accomplished King and leader,
The King growled under his breath; something inaudible, but it sounded unflattering.
'Furthermore,' Talamir persisted, 'if you intend to persuade your daughter to put up with
'That,' Sendar said, clearly and distinctly, 'is blackmail.'
'The blackest,' Talamir agreed. 'It's also the truth.'
He neglected to tell the King that he had pointed out the converse to his Heir. If each of them thought that the good example she (or he) was setting was the reason for the
Although Sendar looked sullenly at him (recalling to Talamir's mind the rebellious adolescent that he'd been as a Trainee), he nodded. 'All right. I'll accept the bodyguards. But I want to train with them,' he said stubbornly.
'I don't think you're going to have a choice in the matter. I believe Alberich was going to insist on it.' Talamir had the satisfaction of seeing surprise on the King's face. 'He's a very thorough fellow, is Alberich. He realized immediately that having a bodyguard doesn't do you a great deal of good if someone attacks you, and you don't know what to do but they
'Selenay—' Sendar began, and was interrupted by his daughter walking into the room.
'Selenay
Talamir decided not to disabuse her of that notion. He just caught Sendar's eye and nodded. Sendar grimaced.
'Well, I'll be doing the same tomorrow,' the King said, to Talamir's pleasure. 'Though how I'm to squeeze more hours into the day, I do not know.'
'I've already told you, and done so repeatedly. By putting the Council meetings and any other business that is not directly concerned with the war into the hands of your Seneschal,' Talamir told him, with a little heat, because he had been advising this very move for months now. 'That is what he is there for. You can't be two places at once, and if we don't win this thing, there won't
Sendar shook his head. 'I don't—' he began, then shrugged. 'I will. But—'
'And don't tell me that you don't like it,' Talamir snapped, deciding to show his King and friend the edge of his anger. After all, Sendar wasn't the only person in the Kingdom who was doing things he didn't 'like.'
'I won't,' Sendar replied, in a way that told Talamir that this was exactly what he
'A speech. You're going to have to tell the people—of Haven, at least—what's coming. And I've never been the speechmaker that you are.' That was
'A speech.' Sendar sighed. 'Yes, that will have to be me. Selenay, I advise you that when you take the throne, find someone else to write the speeches for you.'
'I think not,' she replied, so somberly that both Talamir and her father shot a look at her. 'Speeches aren't just something that we deliver, as if we were mere actors. They have to come from our hearts, father, and there has to be truth in them. If they don't resonate from inside us, and they don't have truth behind them, how can we ever expect people to believe in us and what we say?'
They both focused on her at once. It wasn't so much with astonishment as—unanticipated pleasure. She sounded like an adult. She