“I thought I saw something, but it was nothing.”
The others
slumped back against the howdah walls.
They passed a
number of small ruined buildings. Some seemed almost like outcrops
of stone. Only when he looked closely could he see that the
moss-covered blocks had been dressed and shaped. Nonetheless, had
they been roofed over they would have been inhabitable, if anyone
could have faced the bleak prospect of living in these
mountains.
Rik wondered
aloud why some poor crofters had not taken them. He had caught
enough glimpses of wild sheep and goats on the hillsides to know a
living could be eked out here by someone hardy enough.
“Shows what you
know,” said Weasel, spitting over the side of the howdah.
“Something you
want to tell me, Weasel,” Rik said.
“It’s the
feuds. When clans up here feel they have a grudge, they get
together and burn out their neighbours.”
That would
explain the old scorch marks on the ruins, Rik supposed. Weasel was
in full flow now: “And of course when the burned out’s kin find
out, they retaliate. And that leads to more burning, and more
retaliation, till pretty soon everybody hates everybody else.
That’s why there’s so many ruins. A man could make a fortune
selling powder and ammunition up here.”
“Is that what
you and the Quartermaster been up to then? I was wondering.”
“Hush, lad,”
said Weasel. His grin looked a little pained.
“You’d think
life would be hard enough up here without them making it harder,”
said Leon. He chewed his empty pipe a bit more intently to aid his
thoughts. A look of child-like seriousness passed over his face as
he concentrated.
“You call this
hard,” said the Barbarian. “You have never been to the Northlands
of Segard.”
“It’s been my
experience that people can always find a way to make things more
difficult for themselves,” said the Sergeant.
“Godless
heathens,” added Gunther with some venom.
“It’s endless
war up here,” said Weasel, not without a certain gloomy
satisfaction. “There’s only two things as can make the clans forget
their feuds and band together.”
“And what would
they be?” asked Pigeon, rather foolishly, Rik thought.
“Banditry. They
like to get together and raid the caravans in the pass, and the
farmers in the valleys.”
“And don’t we
get blamed for enough of that,” said the Barbarian, somewhat too
sourly for a man who had done his fair share of rustling. Weasel
sucked his teeth and nodded his agreement.
“Lawless
heathens,” said Gunther.
“They’re
actually pretty god-fearing,” said Weasel, just to be
argumentative. “One of the clans, the Malarceans even gave shelter
to a Prophet of the Light. That’s how they got the name. They took
his…”
“And look how
they have disgraced it since…”
“What would be
the other thing that unites these wild hill-men?” asked the
sergeant, asking the question to change the subject and forestall
an argument.
“The sight of a
whole bunch of the Queen’s soldiers parading through their
land.”
“It’s the
Queen’s land,” said Gunther.
“At least as
much of it as is on her side of the border,” Rik said, giving his
attention back to their surroundings. He had already known the
hill-men could be hostile, but Weasel had given his fears
expression and put his nerves on edge.
“You will get
no argument from me,” said Weasel. “The problem is they think we’re
tax collectors or from the Estates.”
It had not been
unknown for the Terrarchs to use their military connections to get
the army to clear humans off freehold land they coveted. Such a
thing had not happened since the Small Revolution, as the laws
passed then had given humans some rights to their property, but the
hill-men had long memories and little education. Rik could not see
them reading any of the broadsheets.
“Who would want
this land?” said the Sergeant mockingly.
“Sheep,” said
Weasel.
“I don’t think
our Exalted lords and masters would take kindly to hearing
themselves described as such,” said Leon.
“I meant they
would put sheep on the land. Textiles is big business, especially
now. Who makes all our pretty uniforms? Who gets the profit of it?
Remember - there is a war coming.”
“The Exalted
are not to be compared to money grubbing human merchants,” said
Gunther.
“Strange that
for people who care nothing about money they should have so much of
it,” said Weasel. "Maybe that's the secret."
“You talk like
an Insurrectionary,” said Gunther.
“Not at all. I
am merely making an observation. God knows I’ve put down enough
revolutionists in my time.”
All of which
was true, but Rik could not help but think Weasel had a sneaking
sympathy for the revolutionaries. They all did. Most men wondered
what it would be like to be masters of their own world once more.
Surely the Dark Ages before the Terrarchs came had been terrible,
at least according to the Terrarchs, but men had been free.
Rik shook his
head at that folly.
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