Red Country Read online




  The Red Country

  Book Three of the Rihannar Chronicles

  Sylvia Kelso

  Dedication

  For

  Lillian Stewart Carl

  (from the White Queen to the Red Queen...)

  For all the usual reasons

  And with more than usual thanks

  Map 1 — Everran

  A Note about the maps: Some ebook formats allow a “full width” display. Choosing this option will enlarge the display of the maps.

  Map 2 — Hethria

  Chapter I

  Had I been capable of speech on my name-day, my parents would never have succeeded in calling me Sellithar. A name like Starflower may be very pretty, and doubtless it is splendid to further a long and noble tradition, but I had little interest in the past and less patience with those who worship it. “Daughter of five royal generations,” and “child of an illustrious heritage,” and “namesake of the dynasty’s founder-mother,” bah. I was sure then, and I am surer now, that the first Sellithar would not have given a rotten hethel for such balderdash. Moreover, the palace brats had even less respect for tradition, and I was “Sillycow” from the first day I ran with them, royal nurse, royal fingernails, royal rank and dignity or not.

  The one good thing was that it made me fight for respect instead of being tamely ceded it. I was ten years old, with a most reckless disposition from proving my superior mettle in all the scrapes available, before I won the place to which birth should have entitled me, as leader of the palace pack. By the time the boys’ muscles overtook mine, I was fifteen, with my hair up and my skirts down, the contest had shifted fields, and I was still ahead. How easy it is to rout callow suitors when you have a sharp tongue and wit to hone it with! By the time they forsook courting I was eighteen, and all of us were growing into our proper roles, I as the crown princess Sellithar, they as the heirs to Resh-lords or soldiers or wine or hethel-oil magnates who would be the pillars of my realm.

  That realm’s kingpost threatened to endure in spite of me. I might shake off that odious nickname, I might become a haughty young lady or a regal gadabout, but the past I could not shake off. Not the horde of royal retainers, grown gray in their posts if they had not inherited them, nor the heirlooms that crowded us out of the palace, nor the endless ceremony, the precedents that governed my day from sleep to sleep, and, chief bane of this baneful bevy, Zathar, the royal bard.

  It was Zathar who droned in my ears his interminable harpers’ lore, the Ystanyrx’ wearisome legends, the dates and deeds and genealogies of Everran’s two dynasties, the history of the law, where I should turn for precedent when my own time to deal out justice came. Worse still, he did not merely drone them at me, he made me drone them back. “No,” he would blandly silence my protests, “a harper’s prentice would not have to learn all these. But you are not a harper’s prentice. You are a prentice queen.” I would have murdered him in the days of my more impetuous youth, had chance not already given me a teacher of a more congenial sort.

  * * * * * * *

  He came on Earth-day in my fourteenth year. It is the high-summer festival, so all Everran was out on the roads with the young trees they would plant to honor the second Sky-lord. My pack should have gone with the palace party, to join their hierarchic succession on the silver-inlaid shovel with which my father would turn the first sod for his sapling terrian. But that year was the opening campaign of my active war against the past, and it began with a signal victory, for in the teeth of heavy and concerted opposition I had coaxed my father into letting me take a shovel and a tree and a household of my own.

  We had gone proudly down from the palace, through Saphar to the city gate, over Azilien’s bridge, and out into the lazy heat-hazed roll of Saphar Resh. The country was blond with hayed-off grass, dull green with faded leaves above the thick black clusters of grapes ripening on countless vines, grimed with dust from the road where all Saphar laughed and labored, mattock and pick and shovel glancing amid the dust.

  We labored too. Hard labor, I found it. I was very glad to relinquish a crowbar to Nerthor, the son of the chamberlain, and stand back with the rest in the shade of an older hellien. It was then that Asta the Resh-lord’s daughter dug me in the ribs and mouthed, “Look—an Estarian!”

  Our site was under the built-up side of the travelers’ campground. He had leant on the well-curb to watch, a slight, shabby, silent man with keen colorless eyes in a hatchet face, his plain gray tunic and trousers spelling Estar as clearly as they said, “We have seen better days.”

  The pack were pointing and giggling at a foreigner. Ever ready to prove both impudence and precedence, I called up, “If you have no tree, you can share mine. The worship—and the work!”

