Page 16 of Quatrain


  Once again, Brolt’s face grew serious and composed. “I will,” he said.

  “There is a place in the city where gulden women go,” Kerk said, “when they have left the protection of their husbands and fathers in Geldricht. Let us not discuss their reasons for leaving or how despicable their actions might be. When they come to the city, sometimes they come alone. Sometimes they come accompanied by their children. Some of those children are boys.”

  Kerk paused a moment before proceeding. “Young gulden men who grow up in the city apart from their fathers’ influence are young gulden men who are completely lost. They understand nothing about honor. They do not know how to show respect. They do not know how a family works, how a man protects those who are under his roof, how a woman cares for the hearts of those who are within her circle. And yet they live, and they grow, and they will soon go out in the world, where I think they will do nothing but wreak havoc.”

  “I would think the same,” Brolt murmured.

  “I had occasion to visit this ghetto in the city where women live and young men grow up fatherless,” Kerk said. “Some of those young men have had so little direction that they looked to me for guidance. Since that first visit, I have spent many days in the ghetto, teaching those men what I know. I do not lecture them, you understand, for what young man will sit still to be told how to behave? Instead I have chosen to coach them in baltreck, and in that way to model the behavior that is expected of a gulden man. I don’t know that they have learned as much as I would have wished, but they have learned more than they knew before.”

  Now he looked up at Brolt, whose face was solemn but closed, giving away none of his thoughts. “Part of me wishes there is more I could do for them. And part of me wants to leave them behind and never return. Am I not endorsing their runaway mothers if I stay to teach them? Am I not in some sense betraying Gold Mountain if I stay?” He spread his hands. “I do not know any of the answers. Brolt Barzhan is wise. Perhaps he can explain to me what I should do next.”

  It was a long moment before Brolt replied, and Kerk felt his stomach twist with anxiety. He had just been offered a lifelong place in the Barzhan firm; he had just been offered funding for his dreams, if he happened to have any. Would both those offers now be rescinded?

  “I think you should not ask if you are betraying Gold Mountain, but ask instead if Gold Mountain has betrayed these boys,” Brolt answered finally. “The way of Geldricht is precisely defined and beautifully functional until it fails completely. I love to look at my family and see generations of strong men and beloved women, all connected by pride and honor. But I do not have to look far to see cruel men and abused women, both of them shaped by and trapped within an unforgiving society. I wish no woman had ever felt the need to run away from Gold Mountain. But I think it is the fault of Gold Mountain that they did.”

  Kerk caught his breath. This was more philosophical than Brolt’s typical conversation, and a little harder for Kerk to follow. But Brolt was not angry with him, that much was clear, and Kerk could begin to relax.

  Brolt went on. “Should you continue to model the proper behavior for these boys? Indeed you should. Is there more you can do? Perhaps there might be. Are they capable of working? Can they be trusted with responsibility? There are jobs available in the city for willing hands. I am not looking for more sons, but I could use more workers.”

  Kerk just stared at him. At no time when he imagined this conversation had he expected Brolt to speak those words. “There are one or two who show remarkable discipline and a will to improve,” he said. “Investing in them would be a risk, even so.”

  “I know how to minimize risks,” Brolt said.

  “I had not even thought of trying to find employment for them,” Kerk said. “My greatest ambition has been to see them play together as a team. Jalci even thinks they could take the court against school baltreck leagues, but I am not so sure they will ever be skilled enough for that.”

  He had not meant to say the name, and, of course, Brolt instantly caught it. “Jalci?” he said, smiling broadly. “Does she serve on your coaching staff? Is she the reason you are so often gone from home? Is she one of the runaway wives now living in the ghetto?”

  “She’s a blueskin heiress who volunteers in the Lost City,” Kerk said baldly. “Hardly the sort of woman you would be proud to see me befriend.”

  That silenced Brolt completely. For the first time during this conversation, the older man seemed wholly at a loss.

