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Fit for Life

This is bad news genetically. Even if they don't have terrible expressed recessives, they'd have other inbreeding problems (a disease that kills any of them will kill ALL of them, stuff like that).

Clearly they need to interbreed with Celts and alt-Brits [STRIKE]and space aliens[/STRIKE] and the Snatched! :sex:

Remember they had problems until the 'Aragon mutation caught hold. And one of the early lords (I think I related this) insisted everyone have offspring. But yes, even though there's a quarter million of them now, they do have weaknesses.

But so do all the populations -- none started with more than a few hundred.


OTOH, remember they got Celt blood early on; there weren't enough Conquistador women to make a go of it. The Quistadors have continues that, though for the "lower classes" mostly. The Escobars had some Celt blood from the early days, and more from servants and retainers when they went to Refuge. That, too, has spread throughout the population. Effectively they had an initial population of about 500 -- not enough to avoid problems.

Of course one might ask just what the d'Aragon mutation does to achieve its results....
 
Makes the babies taste awful to the Others? :badgrin:

:rotflmao: HA! Though that would be Awesome! :sick:

Though it's only been a few generations, I'm sure "adaptive mutations" have already begun to show up. They are likely stronger now as their offspring have become more diverse, even given the initial, closer, inbreeding. ..|

And, Devon, as Chief Engineer, has certainly grown into his own! He's also expanded into community civic planning! I just hope, that once they "invent" them, he can also get the traffic lights synchronized properly! :lol:

Great stuff here, Guys!! (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Mayhaps we should all get together at the local "Irish Pub" to philosophize on Kuli's great planetary "experiment"?

Perhaps they'll have a nice Spanish Bistro near by that specializes in Paella Valenciana, with a plethora of Lobster, shrimp, clams, maybe even scallops. (Not a big fan of mussels, though). Some Andouille sausage, ham, chicken, pork, too?

Or, I could just make a big pan of Jambalaya? Not exactly Spanish, but sure is tasty!
 
Mayhaps we should all get together at the local "Irish Pub" to philosophize on Kuli's great planetary "experiment"?

Perhaps they'll have a nice Spanish Bistro near by that specializes in Paella Valenciana, with a plethora of Lobster, shrimp, clams, maybe even scallops. (Not a big fan of mussels, though). Some Andouille sausage, ham, chicken, pork, too?

Or, I could just make a big pan of Jambalaya? Not exactly Spanish, but sure is tasty!

Our Celts aren't exactly up to pub level -- but with the information on the art of brewing from the "How Things Work" book Anaph managed to Grab, it shouldn't be long!


Speaking of not being long... I'm again stuck with files on one computer inaccessible to the other. Supposedly the software will arrive within two days, though -- and if I can get the other computer back tonight I'm going to try to move files (I now have an ethernet cable to try).
 
Eagerly awaiting on tenter hooks! ..|

(Damn! Those hurt! :grrr: )

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


"I do not disparage your gift of freedom for my House", Jaspar de Medina told Osvaldo, "yet I find I must ask: is this a way of saying there are no lands in Refuge, and we are not welcome?" He sat with the Heir, Lord Ortega, Rigel, and a half dozen others in the office that had been Lord Ortega's as Regent, and would remain his in his new office of Chancellor.

"No!" Osvaldo exclaimed, hurt. He scowled at the Lord who, although young, was still older than he himself was. "You sound like my mother -- twisting things."

Rita chuckled. "No fair, accusing her when she isn't here to defend herself. Besides, that is what it could look like. In fact you may have gotten support from some lords because that's what they thought, too. Your promise last week was noble, generous, and well-meant, but you have to see how things might look to others."

"I've never been very good at that", Osvaldo admitted. "And I didn't exactly stop to think." He looked up and over at Jaspar. "No, that wasn't what I meant. But you're right, there aren't any lands here. I could try to squeeze out some, but...."

Jaspar smiled. "But you would cause anger among the Council. This I understand quite well. My father trained me until he was taken by Allah five years ago, and my mother Jazreena does so still. There is a heritage in my House, I shall not say of deceit, but of convoluted workings, to let one action cover another, let one motive hide another. It is nothing we have practiced; our scrolls say it was so even after Saint Mohammed, blessed be his name. Thus I see always two, or three, or even more motives and causes for any action, and never trust that the obvious or given one is the actual."

"Maybe I should have made you an advisor", Osvaldo told him wryly. "So you didn't really believe what you asked?"

"I never believe anything until it is verified. By your actions since I met you, you have shown that what you say is what you mean. But in the interests of my House, I had to ask."

Rigel could see that Osvaldo was still uncomfortable. "Remember you're talking to two different people -- Jaspar your friend, who trusts you, and Lord de Medina, who has his House to protect and care for."

Osvaldo cocked his head a moment in thought, then nodded. "I understand. When I was little, I could be free to do many things as Osvaldo the boy that I couldn't do as Osvaldo the Prince Heir." He grinned. "And in your camp, I could stand guard at your tent and listen, as Osvaldo the guard, but never could have as Osvaldo the fugitive." That brought a laugh, though with a bitter edge: it still cut that the legitimate Prince Heir had needed to be a fugitive.
"Lord de Medina, I will swear on the Sword of my House if you wish: I meant no slight by this promise. I would rather you by my side, but you are right: the lands once yours have been now held too long by others; you cannot return there." Inspiration struck. "As earnest of my promise, I grant you three fortresses: formerly of the Guardians, they sit empty in Tesifón, in San Isidro, and in Balestra. There are lands with the latter two." The Heir paused. "Lord Ortega, where does the great fortress in Tesifón get its sustenance?"

"Gold." Ortega sighed. "A great deal was captured when it fell to us. Far more got away. From whence it came, I have not even a guess. Nor did your father, though he searched." The Chancellor hesitated, then forged ahead. "Signs were found that it was because of that search that he was killed."

"The love of money", Rita commented. "He must have been getting close."

Osvaldo looked sick. "The Guardians. I should burn their remaining fortresses around them!"

Chen shook his head. "Waste of good real estate. Find something useful for them to do." Osvaldo looked at him for a moment, then turned to Rigel.

"Friend Rigel, you need more work horses, and we need steeds worthy of caballeros....."


The messenger hesitated only a moment before trotting into the banquet hall. His orders had been plain: "without delay". He feared he'd already delayed, stopped for half an afternoon by a sudden snow storm that left the world a prettier place, slowed by falling asleep in the saddle so his horse ambled along nibbling. Now he could see the Heir, and nothing was going to delay him more. He plowed ahead through servitors and a pair of staggering guests leaning on each other for support as they walked, yet making little progress.
Austin, limited to only weak wine, saw him coming. He jabbed Rigel with an elbow and pointed; Rigel tapped Osvaldo on the shoulder and pointed. They weren't the only ones who'd seen; the progress of a messenger recently from the road, uniform wrinkled and stained, a determined look holding at bay the weariness on his face, got attention. When it became clear he was headed for the head table, conversations died or got put on hold. When the man stumbled as he knelt to give the Heir the message, and the guest of honor himself, Rigel Lord FitzWin caught and steadied him, silence fell.

"What passes?" Osvaldo inquired as he reached for the small message scroll.

The hall was quiet enough everyone could hear. "Foe. The Foe. Calles Maderas. Merida." The last was croaked. "For love of the Virgin, have you ale?"

Hostile eyes watched as Rigel seated the man in his own chair and went to Tanner. Now, they were thinking, he will run to safety; now we will see what use foreigners are. But they were sorely disappointed. "Tanner, how soon can we ride?"

Rita answered. "Rigel, we can't stay! We should have been away already!"

"But--"

Hedraing stood, a table and a half away. "Lord, your Wise woman speaks truth: we must go."

Rigel absorbed that. "Did Anaph call...?"

"Call? No. But there is need."

"And I have to get back to Healer Hall", Lumina reminded him. It was enough.

"All right -- we go home! But I'll be damned if I leave friends without help. Tanner, what can we spare? And I don't mean what it won't really bother us to do without, I mean everything we don't absolutely need to get home alive."

His Captain didn't hesitate. "The cannon, for starters. Then the supplies that go with them. Our old rifles, and ammunition."

Rigel nodded. "Yeah -- and Captain Aodh. Aodh!" he called, forgetting where the young officer was sitting.

"Sir!"

“Work through the riflemen and make yourself a team. You get all the cannon. How many people know how to make them?"

"Without the aid of a Druid? One, and two helpers."

"Then they’re yours", Rigel ordered. "Their job is to start making cannon. Work with the smiths to make them out of iron as soon as you can."

"Lord, that will make your party small", Aodh pointed out.

"We'll have Hedraing -- we can outrun any Foe." But his heart howled within him at the thought of running; his task was to destroy! But Escobar spoke within: Let the enemy choose the place of battle, and you have lost. Victory may be yours for the day, but if he commands you to a place once, he will do so again, and he will be ready. "Besides, we're not out to fight -- this time. I'll fight when I can pick my ground."

Aodh smiled slightly, and nodded. "Any limitations?"

"No. You can shoot all the prisoners you want. Except don't do it on a lord's fine rug. Captain, don't go chasing them. Make a line you can defend, and do so.
"Lord Heir? Is there anything we can do to aid you?"

Osvaldo had been asking himself that very thing, so he was ready with an answer. "Free up resources", he answered, a phrase he’d picked up from Tanner. "Your Wise Woman Lady Rita spoke of giving the poor new lives. If you could take some who wish to go...?"

"Done. One other thing -- there's a sort of tipped shelf of land north of the lake a bit. It's west of our path, but it looked like a good place for a castle. If you could send a House to get that started...?"

Osvaldo chuckled. "Done. You wish a place between the lake and your home, secure against the Foe?"

Rigel shook his head. "Not just one; a whole line of them. But that's a good place to start. And there’s another north of it....”

"Another House, then. And the our western line -- Guardians will hold it", Osvaldo declared with satisfaction. They'd been up all night, working with maps. Rigel rested easier knowing that it hadn't been a Foe attack, just a sighting. But it had been a sighting of a group large enough to have eaten the village of Calles Maderas, children, adults, pigs, and all, without hardly slowing. The "it" that he'd decreed the Guardians would hold was a line between two fingers of hills sticking out into the savanna. The area in between was large -- large enough to hold a House in need of lands, and two smaller ones besides. So besides being an ally, Jaspar de Medina was now Count Medina, with three vassals, the first settlers outside the Constant Hills themselves. The line itself would become a wall. To aid that, Austin would be staying with the cutter Rigel had been hauling around and spend two days -- no more -- slicing into the bedrock to get things started.
Near the village of Calles Maderas itself a fortress would be built, with two cannon. On the other finger of hills another would arise, with two more cannon. The other two would go in a place Osvaldo would choose.

"A nice solution", Ortega noted. "You wished to be rid of the Guardians; now they will be useful, and be far away. But you need a commander, my Heir -- you have too many other duties."

"I know. I should send someone to Lord Ryan's school." He glanced out the window at the light. "Some lords wanted to meet for breakfast. I think 'some' means several score. And I think they want cannon and rifles for themselves."

Rita nodded. "People are frightened. Horrible creatures from stories are suddenly very real. Older people who know because they've seen them sound like they're telling tales like the Oak Knight and the Lady Elm. But now it's real."




