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Fit for Life


186
Flow


Captain Heath laughed with astonishment verging on disbelief. “By the Saints, she’s here before us!” For the sake of those without a Fleet background, he pointed. “Mercury’s Blade – my coin says she’s the fastest ship afloat.”

Elizabeth chuckled. “Not at her trials. You are thinking she has changed?”

MacNeil chuckled in turn. “Commander Chalmers just sailed her from Sidmuth port down the lakes to Fort Narrows, and back here, at a pace a fair four knots faster than expected of a courier – or more.”

“Having this stiff wind behind her did no harm.” Heath glanced over at the helmsman, then up into the rigging where seamen scrambled to comply with orders from the officer of the deck. “I dare say we may learn more by a visit.” He turned to Elizabeth. “Lady Meriel, by your leave, I would invite those of importance on Mercury to join us for dinner.”

“Of course, Captain.”



Devon puffed a little from the climb; he was used to steady, even, paced work, not hurried dashes. “This had better be worth it”, he declared.

“Have a look.” The British scout handed him his telescope.

Devon aimed where pointed, using a faint sparkle to guide him. If this was what– “Holy crap.” He swung to the left, but what he wanted to see was hidden by the hill. “Okay, three things: get a message chasing Druid Anaph, get a team organized to go over there and see what’s really happening, and get a team together to get up here and build a tower high enough to see where that’s coming from.” Someone went running with those orders; the Engineer took another look. “That flow looks like about two-thirds of what we’ve got. I just hope Anaph knows about it, and that it stays stable.” Handing the telescope back, he smiled wryly. “One way or another, some Aliens are going to be getting swimming lessons.”



“Her hull....” Kevin MacNeil gave just enough inflection to suggest a question.

“Druids”, said Commander Chalmers, looking skyward.

Everyone laughed or chuckled. “Purveyors of surprises”, Rigel agreed. “Anaph – how?”

“The wood still holds life. Now the water flows around it better. Rigel, a ship has a life of its own, too. I don’t understand, but it does.”

“Druid, could you alter Resolute’s hull as well? Her design is meant to be fast, but a little more speed would be a great gift.” Captain Heath looked at Anaph expectantly.

The Druid shrugged. “Sure. The wood still has a lot of life – that will make it easy. Captain, where are you bound next?”

“Standish, across the bay. Then depending on the wind, either Pevensie or Tern’s Roost.”

“Tern’s Roost stands on a cliff.” The young voice was Onatah’s; the boy sat cross-legged on the deck by Elizabeth.

Heath chuckled. “Indeed, lad. But there is a stair, which Lady Meriel wishes to see. If the wind is easy, that can be done.”

“The west wind ends tonight”, Anaph informed him. “Tomorrow morning will be calm, then gentle winds from the south.”

The captain stared a moment. “You can feel the weather in different directions?’

Anaph shook his head. “No, I feel the living things, and they feel the weather. Sometimes I fail about when a change will arrive, though.”

“Knowing the weather ahead of time – that is a valuable thing!” Elizabeth exclaimed. “Druid Anaph, could you train a Druid for me?”

Again Anaph indicated a negative. ‘I must find one with the idrûdh spark – only one with the spark can be trained.” He frowned. “The spark seems lacking here.” He looked over at the deck. “Yet Onatah has something like it.”

“We cherish the talents the Spirit Creator gives”, the boy responded.



Captain Heath and Lord MacNeil looked at each other and shook their heads. None of the Vortex Snatched had the trained eye, but these men, brought up in naval traditions, could see the difference. “How much faster?” asked Elizabeth.

“I think a little more than a knot”, Kandath answered. “But I haven’t felt the ship at real speed.” They’d made a morning run up and down Miles Bay, to give the Druids a chance to do their work.

“A knot – that’s amazing”, Captain Heath responded. “Now when she’s back in Hampton Wharf, the shipwrights won’t let go of her till they’ve measured the changes.” His grin was like a boy’s. “Then we can do new speed trials, and put the rest of her class to shame.”


An hour later they were on their separate ways, Resolute bound for Tern’s Roost, Mercury’s Blade not for what were no longer so much lakes as an arm of the sea, as Rigel had expected, but for the broken lands where Anaph’s earthquakes had made sharp-edged fragments of land.



“Captain, we don’t know these waters!”

“Leftenant, I trust the Druid. Keep to full sail. We’ll shoot the passage at speed, then make for the round bay he described. It’s out of the current, except a giant slow whirlpool.” Her first officer winced at the familiar playful grin. “If we get to the center, the Blade can turn lazily in place.”

The rough, shattered cliffs went by at twenty-six knots, as judged by Dugal, confirmed by Chalmers. Eleven of that was the current; the commander declared that their own fifteen was very good with the ship heeled over to use the south-east wind. “A new island”, the ship’s first officer observed. “Does it fall under Lord MacNeil’s authority?”

“Under no one’s”, his captain responded. “Lord MacNeil is special representative for the peninsula project, Lord Sidmuth minister of the western shore settlement. “Her Majesty will be appointing a new Minister of Settlement, for new islands.”

The senior leftenant scratched his right sideburn. “Are the islands Her Majesty’s?” he asked softly. “‘Tis the Druid who made them.”

Chalmers nodded slowly, just a bare movement. “A telling point. But what would he do with them? The kingdom needs the land.”

“Rigel gets a big one.” Oran had come along, mostly to see if he could judge distances when he wasn’t covering the ground. “He should have a title here, to bind the realms together. And he’ll want an embassy, anyway, which will need lands to support it.” He paused briefly to watch a dark, nearly black, rock face rush by not a mast’s length away. “And Anaph will pick one for Druids to use.”

“But for the rest?” Chalmers prodded.

Oran considered. “Probably one for the Escobars, and if any Celts want to come here, one for them. Rigel wants to bind us all together, so we’re friends, not just allies against the Aliens. But the rest” – Anaph had announced that many islands had formed, not just the few he’d foreseen – “he could sell them”. His grin was the impish one he shared with Casey. “I’m joking – he’ll probably give to your kingdom”, he told a briefly scandalized audience. Then he laughed. “But I’m going to tell Chen to ask for one for Scouts.”

“I don’t understand that gift”, the captain shared. “Does it serve you for aught, here on the Sea?”

Oran sighed. “Confuses me. I can feel us moving through the water, and I can feel actual distances, and the two don’t fit, almost ever. I’d rather have the earth under my feet.” His thoughts reached to the mainland. “And I miss my cat.” He’d explained that earlier, learning in exchange that the British had dogs, but they were weak, often sickly things, poorly adjusted to this world.

“I could put you on an island, and let you race the Blade”, Chalmers teased, relaxing with this lighthearted young lord.

“Hey, I’m the fastest Scout of all, but no one is that fast!”



Bishop Theodoro marveled yet again. His shadowy protector, Esteban, had procured some of the finest of cloth of the Realm so this Sister Anne could have an impressive nun’s habit. He’d agreed to schedule a Thursday evening Mass in the St. Anne’s chapel, announcing it as a Mass for Healing. He’d expected only two dozen, perhaps, but the poor families and host of urchins Anne had brought in tow from her travels numbered nearly two score, and three times more besides had come. Docenturion Vargas reported that the older children, shown the town by Esteban, had talked freely of the miracles Sister Anne performed; when people connected the name of the Sister and of the saint’s chapel, rumors started. Now the chapel was packed to overflowing with men, women, and children with recent injuries or present ailments. He had granted Anne the administration of the sacred Bread, he following with the Cup – and in his wake, often at the moment the sacramental wine was swallowed, healings happened. Now, completing the last circuit at the altar rail, he pondered who in the town was suitable to design an abbey, for this Mass would be followed by others until everyone in Dos Reyes was whole and sound – and that would bring vocations as surely as an announcement of free fruit pies brought children.

Anne frowned internally. The boy – a mid-teen – she’d just given the Body of Christ to had the same affliction two before him, a widower and a husband, had exhibited. She’d paused to lay a hand on the lad in blessing, to get a closer look, and was now certain it was sexually transmitted. It didn’t seem terribly harmful; the worst symptom was a proliferation of hair follicles in pubic regions, plus the new hairs grew to two or three times the normal length – the second was waves of terrible itching as the tiny creatures, sixteen-celled organisms, reproduced in synchronization. She would have to inform Theodoro; no confessional seal held her to confidentiality. It was something she wanted to eliminate quickly; it seemed odd that the planet’s organisms had adapted this quickly, in just a few hundred years, to the Quistadors – and if it had adapted so fast, she worried that it might change again, into something more virulent.

After Mass, she went to the rack of prayer candles and knelt. The looks in people’s eyes declared that she was going to be swamped by grateful individuals with thanks, plus a few who were certain that she was St. Anne herself come to aid “God’s own Bishop”. Prayer was respected, and while she felt slightly uneasy about using it as a device to accomplish something else, she was in fact praying.

“Father Almighty, thank You for the girl with the gift.” Now Anne was certain she would stay here. And with the High Bishop in much better health, she held to hope that the trouble she would cause would remain quiet for a few years.



The young man scrambled over the ship’s rail. When HMS Mercury’s Blade had dropped anchor, they’d seen the figure on shore strip, bundle his clothes in a bag, and set out swimming for them. He was nearly as fit as a Scout, and not at all self-conscious as he dried and dressed. “So we’ve been cutting sod and tossing it in, since we didn’t know what you wanted to happen here. Master Devon said it was better to keep it whole even if you wanted it broken, because it would be easy to break in that case, but impossible to repair if things were the other side ‘round.” He wriggled a bit to settle his short pants in place.

“A good decision”, Anaph responded. “I don’t want it broken quite yet – that comes after Devon’s collapses.” The Druid could feel, distantly, the efforts of men continuing to raise the dam, now digging what would be a small harbor when sea level was reached. Every additional centimeter before it was all washed away was million of more cubic meters of water for his purpose. He devoted eight seconds to concentrating on the third ridge holding in the Sea, where the final smaller ridge had broken and salty, muddy water was rushing in. Its condition told him they couldn’t afford another two meters of depth. “A little more, and this will hold. Then stay here and start a village – this will be a good spot for a fortress.” Once it had amazed him that people under the command of others would so easily take orders from him; now he accepted it and used it.
“Oh – do you have signal towers from here to the fort?”

The lad nodded. “The Engineer said this is an island now, so we don’t have to worry about Aliens. That meant no soldiers were needed, so the towers went up fast.”

“Good. Send word to Devon that I’m here. When I’ve finished what I need to do, I’ll go join him.”

“What do you have to do here?”

Anaph waved a hand at the ridge/dam. “I’m going to arrange it so that an hour after Devon’s dam collapses, this will do the same.” He looked to the north, toward the Stone. The amount he’d come to understand here was astounding to him; he’d had no idea that it was possible to link events that way, to set up the energies to wait on something else happening. “It will be a sight to remember – so when you feel the ground tremble, settle down to watch.”

“And stay back”, the lad deduced.

Anaph chuckled. “Definitely. Now do you swim back?”

The welcoming committee of one shook his head. “I ride in with you in a ship’s boat. Then I return with you – I’m a messenger to Master Devon.”


Dinner was just before sunset; it had taken Anaph hours to set everything properly, and make the link.



Brother Dismas found what the Bishop needed. Just a two hour walk outside the walls was a piece of property so tangled in disputes that the Count’s court and the city courts had never been able to agree on a settlement. In such a case, Theodoro had learned, it was a bishop’s prerogative to step in and settle the matter. The eleven expectant faces before him – expectant toward him, hostile to one another, especially the lawyers – were all going to be united in a moment, united in anger toward him.

“Four parties claim the land”, he stated, and began to review the case. The lawyers were impatient at first, but began nodding in respect as he listed every significant argument they’d made for their clients. “So under law each has a good claim”, he summarized some time later, “enough so that the courts cannot reach a decision.
“Having this land sit vacant–“

“Except for trespassers and squatters”, an attorney interjected.

Theodoro ignored him. “--benefits no one. Thus, I exercise my authority to settle this matter.” Though that was what they’d expected, still breaths were sucked in. “Since each claimant has a good case, it would be unjust to favor one. Therefore I end the disputes by awarding the property to the Abbey of St. Anne.” Shock was quickly followed by anger and dismay. “The vineyards are to be restored, and half the revenue each year is to be divided among the claimants present here.” Several lawyers chuckled; one claimant hadn’t bothered to attend; he would regret that decision. “In addition, stones in the steps to Saint Anne’s common hall will be engraved with the names of the claimants here present, as donors of the property for the glory of God.”

That caught them by surprise. If asked, none of them would have agreed to make such a donation, but the Bishop was crediting them nonetheless. One was honest. “Your grace, we did not offer – we do not deserve this!” Everyone present, even the lawyers, nodded.

“None of us deserves the grace of God”, he replied, wondering again at how the Lord Oran had delivered that small, wonderful book. “Yet He bestows it in spite of that. Though you did not choose to make this gift, still you are making it, and so will receive recognition.” In truth, he wasn’t certain such recognition should be awarded; might it not take away from the reward in heaven? Yet in truth, it was the only compensation he had to give for the loss of the wealth each had pursued.

“How to pay for this abbey?” a lawyer inquired.

“The gifts at the Mass of Healing and at the cathedral’s St. Anne’s chapel have been large”, Theodoro answered. “I expect they shall suffice. Yet if not, there are still luxuries in my residence that might be sold.”

The eldest of the claimants, a man with a slight hump on his back, stood. “Bishop, I know you were sent by God. Now Anne of God is among us, and I say for myself that I happily approve your judgment.” The next wasn’t immediate, but one by one the claimants stood and stated their agreement.

Theodoro sighed inwardly at the less than full truth he had given. Neither the gifts nor works of art would pay for the building of this abbey. The balance, he had been promised in terms permitting no disagreement, would be made up by the thieves of seven cities. As those who had come to hear him filed out, the bishop wondered, and asked God, just how that young Esteban had learned that attitude, that posture and assurance of command, yet had called him to no holy service. He grinned as he followed the deacon who carried his books: Esteban would likely claim that his was a holy calling, and argue the matter for an hour.



