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Fit for Life


150

Angels


Cat stared at cat as human stared at human. Tails lashed – fingers fidgeted, humans being less well endowed with means to expression tension.

“You surprised me”, Esteban admitted.

Casey relaxed. “It’s my territory. Inside the walls, you would have surprised me.”

“You’re getting better”, the street-Scout allowed.

“You, too.” Casey chuckled; at the same moment, the cats went from staring and lashing to jumping and rolling. Casey followed suit, tackling his friend; they rolled just twice and came to rest with Esteban on top. He planted his elbows on Casey’s chest and dropped his chin into them.

“I won’t answer any of your questions”, Casey proclaimed with a laugh.

“You’d better”, Esteban admonished.

“Or what?”

“Or I’ll pee our pants.” It set Casey laughing so hard Esteban was bucked off. “That’s okay”, the smaller thief announced, “I didn’t have to, anyway.”

“That’s okay”, Casey echoed. “I’d talk, anyway. Hey – did you bring some wine?”

Esteban nodded, rolled to where he’d dropped his gear, and retrieved a skin. “Are we getting drunk?”

“Are there pretty girls?”

“Only ones who’ll cut our throats.”

“Okay, we’re not getting drunk.” Casey accepted the wine skin, depleted by a large swallow, and did his own depleting. Capping the skin was accompanied by a sigh. “That’s nice. My water skin has something growing in it. Anyway... What progress?”

Esteban wiggled his fingers for the skin; Casey tossed it back. “Three and three.” He downed two gulps and put the skin down. “Three watchers, always, three ways out.”

“Have you got a signal?”

Esteban shook his head. “All I could think of was going in to tell him. Bad ideas – breaking a window, starting a fire in the cathedral, or across the street, or just running in and saying, ‘Bishop, you have to runnnnnnnnnnnnn!’
“‘Carlos’, I steal things. I sneak around. I could teach Theodoro hand signs, but....”

“But would he pay attention?” Casey finished. He’d been running mentally through ways to signal Theodoro it was time to run away and hide, and had kept running up against two things: he didn’t know the culture well enough, and it was essential to not be revealed when delivering the signal.

“He pays attention to prayers, and hymns – he likes to sing”, Esteban revealed. “Something in the little book you left him got him singing, and now everyone sings. He pays attention to the poor, and to his sermons. He pays attention to books, and his studies. He–“

Casey thrust a fist into the air. “That’s it! ‘He pays attention to books’! We just need the right book....”



“Two of you. Scout Casey, how fares don Antonio? and my brother, don Ramón?”

Casey shrugged. “Antonio’s got more help. He’s building a church – if you know a good priest, to would help. He’s got one who came as a slaver, exiled by some idiot lord. He’s old – you know him?” Theodoro’s face had lit up.

“I think I do. Is he well?”

Casey shook his head. “Not really. They broke his back and left arm. Antonio has friends who can help that kind of thing, but it isn’t easy. He really needs a helper.”

Theodoro was nodding. “At least he is cared for. He still limps?”

Another head shake. “Only when he does steps. Levelish, his left foot swings out a little wide, but he walks okay.
“And don Ramón is busy. And worried about you.”

“God will take care of me”, Theodoro asserted, calm assurance infective. It didn’t quite bounce off Casey’s serious impudence.

“Yep – and we’re part of how He’s doing it. We’re the boat drifting by in a flood just after you tell God you trust His care.
“Here’s the deal: people are getting ready to make trouble for you, maybe hurt you. Instead of angels, God sent us – call us ‘Esteban’s Angels’.” The bishop couldn’t help but chuckle. Esteban stood and bowed, and the bishop laughed.

“Well, then, angels. What shall be the means of my deliverance?”

It was the perfect opening. Casey pulled out a book and held it up. With a bright red cover, it would stand out beautifully; with the faded blue ribbon marked by a white cross, it could carry information. “This. You’re interested in books. Esteban says people come and go, delivering books, so someone with a book won’t be strange. If you’re really in danger, someone will deliver this book. If it’s close, the delivery person will wait – and that means you gather things and leave with him!”

“Or her”, Theodoro and Esteban corrected together, then laughed.

“Or her”, Casey agreed. “Anyway – if you find the book delivered, that means get things ready, and someone will come for you. When they come, you go – it doesn’t matter if you’re busy praying, or reading, or anything. Um, if you’re at Mass, and it’s desperate, the delivery person will stop with the book visible and make sure you see it. Then you finish Mass and leave – no private prayers, no greetings, just drop the fancy robes and go.”

“And if Brother Dismas is paying a call?” THeodoro asked, playing devil’s advocate and teasing.

“He’ll help you get out”, Casey declared firmly. “If there’s an argument, come with us.” He emphasized the word with a thumb to his own chest and a forefinger pointed at Esteban.

“How do I know the book-bearer is from you?” asked the bishop.

Casey was ready for this. “Ask the name of the book found in a dead man’s hand.”

Theodoro chuckled and applauded the verbal ploy. “A phrase of two meanings – resting in the hand of a man who has died, or written in the hand of a man who has died. Unclear, and therefore quite clear. Yet what if I should fear one of your messengers has been captured, and I face an imposter?”

Casey hadn’t thought that far, but the answer was right within sight. “Ask who left you a green book with living lessons. I won’t tell anyone that’s a question you might ask, but anyone who comes for you will know.”

Theodoro’s eyes went to the book in question. “Doctor Lutéro makes many allusions to the scriptures – scriptures we do not have. He leaves me as a shepherd unable to feed his flock.”

Casey grinned. “Scout Two told me Doctor Martín loved the Psalms. I think I can find copies of some, here and there. And you do like books....”

Theodoro laughed, but it was tinged with sadness – sadness that he should be reduced to reliance on these... well, why not think of them as angels? Was an angel not one God sent? Could they not, as did the Savior Himself, come in humble form? Yet that he should have to flee saddened him, and that he would need to leave his flock without their shepherd, more.