"Enough!" Lady Escobar slammed a bronze pitcher against the breakfast table. "My son is Heir, and you will heed him! My brother's diary is still in the cabinet", she noted more quietly. It struck Rigel like the hiss of a cold, deadly snake ready to strike. Rita whistled silently. "If I his mother can grasp that he is a man, certainly a flock of flighty lords can!"

"What was that about her brother's diary?" Rigel asked quietly.

Rita chuckled wickedly. "Her brother was a compulsive secret-finder. Supposedly he knew every black thing about every noble in Refuge that there was to know. But he was almost saintly, they say, so he would never have used it. But his personal possessions were delivered to Lady Rosalina two years ago, and rumor says one of the cabinets held his diary. She just reminded them that she has -- or everyone thinks she has -- all those secrets.

Osvaldo stepped up onto his chair and sat on the back -- with its pointy decorations, it couldn't have been comfortable. He looked around the room, then held out his hand; Miguel stuck a tall wine glass of redberry juice in it. The Heir sipped, and sighed.
"There are six cannon. One by itself against Foe will be overrun, so it would be useless. Two together can do damage to them. I would rather have three places that can actually do damage to the enemy than no places at all. So the answer is 'no' -- until the fortresses are at least earthen bulwarks and the cannon dug in, and then their number doubled, none of you get any.” He took another sip; it reminded Rosalina so of his father that she bit her lip.
"There are only so many war horses in the world. Earl Rigel, Lord Fitzwin, has nearly all of them. Out of friendship he gave me two dozen. Since we are allies, he has promised two dozen more. From these we can breed our own. But I will not badger him with requests, and I will not beg for you, because there are only so many horses in the world, and they only breed so fast..
"As for building the Wall, I don't care who thinks it's folly. We have to defend the Hills. Our ancestors have been fortunate that the Foe came rarely. Yet now they have attacked folk to our south, and they have scouted our Refuge. Listen to sense! It's easier to defend a short line than a long one! So we build the wall, our allies the de Medina get land they deserve, three minor Houses get out of their cramped lands. They are willing, and if they are willing, the rest of us should breath prayers of thanks to St. Michael and all the angels that we have such brave men, and women, among us.” He sipped again, savoring the rich flavor of the recently-harvested berries.
"I was given advice that I must find a commander for this venture, that it is too much for me with all else I must do. Your badgering and arguing here have shown me the truth of that -- you would drag me into dealing with petty things and leaving major things undone. So -- I must have a commander. And not just a commander, for I know not how long this war will last. I have spoken with Lord Rigel, to whom the Lord of Life has given the burden of taking this war to the Foe, and he does not know. He does not know if he will see the end of it, or hand it to another. I hope he doesn't fall in battle, because then the Sword of our Ancestor would come to me, and there are some other things I'd like to do first." Rigel raised his glass in salute, with a chuckle. "I plan on having this sword in my hand when the last Foe in the world dies", he assured his friend. Osvaldo smiled and raised his own glass, not quite as high.
"Well. A commander, but more -- someone who doesn't just lead troops, but knows foot, horse, engines, now cannon and rifle, who knows fortifications and supply, secret places for hiding, when to come out, when to strike -- all that and more. It must be someone who can keep faith when the world heeds fools and is against him, who will stand by those he defends when it risks his own life and even his House.
"Lady Rita tells me there was such an office in her homeland. It was called 'Marshal'. It didn't mean quite the same thing all the time, but we've taken from all that what we want it to mean: a lord who commands everything in the area he's assigned, to defeat the Foe.
"Not long ago I would have said the only man who was all that was my father. But while I was making my way here to stand before the Council, I found another." Lords held their breath in expectation. Osvaldo stood on the chair, then stepped down, motioning Rigel to stand. "My ancestor's Sword, friend", he requested. More than a few let out their breath, having half-feared their Heir would name this foreigner.

Osvaldo took the blade in bare hand as Rigel released it from bare hand. The young Heir seemed transformed, more than himself, but also a stronger self, risen to withstand a great deluge. His movements very formal, he turned.

"Lord de Cadiz, come forward!" he called. "Lords of Escobar, this man risked his own honor to uphold that of another. I can think of no one more to be entrusted with the care of our western border." De Cadiz, a bit dazed, arrived, and knelt when Miguel motioned him down. Osvaldo held the blade above the chosen lord's shoulder. "Lord de Cadiz, you have shown yourself a true caballero. Now be more: I name you Marshal of the western borders."

The man who had grown up taught that the main line of the Escobars was an enemy, had to be an enemy, showed no emotion. But as the Sword of Escobar touched his right shoulder, he felt a spark, and from the tiny jerk of the blade knew that the Heir had felt it, too. Their eyes met, and both in that moment knew the other could be trusted beyond a doubt. He took Osvaldo’s hand and rose. “As faithful an enemy I have been to your House, I shall be more so to these Foe.” There was shocked silence at the bald admission, then uncomfortable laughter. “My House will pay for a fortress on the Line, for this command’s center”, he added. “And give me this honor, for we are, as Lord Jaspar reminded us, all Escobars: let me be titled Marshal Escobar, and pass this title to one of my sons.” That brought gasps – and one angry curse, as a single lord kicked his chair back, rose, and stormed out.

“Do you think Marcos is ready for it?” Osvaldo asked. De Cadiz had four sons, and nine daughters, a bit more than the usual d’Aragon gene distribution; the Heir was getting in a suggestion.

“He’s got time to grow – I don’t plan on dying till Anastasia is weddable.” His youngest daughter was three – and his wife pregnant again. “But if you grant this, I make this rule: not the eldest, but the best, shall inherit the office.”

Osvaldo smiled, plainly pleased. “Then I grant it: Marshal Escobar you shall be – once you have a place to command from.”



Rigel departed two days later, leading quite a procession. Osvaldo had pragmatically chosen the two closest lesser Houses who had volunteered to settle new lands; their lords had already begun organizing. Under sons selected for competence, not seniority, each had a contingent ready in little more than a day, with more to follow. Both of thirty men and sixty women, fighters all – the women were archers – they took what they’d need to make a quick fort, and expand from there.

Leaving Austin was hard, but if the cutter was to be left in anyone’s hands, he was the obvious choice: Titanium could outrun any horse alive, and almost any horse could outrun a Foe. The squire set off for the planned line, accompanied by a squad hand-picked by Captain Aodh from his volunteer army, their assignment simply to guard Austin.

That army wasn’t disbanding, either; it had sworn to serve Osvaldo. That gave him a force greater than that of the two greatest lords combined, and if the House troops were counted, larger than the top three. That had seriously offended some, enough that six more lords had departed, refusing to stay for a Conclave. Osvaldo remained optimistic; Lady Rosalina worried.

But that was no longer their concern; duty called, and Rigel rode.



It was the rumble that got his attention, a rumble that seemed familiar. Austin had just made a cut across a point when two very different layers of rock lay in contact. His first though was earthquake, but some instinct said to turn. He spun on his left foot. All doubt as to why the rumble had seemed familiar disappeared: for the second time in a year, a wall of water was rushing toward him, and the distance to run to get clear was too great.

Calmly, his terror seeming like something on a movie screen, not real, Rigel’s squire turned and ran away from the slope that led out of the low spot. Cries of dismay followed him, but he knew what he was about. Facing a wall of water when you have no tools is one thing; facing it with a cutter in hand was another altogether, or so he told himself. In a few quick strides he reached the spot he wanted, nearly vertical, almost all solid rock – and he slashed, back and forth. It was a big step, almost knee high, but he jumped into it as his third slash shattered the slice of stone he’d made, leaving the opening he wanted. He slashed again, suddenly thinking he’d picked the wrong spot, because it was more than difficult to balance while cutting higher on a nearly vertical face. He had to slash off to the side, so climbing this time wasn’t as simple.

The water hit just as his head rose above the top. In his concentration, Austin didn’t see the hand that swept down a full second ahead of the water. Knowledge of its presence came with the arrival of the water, by the intense pain from the force of water tearing at him being countered in his scalp: someone had him by the hair! In his struggle to remain conscious, he focused on one thing: don’t lose the cutter!

A scream dragged him back from darkness, a scream and a curse, followed by a cry for their Healer. “He said to avoid that thing!” a voice yelled. “Let lord Jaspar attend to him, and stay clear!” Austin realized he hadn’t lost the cutter – the scream was the proof. As he wondered just what someone had lost, darkness claimed him again.


Someone’s hands were doing good things to his body. Austin had learned the art of staying relaxed, so whoever it was kept working, unaware his subject was awake.. Before too long, though, the bladder pressure that had brought him into wakefulness forced him to abandon the pretense. He stretched, and rolled over to find himself facing a young Persian, one of Jaspar’s people. For the first time since being Snatched, he found himself truly embarrassed by his body’s reaction to the contact... almost caresses.

“We are taught that healing is aided by pleasure”, the man said. “I hope you recover well.”

Austin didn’t know what to say, so he dashed to take care of business. He liked that the de Medina effectively had portable outhouses, tents with seats made to go over the holes. When too many flies gathered, they poured in a light oil and lit it, scorching the surface so the flies weren’t as interested. He also liked that they didn’t mind people dashing about in bare skin, at least after dark – before, was definitely forbidden. It was definitely dark, though a hint of light in the east told him he really ought to hurry.


“You’re late leaving”, Osvaldo told him “Don’t push your horse to rush.”

Austin laughed. He really liked Osvaldo, especially the way he really cared about people important to him. “Push Titanium? Oz, Titanium doesn’t get pushed. He’s as good at not going anywhere as he is at getting places. He’ll give everything he can, and if I try to make him give more, he’ll still give what he can. Trust me – on a long ride like this, he picks the pace.”

Osvaldo looked Titanium in the eye. Something he saw there seemed to reassure him. “If I didn’t believe you, I’d insist he cover a few mares before you leave.”

“What, more than the two you’ve snuck in?” Osvaldo’s jaw dropped, making Austin laugh. “No worries – if he didn’t want to, it wouldn’t have worked. So who gets the foals?”

“Marshal Escobar, for the Line. They’ll go to no lord, only to protect Refuge.”

“How come you never did this before – make fortifications, I mean?”

“Some have. North of here there are estates with a continuous wall running for over two dozen kilometers.” He grinned wryly. “The wall is in some disrepair, but that is being changed. The size of the party of Foe has everyone frightened at least a little.”

Austin switched to what had been bothering him. “Where’d that water come from that hit me?” he asked. “That was freaky!”

“A small earthquake, friend Austin. You disturbed something, and rock shifted. Water suddenly poured out from a layer of round pebbles with mud.” He grinned. “The workers call it ‘Austin’s pond’. Water filled that hollow, then the ones north and south, and four south of those before it stopped spreading. Lord de Cadiz is delighted; he’s going to put his fortress here because it will have water. The Wall will move a little, to run along the water, making it harder for the Foe to reach the defenses – or truly, ‘Austin’s pond’ will be part of the defenses.”

“I should swim in it before I leave”, Austin joked.

“It is warm water”, the Heir allowed, then grinned. “I knew you like swimming, so I let no one swim in it before you.”

Austin laughed. “Tonight, then – so no one will have to wear clothes to get there.”


