"Milady's Wiles"
by Brandy Dewinter
with the invaluable assistance of P.J. Wright
Chapter 1 To Arms! To Arms!
The stream of humanity flooding into the protection of the castle known as
Stalwart Guard could no longer be called an army. In their own minds, they
probably couldn't even be called men. They were beaten and they knew it.
My brother, Prince Bareth, the commander of Stalwart Guard would have to
try and reform them into a defensive force.
An errant lock of pale gold whipped into my face from where I had tried to
capture it in a twist beneath my collar. I should have grabbed a clasp on my
way out, but when I heard the guard announce the flood approaching the gate
I had hurried out to see what was going on. Prince Bareth would not have
had that problem. He had always kept his hair cut short to fit under his
helmet, but I had never followed that route.
That had been but one of many ways in which I had disappointed the
king, our father. I was the youngest brother and he was long past enjoyment
of bouncing a baby on his knee before I came along. Instead, he was usually
out practicing sword whacking with my two older brothers and I had fallen
much into the care of my mother, Queen Selay. She had liked my hair and
had held off cutting it until I had grown to like it, too. I could not remember
a time when the golden weight of it had not been part of every move I made,
nor would I give up the special times we had shared when she had brushed it
into shiny silk.
It didn't help that I had taken after her physically, too. At sixteen it was
clear that I would never be a well-muscled giant like my father, King Andros,
and my oldest brother, Prince Tamor. Nor would I even have the wiry
strength of Prince Bareth, who had speed enough to give any man a tough
fight. There were not three finer fighters in our whole Kingdom of Achaiea
than King Andros and his two sons. How often had I heard that? Not 'King
Andros and his two older sons,' just 'his two sons.' There was a barely-
concealed sneer at the King in this comment as well. Of all his sons, only I
had the crystal blue eyes that Mother owned. That was a double concern for
Father, not only did they set me apart from him and his older sons, giving
rise to rumors about my true parentage. They also proclaimed my lineage to
the queen's whispered powers of magic; powers of persuasion beyond other
women that were, in the legends, the result of those spectacular eyes.
My ruminations were interrupted when I saw an officer approach Bareth
to give his report. Even without their martial respect I still deserved the
outward shows of my rank, and I had a right to hear what had happened to
the army the King had led into battle.
The stairs from the battlement ran inside the thick wall so I lost sight of
Bareth and the officer for a few minutes as I ran down. When I came out the
most important news was already apparent. The officer and all the men
around him were kneeling before Bareth, not the formal bow with leg
extended that we were due as princes nor the clenched fist salute due the
garrison commander. They were kneeling with the obeisance given only to
the King. That could, in turn, only mean that King Andros and Prince Tamor
were known to be dead.
I was getting ready to kneel myself when all eyes turned to a doorway
from which Queen Selay and her retinue approached. Her sharp eyes
absorbed the postures of the army and recognized the import as fast as my
own. Her next glance though, was to me and her eyes directed me to her side
before I had a chance to complete my own gesture of respect.
Instead of kneeling she gave Bareth a courtly bow of her own, the narrow
ankle of one graceful leg extended forward from the gathered hem of her
dress. Since she set the standard, I matched her, my own slender limb even
more displayed in the tight knit leggings that were my standard informal court
dress.
"What news?" she asked simply.
"Mother, the news is bad. The King and Prince Tamor have both given
their lives in defense of our land, but to no avail. Kragdle and his High
Canyon horde are following on the heels of these survivors of the battle."
"Can we hold?"
"With these men, once we get them reorganized, I could hold Stalwart
Guard for a very long time," Bareth claimed, his tone so flat there was no
hint of boasting in it. "But Kragdle knows that and there are many villagers
who will not be able to reach the castle's protection. I fear for them, my
Queen."
I could see that she wanted to say something, but the words couldn't get
past the tightness in her throat and all she managed was a heartbreakingly
small smile and a quick nod.
That seemed to be the cue for the priest to come running up with the
anointing oil, followed by the Chamberlain with the crown. In moments it
was over. Achaiea had a new king, though if Kragdle conducted his
campaign with typical ruthlessness, it wouldn't be long before there was
precious little kingdom to rule. Achaiea had known generations of peace but
we never realized how much that peace was due to the internal bickering of
the High Canyon hordes who had not united in as many generations. Not
united until the coming of Kragdle, who now held those lands in his
clutching talons and planned to extend his grasp to our own kingdom.
Queen Selay turned back to her apartments in the inner castle. I knew she
needed me a lot more than Bareth did so I stayed at her side. As we left the
courtyard I could hear the twang of crossbows as the guards on the wall let
fly at Kragdle's approaching vanguard. The repetitive clank from the
drawbridge chain that had so often seemed needlessly irksome when
someone wanted to pass in times of peace, now seemed little enough comfort
in this suddenly too-real war.
At the door to Mother's dayroom she waved off all the others, though her
tight grip on my arm made it clear she wanted me to stay with her. Once we
were inside she walked around uncertainly for a moment as though looking
for something that wasn't there, that would never be there again.
"Deacon," she said to me, "your hair has gotten tangled in the wind. Fetch
your brush."
How often when we are overwhelmed we cling to little islands of
familiarity in the chaos. I did as ordered of course, and as her hands gently
stroked the twists from the long flow of my hair I could feel a corresponding
tension flow from her stiff body.
"Your hair is quite beautiful, you know," she said, still clinging to the
mundane.
"Thank you, Mother, your brushing keeps it so."
Perhaps it was the word, Mother, that triggered her loss of control. I'll
never know for sure, but after my simple response the brush thunked on the
floor and her hands flew to her face. Heaving sobs wracked her slender
shoulders as she hid her streaming eyes from the world that no longer
included her husband and her eldest son.
I stood and walked behind her, picking up her own brush from her
dressing table and began to return the favor. Her hair had been pinned up in
a more formal arrangement than mine, of course, so the first thing I did was
remove the pins and combs and other aids to control. It was a few moments
therefore, before I was running the brush through her own golden glory, still
thick and soft and without a trace of grey.
Her cat, Greyshadow, jumped into Mother's lap and added her own
comfort to combat the Queen's distress. As Mother stroked the soft fur the
cat arched her back in pleasure, purring with a promise that their world would
survive this tragedy.
My own mind churned, racing beyond the simple motions of my hands to
consider . . . and reject . . . plans and strategies for defending the castle.
