Vaelora and Quaeryt were in Bhayar’s study by a quint past seventh glass on Jeudi morning. First, Quaeryt brought up the issue of the late High Holder Fauxyn. When he finished, he looked to Bhayar.
The Lord of Telaryn and Bovaria smiled. “I think that all these complaints about succession for High Holders should be a matter handled by the Minister of Administration and Supply for Bovaria, jointly with Vaelora. You know more about the implications and laws, Quaeryt, and you have the blood, sister dear, so that these prickly High Holders can’t complain that they’re being dismissed by a mere commander.”
Quaeryt couldn’t argue with Bhayar’s logic, and neither, he saw, could Vaelora.
“Whatever solutions you two adopt should not deviate too far from existing practices. I don’t want you disciplining High Holder after High Holder.”
“What about allowing widows to hold and administer the lands for their children?” asked Quaeryt. “If a child is a boy, until he reaches maturity. If there are only girl children, until the eldest is old enough to marry the son of another High Holder. That preserves the bloodlines, and doesn’t force quick and unsuitable alliances.”
“You might add something about the widow also being allowed to marry someone of equivalent suitable rank,” suggested Vaelora.
“What do you have in mind there, sister dear?”
“Any single or widowed officers of the rank of commander or higher in the Telaryn forces,” said Vaelora. “There won’t be many, but there might be a few younger widows or those whose heirs died in the war. It would also offer another possibility.”
“That exception will have to receive my approval on a situation by situation basis,” replied Bhayar. “What else did you want to talk over?”
“The missing Bovarian imagers,” replied Quaeryt. “Ever since the battle of Variana, and even before, I’ve wondered why we never encountered any Bovarian imagers. We’d heard that Kharst had them…” He went on to recount the conversation of the night before.
When he finished, Bhayar nodded slowly. “That makes sense, unhappily. You don’t have any idea where they might be?”
“None, but I wanted you to know that there was the chance that they might appear or cause trouble in the future.” Quaeryt paused, then asked, “You haven’t heard any rumors, have you?”
“No. Not a one, but it’s unlikely I would. What are your thoughts?”
“The Khellans won’t want them, and Bovarian imagers wouldn’t feel safe there for long, even now. Sooner or later, if they stay in Lydar, there’s a chance we’ll likely hear something.” Quaeryt shrugged. “Then again, we might not, but I don’t want you to be surprised.” Rulers don’t like surprises, especially unpleasant ones.
“What are you two doing today?”
“I’m going to survey the isle of piers with the imagers and get them started on making the place suitable for a Collegium.”
“I don’t want you there personally all the time,” said Bhayar.
“After I survey the place and have Lhandor and Baelthm draw up plans and approve them, I won’t have to be. That will likely take the next few days.” Quaeryt grinned. “It will remove an eyesore and will be another part of your efforts to improve Variana into a most excellent city.”
“Don’t push it, Quaeryt,” said Bhayar genially.
“Sir … have I ever not acted in your interests?”
“Just leave it at that.” Bhayar looked to Vaelora. “Try to keep him from acting in interests I don’t even know I have.”
“Yes, brother dearest.”
Bhayar offered a long and dramatic sigh. “Go … both of you.”
Neither Vaelora nor Quaeryt spoke until they were alone in the smallest of the studies they had taken for their ministry, the one with a desk and a conference table. Quaeryt had insisted that the desk was Vaelora’s.
Vaelora looked at her husband. “What are you going to do first today?”
“As I told your brother, start working to turn the isle of piers into the grounds for the Collegium Imago.”
“Bhayar hasn’t approved the name…”
“I’m not using it except with you and him until he does.” Quaeryt smiled. “He will.”
“So long as you keep yourself safe and don’t try something like the other day.”
“I won’t.”
Vaelora looked at him firmly.
“I promise.”
“Can you finish surveying and hand things over to the imagers?”
“I haven’t even started because we were working on the roads and the entrances to the Chateau Regis.”
“I think he’s right.”
“I’ll see what I can do today and early tomorrow.”
She nodded, then slipped her arms around him for a moment.
Even so, in less than a third of a quint, Quaeryt was mounted and riding toward the headquarters holding with half a squad, and by a quint past eight glass, Quaeryt, the imagers, and Elsior, and the duty company were at the bridge to the isle of piers.
Imagisle … in time, thought Quaeryt, you hope.
“Lhandor … a gate in your grillwork, please.”
“Yes, sir.” The Pharsi undercaptain concentrated but briefly, and a set of double gates replaced a section of the iron grillwork.
One of the duty company rankers rode forward and swung the gates wide.
“Company! Forward.”
At the end of the bridge Quaeryt called another halt and turned in the saddle. “Elsior! Forward.”
The Pharsi trainee from Liantiago rode forward. “Yes, sir?”
“See what you can do to create a causeway from the end of the bridge down to that ruin of a road.”
“Yes, sir!” Elsior straightened in the saddle and concentrated.
White mist appeared at the end of the bridge, extending perhaps five yards. When it cleared, there was a stretch of paved causeway. The young imager frowned, then wiped his brow.