Elizabeth laughed, letting herself go. The antics she was watching – “Truly, Lady Rita, is this called dance, in your homeland?”

Rita managed to laugh and pant at the same time. “That depends – on who you ask – some call it gyrating – some call it free form – some call it modern.” She forced slow, deep breaths for a count of twenty. “Everyone makes it up as they go.”

“As he goes”, Kevin MacNeil corrected, in an ongoing sort of verbal tag with Rita. The two grinned at each other.

“There’s what we call ‘ballroom dance’”, Rigel informed Elizabeth. “It’s got definite patterns and moves, but still a lot of improvisation. I like swing – that’s one of the types; it goes with a certain kind, I guess beat, of music.”

“Swing?” Rita asked, all innocence. “I thought you liked tango!”

Rigel blushed faintly. “Well, it has... elements”, he replied lamely.

Elizabeth caught the subtle change of color to his cheeks. “Lady Rita, would you teach me this ‘tango’? I would venture it with Lord Rigel.”

Three minutes later, Kevin MacNeil was mentally listing ladies he’d like to tango with. But an alert piece of his mind, always on his kingdom’s business, was evaluating just how Rigel and Elizabeth were enjoying the exercise.



Anaph tossed his staff to the shore, where it bounced off its tip, flipped, landed on its foot, and balanced. “Commander, many thanks. If your ship is to escape, you must go swiftly.”

“Back the way we came”, replied Marlys Chalmers. “That side channel was flowing back out.”

“It won’t be for long. Once these dams are broken, the whole Sea will flow in.”




Rigel wasn’t totally oblivious, at least not sometimes, Rita noted, keeping her silence, letting him put things together. “So the Isle of Bruce is wealthy, but its prosperity is threatened.” He scanned Guysdock, where six fishing boats lay up on the shore. “The fish are running out?”

Elizabeth kept her pleased smile inside. “The catch each year, for eight years, is smaller than before. A smaller catch means higher prices, but also men without work. And it means less to eat. None starve, yet, but” – she pointed back toward the peninsula with its new towns and Wall – “this should have begun five years ago, to grow grain. Your new plow will aid, but now we need men for war, not the fields, and the peninsula has little enough good land for crops.”

“Don’t worry about that”, Landon remarked without taking his attention from the deep water between ship and shore. “Lady Meriel, do you harvest the small creatures with pearly shells?”

Elizabeth blinked, her attention on his offhand comment about not worrying over land for grain. Kevin saved her. “Yes, Bard – they’re delicacies.”

Landon nodded. “I thought so. If you can make people stop harvesting those, you’ll have more fish in two years. Can they harvest them without killing them?”

Elizabeth blinked at the shift in thought. “Yes. Many prefer them live.”

“Good. Lord MacNeil, if you have the authority, get everyone on that island who knows how busy getting all those creatures off that big rock face.” Landon pointed. “Why, you wonder? Because when Druid Anaph shakes the earth again, that rock is going to collapse, and kill them all.” Finally he turned from the rail.

His harp seemed to appear from nowhere; he strummed a mournful, somehow scolding, series. “There are places in your islands where these used to live, but your fishermen took them all. Use the ones from here to put them back, and allow no harvesting of them for ten years.”

Elizabeth held up a hand. “Bard, how can eating these harm the fish?”

Landon sighed. “There are three basic things these fish eat. Two are very scarce right now. The third is becoming scarce. They’re becoming scarce because there’s something else that competes with them, and something else still that eats them.
“What the shells eat uses the same space and places the things the fish eat do. Without the shells, that crowds out the things the fish eat. That takes food away from the little creature that also eats the food the fish eat. Except it doesn’t just eat them, it also spreads their seeds. But since it’s scarce because its food is scarce, the seeds aren’t getting spread.”

“So because the shells’ food is not eaten, the fishes’ food is driven away?” Elizabeth asked, her eyes on a distant focus. “I find that makes sense!” She had to catch herself from just giving an order. “Kevin, could you write this, and send it to the University? And perhaps the Prime Minister?” Kevin nodded, the sharp action reprimanding her for almost breaking character.

“I’m going to try to figure out what could help here”, Landon declared. “I can show Druid Anaph what’s needed – once I discover what that is.”

“Lots more lower on the food chain”, Rita mused. “Do you know enough to interfere with this ecosystem?” she asked softly.

“I know enough to know one thing”, he replied. “Life here only goes down about five meters – so I should be able to find things that live eight to twelve meters down, and not have problems.”

Elizabeth was looking at him intently. “You have the talent, true? So why are you not a Druid?”

Landon struck his harp and a pose. “Oh, aye, in me’s the talent / a Druid for to be – but God gave out singing, so I am – what you see!”

Light laughter and applause rewarded him, along with one silver coin flipped his way by the officer of the watch. “Entertain the crew tonight, Bard, and I’ll see about a better thanks”, the leftenant said. “Some has been asking after you. If I put them off much longer, I may be subject to an over-boarding action.”

“Gladly”, Landon replied, bowing. “And”, he added with a sly grin, “I shall strive to play some for a tango.” Rigel glared at him briefly, then shrugged. Elizabeth clapped in delight.

Rita looked thoughtful.



Devon looked down at his dam, where men frantically dumped fill in low spots. “Another six hours?” he asked Anaph rhetorically. “Only one way to do that. Shelby!” he yelled. “Go blow that canyon – let the pressure off.” The Engineer turned back to the Druid with an explanation. “All the flow was going sideways, five days back. Some water had started flowing out a swale about eighty meters upstream, then a section close by collapsed. I didn’t think much of that until the current headed across the collapse.
“It let a lot of water out – those Aliens know there’s water coming their way now; they can see it, and some are building dikes.” Devon grinned grimly. “Lines in the dirt, is what they’ll be when this busts loose. Anyway, that water flowing down the swale carved a gully that swallowed water fast enough we could barely tell it was rising, here.
“So why six hours?”

Anaph grinned. “Rigel and all the rest will be here in about four. Then we’ll hike up by your watch tower, for the show.”



4338667-a-sailing-ship-anchored-in-neva-river-saint-petersburg.jpg
 
Little lesson in ecology, and Saint Anne getting herself established.

And tangos? Really? Can someone build an accordion?

I'd love to see a bunch of people in Tudor clothes swing dancing!
 
A great update on our multiple fronts.

And the covert romancing commenses, lol.

Our Good Bishop Teodoro, the thieves of seven cities his
apostles - but, like Robin Hood, that is essentially what they
really are, lol. I quite liked his solution regarding the property - and the contestants can hardly complain - they are getting a share of the vineyard proceeds, annually, as a continuing payment for their loss of claim. All for the glory of God.

Super installment, Kuli.
 
I'd love to see a bunch of people in Tudor clothes swing dancing!

It's certainly not "swing", nor quite the tango, nor exactly Tudor, but I was pleasantly reminded of the banquet scene in "A Knight's Tale". \:/

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0183790/

Excellent chapter, Kuli! Light, entertaining, informative, and intriguing. :=D:

I'm trying to figure out what Anne has done to cause trouble. Assisting the High Bishop survive a few more years, keeping his would be successor at bay, should only maintain the status quo, and give "our side" time to position themselves better ... right? :confused:

And, I liked the land dispute settlement. "Thank you, gentlemen, for your generous donation!" (SWIPE!) And, they may even be making more future donations through the thieves' fund raising efforts! :lol:

Now ... Could you perhaps get Devon to send me a messenger, too? While I'm waiting, I WILL find a boat! (!) :badgrin: :slap:

O.K.! I'm settled, for now. Headed off to the tower for "The SHOW"!! (!w!)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Kuli,
A most excellent movie allusion - I can hear the seductive rock and see them lead the dancing in his green tunic du tent w/ toggles, lol.

Queen makes a most interesting musical choice, too.

What a way to Rock You!
 
I wish we could simulcast it and comment as we went along, lol.

No, we weren't counting on you working on another chapter - we weren't starved for an update - we all took our sweet time getting here to read the latest and post, didn't we? lol

Geoffrey Chaucer in the buff . . .
 
I wish we could simulcast it and comment as we went along, lol.

No, we weren't counting on you working on another chapter - we weren't starved for an update - we all took our sweet time getting here to read the latest and post, didn't we? lol

Hey! Speak for Thyself!! :grrr: :slap: :lol:

DonQuixote said:
Geoffrey Chaucer in the buff . . .

Oh, Yeah!! (!) :badgrin:

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
And, while not posting more here, let us just say that Chaz and I had an interesting and perhaps enlightening "discourse" via e-mail related to this post!
 

187
Shocks and Waves


All eyes swung to Anaph as the ground trembled. “I didn’t do that”, the Druid told them. “I’m not starting–“

People grabbed at each other for support as the ground lurched. “The tower!” Casey yelled. He and other Scouts, seemingly unaffected by the earth moving beneath them – it lurched again, not as harshly – dashed for the reeling structure, where people already on top were crowding the stairs. One figure stood calmly, looping a rope around a corner timber that served to anchor the railing, then throwing it over.

“If you can control your slide, this is faster!” came in Devon’s voice. The jam at the top of the stairs eased as half broke for the rope. The moment someone grabbed it, Devon moved to the next corner and anchored another.

Landon’s clear tenor carried over all other sounds. “Everyone down!” he sand out. “Big one coming!”

“That wasn’t big?” Austin called back, laughing.

“You tell me, in about a minute”, the Bard replied, sitting and beginning to strum his harp.

Anaph joined him but didn’t sit, depending on his ever-upright staff. “You can feel the quake coming?” he asked in amazement.

Landon sang his answer:

“Oh, the ground is going to shake!
There’s a note I hear rock make –
a tortured tone so great...
Like fingernails on slate!”

Austin laughed, but not for long. Those few who hadn’t followed Landon’s example suddenly wished they had: the earth jerked, and bucked; no one standing kept his feet.

The tower was half its former height when the ground came to rest. Rigel, Tanner, Lord MacNeil, and others looked around to take stock. A woman’s anguished wail broke the human silence. “Onatah!”

Elizabeth’s Haudenosaunee youth lay on his back, his left leg twisted back under him at an impossible angle. He clutched at a piece of ragged wood, covered with blood, that stuck up out of his chest. The British Queen dropped to her knees by him, reaching out a hand to take one of his.

Anaph was there within a breath. He merely touched Onatah’s shoulder. “Breathe easy – save your strength”, the Druid ordered. Yahala will be here.”

An Escobar Healer student was there first. “I’m Felix”, he told Onatah. “Think of yourself whole.” As a student, Felix wasn’t capable of much, but he did what he could: small cuts vanished, and a streak of shredded skin that was oozing blood stopped bleeding, and slowly began to knit itself whole.

“My body ignores my commands”, Onatah informed Yahala as she arrived and knelt beside him.

“Anaph told it to remain still. Don’t try to move. Did he banish the pain?” Her fingers ran lightly around the exit point of the shattered wood.

“No. It is there, but it seems a dream.”

“Good.” Yahala looked up to see Rigel and MacNeil standing above her. “Lords, I need strong men. When I am ready, they will lift while I heal as the wood leaved his body.” That didn’t make sense to Rigel until he looked closer and saw wood sticking out from beneath Onatah. “Yes”, the Healer told him, “it is one piece.”

Ever so slowly, twelve hands raised Onatah under Yahala’s guidance. Soft exclamations broke out as no blood erupted from either entry or exit wound while the huge splinter was withdrawn. Once the Haudenosaunee youth was freed, they let him down carefully on a blanket. “I can’t fix your lung”, Yahala said to him solemnly, “but I fixed a handful of smaller things. You’ll live to see Lumina Knayz’ee.”

“Patching a lung is battle surgery”, Tanner cut in. “We can make your lung right, Onatah.”

“Use great caution”, Yahala admonished. “There are tears I could not mend, and what I could, is delicate.”

“All clear for now”, Landon announced, a phrase with double meaning. “Some aftershocks later, but for now, quiet.”


Onatah’s was the worst wound, though there were five others with broken bones. The only death was one of the British riflemen who’d been working with Devon; he was killed when dodging a tumbling beam as another bounced high and landed on him.

Within five minutes of the quake that toppled the tower, the lower half that still stood had a deck of salvaged lumber across the top; within another two, everyone considered sufficiently important to deserve a better view stood on that deck.

MacNeil was astounded at what he saw. “That was all dry land!” he exclaimed. “And those Alien fortresses look big”, he added grimly, handing his telescope to Elizabeth.

“Not much longer”, Anaph declared. “Watch Devon’s dam.” Water was already rushing through a large gap in the far end and trickling over the top in a dozen places where the quake had caused the structure to sag. “In three... two... one... Now!”

“Lord of all!” Elizabeth exclaimed in a hushed tone. The dam on which a thousand men had labored so long sagged, flowed, and vanished beneath the unleashed waters. Austin found his muscles tensing in memory of another wall of water, but that had been nothing compared to this twenty-five meter high horror stretching across a valley, its boiling froth a filthy greenish-brown.

“Sat there long enough for algae to flourish”, Landon observed.

“That’s scary”, Antonio said. “Anaph’s own private tsunami.”

“It’s grand”, Tanner disagreed. “Like the walls of water in The Ten Commandments. Except this won’t be drowning Pharaoh and his chariots, it’ll be drowning Others.”

Elizabeth shuddered in spite of herself. Ingrained discipline kept her from stepping farther from Anaph. “How long till it overwhelms our enemies?” she inquired softly.

Devon had done the calculations. “By the time that ripple where the dam was is gone, the front will be moving at around ninety kilometers per hour. See that hilltop over there? It’s going to become an island. The water will hit it in a little more than an hour. That’s when Anaph’s other dam – a natural one – breaks. The water will be slowing down then, because spreading means slowing – but not a whole lot, maybe to seventy-five kilometers per hour.” He avoided Snatched slang, for clarity. “That gap is like three kilometers wide, and a lot deeper, so the water coming out of there could start off at almost a hundred kilometers per hour.
“About two hours from now, that first hill will be an island. An hour after that, and the combined flood will be shooting between the two hills straight to the west. Roughly three hours after that, the first enemy fortress will get hit by a wall of water twelve meters high at sixty kilometers per hour. Twenty minutes later, the northern fortress gets hit, with a wall under ten meters high but still fast. Then it’s a half hour until the third one gets hit, fifteen more minutes until the fourth. The Aliens at the fifth one might have a chance to save something if they know soon enough; they get another whole hour.
“Then this starts filling up to be a sea.”

