'We could skip the lesson,' he began, with carefully suppressed emotion.
'No!' Medren exclaimed, clutching the lute to his chest and jumping to his feet. 'No, it's nothing! Really! I'm fine!'
'If you're sure,' Vanyel said, wondering how much of that was bravado on the boy's part.
'I'm sure. I got some horse-liniment, I'd have rubbed it on right after, but I didn't want to stink up your room.'' The boy grinned half-heartedly and sat down again, his eyes anxious.
'I've got something better than that - if you aren't afraid I'll seduce you!'
The boy made an impudent face at him. 'You
'Willow and wormwood in ointment, with mint to make it smell reasonable. I
When he turned around with the little jar in his hand, the boy had stripped to the waist, revealing a nasty bruise the size of his hand spreading all over the left shoulder. It was an ugly thing; purple the next thing to black in the center, blue-gray and red mottled through it.
'Good gods!'
Medren shrugged with one shoulder. 'I bruise that way. Looks worse than it is, I guess. Young Mekeal took one just as hard and you can't hardly see a mark on him.' He looked longingly at the pot of salve. 'Vanyel, you going to stand there and stare all day, or use that stuff?'
'I'm sorry, Medren.' He shook off his shock; got several fingersful of the ointment, and began to massage it as gently as possible into the bruised area, working his way from the edges inward. The boy hissed with pain at first, then gradually relaxed.
Vanyel, on the other hand, was profoundly disturbed, and growing tenser by the moment, his own shoulder muscles knotting up like snarled harpstrings.
'Lady Bright,' the boy sighed. 'I feel like I got a shoulder again, instead of a piece of pounded meat.'
'Medren, is there
Medren considered a moment. 'Now and again,' he said, slowly. 'Not on a regular basis.'
'Are you
'Not since they opened up the back of the library. Anyplace I go, they'll find me, eventually. Isn't there anything
Vanyel shook his head with bitter regret. 'I wish there were. I can't think of anything at the moment. I'll work on it; if there's a way out for you, I'll find it. Look, avoid him as much as you can. Try and stay out of his line-of- sight when you can't avoid the practices. If he doesn't actually
Medren sighed, and shrugged his shirt back on. 'All right. If that's all I can do, that's all I can do.' He twisted his head around and gave Vanyel a slightly pained grin. 'At least you believe me. You even sound like you know what I'm going through.'
Vanyel stared at the wall, but what he was seeing was not wood panels, but a thin, undersized boy being used as an object upon which a surly ex - mercenary could vent his spleen. 'I do, Medren,' he replied slowly, a cold lump settling just under his heart. 'Believe me, I do.'
Vanyel was more than happy to see his Aunt Savil's serene, beaky face again. And was glad he'd decided to ride out and meet her. It was a lot easier to tell her what had been going on without wondering who was going to overhear.
'. . .so that's the state of things,' Vanyel concluded, Yfandes matching her pace to Savil's taller Companion. 'The only real problems-other than the fact that Lineas and Baires could go for each other's throats any day - is Medren. Melenna I can avoid. The Great Sheep Debate is going to go on until the sheep are gone from Long