Authors: Mercedes Lackey
I would rather not imagine a vole, which must eat its own weight in prey three times a day, transmuted to something the size of a cart horse.
He made a quarter-turn, and now looked out at Shonar, all of which lay beneath the level of this tower. It was not a big town by the standards of the Empire, and from here it was easy to see the signs of decline; abandoned houses where the thatch had disappeared or rotted, warehouses and workshops where walls had fallen in or been broken down. There were a lot of them; more than he had guessed, and certainly more than the Town Council would want to admit. If Ancar had not been killed, he would have driven his land into oblivion in a few more years, by taking the able-bodied and leaving behind those unable to keep towns, farms, and businesses going.
He was mad. There is no doubt of it.
Irrational anger stirred briefly in Tremane’s heart, but it faded quickly, for what, after all, was the point? Ancar was dead, dead as last year’s grass. What was important was this; there were empty and abandoned structures in the town that could be taken over and put to good use.
That
was what
he would do when the men were finished with their barracks; he’d send them into town and begin repairing and refurbishing the houses, warehouses, and workshops. Those would become Imperial property—and he would have his quarters for married couples, his workshops for men wanting to retire into a profession.
Satisfied with that idea, he made another quarter-turn to look out over more of his barracks and empty land beyond the walls.
The men down below him were drilling in an area cleared of snow; the ones on the walls doing much the same things as the men on the other side. The one difference was that two of them were having a snowball-hurling contest with improvised slings.
Now there’s an idea for a festival competition. Target-throwing snowballs with bare hands and with slings. There certainly won’t be any dispute about where they hit!
But as he raised his eyes past the level of the walls and out over the landscape beyond, he was puzzled, sorely puzzled. There were no mountains in that direction, so what was that long, dark line on the horizon? A forest of exceptionally tall trees? But it was so far away!
A moment later, a wind sprang up out of nowhere, and the long, dark line moved nearer—and he knew what it was.
Huge clouds, black and heavy with snow, were hurtling toward him on the wind that blew into his face. The old weather-wizard had been right!
Before he could call out anything to the sentries on that side, they had already reacted to the rising wind by leaving off their games and conversations and peering toward the horizon. It took them longer to see what he had because of his higher vantage, but as the clouds raced into their field of vision, they reacted.
“Is that a storm?”
“Looks like one to me!”
Shouts up and down the line quickly confirmed what Tremane knew, and one of the men with an alarm-horn at his belt lifted it to his lips and began to blow.
Three long, steady tones and a pause, repeated for as
long as the man had breath, that was the agreed-upon signal for a heavy storm approaching. It might seem alarmist to signal the approach of a storm, but Tremane was taking no chances. He’d heard of dreadful snow-storms in the far north where men could get lost and freeze to death not a dozen ells from their own doorstep. If there were men outside the walls, hunting or gathering wood, he wanted them alerted and homeward bound before a storm hit.
Other men with alarm-horns all across the walls took up the call, amplifying it and sending it out over the snow-covered fields and into the woods.
The men drilling stopped what they were doing at a barked order; a moment later, the officer in charge divided them into one group for each barracks, and marched them off to the piles of dung bricks, peat bricks, and wood to stockpile fuel beside each barracks furnace. Below him, Tremane saw men going off purposefully in small groups, presumably sent on other errands by their officers. He didn’t even
have
to send men into town to fetch back the ones on leave of absence—they were coming in through the gates by threes and fours, secure that although their excursions had been cut short the time would be made up later.
It was all running like a smoothly-oiled clockwork, and he marveled at it.
It wasn’t
just my foresight; they understand why the orders are there, and they’re cooperating. If a bad storm is on the way, I want our men here so that their officers can account for all of them and we can send out search parties for the missing.
Well,
he
had better get back to his desk so his officers knew where
he
was! The clouds had already filled up half the sky to the north, and now even the men below the walls could see them. They weren’t getting any lighter the nearer they got, either, and the wind was picking up. There was a damp bite to the wind, something that was almost, though not quite, a scent.