“With almost a hundred thousand enemy bodies floating around”, Chen added grimly. “Lord MacNeil, your fleet will have some work to do – a lot of Aliens may get up onto the hills that will be islands. They could start over.”

Kevin looked at the flow of water four kilometers away and shuddered. Every few seconds they felt the earth vibrate. “It’s tearing that channel bigger, isn’t it, Engineer?” Devon nodded. “But that basin out there is much larger than your lakes were. How long until ships may sail safely in and out?”

Devon grunted. “Point to you, Lord Kevin – I had to guess a lot on volume, because no Scouts have reported on just what’s out there. But before I’d get on a ship planning to sail in and then back out, it will be snowing. Anaph, you have a guess?”

“Yes, but no. Landon showed me something: Out past the fifth fortress there’s a place where water will seep in. If this water is high enough when another earthquake comes, it could break – and it starts all over again, flowing to make another new sea. I think four months until this is full enough to sail in and out from the Sea – but that much water could break the plug without a quake.”

“And there’s another basin to the north”, Landon informed them. Anaph looked surprised. “Sorry, Anaph; you were busy with the dam, or I’d have told you. I felt for where that big quake was. It was up north. The basin there wasn’t going to get flooded, but now it is.”

Elizabeth chuckled. “So by bringing death and destruction on the foe, Druid Anaph, you give us three new seas, with islands.”

Landon cleared his throat. “Pardon, Lady, but the High Druid has not said whether he will give you these. They are of his making, so they are his to dispose of.”

Kevin MacNeil almost burst out laughing at the look on his Queen’s face. “Ah, Lady! – this escaped you? Our kingdom had no claim on these lands, so what claim have we on the islands? Or the seas?” Shock was changing to thoughtfulness on his sovereign’s face. “For my part, I say we name these waters ‘The Druids’ Seas’ – for you did have aid, did you not, Anaph Druid?”

Anaph blinked; he wasn’t through absorbing the proposition that he might in some way own all this. “True, I did.” He shook his head sharply, like a dog might. “Rita, you’re the Wise Woman – would that be a good idea? The British here don’t know of Druids.”

“We do in folklore”, Elizabeth corrected. “That’s not the same as knowing Druids, though.
“Yet I see why it might not be a good name. Kevin, consider this.”

“A reminder of Druid power”, MacNeil said, “which would keep people mindful – yet a reminder of Druid power, which could make people resentful. High Druid, I withdraw my suggestion.” Rita nodded her approval of the thinking.

Anaph couldn’t resist a tease. “I never really considered it”, he replied. Elizabeth had competition for the loudest laugh. “But a reminder would be useful. So – I won’t decide what to do with other islands until I choose one for Druids alone. Oh – this one is Rigel’s. And the one with that village on it, the one with workers from Fort Fitzhugh, belongs to the Fleet – they’re using it anyway.”

“Village?” Elizabeth inquired, with raised eyebrows.

“They call it ‘Two Coves’”, Devon explained. “There’s decent anchorage in either cove, and the village sits right in between. When I decided to abandon the fort there, we didn’t have room here for everyone, so I asked for volunteers to set up a town and port. Captain Shaugnessey has been using it for provisions – it has a pair of good springs, for water, and a whole herd of deer got trapped there. I think it’s more deer than the place can support – Captain Shaugnessey agreed, so they’ve been using them for a meat supply. But I ordered that they can’t wipe them out.”

Ocean, who’d been watching the flood of waters with serious contemplation, brightened. “I brought cages of rabbits and chickens – ones Eraigh said would live better here than up north. I can put them on the island, and let them multiply!”

It was the first Rigel had heard of hauling live animals from Cavern Hold, but it struck him as sensible: those rabbits Anaph had snagged weren’t doing well outdoors despite Druid crossbreeding and gene adjusting. But here the climate was warmer – especially in winter, around the Sea; they could top the Valley in total snowfall, but Rita had already learned and passed on that the temperature rarely got more than even ten degrees below freezing. “Great idea, Ocean – and when there are enough, catch some and put them on my island.
“And before anyone even suggests it, we are not calling it ‘Rigel’s Island’.”


That evening, the rail on the truncated tower was adorned with telescopes. Elizabeth had efficiently organized a schedule so everyone would get a chance to see the wave of water crash into one of the fortresses. Landon declined to be on the schedule, but he looked at the first fortress as the flood edge approach, then sat quietly up on a broken upright, eyes closed. He remained still while the flood struck, and crushed, three successive fortresses. When he jumped down, he motioned for Anaph to go with him.

“Anaph, tell me this isn’t a surprise to you: I can’t feel the Others, the Aliens. I can’t feel life there except as a sort of murky fog, and I can’t feel more than a murmur when they get killed. That small herd of deer – small ones, aren’t they? – that got drowned was ‘louder’ than a whole enemy fortress!”

Anaph looked troubled. “I know. I don’t know what it means. Is there a different kind of Life, one we can’t feel? or are the Others alive in a different way?” The Druid hesitated. “Or are they not alive at all?”

Landon shook his head. “They’re alive – but something’s really different.” He kicked at a high spot in the grass. “I was hoping you had it figured out.”

Anaph looked uncomfortable. For a long while he hesitated. “Landon, I’m a kid from a messed-up family. I went to school just enough to keep my mom from getting into trouble. You’re a college dude – how would I figure things out you don’t? Because I’ve been here longer?” He turned away and stood silent for several seconds. “You Yankees know loads more than I do. I shouldn’t even be head Druid, with all of you knowing so much more.”

Landon plucked an enigmatic series in an augmented seventh chord, and came around to face Anaph. “You can learn – I’ve watched you learn. Anaph, it scares me how fast you learn some things! I can see when you store all that energy on your staff – that’s complex! It’s so complicated I can’t begin to follow it – even with my university education.
“Listen: you may think you shouldn’t be High Druid because you don’t know all this stuff. But I’ve talked with our Druids, and they’re in awe of you. And Mervyn – the Snatcher gave him DNA from the native race here, along with memories that haunt him; he says you’re more part of this world than he is, that you belong here just like you were a native.
“We talk about Oak and Ash, thorn and vine – you... live them. While you were studying those fisher birds by the Isle of Bruce, I was studying you. You look at birds, or fish, or deer, or trees, like they’re your family. To us, they’re specimens, living objects, but still objects. And that’s the thing that really makes someone a Druid: not knowledge, but being part of the whole thing. On that part, I measure us as being five years behind you – or more.
“You know that debt you say you owe? You owe it because you’re part of the whole. You can’t hurt anything without cause without hurting yourself. You tell us that everything’s alive – to us, that’s a theory to work from, but to you it’s like saying you need to breathe to live! For you it isn’t a rule you follow, it’s reality. I wake up in the morning and become aware that my toes are cold; you wake up in the morning aware that every living thing within twenty klicks is cold, and trying to comfort them! And I bet you don’t even know you’re doing it – you’ve gotten so accustomed to constantly listening to and responding to every last living thing from your head to the horizon that you could make yourself stop breathing more easily than you could stop that conversation.
“No – you’re High Druid, because it’s what you are. You might be the reason the Snatcher chose you Vortex Snatched: it needed a Druid, a real Druid, for whatever it wants done. Rigel and the others are just here to help get you where it needs you.” Landon shut up abruptly; he hadn’t meant to say that much. But he didn’t chastise himself; some others had said they poured things out around Anaph – and around Lady Rita, and even Rigel – that they’d meant to keep quiet.

A tear trickled from Anaph’s right eye. He didn’t wipe it. “Thank you”, he whispered. “But I hope you’re wrong: I don’t want to be anything great. I just want to serve life.”

Landon chuckled. “That’s what makes you great. I think that’s what the Snatcher needed – and you’re fit for it.”

Now Anaph chuckled. “Fit for life? You know where I was when we were Snatched? Sitting on a curb in front of a fitness club – named ‘Fit for Life’.”

“Bards believe in omens”, Landon intoned solemnly, with a minor chord for accompaniment. “Do Druids?”

“I think Bards are part of the Druids”, Anaph replied, avoiding the question.

“A sub-Order?” The Bard strummed the opening of The Wicked Witch from The Wizard of Oz. “I can live with that. But we make our own rules about what to sing.”


As the second fortress collapsed, Austin let out a whoop. “Did you see that bubble? It bubbled!”

“Devon.”

The Engineer suspected what Shelby wanted. “Your note?” he asked, turning to the British demolitions man.

“Yes – read it now.”

Devon pulled a neatly folded piece of paper from his pocket reserved for notes, and read: “The apparent difficulty of where they get their building materials, which is not evident to observation, is simply solved: the structure we see is erected using materials from excavations beneath. Test: when these fortresses are flooded by Druid Anaph’s great deluge, violent bubbling should be observed.” Fingers folded the note tidily again and returned it to its place. “Looks confirmed.”

Shelby nodded. Tanner nodded very, very slowly. “That explains their numbers – those things are as big underground as they are above”, he judged.

“Not quite”, Shelby disagreed. “I do demolitions. I know how much comes out of a hole. When making tunnels and rooms underground, what one can build above with what one removes contains more usable space than what is below. Unless they have some fanciful way of reinforcing their passages beneath, the useful volume above is, I estimate, half again as what is below.”

“So three-fifths of their total space is above ground”, Rita concluded. Her grin was almost cruel. “So almost half of them are in their basements, drowning, trapped underground.”

“You have a cruel streak, Lady Rita”, observed Leftenant Shelby.

“Cruel? No”, Rita disagreed, “just vengeful. Remember – they eat human children.”

Shelby gave Devon a sharp look. “I know. Master Devon made use of that knowledge to lure them to their deaths, at Fort Fitzhugh. The Signals lads who surrendered their personal garments for bait are rather proud of themselves.”

“I hadn’t heard that part”, Rita responded. “Good idea, though. And let them be proud – it may be their way of defending against the horror getting caught would have meant.”


“There goes the third one!” Casey danced a little jig, watched a while, then swung his telescope. “And there goes the last of the first one – nothing left of it.” His tone showed immense satisfaction, then he laughed.
“Dead foes drowning at the bottom of the sea!” he sang, to a tune Tanner knew as “Blind Man”, an old Gospel song. So he joined in, laughing, repeating the same words twice more to a variation on the initial tune. They dissolved into laughter before inventing words to complete the chorus.

Just then Anaph and Landon came racing up the steps. “Everyone hang on”, Landon instructed in a loud baritone that cut through all conversation and over the now-muted roar of the torrent racing past the fort.

No one argued, but Rigel had a question. “Now what?”

With a gleeful grin, Anaph answered. “The other natural dam, at the south end, is going to collapse. It’ll be big – not like the one this afternoon, but... like if the mountain with the Snatcher Hut fell over.”

“Big enough for me”, Ocean declared with a giggle. “As long as it doesn’t knock the tower over.”

“Not that big”, Landon assured her. “But it will feel like we’re on a ship.”

It was two minutes before his words were proved true. “That changes things”, Devon stated, wishing he could have seen the collapse. “Now water should be flowing out of there almost as fast as it’s coming in from the Sea.”

“But it won’t speed up your forecast”, Landon told him. “There’s a huge hollow under this basin – water’s going into it now, too. It will be rather an underground sea beneath the sea.”

“Could that make the basin bottom collapse?” asked Rita.

“No”, the Bard replied. “All the settling that could do was done during the big quake earlier. Though – Anaph, I don’t think that fault is through bouncing us around. I feel a lot of tension in the rock up north.”

Anaph gave a wry grin. “I can make the earth shake, but I can’t stop it”, he admitted. “If it happens, it happens.”

“At least you have a staff to hold you up”, Austin quipped.


They watched until the water hit the final fortress. It began as with the others – but didn’t finish that way. “Slag and ashes!” Kamal exclaimed. “Bloody buggers walled up – the water’s just rising around it!”

“Blast!” Rigel swore. “But wait – can they survive that way?”

“For a while, I’d guess”, Lord MacNeil answered. “But in a few weeks Captain Shaugnessey will be able to sail in and bombard them. If we could put one of your cannon on his ship, Rigel...?”

Ravi cut in. “Easier to fashion explosive rounds for their guns – right, Kamal?”

The artillery team’s problem solver nodded without taking his eye from the telescope. “With sabots, they can use fuses that light from the cannon firing. The hitch is that if one goes into the water, the fuse goes out.”

Leftenant Shelby looked up in surprise. “Demolitions has fuses that work under water!”

“And how dependable is their burn rate?” Kamal asked pointedly.

“Admittedly not exceedingly precise. But think on it: if a round hits the outside of their fortress, will it not roll down the face, beneath the water? And will it not explode against the wall? And will it not be enclosed by the water. Will the water not confine the blast?”

Kamal turned from the telescope and stared for two seconds. “I thought too narrowly. You are correct: even if the timing is awry, so long as it is not too soon, the round may still do damage.”

Shelby the demolitions man laughed. “By the saints, our fuses never burn too fast – our lives depend on that!” The engineer types had a good laugh at that. “Friend Kamal, let’s talk of fuses, for confusion to the foe!”


They watched the fifth fortress until the light began to fail, but it remained there, whole. The Aliens did more than just plug openings to keep the interior dry; new structures began to appear on the outside, structures Rita suggested looked almost like flying buttresses. “But what’s the point?” she asked as they rode back to Fort Narrows.

“To support docks – that’s one possibility”, Devon replied. He didn’t sound confident.

“But you don’t think so”, Kevin MacNeil guessed.