  “And now you know the worst of it,” Kerk said. “But despite the color of her skin, I believe she is an honorable woman. What she wants is to put more good into the world than existed before she was present. That is a noble goal for gulden or indigo.”

  “Indeed it is,” Brolt said, his face and voice once again neutral. “I know you confide in the lady Tess from time to time. Is she aware of this most unlikely friendship you have managed to strike up?” Kerk imagined the rest of the sentence. And why hasn’t she informed me of this disastrous turn of events?

  “No,” Kerk said. “She knows I have been to the Lost City. She does not know how often, nor how I spend my time when I am there.”

  “I myself have done business with blueskins, and found them, at times, reasonable and intelligent and not without honor,” Brolt said. “I suppose your new friend might fall within that same category. But anything other than friendship—”

  “I know.”

  “Would be scandalous in the extreme.”

  “I know.”

  “And very difficult to tolerate.”

  “I realize that. It is strange to me that I even consider her a friend. I have not viewed her in any other light.”

  “Might I know the full name of this blueskin woman who has so dangerously befriended a member of my family?”

  “Jalciana Candachi.”

  “Candachi?” Brolt exclaimed. “Is she any relation to Anton Solvano’s daughter?”

  Kerk was confused. “Who? I don’t know. She’s mentioned her aunt Kitrini a few times, but—”

  Now Brolt was staring at him, but his wide smile was back. “She is from the family of Kitrini Candachi? How is it that you have managed to find, among all the indigo in the city, the only one for whom the gulden can feel a genuine affection?”

  “I know nothing of Kitrini Candachi,” Kerk muttered.

  “She is a great favorite of Chay Zanlan. They had a grave disagreement ten years ago, but they have reforged their relationship. The Candachi name will open more doors in Chay Zanlan’s palace than the Barzhan name ever could.”

  “Then you’re not angry that I have met her?”

  Brolt watched him awhile before answering, smiling slightly. “I am thinking that of all the surprising news you have brought me this evening, this is the most surprising—and the most welcome. And yet none of it was unwelcome. You have long been an honorable man, Kerk Socast, but tonight you have proved to me that you are much more than honorable. You are enterprising—you are committed to kindness—and you are lucky. Such a man is an asset anywhere he goes. I am happier than ever that the family you call your own is mine.”

  Seven

  Although they never explicitly made plans, Jalci and Kerk had fallen into the habit of leaving the Lost City together after a coaching session and heading to some small, intimate restaurant where the races were allowed to mingle without harassment. The day after Kerk’s revelatory conversation with Brolt, Jalci took him to a rather more upscale place than they had frequented so far. It was near the East Three gate, practically back in the commercial district, and decidedly more biased toward indigo than gulden. Kerk counted only seven guldmen eating at any of the tables, and none of the items on the menu would have been served on Gold Mountain.

  Jalci was oblivious. “You ought to try this dish with wine sauce. It’s a specialty of the restaurant and it’s so good. Oh, and we’ll have to order some of the spiced nut bread. The only person who’s ever made it better is my grandmother, and
she says she’ll give me the recipe if I ever get married. Which is almost enough incentive to let my mother matchmake for me after all.”

  “I can’t tell what would be good, so just tell me what to order,” Kerk said. He realized he would never ask a gulden woman to direct his choices that way—in fact, if he were here with Tess, he’d be picking the items she should eat—but, as always, life with Jalci didn’t conform to what he considered ordinary rules.

  “Well, let me figure out what I want first, and then we’ll get something completely different and share.”

  Once the waiter had taken their orders and brought them a plate of spiced nut bread—which was even better than Jalci had led him to expect—Kerk said, “So tell me more about your aunt Kitrini.”

  Jalci widened her dark eyes. “What made you think of her?”

  “I had a conversation with my stepfather last night. He asked where I have been spending my time lately. I told him.”

  “Oh, I hope he wasn’t angry with you!” Jalci exclaimed.

