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The Christening Quest
The Christening Quest Read online
Contents
Copyright Page
Dedication and Acknowledgements
Chapter One
Chapter Five
Chapter Ten
Chapter Thirteen
About the Author
The Christening Quest
by
Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
Original Copyright © August, 1985 Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
Discover other titles by Elizabeth Ann Scarborough at Smashwords.com
All rights reserved
Copyright © October, 2010, Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
Cover Art Copyright © 2014, Karen Gillmore
Gypsy Shadow Publishing
Lockhart, TX
www.gypsyshadow.com
Names, characters and incidents depicted in this eBook are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of the author or the publisher.
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eBook ISBN: 978-1-4524-7026-9
Print ISBN: 978-1-61950-260-4
Published in the United States of America
First eBook Edition: October 2, 2010
First Print Edition: May 15, 2015
Dedication and Acknowledgements
For David Michael Ruthstrom, Minstrel Extraordinaire and Stalwart Questing Companion, with abiding affection.
Also for my parents, Don and Betty Scarborough, my brother, Monte Scarborough, and Greg Herriford, Jeannie Jett, and Charles and Karen Parr for their help and inspiration. Special thanks to Tania Opland for listening, and to Tim Henderson, songwriter and minstrel, for his special insight into gypsies.
I would also like to acknowledge Scottish songwriter & singer Archie Fisher whose song “Witch of the Westmereland” inspired the initial meeting between Rupert and Carole.
Chapter I
Banshee shrieks and shuddering moans pealed off the stone walls, bouncing from buttressed arch to arrow slot, lending the whole north wing all the peaceful charm of a dungeon. Rupert Rowan, prince and diplomatic trainee, winced and recrossed his long legs, sinking back into the velvet padded chair and trying to maintain his carefully cultivated serenity despite his sister’s anguished wails from the other side of the iron-hinged door. He had wearied of pacing hours ago and now had settled down to present a good example to the occasional subject who passed by him in the corridor. Most of these subjects were women, and many of them pretended not to hear Bronwyn’s caterwauling, which Rupert thought very decent of them. Bronwyn was supposed to be a warrior. Why did she have to choose a time when he was in earshot to give up stoicism?
A buxom wench with a pert face and a corona of golden braids smiled warmly at him, masking the expression he frequently saw in female faces with one of sympathy. “There now, Your Highness, don’t worry. The hollering relieves the pains some, see? Every woman does it in labor. She won’t even remember this when she holds the little one in her arms. You’ll see.”
He smiled at her, a bit pitifully, striving to present a visage that would inspire her to clasp it to her bosom. “You’re very kind. Will it be much longer do you think?”
She smoothed the clean, white towels over her arm with one shapely hand. “Not much, I should think. Though the first always takes longer. Is it an Argonian custom to have a male relative in attendance, Your Highness? Forgive me, but we were curious, we girls, if you were here because Prince Jack couldn’t be, being in Brazoria as I’m sure it’s needful he be, though very hard on our young lady, your sister, it is. We think it ever so sweet that her brother should come be near her in her husband’s stead. None of his folk offered, not even the women.” She blushed a pretty pink and covered her pretty mouth with her fingertips. “No disrespect intended, milord.”
“None taken, I’m sure. We all know what gypsies are like. As a matter of fact I—”
A particularly blood-curdling bellow emanated from the royal bedchamber. The girl started, gave him an apologetic smile and a half-curtsy, and scurried off, banging through the door hip and shoulder first.
He had been about to explain to her that the last thing he intended was to be at Bronwyn’s bedside for her birthing. He had, in fact, only been stopping off on the way from his fostering in Wasimarkan, where he was learning diplomacy at the behest of his Royal Mother, Queen Amberwine. The Queen had rightly pointed out that with an elder sister as Princess Consort of Ablemarle (having lost the title of Crown Princess of Argonia when her brothers were born), elder twin brothers (one of whom, Raleigh, would be King, the other of whom, Roland, would be war leader), there was very little else for her fourth child to do that would be useful.
The Queen had declared with unusual forcefulness for a person of faery blood that she was not about to have a son of hers turn into a good-for-nothing knight errant bullying the populace and using his royal prerogatives to rape and pillage. It had happened elsewhere, and Rupert was no less fond of the phenomena than his mother. He was a highly peaceable and loving sort by nature—so loving, in fact, that by the age of twenty, when his frost giant ancestry caused him to be so unusually tall and well grown and his faery blood lent him an uncommon beauty and charm, he was a cause for alarm among the fathers and husbands in the Wasimarkanian Court. To the men he was called, behind his back (for it would never do to offend so powerful an ally as the Royal House of Argonia) Rowan the Rake. To the women, into whose eyes he gazed soulfully and whose hands he kissed tenderly, almost without regard for age, station, or pulchritude, he was Rowan the Romantic. He would miss those charitable and generous ladies, one and all, but his mentors, under pressure, had declared that with princesses of six major countries in a swoon for his attentions, he would need more advanced lessons in diplomacy than they had to offer. They referred him back to his own family for further instruction.