Devon sighed. “No, I don’t. I think you’re not going to be able to wait several weeks to get a ship, or more than one, in there – I think they’re trying to tunnel out. They’re building those structures with what they’re digging.”

MacNeil nodded. “Then what are the structures for?”

“Defense platforms to keep your ships away”, Rita suggested. “Some of them have seen ships in action, in two different places. In the war with the Celts and Spanish, they sometimes knew what had happened somewhere even though none survived. I think they recognized ships as a danger, and that’s what they came up with for a defense.”

Mac Neil sighed. “They’ve been foolish. Why did they have to get smart now?”

Rita laughed. “Kevin MacNeil, it wouldn’t matter when they got smart – because it would always inconvenience us.”

Kevin chuckled. “Well aimed, Lady Rita! Thus you say I should be asking how to fight that? Of course you do. I say I can’t so much as guess until I get a closer look – and then it will be not I, but Commodore Lord Howe.”

Antonio had already been thinking. “You said it: put some of our cannon on a ship’s deck. They’ve got better range than anything of yours, better accuracy, and nastier things to fire.”

“Blunt truth from the Count de la Vega”, Kevin noted.

“Remember we’ve used a lot of ammo”, Kamal reminded Antonio.

“If we’re not going to use it against the enemy, why have it?” Antonio sounded entirely reasonable. Kamal shrugged; his thoughts had turned to the problem of firing field artillery from a ship’s deck. “I’d try blowing the top off, then dropping incendiary rounds inside – and more of your explosives with uncertain fuses. Once they’re dealing with that, then try to crack the shell.” Antonio considered. “But if the top doesn’t crack on the first couple shots, forget it – waste of ammo.”

MacNeil’s focus was in a different direction. “The Druids said it will be months until ships can sail safely in and back out”, he mused. “But inside, where the enemy is – the water should be of a level, in a few days, should it not?”

“Makes sense to me”, Rita replied. “You’re going to bring in a ship and leave it until it can sail back?”

“Not just a ship – three, I think. Captain Shaugnessey is already here; he can sail in and look for an island where we can build a base. Then we’ll get supplies in – he can teach the other captains how to shepherd a string of supply barges.” He shook his head. “I suppose I must ask Druid Anaph for his permission to use an island.”

Elizabeth didn’t sigh at all, though MacNeil’s concession would set precedent. She’d already thought it through, and decided that the implications of Lord Rigel’s Druid having authority to dispense lands and rights here were mostly in her favor. She turned her attention back to the dirty waters to the west, waters that merely by offering new places for sailing would bring new vigor to her kingdom.




372141.gif
 
Kuli,
GREAT Chapter!

Thunderous Sound Effects!

Anaph in that classic li'l kid stand "I didn't do it!" ;)

A minstrel so into the "Beat" that he can feel Earthquakes coming :eek:

The Ultimate tie in to the very beginning of our saga, and the ultimate compliment from the other members of the snatched, hybridized, and native communities.

He is not only "Fit for Life", he is at ONE with all life.

Then there is the issue of our nasty nasties, "the others". Flooded out most of them, but damn if they aren't an adapting menace - Now to get to the remaining nest/fortress and blow them to smithereens before they get a chance to escape and regroup.

It was a most lively read.

Oh, yeah, and "her ladyship" aka "da' Queen" seems to have a bit of "chagrin" on her face, as her loving cousin points out that the islands aren't "theirs", they're Anaph's!

Thanks for the update, Kuli!
..|
 
Just wanted to let you know that I did read this, the other day, but was scrunched for time so didn't reply. I do whole-heartedly agree with DQ, though! ..|

I found it interesting that my view of "The Others" is changing. Yes, they are dangerous and destructive, and I would gather alien to the planet. However, I'm no longer thinking of them as a Vicious Foe, unlike The "Inkies"! *%%*

I'm also regarding "The Snatcher" as more Native, but I"m no longer regarding it/them as a living being. Rather, thinking back to the Computer, in the beginning, what if "The Snatcher" is nothing more than a residual Program that is running long after those that did the programming are long gone? Perhaps "The Machine" is snatching 'physical' beings, to do it's bidding, or hoping to persuade them to do so, because it is no longer "corporal" itself? :confused:

I'm also intrigued with the way Anaph can set things in motion, but can't (yet) entirely control the total outcome. And, I'm liking the way others, with "the spark", can sense things in a different way apart from Him, the "High Druid"! :cool:

Aw! The excellent ways this story is twisting, and playing with, my addled brain! #-o

I LOVE it! (!) (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Chaz said:
Rather, thinking back to the Computer, in the beginning, what if "The Snatcher" is nothing more than a residual Program that is running long after those that did the programming are long gone? Perhaps "The Machine" is snatching 'physical' beings, to do it's bidding, or hoping to persuade them to do so, because it is no longer "corporal" itself? :confused:

Did he get promoted to Sargent? :p P'raps you meant "sans physical form?" aka Corporeal????:rolleyes:

A bit punch drunk, it caught my funny bone, which has been damaged for about a year now.

BTW the soon-to-be-new-family-member id'd "The Kingdom" just from Major biz category and two cities mentioned. He used to work for a similar firm - in broad brush strokes.
 

188
Missions

HMS Druid seemed to hesitate at the edge of the great arc between the relatively smooth waters of the Sea, and the turbulent stream tearing westward. Kilometers distant, a seeming toy, HMS Brilliant waited under the command of First Leftenant Oleg Benson, prepared to “render all assistance”, should any be needed. Captain Sir Aaron Shaugnessey stood on Druid’s quarterdeck, his experience in running the current into what had been the three lakes at her service. Then her bow crossed that line, a commitment already made becoming visible – as did the increased tilt of her deck as she ventured onto the rushing slope of water.

Captain Heath broke the silence. “Lady Meriel, on first instance I resented your presence keeping Resolute from making this adventure. I withdraw that; ten degrees of slope is nothing I wish to try in a hull I know not well enough by half!”

“And that before the Druids made her seamless”, his first officer opined.

Anaph shrugged. “No one said not to. ‘Make her better’, you said”, he reminded the young officer.

“Better, she is! Nearly three knots faster than before, and the midshipmen no longer have to check the bilges for water!” The leftenant shook his head. “A hull all one piece of wood....” He stopped and regarded Anaph seriously. “And truly, it is alive?”

Heath snorted. “Leaves in my cabin, and on the rails, and you ask? or think you he glued them on?”

“Sir, I never believed in leprechauns or sprites. Accepting that this man is truly a Druid is a great journey for me. By my upbringing, magic is a meaningless word!”

Four voices joined Anaph: “There is no magic.” Chuckles followed the chorus. “Yes, it’s alive”, the Druid went on. “The wood was new, and held life. Binding it all to one required life. Letting the wood revive was easy. Though”, he added, “it isn’t quite alive the way a tree is, except on the edges where there are leaves. It’s....” Anaph sighed. “I don’t have enough words. Landon?”

The Bard strummed and plucked a sort of searching little tune. “It’s sort of like being dormant – how trees lose their leaves in winter, and sort of sleep.
“A thing of oak we sail on the Sea, planks united as one tree!” he sang softly, “And while much asleep it be – I compare it to anemone!”
Landon coughed into his hand. “Not my best. But it’s alive in a way a tree isn’t, too, is what I mean: it can flex and warp like a sea anemone.” The Lost British looked blank. “A creature that lives on coastlines, attached to rocks. It’s like a plant, but its ‘limbs’ can move, and some kinds can actually shift their own shape a little”, the Bard explained.

The leftenant looked to Rita. “There are such creatures?” he asked.

“Yes. Anaph, there’s a project for your team: bring a whole tide pool with all its life. They’ve got some barnacles and muscles and rock worms – oh! Your sea life”, she said to MacNeil and Elizabeth, “at least the kinds that cling to rocks, are the things that might grow on a ship’s hull!”

Elizabeth looked delighted. “Yes! And the fish we have are those which would have been in the water which came through in the Crossing.”

“Except some strange ones, no good for eating”, MacNeil added, “which must have lived here before.”

“Though other uses have been found”, Elizabeth augmented.

Rita got the impression that this was a sort of game with the two, sprung from long acquaintance, grown of the easy manner in which two friends might correct or complete one another’s statements. “You’ve studied this together?” she asked.

“After a fashion”, MacNeil replied. “We both have a great interest in the fisheries, and have followed the work of professors Alton and Bentham.”

“One of their hypotheses is that if there were more kinds of creatures, to cover more of the coastal rocks and the shallow sea floor, we would have more fish”, Elizabeth said. “They have graphs showing that where more of those surfaces are covered, more fish thrive.”

“Which could mean the fish thrive because of the rock and bottom creatures”, Landon mused, plucking the low E string on his harp, “or that both thrive because of some nutrient source.”

Elizabeth practically hopped. “Yes! And so they turned to studying what in the Sea provides nutrients!”

“And it’s something they’d love to discuss with you, I’m sure”, MacNeil cut in, taking Elizabeth’s arm. “But Druid survives well, and Captain Heath is impatient to get Resolute under sail. So – let us go from here.”



Ryan scanned the message. He’d grown used to having the equivalent of an executive secretary, an aide, and a butler, mixed and distributed among three people who were quiet and efficient about their duties, and good at screening things he didn’t need to be interrupted for. The service was so efficient and quiet, he often – as now – didn’t even notice who’d come and left.

It was from the tunnel engineers – another delay. But this one apparently came with benefits. “Underground stream flooded the works... altering the plans to provide for its flow within the tunnel, for a water supply....” Those valleys the tunnels connected weren’t lacking in trees and all, but water sources weren’t that abundant; he had to agree that changing the design to take that flow – or some of it, he realized as the concept description sank in – to whichever holding it would best reach.

“Silver!” Ryan wished it had been gold, but he wasn’t going to complain about silver. He looked up to find Varden with wine.

“Messenger said there was good news, lord.” The boy poured. “You said silver – they found some, in the mountain?”

“Quite a lot, sounds like”, Ryan affirmed, accepting the glass. Varden knew better than to not pour for himself; they’d all learned their master didn’t like drinking in celebration alone while someone hovered. In a few moments glasses clicked.

“You want it sent to Count Antonio?” Varden asked.

Ryan shook his head. “Silver doesn’t go far there. Besides, we’ve started trade with the Escobars, where silver goes a bit farther.” An idea that had been hanging around the back of his head popped up. “But I think most of this will go to the smiths – the Druids and Healers are going to want medallions and things. So for now, just have it turned into bars and stored.”

“Bars for storage”, Varden echoed. “I’ll send that back with the messenger, too.” He finished his wine – Ryan’s staff boys poured only a token for themselves – and set the glass down carefully. “Are they sending a sample?”

Having finished the message, Ryan nodded. “Enough for eighty sueldos, they estimated. You know where it goes.” Varden did; he bowed and vanished. Watching him go, Ryan raised his glass again. “Thanks, tunnelers – at least the silversmiths will have plenty of metal.” He was done being angry over the lack of iron; the Smiths distributed according to far better knowledge of the situation than he had – and maybe Rigel would bring back metal from the south.



Landon led the small group who’d come to see him. Rigel wondered what the Bard, Oran, Austin, Chen, Antonio, and Marcos de Cadiz – and Mervynn, at the rear! – could have to talk about. Austin split off and spoke with two seamen at a table near the entry; they nodded, and by the time the little delegation was seated – Landon on a tabletop, the rest on benches – had gathered the few others in the room and departed.

“Ooh, secrecy!” Rigel joked. “Do I have to shoot myself before I listen to you?”

“No, only if you talk about it in your sleep”, Oran quipped.

“It’s not really secret”, Landon asserted. “We just wanted no interruptions. Marcos – you started this.”

The young Escobar noble, one of Osvaldo’s former strongest foes, blushed faintly and cleared his throat. “Lord Rigel, it was Bard Landon’s mention of a basin to the north which sparked my thoughts. I have been aching to be searching for the Shining City, for the stars I know are of this season, but earlier. That is no longer such a concern, for Count Antonio has studied the stars here, and with the aid of Sir Chen we have worked out the differences.
“One of the marks for finding the Shining City is that it sits in a ‘low valley, oft shrouded in fog, yet on a great hill rising gently above the fog’.” Closed eyes and a chanting rhythm suggested he was reciting. “I asked Bard Landon if this basin he says will be sea could be a valley, and when he said it might be seen as one, I asked if it had a great hill.” He looked at the Bard.

“I had to feel hard to get that – feeling the stress along a fault is easy for me, but sensing the quiet landscape is tough. But I figured out how to use the vibrations from the mini-quakes happening up there to get an image of the topography. And yes, the basin has a hill – two, in fact, but if you’re looking at it from the direction of the Constant Hills, the southern one wouldn’t be visible. Chen?”

The senior Scout nodded. “As we came south, the route we took came by a basin, in the distance a few days. Once Landon and Marcos described it, it fit with what I saw. But to be sure of what Marcos was worried about, I checked with Oran, too.” Chen pointed a finger, hand like a gun, at Oran.

“It’s lower than the Sea”, Scout Two related. “We sketched Marcos’ description and guessed at distances, and that hill is in the right place. Just to be sure...” Oran looked back to Landon.

“We all went to see Anaph. I guided him in where to look, and he’s sure: up on that hill is a huge amount of metal. But Marcos' worry is right – so we came to you.”

Rigel looked from face to face, then realized they were going to make him ask. “Okay – Marcos, what’s the worry?”

“The hill’s going to become an island. But Druid Anaph and Engineer Devon say it may be years before the level settles and ships can sail there from the Sea.” Young de Cadiz looked unhappy. “It may be two years before water even reaches the basin, from the Sea. But – Bard Landon?”

Discordant notes jumped from the harp. “The quake’s shifted water tables and underground flow. It’s nothing yet, but when the rains start, the water that falls isn’t going to sink in for long. So if we’re going to visit that city and see about metal, we have to do it before we get rain.”

Rigel refrained from cursing, then changed his mind. “Frak! So we have to bail on Lady Meriel, and go north!”

Rita shook her head. “Rigel, why do you have to go?”

