de Loungville said, âHeâs been my friend for twenty years. He found me serving with Daniel Troville, Lord Highcastle, and dragged me away from the border wars to go to the strangest places a man can imagine. Iâve been with him longer than any man in his company, eaten cold rations with him, slept beside him, watched men die in his arms, even had him carry me for two days after the fall of Hamsa, but I canât say I know the man.â
Erik asked, âIs it true heâs part elf?â
De Loungville rubbed his chin. âI canât say I know the truth of that. He told me his father came from Crydee originally; a kitchen boy, he claims. He doesnât talk about his past much. Mostly he plans forthe future, and takes barracks rats like you two and turns them into soldiers. But itâs worthwhile. I wasnât much more than a barracks rat myself when he found me. Worked up from that to my grand station today.â He said the last with an even broader grin, as if he were nothing more than a common sergeant and that remark a joke, but both Erik and Roo had been told he carried high court rank in addition to his military rank. âSo I never asked too many personal questions. Heâs very much what you might call a âright nowâ sort of fellow.â De Loungvilleâs voice lowered, as if Calis might somehow overhear from down on the dock, and his expression turned serious. âHe does have those pointy ears. Still, I never heard of any such beingâhalf-man,
half-elfâyet he can do things no other man I know can do.â He grinned again as he said, âBut heâs saved all our hides more times than I can count, so whoâs to care what his line is? Your station at birth means nothing. A man canât change that. Whatâs important is how you live.â He slapped both young men on the shoulder. âYou were worthless dogmeat when I found you, fit only for starving crows, but look at you now!â
Erik and Roo exchanged looks, then laughed. Both were wearing the same clothing they had worn when escaping the destruction of the city of Maharta, oft patched, stained beyond cleaning, reducing both men to the appearance of common street thugs.
Roo said, âWeâre two men in need of some fresh clothing. Save Erikâs boots, we look the part of ragpickers.â
Erik glanced down and said, âAnd these need mending.â The boots were all he had left from the Baron of Darkmoorâs legacy, a grudging admissionto Erik of his paternity, along with not denying Erik the right to call himself âvon Darkmoor.â The boots were riding boots, but Erik had walked enough to wear the heels down to nearly nothing, and the leather was weather-beaten and cracked.
Sho Pi, an Isalani from the Empire of Great Kesh, came upon deck from below, carrying his own travel bag. Behind him came Nakor, also an Isalani, and the man Sho Pi had decided was destined to be his âmaster.â He appeared old, but moved with a spry step and quickness that both Erik and Roo knew well. He had instructed them in hand-to-hand combat, and Roo and Erik knew that the odd little man, as well as Sho Pi, was as dangerous unarmed as most men were with weapons. Roo was convinced he had never seen Nakor move as fast as possible, and wasnât sure he would welcome such a demonstration. Roo was a gifted student of the open-handed school of fighting practiced in the Isalani provinces of Kesh, only surpassed by Sho Pi and Nakor in Calisâs company, but he knew either man could easily defeat him with a quick killing blow.
âI am not going to have you trailing around behind me, boy!â insisted the bandy-legged Nakor, yelling over his shoulder. âI havenât been to a city in nearly twenty years that wasnât being burned to the ground or overrun by soldiers or otherwise unpleasant in some fashion, and I intend to enjoy myself awhile. Then Iâm going back