This is my first f/f piece, and it's not too explicit but full of innuendo- not lewd jokes, but you'd have to be an idiot not to guess what is happening. It's a crossover between the Circle of Magic quartet and the Protector of the Small series. I've set this post-The Will of the Empress and post-Lady Knight, so there will be some artistic license going on.


Kel had only cursed the Kings name twice in her life. The first was when she'd been put on probation for her first year as a page, and the second…

The second was being assigned to the Emelan delegation.

Lady Alanna, who had been standing near her, barked in startled laughter, causing some of the nearby nobles to glance at her. A purple-eyed glare had them whirling around, flustered. These Emelanese nobles were unused to the Lioness and Kel really couldn't blame them for their trepidation.

"Such language." The sword mistress remarked, grinning. "Usually you're one to suffer in silence."

Kel scowled, flicking a piece of chin length brown hair from her face. "I just don't know what my being here does for anyone." Kel muttered, glancing around the large hall. "I'm a diplomats daughter, not a diplomat."

King Jonathan had recently opened talks with the Duke Vedris; Tortall was reeling from the Scanran War and needed the steady supply of trade ships to replenish his coffers. He'd sent the usual diplomats along with a few of the trade guild advisors and secretaries, enough to establish a decent embassy in Emelan. That she could understand, being her parent's child. What she could not comprehend was her Kings decision to send both lady knights overseas- it wasn't like she was going to miraculously come up with a solution to fix everyone's problems.

Indeed, the talks were restricted to the pertinent officials only, so Kel was left with little else to do but train in the courtyards all day and attend the balls she loathed by evening.

"Didn't make a difference to Jon, did it?" Alanna shrugged. "He probably figured you'd keep me from doing something stupid."

Kel smiled slightly. "Even the Great Mother herself couldn't do that, Lady Alanna."

Alanna rolled her eyes. "It's not like Emelan is so bad." She mused, taking a sip of the wine she'd snagged off the tray of a passing servant. "A lot like Tortall, only filled to the brim with mages."

"That makes you less prone to trouble?" Keladry laughed. "The dances are still-"

"Boring?" Alanna interjected. "Your hatred of dancing is a really bad attitude to take from your knight master, Lady Kel-"

"Raoul has improved." Kel protested, feeling the need to protect her mentor in his absence.

Alanna snorted. "Buri's whipped him into shape, that's for sure. He used to be infamous for his hatred of frivolity, now it seems he's passed that attitude onto his squire."

"Lady Alanna, he still hides behind the drapes."

"Well, he never quite stopped." Alanna admitted ruefully. "But marriage has certainly agreed with him, as he doesn't do it near as often." She stopped short, eyebrows raised as she watched the younger woman shift slightly, like listening to the Kings Champion natter on about their very physically affectionate friends made her uncomfortable.

She felt no mercy as she waited for the opportune moment, and leapt for the kill.

"Got a man at home, Kel?"

Kel managed to avoid spitting the juice on her tunic, breeches, or any of the nobles that hobnobbed around them. "W-what?"

"You heard me." Alanna smirked. "Last I heard some soldier boy was sweet on you. What was it Nealan called him? Cousin Dom-"

"I doubt anything you've heard is true." Kel said primly, wiping at her lips with a handkerchief. "Certainly nothing about my love life."

Chuckling, Alanna held her hands up in defeat, letting the subject drop. "I'm just saying, Emelan's a good place to have a little fun before you go back to shoving your celibacy into conservative faces. Even the conservatives here are progressive. At least they wouldn't crucify you here for taking a lover."

Kel cleared her throat, struggling to retain her Yamani composure, before directing their conversation onto lighter things, prolonging the inevitable call back into society. Kel, as a lesser member of the delegation, wasn't required to play nice but the Kings Champion had to be gracious, benevolent, patient and above all, she needed to suck up to important nobles.

"Well," she sighed, setting her glass aside. "I'm getting dirty looks from out diplomat-in-arms. I'd better go mingle." Saluting lazily, Kel watched her friend disappear into the sea of taffeta, velvet, and silk.