“We persevere”, he said softly.

“And then we triumph”, Casey stated emphatically. “Then we triumph.”



361012.jpg
 
Bishop Theodoro is alive, well, and, while saddened by the prospect, enough of a realist to know that the Lord does, indeed, work in mysterious ways and Esteban and Casey & company can, indeed, be Angels from God.

A serious, yet lighthearted installment.
I enjoyed the "Mexican standoff" between Esteban, Casey, y los tigres.
And the fun 'rasslin' match afterwards - BOTH feline and hominid.

Gotta be able to let the stress flow out now and again.
..|
 
I wonder if the rasslin' between Casey and Esteban suggests more than is obvious.

Oh, maybe not. Good chapter anyway.
 
:rotflmao:
I wonder if the rasslin' between Casey and Esteban suggests more than is obvious.

Oh, maybe not. Good chapter anyway.

I was thinking the same thing, Críostóir. And, there was the threat of "water sports" from Esteban. Imagine the trouble they could be in if the kitty cats decided to horn in on them "in flagrante" - talk about "raspy" tongue jobs. OUCH!
:D :rotflmao:
 
Oh! Good Grief! A very serious posit from Master Kuli, and "You Guys" take it "THERE"! #-o ](*,)

Can I watch? :badgrin:

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :slap:
 
151
Building Program


Rigel felt like he was drowning in information. Their hostess was giving not just answers, but great detail: he now knew, for example, that more than one lord in Refuge with a fine quarry kept workers busy cutting at a steady pace, in order to have good stone workers available. Stone was stockpiled in a number of standard sizes, which was one reason many buildings in the Constant Hills had dimensions that were similar or identical: it was as though someone had delivered a giant set of LEGOs, and those determined the proportions of everything. But with the citadel here, and the rest of Osvaldo’s – hers and Ortega’s, officially – building program, those stockpiles were gone. Not all the stone had been used, yet, but it was purchased and transported.

The one thing that rang in his mind clearly concerning that point was simple: without those massive work horses, it wouldn’t have been possible. Second was one he was already aware of in theory: without the main road system – and a good assist from frozen ground – the horses couldn’t have made it possible. Yet evening knowing the transport methods that had made it possible – including, when wagons were short (always) and the temperature had plummeted, deliberately pouring water on the roads to ice them, so sledges could be used – what astounded him was that there had been enough stone on hand to supply a half-dozen large castles, another half-dozen small ones, several bridges and some road embankments, and the foundations for three dozen buildings in the town they’d measured out the year before, now being called Francisco!

It was an immense amount of stone, but nowhere near infinite. Awareness of that had driven House Aguilar’s architect to decree round castles. Ryan would have been pleased; they knew the fact of circumference-to-area ratios, and that the best possible one was described by A=πr2 (though he would have cringed right along with Rita at their approximation of pi as 3 and 3/22). So they’d seen a round citadel, built where Flavio Gael Rubius Aguilar had determined the road north was to begin, and now a round castle where don Aguilar had set Cristobal de Logroño. This castle was huge itself, for a simple reason: the lord was moving his entire House, with all its people and all its possessions, and as Lady Escobar had told them, selling anything that couldn’t be moved.

People wouldn’t have put up with round houses, though, even if the stone stockpiles had lasted long enough to supply such lesser buildings. Those were being built with what Rita judged – from questioning to annoying lengths – to be low-quality brick, green lumber, and increasingly expensive stone from a too-slowly increasing number of quarries. The town. If they’d had the chance to see it, would have been a strange mix of building styles, people throwing up what they could afford on whatever ground was theirs. Many would fully intend to replace and improve as conditions did, but the time would never be right for most of them, and so the character the town was acquiring in its birth rush would remain for many years.

Rigel had missed Rita’s question. “About one in twenty”, had been Lady Escobar’s answer. “That’s twelve thousand people!” Rita exclaimed. It was enough for Rigel to figure out that the question had been how much of the population had left Refuge.

“All here by the lakes?” he asked.

“From Refuge to here, and reaching north”, explained Lady Escobar. “Twice that many more will follow.”

Rigel thought he remembered Chen saying the lake area would only hold twenty thousand. “Won’t that be crowded?”

“If all settled by Lake Rigel, that–“

Rigel exploded. “Lake what?!!”

Rita and the Lady laughed together. “That was a test, it was only a test”, Rita teased.

“Lord Aguilar tried to name the town ‘Pueblo Rigel’, when he found it all set out for him”, Rosalina related, “but Osvaldo had already named it Francisco. Then his wish was to name the lake ‘Lago Rigel’. I told him you would be offended” – her eyes twinkled – “but I wished to see how much. Apologies, Lord Rigel!” She sighed. “He misunderstood, thinking I meant the lake was too small. So now it is Pueblo Francisco al lado de Lago Osvaldo en las Colinas de San Rigel.”

“‘San Rigel/?” asked Rita skeptically, while Rigel didn’t know whether to laugh or cry.

Rosalina chuckled. “Was he real, you mean? In this world, I have no way to know, but he is in an old, old book. A saint of the desert, of the sands. It is written that he had visions which guided seekers to fulfill their duty and to achieve honor.” He tone became less amused, more serious. “The de Medina venerate him, else I might think him some writer’s fancy. But don Flavio believes, and so made a subtle play: the hills are named in your honor, but you need not acknowledge it, for the name belongs also to another.”

“Why should they be named for me at all?” Rigel objected. “I didn’t make them, for” – he switched words, given his company – “mercy’s sake!”