Once word spread that he was awake and feeling fine, lord de Cadiz came to see him. “I need your aid, Squire. There is a massive boulder blocking our excavation, where we dig for the foundation of a castle wall.”

“I can deal with that”, Austin replied, grabbing the cutter – now secure in its case. He looked a question at the lord.

“No, it was not touched. Many argued it should be employed, as you were not awake to wield it. Heir Osvaldo, Lord Jaspar, the new Lord Gomez, and I told them all no.”

“Gomez?” Austin couldn’t place the name.

“His father died of a strange and horrible affliction, so evil they burned his room and those of two servants who caught it. He was the third son – the second is a priest, and the eldest...” De Cadiz took a deep breath. “When he learned of his father’s death, he began killing servants with his own hands, for letting such a horror in the house. Then he took his father’s wives, though it is forbidden.” The emphasis on “took” told Austin it wasn’t just appropriating them. “The younger defied the eldest and accused him; the eldest laughed. When the Council stood down after your confirmation, the eldest came home. The younger had already spoken with all the key retainers. The first night the new lord was home, as they supped, the younger stated his accusations again. He kept speaking of it, which made the eldest drink more and more. Finally the eldest grew angry, and took up blade. It was as the younger had planned; the eldest was unsteady from the drink, while he was sober, and had eaten only lightly.
“It was not even a contest. They sparred some minutes, until the younger had judged what he faced, and the eldest was blinded by anger. The younger disarmed him of their father’s blade, caught it, and drove it through the eldest’s heart. He declared softly, for only the closest to hear, ‘You made my mother bleed’. Then he twisted their father’s blade and drove his own up through the gut beside the heart. He said coldly, ‘Thus may all mother-rapers die’, and jerked both swords, cutting the heart from below and beside.
“So now Diego Gabriel Tiberio d’Aragon Gomez is Lord Gomez. I will be bold and say that the blood of his ancestress runs strong, and the Latin, more than the paternal. His father paid to see Osvaldo dead, his brother would not stand for him though nearly all did. When he came, he stood nowhere. Since then, he has seen the Heir and Lord Jaspar and yourself risk your own safety for ‘mere workingmen’, and he now stands as loyal as any.”

“What a way to kill your brother”, Austin muttered.

“He was not fit for life”, de Cadiz declared. Austin’s head snapped up at the phrase. “If you had a father as he did–“

“I do”, Austin snapped, cold and fiery. “If I could, I would do to him as Diego did to his brother!” Tears came to his eyes. “But he’s out of my reach.”

The very traditional lord was at a loss. He could not grasp hating one’s father enough to say such a thing, or to weep that it could not be accomplished. He stood uncomfortably. Rescue came in the form of Miguel sweeping into the tent, then Osvaldo and Jaspar, followed by young Gomez.

Miguel jumped to the wrong conclusion. “If you have harmed him–!”

De Cadiz shook his head. “He grieves over his father – not that his father fails, but that he cannot slay him.” He bowed toward Osvaldo, then Diego. “Lord Gomez, I told the Squire of your brother. He tells me his father is so vile he would slay him as you did the one who raped your mother.”

Diego’s face flashed to anger. “Squire Austin, I will aid you in reaching your father!” he declared impulsively.

“No one can reach him”, Austin said dully. He didn’t know if the tears were because he couldn’t reach his father, or because he’d never been able to reach his father, or because de Cadiz had used the words his father had used about him – that he was not fit for life.

Miguel had his own view of how to handle such things. “Squire Austin, would you like to destroy something?” he asked. Osvaldo suppressed a laugh.

Austin just nodded. “Lord de Cadiz, show me this boulder. It isn’t my father, but it will do for now.” Once he cut in, he realized it was beautiful stone, a rippled granite sparkling with pyrite. The sight defused his anger; he cut the rest carefully into slices that were as carefully hauled up to use for decorative stone.

After sunset he made the inaugural dive into Austin’s Pond. Floating on his back near midnight, an ice cold breeze making his chest tingle, he wondered if it really was impossible to reach his father. Could what had been Snatched be Returned?



Sunrise found him accepting a hot breakfast sandwich from Osvaldo and a hot-skin of kaf from Jaspar. Austin didn’t really like the stuff, and he didn’t think it tasted much like coffee, but it definitely did a good job of keeping a guy warm. “I added honey”, Jaspar informed him with a smile, “but no milk – milk is bad for the skin.”

“Unless it’s fermented”, Osvaldo amended, “and you don’t want to be drinking that stuff!”

“Not on a ride like yours, no”, Jaspar agreed. “Ooska is for a long night by a great fire, with friendly girls–“

“Boys”, Osvaldo corrected. “Not all men want girls.”

Jaspar frowned. “How may the tribe increase, if man joins with man?”

Austin laughed. “We weren’t talking about wives, we were talking about fun!”

“So you will get married, and have sons?” Jaspar inquired.

Austin’s turned and looked east, and a little south. His eyes had a look of surprise. “Yes. She went with Rigel. I swore to care for her....” Puzzlement joined the surprise.

“And found you care for her”, Jaspar concluded. “So does Allah provide. Yet still you desire men?”

A grin washed away Austin’s previous expression. “All the time. That servant you sent me was fun.”

Jaspar looked scandalized, and Austin laughed. “I’m teasing. I offered, he declined, but was curious. I did show him a thing, though. He said if I were staying, there were some in your party who might wish my, um, ‘services’.” Osvaldo blushed and looked away; Miguel laughed, then he and Austin looked at Osvaldo and licked their lips.

Lord Jaspar frowned again and shook his head. “I do not understand this. But St. Mohammed said nothing against it in his purification of the church; indeed it is said he took solace from the company of young men when battle took him from his wives. Perhaps this is what he meant. But you ought say nothing of these things before Lord de Cadiz; he is not approving.”

“Marcos is”, two young men said at the same time. Austin and Miguel looked at each other in surprise, then laughed.

Osvaldo slapped his thigh for attention. “Time for you to leave, Squire Austin, friend – before you and Miguel begin fighting over the prettiest boys.”

“Why fight, when we can share, cousin?” Miguel asked. “But I have you to myself now, for a time. I like that – so friend Austin, do go away now”, he finished in mock severity.

“Lord de Cadiz comes”, Jaspar announced softly. The topic changed just that fast. It became a formal farewell, ended swiftly. Titanium was the one who made that decision, snorting and pawing at the ground.

“Train’s about to leave the station”, Austin observed, to totally blank looks. He rolled his eyes. “I’ll explain next year! You guys kill some Foe for me!”


Titanium took him north, along the Line, before cutting into wooded hills on an eastward road. Austin settled into the joy of riding, connecting with Titanium in a way he never had with any human until he was Snatched. He thought about Lord de Cadiz’ words, his declaration that the eldest Gomez son was not ‘fit for life’, and how Rigel had not just assured Austin that he was fit for life, but had told everyone else. He remembered how Tanner had hit Casey, and he’d hidden inside himself, knowing the blow was for him, but then Tanner had changed, and even joked with him sometimes about the new riflemen – asking once in a teasing tone, “How many of this batch would you like under you?” Ocean said that through Rigel the Universe had imposed harmony because Rigel loved them all; Dmitri, and Casey, and Tanner himself said God had changed Tanner’s heart.

God had certainly changed his heart, providing Valentina to him, when he never thought he’d ever find a girl more than a pleasant companion. That first impulse, with his declaration that he’d take care of her, and protect her, still surprised him. But as she shared his tent, things had changed....


. . . .
Austin awoke to weeping. He didn’t stop to think that he was nude; he only heard pain in Valentina’s sobs, and went to her instantly. “What wrong?” he asked, laying a hand gently on her shoulders. “Another dream?”

“They’re not dreams!” she hissed at him. “I go back there, and it happen again! It always happens the same way!” Rita had told him that was a feature of post-traumatic stress something-or-other, to relive the thing over and over. But that was her mind, not a time machine; she wasn’t really there, so didn’t that make it a dream?

“I’m sorry”, he whispered, agonizing with her. “If I’d just been there sooner....” He knew that was stupid as soon as he said it, and expected her to lecture him on being an idiot. But this time she didn’t; instead, she lifted the bee covers.

“You can be here now”, she whispered, imploring. “Don’t leave me alone!” So he slid in. She curled against his chest, he put an arm around her, and she fell asleep. Her breathing became even, rhythmic, and soon he was asleep.

He came awake again to her thrashing. Protective instinct made him turn from her, but that gave him an idea: if she was reliving it.... “Valentina!” he cried softly, but sharply, “get behind me! Hold tight, and they won’t be able to get to you!” He wanted to jump for joy when she complied; maybe this time he could make it different!

But it wasn’t that easy. Her fingernails dug into his shoulders, piercing the skin. “They’re still coming!” she wailed. He wondered if she was still asleep, but there was no time to think about that: he had to change this dream! He closed his eyes and pictured the tent–her sandals were by the bed; maybe he could reach one.... It was a stretch, but he managed without pulling away from her. Getting a good grip on the sandal, he whacked it against the ground. I wasn’t a very satisfactory sound, so he tried again. He felt her cling more tightly, her left leg slipping between his. “Hit him again!” she whimpered. “Get him away!”

So Austin slapped whatever he could reach – the ground, the thin mattress, his own leg, the short leg of the low cot. Suddenly she was sobbing, clinging to him tightly. Her hand stroked his chest. “Oh, Austin, you were there! But you stopped them! They grabbed me, but you were in the way! They kept trying, but you were in the way.... then I woke up, holding you.” She gasped; her wandering hand had just found his crotch. Austin nearly panicked; he didn’t know how he would explain. But the hand made an exploratory tap, then withdrew.

“You’re not like them”, she whispered, kissing his neck. “Here you are with me, but your... animal isn’t roused!”

Austin like the word she’d chosen: “animal” was a prefect description for that part of a man, roused by its own instincts, hardly subject at all to conscious decisions, full of desires and appetites. He’d told her, but didn’t think she’d really understood, that his “animal” roused for good-looking young men. He thought he’d never been so glad in his life to be gay, because not being aroused by girls had just help comfort a girl he cared for.

As he thought it, he realized it was more true than he realized: he wanted to turn, pull her close, kiss her – and never be apart!

. . . .

They hadn’t been, much. Several nights she’d fallen asleep on top of him, both of them nude. Valentina had said it made her feel there were men who were safe, having him close like that, nothing between them, and him not lusting for her. “She’s right, too”, he told Titanium as they raced along the road. “I hold her close and don’t get hard – but she has my heart. How did that happen?” Titanium answered with a snort. “Yeah, it just did”, Austin agreed. “It’s when I’m not with her I get hard for her! But then I just go seduce some guys – cute guys. Maybe when it’s okay for her to know someone wants that, it’ll change. Hey, do you think she knows I want to marry her? She said a smart girl would let me still have guys, as long as I gave kids, just to keep me. I wonder if she was telling me she would let me?” The squire sighed. “That would be heaven – love with Valentina, and play with... I guess I’d have to settle for just a few companions, and not keep playing the world.”

Wisely, Titanium gave no answer.




Aodh stared at Heueil, raging inside. Reason told him it wasn’t the other’s fault,, but reason wasn’t serving him well at the moment. He turned to Lord de Cadiz. “Marshal, will we be assigned to different sections?”

