fact her crimes included attempted regicide. Cefwyn had spared her life and sent her off to the nunnery instead on the understanding she would never return to Henasâamef or set claim on the duchy.
And now, now so very soon after the new year, here she stopped at the west doors of her former hall, drew herself up straight and defiant despite the ravages of weather and a body lately failing from exhaustion, and strongly suggested she be given the honors of her birth and recent office.
One couldâalmostâadmire herâ¦but one could never, never yield to her.
âWeâll find a place suitable,â Tristen said curtly. âRooms better than the guardhouse, at least.â He knew the outrage he provoked by adding that last remark, but it made his point. And turning to Lusin, his chief bodyguard: âTell Cook to come.â Cook, like many of the servants, had served the Aswydd lords before he had taken the dukedom, which was to say only last year; but now he relied on her and trusted Cook as the only woman of his close acquaintance. More, Cook had children, several of them, and might understand Lady Tarienâs condition better than a man would.
Regarding that