In the Company of Gentlemen
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About this ebook
The greatest poet of the Empire of Astandalas was widely considered the infamous outlaw Fitzroy Angursell. Almost all of his poems and songs were banned, but that had the tendency merely to encourage everyone to read them. Hilarious, pointed, and scathingly topical, one of the games of all levels of society was to guess who they were truly about.
After the Fall of the Empire, both the songs and the old stories are still sung, still illegal, and still a mixed blessing. It was not until his nephew tried to impress him that Zorey, formerly a soldier of the Emperor, finally told the story of how he got the scar on his face and earned the dubious gift of Fitzroy Angursell's particular brand of immortality.
His nephew wasn't expecting the story. Zorey wasn't expecting the response.
Victoria Goddard
Victoria Goddard is a fantasy novelist, gardener, and occasional academic. She has a PhD in Medieval Studies from the University of Toronto, walked across the length of England in 2013, and is currently the sexton of an Anglican church in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
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Reviews for In the Company of Gentlemen
5 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A lovely little snippet that brings together various elements in the universe of this series of books. Easily read as a stand alone short between the bigger books.
Book preview
In the Company of Gentlemen - Victoria Goddard
One
Zorey arrived into Stoneybridge town tired, wet, and hungry, and not much inclined to dealing with his fool nephew’s most recent passion—whatever it was. He couldn’t remember what his sister had said the lad was up to this time. Falconry, maybe.
It was something she thought Zorey might be a good influence on, anyway; though perhaps it was just that she’d run through all her other friends and relatives and was left with him. She’d begged him to take the time for a visit, to make sure Colin was learning something, making good connections, anything, at the second-most expensive university in the world.
It was with some surprise that after a bath and a meal Zorey found his messenger returned from the university with his nephew in tow. The merchants he’d been guarding through the battlefields of Tezhar and East Willonby had paid him extra for night duty, so they could arrive in time for the opening of the Luchar Market.
Zorey didn’t care about the merchants or the Luchar Market or anything but the fact that he’d been on the road for two weeks, it was ten of the clock on a Saturday, and the bar wouldn’t open for another two hours. He was, however, surprised that his nephew was out of bed: not something he usually expected of students.
Colin was dressed in what Zorey presumed was the fashion at the Circle Schools – or at least among the richer set at Stoneybridge and Birckhall across the water. Everyone else was still in breeches, waistcoats, frock coats. Colin wore a short doublet of green with red dagging, with balloon sleeves, hose, and codpiece of contrasting white and black. To top it all off he wore a green velvet hat so large and pouffy that its feather kept knocking into things, even when Colin had taken it off so he could bow to his uncle.
Zorey grunted and shovelled more bread into his stomach. A dozen or so years after the Empire left Alinor and the old courtesies were coming back under strange new fashions. He was an old soldier from Imperial days: he saluted when he met a noble, called his superiors ‘lord’ and ‘lady’ (or ‘sir’ and ‘madam’, if they weren’t quite of the Quality), and left fashion to the young and foolish.
Uncle Zorey!
Colin cried, in his barony’s accents; well, he couldn’t help that. I was so glad to get your message. How long are you in town for?
Zorey yawned. Just till tomorrow. I’ve a job to take a Scholar home. Won’t be back east for a month, it’s halfway into Pfaschen.
Colin’s face fell. Despite himself Zorey felt a little flattered that his nephew wanted to spend time with him. Then he recollected that no doubt Colin would want some money or the like to tide him over to the next quarter-day.
(Although his sister had mentioned that Colin seemed to be going through less money than normal, and was afraid he’d fallen into bad company, by which she meant poor people up on scholarships.)
Not that Zorey had much money to spare, being a battered old soldier reduced to guarding nervous travellers across the mostly peaceful lands of northwest Alinor. Mostly peaceful, except when some local baron took offense at another local baron, and declared a raid or a siege or a war.
Uncle, I don’t suppose—
Ah, here it came, he thought, gulping down his coffee balefully and wishing for