De Cadiz was no slouch; he caught the intent. No decision had been made; now it was. “Your station will be on the south, Captain Heueil’s the north. The two of you know your men best; if the division by centuries isn’t the best, feel free to reassign any. I know you’ve worked as partners, but I need a commander on each section of the Line, and since I need to spread out your men, you two have to spread with them.” Aodh visibly relaxed, making Heueil wonder what he didn’t know.
“Your first job is to train the workers as fighters. No man can grow to manhood in Refuge without learning the use of a sword and a bow, but they lack training for working together. Some may have a small amount; disputes between lords do occasionally bring levies into the field.
“To make up for lost work time, all your soldiers will become workers. This Line won’t be fortified in a year, but we can get fortified quarters for everyone finished. Don’t forget you each have two cannon.
“Any questions?” There were none. “Captain Heueil, dismissed.” The word still didn’t sound polite to him, but it was plain and blunt. “Captain Aodh, stay.”

De Cadiz waited until Heueil was well gone, then stepped out of the crude tent-covered cabin – or wood-framed tent. “Corporal, move away five meters”, he ordered. The guard nodded and paced off the distance; he called for two more guards as well, and set them around the tent as points of a triangle.

Aodh was tense when the Marshal finally spoke, after sitting and checking some papers before turning to his junior. “Captain Aodh, I’ve been told your history since arriving here. I admire your ability to recruit and set up a training program. I admire your effectiveness.
“I do not admire your methods. You are brutal beyond need. Be assured that should you ever repeat in my presence what you did before Chancellor Ortega’s eyes, I will kill you with my own sword. Is that clear?”

A verbal response was plainly required. “Yes, sir”, Aodh said.

“Good. I also want you to know that one reason for the division in your command is that I do not judge you fit to be much more than a centurion. The single reason I don’t reduce you so is that your men would resent it. They don’t realize you aren’t worthy of them.
“To keep them from ever being so disillusioned, you will remedy this lack. Young lord Gomez came to me asking for instruction in the arts of command. So you will be his fellow pupil. There are also six other young lords who will be joining him. Keep in mind that at all times under instruction, your military rank means nothing. You are by that measure a freeman – not without respect, but lesser than they in nearly every way. So learn from someone what their ranks are, and what the standings of their families as well.” Aodh blinked and frowned. De Cadiz sighed. “Rank comes from one’s title, and from the length one’s family has held that title, and somewhat from how long one’s family has been noble. Standing comes from wealth, land, vassals, allies, and much more. If you are to be an officer here, it is necessary to know these things. As to the question behind your eyes, Captain Heueil has been studying such things on his own, from many instructors. He saw the need, and acted on it.” De Cadiz shook his head, wishing there were some easier route for this talented, brilliant, but socially delinquent officer. He knew the next blow would push the Captain near his limit.
“You will have a number of instructors for this – Chancellor Ortega will be one, as will I; young Miguel will be another, as will Heir Osvaldo. That the Heir and Chancellor plan to devote time to you is a serious honor. But your main instructor is to be de Medina – Jazreena de Medina.” He waited for the explosion, but it remained behind the Celt’s eyes and set jaw. “Along with Miguel, she has consented to train you all in unarmed combat.” Surprise pushed aside anger. “Yes, Captain, Jazreena. You’ve seen Miguel and Jaspar go some bouts; know that she trained her brother and can still defeat him, and that Miguel is somewhat in awe of her. Scout Sir Chen had the privilege of a bout; he came away battered, and proceeded to ask for lessons. So when your resentment grows great enough that you contemplate foolishness, remember that she bested your instructor from the Valley of Horses.”

“I’m certain he got in some good blows, sir!” Aodh asserted, standing up for Chen’s honor.

De Cadiz chuckled. “That is true. She also asked for lessons. You will be getting the benefit of her knowledge, plus what you have learned from him, plus what she learned from him.” He cleared his throat.
“Assist the cooks in cleanup after supper, for speaking out of turn. As for your position here: do well in the training, and next time I divide forces you’ll get an officer under you instead of another beside you.” He gave Aodh time to review that mentally. “That’s all, Captain. Dismissed.’

This time the word didn’t seem rude at all.




Austin had lost track of time. He’d slept, Titanium standing watch over him – wondering how a wild stallion had become such a faithful friend. He’d slept, in the saddle, Titanium moving at a gentle walk until he judged his rider was rested enough. He didn’t remember if he’d slept a third time, or not. All he knew at the moment was that they were heading northeast, and the sickly gray-white blotch behind them, that had been hidden for so long by a ridge, was visible again.

“Others”, he whispered, mouth dry. “Titanium, they’re on our track!” Austin looked north, wondering if they could reach the spread of woods before the Others – wondering if it would do any good.

Titanium turned and headed due east. He didn’t changed pace, just turned. Austin twisted to watch; the Others were steadily gaining ground. “Titanium, run! We have to run!” In his imagination he could already feel those pincers slicing his flesh. “Run, horse!” He pounded on the great neck.

Titanium shifted into a fast canter; Austin wanted a gallop. In his terror he tried everything but kicking his horse in the ribs – he’d done that once, and only once, and knew very thoroughly it wasn’t a good idea. Nothing made any difference; the big stallion had his own ideas, and nothing would move him. Austin checked his rifle, thinking he could at least take some with him, and feeling very betrayed.

But the Others never got closer than twelve meters. Titanium toyed with them, playing at zigging and zagging. Whenever he let them as close as twelve meters, he gave a wimpy sort of shriek and a burst of speed. It went on for an hour and into a second. Austin became curious, then amused, then finally decided Titanium had a plan. So he amused himself by riding backwards, rifle ready, and when they got close, putting a bullet into one.

Then Titanium slipped. It wasn’t much, only enough to threaten to dump Austin, only enough to allow the Others within two meters. Austin hung on somehow. The closest Other stumbled and stopped, Titanium was steady again – only then did Austin realize he was holding the Ruger and an empty quick-loader. He looked at the cylinder, and it was empty, too. Ten rounds to save his life and Titanium’s, ten rounds they couldn’t replace.

The slip had encouraged the Others; Titanium was in a good gallop and they weren’t falling behind. Austin didn’t know what to feel; he thought his feeling circuit had blown from the close call. So he turned around and rode front-ways again. “Titanium horse, I hope you do something soon, ‘cause I’m tired.” Seeing tears run down the stallion’s neck told him he was crying, but he still didn’t feel anything. Titanium slowed once more, as though resting. The Others were fifteen meters away, then twelve... ten... five... three.... The horse exploded, flying across the rolling ground at full gallop.

Austin noticed there weren’t any hoof beats before he noticed there wasn’t any grass under them. His tired mind said they were flying; instincts launched him out of the saddle so he wouldn’t be on Titanium when they hit. Water gave way to air around his head just in time to see the first Others tumble over the three-meter cliff into the small lake. “WOOOOOT!” He trode water and raised his fists. “Tie-ray-nee-UM!” he exulted. “Wooooot!” A whinny got his attention; Titanium was swimming toward him; he dove to swim underwater and meet his hero halfway.

There were too many Others. But Others don’t move worth crap in water! Austin noted with satisfaction. “Titie, hold still”, he ordered. Stretched out in the water, forearms on the horse’s back, Austin aimed... fired. The Other closest to them in the water thrashed, getting in the way of some trying to make their way to their prey. The squire aimed... and fired, aimed... and fired. Three Others, deliberately not wounded fatally, completely blocked the efforts of those behind. “Besides”, Austin observed, “they’re mostly coming forward because others” – he giggled at that – “are still falling off the cliff. And we don’t want them to stop, do we?” So he shifted in the water to raise his sights, and started shooting. His targets were any Others which had actually stopped up on the cliff. But he kept an eye on the ones in the water, too, adding a fourth, then a fifth, to his floating blockage.

“Oh, getting tricky”, he muttered. Two Others had managed to get atop the floating bodies of their fellows, and now moved steadily, if slowly, toward him. It was tempting to shoot the ones they walked on, but that might not do any good, and – worse – it would still leave the bright ones with the useful idea. So he fired low, then mid, on both of the “second-floor” Others, sending bullets ripping through their guts all along their bodies and through their heads. He didn’t know if their heads held their brains, or even if they had brains, but what they had for eyes, and a whole array of antennae-like things were up front. Besides, hit one just right in the face, and he could get a very satisfactory spray of goo and gore out the back.

Only five Others remained above on land. Austin made it four... three... two.... One jumped into the lake; the squire switched to the last, and then the only enemies he could see were in the lake. “Okay, your majesty”, he said to Titanium, “Get us the hell out of here.” He wiggled his rear. “Damn – I crapped my pants! Well, swim, and I’ll rinse ‘em in the lake.”


From the other shore, standing nude by a fire because all his gear was wet – except herbs – Austin could see more Others milling about on top of the cliff. It was long range, but he thought he could do it. He didn’t want to leave any alive. Besides, he’d realized why they’d come chasing, and that gave him a second reason to want them eliminated.

Every one of twelve shots hit, but he was sure only half had been actual kills. Mostly, he’d driven them back farther. From what Rigel had said, that wasn’t normal – but Rigel didn’t have any stories about them charging off a cliff into a small lake, and maybe that changed the rules. “Okay, Titanium, this is going to be tricky. I’m going to rub you down with some of those leafy things from the shore, then we’re going to do something about me.” He offered one of the broad, thick leaves for the horse to inspect; Titanium didn’t reject it, so Austin went to work.

He cursed himself for smearing Titanium when he had other preparations to make. But it was done; he turned to his pack. He emptied two jars into improvised pouches, then poured a bit of his precious oil into each. One of his candles was turned into shavings that joined the concoctions; that was followed by a guesstimated amount of black powder. He had a bottle of “fortified wine” from Bilbao; a spoonful on a piece of leather lit nicely, so he poured a bit into each little jar – and a bit down his throat. He heated them carefully over coals, shaking regularly, then finished them with more oil and brandy. The tops went in the fire, to be replaced with cloth coated with wax.

By the time he’d rubbed the whole horse with the weird and annoying goo the leaves made, with their weirder and more annoying smell, then mixed and resealed his two jars, most of Austin’s gear was dry. One thing wasn’t: his shorts and undershorts. Those he’d left damp on purpose, but under cover; now he sniffed the crotch, verifying that they smelled like human boy. He put them on two little racks of twigs, then turned to Titanium.

“I know it’s a lot to ask, King Horse, but if you can manage, would you pee for me? In this spot over here?” The spot was a small area Austin had cleaned of grasses and dumped mud from along the shore. Titanium looked at Austin for several seconds, then sniffed at himself, then looked over where there were still living Others. He whuffed and came to where Austin pointed, and peed on the mud.

“Thanks, Titie.” Austin gave his horse a bow, then squatted and stirred horse urine into mud. When he was satisfied, he first packed his gear and loaded it, then set the little stands with pants and undershorts a meter and a half from the fire – and then coated himself with the gross mixture, rolling in the patch to cover his back, packing it in his armpits, and rubbing his hair with the leaf goo. To finish, he stacked all the extra leaves he’d picked in front of his saddle. Before he mounted, he moved the two racks not quite halfway to the fire. “Okay, I hope this works!” He swung into the saddle, checking rifle, revolver, and his two jars. “Let’s go north”, he instructed, and they moved out.


