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Fit for Life

Kuli,
This wasn't a Chapter - it was a Novella!

An hour and a half over lunch, NOT to finish, and now I'm sure I needed over an hour to finish.

I can't begin to recount all of the actions an interactions.

Perhaps what struck me the most, was the compassion Osvaldo showed, perhaps for the Lady, but I think much more for Cristobal.

The final Mass with the Franciscan we extremely powerful, and meaningful.
You did a wonderful job with the liturgy and the homily, as it were.

And, while Osvaldo may have had Cristobal, and his double pain in mind, HE brought clarity to the Lady; between his mercy and the statements of the Capitan, she came to understand that she might find forgiveness with the Lord God, almighty. She also came to understand that these new strangers were not heathens, but God Fearing folk as well.

The poisoning attack was well staged - it's too bad they couldn't get to the assassin before he injected our stand-in thief and almost killed him.
Love the power the the dhruid. I also thoroughly enjoyed, gruesome as it may be, the Justice served on the Lord who put the contract out on his Lord Heir.

I haven't forgotten the coal and steel back at "the ranch" with Devan and Ryan;
Or the good fortune that Anaph has come into - pink Galmat in abundance!

I have to be a little careful - since I got an e-mail with 1st post since I'd visited story - and it happened to be an "oops" post - there was a lot going on in that oops, lol.

The council meetings were interesting, the politics behind the governance.
My mind is still reeling from everything you packed into these chapters.
:=D: :D :wave:
 
OMG! MAJOR Overload! And, I delighted in every, single, word of it!! :=D: :=D: :=D:

The intricacies, innuendo, insight, of Court Politics. The intertwining of Law, Church, and State. The meting out of Justice and Compassion, plus the unyielding deliverance of rightful punishment to a True Traitor (So, what happens with the "Third Lord"?)! ALL expertly presented and craftily related! (ww)

AND, new resources in ores, animals, (re-aligned) vassals ... revealed/related "close encounters" with the Foe ... extensions in Druid, and Healer, experience/knowledge ... (I think that Young Guild Member deserves a Knighthood, eventually!) ..|

And, then, there's Miguel! My goodness! Just think what he could teach Casey, Esteban, and "the cats"! (!w!)

But, that's going to have to wait ... An Expedition is ON! Can the remains of the House of Aragon be all that far away ... given the female lineage in the House of Escobar?? And, what of those Lumina is in search of??? :confused:

DAMN!, Khuli!! This is Beyond "GOOD"!!! (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv2:
 

Southward​


The House Guard company stood at attention as Osvaldo passed them for inspection. Their ranks lacked six of their full number, men who’d fallen in an ambush on their way through the Hills. The ambushers hadn’t known about rifles, though; those first casualties had been the end of it, as Tanner’s Mounted Riflemen shot from their horses, dropping the first wave without needing orders, and the second in coordinated fire. If there’d been any other component to the attack, it hadn’t materialized.

“You all look very fine”, Osvaldo told the company. “Guard well your fallen.” The bodies were with them, field-wrapped in their own bedrolls filled with herbs, riding in a wagon purchased without haggling from a farmer.

“We’ll be back to home, then”, the Captain told Osvaldo, “my Prince.”

“No, captain”, Lady Rosalina said. “Go straight to the estate of Lord Mendez. You know it?”

“Of course, my lady.”

She nodded. “Good. Don’t use the road; follow the cart paths and game trails. There are those who would see you never return home.”

Sadness washed across the officer’s face briefly. “You are certain, my lady?”

“Yes, captain – things are that bad. Lord Ortega is Regent, but those who did not vote for him will seek to weaken him.”

“Will it be war, mother?” Osvaldo asked, sounding very much like a boy and not much like a Prince Heir at that moment.

She closed her eyes and bowed her head. Seconds passed before she looked at her son again. “Osvaldo, it would have been war no matter what. If Lard Rigel hadn’t come, and you had been killed, those loyal to our heritage would have fought the usurper. Had you lived and been confirmed Heir, they would have sought to bring you down, and it would have come to sending armies to drag them from their castles.
“By no means is it your fault. Your father fought against it, but the rot has been growing since before your great-great-grandfather’s time: struggling to just survive was past, the Refuge began to prosper, and with prosperity came contention.” She shrugged. “It has been so, I think, since Creation.”

Rita nodded. “I’d say you’re right.”

Lady Rosalina nodded acknowledgment. “Osvaldo, when you thought you could twist the Council by will and threat, you were being foolish. Yet you reached a place we never could have following my path: a loyal lord respected by all is now Regent. Those who would have followed whoever was Regent will follow him, not our enemies. More, you swayed no small number by your courage and because you not only dressed like your father, but spoke like him.
“You, Lard Rigel, by force of will and... I will not say deception, for they deceived themselves, but by leading them astray using only truth, removed two of our greatest foes. Perez, at heart, is one who follows what works, and he would rather be a wealthy vassal of a mighty prince than risk all by standing against that prince. Ramos follows him unhappily, but without Perez, he would fail even among their allies, and he knows this. He is no man of politics; speaking baldly, he understands it as little as you, Lard Rigel.”

Rigel was getting tired of the “Lard” business. “Please, Lady – just ‘Rigel’.”

She smiled. “Then I am Rosalina.”

“And you have more to say.”

She chuckled. “Yes. Son, perhaps the greatest thing you did, all unknowing, was to put old Lopez where he had to publicly concede that you are the rightful Heir. So long as he remained silent, many would have played the game, pretending ignorance. But now there is no excuse: he made plain the law; now all among the lords must recognize you.”

“Which just makes some of them want to kill me even more, mother”, Osvaldo pointed out sardonically.

Rosalina laughed. “That could not be avoided.”

“And what cannot be avoided must be boldly faced”, Osvaldo responded. He went still as a statue, then turned slowly to face Rigel. “Lard, what is this voice which tells me such things ?”

Rigel tapped the Sword of Escobar. “I cheated, back when you challenged Captain Alonzo. You might have had more skill, but he had size, experience, and reach on you. Remember when I grasped your wrist, and the sword, with bare hands? I got it to dump sword knowledge and skill into you. Those little things, like getting your enemy mad so he’ll make mistakes – I like that one! – are from the man who left this sword for me to find. He wasn’t just brave and loyal, he knew more about warfare than... than probably your entire House now.” He chuckled. “‘What cannot be avoided must be boldly faced’ sounds like good strategic advice.”

“Good political advice, also”, Rosalina noted. “So you made some who wanted to kill you more eager? You made many who would have merely stood by ready instead to get in their way, and some perhaps to reach to foil them directly. You gained guardians, and added” – she paused a moment – “I meant to say ‘no foes’, but there are one or two who did not like Francisco your father, and because you were so like him, will not like you. But they are of little account.”

“So does Ortega have the upper hand?” Rigel inquired.

Lady Escobar shook her head. “He has more supporters, but our enemies have more force. Of the seven great towns on the Oval, they hold three for certain, and will easily seize two more. The sole one we might hold is San Tesifón. But the main Guardian fortress is there, and they will not give over easily.”

“Maybe we shouldn’t be leaving”, Austin suggested. The Lady of the House shook her head.

“No, my son is correct: only here is he truly safe. No enemy will be able to follow; if they could follow, they could not catch us; if they caught us, they have no force to defeat L– Rigel’s rifles.”

“And while we’re exploring, Osvaldo is going to learn everything that Scout Chen and Captain Tanner and I can teach him”, Rigel stated.

“And Miguel”, Oran added.

“Where is Miguel?” Chen asked. “His horse is still back there empty. Well, it has his gear, just not him.”

“He’s going to meet us....” Oran began. “He said before we left the hills!”

Rigel cursed and signaled for a stop. Tanner immediately deployed the First and the Fifth defensively. “So he ran into some trouble”, Rigel said, glaring at Osvaldo as if it were the Prince Heir’s fault. “Now we wait.”

Chen launched himself from the saddle and pulled Osvaldo from his. The Prince Heir protested volubly. Chen pinned him quickly. “Lesson”, he pronounced, face stern, “when attacked – fight back!” He let go and rolled clear.

Forty minutes later the lessons came to an end at a cry from Oran. “There! Someone’s running!”

Rigel didn’t hesitate. “If it’s him, let’s go get him and not wait”, he growled. Oran and Austin joined him as he turned Tornado toward the direction Oran had pointed.

Rigel was just thinking he’d spotted Miguel, if it was Miguel, running from between two hills, when Oran had more news: “Someone’s chasing him. They’re gaining.” Rigel kicked Tornado into a full gallop.

Before long Oran confirmed it was Miguel. “And he’s wounded”, the Scout added. Rigel was just starting to be able to count the pursuers, and see for himself that they were gaining. All he could do was keep on.

But it wasn’t all Austin could do. “Hya!” cried the squire, tapping his great stallion with his heels. Titanium erupted as no other horse could, gaining a length on the other two in his first great leap forward. The two streaked ahead, the horse’s great reach covering a fifth more ground than either Tornado or Apache with each stride.

He’d covered half the ground to Miguel when the pursuers reacted. One had a bow; foolishly he wasted an arrow that fell far, far short. “Two can play at that game”, Rigel muttered, “but I can reach that far!” He slowed Tornado enough that he could pull his rifle from its scabbard. Still riding, down to a canter, he checked chamber and round, flipped off the safety, and looped his arm through the sling. By the time he got Tornado to a stop, he was close enough to make out faces. He picked the closest one, projected the man’s path, lined up, and waited until the head arrived at the point which put his sights at the right lead distance. He squeezed the trigger, cycled the bolt to get another round in, and swung to the third man, the archer, who was stopped again and putting an arrow to string. Float the head on the sights, allow for range, squeeze.... As Rigel worked the bolt again, he looked and noted that the first man was nowhere to be seen. He hoped that meant he was down for good, fertilizing the earth. The second man was approaching the first; he knelt.... It was too good an opportunity to pass up. Rigel sighted, squeezed, and this time watched: the back top of his target’s head blew apart. The man hadn’t moved noticeably during the flight time, which meant Rigel had been off a good eight centimeters.

The other targets had figured it out, and were fleeing. For good measure, Rigel put a piece of lead in the ass of the man bringing up the rear. When the man fell, then got back up, Rigel felt sick at what he’d done: with the level of medicine the Escobars had, that wound could kill – slowly and painfully. His other targets hadn’t felt a thing; a head blown off doesn’t leave time for pain to register.

Austin reached down and grabbed Miguel’s wrist. The Escobar man’s grip was weak. The squire had heard the rifle shots, and knew they were Rigel’s; he looked to see how close the pursuers were just in time to see the archer’s head vanish and a cloud of red mist take its place. If any of the bad guys were close enough to be a danger, after that he figured Rigel would remove them, so he slid down and helped Miguel into the saddle before climbing up behind him. “Where are you hurt?” he asked.

“Shoulder. Arm. Back.” The words came through clenched teeth.

“Nothing broken?” Austin started off at a walk.

“No.”

“Hang on”, Austin ordered. He took Titanium quickly to a canter. Oran swung in and joined him, and together they rejoined Rigel.

Miguel passed out before they got back to the expedition. Lumina didn’t mind; an unconscious patient had advantages for her. “Laceration, puncture, tear, severed tendon”, she reported. “Nasty fight, hands and a blade. That tendon’s going to take a lot – I can do it and kill any infection, but that’s it if I’m going to ride.”

“And your patient?” Rigel asked.

“Nothing faster than a walk. Give me a few hours, I’ll deal with the tear, and he’ll be good for a canter.” The Healer’s glance at Austin wasn’t quite a rebuke, though to him it felt like one.

“You did your best”, Rita said to hm softly. “And you were right – get your wounded away from the enemy and to safety.” Austin nodded. That was what he thought, but somehow when Rita said it, it sounded like it was The Truth.

Sir Patrick was ready with Lumina’s honeyed herb tea when she finished. She was last into the saddle. Rigel held them to a slow walk for half an hour while she recovered some before picking up the pace. Oran kept watch to the rear.

Everyone was itching to know what had happened to Miguel.



“Lord Ryan – we have iron!” The messenger from the forge dropped a three-sided bar on Ryan’s work table. “Fifty of these!”

“Can we turn it into steel?”

The messenger nodded. “Master Kinner says enough for fifty rifles and a number of tools they need.”

Ryan sat back with a sigh. Their trickle of nickle and other metals for steel had been a source of frustration because they’d lacked iron to go with them – now they were a frustration because they had iron, but not enough of the other metals for high-quality steel. “Any news from the nickle mine?”

“Metal soon. There was an old vent, as you guessed. The Riders built a fire and kept pushing it back, until there was nowhere for the demon spiders to go but the very back. Then they used oil and crossbows.” He grinned; the messenger’s shoulder patch said he was a Smithhall apprentice. “So in ten days we can make more steel.”

“Tell Kinner to make his tools, and just half those rifles. Get all the smiths all the tools they need – they work faster when they have the right ones.” The messenger nodded, muttered the message to himself, repeated it – correctly – to Ryan, and headed back.

“Enough rifles for two more squads”, Rigel said to the open window. “Conal can finally have his, and I can start up the Sixth. Good thing I got Tanner’s evals before he left, huh?” The window didn’t answer; it never did, though it was a good listener.



Miguel awoke nude under a linen sheet. Automatically he started to sit up, but dropped back in anticipation of pain – pain that never came. He wiggled his left arm, then his right; his right leg, then his left. He lifted his head and dropped it down, then slowly sat up – and grinned. Nothing hurt, not a thing. Healers, he decided, were definitely gifts from God.

“Thank you”, Lumina told him with a smile.

Miguel blushed. “I didn’t know I was talking.”

She laughed softly. “It happens. Any pains?”

He grinned enough for three people. “None. You’re an angel.”

“I’m just Lumina. Now: you need to move slow and easy the next three days – no jumping or running, don’t lift anything heavy, no wrestling. Your wounds are healed, but they can tear again. Understand?”

Miguel nodded. “Yes. I get to be lazy.” He flashed a grin. “But there was value.”

“Good – the value, and the... being lazy.” She got up and handed him a leather bag. “Your clothes – dress slow; if there’s any pain at all, holler.”

“But... “ Miguel frowned. “Didn’t you heal them all the way?”

“Rarely. Miguel, I keep a reserve of energy, in case someone else needs it. If by lights out there haven’t been any others in need, I’ll give your worst injury another Healing. By morning it would be like it never happened – but you still have to be ‘lazy’ for three days.”

“I understand. Where’s my tent?”

“I don’t know. You’re going to Rigel’s first, anyway, to tell your story.”


Rigel let Miguel get seated comfortably. “So”, he then asked, “start at the beginning: what did you accomplish; how did it help us?”

Miguel looked nervous. “Lard Rigel, most I cannot tell – it is Guild seal. But I can tell you what will happen.”

Rigel’s expression was half grin, half grimace. “I can settle for that.”

