Isabella watched the warriors training throughout the wide-open hall that Valerio had taken her to. On the outside, this place looked like a fancy bank. Deep inside, however, countless well-kept warriors sparred amongst each other. Isabella didnât know very much about fighting, but they didnât look clumsy or poorly trained. Rather, it reminded her of when sheâd entered the training barracks of the holy paladins.
âWhat did you call this place?â Isabella asked Valerio. She wore a large black cloak, and had stuffed all of her hair within the hood to conceal herself.
âThe Court of Condottieri,â Valerio answered, watching the people fight.
âWho are these people?â she asked him. âWhy do you think theyâre reliable?â
âIn Dovhain, the eldest son takes all,â Valerio said. âBut this tradition started in Ambrose, actually. Sons that didnât stand to inherit anything would take arms and armor and pick up warfare as a profession. They became condottieri.â He looked over to her. âThat tradition was exported here. Most of the people youâre looking at are landless nobles.â
Isabella looked again with a new perspective. She supposed that not every noble could earn a living serving as a knight for a family⦠or perhaps they simply didnât desire it. Instead, they found employment here.
âThe ships I raided at sea started hiring these people,â Valerio reflected. âThe only time we ever struggled was when condottieri were aboard a ship. There was a bounty on me in this court, for a time.â He looked over to her. âSo⦠Iâm speaking from personal experience when I say theyâre much more reliable than other mercenaries.â
Isabella played with a ring on her finger. Honestly, she didnât know what she looking for in a bodyguard. She looked at Valerio, deciding that she could rely on his insight.
âWho do you think is the best fighter among them?â Isabella asked.
âThat man,â Valerio pointed to a lithe man who seemed to move around as swiftly as a rabbit. He fought against two people on his lonesome. âBut heâd be a terrible bodyguard.â
Isabella looked at Valerio in confusion.
âGood fighting doesnât count for everything,â Valerio continued. âYou want someone with good situational awareness. Someone that can tell when something is off, who can tell when things are dangerous. Ideally, you want to avoid ending up in danger at all.â Valerio pointed to the corner. âThat man⦠heâd be good.â
Isabella followed his finger, where it finally fell upon a man who stood still in the very corner of the room. He was broad, with a thick body, thick arms, thick legs, and a thick head concealed by a helmet. He trained with a dummy, alone.
âWhy him?â Isabella asked.
âHe hasnât taken his eyes off me since I entered the room,â Valerio said. âThatâs the sort of threat assessment you need. If I were to guess, he has orcish blood. Very difficult to sneak up on orcs. They have some sort of sixth sense, and reflexes that could make a cat cry with envy.â
At Valerioâs praise, Isabella looked over to the manager decisively, and the man walked up to her.
âCould you bring the broad man over?â she asked, pointing him out. âAnd give me his name, if you would.â
âAh.â The man looked over. âHis name is Randolph. If I may be so bold, my ladyâ¦â He rubbed his hands together, choosing his words carefully. âI believe you are of quite high stock. Randolph is⦠quite unbecoming of noble sensibilities.â
âUnbecoming how?â Isabella questioned. âDo you mean baseborn? I donât care about such things.â
âNo, heâsâ¦â the manager rubbed his hands together, then said delicately, âVery sassy. And unrepentantly vulgar.â
âIs he disloyal?â Isabella asked.
âNo, never that,â the manager assured. âHeâll do precisely whatâs asked of him. Just⦠impolitely.â
Isabella looked at Valerio, who shrugged. She looked back at the manager, then said decisively, âPrepare a contract.â
***
Isabella and Valerio sat in a stately reception room not inferior to any that one might find in a noble parlor. The door opened, and Randolph walked in, his helmet off. He had a bald, blocky head marred by scars. His eyes immediately went to Valerio, and he froze in place.
âGods damn it,â Randolph said with a heavy western Dovhain accent, then walked back out and shut the door. She hadnât heard many people with a western accent. It was simple and direct, often called the âworkmanâs dialect.â
Isabella looked at Valerio questioningly. âDo you know him?â
âI tend to have that effect on those with orcish blood,â Valerio explained.
