Page 15
An uneasy warmth washes through me at that smile as Tennet returns his attention to Fortiss.
“With Lady Talia fighting so well in the tournament, it seems you’ve already experienced the strategy of the mountain houses, Lord Protector Fortiss.
We are small and left without the great defenses of the houses on the wide plains, or even the natural benefit of the open desert that gives the houses to the south some protection from their enemies by virtue of the fact that they can see them coming.
The mountains can hide a multitude of enemies, and sometimes the best defense a house can mount are the stories that swirl up around it. ”
“But we have no stories about the Twelfth House,” Miriam puts in, sounding genuinely curious.
My father sits forward, too, his sharp eyes hard on Tennet’s face.
“Lord Protector Fortiss is correct. Your father hasn’t left his home since his last tournament appearance nearly twenty years ago.
By that reckoning, you would have been a young boy, but there was no record of a boy in attendance with Lord Orlof, or a wife or family of any kind.
It was simply him and his attendants. He acquitted himself quite well in battle, advancing to the final stages of the competition.
In those times, Lord Rihad had just come to power and was eager to impress all the houses as to his strength and dedication to his families charge of ruling the Protectorate.
He gave Lord Orlof several fighting men, and gold to pay for goods in times of trouble.
Or at least, that’s what is written in the annals of that tournament. ”
Despite myself, I’m also fascinated by Miriam’s words. It never occurred to me to look back at the old records of Orlof’s last visit to the First House. I slant a glance toward my father. Did he know Orlof had a son at that time?
Tennet’s reply cuts across my thoughts. “I can’t speak to events of that tournament, as you say I was just a boy, and my father traveled frequently when I was a child, leaving a brace of guards to protect our home and my mother.
He continued traveling after she died giving birth to my younger brother, who yes, still lives.
My brother is afflicted by the same illness that took my mother’s life, however, and he is not fit for fighting. But he is well, and safe.”
“And you, a warrior of clear merit, never wished to compete in the Tournament of Gold?” Miriam asks.
Tennet’s lips quirk derisively. “My father was keenly aware of the value of winning at the tournament when he did and how he did, and he also understood the inherent gamble of the tournament. Yes, you could go and win men and money for your house. You could also die or be injured to the point that you are of no service to your house…and then your Divh might be forfeit to your eldest son who perhaps isn’t prepared to take on that responsibility.
You may also draw the attention of the lord protector if you perform too well or too poorly, and attention often begets more attention.
My father was fiercely proud of our mountain home and keenly aware of its status among the other Protectorate houses.
He also had no love of visitors. No doubt you have that written in your records as well. ”
She waves that off. “Only the hearsay of the bards, whom he still entertained, though less and less over the years.”
Tennet smirks. “The mountains to the east are dangerous for unwary travels, and while the Tenth House boasts a location close to the pass into the Imperium, the Twelfth House isn’t so blessed.
And so, we took the gold that Rihad gave us, and we traded it for hunting spears and farming implements that would be best suited for gleaning the fruits of the mountains.
What we could produce that was beyond our means, we carried over the border to the Imperium and sold there.
It was a far less difficult journey than making it to strongholds like the First House where we would be competing against so many better equipped houses than ours. ”
My father straightens. “You what ?” he demands. I’m equally surprised, but grudgingly impressed at the Twelfth House’s strategy. We should have been doing the same, truth be told.
Tennet glances at my father, unperturbed.
“Our produce is good, our wine is better. I’d need to taste it to be sure, but I’d guess that some of the imported wine you bring from the Imperium is our label made over into the image of whomever we sold it to.
But that’s of no account. The story of the Twelfth House is one of industry and isolation, and it remained that way until my father signed the marriage contract to join our lots with that of the Tenth House.
He died waiting for that promise to be fulfilled. ”
My lips press tight together, the heavy fist clutching my heart unwilling to move.
Despite Fortiss’s spell, I don’t know whether to believe this man or not, but his story…
almost makes sense to me. It explains why the Twelfth House had no need of Protectorate wealth beyond the seed money Rihad provided through Orlof’s tournament rewards twenty years earlier.
And in truth, though we are a simple holding, the Tenth House has also been largely self-sufficient.
Father has seen no need to subject us to the tournament in all the years that I can recall.
Merritt chafed against that restriction far more than I did, having never seen it in all his seventeen years, but…
So many questions bubble up, but Fortiss seems done with this line of inquiry.
Even as my father leans forward, he cuts off the conversation.
“Then we take you at your word, Lord Tennet, until we have reason to believe otherwise. We don’t need to search for trouble in these challenging times.
Welcome to the First House at long last, we have much work to do. ”
And he raises a glass of wine, then glances at it realizing as I do the truth. “Is it your vines we have to thank for our enjoyment this night?”
Tennet takes a measured drink—his first, I realize. “It just may be,” he agrees with a smug smile, lifting a glass. “To the Protectorate.”
I lift my glass to my lips, but this time I don’t drink.
Table of Contents
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- Page 15 (Reading here)
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