Katharine Kerr

Daggerspell


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like—and then he’ll pledge you to the band.”

      “Do you have to show him you can fight good?”

      “Fight well.” Cullyn began to shave in neat, precise strokes. “That’s somewhat of it, truly, but only a part. Here, silver daggers have an honor of our own. We’re scum, all of us, but we don’t steal or murder. The noble lords know we don’t, and so they trust us enough to give us our hires. If a couple of the wrong kind of lads got into the band, gave us a bad name, like, well, then, we’d all starve.”

      “Da, why did you want to be a silver dagger?”

      “Don’t talk with your mouth full. I didn’t want to. It was the only choice I had, that’s all. I’ve never heard of a man being so big a fool as to join up just because he wanted to.”

      “I don’t understand.”

      Cullyn considered, wiping the last bit of lather off his upper lip with the back of his hand.

      “Well,” he said at last. “No fighting man joins the daggers if he has a chance at a decent life in a lord’s dun. Sometimes men are fools, and we do things that mean no lord would let us ride in his warband ever again. When that happens, well, carrying the dagger is a fair sight better than sweeping out a stable or suchlike. At least you get to fight for your hire, like a man.”

      “You never could have been a fool!”

      Cullyn’s lips twitched in a brief smile.

      “But I was, truly. A long time ago your old Da here was a rider in a warband in Cerrmor, and he got himself into a good bit of trouble. Never dishonor yourself, Jill. You listen to me. Dishonor sticks closer to you than blood on your hands. So my lord kicked me out, as he had every right to do, and there was nothing left for me but the long road.”

      “The what?”

      “The long road. That’s what silver daggers call our life.”

      “But Da, what did you do?”

      Cullyn turned to look at her with eyes so cold that Jill was afraid he was going to slap her.

      “When you’re done eating,” he said instead, “we’re going to the market fair and buy you some lad’s clothes. Dresses aren’t any good for riding and camping by the road.”

      And Jill realized that she would never have the courage to ask him that question again.

      Cullyn was as good as his word about the new clothes. In fact, he bought her so many things, boots, brigga, shirts, a good wool cloak and a small ring brooch to clasp it with, that Jill realized she’d never seen him with so much money before, real coins, all of them bright-minted silver. When she asked him about it, Cullyn told her that he’d captured a great lord’s son on the field of battle, and that this money was the ransom the lord’s family had to pay him to get their son back.

      “That was honorable, Da. Not killing him, I mean, and then letting him go home.”

      “Honorable? I’ll tell you, my sweet, it’s every silver dagger’s dream to capture a lord single-handedly. It’s the coin you want, not the glory. And by the hells, many a poor lordling has made himself a rich lord doing the same thing.”

      Jill was honestly shocked. Taking someone prisoner for profit was one of those things that never got mentioned in the bard songs and the glorious tales of war. She was glad enough of the coin, however, especially when Cullyn bought her a pony, a slender gray that she named Gwindyc after the great hero of ancient times. When they returned to the inn, Cullyn took Jill up to their chamber, made her change her clothes, then unceremoniously cropped off her hair like a lad’s with his silver dagger.

      “That long hair’s too messy for the road. May the gods blast me if I spend my time combing it for you like a nursemaid!”

      Jill supposed that he was right, but when she looked at herself in his bit of mirror, she felt that she no longer really knew who she was. The feeling persisted when they went down to the tavern room of the inn for the noon meal. She wanted to get up and help Blaer the innkeep serve, not sit there and eat stew with the other customers. Because it was market day, the tavern was crowded with merchants, who all wore checked brigga as a sign of their station. They looked Cullyn over with a shudder for the silver dagger in his belt and gave him as wide a berth as possible. Jill was just finishing her stew when three young riders from a warband swaggered in and demanded ale. Jill knew they were a lord’s riders because their shirts had embroidered blazons, running stags in this case, on the yokes. They stood right in the way near the door and kept Blaer so busy that when Cullyn wanted more ale, he had to get up and fetch it himself. As he was coming back with the full tankard, he passed the three riders. One of them stepped forward and deliberately jogged Cullyn’s arm, making him spill the ale.

      “Watch your step,” the rider sneered. “Silver dagger.”

      Cullyn set the tankard down and turned to face him. Jill climbed up on the table so she could see. Grinning, the other two riders moved back to the wall.

      “Are you looking for a fight?” Cullyn said.

      “Just looking to make a lout of a silver dagger mind his manners. What’s your name, scum?”

      “Cullyn of Cerrmor. And what’s it to you?”

      The room went dead silent as every man in it turned to stare. The other two riders laid urgent hands on their friend’s shoulders.

      “Come along, Gruffidd. Just drink your wretched ale. You’re a bit young to die.”

      “Get away,” Gruffidd snarled. “Are you calling me a coward?”

      “Calling you a fool.” The rider glanced at Cullyn. “Here, our apologies.”

      “Don’t you apologize for me,” Gruffidd said. “I don’t give a pig’s fart if he’s the Lord of Hell! Listen, silver dagger, not half of those tales about you can be true.”

      “Indeed?” Cullyn laid his hand on his sword hilt.

      It seemed that the whole room gasped, even the walls. Jill clasped her hands over her mouth to keep from screaming. Frightened men leapt back.

      “Here!” Blaer yelped. “Not in my inn!”

      Too late—Gruffidd drew his sword. With a sour smile, Cullyn drew his own, but he let the blade trail lazily in his hand with the point near the floor. The room was so quiet that Jill heard her heart pounding. Gruffidd moved and struck—his sword went flying. Across the room men yelped and dodged as the sword fell clattering to the floor. Cullyn had his blade raised, but casually, as if he were only using it to point out something. There was a smear of blood on it. Cursing under his breath, Gruffidd clutched his right wrist with his left hand. Blood welled between his fingers.

      “I call you all to witness that he struck first,” Cullyn said.

      The room broke into excited whispers as Gruffidd’s friends dragged him away. Blaer hurried after them, quite pale and carrying the rider’s sword. Cullyn wiped the blood off his blade on his brigga leg, sheathed it, then picked up his tankard and came back to the table.

      “Jill, get down!” he snapped. “Where’s your courtesy?”

      “I just wanted to see, Da. That was splendid. I never even saw you move.”

      “Neither did he. Well, Jill, I’m going to drink this ale, and then we’ll be packing up and getting on the road.”

      “I thought we were going to stay here tonight.”

      “We were.”

      All aflutter, Blaer ran over.

      “By the pink asses of the gods! How often does this sort of thing happen to you?”

      “Far too often. These young dogs would count it an honor to be the man who killed Cullyn of Cerrmor.” Cullyn took a long swallow of ale. “So far all they’ve won for their trouble is a broken wrist, but ye gods, it