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Fit for Life

167
Battle


“You can’t move him”, the wiry girl insisted. “That blade’s into the wood!” Fighting was audible in the distance, but not a person in the gate room cared.

“Points will die from blood”, big man argued, even as he and two other cranked the gate another notch.

“He has herbs for bleeding.” The voice was Prick’s, coming from under Oran, and it was desperate and scared.

“Which ones?” Cuchilla asked. So when Casey got there with Dugal, he found a female thief sorting through packets, instructed by a voice from beneath his friend.

“Here”, he commanded, wishing they hadn’t disturbed the pouch, since all the Scouts organized their herbs the same way. Still, he could tell which was which easily; Ocean had symbols for each. “This, and this”, he ordered, “in wine., enough for a paste.” Those were powders; one caused clotting, the other killed bacteria and weakened cells. “Slice his clothes off him. Is the place secure?”

“You’re Casey. Yes, it’s secure”, Cuchilla replied as she set to work removing Oran’s upper clothes. “We got a rope to your friends outside. Is help coming?”

Casey winced as his weight shifted onto his injured ankle. “Yeah. Soon, I hope.”

“Druid Ander!” Dugal cried, as the Druid appeared. “Can you....?”

“Gray man”, Cuchilla whispered. A rifle volley sounded from the castle courtyard. Musket reports were few, and ragged.

“More than you fear, not as much as you hope”, Arden stated. He set his staff on the floor, where it remained upright, drawing gasps and stares, and knelt. Hands moved toward Oran’s bare back, slipping and weaving side to side with little flutters, finally settling.

“The dead give life”, the Druid intoned. Casey understood: Arden was drawing life energy from the men dying in the fight, to strengthen Oran – with the side effect that the men Montdragón and Castellán were facing were going to be dropping unnaturally quickly. As he watched, Oran’s blood stopped trickling out; it clung to him. Breathing was next, steadying, smoothing.
“The blade is sharp and clean” Arden noted. “I can bind the tissues – Scout Three, carefully, slowly, draw out the blade.”

Casey anchored himself in Streaker’s calm attitude toward the universe, where what was, was, the future still in the future and not to be feared. A weapon approaching with intent to harm was something to be feared; a weapon already in the body was not. Centered, he grasped the weapon and began to pull. It jerked at first, coming loose, but after that slid evenly.

“I cannot close the lung”, the Druid told the small group.

Casey shuddered; the idea of a lung collapsed inside a chest disturbed him. “I know how to fix that”, he announced. “I need wax, silk, a water jug or skin, and some small tubes.”

The equipment was nearly set up when a Healer arrived, a former Quistador named Eufenia. She stared at the arrangement a good dozen heartbeats. “I see – the air goes through the water to cleanse it, while the water keeps the air from just blowing out. Begin – I will heal as things are set right.”

Before it was done, she fell back. “No more strength”, she whispered, taking a skin from her hip. “Honeyed wine”, she related, upended it, and squirted a steady stream into her throat.

Oran moved; Casey and Dugal helped him sit. Pricks unbent himself. “You saved my life, Points. You don’t know me.”

Oran stared a moment, then shrugged. “It was the right thing to do”, he explained lamely. He took a deep breath, shuddering as he sucked it in, trembling as he let it out between clenched teeth. “Healer, can I walk?”

“No fighting or jumping around, and yes.”

“I will give you energy”, Arden declared. “You wish to join Lord Enrico?”

“Yes.” He undid a cover and pulled out his Kinner-Ruger. “Healer, should I use this?”

“With restraint. She paused. “Your left hand.”

Oran nodded. “Good. Casey, yours loaded?”

His friend nodded. “You got two?”

Oran laughed. “Master Kinner made sure Scouts and lords get two. Come on!” The Scout tried to jump up, but it was more of a climb, using Prick’s shoulder.


They caught up to Castellán on the third floor. “Are we close?” was the first thing Oran asked, taking care to moderate his breathing – that lung still hurt.

“You’re wounded?” asked Enrico.

“And Healed, and strengthened”, Oran explained. “I’m not supposed to fight – but I have a couple of tricks, in case.”

“Guard Lord Oran”, the soon-to-be Count ordered two men. He gave the Scout a considering glance. “But trust his instincts.”

A single corner later proved the value of that command. A rush came at them; Oran’s brain evaluated faster than conscious thought. “Kneel!” he yelled at one of his escorts, the revolver coming down. His first shot was aimed; a bloody hole opened in a bare chest. Brave man, he thought, attacking half-naked. But there was no time for honors, or even thoughts of honors. The second bullet went a little wild, but the random processes of the universe favored him: it ripped out the side of a throat as his target ducked reflexively; throat come low, aim for the heart made high, and jugular blood surged.

There was no need to aim for the third man. Austin’s lessons guided Oran now: both hands on the gun, pull it in, elbows to sides, and shoot by feel, looking where you want to hit. It worked like a charm, though he added a second shot because the man just kept coming. A gut wound brought both hands where humans always put them, and Oran’s second escort took his head. The threat he’d chosen to handle dealt with, Oran emptied his last round into the first foe his eyes found. Right hand slapped sidearm to rest, left hand drew, and he stood ready.

The fighting was beyond him now. A man lay dead in front of his right-hand escort; the left was dueling. He stepped on the corpse to his right, helping his ally get his blade free. Then he gave his concentration to the melee. “This is their last effort”, he thought out loud. A loud report sounded, drawing his attention – Casey was slapping out empty brass and fumbling with a quick-loader. “Stupid”, Oran muttered, stopping the man who was about to be a threat to his fellow Scout with a round that might have struck the heart, but definitely punctured both lungs. Nausea threatened; the man would die of suffocation. When he came to rest on one hand, Scout Two took steady aim and granted mercy, right through the left ear.

Casey’s Kinner-Ruger came up now. It spat out three shots in quick order, ending the careers of two castle guards. Oran got the one behind those. That fast, the fighting was done, none any longer even in sight or hearing. He took the moment to reload, the slow way, round by round. Casey emulated him. When they were ready, they nodded to each other. “I’ve got point”, Casey said. Behind them Oran heard a sharp gasp; a look over his shoulder showed Prick and Cuchilla methodically making sure of the dead – and emptying their pockets. He grinned wryly at that, but a part of him judged that since they’d come to battle, they deserved it; this wasn’t a thief’s risk.

“That was all they had”, Casey marveled as he rounded the next corner. Only two more lay dead here, both older than should have been expected. A rifle volley testified that Daly’s squad was dealing with the barracks. Oran shook his head at the waste, and headed for the doorway where Enrico stood looking in.

Count Nevarez sat on the end of the bed, a smoking musket in his right hand. A final guard lay on the floor, his blood running along the low paths of the stone. “You!” he spat finally, and threw the musket at Enrico. “In my generosity I allow you to camp in the square, and you let Celts into the city and into my castle! I suppose”, he sneered, you wish a reward for coming to my aid.”

It was a fine and moderate irrationality. Enrico went straight to the point. “No. What I wish is to repay you for the evil you have done to my father and family. I wish for you to never threaten them again. So by noon tomorrow I shall be Count. What to do–“ He broke off at the sound of running footsteps followed by the skid of boots on stone.

“Lord Enrico! Lord Oran!” the boy gasped. “Lord Montdragón sends greetings, and bids me say he holds the wall from the gate to the castle.”

“Montdragón!” the Count exclaimed, practically screaming. “You name a sell-sword ‘lord’? How did you come to hire him?”

“He found a better coin than gold”, Oran told Nevarez. “One you could never pay.”

“Lords?” the messenger asked.

“What else?” asked Enrico.

“The townspeople... they begin to riot. And the Celts are becoming unruly.”

