should do it.’ She paused pensively for a moment. ‘Attend to that as soon as you leave here, and don't delay.'

'What about Drayner?’ Menedrion asked, glad himself to be shielding behind his mother's will.

Nefron was dismissive. ‘Drayner doesn't gossip,’ she said. ‘And if anyone else knows about it, it won't matter if there's no complaint from the family.'

She nodded to herself, satisfied. Then, as she had expected, the answer to the second problem came to her. She smiled to herself at its elegance. It would deal with this matter and help with another one also.

She sat down opposite Menedrion again. ‘This other business is more serious, though,’ she said, concerned, but purposeful. ‘We need to know what happened to you last night, but we can't find out on our own.’ Then, as if the thought had just occurred, she laid a hand on his knee. ‘You must consult a Dream Finder,’ she said in mild triumph.

Menedrion looked at her uncertainly. ‘A Dream Finder?’ he echoed.

Nefron nodded by way of a reply.

'No one uses Dream Finders these days,’ Menedrion said, dismayed. ‘They're quacks. Like…’ He searched for a word. ‘Fortune-tellers, market tricksters. Reading the future from the dregs of a wine cup. They're for merchants’ wives with too much time and money on their hands…'

Nefron smiled broadly at the outburst and shook a silencing hand at him. ‘No, no,’ she said. ‘There are some charlatans about, but they're still a respected Guild and they were much used once. I heard of one recently. Not a famous one, but very good. Used by some important people…’ She snapped her fingers softly. ‘What was his name now?'

Her face lit up. Menedrion bathed in its certainty.

'Antyr,’ she proclaimed. ‘That was it. When you've made your peace with the girl and her family, Irfan, go and find the Dream Finder, Antyr.'

Chapter 7

Arwain scowled as he jumped down from his horse and handed the reins to the waiting groom.

'Is something wrong, sir?’ said an officer stepping forward to greet him.

Arwain returned his salute and, with an effort, smiled. ‘No, no, Ryllans, he said. ‘Just the dampness after the fog. It seeps into the bones.'

Ryllans raised his eyebrows. ‘I heard there was some disturbance at the palace last night,’ he said straightforwardly.

Arwain shook his head and chuckled. ‘One of the servant girls had a bad fall and needed help, that's all,’ he said. ‘Is there anything you don't hear about, Ryllans?'

'Not too much, I hope, sir,’ the officer replied. ‘Your safety and the Lady Yanys's … are my responsibility and I need eyes and ears everywhere for that.'

Arwain nodded appreciatively.

'Doubtless you'll tell me why this servant girl warranted the attention of the Duke's personal physician when you're ready, sir,’ Ryllans went on softly, his slight foreign accent betraying his true anxiety.

'Doubtless,’ Arwain replied, laughing. ‘If you don't tell me first.'

But Arwain's laughter did not invoke the same in Ryllans. Instead, the older man held Arwain's gaze in silent, but relentless, inquiry. His charge and his guards wandering the cellars at night had to be explained to his satisfaction sooner or later. That they found a physician and his patient instead of secret plotters was irrelevant. Clandestine movement through the palace was always a matter for concern. And there was the matter of the Duke's physician being called out in the middle of the night to attend to a mere servant.

'It's all right,’ Arwain said, more soberly, and also lowering his voice. ‘There was no danger, and there's no plot brewing. It was just an … excess … by my beloved half-brother. I'll tell you what happened later, have no fear, there's no urgency, trust me. Let's proceed with the task in hand.'

Ryllans nodded and turned on his heel.

Arwain looked at the back of the Commander of his bodyguard as he followed him. A little shorter than himself, balding and clean-shaven, Ryllans walked with a slight roll which made him look heavy and clumsy. He was neither. Arwain knew that he would already have quietly wrung all that happened from the guards who had accompanied him through the cellar and that he would probably be well on his way to identifying the girl and the servants.

He knew, too, that the fact that Drayner and the others had been spotted purely by chance would be concerning him greatly, for the security of Arwain and his house came second only to his ultimate loyalty to the Duke, and dominated his thinking.

Arwain liked and respected Ryllans, yet he was always aware of a distance in the man. Not that he was cold or aloof-indeed he was invariably good company-but somewhere inside, there was a part that Arwain knew he could not reach. Not that he was alone in that, he consoled himself, for Ryllans was the most senior of the Mantynnai: the men who had defended the city of Viernce during the Bethlarii inspired rebellion and siege some ten years ago. To a man, they were, at bottom, unreadable.

A small group of foreign mercenaries in the employ of Duke Ibris, and garrisoned at Viernce, the Mantynnai had put down the rebelling faction after the local militia had thrown down their arms. Outnumbered, that in itself had been no easy task, but they had then found the city besieged by the Bethlarii army and had taken appalling losses holding it until the Bethlarii, not expecting and not equipped for a long siege, were put to flight by the unexpected arrival of the Serenstad army with the Duke at their head, soiled and raging, after a prodigious forced march over the snowbound countryside.

As a reward for their exceptional courage and loyalty, Ibris had immediately appointed the survivors to his own palace guard, an elite regiment, entry to which hitherto had been exclusively restricted to the citizens of Serenstad only.

It was a decision that had caused some controversy at the time, prompting angry and anxious debates in both the Sened and the Gythrin-Dy. ‘They're not Serens,’ was the cry. ‘They're not even from this land. A raggle- taggle bunch of foreigners. Warriors for money. We know nothing of them. Not even where they come from, or how they came here.'

The comments were accurate, but the Duke had rounded furiously on the carpers, at one stage throwing a handful of gold on to the floor of the Sened House, and standing over it, sword drawn, shouting, ‘Warriors for money! That's a half year's pay for a Mantynnai infantryman. Which of you here would die for it, or for ten times that amount?'

Then into the silence he had said, ‘They stood, fought and died, where our own kind surrendered or fled. Had they not done so then Viernce would now be a subject city of Bethlar. Do you think we'd be sitting here debating so calmly with the Bethlarii holding all our northern territories?'

'Nevertheless, they are foreigners and we don't understand them truly. They should not be brought so close to the seat of power,’ had come a quieter voice from an older Senedwr.

The Duke had answered him in like vein. ‘Power goes to those who are most fitted for it,’ he said sadly, sheathing his sword. ‘And, believe me, such men could have taken power at any time had they so wished. If they take it now, then it will be by stealth and silence and it'll be a gentler bargain than that which our ancestors, as foreigners, offered the original inhabitants of this land.’ It was the definitive statement of a man who understood the true value of force in governing a people.

The opposition had eventually faded in the face of his determination and as the full truth of the events at Viernce became more widely known. Subsequently, the Mantynnai survivors had taken up their new roles in the palace guard as quietly and inconspicuously as they did most things.

'One of my better decisions,’ Ibris later remarked as he watched this ‘raggle-taggle bunch of foreigners’ gradually improving the weapons and tactics of his guards, and thence the whole army.

More subtly, they also began to develop in the army a sense of discipline and independent loyalty to him as Head of State which did much to lessen the more bloody partisan excesses that stained the politics of the cities.

Now all the Mantynnai held high-ranking posts in the palace guard, and were regarded in many ways as its

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