"Speaking in Rakahi"
"Speaking in Common"
7th of Ashan, 718 "Speaking in Common"
It was a grim day. The sky was grey cloud. The temperature was frigid. Snow drifted down from above.
News had come from Rynmere to the Eastern Settlement. It had come at sixth bell. The news was that the guards stolen from the duchies season-last had been found. They had been found dead, strung up on pikes, in the centers of towns.
The duchies of Rynmere were in mourning. The people of Dewwich, who were a kind and sympathetic folk, were dressed in dark clothes. It was very quiet in and around the little village, nearly funereal. Normally sound rolled over the hills, echoes of birdsong or the rustling of grass or the clopping of hooves on cobbled roads. But today the snow fell in silence.
Hart ran the road from Dewwich to Tristan's Estate and back again. It was half past seven; he'd been running since he'd heard the news at three-quarters past six. It was terribly cold but the movement and his coat and scarf and gloves kept him warm enough.
Mostly he jogged. He could jog from Dewwich to the Estate in twenty bits. Sometimes he ran. If he wanted, he could run from the village to the Estate in half the time it took to jog. Every ten bits or so he sprinted. He bent forward against the muffled snow and cold and he ran, full-out, as if someone was after him. His boots tore at the frost-soft ground. His breath steamed in front of his mouth.
Running made thinking clearer, sometimes. This morning, Hart had been thinking a lot. About the news. About the guards who had been slain. About VII, and the RCA, and the king. And about the mages.
Someone had to do something. That was what he kept coming back to, as the thoughts swirled like the falling snow through his head. Someone had to do something.
Someone. Someone had to.
If there was one thing he'd learned from Sarah Dj'pyrj's execution in Cylus, it was that sometimes, that someone had to be him. But he didn't know what to do about it.
So Hart kept thinking, and he ran as he thought.
---
Sometime after eighth break, Hart knocked on the front door of Tristan's Estate. His hair was damp from sweat, collecting frost in the cold. His legs burned and ached.
The person who let him in was a member of the house staff. Hart said he wasn't here to see Tristan, he was in the area and he'd thought to stop by and retrieve his things. The staffsperson led him to the room that had been his. The bed was perfectly made with fresh blankets, pillows, linen.
Hart hadn't left much behind when he'd gone. His boots, mostly. They'd been put away in the closet. They were dusty, and he took them out. He tied the laces together and slung them around his neck.
In the closet was an old bag of dog food that he had completely forgotten. Hart had had a dog named Jack. The food must have been an arc old. Hart looked at the bag for long moments, struck by the dust that had gathered on it in a way that he had not been struck by the dust on the boots.
"We'll put it outside for the animals," he finally said.
He made to leave the Estate, the dusty boots the only trophy of the homesickness he felt being here. Then he thought again. "Would you mind taking me to Sintih?" he asked. The staffsperson led him to the room Sintih was in.
Hart thought it was a study, for the maps and books that lined the walls. A large table full of spread papers took center place in the middle of the room. Hart stood in the doorway.
"Sintih," he said, announcing himself to the guard. "It's Hart." As if Sintih might have forgotten him. "You've heard the news?" Hart asked. "Are you terribly busy?" Sintih could have been; Hart didn't know how the slaying of hundreds of guards in Rynmere might affect security here in Oakleigh. "I thought I'd stop by and get my boots," he explained, indicating the shoes slung around him. "And if it's not too much to ask, I wondered if you might want to take a run with me."
Hart wasn't done running. He wasn't particularly good at any physical enterprise other than sailing, but he was resolute and he would run until he could no longer stand to do it. "Or we could walk, if you would prefer," he amended. "Or ride? I was thinking of buying a horse sometime soon, and exploring Oakleigh."
"What do you say? The countryside's quiet this morn." In fact, it was almost eerie. "It's snowing and cold. Not the best weather for a run, but not the worst, I'd say."