Why was she dressed like a man today? Last night it had just been the solstice dance, but now… did she
Either that, or she was dressed that way because she thought I liked it. Moment by moment, you could never tell whether Cappie was going to be defiant or clingy.
Heaving a sigh, I headed toward her. On the morning after the night before, a gentleman knows his duty: submitting himself to all that awkward 'How are you?' 'No, how are
Sometimes, it's a pain knowing how women think.
Cappie's sister Olimbarg spotted me first. Olimbarg was fourteen and had a permanent crush on me. This year, the crush disguised itself as haughty annoyance, making her blurt out adolescent insults whenever I came into view. I put up with it because kids will be kids; and the insults didn't bother me as much as her behavior the previous year. Then, Olimbarg had been a thirteen-year-old boy while I was a nineteen-year-old girl. Picture a pubescent drool-monster getting underfoot every time Cappie and I wanted privacy.
It didn't help that Olimbarg was one of those rare people whose female self was almost an exact twin of her male. Now that she had begun filling out with adolescence, there was a little more variation from year to year; but still, when I looked at her face, I sometimes had an uncomfortable jolt, thinking I had a male Olimbarg infatuated with Male-Me.
'Here comes Fiddle-fingers!' Olimbarg called when she saw me. 'Did the gods send you a duck, Fullin? Or did they decide you deserved a skunk?'
'Happy solstice to you, too,' I told her. I kept it civil, because Cappie's whole family had turned to look at me. Some smiled; some didn't. Her father, for example, wore the expression of a man with nerves as taut as bowstrings, skittish for fear someone would notice Cappie wearing his clothes. His name was Nunce, and he dreamed of becoming mayor when Teggeree stepped down. If you ask me, he hadn't a chipmunk's chance of getting elected — his strategy for winning public favor was an obsessive concern with appearances, and it made him compulsively dodgy. Nunce had never quite decided how a man with leadership potential should hold his hands. He seldom spoke to any member of his family except in sharp whispers, telling the children, 'Stand straighter,' or, 'Stop that, people are watching.'
In another family, Nunce's constant fretting would have produced a pack of rebellious brats, going out of their way to make themselves embarrassments. Fortunately, Cappie's mother Jewel had a counterbalancing talent for making children civilized. She was a big blond woman, tall and wide, proud possessor of a cheerful no-nonsense approach to dealing with everyone except her husband. Jewel fiercely believed Nunce was an important man, a thinker and philosopher. I can't tell you what his philosophy might have been — he never shared it with the village. Rumor suggested that Nunce was writing a book which would explain everything in the world so easily a child could understand it… but most Tobers believed the rumor had been started by Nunce and Jewel themselves. I'd visited their house almost daily since I was born, and had never seen anything that looked like a manuscript.
'Happy solstice,' Nunce said as he fidgeted to keep Cappie out of public view. 'Did you have a pleasant vigil?'
'A gripping one,' I replied. 'Just thought I'd check how Cappie was doing.'
'Fine,' came a tentative answer from behind Nunce's back. 'How are you doing?'
'Fine. Just fine.'
I'd been trying for an ambiguous tone of voice — not post-love creamy, but not a hard-edged 'Sorry, babe, the dew has dried' either… something cozy enough for Cappie's peace of mind, but detached enough for mine.
Okay: it's a lot to expect from three words.
Cappie stuck her head over her father's shoulder; she must have been standing on tiptoe. Her expression was balanced right on the divide between happiness and fury, ready to swoop down the slope in either direction if I gave her cause. 'Your note said you went back to vigil.'
'Good thing I did,' I replied. 'Hakoore came to see me.'
'Leeta said he might.'
'Really?' I asked. 'How would Leeta know?'
'The Patriarch's Man discusses lots of things with the priestess.'
That surprised me. I couldn't imagine Hakoore discussing anything with anyone. 'Did Leeta tell you why Hakoore wanted me?'
Cappie nodded. 'But you told him you couldn't, right? That you had other plans?'
'I said no as clearly as I could,' I assured her… which wasn't really what she was asking, but I hoped sounded like an answer anyway. Thank heavens women seldom resort to direct questions. 'I refuse to be anyone's
'You'd be Leeta's disciple,' she said. 'Unless you intend to weasel out on what we agreed last night.'
'I'm not a weasel!' I snapped.
She pushed her father out of the way so she could confront me face to face. 'Look me in the eye, Fullin, and tell me you'll keep your promise.'