“Huh? Because...” His voice trailed off while he gazed at her. “Okay, Wise Woman, I don’t really have to go. But who do I send? And what do I send – wagons? cannon?”

“No British, certainly”, Marcos de Cadiz advised. “You will wish the metal for bargaining with them.”

Landon laughed and plucked some happy notes. “Bargaining? Once Anaph has set aside some land out here, Rigel can bargain with it for anything he wants!” The tune he plucked then was familiar to some of them as “Lord of the Land”, a bright little children’s Sunday School song.

Chen nodded. “Land for estates, land for independent farmers – nobility with their allegiance to you. Invite them from Lost Britain, invite them from the Constant Hills, even invite Celts. Mix them together into something new.”

“And a Druid hall where they can hand out languages”, Austin declared glibly. “Not everyone has Anaph and Eraigh and Hedraing so they can speak five languages at once.”

“Squire, we don’t have five languages”, Rita chided, “and we certainly don’t speak them all at once.”

Rigel shook a finger at her. “Not so fast, Wise Woman! Have you listened to us when we’re traveling? I speak ‘American’, Antonio answers in Celt, Austin comments in Spanish, Eldon uses ‘Common’ – and we use words from one or another language if it’s better than the ones in the others. Like if we were talking in Spanish and I wanted to say something about chopping kindling, I’d use ‘hatchet’.”

“Or if I say ‘silver’”, Antonio contributed, “I’m talking about the metal, but if I say ‘plata’, I’m talking about silver money.”

Rita held her hands up. “Okay, I surrender. We mix them – but we still don’t talk ‘all at once’.” She looked pointedly at Rigel. “So – who will you send?”

“Not me”, Antonio stated firmly. “I haven’t done a thing about finding the d’Aragon – which is why you brought me.” There was no resentment in Antonio’s tone, though Rita noted impatience.

Rigel scratched his head. “Well, the science – sorry, the wizard team has to go, and Devon is their superior here. The other question is what forces to send. Antonio, for you that’s easy – you get lancers and archers, because they fit the part you’re in. For the rest... suggestions?”



“Brother Inquisitor.” Theodoro offered his hand with its ring, and the other bowed over it. There was no kiss; it was decades since the Inquisitors had decided they were above bestowing a kiss on any bishop’s ring but one, the High Bishop’s. Apparently they hadn’t discovered that Theodoro had done away with the practice except in public ceremonies – something everyone on his informal council, from quincenturion to cofradiador, agreed would cause deep resentment from the hunters of error. “Please, be seated.” As the Inquisitor – present officially, for once – accepted the chair offered, his eyebrows rose at the insignia on Tacito Vargas’ shoulders, which indicated the centurion commanded four centuries of guards besides his own hundred men.

“A small army, for a cathedral and a nunnery”, he commented. “A suspicious man might think it a sign of ambition.”

“I thought all Inquisitors were suspicious men”, Vargas remarked blandly. The Inquisitor, now seated, waved a hand, dismissing the remark. The lack of indignation told Theodoro a good deal about his visitor’s actual, as opposed to public, rank. The commander of Theodoro’s episcopal troops smiled slightly and went on. “His grace’s guards have care of the cathedral, the great square, the Abbey of St. Anne, and the orphanage. One century is lent also to the Count, to guard the supplies and project of extending the city wall.”

“Also one century is of local men”, Theodoro added. “They live with their families, work regular trades, and serve mostly on feast days.”

“In effect a reserve”, the Inquisitor observed. “You name the Abbey. The Abbess – an imposing, yet humble woman, gifted with the Spirit’s touch?”

Theodoro nodded, wondering what this was about. If the Inquisitors sought Anne as a witch.... He knew different, but dared he face them over it? The bishop rejected the thought as unworthy: she was a servant of God and the people of God, and he would stand by her!

“Yes”, Vargas answered. “With a habit of white and green, and a deep devotion to the Holy Sacrament.”

“Indeed. So she is real.” He smiled wanly at their puzzled looks. “She appeared in the Duke’s city, in the cathedral precincts, within the apartments of the High Bishop. She attended him, then vanished. I have worked diligently to find her.” He focused on Theodoro. “When she aids at Mass, do some come away whole and healthy?”

“Some?” Theodoro echoed. “Many! And though besought by many, she will not hear thanks.”

“Of that I know nothing.” He pulled a small purse from within his robe. “What I know is that the High Bishop believes her sent from Heaven.” He held the purse out to Theodoro. “This is to aid her work here. Do not let her wander, but see to building an Order of Sisters who care for the sick. When the work is well begun here, perhaps she could start another Abbey in a neighboring city.” Subtle emphasis fell on the word “neighboring”. The purse was heavy; it had to be gold.

The Inquisitor stood. “That ends my task here. But one word: so long as she works here, and in neighboring cities, there will be no questions of witchcraft. Bishop Theodoro, see to it no movements of personal loyalty to her arise. She did a service to the Realm, bringing health to the High Bishop; she serves best now by remaining here, quiet and diligent.
“Now, I must go – I have less pleasant tasks ahead of me before I return home.” He didn’t kneel for a bishop’s blessing, merely bowed slightly and slipped out.

“A new Order of nuns”, Vargas mused as Theodoro hefted the purse, then tossed it. The centurion’s eyes went wide when he caught it. “Gold! Over a dozen excelentes, I think – enough for the abbey, the orphanage, and the school Anne wants. Yet a question – how shall this Order be called?”

With a slight grin, Theodoro shook his head. “That is simple: it shall be called after the archangel of Healing, Ra-fa-el. She calls on him, now and then, speaking as would a friend”, he mused.

The episcopal guard commander emptied the purse on the sitting table, revealing not twelve, but sixteen excelentes. “God of gold”, he breathed, a play on Theodoro’s name that came from mixing Greek and Spanish: “Theo d’oro”. “Bishop, this is wealth! But who is it truly from?”

“And why”, Theodoro augmented, nodding. “Not from the High Bishop, who sees Anne as a messenger from Heaven, and who would not send an Inquisitor in any case.”

Tacito Vargas thought it through, with little effort. “The Inquisition wishes her to remain far from the High Bishop. They are unhappy that his strength is restored. They had spent gold to support a candidate of their choice for his successor – but as he will live on, those they have bought will wish more, to remain bought.” He didn’t flinch from the gritty realities of church politics in the Realm. “And they may decide to hasten him on to the grave – and so buy her presence here, keeping her where she cannot come to his aid.”

Theodoro nodded. “Also a warning: if she does go to him, she will be sent to Heaven.” They didn’t know what Ann did, that there would be no point in going to the High Bishop again anyway.



Rigel glanced at his notes before he began. “Conal – you’re going to be a messenger. Take twenty riders – I thought guards, at first, because you know them, but you’d just tell me their job is to be with me” – Conal’s twisted grin confirmed that – “and they’re not necessarily the fastest, anyway. You know the men by now, so pick twenty who ride horses with speed and endurance. If Titanium decides to help, let him.
“You’re heading back north. I’ve got letters for Osvaldo and Ryan, and a few others. There’s a brief summary of each you can send ahead once you reach a semaphore station, but the actual contents stay confidential. When you deliver them, make yourself available for whatever questions they have.
“I wrote that all out, too.” He handed over a folded sheet of paper. “In case you get hurt or someone argues.”

“When do I leave?” It was early evening.

“First thing in the morning. Tell me who should command my guard, then. Now, go get ready.” Conal saluted, fist to chest, and departed at a jog.

“Enthusiasm”, MacNeil, sitting in by Rigel’s invitation, commented.

Rigel nodded; that or dedication, or both, but it didn’t matter to him, so long as Conal did the job. “Okay. Antonio, you know what you’re going after. You can have two cannon. Ask the wizard team how much ammo they’ll let you take – but if what they say is low enough to make you nervous, override them.” He grinned. “You don’t have to start in the morning, though.”

“I don’t even know where to start looking. Kevin doesn’t know anything, or Meriel. You’re going on with them, so drop me at the port – maybe McCutcheon has a clue.”

“I figured that’s what you’d have to do”, Rigel responded, nodding in agreement.

“I have lent some aid”, MacNeil put in. “I sent off a letter to the University, asking the archives to be searched. If there is anything known in the Realm, they will find it.”

“Thanks”, Rigel and Antonio said together. “Chen, are you the best choice to go with Devon?”

“Meaning you hope I am”, Chen ventured. “In truth, I would have said Oran would serve better, but Landon, with Oran’s help, has got the directions down well enough Devon could probably get there without a Scout. So I’ll go.
“Any special reason why?”

Rigel nodded. “I’d like to send Oran with Antonio, once he sets off. And Casey’s going north.”




“The saints keep you”, the swordsman whispered. He saw a tear in the winning duelist’s eye. “Don Julian, you should go swiftly.”

The man he addressed carefully wiped his blade on a cloth lifted from the serving boy who’d stood petrified while the common room’s other occupants had fled. “As I may.” He looked the other over carefully. “Why did you lend a hand?” The man had been watching intently, and when the viscount’s son had pulled a hidden dirk, smashed that hand with what looked to have once been a chair leg.

“I knew his ways. When he could not kill you quickly, he would pull the knife. I prefer a fair fight.” The man snorted. “In truth, I care more that he killed a friend’s sister’s brother that way when he objected to his... use of her.”

Momentarily Julian wished he’d killed the man painfully. But it would not have been honorable; dueling had its code. “A sound objection.” Mental wheels rolled ponderously. “I will not protest your action.”

Astonishment made the other look younger. “‘Protest’?! I gave aid that the match might be fair, and you would protest?!”

“It was my fight. That he cheated makes no difference. But that you had good cause does, for your interference.”

Wonder replaced astonishment. “I see why you are a good champion: you seek nothing but honor! You won’t even take his sword, will you? You didn’t last week.”

“That one’s family had but the one sword. Should I leave the son without blade? Where is the honor in that? God may punish the sons for the sins of the fathers, but I am not God.” He looked at the body on the floor. “This one – it is a fair blade, but not so good as the one I bear. I see you bear no blade – do you wish it?”

The laugh was caustic. “Me, with a blade like that? I’d be dead in ten days! No, you should take it – soon enough a young man or two will ask to be in your service, and may need a sword.”

Julian looked startled, baffled by a possibility that just didn’t fit with reality as he understood it. “In my service?” The other allowed him the half-dozen heartbeats – slowed now almost to normal; fit men recover quickly – it took to process the idea. At last Julian nodded. “You’re right – some might.” He scowled at his boot tips. “I wish no reputation!”

His companion’s smile was gentle, as was the hand that squeezed Julian’s shoulder. “Then never draw your sword again. But that would mean ceding honor, would it not? No, you will draw, because your heart calls you to fight for those who need a champion. And you will keep gaining a reputation, and men will come to you.” A hard squeeze came before the hand departed. “And God will give you grace to survive it.”

“I–“ Julian began. The outer door burst open, and in swept a young man who looked a great deal like the one on the floor, followed by three armsmen. They weren’t city watch, but wore colors that made a perfect match to those of the corpse.

The youth took in the scene. “You killed my brother”, he declared, but there was no accusation, or even tension in the voice. A brief glance dismissed the second man in the room, then settled on Julian. “So – he was angry that you killed our cousin. Good – I’d hoped he would be.”

Julian was utterly lost, bewildered by the plain tone of satisfaction. “You – hoped?”

The youth laughed. “Yes, by St. Michael’s sword, I hoped! My man, I am not here for vengeance, or to arrest you! May I buy you dinner? Here, please – take his blade; if you have no need of it, find someone who does.” He scooped the weapon up with a toe, tossing it into the air and catching it, then stooping to wipe the tiny trace of blood on his dead brother’s head. “Did you know hair takes off dried blood better than a rag? It’s because it’s rough, I think.” He turned and yelled.

“Innkeeper! Cook! Girls!” He glanced at Julian and decided adding “boys” wouldn’t be appropriate. “Your best cut of meat! Your best wine! By Gabriel’s trumpet, the best of everything!” Then he turned to his men. “Clean this. Take my brother’s body home and put him in bed. See if you can find a dead prostitute to stick with him – male or female, I don’t care.” Two of the men exchanged a glance that suggested these weren’t the first strange commands they’d ever been given, the other rolled the body over and assessed the floor. “Now, come, sit!” the youth urged. “You, as well – brave enough to be witness to this duel!”

“More than just witness”, Julian related as he let himself be guided to a bench, then went on to tell the story.

The youth scowled. “Where’s the dagger? I want it. And what’s your name?”

“I am called Inebrio, sir”, Julian’s sort-of rescuer answered. “The dagger....” He went back to where he’d been sitting during the fight, leaned this way and that, then swung his chair leg just as he had before, except this time letting it go. Dropping to the floor, he watched it, then followed. A moment later he was back at the table, carefully handing the dagger to its owner’s brother. “You just have to remember the motions”, he explained, “Which way the knife was moving, which way you swung. And the sound when the wood hit the metal and the hand can tell you a bit, as well. See, it’s–“ Inebrio clamped his mouth shut at the look from the youth.

“As my name is Antony Francisco Mauretius, you make it a science!” he declared in amazement. But a scowl followed. “I don’t like science.” Then he sighed. “Friend duelist, favor me with your name.”

“I am called Julian de Fidalgo.”

Antony stared, then laughed. “Ancient gods, no wonder he challenged you!” Laughter replaced words for several seconds. “Powers! Knowing our cousin was killed – justly so, in truth – for honor made my brother angry, but when he found your name – tell me, did he issue the challenge, or just draw?”

“The words began before the blade moved, but he had his sword free before I answered”, Julian related. “Even so, I made the reply properly, though with need to defend myself the meantime.”

His dead opponent’s brother stared. “Merciful Mary, he killed himself”, he breathed. “For once in his life he met a man of true honor, and he impaled himself on it. I cannot even imagine – no, I can imagine the anger; it would have been like my father’s, such a thing that were wizards real and he one, an entire city would burst into flame at his wrath! When you maintained honor in face of insult, when you would not be angered, he was a dead man.
“He fought recklessly, did he not?” Julian and Inebrio nodded. “But then he came to himself, and drew calm upon himself, and fought like a force of nature?” Again, the nods. “But that was something he could not maintain – and then he made mistakes that killed him?”

