Read Legacies Online

Authors: Jr. L. E. Modesitt

Legacies (41 page)

BOOK: Legacies
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86

The late spring sun had dried up the morning rain and shone brightly on the rain-washed streets of Zalt, and a light wind out of the south carried a fresh scent of damp fields. Alucius walked briskly through the early afternoon toward the market. He still wondered about his encounter with Undercaptain Taniti. Clearly, it had been an examination, but for what? To make sure he could write? Was Brekka right about Alucius's being considered for promotion? Alucius wasn't so sure he wanted anyone to examine him too closely, especially not a Talent-officer.

He stepped to one side, out into the street, bowing his head slightly, to avoid a woman and her daughter, careful not to look directly at either. Neither looked at him.

His eyes ran across the blue-painted shutters of the house he passed, shutters that matched the door, and the window hangings, and even the woven mat on the front stoop. The neat stone-walled houses past which he walked were as closed to him as if they had iron gates, as were the walled courtyards behind them.

A few yards farther north, as he neared an older woman with a cane, he smiled and nodded. “Good day.”

“Good day, trooper.” The woman returned the smile and continued onward.

That was how it always was. He smiled, more faintly, as he neared the marketplace, thinking about how, even after a year, the only people he really knew in Zalt were troopers and a handful of vendors and shopkeepers. And in the only tavern, it was clear troopers weren't welcome. Alucius had never gone back.

His first stop was at the cooper's, but Elhya, the wife of the owner and perhaps the first person who was not a trooper that he had spoken to in Zalt, was not there, and the stall was being tended by an apprentice. So Alucius merely made a cursory inspection of the smaller barrels and then slipped away toward the weaver's.

A white-haired woman was haggling with Hassai over the price of a thick blue blanket, and Alucius stepped away and looked over the wares of the coppersmith, well made, but not exactly of much use to a Matrite trooper.

Alucius waited until the white-haired woman had left the weaver's stall and until it appeared that no one else was nearby, before slipping in and looking at the scarves—some of which he liked and could have afforded. Then he looked up. “Hello, Hassai.”

“Alucius, my curious trooper friend, how are you this fine day?” The darker-skinned weaver smiled, showing even white teeth.

“I'm doing well.”

“You always look, and you never buy.”

“You have fine scarves, and some I could afford.” Alucius shrugged. “But how would I ever be able to send one to my family?”

“You still pine for someone in the Iron Valleys?”

“You know that.” Alucius bantered easily.

“You will never return there.”

“You always tell me that. Tell me something new—of a trader who will carry a message there, or of a courier between large traders who could be persuaded—”

The weaver raised her hand. “My trooper friend…”

Alucius laughed. “I know. It is not possible.”

“It has never been possible. You wish to send a message hundreds of vingts. In fifteen years, I have yet to find one wool merchant, one of the many traders who come here to sell their wares, who would carry a message less than two hundred vingts to my sister in Southgate. Sooner or later, you will understand.” Hassai smiled. “I know a girl here who watches you. She finds you most handsome and kind.”

“Not yet, Hassai,” Alucius said, looking down at the green scarf, a color that would certainly bring out Wendra's eyes. “How much is this one?”

“Surely you do not intend to buy…not after teasing me for so long?”

“I might.” Alucius grinned.

“For you, a mere two silvers.”

Alucius slipped the coins from his wallet. “Two, it is.” He handed the Madrien silvers to the weaver.

“You are too easy. You do not bargain.” Hassai took the coins, shaking her head.

“I've bargained with you for a year, but never bought. How could I bargain about such a little thing?” Alucius grinned.

“You are kind.” The weaver woman shook her head once more. “Once you have a stipend, women will come from all over Zalt.”

“That's a long time,” Alucius observed, carefully folding the scarf and slipping it inside his tunic. “A very long time.”

“Time passes, more quickly than you know.” Hassai looked to Alucius's right.

Alucius nodded and slipped away to leave the weaver with the pregnant woman who stood before the smaller blankets on one side of the stall.

Hassai flashed a smile at the trooper before stepping toward the woman.

After deciding against spending any more time in the marketplace, Alucius walked out into the spring sunshine, sunshine that somehow did not feel quite so warm and welcoming as it had earlier.

Had he bought the scarf to remind himself that he needed to find a way to escape and return to Iron Stem? And to Wendra?

