************* CHAPTER TWENTY TWO
The ocean trip to the city of Tellismere was somewhat delayed by contrary winds, which at this winter season came near head on, from the northwest. The fleet was running close-hauled, tacking back and forth beating their way upwind. In better weather, the trip could have been made in less than a week, but instead they felt lucky that the trip had only taken two full weeks.
From off-shore, the situation with tracking the progress of the Eorfleode horde remained simple. With their slow progress north they remained days at the very least behind their trail until they passed the ruins of the coastal city of Evesham, at the mouth of the Bekingham River. Here it seems the horde mostly left the coastal road and headed straight north, up the river towards Applewood, and Crystal Lake. Some smaller war-bands continued to follow the coast north but these groups didn't leave the complete wake of destruction behind them that the main horde had.
Indeed, it quite appeared to even the casual glance that there was going to be precious little of Tellismere left to save. With every passing day, the mission turned more into one of revenge rather than rescue and salvation. With each day that passed, seeing naught but burning smoke coming from sacked towns, villages and farms onshore, the Lady Ayleth's hope began to fade, and only the firm presence of Boyle by her side kept the faintest sparks of hope alive in her heart.
She was certain, once they approached the mouth of the Klure River, that she would soon see her home city aflame, but instead the skies were clear and the city walls seemed strong and firm, although nearly everything else around the city showed signs of siege and ruin.
Dashing first off of the ship onto the docks, Ayleth ran to look for her father the Duke, but he had not come to greet their rescuers and had remained in his chambers at the castle. In fact, as everyone soon realized, if they had expected a sincere hearty welcome, they were in fact much mistaken!
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"So, the Foole arrives back with yet more unwelcome guests and an ungrateful daughter who greets me with loud shrill demands for things that cannot be done! Fie upon you all, and may the
Eorfleode
take you first upon their return, for their numbers are endless, like the waves upon the Great Western Sea, and drowned already this land is, from their vast numbers!"
"And greetings as well to you, my Duke!" The Foole replied. "And just what would your most unreasonable daughter have you do?"
"She would have me gather up all of my remaining arms-men, and every man, lad or lass who is capable of bearing arms, and lead them to the defense of our land! Doesn't the daft girl realize that it is too late? There are too many of them, and their hordes cover all parts of this land, north and south, east or west. Most of my men I did indeed already send, scattered to the villages and the towns to protect the harvest as it was brought in, and gone they are... lost to a man!"
"So, you sent what were in effect raiding parties of your own, to gather in all of the harvest to bring it here, to plan to stand here alone in siege, rather than to protect the people of the Duchy? Rather than using your men in numbers, to better defend each of the towns and cities assaulted in turn, you instead scattered your forces piecemeal, thrown to the wind in handfuls like ill-sown seed, or grain scattered to feed chickens.
"Useless... worse than useless in fact!" The Lady Ayleth shouted, so that her voice filled the entire great assembly hall, where her father and his remaining nobles miserably sat. "Did you command the assembly and training of conscripts? Did you withdraw the scouts and the defenders from the wilderness forts in time before they were overwhelmed one by one? Did you order the evacuation of the threatened areas where the horde was marching, to bring the refugees to a strong place of safety?"
"How could we?" Her father muttered! "We had no warning that the horde was coming, or that it was so huge! The barons wouldn't have agreed to release their workers so soon before harvest time, or pay the many golds that it would have taken to assemble, arm and train an army of conscripts. Instead, they begged only for more of my soldiers, so I sent them all that I had! As for the peasants, only a little food could be gathered up in time, little even enough for the men of this city. We couldn't admit those that fled to us for safety from the countryside... we couldn't! We didn't have the food to feed them, food that was now needed for my remaining guardsmen. So we ordered the gates and drawbridges closed... and closed they have remained."
"So, my dear darling father has indeed lost the very last of his senses! You have had a great many months of warning, but you wasted your soldiers and abandoned them; you tried to steal what little food you could find for yourself and your lackeys from the mouths of your peasants, and then barred the hungry survivors of raid and ruin from the safety of your city walls, leaving them to die outside; and worse, like a frightened child, you and your so called advisors cringe like terrified children in this dark hall, wringing your hands together and whimpering that there was, or still is, nothing that you could do! I am ashamed that I lived to see this day, that no honor remains within Tellismere, nor is there the will to fight for what was ours!"
