Part 20 (1/2)
”And you,” Ren said with a smile.
”My apologies, goodsir,” Vol said to Cale.
”Accepted,” Cale answered immediately.
Side by side, Cale and Ren walked up the paved walkway that led to the gatehouse. Four other members of the house guard stood at the gate, watching them approach. They were armed and armored like Ren.
Ren said, ”The hulorn informed the house guard that if you appeared, you were to be allowed entry at any hour. He neglected to inform the Helms.”
Cale did not recognize any of the house guards stationed at the gatehouse. Ren ordered one of them to inform Irwyl, Cale's replacement as Uskevren steward, that Mister Cale had arrived, and the young guard sped off. The other house guards eyed Cale with open admiration.
Ren made introductions and led Cale through the gate and onto the grounds. The estate appeared as Cale remembered it. Topiary, fountains, statuary, and well-tended gardens dotted the swath. The stables, servants' quarters, and other outbuildings crouched along the surrounding walls.
”I told the other guards what happened at the Twisted Elm,” Ren explained. ”Everyone here knows of it.”
Cale nodded, mildly embarra.s.sed.
Ren looked at him sidelong. ”I wondered what happened to you after we parted. Were you in Selgaunt all that time?”
”No,” Cale said, and left it at that.
Cale could see Ren wanted to speak his thoughts.
”Speak plainly, Ren.”
Ren hesitated, but finally asked, ”Mister Cale, what happened to the sons of wh.o.r.es that maimed me? I want them dead. Or hurt. Or ... something.”
Cale understood the feeling. He pulled Ren to a stop and looked the young man in the face. ”All but one is dead. And I made that one suffer before he escaped. Well enough?”
Ren smiled grimly and nodded. ”Well enough.”
Cale said to him, ”My advice? Leave it in the past.”
Ren looked Cale in the face and nodded. ”Good advice.”
They started walking. Ren asked, ”What happened to your hand, Mister Cale? Surely not the same b.a.s.t.a.r.ds?”
”The same,” Cale said, holding up the stump of his wrist. ”But the one that took my hand was not the one that escaped.”
Ren spat on the ground. ”Good news, that. Who were they, Mister Cale?”
”Ask me again another time, Ren. That is a long tale.” Ren nodded and changed the subject. ”Things look a bit different, don't they?”
”Stormweather? It looks nearly the same.”
”No. The city, I mean.”
”Ah,” Cale answered, nodding. ”Very different.”
Ren gestured northward as they walked. ”Upcountry was struck hard by the Rage and the Rain of Fire. I heard that wildfires and dragon attacks destroyed entire villages. Some villages were abandoned out of fear. In others, the soil just went bad. The harvest suffered. The villagers headed for the cities in droves but the cities had nothing to offer them. So here we all sit.” He shook his head. ”I hear Selgaunt is worse than most. I do not know what will happen.”
Neither did Cale. He knew only that Sephris had prophesied a storm and he felt as if he were watching it unfold before his eyes. He moved the conversation to smaller matters.
”What are you, second or third in command of the guard? Who heads it? Still Orrin?”
”Second,” Ren answered with a swell of pride. ”The youngest in the history of Stormweather. And aye. Still Orrin.”
Cale knew Orrin to be a good man and a good leader. He had done well to promote Ren. The young man had grown much in the last year. Cale hoped the same was true of Tamlin.
They walked for a time in silence and Cale noticed eyes on himself. Grooms, stable boys, grounds men, all paused in their work to watch him pa.s.s. He recognized many of them. They had been on his staff long ago. He nodded. They waved. Gossip trailed in his wake.
”The staff still gossips,” Cale said with a smile.
”So do my guards, and neither will ever change,” Ren answered, also smiling. ”It's good to have you back, Mister Cale.”
”Thank you, Ren.”
Ahead, Cale saw the raised porch and double-doored main entryway to Stormweather Tower. Ivy climbed up the manse's curved walls. The Uskevren crest-the horse at anchor-hung over the doorway. Part of Cale's past lurked behind those doors.
Before they reached the porch, a squeal from Cale's left stopped him. He turned to see a bouncing mountain of flesh lumbering toward him-Brilla, the kitchen mistress. She wore a dress as large as a tent, a stained ap.r.o.n like a s.h.i.+p's sail, and a smile as wide as the Elzimmer River.
”Well met, Brilla,” Cale said.
Brilla did not bother with words. She wrapped him in the folds of her ample body and gave him a squeeze so hard he was pleased his body had regenerated his broken ribs. Streamers of shadow coiled around her but she seemed not to notice.
”I told them all you would be back, I did. Said this place was in your veins. Said this family was your family. And here you are.”
She pushed him away to arm's length. ”Let us have a look. Look at this hair! You look so different, Mister Cale. I hardly recognize you.”
”I have changed a bit,” Cale acknowledged. ”But not you, Brilla. You look as lovely as ever.”
She turned away and blushed under her gray hair, pulled into a tight bun. ”Now, Mister Cale ...”
Cale smiled and said, ”It is a true pleasure to see you, Brilla.”
Brilla had always been a rock of sense among the staff. Chatty and stubborn, but always sensible. She beamed. ”And you, Mister Cale.”
”No need for the 'Mister,' Brilla.”
”You will always be Mister Cale to me, Mister Cale.”
Cale decided not to argue the point.
”Ah!” she exclaimed. ”Your hand!”
Cale pulled his sleeve down over the stump. ”It is nothing, Brilla.”
”Nothing! How can you say such things?” She took his forearm in her hand, pushed up his sleeve, and examined the stump. There was no point in resisting her.
”It has healed well. How did it happen?”