Left alone, Kel sat herself in an alcove out of the way. She had a clear view of the dance floor from her relaxed position, but she felt out of the way enough that she could let her face relax into slack contentedness. She felt her eyes close as she based in the comfortable warmth and the soft notes of the mandolin that carried the tune of a traditional Tortallaln waltz in honor of the delegation.

"Do you mind if I sit here?" Kel blinked her eyes and looked up. She was surprised by how far she had to crane her neck to see into the womens face and slightly gratified that someone else shared her problems with height.

A dark skinned young women about her own age looked back calmly. Her skin was far darker than the copper of the Yamani or the nut-brown of the K'miri. No, Kel decided, it looked more like the darkness of that foreign drink coffee that was so coveted nowadays. Her equally dark hair was done in braids, every small twist of hair braided and tucked behind her ears.

In her defense, it really wasn't her fault she could barely recall her own name.

"No, of course not." Kel managed to remember. "Uh- it's Keladry of Mindenlan. Just Kel, if you please."

The women reached out and clasped Kel's hand. Her grip was firm and the muscles in her arms just as developed as Kel's, with almost identical calluses on her palms.

"Pleased to meet you."She said, smiling slightly, white teeth flashing against dark lips. "Daja Kisubo. Daja to my friends." She gave Kel another warm smile.

"What, no title?" Kel teased, feeling light.

Daja smiled slightly. "I have some powerful friends." She shrugged and Kel noticed the tunic that fitted nicely over her shoulders was of good make, with delicate embroidery that would've made Lalasa weep with envy. She was also wearing breeches, same as Kel. "Comes with magework."

Kel blinked. The women in front of her looked no older than her own bare 21 years. A mage powerful enough to have friends at Court at so young an age was almost unheard of as usually only those with full mastery had such influence.

Of course, Kel thought, I'm measuring everything by Tortallan standards. Perhaps here there isn't an age limit is lowered or she's a prodigy.

"And you?" she heard Daja ask. "What is it you do, Keladry of Mindelan?"

"I'm a lady knight." Kel said, sitting back. "A member of his Highness, King Jonathans forces."

Daja only nodded slightly, her eyes flicking to the impressive array of scars visible on Kel's hands and the scent of oiled metal that clung to her, pinging off her magical senses. She shivered, shifting slightly. She hated it when her own magic turned her body against her!

Kel was still talking. "We're here for the rest of the summer. Our ambassador says he'll have the trade agreements squared away by the time the Northern winds come through-"

"You're not staying?" Daja was surprised at how disappointed she sounded and she flushed darkly when Kel raised an eyebrow.

"Should I stay?" she asked dryly.

Daja honestly didn't know how Kel managed to pitch her voice like that, but it had a profound effect on her. Her own body snapped taught, her hands clenched in her laps. She swallowed- her mouth was suddenly dry. Kel herself seemed surprised, but not alarmed by her companions anxiety.

She supposed if she'd been anyone else from Tortall, she'd have been disgusted by her own attraction- lovers of the same gender weren't exactly encouraged within the nobility, after all- but she found that she really didn't care. The Yamani hadn't really cared either and Kel found that, as usual, the culture she grew up with was talking more sense.

Considering Daja's effect on her, Kel didn't really think she'd care even if she'd been raised in Tortall her entire life.

"Ahem." Kel coughed, her cheeks pink. She looked across the dance floor, painfully aware of Daja radiating heat at her side.

"D-do you want to take a walk?" Daja managed, her voice cracking slightly.

Each caught the eyes of their friends. Kel watched, unamused, as Alanna grinned at her wickedly, mouthing something obscene at her from where she was chatting with the Minister of Agriculture. Daja sent a quick goodbye to her family and shut them out, not wanting them to worry but definitely not wanting them to see what she was thinking about right now. Briar, not wanting to be deterred, caught her eye from across the room at stuck his tongue out lewdly, leering at her as he fought his own laughter.

Daja flushed darkly, ducking her head- and kept it down even as she walked arm in arm with Kel out of the hall.