Lady Escobar shook her head and looked at him over her cup. They’d moved from the makeshift dining hall to a chamber more appropriate for a small group, so she really had noplace to put it. Lifting it and dangling it to show it was empty, she let Lucita take it and decide where it should land. “Friend Rigel, you were the one who gave the word that moved us here. They could have been yours; many lords here, if they had been capable of the vision of exploring, would have claimed them for their own House, and so named them. Not even Osvaldo’s father considered coming this far.
“But here you came, riding across the savanna, braving the beasts, showing that men could conquer such places – when we Escobars had trapped ourselves in Refuge. You broke through our gates, stirred up a brood of whirlwinds, and passed on your way – taking our Prince Heir, and bringing him back, and standing with him then more loyally than most of our own.
“When you left, where did you go, but back through these hills? Your man Chen – what an odd name! – said twenty thousand people could live here, and the same agin in the other small set of hills nearby, so when you rode off, taking a score of our own with you out into this greater world, lords convinced that Osvaldo’s was the start to follow set out after, mere days behind. Lords Perez and Ramos went north, and others, and Perez sent word back when they had reached your hills – on his word, knowing it could be done, lords began arguing for the honor of venturing forth from Refuge to claim a world.
“It was not many lords, but more than enough. Las Colinas de San Rigel are spoken for, and a good start made. Castles rise in three places on the route from the Constant Hills to Saint Rigel’s Hills. Six more rise in locations chosen along the way north – not a direct line at all, but they are places with water and resources.
“In the west, is the Wall, earlier called “The Line”, now on occasion called ‘La Pared de Rigel”, more often ‘La Pared de Austin’.” Behind Rigel, Austin blushed. “Lord de Cadiz is making a home there, dividing his House. De Medina is there, and three lesser houses. Grand House Escobar reaches out, as we have never done.
“This is not enough, for other lords have this fever – perhaps eight, but when these lands are well settled, and their safety is seen, eight will become more. Osvaldo stares at his great map, pondering how much he dares grasp before he cannot hold it.” She grinned at him. “And all of this everything outside of Refuge, you have given back to us.” The grin turned triumphant and teasing. “I ponder, perhaps at the edge of these hills, looking north, I should finance a great taverna, which I would call ‘Rigel’s World’.”

Rigel wanted to put his face in his hands. Instead he took a good swallow of wine and tried to remember how they’d gotten to the point of naming the whole world after him. Rita was more alert. “So they’re not all settling by the lake.”

“Perhaps a fourth, just now”, Rosalina replied. “Half, when all the places being settled are filled. But”, she reminded them, “there are more places.”

“So you have to go south, toward the British”, Rita concluded. “We saw hills there, too.”

“Wells”, Tanner said abruptly. “The savanna is fine, except for water. Anaph, you could tell where there’s water for a well, right?”

Anaph nodded. “Water means life. But there’s a problem – I don’t know how to tell how many wells it’s safe to drill.”

“I think ‘dig’ is the right word”, Austin corrected. Rigel could almost here the unspoken “dude” at the end.

But Tanner shook his head. “Turn Ryan’s train engine on it’s side and you can drill.” A thought made him pause. “Through dirt, anyway – rock takes tough steel.”

“Rita, don’t let me forget we’ve got a trip to an ancient city to do”, Rigel said. “Maybe all that shiny metal Osvaldo told us about will do the trick.”

“I’m a Wise Woman, not your secretary”, she teased. “Rosalina, that city’s been there as long as anyone knows?” Lady Escobar nodded. “At least a thousand years, then”, Rita mused out loud. “The Celts would have noticed if there’d been a living city down there when they arrived. Whatever else it was built of is gone, I think – or are there mounds where buildings were?”

Lady Escobar frowned. “Mounds, I don’t know. But the accounts say the ground is rough where the metal rises to the sky. Lady Rita, Lord Rigel, do not be careless, if you go there.”

“Rough ground – everything fell”, Austin concluded, “and just made piles. If it could rot, it rotted by now. If it couldn’t, it’s still there all jumbled.”

Tanner had leaned forward, intense. “Floor and wall slabs in a big mess. That means lots of hiding space – or living space.” Rigel’s top military man scowled. “Rigel, did Ryan ever get flame throwers working?”

Rigel shrugged. “I don’t remember him talking about it. But with all his new Wizards and Engineers, I bet it wouldn’t be hard.”

Austin had a sick look on his face. “Rigel, can we build machine guns?” He plowed right on when Rigel’s response was a look of surprise. “You know what’s going to be there, don’t you? Demon spiders, just like at Wizard Tower before it was Wizard Tower – except millions of ‘em.”

Rita whistled; she reached the conclusion of vermin, but Austin’s view of it was chilling. “Lady Rosalina, why aren’t people supposed to go there? Could it be the place is a giant nest of demon-spiders?”

“I do not remember any reason – only that it is forbidden to any Escobar to go there. Some priests say it is cursed by God; that could be ‘demon-spiders’.”

“Humans versus Others, practice session, round one”, Rigel intoned. “Lights, cameras... action!”

“That’s ‘Lights, scribes, action!’”, Austin teased.

Rosalina and Rigel were the only two who didn’t laugh, though for different reasons. “Okay, Tanner”, the head of the Snatched directed, “I need a plan for getting in, grabbing metal, and getting out. Assume the place is as big as San Tesifón–“

“Larger”, Rosalina disagreed. “Many times larger.”

Rigel groaned. “Okay, assume it’s as big as the whole ring of cities by San Tesifón. Staying alive is more important than getting metal.”

“As large as the Oval – that could be”, the Lady agreed.

“Primary objective survival, secondary objective retrieval”, Tanner muttered. “If it’s full of demon-spiders, I need flamethrowers, and I want incendiary shells. Anaph, if there’s any way you could help? I know they’re alive, but....”

“But they are not our kind of life. They’re more like cancer”, the Druid asserted, then, deliberately catching Austin’s eyes, “to be wiped out – not fit for life.” To his delight, the haunted look or at least discomfort that phrase generated for the squire wasn’t there. “Austin, they live in dark places, don’t they?” It was conversational cover, and worked except for Rita and Rigel.

