CHAPTER FOURTEEN

CENTRAL OREGON RANCHERS' ASSOCIATION TERRITORY EAST OF BEND,OREGON

JANUARY 22, CHANGE YEAR 24/2023 AD

Signe Havel cursed quietly beneath her breath, and spat to clear the alkali dust from her mouth. It was futile; the cold morning wind that snapped the dark brown banner with its snarling crimson bear's head beside her blew more back into her face, along with a little dry snow from yesterday's thin fall. The sun was far enough over the horizon now that a squint and the shade of her raised visor did well enough to show the huge rolling landscape that opened out before her. Gray-green sage, a frosting of white snow blown in numberless little crescents against the sides of brown dead bunchgrass, the slightly darker brown of bare soil, aching-blue sky…

She was a tall fair woman a little past forty; the face under the raised visor of her sallet helm was still beautiful, in a fashion now slightly harsh. The sixty pounds of Bearkiller cavalry armor-breastand backplate of articulated steel lames, similar cover for upper arms and thighs, vambraces and greaves-didn't bother her.

It's about the only thing about this cock-up that doesn't bother me very much indeed, she thought. But Mike taught me a long time ago that you have to look positive for the troops.

She'd kept all her skills up, enough that she wasn't a handicap on a battlefield where command was her primary job, but she hadn't taken the field for years. Most of the time she ran the civil side of Bearkiller affairs from Larsdalen-the core of which had been her family's summer home even before the Change-and left active military leadership to her twin brother, Eric Larsson.

But most of the time we're not scraping the bottom of the barrel and holding on with our fingernails, she thought bleakly.

And then, as she watched the skirmish half a mile away:

I haven't forgotten how to do this. I also haven't forgotten how much I dislike watching men die. Even strangers who've never done me any personal harm; my friends, even less.

It was a chilly winter's day here up on the high sagebrush plains east of the Cascades, which introduced yet another of the discomforts of wearing armor-in summertime she'd have been roasting like a pig after a blot in the suit of articulated plate, and now it made her sweat whenever she was active and then let the moisture in the padding beneath turn dank and greasy-chill as soon as she was still for more than a few moments.

Which right now is the least of my worries.

The enemy had thrown up the earthwork fort beside the old road bridge in less than a day; her own field engineers were lost in professional admiration at how swift and thorough it had been.

Damn them all, Signe thought. Hella eat them and spit the bones into Ginnungagap!

The foursquare earth walls appeared as if dug by a race of giant prairie dogs, with four low thick towers of prefabricated timbers at the corners, sheathed in steel plates and a broad abatis covered in angle iron and barbed wire. The United States of Boise's flag flew over it; since they considered themselves the United-States-of-America-full-stop they used the Stars and Stripes. Which her husband, Mike Havel, had always considered slightly blasphemous for any of the thousand-and-one successor states in the ruins of the world left by the Change.

At least Lawrence Thurston had really believed in restoring the United States. His parricide son, Martin, just wanted to be Emperor, as far as the reports could tell.

The cavalry deployed around it to protect the construction were mostly Pendleton rancher levies, light cavalry armed with bow and slashing-sword, few with any protection beyond a bowl helmet and steerhide jacket. And a platoon's worth of the Sword of the Prophet, elite troops of the Church Universal and Triumphant out of Corwin. Boise's theocratic allies were armored in lacquered leather and chain mail, and unlike the ranchers and their cowboys they used both lance and bow.

Which was supposed to be our Bearkiller A-list's monopoly, she thought. There aren't as many enemy horses as there were yesterday, when I decided we couldn't take them on. That's because the fort's finished today. Do we get anything by winning this action' But if we just retreat every time they run up a fort, why not surrender right away'

The Bearkillers had ranchers' retainers with them as well, men and the odd woman from the CORA, the Central Oregon Ranchers' Association. The two forces of light horse were skirmishing, loose knots of horsemen galloping and exchanging arrows that twinkled as they reached the top of their trajectories and plunged downward. Now and then a man would fall, or a horse. A clump of riders would drive in to the rescue, and light broke off the honed edges of the swords as little squads cut and stabbed at each other, saber against shete. One such rescue party got a little too close to the new fortlet, and there was a deep unmusical tunnnggg-whap! sound as the heavy truck springs that powered a murder-machine on one of the towers cut loose. 'Shit,' she said flatly.

The ball from the six-pounder scorpion was too fast to really see save as a streak until it was nearly to the target. Distance mercifully hid the details, but she thought it smashed a man's head off; certainly he rode on for a dozen paces before toppling. The others exploded outward like a drop of water on a hot greased skillet; one of them paused a second to swing the unhorsed comrade they'd first come for up behind him. The dead man's horse followed the rest of the war band with the stirrups bouncing loose. 'The High One receive him, and the valkyr bring him the mead of heroes,' she murmured, and signed the Hammer with her was. 'And that one who rescued his friend is a brave man too,' her son Michael Jr. said.

He'd filled out and shot up as he turned sixteen, and though he was taller now he looked more like his father than ever-save that his hair was fine and corn yellow, rather than Mike Havel's coarse black mane. That meant Michael Jr. also looked more like his half brother Rudi, a thought which made her force herself not to scowl; they were both exceptionally handsome young men, straight-nosed, with square dimpled chins and high cheekbones. Mike had the brand of the A-list between his brows, despite his youth. He'd won it by bravery on the field, at the Battle of Pendleton last year, and the privilege of carrying the lance that bore the Bear-head flag.

The lance was perfectly functional. Bearkillers didn't bring empty symbols to a battlefield.

The mounted trumpeter on her other side was also close kin, her twin brother Eric's son Will, and also young for his task. A field-force commander's signaler had to get things right. That branch of the family was Catholic; he crossed himself. Both the youngsters wore only mail shirts and leather armguards over their brown uniforms. Not even Bearkiller thoroughness went to the hideous expense of refitting fast-growing teenagers in a new set of plate armor every year. It had to be tailored like a fine suit of clothes. 'Signal execute retreat,' Signe said.

His brown face was solemn as he raised the trumpet to his lips and blew the six-note call the regulation three times. 'Now let's see if the CORA boys are still fixated on being ornery independent cusses of sure enough cowpokes by goddamn, or whether they've finally learned to do what they're told,' she said.

They had; the whole hundred-odd of them started to fall back at a hand gallop, turning in their saddles to shoot. The Pendleton cowboys pursued their outnumbered opponents, yelling and whooping and bunching up, which was almost instinctive in a situation like that. Signe's lips peeled back from her teeth in a she-wolf grin as they approached a certain point and her hand rose. The forces of the realms allied in the Meeting at Corvallis were stretched thin. She had thirty A-list lancers with her, no more, and the lower your numbers the less the margin you had for error.

I don't have any at all.

The retreating CORA riders passed over a low ridge, and towards a section of sparse grassland dotted with sagebrush that looked no different from a hundred thousand square miles just like it in this part of the continent. The CORA horsemen weren't trying to lead the enemy towards her; reckless or not, the pursuit wouldn't come anywhere near the A-listers. Not within charging range of armored lancers on armored horses; not so close that they couldn't disengage on their more lightly burdened mounts and pepper the heavy horse with arrows from a distance.

