Read Blaze of Silver Online

Authors: K. M. Grant

Blaze of Silver (6 page)

“No,” Will agreed after a minute or two, “he doesn't. How curious.” He watched a bit longer, then shook his head. “I wonder why. But I can hardly turn the man out just because Hosanna wants to avoid him. Not after he traveled so far to bring the horse here and all he did for Elric.”

“No, you can't,” Ellie agreed, but she was disturbed. “It's just odd. I mean, Amal is a Saracen, but I don't see how he could really hurt us or why he would want to.” Yet it was unmistakable that every time Amal put up his hand to touch Hosanna's white star, the horse made sure it was out of reach. “Perhaps Hosanna also thinks Amal will take Kamil from us,” Ellie said a little wistfully, “and he doesn't want that either.”

Will again found himself at a loss but then Hosanna whinnied at him. Will's mood lifted. “I think,” he whispered in Ellie's ear, “that Hosanna might not like Amal because Old Nurse dropped his clothes in some old fish water when she took them to be washed. They stink. Old Nurse said she did it by mistake, but I wonder. ‘Really, deary,'” he imitated Old Nurse's voice perfectly, ‘you never know where this foreign cloth has been.'” He harrumphed in true Old Nurse style. Ellie's eyes crinkled and she wagged her finger. It had been ages since she had seen Will like this. He had been so serious since he had come back from crusade and it had all been so dreadful after Gavin. But Gavin couldn't want Will to be sad forever. Their laughter pealed out. Kamil and Amal watched them, rather bemused.

“I think I do want to keep the silver mare, Will,” Ellie said as she and Will companionably approached
the horses. “I don't expect I'll ever love her like I love Hosanna or Sacramenta, but I think we will look very splendid riding together, you on Hosanna and me on—actually, Will, on whom? She hasn't got a name and she can't just be ‘the silver horse' forever more.”

“You're right, she can't,” said Will. Ellie had said “riding together.” He liked that picture very much. “Let's think.” Will stroked the silver rump. “Ellie wants to find a name for this horse, Kamil,” he said before moving to Hosanna, who blew sweet breath into his face. Will murmured endearments and Hosanna gave a rich sigh of contentment.

“Yes,” said Ellie, and her eyes twinkled into Kamil's, “a name.”

“What about Sanctus?” suggested Will. “It goes well with Hosanna.”

But Kamil was scrutinizing the horse carefully. “I think you should call her Shihab,” he said, smiling down at Ellie.

“Shihab?” asked Ellie, intrigued. “Does it mean something?”

“It means a flame or a blaze,” Kamil explained, “and although the horse is silver, she's as speedy as fire.”

“Shihab,” said Ellie to herself, then repeated it more loudly. “Shihab. What do you think, Will?”

“It's very unusual,” said Will, tickling Hosanna's nose, “and I think it's rather ugly.” Ellie looked crestfallen. “But it certainly seems to fit,” Will added hastily. He did not want to appear churlish.

“Shihab it is then,” decided Ellie, and she tidied the mare's mane.

“It will be strange,” said Kamil, addressing Ellie directly. “When I go home I will have Sacramenta, a Christian
horse with a Christian name, and you will have Shihab, an Arab horse with an Arabic name.” Ellie felt a chill at the word
when
, which had always been
if
before. But at once the silver horse shook vigorously and her mane covered Ellie in a great sheet. “Shihab!” Ellie cried as she emerged. The mare looked around. “She likes her name,” Ellie said. “Now, Kamil, you must show me how best to manage her.”

Kamil dismounted and helped Ellie on, telling her how the mare disliked too tight a rein and how she must sit for better balance and security. After a while Ellie rode off, alone, toward the castle. Will hesitated, then jumped onto Hosanna and caught up. When the two horses were side by side, Ellie turned and her face seemed lit from the inside. “Oh, Will,” she whispered, stroking the proud silver neck, “It is like riding a piece of silk.”

“Remember Elric,” Will said shortly. “She may feel like silk, but she's dangerous, too.”

But Ellie was in no mood for caution. “Of course, Earl William,” she said demurely, then her face dissolved into a wide grin, “only last one at the table gets rats' legs for dinner!” At her command, Shihab shot toward the castle, with Hosanna thundering beside her. Once in the courtyard, Will and Ellie tumbled off and Ellie picked up her skirts and ran. When they both banged their fists on the table at the same time, Will took this as a good omen.

