Coming back to the main room with the runes stored in his ring, Gregory looked at the worried eurtiks. âIâm sorry for whatâs happened. I have other stops to make before we return to camp. Please be patient while I handle the things I need to.â
âSir,â Belly said, looking down, âwe can help if you want. Many of us have run errands for our previous owner.â
âI appreciate that, but most of these are things I need to handle personally.â Gregory exhaled slowly. âI just meant to find a cook to help the camp, not end up with slaves beholden to me⦠but weâre here now. I will do what is best for you.â
âYes, sirâ¦â Belly murmured.
Gregory gave them all another look, noting their lack of real personal property. They had the clothing on their backs and, at most, a small bag clutched in their hands. The seven women were a mixed lot of eurtik, and only Bellyâs mother was older than thirty. The two sets of sisters were cheetah and cow eurtiks. The last two were a rabbit eurtik with floppy ears and a snake eurtik who kept tasting the air with her tongue.
âCaptain, can I ask you to do me a favor?â Gregory turned to Willof.
âWhat are you asking for?â
Gregory produced a small bag of vela. âCan you take them to a clothier to get them at least outfitted with suitable clothing for a few days?â
Willof accepted the bag of coins. âThat I can do. Youâll have to let Davis know to add in more supplies.â
âIâm going to the distillery first, and then to each stop he should be at for just that before I get back to my other tasks. Thank you.â
âYou did a good thing. That man was not a good person,â Willof said. âAll of you with me. I need a good clothier who will do the work without balking.â
âThereâs one a couple of streets away who made these for us,â the rabbit eurtik whispered.
âVery good, Missâ¦?â
âFlopsy.â
Willofâs eye twitched; he knew how most people treated slave eurtiks, and that meant their names were always demeaning. âFlopsy, please show me the way. Magi Pettit is a good man. I can tell you some about him as we go. Your station in life has taken a tremendous step forward. Youâll see as you work with him.â
Gregory followed the group out, then mounted his horse and rode to the distillery. Eight more people would tax his budget from the empire, but he would pay for the increase out of his own pocket. Heâd thrust himself into their lives, not even asking if they wanted him to. He would have to make things right for them.
Riding into the yard of the distillery, Gregory exhaled in relief, as Davis was still there. âLieutenant! A moment, please.â
Davisâ head whipped around to find Gregory before he excused himself from the other conversation. âSir?â Davis asked when he got closer.
âIncrease the amount of drink and food we get,â Gregory said. âMy pay going forward is to be diverted to account for the eight people I just brought under my banner.â
âEight, sir?â
Gregory grimaced before he dismounted. âLet me start with the fact that the cook I was seeing first is a slaveâ¦â
Davis nodded slowly. âYou couldâve just taken the two extra off him. I know why you did what you did, though, sir. He wouldâve done it again later. It was best to remove him entirely. You could hand the slaves off to the mayor to find owners for?â
âNo. Iâve met him and wouldnât do that to people whoâve already had unpleasant lives.â
âIâll arrange for more food and drink, sir. Two of them are cooks?â
âBelly,â Gregory hated the name, and it was clear in his tone, âand his mother. The other six are all barmaids who did what they were ordered. Iâll be making it very clear that they are not to be touched without clear, freely given consent.â
Davis leaned back slightly at the pressure leaking from the magi. âIâll make sure itâs known, sir. I have strong feelings against coercion, as well. What will you task them with?â
Gregory looked away for a moment. âI donât know, but I would value your advice.â
âWe can make them camp helpers⦠for the short term, at least. They can run errands for the sergeants, or maybe even bring water from town. Itâd help with cleanliness. One of them will need to be taught how to handle the wagon, but the boys can manage that.â
âIf things donât work out, Iâll see if my wives can help. We have three weeks before we go to the city, right?â
âYes, sir. We leave the day before resupply, so weâll arrive empty of goods. Weâll be bringing a full load from Grakle back out with us.â
âThat might help⦠Iâll be starting them on conditioning. None of them are in great shape for the marching weâll have to do.â
âSir, Iâve come to understand that you want things to be better,â Davis said softly. âYou might not have thought your actions through, but you did what was right. We can work on it from here. The women will have choices, choices theyâd never have had if not for you.â
Gregory took a deep breath. âThank you. I just hope I didnât cause more problems for them. People in Gardenia will be very upset with me. I just closed a known establishment.â
âPossibly, sir. The man was breaking laws, so it had to be done.â
âIâm going to complete my other errands. Iâll meet you back here with the others.â
âYes, sir,â Davis saluted.