Bareth would never ask for my help, but he had often mused aloud in my
presence and listened carefully when my own musings touched on the topic
he raised. It was his little make-believe to take advantage of the intelligence
we both knew I possessed in greater measure than him without formally
requesting advice from our father's disappointment. I had rejected a dozen
impossible schemes and was searching for ever-less-likely candidates when a
knock at our door had Mother quickly dabbing at her eyes and arranging her
dress. At her nod I went to open the door.
Bareth was there, along with a few of his top officers plus the priest and
Hugh of Sandars, the Chamberlain. Several members of the entourage
looked with displeasure at the cradled gray cat. The rumors that claimed
strange powers for my mother declared that the cat was somehow involved
and most people were wary of the innocent animal. I had one of her kittens
myself but had never seen any unusual behavior. Well, none beyond the
strangeness of all cats.
Bareth began without preamble, "Queen Mother, the castle has been
invested and Kragdle has announced his intentions."
She sat patiently, perhaps still not trusting her voice.
Bareth glanced at me, though not with his usual sly invitation to think on
the topic for him. There was something else in his demeanor. "Kragdle
intends to rule Achaiea as part of his empire. To that end, he offers terms for
our surrender rather than see the lands destroyed."
In later years I would remember Bareth's tone as he delivered that part of
the message. It was calm, controlled, and gave no indication of the rest of
the self-styled emperor's intentions. I could not have matched that calm, if I
had known what was to come.
"The terms?" Mother asked, a hint of hope in her eyes.
Seeing that his calmness had actually misled Mother, Bareth kneeled down
before her and took her hands in his own. "Mother, the terms are hard. He
demands the life of all male heirs to the throne of Achaiea. Else, he will
execute a dozen peasant families every day and lay waste to their homesteads
until either we consent or there is nothing left of Achaiea. Oh, Mother, he
has already killed the first families! Their bodies are lifted outside the gates
on wooden poles. Men, women, youths and maidens. Only the smallest
children are spared."
"How far does this edict extend into the nobility of Achaiea?" I asked.
"Never fear, Prince Deacon, you're close enough to be given the chance to
do your duty," Drayson, one of Bareth's officers, sneered at me.
Bareth was about to speak to him but I held his shoulder. In the face of the
loss of our kingdom, and of my Father, and of my own life, I lost the fear of
the future that had always controlled me. I felt a white-hot yet death-cold
power rise up within me, driven by a fierceness I had never accepted before.
Not a fierceness of violent motion, instead a fierceness of purpose that would
crush all opposition before it with the grinding inevitability of a glacier. I
walked over to the smug soldier by myself. It wouldn't have been much of a
fight, physically. He towered over me by at least six inches and probably
had twice my weight. But I was a son of our father, and of our mother as
well. Their strength had maintained order, even justice, in our kingdom for
longer than this cretin had been alive. I just stared at him, the chips of blue
ice that were my eyes drilling into his muddy brown ones with cold beyond
his worst nightmares of hell. Without breaking my hold on his eyes I slowly
walked up to him and drew his own dagger from his sheath and pressed it to
his neck.
"Never fear, soldier-who-fled-the-battle, I will do my duty," I whispered
in his face. Then, without yet looking away, I threw his dagger down to
spike between our feet. It made him blink. Only then, with a cold neutrality
replacing my intensity, did I turn back to Bareth and the Queen.
"However," now I continued on as though no fierce emotions had just
been vented, "we still need to know how far the edict extends. Does it include
those in Mother's family line? What of the outlying barons? They are
outside the walls already and if Kragdle expects us to gather them in, his
terms are impossible and our decision is obvious."
The Chamberlain, who had never been a particular friend of mine though
he had been my primary tutor, weighed in on my side for once. "Prince
Deacon is correct. We should not volunteer anyone to this madman's
bloodthirst. We must make him give us a specific list of those to be
surrendered."
"We cannot accept his terms," Mother breathed.
"We may have to," Bareth disagreed. For the first time, the royal 'We'
was evident in his voice. "We cannot allow Our people to die needlessly. If
Kragdle does as he promises, and the precedents of his cruelty are many,
there will be no kingdom to rule if we do not meet his terms."
He stood straight, his resolve firm, his bearing regal in a way that I had
seldom seen even in our father, King Andros. With a brief nod in respect to
the Queen, our King led his staff out of her room to continue the
negotiations.
"Oh, Deacon, I can't lose you, too!" her sobs returned even as the door
closed.
I did not notice at the time that Mother's expression of grief did not
include Bareth, "We are sons of our father as well. If we turn our back on
our duty, you will already have lost us."
The proper thing to have done would have been to stay with her, but faced
with the prospect of my own imminent demise I found I had no comfort to
spare. My apartments were not far down the hall and I reached them quickly.
What would happen to the momentos of my life? My mother's influence
was clear in my room, dotted with paintings and musical instruments rather
than the swords and armor I knew were in Tamor's room. And my books!
In all the kingdom, there was not a finer library of discourses on human
motivation than I had accumulated. The rumors of Mother's powers had
intrigued me and I had been quietly corresponding with scholars since I
learned to read, though always through my Mother. Father would not abide
any reference to her gift, except from the one source he could deny nothing.
And why was that? Had I just witnessed within myself an echo of that
rumored power? That irresistible persuasion? Now I would never know.
My own cat, Wraith, was a few shades lighter than Mother's
Greyshadow. Both had a smooth, uniform color that seemed to make their
forms indistinct in anything other than strong light so I missed her for a
moment while I was considering my few treasures. When I didn't reach to
pet her as I moved near, she voiced her displeasure with a demand no less
imperative for coming from a kitten barely past weaning. She subsided with
no more than a brief caress, though, sensing my mood.
I spent the next hour or so quietly reminding myself of my favorite tunes
on the various instruments, letting the music be a symbol of my brief and
passing contribution to the world that would soon throw my books out with
the other rubbish. A knock on my door interrupted me before I became
excessively maudlin.
"Prince Deacon, your presence is requested in the Queen's chambers,"
came the call when I stopped playing.
The resolve demonstrated by my brother the prin . . . my brother the
King, set a higher standard than I had given him credit for and I tried to
capture a share of that myself as I went to hear of my doom. When I got to
the Queen's chambers there was an unexpectedly high level of energy in the
room. Bareth and Mother were looking together at a parchment that appeared
to set out the terms of the surrender, with the other members of Bareth's staff
humming to each other in small groups.
"Deacon, your name's not on the list!" Bareth blurted out as soon as I
entered.
