... " She told me some things to look for.
"That's not much."
"Tell him that, too. His problem is that he sat in a box for a year and didn't move. Kellen's fault - he was in good shape until then, from what Rosem told me."
"Rosem talked to you?" That surprised me; from what little I'd seen of him, I'd heard even less.
"Rosem started in the Blue Guard," she said. "He fought in Oranstone under your father - one of the reasons he doesn't like you much. Kellen is well-schooled, he knows both Shavig and Oranstone style in sword and hand-to-hand. Try fighting him with Axiel's dwarven moves."
"They're really better for someone a little shorter than I am," I said.
She snorted. "Maybe so - but you still managed to set me on my butt with them a time or two. Now go find him. I think he's still sulking in the east wall tower."
The east wall tower was the only place in Hurog you could see the sea. Other people spent time there, staring at the waves where the White River met the ocean, but Kellen was alone when I found him. From the look he turned on me, I thought he preferred it that way.
"Come practice with me," I said.
"No." He returned his gaze to the open window. "Thank you all the same."
Since we'd left Estian, his face had tanned. Hair dark as rich earth had been tamed and trimmed. Only the thinness of the body beneath the rich tunic and over-robe gave any hint of what he'd been a short month ago.
But inside ... I knew how deceptive the outer coverings could be. If he weren't strong and we weren't careful, we'd have nothing to put upon the throne. Tisala was right, Rosem was the crutch that would let him survive. Kellen needed someone who cared for him because he was Kellen and not their only hope to defeat Jakoven.
"It wasn't a suggestion," I said mildly. "You need to hit something and so do I. There's no one in the training ring by the stables." We only used the ring for a few months in the spring with the young horses. "And you can't afford to let your sword arm weaken any further."
His eyes flashed hotly. "You overstep yourself, Wardwick of Hurog."
I raised my eyebrow. "Do I?"
Anger swept over me that I had not been able to avoid putting the fate of Hurog in the hands of this man. He was so badly damaged he might take the rest of us down with him. He had to be strong.
I bent down and set my face close to his, so he backed up involuntarily.
"I think you are weak," I said. "A weak man cannot save Hurog for me. I won't have my people destroyed because I was worried about stepping on royal toes. Now get yourself down those stairs and take your attitude into the ring." I almost didn't recognize the voice I used as mine; I sounded so like my father in one of his killing rages.
His eyelids fell until his lashes veiled his eyes, but it was anger, not fear, that made his shoulders tremble as he preceded me down the stairs. I shadowed him through the bailey, out of the inner gates, and past the stables to the training ring.
The fence was solid so a young horse wouldn't have anything to distract him, and taller than I so a frightened animal wouldn't be tempted to try and jump over it. It made an excellent place to fight if you didn't want to be observed.
The ring had been scraped after the heavy snow, but there was a new skiff on the ground, and I could see the evidence of Kellen's previous practices in the frozen earth.
Kellen pulled off his heavy over robe and tossed it over the top of the fence. Slowly he pulled his gloves off and drew his sword. He walked to the center of the ring before he turned to face me with the relaxed air of a man who had been in many similar battles.
I had no over-robe to cast aside, no gloves to pull off casually to intimidate my opponent, so I just drew my sword and stalked the man I wanted to serve as my high king.
Take him down fast, Stala had advised me, and hard. So I did.
The dwarves were short, but their strength, like mine, was tremendous. I've heard men say that dwarves are slow - but that's what comes