“Thank you. In San Tesifón, the Guild will aid Lord Ortega. I promised them plunder. They will do small things constantly against enemy lords. They will aid once or twice in something big. A message saying this will get to Lord Ortega.
“In San Isidro, the same. That is the next town left around the Oval”, he explained. “In San Orofino, they will aid only once, for a guarantee of three gold duros for each leader and one for each who aids. In the others, they will do only small things, unless they see an opportunity that to them looks good.
“I didn’t talk to them in Tarentino – I was jumped by twelve. Eight lived to give chase. I killed two in ambush. Six followed me out through the gate. You killed two, or three?” He shook his head. “I didn’t want to kill them, but I wished to live.” For all his bravado, Miguel now looked haunted.

“Every man owns himself”, Rigel said, focused on Miguel. “No one else can decide what to do with his life. Everyone has the right to live. If someone tries to take that life away, that’s theft. But it’s also a surrendering of rights: someone who says, ‘I will kill this man’, has declared that by his rules of ownership, it is right to kill someone – and it is acceptable that someone be killed.
“But that man is a ‘someone’. By his actions he’s said it’s all right to kill someone – so he’s said it’s all right to kill him. So by attacking you, trying to kill you, they gave you permission to kill them.” Rigel paused for a pair of seconds. “So, Miguel, you didn’t do anything wrong – they told you it was agreeable to them if you killed them, and you did.”

“That’s crazy”, Tanner muttered.

Rita shook her head in disagreement. “It makes sense. The one thing we really know in this world is that we exist – ‘I think, therefore I am’, really means ‘I observe that there is someone thinking, and since I am observing, I exist.’ When we look at our bodies, we notice that we’re the only ones who can command them. No one else can think, ‘I’ll lift Tanner’s left foot’, and have it lift – you’re the only one who can do that. And no one else can think thoughts in your head.
“So you’re in command of your own mind and body.” She chuckled and shrugged. “Okay, maybe not totally in command, but the thing is, no one else is in command at all. So – you own yourself. And every other person owns himself, or herself. That means the basic rule of actions between people is that I’ll show you the way I want my ownership to be honored by the way I treat you. Other people won’t always honor that, but when they don’t, they’re telling you how they want to be treated, or at least how they think it’s okay for them to be treated. So Rigel’s right, Miguel – you didn’t do anything wrong.”

“So did I tell them it was okay to kill me, when I killed some of them?”

Rita smiled. “An important question. I say no, because all you were doing was following their rules. You never really got a chance to show them your rules. But here’s something important: no one really wants to be hurt, or robbed, or anything. People just want to be left alone to do what they want. So the way to go is to figure that everyone’s rules are like that, until they show you otherwise.”

“Then they should have figured I didn’t want to hurt people, unless I started attacking people?” Miguel asked.

“Until you started attacking people who hadn’t attacked you”, Rigel corrected. “Someone attacks you, you can do whatever you want to stop them – because you own yourself, and they don’t own you.”

“Brilliant”, Chen said in admiration. “Ethics one-oh-one, by Rigel and Rita.”

“Something like that”, Rigel answered. “Anyway – so the thieves and all are ready to help Lord Ortega.” He chuckled. “Weird to have the ‘bad guys’ on our side, but... okay. But that’s not our worry right now – we have exploring to do. We want to meet the people Antonio learned about, we want to meet the people Lumina learned about, we want to meet anyone else who’s south of here.
“Now, how about some dinner?”

Lady Escobar took her leave after a few words with Miguel. “Can’t stay for dinner?” Rigel asked.

She smiled. “No – Rigel. Captain Ortiz has gone his way. I go mine now – I have my reasons. I have my four men, and my ‘Amazons’, and they are enough. Despite all contention and dispute among us here from time to time, one thing has always been true: should a man attack a noble lady, all become his enemies. I shall be safe.”

“Then why send Captain Ortiz away? Why not keep him and his men?”

Rosalina regarded him. “A lord would risk having false bandits fall on a group, to kill many men, then ‘discover’ the lady of birth, and ‘flee’ their ‘mistake’. With but four men and four ‘lady attendants’, there can be no claims of failure in knowing who I and mine are. None can have known I would send Ortiz away, so there will be no traps for him.”

“You’re trusting a lot in a custom.”

“Some customs, Earl Rigel, are stronger than law. Now I must go; I would reach my destination before nightfall.”

Rita and Rigel watched her go. He’d given her one of his gentle, and dependable, mounts. It was blockier than most of their horses, so it matched the work horses which were all the Escobars had, so it wouldn’t immediately arouse suspicion, while giving her the speed to escape any pursuers, if she needed to flee. It was all she’d allowed him to do for her.

“She’s right, you know”, Rita told him. “Think: Spanish culture has a high regard for ladies anyway. When the Escobars came here, their House was at risk of extinction: women became prizes to be protected, for the sake of the House. That kind of thing lasts beyond when it’s needed. With those two strands, a tradition of guaranteeing safety for all women isn’t surprising, and of war over endangering a noble woman makes good sense.” She caught his chin with a finger and turned his head. “She’ll be fine.”


The land looked just like it had on their first journey: kilometers of grass in every direction, clusters of oak trees with an occasional tall evergreen or strange alien ones, tall and shiny except at the top, where they exploded in a riot of kinked and twisted branches, each of which ended in a riot of kinked and twisted twigs, each of which ended in a riot of kinked and twisted threads, each of which ended in a riot of kinked and twisted fibers... and the fibers were fuzzy on the end, probably with another burst of branchings.

Hedraing rode off through groves on his own, studying and absorbing even when he didn’t comprehend. Most of the trees were Earth trees; the others fell into two categories: alien trees, and Earth trees which had been... changed, like the blue oak and the bristly cedar, the fountaining fir that grew up straight but split into branches that cascaded like willow branches. The alien ones might have had some changed ones; he couldn’t be sure ; they were too strange and different. He’d never paid serious attention to the forests around the Valley, but what he’d noticed was almost all trees like what Anaph said were Earth trees.

It bothered him that this world didn’t seem to have anything of its own – or not much. Anaph said the Others weren’t from here, and the Others were like the demon spiders, and the alien trees he was studying seemed a lot like the demon spiders down where the tiny pieces they were made of were. So if this had been a living world, where had its trees gone? and where had its animals gone? He could count the number of animal kinds they knew of on both hands – how could a world like that keep Balance? He was learning to sense Balance, and the best thing he could say of it was that it shouldn’t be a Balance!

He felt the cat before he saw it. Anaph could talk to them; he couldn’t, though he could handle human languages almost like toys. But he sent friendly feelings, and tried hard to convince the cat that he wasn’t food. It must have worked; the animal climbed an oak and lay on a branch watching him pass below.


“Life!” Lumina exclaimed at the sight. She hadn’t really believed Chen, but if anything he’d understated the size of the herd. It moved like a sea across the rolling grasslands, flowing around the oak groves where occasionally one of their number fell to a cat.

“That’s a lot of deer.” Leftenant Jarlan waited his turn with Rita’s telescope.

“Dinner for a hundred years”, agreed Leftenant Rainald. “If one had a big enough place to keep the meat.”

“We can spend a day and more going around it, or we can wait a day and more for it to pass”, Rigel commented, “Or”, he continued with a crazy grin, “we can try to eat our way through it.”

“Or scare our way through it”, Austin proposed, aiming his rifle at the herd a miming shots.

“Stampedes can be deadly”, Rita cautioned. “Rigel, all the horses are used to deer, right?”

“Sure – but this many? There must be ten thousand of them!”

“Others come here”, Hedraing declared. “They travel in huge herds for protection.”

“Safety in numbers”, Rita noted. “Rigel, we could ride through them. I’ve seen it done with sheep – cars, horses go through, and the sheep flow around them like... moving trees.” She watched the herd for a while “We’d have to ride in small groups, side by side – a solid block could spook them, so we have to be obstacles they can just flow around.”

Rigel leaned on Tornado’s neck and considered. “How long?”

Tanner answered. “Four, five hours. It would take patience.”

“Hedraing, can you make us all patient?” Rigel asked.

“If you wait long enough.” It was the closest thing to humor Rigel’s heard from Hedraing in a while.

“Right. Okay, I think the more of us in a group, the better we’ll be – but the smaller the group, the better the deer will take it. So, the soldier types can go in groups of three, the rest in groups of – Rita, would six be too many?”

“Not if we stay in a good side-by-side line.”


The best word for the experience, Oran declared afterward to general agreement, was boring, followed closely by smelly. Both were understatements, but especially the second: a herd of so many deer, under a warm sun on an increasingly hot day, reeked. They reeked of an intense musky odor, their breath reeked with so many so close, and the ground, carpeted with their droppings, reeked especially as they walked on it and ground it into a paste.

But they survived – not that they had much choice, once committed. Austin had tried, and even Titanium, king of horses, refused to turn; he did not want to go with that smelly flow. Only Hedraing found the experience anything but a trial requiring endurance: he rode out the other side with a satisfied look.

“What made you so happy?” Oran asked, falling in beside the Druid.

“I studied them”, Hedraing replied. “Then I changed some.”

“What do you mean, ‘changed’?”

“When they have young again, many in this herd will have offspring like enough to them that they will care for and raise them, but different enough they won’t be welcome in this herd.”

“What about breed with them?”

“Good question”, Rita commented.

“I do not think so”, Hedraing answered. “I made them too different.”

Rita regarded him with awe. “You made whole new kinds of animals?!”

“Awesome!” exclaimed Oran. “What did you make?”

“One kind will have straight, pointed horns, not curved and split. They will be more the color of the grass, not brown, so they can hide better in the grass. Another will have heavy curved horns, and stripes, like light and shadow, better for hiding in the groves. The sharp horns will let those attack their enemies and wound them by piercing. The strong horns will let those attack and wound by crushing. They no longer will need to hide in great herds and hope not to be on the outside, but will be able to defend their kind.”

“Like animals in Africa”, Rigel observed. “Some run, some stay in big herds, some defend, some attack. Nice. Just one question: how did you figure out how to do it?”

“Lord Rigel said this was all a classroom, the place where Anaph learned. I didn’t know what Anaph learned, but I studied everything I could. Then these deer – I studied some near the Valley, so I had a beginning. I noticed that of these, the horns weren’t all alike, so I followed the things that told how the horns are made. Here was a small difference, there another. I saw also that the coats had different colors, so I followed the things that told how the colors are made. I learned that one thing tells the horns to be straight, another says to curve; one tells the horns to be thin, another says to be thick. These places were the same all through each animal.
“So I began touching females, and males. I told those parts which make the seed of offspring, ‘Do this part this way’, and ‘Do that part that way.’ I have noticed besides that animals attract each other by scents, for mating, so I also changed the scents, so that those with the pointed horns will sniff and find each other, and those with the curved heavy horns will sniff and find each other.”

Rita was blown away. She wondered what this Druid could do if he knew about chromosomes, and wasn’t just feeling and fumbling his way along. She also wondered just how many mistakes he’d made, and whether all of the offspring would be whole and healthy. But really that wasn’t any worse than what Nature did; mutations often caused deformities – and the deformities didn’t get passed on, because those didn’t reproduce. That brought a question to mind.

“Did you change enough to get new herds started? If there aren’t a lot, copies of bad parts of the things that tell the animal how to grow can come together, and many of them can die. If enough die, your new types of animals won’t make it.” She hoped she’d gotten the idea of dangerous recessives across, knowing Ryan probably could have done better.

Hedraing puzzled over that as they rode, once the column all joined together again; the river of deer had spread them apart by half a kilometer. “I... cannot say. I didn’t look at all the commands for how to grow, only the ones that interested me. You say that some parts have bad commands, and if those come together, an animal could fail to live?”

“Basically, yes. The more first parents, the better chance for the kind to survive”, Rita said.

The Druid looked back at the herd. “They are too far to return and change more. If we find more deer, I will venture to change some.”

The matter was dropped then, but the subject sprang up repeatedly over the next half dozen days, especially when any deer were sighted. Hedraing practiced calling deer as he’d learned to call rabbits, until by the fourth night he was calling deer to the edges of groves, stroking them and changing them. “It’s a gamble”, Rita commented to Rigel while watching Hedraing one evening. “All these separate small herds, which might not make it if they don’t find others. If they start mixing, their chances will be good; if they don’t... not.”

That reminded Rigel of something. “Remember the sheep? and rabbits got brought with them? Anaph said there were mice, too. I wonder if they survived?”



Anaph’s thoughts were far from mice. He faced the last meeting of chiefs, which was going to be the worst: all but one clan coming to it had serious feuds with others which had already agreed to having a king. So they were going to start saying “No”, before they even listened – if they would listen. And he had no idea what he could offer to persuade them.

If only he had the LifeGem and the Stone – the Snatcher had helped once; if he picked the right animal, maybe he could get help again. But what would he choose, if he could? The answer came as soon as he thought the question: elk. Deer were a regular food source, but they were a precarious piece in a precarious balance. Something to compete with them in their habitat would help there – especially something that would be a bigger challenge to hunt,

He stopped in the middle of the path, surprising his loyal young warrior escort. How would he link to the Stone from here? what would it take? He set the staff on the ground and let it stand on its own, and pondered. The LifeGem was set in bedrock, the Stone was set in bedrock – could he get it to work like the ground on a car, running through the frame everywhere? If those were like batteries, could he make a circuit? It was worth a try. He turned to his local guide.

“I need rock, rock that is a solid part of the world.”

The guide didn’t ask why, or hesitate; here among the Clans, a Druid’s word wasn’t questioned, nor his reasons for things. If a Druid asked for something, everyone took for granted there must be a very good – possibly deep and mysterious, but good – reason for it. “Three rises ahead, a stream flows south. Four turns, there is a river. On the river is a fall of waters, where the rock of the world bends the river.”

“How long to get there.”

“Two, three hours.”

Anaph was glad he had no set schedule, only the promise he was coming. “Lead, then.”



Ryan hefted the new action. “And the magazine?”

“Eight rounds, lord. Kinner isn’t happy with the ejection. And Slimmer is working on a better spring for the feed.”

As amazing as the fact was that the metal crafters were producing a rifle worthy of World War I technology was that the language came so naturally to them. Sometimes Ryan wanted to cry, it seemed so much like a touch of home. He knew he gave more attention to the project because of that, but it was an anchor for him, technology he wasn’t striving to bring up to something good, but that was good, matched to things he'd handled, but more importantly because he could talk to people without feeling he was dealing with second-graders.

“Test model?”

“Three days, if Slimmer is ready.”

“Who’s ‘Slimmer’? Ryan hadn’t heard the name before.

A shrug started the response. “From the east. Came in one day, started helping. Next day he made a trigger assembly himself. Don’t know his real name – everyone calls him Slimmer since he makes the leaf springs for the magazines slimmer than anyone else.”

Ryan nodded and tossed the action assembly back. “I guess I should stop by and meet him one day. Right now – tell him the big boss in the castle says three days is when he’ll be ready. Got it?”

“Yes, sir!” The apprentice grinned. Ryan was famously flexible on schedules, and infamous on holding people to deadlines they themselves set. Both sides of that were appreciated, more so because Ryan applied the same standards to himself. With that and the way he treated everyone at Wizard’s Tower as a colleague, not a servant to be ordered about, Ryan had made something new among the Celts, perhaps on the tntire planet. Ideas were prized, even when wrong. Creativity was respected, not held back by tradition.

