With his five sons all betrothed, my father seemed to lose any further interest in our actual weddings. He was certainly not going to invite hundreds of guests, and undertake the enormous expense of entertaining them all. Those details - and those costs - he left to us.
He could have left his mark on history, as the host and the moving force behind one of the greatest events of the past century: five sons, marrying on the same day, attended by all of the notables in the Duchy. It might have immortalized my father - but his parsimony was greater than his desire to be remembered.
Left to our own devices, Saska and I agreed that we should marry in the spring, at Souglad, her home. Gerdar Tanle was prepared to organize a modest celebration (neither of us wanted anything too extravagant). I submitted a short list of people that I would wish to invite: my brothers Aludar and Toran, and my sister Sanatha. Hurmas and Sezima, the friends I had travelled with. Yazgash and Durgat. Enneiros (unless Gerdar Tanle already intended to invite him). Rhigen, Glasha's father.
I couldn't invite Glasha herself, since Saska had already asked her to be one of the bridal party. It was a generous gesture. I offered to contribute what funds I had, but Gerdar Tanle turned me down.
- "Save what money you have." she suggested. "And Saska's dowry. It's not much, but you'll need all of it if you're to have a house of your own some day. You may not be living in Elmina for the rest of your life."
That was true. With father gone, one day, Aludar would become Duke. Would he want his brothers living with him? Surely he would need our accommodations for his own children. Were I in his shoes, I would want Merik and Nathal as far from the capital as I could send them, with important-sounding but utterly meaningless titles and duties. Inspector of the Southern Hills. Ambassador to Galtin's Port.
But a niggling thought continued to bother me. Why
had
Father insisted that we all marry? Was he encouraging some kind of competition for the succession? What if Aludar was
not
the next Duke?
Saska and her mother left two days after Father's banquet.
- "It's so strange." said Saska. "I've only been in Elmina for a matter of days - and yet I feel as though I've known you for years. I'm going to miss you both." She hugged Glasha and me one after the other, and then together.
- "I know what you mean." said Glasha. "I'm going to miss you, too."
- "See you soon." said Gerdar Tanle.
***
Reaction set in the very next day.
- "I'm getting married."
- "Yes, I heard." said Glasha. "I was there, remember?"
Then she saw that I wasn't making light of the situation. "Does that trouble you? Are you having second thoughts?"
- "No. It's not that. I mean ... it just happened so fast. A few days ago we were only
thinking
of a bride ... and now ..."
Glasha put her arm around me. "You did well, Tauma. We've done well. And look at it this way: you may have gone into this madness with a better idea of who you
wouldn't
marry than who you would - but Saska and her mother came here to see
you.
"
I hadn't thought of it that way.
"They could rule out your three older brothers before they left home. Aludar was promised to Bathene, Merik was Merik, and Nathal was at Tanarive - on the wrong side. That only left you."
- "And Toran."
- "Too young, and an unknown quantity. You, they knew of. Gerdar Tanle spoke to Rhigen, to learn more about you - and about me, I suppose. Saska came prepared with her questions about Tanarive. Didn't it seem as if
she
was interviewing
you
, rather than the other way around?"
- "Yes. You could say that." I smiled at the memory.
- "And then they waited, to see if you would say anything about me. They were making sure that you were the man they wanted."
- "So you're saying that we fell into their trap." I said.
It was Glasha's turn to smile. "Some trap. We got exactly what we hoped for."
- "You're right. Thank you." That did a lot to improve my mood.
Now I could turn my thoughts to the other four who were engaged.
As Glasha had said, Merik was Merik. He had never travelled very far; his grand tour had come to an early and ignominious end when he seduced the Moksha girl. He'd always wanted to be a warrior, and trained with the garrison troops. It was no wonder that he'd developed a strong connection with Tir Storum.
Or had he fallen under Storum's influence? Shurkka was attractive, cruel and a bully, just like him. Two peas in a pod? How would they get along?
Nathal's marriage was more troubling. It was an alliance, and logic suggested that it had been contracted back in the days of Tanarive. That would bear thinking about.
First, though, I needed to clear the air with my eldest brother. Once Bathene and her brother Viken had also departed, to return to Whydah, I went to Aludar's quarters.
He was sitting at his desk, fingers steepled before him, lost in thought. I had to cough loudly to get his attention. His eyes snapped back into focus, and he caught sight of me standing there.
- "Tauma! Ah - good to see you. I was ... meaning to come and see
you
, as a matter of fact."
- "That can wait for another time, brother." I said. "I only came by to say two things."
- "Oh?" Aludar frowned at my tone.
- "I am happy for you, brother. My congratulations were sincere. Bathene is a prize." I drew a deep breath. "But I am not happy
with
you, Aludar. You interfered in my courtship of several women, in order to scupper my chances with them."
- "Tauma -"
- "How would you have reacted, brother, if I had tried to prevent you from marrying Bathene? You put your own selfish interests ahead of mine - and Glasha's, for that matter. She's never done you harm - nor have I, that I know of. Yet you sought to manipulate me, and to push me in the direction that
you
wanted."
- "I had my reasons, Tauma. I -"
- "
I don't care
!" I shouted. Right away, I realized that I had nothing to gain by getting angry. I lowered my voice. "You know that I love you, Aludar. I want
you
to be the next Duke. But you sought to ensure my loyalty by pushing me to marry an ally of the Esins. That was arrogant, and disrespectful. Is that the relationship you offer me in future? My loyalty, in return for your disrespect?"
- "You make it sound ... bad."
- "It was. You treated me like a playing piece. Had you come to me and told me of your 'reasons', I might have listened. But you didn't consider what I might want, or what Glasha might need. Disrespect, Aludar."