"What?"
"Look and see," he offered, not quite pulling the parchment from
Mother's hands as he turned it toward me.
At the head, was Tamor's name, followed by Bareth. But where mine
would be expected to be found, the name of one of Father's brothers was
listed, Alcon, then his other brother, Kestrel. The fifth and final name on the
list was mother's brother, Nyquist, who had come to Achaiea to assist us in
the ill-fated war. All these relatives were elderly. Father had been
proclaimed heir by his father in preference to older brothers who were
considered unsuitable for some reason I never knew. As I looked at the list I
wondered if their failing had been in choice of a mate, for they were similar to
Father in many ways, yet none had found wives to match our mother. Father
had reigned, but who had truly ruled in Achaiea? These idle thoughts were an
attempt for my mind to consider small problems before attacking the large
ones, but the large ones weren't going away.
"Why is Tamor's name on the list?" I asked while I tried to understand the
significance of my name's absence.
"They don't know he died in the battle. We told them that we believed
that to be the case and Kragdle has scouts out looking for his body. I
confirmed with our men, though, and Tamor definitely died in the fight.
"It's, um, a surprisingly short list," I mused.
The briefest flicker of amusement flashed across Bareth's eyes as he
replied, "Brother, you have a gift for making a point without saying what one
would expect. The absence of your name is indeed a surprise."
"Do you have an explanation?" I asked.
"No. When they gave Hugh the list, he did a masterful job of betraying
none of the surprise you mentioned and just brought it to me."
The Chamberlain, on hearing his name, turned to us. "Your Majesty, I
may have an explanation. All the names on that list have participated in
martial tournaments. In addition, all have been proclaimed as the King's
representatives at fairs or as envoys in negotiations or in other official
capacities. And of course, Queen Selay's only other brother now reigns in
Verdantland. Since Prince Deacon has only now turned sixteen, he has had
no official duties outside the castle. It appears that Kragdle's spies are not
very efficient."
"Surely his spies can't be that bad," I disagreed.
"Your pardon, Highness, but your appearance is somewhat , um,
ambiguous. It is more common to find a girl who wears leggings than a boy,
uh, man with long blond hair, especially as long and . . . err . . . well tended,
as yours. Those who saw you but did not know you personally might not
have recognized your true . . . gender," my old tutor stammered out.
So that's why he was never very friendly toward me. He thought I was
too effeminate. Not just weak, but actually un-masculine. Well, maybe he
was right, at least in how I appeared.
I didn't voice these thoughts, but Mother's mind was moving in a similar
track and much further down the path.
"We can beat that monster!" she breathed fiercely.
"Mother?" Bareth asked in surprise.
In sharp, clipped tones that seemed brittle as glass and twice as edged, she
explained her plan.
"Oh, Bareth . . . my son . . . forgive me, but I cannot find a way to save
you. This is no less your duty than it would be to lead your army into battle,
though the outcome is certain rather than in the hands of God. However,
Achaiea can survive."
Bareth's eyes had held hope when Queen Selay had claimed a chance to
beat Kragdle, then became carefully neutral when she withdrew any personal
hope for him. He nodded briefly in acceptance of her priorities. Achaiea was
more important than any single life and the life of her King was always hers
to claim. Yet just as surely, if the kingdom were to survive, there needed to
be a King.
"I don't understand," he prodded the Queen.
Instead of responding to him directly, Mother looked at me.
"Deacon, are you ready to make a sacrifice almost as drastic as that
demanded of Bareth?" she asked.
"Yes, Mother, though what can be almost that bad, yet be effective?"
"Can you not guess? You were always the smartest of my children and
Hugh has already given you the answer."
Hugh has given the answer? What answer? Hugh just said that some
people might have mistaken me for a . . .
It came to me with an inevitability of its own, yet I must resist. "No. I'm
sorry, but I'll let them have my head first."
Bareth still hadn't caught on, so the next to react was Hugh. His face
took on a fierceness to match Mother's and I remembered that this man
controlled the daily management of the Kingdom, not a job for a man of weak
will or small intellect.
"Yessss," he breathed. "It would work."
"What would work?" Bareth demanded. "Somebody tell me what's going
on!"
I tried to cut off any other response, "Nothing is going on. Go tell
Kragdle that they made a mistake. It's better to do it now than have him find
out on his own when he occupies the castle."
Bareth was puffing up in preparation for a truly regal rage when Mother
put her hands on his arm, and on my own.
She spoke to me, first, "Deacon, this is your duty to your kingdom, no
less than your duty to die if required. In this case you must live in order for
Achaiea to live and for Kragdle to die."
Finally, she explained to Bareth, "Deacon will have to masquerade as a
woman. When the time is right, he can depose the High Canyon trash and
reclaim the kingdom."
Chapter 2 A Maiden's Lover
Even his own impending doom could not contain my brother's humor at
the path the Fates seemed to have selected for me. His laughter rang out with
a too-loud energy that betrayed the tension within him even as it gave him a
way to relieve it.
"Why, Deak, old boy, uh, girl, I think you may have the greater sacrifice
to make at that!"
"No, for I will share the same end as you. It is impossible, and when
Kragdle finds out his vengeance will make his current threat seem the greatest
of mercies."
"Deacon," at the word of our mother, all other voices ceased, "if there
were a way, one that would work for long enough to rid our land of this
pestilence, would you do it?"
"Of course, but your premise is impossible." I gave an easy, hollow
agreement.
"I tell you that it is not. I tell you that this can work, if you will commit
yourself to it as fully as your duty requires."
Her tone was strange. There didn't seem to be any emotion in it at all, but
it left not the slightest room for any alternate concept. What had been
impossible now became the only possibility. I found myself nodding, as did
everyone else in the room. For a long moment she sat quietly, the only
motion in the room her fingers idly stroking Greyshadow's fur.
"Leave me, please, all except Deacon." Her order included the King as
casually as it did the lesser soldiers who guarded him. They filed out in
silence, remarkable silence no less so because it seemed absolutely
unremarkable at the time to all of us.
"How often have you used the white-cold mind?" she asked when they
had left.
"Excuse me?" what was she talking about?
"As you did with Drayson. I saw it in you as surely as I saw his
submission to your strength."
"Never," I replied. "I just couldn't accept his insult, at least, not any
longer. I mean, what could he do to me that wasn't going to happen
already?"
"Why do you suppose he didn't react?" she continued to probe.
