Parents
Pirate's Swoop, Tortall
on the coast of the Emerald
Ocean
March 27 - April 21, 462 H.E.
George Cooper, Baron of Pirate's Swoop, second-in-command of his realm's spies, put his documents aside and surveyed
his only daughter as she paused by his study door. Alianne--known as Aly to her
family and friends--posed there, arms raised in a Player's dramatic flourish. It
seemed that she had enjoyed her month's stay with her Corus relatives.
"Dear Father, I rejoice to return from a sojourn in our gracious capital," she proclaimed in a comic, over-elegant
voice. "I yearn to be clasped to your bosom again."
For the most part she looked like his Aly. She wore a neat, green wool
gown, looser than fashion required because, like her da, she carried weapons on her person.
A gold chain belt supported her knife and purse. Her hazel eyes contained
more green than his own; they were set wide under straight brown brows. Her nose
was small and delicate, more like her mother's than his. She'd put a touch of
color on her mouth to accent its width and full lower lip. But her hair.
George blinked. For some reason, his child wore a very old-fashioned wimple
and veil. The plain white linen covered her neck and hair completely.
He raised an eyebrow. "Do you plan to join the Players, then?" he asked
mildly. "Take up dancing, or some such thing?"
Aly dropped her pretense of an over-bred noblewoman and removed her veil, the embroidered cloth band that held it in
place, and her wimple. Her hair, once revealed, was not its normal shade of reddish
blonde, but a deep, pure, sapphire hue.
George looked at her. His mouth twitched.
"I know," she said, shame-faced. "Forest green and blue go ill together." She smoothed her gown.
George couldn't help it. He roared with laughter. Aly struggled with herself, and lost, to grin in reply.
"What, Da?" she asked. "Apart from the colors, aren't I the very latest
fashion?"
George wiped his eyes on his sleeve. After a few gasps he managed to say,
"What have you done to yourself, girl?"
Aly touched the gleaming falls of her hair. "But Da," she said, voice
and lower lip quivering in mock hurt, "it's all the style at the university!" She
resumed her lofty manner. "I proclaim the shallowness of the world and of fashion. I scorn those who sway before each breeze of taste that dictates what is stylish in
one's dress, or face, or hair. I scoff at the hollowness of life."
George still chuckled, shaking his head.
"Well, Da, that's what the students say." She plopped herself into a chair
and stretched her legs out to show off her shoes, brown leather stamped with gold vines.
"These look nice."
"They're lovely," he told her. "Which 'they' is it that proclaims the
hollowness of the world?"
Aly flapped a hand in dismissal. "University students. Da, it's the silliest thing. One of the student mages brewed
up a hair treatment. It's supposed to make your hair shiny and easy to comb,
except it has a wee side effect. And of course the students all decided that
blue hair makes a grand statement." She lifted up a sapphire lock and admired
it.
"So I see." George thought of his oldest son, one of those very university
students. "Don't tell me our Thom's gone blue."
Now it was Aly's turn to raise a mocking eyebrow at her father. "Do you
think he even notices blue-haired people are about? Since they started bringing
in the magical devices from Scanra, he's done nothing but take notes for the mages who study how they're made. The only reaction I got from him was 'Ma better not see you like that.' I had to remind him Ma's safely in the north, waiting for the snows to melt so she can chop up more Scanrans." Aly had left a pair of saddlebags by the door.
Now she fetched them and put them on a long table beside George's desk. "The
latest documents from Grandda. He says to tell you no, you can't go north, you're
still needed to watch the coast. Raiding season will begin soon."
"He read my mind," George said crossly. "That cursed war's going into
its second year, your mother's in the middle of it, or will be once the fighting warms up, and I stay here, buried under paper." He indicated his heaped desktop with a wave of a big hand and glared at the saddlebags. "I've not seen her in a year, for pity's sake."
"Grandda says he's got an assistant trained for you," Aly replied. "She'll
be here in a month or so. He is right.
It's no good holding Scanra off in the north if Carthak or Tusaine or the Copper Isles try nipping up bits of the south."
