nine
TESTS
The week’s punishment left everyone too worn out to do anything but classwork. Kel knew that was temporary. Joren, Vinson, and another third-year named Garvey had not given up their harassment of the first-years completely: during the day they took every chance to bump, casually push, or thump the younger pages. On their first night without linens to scrub, Kel changed from dress to shirt and breeches after supper, and went to Neal’s room to study as usual. Merric, Seaver, the prince, Faleron, and Neal himself were there when she came in. Cleon arrived not long after she did. He sat with Neal at the writing desk, talking about a paper the third-years had to write for Master Yayin.
The room settled into its usual library-like quiet. Everyone whispered to keep from disturbing the others. Kel, Seaver, and Merric worked on the day’s mathematics problems together for a while. When Kel knew that she wouldn’t be needed right away, she rose and stretched. Then she casually walked out of the room.
Neal followed her and closed the door behind him. “I’d like a word,” he said.
Kel looked at him. “I’ll be right back,” she began.
“You’re not fooling me, you know,” he informed her. “Every night you put on a dress for supper. That’s to remind us you’re a girl and you’re not ashamed of it. Fine. I understand perfectly. But some nights, when you don’t have punishment work and Joren and his pack are being rowdy? You go and change into your fight clothes,” he waved at her shirt and breeches, “and you take a little walk. Sometimes you come back just fine, and some nights they haul you and whoever you mixed it up with before the Stump. You go looking for trouble!”
“Neal,” she said nervously, “keep your voice down.”
“Why? You don’t seem to care if you get caught!” It was an accusation, but he lowered his voice to say it. His face turned red with the effort.
She sighed. “That’s not it at all.”
“Then what is it?” he demanded hotly. “Are you some kind of—of tavern tough that likes to brawl?”
Kel shook her head. “Not hardly, since I lose every time.”
“Then what is it? I want to know!” cried Neal, his voice cracking. “I’m your friend and what you’re doing worries me sick!”
“This isn’t the time or the place—”
“It is if I say it is,” he snapped. “I mean it, Kel. I swear by Mithros, if you try to leave I’ll call the servants out myself. I’ll tell the Stump.” He stood between her and the halls she patrolled, arms akimbo, his green eyes mulish.
Kel ran her fingers through her hair. He really would be difficult about it; she knew him well enough to be sure of that. And she wanted someone to know she didn’t get into fights because she liked it. “It’s that earning-your-way custom, where the older boys make us do their errands. It’s stupid and it wastes time. That’s bad enough. But what Joren does, and his friends—they take it way too far. They use it to bully first-years, and that’s just plain wrong.”
He crossed his arms over his chest. “Oh, wonderful. You’re on a hero’s quest to get rid of bullies.”
Kel glared at him. “Someone has to!”
“And if this wish of yours is so glorious, why haven’t you asked anyone to join you, hm? We’re all would-be knights, aren’t we? If you aren’t just enjoying the fights, why not ask for help?”
Kel planted her fists on her hips. “Because I had no reason to think I would get it!”
“What?” said a startled voice nearby.
Kel and Neal turned toward his door. At some point during their argument the boys inside had eased it open a crack to listen.
“Merric, you dolt!” they heard Faleron say. The door opened wide. They all stood there, even Prince Roald, looking at Neal and trying not to look at Kel.
“Well, she as good as said we agree with, with Joren and his pack,” stammered Merric.
Kel inspected each of them. “None of you ever spoke against it,” she replied, picking her words carefully. “Even when it was you being picked on”—she rested her eyes on Seaver and Merric— “once it was over, you didn’t say how it wasn’t right and ought to be stopped. You just came here to Neal’s room, to work with the group. I figured I was the only one here who thought it was all wrong. I thought maybe I saw it different because I’m a girl. I could do something about it, but I didn’t think you would.”
Neal turned away, running his fingers through his hair.
“Now, wait,” protested Cleon. “You can’t go setting tradition on its ear. Hazing is the way new boys become pages. They have to earn respect from the older ones, and we teach them to obey orders.”
