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Fit for Life

Some modern Christians who want to get away from the male-oriented language of the Bible simply call the three persons of the Trinity Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer.

(Yeah, Jesus was male, but he was an avatar (in the ancient sense) of the Redeemer, not the Redeemer Itself.)

Putting a little Lutheran catechism in, eh? Just remember that theology is a spice, not a staple, in a story.

No one's mentioned the Others in forever. Aren't they what this is all about? Wouldn't the Cofradia also support efforts to rid the world of them?
 
Kuli,
I didn't get out to "lunch" until 4:30, and had to pick my daughter up w/ twisted ankle, so I didn't get to post this when I wanted to.

First, a quick note to Críostóir - I appreciate that you are not a Christian, but I think Kuli's done a great job of trying to bring a reasoned, balanced overview with the hope of marrying slightly different aspects of Christianity (Lutheran, Roman Catholic, and Eastern Rite), with a minor seasoning of a "Christian Islam", and a healthy dose of the ancient religion of the Celts as presented with Druids and standing stones. He has melded a much more "WWJD" version of Religion with questions of social import vis a vis sexuality and political heirarchies.

I don't think he is pushing religion, but religious differences and, especially intolerance, are key parts of the story line. I think his Q&A discourse between Lord Oran and Brother Dismas is extremely believable, as well as important to the story.

Kuli,
I love the way religion/theology is such a large part of your story.
Didn't I just get back from mass a few hours ago? lol Well, it's been almost twelve more since I wrote most of these words.

The Nicene Creed, according to the Roman Catholic Church is phrased
"One Holy, catholic, and apostolic church"
vs. your
"One universal and apostolic church"
Note the lower case "c" on catholic - because Universal IS what it means.
I think too many people don't understand that. I know I didn't until well into my adult years. If they taught it in CCD classes, I don't remember it.

What's interesting is Brother Dismas' statement about all that he has already learned/heard, and he hasn't event met don Antonio de la Vega.

What the "good" brother doesn't understand is that some of the stations are a result of the luck of the genetic draw as much as experience and earned rank.
Antonio was hispanic, and fluent in la lingua propria. He met the needs of the charade. Is Oran any less qualified for the station of "don" than Antonio? Oran has the Ranger Spark, and that serves a slightly different, but no less important, calling. Then, again, he does recognize him as "Lord Oran" so, perhaps there is not such a distinction, only the knowledge that don Antonio is the force to be reckoned with in the immediate environs ~ with a suspicion that don de la Vega is subordinate to some even greater noble. (Which has been neither confirmed nor denied, merely had the premise questioned back.)

At least Dismas is not a fanatic; he is a keeper of the faith, but I think he also sees the validity in Oran's statements, as witnessed by his laugh at the "And if the church doesn't agree, they need to repent and get it right." Coupled with the admonishment of "Lord Oran, if you want the church to make war on you, that declaration would do it." There was no abject terror there; it was an acknowledgment of the divergent path and the great power in that distinction - AND these unknown's apparent willingness, no, Ardor and Zeal in preparing to "enlighten" the masses AND the church heirarchy.

I think Lord Oran has done well in activating Brother Dismas' synapses in a cautious but receptive manner. Will the rest of the cofradia think likewise?

And, not to be missed - the changing roadways due to some undulating nature of the land?

Oh, and the enlightenment to Eemee of the powers of the Valley of Horses, and surrounds - while trying to keep that more than a bit quiet as far as Brother Dismas is concerned.

The whole juxtaposition of knowledge and what's ordinary vs. exceptional.

It was a nice, Monday morning treat!
:=D: ..|
 
Bring it on - I can read it tomorrow.
Heading on up now - can't keep my eyes open.
 

142
Summons


They’d been watching the ship beat across the wind for an hour and a half, without a glass, just to relieve the boredom. Watching one new stone placed atop two already in place was exciting only for so long. The foundation across the low parts of the peninsula was done; where the trench for foundations looked down on the land beyond, work went on but at a greatly slower pace: Lord MacNeil had decreed, and Lord Sidmuth concurred, that it was better to have something to defend all the way across rather than a foundation all the way. Now Senior Chief Engineer Granger oversaw the widening of the foundation and, more importantly, the beginning of the wall’s rising. There’d been no argument about where to start: there would be gate fortresses, and there would be land’s-edge fortresses, but unless the landing area was secure, the rest was irrelevant. So where on the water the shell of the Eagle And soaked up the force of small waves under the strict eyes of Captain (field promotion) Shaughnessey, on the shore nearby the beginnings of an outer wall rose under equally strict eyes.

High enough up where they could watch both, Kevin, Earl Dennishire sat with Percival Sidmuth, Grand Earl Wenham. Their perch was the first structure actually completed, though it was crude, by necessity: a lighthouse. From that vantage they could see another bit of steady activity, two longboats going back and forth across the new inlet, following a strict grid, taking soundings once every meter. Lord Howe, as senior captain in command of the small flotilla, had ordered that he wanted every lump and bump, ridge and rill, charted before he would call it a harbor – and if it lacked the depths he wanted, dredging would follow.

It had quickly become evident that dredging would be necessary, but there was so much debris the crews had combined the two processes, dredging and debris removal: instead of raising debris, it was dragged, gouging and loosening the cove bottom; where charting had revealed ridges or rises, charges were set by divers and the debris dragged across the blast area. It took only three days for Kevin MacNeil to realize that the current here wasn’t carrying the dredgings or debris away, so he’d ordered it scraped together to build an island. Angus O’Rourke had stepped in to take charge of that, so his crew were getting more exercise than anyone, kedging the Reginald from one position to another before dragging the latest log or boulder or giant splinter of rock to just the spot he wanted. The service ship captain had even earned the compliments of Jeffrays Granger: thinking ahead, he began by dragging the largest debris into a shield against the current, letting just enough flow around the end to flush the cove of murk and trash. Building against that, he now had begun giving his slapped-together bulwark a surface of crushed and broke rock. Kevin guessed he’d be needing–

“O’Rourke’s signaling”, their midshipman-servant of the moment called. Kevin turned his attention that way, though Sidmuth kept watching the very distant but approaching ship – they had a bet on, so someone had to watch it.

Kevin used his glass; Angus was terrible with signal flags and so preferred hand sign. When he could see his old friend’s chest, he waved. At that signal, O’Rourke began. “Barrier... wall.. one... meter... under... surface... need... stone... covering.” That was it, so, sporting a wide grin, Kevin covered the lens and thought a moment.

“Midshipman, message for the Engineer: my compliments, and he can call on any idle hands to begin delivering scrap rock to captain O’Rourke. Repeat that back.” His words came back as he’d spoken them, save for the change from “my compliments” to “His Lordship’s compliments”. “Excellent. Run it fast, and you can have a swim.” He didn’t understand how the middies could swim in that water, even if there was a heat source somewhere near and the sun was bright.

“Yes, sir!” the young junior officer cried. Kevin wasn’t sure his offer been a good idea, as he watched the midshipman race down the rough, steep stone face like a drunken mountain goat. He made a mental note to ask Earl Rigel, Lord Fitzwin – and Ard Righ, he whispered to himself. Sidmuth heard the sound, but not the word; it earned Kevin a glance.

They went back to watching; the ship showed no sign yet of what it might bring. It was a frigate, a standard patrol version, and at its present range they couldn’t judge its identity; detailed features just couldn’t be distinguished. There had been no point placing a bet on it; Lord Percival hadn’t spent a day on a ship except passenger runs since his obligatory Fleet service, while Kevin had been back and forth across the realm on nearly every ship the Navy had – the ones smaller than a full ship of the line, anyway. Most of the time, Percival Sidmuth wouldn’t even have a guess at a vessel’s identity until he read the name on the bow, and he knew it.

But they could bet on what a ship brought. An officer in Her Majesty’s service could face severe penalties for gambling for any serious stakes, so they’d come up with a medium that was quite intangible indeed: the right to decide what to do with a portion of the land on the peninsula. After agreeing on what should be set aside for the Navy, Marines, Royal Foot, and other entities essential to the settlement’s function, and then merchants and the church, they’d assigned themselves each fifty thousand square meters to bet with. So far, Sidmuth was ahead, though by less than five hundred squares. There was even a kitty for when both were wrong, a fund assigned to Chief Engineer Granger. Since it was still empty, they hadn’t told him.

“Coming about again”, Kevin noted. “Curse this contrary wind.”

“We could send out a line to tow her”, suggested Percival.

Kevin snorted disgustedly. “We’d need half the manpower here – we have no big capstans mounted on shore, not even a good quay to set one on.”

Sidmuth chuckled. “I didn’t say it was a good idea.”

“For an old fossil, you’re getting a fair sense of humor”, Kevin responded with a chuckle of his own. “Bloody – this is so slow I’m almost ready to bet on when we’ll be able to read signals!”


Their midshipman returned with a replacement and a request for five of his fellows to join him. Kevin granted it – “But find something useful to do while you’re there”, he added.

“Five squares says the lad can’t find anything”, Sidmuth said the moment the midshipman was gone.

Kevin didn’t pause to think. “I think I know this midshipman – he’ll figure out something useful.” Or turn himself in for discipline, he added mentally.

It was a bet Kevin won: not a minute into their swim, one of the lads came limping back to shore, complaining. ‘Their’ midshipman called a sailor, and gave crisp orders; within another minute, the obstacle was marked. Two minutes after, another was marked, but it wasn’t until the third that the boy got inspired: he made it a competition to find and mark obstacles. When they finally succumbed to the chill of the waters and clustered around one of the shore fires, the area they’d been in sported a whole field of bobbing chunks of firewood.

“Enterprising”, Sidmuth remarked. “He certainly earned your five squares. Mark that one!”

“Already have”, MacNeil replied. “Or I wouldn’t have bet.”

Percival gave him a sour look. “Already anchored, were you?”

“Not truly, but the chain was loose.”

A nod answered that. “Still sporting, then. What, ho! Penants!” Their attention turned to the ship, and Kevin reached for his glass – only to find his fellow lazy lord had it. “Marines”, Sidmuth reported, “four companies....” He handed the glass over. “I can’t read the next.

“Ponies to follow”, MacNeil read. “Companion ship.” Seeing that, he looked farther, scanning carefully. “There! She’s not alone!”

Percival’s eyesight wasn’t as good, but after half a minute he found it. “Not keeping good station, for a pair”, he observed. “But close enough, I suppose, for our purposes.”

“Dispatches”, Kevin was reading from the closer ship’s signals. “One for you, one for me – tie. Wait – something else is going up!”

“Dispatches for the Queen’s Bride’s Spokesman do not rate”, Sidmuth reminded him.

“As agreed. What, here? The new one’s going to the top! Hardly sporting”, Kevin trailed off.

“Word of our bets has been passed, I suspect”, Lord Sidmuth ventured. “And this last pennant?”

“St. Michael, escort” – Kevin stomped his foot; the officer was trampling custom just to frustrate them... the escort should be given after their principal! – “Herald’s Guild, Crown’s business”. He let the glass swing down and dangle as he turned to face Sidmuth. “That’s not for me”, he whispered. “Crown’s business.... what?”

