hands clung limply behind him, the king who was called Invincible shuffled heavily into the keep, the pungent smells of mildew and damp rot greeting him from the interior.
* * * *
“Lottie Kovacs—and Richard—whatever are you doing in here!”
Genya lowered her voice in mid-sentence to avoid attracting attention to the narrow larder just off the immense castle kitchens wherein she had found the pair huddled together behind the bins. Hunkered down against the wall, Richard sat with arms folded about Lottie, whose head was buried in his shoulder. Genya stood over them, hands on hips, affecting a stern posture.
“Don’t the two of you have any sense at all? What if the king’s chief steward comes to the kitchens? Lord knows I’ve had trouble enough with him already. Hanba na vy!—shame on you!” She shook a finger at them. “You’re just lucky I’m in charge here and not someone else or you’d be—Lottie? What is it, dear?”
She knelt and laid a hand on the sobbing girl’s arm.
“Her father’s dead, Genya,” Richard whispered. “Killed by soldiers. Ferenc heard.”
“Oh, dear Lord,” Genya gasped. “Lottie—Lottie, I’m so sorry.”
Lottie raised her head to reveal a tear-stained face, red and puffy eyes. “Oh, Genya,” the girl moaned, “things were so wrong between us. I—I never realized how much I loved him. And now he’s gone. It’s my fault as much as anyone’s.”
“Lottie, don’t say that.”
Genya gazed at her helplessly, momentarily lost for words. Lottie’s sad, china-blue eyes stared vapidly. Her small, perpetually pouty lips were drawn and quivery. Mourning seemed to befit Lottie, who was Genya’s best friend and polar opposite. Their alliance was as likely as one between a proud mare and a humble tortoise. Lottie had hired on as a servant at Castle Lenska over her father’s protestations, mainly so that she might be near Richard, a baker, whom Papa Kovacs called “bun-brains,” which is all that need be said of their strained romantic situation.
Genya rose. “Now listen—Richard, you stay right here and comfort Lottie,” she said, shaking her finger officiously. “But only for a while. I’ll steer anyone from the larder as long as I can. If anybody comes from the bakehouse, I’ll put them off. Just pray the chief steward doesn’t poke his birdie beak in here, or I’ll have to bounce a salver off his skull! When you leave, leave separately, and quietly.” She smiled warmly, patted Lottie’s ash-blonde locks. “Be strong, dear. Soon we’ll be able to leave and you and Richard can begin a life together.”
She nodded curtly to Richard, puffed up her damp hair, and eased out into the steaming, noisy kitchen. At once she began calling out directions in a voice that was both commanding and pleasant.
“Nahlit sa! Nahlit sa! Hurry up! Tonight Papa Flavio comes, and if all goes well you’ll be home to see your families soon. The king is good and gracious, and I have his assurance from his very own royal lips!”
There was laughter and good cheer all about her, despite the hot and tedious work of preparing a banquet for hundreds. And Genya threw herself into the preparations lustily, lending a hand wherever one was needed. First she helped the Yeoman of the Pantry trundle out and count the silver gilt plates and utensils and lay out the trenchers on which meat would be placed.
The kitchen was huge: sixty feet long by thirty wide with a vaulted roof nearly forty feet high at its apex. On one wall were the cavernous fireplaces—eight feet high and twenty broad—in which cattle and oxen could be roasted whole. And Genya next joined a struggling party attempting to wrestle a side of beef into one of these. Donning a bloody apron, she provided the final push needed to hoist the carcass into position, and by the end of the task her infectious good humor had cheered them all.
She turned her attention to the central hearth slab, where the cooking fires were being lit for the smaller game, which would be roasted on spits turned by dogs in wheelhouses.
“Nahlit sa!” she enjoined, aiding the cooks and drudges in spitting pheasants and geese and capons. “And where are our whimpering turnspits?” Indeed, to see the hearth fires lit the dogs scurried off for cover, for they knew well the work that would soon fall to them. Genya sent scullions to drag the dogs to the wheels. Thick cooking aromas already permeated the withering kitchen heat as Genya brought from storage the ornate saltcellar that would be placed before the king. She filled it carefully and trundled it by cart through the corridors toward the great hall where the banquet would take place that night.
The saltcellar was of ivory, enameled over with the figures of lions. Standing a foot high on carven legs was the shallow dish that contained the precious salt. Over its top was the golden canopy that protected the ceremonially regarded seasoning. And as Genya pushed the cellar along, she suddenly caught sight of her reflection. She stopped and peered around her: no one in sight.
She raked and molded her dark curls into a semblance of casual charm with practiced fingers. Pinching her cherubic face to instill color, she puckered her red lips—which caused little change inasmuch as nature had set them in a pucker—and practiced a range of expressions, from coyly beguiling to stoically wounded, until they appeared convincingly unpracticed.
Lord, forgive me, but I’m so clever, she thought, her shoulders hunching to suppress a self-satisfied chuckle. But praised be for that, since someone has to be....
It had all been trying and frightening at first: the violent overthrow of Baron Rorka on that horrible night and the succession of King Klann; monsters and giants prowling the walls; soldiers parading throughout the castle. The servants had all been too frightened to do anything but cower in their chambers for a night and a day. Those with any backbone at all had been slaughtered with the Baron’s men, including the former chief steward. And Klann’s newly appointed chief was a nasty, spiteful, vulture-faced old viper. Between him and the proudly strutting Llorm regulars and the pompously demanding ladies of the court and that bastard captain who had grabbed at her, why—
But Genya’s anger had finally been stoked, and the lowly scullery maid had dared speak for all the servitors to King Klann himself, presenting their fears to him in a performance that required all her considerable guile. And not surprisingly (to her, at least) Klann had been won over by her charm. He had assured her of the servants’ safety and instructed the chief steward to lighten his approach. He had promised that they would be free to visit Vedun once the security quarantine could be lifted, and—best of all—had appointed Genya head of all the local servantry and his personal liaison to them!
His paternal interest in Genya was a great comfort to her, although it had aroused the jealousy of the ladies of court, some of whom from the beginning had found Genya’s voluptuous youth and vivaciousness a spur to their cattiness: Before the audience with Klann, for instance, the Lady Gorkin, wife of the castellan, had caught Genya in alleged idleness and sent her to the steamy kitchen for the unpleasant job of shelling eggs. It was all Genya could do to keep from blasting the haughty old wench with a few, just to see how such a fine lady would react to the shocking mess.
And then there was the red-headed virago Lady Thorvald, whom Genya had first supposed the queen, judging by her incessant doting on and flitting about the king. She turned out instead to be a kept-woman in whom Klann had lost interest. Her attentiveness on His Highness seemingly grew in direct proportion to his weariness of her. Genya, in her less charitable moments, thought of Thorvald as a dried-out old shrew who strove to stave off the advance of years with her mock-exotic displays of paint and feathers. She was the epitome of tacky ostentation.
“Such a pampered old puss!” Genya had said that morning to the chambermaid who had overheard that Lady Thorvald would not be in attendance at the banquet, complaining of one of her frequent “head ailments.”
Ah, well, Genya thought, steer clear and all’s well. All but that scary sorcerer, Mord, him and his hungry looks....
She shuddered to think of him and chased the thought. But then there came the reminder of Lottie’s murdered father and Genya suddenly wondered about the safety of her own parents