Conrad Starguard-The Radiant Warrior

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Conrad Starguard-The Radiant Warrior Page 30

by Leo Frankowski


  "Why, your accountant, Piotr, uses that, my lord. I know! Those merchants from Prague! I shall evict them. I never liked Bohemians anyway!"

  "Hey, none of that! If we've rented them rooms, the rooms are theirs. Look, for tonight, put Piotr up with the stable boys, find a second bed and put it up in the room for Sir Vladimir and Annastashia. Three of our ladies can sleep with the waitresses."

  "Ah, my lord. Some of these maidens wish to be waitresses?"

  "I'm afraid that they don't qualify. For now I want a tall beer and a warm bath before supper."

  I later found that to be a waitress at the Pink Dragon Inn, a maiden must needs be a true intact virgin; a thing my Annastashia had ceased at months ago.

  Although the sun was still high, the common room of the inn was full of customers. At a whispered word from our host, a party of young men quickly smiled, bowed and vacated a table for us. It seems that they worked at the brass foundry, which Conrad also owned.

  A pair of fast-moving waitresses quickly cleaned the table and brought us pitchers of cool beer from the cellars. They were maids of exceptional beauty and most immodestly clad.

  To start from the bottom, they wore shoes with extremely high heels; two or three fingers high. They wore no dress, but a tight fitting cloth that barely covered their breasts and privy members. The back of this skimpy garment had an absurd puff of fur, like a rabbit's tail. Their legs were covered with tight hose of a material suitable for netting small fish. There were bands of cloth at their necks and wrists—suggestive of shackles—and a strange sort of hat, reminiscent of a rabbit's ears. And that was all.

  I found myself staring at these lovely apparitions until Annastashia kicked me, quite painfully, in the shin.

  Conrad didn't bother to sit as cool beer was placed before us. He simply downed his mug with a single pull, said, "To the showers!" and went out the inn's backdoor.

  "Can he do something to make it rain?" Natalia asked between gulps of beer.

  "No," Krystyana said. "He just means that we should follow him to the bathhouse."

  "Oh, good! I've always wanted to take a bath!"

  Count Lambert's castle town had a sauna for use in the winter and there was a nearby stream with a swimming hole for use in the summer. But there was no bathhouse. The girls had heard Krystyana's descriptions of the glories of soaking in a hot tub and they scurried eagerly after Conrad.

  I, perforce, mounted rear guard and showed admirable foresight in securing a pitcher of beer from the table to take with us. The bathhouse was an establishment separate from the inn, but adjoining it. Conrad did not own the place, but had made special arrangements with it for the convenience of the inn's servants and guests. A brass token from the inn paid our fare.

  The baths were of the traditional sort, with men and maids bathing together. There is a fad, prevalent in some of the larger cities, that separates the sexes. An annoying modernism, it spoils the scenery; and how is a man to get his back clean?

  As I entered the changing room, Sir Conrad was already walking out, having left his clothes and armor scattered on the floor.

  "A wise thought, that," he said, noticing my pitcher. "Boy! Run to the inn and bring back a few more pitchers of beer! And mugs!" He stumbled into the darkened bathroom.

  The girls, having seen Conrad scatter his clothing and equipment about the room, naturally assumed that this was the proper way to do things. Soon stockings and embroidered petticoats were scattered atop chain mail and leather.

  Now, my arms and armor were worth three hundred times the money in my purse. To treat them in this careless manner was painful to me but I did it, to keep up appearances. As I finished stripping, an old female attendant came in, shook her gray head at the mess, and started folding things. I wanted to tell her to take special care with my armor, but didn't, fearing that she would expect a gratuity.

  The bathroom proper had no windows; it was lit by but two oil lamps and one must needs feel one's way in until the eyes became accustomed.

  "Well now," said a voice that I almost recognized. "They seem to let anyone come in here."

  "You'd think the place was a common stews," said another almost familiar voice.

  "But then, again, it is a common stews," said a third voice. "That is to say, it is common and we are all here up to our necks stewing."