And… yes, one or two of them were starting to look at the ground ahead suspiciously. One stood in his stirrups to shout something. Beside her Will put the instrument to his lips and took a deep breath. 'Wait… now!'

Her arm chopped downward. Will's bugle call rang out instantly, loud and sweet. The CORA horse-archers split left and right as the sagebrush erupted. A hundred Mackenzies sprang up from where they'd lain prone beneath their war-cloaks since they'd crawled forward in the middle of last night. The cloaks were mottled coarse cloth sewn with loops that held sage and bunchgrass; they fell aside to reveal kilt and plaid… and brigandine and helmet and well-stuffed quivers of clothyard shafts fletched in gray-goose feathers.

It was cold last night. Better them than me!

A piper was with them, and the harsh, hoarse squeal of the drones wailed out. As it did the long yew bows came up, bent into beautiful shallow curves, and began to snap. Arrows flicked out in a sudden ripple, thirty a second at point-blank range into a bunched target; a target of horses completely unprotected, and of men with nothing more than boiled leather or the odd mail shirt. The charge of the Pendleton men shattered like a glass bottle flung at a castle wall as men and horses went down in a thrashing, screaming tangle, and now — 'Sound charge!' she called.

The trumpet sang, high and sweet. The A-listers' deep shout of Hakkaa Palle! rang out as the lances dipped and the big horses began to move away from her in a mounting rumble of hooves. Tactical doctrine specified a two-deep staggered row for this. Sheer lack of numbers meant a single line. 'Hakkaa Palle! Hack them down!'

They started slower than a ranch-country quarterhorse; sometimes she thought those were crossbred with jackrabbits, and the Bearkiller mounts were carrying the armor of their riders and their own on neck and chest as well. But their long legs were fast enough when they got going… and the Pendleton cowboys were too tangled with their own dead and dying to react quickly. The arrow storm stopped as the Bearkillers struck. Five minutes later the enemy were running hard, but by then far fewer of them were able to move.

The CORA horse-archers rallied behind the Mackenzies and slid back around to their right, to the north and as close to the fort as they could get without being back in artillery range. That put them on the flank of any attack by the block of the Sword of the Prophet waiting under the fort's cover.

They weren't moving. It wasn't cowardice.

It's iron discipline, she thought. Damn. We were supposed to be ahead in that, too.

The Pendleton men still outnumbered the Bearkillers by three to one, even after most of the A-list fighters had speared one enemy out of the saddle in the first onset. That was about as important as fresh eggs outnumbering ball-peen hammers, though; now the backswords were out, armored riders on tall barded horses working in drilled teams. The eastern cowboys stood the melee for moments only, just long enough to look for a way out. Most instinctively broke southward away from the Bearkillers… which meant they had to cross the front of the Mackenzies again, as the A-listers left them to the longbowmen.

Even at this distance and over the sound of the'Ravens Pibroch' she could see the grins of the clansfolk, and hear them shouting cheerful bets at each other as they drew and tracked the moving targets and loosed. A superficial acquaintance with Mackenzies could leave you with the impression that they were a friendly, musical, fanciful, harmless people. Signe Havel had been dealing with them almost as long as there had been Mackenzies, and she knew that stereotype was about three-quarters right.

The last bit was a very bad mistake, though. Lethally bad.

Three more of the enemy squeezed out northward and made straight for her in a triple plume of dust either just trying to get by, or out for some revenge on the party under the enemy banner. They grew swiftly from doll-size to real men on real horses, close enough to see the fixed snarls of terror and rage, the thin reddish beard of one, the bleeding slash along another's cheek. 'Heads up, troopers,' she said to her son and nephew, drawing her sword and sliding her round shield onto her arm.

Will slung the trumpet around over his back and pulled the recurve bow out of its saddle scabbard before his left knee; his other hand went back and twitched three arrows out of his quiver, putting one on his string and the other two between a forefinger and the bow stave. They all signaled their horses forward with thighs and balance, walk-trot-canter-gallop; an A-lister usually didn't touch the reins in battle.

Three deep breaths and everything left her mind but the now. The cowboys drew closer with shocking speed, strings of foam and slobber running from their horses' jaws. The men were nearly as wild-eyed, their shetes in their hands. None of them had any arrows left in their quivers-most of these cow-country men were fine shots, but the sort of organization that brought ammunition forward during a fight wasn't their long suit. Beside her Mike Jr. was riding with perfect form, shield on arm and lance slanted forward at forty-five degrees, held loosely. The popping fluttering rattle of the flag increased as the wind of their passage cuffed at it.

Will's bow snapped, once, twice, the boy bracing himself up in the stirrups of the heavy war-saddle as he drew and loosed. The cowboy opposite him ducked below the first shaft as it wasp-whined by his face. That put his collarbone right in the path of the next; there was a wet crack sound of parting bone audible over the pounding of hooves, and he pitched backward off his horse.

Signe gave her opponent the point, sword extended at the end of her outstretched arm like a lance, but he threw himself to one side just in time. She wrenched her sword up and over to rest behind her back for an instant as they flashed past. Tunng and the heavy shete's backhand stroke hit it hard enough for the blow to wrench at her hand, just over the spot where there was a gap between the flare of her sallet helm and the upper edge of the backplate.

Her horse reared and crow-hopped three times on its hind legs as it killed its momentum in response to her signals. It whirled as it came down, eyes bulging, huge yellow chisel-teeth bared as it snapped at the cow pony. That agile beast had already wheeled and put its master within chopping range; he struck at her three times in fewer than three heartbeats, overarm and forehand and backhand.

Tung. Crack. Tung.

One blow caught on her backsword, one glanced off the surface of her shield, another on the sword, and this time it slid down to hit the guard and numbed her hand again. She had no time to strike back. The man was shrieking as he hewed at her, half her age and quick and strong…

Then he coughed, looked down at the arrowhead that jutted from his leather coat, coughed again in a spray of red, and slumped away. One high-heeled boot caught in a twisted stirrup as he fell, and the horse moved away dragging him and looking back over its shoulder, dancing sideways until the boot slid off the foot and the body dropped free. Then it galloped away.

Mike Havel had given the Bearkillers many sayings. One was:

Fair fights are for suckers.

Another was:

One for all, and all on one. 'Thanks,' she wheezed to Will Larsson, wiping drops of blood off her eyelids with the leather on the palm of one gauntlet.'Been a few years since I did this.'

Long enough to forget how it can leave you feeling like a wet dishcloth in a few seconds, she thought, struggling to take steady deep breaths. ' De nada,' he replied, his smile white.

He came by the tag naturally; his mother Luanne's mother was Tejano, and Angelica Hutton had been the Outfit's quartermaster-general since that meant cooking dinner personally. His maternal grandfather had been a black horse-breaker from the Texas hills. The combination of that Afro-Anglo-Hispano-Indio mix with Eric's Nordic heritage had given him exotic good looks, bluntly regular full-lipped features, skin the smooth pale light brown of a perfect soda biscuit, eyes midnight blue and hair curling from under the edge of his helmet in locks of darkest yellow.