The stop in Ablemarle’s capitol to visit Bronwyn had been an impulse. His ship was docking to take on cargo. He had not seen Bronwyn in several years, and she had always been his favorite in the family. She was as good a fighter if not a better one than Roland—at least on the practice field—and she had had marvelous adventures when she was still much younger than Rupert. When Rupert tired of hearing of those adventures, which he sometimes did since he always wanted to learn something new, Bronwyn was most adept at making up tales to amuse him.
He almost failed to recognize the wild-eyed creature who greeted him and clung to his hand, her face so pale that every freckle stood out like a pock, her wiry red hair loose and straggling in every direction, her belly great with child. The self-sufficient big sister of his youth all but pleaded with him to remain until her child was born, as it was to be any day. She begged him to stay since her husband, Prince Jack, could not. Rupert had failed to understand any more than the pretty lady-in-waiting why any masculine family member should be a comfort to Bronwyn in what was first and foremost and unarguably woman’s work, but he could not deny her. He had stayed.
A long, gasping cry ended in an ear-splitting scream,
and was followed closely by another cry, this time the squall of an infant. Rupert jumped to his feet and strode to the door, leaving his rowan shield leaning against the door. All the Rowan offspring usually carried the shields made by their father as birthing gifts on their persons, for the rowan wood was proof against magic. But he was in his sister’s hall and far more excited than he had thought he would be at the advent of this new relative, and three strides was hardly an incautious distance.
The door flung back against him and the girl with whom he had been speaking bustled out, brushing against him, a whimpering blanketed bundle cradled against her breast.
“Wait,” he said quickly. “Can I see?”
She lifted the triangle of blanket just above the crook of her elbow and showed him a wrinkled, red little face that began to screw itself into another scream. “It’s a girl,” the maid informed him. “Isn’t she adorable?”
“Quite,” he said, trying to sound sincere. “I’ll just go congratulate Bronwyn.”
“Oh, not yet, milord,” she said. “She’s getting her bath and then she must rest a bit. I’ll be bathing this child to be presented to her when she wakes.”
“A bath?” he asked blankly. “Oh, of course, the baby would be needing a bath. Well, um, may I watch? I’ve never seen a new child bathed before.”
“I don’t see why not,” the girl said with a saucy, calculating look from under her lashes, “But you Argonians certainly have strange ways, if you’ll pardon my saying so, sir.”
“I’d pardon you almost anything, my dear,” he said politely, and opened the door to an adjoining chamber for her.
The baby’s bath was interesting chiefly in that Rupert thought it very convenient to be able to bathe an entire human being in a wash basin that barely fit his two hands. Otherwise it was rather messy. The maid herself was far more intriguing, and he proceeded to get to know her better while his new niece slept in her cradle, carved in the shape of a swan and newly decked with pink ribbons by the lady whose ear he was nibbling.
The enormous draft that blasted open the double doors took both Rupert and his companion by surprise, as did the fact that neither of them was able to do so much as raise a finger to lift themselves from the tiled floor where they had been flung. Indeed, Rupert could not so much as twitch his knee from where it undoubtedly inconvenienced his paramour, lodged in her midsection. He watched helplessly as a rather large rug whisked in on the blast. Two gentlemen with blue robes and bandages tied round their heads with blue cords lifted the baby from her cradle and onto the rug and whisked back out again. They failed to blast the door shut behind them and Rupert could hear doors banging, presumably all the way down the corridors to the main entrance, as the rug flew through unhindered.
Sensation returned to him as the last distant door slammed back again, and he jumped up, still stunned. The whole incredible event had happened so fast he thought perhaps he had been napping in his new love’s arms. But the cradle was empty and when he ran to the arrow slit in the corridor outside, he saw the outline of a flat flying object with two figures on it. Behind him, the girl scrambled to her feet, clutching her bodice together, and scampered into his sister’s chamber. Rupert sagged against the arrow slit for a moment and watched the rug disappear over the city, over the masts of the boats docked in the harbor, and far far out over the line of greenish-gray that marked the vastness of the Gulf of Gremlins.
When no outcry erupted from Bronwyn’s chamber even after several moments, he cracked the door, expecting to see her in a swoon. Instead, she sat up in bed, her hair splashing like blood upon the pillow, her eyes staring straight ahead. The ladies around her started nervously, but she quieted them with one look and bade Rupert enter with another.
“Bronwyn, sister, I don’t know what to say,” he began. “I was helping your nurse with the baby’s bath and we had only just put the dear little one to sleep and were chatting when—”
She took his hand in both of hers and pulled him down to sit beside her, then wrapped her arms around him. She sobbed wearily and almost noiselessly, her face against his chest, her tears soaking his fine embroidered tunic. His own tears wet her hair, and he held her and rocked her until she was so quiet he thought her sleeping. Then she disentangled herself and lay back against her pillows, her face full of grief and something else that he could have been imagining as a reflection of his own shame at having been caught dallying when those who depended on him were threatened. The look on her face undid him, so that his own tears flowed anew. Her eyes turned outward, toward him, again and she reached up to mop his tears with the edge of her sheet.