Gregory mounted his docile mare. âSee you soon, Lieutenant.â
As Gregory rode away, Davis called Jim over to him. âThere will be eight eurtik going back to camp with us. Make sure that one or two can find a place to sit in the wagon after we load it.â
âEight eurtiksâ¦? Slaves, sir?â
âYes. The man who owned them was breaking laws, and our magi gathered them under his wing. Theyâll be treated well, or heâll be unhappy. Itâll all be explained back at camp. Just make sure that we have space, even atop barrels that are safe for people to perch on, if itâs needed.â
âYes, sir.â
âI need to get more wine and food organized,â Davis said, then went to find Paul Vattakavanich, the manager of the distillery.
~*~*~
Willof had tabards made for the slaves so they now bore the clan emblem, informing Gregory that normal clothing would be delivered to the camp over the next few weeks for them.
No one rode in the wagon on the way back. Gregory spoke with the eurtiks during the trip, walking with them, his horse tied to the wagon. Bellyâs mother was named Squeal, and when Gregory offered them the chance to change their names, they both did. Belly took the name Barny, and his mother went with Petal. Petal was in her forties and had been a cook for most of it; she promised to do her best, very grateful to be free of Bruce.
Flopsy, the rabbit eurtik, chose to keep her name, as she genuinely liked it. She told Gregory about how things had been at the Blushing Maid. Not many would pay to sleep with them, but if they did, the women could never deny the customer anything, even if it hurt them. She was cautiously optimistic about this new life she was being offered.
Hiss, the snake eurtik, opted to become May. She was curious about Gregory, since he didnât smell like others. When he answered her questions, she even smiled; he didnât rebuked or hit her. By the time he moved on, she was sure that life was going to be much better.
The cheetah eurtik sisters, Polka and Dot, didnât think changing their names would matter. The pair were thin to the point of being unhealthy, obviously having been forced to stay that way. When Gregory asked, they told him how their food was half of the others. Their leanness coupled with their fur pattern had made them the most bought women on staff. Neither thought that a change in ownerâ especially to a magiâ would improve their lives. They were sure the captain had lied about him earlier, but kept that to themselves.
Moo and Milk were eager to change their names. The bovine eurtik chose to be called Nammi and Netty. The pair were the largest of the eurtik, having been fed to plump them up. They were the polar opposite of the other sisters in body types, which got them bought often enough that neither wanted to be touched by men again. Their horns had been sawed off a handspan from their heads; they explained that their horns had been the only thing to tell them apart, so Bruce had them removed so he could fool the guards.
The conversations reaffirmed that Gregory had done the right thing. Society wouldnât have found anything wrong with what Bruce was doing, but he had, and heâd acted to stop it. All he could do was his best going forward.
When they arrived back at camp, a crowd had gathered, as it was clear there were a lot more people. Gregory motioned Basal to take his horse so he could address the growing crowd.
âMen, we have more faces in camp starting today. Weâll be settling them in over the next few weeks. These eight are slaves, and their runes reside with me for now. You will treat them the way you would Rafiq. Do not harass them, or I will be displeased. I didnât free them from a lawbreaker just to have my own men hurt them.â
Heâd spoken loudly enough that even the men cooking could hear him. His gaze darted from squad to squad, making sure theyâd all heard him.
âTwo of them are cooks who will be taking that duty away from you.â
He had to pause when a small cheer went up.
âThe other six might end up as runners for the sergeants. Just remember that theyâre people who are under my protection. I know none of you would try to coerce themâ my men are better than that. If any incident happens, I will become personally involved. On the unlikely chance one of them does something wrong, bring it to your sergeant and theyâll bring it to me. In time, they might find a better life with others, or theyâll be with us for years, so treat them accordingly. Any questions?â
Sergeant Glasson stepped forward. âSir, where will they sleep?â
âI picked up a tent for them,â Gregory said. âItâll be placed beside mine. They might have different accommodations later, but for now, this will help everyone.â
Glasson nodded. âYes, sir. Thank you.â
âBarny, Petal, if you want to go check in with the cooks, I think dinner is soon. They can show you the tent.â
The two pig eurtiks bowed to him before heading away.