“I can go”, Casey declared. “It’s better than standing here wanting to shoot the Count.”

“Wait.” Cuchilla’s tone commanded attention. “Give the people another target.” Slowly she swung her head to regard the Count.

“Brilliant!” Casey said. “Now I’m gone!” Behind him, he heard the Count babble wildly as the girl thief's meaning sank in.


The front of the Pickled Cock was a wreck, the interior a shambles. Casey commandeered a half dozen Quistadors and set three of them to guarding the block, then headed north toward the loudest noise. On the next block he came on two Celts, one holding a woman and the other on her. “Get off!” snapped the Scout.

“Git away, runt”, the one holding her retorted.

“You dishonor your tribe”, Casey said, persisting. “Your chief agreed no rape. Now let her go.”

Both men laughed. Casey remembered Austin’s tale of rescuing Valentina; all thoughts of mercy vanished. His legs made three strides, his hand drew his revolver... from six inches away he blew the man’s brains out. “Run”, he told the other. “To the ends of the earth.” The man ran. Casey turned and threw up on the Celt he’d just killed.

“You dishonor him”, a nearby Celt claimed.

“Fuck that – he dishonored himself”, Casey snapped back. Voices murmured agreement. “You five – spread the word that the penalty for rape is dishonorable death.” He turned to his three Quistadors. “Come on; let’s calm this down.”

The square and nearby blocks quieted fast enough, as word spread of Casey’s justice, that from two blocks away Casey heard don Rodolfo’s announcement that they would bring the Count out, to deliver to the town for their justice. Townspeople began streaming toward the square, alerted by boys Casey had paid to spread an invitation.


Castellán had the Count dragged to his own torture room. From rumors, Enrico was certain the man knew what damage the tools here could inflict – tools he meant to have melted down for something more useful – kitchen spoons and ladles, perhaps. Merely the fear, he presumed, would drive some truth out of Nevarez, truth about any hidden hoards of coin or gems. In the event, he was more than right.

“Arden, shouldn’t you be with Lord Oran?” Enrico inquired.

“I can help.”

The future Count’s eyebrows rose. “You know torture?”

He didn’t expect the laugh he got – soft, sad. “Not as you think of it. Grant me leave?”

To do as you wish. Curiosity tipped the scales. “If only to see what you do”, he replied, nodding agreement.

“Only one thing. Proceed as you would”, Arden responded. “And I as I.”

Castellán was intrigued to see that all the Druid did was order the prisoner to grasp his staff. The moment Nevarez saw one of his replacement’s men pick up a tool that looked like a corkscrew with razor-sharp edges, he screamed – and kept screaming until Arden slapped his wrist. The Count looked down at his own flesh, still whole, then looked up at Arden, pure horror on his face.

“He just experienced his own fears”, the Druid explained to satisfy Castellán’s desire for knowledge. “He will now answer you truthfully – his spirit desires to cooperate.

“Experienced his own fears.” Enrico looked from Count to Druid and back, and back again. “To him, how long did it last?”

Arden shrugged. “Hours, I judge. His mind is full of terrors witnessed in this room. He would feel himself in them, for as long as he actually witnessed.”

The edge of sorrow in the Druid’s voice touched Enrico. “You have a hard calling, grey man”, he whispered. “I do not envy you, even with all your power.” Arden bowed to him solemnly, accepting that accolade. Castellán turned to the Count. “Now, questions.” He smiled, triumph washed out by what he’d just seen, replaced by pity. “Tell me, Nevarez....” he began.


Oran found the book tucked into the complex headboard, in a nearly secret chamber. He leafed through it and discovered charts and descriptions. “The Count’s lineage”, he muttered, flipping toward the back. “Wow... and crap.” He snapped the small volume shut. “Enrico has to see this.”


Rape and violence dropped; now Casey had another problem: Celts were stripping people of anything valuable, and he knew that hadn’t been part of the deal. He tried corralling various Celts and explaining it, to little avail, before inspiration struck in the form of Leg. “I need all the thieves”, he told the kid. “These warriors don’t know how to just take a fair share from someone. Run!” The Scout wasn’t even aware of the irony of calling thieves to teach fairness and mercy.

Leg didn’t have to run far; the Queen of Hands had her people out in force anyway. A deal was quickly struck – her “wealth experts” would work with the Celts to keep them in line; the Quistadors, whose faces might be remembered, were Casey’s concern. The masked woman who’d come to talk with him asked how much wealth they could take. “A fifth”, Casey said, remembering something about that being the traditional amount for tribute. This wasn’t tribute, it was plunder, but if it was good enough for a king, it was good enough for thieves. He didn’t realize until later what he’d set off; the Celts and thieves just kept plundering until the Castellán banner ran up above the castle. By that quirk of fate, the part of town between the gate and the great square became poorer as the rest was spared.

Daly intercepted Oran just outside the castle gate. “Where’s Castellán?”

“Inside. What’s up?”

“The barracks will surrender, but only to someone of rank.”

Dugal joined them. “They seem urgent to surrender, Scout Two.”

Oran sighed. “I’m not moving fast. Dugal, go get Enrico – he took the Count to question him.”

His fellow Scout grimaced. “Torture chamber”, he said, with a dark look. “I’ll ask a guard.”

“What’s the book?” Daly asked.

“Let’s walk to those barracks”, Oran replied. He held up the book. “It’s got the Count’s lineage.”

Daly understood. It wouldn’t have been the same in Celt society, where tanistry was the rule, but he’d soaked up a lot from rubbing shoulders with lords. “Heirs. Dangers for our Count.”

“Yeah”, Oran agreed. “But what will he do about it?” The two pondered as they walked.

Castellán did reach the barracks first, by a half dozen strides. “I will not accept this surrender”, he said. “I need an officer of equal rank to the one within.”

Dugal grasped that somewhat. “So you need a captain.”

“Not merely a captain, but one of nobility. The barracks commander likely is a caballero.”

Oran arrived to hear the last. “Shouldn’t be a Celt, either – they might not surrender to a ‘barbarian’.”

“Or one who appears a Quistador”, Enrico mused, still staring at Dugal. “Lord Oran, if I may?”

Oran had no idea what Castellán had in mind, but he’d come to trust the viscount’s son. “Certainly”, he said. “We’ll help, if you need us.”

“Just one”, Enrico told him with a chuckle. “Tell me – is this Scout honorable, courageous, merciful, generous?” He didn’t look away from Dugal.

“Well....” Dugal shot Oran a seriously irritated look, for that hesitation. “Yes, Enrico, he is that. Also trustworthy, loyal, helpful, and friendly.”

The Count-to-be nodded. “A viscount’s son is sufficient”, he thought out loud. “Scout Dugal, kneel.”

Still puzzled, Dugal knelt. Oran suppressed a laugh as Castellán drew his sword and dropped its tip to Dugal’s right shoulder. “Que Dios te dé la fuerza para hacer lo recto, a prestar su fuerza a lo recto.” -- May God give you strength to do what is right, to lend your strength to what is right. The blade switched shoulders. Dugal looked shocked, offended, then resigned. “Que Él te conceda a hacer justicia, amar misericordia, y caminar humildemente con Él.” – May He grant you to do justice, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with Him. Dugal grew a small, wry smile. “Levantate, Señor Dugal, caballero.”

Dugal got up. “I’m not an officer”, he pointed out.

“You’ve commanded people”, Oran reminded him. “Pay attention, now – I think you’re about to be made a captain.”

“I won’t look like one.”

