The dream with Darkness and Clover was the only major moment of note for the entirety of the six weeks since heâd left Grakle. The training continued on schedule for everyone in the unit. Gregory and Rafiq had their game nights and spoke of history together, being mindful of Basal sitting nearby. The run through the obstacle course at the end of each week was always a high point for the entire unit. The officers ran it as a trio before everyone else came down to participate.
The day before Gregory was planning to make his second trip to Gardenia to resupply, Polka brought forward a unique request. Gregory then took it to Davis and the sergeants. After some debate, the whole contingent allowed it. When the entire unit took to the obstacle course next, Polka and Dot were with themâ theyâd argued that they should be prepared to brave dangers to assist in combat; running supplies would mean being able to navigate dangerous terrain.
That day, the men gained more respect for the sisters. Polka and Dot were fastâ Gregory could keep up if he used his aether, but no one else would have a chance. The duo could easily speed ahead of everyone else and, for the first run, they had. They struggled with the strength obstacles, as they were still working on getting stronger, but the balance ones didnât slow them down at all. The rest of the day, the pair stayed back with Davis, ready to run off as he directed.
That gave Gregory an idea that he talked with the sergeants about later that evening. He suggested splitting the unit runs into what he called âcombat conditions.â Theyâd send the scouting squad ahead of them by a full minute, then send the others behind them at a steadyâ but not breakneckâ pace.
Willof interrupted, asking why he was suggesting that course of action. It got everyoneâs attention, as he didnât interject often. Gregory explained his reasoning, and Willof laughed as he made notes; all he would say was that everyone would be surprised later.
~*~*~
Gregory gave the sisters a smile. âYou did great yesterday. Iâm also happy you want to go into town.â
âJust a few errands,â Dot said softly. âWeâre glad to help you with your things, too.â
âThatâll be fine with me. You can handle the oxen?â
âYes, sir.â
âIâm sorry for asking this, so please forgive me,â Gregory said slowly. âCould no one really tell you and your sister apart? Iâve never had any trouble.â
Dot looked down, her smile fading. âNo one cared to see the differences, besides the others like us. We sound and look similar enough that people just think they remember wrong.â
âSorry,â Gregory said. âIt was the same with Nammi and Netty. I just donât see how people could confuse you two or them.â
âBecause you take the time to actually see us, sir.â
âMaybeâ¦â He trailed as he thought about what that said for society as a whole.
âWe wanted to thank you for allowing us to run with the unit,â Dot said. âWeâve had a lot of fun.â
âYou impressed the hell out of everyone. Next week, youâll have extra roles to do when we do that.â
âWeâll do it,â Dot said with a big smile.
âI know.â Gregory went to take the reins of his mare from Basal. âSame as before?â
âIf you could get one with lamb, that would be perfect, sir.â
âIâll see what he has. You and Hanz deserve the treats; you two make things easier for Davis and me.â
âItâs our job, sir.â
âThereâs doing just enough to get by as opposed to the extra lengths you two go to.â
Basal bowed his head. âWe just want to do as much as we can. Weâd feel bad if we were the only two in the camp not doing that.â
Mounting up, Gregory couldnât fault the young man. âA fair point, Basal. Iâll do the best I can about the lamb pie. Hanz,â he called over to the other squire, âany preferences this week?â
âAny of the fruit is fine with me, sir.â
âGot it.â
Willof walked over to mount up. âYou spoil the hell out of your men, Gregory. Whatâll you do when you donât have access to easy rewards?â
âHope they understand, then treat them when I can.â
âGood answer,â Willof nodded.
Davis came striding their way. âSorry about the delay, sir. Iâm ready to go.â
âWeâre off as soon as you mount,â Gregory said.
~*~*~
As they reached the gates of Gardenia, Bill raised his hand to stop them. âMagi, sorry for the delay, but the mayor wants you to come by. He knew youâd be coming today.â
âIâll see him first, then,â Gregory replied.
âHave a good day, Magi,â Bill saluted.
âYou, as well.â Gregory returned the salute before leading his group through the gate.
As they made their way down the street, Gregory slowed to ride beside the wagon. âDot, Polka, go with Davis to the distillery, please. Iâll come back to get you as soon as Iâm done with the mayor.â
âYes, sir,â Polka replied.
âWillof, with me?â
âYes. Iâm interested in why heâs summoned you,â Willof said.
The pair split away from Davis and the wagon, heading for the mayorâs house at a fast walk. Gregory figured it had to be fallout from his sending the owner of the Blushing Maid to the magistrate.