"I don't think I really considered it. To begin with, I was so angry that I
didn't care, and when it was over, we had other things to worry about."
"Were you angry? Describe your anger."
"It wasn't one of Father's smashing rages, if that's what you mean. It felt
focused, white-hot yet cold beyond anything imaginable. I just knew that my
will would prevail."
This was too intense, not supported with the fuel of anger from Drayson's
insult, confusing to a degree that made me very uncomfortable. I had to
lighten the mood.
"Or else he would have killed me," I defined the acceptable alternative
with a smile. "There was no middle ground."
Mother ceased her questions and began to explain, "What you have
described has been in our family, that is, my family, for untold generations.
Your description is apt. We have always referred to is as the 'white-cold
mind'. It is a means of focusing our minds so intensely that we can compel
other minds to do our bidding. Yet it is a dangerous gift, or curse, for there
are limits. It is a battle between our will and that of our target, and if our will
is insufficient, well, don't attempt it lightly. It is easiest of course, when the
target's will aligns with your own. Intense anger such as you felt provides
great power to your will, but it is a dangerous source of strength. It will burn
you out as surely as a true fire of equal intensity."
I nodded, not really sure what she was talking about though her
description certainly matched my experience. My lack of comprehension
must have been apparent, but when she continued she added yet another layer
of confusion.
"Yet it is the reason you can succeed in your duty. If both participants are
willing, the white-cold mind can allow them to share knowledge without
coercion; to merge wills in an alliance rather than dominance and
submission."
Where was she going with this? What did this have to do with regaining
our realm? And how did it make the impossible become inevitable?
"Will you merge your mind with mine, Deacon? In a matter of minutes I
can provide you with a lifetime of knowledge on how to act like a woman.
The other aspects of your masquerade are clothes and artistry that are
secondary. You will be convincing. In fact, with your fine features you will
probably be appealing, but that is also secondary. You will reveal yourself,
or confirm yourself, with every gesture of your hand, with every glance of
your eyes to be either man or woman. I can help you learn what you must
know to succeed."
"With this white-cold thing?"
"Yes. But you must be a willing participant. If you fight me, I will not be
able to sustain the intensity of emotion it would take to force you, especially
since you have the power yourself. Yet this is how you can do your duty to
our kingdom and to our people."
I could not claim to understand any significant portion of what she said,
not truly understand. On another level though, I could not deny what she
said. I had felt that intensity, that . . . power. It was as real to me as the
breath that sighed in and out of my lungs as my mind churned.
In the end I had no more option than Bareth. Duty is a hard taskmistress
when she provides no choices at all. Even death was not mine to choose if
there were a chance that we could restore our kingdom through some other
sacrifice. Yet what a sacrifice this would be!
Still, I nodded, "What do we do?"
"Sit here," she pointed to a low stool near her own chair. When I was in
place she took my hands in her own and caught my eyes with her own. The
blue jewels that had always seemed so much like my own were now so
different, somehow. Larger, it seemed, and deeper in more ways than I
could measure. I found myself moving forward into that depth as though
swept in a current of smooth water, at first quite slowly and I knew I could
draw back, but with gradually increasing speed until I knew just as surely
that I had no control at all.
Images, impressions, sensations beyond senses began to match me on my
journey. They melded with me until no seam existed and I could not tell
which were external and which had always been part of me. The first images
were of Father and I thought to study them, but I felt a pull in another
direction and knew that Mother would hold these to herself.
The sensations that next sought me out were like, yet unlike, my own
memories. The scenes were the same, the people were familiar, but these
impressions were from Mother in those same situations, impressions that
focused more and more on things she did because of her femininity. Clothes
seemed initially overwhelming in variety and purpose, but as they were
absorbed into my knowledge their complexity seemed childish next to those
of action within the clothes. I saw her as a young maiden captivate suitor
after suitor with a lift of an eyebrow, a glance, a flutter of a wrist, or of an
eyelash. I saw her win Father with a smile, while that same smile
transformed a rival into incoherent rage.
The intensity of that long-ago rival's emotion cast me from her mind. I
blinked and the merging was lost. When I looked again at Mother's eyes, I
saw only the clear blue gems that had always comforted me. They crinkled in
the corners with amusement, a surprise on this most devastating of days yet
perhaps understandable.
"So, Deacon, do you still think this is impossible? Or should I say,
'Cherysse'?"
The voice that answered her was not my own, though it came from my
mouth. This voice was lighter, more musical, more full of life and energy.
The register had not changed, my own voice had never dropped much, but in
all other ways it was as different as night from day. Or, as man from
woman.
"I would not have believed it, but now I cannot imagine we will fail. At
least, not because of someone penetrating my masquerade," that strange,
musical voice replied.
This phrasing seemed to bother her. I saw a note of discomfort pass her
face, quickly suppressed, but less deniable now than even in our previous
closeness. Before I could ask about it, she had risen and gone to her door.
Opening it, she bade the servant request the attendance of the King and
such others as he desired.
"Cherysse, you will find that after you have fully absorbed the
impressions I have shared, you will be able to choose between the
mannerisms as you wish, but for now the feminine will be dominant. I'm
sorry for the abruptness but we have no time. Remember always, your duty
is as vital and as inescapable as Bareth's own."
By this time the King had approached. I still sat on Mother's stool, dazed
by the flood of thoughts that had assailed me. Lost in my thoughts as I was,
I absorbed without registering the conversations around me. Finally,
Bareth's voice grew loud.
"Deacon. Deacon! Wake up, brother!"
I jerked to attentiveness and swiveled on the stool to look at him. His eyes
wore a very strange expression, one that seemed to indicate that I was the
source.
"Yes, Bareth? I mean, Majesty," that strange voice replied from my
mouth.
All sound in the room ceased. Bareth's eyebrows made an attempt to
disappear into his neatly trimmed hairline. The voice from his mouth, though
still his own, had wonder in it that I had never heard before.
"Deacon?" he asked again.
"Yes?" I replied, a bit petulant at the repetition. I tossed my hair over my
shoulder and stood up.
Why was everyone looking at me so strangely? I just stood up, for God's
sake. I could feel a most unattractive frown forming on my face and I fought
to keep my features smooth. A glance at Mother from both Bareth and I
stirred her to explanation.
"I have instructed Deacon in skills he will need for his masquerade. In
support of that, from this moment forward, this is Cherysse, my daughter.
Deacon never existed. I wanted you to understand this before the
transformation is complete so that there is no doubt that Cherysse is indeed
Deacon."