Oran laughed, and turned to take his knife to a dead man's gear. The moment Enrico finished pronouncing Dugal a captain, Scout Two was ready with a lacquered breastplate. He stuck an arrow into a bullet hole and snapped it off, hiding the hole, shaking his head at the disparity in technology – no musket had made that hole. “Stand still while I strap this on. Now, a helmet....” He found one nondescript enough to be worn by a Quistador or Celt and stuck it on Dugal’s head. “Doesn’t fit right, so yours must have come off in the fighting and you grabbed this to replace it.”

Dugal grinned weakly and shook his head. “Always has an answer, Scout Two does. Okay, I’ll go accept their surrender.”

He learned they had one other condition: their captain was wounded, possibly fatally, and they wanted aid. “Daly, send men and find Healer Eufenia. If she has any strength left.”

“I can aid”, Arden said.

Oran hadn’t noticed the Druid arrive, but he nodded. “Dugal, lead.”

The Celt Scout added a touch as they reached the barracks. “This way, Lord Oran, Wise Arden.” He knew better than to say “Druid”, in this place. To the men blocking the entry, he urged access to their captain. One led them.

“His abdomen is punctured, and his digestive tubes perforated”, Arden observed before even touching the man. He knelt and touched exposed flesh on the chest. “A rough weapon – there is tiny tearing.” Oran shook his head at the mix of sophisticated and mundane language. “I can give strength.” The Druid looked around. “How do you value your captain?” he inquired softly.

“I would have taken the blows for him”, a soldier declared. “I also” asserted another. Seven more joined them.

Arden nodded. “Join hands, and you take mine”, he instructed, looking at the first to speak. Oran wanted to join in, but knew he would be foolish to spend his energy that way.

One man’s eyes opened wide. Arden spared him a glance. “He has the idrûdh spark”, Dugal whispered. “Will the Dr– gray man take him?”

“I’d bet on it”, Oran replied. Moments later, he was proven right.

“There is a price”, Arden stated as he released the soldier’s hand. His gaze went to the sixth in line. “You will come with me – you have the talent.”

The man swallowed hard, but nodded. “I would have given my life for his”, he whispered. “And so I shall. Must I surrender weapons?” he asked.

Arden smiled and shook his head. “Our lives are as valuable as any – you must be able to protect yourself.”

“What is your weapon?”

Arden tapped his staff with a finger. It didn’t even wobble; it had been standing, though leaning against the Druid’s shoulder. “This suffices.” His expression left little room for doubt.

“He’s not kidding – I watched him take a sword and an axe at once, and disarm them”, Dugal informed Oran. “Then knock them flat.” The response was a whistle of appreciation.

Eufenia had arrived, and now stepped forward. “Give me room.” Her voice had a confidence the soldiers associated with nobility; they made way. The Healer took almost an entire minute before any reaction, then it was a sigh. “I can keep him alive, no more for now. Lord Oran, I am spent.”

“Thank you”, Scout Two replied quietly. “It’s nice to be alive.” The soldiers didn’t miss the exchange; seven of them shied back.

“It’s a gift of the Holy Spirit”, Oran asserted. “No need for fear.” He flashed a wan grin. “Else I would be angry at her for Healing me.” The theory they might have believed, or not; the plain statement of experience they accepted, and relaxed.

Eufenia spent just three seconds at work, then fell back. “His digestion tubes are repaired, weakly. He cannot be moved until I do more. And I must sleep.” It wasn’t a statement of intent, but necessity; she collapsed right there and slept.

“I could use some of that”, Oran said. But events didn’t allow him that just yet.




363436.jpg
 
As the battle winds down, the count more than defeated, and the healing begins, slowly.

The Celts and Thieves sought recompense.
I'm still a bit fuzzy on the one area - 1/5 of their wealth - then the next comes and the next and the next and so on and so forth till the limit approaches -0-?

It that what was happening? I stayed up, now I'm wiped out.

Thanks for the great installment - even in battle, mercy and teaching moments - reaching across the chasm of cultures to plant seed in the minds of the beaten soldiers - a gift from the Holy Spirit - not magic.

And, the price - one of them has the spark, and must come learn, that he may benefit all.

Poetry comes in all shapes, sizes, and messages.
:wave:
 
As weary as he may be, DQ just put it perfectly! :=D: ..|

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
The Celts and Thieves sought recompense.
I'm still a bit fuzzy on the one area - 1/5 of their wealth - then the next comes and the next and the next and so on and so forth till the limit approaches -0-?

It that what was happening? I stayed up, now I'm wiped out.

Ack!

No, 1/5, period. Well, except for maybe the rich delinquents in the three inns -- but one suspects that some common-man and thief justice was handed out there in addition to any plunder.

And it was plunder. Those over three hundred extra Celts to divert attention from the castle and seize the walls came with that price. The whole extra batch of Quistadors came for pay and honor... but always a bit of plunder; that's part of any medieval-level battle.

So, not really "recompense", just plain plunder and compensation.
 
I like the fact that you show that fighting is icky, and that blowing someone's brains out, even in dire necessity, has consequences.

But I have to say that my favorite thing about this is that the knighting ritual is partly drawn from Micah 6:8! (This Pagan's favorite bit of the Bible.)
 
Kuli,
I originally read the 1/5th. What confused me was this statement
"He didn’t realize until later what he’d set off; the Celts and thieves just kept plundering until the Castellán banner ran up above the castle. . . By that quirk of fate, the part of town between the gate and the great square became poorer as the rest was spared."
 
Kuli,
I originally read the 1/5th. What confused me was this statement
"He didn’t realize until later what he’d set off; the Celts and thieves just kept plundering until the Castellán banner ran up above the castle. . . By that quirk of fate, the part of town between the gate and the great square became poorer as the rest was spared."

AH.

Maybe needs clarification. I was mentally picturing an expanding zone being methodically looted.

How does this sound:

...just kept plundering, like a wave washing over a rocky beach, until the Castellán banner ran up....


@ Crio:
the use of that passage was spur-of-the-moment. I was thinking it was extemporizing; maybe I'll change that.
 
Kuli,
That could work. It gets to them spreading the "lack of wealth, anymore" to more people.

I liked the knighting, BTW.
 
168
Ends



Montdragón had tracked him down. “Lords, the north wall refuses to surrender. We hold three-fifths of the ‘round.”

Oran looked like he wanted to cry. “I thought taking the castle....” But Enrico shook his head. “Never so easy”, he told the Scout.

“Crap. Okay, where’s Daly and the rifles? We’ll force them to keep their heads down, take the walls, and seal them in the towers. Let them get hungry, and they’ll come out.” Then he remembered why he’d gone looking for Castellán. “Señor, there’s something you must see”, he said quietly, and led the way out into the square. He decided on the church – and they ran right into an upset bishop with a party of priests. Oran looked for Inquisitors, but was grateful his Kinner-Ruger would be staying holstered.

“Señor Castellán, what is this? We are invaded, there is fire in the castle I thank God the cathedral was not threatened!”

Oran decided to do the talking. “Your grace, there is a new Count in Burgos. God has cast down the abuser of children, and set a man of honor in his place.”

The bishop looked Oran over, a shrewd look on his face. Oran had just effectively made a challenge; the bishop wanted to know how firm it was. “And tell me, who is the man I am to believe God has given us?”

Oran smiled inside at the ploy; the bishop wasn’t going to go along easily. “You spoke with him first, your grace.”

The slow turning of the man’s head suggested the bishop was thinking through implications. “You would be Count Castellán.” He paused; Oran closed his eyes, knowing what was coming – and wishing he’d had a chance to settle it first. “Surely there are heirs.” The way he said it, it was more a stern admonishment than an inquiry.

“Perhaps”, Oran said, holding up the book of lineage. “We were on our way to the cathedral to discuss it – you have better light than the square does.”

The bishop stared at Oran all of three heartbeats, then grunted and turned. “The inner porch, not the nave”, he stated, striding off.

