Please leave comments for me. Thank you! (Diolch.)
*****
The seabirds cried above, Vadya sniffed the salt tang of the air and felt a stiff breeze in his hair. It was a cloudy day with occasional sudden shafts of sunlight making the choppy waves in the estuary sparkle. There were flags hanging out on Vadya's caravel and the sailors raised a
huzza!
as his boat went by, he waved his hat to them and they waved spontaneously back.
He saw his father on the quay, a broad greying soldier with a gentle bearded face, wearing a long dark robe.
The Port H'las band was there to play Vadya off the boat and into his father's embrace. There was a great crowd of people cheering him and the Port H'las Guard gave him three
huzzas
, to his embarrassment. His father had come down in the carriage, it was dull to ride up to the castle inside a carriage although at least they did not have people thronging round getting in the way of their horses in order to shout their love and gratitude to his father and their affection to him. As he looked out of the windows at prosperous people in many-coloured garments merrily engaged in choosing and buying wares and eating out in shops and at wayside stalls, he thought of the poverty he had seen in Port Paviat. His father's warm brown eyes were looking not at the shops but at him, Lord van H'las was asking about Fiotr's wedding which they had celebrated earlier in the year and about the raid on Second Thiel for ten cases of Pava's white wine.
They went to his father's office as usual, a big room lined with bookcases of papers, his father's desk was piled with stacks of more papers. By the fire, his father had a clutch of old leather armchairs with his pipes in a rack on a table and a drinks cabinet conveniently hidden behind a fake bookcase. The square castle set on the hill above the port was full of reception rooms and sitting-rooms but since Vadya's mother had died, these had slowly become cleaner and tidier. General-Lord van H'las retreated from the maid-servants and dusters as he had never done in the field of battle and settled himself in the room where he spent so much time with his seneschal, secretaries and fellow Generals.
He got out a special whisky with a gleaming look of pleasure. Vadya preferred brandy himself but to please his father he was happy to take a bowl of whatever his father brought out. "I found this in a small shop at court," van H'las said conspiratorially, sitting heavily back in his chair with a squeak of leather, his silk-draped knees comfortably spread out. "Ten cases! And half the price that I would have paid in Port H'las, I tell it you." His father was convinced he was good with money but Vadya knew that his generosity made heavy demands on an income which the dwindling trade through Port H'las had reduced. There were often arguments with the seneschal about taxes van H'las did not wish to raise and funds out to support his people which the seneschal would sometimes absolutely refuse to countenance.
As Vadya sipped the whisky, which offered an aromatic and smooth yet hot taste in his mouth, he looked over at all the papers scattered on his father's desk and asked: "How in Hell do you manage with all that? Did you always have Prianne Fidor to help you?"