Corec helped to get the caravan settled, then tracked down Boktar and Ellerie in the great hall. Treya and Bobo were already there, going over the cargo manifest.
âWe finished unloading the food wagons,â Ellerie was saying. âI sent Nedleyâs squad on a circuit around the village to make sure there arenât any problems.â
âThe other wagons are locked away in one of the warehouses,â Corec added. âRalâs setting a watch over it.â To Boktar, he said, âYou made him a corporal?â
âHe seemed the best fit,â the dwarven man replied. âAnd I hired two more men to bring the squads up to full strength.â
Hiring more soldiers was another added expense, but with the number of new people they were dealing with, it was probably necessary.
âAre they from the expedition, or from the new group?â Corec asked.
âThe new group, two farm boys. Solid lads. No training, but Nedleyâs got them started. Iâve asked Ral to watch and learnâI figure weâll want him on siege weapons rather than on the front lines, but heâll need to know enough real soldiering to handle a squad.â
Corec nodded. âThat sounds good, but what happened? We were supposed to be avoiding towns in case weâre attacked, not setting up one of our own.â
The dwarven man sighed. âIt started simple enough. Some of the refugees heard we were heading back south, so they asked if we could act as their escort. It went fine at first, but then we caught up to Patrig and his group from Springwater. They were already on their way, and they told everyone there was going to be a new village here, and thereâd be work available once the trade caravans started up again. And that whoever got here first could pick from the homes that were left.â
âThatâs not what I said!â Treya insisted. âI told Nallee that Patrig could have the smithy, just like we discussed, and I said there were plenty of houses for them to choose ⦠from â¦â She winced. âOh.â
Boktar nodded. âThe first few families who asked if they could settle here, I figured it was fineâwith the number of people weâre hiring, weâre going to need more than just a blacksmith. But then more kept asking. I didnât see how I could tell them no. A lot of them donât have anywhere to go back to.â
âWell, whatâs done is done,â Corec said. âHow many are there?â
Boktar glanced down at his list. âOf the people we hired, eleven armsmen and two scouts, and Nedley brings us to an even fourteen for the soldiers. Six carpenters, a woodcutter, four servants, twelve for the road-clearing crew, a well-digger, and a potter who makes water pipes, so we can fix the drainage. Thirteen families, which is more than we thoughtâsome of the workers figured theyâll be here long enough that they might as well stay.â
That was the group Corec had been expecting, but it still sounded like a lot of people. âAnd the rest?â he asked.
âThirty-eight more families, a dozen single men, and two women who plan to start a laundry together. I tried to hire them for the keep but they want to go into business for themselves.â
Corec rubbed his temples. âFifty extra men? What are they all going to do? We canât hire that many.â
âMost arenât looking for jobs; theyâre looking for opportunity. They know what the situation is like here, but they still made the choice to come. Half of them are farmers.â
âFarmers are a problem if they want to settle down nearby.â Corec thought for a moment. âWe need to convince them to go east rather than west. Letâs tell them ⦠weâre worried about hillfolk raiders.â
âThat should work for most of them.â
âThen maybe weâll be able to deal with this.â
âWell, thatâs just this batch,â Boktar said.
Corec stopped cold. âWhat do you mean?â
âThe scouts say thereâs another caravan a day behind us. If theyâve come this far, theyâre probably on their way here. I expect they wonât be the only ones.â
Treya nodded. âNallee thinks Mother Yewen was right about the farmland,â she said. âShe told me the area around Four Roads has gotten too crowded, and it wonât matter that the land here needs to be cleared first. Theyâll come anyway.â
âWouldnât most of them want to settle closer to Four Roads or South Corner?â Corec asked.
Boktar said, âSome might, but these folks came here because they think we can protect them better than Four Roads can.â
âProtect them from what?â
âRaiders, bandits, another dragon.â Boktar shrugged. âWhatever happens.â
âThe village, sure,â Corec said, âbut what do the farmers think weâre going to do with twelveâfourteenâsoldiers? We canât be everywhere at once. Even if we convince this group to settle in one area, if more keep coming, we wonât be able to watch over them all with just the men weâve got.â
âCan we hire more?â Treya asked.