“It’s harder than it looks,” observed Quaeryt mildly. “Have some lager from your bottle and a biscuit. I’ll do a little stretch and then you can try again.”
“Yes, sir.”
All in all, it took two quints to finish the fifty yards of the causeway, with Quaeryt alternating with the young trainee. When it was done, Elsior was pale and shaking, and that was fine with Quaeryt, because that kind of stressful imaging was what it took to strengthen any imager. After that, as he rode down the last section of the newly imaged causeway toward the warren of rubbish behind the ruined buildings fronting the river and the sagging piers, Quaeryt could immediately see that the destruction was far worse than he had thought. Nearly all the warehouses either were roofless or their roofs had collapsed onto empty and sagging interiors, as if most had been abandoned years before. In a few places he could see charred timbers and signs of a fire, but even the charred sections of wood had faded into a dark gray.
He turned to Baelthm, riding beside him. “It doesn’t look like the isle’s been used in years.”
“No, sir. I’d wager that it flooded too much.” The older imager pointed to the northeast. “That section over there … looks like it’s only a few yards above the water.”
“Then we’ll just have to deepen the river on each side and image the spoil onto the isle.”
Quaeryt turned in the saddle and grinned at Lhandor and Khalis. “That will keep you both in practice … and strengthen Elsior and the student imagers.”
For a moment Lhandor looked stricken, until he glanced at Khalis, who had grinned back at Quaeryt and said, “Yes, sir, but what do you want us to do with the cataract that will create at the north end of the isle?”
“Maybe we’ll have to widen the channel, too,” replied Quaeryt with a smile. “We need to ride north and see how bad it is. Keep sketching any ideas you have, Lhandor.”
“Yes, sir.”
Quaeryt gestured and then urged the gelding forward.
Riding to the northern end of the isle, a good mille from the bridge, took a good half glass, just because of the need to image rubbish and rubble out of what had once been a road or a lane behind the abandoned buildings on the west side. As Quaeryt had surmised, though, the last quarter mille or so sloped upward to the rocky outcrops that had partly protected the southern section of the isle from being eroded completely by the River Aluse.
He reined up short of the rough ground that held no structures and surveyed the back side of the granite ramparts he had earlier imaged. From what he could tell, they were solid enough. “We’ll head back along what passes for a lane on the east side.” He turned the black gelding.
The east side of the isle was even more dilapidated than the west side had been. At the lowest point, roughly a third of the way south, the floodwaters had apparently earlier flowed over the isle embankment, and then receded to leave a small pool.
“We’ll definitely have to build up this part of the isle,” said Quaeryt.
“You want me to do some of that now, sir?” asked Horan from where he rode behind Khalis and Lhandor.
“Not right now. You’ll have enough to do shortly.”
Near the southern tip of the isle on slightly higher ground to the west, they came to the ruin of the anomen, standing between two tumbledown buildings that might once have been warehouses of some sort.
“Sorry-looking anomen,” observed Baelthm.
Quaeryt studied the building. Despite the years, or possibly century or more of neglect, the tan stone walls appeared solid, and behind the heavy sagging beams that blocked the entrance, the ironbound, age-darkened, double oak doors looked sturdy. The roof tiles were chipped and cracked, but most appeared still in place, if most precariously. “It’s held up well against time and neglect. As you can, Baelthm, I’d like you to take charge of restoring it. You’ll need to call on the others to help, but we do have a chorister now, and he should have a proper anomen.”
“I can see that, sir.”
The only other buildings Quaeryt judged worth saving were a pair of newer and very solid long warehouses near the south end of the isle, but north and east of the anomen, and south of the new bridge. As with the anomen, they were located on somewhat higher ground and looked to be able to be converted into good barracks.
Once he completed his informal survey, Quaeryt gathered the imagers, as well as the company captain and the squad leaders, then began to outline the plan for the remainder of the day. “Most of the buildings aren’t worth saving, except for the two stone warehouses and the anomen, and most of the ground is lower than it should be. We’ll begin by clearing the south end of the isle, except for the anomen and the two warehouses. You’re to flatten the buildings into small pieces but not to remove the pieces because we’ll need all the fill we can find. After that, we’ll see where we need to build up the isle the most…” He went on to explain before turning to Lhandor. “You’ll likely have to modify the plans you drew earlier because I want you to work with me-as we can-on a plan for the entire isle.” At the looks that crossed the imagers’ faces, Quaeryt smiled. “No … we won’t be doing all that this week or the next, but we need a plan so that we don’t have to do things over…”
By the time fourth glass had approached, every structure on the isle, except the three buildings, had been reduced to fill, not that it had taken as much effort as Quaeryt had thought it might because most of the buildings would have collapsed before long anyway.
“That’s more than enough for today!”
As the tired imagers and troopers rode off the west end of the bridge, Quaeryt could see people watching from the east side of the old river road. Those nearest the bridge eased away quickly.
For all their trepidation, Quaeryt couldn’t help but wonder how long that deference would last. A few years after the last building is in place-unless we do something else massive and mighty.
He didn’t shake his head as he led the column toward the north road.