“I think I know”, came the reply a handful of seconds later. “But I venture no bets on such a thing – it would lack dignity.” He stood. “Come – we ought greet them well.” By “well”, MacNeil knew his fellow lord meant “field formal”. That meant a bath, oils, clean undergarments, and his best uniform. That meant...

“Midshipman, claim that fire”, he ordered. “Baths, for Lord Sidmuth, myself and... pick a dozen men who can stand straight and hold rifles.” It wasn’t a specific order, but midshipmen were officers and had to learn to handle ambiguous situations sometime. With men being assigned and reassigned, swapped and bargained, Kevin had no idea what Marines or seamen or stoneworkers or anyone else were working or not, or where. But midshipmen were expected to run, and as their attendant this one outranked the others, so he confidently expected that before he was dry enough for a clean pair of socks – the idea seemed sinfully luxurious – there would be a dozen men in good uniforms with clean rifles, smelling of bath oils, ready to stand smartly in reception of a guild Herald.


“I am what?” Shaugnessey demanded irritably, though he’d heard clearly enough the first time.

“Summoned to Far Londinium, along with Grand Earl Wenham and myself, Earl Dennishire”, Kevin replied calmly. “‘Immediately and without delay’, are the orders.
“Aaron, your first leftenant can handle the work. And you’re also required” – he looked down and read from the copy the herald had given him – “to stand honor guard over the body of Leftenant Kevin Aidan Cathal Shaugnessey, as am I and Grand Earl Wenham.”

“He was no leftenant.”

“He is now – that’s Her Majesty’s own impression. If she calls him leftentant, he’s a leftenant.”

“There’s no body.”

“There are ashes.” Engineer Granger hadn’t liked giving up the men for the labor of building a quarter-scale replica of the kingdom’s flagship out of lumber from the wreckage and fallen trees off the peninsula, but he’d recognized the right of it as honor due. Every man in the little squadron had attended; most ashore, the rest on ships packed in by the expedient of winching them together. Kevin had officially named the cove Shaugnessey’s Harbor, dedicated by the scattering of a handful of ashes along the beach. “We’ll put the urn in a coffin and bear it back.” MacNeil decided it was time.

“Her Majesty didn’t want you to be unknowing concerning the cause of your summoning”, he told the still-grief-stricken Commander. “Your son is to be honored, you are to be honored. She wishes to set leftenant’s bars on the casket herself – and to pin captain’s pips to your collar.”

That snapped the man out of his obstinate brooding. “Herself? Why should she do such a thing?”

“Because I commended you, and my report credited you with saving four of Her Majesty’s ships.” Shaugnessey lurched to attention at the sound of Lord Howe’s voice. “I won’t hear any protest that the idea was mine – perhaps so, but truth is, I could not have carried it out. You commanded your ship like a god from the epics. Her Majesty ought knight you. And no protests!” he snapped, flinging up a hand. “Captain, you have your orders. You are to carry them out. My lord MacNeil, when do you depart?”

“Half an hour from when I have in hand the last person summoned. I could bring you, if you wish.”

“I was not summoned. I stay with my squadron.”

“Ah – as to that....” This Kevin had kept secret for just this moment; Lord Sidmuth had suggested they’d need the senior captain’s word to get Shaugnessey moving with something other than brewing disgruntlement, and to Kevin it seemed the perfect set-up. “Captain, stand to!” Without a post to be at, it meant “Attention!” It had the desired result: a puzzled officer, cap under his arm, feet wide, formally at ready.
“Her Majesty decided that since we saw fit to give this harbor a name, it must be ready for expanded use. Two ships came; one remains, transferred to your command, and two more are coming. That’s a lot of ships for one Senior Captain, and so...” – he made a show of fumbling – “if you’ll hold still, I’ll pin on the leaves here....”
He stepped back. “Well, damage done, mission accomplished. Commodore, I wish you well in your new command.”

“It was not necessary–“

“For me to pin them on you? Yes, it was; that was in my orders, as Her Majesty’s representative.” He flashed the famous MacNeil grin. “She wrote that she’d heard you prefer not to be at court until, ah certain matters are resolved, but left the decision to me. I left it to you.”

“I was not summoned”, the newly-leafed commodore stated rather stiffly. Stubborn bastard, Kevin thought, like your two brothers. She also hoped you’d choose to stay, because she couldn’t stand another Howe at court – or didn’t know how. Mentally he shook his head at their old lame joke.

“So you said. Well, then, I have a certain young Marine leftenant to collect.” She was energetic and bold enough he thought he’d like to collect her for his bed – if her enjoyment of women was exclusive. But first he had to collect her for the voyage, and then be on his way. Best to send a midshipman, he decided.


“Refit?” Angus asked. “Why a refit? That means I lose her!”

“You’re getting a trade, while she’s done over”, Kevin informed his friend. “Then you can have Reginald back, or another.”

O’Rourke shook his head. “The Wilberforce class is the best for my work; I’ll no trade. What’s in this refit?”

Kevin grinned. “A bit of a change in the rigging, a slightly expanded stern and quarterdeck, a more forward-reaching forecastle.”

Angus frowned. “What’s all that in aid of?”

“More guns, Angus. I know you can keep a secret, so – here’s why, and the why of building this wall on this pitiful peninsula: we’re to be fighting Aliens. I fought them last year. Her Majesty and I believe they’ll be back. So we’re making a place to fight them, a place for them to find us. No more wild patrols all along the shore by Marines; the patrols will be by the Navy.
“The Wilberforce class was made for service. Now that service may mean being able to shoot at Aliens while rescuing men and beasts. But more sure is that it may mean offering fire support to men on this wall.”

Angus nodded. “Aye, a place for dying, you’re buildin’. And my Reginald, she can bear heavy mortars, and slide in where the warships can’t.” He looked wistful for a moment, only a moment.

Kevin chuckled; he’d been saving this, too. “With the new rigging and guns, Reginald will rate as a warship.” He watched his friend’s face as the implications got thought through, and laughed when he saw the destination reached. “You’ll have a commission, Angus.” He laughed harder when O’Rourke began pounding on the ship’s rail.

“Then I’ll be after getting these lazy squids to putting the wind in her, me lad!” Angus exclaimed, and went off shouting commands.

Switching ships, and going to his assigned cabin, Kevin got his own surprise.

“Well, my boy. You appear to have survived without me. And your father sends word.”

Kevin MacNeil knew then that the voyage was going to be a good one. “Alfred, have you tamed the kitchen yet?” he asked.



360098.jpg
 
From previous chapter ...

Young boy "baptising" his new puppy ...

"In the name of The Father, and The Son, and in the hole he goes ..." (Splash!)

Gotta scoot! Will read the latest ... well ... later ...

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Nothing like a quick trip to New Londoninum's realm to check up on Kevin and the lads.

A lot has been happening, as they build their new harbor and prepare to do battle.

Honours paid where due, and commission's too.
 
Aw! "The Brits"! I love this! A wonderful change of pace, and style! :=D: ..|

And, I do believe, though I may be wrong, that it was "our" Brits that started "The Masons" ... a Middle Ages secret sect/guild. Which also reminds me of your mention of "DS9". Didn't Cisco also have to deal with the (Kim) Kardashians? :lol: :slap:

Gotta Scoot! #-o

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
143
Tour

The snow flurry was thinning, but he needed it to hurry if he was to get a look at Oran’s party through the telescope mounted on the wall just for the purpose of watching this approach to the tableland. It was a major advantage over the Mark I eyeball, but both shared the limitation of not seeing through objects such as trees. There was a ridge in the way, too, and he gave thought to having it shaved off; there was no point in leaving any enemy a bit of cover to hide behind. Eyes closed, he tried to review....

“Samson, do we need enough rock that shaving that ridge off would fit the need?”

His new steward, another of their newly-come Yankees, whistled, not quite on-key. It was an odd memory assistant habit, but Antonio didn’t care; the kid could remember everything he heard so long as it integrated somehow with the running of the de la Vega domain. “Trees become charcoal, soil becomes fill or goes back down... there’s that hollow up on the north with the rim you wanted leveled, and the marsh along the road south, so.... It depends a bit on just what it’s made of, but if it’s typical of the west-side formations then it would fill needs for those projects and supply what the Engineers have asked through the end of Spring.” He scratched his right cheek, a nervous habit that announced he was going to amend the statement. “Unless the weather warms early. But there’s another ridge north of it an arrow-shot.”

Antonio nodded. The snow was clear enough – was Oran’s party still there? He had to back away once before remembering that in the cold weather, he needed to hold his breath to keep from fogging the lens. Yes, there was Oran, and that Me– well, the girl Celt who was enough of a Scout to have a cat. He counted the rest as well as he could, but didn’t finish: there was one, almost regal in bearing to his eye, that his three reports had mentioned. From the Quistadors, a sort of secret agent, just showed up and joined the group, was all he knew; he didn’t trust much more than observable information to riders, just to keep the habit. For nowhere near the first time, he wished for radios, even monstrous ones like in the movie Saving Private Ryan: the semaphore system was great for places it reached, but groups moving around here in the shattered geology along the northern border of the Celts couldn’t exactly haul a signal tower and its equipment along – even if the British did it, they weren’t worried about who saw them, but his people were, and even though they wanted to be found and attacked, it had to be by the right people, when they were ready.

“Two hours and they’re here”, he mused out loud. “Screw it – I need a break, and Muskatel could use the exercise. Let’s give them a lordly welcome and see what that does to this secret agent’s mind.”



Ryan leaned back in a chair that not only swivelled, but tilted, and that with hinges so the back tipped even more, and springs to make it upright again. The map filling most of the east wall of his office told a story of how busy he was; the semaphore message pinned to it told of the current object of his thoughts – mostly.

“I had too much to do”, he told the map, “so I was getting worn out trying to lead everywhere at once. Now I have lots of leaders, and I have too much to do getting them settled into their jobs!” He really had no complaint, though; those who’d grasped and gotten on top of projects already running had relieved him of an immense load, enough that he was sleeping an additional hour each night, enough that twice a week now he had lunch with Lucinda just because he could.

And she still wouldn’t let him into her pants! he fumed. By some bizarre quirk, she was allowed to satisfy his needs, but only with her clothes on. At first it had been pleasant enough to ejaculate by getting stroked instead of stroking... then the day after a number of Yankees had started settling in at Wizard’s Tower, one named Blake had walked in on her stroking away and looking frustrated. “There’s another way for that”, the kid – well, he was Ryan’s age, but after the experiences since being Snatched, the newcomers all seemed like kids – had said. “Allow me”, he’d continued, and just like that Lucinda had set back on her heels and Ryan had gotten perhaps the best blow job of his life. His response had amused Lucinda, who’d decided she need to know how to do that. Blake had locked the office, and in the next hour Ryan came five times, three to Blake and two to Lucinda – the second because Blake had scolded her for not swallowing. “If making a mess, one ought to manage it”, he’d admonished, “and besides, it’s good nutrition.” So Lucinda had learned to swallow....