Except, he knew all too well, escape was not enough. That thought bothered him. For while his grandsire had warned him to trust his feelings,
why
did he feel that escape was less than enough?

He shook his head as he walked back toward Zenob Post. To the west, another line of clouds was gathering, promising evening rain.

87

After sitting down at the mess table, across from Oryn, Alucius looked at the golden brown fried fish on his platter. Well cooked as it was, after more than a year of batter-fried breakfast cod, he wasn't certain that he wouldn't have preferred even honeyed prickle slices.

“Gets to you after a while, doesn't it?” Oryn asked dryly.

“The cod?” Alucius nodded.

“Got to me a long time ago. Hard to raise anything in Northport, except winter deer, and the does only come in season every other year. We ate a lot of fish. Didn't mind the clams, but when all we could catch was herring…” Oryn shook his head.

Alucius had never eaten herring, but he could sense that Oryn felt about herring the way Alucius did about prickle.

The two shared a laugh. Then Alucius took a bite of the slightly elastic eggs. The ale helped, and he slowly finished off the breakfast, saving the dried apple slices, also elastic, but tasty, for last. Then he carried the platter to the messboy, and turned toward the archway from the mess, followed by Oryn.

“What are you going to do today?” asked the other trooper. “Last day before we go back on duty.”

“Might go to the market later, if it clears.” The rain of the previous night had stopped, although the sky remained gray, and seventh squad was due to ride out on the following morning, back to the logging camp post to watch for and prevent more Lanachronan raids.

“You won't spend much. You've got more saved than some ten-year troopers, I'd wager.”

“Probably not,” Alucius replied, not quite truthfully, since he knew more than a few troopers who spent every coin they received. He also had to wonder about his uncharacteristic impulsiveness in buying the green scarf. But it did remind him of Wendra.

The older trooper laughed.

Alucius shrugged helplessly.

“When you come to the market,” Oryn said, “you can find me at Cherafina's.”

“The perfumer's?”

Oryn nodded.

Since he wouldn't go to the market until later, Alucius turned and headed toward the library. Once there, he took out the rack of maps that held those for the midsection of Madrien—where the midroad ran from Arwyn eastward and toward Iron Stem. He was more interested in what the maps showed in the way of back roads and towns. He had the feeling he'd need to know them far better than he did, which was not at all.

“Trooper Alucius!”

“Yes, sir.” Alucius snapped to his feet as Tymal entered the library.

The senior squad leader shook his head. “One of my deadliest troopers…and he spends his free time reading and studying.”

“I can only spend so much time in the market, sir, and I have much to learn about Madrien.”

“You've learned a great deal, and you're on your way to learning more.” Tymal smiled. “The captain wants to see you.”

“Me?” Alucius wished he hadn't blurted that out.

“It's nothing to worry about.” Tymal turned.

Hoping Tymal was right, Alucius hurried after the senior squad leader.

The captain's room wasn't as large as Alucius would have expected, a space five yards by four, but it had two large windows looking out on the courtyard. Captain Hyrlui stood behind a table desk, with Undercaptain Kryll to her left.

“Trooper Alucius, sir. As you requested,” Tymal said.

“Thank you, Tymal. If you would stand by.”

“Yes, sir.” Tymal offered a nod of respect, then stepped back out of the room and closed the door.

“Alucius,” began the captain, remaining on her feet. “You've been here something like a year and two months.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Last year, when your squad leader was killed in an ambush, you led the squad to a successful counterattack before turning the squad over to the next senior trooper. Is that correct?”

“Yes, sir. I didn't know if Brekka could see what had happened, and we were under heavy fire, sir.” Alucius could sense a slight wave of Talent from both the captain and the undercaptain, but so little that either would not even have made a marginal herder.

“You have also operated independently and successfully routed small Lanachronan raider forces with few or no casualties to the men you led. Is that not true?”

“Yes, sir.”

“You understand that forces smaller than a squad are frowned upon?”

“I understood that we were not supposed to range far from the rest of the squad, and in those cases we were not that far away. It was hard covering that territory with only a squad, sir, and I'd thought that was why more squads were sent on patrol.”

Hyrlui smiled wryly. “I'd appreciate it, trooper, if you did not guess at the reasons for actions.”

“Yes, sir.” Alucius waited.

“Undercaptain Kryll has verified that you write acceptably.” The captain paused and looked at Alucius again. “In fact, you write and speak better than most, and yet Madrien is not your native tongue.”