  He came slowly to the bank and looked down at us. There was a dry twinkle in his eye.

  “The honor, princess,” he answered gravely, “far exceeds my worth.”

  “And what is your worth?” I fully intended to be insolent.

  He did not show affront. Though he shrugged, his inflection was deadly earnest. “Who knows?” he said.

  No more was needed to intrigue me. “Go on there, Nerthor,” I said, lordly fashion, and swarmed up the bank.

  “Who are you?” I enquired. “Why are you in Everran? And what do you do?”

  “My name is Kastir,” he answered at length. “I am in Everran because Estar would at present be a little uncomfortable. As to what I do . . . I was once a ruler, of sorts.”

  Political exile, I thought. At fourteen I already knew of Estar’s domestic turbulence. Lacking a monarchy, they are ruled by whoever is strong enough to take—and hold—the power, which makes the consequent government more like a dogfight than a dominion of men. I looked again at his dusty feet and once good clothes.

  “Come down,” I said. “You needn’t share the digging, but you can share the tree. Maybe Haz will change your luck.”

  He chose his words. “Your generosity, princess, is worthy of your rank. Unhappily . . . if I were to accept it, I would be unworthy of the kindness as well as the—possible—luck.”

  I stared. “What do you mean?”

  “You worship Haz,” he answered. “If bad luck came on you, would you blame him for it and turn your back?”

  “No-o-o,” I said. “But—”

  “Then it would be as ungrateful of me,” he said, “in bad luck, to run bellowing after a god I never troubled before.”

  I could hardly believe my ears. “You don’t believe in the Sky-lords?”

  He looked a little pained. “Princess, the word ‘believe’ is not relevant. Of that which is affirmed by the evidence of my senses, I say, I know. Of things reported or held as opinion, I can only say, this may or may not be true. For myself, I do not know.”

  I was some time mustering a reply. I had heard of Estar’s weird schisms, weirder sects, indeed of barefaced atheism. To hear is one thing. It is another to have reality thrust on you in the broad light of day.

  “You don’t know?” I broke out at last. I waved around, at the broad breast of Saphar Resh, the festive laborers, Saphar’s terraces mounting their knoll to the irregular towers and roofs of the palace and the great stem of Asterne, the rock-pillar that rose above the Helkent ranges’ remote red skyline, towering into the hazy summer sky. “But you can see all this! The Sky-lords made it. How can you not know—not believe in that?”

  His eye had followed mine. “Men made the city,” he responded. “Just as men planted the trees and bred the vines.”

  “But who made the men?”

  His smile was quick, appreciative, and colder still. “You believe it was the Sky-lords. I can but repeat, I do not know.”

  “But they did!”

  “Have you proof?”

  Th
at stopped me dead. As I stared, he went on, “Did you see them? Hear them? Did they tell you so?”

  “No, but—but—everybody knows they did!”

  His smile was dry. “No, princess. Everybody believes they did.”

  Quite kindly, he nodded at me. “And whoever told me he had seen them, princess, even your beautiful and generous self, I should still be obliged to answer: You may have seen, but I did not. When I too see, I shall be able to say, ‘The Sky-lords exist.’ Until then, I can only repeat, they may exist. But for myself, I do not know.”

  I found myself whispering. “That’s . . . blasphemy.”

  He shook his head sharply. “I do not deny that the Sky-lords may exist. Indeed, I hope they do. I have not the least objection to your believing so. All I claim is the right to form or decline to form an opinion, without fear or prejudice, according as I perceive the truth. Not to blindly swallow other men’s beliefs. Either to know, or to say freely, ‘I do not know.’”

  In that moment the world shifted, as if a new clarity had informed the sun, or a great window opened in a blank and baffling wall.

  I took a deep breath. Then I said, “But . . . if you only accept what you see for yourself . . . what about history—other countries—things you’ll never see? You won’t know anything at all!”

  He gave me his cold, keen, steely smile. “Agreed, princess. If I accept only the things for which I have evidence, there will be a great deal about which I can have no opinion. On the other hand, I shall have no false opinions. And if I know very little, at least I shall be sure of what I do not know.”

  A wind blew in the window, quick, exciting, new. I took another breath. Then I said, “You have nothing to do now?” He nodded. “Could you be a teacher?” He looked startled. “Could you teach me to think like you?”