“Antonio”, he said out loud, frowning at the semaphore message, knowing Oran and company should be arriving within an hour or so, “you’d better send a detailed report. I may not be king of the world, but Rigel isn’t here, and I have to know things so I can make decisions.”



Oran was surprised to see Antonio and a dozen other ride halfway down the great ramp to meet them. Two rifle squads sat horse at the top, one on either side, the great gates open as they usually were. He laughed silently at himself for the thought that there should be more banners and definitely trumpets, but no more showed that than the surprise. He allowed himself a pleased smile, which grew to a broad grin as Antonio spurred Muskatel ahead of his escort to come meet him.

“Hey, Scout-man. How was the journey?” Antonio reached out a gloved – no, mailed, Oran noticed, fine links of steel covering the leather – hand and they grasped wrists. It always made Oran feel as though he were in a movie, doing that, but it was starting to be the greeting of choice between the Snatched, and for those they trusted.

“Cold. Sun came up, sun went down, still cold. Did that a few times.” He blew on the fingertips of his right glove, then rubbed them against his chest as though polishing fingernails. “Met someone.” That turned Antonio’s attention to the cofradiador. They examined each other from a distance. Antonio broke that tableau by waving the man over. They grasped hands, a difference not at all lost on Dismas.

“Brother Dismas. You don’t look like a churchman”, Antonio observed.

Dismas turned and stared at Meckayh for a few seconds before she turned away; then he laughed. “I told her you were sending messages ahead”, he explained to Oran, “and she pretended she didn’t know anything about it. Then she said you wouldn’t need to.”

“So you won?” Antonio only barely made it a question.

“A lesson” Oran cut in. “She needs to do better at keeping things... secret.” He grimaced at the word. “Brother Dismas is very good at learning things people don’t want him to know.”

That gave Antonio pause. He looked Dismas over again, wondering how much he wanted to keep secret, anyway. Finally he nodded and turned Muskatel. What he wanted to do was wave the escort back up and back to work, but didn’t really want to have this visitor see them not obey. Instead he made it a quick trot to the top – on stone, a bone-shaking ride. There, the two rifle squads saluted before turning to depart, and the rest of his escort, once those were gone, did the same. Oran’s Scouts and the Riders with them flowed without hesitation or flaw into place as an escort, which was fine; they were essentially full-time at their jobs.

“I am no churchman”, Dismas replied once their escorts had departed. “A faithful son of the Church, however. As, by report, are you.” He nodded to Oran.

Antonio actually grinned. “Oran, you haven’t seen this, either. Come on!” He ratcheted the pace up to a canter and headed up the road toward the manor house, but diverged before they arrived, onto a road Oran didn’t recall – very new, he noted; the gravel surface was still packing down into the crushed rock – ten to fifteen centimeters, over the top of thirty to fifty centimeter material Oran thought of as baby boulders. Apache really didn’t like the footing, so Oran hopped off and ran. Apache matched his rider’s pace, and Muskatel adjusted to Apache, so with Dismas watching bemusedly and Antonio laughing, they continued. The road merged with another, also new, and they topped a small rise.

“Saints and bards!” Oran swore, a phrase he liked and had adopted. To his side, Dismas crossed himself and gave his own oath: “Holy Mary, Mother of God!”, followed by a quieter, “and Joseph, faithful earthly father.”

Antonio stared across the scene where the foundation for what was obviously going to be a cathedral was growing – obviously, because a portable altar already sat where the real thing would be, and a temporary wooden bell tower held a large bronze bell. “The cathedral of All Saints”, he said softly. “It was going to be smaller”, he commented to Oran, “but one of our new Engineers knows some tricks. I asked what if we used steel, too, and he came up with a design that will have steel beams running through the bearing arches.”

“Can we do that?” Oran asked skeptically.

Antonio laughed, also softly. “No. But it will be three years before we need them, and one of his Wizard friends says by then we will.”

Dismas watched workmen easing a huge block into place, but his mind was projecting the implications of Antonio’s words. Something they couldn’t do now, but would be able to when de la Vega had need? What sort of people could look into the future and say, ‘Yes, by St. Jerome’s Day I will be able to do this, though I cannot do it now”?

Oran broke into his thoughts. “It’s not that hard. The Wizards know how already, but they haven’t taught the smiths and craftsmen yet.”

Dismas grinned wryly. “You learn well, Scout. Did your cat friends aid you?”

Oran had to laugh, but did so lightly; laughing out loud seemed disrespectful. “Runner didn’t even come up – he’s down... “ – concentration took some effort; then he pointed – “over there, chasing furry things in the broken rocks.” It looked to him like the closest Runner could be to him but still be below. “So, no – you’ve got me listening to myself and thinking about what you can learn from it. I just listened to Antonio and did the same thing.” A rare impish grin, a bit reminiscent of Casey, came into play. “But it makes my brain hurt.”

“Don Antonio, this cathedral will be grander than any in the Realm. DO you plan a city here?”

Antonio shrugged. “People come here from all over. I’ve got a lot of Celts and a lot of your people, and more keep coming. I figured just in case we ever need it, might as well have it. But that’s not all – over there, where the shops are? That will be a big school for all the children. And the mud pit?” He didn’t bother explaining what that was for; Oran wondered if Dismas knew. “It’s going to be a huge terrarium for growing every kind of plant we know of. And left of it, on the little mound; those are where the people in charge of this live, and that will become the homes for priests and monks and teachers.” He grinned wryly. “Big dreams, but if you don’t dream big, once you reach your dreams you don’t have much.” He let them watch for several minutes, knowing Dismas was estimating everything. For a few moments he entertained the notion of telling how many workers there were doing each thing, but... let him do his own work.

Dinner was a quiet but drawn-out affair. That had been planned already to some extent for welcoming Oran back, and so he could listen to an account of the whole journey. But now Antonio told the staff to pull out the stops and show off what the tableland they were calling Plateau de la Vega could provide. He winced at what it was going to do to the food stores, but there were still deer in the forest, and they would hardly starve, just have a bit more meat in their diets than planned. But that was Samson’s job now, one he was very, very good at it – possibly because he seemed to enjoy it as much as he enjoyed giving blow jobs to the young men who had no partners. That was an oddity among the Yankees; most had partners and stuck with them, even if the bond lasted just a few weeks. On the other hand, Samson was different than most of the Yankees: he was one of three Jewish ones, with a tumultuous background in a Middle East as unsettled as Antonio remembered from news accounts.

That pointed up just how different the two worlds were, Antonio thought once again: in the Yankees’ world, there was no West Bank; the Israeli victory in their 1962 war had been so thorough that the Israeli Northern Command had driven north and bombarded Damascus for an hour just to show they could. The price for withdrawal had been taking all the residents of “Samaria” except any vouched for by Israelis, who wanted to remain. Jordan had offered to take half, if Israel paid for the relocation – not just travel, but places to live when they got there. The Imperial Jewish Foundation had jumped in, under the leadership of one Sydney Balfour who argued that only generosity could bring peace. Conservatives had protested, loudly and obnoxiously, at the next IJF Congress, but Balfour had faced them down simply by reciting entire chapters from the Prophets and the Psalms – chapters about mercy, both God’s and what He expected from His people – until they subsided before his unswervable will.

Similarly, there was no Gaza: The IDF had simply rounded up those inhabitants and asked whether they wanted to live in Egypt or the Sinai. They didn’t get the aid the “Samarians” did, but those who chose to settle in the Sinai were given the same benefits and assistance as those given to new immigrants to Israel, and had more than survived; they’d prospered. For that matter, Israel still held the Sinai, which had begun to blossom: of all things, they bought sewage and food refuse from Egypt, and one square meter at a time used it to turn desert into soil. And on the other end of Israel, to the north, was the Lebanon Protectorate, where government was local but the IDF ruled – but only in matters of foreign affairs and security, foremost among those being Israeli security.

The key to the whole thing was the same that made it possible to water the Negev and Sinai: Israeli scientists, immigrants from Russia and Ethiopia, had made the breakthrough to fusion power. Their first plant had gone into operation in 1989, to provide electricity to a burgeoning population with a very redundant power grid; the item that had swung funding in the Knesset was the secondary product: distilled water, in vast amounts. Just that first plant had provided more water than the largest British desalination plant, and to the Israelis it had been a pilot project; the later ones were five to ten times that size! It was a tale that had sent Ryan into near-rapture, except when he learned that Israel had never shared that technology: the Empire was still grinding away at it – and meanwhile, sucking up Middle Eastern oil, and the enmity of Al Markaz. Ryan wasn’t alone in thinking Israel was being foolish and short-sighted, refusing to admit that merely by licensing the technology they could reduce the tensions in the world.

Instead, terrorists had nuked Toronto, sending “six score and seventeen” gay and lesbian college students into oblivion – except that they’d been found by the Snatcher and dropped here. To Ryan, the tragedy that they hadn’t brought fusion technology seemed greater than the deaths of millions as city after city had flashed into death in a nuclear furnace. But Antonio had to concede that it was practical: he had people here to worry about, and though it was presently out of their reach, fusion as an energy source had to have seemed like the most incredible treasure.

Being a lord taught strange skills: Antonio nattered on in the sort of meaningless chatter that passed for conversation at formal dinners, even as his mind wandered from a steward gorging on an abundant protein source to Rigel’s de facto regent longing for an abundant energy source.

“Mirrors”, Oran was telling Dismas. “Even on a day like this there’s enough sunshine that mirrors can heat water. It doesn’t get the water hot, but it does what we’d need wagon-loads of wood for.”

“Heat from the sun.” Brother Dismas looked like he was on information or conceptual overload; Antonio wondered what else Oran had said, while he himself had been making polite comments. “Always one appreciates the sun’s heat, but has anyone in the Realm ever harnessed it so?”

“It saves a lot of work”, Antonio pointed out, “not just wood. For every load of wood it replaces, that’s a team that doesn’t have to cut and split the wood, and another team that doesn’t have to keep the fire burning to keep the water hot.” As Dismas thought about that, Antonio mouthed to Oran, What have you said? He couldn’t wait for an answer.

“Don Antonio, you could sell this”, Dismas mused. “The wealth... what is needed to build one such system?”

“Iron, copper, wood, and some silver”, Oran added. “I don’t know how much. Antonio?”

Antonio chuckled. “That’s why we have craftsmen.” Understanding dawned, and his respect for Oran rose a notch. “We’d need to know what your craftsmen can do, how much the different metals cost....”

Dismas laughed. “Oh, well played, Scout Oran! Yes, you would need to know such things.” His voice went serious and businesslike. “That is more than I dare reveal on my own – but I will ask my superiors if such information may be traded.”

Oran wasn’t done. “Your cofradia needs money – everyone needs money! Perhaps your superiors would be interested in.... Antonio, I’m not sure how to say it – a monopoly?”

Antonio wasn’t sure where this new Oran had come from, but he was impressed, and wanted to cheer. “I think you mean an exclusive marketing arrangement”, he answered, then turned to Dismas. “We’d make the systems, and your people would be in charge of selling them.” He grinned. “I have people who know how to talk about dividing the profits.”