“Shortly after I broke his hand”, Inebrio replied. “I believed that shattered his calm?”

“Perhaps – but it would have shattered anyway; he could never control his anger.” He turned to Julian. Don Julian, if every person who has suffered from his anger gave you a sueldo, you would be a wealthy man. If I made reward measured by my gratitude – oh, but I haven’t explained my gratitude, have I?” He paused briefly, taking a sip of wine.
“Really, it’s simple. Father had three sons. The first was to be heir, the second a priest, the third a military man. You have killed the heir – and saved me from being a priest! If horses weren’t just tales, I’d buy you a horse!” He fumbled inside his shirt. “In its place – here”, he said, producing a small round purse of rich auburn leather, “the price of a horse.” He laughed again. “If any price could buy one!”

Julian caught the small purse but regarded it dubiously. “I do not take payment for honorable victory.”

“Bah – it isn’t payment for your victory, it’s payment for my freedom! Do you know I’m still a virgin? Well, no priest’s robes for me, so tonight I shall learn what God made that member for!”

Just then food arrived, and Antony made a show of looking it over. “Good, good – boy, make a bath ready, and a girl for each of us.” The serving boy’s neck tensed; Antony did the sum. “My brother called on you, too? Beast – grandfather said, ‘bed only the willing’. Here – have a silver duro, and come to the bath – bring a girl for yourself.” He laughed in delight at the mixed relief, confusion, and anticipation on the boy’s face.

“Don Julian, do you know Count Castellan?” he asked minutes later, when the amount of food delivered had been halved.

“By name, and reputation.”

Antony sighed. “I hoped you might have some influence with him.” He brightened. “Though perhaps you would... you have eliminated two problems for him.” Julian just listened. “Señor, I don’t want to be viscount, either. But my younger brother, he’s a historian, and he thinks through everything – he’d be a good one!”

Julian knew he was too poor with words to attempt such a suggestion, but he knew his mentor, don Montdragón, had no such failing – indeed, had an abundance, and what Julian lacked on top of that. “I know one who would be heeded; I will tell him”, he offered. He shook his head. “This is strange to me: I kill a man, and then another. Now, here I am, thanked and rewarded by their cousin and brother.”

Antony shrugged. “Fate gave me an oaf for a father and a beast for a brother. Heaven gave me you to change my fate. Should I not thank and reward you?” He brightened and chuckled. “The priests say we should be generous in gratitude, so I am but a good son of the church!” To Julian that seemed somehow twisted, but he didn’t try to puzzle it through, accepting that at least having gratitude was something the Saints must approve. “As a good son of Mother Church, I also give you warning: disappear somewhere, for a time. The next man you will seek to duel – oh, look not so innocent; I can tell you are seeking people with grudges against corrupt men! – is not one to wait for such as you. He will not face you – and the numbers he will have fall on you will be greater than you can meet.” He chuckled. “When I am free of obligations, I may stand with you – if you will teach me! But for now, I can offer no protection but this advice: be somewhere else for a month, or more.”

Julian nodded. Don Rodolfo had explained that he would become a target of men willing to cheat by hiring others to ambush him. He had known he would not be able to tell when, so this was welcome. “I hear you as God’s messenger”, he assured Antony solemnly. “And with your gift, I may travel swiftly to a place I will be welcome. A multitude of thanks!”

“Good!” Antony clapped him on the shoulder. “I want you to live until I may join you – don’t deprive me of the fun!”




Lord Ortega gripped the hand of each in turn. Osvaldo had intended only six of the ten champions, but twelve were riding north: seven champions, and five fast friends who had also fought well. With them went twelve squires, since Osvaldo had decided to raise the dozen to caballero. Of the hundred precious horses the new Lord Escobar had gotten from Grand Earl Rigel, twelve went with them – a princely gift, far too princely according to mutterers among the lords, but deemed necessary by their young master to assure their standing as they went through foreign realms. Their squires rode twelve of the narrowest Escobar beasts, and the serving boys who went along led twelve that would have split in two any man who tried to straddle them. “Remember you will be in service to others”, the former Regent admonished. “Do as Lord Ryan bids you, and bring honor to our House!”

Three regarded him as some kind of irritant; not so their leader, Gabriel Felix Rodriguez. “In matters of honor, we shall yield to don Ryan. But we are not to be his vassals! So in the rest, we take his advice, and do as Conde Antonio de la Vega bids.” His grin was barely teasing, his tone serious. “Since he has passed through here and gone south, we shall seek the words of whomever he set in his place.”

Ortega was reminded of a stubborn young Miguel, and called up that same patience. “You will be Grand Earl Rigel’s vassals – Lord Ryan is his Regent.”

Rodriguez’ reply was even. “Lord Rigel works through Conde de la Vega.:

The companion closest to him coughed. “Gabri, that is in the east. The Lord Ryan commands those in the west.”

Gabriel nodded without turning. “True, Constantin – but the Conde is master of those within the Realm, don Ryan of those not. We shall be going within.”

Ortega chuckled; this crew would lawyer out every possibility, as they traveled, only to find that the reality wasn’t one of their possibilities. “Abide by Lord Ryan’s decision on that”, he admonished. “Now, off with you – the blood of some vile men awaits your swords.” The young men all laughed; saluting, they turned and set off.




“Wizard Ryan – a man to see you.”

The voice got Ryan to turn. “Dallaen? What are you doing here? Where’s Varden?”

The Rider, Ryan’s aide in the field, grinned. “Konan and I brought the man in. Varden passed us – he’s reading.”

Ryan smiled at that, picturing his squire on station – on his rear end, parked on the floor, the latest new book in his hands, eager eyes devouring words. The passion for reading had struck hard, harder even than the passion for learning his duties as Rigel’s squire – and that had been exemplary. “Well, all three of you, come in”, he responded.

His eyebrows rose at the sight of Konan. “You’re taller”, he accused, curious.

The lad who’d nearly died in a blizzard – under Ryan’s command – grinned sheepishly. “Shannon decided my proportions were wrong for riding, so she made my legs longer. Shannon though it made me look like a pole, so he widened my shoulders a little. Eraigh thought I needed ‘balance’, and he adjusted a handful of things.” A glance downward reminded Ryan that one of Konan’s feet hadn’t grown back quite straight. “I needed all new clothes.”

“You’re growing – you’d need those anyway.” If it hadn’t been for the visitor, Ryan would have wrapped Konan in a long, tight bear hug; the energetic presence felt like absolution for the hash he’d made of that expedition. He settled for a compliment. “You look superb – like you were born to be a knight.”

Konan actually considered that seriously, and after two seconds shook his head. “I don’t think so – I was born to be a Celt. But I was reborn one night, to be a knight.” A grin wiped out the serious expression. “Does that mean you’re going to make me a squire?”

Ryan laughed. “Not mine – I’d bore you! You’re made for riding, going places. But I’ll think on it.
“Now – who’s the visitor?”

Konan ushered a slightly bent, graying Celt forward. “I be called Donal, Lord Wizard”, the man said, his he4ad bobbing a bit to the left as he spoke.

“Just ‘wizard’”, Ryan corrected.

“Ye’re not bein’ a lord?”

Ryan chuckled, and made a mental shift, turning the man’s pronunciation and dialect into good Common. “I’m a lord, and I’m a wizard, but I’m not both at once. In this tower, I’m just ‘Wizard Ryan’.” Seeing the exchange of amused glances between Konan and Dallaen, he added a comment. “Sometimes I get called away to go be a lord, but inside, I’m Wizard Ryan.”

“Ah – I see. Well, Wizard, I’ve heard that your gun-makers, with the giant rifles, have been in need of shells. In Devon’s Mills I was, and the word set me thinking. I remembered a bit from when I was a wee lad, and having freedom to go where I wished, went looking. I found what I sought, after some days more than I hoped, as the hills and streams are different to a man of full height than to a wee bit of a boy.”

Konan already had the man’s crude pack open and held out as Donal turned for it. “Thanks, Rider.” Ryan noticed that Donal’s left hand was deformed, as the man reached in and drew out an object so dark brown it would appear black in shadow. “Here, Wizard – there are more, but I brought this for you to see. It’s a tree shell, from a shell tree.”

The apparent tautology amused Ryan only briefly. The item he received from Donal’s hands was like nothing so much as an elongated giant acorn. “Heavy”, Ryan noted. “Thick skin?”

Donal shook his head. “No, lor- Wizard. The skin is hard as rock, and near as heavy. The shell is hollow.” Ryan hefted the object and frowned at it. Hollow meant a sterile fruit – if that was the norm, how did the trees survive?

But even as he wondered at that, his mind was assessing what he held. “How abundant are these? How many can you find?” he amended, seeing the lack of understanding.

Donal shook his head apologetically. “Not many, Wizard. Perhaps a few hundred. I saw only a few on the ground.”

“Why not pick them?” Ryan wondered.

“Ah, that kills the tree, Wizard! Snap one from its place, it makes a wound that leaks and leaks. Above the wound, the tree dies fast; below, it lingers, turning diseased. It stinks enough to drive deer away while it dies.”

The contradictions tugged at Ryan’s mind; ecologically, that was impossible – it was anti-survival! On the other hand of the equation was the incredible lack of diversity in wildlife; perhaps there had been some insect which had eaten at the leaking sap, maybe some chemical from its saliva (or equivalent) serving to catalyze the tree’s fluid so it set and healed. He filed the thought to mention to Eraigh, then turned to the matter at hand. “Judging by eye and hand, these could work – if the shell can be cut and drilled. Are you the only one who knows this place? And how do you know it?”

Donal shrugged and looked at his feet. “I know not if other remember. There once was a village, but in my grandfather’s time a sickness came, and many died. He took me, to show me, when I was a boy. My father would not go – he said it was the past, with no going back.”

Ryan considered, tossing the heavy shell in his hand. From what little he knew, he felt sure the wooden shells could be modified for firing from cannon – filled with explosive, or incendiary, either way. It would allow artillery rounds to be made while metal was in short supply, and if all they could make were a hundred, that would be a hundred more than they were making now! A smile grew on his face as he realized they might as well turn all they could get into artillery shells: those too small on their own could be fitted with sabots, those too large could be fired by catapult. “Donal, how would you like to live there, in a village?” he asked.

The Celt stood silent, mouth open, for a pair of heartbeats. “Why, Wizard – I would indeed, if there were a village! I could teach youngsters what I know, and if there are others who remember, they could do the same!”

Tension Ryan hadn’t noticed fled. He tossed the shell to Dallaen. “Get that measured – I want an answer by sundown, if the size is at least right.” The Rider caught the hollow wooden piece, grinned, saluted, and left.
Ryan turned back to Donal. “Donal, I’m giving you a name. I’m also giving you a rank. From now on, you’re Squire Donal Woodman. You’ll be my man in the village.
“Konan”, he went on, not giving the astounded Celt time to respond, “you’re now a leftenant. Go with Squire Woodman, and gather any people or supplies he thinks he needs. Squire, your job is to select people, especially people who know anything about the shell trees, and go build a village there. Oh – Konan, tell Eraigh I said to lend you a pair of Druids; maybe they can learn more about these trees – like how to get more to grow! Um... you have my authorization to get tools and utensils for the Masters if Cavern Hold doesn’t have what you need.”

Konan held up a hand, cutting in, and recited a list covering everything Ryan had said. “Any more?” he inquired.

“Mark a good trail – one good enough for wagons.” He managed not to sigh; that was one more road the engineers were going to have to put in!



Rita clapped her hands in fervent approval as Rigel, clad only in loose shorts, let go the leather thong he’d used to slide down the forestay, and dropped to the deck. A deeper tan than she’d ever seen on him made him blend with the crew, of whom those nearby joined her applause, stamping their feet as well. Austin came up with a bucket of seawater and doused his master, which event brought no yelp but instead a shudder of pleasure.

“Lady Meriel, whatever else is true of sailing in your fleet, it’s hot work at this time of year!” Rigel declared. “Now, do I name the lines, the spars, or what this time?”

“The sails”, Elizabeth decided. “Tell me which at the moment are furled.”

“Furled – that means tied up, bundled, not in use”, Rigel commented, stalling as he pictured the ship he’d just traversed. “Well, Captain Heath only has one jib out, which leaves the outer and inner. No staysails at all – main, main royal, or main topgallant. No moonsails or skysails – fore, main, or mizzen. And he’s got the fore royal and main royal up, but not the mizzen royal.
“And I’m thirsty – Austin!”

“Ale, your highness”, the squire quipped, earning a dirty look from Rigel and a chuckle from Rita.

“Slowly”, Elizabeth cautioned. “Squire, water the ale and let it warm, for this!”

“He earned a cold one”, Austin disagreed. “Rigel, sip”, he added, to cover himself.

“Yes, squire”, Rigel responded, mock-meekly.


The British leftenant trotted up, stopped at a precisely proper distance, and saluted. “All loaded, Master Engineer. We can sail at your pleasure.”

Devon sighed and returned the salute. Oran had insisted he practice that, laughing the whole time at Devon’s discomfort with having had the rank of Major bestowed on him by Rigel – something Rigel had found immensely amusing! His college friend would have thought there would be understanding, since Rigel was so uncomfortable with all his titles, but it hadn’t worked that way. But his friend – and lord – had been right; the British felt much better about knowing just where Devon stood in the order of things; “Master Engineer” had been too vacuous for them. But at least he’d gotten away with his order to be called that, instead of “Major” – though that hadn’t been that great a victory, coming as it had as his own solution to just how he should be addressed, he being a foreigner and all. “Good”, he relied, “and thank you. You mean all the wagons and gear, correct?”

“Precisely, sir. But all personnel are either aboard or at dockside.” He frowned. “With the exception of Scout Sir Oran, who I am told is ‘running with his cat’, along with two other Scouts.”