A look around the Sword of the Prophet were cantering forward a little as her A-listers pursued the fleeing ranchers' men. The A-list lancers reined in at the very fringe of the area covered by the fort's war engines, turned, and cantered back towards her. The Corwinites halted again when the CORA men started lofting arrows at them from extreme range, a bit over two hundred yards with a saddle bow. The survivors of the Pendleton force drew up behind the Prophet's guardsmen-all but a few who kept going east as fast as they could quirt their horses. 'We beat'em!' Will said. 'Good as we can expect, dammit,' she said.

Mike Jr. was out of the saddle, pulling at the shaft of his lance with a foot braced on the body of the man it pierced, looking grim but not too wobbly. The lance was disposable, but the banner had to be retrieved. And bloodstains were nothing new on a Bearkiller battle flag.

This was his second real fight, not his first, she reminded herself. 'Trooper,' she said. Mike looked up.'Put something white on the end of that, and ask the enemy commander whether he's interested in a mutual half-hour truce, for each side to retrieve their wounded.'

It took an effort to say; the enemy-even the Prophet's fanaticsusually respected a flag of truce on the battlefield. About as often as her side did, for the same self-interested reasons. That still meant sending her son into talking distance of men for whom mercy was scarcely even a concept.

I can't treat Mike any different from the way I would any bannerman, she told herself.

He grinned at her and saluted crisply.'Yes, ma'am!'

Signe slid her unmarked sword back into the scabbard and rested the palms of her gauntlets on the horn of her saddle for an instant, waiting tensely while her son cantered over the battlefield and picked his way between fallen men and horses. The sun had barely risen at all; the whole affair had taken less than half an hour. Mike waved at her after an instant's conversation with the man beneath Corwin's flag of golden-rayed sun on a bloodred ground before turning and galloping back. She kept her breath of relief behind her lips until he was out of arrow range.

Will used his trumpet again, and the light two-wheel carts came forward to gather the hurt, with medics jumping down to administer first aid. For a moment there was little sound, except the sough of wind and the shrieks and moans and whimpers of humans and horses in pain. That became less, as the wounded animals were put down and the men given morphine.

The Mackenzie commander came up, running afoot with one hand on the stirrup leather of his mounted opposite number from the CORA contingent, the longbow pumping in his left hand. 'Montival's secret weapon strikes again, you might be after sayin',' the grinning leader of the Mackenzie archers said; he was an olive-skinned young man named Beech, after the tree.'We've only a few hurt. They should all make it.' 'Stung'em bad,' the rancher said.'We paid for it, but they're busted for now. Bastards won't have as many men to go raiding after our herds next time!'

His name was McGinty, and he had a bullhide breastplate with his own Bar Z brand pyrographed on the boiled leather. The horsehair plume on his helmet bobbed as he chuckled.

He's younger than me, too. So many are these days. Forty's not old! Well, forty-two.

That thought marked her age itself. These days, forty was fairly well along. Not many people beyond their first youth had survived the generation since the Change; she'd been eighteen then, herself. It was some consolation that she looked a lot younger than her age by today's standards, since she didn't pass her days in field labor. 'Get your people heading east to camp,' she said to the Mackenzie. 'Don't get settled in there, either.' 'We're leaving'' he said.'After this fine and glorious thrashing we gave them, and the kicking of their arse so hard their teeth came marching out like little pikemen on parade''

Signe nodded towards the fort; a century of Boise infantry were double-timing out of the gates… and they had a fieldpiece with them. 'With that as a base, this isn't a healthy locality,' she said grimly.'Move. We'll accompany and the Bar Z men will cover us both. Eat, get your gear packed, get on your bicycles and clear out to the next rally point. And could you get that so-called musician to stop torturing that poor agonized pig'' ''Tis scarcely war at all without a piper!'

The clansfolk moved in a ground-eating trot that made it easy for the cavalry to hang behind them. The allied force's hasty encampment was four miles up the road-where another small bridge had spanned a gulch that scored the rolling plain, muddy save for patches of snow now, potentially a torrent. There was no glimpse of the Cascades on the western horizon… not quite, unless you used binoculars. Her horse picked its way across the streambed, hooves clotting with temporary boots of black sludge. The Mackenzies took the stretchers with the wounded on their shoulders, cheerfully trudged through the glop themselves, and manhandled the empty ambulance carts over.

They even found energy to sing, as they strutted into camp with their piper sounding off, a rollicking tune with a chorus that went:

'Gather the sheaves of harvest-time lightly

Many a day will they strengthen our kin;

Gather the sheaves of arrow shafts tightly

Many a battle their feathers will win!

Call the names of the clansmen who've fallen;

Let them be carried like seeds on the wind!'

The bridge had been as thoroughly destroyed as thermite, metal saws and enthusiastic sledgehammers could manage in the time they'd had. 'That'll delay them,' Will said as their mounts surged up the low slope on the other side of the stream.

Rock rattled down as hooves pushed them out of the damp sandy earth. His cousin snorted. 'Yah. Just as long as it takes Thurston's engineers to bring up materials to build a replacement,' Mike said.'While they also bring up enough troops to hold us off.'

His face turned to her.'Moth-I mean, Ma'am, why aren't we bringing up enough force to stop this' They're nailing down Highway 20 like someone tacking down a strip of carpet. At this rate, they'll be at the gates of Bend by springtime. After that there's nothing to stop them short of the forts in the passes over the Cascades.' 'Trooper, we're not doing that because they're doing something like this in half a dozen other places as well. If we put more troops here, they'd push west faster somewhere else.'

Greasewood fires were burning under big aluminum kettles cut down from old trash barrels; the smell made spit run into her mouth as her stomach unclenched. Signe swung down from her horse, wondering where several suddenly painful incipient bruises and wrenched joints had come from-except for the ones under her shield arm, and the wrist of her sword hand, which she knew about full well. Military apprentices attended to the Bearkillers' chores, taking the barding off the A-lister horses, packing it on mules, handing out food. They were young men and women of Will and Mike's age, and this was part of their training.

Was this really more exciting when I was campaigning with Mike' she wondered.

She quickly spooned down thick barley-and-mutton soup, gnawing on a tasteless wheatcake with alternate bites from a raw onion and a lump of rocklike cheese that bit back at the inside of her mouth. Then she used the last of the flatbread to mop out the bowl before she tossed it back.

Or am I just getting nostalgic' Nostalgic for a war, of all things. Frigga witness, I was a fucking vegetarian before the Change, and the next thing to a pacifist. Though that didn't last long after I met Mike. 'Was this ever better, Aaron'' she said aloud.'I remember it as being… fresher back in the War of the Eye, and before that. Not as boring, not as uncomfortable, not as frightening either.'