  "True," said the first. "And he doesn't seem a truly bad sort."

  "Indeed, he comes in the company of five of the truly good sort."

  "Unclad ladies must always be considered socially acceptable," agreed the first. "In fact, I move that we make a guild ordinance to that effect."

  "Moved, seconded, and passed by general acclaim."

  It was still too dark to see who was talking. Straining to see them, I bumped my shin on the rim of one of the two huge half-sunken tubs.

  "Tsk. Such a clumsy sort. And his mother was so proud of him. Twenty years of careful upbringing gone to waste."

  "Mothers all feel that way. It comes with the fief. But see. He has had the foresight to bring potables. If this wisdom is matched by generosity, he might prove a valued member of our company."

  The girls were giggling at the exchange, but I have found that it is not wise to act belligerent when naked. Had I been in armor, my response might have been different, but I attempted humor.

  "I brought the pitcher from the table lest it be abandoned. This very night, little Moslem children will be going to bed thirsty, so it's a sin to be wasteful."

  "You know," Conrad spoke for the first time. "My mother used to use a similar argument to try to get me to eat my vegetables."

  "Mine as well, though she never used it on beer," said a voice. "I always told her to send them to the poor infidels, but she took no heed."

  "I did precisely the same," said Conrad. "Do all mothers read the same books?"

  "My mother can't read at all. Nonetheless, it was wise of Vladimir to bring the beer. Why, it might have fallen into the hands of some intemperate inebriate and thus contributed to all manner of venial sins."

  "As well as a few carnal ones."

  "Just who are you men?" I shouted.

  "He doesn't recognize us. I'm crushed. It must be eyestrain."

  "Doubtless brought on by staring at these lovely ladies."

  "Dammit!" I said.

  "We're the Upper Selesian Drinking and Fighting Men's Guild."

  "Dragons slain, treasures liberated, maidens put in distress, and promptly rescued."

  "All services performed by true belted knights."

  "I never heard of it," I said.

  "Reasonable. We only just formed it this afternoon. After all, if the commons can have guilds with all sorts of special privileges, why can't we?"

  "Right. We have, for example, declared a guild monopoly on rescuing fair maidens in distress. Now you, young lady, you look to be in need of rescuing."

  "But I'm not in distress!" Natalia said.

  "Easily arranged. Gregor here can do it."

  "Gregor!" I shouted. "You are my cousin Gregor!"

  "A slow lad, but he comes through in the end."

  "And that's second cousin. You must allow us some dregs of pride," his brother Wiktor said.

  "Nonetheless, we are family, Vladimir," my cousin Wojciech added. "So get in the tub, share out the beer, and introduce us to your attractive friends."

  I got in. The room had lightened enough for me to see reasonably well. "Have some beer, if you need it badly enough to beg. Unfortunately, I can not introduce you three to my friends. You see, they must maintain their standards, which would be irretrievably lowered by social contact with the less fortunate members of—"

  "Come off it, Vladimir. They played a good joke on you. Don't rub it back on them. Gentlemen, I am Sir Conrad Stargard."

  "And I am Sir Gregor Banki. These are my brothers Sir Wiktor and Sir Wojciech."

  "Sir Wojciech! What fool finally knighted you?" I asked, but was ignored.

  "You are the Sir Conrad Starg
ard? I should have known by your size," Wiktor said.

  "You are the warrior who singlehandedly destroyed Sir Rheinburg's outlaws? The warlock who is doing all those strange things in Okoitz?"

  "Gentlemen, if you want to stay friends, I'll ask you to forget that word 'warlock.' I've built a textile factory at Okoitz and I have a few windmills going up. As to the rest, well, it just sort of happened," Conrad said.

  A waitress from the inn brought a tray of beer and mugs. Despite the fact that we had five lovely and nude young ladies in the tub with us, all male eyes followed her around the room as she served.

  As she left, Wiktor said, "Sir Conrad, how do you go about training them to walk that way? I mean, the way her, uh, derrière moves . . ."

  "It's not training. It's the shoes. Walking on high heels requires more hip action."