âNot enough; not without â¦â Corec trailed off, thinking over what heâd almost said. âHow many people are we talking about? Another caravan, and then what? Treya, your friend says thereâll be more after that?â
âShe thinks so.â
Corec paced back and forth. There were no customs or laws that would allow the group to exert control over the surrounding area, but if they didnât take action and Rusol launched an attack, theyâd be putting innocent lives at risk.
âWe canât let anyone settle near the west road between here and Fort Hightower,â he said, âbut these are the free lands, so we canât stop them. Not unless we change how things are done.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âWe need to protect them from Rusol, and apparently they want us to protect them from everything else too. Thereâs no way to do that unless we administer the land the way my father does for his barony. We decide where the farmers can settle, or at least weâve got to approve their choices. Weâll still let them claim land for themselvesâone hide per familyâbut only in the areas we allow.â
The others exchanged glances.
âCan we do that?â Ellerie asked.
âNot by custom, but whoâs going to stop us? We killed the dragon like we promised we would, but we never said the land would be free for the taking afterward. We either have to take charge of the area or we leave everyone to fend for themselves.â
Bobo frowned in thought. âI donât know how the neighbors are going to feel about that. Half the reason nobodyâs tried to conquer the free lands in the past few hundred years is because nobody else has. When Matagor was here, they never claimed much beyond the village. They didnât want to antagonize Larso.â
âWeâre already waiting for Larso to attack, and I donât imagine Matagor will want to go the expense of mounting a war outside their borders. I canât think of any other way to do this. We need to make sure the farmers are grouped together in the east so our patrols can cover them all.â
âCan they, with just two squads?â Treya asked. âThe coal mines are to the west, and you wanted to patrol that way too.â
âNo, weâll need more men. If we donât make enough from the toll bridge and the mines, weâll have to levy a tax.â In the free lands, towns usually taxed farmers with milling and trading fees, but that wasnât enough revenue to do anything with. The larger nations taxed the land itself.
âA tax?â Ellerie said. âWe shouldnât let that come as a surprise. We should tell everyone now before they get settled.â
âYou donât think weâll bring in enough without it?â Corec asked.
Ellerie shook her head. âNo, the numbers I saw would pay for our original plan, but ⦠we have no idea how many other people will show up. How big of an area are you talking about?â
âWell, itâs got to be from here to the hills in the west. Enough in the other directions to provide farmland for everyone who comes. What if we just take the dragonâs territory? Itâs been stable for decadesânot counting the past yearâso the borders are pretty well set.â
âThatâs ⦠a lot of land,â Bobo said.
âHow much?â
âFifty miles north and south, more to the east and west, since the smaller communities dried up when it wasnât safe to use the main roads. Maybe ten thousand square miles? Twelve?â
Corec coughed. The region was significantly larger than his fatherâs barony. In fact, it would have been among the largest baronies in Larso.
âThatâs too much,â he said. âMaybe we should just focus on the road to Hightower, and convince the farmers to go east on their own.â
âNo,â Ellerie said. âYou had the right idea. Theyâre here because they want our protection. If we can do it, we should. How many others will come for the same reason, and how much land will we need to accommodate them all? The dragonâs territory makes a good boundary. No one lives here now, so they canât complain if things are different than what theyâre used to.â
Corec nodded. It was more responsibility than he wanted to take on, but it was the best way to keep everyone safe from Rusol.
âThen yes, letâs warn them about the tax,â he said. âWeâll need surveyors and extra patrols to cover that wide of an area, even if most of it is unoccupied. One hide of arable land â¦â He had to stop and think. It had been a long time since his early schooling with his brothers, and after he left home, his education had focused more on military matters and tactics. âOne hide of arable land should bring in five to ten gold each year, depending on what the farmer grows and whether heâs living off the land himself. In Larso, itâs taxed at thirty silver, but ten of that goes to the Church. If we tax it at fifteen, that should be enough. I donât remember the rates for the different crafters and merchants.â
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âI know what they are in Matagor,â Bobo said. âIt should be close to Larso, minus the Church tithe.â
âWe canât tax anyone this year,â Treya pointed out. âThe farmers wonât have time to get in full crops, and all the other trades depend on the farmersâ income.â
That meant any income from taxes would be over a year and a half away.