It didn’t take much light for Others to be visible; their whitish-greyish kind of translucent bodies picked up starlight or moonlight and made them stand out rather well. It was, Austin joked with himself, like hitting the broad sides of barn sheds. They were hardly moving – the cold? he wondered – so he could pick his targets and figure his aiming shifts beforehand. He took his time.

The first shot rang out, splitting the night, turning the front of one Other’s head into pulpy confetti. Austin didn’t watch to see the full effect, but swivelled as planned, working the bolt as he moved, slapping the next bullet into the next head. He had seven targets, all picked because they were beautifully positioned for fatal or disabling shots, and he moved from one to the next methodically. The first five went without trouble. Number six was the first deviation: when the fifth’s head shredded, the sixth started to move. While shifting his aim, tracking the enemy, Austin wondered if it had taken from the first shot for one to start moving. He knew that would be worth knowing, but didn’t have any way to figure it out. Three extra seconds went to taking down number six, but it provided an opportunity: another head was in perfect visibility, so he took it. The planned seventh became the actual eighth. Then it was time to move; they were certainly all moving!

“Time for fun, big boy”, Austin told Titanium as he reloaded his ammo supply. “They should come around the end of the lake and smell me – smell my shorts”, he corrected with a cold grin. “Before they reach the camp, we need to be east of them. So to quote several famous people, ‘Let’s do it!’”




Marshal Escobar, Lord de Cadiz, cursed in polite fashion at the straight line of clouds to the south. The temperature had started dropping at midday; they were getting frost at suppertime! It would keep getting colder, too, until that line from the south pushed in – he’d seen it before. They’d have cold air on the ground, and rain from above – and the rain would freeze when it hit, covering everything with ice.

“Diego.”

Lord Gomez snapped out of his contemplation of an ice crystal growing on his empty mug. “Marshal?”

“Get our things cleared out of the buildings. We sleep in the tents again. The buildings are for the wounded and infirm.” A fair number of men had coughs from the cold nights already.

Gomez nodded. “Coughs before sniffles?”

De Cadiz chuckled. “Yes. I’m going to the wall. Maybe that master builder can shift things to give us more real housing before the ice gets here.”


Gavin protested. “Lord, if you put sick men by sick men, they will get worse!”

“Healer, if I put well men by sick men, they’ll get sick! Can you not do anything for the coughs?” De Cadiz chastised himself, silently of course, for expecting more of a talent he hadn’t had available just months before.

Gavin counted to ten. “I can end sore throats. I can do nothing in the lungs. I don’t know why, but I can’t. One of lord Romero’s archers has the spark, and he can heal some coughs, but not all. One of Lady Jazreena’s girls has the spark, and can ease sniffles but not cure it. Another of her girls has the spark, but all she can heal so far is foot itch. And that is the extent of our Healers just now.
“If I had more herbs, I could do more. You have some here I’m not familiar with, but there hasn’t been time for me to learn them. Besides, many of the men despise ‘weed women’, as they call them.
“What I need are rooms where men can be on beds, not on the floor, a long arm’s reach apart, not shoulder to shoulder – warm, dry, quiet rooms.”

De Cadiz held up a hand in surrender. “Healer, you know your warfare, as I know mine. We do not have the rooms. We have the pieces for the cots, but they are not together. We have blankets, and sheets, and hangings, and pillows. We have lumber for – for many things. With this, do your best.”

Gavin thought, letting lore from the Stone and wisdom from Lumina roll through him. His eyes unfocused, something de Cadiz took as meaning meditation, so he waited, calling for two mugs of mulled wine as he did. They arrived a half dozen seconds before Gavin blinked and nodded.

“I’ll put the sick to assembling their beds. I know there’s lots of rope. I’ll want a carpenter to build frames to hold the rope. We’ll hang sheets from the ropes, about every third man – like tents would be best. That way the germs” – he saw de Cadiz’ lack of comprehension – “the tiny evil creatures which make men cough and sneeze, will stay in their own tent. The men in the tents might share their kinds of tiny evil creatures, but they won’t easily get farther.
“And you must order this: all cookware and dinnerware must be washed in boiling water after use! And every man must wash his hands in the hottest water he can tolerate, before eating! The tiny evil creatures come from a man’s nose and mouth with a sneeze or cough, by the thousands, entire armies of them. They land everywhere, and if they get into another’s body, they can build new kingdoms and wage war on that man’s body. But they cannot survive boiling water, and they suffer from hot water, and if the hands are scrubbed well, the water will carry them away.”

De Cadiz was no fool; he knew a man who spoke what he knew, when he heard it. “Ought we wash the walls, and the tables, and the chairs?”

Gavin wanted to hug him; de Cadiz was only the fourth non-healer who plainly believed him! “In the rooms for the sick, wash the walls – I’ll have to think about how often. In the eating hall, yes, wash the tables – that’s good thinking. The chairs... only if someone has been violently coughing and sneezing.
“Lord de Cadiz, I’m glad for your men that you understand this!”

“I know a man who knows his enemy”, de Cadiz replied. With a wry grin, he added, “I am Marshal of men, for a warfare we can see. I perceive you are Marshal of this warfare we cannot see.”



Austin still didn’t have the stink out, of himself or Titanium. But it had done the trick. They’d come far enough he couldn’t see the small lake – come through freezing rain, though it hadn’t last long, only a few hours. He shuddered at the memory, though his victory had been total: the Others had come north as he’d hoped, then caught the smell of his clothes, the smell of human food. Titanium had been swift, so when the Others were ripping the camp to pieces, he’d tossed his fire bombs. One had sputtered, but the other did almost what it was supposed to, scattering flames into dry grass, flames that the wind from the east that had been coming every night swept toward the camp. The Others hadn’t even noticed until almost too late – he’d shot two as they came around the end of the flames, trying to avoid them. It had been the one that madly charged through the flames that had sliced Titanium’s flank and sent the rider into a blind rage.

He patted the cutter that now hung at his side in place of a sword. He still didn’t remember attacking, but from the way things looked after, when he was aware again, he’d launched himself on top of the Other, drawing the cutter, slicing it in two as he’d landed, then turning it into science-fiction horror goo. Titanium had called him back with a lick on his forehead. But before he attended his horse, he stalked through the ashes to where three remaining Others fought each other over the tiny remaining scraps of his clothes. He’d carved the rear ends off the nearest two, taken their heads off with two swings when they were still turning, then sliced the head of the third down the middle. After that he’d gone from body to scorched body, half of them feebly twitching, and cut them into chunks smaller than a breadbox.

That memory brought a grin, the joke on himself: after tending to Titanium’s wound – shallow, thankfully – he’d ridden for more than a day in a sort of delirium. Over and over he’d asked the savanna, “Is it smaller than a breadbox?”, and answered himself, “Yes!”, then, “Is it a piece of Other?” and gone into mad laughter.

There’d been one more, one that somehow survived and tracked him slowly despite his precautions. But the freezing rain had gotten it, coating it, weighing it down, immobilizing it, encasing it in shimmering frozen water. Austin had watched in awe and glee, whooping like an idiot. Bored of the sight, finally, he’d gotten out his rifle and shot the thing – and sat dumbfounded when it shattered along with the ice.

Now he could see, up ahead, the edge of the forested hills that marked the realm of the Celts. He should have been able to see Rigel and everyone, but his trip had taken longer than planned, and gone farther, and wasn’t on track. He shrugged: as far as he was concerned, he and Titanium had proven they could take care of themselves.




[needs pic of Austin on Titanium going off low cliff into lake]
 
WOW!, Kuli!! That was awesome, Awesome, AWESOME!!! :=D: (!w!)

And, you know what? I can see, in your writing, that your Talents have improved, from what they already were, since the beginning of this tale! This particular Read was smoother, more polished, easier to follow, more intense, deeper, more riveting, pleasurable, encompassing, than your previous work! (Which was in NO way a slouch!) (ww) Absolutely WONDERFUL!! :hurray:

Now, can you possibly guess what my most favorite part of this monumental episode was?? (Oh! I'm sure You Know, already!) :badgrin: But, what about the rest of you loyal fans? Or, is it really all that obvious?? :lol:

And, Titanium, now known as "Titie" (tighty)! Nice!! ..|

Aodh, rough "gem" that he is, provided he can "endure" the training, that has been outlined for him, may just have a chance at redemption in Criostoir's eyes. Hmmmm??? :confused:

The Friendly, yet Very Serious, relationships between Oz, Jaspar, Miguel, de Cadiz, etc., were quite well established and described. And, SO important to include! I can understand how Rigel & Co. can leave, heading back "Home", with the Knowledge that ALL, well, mostly All, will be O.K. in Refuge, and it's expanding territory. Now ... if we could just get a little more insight into those Brits to the south .... :cool:

Austin has certainly cum into his own! His title may still be Squire, but his Future is belying Far more than that!! \:/

And, even with the coming of Winter, the Foe, the Others, are venturing further north??! :eek: :help:

THANK YOU! Kuli, for this most Excellent Adventure!!! (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv2:
 
Kuli,
I think our Brave Austin's member, err, Chaz, yeah, THAT's it, Chaz, has posted a prolific perambulation pertaining to your post perfunctory prose! Well, said, Chaz.

And yes, I DID catch your sudden appearance in a prominent [STRIKE]penis [/STRIKE] position in the story. I loved it, and thought it MOST appropriate.

Kuli,
This was such an encompassing treatise. It was great to see the council among Oz, Jaspar, Rigel, and company. It was also good to see Osvaldo recognize the true nobility in his house's former adversary, de Cadiz. While Osvaldo, like I, is not the most politically correct of people, he has a truly noble heart and cuts to the chase.

It will be interesting to see how the dynamics of Refuge, and it's expanding no-quite-safe-refuge domain evolve. I think everyone is getting a wake-up call, and even the petty Lords with their collective heads up their asses will soon enough see the wisdom of what's happening. Hopefully, it won't be too late, and they'll start pulling together for the collective good, instead of their own selfish agenda. The Foe is not gone from their world; indeed, it is coming back to find them.

I particularly appreciated the extended focus on Austin, and the titular phrase was not lost on me the moment I read it, either. He has definitely become a force of nature, a fine, young man to be nobly rewarded at some point for all of his contributions. He and Titanium have a special bond. And, it's good that he has someone he is starting to view as a life partner, someone to love him, be with and a part of him, but acknowledge and respect all of who Austin is, and hopefully grant him the freedom to be completely happy. It would be a hoot to see a bunch of little Austin's raising hell around Cavern Castle and its surrounds. I can picture their forays into Servant and the other villages, getting to know all the boys and taking their pleasures with them. Scandalous! lol


I know you've been having some "challenges" between technology and truants; it seems to have redoubled your focus with a keen precision.

Thanks for continuing to construct this magnificent tale.
..| :=D: :wave: (*8*) :D
 
I have to confess that the portion of this chapter that concerns Austin came, believe it or not, from a dream/daydream, sitting more than half asleep in my truck one day waiting for someone. I'd already put down that Austin would be staying, then catching up, and dozed off realizing that his young scent on the breeze would be like bait for any Others about. When the truck door opened, I had the imagery of his adventure in my mind like a fading YouTube video. The trick was getting it on paper -- or silicon, I suppose.