“Dark, gross, rotting places”, Austin agreed. “Tanner, ask Ryan for napalm!”

Lady Escobar stood, brushing crumbs from her long skirt, to be swept into the fire lest they attract vermin. Still pleasantly full and warm from dinner and the following private sharing of a wine too scarce to share with more than a dozen, she was tired of answering questions, and she could see more stirring. Lord Rigel knew that Osvaldo was too far away to meet before the trip north was going to start, and knew in fact many other things, but enough was enough – and there was one thing he didn’t know – yet. He looked ready to ask another question; this one she would crush. “Rigel, I am weary of questions. More important than answers, now, is sleep. You have a return trip to make in a hurry, even if you leave in the morning. Save your questions; ask me as we ride north. I do hope you’ll let me have one of your lovely mares.” She blew him a kiss, curtsied just enough that is was noticeable, and swept out, opening the door herself and letting a servant close it.



361018.jpg
 
A double header chapter evening, wow. And the Three Musketeers all had a chance to read and weigh-in on the first before the master wordsmith posted the second - bigger wow, lol.

A lot of plot development. Understanding just how much "make work" stone cutting had been stockpiled. A good thing, since it has allowed for all of that construction/protection to be built in the outlying areas.

And, what are we going to find at this ruined city? (I have repeating visions of "Planet of the Apes", you do realize, don't you? You've done your crafting well.)

Details, details, and more details. But with details comes insight into the culture of the people. And the people are willing to risk a lot for the chance to spread their wings, and feel THEIR land beneath their feet - in acreage large enough to grow.

Thanks for the double serving, Kuli.
(With all of the hard labour, they're going to need lighterweight garments that allow for moisture transpiration - silk is not a common commodity - their knitters may need to work with the flax and cotton available, and develop mesh shirts and undergarments. But I'm sure you've thought of all sorts of possibilities for enhancing more than the work efficiencies, lol.
:rolleyes:
 
And, no, the banter over naming EVERYTHING after Rigel was not lost on me - nor the eerie parallel of "names that work" correlation between Our Rigel, and San Rigel of scripture. In addition to the sense of de'ja vu in the "Planet of the Apes" comment, we have a large smattering of "Back to the Future" or "Dr. Who" - has Our Rigel existed in another temporal plane, doing great works then, as now?

He is certainly filling prophetic shoes.
Gotta Scoot!
:wave:
 
Well, we all know Rigel's destiny is to be Ard-Righ. I'm just trying to figure out who the Queen will be (I'm pretty sure there WILL be a Queen). I'm thinking the Queen of Lost Britain will marry him, ultimately.

It's funny to watch him be dragged, kicking and screaming, into his destiny. The Reluctant Emperor.

Meanwhile I'm sure hoping they can hunt the Others down, wait for winter, and exterminate them before it's too late. Btw, I have a theory I'm working on about where the Others came from...but more on that when I've had more time to think.

I'm going away for Thankgiving, and probably won't be on JUB Wed-Sat. I may have access to a computer, but not one where I can get on JUB!
 
And, what are we going to find at this ruined city? (I have repeating visions of "Planet of the Apes", you do realize, don't you? You've done your crafting well.)

I'll say this much: I've spent four hours searching images on line, and can't find anything to even begin to do it justice. Just for starters: Lady Escobar said it's about as big in area as the Oval, right? Grab this: it's higher than it is wide.....

I hear Ky has some expertise that might be helpful here (consider this an appeal!).
 
Oh! ... "SHOOT"! #-o

I do have several images in mind! Not sure if I can successfully Find them, though! AND, given my current, active, work schedule, and all those that will be descending HERE, on Thursday, and maybe staying longer, I KNOW I don't have the time to hunt them down!! (As much as I WANT to!) ](*,)

Can you give me a few, or more, days? And, even if so, I'm not positive of possible success! :help:

But, PLEASE!, don't let that hold You back! Yes! I adore, and appreciate, the images! However, the continuation of the story is far more important! :=D: ..|

I'll certainly do what I can ... as soon as I can ... (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Kuli,
Auto might be able to do a post-post insertion, if you know what I mean . . . .
 
Kuli,
Auto might be able to do a post-post insertion, if you know what I mean . . . .

LOL

Yes. It wouldn't be the only chapter waiting on an image -- though I've lost track of the last. But not to worry; it's a few chapters down the line -- there are weddings to witness, preparations to make, Osvaldo to meet with.... and a couple of other things that haven't happened yet except as sketches in drafts, for that matter.


BTW, the back-to-back chapters happened because I saw the quick responses, and had one almost ready, so a surprise seemed in order.
 
152
Taken


Anaph looked up sharply. Rigel heard Gloaming coming at a gallop and turned to see their Druid looking north, direction of his gaze unwavering. The look on his face was mixed surprise, shock, and worry.

“Anaph, what is it?” Rita called while Rigel was still trying to fathom the expression coming toward him, surrounded by Druid cloak and hood.

“Something – no, someone”, Anaph told them as he slowed his mount to match theirs. “Someone was... The snatcher pulled his pattern and reset it. Remember when Austin nearly died, and the Snatcher held him until his body was ready? Someone wanted to die – went out to die. But....” He frowned and pounded on Gloaming’s head. “I get it! The building high on the ridge, where we found the cutters – the Snatcher pulled him there! His body was dying on the slope, and it moved him.” He sounded puzzled, and looked more so.

“Wait – I thought the Snatcher was in trouble.”

“Right, it is”, Anaph acknowledged. “But this is like... like rolling a model LEGO train, but reaching out is more like trying to pull Ryan’s whole train” – he grinned – “by yourself, in the snow, naked.” Austin laughed, though no one else did.

