The Burning City

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by Jerry Pournelle


  “Tar,” Whandall said. “Tar is always valuable.”

  “And we have lots, yes,” Shanda said. “But I may as well be honest. They found tar somewhere south of here, some lagoon between here and Condigeo. It’s hard to get to, but if we charge what we need, the ships will go there instead. But you’ll help, won’t you?”

  “Why should he?” Green Stone demanded.

  Whandall gestured. This was not the time to play roles in the game of negotiation. Was it?

  “It’s his home,” Shanda said simply.

  “No, Lady,” Green Stone said. “Not anymore. Whandall Feathersnake lives in the New Castle at Road’s End. Everyone along the Hemp Road knows that!”

  Burning Tower looked admiringly at her brother.

  And it’s all true, but this was my home, Whandall thought. Good or bad, it was my home. “I’ll do what I can,” Whandall said. “We’ll look to see what’s plentiful here and valuable on the Hemp Road. There must be something. And however easy or hard these new tar fields are to get to by ship, this place is easiest for me. Decide what’s your price for tar. It’ll tell me whether I come back.”

  A pony nickered outside. Whandall’s expression didn’t change as he thought how valuable a bonehead pony grown into a one-horn stallion would be. He said, “Ponies, maybe; there are places along the Hemp Road that might buy a pony. There must be other such things, magical items and animals stunted by Yangin-Atep. We’ll look.

  “But there’s a problem,” Whandall said. “The Toronexti make it very difficult for traders.”

  “We’ve spoken to them about that,” Shanda said. “But I’m afraid they go their own way, much as the Lordkin do. And they have a charter.”

  “Scraped-off skins?” Whandall asked. “Covered with black marks?”

  “I never saw it,” Shanda said. “Writings, yes, witnessed by Lords in every generation, granting them privileges. Promises made long ago.”

  “By dead men.”

  She shrugged. “Still promises, written and witnessed. Written and witnessed.”

  Summon them up and ask… but this is Tep’s Town. “If they lost that charter?”

  Her eyes twinkled, just a touch, like the young girl he’d known deviling her governess. No one else saw it. “They’d never do that. It would be like—like it never was, wouldn’t it?”

  “How is Miss Batty?” Whandall asked suddenly.

  “She married a senior guard,” Shanda said. “But I didn’t know for years. Samorty dismissed her after we…” She glanced at her daughter, then said it anyway. “Spent the night in the forest.”

  “They keep a shop in Lord’s Town,” Roni said. “Her daughter is learning to be a governess. For my children after I’m married.” Roni was very serious.

  “And Serana?”

  Roni smiled. “She’s chief cook, which means she doesn’t do any work and orders everyone around.”

  “Even me,” Shanda said.

  “Good. Tell her I remember her puddings. Wait. Here…” He found it tucked under an Owl Tribe basin. Rosemary in a little parchment bag. “Tell her to crush this and rub some on red meat before roasting. Bison or goat or terror bird. And I’ll send her some spices with the next caravan I send in here.”

  “Oh, good. You will be back?” Roni asked.

  “If this works out. Shanda, I will need some help. Chariots. I’ll need at least two—three would be better—with drivers. Lord’s horses, not ponies! If I send my clerks around to look for trade goods, I want to know they can outrun gatherers.” And because he’d seen Morth mapping out a path a day-walk long!

  “I’ll send for drivers,” Shanda said. “The kinless hire out, but it will be better if your people are with a Lordsman. Fewer problems—I know. Roni, your cousin Sandry and his friends. Do you think they’d like to do this?”

  “Sandry?” Whandall asked.

  “We know a Sandry,” Green Stone said. “Master Peacevoice Waterman brought him. To assist us. Said he was a clerk.”

  Shanda smiled thinly. “I hope you’re not angry?”

  Whandall grinned. “I’d guessed he was more than a clerk,” he said. “What of the others? Will they be drivers?”

  “Sandry will,” Roni said. “I’m not sure about all the others.”

  “We’ll send several,” Shanda said. “Whandall can choose those he likes best. I’ll have them here in the morning. And I’ll speak to Master Peacevoice Waterman about deceptions.”