“A side chapel, I think”, Oran countered. “There is more privacy.” With no argument to oppose that, the bishop consented. Half a minute later they were standing in a chapel to a Saint Zoilus – an obscure one, Oran judged, certain that without a pope, they wouldn’t have raised, or canonized, or whatever, any new ones here.

“Dugal, grab that serving table”, Oran instructed. Dugal set it in the middle of the room, slightly off center where the light was better. Oran put the book down, opened the first page, and opened it. He skimmed through the lineage, on the way to the end.

“They list everyone”, he pointed out. “Bastards, adopted, no one overlooked. So I trust this as thorough.”

“The Church would know”, the bishop declared smugly.

“Isn’t the confessional secret?” Oran asked, curious as to whether they might have changed that rule.

“For a matter of the heir of a Count? No, not on matters thereunto pertaining.” Dugal rolled his eyes, Oran chuckled softly; both thought the language pompous.

“How long to find out? Your records must be close”, Oran ventured.

The bishop was a bit taken aback, because Oran was right. He nodded to one of his priests – the youngest one, Oran judged – which sent the man scurrying. Oran noted two minutes and a few seconds till the priest was back, with a scroll. “Good”, Oran said, working to keep in control – if the bishop got control, there would be a steep price for cooperation; he had no doubt about that. “Padre, please read – we shall learn if our records match.” Time passed, the priest reading names, Oran checking. Once a spelling error forced them to look for more details, just in case; when they found a set of notes in both records that matched well, the bishop declared it the same person.

“So”, Oran summarized, “we have five infants, six toddlers, three youths, two nearly men, and four of age.”

“Kill them”, growled one of Enrico’s men. “Be done with it.”

Oran fumed. He knew it had been a common solution in his Earth’s Middle Ages, but he’d hoped it wouldn’t be proposed. “Soldier, I will pretend you didn’t say that”, he stated coldly, “because if you did, I would have to challenge you for besmirching the name of Castellán.” Enrico opened his mouth to argue, then shrugged and closed it – he realized he could hardly argue over such a detail with the man who had brought this solution to his family’s problem. The soldier considered, looking to his lord.

Dugal tipped the decision. “He killed a dozen men tonight, that I can attest to”, the Scout asserted. “Do not venture it.”

“I said nothing”, the soldier decided.

“Then you cannot be Count”, the bishop said, a little smugly.

“He is Count”, Oran stated flatly. “If you want to disagree, then tomorrow Señor Montdragón and I will accept challenge from these heirs, and kill them as they come.” He commenced a stare-down. The bishop flinched, and Oran knew he’d won; it was only details after this. The bishop was not one for bloodshed, who feared anyone thinking there might be any on his hands.

“Then how will you dispose of the threat, if you will not dispose of the blood?” Enrico asked. The bishop nodded his agreement at the question.

“Start with the infants and toddlers”, Oran replied. “They’re not old enough to remember. Give them new names, and new families.”

“I can find homes for the babes”, a masked woman who’d arrived with Casey said. “I know two women who lost their babes, two who want babes. The other and the toddlers, send to other cities – I will find homes there, too.”

Oran got an image from Runner, passed on from Streaker: this woman, wearing a crown, making off with gold from a sleeping house. Queen of thieves, he concluded. If it was the Queen of Hands, she changed her voice well. “Lady, my thanks for your aid”, he said. “Bishop?”

The man sighed. “I am able to call it mercy”, he said, with a glance at the soldier who’d proposed death. “Let it be done.”

Enrico sighed; Oran forged ahead. “Then the youths–“ He was interrupted by the arrival of Montdragón.

“Count Castellán, Lord Oran. My men have rounded up heirs. Shall they be brought here?”

“Yes”, the bishop declared, seeking to regain some authority in the affair. “And I expect mercy of you”, he aimed at Oran. Like I gave the little ones, Oran added, completing the sentence with what he knew the bishop was thinking.

“For the three youths, it’s simple”, Oran stated, hoping to get them off the bargaining table. “Bishop – this is under the confessional.”

The bishop flinched again. “Leave us”, he ordered them all, but caught one priest with a finger. “Save my own confessor”, he said. For a witness, Oran figured, and nodded; after a second, so did Castellán.

When the room was cleared, and only Castellán, himself, Dugal, the bishop, and the priest remained, and Enrico had order two men to clear the near area, Oran took a deep breath, and the plunge. “To the south, the House of Escobar survives, and prospers. They rule many lesser houses, and some of medium stature. High stature, really, Oran knew, but wasn’t going to say that. “These can be adopted into houses in need of sons, and earn their own honor – with a different name.”

“The Escobars”, the bishop breathed. “Traitors to many, heros to some. And you wish the Duke not to know.” This time he didn’t flinch; Oran smiled grimly and replied, trying not to grin at Runner’s impossible mental picture.

“Personally, I don’t care a fart for what the Duke knows. What I wish is to avoid a war – you want the Realm united again, but the Escobars won’t do it – I know their lord, and he, knowing of the Realm, has been preparing to stay free. He has allies also, among the Celts, and my own lord, who can call on ten thousand more” – Celts, he meant, but didn’t specify – “It is a war the Realm would not win.” Scout Two shook his head. “In war there are no winners, only the dead, the wounded, and the fortunate.”

“You have begun the war”, the bishop countered, thoughtfully. “I shall await news of other new counts.”

Enrico laughed. “Lord Oran, I had not thought of this! You would replace the Realm, under the Duke’s nose! But what then?”

Oran shrugged. “Then we show him we have an army that could take his city in a week, and he signs a treaty.”

“You will make him subject to your lord”, the bishop stated with disapproval.

“Probably”, Oran replied with a grin. “My lord won’t like it, but we’ll do it anyway.”

The bishop practically froze. “A reluctant king”, he said, very slowly. “And not incompetent, or you would not propose setting him over the Duke. No, he is a very good one.” He shook his head and sighed. “When the time comes, I will advise the Duke to submit. I also would avoid war, young Señor.”

Oran gave a shallow bow of recognition of a point conceded, wondering how Brother Dismas would have fared in this. “Then if they are willing, I will see the heirs not of age placed well in Escobar lands”, he said, sealing a bargain.”

“What if they’re not willing?” asked Enrico.

Dugal chuckled. “Then he’ll beat some sense into them, and place them anyway.” He sobered. “If they have brains, they’ll be willing. There are people who like lord Oran, people he doesn’t exactly command, who would remove them more permanently, if they don’t.”

The bishop looked to Oran, who sighed and nodded. “I don’t like it, but they do what they please.” He shrugged, as if to say, “What can a man do?”

The bishop shook his head. “If they balk, I will warn them their lives are in danger if they remain.”

“Thank you, your grace”, Enrico said. “I would not have them killed for reasons of power. Lord Oran, I thank you as well. I did not know of the Escobars’ status; knowing, I see the wisdom. These young men can also serve as a bridge to them.”

Dugal went out to meet them, waiting until they arrived. Two looked beaten, one with a slash on the arm – Dugal parked him against a wall, pulled out his herb pouch, and proceeded to doctor the wound. The third was unscathed, and frightened. “I told them there’s nothing to fear”, Dugal informed the little council. “This one....” He shrugged. “I told them an arrangement could be made.”

“An ‘arrangement’ is a good way to say it”, Oran agreed. “Gentlemen, you have a chance for a new life: I can send you to places with people you’ll understand, and you can earn your own honor. The other side is that you give up your family name and swear off all claim to anything here.”

“I would be a caballero?” the frightened one asked.

Oran grinned, a lopsided one. “You wouldn’t have to, but it would help at first. There’s nothing wrong with being a caballero and something else, too.” He watched the youth mouth the last words over, then nod.

