The Elder Lands Chapter 44: Departure

Novel: The Elder Lands Author: B. Salem Updated:
Font Size
15px

Lucan knocked on his father’s door, receiving an imdiate response to enter. He opened it and stepped inside, finding his father seated at the table, surprisingly, with a goblet in hand. He had never known his father to drink outside of occasion.

Gloom clouded the knight’s features as he sipped ruby liquid from the goblet. “I just ca back from the King’s study.”

“Did he give us leave?” Lucan asked.

“Aye, he did,” his father drawled. “After he delivered upon appropriate admonishnt for infringing on the royal family’s dignity.” He gave Lucan a look. Then he stood up, leaning with both hands on the table and shaking his head. “This…” He sighed heavily, and his thick voice ca out even, but troubled. “This is unlike . I don’t conspire in courts. I don’t take part in the sches of plotters. I don’t humiliate my betters to save myself.” He fixed Lucan with a stare then he sighed again and let his head fall forward as though it had been a burden to his shoulders. “It’s a relief that the King has given us our leave. I have had enough of this godsdamned city.”

Lucan was struck by his father’s forthrightness, which left him speechless for a few monts. He gulped. “I’m sorry, Father. I didn’t an to–”

“It’s not your burden to carry,” his father interrupted. “The responsibility is mine, and the bla is for to bear. And I will bear it. For now, you need only learn, Son. Perhaps you will fare better than after I pass.”

Lucan knocked on his chest. “Elders protect you, Father. And long may you live. Don’t say such things.”

“Death is inevitable for all of us,” his father said. “We must prepare for it just as much as we accept it. All I am doing now is preparation so that you may inherit and live in a state better than mine. Only, I’m not so certain anymore whether I will leave you better or worse, Son.”

Lucan nodded. “You will leave better, Father. Of that, I’m certain. Let them play their gas. Now we only need to ride for our duties. The Kingdom needs us to protect its borders, and so let us.” And let learn to play their gas in your place, Father. So that I may play them in your stead. So that you may not be so pained again.

His father’s face lit up and he let go of the goblet, nodding fervently. “Yes. Let us. Let us wade through our true battles, where the sound of tal rises above the sound of man, noble or common. Where the rot of friend and foe does not hide behind the scent of flowers and the pretense of empty smiles.”

It only struck Lucan today how thin his father’s tolerance for politics was. They hadn’t maneuvered that much in the deep waters of the court, and yet the knight was already so frustrated. Lucan now understood his initial reluctance. Perhaps the only thing that had persuaded his father to back the first prince in the first place was the title of nobility dangled in front of him, besides it being the traditional thing to stand for. He imagined that his father would have otherwise never done such a thing, no matter what amount of favors or wealth were offered.

Lucan smiled and nodded to his father firmly.

The knight grew quiet for a mont, sitting back down and taking a breath, his countenance much healthier. “The princess has appropriated the mythril, I imagine?” He surprised Lucan with both the change of subject and the livelier tone.

“Yes,” Lucan said with a sheepish smile. “You were right.” He sighed. “I suppose it was to be expected, even by .”

His father nodded sympathetically. “It is fair, considering.” He grew quiet again.

“I have invited an acquaintance of the princess to our lands, well, more of a subordinate really. He is an engineer,” Lucan said.

His father raised a thick brow. “Why?”

“For the salt lake. We ought to find a solution for our troubles on that end.”

“And this engineer will need to be recompensed, yes?”

“If he achieves the purpose for which he is brought, then yes. And if he does, then it will more than compensate for the spent coin.”

His father humd, nodding softly. “I suppose the effort is justified.”

“There’s another matter,” Lucan said, his voice growing faint in spite of himself.

A rueful smile mastered his father’s face. “I’m growing used to this, Son. More matters. Always. What is it?”

Lucan took a deep breath and went on to tell him about his eting with Maris Saltner. He told him of their agreent for the rchant to visit with one of his caravans. Then he told him of their other understanding.

His father looked perplexed for a breath then bobbed his head in surprising acceptance. “I suppose this may be a good thing.”

Lucan’s surprise must have shown on his face because his father continued.

“Rising to the ranks of high nobility is now farther from our reach than it has ever been, Lucan. If we can gain the alliance of a wealthy man such as this Saltner, then it will do us much good. You also said that his daughter is a mage. We have no ans to hire one now, and I doubt we will manage to do so even with coin at hand.”