“So I should let this go on because it’s always been that way?” she asked.
Cleon, the prince, Faleron, all nodded.
“No,” she said flatly. “I know what you mean, Cleon. I do your chores.” She met each boy’s eyes. “But this custom leads to worse things. Cleon sends me for papers, but someone else traps a first-year in a corner and keeps making him do stupid tasks. He’ll maybe hit the first-year to smarten him when the first-year slows down—and that is dead wrong. If we take this as pages, what about when we are knights? Do we say, Oh, now I’m going to be nice to the weak and the small? Or do we do as we learned when we were pages?” She stopped, breathing hard. It was the longest speech she’d ever made. “I don’t mean to lecture. You can laugh and say I’m a silly girl—but when I see anyone big pick on someone small, well, there’s going to be a fight.” She looked at Neal. “Joren and his friends are out there looking for someone to hurt. I want to stop them.”
“They’ll beat you up,” the prince remarked quietly.
“I think of it as combat exercise,” Kel replied with grim good humor. “And I’m learning new ways to do combat all the time. So if we’re all finished here?”
She walked through them and down the hall, turning into the library corridor. Running footsteps approached. She turned to find Neal.
Kel stared at him. “What do you think you’re doing?”
He looked down at her for a long moment. “You’re the oldest ten-year-old I’ve ever met,” he said finally.
Exasperated, Kel put her fists on her hips. “What is that supposed to mean?”
Neal thrust his hands into the pockets of the breeches he wore at night. “It means I’m trying to justify to myself the fact that the best lesson I ever had on chivalry came from someone five years younger than me. When you put it that way, well, I guess I’d better help.”
Kel shook her head. “All right, but it’s going to hurt,” she said, and set off down the hall.
“You don’t have to tell me that,” Neal said, keeping up with her. “Don’t forget, I see your bruises every day.”
They heard laughter from the stair leading to the teachers’ quarters and ran to investigate. They climbed to the landing between that floor and the teachers’ floor to find Joren and Vinson pushing Quinden up and down the steps as Garvey watched. The moment they saw Kel and Neal, they stopped.
Quinden made his escape. Kel, Neal, and the three senior pages, not wanting to be heard by anyone on the teachers’ floor, went cautiously down the stairs. At the bottom, Joren threw a punch at Kel, who ducked. Vinson tackled Neal, who threw him into Garvey. They were in the thick of combat, giving and exchanging blows, when the air seemed to grow as heavy as velvet, weighing their limbs and shoulders down. Suddenly fighting or even speech was an effort. Slowly the five pages looked toward the stair. A tall man—a very tall man, Kel realized—with tousled black hair and large, dark eyes stood there, hands braced on either side of the door frame. He was dressed in a flowing white shirt and black breeches. The sparkle of magic glittered in the air between him and them.
“Such animosity will not do,” he observed in a light voice. “You’ve managed to affect my current working; if it were to go astray...Except that it’s not going to, because you are going to drop this and go do whatever it is pages are supposed to do at this time of night. Run along, please.”
Although they were dismissed, none of them could move. The man frowned when he saw he wasn’t being obeyed. Finally Neal managed to croak, “Spell.”
“Spell? Oh, yes, of course. How careless.” The sparkle of magic vanished. Kel and the others could move again. “Now you may go.”
He turned and climbed up the stairs as Joren, Vinson, and Garvey ran. Kel and Neal remained there, staring up the stairs as the man disappeared from view around a turn.
“Will he report us?” Kel asked. If so, she wished he’d do it. She hated waiting for a summons.
Neal chuckled. “Master Numair? I doubt he’ll remember why he left his workroom, once he gets back to it. That must be a sensitive spell, though, if we affected it.”
“Numair,” she murmured to herself with a frown. The name seemed familiar.
“Numair Salmalin,” replied Neal. “Only the most powerful mage in the realm. He’ll be teaching the magic classes about dragons and griffins in a month or so.”