  And what will you say to him? “Be more clever next time?” “Thank you. Now, who sells me tar?”

  “Us,” Shanda said. “The Black Pit belongs to the Lords. A kinless family takes care of that for us. Roni, see to that, please. Find out how many jars Whandall will want, and arrange for them to be filled and sealed and brought here. It’s time you learned some of that aspect of city management, I think.”

  “It’s a man’s job, Mother.”

  “Of course it is, but if women don’t understand these things, how can we make sure the men do them right?” She grinned at Whandall, the old Shanda again for an instant. “I’m sure our merchant prince understands,” she said.

  “And if I don’t, Willow will explain. My wife,” he said, in case she’d missed it earlier. Both of us married, with children. Right? Right.

  He was ready for bed when Morth came in. “I walked up Observation Hill,” he said. “I used to go there a lot. Those ruins at the top, that was an old kinless fort. I can see the ocean from there, way off. I couldn’t see anything, but with my talisman I perceived the elemental.”

  “Talisman. Another doll?”

  “Yes. It won’t last long. Whandall, the elemental perceived me. I should go out to look for myself. Sea Cliffs.”

  “Take a fast chariot. I’ll have chariots tomorrow.”

  CHAPTER

  75

  Two hours after daybreak, seven chariots clattered into Peacegiven Square and drew up in a line in front of the Lordsman camp. An earnest young driver in Lordsman armor stood beside each one. One was Sandry, no longer wearing a clerk’s cap. The horses were big grays, matched pairs at each chariot. They were well groomed and well fed. The chariots would hold two adults. In each chariot was a leather sheath holding a long thrusting spear and two shorter throwing spears ready to hand between driver and passenger.

  They were smaller than Whandall remembered. He’d imagined Lords’ chariots big enough to hold half a dozen men. They looked that big coming at you, but of course that was silly. Not even the big Lord’s horses could pull such a load.

  Master Peacevoice Waterman walked up and down the line examining each horse and driver. He muttered something and one of the drivers flicked dust off his gleaming armor. Another tightened the harness of his horse. When Waterman was satisfied, he strode briskly to Whandall’s tent. “Chariots and drivers waiting inspection, sir!”

  Morth and Whandall crossed the square to the waiting line. Whandall moved closer to Waterman. “I’m not used to chariots,” he confided.

  “Not surprised at that,” Waterman said. “Trick is to spread your feet out, brace one against the sidework. There’s a brace built into the floor to wedge your other foot against. Bend your knees so there’s some spring in them; otherwise, you’ll bounce right out when you hit a bump. Chariots are fast, but they tire the horses fast too.”

  “Are these horses tired?” Morth asked.

  “Not too bad, sir; they led these in at first light, no load. The horses that pulled the chariots here from Lord’s Town are resting up. They’ll all be fresh come tomorrow morning.”

  “Good. Who’s the best driver?”

  “For what purpose, sir?”

  Morth considered.

  Finding the right questions wasn’t easy here. “Speed. Distance,” Whandall said. “We might have to cross most of the city. Maybe fighting.”

  “Best fighting driver would be young Heroul there.”

  Whandall regarded the charioteer. Young, clear eyed. Armor polished. He stood impatiently.
“Is he reliable?”

  “Depends on what for,” Waterman said. “He’ll take orders just fine. And he’s got the fastest horses in the corps.”

  “Who for just speed and distance and a passenger who can’t fight?”

  “That’s not Heroul. He likes to win,” Waterman said. “You can depend on young Sandry there. Lord Samorty’s grandson, he is, and best officer cadet in the corps.”

  “Lord Rabblie’s son?”

  Waterman looked at him oddly. “Reckon they called Lord Rabilard something like that when he was a lad. Yes, sir, that’s his father.”

  And the Lords still talk about family to strangers. Brag, even. Not like Lordkin. Like us.

  “He’ll be steady, then?”

  “I’d trust him,” Waterman said. “You needn’t tell him I said that. Cadet’s head doesn’t need more swelling.”

  “Thanks. You won’t need to introduce us.”

  “Reckon I won’t, sir,” Waterman said.