Oran enjoyed the expression on the cofradiador’s face – it was a better reward than the earlier compliment. The agent had obviously never entertained the thought that the people he went to investigate would offer a partnership that could enrich his cofradia! The response that came was only icing on the cake.

“This....” Dismas shook his head in the most human gesture Oran had seen from him. “In all honesty, Lord Oran, Lord Antonio, you have just changed the game. I have not even the ability to comment on this – but I will present it to my superiors, and I will recommend it.” He gave a warped grin. “If for no other reason, they are likely to accept because it will open the opportunity to put someone such as myself here.”

“A spy, you mean”, Oran commented, jokingly. “But we’d need to send people along to help with the sales, and to put the systems together – so it works both ways.” The Scout turned more serious. “And at least we can trust you not to spread information to our enemies. I’m not sure Antonio trusts any of the traders he works with.”

A grimace and a shrug led Antonio’s response. “True. But that’s why we don’t use many.”

“You work through households you trust, not merchants”, Dismas guessed. He had knowledge that made it fairly certain, but it was still a guess.

“Actually – sort of”, Antonio admitted. “I happened to buy – but you probably know this.”

“The town house in Padillo? Yes. And you sell kitchen items to El Pollo Rojo, and they quietly sell to other inns and tavernas.” Dismas presumed they got information that way, but it was a poor pathway. “I believe there is a connection with La Hoja Brava, also. And in Pueblo Alvarez, La Posada dea Bota Tercera.”

Antonio winced at the corrupted conjunction. “Please – ‘de la Bota Tercera’. Do the people at that end of the Realm shorten things that way a lot? I’ve noticed some in Padillo and nearby, but not like out there.”

Dismas chuckled. “So you deflect my question – but in a way that says ‘yes’. So you sell a few things through a few places. In Padillo, but also in the west – where they indeed ‘shorten things’. To some”, he related, “they are considered nearly barbarians.”

Antonio was tired of the fencing. “Yes, we have a few quiet trade connections. Mostly so far they’ve shown that the things we think we can sell actually will. Those things we’ll keep selling, and probably through the same people, because they served us well in the past and we trust them. So far a half dozen small-load merchants have come looking for us; I let three of them find us” – he grimaced – “and didn’t let one go back until he’d learned a few things. But if your people can help sell sun-mirror heating systems, we’ll be happy to have you. And if there are other things you think might sell, we can talk about that, too.”

“Rifles.” Oran could tell Dismas was teasing; he didn’t think Antonio could.

“Not a chance in hell”, was the reply. Antonio didn’t realize that soon enough he’d be changing his mind.



Morning came as cold as night came early in the winter. It took morning for their visitor to truly appreciate the usefulness of that sun-driven heating system: it heated lots of water, not well enough for a bath, but well enough that a wood fire did the rest in a speed best appreciated when one’s breath was practically freezing on the walls. The baths weren’t private, but he couldn’t have everything. There, he met a young man he’d seen the night before, bustling about keeping things running smoothly.

“I’m Samson.” The intensity of the youth’s scrutiny made Dismas feel quite uncomfortable. He was settling so his chin just touched the bubbly froth on the water’s surface when he realized what that inspection indicated.

“Please keep to your side of the bath”, he requested.

Samson nodded; in this culture, or blend, or turbulent mix, he was getting used to that. He sensed that in this case there was no animosity, just discomfort. From comments and attempted explanations by Ryan and Antonio and others, he knew that the Snatched before them came from a place where they lumped all negative reactions to his sort “homophobia”, which was exceptionally irrational, on par with calling all canines “wolves”. His judgment of Dismas was that there wasn’t any fear present, just the discomfort of lack of experience – calling it a phobia made about as much sense as saying people heading for sex the first time experienced a phobia, when it was just nervousness. Even in the Empire there had been people who’d qualify as “homophobes”; something in their makeup made them actually afraid of people whose yearnings and urges – lusts, too, to be honest – were toward the same sex. He didn’t despise them, as apparently people in Rigel’s world did; if anything, he felt sorry for them as some sort of emotional cripple, with a disorder not much different than agoraphobia. Haters, though, he’d never experienced. The thought made him shudder; the man across from him represented a culture that would burn him at the stake if they caught him. It was one reason he’d chosen to set down with Antonio: he was signing on to a venture that meant to eradicate that, in blood and fire if necessary.

“I don’t bite – in case you’re wondering”, he related softly. The grin he flashed had melted the resistance of many boys attracted mostly to girls. “Unless you ask me to.” A tiny smile tugged one side of Dismas’ face ever so little. “The suds are an excellent idea, you know”, he went on, changing subjects totally. “When the air is so cold, the water cools off fast from the air. The suds are like a blanket – they keep the heat in. That saves wood, and work. It’s also nicer for us.”

Another young man came along. This one had the build of a near-pure Quistador line that had worked hard to maintain as much original Spanish blood as possible. Dismas estimated that as a slave, he could bring three excelentes – then he got a full side view, and decided that the equipment thus displayed, especially as the youth stood on tiptoes and reached to adjust something on the ceiling, would warrant an additional gold casco, depending on the buyer – a certain young viscount he’d once investigated enjoyed frolicking with a male partner and three or four girls.

“How much?” The young man had turned and was staring at Dismas from beneath the small fan he’d tugged down from its hiding place in the ceiling. “You’re estimating my value as a slave, aren’t you? It’s what you people do! So how much?”

Dismas had no reason to not be honest. “I know a buyer who would give me three excelentes and a casco for you. That’s enough to buy a decent house in a good town. You could pass for a Quistador noble – with training to do so, I could get four excelentes. But the reason I could get so much from this buyer – quite a lot more than from others – is that he likes to enjoy himself with well-endowed young men as partners in all manner of possibilities with three or four girls at once. And you plainly have the equipment to make them happy.”

“Farrel”, Samson began.

“It’s okay, Steward.” He grinned wickedly. “I guess you won’t get to try to swallow my ‘equipment’ until later.” Samson thought about telling the truth, that such a thing hadn’t been going to happen, and suddenly was very glad indeed for the suds; his ‘equipment’ was inflating with a vengeance – and he very much wanted to make it happen later!

“I’ve never observed that”, Dismas responded, no hesitation evident. “My profession is observing, and–“ Farrel turned and fled, pursued by the cofradiador’s soft laughter.

“That wasn’t nice”, Samson asserted, without much conviction.

Dismas shrugged. “You were definitely willing. And I spoke truth: I have never witnessed that, not man upon man. It might possibly have been instructive.”

Samson mentally recategorized his fellow bather. “You wouldn’t have been uncomfortable watching? You sure don’t want me close!”

“Two different methods of information gathering, young Steward. Watching and experiencing can be vastly different. I learn a great deal of information without joining the experience. Some of it you would not want to hear; some of it, hearing, you would refuse to believe. Seen against the rest, this would have been interesting and entertaining.”

“I knew you were strange.” Oran dropped his towel without slowing and jumped in just to Samson’s left. “If you were serious about watching... no, I’m not going to volunteer”, he told Samson. “I’ve done it for a good friend in need, but to me sex isn’t merely for pleasure. I try to keep it in perspective, because I don’t want anything to make me think my bride doesn’t measure up, on my wedding night.”

Dismas sat up and favored the Scout with a bow from the waist. “Your chastity commends you, Scout Oran. I believe you speak to describe yourself, not to make claims. That is rare among young men.”

“Too many people in my life made claims that turned out to be shit”, Oran replied, with little trace of the bite his voice had once had concerning the topic. “If I talk like them, what would that make me?”

Dismas had no answer. They sat quietly, soaking heat into chilled bones.

Yet another young man joined them. Oran chuckled, surprising Dismas. “Samson, stop punishing yourself – grab Weylan, and go take care of it.”

Weylan stopped with one foot in the water. “Lord Oran, I’m supposed to wait for Lord Antonio.”

“Samson works fast”, Oran said with a straight face. Samson actually blushed. “Score”, Oran whispered to the Steward. Samson splashed him, turned under water so he climbed out with his back to Dismas. Oran looked him over, a little awed at the long, slender, nearly vertical “equipment”, more than a little envious, and tried once again to imagine wanting one inside him. It was a leap he’d never made – and it suddenly sank in that his reason for it was gone: he’d been trying to imagine it for Austin’s sake, but Austin was no longer alone – and if here, would happily ‘take care’ of Farrel while Samson took care of him – and then probably want to switch. A memory of Austin’s face covered with delight the first time it had really hit that here, everyone he knew thought he was fit for life, and to hell with his father. At that moment, Oran almost made the leap... but, ever so close, it slipped away. “Make sure he gets that all the way down”, he whispered to the Steward, whose eyebrows shot up and tried to crawl under his hair line. Then Samson grinned, more than a hint of gratitude in the look; he reached and grabbed Weylan’s hand and led him out a small arch.

Dismas had watched it all and soaked it up. “No pederast in the Realm would be so bold”, he began. If it hadn’t been for the suds, he would have broken Oran’s tibia out of reflex; as it was, he got him around the neck only after pain erupted in his midsection.
“Scout, I meant no insult. In the Realm, the boldest of those men who prefer males are pederasts – yet they are not even in range of your young men’s boldness!” He grew thoughtful. “I could nearly admire them, for their pride.”

“It’s confidence”, Oran gritted out. “If you value your own ‘equipment’, let me go.” To drive his point home, he twisted suddenly, his elbow stopping just short of adding to the pain between Dismas’ legs. The arm released him.

“We do not share the same world”, Dismas said. “You observe well; for this I assumed too much, and did not think. I would offer amends – except you have already inflicted a penalty.”

Oran’s expression was calm, with traces of interest and acceptance. “Okay”, he said after a minute. “But where I come from –“ He shook his head. “Never mind. They have as much right to be proud of what they are and enjoy as you have to be of what you are, or anyone else. I tried it and found that when things are really bad, it can be comforting, but it’s just not my way.” He caught Dismas’ eyes and held them. “But I have a friend like them, and it is his way – and if you ever make a mistake like that where he can hear, I will kill you.”

“Or if you fail, your cat will.”

Oran grinned crookedly. “Him and about a dozen others. I know, you’d probably kill me if I tried – but some things are worth the risk.”

“Your loyalty commends you.”

“Wrestling in the baths – and before breakfast.” Antonio walked across the floor and joined them. “I trust matters of honor have been settled?” he asked, sliding into the water.

“Something like that”, Oran replied. “What took you so long?”

Antonio shrugged. “Issues – priority on supplies. Samson can handle getting supplies where they need to be; it’s my job to make priority calls.”

“No craft-hall?” Oran inquired.

Antonio shook his head; he was low enough it sent little ripples across the suds. “Not yet. That was a good idea someone had, using the smiths as a model. It works for the Celts just fine, but I’m not sure it will with Quistadors.” He looked over at Dismas. “What we mean is that among the Celts, the supply of some things isn’t up to the chiefs, but to the craft people. The smiths is a great example: they know how much ore can be had, how much they can turn to iron, how much each forge can use. The chiefs tell them what the clans need, and the smiths do the work of spreading it around in the best way. We’re trying to get that to work with lumber and rock.” He let out a deep sigh.
“Anyway, Oran, you’re on the hot seat – I’ve got some things to deal with.
“Sorry, Brother Dismas, but I’m a working lord; my time isn’t always my own. Oran and Samson can take you for a tour. Go anywhere you want, except places guarded by people with rifles, or inside any buildings without asking. Now, while it’s still before breakfast, is there anything else about me you’d like to know?”

