Michelle Sagara

Cast In Courtlight


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they could start learning. It’s never too late, and it’s not like courtesy ever killed anyone.”

      Kaylin almost laughed. What could she say to Marya that would make sense of this armored stranger? That he was one of the fieflord’s personal guard?

      Andellen, however, chose to take no offense at the old woman’s words.

      “We could stay at my place,” Kaylin told him. “It’s night in the fiefs. We were lucky enough to miss the ferals the first time.”

      But Andellen did not reply; he was watching—of all things—the babe. “Andellen?”

      The Barrani shrugged. “You are too weak to walk,” he said at last. It was the first sign of hesitance that she had yet seen him show. “I will take you to your home.”

      Five minutes passed like three hours. Kaylin wanted to sleep off the healing on the nearest stretch of cobbled stone that didn’t have merchanting crap all over it; the problem was finding one. Well, that and the big Barrani who herded her forward every time she looked like she might fall. He took care not to touch her; it seemed odd. Had she been with Teela or Tain, they would have given up on her half a block past, and carried her the rest of the way. Oh, she would have cursed them in at least three languages, but they were used to that.

      Andellen gave her space.

      He made certain that anyone whose curiosity was stronger than their self-preservation instinct also gave her space, and she finally reached the door of her apartment. She fumbled with the key and dropped it twice, while he watched, impassive. Waiting.

      She tossed out a few recreational Aerian curses, just to keep in practice, and made a third attempt at the lock. This time, it worked.

      The stairs looked very, very steep from where she stood. She made her way up them, hanging on to the rails until she ran out of railing. Her door was there. She was surprised that it was open.

      And more surprised when she saw who was waiting in the room. Severn, in the moonlight. He’d even opened the shutters, the bastard.

      Andellen was behind her. She knew this because the stone of Severn’s expression shifted into something a lot less friendly.

      “When did I give you a key?” she muttered. “You didn’t.”

      “What the hell are you doing here?” “Waiting.”

      Sarcasm took too much energy. She stumbled over the threshold. Andellen followed.

      Great, she thought, they’re going to fight. I’ll lose the apartment.

      But … they didn’t. Nothing made sense. Severn was stiff, and obviously angry, as he made his way toward her.

      “Waiting?”

      “Someone sent word,” he said as he caught her. His hands were cold. And stiff.

      “The fieflord entrusts her to your care,” Andellen’s voice said. She didn’t actually see him. Couldn’t. She could see the hollows of Severn’s collarbone, and they were the whole of her vision.

      “You’re bleeding,” he said in her ear.

      “Not my blood,” she replied dimly. “But the baby was a girl.” It was the last thing she said, and she thought she smiled.

      Sunlight was the bane of her existence.

      Mirrors were also the bane of her existence. And the inside of her mouth? That was bad, too. Her eyes were crusted together, her arms felt as if she’d been doing chin-ups in the drill yard, and her legs—well, never mind; they were worse.

      The mirror was snarling. Covered, and snarling.

      The glare of the damn sun made her glad that opening her eyes was difficult.

      “Kaylin Neya!”

      No one, she thought bitterly, should have to wake up to that voice. Marcus Kassan was in a mood.

      “Kaylin, take the bloody cloth off the damn mirror and answer me!”

      “Coming,” she managed, and rolled over.

      Either her bed had changed shape significantly over the course of the night, or someone else was in it. She jumped up, hit the open shutters with the back of her head, and cursed in loud and angry Leontine.

      Which, of course, Marcus heard. It certainly added color to his reply.

      Severn lay on his side, propped up on one elbow. His hair fell over one eye, and the scar along his cheek was white in the sunlight. He didn’t look sleepy.

      “How long have you been here?” she hissed as she crawled off the bottom edge of her mattress.

      He shrugged. “Long enough.”

      “Why didn’t you answer the damn mirror?”

      “The Sergeant is in a mood,” he replied. He sounded almost amused. But he didn’t look it, so she didn’t hit him.

      There were rules that she tried to follow when she undertook a healing of any difficulty—and chief among those was Don’t Crouch; crouching for hours at a stretch almost destroyed her knees. Unfortunately, emergencies tended to drive common sense out of her head, as if it were something sheeplike.

      Oh, it was bad. The sun was well past high, and the shadows it cast were a very strong reminder that she was—yet again—late for something.

      Marcus was practically eating the mirror by the time she got to her end and pulled the cloth down from its less than pristine surface. When she saw his face, she thought briefly of putting the cloth back. Unfortunately, he’d seen her.

      “Where the hell were you?”

      “Out.”

      He snorted, but there was a little less edge in the sound. He knew what she did when she was off duty, even though it was technically both illegal and impossible.

      “You’ve got a meeting,” he growled.

      “When?”

      “A half an hour ago.” Some days it just didn’t pay to be alive. “How important is this meeting?” “It depends.”

      “On?”

      “On how much you like wearing the Hawk.” She groaned. “Stall for me?”

      “I have been,” he snapped, exposing the full line of Leontine teeth. They were really impressive teeth, too. “And Kaylin?”

      “Yes, Marcus?”

      “I’m not enjoying it.”

      “Yes, sir.”

      “Get your ass into the office.”

      “Yes, sir.”

      “NOW.”

      She broke contact. “Don’t laugh,” she said to Severn, who was, in fact, chuckling. “You’ve got beat duty, and if you’re here, you’re not there.”

      The smile didn’t fade. “I’m not you, Kaylin.”

      “Meaning what?”

      “I cover my ass.” He reached into the folds of his uniform—he hadn’t even bothered to remove it—and pulled out a curled piece of paper. She really hated paper. “The Hawklord’s orders.”

      “He told you to babysit me?”

      “I don’t believe that was the term used, no. But my duties this Festival are somewhat elastic, owing, no doubt, to my inexperience.”

      “Meaning?”

      “You don’t have time for the explanation.” She tossed him out into the hall and dressed.

      CHAPTER 4

      “What are you