âThen weâll have to be careful,â Corec said. âIf we keep everyone to the east for now, the elves arenât going to cause a problem. The real threats are to the west.â
âWhat about here?â Treya asked. âThe village?â
âWe can fit people inside the fortress if thereâs a surprise attack, but that wonât work for a drawn-out siege. If Rusol sends the army, weâll have to get these folks away to somewhere safer. We need more scouts.â He paused, then shook his head. âNoâwe need someone to watch Fort Hightower. If the armyâs headed here, theyâll muster out at Hightower. That could take a month or more, and then itâll take weeks for them to reach us. A scout could get back in time to warn us.â
âA scout?â Ellerie asked. âOr Leena?â
Corec shook his head. âNot Leenaâsheâs too busy already, and I donât want to send her into Larso unless itâs absolutely necessary. Maybe she can check the border once a week until we find someone. If weâve got a man in Hightower, heâll hear all the rumors and see whatâs happening.â It would be a spy, really, rather than a scout. Was this how Yelenaâs spy network had first started?
#
The small tavern was crowded for its first night, the new residents of the village taking a break from attempting to clean and repair the homes theyâd claimed. They stared uncertainly at Corec as he entered, but so far none of the families heâd spoken to about the tax had outright rejected the idea.
He made his way over to Katrin, who was standing behind the bar serving drinks.
âDid Shavala make it away all right?â she asked.
âWe snuck the dragon out without anyone noticing,â he murmured in reply. âSheâs going to camp out in one of the abandoned villages. Howâs it going here?â
âIf weâre this busy every night, the ale I asked Boktar to buy is only going to last for a few days. And they keep asking for apple brandy. Who drinks apple brandy?â
Corec snickered. âIn the city, only rich people. It must be cheaper here, with the orchards.â
âWell, I donât have any, so theyâll just have to wait. But I did learn something.â
âWhatâs that?â
âI would have made a lousy serving girl. And thereâs no way I can play music and serve drinks at the same time.â
âMaybe you can find somebody here looking for a job.â
âI have someone in mind already,â Katrin said.
âOh?â
Before she could reply, Boktar appeared at Corecâs side, leading an older man.
âCorec,â Boktar said, âthis is Mr. Jonson. He was the miller in Springwater before the dragon came. He asked if he could speak to you.â
Jonson gave an awkward half-bow. âYes, ahh, Lord Corec. Thereâs no mill here, and the banks of the river are too steep and at too much of an angle to build a waterwheel. Even if I could dig out enough space, with the way the water is funneled through the ravine, Iâd just get flooded any time there was a little rain. Is there a stream nearby? The riverâs too much, really, for what I need.â
âJust call me Corec, Mr. Jonson. Iâm not a lord.â
âOh, ahh, yes, sir.â
âWe have a listâwhereâs Bobo?â Corec looked around. âI donât see him here, but a man named Bobo has a list of all the villages in the area that had grist mills. We havenât sent anyone out yet to see what condition theyâre in, but I believe the closest is just a mile or two away. If youâd like to look it over, we can get you a map, and some soldiers as an escort.â
Jonson nodded. âAppreciate it, sir. This is in another village, you say?â
âYes, but nearby, and close to where we hope to settle the farmers. Iâm sure some of the buildings are still standing, but I donât know about the mill.â
âIf the millstones are still in good shape, everything else can be rebuilt, but Iâll need some strong, young backs to do the work,â Jonson said.
There were already more projects available than the road crew and carpenters would be able to handle, but the grist mill would be necessary with this many farmers.
âWeâll make sure you have the help you need after weâve made some progress on the roads and the fortress walls. Boktar, would you ask two of the men to ⦠No, waitâask Sarette to tell the squad leaders to choose two men to serve as an escort.â
âSure, Corec.â
By the time Jonson and Boktar left to look for Bobo, Katrin was busy with customers at the other end of the bar. The next person who came up to Corec was less welcome than the miller had been.