“Are these youths slaves?”

Antonio’s face grew dark. “No. Slavery is an offense against God. To clain ownership of the image of God is blasphemy.”

Dismas’ eyebrows rose. “There is a debate you could have with some bishops.”

“It would distract them from other things”, Oran suggested, guessing that to be Dismas’ intent.

The lord of the manor snorted. “A tactic. I’m serious: to own slaves is to blaspheme.” No one ventured agreement or disagreement. “Breakfast will be ready soon. Anything else?”

Dismas didn’t hesitate. “In truth, yes: have you a wife?”

Oran grinned; Antonio looked wistful. “I have an intended. Her mother is willing, and the girl hasn’t told me to go away.”

Samson came scooting back across the floor and into the water. “Tell him your dream”, he urged with a grin.

Grin answered grin. “It’s silly”, Antonio conceded, “but I want us to be the first married in the cathedral when it’s done.”

Dismas smiled. “That gives you a schedule. She lives here?”

“No”, Antonio replied. “North of here.”

“A House alliance?” Dismas wondered.

Antonio shrugged. “Can’t hurt me, can it? But the point is – she fills up my soul.” With that he slipped under the suds for over a minute.



“Did you disappoint any stable boys?” Oran teased. Samson had ducked in and back out of the warmed watch-room of the stables quickly, grabbing an extra blanket for each horse. Vincent caught his gladly; he was quite a southern Yankee, and the blanket went across his lap. Dismas draped his across his lower back, while Oran tucked his into a cargo loop on Apache’s saddle.

“Saving the suction for someone special”, Samson quipped, blowing Oran a kiss as he slapped blanket on saddle and himself on the blanket. Wisely, Oran said nothing.

Setting out, Oran rode beside Dismas, letting the man observe. It wouldn’t have been his choice, but Antonio wanted him to see whatever he wanted. From the manor they circled, passing watch tower, castle, and watch tower before reaching the rim. Dismas reigned in by the telescope mounted for watching. At the moment it was tipped upright and covered; Oran was glad when he got no questions about it. A third of a minute passed before they moved on.

Oran didn’t remember which castle was which, here; all belonged to former Quistadors sworn to Antonio, and that was enough for him. But Dismas had questions anyway, at the third one, which was actively under construction . “Lord de la Vega said he holds no slaves.” The cause of his puzzlement was plain to see: two dozen workmen, all of Quistador heritage, labored in chains. All were watched by two Riders and what could only have been a knight – a caballero.

“They’re not slaves.” Inspiration landed softly. “Samson, you’re the Steward....?”

The Yankee was as ready for this as he had been in the bath. “Actually, Brother Dismas, they’re part of our solution to slavery – those men are slavers. Almost all the men you see working are slavers, if they’re Quistador. The sets in chains are under punishment; the ones in shackles are men who would not swear loyalty to don Antonio or to any of his caballeros; those with double shackles didn’t swear, but also while here they’ve committed a crime – stealing someone else’s food, mostly, but fighting, or damaging property.
“The ones not in chains have sworn loyalty, but have penalties to work off. When they finish that time, they can go free, or continue working to earn silver or land.”

Oran guessed one place Dismas’ thoughts might be going. “We don’t use the lash, or pillory. And leaving a man sitting in a hole eating food and not being useful is something we can’t afford. Anyone who commits a crime is going to pay a penalty in hard work.”

“Efficient”, Dismas observed softly. “Of course. Might I see some who have finished their... penalty time?”

Samson might have been embarrassed; he didn’t show it. “The minimum penalty for a slaver is three years, Brother. Even the caballeros are under the penalty, and none has been here so long.”

“There are a few exceptions”, Oran commented. “Some came at others’ orders; their time was shorter, and one came because he saw no other way to get money to save his family.”

Storm clouds had nothing on the darkness on the cofradiador’s brow. “One Count especially does this, driving those he dislikes into poverty. At least once he has used cofradia to lure them into slaving – but truly into a trap.”

“We saved one of them”, Samson recounted. “I’m not saying names, but they were east of here. A Scout – Scout Oran, is there a Scout Owen?”

Oran nodded. “He works with the border clans.”

“Then he was the one”, Samson said with a nod, then turned back to Dismas. “Scout Owen thought something was odd, and sent his partner to give the alarm. The custom is for the Scouts to work as a pair, but he thought this important.
“He was right: when the slavers paused, their ‘guide’ went ahead as though to scout the way, but then headed down a fair game path. Scout Owen was much faster”, he related with a grin; since he’d seen just how fast Oran and Casey could move in the woods, Dismas grinned along, “so he went to see what this guide sought. It was a party of Celts, renegades. Owen guessed they didn’t know exactly when this guide was supposed to tell them their prey was near, so he captured the guide and hid him.
“When his partner returned, it was with twenty-six Celts” – as his grin broadened, Oran suddenly knew what was coming – “and two dozen Riders, with rifles. They first faced the renegades, and after three who tried to escape were dragged back bound, unconscious, or dead, they surrendered. Then Owen led the Riders to meet the slavers. When his guess of treachery was confirmed, he offered them don Antonio’s welcome. They live now on Mesa de la Vega, as free men.”

“And the renegade Celts?” DIsmas inquired, curious.

Samson shrugged as though it meant nothing to him. “Some metals are harder to get from the earth than others. Some mines are more dangerous than others. The minecraft hall has them – two years, I think.”

Dismas shook his head. “And the rest of these men? Those from the Realm?” His expression grew puzzled as Oran shook his head.

“They’re slavers, Dismas. I know, the Celts used to kill slavers that they caught. Now, they don’t. We pay them for captured slavers – in rifles. We Scouts taught them ways to keep watch so there’s warning. We have Riders along the border to help, like they did with Owen. Not many slavers die any more – but none get back home, at least not on this part of the border.”

“Almost the whole border”, Samson informed him. “It’s not a total seal, but the clans have all decided that rifles are better than blood.” He turned to Dismas. “Over three hundred slavers live here, and four score free men. Don Antonio has five sworn caballeros on the plateau.” Dismas had already seen that there were five castles, besides the one near the entry ramp.

“They stay, while their families suffer?!”

Oran laughed. “Their families don’t suffer – how many are here, Samson?”

“Over half. The ones from farther north are hard, but there are ways.”

Dismas closed his eyes and sighed. “The thieves. There sat Esteban before my eyes, and all I saw was a little agent of a small effort to protect a bishop!” He directed his question at Oran. “You have thieves working to smuggle out these families, do you not?”

“It’s better than letting them suffer”, Oran responded. “And it shows them a different world – one where slavery doesn’t pay, and isn’t needed, one where a lord is expected to take care of his people, one where if a village is in danger, people get together and go help them.”

“And get paid in rifles.” Dismas groaned softly. “Lord Oran, you give rifles to the Celts – they will begin raiding the Realm!”

Oran laughed. “No, they won’t – it’s part of the deal. Any clan that breaks it gets no more rifles and no more ammunition for the ones they have, and the smiths won’t repair the rifles they do have.”

“It’s a war of the mind”, Samson explained. “Slavers march south – and don’t return. Where did they go? What happened to them? And the Celts remain in their places, so that the only answer from the south is silence. Silence can be very frightening.”

“But the families disappear....” Dismas shuddered just enough that Scout senses caught it. “That makes the mystery worse: the men marched off to get slaves, and they didn’t come back, and their families vanish into the silence, too.” He pinned Oran with his gaze. “And when the Realm is frightened enough, what then?”

Now Oran shrugged. “Hopefully, they stop trying to come capture slaves – that’s the deal with the clans: we’re just going to stop it. Some chieftains wanted to turn Quistadors into slaves... well, they’re not Christians, but they believe in the LifeGiver, and they’re pretty convinced that it’s an insult to the LifeGiver for a human to own a human. And their king sees the vanishing slaver business as a huge joke.
“So you don’t have to worry about that. Quistadors won’t be getting any more slaves from the Celts. And as long as they don’t send any big armies to try to change that, the Celts will leave them alone.” He recalled something from Artur’s king-making. “In fact, it would take a pretty big army to have a chance, now. Maybe you ought to pass that on to your superiors, Dismas: they could send an army of two hundred and I bet it would just vanish like the little ones.”

Dismas turned and rode back to the edge of the tableland, this time picking a high point. His manner was cold, pure business, when Oran caught up. Dismas pointed to a defile leading down the slope, and then a cleft, and what from below had looked a canyon. “You mean to be attacked! You mean to stir up the Realm, and draw them here to be slaughtered!” The intensity of the accusation drove Oran back a step in reflex; he tripped and fell into Samson’s arms.

“You’re close, but not on target”, another voice said before Oran had recovered himself. “There is one thing in the Realm we hate. Antonio hated it first, and his friends, and now scores of us who have come from afar hate it.
“Brother Dismas, look at Samson, and tell me what you see. Ah, you will not say it?”

“A lover of men”, Dismas stated, then started. “And you also”, he said to Vincent. His eyes went a little distant. “And Farrel, and Weylan! Lord Oran, how many of you....?”

“How many is the wrong question, asker-of-questions. Tell me”, Vincent demanded softly, “When Samson chooses a life mate, and it is another young man, if this was known in the Realm – who would speak on the matter?”

“The Inquisition.” Dismas saw the pieces fall into place. Seen this way, as a plan made by men who loved other men, by them and by their friends, even Theodoro was only a piece – and so was all the rest: town houses, trade, even stopping the slaving, it all aimed at the one thing. “Holy saints, aid us! You mean to anger the Inquisition beyond reason, and draw them here!” Out of long habit, he hesitated.
“But Lord Oran, you do not know how many they can summon! Even these lanes of death cannot be enough!”

Oran shuddered at the thought of all the death they’d planned. “The best guess is they’ll send four hundred against an upstart back-country lord. A hundred will be Inquisitors themselves. The rest will be elite butchers, men who delight in causing harm and suffering. They’ll think they don’t need to look around, because God is on their side.” He hopped up on the wall – that didn’t look like a wall, from outside – and pointed. “That nice meadow there, it’s an inviting camp, don’t you think? We made it that way – cut the trees, got rid of the stumps, raised it above the rest so it’s dry, then off to the side there’s a whole bunch of fallen trees, great stuff for camp fires. And from there, the places you pointed to look like fantastic places to attack – and we’ll let them think that, seeing how many we can kill before they’re going to figure it out... and then we kill everyone in them. That’s when we let them know we have horses – see over there? Horsemen charge down, fire off arrows, and run away. They’ll think, if horses came down, we can go up. And the Inquisitor in charge will be crazy-angry, and send the whole army up.”
He looked Dismas square in the eye. “And then they die. That’s one big trap. These are just the appetizers.”