  "I've got to get one of those outfits!" Yawalda whispered.

  Conrad laughed. "Gentlemen, let me complete the introductions. These are Lady Krystyana, Lady Annastashia, Lady Natalia, Lady Yawalda, and Lady Janina."

  "We are honored, ladies," Gregor said. "You must forgive me. I had assumed that since Sir Conrad just came from Okoitz, you must be some of Count Lambert's famous ladies-in-waiting."

  "Well, they are," Conrad said. "Or were. But since I seem to be their guardian, I've just promoted them to the nobility."

  "Can you do that?" Wiktor asked.

  "Are you saying that I can't?" Conrad said.

  "Sir Conrad, considering the stories that we've heard of your sword, I'd say that you can do just about anything you want." Gregor laughed.

  "Then it's settled," Conrad said. "I think I've soaked enough to loosen the dirt. Krystyana, if you'd get a brush and some soap going on my back, I'll return the favor shortly."

  As soon as Krystyana went to work, Annastashia claimed proprietorship of my own back. After a few moments of reciprocal grinning between my cousins and the other girls, there was shortly a great deal of scrubbing going on. A very great deal. In fact, the waitress returned to freshen our mugs and was hardly noticed.

  Things became increasingly boisterous, which was just as well. The mood of the company was such that things had to fall out either to sport or to sex and I wouldn't like my aunts to hear that I was involved in a public orgy!

  Soon people were bumping into people, Natalia splashed Gregor, he retaliated, and in moments the room exploded with soapy water as everyone joined in.

  As the water settled, Conrad vaulted from the tub and went to the clean-water tub for a hot soak. The old bath attendant, having finished with our clothes, came in, shook her tired gray head and picked up a mop. She dried the floor, muttering under her breath. The waitress returned with fresh mugs of beer, as the old ones were half filled with soapy water.

  The others followed Conrad to the clean tub, but Annastashia motioned for me to stay behind with her.

  "What Sir Conrad said," she whispered, "about how we were all ladies, now. Is that real? I mean, would your parents . . ."

  I shook my head. "It means that you will be treated with great courtesies at the inn and on Sir Conrad's lands. But my parents, especially my mother—she'd look down on anyone whose great-grandfather was a commoner."

  After the bath, my cousins accepted Sir Conrad's invitation to supper. We returned to the inn to find the table ready for us and fairly groaning with food and drink. We did justice to a slab of smoked sheatfish, a joint of lamb, and an entire goose. Gallons of wine and buckets of beer washed down mounds of bread and cheese. I think only my Uncle Felix sets a better table than Conrad's innkeeper.

  Further, we did not have to go to the market to purchase these things so that the inn could prepare them, as is the usual arrangement with inns, but the inn provided the service, not only to us but to all as a matter of custom. The innkeeper told me that this innovation of Sir Conrad's was partly responsible for the profitability of the inn, for by buying in vast quantities he was able to get the best at very low prices.

  "Further," Tadeusz continued, "I need only prepare a half dozen items a day to satisfy my guests, saving the cooks much effort."

  "But how do you know how much to cook?" Krystyana asked.

  "My lady, we know about how much of what our guests will eat. True, sometimes the pigs are fed better than they deserve, but not often. Also, our waitresses have become adept at persuading our customers to purchase that which we have in excess."

  I laughed. "I think those girls could have a man eating dog meat without his noticing!"

  "Hmm . . . an interesting suggestion, my lord. But I'm afraid that Sir Conrad would not approve."

  "No, Sir Conrad would not approve," Sir Conrad said. "And you're feeding surplus food to the pigs? That's not good. Tomorrow, talk to Father Thomas and see what can be done about giving it to the deserving poor. Don't give them anything you wouldn't eat yourself, but, well, there are hungry people out there."

  I drifted off in private words with Annastashia and so lost the thread of the conversation. When I returned, Sir Conrad was reading from a list.

  " . . . two dozen carpenter's hammers, two dozen mason's hammers, three dozen wood chisels, assorted, one dozen wheelbarrows, two dozen . . ."