"Ever the whining malcontent, my willful daughter! As always a girl of passion but no sense... unable to see the world for the way it is. Indeed, for my eyes do see that your hand is now held firm by another. What low base creature have you now found to dally with? Have not your quest guardians kept your frequent amoral urges restrained? Indeed, I see the accused lad, now apparently a grown wicked man, who daemonic weapon certainly has added to the great and near completely destruction of my land! The man by your side seems familiar but unknown to me, undoubted a scoundrel of low birth and lower morals! Send him from this hall, or I shall summon my guards to have him whipped like the dog he is out of my castle and taken out from our walls, for he has a lean hungry look and I like him not at all!" Boyle had indeed lost nearly all of his previous portliness and was indeed much changed since his last meeting with the Duke.
"Her companion is of quite noble standing." Rowan stated, with an angry white knuckled grasp of his sword hilt. "He is the Viscount d'Bournyss, and acknowledged champion and benefactor of the great temple of
Árfæsliss
, Goddess of Mercy, the Hearth & Healing in Corælyn. His deeds are most resplendent, and of much honor, acknowledged as such by the four other Dukes of the Southern Duchies, whom even now wait for your recognition outside the doors of this hall. He is my oath-companion and my friend, and I will no further words of ill-respect spoken of him. He is worthy of your daughter, and should it ever become their will to consort, as her acknowledged champion, I shall witness their consorting-oaths with pride and satisfaction."
"Well I shall not!" The Duke shouted, as angry and as red in the face as a beet. He leaped up onto his feet and dashed up to his daughter and shook his daughter hard with both hands. "Send him from this hall! And send away the other Dukes as well, for they are only here to pick over my yet living carcass. I command it! Whip this miserable refugee from a dungheap away from my presence, for I would sooner have my slut of a daughter marry a stable-boy than this swarmy smug Aldarian!"
"That my Lord, can be quite arranged!" Boyle laughed.
"Indeed, my father!" Ayleth giggled. "For yon nobleman, the famous Viscount d'Bournyss, is quite none other than my companion, Boyle... formerly the farrier of the stables of Swanford. His birth might have been common, but he has been accorded with honor and great honors at every point in our travel. His blood is indeed quite noble, perhaps now far more noble than yours! He and Rowan have fought had shed their blood for the defense of our lands... which is much more than can be said for you, my craven father!"
Duke Emdyn de Mosena, then slapped his daughter hard, and tried to strike her again before Boyle seized his hand and restrained the nearly berserk Duke.
"My Lord," Boyle calmly stated, "gather yourself and find your noble spirit! The Duchy is in flames but the hour is not too late! Gird yourself and find the will to act, for all is not yet all lost!"
Instead, shaking in a fit while restrained in Boyles strong arms, the Duke's eyes lost focus and rolled up to their whites, and he collapsed into a fit as Boyle gently laid his shaking body down to the stone floor. The guards and nobles standing around the hall were paralyzed as well, uncertain of what to do.
The Lady Ayleth had no remaining uncertainties in her heart and knew at once exactly what must be done. With a brief glance at her sickly father, who was being now tended by Oddtus, she strode across the hall floor to the high chair where her father had sat, and she stood in front of it and turned to face her nobles and the guardsmen.
"It appears that my father is unwell, too indisposed to continue with his duties for this day, or perhaps even for the rest of his life. Accordingly, I, Lady Ayleth, daughter of Duke Emdyn de Mosena, do so assume the duties and responsibilities of this Duchy as its Duchess, vowing to defend this land and her people, both noble and low born in honor and uphold its laws with justice and mercy. I do so swear and affirm!"
Rowan then drew his sword and the dim light of the hall was bathed in the glow of its flames. As he glared at the assembled nobles, the threat was unmistakable; kneel and bow and offer their homage to their new ruler, or face immediate summary execution.
It was the guardsmen who acknowledged her first, stamping their boots to attention and then as one drawing their weapons in salute. Slowly, the assembled nobles bent their knees in submission, one by one. Each in turn was escorted to the Duchess to make their individual supplications and give their homage-oath. When the last of the nobles had been so sworn, she ordered them to remain on their knees while the four waiting Dukes were finally admitted to the hall.