The wounded one looked defiant. The bishop, good to his word, stepped in. “To remain is to be hunted, my son”, he warned. “These honorable men have no desire to kill you, but others are not so restrained.”

The kid looked confused. “Bishop, you would have me abandon my name?!”

The bishop sighed. “Lord Oran, if he merely swore, would that be sufficient?”

Oran had seen the question as a possibility. “On one condition – you get adopted into another house, and swear to no other claims, besides taking oath casting off this one.” He decided to commit himself. “I have to admire your loyalty and dedication. If you can give it to another house, I will see how high I can reach for you.”

“A double name?”

Castellán nodded. “Thank Lord Oran he thought of this. There is no shame, nor dishonor, in such an adoption. You would start a new line of Nevarez, if you willed it – with a better name than your father and grandfather made it”, he added drily.

“Might I be your man?” the youth asked Oran. “Is your house high?”

Oran couldn’t help but laugh. “You could be my man if you wish it, but I have no house – so far, there’s just me.”

“A noble quest, then, to build a House. I agree, and I will think on searing to your house.”

Oran let out a breath. It had gone better than he’d expected. But he had to ask... “Don’t I get a choice?” The humor in his voice was evident.

“Tell him ‘No’”, Dugal advised. That was the only response.

“Now the hard part”, Dugal called over his shoulder as he escorted the three from the room, to be kept in silence by a priest. His charges delivered, the Scout turned to the next set. “I am don Dugal. If you desire hope for a future, come with me. You two, first”, he decided, choosing the youngest pair.” As they stepped forward hesitantly, justified fear on their faces, Dugal casually asked, “Does blood frighten you?” He winked at the two with him, but the two behind went white.

“I heard that”, Oran told him quietly. “I don’t know if I should kick you or thank you.” Dugal chuckled and said nothing.

Castellán spoke first. “Your father -- or uncle – once Count, is in my hands. For his crimes, he will be surrendered to the townspeople for their choice of justice.” The two went whiter than their kin outside. “My advisors are divided: one says to kill you, one is willing to accept a challenge for your freedom–“

“Not worth the risk”, Dugal remarked. “He killed a dozen men tonight and didn’t sweat.” No mention was made of the Kinner-Ruger, of course.

One of the pair nodded, the other stared, plainly wondering if Dugal meant himself.

“Don Dugal, please do not interrupt”, Enrico scolded. “Nevertheless, he is correct”, he said to the two. “The bishop recommends mercy.” He let them think on those possibilities for a large handful of heartbeats – which to Oran and Dugal were loud. “What I wish is whatever secures this fief for my family, to keep my father safe.”

“Words.” The taller of the two spat at Castellán’s feet. “What are our choices, besides a duel?” The image from Runner was a very large, long-fanged, spine-maned cat at bay, blinded by fear and anger.

“You become squires, in service to my lord”, Oran answered calmly. “When you’re of age, you become caballeros, and stay in his service. If he decides you’re worthy, he will give you lands of your own, and may start new Nevarez houses.”

“One house only”, the taller snapped. “What other choice?”

“Come to the land of my fathers”, Dugal said, soft and deadly. “Your memories will be taken away, and you start anew, knowing nothing of your past.” Oran didn’t turn, but Dugal felt, via the link through their cats, his surprise and questioning. He sent an image of himself laughing. It came to Oran as a cat with Dugal’s face, laughing. Mentally, he shook his head.

“Two ways to death. I take the other.” He addressed Oran. “I will do well, and I will start a new house of my family.”

“Good”, Oran replied, meaning it. The youth rubbed him the wrong way, but he liked the determination. “Don’t expect to ever see these lands again.”

“Returning would be a threat to your life and future”, the bishop warned. “Some hated your father, who would not scruple at killing the son.”

Anger and stubbornness marked the response, enough to spill through raw from Runner. “Que será, será”. The stubberness was like concrete – yet Oran felt sure Rigel and the rest would tame that.

“I will accompany him”, the other declared, finally speaking. “Cousin, I will be your man. I will see our name restored.” Oran sensed he meant it differently than the other: this one understood that the Count had shamed them all. “Will you kill our kin, then?” the youth asked Enrico.

“The small ones will have families. The three just younger than you two will be adopted into other houses. The last?” Enrico asked rhetorically. “They shall have their choice, as you had yours.” He nodded to Dugal; they were led away.

“Silence as we go”, Dugal warned, knowing they wanted to ask “What other houses?” and say something to their kin.

Dugal brought back one. Enrico began to state their options, but it was a hint from Streaker, via Runner, that settled this Nevarez’ fate. He stepped forward quickly and grasped the man’s neck. “This one’s mine”, he declared, looking him in the eye. “You have a gift.” Dugal was nodding, grinning. “Your realm won’t be a small fief here in the Realm – it can be the world.”

“A gift?” Confusion dominated the tone.

“To be a Scout”, Oran told him. “To run for days, if you want, and take joy in it. To see like a bird of prey” – he couldn’t remember just then if there were eagles here – “to smell and track like a great cat.” He ran out of words.

“To have men honor you, and look to you for their paths”, Dugal added, giving a different angle. “To be trusted by rulers.” Then he grinned. “To become a caballero, if some noble takes it to mind.”

“I don’t understand.”

“I know”, Oran told him. “I didn’t either. But it’s your future. You can see things others never will, find places where no man has ever gone.”

“To see the world beyond the Realm....” It wasn’t quite a question.

“See ten times the world than the Realm”, Enrico assured him.

“Or more”, Oran amended, thinking of the expedition he had to catch up with. “Lots more.” Celtish territory along dwarfed the Realm; Escobar territory matched it, and British? Well, no one had really seen what the British had. “Come with me, and meet peoples you’ve never heard of.”

The young man stood silent long enough Oran wanted to fidget. “Then I will”, he declared finally. “I will be your squire, while I learn my gift.”

“Um–“ That would slow him down, but on the other hand, Rigel would be following a reasonably known route; he could still catch them before they reached the Constant Hills. “Provisionally”, he decided. “You have to keep up – when I leave here, I’ll move fast.” He hooked his head toward the door; Dugal went out, and brought in the last, in silence.

“I will not yield”, the last asserted. “Give me the axe.”

“What do you think of holy women?” Dugal blurted out, acting on some feeling from Slider. “Are they deserving of protection?”

“As would be the Virgin!” came the answer.

“Oran – send him to Sir Patrick.” Dugal sounded quite confident.

“Yeah – I think I get that, now. Life, I’m weak!” He addressed the young man. “You’ll have to swear to abandon all claim here. You’d be a caballero-protector for women gifted by the Holy Spirit. Maybe a special one, if God wills.”

There was still hesitation, with a good dose of defiance. “If you can defeat me with the sword”, he declared. “Tomorrow, at noon.”

Oran rolled his eyes. It would demand more of Eufenia than she’d want to give, which he didn’t like. It would require aid from Arden, but the Druid seemed to have deep resources. He wasn’t worried about losing, but he wanted to be away! He got stubborn. “Dawn, or I have you cast into a solitary cell until I return.”

The intensity of the other’s scrutiny made Oran itch. “Acceptable”, came the reply. “Whom do I have the honor of engaging?”

“This is don Oran, Señor deLambert”, Dugal responded, “Knight-Captain of Scouts.”

Oran’s future foe nodded slowly. “An honorable stature. Don Oran, I will be honored to cross blades with you.”

Oran nearly shrugged; he didn’t get ‘honor’ with combat; you fought, you either lost or won, you went on. “You demanded challenge; I set a requirement: no death. We fight until one cannot.”

The young man actually grinned. “A test of skill and endurance. In the morning, then, I will salute you.”

