Vignette II -- Quis Custodiet
"Halt, who goes there!"
"It is I, Alban of Brenthown, Guildmaster of the Cheesemaker's Guild. I bear an exquisite masterpiece from the renown cheesemaking virtuoso..."
"You may pass, Abban... Alban of Brenthown." Alban bows deeply and simpers, "Thank you, Milord."
It has been two weeks since the birth of William, and well-wishers have come and gone in an steady out-pouring of gifts and congratulations. An onerous duty for the young new Chamber Guard, but girt with your wooden sword, you have ably held up under the rigours of the profession. As Lady Marna recovers from childbirth in the Lord's Bedchamber, very few courtiers come to wait upon the Countess that do not first announce themselves and their intentions to you. You learn a few important things, the first of which is that guards are positioned to learn lots of things, the second of which is that Mother's courtiers are a dreadfully boring procession of minor officials, advocates for local nobles and trade concerns, and other people adept at uttering long words. The second revelation does much to restrain your enthusiasm for the first.
Nevertheless, you do gain a general impression. Marna's recovery has trimmed down her court from over twenty hangers-on to only the most notable handful: Lord Thomas Scale the Chancellor seems to speak for Mother when advocates call upon her--his overhanging bushy black eyebrows and cold blue eyes do much to shorten their demands, and likewise he alone passes by your guard post unchallenged; pudgy and perfumed John Bergamot the Chamberlain always argues with ascetic Barachiel Lope the Treasurer over his expenses on servants, furniture, and the upkeep of the rooms; finally, there's Symeon Daffinois, holding the minor office of Lord Chandler and whose salient feature is his exceptional mediocrity in all things but wit. During the most heated debates over coin or storage, laws or land divisions, Symeon usually manages to agree with everyone and drop a few inoffensive wordplays that lighten the mood.
A servant hauls inside a sculpture of a mother lovingly holding a baby, remarkable in that it has been molded entirely from various cheeses. Normally, you'd be impressed, but after standing guard over your mother and baby brother for two weeks, you have witnessed a dozen renderings of the same maternal theme in the mediums of stone, wood, candlewax, pastries, and so on; by now you have written off the mother-and-child theme as extremely overused and lacking in creativity. Your little mind scours to find a proper word for that, but fails. Standing guard over courtiers has made you much more aware of language and your shortcomings in using it. You feel your speech has lately improved.
From within the chamber, the courtesies of the visit play out. "Stunning, Master Alban, simply stunning. I shouldn't ever think of eating it." The guildmaster affected hurt despair, "That would wound me most deeply, Milady, for the flavour of it is second to none, yet the sight of it, and of all other things, must pale next to you." Lord Symeon cuts in. "Quite the contrary, good master, for Milady Countess shall never be outdone in fairness of her skin, nor in fairness of her rule." After a pause, he resumes around a mouthful. "Quite flavourful. My compliments." Polite laughter ripples around the room.
A few days later, the trickle of visitors has stopped entirely, and in the growing quiet of your post, you wonder why Grandpa Erran has not yet brought your little brother a fascinating new toy from Torchester. You ask Mother where Grandpa is, and her eyes start to glisten. "Oh, my sweet, it was a horrible day for us, and for the Kingdom. Daddy and Grandpa went to heaven together. I thought you knew..."
You are still fighting back the tears, when a young woman with a rather pendulous set of attributes sways into view and approaches. "Halt. Who goes there?"
Nanna briskly comes up behind the woman. "This is Jenny Milch, the wet nurse, young Lord Stone. We are here to take baby William to the nursery. Your mother is a very busy woman with a County to rule. We can't all play at waving wooden sticks around from dawn to dusk!"
A response to the suggestion that Isaac should be protective of William. It also gives me an excuse to show a little of the court and where William will spend his time from now on. I'd venture to say he's safer with Nanna than in the middle of the barracks.