âWhy?â
âI told you. They react to danger,â he responded cryptically.
It took a few moments, but the door reopened, and Randolph inched back inside. He shut the door, standing right beside it as if ready to depart at any moment.
âPresumably Iâm not to be guarding that devil,â Randolph said, gesturing at Valerio. âIf that bloody bastard needs guards, heâs doing tripe miles above my paygrade. So, miss⦠I take it youâre my client.â
âThatâs right,â she confirmed.
Valerio rose to his feet, and Randolph reached for the doorknob. Valerio merely shot out his cuffs, then said politely, âIâll leave you to him.â
When Valerio left, Randolph pulled out a cloth and wiped his head for sweat. âBloody bones are aching after that.â He looked at her. âI hope heâs not a fixture of this job.â
âHeâs my fiancé,â Isabella responded.
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He wiped his face with one of his big hands. âAnd here I thought alcoholism was a distant prospect, not a near future.â
âWhy does he frighten you so much?â Isabella asked.
âWhy is the sky blue? Why do seagulls view my head as a perfect target?â He shook his head as he walked closer to the couch opposite her. âIf I knew the secrets of the bloody universe, I wouldnât be wasting my days away as a condottiere.â
âYou donât have any notion?â Isabella pressed. âHe said you have orcish blood.â
âMy mother said as much,â Randolph said, picking up the contract that had been drafted. âI assumed she was giving an excuse as to why I was born with this face.â He looked up. âSo, Iâm guarding the precious flower as she traipses about the capital, am I?â
Isabella nodded, impressed he read it so quickly. âIn short.â
âIf only I was born rich instead of handsome,â he said sarcastically. âVery well. Eight gold per day. I shanât barter.â
Isabella discreetly pulled a pouch out of her boots, retrieved sixteen gold coins, and set them on the table.
âFor tomorrow,â she explained. âSo you donât take on any other jobs.â
Randolph took one of the coins and bit into them, nodding just afterward.
âA wise decision, my lady. There are graveyards are full of idiots who dithered at paying my fee.â He flicked the coin. âIâll get me things.â
***
For the first time in both her lives, Isabella wandered the capital without significant oversight. She had obviously toured the streets before, but it had always been a very controlled experience. It was somewhat jarring, frankly, to be just one face among many. The many noises and sights and sounds were slightly overwhelming, butâ¦
Heâs like a human wedge, Isabella thought as Randolph walked ahead of her, clearing a path.
Randolph had already effortlessly caught a pickpocket. She hadnât brought anything worth stealing, but his competence was on display immediately. No one had as much as pushed her. Nothing seemed to slip by her guardian. She hadnât known what to expect with him, but he was already proving to be worth the gold.
Isabella finally came to a grand building that was fenced off, and heavily guarded. She told Randolph to stop, and peered beyond. The chateau seemed every bit as grand as any of the wings of the royal palace. She saw a fountain beyond, and an immaculate garden easily peer to the one where sheâd had tea with Valerio this morning.
This was Duke Albertâs art auction house.
It took a great deal to ruin a duke. Slave trading, domestic abuse, murder, kidnapping, rape⦠so long as these crimes were done to the right people, the most that would happen was a slap on the wrist or perhaps a fine. King Edgar II wouldnât care if Duke Albert was eating babies daily, so long as they werenât important babies.
âAh, the finer arts,â Randolph said, leaning up against the gate. âI, myself, am a great admirer of the works of Santiago. His morbid aestheticism and chiaroscuro of desolation speak to my deep connection with the sublime decay, and my unending fascination with our corporeal transience.â
Isabella looked at him, baffled at a few of his words.
âYou spent eight gold to take me to a bloody art show?â he continued incredulously. âIâm appreciative that youâve deigned to bestow some of your gilded purse upon my lowly person, but these places are generally quite safe.â
âYou like art?â she asked.