The slim sixtysomething physician didn't look up from his work with splint and bandages, his hands moving with a swift, impersonal gentleness as the man whose leg had been pulped by a war hammer stirred and moaned beneath the drug. He hadn't taken the field lately either, having been the Outfit's chief doctor since before they arrived back in Oregon in the first Change Year. Supposedly his jobs were training and administration. 'No, it was mostly about like this,' he said shortly.'You're just remembering being young and hormonally optimistic and in love, and retrospectively you know we won. More or less. So yes, you are just getting senile nostalgia. Enjoy the mild case now. It gets steadily worse as age and sagging bits and tits and those wrinkles at the corners of your blue, blue eyes accumulate.' 'Fuck you, Aaron,' she said, smiling. 'I'm afraid not. You were never quite butch enough for me, Signe darling,' he replied. 'And they call me a superbitch!' 'Unjustly. Women just can't manage bitchery with any style, so I've got you outclassed. Besides, I was always madly jealous, which justifies it.'

She laughed; that was a running joke between the two of them, and actually true. Aaron Rothman had been hopelessly in love with Mike Havel too, from the day he'd been rescued from a band of Eaters not long after the Change; not that that unrequited longing had ever kept him from a love life surprisingly varied for their staid little rural community at Larsdalen. He finished off, signaled to the stretcher-bearers and limped over to her-the cannibals had made a start on him by taking his left foot off a few days before the nascent Bearkillers arrived. He was looking over her shoulder. 'Oh, oh, oh,' he murmured.'It's our stylishly brutal neofeudal friends, with their banners unfurled.'

She turned, and recognized the colorful split-tailed pennant of a high PPA noble at the head of the party coming down from the northwest, almost before the outposts reported it. Her brows went up as she removed her helmet and tucked her armored gauntlets into her sword belt and waited. They went higher as she saw the blazon on the forked pennant and the quartering on the big kite-shaped shields northern knights used-the Portland Protective Association's Lidless Eye with sable, a delta or over a V argent.

The Grand Constable herself, she thought, keeping her lips from showing teeth. After the loathsome Sandra Machiavelli-in-a-skirt Arminger, my unfavoritist of all our dear Associate allies. A lance of bodyguards, Baroness Tiphaine d'Ath, some hangers-on, and two other nobles. Wait, no, that's a knight-brother of the Order of the Shield of St. Benedict with her. And I know the other guy's face. He's Sir Ivo Marks. ' Hell — o,' she murmured.'Ivo is seneschal of Castle Campscapell out east of Walla Walla these days,' she said quietly to Aaron. 'That's on the front lines, and Boise is pushing hard there. What the hell is he doing back in the West'' 'Lady d'Ath,' she said courteously as they drew rein and dismounted, handing the reins to their followers. 'Lady Signe,' came the reply in that water-over-ice voice.

The four men-at-arms and eight mounted crossbowmen in half-armor looked as if they'd come far and fast; so did their horses, despite the short string of remounts and sumpter mules.

D'Ath never shows much sign of wear; you have to give the bitch that.

The knight-brother and Ivo looked like they'd come a lot farther, and they both had the fading bruises and minor cuts that told of a serious fight not long ago. Ivo Marks looked like he'd lost his fight, too; something about the eyes. He was a thick-built man of Tiphaine's age, four years younger than Signe but with his brown hair just beginning to go gray at the temples and starting to recede a bit. There were a few red veins in his cheeks as well.

Brawling thug with a veneer of manners, she thought again. Typical of that generation of Associates. Not quite a Changeling, but a lot closer than me. At fourteen you're a kid; eighteen is a borderline adult. Or it was. He's not stupid, though. 'I am Brother Jerome,' the warrior-monk said.'Currently assigned as a liaison to the Portland Protective Association forces in the northeast. We have not met, Lady Signe.'

Though that didn't matter much. Mt. Angel seemed to have developed some sort of injection-molding process for turning out its knight-brothers a little after the Change. They differed only in complexion, and even that was uniformly weathered. Jerome's bowl-cut tonsured hair was medium brown and his eyes were hazel, and his face was long and lumpy and horse-like; the alert stance even when exhausted was the standard, and the expression of mild, calm attention. 'You've been in action'' d'Ath said, looking around and at the spray of blood drops smeared on Signe's face.

The Lady of the Bearkillers bit back: No, we just had a really rough game of football.

D'Ath always annoyed her, made her feel halfway between angry and off-balance. Part of it was the personal history. They'd crossed swords a few times during the wars against the Association, and there had been that business in Corvallis where Tiphaine had made them all look like complete idiots just before the final conflict. Part of it was just the woman herself. Signe Havel could be as ruthless as necessary when she had to be, but d'Ath just had something missing in there somewhere, as if being a human being day to day was something she did as a conscious decision.

And be honest with yourself, Signe, gay people creep you out a bit, she thought. Then with a glance at Aaron. No, be even more honest. Gay men are restful. Gay women creep you out a bit. 'Skirmish at their latest roadside fort,' Signe said aloud.'We beat them, more or less. They pulled out part of their cavalry once their fort was finished so we tried drawing them into an ambush. We inflicted a lot more losses than we took but they can replace theirs and we can't. Technically we won. And then had to retreat. Hurrah.'

The Grand Constable nodded.'They can match our numbers everywhere and still keep a central reserve to switch around,' she said.'That means they can outnumber us whenever and wherever they feel it's important. It's… difficult.'

It's a recipe for fucking disaster, Signe thought but did not say. Unless they start making a lot of big mistakes. Which so far they haven't. Neither have we. Absent idiocy on either side or the Gods taking a hand, numbers win. 'Well, your castles are holding them up in the Columbia Valley and the Palouse,' she said instead.'Which goes a long way to compensate for their numbers.'

That had the virtue of being true, as well as complimentary. The only way to hold the Corwin-Boise alliance out if this open plain would be a pitched battle… and they'd tried that at Pendleton last year and lost.

D'Ath frowned; if possible, her pale gray eyes grew chillier. 'We need to speak in confidence,' she said.'That's why I'm here in person. I'll be moving on to Bend to consult with the CORA leaders next, then back west to stop in Corvallis and Dun Juniper.'

Signe nodded.'Did anyone say stop working'' she asked the air, and the curious onlookers within eavesdropping range withdrew.'I want us to be ready to pull out of here, soonest!'

Tiphaine looked at the doctor, who showed no sign of retreating with the others. 'Aaron is one of my closest advisors,' Signe said.'You can tell him anything you tell me.'

Nobody mentioned Will and Mike Jr.; they were family, and learning the family business. Signe looked at the Association commander's followers in turn. 'Armand and Rodard are my squires,' Tiphaine said.'And confidential agents. Sir Ivo and Brother Jerome were involved with the matter personally.'

She took a deep breath and paused before speaking; Signe was surprised, and felt a trickle of alarm.

What could be upsetting the Ice Dyke of Castle d'Ath'

It wasn't like her to hesitate to spit the truth out, however disagreeable. They'd had as little as possible to do with each other, but she knew that much. 'Castle Campscapell fell six days ago,' the Associate said bluntly.