“He’s Daine’s—” Kel started to say “lover,” but didn’t when she saw Neal frown. “Friend?” she supplied hastily.
Neal sighed and nodded. “He’s too old for her, you know.”
Kel gave him a sympathetic pat on the back as they headed back to the others.
They were at Neal’s door when he suddenly turned cheerful. “At least Joren won’t stage any of his little scrambles near the teachers’ quarters again,” he pointed out. “He’s probably thinking right now he’s lucky Master Numair didn’t turn him into a tree.”
“Oh, as if Master Numair could,” retorted Kel. Only in stories did mages turn people into things, and she had noticed such stories always took place in the very distant past. In real life it was supposed to be impossible.
Neal grinned at her. “When he’s upset enough, he can do pretty much what he wants. He turned an enemy mage into a tree just two years ago, at Fief Dunlath.”
Kel gaped. “I never heard that, and we got all the news in the Islands. You’re sure?”
“I had it from Father, who had it from the king.”
Kel shook her head, impressed, and Neal opened his door. “Hello, my ducks,” he caroled as they walked in. “Did you miss us?”
The next night, when Kel stood to go through the halls, Neal closed his book and stood with her. Faleron hesitated, then got to his feet, as did Merric. Seaver was already opening the door.
Kel looked at the other boys. Cleon had returned to study with them; his open, direct face was confused. The prince met Kel’s gaze and shook his head, a wistful expression in his eyes.
Poor Roald, Kel thought. His life would be so much easier if he didn’t worry about what people might say. She smiled at him and led the others outside.
There was no sign of Joren and his cronies that night, or the next. The third night they found Joren and Vinson in a courtyard, forcing Esmond of Nicoline to do bows made to a monarch over and over. The two third-years looked up, saw the size of their company, and fled. Neal slung an arm around Esmond’s shoulders. “Want to join our study group?”
They had a brisk skirmish with Joren and Vinson the night after their meeting with Esmond. It ended quickly, all of them running when they heard the approach of a group of servants. The night after that, Cleon put his book aside with a sigh as Kel got up. “I’d better come keep you children out of trouble,” he said with a grin at the older, taller Neal. Prince Roald and Esmond, who had joined them, stayed to work as Kel and her supporters patrolled the halls. With the addition of Cleon to their group, the fights ended. He and Neal were too big, and the others too many. Joren, Vinson, and their friends decided to find other ways to spend their time until spring.
At the end of March, another thaw was followed by a blizzard that laid more than two feet of snow on the ground. Three days later it had all melted, creating seas of mud everywhere. Planks laid on the mud to provide dry footing sank and disappeared. Weapons and unarmed combat practice were held indoors.
When they were done, Lord Wyldon demanded their attention. “I won’t have good horses lamed from riding in this if it isn’t necessary,” he told the pages. “Instead we’ll go for a run, from one end of the curtain wall to the other.”
Kel’s skin rippled with goose bumps. The wall that cupped the palace in a flattened half circle was thirty feet high. True, the top was broad enough to allow five men to walk abreast, but the thought of being up there made her sweat.
I should have known, she thought, trotting up a narrow stair to the top of the wall in Merric’s wake. I was lucky to go for so long without facing this. I should have known it couldn’t last. And I’ll just have to do it, that’s all.
“Waiting bores me!” she heard Wyldon roar from the open door above. “Get those legs moving!”
Kel locked her eyes on Merric’s ankles as they ran gasping out of the tower. Don’t look ahead, don’t look to either side, she ordered herself. Just follow Merric.
“Go!” Wyldon bellowed. “Don’t wait for permission, I told you run the wall, so run it. Smell that fresh air! Don’t make a face, Queenscove, air is good for you. Breathe it!”
Stone after stone passed under Kel’s nose. Her feet, shod in thin leather slippers, slapped the ground.
“You run like a lamb, probationer!” The boom of Wyldon’s voice in her ear made her jump. “Open your stride—put some distance between your knees. Plant those feet—don’t touch on your toes and kick up your heels. I hope your precious Yamanis don’t run like this.”