âI consider myself a connoisseur of the unobtainable. A dilletante, if youâre insufferably pretentious,â Randolph said, vigilantly watching the street behind them. âIâve got enough problems without throwing gold at pretty colors. Donât even have a bloody house to frame paintings at.â
Isabella looked through the gate. âThereâs a big shift coming in the art world.â She pulled her hood down lower. âPeople are tired of the grandeur and religious intensity of the paintings today. The church is corrupt, yet our art has never more splendidly depicted the gods. Itâs all devotional, paying fealty to the king and the gods as supreme figures. Those figures are faltering.â
âYou pay my fee, so I agree whole-heartedly,â Randolph said sarcastically. âYouâre a visionary, madam.â
Isabella rubbed her hands together uncertainly. She was a visionary in a manner of speaking. She had knowledge of the future. But knowing the future and executing it were very different matters.
Artists loathed working underneath Duke Albert. The moment that a new opportunity appeared, they had eagerly flocked over to different patrons in her last life. New names had risen up seemingly overnight, as all turned their focus from devotional art to new styles focusing on individualism, pleasure, beauty, self-indulgence, leisure, and intimacy.
The shift in art was a reflection of the shift from royal power to widespread factionalism, where the individual position came to matter far more than the gods or the king had.
Isabella had seen this occur in her previous life naturally. Albertâs auction house closed two years from now, and he was executed for embezzlement after trying to steal money from the crown to pay the many debts his business had accrued. It was very difficult to predict the whims of the art enjoyers, but the notoriety that sheâd accidentally gained put her in a perfect position to do so.
âArt is one of the few spheres permitted to noble women without restriction,â Isabella said after her long period of silence. âAnd itâs perhaps the only one where theyâll allow me to win.â She looked to Randolph. âI canât stay out too late. Iâd like you to do something for me when Iâm not here.â
âAsk away,â he said.
âThere are some lesser-known artists affiliated with this auction house,â Isabella said. âIâd like you to see if you canât locate them. I wrote a brief description of their appearance and their names.â She handed him a list. âAll you need to do is find out what you can.â
âDo I look like your bloody errand boy?â he crossed his arms.
âIn the right light,â she said dryly.
âTo the hells with you,â he said, but took her paper. âIâll do what I can, but donât expect much. Iâm no master sleuth.â
***
Isabella laid in her bed, staring up at her ceiling sleeplessly as she had many nights before. A great deal had happened today. She hadnât realized just how much sheâd been enjoying wandering around the capital until sheâd been brought back here. Randolph seemed reliable, and she didnât mind his crass tongue overmuch. Sheâd learned new words today, from âchiaroscuroâ to many new vulgarities. He seemed⦠worldly.
She had many more questions about Valerio, though. Why did he terrify Randolph so? What was he after? He said that it had just been instinct, but sheâd been around long enough not to buy that nonsense. Someone like him thatâd remained ostensibly neutral for all eight years of her prior life didnât just act on a whim.
Perhaps Valerio had been an unseen mover in her prior life. The thought made her uneasy.
Once Duke Albert is done with⦠I should end the engagement, she mused. I canât figure out what he wants. I donât want to be used, then tossed aside. Heâs been nothing but gracious⦠but thatâs the problem. No one does anything without expecting something in return. Not in this place, not in this life.
As Isabella rested, she heard a strange tapping noise. She turned her head to the small window. A brown woodpecker sat there, tapping at the glass. It was quiet, but difficult to ignore. For a few moments she simply hoped the bird might go away, but it persisted. She stood and walked to the window. She thought her presence might shoo it away, but it stared up at her undeterred. She tapped the glass with her nails, but still it persisted.
Isabella lifted up the window slightlyânot enough that it could enter, but enough she could touch it. She stared down at the bold bird confusedly. She didnât want to hurt it, but she needed to sleep.
âMay I come in?â it said, and she slammed the window back shut in shock.
Isabella stared at the bird, wondering if she was dreaming.