Signe managed to control her impulse to grunt as if belly punched; her sister, Astrid, was operating her Ranger deep-reconnaissance and sabotage teams out of there right now, and her brother, Eric, was backing her up. They'd been running weapons to the Mormon guerillas and harassing enemy logistics in occupied New Deseret, as well. Aaron whistled almost silently. 'That… was a very strong keep,' Signe said, and glared at Ivo.

Ivo Marks had been a protege and vassal of d'Ath's since the War of the Eye. Commanding a major castle was a plum job, too. She went on: 'How in hell did that happen' They certainly didn't sit a fucking great army down in front of it for a siege or assault, that I heard of!'

The monk intervened:'A postern gate was opened late at night. By a priest. A joint force of Boisean and Corwinite special forces took the gatehouse, raised the portcullis and let down the drawbridge. They held it long enough for a fast flying column that had approached in stealth to punch through and take the castle as a whole.'

Signe's breath hissed out. The gate of a big castle was a mini-fortress in itself. They'd known that the enemy alliance had good special operations troops, but this was a nasty confirmation. 'Bribe'' she said.

Brother Jerome shook his head.'I don't think so. It was a rather elderly Dominican; a harsh man, one of Antipope Leo's appointees, but not a corrupt one. I knew him slightly.' 'Why not'' Signe said.'It wouldn't be the first time a priest of your Church caught gold fever. And knew' He's joined the majority'' 'No, it would not be the first time a priest was bribed, my lady,' the monk said, with that steady courtesy that was more irritating than irritation.'All men are sinners, and priests are men. However, the priest in question then cut off his own testicles and stabbed himself eight times in the belly before he died. And the first enemy through the postern was in a red robe-a High Seeker of the Church Universal and Triumphant. He killed armed men with his hands and they did not resist.'

For once the monk's trained calm seemed to waver.'I… was there. I saw it. I… fought him. Not so much with my sword… I have never felt anything like it. Never anything so strong, or so foul. As if I were prisoner in my own mind, and my mind was in Hell. Only by the grace of God was I able to give the alarm and close the inner doors to the bailey long enough for the garrison to arm.'

A chill silence fell; they'd all heard the rumors about the Corwinite adepts. Several made the protective signs of their various faiths. Then Ivo spoke, his voice shaking slightly: 'That's all that let any of us escape.' 'Ivo got most of the garrison out,' Tiphaine said crisply.'Given the initial situation, he did quite well. But that unhinges our position in the western Palouse and it gives the enemy another foothold on the navigable Snake River. It's… troubling. We've been counting on our fortifications to even things up.' 'If we can't rely on the castles to keep them off the Columbia, what the hell can we do'' Signe said, looking around for a moment as if armies could be conjured from raw need.

One of the squires blurted:'Artos has to return with the Sword. Only that can save Montival!' 'He's right, Mother,' Mike Havel Jr. said, before Tiphaine could blast her subordinate for speaking out of turn.

Gray eyes met blue. Tiphaine spoke slowly and reluctantly. 'I have a horrible suspicion that may be correct.'

And the Gods alone know what Rudi and the others were doing. Mary, Ritva, is it well with you'

A Bearkiller couldn't show weakness.'It would be a help,' she said.'An army or two with it wouldn't hurt either.'


FREE REPUBLIC OF RICHLAND SHERIFFRY OF READSTOWN

(FORMERLY SOUTHWESTERN WISCONSIN) NATIONAL GUARD DRILL FIELD OCTOBER 10, CHANGE YEAR 24/2022 AD

Being impatient and not showing it is even more of an unpleasantness than being impatient alone, Rudi thought.

He suppressed an impulse to jig from foot to foot, like a small child in school bursting to ask permission to visit the jakes.

The best cure for it being some sweat. Luckily that also serves our purposes, since we want to be well remembered here. Not just remembered kindly, but remembered well, as folk worthy of respect. Worthy of alliance against a common foe.

He kept a smile on his face as he strode out to the drill field. Partly that was natural to him-he liked most places and most people he met-and partly it was politics.

The which I will never be able to escape, now, all my life. Fortunately I've been assured that won't be overlong…

Most of the drill field was exactly that: fields, now reaped and empty of crops, but busy with the local folk. Some of it spilled up into the forested edges of Readstown, to give a realistic variety of ground. Only parts of it were permanent, like the row of oaken pells-thick posts used as targets for practice with sword and ax. Mathilda and Odard were at a pair of them. 'How's the arm'' he asked. 'Healing,' Mathilda said shortly.'Nearly healed. Still hurts a bit, but it needs to be stretched or it'd heal tight.'

What's got into her' he thought. Aloud: 'Well, careful while it's still weak, acushla — you always did push yourself too hard when you were injured.'

She nodded without meeting his eyes and continued the routine she'd started with a light wooden practice blade. This was an overcast day and chilly, but sweat was still running down her face, and doubtless down her flanks beneath the mail hauberk and the padding. He didn't bother repeating the warning to Odard as the baron slammed his own drill sword into the pell again, smashed at it with his shield, set himself and repeated the pattern. The young lord of Gervais worked conscientiously at maintaining his skills at the warrior's craft, but he didn't have Mathilda's driven will and was less likely to overwork.

Over to the archery range…

Edain had just lowered his bow after a ripple fire that left the pop-up targets shaped like outlaws and Eaters neatly feathered. 'And how's Aylward the Archer'' Rudi asked. 'Doin' well enough, Chief. Just showing these lads and lasses how it's done, so to speak, and keepin' me hand in.'

That got him a chorus of groans and hoots from the locals; he grinned at them and replied with a mocking gesture. It had taken only a day or so before he couldn't find anyone willing to take a friendly bet on a session at the butts. Jake sunna Jake and his Southsiders leaned on their bows and basked in the young Mackenzie's reflected glory. Those bows had been substantially improved; Edain had run joyously amok spending Iowa's gold in Readstown's well-equipped archery shop, and had ordered a set of portable bowyer's tools as well to take with them. They should all be ready before the party left.

The former wild-men had also become noticeably better archers with Edain to instruct and bullyrag them; already they were as good as the average run of the Readstowners.

Rudi took a deep breath of the chilly late-October air laden with the damp smell of fallen leaves and turned earth; it smoked when he exhaled. Then he passed on to the practice circles where the trainees worked with the sword; they were sensibly marked out on sections of irregular pasture, complete with low brush in some or set around trees or big rocks. In his experience, battles rarely took place on neatly level ground raked and rolled for good footing. The Readstown arms master-they called him a Drill Instructor here-gave him a slight wink. They'd already met.

He was a thickset man about ten years older than Rudi and three inches shorter, with hair of dark yellow closer-cropped than most locals and the tip of his nose missing. His father had been a retired Marine noncommis sioned man, like Rudi's sire, Mike Havel, and had run a martial arts club and store in Racine before the Change came and set him on a road that ended here. His son had fought in some of the same wars as Ingolf, but returned home to inherit his father's employment and pass on what he'd learned. A scar from the slash that had marred his nose also split a lip and drew a corner of his mouth up into a constant sneer, turning a face not notably lovely to begin with into something most men would blink to see. 'Hello, Mr. Mackenzie,' he said.

