And the cousin, it seemed, had been one of Ylyna's personal maids. More importantly, she had been
'You gonna sit there all night diddlin' that thing, or you gonna play?' Bel growled, breaking into his thoughts. With a start and a cowed look, he began playing.
The young girl scampered back to her duties, leaving Valdir alone with the last surviving member of the palace staff, her cousin. The woman pondered him for a moment, then, a trifle reluctantly, invited him into her tiny parlor. The cousin was old; that surprised Valdir. And the odd look she gave him as he took the seat she indicated surprised him more.
'Why are ye askin', lad?' she queried, as she settled into her own chair. 'If it's just morbid curiosity...'
He rubbed the bruise Bel had gifted him with this morning - it matched the first - and tried to get her measure. She was a bit younger than Savil, and small, but proudly erect. There was something very dignified about her, and out of keeping with her purported position; she didn't hold herself with the air of a servant. She was plainly clothed, in dark wool dress and white linen undertunic, but the wool was fine lambswool, tightly woven, and costly, and the linen as fine as he had ever seen on his mother. She watched him from under half-closed lids. Her eyes seemed full of secrets.
She had been out of the palace that fatal evening, the girl had told him, because she had been here, in the home of her aged mother, who had fallen and could not be left alone at night. There was a great deal about her that prompted Valdir to trust in her honesty; enough that he decided to tell her a certain measure of the truth.
'I want to find out what really happened,' he said, as sincerely as he could manage. 'The stories I've heard so far don't make a lot of sense. If there's something that needs to be told, perhaps I'm the one to tell it. A minstrel can tell an unpleasant truth with more success, sometimes, than anyone else. I'm a stranger, with no interests to protect. It might be I'd be believed more readily than a Linean.'
She looked away from him, and her face was troubled. 'I don't know,' she said, finally. 'This ...' She looked down at her hands, and her attention seemed to be caught by a ring she wore.
It was an unusual ring in the fact that it was so very plain; burnished, unornamented silver, centered with a dull white stone. The stone was nothing Valdir recognized; it looked like an ordinary, water-worn quartz pebble.
Then her attention was more than caught -
The stone flared with an internal, white flame for a moment, and it seemed that she could not look away from it.
The woman's face took on a blankness of expression he'd only seen in the spell-bound.
Valdir felt the back of his neck chill. There was a Power moving somewhere, one he didn't recognize. He longed to be able to unshield and probe, and maddeningly knew he dared not. This felt
'Lady Ylyna-' she said, in a strangely abstracted voice. 'At the bottom of this, it all comes down to Lady Ylyna.'
'Tashir's mother?' Valdir asked, biting his lip in vexation when it occurred to him that his words might break whatever spell it was that held her. But her expression remained rapt, and he ventured more. 'But – how -'
'She was hardly more than a child when she came here,' the woman said, still gazing into the stone of her ring, 'but I've never seen a more terrified girl in my life. She'd been the ignored one, until Deveran refused to take any girl to wife that had mage-powers.
'But - '
She didn't seem to hear him. 'He ignored the boy, too.
'Why would she
The old woman shook herself, and gave him a sharp look. 'I've said more than I intended,' she told him, almost accusingly.