“It was no place for a lady of your age and condition,” Gird offered, twinkling again, after a quick glance at Eris, the
peasant woman. “You’re right, of course. Noisy, rough, even dangerous. I would hope your people had the sense to keep
you well away from windows and doors, most of that time.”
“In t’cellar, at the worst,” said Eris, unexpectedly. “But the worst was over, time you come in, sir. Worst was the other
lords’ servants smashin’ and lootin’ even as the lords fled. Runnin’ round sayin’ such things as milady here shouldn’t
have to hear. Though it was crowded and noisy enough for a few hands of days. And when th’ yeoman marshals sorted
through, takin’ count o’ folks and things. But they didn’t seek bribes, I’ll say that much for ’em.”
“They’d better not,” said Gird, suddenly all Marshal-General. Even the old lady gaped; Luap, who had seen it often
enough not to be surprised, enjoyed the reactions of others. He had never figured out what Gird did to change from farmer
to ruler so swiftly, but no one ever mistook the change. “So,” he went on, this time with everyone’s attention, “you did
not come to the Hall that day, and had not known Arranha was with us? You should know that I’ve known him for some
years—he’ll tell you in what tangle we met, if you wish. I knew he’d been exiled, and nearly killed, but for all that he’s a
priest of Esea, one of the few left alive these days.”
“He’s a fool,” said the old lady, having recovered her composure. “He always was, with his questions into this and that
and everything. Couldn’t let a body alone, not any more than a bee will give a flower a moment’s peace to enjoy the sun.
Always ‘But don’t you think this’ and ‘Well then, don’t you see that’ until everyone was ready to throw up their hands
and run off.”
Gird grinned. “He did that to me, too. You know he took me to the gnomes?”
She sniffed. “That’s exactly the sort of thing I’d expect. Gnomes! Trust Arranha to complicate matters: mix a peasant
revolt with gnomes and both with religion.” The flick of her hand down her lap dismissed Arranha’s notions.
“Well, it worked. Although there were times, that winter, when I could happily have strangled your Arranha.”
“He’s not ours,” the old lady said. “A law to himself, he is, and always has been. Although you—” She gave Gird a look
up and down. “I expect you give him a few sleepless nights, and all the better.”
“But my point,” Gird said, now very gently, “is that Arranha is the only priest of Esea now in Fin Panir, serving his god
within the High Lord’s Hall, and he has not said anything about needing such cloths… although your years of labor
should not be in vain, you must know that we are not such worshippers of Esea as your folk were.”
“Even he—even he should realize—” Abruptly—Luap wondered if it were all genuine feeling, or a habit known to be
effective with men in power—the old lady’s eyes filled with tears that spilled down her cheeks. “Oh, sir—and I don’t
mind calling a peasant sir in such a case—I don’t care what you call the god: Sun-lord, High Lord, Maker of Worlds, it
doesn’t matter. But he must be respected, whatever you call him, and I’ve made these…” A tear fell, almost on the cloth;
when she saw it, her face paled, and she turned aside. “I must not—cry—on the cloth—”
Eris came forward, and offered her apron, on which the lady wiped her damp face. “She really believes, sir, that if the
altar’s not cared for, it’ll come bad luck to everyone. It’s no trick, sir, if that’s what you’re thinking.”
The old lady’s hands, dry now, fumbled at the cloth, to fold it away safely. She didn’t look up; her shoulders trembled.
Luap felt a pang of emotion he could not identify: pity? sorrow? mean amusement? Gird sighed, gustily, like his horse.
Luap knew what he wanted to say; he had said it before. You should have worshipped better gods he had told more than
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