Then he indicated three big young men in practice gear. That meant mail shirts to the thigh here, and helmets like brimmed hats, with round shields and wooden drill shetes. 'Care to give some of our local boys a bout'' he said, elaborately casual.'I see you're kitted up.'

The Mackenzie was wearing his brigandine, plus mail sleeves, mail-clad leather gorget, plate vambraces and greaves, visored sallet helm and breeches beneath his kilt with mail on the outsides. It was all more elaborate than anything Readstowners were likely to have seen before and enough to let him fight like a knight afoot or ahorse, though it gave a bit less protection than a modern suit of articulated plate and weighed slightly more. The gear did have the advantage of being modular, and you could put it on yourself. 'It would be less than a guest's duty should I refuse,' Rudi said gravely.'That being the work of the season.'

October wasn't exactly the easy time of year here. There wasn't such a thing, amid the thronging tasks of a farming settlement that also made most of what it used and wore. But it was as close as any, with the grain and root crops in, the last hay and silage cut, and stock culling over and the meat steeping in the vats of pickle brine or turning in the smokehouses or freezing amid underground blocks of ice. What was left was the sort of thing that could be attended to anytime, mostly even in the hard dark cold of winter.

That gave time for the arts of war; like any manual skill, they rusted if not used. Their main rival in the fall was hunting. Which also trained you in fighting, and doubly if the quarry were boar or bear or wolf. 'Just a moment, then,' he went on, and hung up his sword belt.

He'd had a training sword made up in precisely the length and balance of his longsword, an oak batten around a rod of old rebar, the wood thickly wrapped in wool rags. Now he tossed it up spinning, caught the hilt with a slap of leather on hard callus, and slid the big kite-shaped Association-style shield onto his arm. 'Which one of us first'' the brashest of the young men said. 'All of you at once, I think,' Rudi said pleasantly.

He snapped down the visor, and the world shrank to the narrow horizontal bar of the vision slit; by reflex his head began to turn slightly right and left, to make up for the way it cut his peripheral vision. The Readstown youths suddenly looked a little thoughtful as his smiling face disappeared, and left them confronting only the smooth curve of the steel. The visor tapered slightly on the bottom edge in a way that suggested a beak, and its surface and the helm as well were scored and inlaid with niello to hint at raven feathers. A real spray of those black pinions stood up at either temple. Rudi went on: 'Why waste time when we can all fight at once' Ready''

They spread out uncertainly, looking at each other. Another breath, and he attacked. His face suddenly twisted and the racking Mackenzie shriek burst from him stunning-loud. A crack of shields on shield, the hard clack as one blade met another, a dull thud of a blunt wooden point on mail over padded leather and hard stomach muscle, and Bonnngk!

The oaken practice sword glanced off a Readstowner's kettle helmet, twisting it half around to break the chin strap and dropping him like a steer hit between the eyes with a sledge. Rudi stepped back and sloped the steel-cored oak lath over his shoulder.

One opponent was down, curled up like a shrimp and giving faint hoarse gasping whoops as he tried to draw breath through a diaphram half paralyzed by a thrust to the pit of the belly; another rolled about with his hands to a head still ringing from the blow that had set his helmet flying with a sound like some dull unmusical bell, and the third was white-faced and shaking from the hard rake across his leg just below his crotch, and from the thought of what it would have meant with live steel-which thought hit more like a message, flashed from gut and balls. 'You fellows are far from bad,' Rudi said.

His breath was deep but not panting. The world came back in its autumnal bleakness as he flicked the visor back up. 'But you're being too much the gentlemen there. If you're fighting a man three on one, just surround him and flail away, get in more strikes than he can block; even the Sedanta couldn't fight two, as the saying goes. Don't give him a chance to deal with you one at a time.' 'Listen to the voice of experience, you lambs still sucking at mommy's tit,' said the Readstown arms master.

The three youngsters were all big rangy young men, but a few years shy of twenty. Even in their discomfort they managed to look sheepishly embarrassed. Their fathers were Farmers hereabout, which gave them more time to practice than common folk, and they were well equipped and supposedly well trained. In Rudi's judgment they were on the better side of middling, as far as formal drill was concerned. Certainly they were strong, quick and fearless. 'He doesn't use our moves,' one of them complained, when he could stand and speak.'And he's a southpaw.'

The arms master's smile was a wonder to see as he crossed his arms on his chest and stared at them; it reminded Rudi of one Sam Aylward had put on when he was fifteen and had done something truly stupid on Dun Juniper's practice field. The kind that made you feel as if you were six and playing at warriors out behind the stable with a rotten stick for a sword and an old fence board for a shield, rather than training for the real thing. When the older man spoke his voice was like a flaying knife: 'Yah hey, if someone attacks you using different moves, or if they're a leftie, you're just going to say you're taking your bat and ball and going home'cause it ain't fair' Christ, Weiss, I've known you were a dumb little punk for years, but do you have to show it off in front of strangers''

Rudi laughed, in friendly wise.'If you travel, you do meet different ways of fighting, the which can be an unpleasant surprise. Surprises can kill you in this trade, for there's no time to think things out when men fight to kill. I had the advantage of you, for I've trained with Ingolf Vogeler for some time now and know the Readstown style. Here, let me show you what happened. Half speed.'

He ran them through the moves of the fight.'See, when I sidestepped I put you out of line with your shield, and in the way of your friend here so he couldn't strike while I took you out with a lunging thrust, then rammed him off-balance shield-to-shield on the next step.'

The DI nodded.'I keep telling you, Weiss, you can use the shield to hit with, not just block. So can the guy you're fighting.' 'Then I backhanded this other fine fellow across the head, turned on my heel, and lunged while your friend there was off-balance, which left me with nothing to do but block your other friend with the black hair so — '

He mimed letting a shete-cut slide off the blade of his longsword. '-which in turn left me in position for a quick stab to the inside of the thigh, below the armor and cup. It's a low blow that's often the most effective. A man who blocks strikes to his face and chest well can often be taken with a blow to the thighs or knees or shins-or even a thrust through his foot pinning it to the ground, after which he'll be sadly lacking in nimbleness and no good at a dance at all.' 'Christ, you were fast,' one of the young men said reverently.'I didn't think a guy your height could move like that. That's why I tried to come in under your guard.' 'Well, to be sure, I am very quick,' Rudi said.

Modesty was a vice he left to Christians and there was also no point in denying what they'd seen with their own eyes; and while some of it was just the cradle gifts of the fey, more was honestly earned by long hard effort. 'And being both tall and fast is a fine thing. But also, there's the matter of the weapons. Your Eastern shete hits hard, I will not dispute, but it recovers slowly even when held by a strong wrist. Good enough for a melee, where you seldom strike for the same man twice and few men see the blow that kills them, but not for the higher art. Here there's just the four of us, and no interruptions or distractions, of which a battle has more than its share.'