“The entire army will disappear, and I don’t just mean it won’t go back”, Samson explained. “Once the battle is done, we’ll clean up everything, make sure there’s no trace at all that any army ever came here. Every arrowhead, every boot, every glove, even every bullet we can find, will be picked up and hauled up here. It will all look nice and peaceful, like nothing at all happened.”
Now Antonio’s Stewards eyes went distant. “If we’re really lucky, we’ll have a man or two still alive, but unconscious. We’ll keep them unconscious while we clean everything up, and then carefully put them back where they fell, and let them wake up.”

The cofradiador’s expression was a mix of horror, dismay – and sheer admiration. “And those men will go back to the Realm, with a tale of mystery and magic, and – Lord Oran, do you have any idea what will happen next?!”

Scout Two shrugged; he was enjoying Runner’s game of “almost catch the rabbit” far below. “Well, we hope they’ll slap together an army of every Inquisitor soldier they have left, summon all the Inquisitors who can walk, hire every piece of slime and bitterness on two feet in the Realm, borrow a bunch of the most vicious soldiers from all the Counts, and come racing back here – oh, with stakes for burning people, and all that. We’re sorta hoping for an army of two thousand or so. This time they’ll probably look around a little more, and find some more of the fake ways to the top and the inviting traps. I’ve got a bet with a friend that we can kill half the army before they get smart and – something bothering you?”

Dismas was staring. “You truly believe you can stop an army of two thousand?!”

Oran grinned. “Remember what you said about a thousand men on horses, with rifles, trained?” he asked gently. “They’ll be here – and more. There are weapons I haven’t mentioned and you’re not going to get to see, and there are warriors and soldiers you might be able to imagine but the Inquisitors won’t. Yeah, I think we can handle two thousand, and still take a bath in the morning. Three thousand would be work. Four thousand – well, I suppose Antonio knows the plans for that; I haven’t been around that much. But unless they bring an army of five thousand or more, I’ll bet all the gold I have they won’t even get a foothold on top.”

Dismas said nothing.

“He speaks truth, Brother observer”, Samson declared, almost conversationally. “I know things Oran doesn’t, and they scare me. I have a question, though: these will all be men who believe deep in their hearts that I and all like me and probably my friends should die burning on a stake. What possible reason is there in this or any other universe that I should consider such men fit for life?”



Picture-172-e1281075153788.jpeg
 
Fit for Life? Good question! :=D:

Aw! Sky Clad in the baths, with suds for "concealment", and, yet, letting all be seen, and "known". (!)

Why are we raised to be fearful of letting ourselves be "revealed"? We are all what we are! Is admitting, and showing, "That" such a travesty? :eek: #-o

Granted ... TMI can be a vulnerability. And, yet, can also be a Strength! Show "IT"! OWN "It"! A "weakness" can be made a trump card! \:/

"Expectations" promoted can become Realities realized! :cool:

It is, after all, our Perceptions that fuel our reactions, and, thus, our Actualities! ..|

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Fit for Life? Good question! :=D:

Aw! Sky Clad in the baths, with suds for "concealment", and, yet, letting all be seen, and "known". (!)

Why are we raised to be fearful of letting ourselves be "revealed"? We are all what we are! Is admitting, and showing, "That" such a travesty? :eek: #-o

Granted ... TMI can be a vulnerability. And, yet, can also be a Strength! Show "IT"! OWN "It"! A "weakness" can be made a trump card! :/

"Expectations" promoted can become Realities realized! :cool:

It is, after all, our Perceptions that fuel our reactions, and, thus, our Actualities! ..|

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

Actually, the suds are there for insulation -- having a few inches of... excuse me, centimeters of lather on top of the water reduces the cooling rate amazingly.

And really, only Dismas cared in the least.
 
At an earlier age, I could understand wanting to keep certain things "secret"! !oops!

Butt, NOW? The most embarrassing thing is my tummy! #-o

All else, including what I may, or may not, "Know", is all "out in the wind"! I've learned, as time has passed, that most "things" don't really matter! (!w!) :-<

Aw! The Freedom of FREEDOM!! :badgrin: ..|

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Kuli,
Wow. Here you are, Brother Dismas. You see what we have allowed you to see, and it frightens you to your boots. But, I think it frightens you with a "scarcely able to believe that 'you' could possibly be that good, that strong" hope.

Could they truly break the Inquistion? Not only break, but utterly destroy, and take the evil element of the civilian authorities with them?

And, Brother Dismas, you don't even have the ultimate goal's picture - the "others" to contend with.

Great chapter, sir.

Oh, yeah, and not a bad public bath's scene, either, lol.
 
On further thought ... Was it "wise" to let Brother Dismas see, and get to know, as much as he has? We still don't know WHO he is working for/with. And, if the plans for "The Trap" get to be known, even inadvertently ...

Dismas has been aided WAY beyond his initial mission. And now I'm wondering if he's making decisions about what to divulge to, and or about, his confradia, or not ...

Looking forward to More!! ..| (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Hi, there, JUB 10K Club Member!

I trust in the infinite wisdom of our guide on our journey - Kuli!
Besides, I think we've seen enough hints of his wonderment and decisions.

Just Sayin' . . .
 

144
Claims


The city of San Tesifón was beautiful in the fresh snow. Miguel Reyes-Ortega felt it might be the last but on of the year; sometimes he was sure he could feel the seasons changing, and this was one of those times. It was early to be looking out on the city, but the message – brought by the messenger who’d left the one set of tracks visible from the study window – had caused a few to be roused. He tried to single out especially large flakes and follow them down while he waited for the Escobar Heir to finish reading.

Osvaldo laughed. “You can’t tell me that if he was starting a town, he wouldn’t call it ‘La Paz’.” He tapped the signature on the parchment. “If De la Torre built it, he’d call it ‘La Torre’, and saints help us! if Delrío built it, he’d remember that it was ‘del Río’ once, and call the town ‘Del Rio’, even though there’s hardly a trickle!” That sent the young lord into laughter again, enough to make the page bringing spiced tea hesitated before dashing forward to place it on the low serving table and discretely flip his lord’s robe closed while positioning it. Osvaldo blinked, sobered, and nodded thanks for the tea.

“Ortega, Jaspar de Medina is as entitled to name his new town after his family’s origins as anyone. If the name ‘Medina’ bothers anyone... let him take it up with de Cadiz – he and Jaspar are shaping that new land in excellent fashion, and if they agree on something, I am not going to object.”

The Regent – and getting quite tired of the office – turned back to the room and his fiery young Heir. “Shaping it as does a smith with raw iron”, he claimed. “Battering it until it yields – and everyone who goes there.” He didn’t mention what Osvaldo had already left unsaid: the big message of this request wasn’t the petty complaint about a name, but that yet another lord had turned to the Heir as the proper authority to settle dispute between Houses. Over the period of the first five weeks after the beginning of the Wall, when it became clear that de Cadiz and de Medina, along with their lesser Houses, fully intended to place themselves between the Foe and the Constant Hills, attitudes among the western lords accustomed to being the defense for all the rest of the Refuge had gone from skepticism to loyalty – and the few holdouts came over when Captain Heueil’s foundry produced its first successful cannon. That it followed four failures made no difference: it was a cannon, one more than Refuge had possessed before, and if it could be done once, it would be done again. But these weren’t border lords, and that meant the example of the west was spreading.

Osvaldo shook his head and slurped some tea. “The Marshal, yes. We expected that. He’s not brilliant, but he is loyal and he is dependable. He can get an idea in his head and pursue it, and that’s exactly what we need on the Wall! At least with him, there’s going to be a wall to show Earl Rigel when he comes” – he grinned – “along with fifteen cannon in their five forts!” That had been a personal triumph, taking the gift Rigel had left and building on it. Most of the work on the Wall had been at those forts, each of which was becoming a castle, each of which would be commanded by a chosen lord from a poor family, raised in station – and responsibilities. That wouldn’t happen until he was confirmed not just Heir, but Lord – which wouldn’t happen until the Council’s team sniffing about to see if any Escobar remained in the north. Of course there weren’t any; it was just stalling – though if his reports from the Rangers could be trusted, and he didn’t see why they shouldn’t; Martin d’Estrada was well on his way to earning spurs in his service, well, some of that stalling was due to lords and caballeros busily covering up things which might anger him should they become known.

Martin himself had brought one of those reports, from Balestra. Livid, he had wanted to use the Rangers to take action. “No”, Osvaldo had ordered, plain and firm. “Leave me a copy of the report. For the files, write only that you found things that could embarrass them.” He didn’t mind having the information, just in case, but he had no intention of dealing out punishment for things learned in secret. And that had become the policy: put the original reports in a secret place – Miguel had charge of them – and officially make note only in the most general terms. Much of what had been learned, he’d never seen, and didn’t want to; he wanted to be able to face his lords as though they were who they were trying hard to appear, and so long as they behaved, he meant to leave it that way. Along the way, he meant to deal with a major cause of much of the mischief: they were too crowded.

Osvaldo turned to look at the great map hanging on its rack; it was on good horse leather, which was heavy, but its size had also been increased: it no longer showed merely the Constant Hills, but the lake – lakes, really; there were three small ones the old maps hadn’t shown – to the east, and small cluster of hills north, and three small groups of hills to the south. The Regent’s eyes followed the Heir’s.

Ortega sighed. “What mad scheme are you hatching now, Osvaldo?”

The object of his disapproval grinned. When his senior advisor and the official head of the House called him by his first name like that, it meant he didn’t think that the Heir’s thoughts were likely to be good ones. “I see three set of hills. I think I should offer Señor de la Paz the closest set. De la Torre has courage, I think; he could have the westernmost.” There was no need to mention why that might require courage. “And the other – the report said there really is a river there, did it not?”

“A river flowing from a rift in the earth, rushing through a canyon, winding like a triple-s through the hills to flow into the grassland”, Ortega recited, then continued with stark disbelief, “where it disappears, only to emerge again a half-day’s ride south, where it makes a small lake before flowing nearly west, to disappear again.”

Osvaldo chuckled. What fueled disbelief in the older man stirred fascination and curiosity in him. If he could get lords to settle there, he’d even have a reason to go see it! “A river – so lest he make himself a fool, bestowing the name on somewhere that lacks flowing water, I shall offer that set to Señor Eusebio Delrío, where he may build a town and call it Del Río. Del Rio, La Torre, and La Paz would make three fine new towns for us, would they not?”

Ortega couldn’t help but chuckle. “So you offer the one who objects to this town named for another house one named after his own, and to two others you think likely to respond well to the offer, their own claims. So the one who objected is perhaps satisfied, but at least far removed, and he is pressured to accept because you have offered the same to two others. Tidy, so far – but what happens when others want towns with their names?”

Finishing the cup of tea, Osvaldo poured himself another – which annoyed the servants and pages, but which he’d insisted on when in private, a lesson vaguely remembered fro his father. “There are more spaces on that map. On the south of the Constant Hills – I love that name! – we can build a second Wall, and gain a piece of land some half the size Jaspar and de Cadiz are settling. Build Walls between those sets of hills, and match theirs. Between here and the lakes I see room for another five houses with their towns. My lord Regent, the Refuge has served us well. But it has three times the people it should. It is time to stop hiding, and go boldly.”

