rippling mirror bright as if it had left the maker yesterday. Only the golden hilt showed the signs of years of careful devoted polishing. Wordlessly, Petro Dorma held out the letter.
It didn’t take Marco long to read it.
I send into the keeping of House Dorma one of the honor-blades of Dell’este, in token of the bond now between us. Young Marco will know how it is to be cared for.
“Your grandfather says you know how to care for this sword.”
Marco nodded, not able to speak. There was a hidden message there from Duke Dell’este, a message Milord Petro could not possibly read. But Marco knew—and the implications turned his life upside down in the single span of time it had taken Petro to free the blade from its silk wrapping.
Petro Dorma was no fool, of course. If he could not read the message, still, he knew that one was there—and that it must be portentous for his house. So he took Marco’s nod at face value, and set the sword back down in its silken nest.
Dell’este steel—Dell’este honor. There is no going back now. Not for Grandfather. Not for the Old Fox.
“Tell me what you need,” Dorma said simply. “I gather this isn’t the sort of thing you just leave in the armory or hang on the wall.”
“A—p-place,” Marco stammered. “I need a place for it, somewhere where it’s safe, but where it can be seen by—by—” He flushed. “By the House-head. You, milord. You’re—supposed to be reminded by it, milord.”
Petro nodded thoughtfully. “Will that do?” he asked, pointing behind and to Marco’s right.
There was an alcove between two windows, an alcove currently holding an unimpressive sculpture of the Madonna. The alcove was approximately a foot wider than the blade was long.
“Yes, milord,” Marco said immediately. “Yes. Milord—that’s perfect.”
A few days later, the thing was done. And he was summoned into Dorma’s presence again.
Marco held his breath, and with all the concentration he could command, placed the tm