"Your pardon, my Queen," Hugh, the Chamberlain interrupted, "but that
brings up a point that we need to address. It would be best if the succession
of the crown were uninterrupted and unambiguous. If we allow Kragdle to
crown himself without our own anointed monarch, his claim might be more
difficult to unseat at a later date."
"What do you advise?" Queen Selay asked.
"If King Bareth were to abdicate, in favor of, um, Deacon, and Deacon
were crowned before Kragdle could anoint himself, then we would have a
much more compelling rallying cry for our people."
Bareth smiled in a self-deprecating sort of way and replied, "That would
be acceptable to me. I was never destined to wear the crown for long, it
seems. Let Deacon carry the weight of it forward."
He removed the simple circlet of gold that symbolized our nation and
moved to place it on my head. The priest interrupted him.
"Your Majesty, that should follow the anointing," he reminded us all.
From the folds of his robe he drew forth a small vial and approached me
in his turn. Once again, the ceremony was completed quickly. A drop or
two of oil and then the cold weight of the crown. Bareth was right, it was
heavy. And I knew it would not get lighter for some time to come.
Once again Mother controlled the situation. The advisors wanted to draw
me off and begin to involve me in the affairs of the realm, to no good purpose
that I could see, but she swept them up with her glance and made them pause.
"Cherysse," the emphasis was unmistakable, and the command just as
clear, "has further preparations to make. You must leave us alone. What is
Kragdle's deadline for our response?"
Bareth replied, "If we do not surrender by dawn, he will execute the next
dozen peasant families."
"Very well. Bareth, we will attend you later." Her words contained the
dismissal of the staff and of the so-briefly-reigning King.
When they were gone she turned again to me. The expression that briefly
clouded her face when I talked about none penetrating my disguise had now
returned in even greater measure. She paced about the room for a moment,
then sighed with a glance at me that made it clear she was not happy with
what was to come.
"Cherysse, are you familiar with a 'maiden's lover'?" she asked.
"No, not that I kno . ." and then I paused as her words triggered a
memory that had not been there a few hours ago.
"No! Mother, you cannot! I cannot! It is too much!" But the very
memories that horrified me were linked to the portion of her memories that
justified the terrible device.
She waited for my protestations to dissipate. When I ran down, she
smiled a sad smile that conveyed her personal knowledge of the price she was
asking.
"It can be survived," she declared.
Not for the first time I wondered if Bareth's part were indeed the easier
one. Not for the last time, either. Yet this was duty no less demanding once
the full price was established.
"What do I need to do?" My sigh of resignation brought an even brighter
shine to her eyes, and a warm embrace.
"I'm sorry, Cherysse, you know that I would not do this if there were any
other way."
"Of course," wistfully I replied, with a tremor in my voice that would
have shamed me, once.
"You will need to disrobe, of course, and we had better arrange a bath
before you dress in your new attire," she said with brusque efficiency as she
summoned the servants.
A bath was drawn with scented oils to smooth and protect my skin. At
Mother's suggestion a fine blade was used to remove all my body hair, not
that there was much of it. I would have savored the luxury of the bath for a
very long time, but as the water began to cool Mother brought forth my
tormentor.
"This one was my own. We don't have time to have another one made
more to your form. It is a good thing that you are slender."
A 'maiden's lover' was so named because it had the sole purpose of
preventing any other lover from approaching her virtue. It looked like a vest
of chain mail woven of the finest steel our land could produce, drawn down
to fine thread but no less strong than an equivalent thickness of plate. In
extent, it was designed to cover me from my nether regions to the bosom that
I did not have. In between the woven steel formed a tightfitting corset, sized
as Mother had explained to the shape she had possessed as a maiden.
Unfortunately, that was not my natural shape, especially in the lower
portion that was led back between my legs. This portion of the garment was
rigid plate, providing enough room for a maiden's treasures but requiring my
own to be compressed most uncomfortably. A flexible rod perhaps the
thickness of an ordinary bootlace trailed from the tip of this part of the device,
trailed for a surprisingly long distance.
The first step in donning it, though, was to slip a soft silken garment up
my hips to cover the same area. It was woven continuously without seam or
fastening, yet in some cunning fashion it provided sufficient stretch to allow
it to pass my hips. The bottom of this tube of silk was closed off sufficiently
to provide some cover for my most intimate areas while leaving openings that
I knew would be only too necessary when I wore the controlling steel device
for days at a time.
When the actual maiden's lover was slid up my hips and into position the
corset portion began just above my hips and had eyelets for conventional
laces, though they were set into the rear of the 'lover' on removable flaps.
Mother drew other laces, ordinary string, through these eyelets and began to
bring the edges together. It took a while. When the tension would become
too tight for her to pull (well past anything that I could willingly accept) she
would pause and require me to raise my arms, or lower them, or breathe (as
though I could) or move as well as I might. After these exercises, she would
draw on the laces again. Eventually the purpose of the long wire leading
from the nether guard became apparent as she began to thread it through
interlocking loops on the back of the garment. This would only work if the
back were fully closed, a condition that the young Princess Selay no doubt
found much easier to achieve than I did. The reduction in my waist was so
intense that some of the flesh actually worked up into the cups in front,
giving me a surprisingly realistic bosom, especially since these cups were
themselves stiffly formed. When she was done she unlaced the long string
and removed the lacing flaps, leaving only the thin rod to hold the back
together.
The purpose of a small loop in the end of the rod became apparent as
Mother drew a final part of the diabolical device from the chest that had held
the garment. A small lock, jeweled and intricate to rival the most precise of
timepieces, bound the loop in the wire to a corresponding loop in the back of
the garment.
"What key opens that lock?" my maiden's voice gasped.
"You will not know that, now or ever," she replied. Something in her
tone let me know that she had once asked the same question, and received the
same reply. I turned to look at her in surprise, but my own protest was
stifled by the view displayed in a tall mirror behind her shoulder.
Whatever else that device might accomplish, it had transformed me into a
woman in body. It appeared Mother, as a maiden, had been a most shapely
lass. Now, whether I wanted it or not that shape defined me as well. My
long golden hair did much to complete the picture. It reminded me of my
earlier comment.
"Well, Mother, it is certain that no one will penetrate my disguise now." I
tried to chuckle for her sake, but the device left me too little breath for more
than a whispered comment.
"Yes, dear, that was my concern when you mentioned it earlier. The only
justification for this garment is that it has that virtue, even when the maiden
may not."