The attitudes were spreading, the atmosphere mixing with that already relaxed manner of the Misfit Village craft people. The latest news from there was that a girl had built a wood lathe, with none of Ryan’s dropped hints; she’d watched a potter trim clay from a bowl on one of the new potter’s wheels, transferred the idea, and produced what Ryan recalled commenting on when they first started working with laminating wood. Kinner was working with her on a new, better machine with stronger steel; another youngster had designed a water-driven system to power it. At the rate they were going, there would be enough furniture for Rigel’s new castle even before it was finished – and more for Antonio to sell north.

The Armory, as the halls dedicated to producing weapons had come to be called, embraced these developments eagerly. Adoption of the lathe concept and its hydraulic power led to an improved bore – and Ryan was now confident they’d have three-pounder and six-pounder cannon before winter; not many, of course, but enough to learn from, practice with, and design better.

He looked as south as he could out his window – have to have one knocked into the south wall, he told himself yet again, as almost daily since Rigel had left with his expedition. For all that he knew this was his place, his proper position with his friend, it felt strange, even wrong, to be somewhere other than at his side. “Hope you found the Escobars and got them as allies, buddy”, he said softly. Hope you find those people in the south, too. Watch your back, and come back.” It was a variation on a wish he made at least three times a day. He almost wished he believed in a God, to ask to keep them safe – but even the merciful God of the New Testament seemed to him sorely undependable in answering such prayers, woefully inefficient at adjusting His plans to lend a hand here or there.

And he certainly wasn’t going to ask the Snatcher to look over them!



“Yes, it’s impressive”, Rigel responded bitterly to Oran’s comment. The Scout had ridden back to report a cliff in their way, a drop-off fifteen meters high. It wouldn’t have been a problem if they’d all been on foot, but then in eight days from the Refuge Hills they’d never have made it this far on foot. “Guesses?”

“Hey, don’t blame me for it!” Oran said first. “I just found it. Chen and I think it gets lower if we go east. So he’s exploring west.” That seemed counterintuitive, but Rigel was familiar by now with the Scouts’ logic: the party would turn the most likely way, a Scout would check the other one, just in case.

“Okay, we go east.” Rigel sighed, then chuckled at himself. “We hiked this country on foot, and I only got impatient once. Now we have horses, I expect to get places overnight.”

“Just like computers”, Rita commented. “No matter how much the speed kept improving, we complained. I remember my dad saying how with the first Windows he could turn on the computer, fix himself coffee and breakfast, and find it just finishing boot-up when he came to sit and eat. My last Mac booted quicker than I could add creamer to my coffee and stir it in, but I still got impatient.”

“Tell Ryan to work on helicopters”, Austin quipped. “We could fly”

“You’d have to leave Titanium behind”, Oran teased.

“Okay – really big helicopters.” The two grinned at each other.

Rita cleared her throat. “For those who don’t pay attention, he’s working on flying – dirigibles, not helicopters, but he wants to be able to move as fast a horse at a trot, and carry as much as twenty horses.”

“He must separate the smallest element from the breathing gas”, Hedraing put it, “the two which make water. Plants do this easily, but for a man it is difficult.”

Rita turned in the saddle to look in surprise. “Who taught you what an ‘element’ is?” she asked.

“Anaph and Ryan have spoken of such. It is a thing which cannot be broken down into smaller pieces without great energy, the natural condition of a material. Gold, silver, copper, and iron are all elements, as is the breathing gas.” He furrowed his brow, thinking. “The black of charcoal is an element Wizard Lord Ryan calls ‘carbon’. The smallest element he calls ‘hydrogen’, and it is what he seeks for his vessel.”

“Dirigibles... nice most of the year”, Rigel said. “But those winter winds....” He shuddered and shook his head.

“No one goes anywhere in winter anyway”, Austin reminded him. “Wait for the railroad.”

“From where to where?” Rigel asked him with a grin.

“The ‘from’ is easy”, Oran chimed in. “Cavern Castle.”

“Rigel’s Castle!” Austin protested.

“Between the two”, Rita recommended.

“Except they’ll never allow a railroad in the Valley”, Rigel noted. “Right, Hedraing?”

“I think you are right”, the Druid admitted.

“That means a long tunnel, or tunnels and bridges”, Rigel pointed out. “A long tunnel would fill with smoke, though, so it would have to be bridges and tunnels both.”

“Leave it to the engineers”, Rita suggested.



Devon watched the piling go down, with disgust. It was the third in a stack, and they just kept going. He was using ten-meter logs, and he found it hard to believe that even this new marsh they’d found could be soft thirty meter logs, but this one kept right on going until its top was half a meter above the much, just like the first two.

“Okay, we change the route”, he said, confirming the conclusion reached by Heber, a foreman who’d risen from the ranks just during the bridge and plank road operation. “Heber, how much did you want to turn?”

“Two points south, for seven logs, then back on the original aim for eight logs, two points north for five logs–“

Devon cut him off. “I see it – dodge that whole area of water the same color, then where it’s shallow swing back to the original path. Do it that way, then.” The second half of that decision was a foregone conclusion, since the road on the far side was already well begun. The latest report had a bridge being framed two days ahead of them – a stone bridge over a canyon where bedrock showed, a place Devon had agreed with the assessment team foreman that he didn’t want to risk the possibility of a timber weakening if the bridge hadn’t been inspected well, possibly dumping someone. Since they were quarrying for that nearby, Devon had sent Pedraig ahead to head that project and build an inn.

He smiled a little half-smile. Now if he could only get Anaph to bring up some hot water from below for the inn....



“Is an earl allowed to scream?” Rigel asked Rita, only mostly humorously.

She looked over the edge of the third escarpment in five days. “I think the custom is ‘ladies first’”, she replied. It got him to laugh. “At least this one is more interesting”, she pointed out. “Chen says the way down is to go up on the odd ridge and follow it down like a ramp.”

That took them to a view that was almost unbelievable. “Holy flying fucking shit!” Oran exclaimed on reaching the top of that ridge. It was a pinnacle they hadn’t needed to attain, but Lumina had pointed out that since it would only add four hours to the journey, they might as well go up to see what they could see. The time involved arose from the need to make the trip on foot: the crown of the ridge was rough volcanic rock with sharp edges, and so no place for a horse.

No one else’s exclamation was quite as colorful as Oran’s, but no one got to that top and surveyed the view without some words of amazement. Chen, not surprisingly, was practical. “There’s the Refuge Hills”, he pointed out. “Now go north, to the sort of rounded peak with the sharp point, then east. You can see the peak we got the cutters on. Now, to the south....”

To the south was the real marvel: spread out before them in a great basin all that savanna sloped to was a sea that stretched for kilometers, dozens of kilometers, each and west, and vanished in the distance to the south.

“A great sea”, Lumina murmured. “Elzbédt said seek her people due south of the Valley, at a great sea.” There was a touch of girlish delight in her voice.

Rigel had his telescope out, but put it away soon in disgust. “Too far away”, Rita chided. “We see if there are ships when we get closer.”

He chuckled. “See right through me, huh? Seriously, ships would tell us a lot about anyone living there.”

“There will be ships, if there are people”, Chen asserted. “That sea is full of islands.”



Coming into the village, Anaph noted the great stone outcrop that surged up from the ground like a submarine breasting an ice field from below. He touched it briefly on the way by, and smiled: it was bedrock.



“Let them enjoy it”, Rita counseled, “it’ll pass.” She suspected it might not, though; when there wasn’t anything else to joke about, this was there at hand to pop up again. “And every time you show you’re irritated, it just encourages them.”

“It’s so dumb”, Rigel lamented.

Rita laughed. “Like we didn’t find some really dumb things funny! Remember our joke about driving into the Vortex and getting caught and never coming out....” Her voice trailed off as the reality of that “joke” sank in: in had literally happened, though not the way they’d meant in the joke, which had been a matter of going around and around forever, unable to escape the traffic, a sort of “Driving Dutchman” doomed to ply the lanes around the monument forever. “Okay, weird example. But we found things just as shallow to be funny.” She favored him with a teasing grin. “At least they’re not saying ‘lard’ any more.”

Rigel snorted. “No, they just turned it into two words – ‘l’ard’, whatever an ‘ard’ is.”

“It’s the root of ‘yard’, ‘card’, ‘bard’, ‘hard’, and ‘tard’”, she declared in superior tones. “Haven’t you been listening?”

He looked at her suspiciously. “What’s ‘tard’?” he asked, falling into the trap.

“I’m tard”, she replied. “I’m tard of riding, tard of sleeping on the hard ground, and tard of a lard who complains so hard.” Her ploy achieved its goal: Rigel burst into laughter.

“Knock-knock”, he said a minute later.

“Who’s there?” she responded as expected.

“Sup”.

“Sup who?”

“Suppose we think of a way to tease them back?” Rigel grinned at her.

Rita laughed. “Now you’re talking! By the way, that was lame.”

“So’s their joke.”

“Ouch – score!” she declared.

So they dropped Rigel’s complaints about their youngsters’ combining of several languages’ pronunciations of things to make “Lord Rigel” into “L’ard REE-gull.”



Ryan loaded the magazine with eight rounds. Everything worked smoothly; no snags or catches or hesitation. The last round, in its shiny brass casing, settled in with a nice click. He looked at the team who’d worked on the magazine. “Beautiful!” he declared, then grinned. “But do they come out again?” he teased. The only reply was Kinner handing him the rifle. The magazine slid in smoothly and locked under the tension clip without noticeable resistance.

The Wizard of the Valley of Horses put eight shots in the knot at fifty meters in just half a minute. That was under excellent conditions, but since he was hardly the best rifleman around any more, he didn’t doubt that many of the men would be able to duplicate it under field conditions. He scooped up his own brass – that was his hard and fast rule: every shooter collected his own brass – popped the magazine out with his thumb, and held the rifle at arm’s length. “Most excellent!” he told the team. “Give me a thousand of these and enough ammunition, and I could conquer the world!”

Some of the Celts had picked up on his odd sense of humor. “Will twenty-five do for now?”



“Definitely riders”, Chen reported. “Looks more like ponies than horses, though.” Rita had her telescope out and was tracking them. To the west, Oran had seen them and was cutting back to the column.

“Keep on like we haven’t seen them”, Rigel ordered. “After all, we came to find people.”

“They can’t see us yet anyway”, Austin objected.

Chen chuckled. “You’re making assumptions, squire. How do you know they don’t have Scouts? And how do you know they don’t have telescopes?” Austin looked unhappy at the correction.

Then he brightened. “But if they’d seen us, wouldn’t they have changed direction?” he asked.

“Did we?” Rigel queried.

“Oh.” Austin thought about that. “So maybe we both see each other and are pretending not to. Why? Oh!” He answered his own question: “To have time to think about it!” Rigel merely nodded; Chen gave Austin a thumb-up.

“We outnumber them”, Chen observed, “but they know the territory. We don’t know what their weapons are. We don’t know what their mounts can do. So if they see us, they’re thinking, ‘They outnumber us, but we know the area. Their horses are bigger, but are they faster? We don’t know what kind of weapons they have. If they’ve seen us, they aren’t reacting.’ Just like we’re thinking about them, except this is probably where they live.”

They drew closer. “They’re patrolling”, Chen decided after watching for a minute. “Their path goes from high spot to high spot. I say this is border territory for a kingdom along that sea.”

“Quite a ways out, aren’t they?” Rigel wondered.

“Maybe not”, Rita answered. “That sea could be close than it looked – we didn’t actually see the northern shore. With ridges and rises between us, it could be two or three days closer than we guessed.”

“They’re turning!” Oran and Chen called in chorus. As the two Scouts grinned at each other, telescopes went to ordinary eyes so they could see for themselves.

“Intercept course”, Chen judged. “They saw us a half minute ago, and waited till they projected our course.” Oran dropped back to tell Tanner what they’d concluded.

Tanner nodded, lowering his telescope. “That’s what I thought, too – a smart man waits until he has some idea what an opponent is up to before he commits. He’s decided he wants to meet us – or maybe it’s his job – so he’s aiming to intercept. He knows we’ll see that, so now he’s waiting to see what we’ll do.” Rigel’s Captain drummed his fingers softly on the telescope case. “Let’s go see what Rigel thinks. Rainald, you have command.”



The castle attendant was shirtless and drenched in sweat. “Messenger in, Lord Ryan.” He handed over the message case. “He’s getting something cold – nearly passed out from the heat.” Ryan nodded; the last three days had been hot and this one was heading for being hotter. Refrigeration, he told himself, work on refrigeration! Right, he answered, and mechanical adding machines, and a hundred other things.

Then he saw the seal. “From Rigel!” The grin that lit his face was that of a little boy. “Thanks”, he told the attendant. “I’ll ride over to see the man – take that message back.” I need a ride anyway, and he’s ridden enough – and we really need a Pony Express to get things moved, not just the semaphores – or a telegraph....

“Holy shit!” he breathed. “Rigel, you madman! Walk in and start a war!” As he read on, though, he began to suspect that the war was coming, anyway; Rigel was just a trigger, like the twig falling on super-cooled water on a windshield, providing the tiniest shock that turned the whole surface to a sheet of ice crystals in lovely patterns.

He sat back, reaching for his water – the coldest water they had, from a pool behind the falls. The red tint was from redberry brandy, or at least his latest attempt at brandy using the latest version of a still; it added enough flavor that the water wasn’t disgusting when it got warm, and a pleasant taste when it was still cool. Feet landed on desk as his swivel chair slid back. “They left a Regent in place. The Heir is with them so he’ll stay alive till he’s old enough to inherit. The Regent has to hang on against enemies that might try to just take the whole place over. I’m supposed to send the Regent horses, to give him an advantage. Advantage....”

“I hate decisions!” he told the desk as he came to his feet. “But oh, well... Conal will have to wait!” He stepped on the block that popped out a round piece of floor near his desk, dropped the message on the desk, and swung onto the shining bronze pole. Three floors below, he hit the ground running. “Ughyr! How many rifles do we have ready?!”



“My lord, they change direction.”

“So they do, Alfred, so they do. I see they turn some toward us, however, not away.” The nobleman watched the intruding column. “Let us hold as we are.”

“Aye, lord – as we are.”



“No reaction”, Chen noted more quickly than Rigel was certain with his telescope.

“But that’s what I would have done”, Tanner stated. “Our move wasn’t enough to change the point we’ll intercept at by more than a couple of meters. Why should he make any change, then?”

“No more changes, then”, Rigel decided. “We just keep going.”

“At high alert”, Tanner recommended.

“At high alert”, Rigel agreed with a slight smile.



“Very well, Alfred, see to Signals.” The other group hadn’t reacted to his lack of change any more than he’d reacted to their small change, so the two were still on converging courses. Much longer, though, and anyone they dropped off would be in rifle range of the meeting point – and Signals had to be outside that distance. Faithful Alfred, son and grandson of equally faithful retainers, dropped back and passed on the necessary orders. It didn’t matter that he had no rank; the words from the gentleman’s gentleman were as from the gentleman himself, in this command.