'Um..' Looking her in the eye was tough for more than the usual reasons: the male clothes were even more interesting on her in full daylight. They made her look excruciatingly feminine — the slight definition of her breasts under that white shirt, the short-cropped hair framing her delicate face. At that moment, I wished I had more visceral memories of our lovemaking the night before… something juicier than the secondhand recollections of what my body had done while my sister self was in charge. 'At this moment,' I said with all sincerity, 'I'm tempted to reopen negotiations. If you go male, I'll never see you look like this again.'
She stared back, her eyes judging me. 'What, Fullin?' she finally asked. 'Are you actually feeling something, or are you just horny again?'
'Oh,
On the contrary, Cappie's whole family was listening with avid interest. Her mother wore a hopeful smile; her younger brothers and sisters had their hands over their mouths to stifle giggles, but were crowding close to make sure they didn't miss a word; even her father was paying attention, temporarily forgetting he wanted to hide his daughter from the neighbors. Cappie, however, took advantage of the distraction and stepped clear of everyone: Olimbarg, me, the rest of her family.
'Look,' she said, to them as much as to me. 'The meeting's ready to start. We'll talk later, okay? Okay, Fullin? We'll really talk?'
'Sure,' I said. 'We'll talk. We will.'
If the Patriarch's Hand had been fastened on me at that second, I don't know if it would have taken my words as truth or crushed me for lying. Part of me had suddenly decided to want Cappie again. A different part would rather kiss a snapping turtle than 'really talk' with her.
'Good morning, friends!' Mayor Teggeree called from the top of the steps. 'You have other things to do, so I won't waste your valuable time. Permit me to announce that we'll have a dignitary among us today: Knowledge-Lord Rashid of Spark!'
Rashid emerged from the interior of the council hall, while the assembled village favored him with gasps, chatter and hasty applause. Under the noise, I whispered to Cappie, 'Didn't he want to keep his presence a secret?'
'Absolutely,' she whispered back. 'And I'm sure he thought he could blend right in with us Tobers… except that he's a complete stranger wearing bright green armor.'
Cappie had a point: Rashid carried his helmet under his arm, but he still wore the rest of his green plastic suit. The glossy shell reflected the sun like an emerald mirror, flashing glints in all directions as he stepped forward. In the full light of day, it was obvious the armor was far finer than anything owned by even the greatest nobles down-peninsula. If Feliss nobles wore armor at all, it was only a steel breastplate that went over a chain mail tunic. Rashid wouldn't fool anyone by claiming to be some visiting Southern Duke — the only people in the world who might encase themselves in OldTech plastic were the Spark Lords.
'Ladies and gentlemen,' Rashid said warmly, 'boys and girls — or vice versa — I'm delighted to come here for your Commitment Day and would like to thank your Council of Elders for graciously inviting me.'
Cappie made an outraged choking sound. Her mother patted her on the back and asked if she had a tickle in her throat.
'I'm especially pleased to be here,' Rashid went on, 'because it's a Knowledge-Lord's duty to learn as much as I can about every society on our planet; and frankly Tober Cove has a pretty interesting one, don't you think?'
Many people smiled, but Cappie only snorted. Her mother placed a hand on Cappie's forehead and offered her a barley sugar.
'Now I'm just here to observe,' Rashid was saying, 'and I don't want special treatment. A lot of places I go, people start talking the way they think lords talk, using big words, rolling their Rs, quoting obscure old poets…'
Cappie took the barley sugar, popped it into her mouth, and ground her teeth against it.
'But I don't hold with such top-lofty behavior,' the Spark Lord said, 'and neither should you. Just do what you'd do on any other Commitment Day, without putting on a show for me. I know you don't get many Spark Lords here — as far as I can tell, you've
I heard a crunch as Cappie bit clean through the barley sugar; and just for the record, Jewel's homemade candy was only a hair softer than quartz. Zephram called it 'barely sugar' — he liked it enormously.
'Don't worry,' Rashid said, 'I'm happy to give everyone a few minutes. But that's not what Commitment Day is about, is it? It's not about catering to lords, it's about your children going to meet Master Crow and Mistress Gull. That's worth celebrating and I don't want to get in the way.'
Cappie gripped my arm and made a show of digging in her fingernails… as if she were desperate enough to kill Rashid or herself any second now. I just shrugged. She might mistrust him, but everyone else in the crowd clearly took him at face value. Why shouldn't they? From birth, we'd been taught to revere the Sparks as our protectors, our line of defense against the scheming traitors who sold out to the star demons four hundred years ago. If Cappie and I had met Lord Rashid under different circumstances: without Steck, for example…
My mother…
Where
'That's all I have to say,' Rashid finished. 'I wish everyone a good celebration and thank you for giving me such a… robust welcome so far.'
Mayor Teggeree surged forward with his hands high in zealous applause. The rest of the village joined enthusiastically — most of them anyway. Neither Leeta