Chaz, I figured you'd like the "Titie" abbreviation/nickname.
 
Kuli,
You need to have more of those catnaps, then.
The imagery was great.
 
Wow, this is a terrific update. Not only is it huge but it's exciting as well! I love both of the Austin parts.

Austin just learned something that will be absolutely critical to the fight against the Others. War against them is best conducted in winter, because of what he's just learned. That really changes everything; instead of sitting home all winter, they need to take the fight to the enemy starting THIS winter!

That's assuming that I read that right, and that the Others are like roaches and are dormant in winter because they freeze solid. Shattering frozen ones is going to be lots easier than fighting them on the battlefield!

WAodh, rough "gem" that he is, provided he can "endure" the training, that has been outlined for him, may just have a chance at redemption in Criostoir's eyes. Hmmmm???

Quite.
 
Artistry​


The opening was a mess, but fifteen meters beyond the lip, the stone was carved in a perfect arc, polished, smooth facets not quit aligned, sliced to mathematically precise planes by the uncomprehended blade of the tool they simply called a "cutter", because it cut anything and everything they knew of. Just ahead of it, smooth-cut stones that matched formed a man-made arch, the first of a row meant to provide a sturdy roof supporting the unstable exterior of the mountainside. The interior, as far as they'd gone, was solid but for a few veins of quartz with occasional inclusions of beryl, and touches of pyrite.

"Those are what you're going to leave showing?" Ryan asked, pointing to one narrow vein.

Devon nodded. "I thought mounting lamps by them would make the place more pleasant. Where Nature puts decorations, it makes sense to use them."

"Won't be spaced evenly", Ryan observed.

"Even spacing is overrated", Devon replied. "Trees in a forest aren't evenly spaced, but I've been forests more beautiful than any cathedral. The best landscaping I've ever seen was darned close to random. Stars are scattered randomly. So in my tunnel I'm going to put lamps where Nature provided seams worth lighting. The rest I'll scatter rather randomly in between." He grinned at the area's lord. "I might even ask for lamps of different sizes. When the glassmakers manage different colors on purpose, I can add those in."

Ryan laughed. "Our Engineer is an artist!" He clapped Devon on the back. "I thought this tunnel would be long, cold, dim, and boring. You're fixing that, and I didn't even complain!"

Devon shrugged. "Digging a tunnel this way can be boring. Might as well relieve the boredom. But it will be dim farther in -- I don't want lamps to use up too much oxygen, or use too many lamps. So they'll get sparser, gradually so the eyes will adjust. By a klick inside, the light will be less than starlight, but seeing will be better on account of eyes being adjusted.
"I'm hoping for enough sand for the floor all the way. Gravel will go first -- river and crushed. Until I've got enough, though, it stays stone. Wood chips would be nice, but I don't have a small-scale steam engine design -- your spinning boiler is nice, but for high arr-pee-ems I need pistons. For a good chipper, I want at least three hundred -- twelve hundred would be great. The nice thing about a tunnel is that the chips would stay dry, so they wouldn't break down as fast.
"Pretty soon we'll lay oak rails and start a track for hauling out he building stone. You probably noticed I'm making about half by volume smaller. They're easier to get out, and that's a factor if we want this done quick. Most of it will be good for supporting walls inside a castle, the smallest are right for dividing walls. I'm not wasting any stone I can't help, we're getting some from right in the arch that's the size of brick -- it'll be good for giving touches of color or putting patterns in brick walls." Devon drew in a deep breath through his nose.

"Okay, so what's the bad news?" Ryan asked. "I know that sign."

"There's a problem with the cutters. Oh, they're working just fine", Devon assured Ryan. "It's just that a certain little side effect has become a serious problem. Remember we figured those things somehow slip between molecules and separate them, to cut? Well, they're not perfect. We've sniffed stone before, but in here it doesn't go away. Get into a tight space where there's no hint of breeze, and it gets thick. Sometimes it smells -- hot, too.
"So we have to let it circulate. But we're in ninety meters now, and it doesn't circulate. So I need to pout in vents sooner than I thought -- and I need something from the smiths: fans for the vents. The other way would be to hang a fire in each vent shaft and let the rising air draw fresh from the entry. If I use fire, though, I could heat the column too much and cause cracking. Fans would be better. They don't even have to be fast, so I think your spinning boilers would be perfect for the job: put fan blades on the outside and hang one in each shaft. It would need a system for lowering them to add to the reservoir and feed the fire, but that's simple."

Ryan frowned and stared down the tunnel to where lights showed the motions of a work crew hoisting a stone onto a wagon -- castle-sized, it was, for main columns or outer walls. He wondered briefly at the sense of continuing to build castles when the cannon he was developing would render them obsolete before the end of the next summer. They'd never been secure since the moment they'd gotten a trebuchet working, but when he got high-velocity barrels they'd be little different than children's blocks -- before LEGOs, anyway. History was like that, though -- defenses would have the upper hand, then new developments would render them useless, or even traps; then the pendulum would sway back, new forms of defense arising to withstand the weapons, and so on. It was the same with armies -- for a while the small, highly skilled army held sway with weapons it took professionals to master, then they faded before mass armies with weapons anyone could learn in a short time. They wove together and apart; sometimes it took massed armies to breach defenses, sometimes it took professionals; sometimes defenses relied on trained professionals, then they required huge masses to man them.
Labor worked the same: technology would provide a simpler way to do things, so a few men could do a task that had taken dozens, or hundreds. Then men would discover new tasks, sometimes thanks to the technology, and it would take dozens or hundreds again. That probably wove in and out with the military cycles, too, but that was the sort of thing to think about on a warm afternoon after a swim, stretched out in the sun seeking an even tan, not when there were problems to be solved.

"So how soon do you need fans? I guess that's really, how fast can you dig a vent?"

"If you have a laser level/transit, two days. Realistically, three or four. The quickest way is to go straight up. That's just plumb line and platform and cutter, with lam armor and thick goggles. Going straight down would be tidier, and save stone. Going up, we just get fill stone. Well, we might cut some counter slabs. But we can't go down from the top, because we don't have a line of sight. So we go up."

"Okay. Slow as much as you need on the tunnel -- if we go slower, we go slower." Ryan spoke absently, which told Devon ideas were sprouting -- so he didn't answer.


Late afternoon, two days later, a massive wagon drawn by six of the horses the Guardians had traded for more effective patrol mounts rumbled into the tunnel. Large pieces of equipment rode in it, and Ryan himself drove, with half his Wizard's Tower crew. Ryan grinned at Devon as he brought the wagon to a halt. "Get your man down and pull that rickety stack of sticks out of the hole. I've got a new toy for you."
Ryan's "toy" was a sloppy, inefficient hydraulic lift. A twenty-centimeter pipe sat or a tripod with a wide base. Each foot of the tripod had its own tripod, adjustable to provide leveling. A second pipe attached to the side of the first. A small pipe connected the two cylinders via a crude, lever-driven pump. A smooth log with a brass end went into the first pipe, brass first -- after coating the sides of the brass and ten centimeters of wood with a foul-smelling grease. Water went into the second cylinder; a seat went on top of the log. When it was all assembled, Ryan put his foot on the lever and pushed. The log wiggled; he pushed again -- this time it wiggled and then stabilized. When he pressed a fourth time, the log rose a few millimeters. "No straps or ties, no lashing. When he needs to go up, you pump. When you run out of pipe -- see this mark, that's your sign -- you take those half-pipes, slap on the leather gaskets" -- he lifted some strips of gr'venstut hide with slots in them -- "with some grease, tighten 'em down, and keep going. Don't forget to top off your water." He looked at the gathered workers as though expecting applause.
"It leaks, so every now and then you have to pump just to keep it at height. The higher you get, the more it will leak. It's not good past twelve meters or so. When you get that high, I'll have an extension for the base." He looked over the man with the cutter. "Armor's doing the job?"

"Quite well, Wizard. A suspension strap in the left shoulder broke, but I just padded it with a rag."

Rags -- the things that could be a sign of wealth were often unexpected. Even with the abundance of the Servant People, cloth was precious enough there weren't any rags. Even though they used rags in paper now, linen cloth was abundant enough they could have rags. Cotton cloth would start during the winter, once spinning and weaving were perfected and running well; the next year would see even more. They had some wool; the amount the next year would more than triple. "I'll have a new set sent over and a strap." He pumped the lever again and watched the log and seat rise. "Have fun."

The vent was done in just over three days. Ryan's first steam-driven vertical-flow fan was in before the fourth was over. He brought another, too. "It's slow", he told Devon, "because you don't want to stir up dust. But it's enough it should take care of your cutter-dust."


Crystal couldn't believe she'd kept her secret so long, but she was certain Ryan didn't know a thing. With her new Musiccraft Hall -- Ryan kept calling it Harper Hall, but they didn't have any harps, or they hadn't had, until four days ago. Now they had two, and those would be playing a duet in the Grand Hall at dinner. She couldn't wait to see the look on Ryan's face!

But her big secret was being saved for Rigel.


Ryan was starting to wonder if he should set up a temporary cubicle for an office in the tunnel. He found himself trying to imagine how Crystal's new harps would sound there -- the place echoed the oddest things, and killed others. Devon's message hadn't seemed exactly urgent, so he'd allowed himself time to finish a sketch and specifications for an impact fuse for the latest attempt at incendiary artillery rounds. The explosive ones were working tolerably; it wasn't so hard to make an impact fuse work when the shell was solid, but when the casing was fragile because it was hollow and didn't have a solid core. But he'd come right after that, because the note had said it was high priority.

The pan of pieces didn't look like much in the light of oil lamps. Ryan saw some sparkle, just like all the quartz and bits of beryl in the granite -- in fact the continued excavation had uncovered a serious stretch of pyrite with some very nice quartz crystals and decent beryl ones. But he didn't see anything special, which Devon plainly thought there was.

"Fine", he said, "let's go out where there's better light." They headed for the tunnel entrance.


Devon laughed. The look on Ryan's face from Crystal's surprise harp duet had been priceless; this was nearly as good. "Green", Ryan repeated. "Clear quartz, yellow and pale yellow beryl. Now green. And lots of pyrite. Devon, that means the green is..." Maybe it was the grin, maybe he couldn't bring himself to say it.

"Emerald", Devon said, grinning like an idiot. "What do you think those would be worth for Antonio?"

"I need a chair", Ryan declared. But he settled for a stack of building stone just inside the tunnel entry. Outside, it was snowing lightly, again; if the sun, snow, sun pattern continued, the icicles outside the tunnel mouth would become visible from inside soon. He sorted green from the rest. None of the pieces was large, and in the rough they weren't particularly nice-looking. Cutting them would change that -- but did anyone around know how to cut them? He wasn't sure of the wisdom of selling raw gems and advertising there was a source.

"Keep this quiet", he decided. "We should find someone who knows how to cut these into gems before we do anything."

Devon nodded. "I thought about that. But what if only the Quistadors know how?"

Ryan scoffed. "You think the Escobars won't have someone? The Celts might, even -- I've seen a few cut gems; they might not all be old." He looked at the leftovers from his sorting. "Is this about the ratio you're finding?"

Devon shook his head and sighed. "I wish. No, that's about the ratio in a stretch where there are any. It's more like that's a tenth of a stretch. Sorry I called you -- I got excited. I thought there'd be more by the time you got here. I knew you wouldn't hurry."