"Don't teach your gran to make butter," George advised her drily. "I learned
that lesson before you were born." He knew Aly was right; he even knew that what
he did was necessary. He just missed his wife.
They hadn't been separated for such a long stretch since their marriage twenty-three years before. "And an assistant in a month does me no good now."
Aly gave him her most charming smile. "Oh, but Da, now you've got me,"
she said as she gathered a wad of documents. "Grandda wanted me to take the job
as it was."
"I thought he might," George murmured, watching as she leafed through the papers she held.
"I told him the same thing I did you," replied Aly, setting documents in stacks on the long table. "I love code breaking and knowing all the tittle-tattle, but I'd go half mad, having to do it all the time. I asked him if I could spy instead...."
"I said no," George said flatly, hiding his alarm. The thought of his
only daughter living in the maze of dangers that was ordinary spy work, with torture and death to endure if she were caught,
made his hair stand on end.
"So did Grandda," Aly informed him. "I can take care of myself."
"It's not the life we want for our only girl," George replied. "My agents
are used to living crooked--you're not. And whilst I know, none better, that
you can look after yourself, it's those other folk who worry me, the ones whose business it is to sniff out spies." To change the subject he asked, "What of young what's-his-name? The
one you wrote was squiring you about Corus?"
Aly rolled her eyes as she sorted documents into stacks. "He bored me,
Da. They all do, in time. None of
them ever measure up to you, or Grandda, or Uncle Numy"--her childhood nickname for her foster-uncle Numair, the realm's most
powerful mage--or Uncle Raoul, or Uncle Gary." She shrugged. "It's as if all
the interesting men were born in your generation." She scooped up another pile
of documents from the desk. Soon she had the various reports, letters, messages,
and coded coils of knotted string into four heaps: Decode, Important, Not As Important, and File. "So you can forget what's-his-name. Marriage is for noblewomen
with nothing else to do."
"Marriage gives a woman plenty to do, particularly the noble ones," George said.
"Keeping your lands in order, supervising the servants, using your men-at-arms to defend the place when your lord's
away, working up your stock of medicines, making sure your folk are fed and clothed--it's important work, and it's hard."
"Well, that lets that straight out," she told him, her eyes dancing wickedly.
"I've decided that my work is having fun. Somebody needs to do it."
George sighed. He knew this mood.
She would never listen to anyone now. He would have to have a serious
conversation at another time. She was sixteen, a woman grown, and she had yet
to find her place in the world.
Aly rested her hip on George's desk. "Be reasonable, Da," she advised,
smiling. "Just think. My da and
grandda are spymasters, my mother the King's Champion. Then I've an adopted aunt
who's a mage and half a goddess, and an adopted uncle who's a mage as powerful as she is. My godsfathers are the king and his youngest advisor, my godsmothers are the queen and the lady who governs
her affairs. You've got Thom for your mage, Alan for your knight"--she named
her oldest brother and her twin, who had entered page training three years before--and me for fun. I'm surrounded by bustling folk. You need me to do
the relaxing for you."
Despite her claim to studying the art of relaxation, Aly had sorted all of the documents on her father's desk. She set the Important pile in front of him and carried messages to be decoded to the
desk that she used when she helped George. There she set to work on reports coded
in the form of assorted knots in wads of string. Her long, skilled fingers sorted
out groups and positions of knots in each message web. They were maps of particular
territories and areas where trouble of some kind unfolded. The complexity of the knot told Aly just how bad the problem was. The knots' colors matched the sources of the trouble: Tortallans, foreigners, or immortals--the
creatures of myth and legend who lived among them, free of disease and old age. Most
immortals were peaceful neighbors who didn't seek fights, since they could be killed by accident, magic, and weapons, but
some were none too friendly.
George watched Aly with pride. She'd had an aptitude for codes and translations
since she was small, regarding them as games she wanted to win. She had treated
the arts of the lockpick, the investigator, the pickpocket, the lipreader, the tracker, and the knife-wielder in the same
way, stubbornly working until she knew them as well as George himself. She was
just as determined a student of the languages and history of the realm's neighbors.