Ortega looked at the map; he’d pondered the matter of expanding, but Osvaldo was far more daring. Not risk-taking; though he was that at times with himself, he risked nothing with anyone in his hands. There was no ignoring the fact that they were gaining resources to place such plans within reach, either, not the least of which were the horses, rifles, and cannon given so freely by Earl Rigel Fitzwin, all because he took seriously the cause dwelling in their Ancestor’s Sword.

“There is still no word of the mission”, he commented, meaning the Council’s team gone north with Lord Fitzwin. Osvaldo had thought of it before; now both did so – and to both it would mean release, Ortega from the duties of Regent, Osvaldo from the chains of games of politics.



“Dom, what happened?” The young Escobar lord rushed to catch his companion – and the body he bore. When the mission had started, there had been factions, but the younger set had drawn together in the face of a world too strange for them – even while the older left the work to the younger.

“All I did was ask if anyone knew the name ‘Escobar’!” he gasped. Natanael supported Dominique and helped him to the nearest table. “Raûl, bar the door. And pack. They killed Emilio.” Dominique flopped his burden on the table and leaned there for support.
“I asked if anyone knew the name. The man I asked stared at me. His companion – his nostrils flared, like an animal ready to hunt. Another asked why I would want to know – were we friends of Escobar? I tried to think of a safe answer, but Emilio said it was possible, but we needed to know – but he didn’t get any farther. The man with flaring nostrils rammed a meat skewer up Emilio’s gut and left it inside him. I caught him, put a dagger in that man’s eye, killed another, and had to leave my sword stuck in a third. He was in the doorway, so I got a chance to run. Only one got close; now he’s wearing a dagger in his thigh.
“I heard one thing as I fled: ‘No friends of Escobar are welcome here! Betrayers!’”

“But–“ Natanael was shocked and confused.

“They know the story differently.” Señor Victor Delrío, cousin to the lord to whom Osvaldo proposed to offer a set of hills, was eight years their senior, and better at thinking. “We knew that.” He felt for a pulse from Emilio, out of habit. “We did not expect it this different. Everyone else is here?”

“All”, Raûl replied, “else I would not have barred the door.”

Delrío nodded. “We leave. Natanael – offer everyone here silver if they will give us privacy for an hour.” He tossed over a purse heavy with coin. “I found fools gambling – those are duros and sueldos, nearly enough to buy this place. Go!” Natanael went.

“Why do we need privacy?” asked Raûl.

“We’re leaving.” Victor looked down at the dead Emilio. “We cannot take him. But I will not see our name insulted this way without a blow back: it will be his funeral pyre. Dominique, help Raûl pack – there is one I must see.”

The rest were waiting, ready, twenty minutes later when Victor Delrío returned. He sniffed; oil had been poured. “I did upstairs, too”, Dominique explained.

Victor smiled. “Good.” He’d forgotten that detail, he’d been so concerned with his own. “Go light the upstairs. Come back and light it here. I bought us secret passage out.” In half a minute they were moving; the first screams of alarm began as they ducked into a tunnel disguised as the back of a fireplace.

“It didn’t take you this long to arrange this”, Dominique accused.

Victor grunted. “No, it didn’t. The place where Emilio got killed is going to burn, too. Then I spent my last gold casco for the last arrangement.” His chuckle was wicked enough it frightened his companions. “In the morning it’s going to say ‘Escobar’ right across one big important building in the town.”

Natanael laughed. “Which one?”

They heard Victor spit; the tunnel had gotten so snug all they could see were the feet, legs, and rear ends of the one ahead. “I don’t know – they weren’t sure which one would be best.”

“How do you know they’ll do it?!”

Now Victor laughed. “Easy – the inn you went to was for well-to-do people. The people of the streets don’t like them. They don’t know what an Escobar is, but if writing that name on a big building will get the ones with coin in a rage, they’ll do it for fun.”

“If it’s fun, why did you have to pay?”

“I paid for something really good – he says they have this stuff they can write it with, and it will stay there for days. Scrub it off, it comes back. Paint over it, it comes back. But after a while it quits by itself, or if they wet it with the right herb, it disappears. I think the Mouse said it dies, but does that make sense? Anyway, it should keep the town stirred up for a while.”

“They’ll hunt for us”, Raûl worried.

“I already paid for our way out. Here’s how we do it.....”

Two minutes later he had to caution against laughter: they’d been saddled with him to impose restraint, but his plan would send their elders into a fury. Raûl said as much.

“My job was to keep us alive”, Victor responded. “I already failed. Let’s just try to make it, and worry about fury then. Now – eight meters to crawl, then run like demons pursue.”

They crawled.



“I talked to Señor de la Torre last night”, Osvaldo recounted at breakfast. “The idea of a town with the family name nearly made him dance.”

The image drew a snort of laughter from Regent Reyes-Ortega, before he blinked and his eyes narrowed. “When did you speak with de la Torre?!”

Osvaldo grinned. “Don’t worry; Miguel made sure things were safe. De la Torre likes the juegos – he was at a parlor. Some new game with cards, depends on placement, not just the hand. He plays towers too readily.... mmm – nice bacon! fruit-packed, I think”, he observed, savoring the break from the ordinary. “Anyway -- as Earl Rigel’s people say -- I bet to support him, drew him away for a drink, offered the claim, told him I wouldn’t be able to do it if anyone found I’d been there. Miguel got me in and out safe, so I let him bring the youngest guard home.” He held up his arms and flipped up his shirt. “See? No holes, nor scratches.”

“You take too many risks”, Ortega declared.

The Heir sucked in breath and counted to five – ten had always seemed too far. “Living as my father’s son was less risky. There are too many forces standing with me for any to risk serious harm to me.”

“You could be seized.”

“For what?” Osvaldo exclaimed in surprise. “To then claim innocence? So my friends could tear the Refuge apart looking for me? And then when the mission returns to say there are no Escobars to the north, and Earl Rigel with it? None are so foolish as to risk that.”

“You trust too much in foreign aid.”

A look of loss crossed the Escobar lord’s face. “My father was taken from me. My duty was to survive – I did so. My duty now is to unite the House and lead. Strength from outside the House is in the hand dealt me – am I to ignore it, and play with a crippled hand?” Sudden understanding of the card game of the night before shed light on his own situation – and the reverse. “I have few towers to play, uncle; I must rely on move and dance and thrust”, he explained, blending metaphors. “If I stand here, waiting, my towers fail; the strength of a tower is not that it stands, but that from it one may move!” Without thinking, he glided from his seat into a fencing stance, sword arm high, shield arm to the fore. “My game must be to move” – he dropped to a knee and thrust the imagined sword under the shield – “and withdraw”. Ortega watched with both amusement and critical eye as his future lord slid smoothly back to a high guard position. “I must dash out here” – a feint to the right – “and venture over here” – a cross-chest thrust to the left.

“Well done!” Ortega declared softly; it was a move not many accomplished without inviting serious attack.

Osvaldo mimed throwing down his weapons. “And ‘well done!’ last night, uncle!” He looked west, the direction he’d be journeying later in the day. “And ‘well done!’ this eve, I pray.” He turned on the Regent, returning to lean with hands on the back of his own chair, knee on the seat, as he balanced it on two legs. “I’ve decided that I should speak to Señor de la Paz personally on this matter, and see to the progress of Señor de Medina and of Marshal de Cadiz. On the way, I’m going to talk to Delrío’s brother. The Rangers will bring him, after dark. If Piedro likes it, then I’ll talk to Eusebio himself the next night – the man won’t decide anything unless his brother has approved it first.” The lovely eyes darkened, their focus far away, as Osvaldo wondered what it would have been like to have had a father to grow up with, but then to watch waste away into a mockery of a human being, good sense and strength and memory failing here, there, in pieces or whole haunch. A small piece said he was well off to never have to think of his father as other than whole and energetic and loving – but the bigger part cried that that was meaningless when he was left with thinking of his father as gone.

“Uncle Manolo, who really killed my father?”

Ortega recognized the tone – sorrow, loss, and raging anger mixed. “You haven’t called me that in a long time, Osvaldo. Now, think: since you are almost certain to be Lord Escobar, if I knew, would it be wise for me to even tell you?”

“You sound like mother”, came the response in leaden tones. “I would not punish whole Houses, uncle. But those who did it....”

The Regent sighed. “Would you really settle for justice? Could you?” Osvaldo looked at his feet and fidgeted. “The de Logroño have helped immensely. We have most of the story. When we have it all, there will be justice. There’s nothing more you need to know – and you know why.”

In a rare fit of anger, Osvaldo scooped his breakfast plate from the table and dashed it against the wall. “I know! If I have anything to do with it, if they get any more than anyone else, the Houses will think I’ll pursue all of them for any little thing they did! But that’s idiocy!” he shouted, slamming a fist down on the table. “He was my father!” He sucked in breath, seeking control. “I’ll declare a new law: if a father is killed, and the killers found, their lives belong to the son. I’ll set the example.”

Ortega leaned back, looking thoughtful. He looked in his cup, and found it empty of tea. Osvaldo stepped up and poured. “I do not recommend such a path, but that could work.” He paused, giving his “nephew” time to think. “If it passed the Council, it could work.”

The tirade about the Council he feared didn’t occur. Instead, Osvaldo laughed. The young Heir said nothing, just laughed.



“Slavers?” Raûl rounded on Victor. “I’m no slaver!”

“Quiet!” Victor hissed. “Neither are they! They just want to get away – like we do.”

Natanael regarded the group Victor had led them to. Most were young, none looked well-to-do. “You are not slavers. Why do this?”

One stepped forward. He had a scar across his face, ruining what would have been outstanding good looks. “My father gave me this. He says I am no man. If I remain, that is my status, unless I earn honor. To earn honor, I must be violent, but I have no liking for violence.” He paused, looking at his three dozen companions. Most nodded for him to go on; none objected. “To bring back slaves would redeem me in my father’s eyes. My fellows have similar stories. Don Victor gave the idea: band together and go slaving, that would be believable to our fathers and uncles. Few have come back with slaves in many months; if we could, it would mean wealth for us, and honor again. To go and fail like others – we would still have gone, and our families could speak of us with pride.” The last came in a tone so sarcastic and filled with disdain that it got through to Raûl, and he really listened.
“So we go, but not for slaves: we go, so our families may think of us as brave. We go to surrender to those who have been stopping slavers.” He looked at Victor with a steady gaze. “We go because don Victor says the slavers have not been killed, but even now live new lives in a place where violence is not a virtue and those who do not love it are not considered without honor.”

Victor nodded. “It’s our escape”, he said to Dominique, Raûl, and Natanael. “We play a men-at-arms for them. We leave here, and we return to don Antonio’s lands. Then we find the others, and we finish our mission.”

Dominique squeezed Raûl’s arm. Their friend would never have been part of the mission, but politics trumped ability, a disease as old as mankind. “I understand”, he said softly. To Victor, “There should be more men-at-arms. I still have some silver – there will be more at home.”

