Thank you for the great recent feedback. Critical feedback on both positives and negatives in my writing is always welcome :heart:
*****
"I met your future brother by marriage, Commander-Lord Clair el Maien van Sietter, early this Summer," Captain-Lord Stevan el T'fel van P'shan remarked, looking down at his cards with cool slanted black eyes. "Pair of hounds." He laid down two picture cards.
"Is he as lovely as they say?" drawled Captain-Sir Diodr Shanne, one of Stevan's fellow officers from First P'shan, in lazy tones. His green eyes flicked up from his hand of cards to Vadya's startled face. "Marriage."
el T'fel frowned. "He has an interesting new theory on Northern architecture," he said repressively. "He is a great friend of my grandmother's, that is, my grandmother in duty bound. She will be visiting Lord Clair and his Lady wife for the hunting." He laid emphasis on the words,
his Lady wife
.
"Have you heard lately from our grandmother?" Vadya said quickly, seeing Tashka's eyes glowering narrowly at Shanne. "I mean, our grandmother in duty bound. Pass." He kicked Tashka under the table and she looked away from Shanne.
"You have heard from her more recently than I, I think," el T'fel replied, still in his repressive tone of voice. He was private about family in the el T'fel way but Vadya knew that all the el T'fels dearly loved old Lady el Farin.
"Royal marriage," Tashka said. Shanne's eyes hardened as she laid the higher pair on top of his own marriage cards. "I met Lady van P'shan at court once."
Behind them, Madam Stanies was presiding over morning tea while young officers and Dames chattered, played games and flirted all around her. She called Pava away from the cosy fireside sofa where he was dallying too intimately with one young Dame and made him sit by her side and tell her funny stories.
It was pouring with rain. They had had to call off the deer hunt they had been planning for the day and were messing about in the sitting-room instead. Everyone was a bit too bright and the atmosphere was close, as if there was a lid pressing down on their bubbling young energy.
"I hear," Captain-Sir Shanne remarked, putting three castles on the table, "that Clair el Maien threw 's glove in el Parva's face for the sake of a poem el Parva wrote to
his Lady wife
. Do you not wonder if there was just a poem in it?"
Tashka's head shot back round to him.
"Shut it," Vadya said fiercely and hurriedly added, "her brother is there."
"He seems quite occupied," Captain-Sir Shanne said, surveying Hanya el Jien, who had come to the party with Pava and was sitting with Mada el Vaie, Hanya el Farin and Flava Trait, arguing about strategic manoeuvres.
"I am to marry el Maien's sister," Vadya said and blushed as Tashka nudged him under the table.
"Shanne," el T'fel's cold voice said, in warning.
The blond young Captain looked at Vadya's blushing face with an ironic sneer. Tashka, he noticed, was looking away from Vadya with a bright sparkle of laughter in her slanted blue eyes.
"el Parva's poem was ridiculous," Tashka said in a careless tone of voice, leaning back to the card table. "A lot of horse manure about how lovely it is to be in an home well-kept by a beautiful woman. Clair ... el Maien did mark his face for him but it was not for Lady el Jien's honour - I ask it of you, it is well known that she is as pure as the streams that come down from the snowfields of the H'velst mountains in spring into the River Arven."
"Since you know so much about it," Shanne said lazily, "what-for did el Maien give el Parva the glove then."
"el Maien was insulted because el Parva attributed his castle's cleanliness to Lady el Jien," Tashka replied. "He is the one who manages the castle and he felt slighted because the poem was not addressed to him." They all burst out laughing at her ridiculous story.
They played another round and Tashka said, "did you meet Clair ... Commander-Lord el Maien at court or at Castle Sietter? Did you meet Lady el Jien as well?"
"I regret," el T'fel remarked, "it was at court. I have long wanted to meet Lady el Jien. The scientist B'dar has spoken to me of her work."
"B'dar?" Tashka said curiously. "Is he interested in working with the merchants?"
el T'fel's dark-haired head lifted and he directed a haughty glare at Tashka. "What would B'dar have to say to merchants?" he said scornfully. "He has spoken to me of Lady el Jien's mathematical theorem."
"Ah," Tashka said, suppressing a smile of enlightenment. "Of course. Lady el Jien's mathematical theorem."
"On any road," el T'fel said. "I met Commander-Lord el Maien at court."
"At court with his many affairs ... of business," Captain-Sir Shanne joked, playing a royal family and winning the game with a satisfied air.
"Shut it about my brother!" Tashka snarled, slamming her hands on the cards. She and Shanne looked narrowly, angrily into each other's eyes.