found it even more difficult to deal with, in a very different way, than the hostility which had preceded it. Hostility was something any hradani had no choice but to learn how to cope with if he meant to travel among the other Races of Man. Admiration, awe, and near deification were something else entirely, and very few hradani had ever been offered the opportunity to deal with
Yet there was no avoiding them now. The knights of Tomanak knew all champions were directly and personally chosen by their god. In Bahzell's case, however, that was no mere intellectual awareness. Tomanak Himself had manifested-
'Actually,' Brandark went on as the two of them reached the larger quarters to which Charrow and Mistress Quarelle had insisted upon transferring Bahzell following 'The Visitation,' as Brandark had christened Tomanak's appearance, 'the situation
'Humph!' Bahzell snorted. He shoved the door open and nodded Brandark through it, and the Bloody Sword stopped short as Sir Vaijon looked up from the breastplate he was polishing.
'Greetings, Lord Brandark,' the golden-haired knight said cheerfully, then looked at Bahzell. 'Good morning, Milord Champion,' he said, and inclined his head in a small bow.
'I'm thinking as how I could shine that up myself, if it were after needing it. Which it isn't,' Bahzell rumbled back with a hint of disapproval, and Vaijon shrugged.
'So you could, Milord. But I had no other pressing duties, and I was taught that caring for his master's gear is a proper duty for any squire.'
'Squire?' Bahzell's ears cocked and his eyebrows rose. 'I've no memory of saying as how I'd take on any
'There was no need for you to,' Vaijon replied with a serenity Bahzell found very difficult, even in the wake of divine intervention, to reconcile with the arrogantly superior pain in the backside he remembered. 'Tomanak assigned me Himself.' The young man allowed himself a small smile. 'Even Sir Charrow agreed with me about that, Milord, when he authorized me to move my possessions to your chambers.'
'When he
'Now look here, lad,' he began in his most reasonable tone. 'I'm willing enough to admit himself had it in mind for me to be, well-' He glanced at Brandark, and his discomfort kicked up another notch as his friend adopted a painfully neutral expression, crossed to the hearth, and busied himself poking up the fire. Bahzell glowered at his back for a moment, then looked back at Vaijon and made himself continue. 'Well, to be taking you under my wing, as you might say, until you've worked all that pompous fuss and feathers out of your head. But he never said a word at all, at all, about 'squires,' and I've not the least tiniest notion how to go about having one, even if he had!'
'It's not difficult, Milord,' Vaijon assured him, running his cloth one last time over the breastplate. Then he lifted the burnished steel, turning it under the light to inspect it, carried it to the armor tree, and hung it carefully with the rest of Bahzell's mail. 'A squire looks after his lord's personal gear and horses. If they're in the field, he looks after his lord's tent and meals, as well. In winter quarters, he keeps his lord's chamber neat and sees to his appointments and any other minor tasks that need doing.'
He turned to smile at Bahzell, and the hradani crossed his arms.
'And just what is it he's after getting in return for all this slavelike devotion?' he demanded.
'Why, his lord trains him, Milord.'
'How?' Vaijon's smile turned into a faint frown of incomprehension, and Bahzell shrugged. 'It's new I am to championing, Vaijon, and I've still less experience at anything to do with knights and knighthoods. You'd best be remembering that when it comes time to explain about such.'
'Of course, Milord.' The young man-who, Bahzell suddenly realized, wore a plain, utilitarian surcoat utterly devoid of gems or bullion embroidery-rubbed his chin for a moment, as if seeking exactly the right words. 'The most important things a squire learns from his lord, Milord, are skill at arms and the proper deportment of a knight. As you bested me with considerable ease, it seems painfully evident you have a great deal to teach me about the former, and-' he blushed faintly '-Tomanak Himself made it quite plain you have even more to teach me about deportment. That's why I feel He intended me as your squire, not just a 'trainee.' I would be honored far beyond my deserts to learn from you, and the performance of such duties as normally fall to a squire would seem far too little repayment for my lessons.'
Vaijon's quiet sincerity took Bahzell aback. Despite everything, including Tomanak's intervention, a major portion of his brain had continued to think of Vaijon as the conceited, egotistical peacock who'd met
And as Bahzell gazed at the younger man, he realized not only that Vaijon
'I'd not put it quite that way myself, lad,' he said after a moment, and waved for Vaijon to sit back down at the table while he seated himself in the out-sized chair beside the fire. Brandark took the opportunity to disappear into his own rooms in an unwonted display of tact, and Bahzell rested one heel on the raised hearth while he gazed down into the burning coal.
'It's glad enough I'll be to teach you what I know of arms,' he went on after another pause. 'Mind you, I'm thinking you've been taught well enough already. It was overconfidence and anger got you into trouble-that, and the way you'd underestimated what I might be doing because you were so all fired busy with what
He glanced up and smiled as the younger man flushed in embarrassment. The flush grew darker for an instant, but there was too much sympathy in his smile for Vaijon to resent it, and the human smiled back hesitantly.
'I wish I could dispute your analysis, Milord,' he said, and Bahzell chuckled.
'Don't be taking it too hard, lad. It's the way of young bucks to make mistakes. Tomanak knows
'I understand, Milord,' Vaijon said, and, for the first time, he truly did.
'Well, if you're after understanding that much, understand this, as well,' Bahzell went on seriously. 'I'm no knight, Vaijon, and I've no least desire to be one. In fact, the very notion makes me come all over queasy. I know that's not something as you find easy to understand, but it's true enough. And I'll not take you nor anyone else as a 'squire,' either.' He held the younger man's eyes levelly. 'But this I will do. I'll keep an eye on you as himself was asking, and I'll teach you whatever there is for me to teach, as
A light began to glow in those blue eyes, and he raised a warning hand.
'Best be thinking before you leap after it like a fish after a fly, my lad, for I've been casting my mind over what himself was saying. I'm thinking it's past time Brandark and I were on our way to Hurgrum, and Gods only know what sort of trouble we'll be finding there! Not to mention that it's high winter and the snow's horse-belly deep betwixt here and there. Or that we'll have to be crossing Bloody Sword territory to get there, if we go by road, and