The Readstown instructor held out his hand.'Can I see that' What do you call it'' 'A longsword. To be technical, it's a hand-and-a-half, or a bastard longsword. Thirty-six inches in the blade, and the hilt long enough for either a single or two-hand grip. Here, try the steel, it'll give you a better idea than wood.'

He picked up his sheathed sword where it rested with the belt wrapped around the scabbard and tossed it over. The Readstowner drew the great cross-hilted blade. His eyes picked out the spots where nicks had been ground out of the layer-forged steel, and he grunted approval of the state of the edge-knife sharp, but not a vulnerable hair-thin razor edge that would turn on bone, and all the metal covered with a barely perceptible film of neatsfoot oil. He tried it in a few broad sweeping cuts of the type the local blade-style used, feet rustling in the yellow-brown barley stubble, then held the weapon and turned it slowly in a circle from the wrist, and then flicked it back and forth. 'Nice piece of smith work here, you betcha. It's no lighter than a cavalry shete,' he said.'But the balance is a lot further back. Just forward of the guard.' He tried a thrust.'Bet you could put this right through a mail shirt.' 'Yes, with a solid hit. And enough weight behind it and just a wee bit of luck. The blade tapers to a narrow point, as you see, and the tip of it will get inside the first link. Then the edges cut the rings from the inside. Even good riveted mail is much better protection against cuts than thrusts of that sort.' 'Like a thin-tipped spear'' 'Precisely, though you won't run a man in a mail hauberk all the way through… but inches are enough in the right place, eh'' 'Yah hey, fighting or fucking,' the man said, to a general laugh.

Then he tossed it up a little, resheathed it and went on shrewdly: 'Bet this thing takes longer to learn well than a shete. Bet you've been at it a while; I'd say you're a Changeling. All the way, too, not just mostly like me.' 'Probably, though a wise man never stops learning his tools,' Rudi acknowledged with respect to the first part of the statement.'And yes, I've been at it since I could walk, more or less, and I was born in the first Change Year. War's my trade, though I've put my hand to other things in plenty.' 'Like to fight, do you'' 'No, that I do not,' Rudi replied.'I like the art of the thing, and the mastering of the skill, and the testing of the self. A bladesman's skill can be as beautiful as any other. Fighting… that you do because it's needful.' 'You've won a lot of fights,' one of the youngsters said brashly, despite a glare from his instructor when he pushed into the conversation.'What's it like' We've had some brushes with outlaws lately but they just run off if they can't bushwhack you.'

Rudi twitched the wooden sword down until its point rested in the dirt and leaned on the hilt.'You've slaughtered beasts, I suppose'' he said calmly.

The teenager nodded; it would be rare for anyone not to have that experience. Anyone except a wealthy dweller in a large city, and such were very rare in the world as it was now. Even a child could help hold the bowl of oatmeal to catch the blood for sausages and black pudding when a carcass was hoisted up to drain. 'Much like that; like butchering a pig, shall we say, they being clever enough to know what you're about, and to fear their death before it comes. Except that you can generally kill a beast cleanly with one blow, since it's not trying to stop you with a weapon of its own, the which is unfortunately rare in a fight. In battle you must often disable before you can put an end to the man; which means you can see the knowledge in their eyes as the last blow falls. Or you must cripple a man and go on to the next, there being no time for mercy.'

The instructor nodded vigorously. Rudi continued: 'And animals rarely try to hold the wounds closed, or weep, or scream and call for their mothers because the pain is so bad.' 'Oh,' the young man said; he and his friends winced. 'And that,' the DI said ruthlessly,'would have been you three this time.'

He pointed to each of them in turn.'Weiss, you'd be bleeding out right now, fast,'cause that one he gave you would've opened up the big artery inside the crotch. Cartman, you'd be lying flat on your face with blood coming out of your nose and ears waiting for someone to cut your throat. And Andersen, you'd have a four-inch stab wound in your gut and after the fever set in you'd be begging for someone to finish you. So let's practice some more, hey' Get set, two on one!'

He turned back to Rudi and spoke more quietly as the young men moved off in obedience to his orders: 'They'll do OK, if I can just keep them alive while they get some of the piss and vinegar whacked out of'em.'

Rudi smiled; he liked this man, even on brief acquaintance. 'Still, better to have to restrain a noble stallion than prod a reluctant mule.' 'Yah, God knows that's true. The timid ones take even more work. These, they're good kids. It's just…' A pause.'Trouble's coming, isn't it'' 'It is that. Trouble that follows me and my friends-but even so is just the first wave of a storm of troubles to come.' 'Well, shit. I'd better get back to work, then.'

Something touched the back of Rudi's hand. It was a snowflake; more fell, and then the wind began to flick them into his face. The young Readstowners stepped back and began to sling their gear.

The instructor gave a smile that would have done credit to a tiger confronted with a crippled cow. 'War isn't going to be called on account of snow!' he barked. 'Where do you think you're going''

Rudi walked over to where his half sisters and Virginia Kane and Fred Thurston had been showing off a little with mounted archery, which was an upper-class style here. Ingolf was leaning against a maple and watching with his arms crossed. 'Standards have gone up since I left,' he said.'This bunch are a lot better than I was when I went for a soldier.' 'The which is a fortunate thing,' Rudi said.

The snowflakes grew larger, and began to stick on his eyebrows. 'What would you say of it'' he asked; Ingolf would be a better judge of weather here. 'Going on to snow hard,' he said.'It's early. That means we ought to be able to get going in a week or so.'

Rudi nodded.'If I were more eager, ants would crawl out of my nostrils. They're crawling around under my skin, as it is. But again, we've not wasted the time here. I think your brother has come around to our way of thinking about the Cutters.'

Ingolf nodded.'Yah. He connected the dots and didn't like the picture. He's going to be sounding out the other Sheriffs and the bigger Farmers about it over the winter too, you betcha.' 'So we've accomplished that here.' Rudi sighed.'Much as a mad dash would have eased my heart. Do you know the worst of adventuring, my friend''

Ingolf snorted.'Your Majesty, I could go on all day about that.'

Rudi shrugged.'It's not so much the hardship or danger. It's the monotony. Everyone back home probably thinks it's such a wild and carefree life… but it's hard work, and mostly at the same thing. You travel, you fight, you try not to starve, travel some more, fight some more… even a pleasant place like this isn't home, and it isn't yours.'

Ingolf chuckled.'Well, you get to see a lot of the country. Granted you do a lot of it bleeding or running or hiding. And sometimes you meet a great girl and she falls for you.'

His gaze turned fond as he looked over at Mary; she was putting the cap on her quiver, and paused to blow him a kiss.

The Readstowner went on:'And Mary and I are going to get hitched before we go.'

Rudi grinned at that, and put out his hand. They shook, and a grin came over Ingolf's battered face as well. It made him look a good decade younger. 'We're already brothers in battle and camp,' Rudi said.'It'll be good to have you formally in the family, so to speak.' 'It's not… well, it's just a ceremony, but… you know.'