  His surprise faded. That appreciative, measuring look returned. Then he nodded again. “Yes, princess,” he said. “There are not many of whom I could say it. But I think you could learn to think like me.”

  * * * * * *

  The uproar in the palace was tremendous, and the aftermath dragged on for years, but in the end I had my way. Not least because of my father, who I expected to be the strongest and had feared would be the most difficult opposition of all. It did take a deal of talking. Yet when I really did fear his silence would end in a measured, kindly, but adamant, No, he straightened up in the chair in his little presence room and said, “Very well, Sellithar. Let me see this prize.”

  I daresay Kastir may have been almost as nervous as I. He entered composedly enough, with his quiet, even step. And if he did not tender the proper court bow, another relic I heartily detested, in his new clothes he looked neat and well-to-do, if vexingly bare of noble ornament. A lord’s factor, perhaps, or a merchant-accountant, though his features would never pass for Everran bred.

  My father surveyed him from behind his judgment face, unreadable even to me. When Kastir folded his hands and remained silent, he said, “Estarian.”

  Kastir said, “Only by birth.”

  “Can a lydwyr jump backward? Or a perraglis learn to sing?”

  “Less is possible,” Kastir answered, “to beasts than to men.”

  I did not understand the metaphors. That it was a test I knew, and perhaps a hostile test, and my heart beat hard, but I knew better than to intervene now.

  My father looked at Kastir, and Kastir looked back, and I knew this was my father’s own test, when he weighed men, their aims, their honor and their veracity, in the balance of meeting eyes.

  My father said, “A shophet?”

  Kastir shook his head.

  “News-master?” Another head-shake. “Guild-lord? Assembly-member? Talk-shaper?” Each succeeding head-shake deepened the incipient frown. “Well?”

  “I have assisted,” Kastir said, “at most of these enterprises. But for myself. . . .” He looked almost surprised. “For myself, given the chance, I believe I would choose to be a—philosopher. Not a practical man.”

  I knew my father had drawn truth into his balance, as he always did. He knew it too. He leant back a little and let their eyes unlock. Then he said, “A teacher?”

  Kastir looked up quickly and for once some feeling showed. “That would be both a pleasure and an honor. If it were with the princess Sellithar.”

  My father weighed that feeling a moment longer, and gave a tiny nod. Then he turned to me.

  “Sellithar,” he said, “are you sure about this?”

  I managed not to gabble from both nerves and hope. “It’s as I told you, Papa. Zathar can teach me things, but that isn’t enough. I need to know how to judge things—how to question them.”

  “And experience is not . . . will not be—enough?”

  “Not just harvest-reports and scout-warnings, Papa! The important things, the ones Zathar never talks about. Who are we all? What are we, in ourselves? Why are we doing whatever-it-is?”

  I nearly wrung my hands together and restrained it just in time. Whatever the lure of change, it is fatal to overstate your case before a judgment seat. I caught the tiny glint of awareness in my father’s eye before it turned back to Kastir.

  They might have modeled for paintings of their nations, I think now. My father with his tawny hair and the brows they say come down from Harran himself, in his loose palace trousers and almost diaphanous white cotton summer shirt, only the big intaglio signet on his hand to mark a king. And Kastir in the decorous householder’s tunic he had somehow managed to make seem Estarian gray, with his grizzling hair and his reticent, long-lined face.

  My father said, “A questioner. A philosopher. A royal tutor. A man who only taught his knowledge, however he came by it, might trust his welcome here. Whatever his birth-land was.”

  Their eyes locked again and this time I understood clearly the message in my father’s stare. And the comprehension in Kastir’s look, before he inclined his head in his nearest approach to either thanks or respect, and answered, “Sir, you have my gratitude.” Bare enough, but from Kastir it came with the weight of a pledge, signed and sealed.

  And my father gave us both his brisk, closing nod and said, “Very well, Sellithar. From now on, halve the time you spend with Zathar.”

  * * * * * *

  So Kastir was installed as the “royal tutor,” creating a new post, and a new precedent, of which I was almost as proud as I was pleased with my protégé—if protégé is the word to use of Kastir in relation to a fourteen-year-old girl. But if my father, in his usual manner, denied me the complete escape I had envisaged, not to mention landing me with the task of wringing Kastir a lodging-place from the palace steward and the even trickier fixing of his stipend with the treasurer, Kastir’s own cold, clear, incisive mind proved an unending delight to me. A resource, then a shield and a weapon in my struggles against the weight of the palace, its precedents and its past.

