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“She seems strangely familiar, my lady. And, if I may be allowed the thought, a trifle old to be embarking on a new role in life.”

Abeh glowed with satisfaction. “Well, it is only for today. The Thane of Thanes was kind enough to lend him – her – to me for the occasion.” She looped her arm around Tara’s and drifted into the Palace of Red Stone. “He was reluctant, really quite reluctant, but I insisted.”

Tara smiled. Abeh’s determination in pursuit of her own amusement was infamous, but it would have been far better for Gryvan to deny his wife this petty indulgence. Such humiliation of Igryn oc Dargannan-Haig, once it became widely known, would only feed the ire of those opposed to Haig’s rule. Igryn might be a prisoner, a traitor condemned by his own deeds and words, but nevertheless he had been a Thane not long ago. Such considerations would not occur to Abeh, of course. She had founded her life, her very understanding of the world and all its processes, on the primacy of her whims.

“Well, do bring him or her in quickly,” murmured Tara. “We don’t want that lovely hair to be ruffled by the breeze.” It would hardly help, but at least they could get Igryn inside the palace and away from curious eyes.

The other guests – most of the wives and older daughters of Vaymouth’s great and powerful – had been gathered in the music room for some time. It was the prerogative of the High Thane’s wife always to be the last to arrive. There was a stir of interest as Tara and Abeh swept in, which gave way to gasps and laughter when Igryn oc Dargannan-Haig followed them. Tara was gratified to see that at least a few of those present had the sense to be dismayed at the sight of the former Thane.

An attentive flock of admirers descended on Abeh oc Haig at once. Tara took the opportunity to edge up to one of the guards who flanked Igryn.

“Please do not feel you have to stand there like idiots,” she muttered in his ear. “There are chairs over there.”

“I offend you, do I?” Igryn rasped. The guard laid a hand on the prisoner’s arm and squeezed tightly, but Igryn did not appear even to notice it. “It’s my sight that’s been taken from me, not my hearing. You’ll have to whisper quieter than that if you want me ignorant of your contempt.”

“It’s not contempt,” Tara said, gesturing to the guards to remove Igryn to the farthest corner. “But you hardly fit in with the mood of the evening. If you’d rather stand there and have all Vaymouth’s fine ladies spitting insults and laughter at you for the rest of the night, you’ll just have to forgive me for denying you your wish.”

When the musicians began to play, the chatter quietened for a time. They were masterless men from the Free Coast, found by Tara’s embroiderer playing at the last night market of the year. Their style was energetic, a novel departure from the light, flowing Tal Dyreen music that had been preferred in Vaymouth for the last couple of years. But their greatest attribute was the singer who soon came to the front. She was an exquisitely beautiful girl, perhaps fifteen or sixteen. And her voice was as sweet and fair as any voice could be. It filled the room like a formless, enchanting quality of the air itself. Even Abeh oc Haig was held and stilled by it for a few moments.

Time passed as it always did at such a gathering: in smiles and murmured pleasantries, in flattery and aimless talk. Tara moved slowly around the room, ensuring that no one ran short of wine or conversation. The singer sang, and everyone praised her voice; some cultivated jealousy of her youth and beauty. A roasted swan, resting on a bed of its own white feathers, was carried in on a huge silver platter.

A serving girl came hesitantly to Tara’s elbow.

“Forgive me, my lady, but your other visitor has arrived. He has been taken to the Chancellor’s audience chamber, as you instructed.”

Tara nodded, and left as discreetly as she could to greet her new guest.

Lammain, Craftmaster of the Goldsmiths, had a sharp, long nose and angular cheeks and chin. It gave him a certain dignity, Tara thought, but it also always made him seem rather gaunt and hungry. And hungry he was, of course, though not for food. In common with much of Vaymouth’s population, wealth, power and standing were what he craved.

Tara did not dislike the Craftmaster. He was one of those amongst the city’s game-players who had never mistaken her for a mere wife, an empty adornment on the Shadowhand’s arm. Lammain had always respected her intelligence, and the particular kinds of influence she could wield. He was, as far as she could tell, one of the few men she had met who was not blinded by her beauty.

“Did they offer you wine, Craftmaster?”

“They did. I declined it. I did not realise you had other visitors this evening. I had no intention of disturbing you.”

“Not at all,” said Tara as she settled gracefully into a chair. She leaned a little closer to the Goldsmith, with an expression that conveyed both guilt and amusement. “I asked you to call on me today for this very reason. These ladies make for demanding company, you know. A few moments away from them will give me the chance to recover my strength. And it is only polite to give them the chance to discuss me, and my hospitality, without having to whisper.”

Lammain gave a brief half-chuckle. “I am sure it is not quite as tiring as you say,” he murmured.

“Oh, but it is. The talking is incessant. And the mind must be fast as a deer to keep up with it. One moment it’s gossip about some lustful intrigue, the next talk of war. Then it’s fretting about the cost of fine cloths. You can never be sure what is coming next. As I left, they were all agog at the news of Gann nan Dargannan-Haig.”

“They were?” The surprise in Lammain’s voice was far too unguarded to be false. It pleased Tara. So long as she kept the Craftmaster off balance, the conversation was hers to steer.

“You’ve heard, I assume?” she enquired. “They say he fell off the dock at Hoke, straight into the sea.”

“I had heard, yes,” Lammain said.

He would have been amongst the first to hear of Gann’s demise, Tara knew. The dead man had, after all, been the Goldsmiths’ possession, purchased over many years with coin and favours. How her husband had arranged the man’s death – and such an appropriately grubby kind of death, at that – Tara had no idea, but that it was a costly one for Lammain was beyond doubt.

“The Dargannan-Haig Blood is having no fortune, is it?” she said. “First Igryn gets himself thrown into a gaol cell, now his cousin manages to die a very common little death. Of course, rumour has it that Gann brought it on himself. I hear he was terribly drunk, and wandering about the harbour at dead of night. It is no great surprise that one with his habits should come to an ugly end.”

“Well, I never met the man myself. But yes, he had a certain… reputation.”

“Still, his death is rather regrettable. It proves the fragility of all our dreams that someone could come within reach of a Thaneship only to be denied by drunkenness and cold water. My husband will be disappointed, when he hears of it. He was most interested in your view, you know, that Gann might be the best choice as Igryn’s successor.”

“Was he? Well, I am gratified. Though it hardly matters now.”

“Perhaps you could consider whether there is anyone else you think well-suited to the task of leading the Dargannan-Haig Blood. I know that the Thane of Thanes took a much closer interest in Gann once he knew of your advocacy. Really much closer. Should you have anyone else to put forward…”

She left the suggestion hanging, with a delicate smile.

The Craftmaster’s face darkened for a moment before he recovered his self-control. It was only a fleeting slip, and the change had been almost imperceptible, but it was enough to satisfy Tara that she had done what her husband had asked of her. Mordyn seldom involved her directly in his dealings but on this occasion his enforced absence from Vaymouth had made it necessary.