“So this is swatting a fly, and what you meant before was loading a freight truck with fly swatters”, Rita suggested. “So – why?”

Anaph considered a moment. “Let’s say you’d like a picture” – he noticed Austin’s eyes attentive on him – “of a hot guy.” Austin’s jaw dropped, and he blushed faintly. “Now, there’s two ways you can get the pic for yourself: you can click on one online, and save it in your pics folder on your computer. Or you drive to where the guy lives, convince him to pose, hire real painters and wardrobe people and everything, get a totally real painting made, and carry it home, frame and all.
“Grabbing a book is like the second one. What the Snatcher just did up there is like the first one. Oh, except it didn’t leave the file behind, it moved it.”

“Why?” Tanner asked. “Why save him like that, if he wants to die, and why put him in that hut place?” They all waited. Finally, Anaph gave up looking north with eyes and Druid senses.

“I don’t know.” He turned to Rigel, boyish pleading they hadn’t heard in months back in his voice. “Rigel, can we hurry?”



“Your man went up this slope, Engineer”, the Scout told Loren. “A fool, he is.”

“Tired of living”, Loren muttered. “I’m an engineer, not a nursemaid.”

Ryan gave him a sharp look, but thought about it before snapping at the Yankee. He’d adjusted as part of a group all clinging to each other, being shaped by the Snatcher to fill certain roles; the Yankee Snatched had been dumped – and left to the care of those who’d wished for them. “We didn’t come with a support staff”, he said. “I should be more alert for these things.”

“If Vaidyanaath hadn’t gone vagabonding off – he’s the one with empathy”, Loren related, indulging in a bit of the eternal human game of “if only”. “And Aaron – he should... well, he should be doing something.”

“No one would take orders from me”, Ryan reminded Loren softly. “I’m not in charge of everything.”

Loren nodded; he’d looked at things that way, too. “They would have listened to Rigel – even those who weren’t much for monarchy back there think of him as our king. No more de facto rubbish, Lord Ryan – get Earl Rigel to officially make you his regent when he’s gone.”

Ryan sighed. He found the nobility bit amusing, while annoying. He enjoyed and employed many of the perks and benefits while using the lack of official designation as a way to dodge unwelcome tasks. “I’ve been slacking, huh? Dodging being in charge except when it got me what I wanted.”

“Lousy example of a – say, someone’s coming on fast!” Loren pointed; Ryan saw a rider on a horse, not taking a great deal of caution with the snow-covered terrain. “He’s daft!” the Engineer exclaimed.

Ryan chuckled; he recognized the straightforward style. “No, its a Druid. He can sense the terrain by the living things in it, and the horse somehow knows what the ground is like. They’re as sure-footed in this as in summer light – better, in some ways, because they don’t just see the surface, they... feel the top ten centimeters or so.”

“I thought you didn’t believe in magic.”

“I don’t”, Ryan replied, trying to guess which Druid was riding like some doom was chasing. “I’m working on a field theory.... That’s Eraigh! If he’s left Druid Hall....
“Scout, be careful following that trail. Loren, we’ll wait.”

Loren watched as the Scout moved cautiously. “Bloody hell, Mervynn, why’d you just wander off? It’s sure some of us could’ve helped!” He hadn’t told Ryan yet, but in his mind it was a suicide, case open, case shut.


“You won’t find him, Wizard, Engineer.” Eraigh pointed with his staff. “His body lies there, but he has moved on.”

“Dead? You came riding like a bat out of hell to tell us he’s dead?” Ryan asked, suspicious.

Eraigh shook his head. “He is not dead, Lord Ryan.” He pointed again, up to the high point that seemed to loom out from the rest of the ridge, the way the snow clung. “He is there.”

Ryan felt his spine go cold. Involuntarily he reached to steady himself, a page he’d only grabbed because pages should have things to do coming to his rescue. “We got the cutters from there”, he whispered. Anaph thought it belonged to the Snatcher. I guess we all did. Devon walled it shut – if he went there, he can’t get in.”

The Druid was shaking his head. “Lord Ryan, hear me: he was close to death, but had not reached it. He did not need to get in; his pattern cares nothing for walls.”

Loren was baffled and irritated. “He didn’t die, but his body’s right up there, dead? He’s in that building, but he didn’t have to get in? What happened to him?”

“As what brought all you here: he was taken.”


361222.jpg
 
Kuli,
Is it Mervynn who is now in the Snatcher's roost?
He has been rematerialized, his former shell left behind.
But, I'd forgotten about the place being walled shut.

Will they need a cutter to get back in, or merely the Druid?

Suicide? Must be feeling overwhelmed in homesickness.
Or, that's a guess. It's a BIG burden to carry and absorb.

A short installment, but mayhaps an important one.

Ryan needs to be formally made Regent, not because the Celts won't follow him, but because the "wished for" won't follow his command when he is only de Facto Regent.

Poor Ryan. Some are born to greatness, some have greatness thrust upon them . . . (then there are those who run like Hell in the opposite direction when they see it coming, but that's another story)
 
Hmmm ... MOST Interesting! (thoughtful chin rubbing smilie, which we don't have)

Mervynn (Merlin?) MUST be a "key"! At least more so than most. I don't recall that much about him. What is his "specialty"?

Like moving a file. I appreciate hearing more about the Snatcher's methods, and abilities. However, I'm still as much in the fog as to it's "Why"! ](*,)

Maybe by being lead back to "the roost", they might discover that illusive image for us? :lol:

BTW, Khuli ... still looking. Might you refresh my memory about the Oval?

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Poor Ryan. Some are born to greatness, some have greatness thrust upon them . . . (then there are those who run like Hell in the opposite direction when they see it coming, but that's another story)

And some who shoulder it no differently than they would buckets of excrement ready for the night-soil cart -- one more unavoidable thing to put up with.

