Michelle Sagara – Cast In Courtlight (страница 5)
And if the Hawks didn’t like what he appended, they could come crying. Once.
He stopped by Caitlin’s desk, and threw the mirror on the wall a thoroughly disgusted glare; like anything that made noise and conveyed messages, it
He had paperwork.
Oh, and Kaylin.
She was perched in the center of his chair, looking like a leather-clad waif, her hair pulled up in imitation of Caitlin’s, and with vastly less success; she’d stuck a stick through its center, and hair had already escaped it in great chunks.
“What,” he growled, “are you doing in my
His chair was large; he was heavier than any of the humans he commanded, and wider by far than the Barrani. It wasn’t his favorite piece of furniture; he’d broken three chairs this year because of the shoddy workmanship of the craftsmen employed by the Halls of Law. Armrests were not meant to snap off
She appeared to be taking notes.
And, as was so often the case when she wasn’t locked in a classroom, her concentration had shut out most of the office noise. His presence dimmed the rest. He could walk silently; as a hunter, he had to. He was seldom given the opportunity to use the skill.
When he was exactly behind her, he roared in her ear.
Papers went flying like loosed birds.
As she tried to catch some of them, she gave him a reproachful jab. As he was smiling, this was safe. Barely. But this was Kaylin; she hadn’t the grace to look flustered or embarrassed. Not for the first time, he thought she’d been born in the wrong skin; she was like a young Leontine kit—a female, at that—and very little unnerved her for long.
Then again, she’d been under his care for seven years, and she’d come as a youngling. If he hadn’t been entirely protective in the normal Elantran sense of the word, he
“If you want to do paperwork,” he said, sitting on the sparse inches of desk that weren’t covered by paper, “you could have volunteered.”
“Would it get me out of those damn lessons?”
“No.”
“Overtime pay?”
“No.”
She shrugged. “Well, then. I guess I’m not stupid.”
His roar was mostly laugh. Many humans found differentiating between the two difficult—or at best, unwise, as the cost of a mistake was high—but Kaylin didn’t labor under that difficulty.
Which was good, considering how many
She shrugged. “Had to happen sometime.”
“Then you guess wrong. You
“Flight feathers don’t fit,” he replied calmly. He looked over her head, his eyes snapping into their habitual glare. “What are you looking at? You don’t have enough to keep you occupied?”
To a chorus of mumbles, which were a type of applause if you were stuck behind a desk for any length of time, he turned back to Kaylin. “You heard,” he said flatly.
“Tain told me.”
“If Tain told you, he also informed you that any interference on our part would
She shrugged. “There are a lot of lords and ladies in that bundle.”
“There always are.” His fangs appeared as he drew his lips over them. “Do not get involved in this, Kaylin.” “But she’s a—”
“She has her place. You have yours. At the moment, they’re not the same.” When she met his glare, and equaled it, he let his shoulders fall; they’d risen, as had his fur. “Given the snit the mage left in, you’ve probably managed to buy yourself a couple of days.”
“You didn’t put me on the duty roster.”
“Observant girl.”
“Is it because of the damn mages?”
“No. I take my orders from the Lord of Hawks.”
“Then why—”
“I used the word
“No.”
“Then he probably thought it best you didn’t know.” “I don’t.”
“Good.” He shoved her to one side and sat; the chair creaked. He’d managed to split leather twice. “Do not mess with the Arcanists.”
“Sir.”
“How many Festivals have you patrolled?”
“Officially?”
“Or unofficially.”
“Enough.” The fact that she was evasive meant that some of those patrols had occurred while her life was rooted in the fief of Nightshade. She’d been a child, then. And she probably hadn’t been there to preserve the peace or prevent a crime.
“Good. You
“A f
“Very well, if you insist on being picky. A few
“Sir.”
“Good. In all of your many colorful descriptions of High Caste Barrani Lords, did any of them include stupid?” “No, sir.”
“Good. Lord Evarrim is not a stupid man.” “He’s not a man, sir.” “That’s enough, Kaylin.”
“Sir.”
“If he is aware of your presence in the streets, it is likely that he will take the opportunity to interview you. As we’ve now denied his pleasant request three times, he’ll be composing less pleasant requests, which are often misunderstood by little Sergeants like me—” and here his voice did break in a growl “—and mislabeled as threats. It isn’t as if he hasn’t asked politely, after all.
“Have you ever been to the High Court?”
“No.”
“You think of it as a place of refinement and unearthly beauty.”
“No, sir! I—”
He lifted a paw. Inspected it for invisible splinters. Let her splutter for a few more minutes. “It is beautiful in exactly the same way the Emperor’s sword is beautiful—it is a work of art, and it is usually drawn for only one purpose. You
“Sir.”
“Good. You will sit this Festival out. And before you start whining, may I just point out how many Hawks would switch places with you in a second?”
“Yes, sir.” She sounded deflated.
He wasn’t fooled. “Give me the notebook, Kaylin.”
She didn’t spit; this was an improvement over her thirteen-year-old self. But it took her a minute to find the notebook, which, given it was clutched in her hands, was an accomplishment.
As she began to walk away from the desk, he said, “If you access Records for this information, I’ll have your hide.”
“Yes, Marcus.”
She accidentally met Severn just outside of the Quartermaster’s hall. Where accident had much to do with a bit of careful deduction, the information on the duty roster, and a damn boring wait.