Devon laughed. “Right – don’t worry, leftenant, they’re well on their way. They’ll be at Zekeriah’s Landing before we are. I bet you they swam Dunbar’s Bay – for the fun of it.”

The leftenant’s eyes lit up. “A wager. On both points?”

Devon managed not to laugh. “Sure – two wagers.”

“A silver pound on each?”

Devon’s jaw nearly dropped. A wager that size from a mere leftenant meant the man was nobility, which he hadn’t known. “I might be in trouble with Colonel Stevens, Grand Earl FitzWin, if I wagered that much – ‘not prudent’, you know. But half on each?”

The leftenant grinned. “Done!” He extended his hand, and they shook on it. “No man can swim Dunbar’s Bay - the gyre in the middle prevents it.”

Now Devon did laugh. “Ah, but leftenant – these aren’t just men, they’re Scouts. Now, let’s go tell the captains they can stop fidgeting, and we can sail.” He really wanted to say, “with the tide”, but that phrase wasn’t used here – not surprising, when tides came on a monthly scale, not a daily.



The vessel’s smallest midshipman landed on the deck. “Fort Winchester, sir.”

Conal stared. “Oh – it is Fort Winchester, but different.” He’d thought so; he recognized the bluff, and the outlines of the crude fort – which even from this distance no longer looked crude. “But what’s that across the cove?!”

“Watchtower and lighthouse, sir. Complete by autumn’s end, it and the stone wharf. Special Representative MacNeil ordered that since Grand Earl FitzWin had made a fort here, to make it a real one. Word is, they’re quarrying right down below the waves, west side of the fort. When it’s done, and they let the water in, it’ll serve as a moat. If Aliens come here to attack, their approach will be a narrow one.”

The thought of Aliens, or Others, made Conal wince. But that would soon be behind him. “Herd them together and kill them”, he commented, then looked north. “I wonder if anyone’s fighting them up north?”





[> brain too tired to get an image -- sorry <]​
 
Kuli,
What a phenomenal update!

And, as I was reading the news from hither and yon, and we were up with Ryan,
I was if we would have an update on our noble Celt - Konan - THANK YOU! It was great.

My head is still spinning from all the different activities and actions.
..| :gogirl: (!) :gogirl: ..|
 
I want to see the final takedown of the Inquisition. Those guys aren't just evil, they're SMARMY.
 
Hey, Crio!
Long time, no see.

What happened to YOUR story, and the English Language thread?
 

189
Changing Courses


“Fair wind for Wellington Rock, sir.”

Captain Heath turned to regard his leftenant, allowing himself a smile. “You want to test her speed, do you, Desmond?”

“Well, the Druid did say her hull should sing....” The Resolute’s first leftenant rolled his eyes.

Heath chuckled. “I believe Master Landon is a Bard, not a Druid – though they seem to share talents.” He frowned at the horizon, turning to slowly scan the western shore where the Sea, the eternal Sea, flowed through a great wound in the land – a wound made by a man. “Though I confess I prefer the music of harp, to that of earth”, he added softly.

“Does that for which the music is meant make a difference?” The two officers turned to see a loincloth-clad Haudenosaunee standing lightly on the balls of his feet, a wrap around his chest covering wounds still healing. “The life from a Healer’s hands pleases me more than the slow healing from my own body – but both yield harmony.” Onatah stood patiently, his stance suggesting at once a student waiting for an evaluation of his effort and a teacher hoping a student will be enlightened.

Captain Heath wasn’t sure of the comparison. “I should think the Bard’s harp is like the Healer’s hands – but the Druid made wounds to the earth.”

“I have watched your ship’s surgeon lance a wound, and your man glad of it.” Onatah gave a hint of a bow, one only the truly observant would notice, in response to the leftenant’s light applause.

Captain Heath stepped forward and regarded the slender youth, searching the open face and eyes. “You really are to replace Master Jays, I see”, he said quietly for just Onatah’s ears. “So young – so wise. Why do your people part with you?”

“The Chief Mother has the greater need.” The captain’s question didn’t need voicing. “The Summoner stirs.”

Heath understood he would get no more; the lad’s style was so like Jays’, the imitation – in the best sense – plain. “Well. And this masquerade – you judge it good?”

Onatah’s grin showed only a bit more than his earlier bow. “So far, it goes well.” The subtle grin intensified, as though the Queen’s apprentice, and future, counselor knew he’d just raised more questions – and not really answered the one the captain meant.

Heath snorted. “You answer like a philosopher!” he declared, normally now. “Stykes – as the Lady Meriel chooses not to rise so early as to give us a destination, let us choose our own -- make course for Wellington Rock.. Perhaps the hull will sing as the Bard told.”

The first officer shook his head, wondering what had passed between captain and youth, and began snapping orders.



Captain Heath sputtered. “Lady, he is a foreigner!”

“The crew likes him. I like him.” Elizabeth stomped on her habit of tapping her foot as a sign she meant to get her way; it was too characteristic of the Lost British monarch.

“And in a week you’ll want to make him an officer!” The captain knew he was on solid ground on one level: queen or not, he was the only commander of his ship.

“If it takes that long to show he’s a good seaman, yes.”

Like a good ju-jitsu move, Elizabeth’s reply toppled Heath’s composure. He gaped, never having really thought she would want to have a foreign lord act as an officer! “Lady, you cannot mean–“ Words died as things fell into a pattern: his Queen’s masquerade, bringing this foreign lord along, the presence of Earl Dennishire, young Onatah's evasive reply.... “Lady, you cannot mean”, he repeated nearly in a whisper, “to choose a foreigner!”

Her look of approval caught him off guard. “I knew I could rely on Owen to choose well. Yes, Sir Meriwether, I do so mean. You deduce this from the Bride’s Spokesman being with the bride, and an unknowing eligible noble. Know this: he is more than he appears, and the match will benefit the Kingdom greatly.”

Meriwether Heath sighed, and watched the ship’s wake briefly, then glanced above where the man in question essayed a yard blindfolded, shepherded by his two youngest midshipmen. “And if he is accepted by men of the Fleet, if he can show himself worthy to be British, your case will be strengthened.” A second sigh followed, then a shake of the head. Hands behind his back, he paced away, turned, and regarded his queen, musing on the turmoil she would cause. Yet she was right; from his grasp of politics, a foreign match, perhaps only a foreign match, could bring balance – yet could she possibly succeed?
But her audacity, her vision – that, a bold captain had to admire! “Very well, my lady”, he conceded softly. “But heed: before he advances, he must be beyond reproach!” Or you will fail in this, he thought, not knowing that events were even then working to lend a hand in her success.



“They ate Signals boys!” a voice yelled. Looking over the most tumultuous Parliament in memory, the Prime Minister declined to correct the misinformation. “They are vermin!”

“Even upon vermin, war can be made”, a familiar voice boomed. “Lords and ladies, I second the call for war!”

“War!” As the cry came from more than a dozen throats, Owen Trenton, Lord Logan, Prime Minister to Elizabeth III, assessed the mood of the House of Lords, and knew the motion would pass, voted by men who a year before had no interest in the mainland save as a piece in the political game


“Did they think about what they were doing?”

“Be welcome, Baron Fox. How fare the ‘lesser Bobrinskys’ these days?” Lord Logan reached for his visitor’s hand, drawing him into the room.

Ivan Elliot Bobrinsky blinked, then harrumphed. “So I should be not so blunt, with an open door”, he grumbled apologetically. “But a good question, it is!”

“Nut beer”, Logan informed Bobrinsky, pointing to the sideboard. Again the baron blinked, then chuckled. “Guessed I would come, did you? So, the answer is, ‘No’?” He didn’t wait before lifting a waiting stein.

“Of course, ‘no’. Blood and passion ruled Lords today.” His smile was bent. “And incorrect information.”

“In Grand Earl Wenham’s report? Never. The man is too devout.”

“Not Sidmuth – Bruce, and Creevy. Their agents... were confused, and hasty.”

“Yet you did not correct them.”

“It was not in Her Majesty’s interest that I do so.”

Baron Fox, of the branch of the Bobrinsky house consigned to Fox Harbor generations before, took a deep breath, following it with a deep draught of beer before letting it out. “Did Her Majesty have a hand in this?”

“Her Majesty is in retreat.”

The two regarded one another blandly a dozen seconds before Bobrinsky erupted in one of the deep laughs for which the family was known. “And I swim Prince Lyle’s Passage to Duke Hubert’s Hump, for pleasure!”

The Prime Minister smiled. “Her Majesty has not been in contact.”

Eyes of Russian heritage held Lord Logan. “That”, the baron said after three heartbeats, “I believe. As for where she is – stalking a husband, I think.” Logan said nothing. “Well, they have done what they cannot undo.”

Lord Logan smiled. “Indeed they have. And you have judged that I judged Her Majesty will have benefit from it. You judge correctly.”

“So we shall have a true Queen sooner, not later. My people will be pleased.” It was a fact of Kingdom life: those of Russian heritage, however thin, preferred a strong monarch.

“You speak also for your nephew?” That meant Marko Bobrinsky, Duke Bobrinsky, of Bobrinskigrad.

“For all the House.” A pause, then those eyes bored in. “Do you know who it is she seeks to wed?”

“She has not privileged me with that.” As he would not have allowed himself with most, the prime minister allowed a small frown.

“Then it is a brilliant pick, one to cause uproar and subdue the ambitious.” The Bobrinkys had never been ambitious, only very attentive to their station, seeking no more – but never, ever less. The baron looked eager to see that happen. “Prime Minister, I thank you.
“Now – how is the chain-nut crop this year? The price of nut beer in Isle Royal has been dear.”



Rigel leaned, held by toes twined in lines, and relaxed his bladder. It seemed wrong to him, that liquid loosed far above the ship’s deck should fall forward; all his experience in boats where he’d taken a leak off the side had been in vessels under power, not under sail. But as Midshipman Donnel had assured him, the wind was still faster than the vessel, and his stream blew away from their perch above the fore moonsail, drifting past the flying jib to land, he supposed, in the bow wake. Spreading his arms, he found himself reminded of a movie, and yelled, “I’m the king of the world!”

That afternoon, he chewed himself out thoroughly when, inducted into the crew as lowliest of the low, he was dubbed “Seaman King”. “I should have said, ‘I’m flying’”, he muttered.



“Don Antonio, patience!” Percival Sidmuth counseled. “You could get on a ship and sail the Kingdom, that is true – but then you would not be here when the reply from the University comes.”

Antonio thumped fist into palm. “I know – but–“

“You wish to go hunt them out. But does not a hunter sometimes do best to sit, waiting for the prey to come to him?”

That brought a chuckle. “Okay – that’s true. But I don’t like it.”

“I take little enjoyment from settling new lands when their main purpose is to draw an enemy to die upon their defenses”, Sidmuth stated, “yet I do it. Why? Because we have duty, you and I.” He stood and stretched. “Yet duty requires refreshment of the mind and body – Kevin MacNeil taught me this. I go to the small island north of the Wall, used for a quarry. The master there tells me that game is abundant – might you care to join me, to make of them quarry?”

Antonio laughed at the play on the word for both stone and prey. “Better that than sit waiting for messages that say, ‘Nothing found.’” He stood. “Sure – quarry by the quarry!”

“Pray the Lord send us prey”, Percival quipped. Antonio shook his head at the continuing transformation of a man who by all accounts had been dull, unadventurous, and cautious, however ambitious he might have been.



“Wellington Rock. I climbed it once”, Kevin MacNeil remarked.

“If you’re daring me to do it with you, let’s go!” Rigel declared. In the previous twenty-four hours, he had spent time at half the duties of a seaman, done quite well at most, admitted he needed practice at others – and wanted off the ship.

Captain Heath inspected the young foreign lord by peripheral vision. He was as fit as any on HMS Resolute, and that was no mean accomplishment. He didn’t win many races through the rigging, but he was no slouch, either, and had managed to reach the crow’s nest earlier in the day using only his arms – something many men in the Fleet couldn’t do. If Elizabeth was willing to risk him.... He caught her faint nod, meant only for him.

Onatah spoke up then. “I wish to go, too!”

Elizabeth laughed softly. “Very well – you three boys go climb the rock. Kevin and Rigel, remember Onatah is still healing.”

Kevin gave her a sour look. “Meriel, that’s just your way of saying, ‘Behave yourselves and be cautious’, isn’t it?” She just batted her eyelashes and looked innocent. The three climbers-to-be laughed.

“Midshipman Keith will go with you as well”, Captain Heath declared. “With respect, Lord Kevin, I believe he is more skilled at the matter than you are.”

Kevin nodded. “Spencer Keith, is he? If he’s half as skilled as his brother, he’s still better than I!”

“The same. Leftenant–“

“Already passed the word, sir, the moment I heard Seaman King accept Lord MacNeil’s challenge.”

“Then set a midshipman to the boat, and send them off.”



“Blast it, Sommers, lay off!” It wasn’t often that Dennis Stepman, captain of Her Majesty’s ship Gallant, lost his cool. When he did, everyone with a bit of intelligence knew to back off and keep quiet. First officer Samuel Samuelson did that, literally, clamping his mouth shut and taking a step back as his commander glared around the room. The officers present knew he was counting to twelve mentally, seeking calm.

“Might I summarize, sir?” inquired Gwen Beckham, ship’s centurion. Stepman nodded sharply. “We have seven known crew who are males sexually attracted to males. First Officer Samuelson rightly points out that the Code requires severe punishment for four, they having been discovered acting on that attraction. On the other hand, ship’s Chaplain Godfrey Culkin rightly reminds us that the standing orders of Commodore Howe’s squadron, soon to be fleet, are that no such punishment is to be administered, that punishment is to be applied only if behavior is disturbing of discipline. So we seemingly find ourselves at an impasse.”

Samuelson raised his right hand, looking questioningly to the captain, who nodded and waved a hand for permission to speak. “Sir, we are not yet under the Commodore’s command, nor are we yet in waters under the authority of Special Representative Lord MacNeil, Earl Dennishire. We are under the Code.”