The butler was cordial, leading them straight into the inner part of the home to the study. He left them there to get the mayor.
It wasnât a long wait before the mayor arrived. âAh, Magi Pettit and Captain Willof. I wasnât sure if the captain would be with you.â
âI have to record how he comports himself,â Willof smiled. âI wonât get involved unless necessary.â
âVery well. Magi, you had a business owner arrested a couple of months ago. I was only informed in the last couple of weeks. He has since been summarily executed for attacking a magi. His property, though, is a point of contention.â
âWhatâs the contention, Mayor Kestral?â
âHis sister has petitioned to have the business turned over to her, along with all goods.â
âIâll leave that with you, Mayor. I wonât confiscate anything other than what I already have.â
âThatâs the contention. You took eight slaves from the premises, didnât you?â
âHe broke the law. His slaves were taken per article twelve, subsection three of the eurtik slave laws. I fail to see what the problem is.â
Kestral blinked at him, clearly not having expected Gregoryâ whoâd been friendly and affable their last meetingâ to become cold and unmoving. âYou canât just take them.â
âDo you have the law books on hand, Mayor? Because Iâve read them in detail. Now, I donât wish to have a bad relationship with you, so letâs find a middle ground.â
Gregory offering an olive branch mollified the mayor some. âGood. I didnât want this to tarnish our relationship, either. If youâd return half of themââ
âI canât,â Gregory interrupted, but not harshly. âThere are only three left with me. The others were taken by other magi and are no longer in reach of here. The remaining three serve my camp. I wonât be giving them up, either.â
Kestral sat back, clearly thinking. His clan must have taken them, and why not? He is in the right. Hmm⦠a change of tactic, then. Nodding slowly, the mayor smiled. âVery well. I should reimburse the deceasedâs family, since the property cannot be returned.â
Gregoryâs eyes narrowed fractionally; Yukiko had worked with him to realize when someone was going to extort him. âYouâre a generous man, Mayor, to give a criminalâs family money after they broke the law for years and then attacked a magi.â
Kestral went silent again, feeling a trap closing on him. He hadnât expected the magi, who was reportedly from the fringe, to sense his motives so easily. âThose are good points. I will speak with her again. Clearly, she should be happy Iâm not confiscating the tavern in recompense for the years he defrauded the city and empire.â
âThat is a sound plan to me,â Gregory replied, back to being amiable. âWas there anything else?â
âNot for today. I just wanted to understand the situation better.â
âVery well. Thank you,â Gregory replied. âCaptain, when are we slated to work on patrols in the town?â
âAfter the solstice, sir.â
âMayor, when the time comes, I would like my men to be given the worst sections of the town. Itâs best to work them as hard as possible now so theyâre ready later.â
Kestral was surprisedâ most magi had asked him or his father to have the calmest sections of the town for their patrols, as their conduct was part of the report for the tournament. Maybe the magi in front of him didnât realize that? Gaze darting to Willof, he held back. Gregory had thwarted his easy access to slaves, so it was best to let him reap that folly. âIf thatâs what you want, Magi. I do try to help.â
âI appreciate it,â Gregory said. âIf thereâs nothing else, I have supplies to gather.â
âDoesnât your lieutenant do that?â Kestral asked as he stood up.
âI pick up extras, not the normal supplies,â Gregory said, leaving it open for interpretation.
âOf course. Have a good day, Magi.â
âYou, as well, Mayor.â
Willof walked out with Gregory, staying quiet the entire time. Once they were riding away from the home, he finally asked, âYou know he was trying to extort you, right?â
âYes. He wasnât going to return the slaves to the sister; he was going to keep or sell them for himself. Iâve set him against us, though Iâm not sure how heâll find a way to repay that.â
Willof chuckled. âYou already gave him his path.â
Gregory rode in thought for a minute. âPatrols in the town?â
âThose get marked down for the tournament. Your entire report factors into the tournament. You just gave yourself a massive handicap.â
âThe hard paths make the best magi. I would bet the same is true for our guards.â
âIf they survive,â Willof added, having been reading the journals Gregory gave him.
âI have faith in my men.â
âAs they do in you. I look forward to the tournament this year and next.â
âTheyâll surprise you.â
âNo, they wonât. Theyâre part of your clan, and close friends of yours. Iâm fairly certain theyâll be very much like you and your wives.â
âThatâs true,â Gregory chuckled. âIâm going back to get the sisters. Did you want to come with me?â
âYes. I have a stop of my own to make.â
âOh?â
âI wanted to get some pascal leaf.â
Gregory chuckled. âSheâll enjoy it.â
âI hope so.â