The rest of the questers came up while they were talking, and Ingolf endured more handshaking and slaps on the back. 'Mary doesn't mind a Catholic service,' Ingolf said.'And I thought my folks here would prefer it that way.'

Rudi nodded.'You're handfasted when the two of you stand before the folk and say you are. Ceremonies mark a marriage, but they don't make it, not to the Old Religion's way of looking at things.'

He cocked an eyebrow at Mathilda.'Matti and I have decided we're to be wed, by the way.'

Everyone congratulated them. He went on.'But we haven't yet decided on a date…'

Mathilda looked at him, turned on her heel and stalked back towards the Vogeler manor. 'Now, what was that about, for the sake of sweet Brigid Hearth-mistress'' Rudi said, bewildered.

Ritva cleared her throat.'Ah… I don't know exactly, big brother. But yesterday she muttered something about witch-boys all being cream-stealing tomcats with their consciences in their balls.'

He raised his hands in exasperation and looked from side to side. 'What' What' I've been as chaste as Father sworn-to-avoid-it Ignatius the now!'

Virginia laughed, not exactly cruelly, but… 'Your Majesticalness, I even believe you. But it ain't me you've got to convince!'

Four days later the blizzard howled outside the Vogeler dining room, hard enough to shake the stout walls now and then; it was a second-floor chamber, big enough to seat a score, if not a feast for the whole garth. Today it held all of Rudi's party, the Sheriff and his wife, and what Rudi had come to think of as the Readstown general staff. The windows were good double-glazed ones of pre-Change manufacture. They rattled a little in the modern frames, and they looked like squares of blackness with ribbons of white spearing at them. It made the glow of the lamps and the flickering coals in the fireplace all the more welcome, and the pleasant lingering smell of the meal. 'And how pleasant it would be, to feast the winter away so, snug and warm, with all the comforts of home,' Rudi said.'The which some of our party can do.'

Jake sunna Jake nodded reluctantly. He also lifted his third wedge of blueberry pie-a quarter of the whole-onto his plate and lathered it with whipped cream; Rudi smiled at his enthusiasm. Until a few months ago none of the Southsiders had ever tasted baked goods, or sweeteners other than wild honey, or dairy of any sort. Some of them didn't like the unfamiliar diet. Jake was not one of them. He'd done justice to the glazed ham, shepherd's pie, glistening panfried potatoes, vegetables, and the better part of two loaves of bread and butter, too. He and his tribe all had the reflexive voracity of those who'd gone hungry often from childhood on, even those who yearned after their old perpetual stew.

And his table manners have become something less roynish, Rudi observed, with some relief. Even a fork has yielded up its mysteries to the man. ''Kay,' the Southsider Big Man said, in something that had grown closer to the others' varieties of English.'I kin… can… go to like have our bitches-um, womenfolks-and littles stay here. They's good ones, here. Southsiders who stay, they can learn plenty till-un we gets here again. And eat good shi… good stuff like this alla times, n' sleep warm, not have lotsa littles die.'

Rudi shuddered a little at what a winter in their home range must have been like, with no more arts than they'd had when he met them. Granted central Illinois wasn't as brutal in the Crone's season as the Free Republic of Richland or the territory they were headed for, but it would be bad enough. He also finished his own last forkful of blueberry pie; it had always been one of his favorite dishes, and the berries here were the best he'd ever tasted either fresh or baked or in preserves.

Edward Vogeler nodded gravely, tamping the tobacco in his pipe. 'Yah, Jake,' he said.'They'll be a help, in fact. Looks like it'll be a hard winter, and an early one.'

That was more tactful than usual with the blunt-spoken Sheriff; it was probably also partly true. Even unskilled hands could always be found useful work-if nothing else, they'd free craftsfolk from routine chores like woodchopping. Not to mention the substantial golden sweetener he'd provided to pay for room, board and instruction in arts like weaving and cheesemaking, literacy and frequent baths. If they returned in the spring When, he told himself firmly. When we come back in the spring. I've no choice, now that I've taken oath on it.

When they returned the Southsider noncombatants would be far closer to something civilized. Enough that founding their own dun in Mackenzie territory would be feasible, with a little more teaching from volunteers there.

To be sure,'Dun Jake' will sound a trifle strange at first! 'And I'm gonna be busy this winter myself,' Ed Vogeler said.'It's our visiting season, and we visit hard. There are important men who'll listen to me.' 'And women who'll listen to me,' his wife put in, a little to his surprise.

He glanced at her and nodded.'You've opened my eyes, Mr. Mackenzie. And Father Ignatius, and all of you. Ingolf too, of course. These maniacs have to be stopped.' 'Good, because to do that we need the Sword,' Mathilda said, her voice clipped.'We need to get going. The snow's deep enough now. And the sleds are ready.'

She shot a glance towards Samantha, whom she seemed to have taken in dislike.

Now, is it more annoying to be suspected of what you have done or what you haven't' She's been intolerable lately, Rudi thought. The best traveling companion you could want through battle and hardship, and now we've found safe haven for a while, and she's… well, I'd ask her if she was under the Moon's domain this week, did I want to enrage her even more! 'You'd better wait until there's some clear weather,' the Sheriff said.

A little reluctantly, Rudi thought. He'd been perfectly honorable, perfectly correct in his hospitality, and once his doubts were overcome full of zeal for their cause-but keeping a party their size fed all winter would be a bit of a strain even for a man of his wealth and power. 'I'll leave you to it,' he added.

The other Readstowners made their good nights as well, all except Pierre Walks Quiet and Samantha the housekeeper. She smiled at Jake: 'I'll have a Moon School running for your people too.'

He nodded vigorously.'Gotta get good with the spooks, yeah!' 'And here's the list of the last supplies,' she said to Rudi, and handed him a paper.'Some things I wasn't sure we could do before you left.'

He scanned down it.'Blueberry turnovers'' he said.'Good, I'm sure, but-'

She smiled.'Concentrated food value. And they keep well frozen.'

Then she stood, stretched, and said:'And now for the farewell. Farewell to you all!'

They said their good-byes, a little puzzled; those of the Old Religion bowed their heads slightly at her sign of blessing. She extended a hand… and Edain, smiling a bit bashfully, took it. 'Some good-byes take longer than others,' she said, and pulled him to his feet.'Merry met, merry part, and to all a good night before it's merry met again!'

A ringing silence fell as they left the room. 'Well, well,' Ingolf said meditatively.'So that's why he's been so carefree lately.'

Rudi coughed and decided on another slice of the pie; with ice cream this time.

And that would have been clever, if only I'd thought of it. Keep in mind, High King of Montival-you're not the only one who can be a cunning fellow!

He glanced at Mathilda and raised a brow. She looked back boldly enough, but slowly a blush rose from her neck to her bold-featured olive face, turning it a dusky rose. Then he relented and made a gesture with one hand, one they'd used together since they were children: It's all right.

She nodded and looked away. Rudi returned to the pie. And you'll never know just how much I was tempted, acushla!

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