Scar-face looked troubled. “I know, but we need something for new lives.” Nods surrounded him.

Victor shook his head. “If we don’t get there, coin is worthless. Spend it – hire more. Look serious. Men seeking to redeem their honor would not hold back.”

“Leonido, I said this”, a slender young man almost accused. Stepping from the crowd, he looked like a dancer in a drama; Victor sucked in a breath at the beauty, understanding immediately that – and why – this one’s father despised him. The thought made him uncomfortable, but he knew from their time with Earl Rigel that this one would find a welcome to the south. “My father will be suspicious if it seems we have not spent everything.”

Leonido, the one with the scar, sighed. “Friends, we must. Don Victor says we may trust those to the south. If we trust them not to take our lives.... let us trust them with our lives.” He bowed to the slender speaker. “Valeriano, if you would....?”

“You’ll be safe for what you are, where we go”, Victor declared softly, for only a few to hear. Valeriano froze for a moment, looking to Victor’s companions. First Dominique, then Natanael nodded. Raûl looked puzzled, until Natanael whispered in his ear; then he looked a little queasy, but nodded. “Safe”, he agreed.

Valeriano licked his lips nervously, then twirled two full rotations and went to collect coin.

“Everything”, Leonido commanded. “Arsenio, is there time?”

A tall, broad-shouldered figure rose and emerged from the back. He was plainly older than the rest; to Victor’s eye, he walked like a fighting man. “There are the taverns”, Arsenio answered. “Not the best – but most will have no families counting on them.” He glanced over at Valeriano’s progress and the accumulating coin. “With luck, I can gather enough so each of us commands two – besides these and the dozen already awaiting us.”

Victor whistled low, in spite of himself. Three dozen plus two each was one hundred and eight; add themselves and a dozen already hired, and they’d be a force of one hundred and twenty-four! “That will certainly look serious enough”, he commented. Of Arsenio, he asked, “Will that delay departure?”

Muscles rippled in the hefty neck as the dark-complected head shook. “No. It will mean hunting for food as we go. Such men must be ready to travel in a moment; if not, they fail at being hired.” Victor nodded; that made sense. He wondered if the differences in their homelands were showing in his questions.




Osvaldo didn’t like being awakened in the middle of the night, but Miguel had privileges. The method by which the awakening was accomplished in this case wasn’t objectionable at all: hands slid up his ankles, caressing, and when they reached his thighs they began a slow, deep massage. He waited until the hands reached his buttocks and dug deep – elbows, actually, at that point – then rolled over. “Hello, cousin. Is this a massage, or did you think I needed a mamada?”

He knew Miguel was grinning. “Mamada later.” The hands that had been on his rear caressed Osvaldo’s thighs. “A messenger came to San Tesifón and kept coming when she learned you had gone.” He stroked Osvaldo’s growing treasure trail. “Perhaps her after the message? I think she would be willing.” And quiet, was the unstated part; the loyalty and discretion of those chosen as messengers were impeccable.

“I’d rather that, in truth”, Osvaldo responded, sitting and reaching for his robe. Miguel managed a light. “Call her”, Osvaldo said, slipping into the robe.

Miguel whistled. The messenger was already half undressed, but not bothered at all by the male gaze – of course she knew Miguel’s attractions, as did all the messengers, and the House Guard. “The snow stopped being snow”, she said by way of explanation, continuing to shed clothes until she stood in just the cross-wrapped scarf arrangement female messengers had devised, or found – for all Osvaldo knew, it was something women had known since the dawn of time – supporting her breasts – not, the Heir judged, that hers needed any – and the quite short two-piece leather riding shorts, stepped into and tied at the hip – with no covering for the hips, which meant she was exposing a great deal of flesh. The function of the shorts was to provide support up front, at least for the men, and extra padding in back. Then from her very close-fitting backpack she drew a message tube, still sealed. The ripple of toned but not bulky muscles as she bent stimulated Osvaldo in a way the idea of Miguel’s attentions hadn’t.

Unbidden, she came over, hooked a stool with her leg, and sat practically knee-to-knee with her lord. Osvaldo had to wonder if Miguel had arranged signals – a whistle meant the Heir wanted her in his bed, a call meant nothing but business, perhaps? It wouldn’t have been a surprise at all, for it wouldn’t be the first time. She handed him the tube. “Your eyes only, it says”, she pointed out. Those words weren’t on it anywhere; it was said by the way in which a cord looped over the end of the tube, through the wax which weather-sealed it.

Deciding to make preference reality, Osvaldo let his robe slip to show his chest, as he took the tube. With a faint grin, he pointed the bottom end toward Miguel, who grasped it, and in well-practiced fashion the two of them twisted together. Wax, cord, and paper strip all popped at once; tipping the tube, Miguel sent the scroll within into his cousin’s hands. It caught on the sleeve of his robe; in irritation, Osvaldo pulled his left arm out as a direct way of removing the offending sleeve. Then his attention was all on the scroll. His eye went wide at the seal.

“It’s Flavio Aguilar’s seal!” He turned to the messenger. “Did you bring this all the way?”

She nodded. “In five days.”

Miguel and Osvaldo turned and stared at each other, jaws dropping. It was a good five days from Pueblo Francisco just to the border of the Hills! Osvaldo was hit with a sudden suspicion. “What horse do you ride?”

She grinned. “A mare, daughter of Titanium, swiftest horse in the world. She is mine”, she declared defiantly.

Osvaldo whistled, an automatic response. “Messenger, for getting here in five days, with this message, I confirm that claim. Now to the message.” A thought itched at the back of his head, that there was two and three to be put together, but it didn’t quite come into the open.

The Heir of House Escobar in Refuge whooped and jumped up on the low bed. His robe sagged from the movement; Grinning fiendishly and winking at the messenger, Miguel gave the bottom hem a strategic tug, and it fell mostly free. Osvaldo didn’t even notice. “Miguel, Earl Rigel is coming! So early in the year!” The messenger took in the not-quite unclothed sight of her lord with approval.

“How many men? Is the Wise Woman with him? and Captain Tanner? Does he bring more horses?!” Miguel forgot about conspiring with the girl to get Osvaldo naked, and stood with Osvaldo on the bed, to see the message.

“You scan it – you’re faster”, Osvaldo decided, thrusting it at his cousin. Then the itching thought blossomed, and he laughed. “You ride a daughter of Titanium – of course Rigel is coming; how else would that be so!” His mouth dropped open... again. “Just how far did you ride?”

“From the side of don Luiz Ortiz-Escobar”, she informed him with pride. “The mare chose me. So the caballero chose me.” All the way, he mouthed, staring.

Miguel poked him in the ribs. “Señor Rigel cannot come farther than Pueblo Francisco, this time. He hopes you may meet him there, but if not, he will understand; he could give little warning.”

Osvaldo didn’t doubt Rigel would understand; that was one of the things that drew him to the somewhat older lord. “What of the mission?”

Miguel shook his head. “They had not reported their work complete. Señor Rigel hopes to bring them when he returns.”

Impatient with bits and pieces, Osvaldo demanded, “And when does he return?!”

Miguel grinned. “After the weddings. I think half of his people are getting married all at once, on the vernal equinox!”

Osvaldo stared at his cousin a moment, then laughed. “Good! He deserves such joy around him! And I enjoy the joy of hearing it.” His grin showed that joy, and it was contagious; as he met his cousin’s eyes, a matching grin sprang up, and then one on the messenger.
“You”, he said, trying to sound serious, something made difficult by a grin that would not be tamed, “deserve a reward – yes, for this ride, with this message, you deserve a reward! I am not yet lord of the House, but name your reward, and if it is in my power, it is yours!” To any ordinary person, that promise would have been license for greed – wealth, station, advancement, would have come to mind. For a messenger sworn to the House, it was no risk: all had a good sense of proportion, and none would ask more than was merited.

She licked her lips as her eyes ran over him, up to his eyes. “I am called Gabina”, she informed him, and he nodded. She tugged hard at the corner of his robe, completing the process Miguel had begun and some jumping about had furthered; the robe fell. She grinned up at his nude figure. “For reward, I claim you.”



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Talk about your hot times in the old towns, tonight - in BOTH (all 3?) places.

First, not a very good reception in the North - the "nobility" of the area have no love of the name Escobar. So they bought themselves and hour and burned the place - and the other as well.

Then, all of the activity and planning/politicking back in the Constant Hills.
Osvaldo is working hard to give his people what they truly need - breathing room so they can become more human again, and less backstabbing.

Ah, the delights of the flesh - the messenger wants to ride a "horse" of a different colour - the mare is good and fast of foot, but lacking in certain "essential" parts of anatomy to satisfy; Osvaldo appears to be well endowed in that department.

Miguel certainly seems to think so!

And then the interesting juxtaposition of "safe journey" for the exploratory committee - they seek out the disenfranchised for strength in numbers, only to become their "ticket" for safe passage to la mesa de la Vega, perhaps w/out having to labor in shackles to make amends for being "slavers".

You are certainly giving us an all around update on our various parties and sections of the world as we know it.

..| :D
 
Edit: Kuli posted another ep while I was reading the previous one. So this is about 143.

This is absolutely delightful. The only problem I have with it is that traditionally, if you give details of a plan before it comes to fruition, something goes wrong with it when it does. I'm hoping the Inquisition really can be wiped out.

Loved the scenes with the boys in the hot tub. Fun stuff.

And I just figured something out. The original Snatched don't come from OUR world. They come from one where the metric system is used in the US. And there are other differences, too; that's why the catechisms and stuff are slightly different.

Um...maybe everyone else already knew this, but I just figured it out.
 
Edit: Kuli posted another ep while I was reading the previous one. So this is about 143.

This is absolutely delightful. The only problem I have with it is that traditionally, if you give details of a plan before it comes to fruition, something goes wrong with it when it does. I'm hoping the Inquisition really can be wiped out.

Loved the scenes with the boys in the hot tub. Fun stuff.

And I just figured something out. The original Snatched don't come from OUR world. They come from one where the metric system is used in the US. And there are other differences, too; that's why the catechisms and stuff are slightly different.

Um...maybe everyone else already knew this, but I just figured it out.

As the man in "Short Circuit" said.... Bimbo!

Actually going to the metric system under Carter is the major noticeable deviation between our world and that of Rigel & company. It isn't the point of deviation, but just think how many changes would have happened if our USA had done that....

As for the Inquisition, I've got notes on ways things could go wrong that would give me nightmares if I dwelled on them. That, in fact, is how the "prepared" meadow came to be: what if they attacked in the wrong place? what if we didn't know how many there were? Solution: make a spot too attractive to turn down.
Of course that's a simple one....
 
As the man in "Short Circuit" said.... Bimbo!

So everyone HAD figured it out but me, huh?

Actually going to the metric system under Carter is the major noticeable deviation between our world and that of Rigel & company. It isn't the point of deviation, but just think how many changes would have happened if our USA had done that...

Yeah. Thanks for confirming, but I still feel really stupid right now.
 
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