same bright red, or brass this-and-thats so bright in the sunshine they hurt her eyes. A line of men sat low on rowing benches along each side. They were naked as the tribeswomen had been, but with steel collars on their necks, and none of them looked up.
'You're late!' A soldier, standing on a high place at the back of the boat, had called that. This soldier wore a short-sword on a wide gold-worked belt. A long green-wool cloak, fastened in gold at his throat, billowed slightly in the river wind. His chest was armored in green-enameled steel, but with pieces of gold hanging from short green ribbons there.
… Martha had never seen a Ten-dot man before. Never seen more than a Six-dot, and that was the Baron Elliot, and she'd seen him only once at the Ice-boat races.
'I'm at fault, milord,' the lieutenant said, 'and have no excuses.'
'No excuse, is not excuse enough,' the Bad-lip Lord said. 'So, three months pig-herding on Fayette Banks, for you and your slow men.'
'Yes, sir.'
'And this' – Bad-lip pointed at Martha – 'this Ordinary is the object of the exercise?'
'Yes, sir.'
'You, Big-girl – sit up here out of the way, and rest. We have cranberry juice; would you like some of that?'
'Yes, thank you.' Martha came and sat on a little step below where he was standing. She wrapped her cloak around her and thought, too late, she should have said 'milord.'
The Bad-lip Lord leaned down and gripped her shoulder. 'Some muscle there. Did the soldiers treat you with respect and kindness?'
'Yes, they did… milord.' Martha thought of saying 'especially Ralph-sergeant,' but didn't.
The Bad-lip Lord nodded, then called, 'Captain! South, to Island – at the courier beat!'
'At your orders, milord.' A black man in a long brown cloak was standing back by a sailor at the wheel.
Then, barefoot sailors Martha hadn't noticed were running here and there untying ropes. The whole boat swung out into the river, dipping, rolling slightly. And so suddenly that she jumped a little, a deep drum went
A boy in white pants and white jacket came running to her, knelt down, and held out a blown-glass cup – glass so clear she could see the juice in it perfectly, juice the same blood-red as the boat.
Martha thought of asking the boy why she was going where she was going, then decided not.
She had heard that Kingdom's rowers were whipped – and this was certainly a Queen's boat – but no soldier whipped the red boat's rowers. Still, they worked their oars like farming horses in summer furrows. She could feel the boat's
It seemed odd to be sailing in a summer-fitted boat through still-wet early-winter water. Martha had imagined one day traveling on a winter-fit's slanting deck as the ship skated hissing over the river's ice on angled long steel runners… lifting, tilting as the wind caught its sails, so it almost flew, banners and wind-ribbons curling and snapping through the air.
But this was still a summer-fit, with rowers. She wondered what work the rowers would be put to, with Lord Winter already striding down to bathe in the river, and freeze it.
The juice – cranberry juice – in the beautiful glass, was sweet and bitter at once. Martha'd never tasted it before, and didn't know if she was supposed to finish it all, or only sip, and leave the rest. She looked up to see if the Bad-lip Lord was watching, and he was.
'It's for you, Ordinary. Drink it.'
So she did. The juice grew sweeter with each swallow, and she hoped it was a River-omen of sweeter things to come.
The west bank was too far away to be seen. She'd never seen it, though her father had when he'd worked fishing. But they were staying close enough to the east side of the river that sometimes she could see a piling-dock there, its house or warehouse high above the water, back under the trees. Then, a log house… and a while later, another.
Martha saw little eel-skiffs as they passed. The men crewing them stood, balancing, and bowed as the red boat, the long red banner, went sweeping by. She sat holding the pretty glass in her lap, concerned it might tip over and break if she set it down on the deck. The deck was as clean as a worn washboard.
The lieutenant and his men were standing in the front of the boat. She could see them, see Ralph-sergeant past the great mast, its long, furled red sail. He turned his head, talking with another soldier… saw her looking, and smiled at her. Martha supposed the wind had completed the ruin of her ringlets.
They passed more log houses… then a lord's strong-hold. It rose above the river's bank, three gray stone towers within gray stone walls, all higher than a man could throw a rock – almost high as a crossbow quarrel might reach. Two ladies were standing on a little carved-wood porch, halfway up the middle tower, their hands tucked into fur muffs. Their hair was combed up off their necks and coiled; Martha saw gold combs glinting. They were wearing woolen gowns, paneled – perhaps in linen. One's dress was dyed soft blue and gold, the other's darker. The ladies, standing so high, seemed perfect little dolls, dolls made for children like their own.
Both together, they dipped behind the little porch's carved railing, curtsying as the blood-red boat went by.
Martha imagined their brothers, their husbands, in the hold. Tall, handsome men with clean hands and several-dot tattoos – and their father, scarred, bearded, brave as a bear. All the men very big, but kind, so that nothing more than a mouse in their wardrobe had ever frightened the doll-ladies, or ever could.
Martha waved up to them, but the blood-red boat had passed down the river, and the ladies didn't seem to see.
A while later, after a ferry had sailed past them, borne upstream on the wind – its passengers had stood, crowded, to bow to the Queen's boat – Martha grew restless, and shifted where she sat.
'Need relief?' The Bad-lip Lord hadn't moved from where he stood in all the traveling.
He'd looked down to ask the question, and when Martha didn't answer, made an impatient face. 'Do you need to piss, girl?' His breath smoked slightly in the cold.
'…Yes, lord.'
The Bad-lip Lord muttered,
'Bring this girl and a piss-pot together in the captain's cabin.' The Bad-lip Lord looked back at the Brown-cloak Captain. 'With your permission, of course.'
'Does me honor,' the Captain said, and he and the Bad-lip Lord both smiled.
…Relieved – a word that seemed so much nicer than 'pissed-out' – Martha had come to sit on her step again, her sheepskin cloak tucked tight around her against the wind. She watched the river run down with them, sometimes seeming to flow faster than the rowers could labor, though the drum kept beating like a heart, so steady that she forgot it from time to time.
Now, the river – great gray pieces of raft ice drifting by – was crowded with more and more ships and fisher- boats, rowed barges, and poled barges along the shore, so there were masts and long oars and banners and house flags of all colors wherever she looked.
Sometimes, as the wind blew this way or that, Martha could hear men singing on other ships as they passed – Gulf sailors and river-boatmen singing as they rowed or worked their lines. These men didn't interrupt their labor to bow to the Queen's boat, but only paused a moment to cup their right hands to their ears, to show they listened for any command.
The river had become alive with people and boats. Along the shore were more holds, more stone walls and