The next day, with Elric waving wanly from his window, Kamil, Will, and Hal, together with half a dozen men at arms, left Ellie and Alan Shortspur in charge of the castle. Hosanna and Sacramenta strode out strongly
together with Hal on Dargent just behind. Many knights saved their warhorses or destriers only for battle but the de Granvilles were unfashionable and didn't care who knew it. Will always rode Hosanna and this morning, when the last winds of summer were blowing lightly over the heavy leaves, he rejoiced in his horse's supple strength. How lucky he was!

Once they reached the bigger, more well-traveled route that led eastward, Will gave Hal charge of the baggage wagon while he and Kamil abandoned the road for the heathery moor and soon the two red horses were leaping from tussock to tussock like ballet dancers. They would speed ahead to Whitby because the quicker they got there, the quicker they could assemble their portion of the ransom and begin to prepare for the long journey to the imperial court. On this perfect day, with the horses chasing the streaking clouds and racing over the springy turf, Will was suddenly, wildly happy. He and Kamil shared their food and dared each other to leap over the ditches and streams. Though anxious to expedite his business, Will felt sorry when they arrived at the abbey and not only because the abbot fussed about like an old woman, relieved that Will and Kamil, being young and persuasive, would find it easier than he did to part people from their money.

Kamil spoke to Will just as normal, but every day now, and most nights, he found himself dreaming of two things: Ellie and his home. When Richard was ransomed, he would speak to Ellie alone and tell her that his time in England was over.

7

Back at Hartslove, Ellie was busy. There was much to prepare before Will and Kamil returned and they all left for Germany. Marie and Old Nurse, nursing Elric between them, sorted out food and linen while Ellie looked to horses and wagons, armor and weapons and made up a small trunk of the medicines they would carry. It pleased Ellie very much to do this. She particularly liked the rattle of the armory keys. Marissa hung about, getting in the way and pushing Ellie's temper to the limit.

In the afternoons, Ellie went to Shihab. The silver horse resented being left behind and showed it. It did not help that at first Ellie was too busy to ride. However, once the organization took shape, she ordered the groom to saddle up the mare. Their first outing was not a success. Shihab was bolshy and either bucketed about or refused to move at all. The second day, scarcely was the mare ready when Amal appeared as if from nowhere, making Ellie jump. He bobbed and bowed as Ellie mounted. “Brave—alone?” he ventured.

Ellie did not like being patronized. She gave him
a regal look and rode down to the jousting field more quickly than she meant to. Today the silver horse was quite different, pulling hard and always wanting to bend in the direction the others had gone. She was no longer silk but steel, tense and hard. Ellie had difficulty keeping control and wished she had brought a switch. That was what Kamil had said: The mare had to learn who was master. Still, she would not give up and battled on, occasionally fearful that Shihab's sudden, twisting wrenches would unseat her. She remembered Will's warning and unwelcome pictures of Elric flashed in front of her eyes. She was just wondering how long she could go on when she noticed Amal had followed her and was watching her struggle. She clamped her knees tighter into the saddle.

Now Shihab began to buck, great rhythmic heaves, and Ellie was pitched violently up and down. But she couldn't give in now, she just couldn't. Then Amal approached and shouted at the horse in Arabic. At first Shihab took no notice, but as she grew tired, she pricked her ears and listened and, with Ellie's white cheeks pink with humiliation, the old man was at last able to take the mare's reins and lead her about until she was quiet. Ellie did not know what to say, but Amal seemed to expect nothing. He simply showed her how to hold her reins more delicately and then touched her legs, light as a bat's wing, to show her how to use them more effectively. He neither smiled nor spoke. He simply made signs and nodded or shook his head. Despite herself, Ellie began to follow his instructions, and to her delight the mare responded. Soon the mare seemed docile as a lamb and Amal stood back. Yet even as she rode, Ellie
remembered how Hosanna disliked Amal and tried to maintain her reserve. It was impossible. With the red horse away, there was nothing at all to keep her suspicions sharp, and by the time Ellie had finished riding, Amal had vanished. The next time Ellie saw him, he was sitting by the fire reading. It would have been rude not to acknowledge him, so she nodded. He nodded back but did not try to be her friend. In spite of herself, Ellie could not help respecting him for that.

