Cormyr_ a novel - Ed Greenwood [59]
With that, he turned away from the pyre.
Ondeth shouted after him, "And how long will this decision take?"
Baerauble paused, then turned. "Ten years. Perhaps twenty. The elves are slow to decide…"
"And swift to act," finished the farmer. "And will you warn us when they choose to eliminate us as they did this farmstead?"
Baerauble Etharr, the elf-friend mage, said something, followed by a jumble of syllables in a strange tongue. The light shivered, flowed like water, bent around him, and he was gone.
Gone back to his elven masters to report his failure.
Ondeth caught the mage's last mumbled words and thought the wizard said, "Prepare yourselves."
Faerlthann heard those same words but thought the mage had said, "I shall try."
Chapter 9: Cordials
Year of the Gauntlet
(1369 DR)
"Princess Alusair? My dear, she's probably gallivanting around the realm with all the handsome young men she can grab with both hands! Gone to fight beasts at the borders of the realm, indeed! More likely she's off to one of the king's secluded hunting lodges for a weekend of dalliance. That one wants to try out all the nobles in Cormyr before she marries one!"
The prawn-and-cress sandwiches were all gone, and the dove tarts as well. The servants had been dismissed-Darlutheene had bidden them to leave the cordial decanters behind-and the two ladies had settled down in the parlor window seats with the drinks between them for their favorite post-highsun pastime: a good old gossip.
Darlutheene Ambershields was in fine form today. To look at her-something few men cared to do for overlong-you'd never think she'd been born to a family of longtime palace servants. Her gown of royal blue musterdelvys was alive with cut gems-glass, a jeweler would have said at a glance-that glistened like tears, and her formidable bodice was a masterwork of upswept filigree adorned with peacock plumes. The red silk of a fitted chemise flared through her slashed and puffed sleeves, and in half a dozen daring cutouts upon her breast and belly. Huge rings flashed and glistened on every finger as she waved expressive hands, and a small silver ship was under full sail across the raised billows of her blonde hair.
In truth, her companion, Blaerla Roaringhorn, considered this bellow-sailed vessel in very poor taste, but it was after all Darlutheene's parlor, and her cordials, too, so Blaerla held her peace.
"She doesn't matter at any rate," Darlutheene confided in a whisper that set the crystal ringing several rooms away. "They say Azoun has three sons-that's right, no fewer than three!-shut up in dungeons at High Horn and Arabel and even right here in Suzail, their wits stolen away by those wicked war wizards, waiting to step onto the throne should anything happen to him. The other nobles are simply furious, of course, and have spent quite a respectable amount of money over the years trying to get to these idiot princes. If they grabbed one, you see, they could kill everyone in the Palace at once with magic and still have a recognized blood heir to put on the throne!"
The earrings at Darlutheene's green- and pink-dyed temples shook with the excitement of her words, tinkling almost like the diamonds they were cut to resemble, rather than the glass that they truly were.
Blaerla leaned forward, jewel-topped toothpick busily at work, to look out over what they could see of the royal gardens, just in case armies of men hired by the nobles were charging the palace to get at one of those chained princes right now, but the shrubs and flower beds were empty of rushing men in armor, perhaps they'd chosen another route. "You speak truth indeed about my mistress, the princess," she said, putting her glass to her full, very red lips, "but I've seen her with a sword in her hand, love, and I tell you if anyone sits on the throne that she doesn't agree with, we'll have war!"
"War? Why, Blaerla, you do say such dramatic things sometimes! Why, who would want