"If this is one section where there were emeralds, what about the others? There were others, right?" Ryan held one exceptionally clear piece up to the sun. "Or is this it?"

"There were others", Devon replied. "Nothing bigger than pea size. This was the last section -- the best, too", he answered mournfully.

Ryan chuckled. "Don't be so depressed. This was worth the trip. And if the last was the best, maybe it will get better. Anyway, you're digging a tunnel, not a mine. For a mine, this would suck. For a tunnel, it's an excellent bonus. Think of it as nature's artistry."


Dinner was over; dessert waited on a break for all the little details that go with medieval dining. It was the moment for unofficial announcements. Devon stood and dinged an empty goblet with his knife. Heads turned and quiet spread.

"I've just got a simple announcement", he declared. "For those who are interested, the tunnel is a kilometer long now. We're taking a day off tomorrow, so anyone who wants to walk a kilometer into the mountainside to see it all, come on over. We'll have a whole hog on a spit, so you can have a bite, too.
"That's it", he finished, and sat.



Lief saw the figure approach the other side of the pool first. He slipped under water and pushed off, reaching Eron. He thought about scaring him, but instead came up and squeezed his fellow castle attendant’s shoulder. “She’s here”, he announced, sliding a hand to Eron’s crotch and giving a gentle squeeze. “Gonna show her some new things tonight?”

Eron pressed against his friend’s hand. He hoped it wasn’t the only squeeze he’d be getting. She was mysterious, beautiful, exotic, and very restrained in many ways. They’d been naked together often, now, especially in these nighttime “skinny-dipping” gatherings in the Druid’s Pool – they all laughed at that word, with its suggestion that swimming nude was something special; after all, what sensible person would want clothes for enjoying the water? But they’d slept together, too, in the plain meaning of the words. But such times had become harder and harder for him, getting him harder and harder; he wanted her, and not just with his loins as he’d wanted other girls: he wanted to enter her and be one with her and never, ever part.

There came a faint tinkling of crystal chimes, a different sort of instrument from the great Crystal Organ, something Crystal had made as an experiment. He didn’t know how she’d arranged that, but didn’t care; on top of Lief’s friendly squeeze and his own anticipation, it was like a fire in dead-dry grass. His body responded; Lief laughed softly as something soft became long and hard, and he could feel Eron trembling.

“Varden will greet her”, he said, sliding his hand up his friend’s bare body to squeeze his neck. “If she doesn’t give herself tonight, you can have me.”

The offer gave Eron a start – he’d never thought of Lief that way. “You prefer...?” he asked, a bit embarrassed.

“No”, Lief replied honestly, “but I found it can be fun with a friend. Two of the stable lads”, he added, knowing Eron would ask. “Austin introduced us.”

“Austin’s good with his mouth”, Eron commented. “I know three servants who say so.”

“You don’t know yourself?” Lief asked.

Eron shook his head. “For me, there’s Crystal. And thanks for the offer, but if she doesn’t offer, I’ll go for a run in the snow.” There was a whole two centimeters on the ground outside.

Lief shook his head. “You’re amazing. When I get hard, I want some, and that’s that.” He chuckled at himself. “I almost tried a sheep, once.”

Eron laughed uneasily; that sort of thing was too much for him. “What stopped you?”

“You know that Healer student with the red streak in her hair? She was examining an injured shepherd. I bumped her, and she jumped – she could tell! She smiled and said, ‘I can help with that – just wait, and we’ll work out the stiffness.’ So we did.”

“I thought you were in love with Rita.”

“So’s Tiernan. But she loves Aidan.” Lief chuckled. “I walked in on them once. She saw me and waved, then whispered to him. He turned to look at me, and said either leave or sit down, because he felt nervous with me standing there. So I sat and watched.” He shook his head in admiration, though Eron couldn’t see him. “That man can take care of a woman!” He chuckled. “Did you ever think of doing between her crossed legs and erupt on her breasts?”

“Not until you said it. And that’s enough – I think I could thrust through the castle wall!”

“Well, here comes rescue – that disturbance in the water is Varden.”

After Eron had gone to join – and hopefully join with; his friends were rooting for him – Crystal, Lief and Varden turned to each other. “That gets me excited”, Varden whispered.

“Think you can get me excited?” Lief asked.


The chimes sounded again. “Who’s chiming those for you?” Eron asked Crystal.

She sighed in deep satisfaction at the feel of his erection against her belly. “Innis”, she murmured. “He made sure the music hall was well supplied with wood, so I brought him as a special treat. Can you believe he wanted to watch?”

Eron could. “What did you say?”

“I told him until he had a nice patch of hair in three new places on his body, to forget it.” She nibbled his ear. “I feel a nice patch”, she whispered. “It would feel nice by mine.”

Suppressing a moan, Eron spread his legs to get lower. The feel of his erection against her hair took away his ability to think, and he blurted out what was in his mind. “Crystal, will you bond with me? To stand by my side, bear my heir, raise our children?”

Crystal’s hand slid down between the two patches of hair. “There’s something down here between our patches”, she said. “I have a place to put it, that’s out of the way.”

He would have laughed, but his body was on fire clear down to his toes and up to his eyebrows. Besides, Innis was playing a piece called “Cascades” on the crystal chimes, and it washed away the last of his emotions except the ones focused on Crystal.

“Yes, silly”, she whispered as bone struck bone and patches of hair crushed together, “I’ll bond with you.”

The chimes reached their crescendo as he ground his hips against hers. Artistry, he thought, harmony in artistry.




351155.jpg
 
Kuli,
It was good to have a glimpse of what's going on back on the homefront.

And, Oooh La La, Crystal has herself a lifemate - and a dandy pole on which to enjoy herself and get pumped up with! lol

Sounds like the boys are getting to know each other fairly well - any old port in a storm,even for the "straight" guys - sounds about right. Horny does as horny is.

The Druid Pool - a holy place if ever there was one! Water warmed from the depths, brought to the surface, and obviously well- mineralled to promote healing and other niceties of the human spirit and body - along with custom musical interludes to have intercourse by.

Thanks for the update!
 
Yep! Nice to be back "Home" for a bit! :D

Sounds like Devon is doing quite a job with the tunnel. I'm not all that sure about the "spinning boiler" exhaust fans, though. Seems it would be quite a job to keep them fueled with fire and water, in a timely manner! Would want one blowing up! [-X

I very much like his idea of enhancing the tunnel's natural, random, beauty! And, little emeralds, huh? Reminds me of the "gem wall" in the cavern tunnel. I'm guessing it's still there, but has anyone ever figured out the "Why"?? :confused:

Crystal is WAY "Kewl", in many, many, ways! And, yeah! I wouldn't mind watching at ALL!! Heck! I wouldn't object to "just" having a view of the swimming "ventures"! And, Yeah!, naked is the only way to do it!! (!)

THANK YOU, Kuli! (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Hills’ Edge​


"That's not just a semaphore station", Rigel observed. A hilltop had been flattened, and was in the process of being extended. A long row of timbers lay drying in the sun, and a small stack of stone was being added to, a block swung up by pulley as they watched.

"Excavation", Rita noted. "Whatever the plan is, they mean to have a basement."

Chen was impressed, and said so when he returned to report to Rigel. He was grinning as he rode up. "They blew a hole in the rock -- looks like volcanic tuff with inclusions beyond boulder size -- and hit a source of hot water -- really hot; too; you can slow-cook an egg in it. So they dug a pool; yesterday they finished the lining. Ryan's sending more people, but for now they've got some who were unhappy at the Springs. They're all working till they drop, to get housing and a roof over the pool before the weather gets really nasty again. The plan is a castle and village -- they already call it 'Hills' Edge'." He chuckled. "They have thirty people, and they gave it a name!"

"Optimism", Tanner commented. "They expect it to be an important place -- they're probably right."

"It'll be the north end of the chain", Rigel commented. Everyone understood his plan, so there was no need to elaborate: from here to the lake, and from the lake to the Constant Hills, there would be strong places, refuge for travelers, no more than a day apart. Osvaldo had promised the ones between Refuge and the lake would be well along by spring, and the two lesser Houses that had volunteered to settle the two promontories along the way had moved out with enough supplies to slap up rudimentary shelter and defense in a week -- more would follow. When they returned in the spring, there would be places to stay.

"They should appreciate the new manpower", Rita suggested. "Fifteen men and their forty-two wives." Rigel chuckled. For all their time with the Escobars, the difference in gender numbers that came from the d'Aragon gene had never sunk in. Traveling with the two lesser Houses and continuing with these villagers interested in living in new places had driven it home: every family tent had a man, two or three wives, and multiple children. Children were few in this last group, thanks to Rita, who had insisted picking those with none or just one.

"Men out this far so long will appreciate the new woman-power", Oran quipped. Forty unattached girls of marriageable age had come with them, intrigued by the idea of a place where there were about as many men as women. Few of Rigel's little council had any doubts that some of these girls would go no farther -- and the genetic mixing Ryan, Rita, and Lumina held was needed would begin.


Rigel threw his people into the effort. Stables sprang up first, simple log structures which would become storage sheds once stone and brick stables were completed in the castle. Barracks followed, then cabins: the Healer’s Hut was the first, then the Druid’s Digs – so christened by Oran – and the Lord’s Lair, which Rigel ordered by made large enough for everyone who wasn’t just an ordinary soldier or non-com. The place began to resemble a village.

Hedraing took charge of the Standing Stone. Rita watched him plant a circle of twelve acorns around it, noting that he ‘watered’ each one personally before tamping down the handful of rich compost he’d generated himself, the same material that nested the acorn from below. She missed the next night because the Druid made sure no one was awake to watch him, sky-clad, add his own seed to each of the holes. But they all found him in the morning, sleeping peacefully next to the menhir, staff across chest and nothing else to cover him. Oran brought out the Druid’s own cloak, and directed them in slipping it under him; a knit blanket went over, but Hedraing cast it off without waking.

“He’s waiting for the sun”, Chen guessed. They’d gotten into the habit of waking before dawn, the moment there was enough light to stumble to a horse and start packing. A few minutes later he was shown to be right: the moment a finger of sunlight touched Hedraing, on his left knee as it happened, the Druid woke. No one said anything as he rose slowly, indeed very slowly, as though unfolding.

Aidan gasped, and pointed. Eyes followed his finger, then moved from spot to spot around the circle: small shoots pushed up from the acorns, reaching for the sun, sprouting leaves, branching, leafing more....

Hedraing sighed and leaned on his staff. “They’ll fade soon enough. But in the spring they’ll reach a meter high, and two by summer’s end. Then they’ll grow naturally.” He touched the stone lightly. “There’s a link here... it’s a way-stone, for those who can read it.” With his right foot he hooked his cloak and lifted it to his left hand; a quick, practiced flip flopped it over his shoulders. He stood his staff on its own and adjusted the cloak to hang around him.

Oran reached out and tapped the staff. “I didn’t know you could do that”, he commented. His tap didn’t disturb it at all.

Hedraing blinked in surprise. “I didn’t... I didn’t, either”, he admitted. “I didn’t even think about it.”

“The lore bubbles to the surface”, Rita opined. “Your mind knew it from the Stone, and didn’t bother asking your permission.”