The following day, when she took Shihab to the mounting block, Amal was with her again, and again he helped her. They fell into a pattern, which both, by instinct, kept secret. At noon, Ellie would ride far away from the prying eyes of Marissa, a recuperating Elric, and Old Nurse, with Amal riding a courser behind her. It pleased them both when he began to teach her to ride short, Arab length, and to show her some riding tricks. The only thing Amal regretted was getting carried away one day and revealing that even an old man could still throw himself off without injury and how to train a horse to wait so that the rider could vault on again. Ellie loved the idea of this although it took her a few days to muster enough courage to try it herself. She practiced on a chair in her room and then took Amal by surprise by doing it at the walk. It was an inelegant but admirable start and soon she could do it with ease, only occasionally hurting herself. Now she wanted to learn how to sweep somebody up from the ground, something she and Will had once spent a whole summer trying unsuccessfully to perfect with a fat packpony. Amal could hardly not show her.

In the afternoons, when the horses were resting, Ellie
took parchment and quill and made him teach her to write Arabic letters, pointing to various items—saddle, tail, mane, stirrup—and repeating the Arabic word. Amal did not like this at all, for it seemed to spell danger rather than pleasure. But Ellie made it impossible for him to refuse, and it both alarmed and thrilled him when she proved to have a quick ear. One morning, she greeted him in Arabic and his heart leaped, the Old Man temporarily forgotten. Cautiously happy, he began to look less gaunt and his cheeks filled out. He even taught her a little about the medicines of his own people and Ellie drank it all in.

Old Nurse was not fooled for long and scolded Ellie soundly. “It's not right for a good Christian girl to spend time with one of those Saracens,” she muttered darkly. “It's not natural.” But Ellie ignored her, and at night practiced her letters with meticulous care. She carefully inscribed Shihab's name as Amal had taught her and thought that one day she would show Kamil.

In the great hall, tucked into the space he had made his own, Amal sat up late reading his Koran. Now when he took out his little book during the night, he would turn first to his daughter's page. Perhaps she and this Christian girl were alike. How would he know? It was when he closed the book that the Old Man's dedication would catch his eye. Then his cheeks would grow taut again and he would bury the book away. He was as content as he could be but he knew this could not last. Soon, even though thousands of miles stood between them, the Old Man would send him a message. All Amal had to do was wait.

He did not have to wait long. Just before Will and
Kamil were expected back, a traveling silk merchant appeared. Ellie had him spread out his wares and she, Marie, and even Marissa exclaimed over them as they held the cloth against the light, imagining beautiful gowns. When Ellie sent him away, regretting that she could not buy more, she did not show him to the gate herself, so she never saw how discreetly he slipped something into Amal's sleeve as they passed on the steps or witnessed Amal start with surprise. Only when he was quite alone did Amal unroll the parchment and begin to decipher the crude code. If he had any doubts as to the letter's authenticity, they vanished when he lifted it close to his face. Though it had come through many different hands, it still carried the scent of the Old Man's oranges. Amal brought the candle very close as he worked and one name caused him to blink. He had not expected it. It seemed that Kamil's punishment was to be part of a greater plot, the details of which the Old Man was divulging little by little. As Amal read on, he pulled his cloak more closely around the angles of his frame. He did not like what this task was turning into. But the smell of the oranges lingered, and through it Amal could see the Old Man's currant eyes and hear his voice. He sighed as he went to the fire and watched the parchment smoulder and shrivel into nothing. When all this was over, he would insist on retiring. Vengeance was a young man's game.

8

Toward the end of September, as the horses' coats began to thicken in preparation for winter, Will and Kamil clattered back across the Hartslove drawbridge. At once the camaraderie that grew so easily between them when they were away became a little stiffer. Both knew it but neither remarked on it. It was just how it was. Elric was up and about and in among his chatter it was easy for Ellie to hug her own secrets to herself, not wanting to reveal them just yet. She was grateful that Amal did not seek her out anymore once Will was back. When they met she did not slight him, but it was clear to both of them that their lessons were over.

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