“Men stopped – setting something up”, Chen said. Back with Tanner, Oran reported the same; the Captain sung his telescope there and watched.

“Signal tower!” he exclaimed only a few seconds earlier than Rigel reached the same conclusion. “And that’s long rifle range from where we’ll meet. Rigel, they’re not alone – they can call for reinforcements.”

“None are near”, Hedraing responded. “To speak accurately: none mounted. There are no creatures within three kilometers large enough to carry men.”

“What about men?” Rigel inquired.

“I’m having trouble sensing men”, the Druid confessed. “Too much focus on animals lately, perhaps. But there are no horses, ponies, or even deer within three kilometers. There is a gr’venstut sow with five little ones nearly three kilometers east. They run, west and southwest, but I sense nothing they flee from.”

“So somewhere out there they have signal towers”, Rita concluded. “A system so their patrols can get off reports, so if something goes wrong, it won’t be a total mystery.”

Rigel nodded. “I like it – border patrols that can report back daily. Not as good as radio, but better than we have.”

Rita and Chen both chuckled. “Not once Ryan hears about it”, the Scout said. “Though it would be harder to do in our rough country.”

“So long as they can’t reinforce fast, we’ll keep going. We’re here to meet people, so let’s go meet them. Chen – lead us on a course for a faster intercept”, Rigel ordered.



“My lord, they change”, Alfred noted.

“The signal crew”, his lord said. “A response.” He squinted at the low rise Rigel’s company was crossing. “Ah! They intend to meet us – greater speed, toward an intercept.” He frowned. “I wish I could welcome them, should that be appropriate.”

“Orders do not so allow, my lord”, Alfred reminded his master.

His lord nodded. “So they do not. Even so, there are ways to be welcoming, without welcoming, are there not?” Alfred smiled. “Indeed, my lord.”

The lord waited until the last moment, then led into a turn and a halt. “Let us hope they know our tongue”, he commented. “I am hoping”, Alfred responded with wry humor. His lord stood in his stirrups and called out.



To Rigel’s surprise, the other company veered and stopped just short of an encounter. A man near the lead stood and called; Rigel signaled a halt just as Rita observed, “Apparently we’re supposed to keep our distance.”

“I regret I must not permit you to advance further”, came the voice – a very cultured voice with a distinct accent.

“British?!” Rita exclaimed.




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(PM I sent to Kuli, yesterday)
I RUSHED to Lunch so I could post re: the "latest Chapter" that I got via my "1st post since visiting subscription" e-mail.

Only, It felt like something was missing, but I cheated and stole the time to read it, anyway - I was all set to try and post on the multiple threads.

I get to lunch, almost couldn't log in - the wifi was acting up - the FIRST fucking day in MONTHS that I haven't brought a book with me as "insurance", and the fucker acts up!

But, they reset router, and I'm here - only the chapter I just finished reading ISN'T - or, at least isn't the NEXT Unread chapter!

Now that I've busted your chops, I guess I best be getting me sorry arse to reading the REAL Next chapter, so I can post about THIS one! lol
(and, yes, I may very well include this PM in the posts, when I get done reading.

Hope your day is going better - and your friends'!:wave:

Now I've got to re-read this chapter later when I can - there is so much going on ~ and here come the Brits - all prim, proper and diffident. We must insist that you draw no nearer.
:wave:
 
OK, now to try and remember so I can post intelligently.
We pick up our tale with Lord ReeHELL (lol) and company, including Osvaldo and his mother, along with the House Guard, enroute to safer places - well, HOPEFULLY safer for Rosalina, at least Adventuresome for Rigel and Company.

The enemies of the rightful ruling house still trying to take them out by ambush - always the coward.

The bittersweet taste of gaining the noble right, but still having to seek safer refuge, at least for awhile - and to garner support for the greater good.

Good men died to defend them.

Ah, yes. As I review the chapter as I post, the memories and subtleties flow back over me - "Where did that thought come from, what is this voice?"
You Great Great Great Great GREAT Grandpappy, young padawan.

And a padawan Osvaldo is, for sure. Our legion of snatched and impowered Celts will truly train him in all things they know, along with the help of Michael.
He will become a master of strategy, and perhaps diplomacy, too.
He will learn stealth - Scouting with the best.

Speaking of Michael, cousin and protector of Osvaldo, and Guild Member of the Thieves. The ways he has protected his liege lord and lady, and the ways he has struck back at those who would do them harm are incredible.

Rigel certainly spared no compassion for those who chased Michael, blowing heads away, wounding one in the butt which, upon retrospect, Rigel realized was tantamount to a death sentence in their society.

It is good that they had Rita with them - and even she can only do so much at a time - even with Hedraing's help for the right(?) wrongs (illnesses/breakes, poisons).

Meanwhile, Back at the Castle - Fe! Bars of it. And Ni not far behind, now that they've taken back the mines from Arachnidadiabolica.

Ryan is showing his stuff as Wizard Extraordinaire - and Lord Manager, too. He knows that first priority needs to go to the tools his craftsmen need, so that they may become even more productive as the iron ore and nickel come to them in greater abundance. He's also very good at analyzing priorities and adjusting decisions about who gets what when, as new circumstances arise, demanding attention. The ability to comprehend and adjust is a great one - too many people get focused on "the solution" and fail to take changing circumstance into consideration.

Miguel, nude under a linen sheet - awake and automatically rising, then remembering. I can well imagine him thinking out loud the thanks to God for the Gift that is Rita's Healing Abilities. It's nice for her to hear the unsolicited gratitude from one of the indigenous Christians, who might have thougt of Witchcraft and the Devil, had Rigel not put a positive spin on it, reinforced by the faith they saw in his people at the execution mass.

And Michael also learns a caveat - Rita rarely has the luxury of healing someone ALL the way - she has to be somewhat circumspect, reserving some energies should a serious injury occur to another. No, the wounded must also work to help heal themselves.

Miguel's recounting of the Guild's assistance plan is no less complex than that of the noble congress. Except that the guild has a much clearer, unified objective. They support a just (duchy?) over a corrupt one, and they have self preservation very strongly in mind- but a joint self-preservation.

"Everyman Owns Himself" Strong, Important words from Rigel to Miguel. And, THEY chose the rules of the exchange, you merely responded to them. THEY told you how to treat them - you are absolved of any wrongdoing.
And, the extremely important alternate meaning of the juxtaposition. NO, you did NOT tell them how to treat you.

And then it was time for the Lady to head off - her House Guard was already headed on its journey via roads less travelled by. Now it was time for her to journey on to her destination escorted only by a minimal contingent, so that none would dare try a strike against her - Chivalraic code forbade such and event, and the size of her contingent precluded any false claims that they didn't know.

Lady Rosalina is one Tough, Courageous, NOBLE, Lady.

I am afeared that I must have needs depart in the midst of my running commentary.

On to the continuing savannah and forests - with the intriguing split between Earth trees and mutations, and "Other world" trees and mutations.

And, a kin of Streaker?!

Followed by their short cut through the valley of the shadow of deer smell and dung -phew! And, Our erstwhile Druid testing his powers, manipulating the species to try and jump start evolution - to encourage the various offshoots to explore other micro-ecosystems - the woods, the savannah, the hills as the case may be - to be less dependent on the mega heard (as in buffalo) mentality.

With a wise question and education snippet from Rita re: critical species size.

Then, after their slightly detoured journey, to come to meet HMS Regimental Border Patrol, replete with "retainer".

I kept looking for Bruce Wayne, though, lol.

On THAT note, I have to bid you adieu for now. (Or, Adios, as the case may be)
Pip Pip, Cheerio old boys!
:p :=D: :wave:
 
If the gentleman associated with the loyal retainer Alfred is NOT Bruce Wayne, I'm going to be seriously annoyed.

Actually...well, I love the stuff about the Escobaran society, and I feel certain you're working up to something with all the Lard and ReeHELL stuff, and the sojourn across the countryside is cool...

...but really, couldn't we at least have ONE WORLD free of the bloody fucking Sassenach?!?!?!?!

Sigh. Nice Celt world. Some nasty Spaniards, but hey, they [STRIKE]used to be under the Celtic bootheel and could be again[/STRIKE] can be reformed and made into useful allies. And I guess I really knew that there'd be other Snatched people too.

But honestly. The ENGLISH?!?!? Nothing against the modern ones in our world, I stress (they're pretty cool, aside from galloping into the Panopticon even faster than the US) but historically they really were the scourge and murder of the Celts in Scotland, Ireland, Wales, and Cornwall. If these people were snatched before about 1950, expecting them to have pleasant relations with anyone they consider inferior (which is to say with anyone) is just foolish.

I know! Maybe they're the Others, and the descriptions of them by the Celts so far were propaganda and the distortions of word-of-mouth history! And the Escobarans never discussed what the Others looked like, so they could be killing the Brits all the time (goooooood Escobarans!)!

But no. Rigel saw them via the sword. Darn.

OK, I'll wait and see. Maybe these are Templars or something and it'll all be OK. Or maybe they're the nice medieval English--all Snatched away, which is why the ones back on Earth turned into such shits.

Ba chóir an Béarla fuilteacha dul ar ais nuair a tháinig siad as, a thabhairt ar ais riamh.
 
Críostóir,
I get the decided feeling that the Brits are of a late 19th century persuasion ~ Colonial Sub-Continent sort of Regimentals and all. Much as I would like to see Mr. Wayne put in an appearance, I seem to remember our Genteel fan of spandex, masks, and pole dancing with boy toys being a Colonial, not a Brit. And their technology would be a tad more advanced than it appears to be at first blush.

I'm quite sure that our friends, the Celts, if they recognized the Limey's, would give pause, as it were ~ considering the greater good of all off-world human kind against they historic Less-than-Friendly relations shared by their peoples.

Sassenach ~ are you familiar with Diana Gabaldon's Outlander series? Our favorite protagonist, Jamie Frasier, uses the term with some frequency - only it has morphed into a term of endearment for his wife. It actually is a very good foil for this epic - it being a epic tale of its own, involving time gates within standing stones and other portals throughout the world - both old and new. And, she has some corollary works about Lord John Grey, which I am quite sure would draw favour from our primary membership here.

And for those of us who, much though we are proud of our Celtic heritage, are not blessed with our native tongue - could I impose upon you to translate your closing line into that much less romantic but more easily understood by modern man language?

--
Now, where was I in my original reaction to all of this information?
Ah, Entering the savannah full of deer dung.

That Hedraing has taken Lord Rigel's statement re: the journey and the Savannah being Anaph's classroom - and listened to earlier conversations re: genetic of a sort isn't all that surprising, in retrospect, I guess. He's a very dedicated and determined young man. The whole venture is a bit freaky - "brilliant, but scary", as Ron, our favorite ginger-haired wizard was wont to remark about a similarly dedicated individual. Hedraing Druid von Frank N. Stein.

Oh, yeah - Lord Rigel - Hell YES, the mice survived - and found your grain stores.

Meanwhile, back at Cavern Castle - Women's Equality is in full force - a wood lathe deigned from a potter's wheel, then adapted to help machine the barrels of the rifles - wunderbar! You go, Girl, whoever you are! Concurrently, Hydropower. We have Mill's Race in our Upper Falls area on the Genesee River, from just that same employment in a bygone era. And, truth be told, my electricity comes from a "slightly larger" version - and a slightly larger waterfall - Niagara!

From the cooperative society of the Celts to modified Capitalism in trading with the Quistadores.

Sad that, after all they have been through, and all they have accomplished on their own, that Ryan cannot feel the presence of the Omnipresent one in and around his life - whether through the Christian Rite or the Druid.

Back on the trail . . .
there's more truth to Rigel's lament about the faster we can go, the more we complain about the wait. Which led to the conversation of helicopters, and Rita to point out that Air Transport was already under plan - Dirigibles - which knocked all their socks off as Hedraing reported the need to "separate the smallest element from the breathing gas". Though, I'd much prefer if they could take the next to smallest - He instead of H2 - so much more stable and less prone to bursting in flames. I know, properly handled . . . They use fire for light, and don't have a lot of Hydrogen proof materials!

Which lead, of course to a discourse ~ "Pardon me boy, is that the Cavern Castle Choo Choo?"

We finally get to check in on our Lead Engineer - Civil, not Rail, at this point, to find him mired in the swamp with a road to be built.

And finally, on to our meeting with the Lord Guard and his faithful retainer, Alfred.

What a fantasmic journey. Our own mini-Europe.
Plus, the Alien Axis of Others.

Hey- still no R&R for our boys.

Mayhaps they will be better received when the Lord hears them speak.

We await the next installment of your magnificent tome, dear Kuli.
BUT, make sure you are tending to your health, dear sir.
(*8*) :=D: :D :wave:
 
And for those of us who, much though we are proud of our Celtic heritage, are not blessed with our native tongue - could I impose upon you to translate your closing line into that much less romantic but more easily understood by modern man language?

"The bloody English should go back where they came from, never to return."

I used Google Translate.
 
What the HELL is going on??? BRITS???? :eek: Why am I thinking bumbling/"lucky" Montgomery, as opposed to Nelson?? #-o Good Grief, Khuli! What have you gotten us into now? :lol:

My "process" oriented, linear thinking, "boy brain", is being stretched to it's limits! Which leads me to wonder, how the Heck do YOU come up with ALL of this "global reasoning" "Stuff"? ..|

I'm finding there's just too much to comment on! The most "interesting" thing I can think of ... Sir Patrick is "with"? Besides keeping Lumina "company", I'm surprised he's only rated just a mention, and not been more involved with what has been happening! :-$

And, with Hedraing (Second Druid) "feeling his oats", and expanding his knowledge, and knowing what Anaph (First Druid) is up to, I also find myself wondering what Urien (Third Druid) has been doing ... :rolleyes:

Which brings up another "random" thought ... When the sheep, with their shepherds, were Snatched, with rabbits, and mice ... no sheep dogs? What would Bammer think about that? Then again, given the "big cats" ... #-o

All in ALL, this story is just getting better and Better! THANK YOU!! (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:

(Oh, wait! Could the Brits be Elzbet's peeps???)
 
To all and sundry:

The chapter "Truths and Consequences " has been revised to take care of certain inconsistencies. Sine I was reworking it, a number (dozens) of little editing bits got done as well. So I recommend returning to post 827 and seeing if you can find the additions and alterations!


BTW, the next chapter should be ready for posting by morning... if I wake up that soon. I've endeavored to avoid bloopers that will require post-post editing this time.


Cheerio!
 
Hi Kuli.
I return from a couple of weeks R&R and what do I find??
A massive missive .... (groan, couldn't resist), an absolutely stupendous addition to the tale! How do you find the time to do anything else, to THINK anything else???
You really are living this with us!
So amazing! Thank you Thank you Thank you.
Hugs
Harry
 
Hi Kuli.
I return from a couple of weeks R&R and what do I find??
A massive missive .... (groan, couldn't resist), an absolutely stupendous addition to the tale! How do you find the time to do anything else, to THINK anything else???
You really are living this with us!
So amazing! Thank you Thank you Thank you.
Hugs
Harry

While I'm driving... I spin the story out in my head.
While I'm doing yard work... I spin the story out in my head.
While I'm working at my project... I spin the story out in my head.
While I'm in line at the grocery store... I spin out the story in my head.