She continued, "Now, let us get you dressed. It is impossible for a
princess to dress herself, and it would be too suspicious if I took care of
everything for you with my own hands. Once you are dressed in your
'lover', others can aid you. However, only I will ever release you from your
protection. That has been our way for generations and will be our
justification now."
She summoned servants and opened her own dressers to find the proper
gown for me. While she considered choices that I would eventually have to
make on my own, others attended to my hair. A woman's rank was
displayed in the combs and pins she wore in her hair anytime she was out of
her own chambers. Those of a princess were many and varied and it was
clear that Mother was again correct. No woman could place them all properly
by herself. By the time they were done a gown had been selected, along with
stockings and shoes. It was clear that this was again a chore that would need
assistance, for while wearing the 'maiden's lover' I could not bend
sufficiently to place stockings on myself, nor shoes.
The final assistant was a cosmetician skilled in arts imported from far off
Araby and even further lands to the East, more legend than real yet none the
less artistic. He transformed my face so that all remaining vestiges of Deacon
were removed and only Cherysse remained.
In the hustle and bustle of so many attendants I had not had time to look
again into the mirror. As though at a signal, all drew back and an aisle was
made from me to the looking glass.
If I had still possessed the breath to do so, I would have gasped. As it
was, I grew light-headed with shock and had to be steadied by several pairs
of hands. Like all court gowns my dress was ornate, yet the decoration in
this gown complemented the shape displayed, not distracting from the flow
of waist and swell of bosom. Only the full, wide skirt departed from the
curves beneath, providing security against a too-intimate revelation of a
lady's limbs. Mother had selected a gown of a deep, rich blue, highlighted
with gold. The combination picked up the colors of my hair and eyes, colors
which Mother displayed as well.
"That was the gown I wore the day I met your Father," she explained, the
bright shine back in her eyes.
A dismissive wave of her hand sent the servants scurrying, all but one she
called by name. "Amy, send to Bareth's chambers and see if it would be
convenient for him to receive us at this time."
The woman was gone in an instant, returning in barely more time with his
reported assent.
"Mother," I whispered, "why not have him come here?"
"We need to maintain the fiction of his reign until at least the dawn," she
explained. "Besides, it will do you good to get out and about."
Taking my hand in her own, she led me down the corridor to Bareth's
apartments. At the rap of his guard, his door opened. He stood there himself
but did not move back into the room to allow us to enter.
"Dea, uh, Cherysse?" he stammered.
"Yes, brother, it is your sister," I replied. My voice, still strange to him
though I was becoming accustomed to it, caused him to start out of his stupor
and finally move back in to the room.
"I would never have believed it. Even after the transformation Mother
called us down to see, I would never had credited any report of this miracle,"
he chattered. "You are not merely feminine, you are beautiful!"
"Thank you," Mother's imprinted mannerisms brought out the demure
response without conscious thought.
Bareth's eyes had lit up with pleasure at the sight of the pretty maiden that
I had become. It overshadowed, for a moment, his own fate. Still, it was
clear that this had been weighing heavily on his mind for it sobered quickly.
"Can you do this, Deacon?" he asked.
"Yes, my brother. I can. I will, for our realm, for our people, and for
you." As I said it, I felt an echo of the white-cold mind in my voice and saw
conviction greater than my own appear on Bareth's features. And peace. His
honor was such that his own sacrifice was not an unrealistic price for him to
pay, but it gave him peace to know it would not be in vain. Would I be able
to keep the promise I had just made? I wished my own mind were as certain
as I had caused his to be.
Chapter 3 Tan Fog
The dawn found Mother and I watching from the battlements as the four
known heirs to the throne of Achaiea walked to their doom. Mother's golden
hair took a deep copper color from the blood of the rising sun, so soon to be
matched by the blood of human cruelty. I knew mine looked the same for
this morning Mother and I were identical in all respects save age. It was her
intention to reinforce the image of my gender by constant reference to her
own. Together we wore widow's black, accented by silver that took on the
color of the sun to look like drops of blood already spattered on our bodies.
Bareth would not stand out in the annals of our realm for the sacrifice of
his life. In the oldest records no distinction was made between this surrender
to death, and death in battle. In truth, there was no practical difference as the
losers were always executed. We had become more civilized since then.
Now a dozen peasant families had already been sacrificed to escort my
brother to his eternity. Yet another dozen stood by to ensure he held steadfast
to his duty. Such "civilized" escorts were also no longer remarkable. In
time, he would be most memorable for the shortness of his reign, over within
hours of his accession to the throne. I wondered if I would survive long
enough to have a record of my own, and what it would say.
As the rays of light crept lower into the valley before the castle the color
lightened to a more golden hue. This did not fill the view with warmth,
though. It showed a shifting tan carpet, swirling over the ground like fingers
of fog, ever moving with no distinct form or structure. This was the way of
the High Canyon horde, never called an army. Their clothes were as uniform
as they could make them, disdaining honorable coats of arms for anonymity
in battle except for those whose deeds were so great that no artificial identity
was required. Their horde as a whole moved in apparent confusion for the
same purpose. It was impossible to count them as they constantly shifted
elements from one sector of the battlefield to another.
There was no doubt about the destination of our men, though. The
headsman was prominent a long crossbow reach from the drawbridge.
Bareth and his three uncles moved steadily forward, neither hesitation nor
anxiety in their strides. When they reached the waiting tan-covered men it
appeared that the faceless members of the horde knew something of our royal
family for each was questioned. From our distance it was impossible to tell
what the interrogation entailed but apparently the answers were satisfactory to
our invaders. Each Achaiean man turned toward the crenellated wall where
Mother and I stood, saluting our bright hair one last time before submitting to
a professionally quick end. In all-too-brief sequence the males of the royal
family were dispatched.
Those murders were only the most dramatic sign of our surrender. The
gates of Stalwart Guard were to remain open as sign of submission of the
people as a whole. A contingent of the horde flowed toward our castle even
as the bodies of our men were bundled in cloths and presented to the
disarmed retinue that had accompanied them.
With regal dignity I strove to match, Mother descended from the wall and
entered the throne room where she took her accustomed place in the Queen's
high seat. I, of course, could not take the royal throne as was my right.