Hmmm ... MOST Interesting! (thoughtful chin rubbing smilie, which we don't have)

How's this?
think.gif


I appreciate hearing more about the Snatcher's methods, and abilities. However, I'm still as much in the fog as to it's "Why"! ](*,)

Good.
cheers.gif


BTW, Khuli ... still looking. Might you refresh my memory about the Oval?

http://www.justusboys.com/forum/showpost.php?p=6022431&postcount=802

That has the original and, I think, fullest description. Look for the paragraph that begins "A ridge connected the next two hills they came to...".
 

153
Not Slavers


The group of Quistadors plowing through brush and snow were a sorry sight. At first glance they were slavers, but to the eyes of Scout Two they were a bunch more interested in finding someplace to stay, not anyone to capture and drag off. “Ewan”, Oran called softly to his partner, three paces back and five right, “what do you see?” He felt the Celt, with whom he’d worked before, slide closer.

“No stealth. No scouting. Two different groups give commands – little group, big group. They don’t get along, except the leaders. The armsmen aren’t taking this seriously.” There came a three-second pause. “Maybe they came for slaves, but they’re not interested in anything but getting warm. I think they didn’t have enough supplies.”

“Yeah”, Oran agreed. “Not enough supplies for now means not enough at all means they never planned to go back.” He frowned. “Where’s the slaver patrol? Artur won’t be happy they missed a group like this.” Knowing the group wasn’t going to see him, he still slid backwards off the rise before rolling to his knees. “Something’s wrong here.”

“You’re sending Runner.”

“Yeah. Grab our rifles – let’s get higher.”


The way Runner could communicate what Oran wanted gave Antonio chills. The cat came bounding up to his column and delivered something like a growling meow, his way of announcing that he had orders. Antonio just watched as the scout-companion leapt to his best group of riflemen and swatted at every single one. He propelled the score toward their horses, then proceeded to add don Delgado and his man Ruiz, don Cortez and his squire, to the mounted group. The great cat gave Antonio a glance and lash of his tail, which Antonio took to mean “You can come, too”, and led off. The pace wasn’t an easy one.


“They are not slavers”, Kelsin hissed in aggravation. “Pay attention, rifleman! They’re hunting, yes, but look at the way they’re hunting: they’re after someone they think is moving, not for a path to a village.”

“The leaders are angry”, Brina observed. She was more attuned to emotion clues than most Scouts. “They were tracking their target – then they lost them.”

“Yeahhhhhh”, Kelsin sort of hummed, agreeing. “Rifleman, tell your leftenant we watch and don’t get seen. Brina – see if you can find whoever it is they’re hunting for. Let’s figure this out before we do anything.” He noticed the rifleman was still there, staring at him.
“You Mounted Rifles are helpers, you’re not in charge”, Kelsin said slowly, emphasizing each word. “I’m the Scout who found them, so I’m in charge. If you can’t look at them and tell they’re not slavers, you don’t even get an opinion. If I still see you here after my next fart, Rhabadh-rí Chen will hear abou–“ He grinned at the way the rifleman, finally given an incentive he understood, scrambled. Discipline held; the man – a dozen years Kelsin’s elder – kept low and quiet.

“Life! Not quiet enough”, Kelsin muttered to himself. Well, this troop had been looking more east, so east he’d lead.... “Ghost in the snow”, he told himself, “except with traces.”


Yellow snow is annoying to lay by, but Oran considered it better than the discomfort of a pulsing bladder. While he’d been moving, he noticed the need, but when he slid into place on a lump, the added pressure had tipped the scales. He couldn’t remember for sure if he’d brought the ability to pee while laying on his side with him from Earth, or invented it here; one thing, though, was certain – peeing in a dozen centimeters of cold snow had the advantage of not splattering, and it kept the smell from spreading, too. Then the trick was to move away while rotating, and come down gently. Once it would have been two or three different maneuvers; now his muscles were so fit and tuned that it came as one gliding motion he didn’t even think about. Anyone recently from either Earth would have said it was like a close between ballet and gymnastics; to Oran it was just part of the job.

Ewan landed beside him. “Two groups”, he noted. “Guess where the local patrol is?”

“Fumbling around over there. Frak! No, wait – someone sent a runner....” He watched a tiny disturbance cutting close across the path of the intruders, staying silent, waiting to see if Ewan would pick up on it.

“Two Scouts out there”, came the conclusion finally. “One’s coming to see what those fighters are hunting. The other is giving them a faint trail to follow.”

“And now cutting back to lead the riflemen. The Celt patrol must have circled around behind”, he deduced, because none of the locals here would trust that bunch to do it quietly.” Oran further deduced that these riflemen were new; they were eager but obviously inexperienced.

While he was watching, Brina glided up and joined them. “You’re on my high spot”, she chided.

“Knew you didn’t see us”, Ewan replied; she didn’t dispute it.

“Far troop is hunting the near ones”, Brina told Oran. He hadn’t seen that, but then he’d been busy getting the bigger picture.

“Hunting someone, anyway”, he mused, knowing she was right: the first group was the bunch that messenger had told Antonio about, and the second was someone interested in making certain not just that they never got back, but that they never got anywhere. That by itself was enough, but Oran had other considerations: someone wanted to get to Antonio and had gone to the trouble and expense of putting together a fake slaver bunch to do it; now someone didn’t want that to happen – so he had to wonder if they knew what the first group did, and didn’t want Antonio to know? Or did they plan to try to take the first group’s place? Whatever their plan was, he needed to stop it, for the purpose of gathering information.

“Brina, who’s with you?” he asked.

“Kelsin. He’s waiting till he figures out what’s going on.” She wiped a trickle of mucous from her nose, refusing to sniffle – that was a sound that carried.