So when I sit down to write, the hard part is recalling the good lines and phrases, and keeping track of what comes when.


Well, except for the editing.
 
To all and sundry:

The chapter "Truths and Consequences " has been revised to take care of certain inconsistencies. Sine I was reworking it, a number (dozens) of little editing bits got done as well. So I recommend returning to post 827 and seeing if you can find the additions and alterations!


BTW, the next chapter should be ready for posting by morning... if I wake up that soon. I've endeavored to avoid bloopers that will require post-post editing this time.


Cheerio!

Whistling into the air ... checking Forum ...
Drumming fingers ... checking Forum ...
Tapping foot ... checking Forum ...
Walking around the block ... checking Forum ...
Twiddling thumbs ... checking Forum ...
Eating lunch ... checking Forum ...
Watching the news ... checking Forum ...
Chatting on the phone ... checking Forum ...
Doing laundry ... checking Forum ...
Whistling into the air ... checking Forum ...

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz ;)
 
Check out CE&P - he spent a fair amount of time discussing the 2nd in command in Rome this weekend.

Me, too - in one post.
 
Sorry, Chaz -- it took a while to work out posting the amended chapter, then I had a couple of bad days, then had to research back in the former chapters over something that looked like a discrepancy, which led to searching through for someone I remembered writing about but didn't have in the Compendium Biographicum, which led to discovering several other people I'd missed, which resulted in re-reading all of Part 4 and checking every name to make sure it was in the C.B.

Now I think everything is consistent, I haven't lost track of anyone or given someone two different names (that's an OOPS I found!) or used the same name for two different people (another one) or had someone in two places at once (another one).

So... I just finished the "at home" edit, on my computer, so it's time to cut and paste to JUB, do the second edit, decide what picture fits the chapter, find one, download and edit it if necessary, add it to the chapter, preview, final edit, and post.

Gimme two hours.



p.s. -- that, too, DQ. now let me work.
 
Ay Chihuahua! I'll try and read it in the morning.
I've got to go to bed now.
Take care.
 
Bishop​


Lady Ismelda clapped her hands. One of the new servants, purchased in a different city by Casey and Esteban, came running. She blew on the wax seal on the letter to be sure it was cool, then handed it to the servant. “To the magistrate of records”, she instructed.. The servant nodded and departed.

The Lady sighed, closed her eyes, leaned back, and smiled. They now owned – she had come to think of herself as part of Señor Antonio’s household, though her own nobility had not, thankfully, been stripped away – a bit over half the block on which the townhouse sat. The record she’d just copied herself and sent would secure title to a different piece of property, nearer the market, where one shop they wanted would be moved, its family with it – where the shop would be larger and the family quarters as well; don Antonio had negotiated an interest in the business as part of the move. That meant tomorrow she would be concluding the acquisition of that shop, and paying carts to move both shop and family. Once those were moved, that shop – a leather worker – and the one next to it would be turned into stables, though when they would dare to bring horses into the town was knowledge belonging to God alone.

The steady sale of almost random items from the rooms discovered under what she’d known as the basement had indeed quieted the machinations of the bishop. Every time Casey and Esteban journeyed to another town to buy slaves or arrange for supplies, they took a quantity of the items, and used part of that cargo as payment for what they needed. That had spread the items across, so far, five towns and twenty-one sellers, leaving the bishop scrambling to track and buy them all. Some had begun reappearing on the market; don Delgado said that meant the bishop had examined them and concluded they held no relics.

She’d given in and trusted Esteban to carry the gold doubloons only when he’d introduced his great cat, Pounces, and Casey had introduced his, Streaker, who was Pounces’ father. The danger written in those great eyes had convinced her that no danger on the plateau could overtake the two young travelers, not with those protectors! They slept warmly, too, against the great beasts, and ate well, from their hunting. And they’d turned half the doubloons into excelentes “and change”, as don Antonio put it. That ‘change’ had bought a dozen new slaves and hired nine new servants so far, so the household was becoming almost as industrious as she remembered it.

Ismelda sat up straight and took up the letter from don Ramón’s brother, now Brother Thaddeus, a consecrated deacon pledged for the priesthood. She re-read the important passage:

I will come by the nineteenth, as I am able. Loss of the home in Pueblo Alvarez troubles me, but I will soon take vows and property will no longer matter. It pleases me you are now in Padillo, as that is a shorter journey.


The nineteenth was tomorrow. Everything was ready for the visit. Don Antonio had journeyed back to his estate and returned, leaving behind three more of Esteban’s colleagues who, now that a safe location was available, had decided to retire. He’d brought back a letter for don Delgado, with news that his sister had decided she would wed the “lovely and gallant Wizard Lord Ryan”, though she had not yet divulged that decision to the future groom; don Delgado had wished to depart immediately to be with her, but had nevertheless decided to remain for this meeting with Brother Thaddeus.

She worried about the meeting. Men who became priests gave up family loyalties; their family was the Church, with its head, the Vicar of Christ, in some other world – a thing she didn’t understand. But don Delgado assured them his brother had a passion for justice that would bring him to their cause, and he was also not yet a priest – quite. But if his loyalty had changed, anything could happen. Unknown to the others, she’d made her own preparations: if necessary, Brother Thaddeus would find himself taking an extended leave of absence from his studies.



Devon surveyed the bridge, then rode confidently over it. Eight bridges now, and one tunnel – actually a slot cut in a hill, lined with stone walls, and capped with an arched top over which soil and shrubs had been replaced – reached west from the road out of Fincado de la Vega. Two bridges were stone, one completely, the other a stone structure with a heavy plank bed, the others solid timber. Except for three stretches, done in stone, the entire road was planks. And whether they were halfway in terms of distance, they now reached halfway in a very important sense: the crews from the Valley of Horses clearing the route of trees had reached this end of the endeavor the afternoon before. Now he would ride west to oversee the important building of the tunnel that would cut through the mountain to Devon’s Mills.

He almost had more workers than he knew what to do with. The addition of thirty more slaves brought by Antonio had boosted his schedule ahead in a way that had put him off-balance and threatened to bring some parts to completion before others, an outcome that offended his sense of – he had to admit – beauty, so he’d peeled off a workforce to build inns. Two of those were of stone, the largest at the longer stone bridge that reached west from the sort of artificial tunnel; that location had gotten the name “Stone Place”, sitting as it did between stone bridge and stone tunnel on a stretch of the road that was paved with stone. He’d stayed there the night before, on the completed second floor – the designer, another Celt come to help, had determined the Inn at Stone Place would reach five floors high! It was already becoming a village; a second bridge had been built to a hill which had been logged and leveled, the flattened top turned into fields.

Behind him, the road down from Fincado de la Vega would be finished in ten days, winding in two switchbacks which took the ascent below three great towers, and through gates under each of those towers. When the stone paving was finished, the crews there would begin taking the road southward to Cromagh, planks and bridges all the way. Villagers there and at Tree Hall had already been shown the method, and were reaching out with their own roads. Amid it all, two people moved about like butterflies: Devon, directing, and Urien, keeping roads aimed correctly.

“We just might make the Valley by winter”, Devon said to no one in particular. “Or at least to the tunnel – and working on it will give us something to do with the winter!” A moment later he slid from the saddle and shook the hand of... well, the crew foreman, who was from lumberer village.

That was when he learned of the re-invention of the lathe, and its new demand for lumber.



“I see, brother”, said Brother Thaddeus, sinking back into the comfortable chair that Felix had gotten back at auction, as he had most of the old family furnishings. He caught himself and sat upright again. “Not ascetic enough, yet”, he admitted with a wry grin that quickly turned serious.

“And that is key to your complaint: the bishops care nothing for their vows, and live in luxury, seeking wealth and power. Now they fight for the high seat, not to be good shepherds, but for more power and wealth.” He hesitated only briefly, catching every eye in the private room deep in the second basement. “In this you are right. Yet none in the priesthood will speak out against this, for those who wish to advance dare not, and those who care not to advance... care not.”

“You care”, Antonio charged.

“Guilty”, the priest said. “Yet I am not a priest.”

“One need not be a priest to be chosen bishop”, don Delgado told him. “Our sister has written to me of this. If only we had our books from Pueblo Alvarez, I could look at the instances she indicates.”

Antonio cleared his throat. “We might have your books”, he said. “I bought your estate.” He looked embarrassed. “It was going to be a surprise.”

Delgado looked at him in surprise and puzzlement. “How did you buy our estate?”

“I had... a friend watching. Creditors seized it. This friend learned the total you owed, which they wished to regain, and offered twice that. So you have no debts now, and your property isn’t in anyone else’s hands.”

“But we cannot return there”, Delgado responded mournfully. He’d come to accept their effective exile, but having the estate practically theirs again, while not being able to enjoy it, saddened him.

“I’m trying to arrange for the Count to insult someone he can’t even touch with a sword”, Antonio claimed, exaggerating – he thought Rigel would like the idea, but hadn’t yet mentioned it. “But – can we get the book here soon enough?”

“I know instances”, Brother Thaddeus informed them. “Both were when the people of a town knew a godly person and demanded him as bishop – but never High Bishop!”

Antonio chuckled and shook his head. “I wouldn’t want to vault you that far anyway, Brother – since you’re ‘not ascetic enough, yet’.” That drew a mild smile from Thaddeus. “I wouldn’t want to tempt you to keep all the furnishings. Though if you know of a bishop who’s dying, sooner than the High Bishop...?”

“The bishop of Corazon dos Reyes effectively is dead”, Brother Thaddeus stated disapprovingly. “He can no longer stand in vestments, yet the Monsignor has him carried to his seat in the cathedral.”

“What’s the succession look like?” Esteban inquired. Brother Thaddeus regarded the young man with distaste; Esteban’s origin had come out.

“There is no favorite I hear of.” His eyes went distant. “It would be a great honor to be bishop of Los Reyes....”

Casey grinned at the not-quite-priest. “I’m sure we could arrange to keep you ascetic – luxuries could just disappear, and be sold for the poor.” Thaddeus looked at him with dark disapproval before he realized Casey was joking – mostly.

Esteban was muttering to himself. “You could be bishop. It could work.”

“Is anyone asking if Brother Thaddeus even wants to be a bishop?” inquired Lady Ismelda. “Is that not important?”

Delgado’s brother regarded her with mournful eyes. “No, I do not want to be a bishop. Yet the Church suffers most grievously at the hands of impious men; if I may aid in correcting the affliction by taking the robes of a bishop, that is my duty.”

“What do you want to be?” Casey asked, honestly curious.

“A scholar. I would study the scriptures, that they could be taught to the people more plainly. I would gather copies of all books into one place, available to all clergy and nobles.”

Antonio dove into the pause. “What if you could have the scriptures in the language of the people? and in the original language?”

Thaddeus stared at him. His expression wavered between shock and delight. After a quarter minute he schooled himself to a scholar’s calm seriousness. “In the language of the people”, he mused. “I am taught this would be dangerous, and yet... could they not learn the scriptures more readily if they could follow in their own copies? But only few read... and from where would come the scribes to make so many copies? Hundreds, thousands, would be needed!”

“If you’re interested, I could help with that”, Antonio assured him. “But also – if I’m going to lend my help to raise you bishop, I want a commitment to put at least a few books in the common tongue.”

Brother Thaddeus regarded him with no change in expression. “Tell me, don Antonio, which books would you have in the Quistador tongue?”

Antonio was ready for this. “Genesis and Exodus, Psalms, Matthew’s and John’s Gospels, Romans, and Galatians. First John would be nice, too.”

“Creation and God’s great redemption, blessed words of praise, the common and philosopher’s accounts of our Lord’s life, the great letter of faith’s foundation”, Thaddeus murmured. “Yet why San Pablo’s letter to the Galatian Christians?”

“It’s the call of Christian liberty”, Antonio replied. “It’s the warning against those who would turn our Lord into a new and more terrible Moses.” He held his breath, hoping Brother Thaddeus would catch his meaning – hoping he would agree!

“You speak of the Inquisition. Be assured, I share my brother’s views, more so recently – though I say nothing more, there. They have a zeal for God but without God, for God says, ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice’. Still, don Antonio, no bishop can oppose the Inquisition!” He was surprised when his brother laughed, and the rest joined him.

“Read this.” Don Ramón handed him a copy made from the Book of Aragon. Brother Thaddeus had one making of a scholar, Antonio observed: he read rapidly. When he came to the end, he looked up at his brother.

“It’s real, hermancito”, Ramón assured him. “Believe it.”

The potential bishop read it again. He began to shake. On reaching the end this time, he threw the paper to the floor and stood, fists tight enough that blood dripped where one fingernail sliced the skin, shaking so hard he kept moving his feet to keep balance.

“Wow”, Casey commented. “Peace, Brother! It happened a long time ago. Don Ramón showed it to you because it’s a weapon. There’s more than one way for a bishop to oppose the Inquisition.”

“A long time ago, yes”, answered the Brother. “But have they changed? No – of that I am certain. Yes, you are right”, he went on, calming himself, this is a weapon.” He bent and picked up the sheets he’d thrown down. “But not for me to use. I would take it to Bishop Moreno of Lago Blanco. He is wiser than I, as well as much safer.”

“Why safer?” Antonio asked.

Esteban snickered. “His church is on an island in the lake. There’s only one way to sneak up, and it worse than jumping through a window. Though there’s little reason to sneak there, anyway – he likes simple things.” He didn’t seem to care that he’d just implied that his only reason for visiting a bishop would be to steal from him.

“You know the bishop?” asked don Delgado.

“We have met”, Thaddeus replied. “He would remember me.” A smile lit from memories. “He also wished to be a scholar.” A deep breath filled his pause. “And now, if you are able to make a miracle, I will follow his path.”

“Time for a trip”, Esteban declared with glee. “Don Antonio, I shall need silver and copper.”



“What a mess”, Devon muttered to Crystal, the only Snatched in Cavern Castle who knew enough about rocks to understand his comment. They stood at the mountain face upstream from Devon’s Mills that had been cleared for working on the tunnel. All trees, brush, and even dirt was gone, leaving the rock revealed. There were sedimentary, metamorphic, and igneous layers, not just stacked, but tilted, intruded, interrupted, offset, and in more than one placed, dropped or raised or jumbled. “That part looks like it was flipped over!”

Crystal was practical. “Will that make cutting a tunnel harder?”

“Some. If I have to go through any of the jumbled section, it could collapse. And a lot of what I dig out won’t be any good for building with.”

“So use it for fill”, she recommended. “You said the road crosses valleys.”

“I hoped for building stone”, he told her.

“Dev, don’t be such a gloom. You’re going through a whole mountain! You’ll get lots of building stone. And you need lots of fill anyway. Now – go cut by the jumbled stuff. See which way it slants inside the mountain. You might not have to cut through it at all!”