The bishop sighed when Dugal returned alone. “So it is done. Don Oran, you make futures out of doom. That you serve your king – I envy him, yet it proves his greatness.”

It was Oran’s turn to sigh. “No, that’s not it.” He’d thought a good deal about how to present this, and settled on an aspect of the lineage. “The House Nevarez has rarely lacked for male heirs. Mostly, it had an abundance, which sometimes caused grief. This Count’s father had only sons, as did his uncle, and his brother.” He definitely had their curiosity, if not their attention. “But girls did happen, sometimes. One happened this time.” He carefully slipped his thumbnail between two pages that clung together, and opened to one page before the one with the Count’s heirs. “He tapped the single name there. “His eldest offspring is a daughter. He didn’t want a girl as his heir. She’s in a convent. Bishop, if you don’t release her, others could use her for mischief – even steal her away by force.”

“Release her to what?” The bishop was being guarded; he was perfectly aware of Oran's meaning.

“To marriage”, Enrico said slowly. “To take Nevarez blood into my line, making my place more secure.” He knew Oran would object, and struck first. “Not many may marry for love”, he said softly. “Some, especially of our station, must marry for duty. If I may save the shedding of blood – and I may – by this marriage, then so I must do.”

Oran shook his head. “It’s your life. Maybe you’ll learn to love her.” He waved to Dugal to take him away.

“Then you’ll bless me?” Enrico asked the bishop.

“Don’t even think about requiring a gift for the church, your grace”, Oran advised. “God’s gifts aren’t things to be sold.” He got a searching look for his effort.

“Very well”, the bishop said. “I like not the manner of your ascension, but you have swept clean any claim against you. I will bless you, Sunday at Mass.”

The masked woman was waiting for Oran outside. “I gave you aid; I have need of yours”, she told him quietly. “Your friend Casey tells me you have means to contact the one I wish, yet swiftly.”

Oran frowned wearily. “Who do you wish? For what?”

“To place the other children! I wish to send those I cannot put here to El Obispo.”

“I just – wait, what bishop?”

The bishop, in Corazon dos Reyes.”



363683.jpg
 
Kuli,
With all of your background work on creating the world Atlas, I wasn't sure when you'd be ready to post another chapter.

I saw your post earlier today, but knew I didn't have the quiet space I needed to enjoy your treatise.

It would appear that this bishop is not as bad as could have been. He sees Oran and his Chivalry and Honour, hears and understands about the "Reluctant King" that he serves, and also understands the subterfuge of the "war" already started against the count. And supports it.

Los ninos Nevarez will have a much better life, all around, methinks, than they had in front of them until now.

It was a fun read. Oran needs some extra special mending to re-knit his wounds in a hurry, so he is up to the challenge of the duel in the morning.

Thanks for the update, good sir.
:wave: ..|
 
Mostly dropped in to let everyone know that I added a whole batch of names to the Compendium Biographicum, but when I did a computer shutdown they vanished wherever nomenae and their data go when lost. I've read through ten chapters now redoing it all, and have ten to go.


@DQ: I had to go back and re-read what I wrote, on seeing your comments regarding the bishop; the word "support" made me wonder what I'd done. I guess it wasn't clear enough: it would be more accurate to say he reluctantly acquiesces. It was supposed to be a parallel between reluctant bishop and reluctant 'king'.

Besides that, does anyone know an image-hosting site that will take really large images? The map for Part 3 is 1400 x 1600 pixels, and when shrunk, the names can't be read.
 
Kuli,
I suppose "support" was too strong a word. The fact that he was acquiescing and not plotting to work against him - aka saw the writing on the wall, and the potential benefit.

As to the map for part 3 - how about subdividing? I know it's not the preferred, but it might give you a way to ramp up the image.
 
Kuli,
I did notice the reference. I don't know what was happening/time constraints when I posted. I did mean to comment on Our good Bishop being The bishop in the eyes of the Queen of Thieves - and by extension, ALL of the Common People.
 
169
Directions


Half the wagons were out of the cavern, on their way down through the tunnel to the Valley of Servants. Devon’s tunnel was too narrow for wagons, and the trace out of Orchard was, Eldon had decided, too rough, so they’d be following the same route as the start of their vacation. Half of the mounted units – the lancers and archers – were going through Orchard, though, leading the small herd of horses meant for trading. Swapping them for Escobar work horses would improve the rate of the wagons, swapping for ponies would get steeds more suitable to the hills, mesas, and canyons of both Celt and Quistador territories. It was strange for them all to think that they were taking with them more horses than they’d originally found in the Valley of Horses, yet not even a quarter of the number they had now.

“Anything else?” Rigel asked. He’d been answering questions from Ryan since breakfast, before dawn. As Regent, Ryan wanted to be sure he grasped Rigel’s ideas and plans.

“All I can think of. You?”

“One other thing. I’ve thought about this hard. I wrote the basics down and signed it so no one can object it isn’t what I’d want.
“Ocean and Casey and maybe some others read some books about a place called ‘Pern’. They had a system of government that had nobles, but they were all the same rank. They were called ‘Lord Holders’, with authority over specific lands. But they were also responsible for the well-being of the inhabitants. If they really got bad at the job, the other Lords Holder come depose them.
“I got to thinking, that’s what the Celt clans and tribes and villages are like. Everyone gets food and clothes and housing just because they’re part of the tribe. Then when I think of us playing knights in lacquered armor, it reminds me of how in the Middle Ages it wasn’t like that at all.
“So I’m setting out a law making all lords under me Lords Holder, besides their other titles. The other titles depend on being a good Lord Holder, too. So everyone within a lord’s domain will be just the same as a member of a Celt tribe or village.
“ I want you to implement it.”


Devon thumped his fist on the wagon footrest. “Enough! I’m going! “

Master Oldran slammed his own fist down, but Master Kinneagh trumped him, a Smith being stronger than an Engineer in most cases – and definitely in this case. “I’ll say a word”, Kinneagh told the tunnel-builder softly before slamming his own fist down, rocking the wagon and making Devon wince. Kinneagh’s other hand came down on Devon’s back.
“Lad, sure you have spoken. And you lads – and don’t be after telling me you’re not, just for that you’re older than myself! You’ve heard the Chief Engineer, and that’s final. He himself has said it, and that’s enough. He himself has gotten all things ready, and that’s enough, too. He himself was required by Lord Rigel to go, and that’s more than enough.
“Besides that, it is needed. We are Smiths and Engineers, but Master Devon is above us more than the flames of the furnace above the anvil. Sure, that would be why we’d all love to have him stay, for his knowledge and answers. And to settle issues among us.” His foot tapped as he caught certain eyes, his words slow and even. “Yet all that is the very why he must go: Lord Rigel says he goes to places of mystery, where he will need the best of the knowledge he can have. That means Master Devon, and that’s enough. The clan yields to need, and the Hall now must yield. No more words, now.” He dropped his arms and folded them. “Master Devon, you’re going now.” It wasn’t a command; everyone knew what one of Master Kinneagh’s commands sounded like. It was a statement of fact, setting out what Devon had been trying to do and now could.

“Who settles if we argue?” a journeyman called.

Devon sighed. “Good question and I hoped no one would ask it. It’s in the orders I wrote. Now I really am going.” He turned and jogged toward where a page waited with his horse. He didn’t need to hurry, since the Snatched were letting everyone else get rolling first. On horses, they could catch wagons asleep! His jog was an effort to be away when the Smiths and Engineers discovered he’d followed Rigel’s example and put Ryan in charge while he was gone – that wouldn’t sit well with many, whose loyalty to crafthall rivaled any tribal or clan loyalty. He couldn’t blame them; many of his people had lacked any such loyalty, being misfits or outcasts because they didn’t fit the image of the warrior or woman. Several had already shown the why of their outcast past, bonding with Yankees. Devon realized that his Smithcraft hall and Engineercraft hall were probably at least a quarter gay, but to him it was no problem: the sight of two people romantically inclined warmed his heart no matter who it was.