“My mother said I had a gift for words, sir. Also, I haven't been around that many who spoke my tongue for almost a year and a half.”

“You've spent many glasses in the market and the library.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Why?”

“I'm here, sir. I have to do the best I can. In the market, I talk to those who will tell me things. The library is to help me learn more. I figured that if I read more and learned more, it couldn't hurt, and it might help.”

Hyrlui glanced toward the undercaptain, who nodded.

“You were a captive, and yet you work harder than most born here. Why?”

“I didn't see that I have any choice, sir. My best shot is to be good enough to get promoted. I figured that meant being as good as I could be. In everything.” All of what Alucius said was true.

“What do you plan to do next?”

“Keep learning, sir. Do the best I can.”

“Have you thought about the future beyond that?”

“No, sir. I mean, not in terms of making plans or anything. I thought I'd be a trooper for some years to come.” Alucius was shading things slightly, but not much.

The two officers exchanged glances.

Then the captain spoke. “If you'd stand by outside, trooper.”

“Yes, sir.” Alucius nodded, then stepped back. The two had begun to talk even before he finished closing the door, slowly and deliberately.

“…darker gray, like his hair…but still gray…”

“…you think…”

“…better by far than anyone else…and with the new assault…then we'll see…”

Alucius stepped away, toward Tymal, not really wanting to be too familiar, but also not wanting to give the impression of avoiding the senior squad leader.

“You'll do fine,” Tymal said. “They go through this with every new junior squad leader.”

Alucius blotted his forehead with the back of his hand.

“It can be a little rough,” Tymal added. “They ask you a lot?”

“They asked me about the time I took over the squad when Alben was killed.”

“I told them you handled that better than most junior squad leaders.”

“Thank you.”

Tymal offered a rueful smile. “I need men who can think when they're moving and under attack. It's going to get worse.”

“The Lanachronans, sir?”

“I'd wager on it, but we'll have to see.”

The wait seemed interminable, but far less than a quarter of a glass had passed before Undercaptain Kryll opened the door. “If you would both come in.”

“You first,” Tymal said.

Alucius stepped inside, followed by Tymal, and set himself opposite the captain.

Captain Hyrlui studied Alucius slowly. She did not look at Tymal at all. “You've been highly recommended by two of your squad leaders and by the company squad leader.”

“Yes, sir, captain.”

“You're going to be the new squad leader of second squad. Sedyr is being promoted to full squad leader and being sent to Thirty-third Company in Dimor.”

“Yes, sir.” Alucius wasn't sure whether he should offer thanks, but decided against it. “I'll do my very best.”

“According to everyone, you always do, and that is what the Matrial expects.”

“Yes, sir.” Alucius paused, then asked, “Would it be possible for me to talk to Squad Leader Sedyr before he leaves…that is, if he has not already?”

The captain nodded. “Absolutely.” She glanced to Tymal.

“I'll take care of it, sir, and his chevrons.”

The captain smiled. “Congratulations, Squad Leader Alucius.”

“Thank you, sir.” Alucius bowed his head momentarily.

“You both may go.”

Once the two squad leaders were out in the corridor, the door to the captain's spaces closed behind them, Tymal glanced at Alucius and said cheerfully, “I told you.”

“You were right, sir.” Alucius had the feeling that much more had hung in the balance than Tymal knew or would ever know.

“Sedyr's leaving tomorrow morning. Let's see if he's still here.” Tymal turned down the corridor.

They found Sedyr in the squad leaders' wing, talking to Solat.

“Congratulations!” Solat looked pleased as he saw Alucius. “I take it you're Sedyr's replacement.”

“That's what the captain said,” Alucius replied.

Tymal cleared his throat. “I'll be back with those chevrons in a moment. You can have the tailor start putting them on your tunics right away. You're lucky in one way. Second squad just got back last night.”

Solat grinned at Alucius. “I know why you're here.” He nodded to Sedyr. “I'll be back in a while.”

“You want to know about the squad, right?” asked Sedyr.

“Anything would help,” Alucius pointed out.

Sedyr frowned. “It's a good group. There are some things. Beral's solid in anything, settles anyone down. Rhen doesn't think much. You tell him to cut his own arm off, and he would. Druw looks like he doesn't hear. He does. Just hopes you'll ask someone else…”

Alucius listened intently, hoping that he could remember it all.

BOOK: Legacies
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