"Delaunay’s
It took me a moment to realize that by spider he meant Delaunay, and to recall that Elder Brother was a sailor’s term for the Master of the Straits, who ruled from the Three Sisters.
"If I could answer that, my lord," I said, sitting on Delaunay’s couch and arranging my skirts, "I would not be pupil, but master."
Quintilius Rousse roared with laughter, and the others chuckled. Delaunay stroked my hair and smiled. "Quintilius, my friend," he said, "if you cannot answer that, none of us can. Unless it be our gracious muse…?" He looked inquiringly at Thelesis, who shook her dark head.
"He let me pass for the price of a song," she said, her rich voice holding us all in thrall; of course, I remembered, she was in exile in Alba, and would thus have been summoned to attend. "Once thence, and once back. As best I can tell, he is governed by whim. To what whim did the Cruarch of Alba cater? That is the question."
Alcuin cleared his throat. It was a small sound, but everyone listened.
"They spoke of a vision." He glanced apologetically at Delaunay. "I was stationed close to the Alban delegation, but it is difficult to transcribe accurately and overhear, my lord. Still, I heard somewhat of a vision, of the King’s sister; a black boar and a silver swan."
"The King’s sister." Quintilius Rousse made a sour face. "Ye gods beyond,
"No, no." Alcuin shook his head. "The sister of the Cruarch, the Pictish King, mother of his heir."
"Lyonette has naught to do with her," Gaspar Trevalion observed, "but I note she took the Cruarch’s wife under her wing, or paw, as it might happen. One almost wished to warn the poor thing that there are claws beneath those velvet pads."
"Lyonette de la Courcel de Trevalion would be well advised to guard herself against such prey," Thelesis murmured. "The Cruarch’s wife, Foclaidha, is descended from the Brugantü, under the aegis of the red bull. The Lioness of Azzalle would do well to beware her horns."
"Her boys are strapping things," Quintilius Rousse observed, nonplussed. "Did’ye see the size o' the eldest lad? None too pleased to play second fiddle to a cripple, either."
"You refer to the Prince of the Picti?" The Comte de Somerville’s tone might have sounded condescending, were it not for the obvious affection with which he addressed the naval commander. "A dusky little thing, but almost pretty beneath the blue. Pity about the leg. What was his name?"
"Drustan." Delaunay said it laughing. "Don’t even think it, Percy!"
"I’d never." The Comte de Somerville’s eyes glinted with amusement. "You know I’m too politic for that, old friend."
I sipped at a glass of wine, my head spinning at the level of conversation. "Are they truly painted blue?" I asked. The question sounded plaintively naive to my own ears.
"As truly as the Servants of Naamah earn her marque," Thelesis de Mornay answered me kindly. "Warriors of the Cruithne bear the symbols of their caste upon their faces and bodies, tattooed in blue woad by their own marquists' needles. Our fine lords may laugh, but young Drustan’s markings bear witness to his lineage and attest that he has won his spurs in battle. Do not be misled by his twisted foot."
"But what," asked Gaspar Trevalion, "do they want?" Having asked the question, he glanced around the couches. No one ventured an answer. "Do they come seeking trade? Fulfillment of a vision? Protection from Skaldic longboats? It is rumored on the coast of Azzalle that the Skaldi have sought to cross the Northernmost Seas to raid Alba, but what can we do? Even Quintilius Rousse cannot sail a fleet up the strait."
The admiral coughed. "It is also. . . rumored…that D’Angeline ships have sought a southwesterly route, and that the Cruithne and the Dalriada make for inhospitable landings. I do not think it is protection at sea they seek."