Oran smiled. Kelsin was steady – and he knew some things. Though it wasn’t necessary, he turned to look; Runner was close, bringing the requested reinforcements. Scout Two sent an image of Runner leading the men in between the two groups. Runner’s return image was of a playful kitten bouncing off trees and men and horses until they were where Oran wanted them.

Ewan’s voice cut into his thoughts. “Hunters are stopping.” He gave Oran a heartbeat to look. “One tripped over something. Ah – old tree stump. He’s angry, kicking it.” And the leader was upset, grabbing the angry one and spinning him. The man slipped and fell.

“Snow isn’t that slippery” Brina stated, Ewan nodding agreement. The mystery was solved a moment later as the fallen man’s companion lifted, not his friend, but a fistful of coin in the air. Amazingly, he didn’t yell.

“Well, they aren’t going anywhere for a while”, Oran muttered, a tinge disgusted. The next moment the snowy woods echoed to first one, then another birdcall of species not know to the world – at least as far as any of them knew. Oran checked his rifle and took aim. “Ewan – leader-second, up front. Thighs; we need him alive.” Then he gently squeezed his trigger.


“Staggered line, facing north, let’s move!” Kelsin called softly. Enough volume for the dozen riflemen to hear risked letting the target know they weren’t alone, but it didn’t matter. The bird calls had been emphatic: turn and prepare to subdue.


“Do Stellar’s Jays live here?” Samson asked Antonio.

Antonio laughed quietly. “No – that’s a Scout giving orders. Runner’s gone lazy, so we’re where Oran wants us. I think that last call means we’re just supposed to stop anyone who tries to fight.”

“Is there a signal?” Samson inquired, honestly curious. “Like another bird?

A rifle shot rang out. “Yeah, the Mark III Rifle bird”, Antonio laughed.


The leader, bending over to scoop up silver from the hollow it filled, felt pain in his right thigh. It was enough his leg didn’t want to take the weight, but discipline and training held. He turned, his brain having identified a firearm as the origin of the sound, and as he shouted orders, his right hand reached inside his vest and drew out a flintlock pistol. Just when he’d decided it was dry and ready, a second lance of pain cut through the same thigh. Since he’d turned to face the source of the sound, this bullet followed a slightly different path. Where it grazed the first path, already-shredded muscle descended into a state of badly-done ground meat. The earlier downward motion of his body resumed, this time out of control.


Dominique and Natanael drew swords and formed a triangle with Raúl the moment the monstrous animal bounded through their procession, knocking down three of their hired fighters. Victor had his out without thinking, as well, but as the beast bounded back through, knocking three more fighters off their feet, he laughed.

“It’s a cat, and it’s playing”, he called. He turned to see Leonido yelling, ineffectually, at more of their fighters. Eight of them broke off in chase of the animal.

Victor sighed. They’d reached the end of their journey, he was certain. It was time for a good lung-full of air. “Don Antonio de la Vega!” he shouted. A memory clicked. “Bid your Scout call back his cat!” His conscious mind figured out what his subconscious already had: if a Scout with a cat companion was here, so was someone of rank, almost certainly, and in their present location, that likely meant don Antonio.


At the front of the hunter band, men with crossbows dropped to cover. Their own officer was already down, his assistant tightening a sash high on the leg to stop blood. Others fanned out, prepared to do battle as the tough roughlands veterans they were.

“These know their work”, Brina commented. “They are confident.”

“So I noticed. I’ll fix that”, Oran responded grimly. His sights fell on the crown of a head, of one of the more hidden crossbowmen; his finger moved the trigger.

Brains flew back. Their comrade had been hidden; what musketman’s stray bullet had delivered such a fate?

“They don’t understand what they’re up against”, Ewan observed. “Two at once?” He didn’t need to see Oran’s nod. “Three... two... one....”

Two heads ruptured like ripe melons tossed from a battlement. Experience and discipline began to erode from fear. Then to their left, a line of men in mottled blue uniforms emerged from the trees. Commands they didn’t understand were yelled, and the muskets in their hands – muskets that didn’t look right – lowered. In spite of themselves, half the crossbowmen rolled to watch. One word was yelled – and eight men around the force commander went down. As they turned back, two more heads exploded.


“Cease fire!” Oran called. He heard the Celts moving in from the back. Below to his left, Kelsin advanced into the open with a dozen rifles. From the information he’d recently learned about the Realm, he made a guess at the thoughts taking place in the badly-mauled force before him: a dozen muskets meant at least a caballero; ten more – he grinned as Antonio’s other ten arrived on the left of the first group – meant possibly a viscount; a dozen on the one hand and a score on the other... what were they facing?

Time to tell them. One Kinner-Ruger in his left hand, the other ready in cross-draw holster, he stood and trotted down the hill. Initially the men he was approaching sat or knelt in shock, but then a spearman swivelled to bring his weapon around. Oran didn’t even think about it: threat appeared, threat removed. The man went down with two holes in his chest – but that wasn’t the straw on the camel’s back, it was the fact that Oran hadn’t even slowed to aim, had hardly looked at the man. The Scout’s arm had come up and back down, the revolver in it roaring twice, and he just kept moving.

“Den se por vencidos!” he called. “Esto yo digo en el nombre del Conde de la Vega.” Surrender yourselves! I say it in the name of Count de la Vega.

A man with a slender sword, unlike the usual Quistador blade, stepped forward, but didn’t drop the weapon. “¿Quien es, este Conde? ¿Es uno que da lealtad al Duque?” Who is this Count? One who gives loyalty to the Duke?

Antonio came riding in, accompanied by the two knights – caballeros, to the Quistadors – don Delgado and don Cortez, and their squires. They’d thrown on the custom laminated wood breastplates Master Aengus made for nobles under Rigel’s authority, over their clothes, and exchanged travel cloaks for better ones trimmed in rich color. “I’m that Count, and my loyalty is not to your Duke. Nor shall it ever be, so long as the blasphemy called slavery remains in the Realm.” He sat looking down, letting his companions enjoy the looks of complete defeat on the faces of all but a handful of the invaders. First ambush, then muskets like they’d never seen, that shot straight! and enough muskets for a full Count... and now the Count himself, on horseback, with caballeros indeed not just in name, with mounted squires! Their reality had been shattered, and not many could bear it.

