"He certainly has his father in him," Idris mused. "If someone had said fifty years ago the same thing about Dominus Patrick, they might have been right. Yet, Dominus had fatal weaknesses. Dominus could not bring true benefit to those that support him. Hecked the fundamental ingredients for that. Does your choice of Lord not invite the same ruin?
The same Lord that now sits in a prison cell, on trial? Your confidence in your ability to predict, my son, and yet you oversaw this."@@novelbin@@
"Oh, but he did not oversee this," Hod said with a waggle of his finger. "Your son visited my before the assassination attempt urred, predicting that it would happen. His only mistake was the timing. He assumed better of his opponent."
Now that bombshell caused quite a stir. The crowd shifted ufortably, and murmured to themselves. Even Jmire was shifting in his seat, squinting his eyebrows, looking like he was searching for the words to refute the ridiculousness that Hod had imed.
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But a voice rang out that put a silence to that. "I, the Minister of des, am absent from this trial. I stand merely as a witness to the events that take ce therein. Though, I can serve to a rify a fact. Verdant Idris echoed much the sameints to me. This event was expected."
Lord Idris drew back in his seat, his eyes had widened in an instant of surprise, but now he wore a calcting look. He seemed to be putting the pieces together, asking why it was they knew, wondering what exactly had urred to make them so certain. In the same instant, Lord ckthorn was struggling to do much the same – he was struggling to find any sort of significance in what had been said.
"So that''s what happened," Lord Idris mused. "An event of that sort. A change in the winds…"
"Indeed, father, one such event," Verdant said.
"But you had already sworn to this boy before that, or so I was informed. You should have spoken to me on this matter," Idris said, stating what he thought, despite the forum being so open. He did not seem to care that the others might take it for familial weakness. There was a confidence to his shrewd gaze, as though he believed they wouldn''t have the skill to take advantage of what he revealed.
"I did. I trusted in my own instincts, as you taught me to, when I was a boy, before I opposed you," Verdant said.
More silence, as Idris sat there, consideringly. Hod interrupted it. "Forgive me, Lord Idris, I cannot dwell on these matters too long. Your situation with your son is unlikely to be cleared up in this forum. However, I do hope, at the very least, you might have revised your opinion of him somewhat."
"Indeed," Lord Idris said. "It would seem my son has involved himself in something quite troublesome…" He drifted off thoughtfully, and would offer no more input after that.
"Then, we shall move on," Hod dered. "Lady ckthorn, the same thing has been said of you – that you had been ckmailed into spending time with Oliver Patrick. Is there any truth to these rumours?"
The confidence with which Lady ckthorn seemed to speak in public, one would never think she was the rather quiet person that she was. She was perfectly poised as she gave her reply, and her voice was clear and resounding. "None," she dered. "I saw him overwhelm our sword instructor, and decided that he had more to teach me than that man."
A bitingment, eliciting a fewughs from the crowd. The nobility were fond of humour at the expense of another, and Professor Heathw had not exactly been a popr man, even amongst those that he should have been allied with.
Lord ckthorn inclined his head at that. "If I saw a professor bested by a mere student, I would not have faith in such a man either. It seems bizarre to me that you punished the boy for that – weakness should have been stamped out long before such a thing could have happened."
Now that was a surprising view. Even Hod was taken off guard by Lord ckthorn''s bluntness.
"Forgive me, Lord ckthorn, but I wonder, you don''t seem to express the same dislike of Oliver Patrick as many here do…" Hod said carefully.
ckthorn shrugged. "Strength is to be admired. He killed twenty men, and Alistar Hoofless and Fabian Small? That''s a strong feat for a boy. I''m not the right man to judge, but I wouldn''t be cutting off the strong when they can have other uses."
"But you seem to be quite angry with your daughter," Hod noted.
"Indeed I am," ckthorn said, his voice regaining its thunderous quality. "I do not expect disobedience from my own. Until the day that my son can best me, I willmand my household, and I expectpliance. My daughter''s movements have been bad for our social standing, or so her mother deres. I read not into that, I listen to the wiser, and I give the order. I expect obedience."
"You were wrong, though, father," Lady ckthorn said. "You agreed with me just now, did you not? I sought instruction from the strong in matters of the sword. Would you not have done the same."
"I am not a woman," ckthorn said bluntly. "It is admirable that you study the de in your time at the Academy, but your future duties are womanly ones. You don''t sacrifice your future for hobbies."
Lasha''s mask cracked more severely at thement. She looked visibly wounded. Oliver could practically feel her anger. He''d seen how hard she''d worked, especially ofte. She''d worked harder than most men were likely to work with the sword – and she was close to achieving something impressive.
She must have been just on the edge of the Second Boundary, and at such a young age too, something that others had already relentlessly praised Oliver for.
"I disagree, Father, but I do not wish to disgrace you by speaking on such matters in a public forum," Lasha said, holding herself back, just barely. "You need only know that I sought Oliver Patrick out for my own reasons, and he taught me."