  Firstly he taught me to sift evidence, to distinguish hearsay and fact, to accept only what could be substantiated, and of the rest to say firmly, “I do not know.” He showed me how to respect others’ beliefs without blindly accepting them, and to suspend my judgment in matters where there could never be proof. He gifted me with a deep interest in the natural world, and the mental methods to order both these enquiries and their results. He taught me to argue by the rule of logic, the mind’s rapier, and, best of all, to keep clean the windows of the intellect from superstitious and shoddy thought. He never tired of saying, “You can confidently state, ‘The sun rose this morning.’ You cannot say, ‘It will rise tomorrow,’ or even, ‘I believe it will rise tomorrow.’ You can only say, ‘I hope it will.’ Nor can you truthfully state, ‘It rose yesterday,’ unless you were there to see. Belief is irrelevant, princess. You know, or you do not know.”

  Taking his post seriously, he did not confine his teaching to the tools of thought. He had held power in Estar. He knew the bones of it throughout the Confederacy, and he anatomized them for me, a far more valuable grounding for a future queen
than all Zathar’s lists of battles and dynasties. Not that Kastir disdained the past; but in his hands it was important as the well springs of the present, not for the Who and When and How, but for the Because and Why.

  For me he traced the rise of Quarred’s Tingrith from the eight noble families’ obsession with “birth,” Holym’s elected Consul and permanent Scribe from the cattle-lords’ insularity and pre-occupation with fighting their own floods and droughts, Hazghend’s tyrants from their endless blood-feuds and brigand temperament, Estar’s dogfights from the factions of money-lord and guild-leader and their secret wars for power. Always he saw with merciless clarity. “Men rule as they live, for their own benefit. In all history, look for the motive, princess. And look low, not high.”

  So he dissected his own career for me, warning me that emotion must not weigh in the mind’s balance. “What happened to me and why is of value, princess. How I felt and if it was justice are irrelevant. Learn what it tells you of Estar, and keep the knowledge for use.”

  With the same clarity he exposed flaws in all the Confederate governments, Estar’s turmoil, Holym’s power behind the throne, Quarred’s oligarchy, Hazghend’s unsanctified tyrant, even Everran’s monarchy. “One man ruling by right of succession, yes. Well, if he is efficient.” Kastir never used the word good. “If he is not, trouble and oppression. Always incipient trouble over the succession, and if he dies untimely, real peril to be faced.”

  When I said in despair, “None of them are any good!” He merely smiled his cold, keen smile. “None of them are perfect, princess. This is the one case where you must fall back on beliefs. Every country believes its government is the best. I prefer to say, ‘Mine is the worst of all possible governments—excepting all the rest.’”

  And we both understood without words that the debate was more than academic: that, one day, forms of government would be another of my choices, when I sat on Everran’s throne.

  Not that I thought much of that, for with a father just hale and heartily fifty, accession seemed many vague tomorrows away. However burdened by Zathar, I had plenty of free time. I played at life with my palace pack, as it is easy to play when you are a royal heir, young, healthy, carefree, and handsome enough for your needs. We might take Kastir with us, but we hawked, we hunted, we danced, we banqueted, we rode on every royal progress, from Maer Selloth in the south to Dun Stiriand at the limits of the north, from Meldene’s gray hethel groves to the red levels of Gebria, and I was lucky, I know now, that in those years Everran’s borders were quiet. We traded with the Confederacy, our wine and oil for Holym’s cattle and Estar’s merchandise, Quarred summered its sheep with us, and we tithed a quarter of the clip before they went home. Hazghend was only a bad reputation in the distant south. Nor did the Lyngthirans descend, as they do so frequently, over the northern border, and everyone knew we were safe from the east. That way the Sathellin carried our wine along Hethria’s desert ways to a great nation no one else could name, but no army could have tracked their road back to us. The mighty Gebros frontier wall and Everran’s doughty soldiers were waiting if they had. No, we were safe enough in our little kingdom, and we played as only the children of safety can.