I’d like to see how you run with a silk kimono wrapped around you from thigh to ankle, Kel thought as she lengthened her stride. The thought of Wyldon in Yamani dress made her giggle as her thigh muscles strained, then relaxed, easing into the new way to run. A quick glance ahead told Kel the boys were starting to race. Let them—she was going to stay right behind Merric’s steadily churning feet.
Wyldon slowed them to a walk, then made them run again. He alternated walking and running, never allowing them to come to a complete stop. They were a strong group, hardened by a winter of short runs to the stables and back. This was an easy track, flat and dry, but the length began to tell on them. Keeping her eyes down, Kel moved up until she was between Merric and Seaver.
“How’s Lord Wyldon?” she inquired, gasping.
“Fresh as rosebuds in May,” growled Merric.
“Don’t you two know?” Seaver asked. “His lordship runs this whole wall, both ways, every morning before dawn. My cousin says that’s how he got the lungs to yell like he does.”
“I hate the Stump,” Merric said tightly He liked Neal’s term for Wyldon.
“As if he cares a docken,” Kel remarked. “How’s Neal?”
Seaver looked up, scanning the pack of older boys. “He’s ahead of everybody.”
“Horse blood,” guessed Merric. “There must be some in the Queenscove family.”
“A racer,” agreed Seaver, panting. “The family keeps it hushed up.”
Kel would have laughed, but she was too breathless. She stayed with her two friends as they ran to the end of the wall. They stopped at the watchtower that marked one end of the flattened half circle.
“Keep moving!” ordered Wyldon, running in place as he watched the pages. “Don’t stop—you’ll cramp. If you throw up, do it outside of the wall— the wind can’t blow it back in your face.”
“Oh, good,” gasped Esmond, who looked like he might well vomit. “That’s an important tip.”
I’d better not get sick, then, Kel thought. She stubbornly kept her eyes on the walkway as the boys drifted toward the view of the city. She’d heard it was splendid.
Wyldon had come to a halt. As the pages drew within earshot, he said, “You might one day command an attack on a walled fortress. How would you approach this position? Quinden of Marti’s Hill?”
“I’d go around the back,” he said, and smirked as the other pages laughed.
“Very true,” Wyldon said frostily. “With no attacks on this palace in centuries, previous monarchs who wished to expand knocked out the rear wall. We are discussing a hypothetical, Page Quinden—a chance for you to use your imagination. How would you attack, Page Merric?”
“I’d still go around back, m’lord,” replied Merric, who had caught his breath. “With the Royal Forest there, you can get men and catapults and rams really close before you’re seen. Here in front, there’s all that open ground between us and the Temple District.”
“If you brought an army into that forest, there is a mage king in possession of the Dominion Jewel who will raise the trees and streams to fight you. He has a wildmage who would ask every vole, fox, rat, wolf, owl, and otter to harass your flanks. You would never be seen again,” Wyldon informed them. “Probationer, how would you attack this wall? You must survey the ground before you reply.”
Kel stared at Wyldon, white-faced.
Wyldon motioned for her to step up to one of the square notches between the tall stones in the wall. “Before we grow old, probationer.”
Kel’s legs trembled, and not just with exhaustion from the run. She forced one foot forward, then the next.
“I hope you are quicker to advise your lord in a combat situation,” Wyldon told her.
Stone halted her advancing steps. She had reached the wall. Kel took a deep breath and looked out through the opening.
Straight ahead the city was a jeweled blanket on both sides of the Oloron River. It was a very pretty sight. Kel didn’t feel as if she were high up, but as if she were looking at a complex tapestry.
“Our attackers have already overrun the city and put it to the torch, girl,” Wyldon said overpatiently. Kel heard the other pages snickering. She was taking too long. “How must they come at us?”
It’s all right, Kel thought. This isn’t so bad.
Then she looked down.