How could someone who liked to win as much as she did lack ambition? His
own ambition had driven him to become the king of the capital's thieves at the age of seventeen. Her mother's will had made her the first female knight in one hundred years, as well as the King's Champion,
who wielded the Crown's authority when neither king nor queen were present. And
yet Aly drifted, seeing this boy and that, helping her father and arguing with her mother, who wanted her daughter to make
something of her life. Aly seemed not to care a whit that girls her age were
having babies, keeping shops, fighting in the war, and protecting the realm.
Perhaps I should let her work, George thought, then hurriedly dismissed the idea.
She was his only daughter. He would never let her risk her neck alone
in the field. It was bad enough that he'd taken her to a handful of deadly meetings
in earlier years, meetings where they'd had to fight their way out. If she'd
asked to try the warrior life as a knight, one of the Queen's Riders, or one of the battle-ready ladies-in-waiting who served
Queen Thayet, he would have found it impossible to refuse. His wife and Aly's
foster-aunts would have had many things to say to him then, and none would be blessings.
But she wanted to be a spy in the field. That he could and did refuse. He'd lost too many agents over the years. He
was determined that none of them be his Aly.
He looked up, realizing that she had given him a weapon in her pursuit of fun.
"What would you have done, mistress," he asked sternly, "if you were a spy and I needed you to go out in the
field, with that head of hair acting as a beacon?"
Aly propped her chin on her hand. "It comes out in three washings, first
of all," she informed him. "Second, if I was in Corus or Port Caynn, it would
make no never mind. The apprentices and shopkeepers' young there pick up university
fashions straightaway. Any other big city, I could just say it's the newest style
in Corus. Or I'd say that they'd remember the hair and never the face under it,
just like you taught me." George winced.
Aly pressed on, "If none of that eased your flutterings, Da, I'd say that's what razors and wigs are for." She brightened. "I'll wash it out right now if you've a field
assignment for me."
George got to his feet. "Never mind.
Leave your poor hair alone. It's near suppertime."
When Aly stood, he came over to put an arm around her shoulders. At five
feet six inches she fitted just under her tall father's chin. George kissed the
top of her very blue head. "I'm glad you're home, Aly."
She smiled up at him, all artifice and playacting set aside. "It's always
good to see you, Da."
That night they ate with Maude, the Swoop's ageing housekeeper. Aly's former nursemaid clucked over her hair, as Aly had known she would. She loved to make Maude cluck. Then she could remind the old
woman how much she had changed from the Maude who had once disguised her young mistress Alanna as a boy and sent her off to
become a lady knight. Maude always got flustered by that. Alanna was now a legend and a great lady of the realm. Maude
could say it was fate that made her open-minded back then, but she knew she was being inconsistent when she said it.
Aly liked to fluster her nursemaid, not to mention everywhere else. Her
father knew her tricks and enjoyed catching her at them, which was fine. She
knew most of his, because he'd taught them to her himself. She disconcerted most
other people, from the many boys who came calling once they'd noticed her mischievous eyes, ruddy gold hair, and neat figure,
to the hardened brigands and criminals who carried information to her father.
The only person she left alone was her mother. Lady Alanna of Pirate's
Swoop and Olau, King's Champion and lady knight, known throughout the Eastern and Southern Lands as the Lioness, did not startle
well. She had a temper, her own way of doing things. She only showed a sense of humor around her husband. Aly knew
her mother loved her two sons and lone daughter, but she was seldom home. She
was forever being summoned to some crisis or other, leaving her children to be raised by her husband and Maude.
Not that Aly required any more raising. She was sixteen, almost an adult
and ready for adult work, as people were forever reminding her. Aly sometimes
felt that everyone in her world had more interesting things to do than she did. She
hadn't seen her mother, Aunt Daine, or Uncle Numair since the Scanran war began a year before.
In this last month, while she had been in the capital, her grandparents were constantly advising the king and queen,
so much so that she couldn't impose on their hospitality any longer. Her brother
Thom, two years older, thought mostly of his studies. Her twin Alan, who'd begun
his page training three years late, was kept busy by the training master. She
had seen him twice during her visit, and only for brief periods of time. She
had felt left out, even as she had understood that for the time being, Alan belonged to his training master more than he did
even to his twin sister. Rather than distract him from his training, she left
him alone. Alan was like a cat: he would return to her when he was ready, and
not one moment sooner.