“Means you’re a real Druid now”, Chen ventured. “Only Anaph and you can do that. People will see it as a mark of the real rank.”

Hedraing looked at his staff through squinted eyes. “Knowing one’s place in the world is the key”, he murmured. “Perhaps it is a mark of truly being a Druid.”



Rigel was pounding a chair rung into a leg hole when Lt. Jarlan poked his head through the doorway, ducking the rifleman who was hanging a gr’venstut-hide door. “Rider coming, lord – only one horse on the world runs like that”, he commented with a smile. “Your squire is a bit late.”

“Make sure there’s something hot for him”, Rigel instructed. “He didn’t have food for the extra three days.”

Austin only nibbled. “Stomach doesn’t want much”, he said. “I’ll eat slow – and steady.” Lumina nodded in approval. She’d already checked him over and pronounced him disgustingly healthy with a few exceptions: blisters due to improper clothing, a number of bruises, and a dangerously low amount of body fat.

“You’re under two percent!” she’d exclaimed. “That’s dangerous!”

“So bring me a giant pizza, with mushrooms, lots of olives, and extra cheese”, he’d quipped. It had been an in-group moment, memories of a world lost to them – and precious, for all that.

The squire did eat slowly -- and continuously; not two minutes went by in his first hour back that he wasn’t popping something else in his mouth, during pauses in telling his story. Rigel listened carefully to the account of the encounter with the Others, asking for details until Austin told him to stuff it; after that, he sat and integrated the new into the known: that the Others were sluggish in winter, he’d guessed, because they didn’t venture out much. Lord Escobar had heard one report of observation of a nest shortly after winter solstice: the Foe rushed about as usual when they first came out, but slowed fairly quickly. The Conquistador lord hadn’t seen any way to take advantage of that in offensive terms – but technology had changed, and Rigel definitely did. He waved Tanner over.

“Winter is when we attack”, he said softly. “They move slow, and caught in the weather, they can freeze. Their nests are warm, somehow – so we get close enough for artillery, hold off their response force, and blow the nest open.”

“If it isn’t underground”, Tanner pointed out. “Or do you know?”

Rigel shook his head. “No – Escobar never saw one, and the one report he had doesn’t say. Frak – we need to know that!”

They were interrupted by a cry from Austin, who was unpacking his saddlebags. “Hey! I didn’t pack this!” He held a scroll case, heavy leather sewn tight and sealed against weather. The catch was covered by a blob of wax with a big “E” stamped in it. Below that, a smear of wax had other letters. “‘Lard Rigel’”, Austin read. “For you, big guy.” He tossed it to Rigel, who snatched it easily from the air, popped the seal, undid the catch, and read.

“Frakamundo”, he muttered. “Listen to this: ‘The Council would not stand for me as Lord Escobar. Several lords of sufficient influence have required that emissaries go north to determine that indeed no Escobars remain among our cousins. Three among those who journey to your home are of rank enough to make such an inquiry and report. I hereby appoint them to the task. Guide them, friend Rigel, for you know the north, and they do not.’ Then he lists their names”, Rigel ended. “So, there won’t be a Conclave till they get a report. The lords mean to wait till Spring to send some people.”

“But Osvaldo means to get the jump on them”, Chen concluded. “Good for him. You should have Ramos and Perez appoint a couple of people, too – that’ll make it balanced.”

“Good thought”, Rita agreed. “You know, they may not even care – this may just be a way to watch how Osvaldo does as Heir before they commit to having a Lord again.”


Three days later, a party of fifteen workers, nine men and six women, all young, rode in. “Supplies are on their way”, the leader reported. “Lord Ryan just sent us, our gear, and basic tools.” He flashed a crooked grin that showed a broken tooth. “I grabbed all the parts for making a swivel crane, though.”

“Without authorization”, the girl by his side pointed out.

“From a work site or from storage?” Rigel asked.

The leader shook his head. “Got it from the smiths – my girl-cousin works there. She said no one knows it’s coming, so no one will miss it.”

“Except Lord Ryan”, Rita pointed out coldly. “He keeps track of everything.”

“So he’ll know where it went”, Austin quipped, saving the now shame-faced man from having to reply. “He’ll probably figure it out about the time he’s lookingh for it to send it here.”

The leader look to Rigel hopefully as the lord thought it over. Rita chuckled. “He’s right, Rye – a new castle gets priority.”

“Sure, if our two new vassals don’t have cranes already”, Rigel countered. He looked at the worried man. “So you’re still in trouble. Next time, ask first. For now... you’re on latrine duty – check in at the top of the hill. You’re to do at least half the work on any new latrines that have to be dug for a ten-day.” Remaining silent, the leader touched his knuckles to his head in acknowledgment.


It was four more days before the “supplies” arrived: stone-cutting tools, with a full team to use them; masons, with a wagon-load of mortar mix; a real kitchen crew with a cook-wagon; and carpenters. “The young ones will do for running and fetching, the cook’s sister declared to Rigel. Out of the social pattern, the cook was a young Celt with obvious Quistador blood.. That didn’t bother Rigel; what made him do a double-take was that the cook’s first assistant could almost have been the cook’s twin, save for the near-albino blonde hair color – and they were holding hands. He didn’t have to turn to see Austin’s grin, or to guess where they’d likely be sleeping that night.

“If it works, it works”, he answered noncommitally. “I hope you don’t mind spending a pair of nights in your tents or in shared quarters, because that’s all there is. But two nights more, and we’re leaving – you’ll have plenty of room, then.”



Anaph smiled. The plank road was uneven, but so was forest floor, even where there were trails. It made much firmer footing, which let a man leave walking to his reflexes, which freed his mind for conversation – and lessons. The straight course cut off several days of travel – not that he and his companions took them; they turned off every time there was a village near, to spend a day in other company than their own.

Now he saw the feature that told him the journey was almost over: straight ahead, far enough to be just discernable – though to one of his escort with the Scout talent, it was plain as day – was the opening to the tunnel that led to Devon’s Mills, or rather would when finished; he doubted Devon had finished it quite yet.

But when they reached that passage, he found he was wrong, in a sense: a passage had been completed, but it hardly counted as a real tunnel, since it was only wide enough for a man with burdens, and two-way only because of frequent wide spots. Those were just large enough for three people at once, so he divided his escort into threes, spaced ten meters apart in case anyone was coming the other way.

Two meters in, he paused, a thought occurring. There was silver here, not enough to be mined, but it could serve another purpose, and there were bacteria in the rock, evident by a very faint glow others might have seen if they had no light. “Wait”, he said simply, then walked back to the point where the tunnel first narrowed to the width meant to go all the way. He concentrated... shuffled backward... reached out, humming to his fellow life-forms... set his staff in front of him, choosing the spot carefully.... A momentary shimmer occurred across the opening. The Druid smiled again, picked up his staff and stepped back. The wind still blew, but here only as a wisp of its outside self, now.

“Lots better”, he stated, satisfied. As a side effect, the colonies of bacteria in the rock would multiply, especially at the surface where the new life-energy membrane touched, but that couldn’t be helped. It wouldn’t bother the rock itself for decades, anyway, or the structure for... millennia, he guessed.


The young man sighed in relief as they emerged from the narrow passage into a much larger space where teams were chipping away at the rock, pushing the tunnel along. The Druid leaning on his shoulder smelled the same thing he did: roasting rabbit. “Druid Anaph, rest here – I’ll bring some.”

Anaph leaned on his staff and watched his pupil sprint toward the aroma’s source. Keeping light for all of them had meant making light sticks – twenty-four light sticks, which had tired him more than he’d expected. To get that many, he’d had to essentially call a new staff from an oak, then divide it. It reminded him he’d been neglecting his practice, just as he’d once neglected homework – when he’d bothered with school. But in only a handful of seconds he felt a tap on his shoulder and then a bump against his calves; one of his devoted escort had brought a camp seat. Nearby, other seats were unfolding, but they all waited on him, so he sat.

I feel old, Anaph thought. They act like I’m old. Maybe I overdid it.... But his Druid senses told him that his body, though aged in appearance from his natural years, was in reality younger than it should have been.

His pupil returned and handed him a rabbit quarter. It had been a big, healthy animal; Anaph thanked the spirit of his departed.... brother, he sensed – then licked the surface to test the temperature. Still too hot, was his judgment. He looked up at his pupil then.

“You’re going to have to pick a name, you know”, he said. “You’ve accepted your calling – but we can’t make a king without a name.”

“It’s a long time till Solstice”, came the sober reply. “The name will come.” The bitter flippancy of days past was gone without trace.

Anaph looked south. Far away, Hedraing looked up and turned north at the attention. He sensed approval of his decision, and went seeking Rigel.

When the rabbit bones were ready to be returned to Nature, Anaph rose – it was time to be seeking Ryan.




logcabin.jpg
 
Updates on a couple more fronts.
Poor Celts come to help settle the new Hot Springs Semifore Tower and Castle - you "appropriate" some as yet uncommitted tools for the cause and, what thanks do you get?

Building Latrine Duty. At least it just BUILDING latrines, and not cleaning them, lol.

But the good Lord Rigel has to set an example, much though the equipment is needed and well received, our errant man should have sought Lord Ryan - or at least Engineer Devon - but I guess he's off tunnel building, isn't he?

Hedraing has certainly learned the tricks of the trade. I presume the compost is of enhanced decomposition plant and animal material, not so much his own personal solid effluence, as was the "watering" and the later "heavy watering", lol.

Thanks for keeping us posted and updated as you work through your PC conversion issues, and other activities, like waxing poetic, lol.

I was sleepy and now I'm awake, but it's late and work comes early, so I must have needs find sleep.
..| :wave: ;)
 
Great to have Anaph back in the story! And, traveling with a "Student Druid" yet to become "King"? Interesting! (Or, did I get that wrong?) :confused:

And, Oz's confirmation as "Lord" on hold? I'm sensing a very Big Solstice coming! (!w!)

Hedraing's standing staff ... Awesome! Everyone's "powers" growing, becoming stronger, more evident ... a building, maturing, of ALL coming into their own! ..|

Good to know that Austin, Titie, and "animal", are safe, and well! Uh ... is "the cook", with the blonde sister, Male, perhaps? (!)

Many "unfoldings" here, Kuli!! (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Hey, Chaz,
Don't you remember our "Out of House" prince of two clans - Scandanavian and Scot(?) who has MANY gifts, and is going to be one hellaciously formidable man when he gets the proper training and comes into his full magnificence?

You, know, the one who was chopping trees down with his sword so he didn't kill some ass holes.

His father "wintered" with the Norse clan, and sired him, a bastard son.
And, Daddy dearest was leading the meeting of the Clans that Anaph attended at the end.

See - I'm not completely losing it!

Oh, and I think you need to read a bit more closely before making any suppositions - I recall a Blonde Cooke and the almost identical except for silver haired(?) assistant holding hands - and Anaph's HUGE grin at the sight. I DON'T remember reading that the Blonde was of the feminine persuasion, however.

I suppose I'm going to have to go back and double check later tonight, when I have time, since I may be all wet! lol
:wave: :D (*8*)
 
I'm not sure what Anaph did to the rock.

Things are moving fast. Maybe we'll see action against the Others in the next few eps?
 
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