Kel’s ears roared; she could not catch her breath. The broad moat that passed in front of the wall was a long drop below. She heard nothing, did not feel hands prying her grip from the stone. The fear gripped her as tightly as it had on the day Conal held her over the tower balcony. Her whole body crawled with a weak, paralyzed itch.
A clean-shaven face thrust itself before hers. “Look at me, girl,” a stern voice ordered. “Nowhere else. Look at my face. Whose face do you see?”
Kel blinked. That hideous drop was gone, replaced... Her eyes darted to red furrows of scar at the corner of his right eye.
“Lord Wyldon,” she croaked.
“Exactly. Look at my face and turn with me.” His hands on her arms tugged, twisting her body to one side. She had to move her feet or be wrapped around her own spine. She turned, her eyes locked on his.
“Now. We’re on a flat place. There’s stone under your feet, do you understand? Look down.”
“I’ll fall,” she whispered.
“You can’t. You’re on solid ground. Just look. Curse it, girl, do as you’re told!”
Instinctively—they’d all learned to jump for that tone this winter—she looked down. The only thing that she saw was stone, flat, gray, and wonderfully close.
A boy snickered. “Ooh, I’ll fall,” someone squeaked in a falsetto voice.
Kel closed her eyes, close to tears with humiliation.
Wyldon let go of Kel. ’’All of you, back to the practice courts,” he said. “We’ve time for a few rounds of staff work.”
A few boys passed her, giggling. A friendly arm was slung around Kel’s shoulders. “Come on, Mindelan,” Neal’s husky voice murmured in her ear. “We’ll get you inside.”
“But you’re not afraid on stairs,” Seaver remarked.
She cleared her throat. “Most are narrow and twisty. You can’t see far in either direction. The rest of the time I just look at the next step.”
“You better pray he never makes you climb Balor’s Needle,” Cleon advised as they entered the tower stairwell closest to the pages’ wing.
“He doesn’t make us run up there, does he?” Kel squeaked. Balor’s Needle was the tallest part of the palace, a lean, high spire with a fragile-looking iron stair that spiraled around its length. The mages used it to observe the stars or to work spells of long-seeing that let them view the countryside around the palace and capital.
Cleon shook his head. “None of us are allowed up there. A page failed the examinations about six years ago and jumped off the Needle.”
In silence they finished the walk to the court where staff practice was held. It surprised none of them that someone might jump to his death after failing the dreaded spring examinations.
Not that I’ll have to worry, Kel thought dully as she picked up her staff: He knows I’m afraid of heights now. He can say if I’m afraid of heights, I can’t keep up with the boys, and I’ll be out on my ear.
By early April Kel was able to hit the quintain’s small shield every time she jousted. Her lance could only take so much of this accuracy; at last it shattered. Taking a buffet from the sandbag—she had yet to strike the small ring on the target, which would cause the bag to swing just halfway around—Kel rode Peachblossom to the quintain and dismounted, picking the pieces of her shattered lance out of the mud.
“Stop mourning like it’s a dead friend,” Wyldon said curtly. He’d been short with her since that day on the palace wall. “Go choose another.”
Joren was ahead of her, picking a lance from the spares and holding it to Kel as she approached. Expressionless, she accepted it, knowing his eagerness to help was just so he could give her another weighted lance. This one felt no lighter than the old one. Kel ran her fingers along it and found the hair-fine breaks where plugs had been fitted back into the wood. She looked at Joren. He smirked.
Something happened to her then, something she would not be able to explain if she lived to be a thousand. A feeling like cool rain poured over her, making her feel more focused than she ever had before.
She mounted Peachblossom.
She floated in an empty space, enclosed in glass like one of Master Lindhall’s animals. Outside the glass, the older boys practiced sword work from horseback as they waited their turn on the quintain, or they joked or rested, one eye on Sergeant Ezeko as he corrected Faleron’s seat. A single quintain was free, the one assigned to the new pages: Esmond was next, but Lord Wyldon was showing him something as the other three first-years watched.