All of the young men she had not flirted with and discarded were also busy. They
prepared to march north when the mountain passes opened, as they would any day, or else they had left to guard the realm's
other borders. None of her family would allow Aly within coughing distance of
the war. So back home Aly had gone, feeling restless and in the way. At least Da would use her for paperwork, which was something.
Sometimes she thought she might scream with boredom. If only Da would
let her spy! As she decoded reports and summed them up for him, she tried to
work out a plan to change his mind.
On Aly's third day home, more reports arrived. One of them was sealed
in crimson, for immediate review. She deciphered it: the code was one of many
she had memorized, so that she required no book to translate it. Once done, she
read what she had written and whistled.
George looked up. He sat at his desk, reading letters from Tyra. "Somebody would tell you that's unladylike," he pointed out. "Not your dear old common-born Da, for certain."
"No, not my dear old common-born Da," she replied, smiling at him. "But
this is worth whistling over. Somehow our man Landfall's made it to Port Caynn. He's hiding out there, with important messages for you."
George's brows snapped together. "Landfall's supposed to be in Hamrkeng,
keeping an eye on King Maggot," he replied slowly, using the Tortallan nickname for Scanra's King Maggur.
Aly reread the message, noting the apparently insignificant marks that marked it as coming from one of their agents,
not a forgery. "It's Landfall, Da," she said.
"I taught him this code myself, before we got him into Maggur's capital four years back. He kept saying it was a hard day for the realm when a little girl was teaching code."
George thought it over, rubbing his head. "Landfall. Either he was found out and escaped in time, or."
Aly finished the sentence for him. "Or what he has is so important he
could only carry it himself. Maybe both.
He must have come down by ship."
George got to his feet. "Well, I'd best see what it's about." Landfall was vital, one of a handful of agents smuggled into Scanra in the years before the war. He was so important that he could report only to Aly's grandfather Myles or to George. "Be a good lass and handle these papers for me? I shouldn't
be gone more than a day or two--I'll fetch him back here. Have Maude get one
of the hidden bedchambers ready."
Aly nodded. "You'll get muddy, riding to Caynn now," she pointed out.
George kissed her forehead. "It'll do me good to get out in the
field a bit, even if it means getting some of the field on me. I'm that restless."
Aly waved goodbye from the castle walls as her father rode out of Pirate's Swoop, two men-at-arms at his back. The ride would do him good. She
only wished he could go all the way to her mother's post at Frasrlund in the far north, where he clearly longed to be.
She returned to his office in a gloomy mood. Would she ever find someone
to love as much as her parents loved each other? She would miss such a partner
dreadfully if they were separated, she supposed, just as her parents did. At
least she would have someone to talk to, someone clever who didn't gawp at her and ask her what she meant, or worse, be shocked
by her. It wasn't much fun, when the only people who could keep up with her were
at least nine years older than she was.
The day after her father's departure, Aly heard the horn calls that signaled the arrival of a friendly ship in the
cove. Normally she would have run to the castle's observation platform to see
who the new arrivals were, but she was in the middle of a particularly difficult bit of translation: code entered as pinholes
in a bound book. If she were not careful, she would flatten the delicate marks,
ending up with gibberish instead of a message. She stayed at her task until she
heard hooves in the inner courtyard. Gently she set the book aside and went into
the main hall, then out through the open front door.
Whatever she had expected, the scene in the inner courtyard was not it. Hostlers
gently led her mother's warhorse Darkmoon toward the stable. The big gelding
limped, favoring his left hind leg. Aly quickly eyed the rest of the arrivals. Ten Swoop armsmen who had gone north with her mother the year before helped the servants
to unload their packhorses before taking them to the stable. The horses looked
thin and salt-flecked, as if they'd been at sea. The men-at-arms looked much
the same, as did Aly's mother.
Alanna of Pirate's Swoop and Barony Olau, King's Champion, watched Darkmoon as he was led away. The Lioness wore loose, salt-stained buckskin. There was salt
in her copper hair, and she had lost more weight than the men. Aly knew her mother
hated ships. She would have been sick throughout the voyage.