  "Sir Conrad," I said, "what are you talking about? And what is a wheelbarrow?"

  "A wheelbarrow is a sort of pushcart with only one wheel."

  "One wheel? Then why doesn't it fall over?"

  "It would, except that a man holds it up."

  "That makes no sense at all."

  "When you see one you'll understand. Come take a look at this list of tools I need to buy. Tell me if I've forgotten anything."

  "Tools? Why buy tools?" I asked. "If you hire workmen, they'll have their own tools."

  "Really? I didn't know that."

  "Then there is perhaps another thing you don't know, Sir Conrad," my cousin Gregor said. "And that's that a workman with tools costs half again more than one without. If you project work of any size . . ."

  "We have a town to build, with a wall and a mine to redig, and—"

  "Then you will save by providing the tools yourself. Also, your tools would doubtless be made hard by this cementation process of yours that we have been hearing about."

  "Of course."

  "Then they will be better tools than any a workman would have. Times have not been good in Cieszyn. In the last year, not a workman in the city has spent a penny on anything but food, and little enough on that."

  "That rough, huh?"

  "It saddens a man to look at them, the men ragged and hungry, the women worse."

  "And the children?" Conrad asked.

  "The children? There aren't many of them. Mostly they die very young. But what can one do? My own peasants are well enough fed and we support our own poor but that is all. I have no great store of wealth with which to feed all the wretches in the city."

  "But surely something can be done."

  "If you would be a benefactor, Sir Conrad, hire more men than you need. You'll get them cheap enough. And build on a lavish scale."

  "A good thought, Sir Gregor. I'll act on it."

  Chapter Four

  FROM THE DIARY OF CONRAD SCHWARTZ

  It soon became obvious that I couldn't simply hire a construction company and go to Three Walls. I would have to hire individuals and form them into a unit myself.

  Furthermore, most workmen didn't have their own tools. They had sold them to feed their families. What few tools were in the men's hands were in very poor shape and were often poorly designed in the first place.

  Nor could I go to a store and buy tools, not in the quantities I required. I had to contract to have them made and if I was going to do that, I might as well see that they were designed properly. I set up my drawing board and went to work.

  I started drawing pliers and was astounded to discover that I knew the designs for more than ninety sorts of pliers. I spent two days drawing them and then realized that most of them would be useless in construction work.<
br />
  I had to stop and think out exactly what we would need, because if we later discovered some lack, we'd be hard-pressed to supply it.

  I only had to put up some buildings fourteen miles away, yet my situation was almost like that of a nineteenth-century explorer going into the jungle. If we didn't bring it, we wouldn't have it.

  The usefulness of many tools often depends on subtle properties. At first glance, you normally wouldn't notice much or any difference between a crosscut saw and a ripsaw, but in use the difference is huge. One cuts much better against the grain of the wood and the other with it. The difference has to do with the angle of the teeth and it took some experimentation to get it right.

  When I was sure of a design and the quantities required, I put it up for bids by nailing a notice to the church door. I know that sounds sacrilegious, but that's how these people posted a public notice.

  Bidding for work was not the usual way of doing things and many blacksmiths objected. It was contrary to guild rules. They were working men, not merchants. It was unheard of.

  I listened to their objections and then told them that if they wanted my work they would have to bid on it. In the end, they did it my way and for a reasonable price, but it is sad that a good socialist would have to do such things.

  All of this took time, and two whole months went by before we could leave for Three Walls.

  One morning, I was having dinner with the Banki brothers, and mentioned that I had run into a German knight on the trail in the High Tatras Mountains who had given me a bash on the head. And a month after that, I'd been attacked on Count Lambert's trail by another German. And the day after that I was attacked by a whole band of Germans!

  "It's like there was an invasion of damned Germans!" I said.

  "You must be careful with that sort of talk," Sir Gregor said. "Did you know, for example, that Duke Henryk's paternal grandmother was a German princess? That his mother was a German princess? That his wife was a German princess? And that young Henryk's wife is a German princess?"

  "No I didn't. Why on Earth did they all marry Germans?"

 

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