Devon first went to the workers laboring to assemble pre-fab wooden supports for once the digging began. They were fashioned to be brought in, tipped upright, and adjusted to whatever height was needed. Later they’d be replaced by properly-fit supports, which would eventually give way to stone arches, but for now they were his best effort at protection from collapses as they extended the tunnel. “Any problems?” he asked.

“Slides jam”, a man responded. “But pig fat solves.” Devon had been afraid of that, but hadn’t seen a way around the risk. He probably should have asked one of the Smithcraft Masters after all.

At the rock face, Devon cut in near the jumbled part. A meter in, he hadn’t encountered it; at two meters, the same. Since he was between it and the spot marked for beginning the tunnel, he concluded he wouldn’t have to deal with that formation.

Since he’d cut already, he spent a third of an hour making a space large enough to serve as a three-walled room, on the principle that holes in the mountain should be useful. He was just tidying the back left corner when a worker came.

“Engineer, things are ready.”

“Good”, Devon responded. “Get a support on this, near the outside. We’ll use it for storage or something.” The worker headed back toward the tunnel beginning; Devon followed.

Someone had marked a line where the first cut should go, using an ‘ink’ made of pig grease and charcoal. Devon assessed it, stepped up, and made the first cut for the tunnel that would put them days closer to the Celts.



Thieves loved spreading rumors; they went delirious at the idea of actually being paid to do it. So word was heard on the streets that God had sent a young man, a scholar, a man of simple ways who loved the Virgin and adored Her Son, who wanted the people to know and be comforted by God’s own words in the scriptures. He was a kind man, everyone said, devoted to the poor even as the Lord Himself when he took on flesh, a wise man who would listen to all, a just man who would not favor one over another for gold or promises, a man angry over injustice and merciful to those who needed mercy.

No one knew his name, but rumor made it Nathaniel, or Bartholomew, or even Matthew, definitely a saint’s name. Other rumor made him one of the Saints themselves, come to Corona dos Reyes in time of need, loaned back to them by Heaven by a gracious God who had at last heard their prayers. Priests denied that, publicly, but it was said everywhere that those who did so did because they knew it was true, and feared for the luxuries they so sinfully adopted and clasped to themselves.

Casey laughed with Esteban at the latest version of one of their rumors. In just five days Corazon dos Reyes had been covered with their bits and pieces and had invented twists and even new rumors. “Now all we need”, Esteban declared softly, “is for you-know-who to die.” Casey understood by now that such talk was no risk; people were always talking of hoping a grandfather or uncle or someone would die so they could get an inheritance or vengeance or promotion; their wishes blended in with all the rest.

“You’re thinking of helping him along”, Casey accused.

“Why not? He’s really dead already.”

“We’ll see what Antonio says. It’s time to go back and tell Brother T, anyway.” Esteban disappeared along their way out of town, rejoining Casey with a pair of steaming berry pies. “So we travel better!” he declared, happily licking juice dripping from a crack.


“Brother T” was incredulous. “In so few days, the city knows of me?!”

Esteban just shook his head. “Lords know nothing”, he pronounced yet again. “From the bottom, a word may reach a whole town in a day. In five days, the town grows its own tales, always more astounding. Before we return, they may expect you to arrive with angels.”

Thaddeus had suspicions. “What lies did you tell about me?” he demanded.

Casey fielded that one; Esteban would have gotten too fiery. “We didn’t tell anything about you. We said God had provided a man to be the next bishop. We suggested a scholar, someone simple, someone who hates injustice, someone who cares for the poor. Those are things you should be anyway – it’s what being a priest means, right? But rumors start themselves – now this man God is sending has healed children with his hands, saved women with his prayers, been visited by the Holy Virgin, speaks with saints come back from heaven to aid him, was sent by the Pope from the holy world where far Rome stands, was taken in spirit to see and touch the nail holes in Our Lord’s hands. But the thing we heard over and over is that this man stands for justice regardless of wealth or rank, and that he wishes the people to truly know the Word of God.”

Brother Thaddeus was staring with his mouth open. “I cannot be all those things!” he protested. “I would cower in terror if the Virgin came to me, and hide under my bed if Saints came to speak with me!”

“I don’t think you have to live up to that part”, Antonio assured him. “Those are people’s hopes speaking, hopes for some deliverer. If you just do the ordinary human parts well, you’ll be more than they’ve ever expected.”

“He speaks truth, hermancito”, said don Delgado. “You have been too long in the halls of study and prayer, or you would know this.”

“Any change in the bishop?” Antonio asked. “I hate wishing someone would die, but... we need him to die.”

“That is impious!” Brother Thaddeus declared.

Antonio shrugged. “It’s practical. Everyone dies, and it would be helpful for us – it would be helpful for our people! – if he died soon.”

“To me it seems the poor man must be suffering”, Lady Ismelda offered. “Death would mean rest in the Redeemer’s arms.”

Brother Thaddeus regarded her with a troubled look. “Perhaps it is so. But we do not know this.”

“Then I will pray for his release from suffering, however much he suffers”, she responded. “All suffer. All desire release.”

Antonio held up a hand to silence any further discussion. “We can only do what our consciences say”, he asserted quietly. “Leave it there, between each one and our Lord.” That seemed to satisfy Brother Thaddeus. They switched to making plans to travel to Corazon dos Reyes.


The trip was slower than the younger duo had managed, running much of the way. Antonio took along six men as guards, knowing that the larger the group, the more slowly it traveled. Casey and Esteban did their part by going ahead at their own rate, thus keeping the size down. It also allowed them to check on things before the rest reached the town.


“Holy crap”, Casey whispered. “How did that get there?”

“That” was a giant portrait of Brother Thaddeus, on the wall of the fortress across from the cathedral. He looked beatific, maybe wise, certainly compassionate. “‘Tis a miracle, visitor”, a voice declared solemnly. “‘Tis God’s own choice for our next bishop.”

“Your bishop died?” Casey asked, boiling inside. How Esteban had managed this, he didn’t know, though it was tolerable, but if he’d tried to “help” the bishop dead....

“Oh, not yet. They carried him to Mass again this morning. Some”, the townsman added in a conspiratorial tone, “say he’s dead already, but the Monsignor keeps him painted so he can keep the power.”

“That’s ghastly!” Casey exclaimed, meaning it – not that the thought hadn’t occurred to him, as something someone might try; after all, in Weekend at Bernie’s it had worked.

“So it is, so it is. But the Monsignor cannot be bishop; he was once of the Inquisidores, and none will elect him. He has held the bishop’s power for four years now, and why would he wish to give it up?”

Casey shook his head. “Why indeed?” he agreed. “Thank you, townsman”, he said, and dragged Esteban off to the Bold Blade, a quite respectable establishment on the square. There, he cornered Esteban with his questions.

“Yes, I gave a fellow a sketch of Thaddeus. No, I didn’t choose the fortress. No, I didn’t think it would be so huge. No, I didn’t ask anyone to help the bishop die. No, I didn’t know the Monsignor was an Inquisidore.” He answered it all defensively. At the end he brightened. “It is a good portrait, isn’t it? I wonder why they haven’t scrubbed it off?”

The question was something Casey was wondering as well. He waved for service, and when the server, a young woman lovely enough to make his thighs tingle, came over, he asked her.

“Oh, but they did”, she gushed. “Inquisidores and soldiers and slaves, they scrubbed it clean. But next morning it was there again. Is it not a miracle?”

“I suppose”, Casey answered, wondering how the thing had gotten there and how whoever had put it there managed to put it back at night without being caught! “What do you have to drink?”

Over weak ale Casey wouldn’t have wished on his worst enemy growing up, they came to an agreement. “Inquisidores are fair game”, he told Esteban, who agreed fervently. “How hard would it to be to arrange for this one to... suffer an accident?” He winced at the price Esteban quoted; he could cover it, but it would leave them without silver. On the other hand.... “Come on – let’s go to some different inns.”

Esteban grinned. “You mean worse ones, right?”

By nightfall Casey had won enough lagging coins they had no worry about coming up short on cash.



Streaker and Pounces stalked shadows outside the town walls. Neither liked having his human off away like that, where so many dark-robes lived. To them it was a trap, like a pit with openings that closed at night, leaving no way to flee to safety. Their human cubs were strong and swift and canny, but they were still cubs.

>as am I< Pounces observed.

Streaker laughed mentally. >but you are my cub – that is different< Pounces didn’t understand, but he accepted his father’s word.

They left the town and went prowling. Though hungry, they ignored the deer; a full meal would make them sleepy and slow. But the scent of roasting venison drew them; they followed, since where men ate, deer could be had in portions.

>dark-robes!< Pounces’ mental snarl was vicious. He didn’t know why he knew that dark-robes were evil, he just knew, had known without his father telling him. Now here was a camp full of them, a camp with sentries so confident they watched little more than their daydreams. And in that camp was meat....

Streaker’s answer was to dash and slash. A sentry’s blood spurted into the grass; he fell grabbing at his throat. The great cat ignored two soldiers, sliding past them to disembowel one dark-robe and break the back of another. Pounces waited until all attention was on his father, then rushed in from the side, tearing out throats – he liked the feel of the flesh ripping while blood spurted – and snapping necks. He didn’t see any reason to avoid killing soldiers, but since his father was doing it that way, so did he.

Pounces screamed as a crossbow bolt grazed his shoulder. The bowman’s head vanished, torn off by a wrathful Streaker. Pounces took out his rage on a tent of dark-robes struggling to find clothes; since there was no way to tell if any were soldiers or all were dark-robes, he killed them all.

Silence fell. No dark-robes remained alive; Streaker was certain of that, though he couldn’t count above four; no human with a dark robe had managed to flee, and no human with neither robe nor armor lived. Some soldiers had fled, but the cats didn’t care about soldiers. Together they searched out some warm venison, and snacked.



Casey sat up bolt upright. He’d dreamed of killing things, lots of things, and chasing others away. Beside him, Esteban whimpered in his sleep. He listened for a minute, shrugged, and snuggled back under the furs.



A massive arch with two lesser arches beneath, an even lesser between them, framed the end of the opening into what was being called “Devon’s Dig’. The great arch was thick, several meters thick, and crested with a peak steep enough to shed snow. The two main inner arches were high and wide enough that horsemen could pass beneath two or three abreast, Ryan judged; the small arched between was tall enough for the tallest of men.

Devon came to meet him. “Think it’s overdone?” he queried.

“Some”, Ryan decided. “Who designed it?”

The Engineer chuckled. “You can tell it wasn’t me, huh? It was a sort of committee.”

“Too brute-force for you”, Ryan replied. “Looks sort of monstrous.”

Devon laughed. “They decided it should hold against an avalanche or mountain slide. I didn’t see any fault with that, so there it is.”

“How far in is the tunnel?”

“Half a klick.” Devon kicked at the turf. “We ran into that blasted jumble after all – three cave-ins before we got a safe bridgehead. Now there’s gonna be a big cavern where it all collapsed. Since the roof’s gonna be high anyway, now, once we get the thing stable and lined, I’m going to cut straight up.”

“Messy.”

“Yeah, but I don’t have Anaph here to line me up from the top. Besides, letting crap fall is easier than hauling it upward.”

Ryan nodded. “I see that. So what’s the estimate for completion?”

“To be able to walk through? Maybe by Solstice, but it won’t really be safe or very useful. For a horse... spring equinox. All three passages... maybe by next summer solstice – maybe.”

“How many vents?”

“One every half-klick. I like the cavern idea, so every other vent will go up from a cavern roof.” He grinned. “You know the inns we’re spacing along the Road? The spacing puts one in the tunnel. I’m going to carve it out on the side of a cavern.”

“The ‘Cold Stone Inn’”, Ryan quipped. “You’ll have to do a special vent for a chimney.”

“Not sure it would work”, Devon responded. “Gotta be able to get the air column ion a chimney moving before smoke will go up. For a good inn, that means a chimney big enough for a couple of dozen fireplaces. To keep that air moving would take keeping a big fire going about all the time.”

“We could try making methane – no, same problem”, Ryan corrected himself. “So what do you want to do? have a real stone-cold inn?”

“I’m hoping Anaph will help me out. Maybe he could bring up some heat to the inn – he did the hot springs in the cavern.”

“Worth a try”, Ryan said. “I want to look at the inside.” He made it a question; Devon answered by leading off.

“Engineer! Oldran says – pardon, my lord!” The man hesitated, unsure of how to go on, with the two in front of him.

Ryan chuckled. “Go on, man – this is the Engineer’s domain; I’m just visiting.”

“Thank you, lord! Engineer, Oldran says you must come, to see.”

“See what?” Devon asked, increasing his pace and aiming for the tunnel opening.

“Stones slides from the wall, gravel like at the Falls. That is what I know.”

Devon groaned. Loose gravel in a formation could be deadly, and he had no foamed concrete to pump in under pressure. “Ryan, let’s hurry”, he said. Hurrying didn’t mean jogging, except for at the start, Ryan found: the center path, the only one excavated for the most part, had rails, and on the rails were carts – and the tunnel had a slight slope. The three of them grabbed a cart, pushed, and jumped in once it was rolling well. Then Devon popped up a pole with a handle and started to push, fore and back. Ryan, delighted, joined in.

“What if there’s another cart on the track?” he inquired.

“Won’t be”, the messenger answered him. “When a foreman sends for the Engineer, the track stays clear.”

“It’ll go better”, Devon puffed, “when we can get a second track in. But this is better than jogging half a klick and more.”

It proved to be more: workers were lifting timber and stone, turning a great round chamber into a dome; three on the floor jumped out to help the cart stop when they saw it. “Farther, Engineer”, one stated before returning to work. That turned out to be about forty meters.

The cutting was beautiful work, in very solid stone. “Get good building stone from here”, Ryan observed.

Devon nodded. “Already have been – lots of brick-sized and brick-proportioned stuff, for houses and whatever. This really doesn’t need bracing; we’re just doing it to keep in habit”, he added, slapping an oak timber along the way. “I’ve got a pile going for Antonio, to ship once we get the road done. It’s beautiful, a pale gray-blue – if he wants to sell it instead of use it, he can get gold for it.”

“Shards”, Ryan breathed as they stepped out of the last shadow and into the lit end of the tunnel. That end looked as though someone had back up a dump truck – or two – and just dropped over a dozen yards of river gravel. Brown, smelly ooze crept out from the bottom of the heap; one workman went methodically along the edge, scooping the crud into a bucket. When it was empty, he handed it to a waiting youth, who headed out the tunnel, and began filling another.

Oldran waved, a huge grin on his filthy face. Ryan remembered him from... one visit or another to something Devon was doing; he couldn’t recall which. The foreman was holding up a small pebble, which he tossed to Devon when the only clean pair in the area got close. He plucked up another and tossed it to Ryan, then say grinning.

“No way”, Ryan breathed. He wiped the small pebble, less than half the size of a marble, on his pants, vigorously, then looked again. The lamp light could be misleading, but– But the teeth can tell, he reminded himself, an adage from rock club. He put the pebble between his side teeth and bit.

“Is it?” Devon asked.

