'Speaking of the children, I've given some thought to what to do with them, the ones that haven't managed to get themselves adopted already, that is,' she said, looking up at him. 'And I wanted to ask you what
'Keeping them to their own—ah—'families,' you are?' he asked, a little anxiously, because he had seen, just as Laika had told him, how they sorted themselves out into their own little 'families,' and stayed together. It had been the smallest of those groups of two, three, or four children that were the ones that found homes first.
'Of course,' she replied. 'It doesn't take an Empath to realize we shouldn't tear apart what few bonds they have! But that's where the problem lies, you see; there aren't too many families or even childless couples prepared to take in six or a dozen children at once, much less ones that don't even speak our language. So my first thought was to—well—send them to school.' She folded both hands over the papers on her little desk and looked anxiously at him to see what his reply would be.
He nodded; that made perfect sense. 'Like—the Academy?' he hazarded.
She nodded. 'Or the Collegia. Oh, obviously, they can't actually go to the Collegia, we haven't nearly enough room for them, but something
Her face darkened for a moment, but she took a deep breath and went on. 'So I've written to all of the major temples, the ones with both day- and boarding-schools, and asked if they would take in some of the 'families' for a year, teach them Valdemaran and some basic reading and writing, until I've got these orphan collegia built.' She waited for his response. He pondered what she had told him. '
She nodded. 'If I have to,' she said, with some of the same mulish stubbornness of her father, 'I'll pay for it out of my own household budget—'
He raised an eyebrow. 'Doubt do I, with the current mood of the Council, you will have to.'
And now she had the good grace to blush. 'Then better to push it through now than wait,' she said, raising her chin. 'Given that the booty from the Tedrels has furnished the means to restore all the damage they did down here, there isn't a great deal for the Council to complain about.'
That was certainly true. Laika had been correct about that, as well.
'So build housing for these children—but
'I'm going to look for childless couples, and ask
'That,' he interjected, 'a most good idea is. Help each other, they can. And good it would be, for Valdemaran children to know, Tedrel children are no different than they.'
She sighed deeply. 'I was hoping you would say that. Then it's settled; I'll put it up to the Council, first thing. Maybe
'Well, this will be the last one of
'Nor I.' He could not wait to be gone, truth to tell. If this had been Karse, rather than Valdemar, the aftermath would have been left for the locals to clean up. But it wasn't. So now there was a neat cemetery with rows of wooden markers out there where the churned-up ground had been—and a pit full of ashes where everything that wasn't Valdemaran had been disposed of. There had been too many burials for single ceremonies; each day at sunset had ended with a mass ceremony at which the names of the interred fallen for that day had been read. He had come to hate sunset, as each sunset brought fresh pain or the renewal of old, as names of those he hadn't known were gone, and those he had known were dead, were read out. He woke each morning, it seemed, with the scent of death in his nostrils, and went to sleep at night with a heart too heavy for tears.
Only Sendar and a few of the highborn were going north to find burial. It was too bad, but there were not many who could afford the expense to bring their loved ones home—and the horror of transporting
The highborn had already been taken north in their expensive, sealed coffins, by the family retainers, in