âConley,â Corec said flatly, âI didnât know you were coming back.â
âSomeone must minister to the people,â the bearded priest said. âBobo and Miss Treya, as powerful as they are, donât seem interested in that sort of thing.â
âI doubt farmers and villagers are going to need any sermons from the God of Warâand I certainly donât want to hear them myself.â
Conley held his hands out to his sides. âIâve spent most of my life in the free lands. Thereâs a time and place for Pallisurâs scripture, but most of the time, my duty is to see that members of the community support each other. And thereâs a temple here thatâs not being used.â
âIâm not giving you a temple that belongs to the Order of Allosur,â Corec said.
âThere arenât any Allosurite priests here.â
Perhaps Conley had a point. Corec had no liking for the priesthood, but the man had acquitted himself well during the battle with the dragon, and it couldnât hurt to have another healer nearby.
âIâll make a deal with you, since they abandoned the place. You can manage the temple as long as you hold it open for all of the orders. Healing takes priority over anything else, and Iâm sure Treya and Bobo will help with that, but they canât be spending their time taking care of the building, so that falls to you. You may give services one day a week, but leave the other days for the other orders. If the followers of Demesis want to hold services for themselves, give them a day of the week, even if there arenât any priestesses here.â
Conley looked reluctant, but eventually gave a curt nod. âAll right, fine, I can do that.â
âAnd if the Order of Allosur shows up wanting their temple back, youâll have to make other arrangements, so you may want to start saving your coin.â
#
Though small, the cottage was constructed of sturdy clay brick. The shake roof had collapsed inward, but when Nedley had cleaned out the debris, heâd discovered the flooring was made from slate tiles, still in good condition. Many of the other homes in the village had wooden floors, and the new residents would be stuck waiting for more cut lumber to arrive before they could replace floorboards damaged by exposure to the weather.
After the second caravan of settlers had reached the keep, fewer than half the homes in the village had been left unclaimed, and most of those would have to be torn down and rebuilt. The cottage had been overlooked not only because of its size but also because it was around back of the fortress, near the warehouses. The new settlers seemed to feel that the most desirable homes were those closest to the fortressâs gatehouse, even if they required extra work to be livable again.
âWhat do you think?â Nedley asked.
Corec and Boktar shared a glance.
âYouâre sure you want to live here rather than in the barracks?â the dwarven man asked. âYouâd have to cook for yourself, and lay in your own supplies.â
âWell, I ⦠umm ⦠if I wanted to â¦â Nedley could feel himself blushing. âI mean, if I were to ⦠find a girl â¦â He trailed off.
Corec chuckled. âBeen walking out with the refugeesâ daughters, have you?â
âThere ⦠umm ⦠there was a girl at the Three Orders.â
Corec raised his eyebrows. âA concubine?â
âI donât know.â
âNed, have you actually talked to this girl?â Boktar asked. âEven for a concubine, itâs a bit soon to be thinking about a house if you havenât spoken to her yet.â
âI did talk to her! Once, for a little bit. Her name is Kimi. Sheâs one of the girls who was helping Katrin teach the refugee children to read.â
âThen wouldnât Katrin know if she was a concubine? Or Treya?â
âI didnât ask them,â Nedley admitted, looking down.
Corec shook his head. âIf you like this girl, youâre going to have to admit it. But do you even know anything about her? Do the two of you have anything in common?â
Nedley thought back to their conversation. âShe likes horses.â
âThatâs all you know? Ned â¦â
âI wanted to talk to her more, but we had to leave town,â Nedley explained.
The two older men exchanged another look.
âWell,â Boktar said, âas Marshal, itâs my duty to see that the soldiers and stables are kept well supplied ⦠and since we donât have a steward yet, Iâd better handle the keep as well. The traders wonât start coming by for a while, so weâre going to need another supply caravan. Weâll have to put one of our best men on it.â
âWho?â
Corec snickered. âYou, Ned.â
Boktar nodded. âBut donât waste time driving the wagons back to town. Have Leena take you, and you can buy new wagons and mules while youâre there. Weâll need extras for the mines anyway. Iâll work up a list of supplies, and while Iâm doing that, you should go around to all the villagers and find out what they need, and what theyâre willing to pay a fair price for. That shopkeeper, Ezra, can help with that, and heâll have his own list for you.â Ezra was one of the refugees whoâd accompanied the caravanâheâd owned a general store in Springwater until it had burned down. Most of his inventory had burned as well, except for what heâd managed to fit in his wagon when heâd first evacuated.