  “Morth, you take Sandry, then—”

  “No, I want speed,” Morth said. “You said that one is fastest?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “I’ll take Heroul. And put some handhold lashings in that chariot. If you don’t know how, I do. I had one of these in Atlantis.”

  Whandall stood uncertainly in Sandry’s chariot. It was hard enough keeping his footing on streets. The potholes rattled him around inside this bucket on wheels. It would be a lot harder going across country. If Sandry noticed Whandall having difficulty keeping his footing, he didn’t say anything about it.

  “Can you carry an old man in one of these?” Whandall asked.

  Sandry nodded. He needed all his attention to avoid a young Lordkin who had darted into the street. Then he answered. “Yes, Wagonmaster. We can strap a chair where you’re standing, strap a man into the chair. But you’re doing fine.” For a beginner, he didn’t add.

  “Not me,” Whandall said. “Morth.”

  “He didn’t seem that old.”

  “He can get older fast.”

  “Oh. Aunt Shanda says she’s known you a long time,” Sandry said.

  “Yes, more than thirty years.” He looked at Sandry and made a decision. “Did you ever know of a servant girl named Dream-Lotus? Kinless, from the Ropewalk area.”

  “No, but I can ask,” Sandry said. “Is it important?”

  “Not very. I’d just like to know. Turn right just ahead there.”

  The streets were in worse repair, and there were more burned buildings than Whandall remembered. “Now left.” Ahead lay the Serpent’s Walk meetinghouse. Curse, it had a roof now! And a new fence. Oversize cactus plants grew against the fence. Two kinless were raking the yard, although it didn’t appear to need raking. Neat, Whandall thought. Wanshig always was neat after he came back from the sea.

  The Placehold looked neat too. In Whandall’s time there was a half-ruined house down the block. That was gone, its lot planted with what looked like cabbages tended by kinless, and a small cottage stood behind the cabbage patch.

  Whandall pointed to the front door of the Placehold. “Stop just there and wait for me. You won’t be allowed inside.”

  Sandry nodded. He looked glad of the armor he wore. “Sure you’ll be welcome?”

  “No,” Whandall said.

  “What’s the best way out of here?” Sandry asked.

  Whandall chuckled. “Straight ahead, left at the end of the block. And stay in the middle of the street.”

  “You know it.”

  Boys lounged at the doorway. That hadn’t changed. “Tell Lord Wanshig that Whandall wishes to speak with him.” He lowered his voice so that Sandry wouldn’t be able to hear. “Whandall Placehold.”

  Two of the boys ran inside. Another stayed in the door staring at Whandall’s tattoo.

  The doorway stood invitingly open. Whandall grinned to himself. At least one, probably several armed Lordkin adults would be in there, one behind the door waiting for anyone to come in uninvited—

  A girl about fifteen came to the door. She wore a bright dress, too fancy for housework. “Be welcome, Whandall,” she said, loud enough that everyone near would hear.

  “Thank you—”

  “I’m Firegift, Uncle Whandall. My mother is Wess.”

  And calling me Uncle says I’m accepted as one of the men of the Place-hold, not that she’s Wanshig’s daughter, Whandall thought. She could be, but she won’t claim that. Just her mother. The Lordkin ways were coming back to him, but as a half-remembered dream.

  “Lord Wanshig is waiting upstairs.”

  Wanshig sat at one end of the big meeting hall. It seemed full of people, none Whandall could recognize. Except Wess. She stood in the doorway of the corner room. The room that was his, with her, for a while, when Whandall Placehold was the eldest man in the Placehold. A lifetime ago.

  She was still pretty. Not as pretty as Willow, but to Whandall no woman ever had been. But Wess was a fine woman still! Firegift went to stand by her mother. They looked more alike, side by side, than they had when they were apart.

  “Hail, brother,” Wanshig said.

  “Lord Wanshig.”

  Wanshig laughed hard. Then he got up and came to Whandall, slapped hands, hugged him in a wiry embrace that showed Wanshig hadn’t lost his strength. Neither had Whandall, and they stood half embracing and half testing for a minute.

  “Been a long time,” Wanshig said.