Lucan felt incredulous for a mont. “Father, even should it co to be, I cannot be expected to send my wife to battlefronts, even with her spells to protect her, can I?”

Sir Golan shook his head. “No, but she may advise you, and aid you in smaller matters than open battle. Is she familiar with ritualism?”

“I don’t believe she is.”

“Pity. But I suppose that would have been too fortunate. So much that it would have roused my suspicion,” the knight said, chuckling. “You said she was the one with you in the Labyrinth? So she is also one of the princess’s people?”

Lucan nodded.

“Huh…our only good tidings seem to co from Her Highness’s coasts. That does rouse my suspicions.”

“It’s not as though there is much to wrest from us, Father. Even if I must begrudgingly acknowledge the princess’s craftiness, there’s not much to fear from bringing her allies into our lands.”

“I suppose not, for now,” his father said. “Regardless, we ought to do what brings us the most fortune at this ti. Elders know we need it.”

Lucan was glad that they agreed on that front. At least now they were leaving Eldham with sothing of worth, even if their court aspirations hadn’t panned out.

“We should prepare,” his father continued. “We are to depart at first light.”

Lucan nodded. “Yes, Father. I will prepare my belongings, and I will send for Sawyer to do the sa.”

“Very well,” Sir Golan said, giving him leave with a gesture of his hand.

Before Lucan turned around to leave, he rembered soone. “Lukas of the High Right. Are you familiar with that na, Father?”

His father, whose glazed-over eyes showed that he’d allowed his mind to wander, snapped out of it.

For a mont, he seed to be thinking deeply, as though recalling sothing from ages past. “Lukas, from the war with the Vincemare? That lad?”

“I believe so,” Lucan said. “Though he didn’t tell much more than what I told you and that you saved his life.”

“Aye, I did,” his father said. “He’s a good lad–man–now, I suppose. A Vincemare huscarl sliced two of his fingers off during our final battle. I’ve witnessed n respond with surprising variety to having parts of themselves sheared off before their eyes. It’s never good. Lukas was of the breed that froze. I rember him growing still as he watched blood seep out of his stumps, giving the huscarl free rein to do with him what he wished. Fortune favored him, though, as I had just stepped up beside him.”

Lucan couldn’t help but feel the sa swell of pride he’d felt when the sergeant had first talked to him about his father. After the attempt on his life, he had been dubious about the sergeant, since he couldn’t be certain of the guards’ innocence in the matter, yet it seed that the man had been truthful. “He said he was of the ‘High Right’.”

His father let out a light huff. “Yes, that was what we called our mounted right flank. The true flank, that is. It was mayhem back then. So still call it the War of False Wings in jest.” He chuckled, then took a breath before asking him, “Where did you et him?”

“He’s a sergeant in the encampnt around the Elder Root. He said to tell you that ‘Lukas of High Right lives well with three fingers’”

His father allowed himself a rare boisterous laugh. “It’s good to hear of soone from back in the day doing well for themselves. That one hadn’t been so hopeful after the battle, but I suppose he eventually got back his bearings.”

After sharing a few rry monts with his father, Lucan was content to have delivered the sergeant’s ssage and affird the truth of it. He soon excused himself and left his father’s chamber with a satisfied smile.

They rose with the sun on the next day. Lucan collected Sawyer and delivered their farewells to the princess. And with Sir Golan in the lead, they departed from the East Gate of Eldham.

Sawyer proved an abysmal rider, struggling with his horse for most of the day and earning the ridicule of their n-at-arms. Bored and on the cusp of a long journey, they enjoyed many a jest at the engineer’s expense. Before Lucan could veer them off antagonizing the man, his father put an end to it by warning them that assassins might still be after them. Lucan hadn’t missed the tension in his father’s shoulders since they’d left the palace. And even the n-at-arms with their jests hadn’t truly let their guards down, if one were to observe them carefully.

Perhaps their rowdiness had only been a front to hide their anxiety, just as Lucan’s calm was a front to hide his fear.

Fortunately, his father’s worries proved untrue by the second day, and it looked like they would have a proper boring journey, one Lucan was very thankful for.

You are reading The Elder Lands Chapter 44: Departure on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.