  “He surprised me by seeming to approve of what I have been doing.”

  She eyed him. “And if he had been displeased? What would you have done then?”

  “It would have been more difficult,” he said quietly, “but I would have continued to come to the Lost City. But to have gone against Brolt’s stated wishes would have caused a rift between us, and such rifts tend to grow instead of mending.”

  “So. You told him about coaching the team and—” She tilted her head to one side. “And you must have told him about me.”

  He smiled very slightly, just to tease her. “I barely mentioned your name. But he recognized it right away, and he asked me if you were related to Kitrini Candachi.”

  “I’m hardly surprised he knew her name. He might even have met her, if he’s ever gone to the palace to see Chay Zanlan, because Kitrini practically grew up there,” she replied. “Kitrini’s always said that Chay Zanlan was like a second father to her.” Jalci thought it over for a moment and added, “Kit and Chay had a terrible falling-out a few years ago, but they’ve patched things up. When Chay Zanlan comes to the city, he often stays with Kitrini and Uncle Nolan. She’s probably the reason relations between the races are as good as they are today. There are indigo politicians who hate her—and they despise Uncle Nolan, but that’s a whole different story—but she’s on every board and committee that has anything to do with indigo-gulden collaborations.”

  “How did a blueskin woman become so close to Chay Zanlan?”

  “Her father and grandfather were sociologists who lived in Geldricht for years. They were activists who fought for gulden rights in the city—very unpopular in their day, but now all the schoolchildren learn about the Solvanos, who laid the groundwork for peace between races.” She cut a piece of bread, took a small bite, and let her face show a brief look of ecstasy. “Have you tried this yet? It’s like eating autumn. I can’t believe your stepfather didn’t ask you any more questions about me.”

  The quick change of topic would have taken him off guard except he had been waiting for it. “He did, but I said very little. The conversation would not have been awkward at all except he had just asked me if I was leaving the house so often to seek the company of a woman.”

  “And you said, ‘Jalci’s not a woman!’” Jalci said. “Don’t deny it. I know you did.”

  His slight smile was back. “Indigo females do not conform to the mold that gulden consider womanly,” he said.

  She was indignant. “Oh, so just the fact that I’m indigo would have reassured your stepfather? ‘No gulden man could find a blueskin woman attractive, therefore I don’t need to worry about how much time Kerk spends with this Candachi woman.’”

  “I think he might have been slightly more alarmed than that,” Kerk said, “but not much.”

  “Hmpfh,” she said and tossed her hair. He couldn’t tell if she was actually miffed or merely pretending.

  “I cannot imagine you have said much more about me to your mother,” he said.

  She laughed out loud. “Oh, I’ve been much more forthcoming, although I have to admit my motives weren’t pure. My mother has been needling me to have dinner with this relentlessly boring man who has been living in the city for two months. I have known him my whole life and never managed to have a conversation with him that did not revolve around his dietary restrictions. So I told her I was not going to marry Stuver, I wasn’t even going to have dinner with him, and that if she didn’t leave me alone, I would make a disastrous runaway marriage with my current flame, whom she would consider appallingly inadequate. Even so, she was excited by the idea that I might be dating someone until I told her you were a gulden man. Then she practically fainted. I actually had to grab her and guide her over to the sofa or I think she would have fallen on her face.”

  For a long moment, Kerk just looked at her. “You told your mother you were dating a gulden man? That you were considering marrying him?”

  She laughed again, a little more nervously. “Well. Yes. But only to upset her.”

  But just to speak the words—even for a disreputable reason—meant Jalci had considered the idea at some point. That she had looked at Kerk and seen him, if only in the most speculative fashion, as a potential mate, and not just some random individual collection of bones and body parts. It was almost beyond his ability to fathom. They were so different, so far apart, that falling in love with Jalci would seem as alien as falling in love with a sea creature or a land plant, tragic and ridiculous and impossible all at the same time.

