The Ships of Merior

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passage through his town.’
    Lysaer looked back in reproach. ‘These are my people,Diegan. However I have to win my way past Erdane, whether my troops come to shelter under carpets or wind-breaks cut from our best murray silk, I won’t cross this land in such haste that I cannot understand the land’s needs.’
    ‘Sithaer take your royal principles, I’d do better arguing with a half-wit!’ Lord Diegan stood, the jingle of his spurs cut by the crunch of scattered nuts as he stalked past the fire and escaped to nurse his pique outside.
    The cavalcade pressed on at its snail’s crawl upcoast to Dyshent, over roads rutted deep by the passage of the season’s last lumber sledges. While the chip fires used to season beech blocks skeined dusky smoke above the houses, the prince’s guard troop quartered in yards piled with bark for the tanner’s, or between their own laden wagons, parked amid stacks of green planks. In complete disregard for the craftsmen who spat in the path of his retinue, Lysaer visited the guild halls and the town ministry. Gold saw his officers billeted in the sheds used to season rare woods, and his lordly good manners won over the councilmen’s wives.
    Diegan waited, edgy as the captains who lost sleep to stop their men from making trouble; but the deep-seated resentments toward Tysan’s royal blood failed to spark into contention.
    Lysaer took leave of Dyshent’s council and rode out in proud form before his cavalcade.
    Unappeased, Lord Diegan forced his mount to pace Lysaer’s. ‘This isn’t Isaer, or Erdane, where a few costly gifts can turn heads.’
    The peaked roofs of the city’s mills were by then lost to sight. Ahead stretched league upon league of wild downs. Rounded, scrub-clothed hills cradled the stones of a Second Age ruin, and chipped old arches lay throttledunder greening trailers of bitter vine. There, where wispy marsh-lights flocked the fogs on dank nights and the spirits of long-dead Paravians were rumoured to wander abroad, no town-bred company cared to linger. Astride his steaming, mud-spattered courser, Lysaer drew firm rein, while behind, in a welter of belatedly shouted orders, his massive column blundered to a stop.
    Straight-shouldered in a hooded cloak pinned with a sapphire, the prince waited, while the mists licked through the air between. ‘Are you for me, or against?’ he asked softly.
    Lord Diegan ignored the chill that grazed the length of his spine. He strove to stay angry, to outmatch that worldly gaze which caught and pierced him to the heart. But like an onset of sudden pain, emotion wrung the truth from him. ‘I fear for you, friend. You’re the only man we have whose gift of light can match the Shadow Master’s sorceries.’
    ‘Then give me your trust,’ Lysaer said. ‘Worry does nothing, after all, but undermine morale and abet the cause of an enemy ruthlessly prepared to exploit every one of our weaknesses.’
    The next day, they reached the crossing of the Great West Road. Against every reasonable inclination, Lord Diegan presided over commands shouted through a misery of rainfall as the crack Etarran divisions he had personally selected to protect his prince were split off and turned back to Rathain.
    Afterward, with the downpour a fringe of silver off his mantle, Lord Diegan huffed through the runnels that channelled through his moustache. “By Ath, I’ll trust you have a plan. Would it strain your royal pride too much to share it?’
    ‘You couldn’t guess?’ As sodden as the house staff and officers who attended him in gloomy huddles, but oddlyoutside of their misery, Lysaer shook back wet hair and laughed. ‘My Lord, your Etarrans are too loyal. All filled with brash courage and intent to ruin Arithon, which is just what we’ll do on a battlefield. But since then-numbers are too small to flush out the Shadow Master, just now their sentiments could cause problems. For our safety and theirs, they can’t be risked.’
    The

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