Ryan nodded, grinning like an idiot. “Gold, Dev! This has to be an old buried river. Oldran, how much is there?”

“Those two, a smaller, and tiny flakes”, was the answer. “We’ve sent out half as much gravel as you see before you, to find that. Wizard, the men are making a sluice, but perhaps you could aid?”

Ryan nodded. Devon had a question. “Rye, how dangerous is this?”

“From risky to catastrophic”, Ryan replied. “Oldran, can you see up there at all?”

“Not to mention, Wizard. But the flow is slower. I judge we’re nearing a lip.”

“Brace this well”, Ryan instructed, “really well. Dev, You might have to detour; I’m not sure. Oldran, once it’s braced, work at digging it out until it stops. Once it’s stopped, call me and I’ll look around. And I’ll go help with the sluice.” He grinned at Devon. “Dude, this is a lot more fun than accounts and ledgers!”

“Yeah, but without accounts and ledgers nothing would get done well”, Devon pointed out. He grinned. “You need what they used to call a Steward: someone to do all that for you, and you just check on him every now and then.”

“That would be heaven”, Ryan agreed. “Dev”, he went on as they turned and left, “even if there’s not piles of gold in there, this is fantastic. What he’s got out so far is almost an excelente worth, and in Quistador territory, that’s serious cash. Even if we only get five excelentes total, that will go far in supporting Antonio.”

“If that’s a lens deposit, maybe we can mine it all out”, Devon mused. “Just the gravel will by nice to have, and if there’s more gold – super.”



Don Delgado’s brother recoiled at the sight of what was recognizably his own face carved in the wall of a wooden building right next to a hot pork stall in the NearGate Market. The shop owner glanced at him, then did a double-take – and a new rumor was born.


Esteban and Casey attended the evening Mass at the cathedral. The place was packed, far more than usual; people were coming to pray for this new bishop God was sending. The Monsignor was patently furious over the stated intentions of many prayers, but there was nothing he could do about it. His muscular deacons deposited the bishop in his seat, and the Mass began.

The homily was about how we all ought to wish that God’s servants would live a long time, that they might accomplish much. Antonio considered it a bald statement meant to encourage the people to support the status quo. The Eucharist itself was bland, mechanical. Then the Monsignor turned for the benediction, lifting his hands

He crumpled to the ground.

Someone screamed. Two priests dashed to help the man, but the Monsignor was dead. Foolishly, one announced that fact. The orderly assembly became a churning mob, most uncertain, many frightened, a few panicked, while some extreme individuals cried it was God’s hand. Casey looked to see what became of the bishop; he was startled to see robes of red and black peeking out from beneath the liturgical dress of three priests who came to help the bishop leave. But he got a good enough look to notice two things about the bishop: first, that he was in truth alive – his eyes blinked and he smiled weakly; second, that he was drooling like a baby. He focused in on that face, and what he saw was fear.


“No, he was scared of the Inquisitors”, he insisted later in the private dining room at the Rock Springs Inn. “He was drooling, like someone really old who can’t keep his jaw shut. He was blinking at everything like someone who can’t keep track of things. And he was scared of the Inquisidores dressed like priests.”

“This is vile”, Brother Thaddeus declared. “They dare!”

“Obviously they dare”, Antonio pointed out. “The question is how we can turn this to our plans.” A sudden thought struck him. “Casey, did the bishop look drugged?”

Casey frowned, recalling the face he’d looked at so carefully. “Not really”, he said with a shake of his head. “What he looked was senile.”

They were still mulling over ideas when the town outside their inn started getting noisy. A look out the window showed people in the streets, some cheering. A group was gathering, yelling. “Esteban, would you go find out what’s happening?” Antonio requested.

“Forty?” don Delgado asked in shock. “Forty Inquisidores dead, torn by demons?”

Esteban shrugged. “That’s what everyone says.” He grinned. “I have an idea – I’ll be back.” He sped out the door and away.

“An idea?” Antonio looked pointedly at Casey, who shrugged.

“He didn’t tell me. But I bet he thought of a rumor to start that will help us.”

Less than an hour later they were hearing rumor in the common room. Esteban hadn’t returned, so they weren’t absolutely sure he’d begun it, but Casey thought he had, or had at least taken a rumor he’d heard and spread it. “Yes, I say”, one man insisted, pounding his mug on the table in emphasis. “The Inquisidores had a pact with the Devil, and they failed his bidding. So demons came to punish them!”

The second man looked dubious, but nodded. “When God’s chosen bishop comes, he’ll set things right. No pact with the Evil One will stand against him.”

“He should burn the Inquisidores!” the first declared. “They say fire purifies the soul – could be it might work even for them!”


Esteban crouched on the ledge. He was cold, and both tired and impatient. To get what he’d wanted, he’d had to steal a bit of silver, and he hadn’t checked in with the local organization. Then he’d had to argue over quality; second-best wouldn’t do. Now he was counting the timing of sentries as they passed by. Their pattern seemed random, but he wasn’t convinced; it felt like there was order to it. Seventeen, eighteen, nineteen, twenty.... Three minutes later, he grinned: it was a combination of three cycles, with the first dominant over the second, the second over the third, and the third over the first – clever, but not good enough. He did the figures in his head: the second cycle would bring a guard... the third cycle and the first fell close together, so the third would dictate the time... He had fourteen minutes to wait.

Slipping into the bishop’s room wasn’t hard; the window latch was already cracked, so all he had to do was help it along. The bishop was sleeping, drooling. Esteban saw that the room was bigger than he’d expected, but other than that had everything he’d hoped: a banked fire, several mugs, one with a spoon in it, a pitcher, and a jug – water and wine. He pulled out his little pouch and went to work. Almost half an hour later he was done: a pot of hot tea sat on the hearth. He dipped a finger in and licked it off. The pleasant sensations took a minute to become evident, but they–

The door rattled, and a servant came into the room. The young man saw the pot of tea and stopped, looking around the room. Then he shrugged, filled a mug from the pot, and took it to the bishop. From beneath the bed, Esteban watched the feet move about.

“Here, bishop”, a pleasant voice said. “Doctor’s medicine.” Esteban heard slurping, then at long last the thunk of mug hitting bed stand. The feet moved about again for a minute, then left. Esteban waited a count of fifty before he rolled out. He picked up the bishop’s mug and filled it again, only half way this time. The bishop was sleeping, a slight smile on his lips; Esteban dribbled some tea down the wrinkled chin and onto the bed cloths. Then he checked everything to be sure he’d left no sign, and went out the same way he’d come.

The next morning, there was no bishop at Mass. The senior priest who led the liturgy announced that the bishop had died in his sleep, and asserted that the man had died secure in God’s arms, since he’d been found with a smile on his face. “In two days, we shall choose his successor”, the priest declared, then dismissed everyone.



“Three excelentes, seven duros”, Lady Lucinda announced. She’d had one of Kinner’s journeymen make her a set of scales, which she’d calibrated using her small supply of coin. “There is no more?”

“Not right now”, Ryan answered. It was hard to focus on business with her so close; he had to keep his eyes on the gold from the tunnel. “Oldran says there’s about twice as much gravel left as we got already, so there ought to be more once they get the tunnel strengthened past there. Maybe we’ll end up with ten excelentes.”

“Even a great many Quistador caballeros never have so much in coin, Ryan”, she responded, savoring the feel of his name on her tongue. “You think it little, but it is wealth.”

Ryan tapped the scales gently and watched the little pile of gold rise and fall, rise and fall slowly. “I’ll send this to the Mint.” That was a joke that had grown between them; it was just a small room where their dies for making copies of Quistador coins were kept. “Best to make it all into duros. We’ll save it, for getting another estate started.”

“You are thinking of don Cortez?” she asked.

Ryan shook his head. “I just know Rigel wants more estates filled with people.” He wasn’t yet aware that some of those people were already toiling north.



Episcopal troops already lined the square, but they didn’t bother Esteban. He wasn’t confident of getting past them – episcopal troops were good! – but if he didn’t, he had a safety plan. Of one thing he was confident: no episcopal soldier would ever be in the pay of los Inquisidores. While that wasn’t directly relevant, it nevertheless comforted him a great deal: a bishop’s troops were men of honor, dependable honor – unlike that of bishops themselves, or nobles – so they would do nothing but question him if caught.

He wrinkled his nose at the stench left from the riot just after dark, not so many hours ago. In a way it had been his riot – no, it had been his riot, he admitted to himself, striving for honesty; he’d paid to send off the true rumor that the bishop had been a prisoner of los Inquisidores. Though they little respected their bishop, people got enraged at the thought that his corruption hadn’t been his, but that of the most hated power in the realm. Two shops had burned; that made Esteban sad; three houses known to house Inquisitors had also, and that sat with great satisfaction in his heart. That there had been Inquisitors in them made no real difference to him; they would have died eventually anyway, and to him the means was only justice, not something to be happy about. Oh, he was certainly happy that they, and the forty shredded in the forest by something, the forty his second rumor had said were coming to set one of their own on the bishop’s throne, were–

Esteban lost his march of thought, forgot his mission, and just froze, cold certainty in his heart: it hadn’t been demons in the forest, it had been two great cats, his friends. He wondered if Casey knew, The question brought its own answer; the moment he thought of Casey, he knew with certainty just where Casey was, outside the walls, not alone. That meant his friend was with the cats, and by now knew.

>shadow-hunter<

The mental call brought him back to his situation. Disgusted with himself, he decided he had to abandon his plan: he’d lost his count, and lost track of one of the roaming sentries the episcopals used. He’d need another hour just to get back to where he’d been, and by then sunlight would be streaming through the square, morning mists vanishing, and all hope of stealth gone.

Hi, Pounces, he thought.

>stealthing?<

He chuckled silently. Yes, stealthing. Streaker? Happy-Hunter?

>with<

A stronger, deeper – if that made any sense with pictures in his head – voice spoke. >Happy-Hunter comes<

“All right”, he said to Brother Thaddeus three minutes later – he’d retreated hastily, abandoning his best skills – “that way won’t work. Let’s be... bold. Follow me.”



The semaphore message arrived with breakfast. Ryan didn’t know whether to be happy or irritated: Lords Perez and Ramos to occupy two adjoining estates Rigel’s vassals vassals. The repeated word at the end told him to be cautious; he guessed they were troublemakers. Why put troublemakers side by side he didn’t know, unless they were expected to keep each other out of trouble. Yet it did tell him that these shouldn’t go to the castle he’d explored, On the other hand, it was a good idea to put problems where they could be watched....

Ryan didn’t recall sending for maps, but they arrived, and by the time he’d finished eating, he knew where he’d send them.



Getting through things meant to keep people out always made Esteban happy. This one was a particular delight, a secret entrance to a private garden by the cathedral, one meant for meditation by high cathedral clergy and visitors. The beauty of using it now was that according to The Hand – the generic name for the head thief in any town – the episcopal soldiers didn’t know it existed. So when he found the little niche, set the -- Set the saint by the deer, press the red duster tree, count to three for the click, put the saint back by the rock, he thought, matching action to word. A section of what looked like solid stone shifted; he caught the edge with his toe, let go the little tree, and with Brother Thaddeus’ help, pulled. The mechanism was silent; mentally he complimented whoever maintained it.

“What do I do?” Thaddeus asked softly.

Esteban managed not to groan. “What do you want to do?” he asked back. He feared the man would want to give up and go back.

“Pray before the conclave”, came the answer. Esteban was delighted; that was perfect!

“Then that’s what you do, and that’s what you tell anyone you meet.” He felt the tension go out of the Brother.

“Then... no deception.” More tension melted away.

“No deception”, Esteban agreed. “But the rest is under the seal.” Brother Thaddeus chuckled at that; neither was a priest, so neither could claim that. Both, though, knew what was meant.

“Now”, Esteban said firmly. Together they pulled, opening the portal enough for Thaddeus to slip through. “Count to five first!” the young thief called softly.


Terens Morales blinked. The mist in the corner of the garden was moving. He’d thought it foolish to post a guard where the only door was back into the cathedral, but it wasn’t his job to ask questions about orders, only to carry them out effectively. He saw the early morning’s light dance as the mist swirled, a small whirlwind. The whirlwind faded, revealing a solid, hooded, robed figure there, walking calmly, slowly toward him. “Román!” he yelled, the name of his backup just inside the little vestry that served two side chapels.

Román had been looking out the window at the garden. He liked flowers, and was hoping to see some glory as the morning mists, lit by early rays of sun, swirled around the bishop’s own blossoms. So he saw the swirl of mists, he saw the figure emerge, and was already turning the door lever when Terens called. It was an arrogant name for a son, but that father’s offspring had no arrogance in him, just solid competence and unwavering honor and loyalty. That name had made it rough going at first, but he’d proven himself, and now there wasn’t a man in the episcopal companies who’d so much as hesitate to answer Terens’ call.

The figure was definitely a man. Terens issued the standard challenge – “State your business!” – as Román came up beside him, sword loose.

“I desire to pray before the conclave begins.” Listening from outside, Esteban nodded approval: Brother Thaddeus sounded no different than if they’d walked down an aisle of the cathedral and been questioned at the entrance to a small chapel.

“How did you get in here?!” demanded Román. Esteban froze. If the Brother gave the truth... but then he wanted to dance for joy, because Thaddeus indeed spoke the truth, but apparently something of Casey and Esteban had rubbed off on him.

“Through the mists, my son. May I pass? I would pray in the garden, but....” Thaddeus shrugged as though to say the reason should be obvious.

“Remove your hood”, Terens ordered, managing to keep the tremble from his voice. “Román, go check that wall.” Esteban heard a gasp – had to be the soldier seeing the Brother’s face.

“Wall’s more solid than a sergeant’s head”, Román reported. The tremble in his voice didn’t stay hidden.

“Then may I go pray?” There was a touch of impatience in Thaddeus voice. To Esteban, it meant that he was tired of games and really just wanted to go pray; to the soldiers...?

Román gasped in turn as Thaddeus looked him square in the eye while he walked to rejoin Terens. The two soldiers looked at each other, then toward the fortress where Thaddeus’ face had graced the wall for the past few days, and then crossed themselves.

“As you please, holy sir!” Román replied hoarsely, just as Terens stumbled through, “Without delay, blesséd one.”

And like that, Brother Thaddeus walked on into the cathedral, to be found there alone, praying, when the senior priest of the diocese opened the doors to begin the conclave. Terens and Román swore on the altar’s relics that the wall was solid, it had not parted, that there had been a swirl of mists and a figure appeared – and why would they not grant admission to the cathedral to a man already within its bounds?! Had it not been for the commander of the bishop's guard, they might have been put to the question, but he had no patience with Inquisitors when it came to his men -- and until the presiding bishop took charge, he commanded the cathedral.

Esteban didn’t trust the soldiers to spread any word, so he did it himself, claiming to have heard from an awe-struck soldier what had happened. He added a touch of glowing aura to one version, a beam of light through the mists leaving the figure in its place in another, the figure appearing as at a great distance and approaching to a third. Of course he only used one, himself; the other versions he gave to beggars already out with their bowls – beggars could be trusted to pass exciting rumors, because a good tale brought coin.

