'Don't leave them any longer.'
'Yes, sir.'
The others were up, gathering their horses' reins.
'And all you officers,' Sam said, 'keep in mind that your lives and your troopers' lives depend on these plans being held in silence.' He bent, scored his diagram to nonsense with his dagger's point.
Murmurs of agreement.
'In
A perfect silence then, as if they were practicing.
'More than likely,' Sam said.
The trumpeter said, 'Sir?'
An early-winter rain had followed the column for the last few Warm-time miles. Now, it caught them, dark, cold, and driving, seething in swift puddles under the black's hooves. What plans he'd made in dirt with his dagger, then erased, were gone now under mud and water.
Better-Weather's fortress, built of granite blocks four years before, squatted gray in dawn's cloudy light amid the town's scattered wood and adobe houses, liveries, small manufactories, and inns. Three-storied, deep-moated by Liana Creek, and shaped a square, it enclosed a large, grassed siege-yard for sheep, a roofed swinery for boar, and runs for chicken-birds.
Charles Ketch's office was off the courtyard, at the northwest corner of the third floor. Its four tall windows were barred with thick, greased steel, and armored men and women of Butler's Heavy Infantry mounted hall guard in six-hour shifts. These sentries, recruited deaf and dumb, had calmed their watch-mastiffs – and grinning, apparently pleased with news of
'… Sam, Sonora doesn't
'Late, you mean, Charles.' Sitting on a three-legged stool with his scabbarded bastard-sword across his lap, Sam straightened to ease his back, and wished he'd had a hot bath in the laundry before coming upstairs and down the hall to duty. Wished he'd had a second cup of chocolate at breakfast.
'No, sir.
Eric Lauder had once said to Sam, 'Charles thinks the truth hides in that Warm-time Bible like a bird in a bush. He puts his ear to it for little chirps and twitters of sweetness… kindness.'
'Charles, you're sure he's serious about withholding the province's taxes? He's picked a very bad time for it.'
'Yes, I know.'
Ketch's office, gloomy in a cold and clouding morning, was packed to its rafters with narrow crates of bound volumes containing the records of what each year had brought to the provinces of North Map-Mexico. Reports of gold or silver earned or spent, of diseases – animal and human – of good crops or bad, of crimes and hangings. Bitter complaints and boasts of success. Everything carefully entered on paper from Crucero Mill.
All news came to Better-Weather, and came fairly swiftly – by messenger, by pigeon – or several were made sorry for slowness. Rumors came as well, and were always stacked in seven boxes at the end of the highest shelf – hard to get to, and so the more carefully considered before setting in place.
'Our memories are all in my paper-work,' Charles Ketch had once said to Sam. And each short summer, when Lady Weather's daughter had wed the sun, he cleaned out his office, transferred all the crates to storage down the hall, and ordered new boxes built for the memories of the new year.
'Oh,' Sam had said to him, 'I still keep a few memories in my head.'
Charles had smiled and reached out, as he often did, to grip Sam's arm, as if to be certain he was still present, young, and strong.
'Very worst time for refusal.' Sam leaned forward to pour a clay cup of water from the fat little pitcher on Ketch's desk. 'What makes Stewart think he can get away with it?'
'A habit of making important decisions. It's the risk with governers: the tendency to independence. They are elected.'
'Elected with my permission, Charles.'
'Easy for them to forget that, after two or three years in office.' Charles took a pinch of snuff, but didn't sneeze.
No one smoked the Empire's tobacco in Ketch's office – there were never flames there that might cause fire, not even lamps at dark, so all reading and copy-work was done by daylight.
No flame, so no heat through the nine months of hard winter. There were leaded panes of clear glass in the windows, so the wind, at least, could not come in.
'And this is your worst news for me, Charles?'
'Yes – except for the Kipchaks coming down, of course.'
'You're mistaken.' Sam stretched his legs out. His right spur scraped the stone flooring. 'This tax thing is much more serious than two thousand horse archers.'
Charles smiled. Approval… fondness. 'Yes. That's right, of course. Stewart's is just the first of an endless succession of conflicts between Better-Weather and the governers elected locally. Each province will challenge you, sooner or later. Roads, mutton prices, wool prices, cabbage prices. You'll need certain taxes, and they'll wish to make them uncertain, to use the money locally, if only to insure their reelections. Stewart, and Sonora, are only the beginning.'
'And you've done… what?'
'Nothing, Sam. It's too important for a decision of mine.'
'Then you
Charles sighed, seemed embattled behind his stacks of paper, his massive copy of
'Aside from recruitment.'
'All right, aside from recruitment.'
'Which would be the next refusal, Charles.'
'Yes, which might very well be the next refusal.'
'And your advice?'
'What I think we need to do, is limit their time in office. Make it law that a person can be elected only once as governer in each province. Then there'd be no building of little lordships to break us apart – or at least it would become less likely.' Charles's voice from gathering shade, as rain came down outside.
'Yes. My fault for not thinking of this before.'