, LE Modesitt Recluce 07 Chaos Balance (v1.5) 

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 I think he s had enough, Ayrlyn eased the child onto the packed clay
floor and unstopped a water bottle to wash the small mess from her wrist onto
the hearth stones. A sizzle followed when some of the water touched a coal.
Nylan used a stick he had whittled clean to stir the stew, but kept his
eyes on Weryl.  It s still going to be a while. Maybe you could get out the
lutar and sing something?
 Later. Ayrlyn glanced at Weryl, who was crawling rapidly toward the
waystation s door and the twilight outside.  Later. Nylan handed the stirring
stick to Ayrlyn and hurried after his son.
XXX
BY MID-AFTERNOON of the next day, the two angels had ridden far enough north
and west that hills had flattened more, and there were cots and even farms
scattered here and there on both sides of the road.
Nylan absently wiggled his fingers in front of Weryl, and the boy grabbed
his index finger. The smith tugged, just hard enough that Weryl could hang on
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for a time.
Nylan rubbed his chin, glad that he d spent the time to shave away the
stubble that had been approaching a beard and getting hot and sweaty in the
afternoons. Ahead, the engineer could see a wagon drawn by a pair of horses
headed in their direction.
 The road s getting busier, he said with a laugh, turning his head toward
Ayrlyn, again wiggling his fingers for Weryl to wrestle with.
 It s about time.
As the wagon neared, Nylan and Ayrlyn eased their mounts, and the trailing
gray, to the right side of the road, onto the shoulder where shorter stalks of
green grass sprouted up underneath the dead grass of the previous year. The
creaking of the battered wagon grew loud enough to silence the scattered calls
of the ground birds in the meadow to the right of the road.
 Greetings, Nylan offered pleasantly as the wagon drew abreast of the two
angels.
The gray-haired driver glanced at the two without speaking, then looked
away quickly, his eyes on the road before him.
 Pleasant sort, Nylan said conversationally.
 You ll find more than a few like that. They think we re evil spirits or
something. Ayrlyn gestured ahead.  We should be coming to a town before long.
It could be right past that hill. I remember there was a hill where the road
curved just before we got there. It s called Ginpa, or Hinpa, or something
like that. After the town, the road follows the river almost straight north to
Lornth. We didn t go nearly that far when we were trading last year, because
the towns get a lot closer together now.
As they rode down the gentle grade toward the curve in the road, a gray
stone no more than knee-high and partly obscured by grass appeared on the
right side of the road. The kaystone read  HENSPA-3K.
 I knew it was something like that, said Ayrlyn.
 What s it like?
 They re all alike. If they re really small, you have one muddy street, or
dusty if it s been dry, and there are a few stores, usually a chandlery-that s
where you can find travel goods, leather, candles, sometimes cheese-a
cooper s, maybe a cabinetmaker. They ll have a smithy farther out, and some
have a mill by the water. The bigger towns sometimes have a square with an
inn, and a public room. The food s not too bad, but the rooms are pretty
awful-bugs and worse. The smell gets worse in the bigger towns.
 You make it sound so attractive. Nylan looked down. Weryl had dozed off.
 They don t have your fetish for proper sanitation-or building.
 I wouldn t quite call it a fetish.
 Most of the guards would-except Huldran. She s as bad as you. Ayrlyn
grinned.  I liked the semiwarm water, too.
 Thanks.
At the base of the hill were clustered several houses around a large barn
and some outbuildings. One man guided a horse-drawn plow, turning back the
dark soil in an even row. Two others seemed to be shearing black-faced sheep.
 I ve never seen black-faced sheep before, Nylan said.
 The Rats have them-even sheep that are totally black.
 That seems odd, when they revere white and mirror reflections. The
engineer glanced down again, but Weryl continued to sleep.
 People aren t nearly so logical as they d like to believe. Ayrlyn s tone
was dry.  Even the cold and logical Ryba can be illogical. Forcing you out of
Westwind wasn t the most logical thing to do.
 That depends on what s important, I suppose.
A boy near the road, holding a scythe, looked at the two riders, dropped
the scythe and ran down the lane toward the two who were shearing.
 I don t like that, said Nylan.
 Neither do I, but you ll find it happens. Some of the older children have
been fed tales about everything from our eating babies to causing ewes to
abort their lambs-or worse. It was probably easier for Gerlich because he
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didn t have flame hair or silver hair.
 That s not any more reassuring.
As the road straightened on the other side of the hill, Nylan studied the
town that lay ahead. Just a brown clay road leading to what appeared to be a
small square. The houses were not stone, but some form of stucco, whitewashed,
probably over mud bricks or something akin. The roofs were made of a dull clay
tile, and many of the tiles appeared cracked or askew.
A short-haired, golden-brown dog appeared on the edge of the road, its tail
stiff, almost pointing at the riders, but as they passed, Nylan detected the
faintest wag.
A young woman, with a toddler tied to a rope wound around her waist,
struggled to fold laundry on a crude outdoor trestle table on the sunny south
side of a small hut. Chickens pecked nearly around her bare feet. The woman
scarcely looked up at the two.
A black dog chained to a small hut yapped, and kept yapping.
Farther toward the center of the town, a partly bald white-haired man
openly stared as they passed.
 Greetings, offered Ayrlyn. She got no response, and no lessening of the
stare.
 This place has a square, anyway. Nylan eased the mare to a slow walk as
they approached the center of the town.
The square was barely that, with a pedestal and a battered statue in the
middle of the road, surrounded by a knee-high brick wall.
On one side of the road was a cooper s. Nylan could tell that from the
barrel hung over the open doorway. Beside the cooper s was another shop, or
something, which had no sign. Across from the unnamed shop was a larger
building, bearing a sign that showed two crudely drawn crossed yellow candles.
Beside the candle-signed building was a stable and beyond that an inn-or the
equivalent-with a sign showing a black bull on a weathered grayish background.
 The crossed candles mean a chandlery. Ayrlyn continued to survey the
town, but the cooper kept pounding on the rim of a barrel outside his shop,
while a heavyset gray-haired woman sat on a stool outside the adjoining
building. She nodded at Ayrlyn, who smiled and returned the nod.
 We could use more cheese, Nylan said.  I worry about Weryl.
 He s fine, but we could use the cheese-and you might think about cloth-if
it s not too expensive. Cloth s never cheap in low-tech cultures. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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