Oran stopped outside of the reach of the slender sword. Eyes met in understanding, and the man nodded. “Very well. I am Caballero-Ayudante Rodolfo Salvador Montdragón de Blanco. If I surrender, what will become of my men and myself?”

Oran liked the order: first his men. “First we care for your wounded, and get you to somewhere warm and dry.” A quick trilled birdcall brought field medics running forward to begin that care. “I say we’ll start on the wounded now.”

Caballero-Ayudante Montdragón watched a moment, and shook his head slightly at the sight of aid rendered to those who hadn’t yet actually surrendered. “We will not be returning to our homes”, he judged.

“True”, Oran admitted. “But if you have families left behind, we have ways of getting them here.”

Montdragón laughed outright. “From the Duke’s city? Not likely. No”, he continued, sobering, “merely because we do not return, they will be sold into slavery.”

Oran grinned. “Then that’s how we’ll get them back. Caballero – no, first surrender. You aren’t slavers, so you don’t have to do hard labor. But you didn’t come peacefully, either, so you’ll have to serve some sort of sentence – don Antonio gets to sort that out.”

“There’s nothing to sort: a certain upstanding caballero’s son seduced the offspring of a dear friend of the Duke. The caballero has already become not upstanding, and then become not. We were sent to find this son and his friends, and make them not.”

“Did she get pregnant?” Oran inquired, wondering at the extreme length of the punishment.

Montdragón studied the Scout a moment, then shrugged. “I cannot be punished for speaking of it, here. One Leonido who has lost his name seduced the heir of a notable caballero. If the heir had taken the position of a man, nothing would have been done but to see to it that this Leonido could never speak of it. But as they exchanged places... one does not do such things to the heir of a friend of the Duke.

Antonio kicked Muskatel lightly with his heels and rode into enemy territory. “Add that to the crimes your Duke supports: if a man can wield a sword in loyal service, where and how he wields his own sword is no other man’s business.”

The enemy spokesman looked up, laughter in his eyes. “Except of his partner. Don Antonio, I go where I am sent and do as I am bid. I am not required to agree.”

Brina had trotted forward to stand by Oran. “He needs someone to be loyal to”, she declared softly. “He can’t set his own course.”

Oran looked at the caballero-ayudante until a response came. “You have a seer-girl – take caution.” He sighed deeply. “She sees truly. It is a flaw. A bishop once told me it makes me faithful to those under my command.
“You spoke of penalties. But we have done no crime.”

Oran looked to Antonio. “In my eyes, yes. But these aren’t my lands. They are under the sword of Artur, king of Celts. That you came, unbidden, armed, is an offense in his eyes – to the council of chiefs, too. My guess – he won’t insist on much, probably all your weapons.”

“I do not surrender my sword.”

“We can work that out”, Samson chimed in. “Ransom it, possibly.”

A voice in pain yelled. “You cannot surrender them! I command!”

Montdragón looked down at Oran’s Kinner-Ruger. “You would bring a blessing to the world, to end him.”

Oran grinned. “Some of your men, you could do without?”

“Some of ‘my’ men are someone else’s creatures, set to bedevil me.”

“Okay – you can keep your sword, and any of those creatures you don’t want, we’ll give to King Artur.” In a way Oran was sad that no one objected. Did it mean they were becoming less civilized? From a certain perspective, he thought maybe it meant they were getting more so – but that was a topic best suited for a late night in the hot springs or baths.

Caballero-Ayudante Montdragón chuckled. “Acceptable. Very well, I give us to you as conquered ones, Conde de la Vega.” Oran whistled, and from the north Celts moved in, taking weapons.



“You’re some of the Escobar investigators”, Antonio summarized that night around a fire in a well-sealed lodge. “And while most had no idea what an Escobar was, some who did didn’t like Escobars, and at least one seriously hated you.”

“Enough to kill”, Victor agreed, feeling hollow now that the escape was done. “When I heard there were armed men....” He nodded to Montdragón. “I feared you pursued us.”

“They pursued me”, Leonido grumbled – some might have called it a whine. “He was willing!” He sucked back a sob. “And my family are all slaves because of our pleasure.”

Oran shook his head. “There were eight hundred thirty-six sueldos in that stump. If we can find your family, we can buy them and bring them south. But silver coin like that doesn’t buy very many quality slaves.”

Antonio answered the unstated question. “Right now I can’t spare much, either. Once trade gets moving, more. If Devon has more gold from that half-assed mine, more. Don’t worry, though, don Rodolfo; we’ll find and ransom your families as fast as we can. You swore to my service; I owe it to you.
“Thinking of service – how do you feel about Inquisitors?”




361349.jpg
 
Kuli,
(Been a busy night of IMs, PMs and such. I started reading this 5 minutes after you posted it.)

An interesting, and bloody, meeting. How many of the brain splattered are merely wounded?

Some definite enlightenment going on. Buying the families back from slavery is "safer" for the alliance, but not great for those enslaved in the meantime.

They need gold. Here's hoping the "mining" operation has yielded some wealth they can use.

I'm glad Victor was able to recognize the signals he was receiving. It saved some problems, though not many.

At least the hunter "leader" is an honourable caballero.

You keep us on our toes and looking for the next installment.
:=D:
 
Glad to hear that those seeking refuge have found it safely! And, those that were not may thank their lucky stars that they've found it, anyway! As for those who were maliciously pursuing, well, they get to meet Artur! ..|

Well done, Kuli! :=D:

Now ... about the Inkies? :rolleyes:

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