Aly trotted down the steps and kissed her mother's thin cheek. "What brings
you here so unexpectedly?" asked Aly. "Is Darkmoon all right?"
Her mother looked up at her: even wearing boots, she was slightly shorter than her daughter. Fine lines framed the Lioness's famous purple eyes and her mouth, marks of long weeks in the open air,
summer and winter. There were a few white strands in her mother's shoulder-length
copper hair that Aly could not remember seeing before.
"He pulled a tendon," Alanna replied wearily. "Our horse healers did their
best with him, but he needs rest. His majesty gave us a month's leave. Where's your father?"
"Off," replied Aly. It was the family's code phrase that meant her father
was on spymaster's business. "He should be back soon--it was just a quick trip
to Port Caynn."
Her mother nodded, understanding, and gave Aly a brief hug.
"Why didn't Aunt Daine heal Darkmoon?" Aly demanded. Daine, the Wildmage,
spoke with and healed animals as easily as she took their shapes.
"Your aunt is having a baby shapeshifter within the month," replied her mother as the men carried her packs into the
castle. "If she doesn't change below the waist whenever the child does, it might
kick its way out of her womb." Alanna shuddered.
"It wasn't even worth asking her, not to mention it made me queasy to see her go from bear to donkey to fish every
now and then, while her upper half remains the same. Darkmoon will be fine with
rest." She walked toward the castle steps, limping slightly.
"What happened to you?" Aly demanded, keeping pace. "You're hobbling like..."
She'd been about to say, "you're old," but her throat closed up. That wasn't
so. Forty-two was not old, or at least, not that old.
"I took a wound to the thigh last autumn," Alanna said tersely. "It troubles
me some yet."
"But you're up to your ears in healers!" Aly protested. "You're one yourself!"
Alanna scowled. "When you've been healed as much as I have, you develop
a certain resistance. You know that, or you should. What have you done to your hair?"
Aly tossed her head. "It's the latest fashion in Corus," she informed
her mother. "It's the height of sophistication."
"It's as sophisticated as a blueberry," retorted Alanna. "Aren't you a
little old for this kind of thing?"
"Why? It's fun, and it washes out.
It's not like the world revolves around my hair, Mother," Aly said sharply. Why
did this always happen? Home not even half a day, and her mother had already
found something to criticize about her.
"Fun," Alanna said, her voice very dry. "There ought to be more to your
life than fun at sixteen."
Aly rolled her eyes. "Someone has to enjoy themselves around here,"
she pointed out. "It certainly isn't you, forever riding here and there for serious
work. You're always be so grim!"
"You're sixteen," retorted Alanna. "When I was your age, I was
two years from earning my shield. I knew what I wanted from my life, I knew the
work I wanted to do--"
"Mother, please!" cried Aly. They hadn't seen each other for a year, but
they had returned to the last conversation they'd had before Alanna left. "Must
you be so obsessed? I know all of this already. When you were my age you'd killed ten giants, armed only with a stick and a handful of pebbles. Then you went on to fly through the air on a winged steed, to return with the Dominion Jewel in your pocket
and the most beautiful princess in all the world for your king to marry. I'm
not you. If you were about more, you might have seen that much for yourself." She wished she hadn't made the accusation, but if anyone could make Aly lose control
over her tongue, it was her mother.
Guilt pinched the girl as Alanna's shoulders slumped. "That's not what
I meant," Alanna said. "That's not what I want.
At least, it would have been nice, to have you do as I did, as far as getting your shield is concerned, anyway. But the whole point to doing as I did was so you could do something else, if you wanted
to. It's just that you don't seem to want to do anything." She massaged one of her shoulders, watching her daughter. "Look,
hair is, is hair, I suppose. If you want it blue, or green, or leopard-spotted
. . . Who am I to say what's fit for a girl?"
She walked into the castle. Aly turned, to see the hostlers and men-at-arms
regarding her with reproach. "She's not your mother," she told them. "You try being the daughter of a legend. It's
a great deal like work."