Unobserved, Kel kneed Peachblossom into line with the free quintain. She swung her lance into the couched position, its grip firmly in her gloved hand, the butt passed snugly between her ribs and arm. The long, tapered end thrust out over the gelding’s withers at just the right angle to hit the shield. Gently she kicked Peachblossom, urging him forward at a trot. Her world narrowed to one small, painted circle on a slab of wood. She was halfway down the lane, and everything—her seat, her grip, the heft of the lance—felt perfect in a way it never had before.
“Charge,” she whispered to Peachblossom. She hadn’t demanded that speed from him since their first try at the quintain.
He lowered his head and charged, hooves thundering on the damp, springtime ground.
Kel rose to meet the target, her lance aimed at the circle. She struck it dead center. The target snapped to the side, precisely as it did for the third- and fourth-year pages, the quintain turning neatly. Kel galloped past, waiting for the bruising impact of the sandbag. It never came.
She raised her lance and drew back on the reins, guiding Peachblossom into a gentle turn. She was almost certain that the gelding congratulated her. “Extra oats for you tonight,” she murmured, slowing him to a walk.
Wyldon watched her, arms crossed over his chest. “Good,” he said. “When you can do it reliably, instead of once or twice, you will have something.”
Kel didn’t hesitate. She knew the feel of it now. She walked Peachblossom into a turn and pointed him at the target. One of the pages had already set it for the next tilter. Kel tucked her lance butt under her arm, lowered it until it crossed the gelding’s shoulders, and urged him into a trot, then a gallop, then the charge. Everything that had been so perfect a few moments ago felt exactly right again. She struck the circle dead center a second time, then went back and did it a third time and a fourth. After her fifth perfect tilt, she stopped in front of Lord Wyldon.
“Very good, probationer.” Wyldon sounded as if his teeth hurt to say it. The other pages had all stopped what they were doing to watch her last three passes. “You are released for the remainder of the morning.”
She bowed to him from the saddle and turned Peachblossom toward the stables.
The sound of applause made her turn in the saddle. “Huzzah, Kel!” Neal cried gleefully. “Huzzah, huzzah!” The prince, Merric, Seaver, Faleron, and Cleon were all clapping and cheering. So were Eda Bell, the Shang Wildcat, and Stefan the hostler, who often came to watch the tilting practice. She waved to them with a grin, and nudged Peachblossom to a trot.
The examinations at the end of April had existed for only fourteen years. King Jonathan’s father had introduced them after the discovery that a girl— Alanna the Lioness—had concealed her sex to become a knight. The suspicion that trickery was involved had led King Roald to create public tests.
Now anyone could watch as a panel of nobles, mages, and teachers asked pages questions about their classwork and watched them show their physical skills in practice bouts of all kinds. Only three boys had failed the examinations since they were set up, yet all the pages were convinced that they would be the next. Even the prospect of the lesser examinations, the “little tests,” which gave younger pages experience in public questions and performance, made them nervous.
Kel dreaded the public exams, but she was beginning to think that this year’s tests would be the only ones she would get to take. Lord Wyldon would never let her return in the fall. He was as cold to her in April as he’d been in September. He still referred to her as “probationer,” which seemed like a bad sign.
Knowing that, she had to force herself to study for the little tests. The reality was an anticlimax: their audience was tiny, the classroom questions basic. The pages had to write and do mathematical problems on a large slate so everyone watching could follow their work. They had to recite the Code of Ten, the set of laws that formed the basis of government in most realms north of the Inland Sea. They reported aloud on the habits and behavior of some species of immortal—Kel chose hurroks. Then they demonstrated three different ways to greet dignitaries. That marked the end of the classroom work.
Going to the outdoor practice court for their examinations, the first-year pages had to saddle, mount, and ride their horses around a ring. They went through the most basic maneuvers with unarmed combat, staff, wooden practice sword, and bow. Then, to Kel’s surprise and relief, it was over. All of the first-years passed.
“I keep telling you, these tests have to be easy enough that even a noble with ogre blood could pass,” Neal informed her at supper that night.