“By the Mother, Bronwyn, I am so sorry. I had no idea—”
“I know, Ru. I know. I had no right to involve you without telling you but I thought they wouldn’t strike so soon, that they’d wait until she was a little older, until after her christening—though why I imagined Miragenians respecting anything but their wretched Profit—”
“You know who they were?” he asked, incredulous.
She nodded.
“You knew this would happen?”
Another nod. “I never told you the whole end of the affair with the magic pomegranate I won from the sunken castle in Frostingdung. I had promised it to the Miragenians, in exchange for their help for our father in the Great War. They fulfilled their end of the bargain so readily I knew that the pomegranate must be of great importance. I learned that it had the power to undo all magic and sow disenchantment and despair in its stead. I could not, simply could not, place such a hideous weapon in the hands of those who care only to reap more profit than their competitors. As I told you, I disposed of it, or rather, Jack did, flinging it into the deepest crevasse of the highest glacier he could find. But the Miragenians demanded, as honorable payment of my debt to them, possession of my first-born child. Jack bargained with them until they agreed to keep her for only fifteen years.”
“Only fifteen years? Great Mother in the Ground, Bronwyn, how could you live with such a bargain?”
She shrugged, a mere hopeless twist of her mouth and clenching of her shoulder. “One never knows what will happen. We thought perhaps we would not marry, Jack and I, as we had planned, but even if we had not loved each other for so long, the alliance was necessary for both Argonia and Ablemarle. Then we hoped I would be barren, and tried to see that it was so but…” She rolled her eyes and sniffed, disgusted with herself for her failure to keep from her husband.
“I understand,” Rupert said quickly.
“That’s why Jack’s away now, I know it. He couldn’t bear to be here when they took her. He’s been strange ever since I told him I’d conceived. And in truth, I don’t blame him. I wouldn’t be here either if I could help it. But I can’t even ride after them and offer myself as my own baby’s nurse. For the honor of Argonia, the bargain must be respected, hard as it is, and I cannot hope to see my child again until she’s almost a woman. But, oh, Rupert, I did think they’d let me see her christened first, protected by the gifts we could give her. There wouldn’t be many, of course, considering the circumstances. We’ve both been in secret disgrace all these years among our families because of it. The gypsies, except for his father and grandfather, are scarcely speaking to Jack—”
At that a black-haired maid who had been scrubbing the floor beside the bed slapped down the wet cloth, wiped her hands on her skirts, and with a passionate and unreadable look from coal-dark eyes fled the room.
“Oh, dear. I forgot about her. Gypsies are so sensitive.” She collapsed into the pillow for a moment, then suddenly sat straight up, swinging her legs over the side of the bed.
“What are you doing?” he asked, restraining her.
“I know. I’ll disguise myself as a man and go after them. I don’t know if I can find Miragenia again but I did it once. I’ll take the christening gifts with me so that even if I’m discovered, my daughter will have her birthright…”
Her skin was hot and her breath came raggedly as she spoke.
“Bronwyn, you can’t. You’re not ready to be out of childbed yet. You’re ill. Besides, you told me they have magic in Miragenia. You have none. You’ve no chance against them.”
“I’ll find Carole, our cousin. She’ll help. She’s a witch and she has magic. Besides, she’s a priestess now. She can christen my child for me there. Yes. That’s what I’ll do…” She broke free of Rupert’s hands and stood for a moment before blood soaked the front of her gown, turning it from white to red as she stood seeking to keep her balance. Rupert caught her as her knees buckled and tucked her in again, while her maids clucked about her.
“Where are these christening gifts?” he asked her, smoothing her hair back and paying no heed to the maids tending to the lower half of her body.
“Here,” she said, reaching under her pillow and extracting a pitifully small packet. “They’re runed spells to be burned and mixed with the christening mud. There’s nothing else except… Take her my rowan shield, Rupert. She’ll need protection.”
“Hush,” he said. “So do you. She’ll have my shield, and I’ll make myself another. Only promise me not to rise from this bed until your midwife says it’s safe. I will find this cousin of ours and together we will do what may be done for your baby.” He brushed his lips against her hair and rushed away to hire another ship.
* * *
Less than a month later Rupert had crossed not only the Gulf of Gremlins but Argonia, and rode across the snow-palled plains of Wormroost Valley. The shadows of the great glacial peaks reached out for him, chilling him when his path led him through them. Snow slowed his horse. It burdened the boughs of the spruces so that they drooped like old women with full aprons. The deciduous trees were reduced to bare bones. The sky was muzzy gray and wonderfully eerie. Wild animals scuttled across the snow in front of him and beside him. This was the wildest country Rupert had ever encountered. He felt certain it was every bit as dangerous as Miragenia and began savoring the perilous nature of his mission. Court was all very well, but a man liked action and adventure occasionally.