The Curse of Chalion - Lois McMaster Bujold [45]
“Oh, potting rabbits is a useful soldier’s training, too,” Cazaril offered consolingly. “In case you ever have to hunt rats for table. It’s much the same skill.”
Dy Sanda glared at him. Cazaril smiled and bowed out of the argument, leaving Teidez to his badgering.
Over nuncheon, Iselle took up a descant version of a similar song, though the authority she assailed was her grandmother and not her tutor.
“Grandmama, it’s so hot. Can’t we go swimming in the river as Teidez does?”
As the summer simmered on, the royse’s afternoon rides with his gentleman-tutor and his grooms and the pages had been exchanged for afternoon swims at a sheltered pool in the river upstream of Valenda—the same spot overheated denizens of the castle had frequented when Cazaril had been a page. The ladies were, of course, excluded from these excursions. Cazaril had politely declined invitations to join the party, pleading his duties to Iselle. The true reason was that stripping naked to swim would display all the old disasters written in his flesh, a history he did not care to expound upon. The misunderstanding with the bath man still mortified him, in memory.
“Certainly not!” said the Provincara. “That would be entirely immodest.”
“Not with him,” said Iselle. “Make up our own party, a ladies’ party.” She turned to Cazaril. “You said the ladies of the castle swam when you were a page!”
“Servants, Iselle,” said her grandmother wearily. “Lesser folk. It’s not a pastime for you.”
Iselle slumped, hot and red and pouting. Betriz, spared the unbecoming flush, drooped at her place, looking pale and wilted instead. Soup was served. Everyone sat eyeing their steaming bowls with revulsion. Maintaining the standards—as always—the Provincara picked up her spoon and took a determined sip.
Cazaril said suddenly, “But the Lady Iselle can swim, can she not, your grace? I mean, she presumably was taught, when she was younger?”
“Certainly not,” said the Provincara.
“Oh,” said Cazaril. “Oh, dear.” He glanced around the table. Royina Ista was not with them, this meal; relieved of concern for a certain obsessive subject, he decided that he dared. “That puts me in mind of a most horrible tragedy.”
The Provincara’s eyes narrowed; she did not take the bait. Betriz, however, did. “Oh, what?”
“It was when I was riding for the provincar of Guarida, during a skirmish with the Roknari prince Olus. Olus’s troops came raiding over the border under the cover of night, and a storm. I was told off to evacuate the ladies of dy Guarida’s household before the town was encircled. Near dawn, after riding half the night, we crossed a high freshet. One of his provincara’s ladies-in-waiting was swept off when her horse fell, and was carried away by the force of the waters, together with the page who went after her. By the time I’d got my horse turned around, they were out of sight…We found the bodies downstream next morning. The river was not that deep, but she panicked, not having any idea how to swim. A little training might have turned a fatal accident into merely a frightening one, and three lives saved.”
“Three lives?” said Iselle. “The lady, the page…”
“She had been with child.”
“Oh.”
A very daunted silence fell.
The Provincara rubbed her chin, and eyed Cazaril. “A true story, Castillar?”
“Yes,” Cazaril sighed. Her flesh had been bruised and battered, cold, blue-tinged, inert as clay beneath his clutching fingers, her sodden clothes heavy, but not as heavy as his heart. “I had to tell her husband.”
“Huh,” grunted dy Ferrej. The table’s most reliable raconteur, he did not try to top this tale.
“It’s not an experience I ever wish to repeat,” added Cazaril.
The Provincara snorted and looked away. After a moment, she said, “My granddaughter cannot go sporting about naked in the river like an eel.”
Iselle sat up. “But suppose we wore, oh, linen shifts.”
“It’s true, if one needed to swim in an emergency, one would most likely have clothes still on,” Cazaril said helpfully.
Betriz added wistfully under her breath,