  “That it has. You’ve come up in the world.”

  Wanshig looked at the ornate knife Whandall wore. “So have you.”

  “That’s nothing,” Whandall said. He took off the knife and sheath, revealing a plainer and more functional blade underneath. “A present,” Whandall said, and held out the ornately decorated knife. “Among others. I’m rich, brother.”

  “That’s nice—”

  “I can make the Placehold rich,” Whandall said. “I’ll need help doing it. Actually, I’ll need Placehold and Serpent’s Walk together.”

  “After lunch you’ll tell me,” Wanshig said. He gestured, dismissing the men and women who had crowded around. “You’ll all meet Whandall later,” he said. “Give me time to talk with my brother.”

  Brother. We had the same mother. Not necessarily the same father, and in our case certainly not the same. Lordkin!

  The others went away or settled in corners of the big room.

  “We’ll eat in here,” Wanshig said. He led Whandall into the big corner room. A table had been set up, and Firegift was bringing food and tea. “You’ll remember Wess. She’s my lady now. First lady of the Placehold,” Wanshig said.

  Whandall didn’t say anything.

  “What? Ah. That’s right; you’ll remember Elriss,” Wanshig said.

  “And Mother.”

  Wanshig nodded. “Dead, brother. Dead together, with Shastern. Fifteen years ago—”

  “Sixteen,” Wess said. “Firegift is fifteen.”

  “Sixteen years ago. The Burning started by Tarnisos.”

  “Tarnisos killed our family?”

  “No, he started the Burning. It was a Mother’s Day; the women had gone to Peacegiven Square. The Lords still gave Mother’s Day presents there. You remember?”

  “Yes.”

  “Shastern went with them. They had collected the gifts, were coming back, when the Burning started.” Wanshig shook his head. “We went looking for them. Found them dead, two Bull Pizzles dead with them. Everything they had was gathered, of course. Later Pelzed and Freethspat went looking for Pizzles to settle the score, but the Pizzles claimed their people were killed helping Shastern. Could have been, even. Could have been.”

  “Who did they say?” Whandall demanded.

  Wanshig’s expression was bleak. “You think you’ll get even, now, after sixteen years when you weren’t here, little brother? You think I haven’t tried?”

  “Sorry. Of course you did.”

  Wanshig nodded grimly.

  “What happened to Freethspat?”
r />   “He tried too. Mother was his woman; he was really close to her. Closer than I was to Elriss by then, I think. He went looking one day. Never came back.”

  “And Wanshig became eldest in the Placehold,” Wess said. And didn’t say that Firegift was born a few months later, but that was clear enough.

  “So. How can we help you, little brother?” Wanshig asked.

  “Two ways, if you can work with me,” Whandall said.

  “It’s possible,” Wanshig admitted. “What two ways?”

  “First, burn out the Wolverines.”

  “That’s hard, little brother. Hard. You know who they are?”

  “I hope I do. I’ve got no quarrel with the Wolverines. But Alferth says they’re the Toronexti. I have reasons to think he’s right.”

  “So do I,” Wanshig said. “And the Toronexti work for the Lords.” He looked thoughtful. “And you? You have a chariot and a Lordsman driver. Have the Lords told you you can burn out the Toronexti?”

  “Pretty close,” Whandall said. “They won’t help, but if it happens they’ll be happy enough to take credit. There won’t be a blood war. If there’s a blood price, I can give it back to you.”

  “I need to think on this. What’s your other task?”

  “Morth of Atlantis needs help. We’ll explain later. But it needs reliable people. He needs a truce with Sea Cliffs, at least to take a chariot there. And Wanshig, I can use some help outside, out of Tep’s Town, if there’s anyone who wants to go.”

  Wanshig stared at him. “Out?”

  “There’s a whole world out there.”

  “Twenty years ago I’d have come with you,” he said. “Not now, and I need all the men I have, in Placehold and in Serpent’s Walk. These are hard times, little brother.”

  “We like it here,” Wess said possessively. “But I have a son, Shastern.” She nodded at Whandall’s look. “Named for your younger brother. He’s a wild boy. I don’t think he’ll live long here. Take him with you.”

 

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