âYou want me to go by myself?â Nedley asked. Heâd never been given that much responsibility before.
âYes, but while youâre there, you can hire more soldiers, since it seems like weâll need them. Thatâll give you some protection on the return trip. Weâve got a list of men from the expedition weâd be willing to take back. Theyâre not as experienced as the ones we kept on, but the training we gave them will be more than most folks in Four Roads have had. It should take you a week or more to make all the arrangements, so thatâll give you plenty of time to talk to the girl.â
âWhat should I say to her?â Nedley asked.
Boktar barked a laugh. âYouâre asking the wrong man,â he said, glancing at Corec, who shrugged.
âIâm hardly an expert,â Corec said. âKatrinâs the first girl I walked out with for real. Mama Wennaâs advice was to just say what you want to say, tell the truth, and donât spend the whole time talking about yourself.â
Nedley nodded. That sounded easy enough. But then why did his stomach feel like an open pit when he thought about seeing Kimi again?
#
The guards at the Council Hall in Snow Crown ushered Sarette into the inner chamber. They hadnât kept her waiting for longâsheâd chosen a time the Council of Elders would be in session.
Once inside, she spoke up before the councilors could greet her. âWarden Corec sends his regards,â she said. âAnd a gift.â She laid out the spear on the half-circle table behind which they sat. âHe canât return the sword from Tir Navis because of the binding spell, but he hopes youâll consider this to be an adequate replacement. Itâs an enchanted staff-spear crafted by the people who came before. We found it in the abandoned city of Tir Yadar.â
âThen your search was successful?â Head Magister Inessa asked.
âYes, Magisterâacross the sea in Cordaea. Lady Ellerie sent along some notes for you.â
âI look forward to reading them.â
Rurik, First Seat of the Council, spoke from his spot at the center of the table. âWelcome home, Lieutenant. Itâs good to have you back.â
âItâs only temporary, sir, and please just call me Sarette. I hereby resign my commission. I hope that will make the trial easier.â
âLetâs not be hasty, Lieutenant,â Lesander said. As the Second Seat, he represented the High Guard on the Council. âWe took statements from the human villagers you saved, and they corroborated your story. Iâve discussed the matter with the generals, and weâd be willing to ⦠overlook the transgression this one time.â It seemed Lesander was still trying to figure out a way to get a fully trained stormrunner into the High Guard.
âMy mind is made up, Councilor,â Sarette told him. âI have responsibilities elsewhere.â
âBut the warden said youâd be able to return to Snow Crown,â Inessa said.
Sarette nodded. âIn time, yes, but for now, Corec has claimed a small region in the free lands, east of the hillfolk and south of a town called Four Roads. We intend to reopen the old trade roads in the area. One of them leads southwest from Tyrsall to Matagor and southern Larso. The other goes from the plains down through the free lands to Terevas and Stone Home. By avoiding the Larso and Circle Bay routes, youâll be able to save weeks of time on any shipments between Snow Crown and the southwest kingdoms.â
âI hardly think thatâs worth the loss of a stormrunner,â Lesander said. âHuman traders will profit from those routes, not us.â
Another man spoke up. âOn the contrary, we buy goods from those traders and sell our own goods to them. Shorter and cheaper trade routes benefit everyone, and this will allow us to renegotiate our current agreements. But Iâm familiar with the areaâI thought those roads were abandoned because of a dragon.â
Judging by where he was sitting, that had to be Kirill, Eighth Seat of the Council and head of the merchantsâ guild.
âWe killed the dragon,â Sarette said. âIt was terrorizing the people for hundreds of miles around, and we couldnât let it continue.â
The councilors exchanged looks.
âYou killed a dragon?â Rurik asked.
âWarden Corec commanded the expedition. As one of his bondmates, I took part in the battle.â
âThat must be quite the story.â
âMy uncle asked me to invite you all to a gathering at his lodge tomorrow evening to hear it.â Sarette had tried to get out of that, but Vartus insisted that a warden and a stormrunner defeating a dragon was newsworthy enough to deserve a formal retelling.