Captain Stepman sighed; this looked to become difficult. “Chaplain?”

“Sir, I believe that two principles apply: that we must seek to meet the standards of the command to which we are bound, and that mercy supersedes justice.”

Stepman snorted. “Mercy has little place in the Fleet. I find, though, that your first point carries weight: we drill and organize in order to fit the strategy of the command to which we are to report. That’s Fleet tradition, as strong as law – captains have been cashiered for breaking it.” He drummed his fingers on the table, then impulsively downed the remainder of his mug of sea-cooled ale and slammed it down. “Barnacles! I’m no politician!” His gaze went from face to face, finally settling. “Centurion, you always have sound views. And since you’re not of the half of the race in question, I consider you hold a more impartial position – especially since the parties in question can’t be influenced by your charms, and they have no ability to charm you.”

Beckham chuckled, her light soprano making it sound gay. “Don’t be so sure of the last, captain. But I dare say they have no understanding of how to wield their weapons.” The double meaning of her last words drew a loud guffaw from the second officer. “But – my view.” She lifted feet in place, as though pacing, for several seconds.
“On the one hand, you have the possibility of not imposing the Code, and being found guilty later. On the other hand, you have the possibility of imposing the penalties, and displeasing the commander to whom we have been assigned.” Her use of the plural brought a few raised eyebrows. “But let us consider consequences: if you impose the penalties of the Code, there is no undoing it; should you be found guilty of not preparing your ship for its duties under Commodore Howe, there would be no making it right, since several crew would be dead. You would have impaired our ability to properly serve our assigned superior, and nothing would undo that. If, on the other side of the vessel, you do not impose the penalties, and Commodore Howe decides you should have, that action could be mended by imposing the penalties when he should so decide.
“So on the one side, you would be unable to satisfy one aspect of duty, while in the other, you could merely be delinquent in satisfying it.” The Amazon knew a conclusion was desired, and plunged on. “Thus, I rely on the principle of Fleet to be prepared to best carry out duty, and advise you heed Chaplain Culkin’s view.”

Stepman already had Samuelson pinned with his gaze, forbidding speech. “Samuel, I know that doesn’t satisfy you. But listening to Gwen, I had an idea: given that we seem somewhat in a fog legally – and I include tradition – there is another route, one that I suspect may have precedent: I could order the accused confined, so as not to be a source of unrest, pending a resolution from Commodore Howe. Does that meet with your satisfaction?”

While Samuelson paused, the second officer jumped in. “Sir, it doesn’t satisfy me! Three midshipmen out of use? and out of training? We’d be shorthanded.” A thought came, from the centurion’s words. “And if they’re not trained, along with the rest of the crew, Commodore Howe will have a base for complaint.”

Stepman’s eyebrows rose. “Eloquent for you, Jimson. All right, then, I can order that they may leave confinement for the purpose of attending to their duties. Comments, anyone?”

“Put them on standard fare”, Beckham advised. “Bread and water would leave them without strength if it’s needed. No sweets, no ration.”

“That makes sense”, the Gallant’s commander agreed. “Samuelson?”

The first officer pondered a dozen heartbeats – a long time, among individuals with a pulse rate below sixty per minute. “I accept, but protest, sir. There should at least be lashes.”

Chaplain Culkin spoke sharply. “No lashes! That’s not Code, for one thing. For another, it also may not make Commodore Howe pleased. There are other forms of clear punishment.”

“Polishing the yards”, the second officer suggested.

Stepman nodded. “Common enough as punishment detail – and in this heat, a painful one. Chaplain, see they have the necessary potions – I’ll not have them made useless by sunburn.”

Culkin, who doubled as ship’s surgeon’s assistant, nodded. “Aye, sir.” The formal response was his way of suggesting that the decision was made, and they should all let the captain get on with other duties.



“That’s a long way down”, Rigel commented, lying on his stomach and looking down a sheer face. Below, Landon, who waited on a shelf with a midshipman, seemed a toy figure like an Army man Rigel had played with as a kid.

“Sort of the point of climbing”, Spencer Keith declared. “Only the climbers get to see things like this.”

MacNeil chuckled. “Not for long, lad. Lord Rigel is going to make ships that sail the sky. Then he and I will wave at you, sitting here looking as small as Bard Landon does below.”

The midshipman considered this. “Will you build them here?” he asked Rigel.

Rigel chuckled. “Hadn’t thought that far. But the cloth to make them is here. And here you British could test them and get it all right without snooping eyes.” The possibility of using them to get the Quistadors in line had occurred to him while talking with Antonio. Wiggling back from the edge, he turned toward MacNeil. “Kevin – if that has to go through Parliament, will it take forever?”

MacNeil blinked; he’d been turning ownership issues over in his mind. “Your air ships – they rise, because hot air rises?”

“Yeah, like in Parliament”, Rigel teased.

MacNeil laughed. “Fair shot, that! I say we ignore Parliament. The rising of hot air is being studied at the University, is it not, Mister Keith?”

“Professor Applestead’s work, you mean?”

Kevin frowned. “Applestead does ballistics.”

“So he does. But he’s extended the effort”, the midshipman related. “He was studying windage on the new long bores and polished balls. My father was visiting one day, and took me along. As we watched balls fly from a set of cannon, my father saw the difference in range from the same elevation and charge. He told the professor of watching leaves rise in a sunny place while they fell in a shady one, with the same gentle breeze, and asked if rising air might change the range by lifting a ball, much as wind changes its course.
“So the professor commissioned hollow balls, and wooden ones, to study. Firing some over green fields and other over fields colored black, he believed there was a difference, but was uncertain. He had hollow wooden balls made, thinner and thinner, and became more certain. But he couldn’t prove it.
“When father and I visited again a year later, he was measuring effects in what he called ‘general behavior’, using items of very low weight and large size – all the same size, with different weights – thrown from identical small catapults. He had been carefully charting all the results, and showed us there was a pattern. It was all being done in a large barn, with great iron plates heated to the same red color so all the objects had the same heat to fly over, at first. He was working with a pair of smiths to arrange a scheme of different temperatures for the plates, so he could achieve another ‘axis of data’.” Spencer glanced from one lord to the other and back.

“I understand that”, Rigel informed him, rather proud that he did. MacNeil nodded that he did as well.

“Well then. He’d also started just dropping very light items, in normal air, and in heated air, to see how they rose. That’s what I know.”

MacNeil grinned. “Then this would be a new line of investigation: how heated air lifts objects when trapped inside them!”

“I don’t see how that helps his ballistics”, Rigel objected.

“Neither do I”, MacNeil admitted, “but then he’s the one whose job is to think! And I shall provide him funds to provide what he needs for thinking in this direction.”

“And he’ll investigate it to death”, Rigel groused.

“Need he not do so thoroughly?” Onatah chimed in. “You wish to travel in your ships of the air. To travel in a ship of the sea, a captain must know what weight it can bear, and how rapidly. Professor Applestead will learn these things for you.”

The two nobles stared at the Haudenosaunee lad, then chuckled at the same time. “Quite true”, MacNeil agreed after a moment. “Even so, I shall recommend he move his study to very large ones as soon as possible.”

“Measuring something very small can be difficult”, Onatah responded. “Yet if many, many small things are put together, measuring them all at once can give a measure impossible for one alone.”

“Averaging”, Rigel murmured, shaking his head. “You’re talking about averaging – and you’re right. Kevin, there’s your reason for him: it’s easier to get a good measure of the lifting power of a liter of hot air if you make something that holds a thousand liters.”

Midshipman Keith nodded, with a smile. “On hearing that, he’ll aim straightaway for kiloliter hot air bags!”

“I’ll write the letter tonight”, MacNeil promised Rigel.

His fellow lord was looking past him. “Kool. What’s that land over there?”

“Three Emerald Isle”, came the answer, with no need to look. Knowing his friend’s curiosity, he went on. “Yes, emeralds are mined there, but that’s not where the name came from – just why it stuck. When our ancestors came here, it was so green compared to Lost Britain, they called it ‘Emerald Isle’ – the Irish started the name, of course. When it was explored, everything seemed to come in threes: it seems made of three capes, separated by three coves, so it was compared to a shamrock. The ends of the capes rise; the land in the middle where they are joined is low, which is also a bit like a shamrock. In that middle are three lakes, which join in a small pond.
“When emeralds were found there, it was being called Three Emerald Isle, so the Crown made the name official. The emeralds are taken from the stone near the ends of the capes, so three villages were built: Facet, Luster, and Brilliance. But there’s just one town, with a castle – Erin, on North Cove, where the main harbor is.”

Rigel chuckled. “There are three harbors, one in each cove?”

“Right! But trade goes through North Cove, as it is closest to Bellingham and Chester, the ports north of us on Lost Britain.” He scowled. “Which we can’t see, for that blasted fog!” The Earl sounded as though he took the fog as a personal insult.

“I sort of like it”, Rigel told him, turning to look that way. “It’s low, so hills rise out of it like islands in some magic sea.”

“There is no magic”, MacNeil teased.



Conal looked around the fort. He had the better part of an hour before it would be light enough to travel, but he was fully awake. A question formed in his mind, something that had been bothering him finally taking shape. He wasn’t yet aware that it was related to a question he’d put off asking.

“Who’s paying for all this?” he asked his companion, Leftenant North – who, ironically, wished to go north with him. “I know that Lord MacNeil ordered it, but is he spending his own money?”

“No, the House of Stuart-Bóruma funds it. That’s their banner”, the leftenant of Dragoons added, pointing – and answering Conal’s other question.

“Stuart-Bóruma – you mean the Crown?”

The leftenant chuckled; he’d discovered he enjoyed having someone to explain things to, rather than argue with about them. Foreigners were a treasure, in his view, if only for that – he liked explaining things. “The Crown is held by the House, but the House and the Crown are different. The House has its own estates, and what’s important here, funds, apart from the Crown. No, this is a House matter alone. Stuart-Bóruma wishes an alliance with Grand Earl Rigel, and makes this effort to provide a safe destination for those coming from the north.” His look was an appeal.

Conal laughed. “I can’t add you to my command! But if you had your own, and were assigned to go speak with the Escobars about official contact, and we happened to be leaving at the same time....”

North sobered. “That... I have no such orders.”

“What are your orders? You’ve been doing nothing but explain things to me and help me get supplies.”

“I have no orders but to report to the commander here and ‘be useful’.” The tone was sour. “The commander finds me most useful out of the way. Once you’re gone–“ The leftenant stopped and his eyes widened. “He will still want me out of the way! If I had a reason to go with you, I would be far out of his way!”

Conal grinned. “Now, how do I hint that Lord Rigel would like to see an informal representative from here, low ranking, go visit the Escobars, without claiming that he actually said so?”



Rigel squeezed his eyes shut to take the sting out. “Austin – water”, he called softly. “Meriel, I know the map. I know the main lords. I can find my way around the Sea. Do I really have to know what order they were settled in, for this midships exam?” He said it wrong to irritate her.

“Midshipman’s exam”, Elizabeth corrected out of habit. “No, you’re correct – that isn’t required. And you do know the order the largest Houses settled, which is sufficient, truly.
“So – we turn to navigation. Or would you prefer the matter of organizing a ship’s stores?”

Her pupil rolled the map and threw it at her. “I would prefer”, he answered,”to jump over the railing and go for a swim, since we’re hardly moving, with all canvas out!”

Elizabeth stood. Three meters away, Kevin MacNeil groaned: she was going to be trouble again! “You think you can out-swim Resolute?” she asked, her grin wicked.

Rigel estimated, both the ship’s movement and his own condition, which was leaner and more powerful than ever in his life. “For a minute, I’d say.”

The Queen incognito grinned in triumph. “And do you think you can out-swim me?” She kicked off her sandals as she emphasized the last word. MacNeil glanced up, but Amazon ears had heard the challenge, and positions were changing.

“How could I know? I’ve never seen you swim.” It was a reasonable answer, but Rigel found himself facing down a glare.

“A mare says you can’t!” Elizabeth snapped, stomping a foot.

“Can’t bet that – I have reasons. Bet this: if I win, I get a day off from lessons. If you win, I’ll be your servant for a day.”

Elizabeth regarded him sharply. “And how much is a servant worth, if he spends all day at lessons?”

“One way to find out!” Rigel peeled his shirt off. “Um – maybe we should tell the captain?”

MacNeil did the honors. Not at all to Rigel’s surprise, two longboats were lowered, the captain’s own and a second, but to his surprise, a dozen women and another dozen men stripped completely and lined up outside the rail, ready to jump. He blushed when he saw Elizabeth shedding her top and tugging at what he would call “boxer-panties”. Behind her, Rita’s finger tapped her waist and she mimed pulling off shorts, so with a wry chuckle and an appeal to heaven, Rigel bared the rest of his skin and headed for the rail.

“Silly – a gentleman should offer a lady his arm”, Elizabeth chided.

He met only her eyes. “My lady Meriel, if you would do me the honor of joining in a swim?” he said. A moment later he discovered that they didn’t have to climb the rail; she gently guided him to a spot where Onatah lifted a section. Out of playful spite, he didn’t pause at the edge, but walked right off, pulling her with him.

Elizabeth thought of scolding, but decided that she’d trained him well enough that he’d known the vessel was heeled over sufficiently they could get away with it, just before they splashed into the Sea’s cool waters.




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Kuli,
You've been a literary busy boy. Wonderful fun!
A little concern over the ship enroute to its new duties, and what to do about certain members of their crew.

At least a somewhat humane compromise has been reached.
They will have hard work, and only "standard" rations, but at least they aren't being whipped or keel-hauled.

Bathing suits? we don't know the word! I guess that's ONE way to be able to check out your future bride - even though you don't know it, yet, lol.

And, you've got to love our resident Haudenosaunee. Wise youth - certainly not a Sophomore - for he is no fool.

A little disinformation, not corrected by the PM, to fuel the verve for battle against the "vermin".

You work hard for our literary enjoyment, sir.

Are you going to go on vacation, or is your delving into our off-world experience providing you with relaxing release?
..| :=D: :D
 
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