He was back at the Rock Springs Inn in time for breakfast. Esteban left out the part about his first plan, and told only the entry of Brother Thaddeus into the cathedral. The rumor he’d spread, with the glowing aura, he shared; the others he kept to himself. But he couldn’t fool Casey.

“What were you going to do first?” his friend demanded when they were alone.

“It doesn’t matter – I gave it up. This worked better anyway.” Esteban was still surprised at that.

Casey stared at him. “Tell me.”

“Why didn’t you tell me our furry friends slaughtered forty Inquisidores?” he fired back.

Casey laughed softly. “Okay – I’ll stop asking. I didn’t tell you ‘cause I didn’t know. I sorta dreamed it, and it woke me up, but I wasn’t sure. Then I wanted to see Streaker.”

“Was either cat hurt?” Esteban demanded anxiously.

“Pounces got a little cut.” Casey grinned proudly. “His dad ripped off the guy’s head.” The two basked for a moment in the warmth of their bonds with the cats, and increasingly with each other.

“Hey – I knew you were outside the wall this morning – explain that!”

“Yes!” Casey exulted. “You have the Scout spark. One thing it does is let you know where your fellow Scouts are – well, if they’re not too far away.” He closed his eyes and concentrated.... Nothing. “I’m too far away from the other guys, but we’re close.”

Esteban chuckled at himself. “You know when I’m sneaking around, then!”

Casey grinned. “Yep. How much did you get on that third floor place?”

Esteban felt like his privacy was violated, but also... he couldn’t put a name to it, but he liked it, liked having someone who always knew where he was. “Forty silver sueldos and fifty billon blancos. But it’s gone.”

“Bribes for spreading rumors”, Casey stated, knowing that had to be it. “What other rumors did you start this morning?” Esteban told him, and they shared a good laugh.

Antonio interrupted them. “We’d better get to the square”, he told them, a bit grim. “Come on.” Esteban paused long enough to shrug and stretch, while Casey adjusted his pants and scratched his right ear. They grinned at each other; the actions had little to do with stretching or clothing, but were their ways of moving just enough to be able to tell if all their little toys were in place.

The square was packed. The episcopal troops had withdrawn to the steps of the cathedral; after all, the people of a town had the right to a voice in the choosing of their bishop. That it was rarely exercised made no difference; they couldn’t be banned. Nor would the soldiers have been easy about it anyway; Terens and Román’s account of the apparition in the garden had spread through the ranks, and while among the honorable episcopal troops a tale was passed on without embellishment, the raw truth was powerful enough.

From time to time a soldier would glance at the fortress across the square. Casey enjoyed watching their expressions: the image of Thaddeus was gone without a trace; he certainly wished he knew how that had been done, when it had reappeared on its own for days. The soldiers looked varyingly nervous, awed, puzzled, fearful, curious, and more than one crossed himself at the absence of the image now that the actual man was inside.

That he was inside, the crowd had no doubt. Call after call to the soldiers made that clear: “Bring him out!”, “Let us in to see him!”, “Where is he?”, “Who is he?”, “Bring the God-sent!”, “What’s his name?” Thanks to the two young thieves and dress armor on Sir Antonio and Sir Ramón, they’d gotten to the front of the crowd before the crowd’s mood began to change.

“How do we calm them?” Antonio asked Ramón.

The older caballero chuckled. “No one can calm a mob. Only pray they remain just people.”

Something smacked into the breastplate of a soldier. He didn’t move, but that only angered some in the crowd. But a hand brushed the mark off, and the crowd quieted. Someone else had decided the crowd was turning unruly, and had come to do something about it.

“I am Centurion Tacito Vargas”, the man called in tones that reached to the fortress across the square. His words weren’t understood that far, because of the crowd’s own noise, but they quieted the half nearest him, and the rest followed their example. He started over. “I am Centurion Tacito Vargas. I command the bishop’s guard. I ask peace here.” There were somber expressions, plus murmurs and muttering; one on one, a bishop’s guard could take any man alive, except possibly the Duke’s Own. And among bishop’s guards, those in Corazon dos Reyes were regarded as the best. Vargas let the quiet return and grow.

“The people have a say in choosing their bishop. There are seats in the cathedral which are not filled. So I will allow some in.” The crowd surged; he drew his sword and slapped his breastplate with it. The ringing crack! Froze everyone. “I say that I will allow some in. No rushing, pushing, or sneaking, and if anyone tries a bribe, his hand shall be severed.”

With the rest of the crowd, Casey had no doubt the centurion meant it.. He didn’t want in, anyway. But he started to jump up and down and wave as if he did, and nudged Esteban to do the same. He got what he really wanted: a soldier came to quiet them, noticed the two caballeros and a lady standing behind the youngsters, and returned to mention them to Centurion Vargas. Within a minute, Casey was cheering quietly as his more fashionable friends were ushered inside to join the merchants, smiths, carters, bakers, cobblers, and other craftsmen and artisans the centurion had been selecting.

The crowd began to thin as people realized that some common people, not churchmen, were being allowed ins; to many, that meant they had a voice, even if it wasn’t their own. Open space, however thin, drew sellers of everything a crowd might want: meat pies, fruit pies, drinks, pastries, and more. It became a carnival atmosphere – and one where Casey got introductions to some of the city’s least fine, thieves and pickpockets of Esteban’s recent acquaintance, who were having a field day.

Casey was blowing on a fresh pie, redberries with diced venison, when Esteban started laughing. “Come”, Estaban said, tugging at his sleeve. They didn’t go far; when they stopped, Esteban took the hand of an old woman who was searching through pockets. “Old mother”, he said, “I saw a thief take your coin. I did not know how much was yours, so I got all he had, and it is now yours.” He poured a fistful off copper with an occasional silver into one of her pockets. Casey heard her gasp, and put an arm around her as tears began to flow.

“Bless you, young master!” she declared. “The Virgin bless you! The Son and all His Saints bless you! And the new bishop they’ve sent us bless you, too!” She took out some of the money Esteban had brought her. “Here, have yourself a pie!” she insisted, and forced a billon blanco into the thief’s palm.

Esteban actually stuttered, embarrassed. “Thank you, old mother, but I did it because no one should steal from those who have little already.”

The vendor of meat-and-berry pies laughed. “Had it been a caballero, you would have let it pass?” People laughed.

“He has his sword – let him get it back himself!” Esteban declared. At that, nearly everyone laughed. One didn’t, a man whose eyes were following them closely. Casey realized the man had been watching, alert, the whole time. He caught those eyes and held them. After a time the man nodded, bowed slightly, and moved on.

Esteban had been watching. “What was that about?” he asked.

“You’re the townsman”, Casey answered. “You tell me.”

Esteban stopped and thought. “Not Inquisition; none of them would have bowed. Not of the shadow folk” – the thieves association – “none of them would have let you catch him watching us. Maybe one of the lords, but lords hardly ever have such men. That doesn’t leave much.”

“What does it leave?”

“Not here”, Esteban told him. Instead, they went to the edge of the square and climbed a huge white oak, stopping a good twelve meters above the ground. “It leaves Duke’s men, or a cofradia.”

“What’s a cofradia?” In Casey’s head it came across as “fraternity”, but he didn’t think the man had anything to do with college.

“Brotherhood. Guild. Association. There are various – those who kill, those who learn, those who...sabotage things.”

Casey felt a chill. “He could be here to kill us?!”

Esteban laughed. “No – you would never have seen him. He’s probably here learning something, and nodded, then bowed, because he recognized that you’d caught him.”

“He didn’t laugh! Anyone would catch that!”

Esteban shook his head. “Anyone would see that. Most would catch a sour disposition. You caught a man busy being watchful.”


The voice of the people admitted to the cathedral was almost unanimous; Brother Thaddeus was elected without a vote of dissent by the clergy, many of whom feared the mob. When he came out, the crowd went wild; more coin came to the cathedral coffers that day than in most months. Brother Thaddeus wouldn’t touch a copper of it, which made the crowd love him more. That evening he complained to his brother as he was being dressed for his ordination to the priesthood.

“They eat at me”, he said, his eyes haunted. “They put hope on me. I am just a man. I shouldn’t have done this.”

“Too late for that now”, Antonio noted. “And they still need you. You told me about other candidates – how many of them would have said to put all those coins in the fund for the poor?”

The Brother’s lips lifted in a wan, hollow smile. “None, or at best the prescribed third. But most of it was from the poor! How could I not give it back to them?!”

“That’s why you will be a great bishop”, his brother said. “You don’t even understand the possibility of a great deal of the corruption in our Church. No one will be able to say you put on a pious show. You are nearly what God had in mind when He decreed that priests serve His people.”

“‘Nearly’?” Thaddeus queried, a ghost of a smile on his lower face.

“As I am not God, nor has He written to tell me just what He wishes in a priest, I must humbly declare I cannot know for certain. But whatever He meant, certainly you come closer than any man I’ve ever met.” The brothers’ eyes held each other. “Hermancito, when you went to become a priest, I thought you a fool, you of the pranks and the disobedience and the stretched stories”, Ramón said softly. “But here I see you becoming a bishop, and the most worthy candidate in a lifetime.”

“Now you’re supposed to ask him to clear your name”, Casey quipped. Both Delgados laughed; that was the way of things, favors and debts and the Game – but not here.


The only flaw in the ordination of their man sent by God was no flaw in the eyes of the people of Corazon dos Reyes: he wept when lifted and marked with the sacred oil, and again when he celebrated his first Mass. Those were tears of joy, everyone could tell that, and for a man to be joyful to come into God’s service was as close to a miracle as most had ever hoped to see.

Then through three days of fasting and prayer, Brother Thaddeus, now become Father Theodoro, studied as he never had before. On the third day he’d be consecrated bishop, and before then he was expected to know all the law of the Church. He’d studied some, of course, in preparation for the priesthood, but only in connection with other subjects. This was immersion.

“That’s idiocy!” he exclaimed late on the night before the consecration.

“Now what is?” Antonio asked, sleepy like the others, but determined to help Father Theodoro through his ordeal.

“Listen: if a man’s brother dies, and he has means, he must wed his brother’s wife, to raise up a son for his brother or to raise his son. Now should a man fight his brother, and kill him, he shall not suffer punishment, for God has ordained that he must raise his brother’s offspring.” Theodoro started to throw the book at the fireplace, but just dropped it on the floor.

Antonio had to laugh. “That is pretty stupid. But what would you do?”

“First I’d ask if there were any other brothers”, Theodoro replied. “If there were, the man who killed his brother would get punished.”

“What punishment?” don Delgado inquired.

“If it were truly a fight, he does not deserve death. He could be put to the work gangs, but then I’d have to worry about his children – and look for another brother!” The bishop-to-be burst out laughing. The others joined, imagining a cascading chain of punished brothers handing their families over to other brothers.

Theodoro sobered. “The true idiocy is that this should fall to the Church. Yes, we must see to the care of the flock, and for that is makes sense we should know to whom the fatherless family should go for nurture and protection, since Nature tells us no woman should head a family alone.” Antonio winced at that, and turned it into a shudder. He tugged a cover off the back of the couch where he sat and pulled it over him. “Yet the matter of punishment belongs to the estate of the Sword.”

“Re-write the laws”, Casey suggested with a yawn.

“As you are a scholar, write why the law ought to be changed”, Lady Ismelda offered. “Surely others before you have said such a thing, and it was written.”

That brightened the priest’s outlook. Fortified by a woman’s good sense, he retrieved the book and went back to studying.


Casey wished they’d started the sunrise Mass for consecrating Father Theodoro as Bishop with Morning Has Broken. Since they hadn’t, he did it himself, singing the words softly while the choir intoned words supposedly Latin in notes supposedly Gregorian – he didn’t know, and didn’t really care; boring music with words he couldn’t understand wasn’t his thing.

He wondered about the man in the square, the one Esteban thought might be a cofradia member, but not an assassin, or maybe a Duke’s man. Casey went with the first; he couldn’t figure out why a Duke’s man would be there checking on things about the consecration of a bishop when news of the death of the last one hadn’t even reached the capital yet, but he could imagine all kinds of thrilling reasons a cofradia might be interested. It’ll probably be something boring, if we ever find out, he decided.

He wondered as well just what Brother Thaddeus – now Father Theodoro and on his way to bishop – thought about while he was lying face down on a cold stone floor. With the heat the beginning of the day promised for later, that might have been a nice position for later in the afternoon, but the cathedral didn’t have anything like insulation, so Casey guessed the floor wasn’t much above freezing – which changed his question to one of could Father Theodoro think, there. He felt amusement from Streaker over the matter of deliberately putting one’s self on a freezing cold surface, and an image of himself stretched out on a nice stone slab in a meadow, with thoughts of warmth.

He found himself happy for the Father when they let him get on his knees, and finally, after oil and other things, to stand. Then the new bishop got to take over and celebrate the Mass, which Casey thought of as Communion and Oran called Eucharist. Something bothered him about the ceremony, though, and he didn’t figure it out until it was all over.

“Don’t they need a bishop to make a bishop?” he asked Lady Ismelda.

“Three, usually”, she answered, “but when the people of a place directly call for a bishop, only one, because the people are the Church. Brother Oremo is a bishop.” She saw Casey didn’t know whom she meant. “The elderly one with a limp. He was bishop in Padillo, once. I’d forgotten he retired here to the monastery. But he’s still a bishop.” Casey thought bishops stayed bishops for life, and wondered why one would retire – maybe it had something to do with the limp.


They all met that evening for dinner in the same private room used before. Don Delgado was chuckling when he came in. “Would you know what my brother’s first official act as bishop was?” he asked.

“This could be interesting”, Antonio remarked. “I’m ready – tell us.”

“He found that five excelentes had been set aside for redoing the bishop’s residence. He ordered that it be transferred to the account for the poor. Then as his second act he went through the residence and had the servants take down anything more expensive than might appear as a decoration in a good, respectable inn – they’ll be sold one at a time, so they’ll bring more coin.” Everyone waited for more.

Antonio laughed. “I surrender – what’s he going to do with the money?”

“The biggest plaint from the poor in town has been leaky roofs. The work will start on the worst – he plans to put new roofs over the heads of all the poor who have their own houses. For renters, he says he’ll pay half the cost of a new roof.” Delgado shook his head. “Soon he’ll be famous for helping the poor. Then people will start wishing him dead.”

“He’ll make the other bishops look bad”, Esteban explained. “Don’t worry about him, don Ramón – the thieves will like him; they’ll take care of him.”




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Wow, fast-forward on the Bishop track!

And what a novel idea - put a Bishop's crook in the hands of the only one who won't be a crooked Bishop!

Something that's been bothering me for a while...when the Quistadores were Snatched, were there Bishops among them? Because otherwise...how could they even ordain priests?
 
Thanks Kuli.
Is this a small start of a Revolution in the Church ?
Roads, bridges and tunnels abuilding, so industrious and everyone working together with a common aim.
How will the new Bishop fare??
Wonderful weaving by our Master Author.
Please continue
Harry
 
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