âI need two men to set up their tent,â Gregory said as he summoned it from his ring.
Two men raised their hands, both partial eurtiks.
âThank you. Once you have it set, I have cots and other sundries to be placed for them.â Gregory turned to look at the six women, who looked uneasy. âLadies, none of my men will harass you. Just wait and weâll get your tent set up. Tomorrow, weâll discuss your tasks.â
All six bowed to him, shifting farther back so he was between them and the men.
Rafiq came out of Gregoryâs tent and, seeing the other full-blooded eurtiks, he approached Gregory. âGregory, might I speak with them?â
âPlease,â Gregory said. âI never intended for this to happen, but I want to do right by them.â
Rafiq smiled. âThat is who you areâ¦â The slaves calmed to see another pure-blooded eurtik already there. âItâll be okay. Iâm sure you have many questions, and you wonder if youâll be told the truth. I will stay with you and answer your questions.â
~*~*~
Rafiq stayed with the women, bringing dinner to them in their tent. That still had a lot of men wondering what purpose the eurtiks would serve in the camp, as none of them could see any reasons for them to be kept.
Gregory called a meeting of his officer core once the meal was over. The sergeants would have questions to ask and concerns to give voice to, and he wanted them aired before anything could fester.
Basal was shaken when Gregory went off to the lieutenantâs tent. The young man had been shocked that heâd brought slaves back to the camp. The magi had seemed against the idea of eurtik being lesser, but now, he was uncertain about Gregory.
âLet me tell you the story before we open up for questions,â Gregory said without preamble when everyone took a seat in Davisâ tent. âI stopped at the Blushing Maid to see about a cookâ¦â
The others listened as Gregory talked. A couple of them, Glasson in particular, looked very unhappy about the women being forced to serve customers against their will. When Gregory finished, they were silent as they thought about what else couldâve been done.
âNow that you all know, youâre probably wondering why he didnât hand them over to the mayor to deal with,â Davis spoke up. âNone of you have met the man. He isnât known for compassion toward people of lower station. They wouldâve ended up in similar places, or possibly even worse places.â
âI donât fault you,â Milton said, the half-dwarf looking thoughtful. âAdding eight more people might cause some resentment among the men. Whatâll have to be cut for the new bodies to survive?â
âNothing,â Gregory said. âIâm paying for their food, drink, and living space. My personal money, not unit funds.â
âThatâll help,â Townson said, rubbing his sharp chin. âI doubt any of the men will press them, especially not now that youâve clearly called them yours. It might lead to problems when the men go on leave, though.â
âCause them to seek out comfort women, you mean,â Bunson snorted. âThey will, anyway. Women, drinking, and gambling have always been the soldierâs way of blowing off steam.â
âBut more will go for women now,â Townson added, âwhich can lead to some of the worst scenarios our men can get into.â
âExplain, please?â Gregory asked.
âFirst, they might be accused of not paying by a womanâs guardian,â Bunson said. âThatâll almost always lead to a fight. It doesnât matter if itâs a true charge or not.â
âDead pimps are a blessing!â Glasson snapped. âMost of them keep the girls under the influence or beat them to keep them in line. If the men need that, they should go to reputable houses, not street women.â
âCost is what drives them to the night-walkers,â Milton jumped in. âItâs always cheaper for a back-alley tumble than an established whorehouse.â
âAnd more likely to get them infected with the pox or itch,â Donald added, his yellow eyes narrow. âMy men have been lectured about that. I wonât abide an idiot who lets his cock lead him into danger.â
âMight want to do the same,â Glasson nodded. âMore so now.â
âWhat purpose will they even have here?â Milton asked, bringing the conversation back to the six women. âThe two cooks have a job to do, but not the other six.â
âThatâs one of the reasons for this meeting,â Gregory said. âIâd considered using them as runners for you. One per squad, under direct supervision of each sergeant.â
âDoing what?â Donald asked.
âSmall errands, passing messages⦠anything that an able body can do.â
âGetting the men water while out on the course?â Townson asked.
âThings like that,â Gregory agreed. âThey could even help with dinner, delivering food to the tables. Thatâs something theyâre used to doing. It would give them a clear function and help them settle in, too.â
âNot sure about it, but Iâm willing to give it a go,â Milton said. âAether knows weâll be an unusual unit as it is.â
âWhat if it doesnât work out?â Glasson asked Gregory.
