The second group rested apart from the others. Seated on a folding stool, a merchant wearing expensive silks inappropriate for travel was gesticulating as another man, also on a folding stool, listened with head bent and gaze directed toward the ground. This man's rank could be told not by his clothing but by the retainers hovering close by: a pair of armed guards, a servant holding a tray with a capped pitcher and cups, and a young man wearing slave bracelets and wielding a large fan to cool his master.
Joss halted beside the third group, five Haldian merchants seated on a single blanket. 'Greetings of the day to you, Masters. I'm called Joss, out of Clan Hall.'
The commander was the kind of person who kept digging into a wound long after the infection was cut out, just for the sake of probing. He meant to give her no satisfaction today by flinching from that which she guessed would cause him a pang. He nodded at the man he knew among their group of five. 'Master Tanesh.'
'Greetings of the day to you, reeve.' That might have been a gleam of triumph in the merchant's expression, or else he was just perspiring from the heat.
'The journey finds you steady on your feet, I trust?'
'I've not much farther to go. I'll be home within my walls by sunset. But my guild-kin, these here, all live up by the highlands. They've an uncertain journey before them, eight or twelve days more.'
His guild-kin introduced themselves: Alon, Darya, Kasti, Udit. A range of ages, they nevertheless had a tight bond: They were gossiping about the other members of the caravan. Master Tanesh magnanimously offered Joss a bowl of cold melon soup, and invited him to sit with them. Kasti and Udit moved apart to make room on the blanket. Udit, by some years the youngest of the group, measured Joss with the same eye she likely used to peruse goods available in the market. Then she smiled, a swift, inviting grin, and passed him a cup of cordial as a chaser to the soup. Joss sipped, listening as the conversation flowed around him in lowered voices.
'Those Herelians, I don't trust them.'
'Did you see the bolts of silk they offered at the market? That was first-grade Sirniakan silk. How they'd get that, with the roads out of Herelia blockaded, eh? Or so they claim. Yet they got passage down for the conclave.'
'They're shipping it in.'
'Around Storm Cape? Unlikely.'
'Out of the north, maybe.'
'Nah, nah. It would be too dangerous. There's barbarians living in the drylands, beyond Heaven's Ridge, you know.'
'How would you know? You've never been there. That's outside the Hundred. No one lives there.'
'Someone lives there! These pasture men, with their herds, always wandering. The 'Kin,' they call themselves. And other tribes, too, farther out. Real savages those are. I heard there's a tribe out there that cuts up their women's faces, like marking a slave's debt, to show they are married.'
The company hooted and laughed until the speaker, Udit, had to admit this detail was only marketplace gossip heard tenth-hand.
Tanesh shushed them. 'Don't believe every tale you hear, Udit. But that doesn't mean there isn't a grain of truth where there's talk of trade. Even savages can be hired to guard merchant trains.'
'Savages can't be trusted.'
'Who can be trusted, these days?' Joss asked mildly, with a grin to take the sting off the words.
Not even Tanesh took offense at the words. He and his comrades considered them grimly. An aged slave filled their cups with more cordial.
In their silence as they drank, the loud voice of the well-dressed merchant of the second group floated easily under the canopy. 'But I fear that the members of the Lesser Houses will not cooperate. Worse, we suspect they are ready to rebel against-' The man's voice dropped abruptly. The rest of his complaint was too low to hear across the gap.
Udit elbowed Joss. 'I don't know who that merchant is, but the other man, the one with him, that's Lord Radas, lord of Iliyat. He came down with his retinue for the conclave. They say his family comes out of a merchant clan. He rules the guilds of Iliyat with a tight hand, I'll tell you.'
'What manner of tight hand?' Joss knew his region well, all the local rulers, arkhons, captains, and hierarchs with whom he dealt on a regular basis as well as other community leaders, guild masters, and prominent artisans, and various local eccentrics and ne'er-do-wells. The valley of Iliyat was normally under the purview of Copper Hall, but he had flown there a few times in recent years because of the trouble in Herelia. He had seen the lord of Iliyat twice, in passing, but not to speak with. 'He seems a quiet manner of man.'
'Oh, he's as strange as the daffer stork,' said Tanesh. 'Never looks a person in the eye, too shy to talk. You're thinking he rules with the tight hand of an ordinand, sword or spear at the ready, Kotaru's Thunder well in his grip. That's not it. He rules with the hand of an accountant.'Every stalk of rice in and every one out is counted,' as it says in the tale.' He sketched the accompanying gestures with a hand, counting and grasping and a reluctance to let go, and the others chuckled. 'He must have served his apprentice year in the temple of the Lantern as a clerk, to be so tight.'
Joss had to admire the graceful efficiency of Tanesh's talking-hand gestures. 'And you served at the Lady's temple, I see,' said Joss. 'That's the real skill you have. The Lady's gift.'
'Aui! So am I found out.' Tanesh was a man who liked praise. All their past differences might be forgiven if Joss only threw fulsome appreciation his way.
'I spoke the truth, that's all,' Joss said curtly. He hadn't the stomach for more. He rose and gave cup and bowl to a slave. 'I thank you for the hospitality.'
He made his courtesies and continued his sweep, hearing Tanesh's company fall immediately back into a buzz of gossip. The three merchants out of Iliyat greeted him courteously and offered him food and drink, the same as they were themselves eating.
'How was your conclave?' he asked them.
Like all merchants, they enjoyed talk. They described Toskala. The two women-dealers in oil and spices-had disliked the city, thinking it too large and loud and crowded and smelly and filthy with refuse. But the young man had found it exciting to wander in so many grand squares and marketplaces, to see such a variety of shops.
'Just to see Flag Quarter-for I buy and sell banners and flags and tent cloth and such manner of working cloth, not clothing, so it's of particular interest to me-where a person might have a shop selling just game banners or just boundary flags or only the ink for printing your mark on the fabric. That was something! I trade in all cloth, all in my one shop!'
'Was it your first time in Toskala, ver?'
'Oh, indeed! My uncle and cousins used to make the trip, but they died last year so I was handed the mantle.' He tugged on his cloak; he wore a pale-blue mantle appropriate to the season, lightest weight cotton and only reaching to his elbows. Its hem was trimmed with the house mark, spades crossed with needles, something to do with digging and sewing.
'How did they die?'
The man dipped his head and sighed. The women shook their heads, frowning at Joss as though to scold him for asking the question.
At length, the older of the women gestured toward Lord Radas. 'Things run smoothly in the Iliyat valley. We're well governed. But I'll tell you that we don't go near the northern border. We keep our distance from the hills and Herelia.'
'Is there much raiding out of the hills or Herelia into Iliyat these days?'
'Oh, we think not,' said the man at last, dabbing at his eyes. 'The roads are blockaded. No one crosses the Liya Pass anymore, though there's a trading post up where the village of Merrivale was before it got burned down. There's plenty of militia to man the borders, even young men hired in from outside. One of my cousin's daughters married a young man who walked all the way from Sund just to get the work. We're well protected.'
'From Herelia?'
The man shrugged. 'My kin were not in Iliyat when they died. They'd taken the Thread north, to Seven. We told them to take the Istri Walk, but they didn't want to take the extra mey, all the way to the river, you know, and then north, not when the Thread is a decent track wide enough to handle sturdy wagons. You never could tell my uncle anything. He had a hasty manner.'
Joss nodded. 'May their spirits have passed through the Gate,' he said reflexively, and they all touched right