Kel grinned, but said, “You know, ogres only sound stupid. Most are pretty smart.”
“And it’s a shallow person who judges anyone by the way they sound,” he admitted cheerfully. “I’m so shallow I’m surprised I don’t reflect myself.”
Kel groaned and punched him in the shoulder.
The next week Kel, Neal, and the other pages watched the big tests, in which the fourth-year pages were publicly quizzed and made to demonstrate their mastery of the skills they would need as squires. Kel was surprised that neither Lord Raoul—the Knight Commander of the King’s Own—nor Alanna the Lioness as King’s Champion was among the judges, and mentioned it to Neal.
“Well, of course they can’t decide on whether or not a page is suitable,” Neal replied. “None of the knights from that generation are allowed to judge. Quite a few of our stuffier nobles claim the pages and squires in those years collaborated to get the Lioness made a knight, though of course no one says as much to their faces. Even Duke Gareth the Elder—her training master—has never served. The king picked the oldest, blue-bloodedest, fustiest men in the realm to do the tests, ones who were nowhere near the palace for Lady Alanna’s training. That keeps the traditionalists happy so His Majesty can then get them to go along with things like opening schools on their estates.”
“How dare they say the Lioness cheated!” growled Kel. “Great Goddess, she fights ogres and spidrens and armies all the time—”
“You really look up to her, don’t you?” Neal asked.
“She’s a hero. She’s proved it over and over.”
“And will go on doing so until the day she dies,” he said evenly. “You can smack some people in the face with a haddock and they’ll still call it a mouse if a mouse is what they want to see. She’s learned to live with that. Perhaps you should, too.” After a pause, he asked, “Have you ever met her?”
“We were away, and now—she’s had a busy year,” whispered Kel, hanging her head. “So busy she hasn’t even visited Their Majesties.”
He seemed about to say something, but he changed his mind. “I want to hear this,” he said as the judges quizzed a page on the law regarding illegal settlement.
That night in the mess hall, the fourth-year pages moved to the half of the room where the squires sat. Everyone applauded. There was cake for dessert and a juggler, a special treat from Lord Wyldon for the new squires.
It marked the beginning of a lazy May. Throughout the month knights drifted in and out of the practice courts, looking at the new squires. Only simple reading assignments were given in afternoon classes. There was no etiquette class: Master Oakbridge was in charge of arranging the monarchs’ summer travels throughout the realm, and had not a moment to spare. Only in the practice courts was the pages’ schedule the same.
With the arrival of warmer weather Kel’s sparrows had moved back into the courtyard. In May the babies began to explore the world outside their nests. Kel loved to watch the tiny birds. They approached their parents or Kel with wings aflutter, yellow-rimmed beaks wide open, cheeping plaintively until they were fed. When not hungry, they seemed to view the world with the gravity of aged priests, watching everything around them with great earnestness. Crown’s fledglings were every bit as alert as their mother, reaching their seed before all of the other youngsters. They were also the first to shed their baby feathers; Kel was able to recognize them only when they begged their mother for extra food.
At the beginning of June, the pages began to prepare for their weeks in camp. They were issued summer clothes much like their practice garments, and taught how to load a packhorse with supplies and gear. Their first class of the day for a week was neither reading nor writing, but the art of calculating the amount of supplies necessary to keep four adults—Lord Wyldon, Sergeant Ezeko, the Shang Horse, and the Shang Wildcat—and twenty-odd pages for two months.
Finally Lord Wyldon gave them an entire day to run last-minute errands and laze. They were to leave for the depths of the Royal Forest in the morning, after breakfast.
The next morning Kel rose at her usual early time. She gave her sparrows one last feeding. “You stay out of trouble,” she ordered them as they pecked at their seed. Salma was to look after them while she was gone. Kel refused to think of who would care for them in the fall. Lord Wyldon had still not given any sign that she might be allowed to return.
Overhead, the great bell clanged, summoning those who were late risers from their beds. Gathering her saddlebags, Kel left her room.