âThatâs where things get tricky. Iâm going to ask my wives for help when we get to Grakle. We might leave them with Mindie, and she can work on finding good people to care for them.â
âYou believe itâll be that easy?â Bunson asked.
âNo. Itâd take a lot of work on her part, but Mindie would see that it got done. My wives are just as focused on some subjects as I am.â
âMindie is part-fox eurtik,â Willof added from his seat. âA magi healer who married Gregory and his other two wives.â
âNever did go into all the details about them,â Gregory muttered. âMy first wife, Yukiko, has hints of snow owl eurtik blood. Jenn, my second wife, is part-dwarven. Mindie became our third wife, and is a part fox eurtik. All of us feel strongly about some subjects.â
The sergeants went quiet for a moment, with a couple of them exchanging glances.
âSir, weâll do our best,â Donald said. âAny problems will be brought straight to you.â
âThank you. I know this will be difficult. It wasnât what I intended to do, but not acting wasnât possible for me when I figured out what was happening. A man who will break one slave law for his own benefit will break others.â
âOr worse,â Davis added. âSir, considering your stance on things, what if they donât want to do as you suggest?â
Gregory exhaled slowly. âThen Iâll have them stay as sequestered as possible until we get to Grakle. I wonât force them; itâll be an offer they can refuse. If they do, Iâll try to see them given to an owner who can care for them.â
Everyone in the tent could see his jaw twitch at the phrase.
Glasson was the one who spoke, and it wasnât a question, âYou donât like slavery.â
Gregory looked from person to person before he replied, âI donât. Saying more than that can be seen as disloyalty to the empire. Even that being said can cause untold problems.â
âNone of us will say a word,â Davis said firmly.
âI trust you, but this conversation shouldnât take place. Not today, not while weâre beholden to hold the peace of the empire.â
Willof coughed. âNot in front of an officer of the empire, either. Now, nothing said crossed firm lines, but Gregoryâs right. Even admitting youâre against slavery can cause backlash in some circles.â
Glasson bowed his head. âSorry, sir. My father⦠was a slave. I kind of wish heâd met someone like you.â
âI wish they all could,â Gregory replied. âIâll be out of training tomorrow. Run them as we have been.â
âIâll handle it, sir,â Davis said.
âThank you, Davis. Hopefully tomorrow, we can start a new page for these poor people.â Gregory stood, thanked the sergeants, then left them to talk without him.
Making it back to his tent, he found Basal sitting in the front room. âBasal?â
âSir,â Basal said softly, standing up from the chair heâd been hunched in. âDid you need anything else tonight?â
Gregory could tell something was off, so he took a seat near the young man. âSit. Tell me whatâs bothering you, please.â
Basal slumped as he took his seat again. âI⦠you⦠the slavâ¦â The sentence was fragmented as he tried to find the words, then just trailed off.
âYeah,â Gregory sighed. âThe new people?â
Basal nodded, not meeting Gregoryâs eyes.
âWeâll do the best we can for them. Theyâve been used by a bad man who held their slave runes, forcing them to do things they hated. Heâll be dead tomorrow, and I couldnât just leave them with the mayor to be given to someone else who could do the same to them.â
Basal glanced up. âYou didnât want them?â
âNo. I donât want slaves, Basal. I wish I didnât have Rafiqâs rune, either, but the academy forced us together. These eight⦠well, it was let them be handed off to another to be used or gather them in and hope I can give them something better. Maybe thatâs prideful of me, but Iâd like them to find a life worth livingâ one they chooseâ as much as they can.â
âMost of them are womenâ¦â
Gregory nodded, but his lips twitched. âI have three wives, beautiful women who I love with all my heart, Basal. I didnât bring them here for base needs. If anyone tries that with them, Iâll come down like a mountain on the offender.â
Basal blinked, then shot to his feet and bowed low to Gregory. âSorry, sir!â
âItâs fine, Basal. It tells me where your heart is, and itâs a good heart. I normally play a game or two with Rafiq before bed. Heâs busy tonight, so would you like to stand in?â
âMe?â Basal asked, coming out of the bow.
âYes, you. You and Hanz have been working hard. I got you both treats again, but forgot to hand them out. Iâll give them to you tomorrow. Tonight, we can play a game and just relax before we have to pick up our roles again.â
Basal smiled brightly. âYes, s⦠Gregory. Iâll go get the Go board.â
âIâll be waiting,â Gregory said.