  And yet . . .

  “I didn’t mean to horrify you,” she said, when the silence had stretched on too long. “I’m really not eyeing you as a possible husband. I’m never even sure you’re going to allow me to be your friend for one more day. But in case you were wondering, yeah, I think you’re cute. I think you’re sexy. All those muscles and that intimidating stare. Yes, that one.” Now she was laughing, though he thought she was still speaking the truth. “But trust me, I don’t expect you to return the compliment. I know I’m not the kind of girl who makes an impression on a man like you. So don’t get all worried about it.”

  It seemed probable, if he didn’t answer, that she would just keep talking this way for the remainder of the meal. “You are attractive, Jalciana Candachi,” he said formally. “I imagine your mother has no difficulty at all finding men who would be overjoyed at the chance to marry you. If I appear stunned, it is not because I find the notion distasteful, but because my mind has not, so far, turned in this direction.”

  “Yeah, well, once you think of it, it becomes difficult to think of anything else,” she said, flashing him a brilliant smile. She actually seemed much less uncomfortable than Kerk felt—though he had to admit that part of his discomfort was actually excitement.

  How strange, to think of an indigo girl admiring him.

  How alluring, to think of this indigo girl attracted to him . . .

  “I believe I will be able to school my thoughts,” he said.

  She burst out laughing again. “Oh, you probably will. Look, what excellent timing! Here’s our food. Now we can talk about something else.”

  He would have expected the rest of the conversation to be strained and halting, but in fact, they were both in high spirits, laughing at comments that were not particularly funny, sharing observations about their fellow diners, sharing food. She insisted he taste her wine, and so he drank from her glass; she touched his hand more than once to catch his attention; he called her by name more times than he could count. They were pleased with each other and amused by each other and drawn to each other, though Kerk, at least, would not examine that last thought too closely. It was, in many ways, the best two hours they’d spent together since they had met more than a month ago.

  “Damn! It’s so late!” she exclaimed after one quick, unwary look at her watch. “Your stepfather will really begin wondering about how you spend your time if you don’t get home fast.”

&
nbsp; “I might need to begin inventing excuses,” he replied. They had already paid their bill—some time ago—and so they just shrugged on their coats and headed out.

  She paused with one hand on the door. He was so close behind her that his arm brushed against her shoulder. “You’d do that? Lie to Brolt? About me?”

  He smiled down at her. “I am not in the habit of lying,” he said. “But I have sometimes found it useful to fail to provide all the truth.”

  “I’ll keep that in mind,” she said with a laugh, pushing the door open. “Because I hate it when people withhold information from me.”

  “I’ve noticed that,” he said, following her out into the chilly dark. “That’s why I find it so entertaining to tell you only part of a story.”

  She laughed again and turned around to answer him. But before she could speak, rough hands pushed her to one side; two burly bodies shoved themselves between her and Kerk.

  “You dare to touch the hand of an indigo goddess,” someone hissed in Kerk’s ear, and he felt a hard blow land against his kidney from behind.

  Without conscious thought, he sent his body into motion. A tight whirl, and he had rammed a hard fist across the faces of the two men in front of him, whipped a steely forearm against the throat of the attacker in back. Another spin, another series of punches, plus a ferocious kick that brought one of the men to the sidewalk with a wailing howl. The two who were still on their feet came boring in with renewed purpose, yelling and brandishing makeshift weapons—an umbrella in one case, a piece of street junk in the other. Kerk shook his dagger into his hand and backed against the restaurant wall, falling into a crouch. His eyes were burning, his blood was racing, and he was prepared to unleash any level of force.

  Astonishingly, Jalci jumped in front of him, her own hand upraised, her own weapon out. She really thought that ridiculous bottle of chemical spray would stop a determined assailant. “Step away from both of us,” she ordered in a cold, clear voice. “Back away! Now. I’m embarrassed that indigo men would behave so offensively.”