The high queen made a stark contrast to dark Tylleth. Miriamele’s golden hair was largely silver now, worn in simple plaits under a modest circlet. Her cheeks were pale, her green eyes shadowed, and Eolair was worried for her. This was the first time the king and queen had faced the anniversary of Prince John Josua’s birth while away from home. Eolair did not blame Queen Miriamele in the least for her irritation at being marooned in conversation with King Hugh’s mistress.
In fact, as Eolair watched, the queen seemed to have lost patience entirely with Tylleth’s chatter and was trying desperately to draw King Simon’s eye. Her husband saw, but Hugh was leaning close to him, talking with quiet animation, and Simon could only shrug to show his helplessness.
Eolair shifted on his seat and felt his joints complain at him for sitting too long on a hard bench. He was beginning to wish he had accepted that offer of more wine, if only to ease his old bones. The day seldom passed now that Eolair—once among Hernystir’s best riders and swordsmen—did not marvel at what age had done to him.
I have become Time’s poppet, he thought sadly. She plays with me as a child with a doll, pulling off a piece here, another there, dragging me through the mud, then carrying me back to sit at some mock-banquet.
But this gathering was no child’s performance of grown-up ways. It was deadly serious business, the monarch of Hernystir welcoming his liege-lords, the king and queen of Erkynland. Simon and Miriamele ruled over Hugh’s Hernystir and most of the rest of Osten Ard by the authority of the High King’s Ward, the empire that Miriamele’s grandfather John of Warinsten had created with his strength and his sword. But even at the best of times, some of the lords of the High Ward’s component nations had chafed under John’s rule.
Eolair could not help wondering whether Hugh was becoming such a man. Or did something else explain his odd behavior in keeping Simon and Miriamele waiting so long outside the city? And even after they rode in, Hugh had waited to meet them until they had reached the Taig itself, which suggested less than perfect subservience on his part. But Hugh had been changeable and headstrong all his life, something Eolair knew better than most.
Hugh’s father Prince Gwythinn had been one of the first to die in the great war that had made Simon and Miriamele monarchs. Gwythinn had been killed and mutilated by renegade Rimmersmen serving Miriamele’s father, King Elias of Erkynland, who had been corrupted by the lying promises of Ineluki the Storm King. Gwythinn’s body had been left for his kinsmen to find. When his father King Lluth had died in battle against the Rimmersmen not long after, only Lluth’s daughter Maegwin and the king’s young wife Inahwen had remained to lead their shattered people. Then madness had taken Maegwin, and with her, nearly all that remained of Eolair’s hope for his native land.
The Storm King’s attack on the countries of men had failed at last, but in the chaos that followed, the ruined, headless nation of Hernystir struggled to hold itself together. Over the first few months a surprising number of nobles asserted slender if not completely spurious claims to the throne, and it seemed only civil war would settle their rivalries. Then a sort of miracle occurred. Everyone had been certain that the line of royal blood had ended with Maegwin until a young woman of the court was pushed forward by her mother and father to tell her tale and show the infant she had been sent off to bear in secret—Prince Gwythinn’s bastard.
Gwythinn had not married the young woman before his death, but he had made certain promises to care for her, and her family had his ring and letters to prove it. The court was anxious to have a royal family again, so the child’s claim was backed by the wiser nobles—not least of whom was Eolair himself—who did not want their suffering nation to tumble into war again so soon. So, in the end all fell into place for the infant Hugh ubh-Gwythinn. When his mother died from a fever a few years later, young Hugh was given to the king’s widow, Inahwen, who did her best both to raise him for kingship and to rule as his regent, with help from Count Eolair whenever he could pull himself away from Simon and Miriamele and the court of the High Ward in Erkynland.
And here sat Hugh tonight, Eolair thought, a man now more than thirty years of age but still with much the look of the changeable, energetic child who had gusted through the Taig like a spring gale flinging open the shutters. Still the same large, round eyes that could look so innocent, so surprised by any accusation. Still the same curling dark hair that would never lie flat, but bounced with every shake of his head, every loud laugh. The round cheeks of his childhood were gone, his handsome face grown thin, but it was still easy for Eolair to remember the monarch’s charming youth.
So why did this older Hugh make him so uncomfortable?
King Hugh caught him staring. “Eolair! My noble Eolair Tarna, better-than-uncle! Why do you look so downcast? Must I beat the potboy for sloth? Boy! Bring the master of Nad Mullach more wine!”
Eolair smiled. “No, Majesty. I have been amply and regularly served and your table is splendid. I am only thinking.”
“Bah. Thinking. You will sadden us all.” Hugh held high his cup, waiting until the roar of drunken conversation diminished in the high wooden hall. “Instead, we should all rejoice! This is a rare feast indeed, when we are joined by our brother and sister monarchs!”
Eolair saw Miriamele’s head lift at the same moment as Simon looked down at the table. Neither of them had failed to notice Hugh’s choice of words.
As the cheers fell away and people began to wave for their cups to be refilled, the dowager queen Inahwen rose quietly from her seat. Hugh noticed. “Dear lady, why do you leave us?”
“I beg forgiveness, Your Majesty, but I feel a bit weak and the wine is too much for my head. I mean the High King and High Queen no disrespect, of course. I am suddenly unwell.” Inahwen didn’t look Hugh directly in the eyes, but her shoulders were squared as though she expected some kind of violent response, which seemed odd to Eolair: if she was not the king’s true parent, Inahwen was the closest thing that Hugh had.
“Ah, then I beg forgiveness myself for putting you through a tiresome evening, dear stepmother.” Hugh smiled. His expression seemed quite ordinary, but Inahwen turned her head as though it hurt her to see it.
“Not tiresome at all, Majesty,” she said. “How could it be, in this best and highest of company?” She smiled and inclined her head in a bow toward Simon and Miriamele, but it appeared to Eolair that the dowager queen was having difficulty keeping her lip from trembling.
“Please don’t stay on our behalf, Queen Inahwen,” Simon told her. “But we will have a chance to see you before we leave, I hope?”
Inahwen assured them of it, and made her way down the length of the table. King Hugh now clasped Simon’s shoulder, pulling the High King back into conversation. Eolair took the opportunity to rise and follow Inahwen out of the great hall.
“Poor, poor queen,” said Lady Tylleth.
Miriamele was not sure she’d heard correctly. “I beg pardon?”
“The poor dowager queen. She does not like these gatherings.” The dark-haired woman laughed. “I do not blame her. They can be tedious. The king loves his company, but some of the older folk at court weary of long evenings.”
Miriamele was not so much younger than Inahwen that she enjoyed hearing this woman speak of “the older folk.” “Your queen did much to save this kingdom during the Storm King’s War and after it.”
“Of course, of course!” Tylleth laughed again, as if it was a little strange anyone should take offense. “All the more reason she should rest now, with Hugh on the throne.” Lady Tylleth gave every appearance of being as attractive and stupid as a peacock, but Miriamele could not shake the certainty that something deeper and perhaps darker was going on beneath the surface.