Instead, I stood at her shoulder in the position of a princess. And in the
raiment of a princess. And under it all, the maiden's lover. It had not been a
comfortable night for me. The tightness of the too-narrow waist had
prevented easy breathing regardless of my position and the unaccustomed
bulk of the bosom I had so strangely acquired maintained a sensation of
discord in any of my normal postures. I didn't want even to think of the
unnatural compression in a so-intimate place. Still, the artistry of the palace
cosmetician overcame such minor obstacles as a sleepless night and I looked
more attractive than I would have believed possible just 24 hours before.
The doors to the throne room were thrown open with casual disregard for
protocol, I thought. Then it came to me this was not casual at all, it was
flamboyantly arrogant. Yet the actions of those intruding in our chamber
were not individually flamboyant. Perhaps a dozen members of the horde
entered, though even here it was hard to tell as they maintained their habitual
swirl. There was an island of stability in their fog. A pair of men clothed in
tan approached on a straight, unyielding line. A third man bearing the
symbol of their pagan religion followed the steadfast two.
A few feet in front of the dais one threw back his obscuring hood. We
saw a face too harsh to be merely lean. Not harshness of expression, of
which there was none, but harshness of a deeper, permanent sort. When the
children of Achaiea were learning to laugh, the child this man had been was
learning to live without water for days at a time. That dryness still pervaded
him, a parched visage with no waste about it, not even the waste of muscle to
pad skin stretched too tightly over sharp-edged bones.
His voice was much the same, toneless yet sharp, with no inflection.
"Madame Selay, I presume."
Mother ignored his comment utterly, gazing at the open doorway as
though still waiting for someone to enter.
I saw that I had misjudged the man. There was humor in him after all. It
was just not reflected in his face unless he chose to use the expression as part
of his communication. A tight smile recognizable by the contrast to his
previous neutrality accompanied his next comment, "Queen Selay, then."
At this Mother nodded her head with rigid precision. Her glance never left
the open doorway beyond our intruder's head, but she acknowledged his
unwelcome presence once her own recognition was proper.
"I am Kragdle, King of High Canyon, and by grace of the one true God,
now ruler of Achaiea," he declared, stepping up to confront Mother from a
distance too close for proper court protocol. Still his voice was absent, the
comments carried seemingly by force of personality rather than the volume
others would need.
He waved his hand and the other figure who had strode directly to our
dais pulled back his own hood and approached to stand in front of me. This
man was inches taller than Kragdle and had the wide shoulders and large
hands of my father and older brother. Yet his body reflected a lean economy
more reminiscent of Bareth. Of the men in my experience, my father and
brothers had been the greatest warriors. This man, though, looked to
combine the best of the fighters in my heritage. His face did not show the
harshness of the thirst that had marked Kragdle, yet the additional flesh he
carried on his face was spare and efficient. More than any other distinction
from his father though, his warm, brown eyes lacked the ruthlessness of the
glittering chips of black rock displayed by our conqueror. Instead, the eyes
showed interest, all the more terrifying when I realized I was the primary
focus of that interest.
"Your Majesty," in another voice there would have been a sneer buried in
that comment to the Queen but the flatness of Kragdle's whisper robbed it of
clear insult, "allow me to present my son, Lyonidas. He will be regent in
Achaiea. In accordance with that duty, I have charged him to act as judge in
our first case. A case of possible treason."
Then he turned that snake's glare on me.
"Ah, what have we here? A royal princess, no less," he whispered in that
voiceless hiss. "We had heard rumors of another child."
He started to move toward me and one of the royal guards moved to
interpose himself. An instant of irritation flickered in the black coals of
Kragdle's eyes. He looked around the throne room at the surviving leaders
of the Army of Achaiea and his smile changed to something even uglier.
"Lyonidas, my son, have you ever noticed how hard it is to tell the
difference between the Achaiean soldiers and . . . their women?" he mused
without inflection.
"Why, even this delicate flower might be one of their noble warriors in
disguise," he continued, pointing at me.
A low, wordless growl escaped from the men of Achaiea in the room.
There was a shifting that cleared sword arms. Kragdle ignored it completely
but his swirl of men did not. Their own arms moved beneath the concealing
cloaks, accompanied by a muted whisper of steel withdrawing from sheaths.
Lyonidas forestalled the imminent battle by stepping up to me with a grin.
He ignored my guard and said to his father, "There is really only one way to
be sure."
A shake of Mother's head even more constrained than her previous
acknowledgment caught Lyonidas' attention. Kragdle used the opportunity
to deliver a threat he had obviously intended from before he entered the
throne room.
"Why, if we found that this creature were male," this part was said with
amusement, but then his tone became vicious, "or if we found another male
heir hidden anywhere in the castle, we would be forced to execute every
single member of the Achaiean royal family to ensure that no other heirs
masqueraded among the inhabitants. Since such treachery might permit
disguise as serving girls, or even children, every person residing in this castle
would be sacrificed to the traitor's deception."
Again there was that flicker of amusement on Kragdle's sun-darkened
features as he observed the total lack of response from Mother. No fear, no
guilt, no anxiety colored her regal features. After it was clear his threat
would bring no response, he concluded with yet another question, "Is there
anything you wish to say before we conduct our trial?"
Queen Selay finally spoke, "This is my daughter, Cherysse. I am not
responsible for your rumors. You have the power to murder peasants, and
for that reason our heirs died in honor. Do not assume that gives you
ultimate power over us. We who remain will die before we are dishonored .
. . for death is available to all. If you defile my daughter, we will save you
the trouble of executions and with our dying breath we will curse you before
God. Our people will know of your perfidy and of the uselessness of
surrender. You will not see any value from your usurpation and butchery,
not now, and not for future generations too numerous to count."
The smile vanished from Kragdle's face while Mother spoke. At the end
of her speech he put it back on his features with deliberate intent, but he
stepped back. The amusement on his face made a claim of being still in
control of this audience, but the true battle of wills had been won by Mother
and at least she, Kragdle, and I knew it.
"Lyonidas, how would you determine if this is truly a woman?" he
offered with that tight little grin. My sex was clear in his mind but he would
use this joke he had made up himself as an excuse to gloat about his power.
Lyonidas reached out to me with his large, muscular hands. The audience
in the chamber gasped, then gasped again as Queen Selay stood.
"For countless generations the Imperial Edict has proscribed the
defilement of women, whether maid or matron," she reminded him.
"There hasn't been an Emperor for most of those generations you
invoke," Kragdle snarled.
"Perhaps not, but the other nations of the old Empire still obey those
precepts of civilization. My brother, King Nikolai of Verdantland has told
me many times of his respect for those ancient traditions."