Was that lightning? He paused for a moment and stared in fascination. It was! It was lightning! He’d
heard
of lightning in a heavy snowstorm, but this was the first time he’d ever seen it!
As if to remind him that he was lingering too long, a growl of thunder reached his ears.
He turned and pulled open the door to the roof, hurrying back down to the escort of guards waiting.
“Bad storm coming,” he said to them.
“We heard the alarm, Commander,” the leader told him. “Is there anything you want to assign us to?”
He thought for a moment. “Just to be on the safe side, once you leave me at my office, go down to the chirurgeons and see what they’d want in the way of a snow-rescue kit and put one together for them. I don’t believe there’s anyone of ours likely to get caught out there, but you never know, and that’s one thing I forgot to look into.”
The leader of his guards saluted, and once the escort left him at the door to his office, they hurried off to follow his orders.
He walked back to his desk and sat down, but restlessness was on him and it was hard to just sit there and wait while the windows darkened and the alarm call rang out, muffled by stone and glass. The one thing he could
not
do in a case like this, however, was to run off and see what was going on. If there was an emergency, he needed to be where people expected to find him.
Search parties if I need to send out search parties, how can I keep
them
together, and prevent their getting lost? How can you set a trail in a blinding snowstorm?
As long as they weren’t searching a forest, the men could go roped together like a climbing party. That would prevent them from getting separated. But what about a trail back to safety?
If it’s still daylight sticks? Red-painted sticks?
It was too late to go painting sticks—
No, wait, we still have all the sticks from surveying the walls and a lot of chalk line.
He made a note to get both out of storage.
You might see lanterns through thick snow.
Another note.
Bells. You might hear bells. Weren’t there ankle and wrist bells with those dancers’ costumes that no one in town wanted to trade for?
He noted down
the bells as well. The chirurgeons would know best what a half-frozen victim would need; he’d leave that part of the kit up to them.
I wish there was a better way of getting around in snow besides walking.
Well, there wasn’t and that was that.
But if they’re looking for someone who’s half-buried in snow, perhaps they ought to have walking sticks to probe the snow for a body. Blunt spear shafts would do, and they might make walking easier. Wait, I’d better insist on every two men staying very close together, one to probe and one to guard, the Hundred Little Gods only know what’s out there and a storm will give those howling things lots of cover for an attack.
He tried to think of anything else that rescue parties might need and failed to come up with anything else. Putting his notes into a coherent form, he called in one of his aides and sent the young man down to ferret out all the disparate rescue objects and lay them out on the floor of the manor armory.
By now it was too dark to see without a light; it might as well have been dusk rather than just after noon—except for the weirdling flashes of lightning, a strange and disconcerting greenish color, that illuminated the office in fitful bursts. He lit a twist of paper at the fire and went around his office, lighting all his candles and lanterns himself. He waited until he had finished his rounds to look out the window, and when he did, he was astonished.
He couldn’t see a thing beyond the thick curtain of snow, and the snow itself slanted obliquely. The wind driving that snow howled around the chimney of his fireplace, and vibrated the glass of the window. No wonder he couldn’t hear thunder now; the wind was drowning it out. The lightning strikes were not visible as bolts; instead everything lit up in unsettling green-white for a moment.
Now I know what they mean by a “howling blizzard.” And I’m glad we designed the barracks around those furnaces, rather than fireplaces. It’ll be harder for the wind to steal the heat from the fires.
That was
always a problem with a true fireplace; in a high wind most of the heat went right up the chimney. He couldn’t afford that to happen in his barracks. They’d use up most of their fuel in no time.
One by one, his officers brought their reports, and he lost a little of his tension. Everyone was accounted for; the hunting and wood-gathering parties had returned before the blizzard hit, in fact they had returned even before the alarm went up. All the barracks were provisioned for a long storm; ropes had been strung between the buildings, barracks, and manor so that no one would get lost.