He was mounted and moving when he heard the first yelp. Then his name was called. Feeling he owed them something, he waved, grinning like when he used to snitch cookies off the racks in his aunt’s kitchen while she bent to check the ones in the oven.


Lumina laughed. “Yes, Shannon, you and Shannon may take anyone you think is ready to the Stone. Why do you think I visited right after the weddings?! Didn’t I – oh, no, I didn’t”, she realized, thinking back: she’d been headed for the Hall to let both sets of twins know what she’d done, but she bumped into a messenger from Servant Village to the Hall, seeking help, and had gone to deal with the injuries due to a collapsed roof. After, she’d sought rest instead of talk. “I was on my way back from the Gathering Place to tell you and had to run an errand. So.
“I went to the Stone. Elzbédt heard me. Just treat the Druid shadows like visitors in the Hall, and you’ll be fine. Shannon and Shannon, Edan and Edana, you go first, though. No Healer goes alone. Elzbédt knows you twins are coming. After that, you escort others. Elzbédt and I understand what happened to the Druids. They might have stayed together if they hadn’t allowed some to go alone – well, and some other things. But no Pledged rises to Healer without a Healer escort. And all Healers who provide escort come from this Hall.” She paused and looked over the faces of the two dozen who’d come to see her off.
“All but the twins, thank you for coming. I have something now for the four.” She reached out her hand for all to touch as they left. She didn’t have to ask for space; people had come to grant Healers space for privacy unless they gave some sign of not wanting or needing it. Lumina had noticed it the first time she pulled someone from the brink of death; as other Healers achieved similar results, it had spread. It was awe, with a touch of fear, something at the beginning she’d tried to fight. She still remembered Rita’s questions: “Does Rigel like the deference he gets as lord? Does Ryan like the avoidance people give the First Wizard? Does Anaph find the way people keep their distance fun?” It was the way people were, and so long as they didn’t take advantage of it, and poked at it from time to time, it was not unhealthy, and besides, it was the way it was going to be, because that was the sort of society they were in.
“When I went to the Stone I took on a burden: I have to find Elzbét’s people. I can’t send someone to contact them for me, I have to do it myself. That’s what this trip is about, for me.” She shook her head with a sort of sour grin. “So now when others ask why I had to go, you can tell them there was good reason, not just Lord Rigel’s command. I may be head Healer, but I’m also Healer to House FitzWin. I don’t go just because of the second, but because of the first.”

“What do you think you’ll find?” Edana inquired.

Lumina shrugged. “I don’t know. Elzbédt was chased out of her homeland, with the last of their Healers. She brought them here, and I don’t know why she did that. There are things she doesn’t tell me; mostly – well, you’ll see. Don’t wait too long to go.” For a moment, she thought Edan was going to raise the issue she knew he was pondering, but he didn’t. She decided it needed to be spoken.
“I know, the rule that Pledged have to be escorted by a Healer hasn’t been followed so far. Talk about that among yourselves, but no one else. I think you’ll see the reasons – and why it isn’t going to happen again.”

“I partly see”, Edan told her. “We are not masters of the Stone, so not all doings there must follow our rules. But I expect Anaph-Drûdh has spoken to his Hall.”

“More likely Eraigh has”, the female Shannon said.

Lumina chuckled. “Probably. He’s the one I talked to.”

Edana was shaking her head. “He is but barely a man, and so high. When he goes to the Stone....”

“I know”, Lumina agreed softly. “He is already great – what will he be then?” She turned her head and whistled. Where Devon had gone to his mount, Lifewind came to Lumina.

“Hold the Hall well”, she said, a final admonition, now from above them.” There were no words in reply, only bows.


A weary quartermaster came riding up. “Lord, you should give the command”, Eldon recommended.. “Major Tanner agreed – the troops deserve their own attention from you.”

“Sets them apart from the ordinary folks, I suppose”, Rigel responded. “Are all the wagons clear of the tunnel?”

“Not yet. You want to wait?”

“Yeah. Get someone at the lip of the Falls to signal – when we move out, let’s do it at the trot. Tell Tanner he can have the mounted rifles do something flashy as they come out the bottom – if I’m going to set them apart, let’s do it with attitude. Oh – I guess that means me and the ‘general staff’ should go first so we can sit in review as they emerge.”

“There’s hope for you after all”, Rita teased. “Do you understand why they deserve the special honor?”

“I’m not dense, Wise Person.” Sadness touched his eyes. “They’re the ones here to get sliced, stabbed, stomped, and maybe chewed so the rest of us can sleep sound a whole. I never understood the liberal freaks back home who thought the military was some kind of disease or an occupation to be despised. If there’s any glory in any occupation in civilization, there is here – not glory in battle, but the glory of putting your life on the line for others.” He chuckled. “Good thing we won’t be going past Servant Village – I’d be tempted to have Tanner put on a real show of weapons.”

“Rigel, it doesn’t help to taunt them”, Rita pointed out.

“No, but I keep wondering what happened to the ‘our people ride horses, when do we go to war?’ business.”

“Culture shock”, came a familiar voice.

“Hey, Lumina. What do you mean?”

“I see it at Healer Hall: none of them expect the shiny pots and bright instruments. They expect a magic touch to fix everything at once. They’re from the Bronze Age, and when they walk into a medical set-up from the... call it the Steam Age, when their mental image is of something from the Stone Age, they get shaken.
“Servant Village held on for centuries, keeping the faith. They didn’t change, they held to what they knew. So when you fulfilled their ‘prophecy’ that their people would ride horses, and there would be a Warmaster, their view of the world gave them a picture of you mounting all your warriors and many of their people, and riding off to do battle.
“What do they see instead? The only battles you’ve fought have been against slavers – battles they really believe, anyway – most don’t believe the fight down south, because in their oral history, the Others are up here, and north of here. You’ve replaced the weapons they know, replaced the type of fighting they know, allowed a king who doesn’t answer to you to head the Celts, brought in foreigners.... they’re confused, and mostly they wish you weren’t here and they could pretend you aren’t, until it’s actually time to fight.”

“Huh.” Rigel scratched his head. “So we’ve given their worldview a swift kick in its weak spots, and they’re scared. I can buy that. Hey – am I still their Warmaster?”

The Healer nodded. “There have been grumblings. You’ll never believe who’s your sternest champion.”

“Um...” Rigel had to struggle to remember the names of Servant Village elders. “That quiet one, Daithi?”

“Nope. Geróanåch.”

He examined her face. “You’re not kidding. Wow. Say.... why does Maolmin manage to have such an open mind? Bebhin is a prune, but Maolmin’s older – why didn’t she become a grouch?”

Lumina mentally weighed the things she knew and understood. “Everyone else, start down without us”, she instructed in a voice that brooked no argument. Rigel raised an eyebrow, but nodded. “You too”, he told Austin, surprising the squire.

The Healer waited till they were alone. “Anaph suspects, but doesn’t know. I’m the only one who’s sure – sure enough Maolmin admitted I was right. I just wanted her to admit it; I knew I was right anyway. So don’t pass this on to anyone.” She took a deep breath.
“Gossip says Maolmin’s two hundred years old. That’s not even close. Rigel, you remember the story I told you about Altreaghi?”

“Last century. Discovered the clans outside the Valley were still around.”

“Right. How about the legend of the Wise Woman who stopped a war by starting to strip?”

“Yeah... um... Sineagh?”