At this thinly veiled threat Kragdle's eyes narrowed once again. It was
well known that there had been border squabbles between High Canyon and
Verdantland for years as Nikolai had tried to take advantage of any distraction
Kragdle might experience in his conquests. The High Canyon campaign
against our nation had been so swift that Queen Selay's brother had not had
time to mobilize while the High Canyon horde was outside home borders and
Verdantland was not strong enough for a bald invasion of High Canyon.
However, an atrocity or two would bring Nikolai allies, perhaps enough to
give Kragdle a real challenge.
Still, great conquerors are great gamblers. Kragdle had not built an
empire from nothing by being intimidated by distant threats. Just the
opposite, his arrogance led him to believe he could do as he wished with us
and still protect his past conquests. I could see a decision forming in his eyes
to make his strength clear with a gesture suitably disdainful of the old
customs.
Before he said anything though, I spoke up. My bookish, unmanly
studies had provided me with another control on his aggressiveness. My
words were not directed to Kragdle, but to the silent shaman with the pagan
wand, "Is it not written in the book of Aster, 'Who wars on an innocent
maiden of a conquered land will face destruction. Verily, even unto the least
of the followers of the defiler'?"
The shaman jerked at hearing the words of his own Holy Writ. His
answering nod was too reflexive for him to solicit permission from his King.
It provoked a stirring from Kragdle's other silent escorts as they realized that
Kragdle was threatening their own souls with his power games.
Kragdle's eyes held mine for a long moment. He took in my golden hair
and blue eyes as though noticing them for the first time. Then his glance
flickered to Queen Selay for an instant, reminding himself of our similarity.
When he spoke, his hiss was too quiet for his own men to understand. Only
the Queen, Lyonidas, and myself heard his comment, "I had heard that the
noblewomen of Achaiea were witches with strange mental powers. Well, I
don't believe it. I have beaten 'King Andros and his two sons, the finest
fighters in Achaiea' and I can beat the women and children that remain, witch
powers or no."
After holding my gaze, and then Queen Selay's, for long enough to make
the point that he was not intimidated, he glanced sidelong at Lyonidas.
Uncertainly showed in the son's features for a long second, then he again
moved toward me.
"Do you really think it is making war on a maiden, when all I want to do
is see if this vision of loveliness has a woman's sensuality as well?"
Lyonidas' eyes never left me. That is not to say they never left my eyes
for his own gaze slowly absorbed my form from golden halo of intricate
hairstyle, past swell of apparently full bosom, to sweep of sleek waist,
stopping only with a speculative glance at what might be hidden behind the
full skirts. Where Kragdle was a leathery snake, Lyonidas was a languid
lion, secure in his power, not intense with taut energy. Only once his gaze
had completed his evaluation of my form, did he again look directly into my
face.
"Father," he said with a ponderous tone at odds with the amusement
lurking within his soft brown eyes, "there is definitely evidence of treachery
here. However, the obvious evidence is against those outside the authority
you have given me. Those spies who report to you have claimed that the
women of Achaiea are the most beautiful in all the world, yet that report so
understates the truth as to be tantamount to deliberate lie. I assume you will
deal with them yourself when you return home."
Now he spoke directly to me with a possessiveness in his tone that
transformed the meaning in his respectful words, "My princess, it is also
rumored that once a girl of Achaiea reaches the age of fertility, only her
husband . . . or her lover . . . ever see her hair unbound. Is this true?"
"Such is our custom," I replied, "and if you know that, you know that
husband and lover are one and the same."
"Always?" His amusement now twitched at his eyes as well as his lips.
"For those who are honorable, yes," I declared.
"And for you?" Now he grinned openly.
I slapped him.
It was a reflex so fast that I didn't even have time to consider any
consequences. Deacon would never have done it. When struck with an
equivalent insult, Deacon had called on the white-cold mind for the power to
restore respect. But my responses were now driven by Mother's personality
and she was a woman of strength in many more ways than just power of
mind.
Swords appeared in the hands of the tan swirl behind Lyonidas and it
began to flow toward the dais almost before the echo had died. They were
stopped by Lyonidas' laughter.
"Ah, a woman of spirit. We had reports of that as well. Tell me, girl, are
you yet a maiden?"
This time it was my turn for the curt, tiny nod that Mother had
demonstrated. I felt my lips tighten at this continued insult but no out-of-
control reflex lifted my hand for another physical response.
Without further words he reached up and started removing the combs and
pins from my hair. His touch was gentle and his hands never came close to
my body, nor even my face. Nothing in his slow, soft touch ever quite
became enough threat to present an unbearable attack, though the insult of
stripping my hair was as great as stripping my body. A woman's status was
defined by the arrangement of her hair no less than a man's status was
defined by his coat of arms. To take down the combs from my hair and let it
flow freely was to take away my status as a princess. Worse, it left me less
than a simple but honorable maiden of Achaiea, such as the peasant girls who
had been slaughtered so casually.
Yet, it triggered sensations within me that I did not understand. Only a
lover caressed a woman's hair this way. As he removed the decorations,
strands began to hang down in unbalanced disarray, tugging my head even as
his ministrations tugged on the combs and pins. A part of me wanted to slap
his hands away just to finish more quickly than his slow pace would support.
But a part of me found the gentle caresses he gave my hair to be
unimaginably sensual, so much so that my eyes closed in appreciation of the
sensations. When he finished and my golden mane again fell in free tumbles,
I gave a reflexive shake of my head to cause the scattered strands to lay
behind my shoulders. Another unconscious reflex tucked a portion behind
each ear to keep it out of my face as I re-opened my eyes.
"Father," Lyonidas reported, "I tell you that this is a woman. Her hair is
natural, and too beautiful for a man. Her reflexes show that this hair has
been always been part of her life. However, in watching it flow freely, I find
a treason on her part, after all."
Another gasp filled the chamber, but I could see the amusement shining in
his eyes and knew destruction was not on his mind.
Lyonidas continued speaking to his father but looking only at me, "It
degrades the beauty of your new realm to restrict such beauty with combs and
gaudy distractions. As your regent, I issue my first formal edict.
Henceforth, only such hair adornments as enhance Our ability to see a
woman's features will be permitted. Combs to keep her shining sunlight
from her face, or perhaps a clasp to gather it, will be allowed, but in no cases
is the full length of it to be bound. It must be allowed to flow unfettered and
reflect her grace when she moves."
With that he picked up two of the combs of status that had been so
painstakingly added to my hair that morning and offered them to me. I t