“You can get lost out there, sir,” one of the last of the officers said, as he brushed at snow that had been driven into the fabric of his uniform coat. “Make no mistake about it. You can’t see an ell past your feet once you’re out of shelter. I’ve never seen the like.”
“Well, there’ll be plenty of fresh water at least,” Tremane remarked, initialing the report. “Just melt the snow.”
The officer nodded, then paused for a moment. “Sir, you did know most of the men in my barracks are from the Horned Hunters, didn’t you?”
Since the Imperial Army made an effort to integrate all of the recruits into a single culture rather than cater to individual cultures, Tremane didn’t know a thing about it until that moment. “Actually, no—wait,
they
ought to be used to this sort of weather, shouldn’t they?”
He had an obscure notion that the Horned Hunters were a nomadic tribe from land so far to the north in the Empire that they never saw summer. “Don’t they herd deer and travel by sled?”
“You’re thinking of the Reindeer People, sir. My lot are a sect, not a tribe. Shamanistic, animal spirits, that sort of thing.” The officer coughed and looked a little embarrassed. “They sent me with a request, since we’re all going to be confined to barracks for a while. They want permission to turn a corner of the barracks into a sweat house permanently. I don’t see anything wrong with it, but I told them I had to have your permission.”
“I believe this comes under the heading of Article Forty-Two—’the Empire shall not restrict the right of a man to worship—’ and so on.” Tremane smiled slightly. “I don’t see the harm so long as they understand there won’t be any ritual fasting without special permission, and if they want to undergo any prolonged dream quests, they’ll have to apply for and use their leave days to do it.”
The officer sighed and looked relieved. “That was the one thing I was worried about, sir, and using leave-days takes care of the problem. Very well, sir, I’ll tell them. I doubt they’ll have any trouble with it.”
“I certainly don’t have any difficulty with it,” Tremane told him. “And if we get multiday storms like this all winter well, I might even make concessions on the leave-days. If you’re cooped up in the barracks, you might as well send your spirit out for a little stroll, hmm?”
The officer laughed. “May I tell them that, too, Commander? I think it would appeal to their sense of humor.”
He shrugged. “I don’t see why you shouldn’t. If they know I’ll let them have their proper rites, it’ll probably keep them more content.”
The officer saluted and headed back down to return to his men. Tremane toyed with a pen and wished he had an outlet for pent-up energies for all of his men that would match the Horned Hunters’ dream quests. If this storm went on for too long, there’d be fights as the men got on one another’s nerves. While many commanders did not like having the odder, shamanistic cults going on among the men, Tremane had never minded; provided you made an effort to understand what they wanted and see that they got it, they were generally easier to please than the “civilized” men.
There was something to be said for diversity, though it sometimes did complicate matters.
Once all of his officers had reported in, he relaxed. Now, no matter what came up, he knew where all the men were. He tried to think of ways they could fill in long days of being snowbound once the insides of the barracks were finished.
Well, now I wonder. The Emperor’s Guard has their Guard Hall all hung with captured banners and painted with murals of great battles of the past, and those were all done by the men themselves. So—what about seeing if we can’t dig up a few men with some artistic talent, then let each barracks decide how the inside of their place should be painted? The lad with the talent can rough things in, and the rest of the boys can color it. We’ve paint enough for a thousand barracks.
That would encourage division pride, camaraderie—
Should he let the Horned Hunters do their barracks with religious symbols?
Yes, but only in the sweat lodge area.
That would work. And if there was another cult that wanted to do up a small shrine, he’d let them build that, too.
Better standardize a size, or they might get greedy and take over half a barracks.
“Sir!” His aide Nevis interrupted his train of thought. “Men from Shonar with an emergency, sir!” The young man didn’t wait for permission to bring them up—which was quite correct in an emergency—he had the group with him. Tremane didn’t recognize any of these people, but their expressions told him they were frantic. He recognized their type, though; farmers. Rough hands, weather-beaten faces, heavy clothing perfectly suited to working long hours in harsh winter weather—they were as alike as brothers. That, and their expression, told him everything he needed to know.