“Right again.” Lumina took a deep breath. “Rigel, Maolmin taught Altreaghi. She was Sineagh’s best friend, her heart-sister.”

“Oh, come on – Sineagh was three hundred years ago!”

Lumina laughed. “Maybe I shouldn’t tell you the last part, the one I know for certain.”

Rigel felt uneasy, the way she put that. “Okay, what do you think I can’t handle?”

“You really want to know?”

“Probably not. But I think I need to.”

“Okay – but after this no more questions till we’re out of the Valley.”

“Whatever – give!”

Lumina’s look could have pinned a lice specimen in a dissecting dish. “When she was a girl, she met Elizabeth Kennessee – Elzbédt K·nayz’ee.”



Cristobal Nevarez signaled a stop. Oran handed him a water skin, his fierce look warning none of the seasoned Scouts to say anything. They’d run more than a hour before the first stop, which Oran had called because Cristobal was running himself into the ground. “Don’t run from pride”, Scout Two had admonished. “Run for joy. Run to celebrate Life.” Saying that, in a slowly deepening forest, had brought him to notice just how easily he’d slipped Anaph’s Druid “religion” into his own Lutheran understanding of “life, the universe, and everything”. That took him back to the night on the savanna, at Grove Camp, where Rigel had slapped together a ceremony meant to bind them together, and Anaph and Austin had sung the Nicene Creed together. That had started a path that led to Tanner breaking Casey’s jaw and arm – and now their biggest problem with Christianity was a fossilized version that hated not just what Anaph was but what Austin was. The constant part was Anaph, Druid celebrating Life. Momentarily he shivered: Druids weren’t all united and peaceful any more than Christians, after all; somewhere out here Urien lurked, with over two dozen followers, the Scouts said.

The important thing about Cristobal was that he’d come ready to run: no heavy armor or weapons, but rugged clothing ready for heavy use. Then when he’d rested, he’d started off again well, and given a good showing. So far, Oran figured he hadn’t slowed them more than an eighth – but the worst was yet to come.

“Lord Oran, my thanks for starting us early. While running with you, I could not think about the square.” Cristobal’s words were measured, spaced by his breathing.

“I didn’t want to know what that crowd did”, Oran told him. “I made sure Don Enrico was well in charge, gave Don Rodolfo final instructions, and off we went.”

Cristobal regarded him with surprise. “You make light of the duel?!”

Oran shook his head. “It wasn’t a duel. We tested each other, got a feel for who we were fighting, then he tried to cheat. He didn’t know he’d only tested Lord Oran the soldier, not Scout Oran.” He waved off the question. “Before you meet any of your people’s long lost cousins, you’ll understand.”

“Scouts get enhanced senses”, Cristobal responded slowly. “You knew what he was going to do even as he was but beginning.”

Scout Two sighed. “No – I knew what he was going to do before he was sure he’d decided. Those were the reactions of a man who’s cheated a lot. He went to it by reflex. His body moved before his mind did.”

“And you moved before his body did?” Cristobal ventured. “And killed him?”

“Look” – Oran counted to five – “Yes, I killed him. The move he’d begun was meant to kill me and make it look like an accident. But I didn’t slip, my attention wasn’t distracted, so I wasn’t where his blade sought. And as I told the bishop, he’d already broken the rules, I had no reason to believe he’d start abiding by them, and I wasn’t about to leave a swordsman around to either try for revenge or take his anger out on someone else.”

“And Don Enrico judged it an execution for attempted murder.” That came with a grin. “Not yet blessed, but judging.”

“It was a good moment – when the bishop accepted that, I knew everything would be okay.” Except the look of appeal in his opponent’s eyes, regret and repentance, when they both knew it was too late, a look he’d never forget. Now he’d have to live with knowing he’d killed someone who hadn’t intended murder, but had only been betrayed by old habits, because he’d been tired and not alert to what Runner had been sensing. The cat’s presence in his mind comforted – a picture of himself as a cub, cuddled in massive arms.

Cristobal nodded. “For you. Yet my family... one with a mainly good heart died, and one who should have died, for he means you ill, lives. You know he will flee?”

Casey cracked up. “Only once! Unless he’s stupid.”

Their Quistador recruit’s forehead wrinkled. “He knows the territory. Why would he need to flee twice?”

Oran and Casey grinned at each other. Casey did a good Earth-cat “meow!” Moments later, a great cat raced by in a blur, then looped and came to sit at Casey’s feet. A second came at a swift but slower pace, to take his place by Oran. Three heartbeats after, a third great cat leapt from above and skidded to a stop. Dugal came trotting in, a quizzical look on his face.

“You spoke of companions....”, Cristobal whispered, frozen and staring.

“Yeah. Meet Streaker, Runner, and Slider”, Casey pronounced gleefully. “Can your brother get away from them?” He leaned toward their audience of one. “The answer is ‘no’”, he related in a stage whisper.

“They are but three”, Cristobal observed, trying to make himself relax.

Oran grinned ruefully. “Think of them as the king and two dukes. There are a lot of great cats out here. Many of them answer to Streaker.”

“Streaker is yours? You rank highest, here.”

Casey cackled. “Streaker’s with me. I’m his Scout. They don’t care about rank. And, Oran, Streaker says you’re moving too hard. Eufenia isn’t here to fix you if you tear something.”

Oran sighed, dropped to the ground and sat. “Yeah. Sorry, Runner, I haven’t been paying attention.” His cat smacked him on the butt with his tail. “Okay – we slow down.” He grinned at Cristobal. “Your lucky day.”

“I make no complaint”, the Quistador-born Scout replied with a grin. “Perhaps you made a mistake in your care.”

Oran scratched his head. “Mistake?”

“You did not bring the woman scout.”

“Meckayh?” Oran grimaced. “She wants more than just caring for me – she wants more than I’m going to give.”

“I think she wants to give you everything.”

Oran snorted. “I think she wants what’s between my legs and expects to get advancement from it. For one thing, I won’t tie favors together like that; you advance on skill, or you don’t advance. For another, I don’t just give my body like that. Somewhere, our Creator has a woman suitable for me – or a bunch to choose from, anyway; I don’t think He plays games like each man only having one right mate out there. And no, she isn’t right for me – and no, I can’t explain why. And I hope you’re done stretching, ‘cause here we go.” Oran set off after Casey, who’d volunteered to be roaming point. That wouldn’t last past the forest: roaming point ran close to – maybe sometimes over – twice as far as anyone else, and when the savanna came under their feet, that was going to be Oran’s joy. He’d just have to follow Runner’s and Streaker’s directions, and take it easy until then.



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And They're Off - On Two Fronts!

Lots of great stuff, Kuli. Our core snatched, plus a small retinue of 700-100- od their closest "friends" lead off from Cavern hold for the great adventure - to the lands of the heirs of Lord Escobar of old, then on to New Great Britain to meet the Queen and Elizabeth Kennessee's decendents.

And our dear Wise Woman, Methuselah - I mean, Maolmin, yeah, THAT's her name, Maolmin, is almost as old as the hills. What powers the life stone pours forth into the waters of the valley of Servant Village. We have speculated on this before, now word starts to work it's way from our Head Healer on down to the rest of the gang - sort of. Rigel is special, after all. Ard Rye and all.

Meanwhile, over in Quistador Territory, our Scouts are having a merry old time departing the scene of the first coup, "enlightening" Cristobal, their newly acquired non-heir with the Scout spark. to their "travel kittpanions", and the extent of the relationships.

Man oh man oh man. I'm sure I'm missing some of the good stuff - I'm not forgetting the closing comments - "I don't operate that way and my body is my temple and she's not getting any of it." Damn straight. He's THAT good, and they all have that much class.

Thanks. Now get some rest and get better!
 
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