Finally, when Levons whispered that he was finished with his report, she suddenly jerked back with a shrill squeal of indignation. “What makes you think you can touch me
there
?” she demanded, then let fly with a resounding slap across the old farmer’s pudgy features. She pulled the blow, but even so, a red mark blossomed. “Let me go!”
Leaping to her feet, she tossed her head, picked up her tray, and flounced away from Levons, who sat nursing his red cheek. When she reached the bar, she busied herself tending to the glasses, and didn’t look up when Levons, accompanied by guffaws and ribald commentary, left the tavern.
Talis scrubbed tables with more vigor than was strictly necessary, trying to shake off a sense of guilt at the way she’d treated the old man.
So what if he’s one of us?
she thought, wielding her scrub brush briskly.
He’s still a
man
.
Just an old drunkard, just like Uncle Jasti. Next time he
starts to paw some young girl, maybe he’ll think twice and
keep his hands to himself!
The clock chimed the hour by the time she was finished with the washing up, and Talis looked up to see Rufen Castio peering at her from the crack in the back room door. Talis began counting, and when she reached five hundred, she nodded to the tavernkeep, who nodded back.
Quickly, she picked up her shawl, pulled it on, and hurried outside. Afternoon was waning and the breeze had grown chill. The clouds overhead were thickening. Talis realized that if she were going to make it home by bedtime, she’d have to run or catch a ride on a wagon. For a moment she considered just starting for home and coming back tomorrow, but she knew she couldn’t do that. Castio needed her.
She darted down the street, moving quickly, but not so fast that anyone would become suspicious. There was a countinghouse on the corner, and she turned right onto the northern road and, still moving fast, headed for a small clearing in the trees bordering it.
Castio was waiting for her, clearly impatient, his tall, skinny form striding back and forth like a nervous horse. His mount, a sturdy chestnut mare, stood tethered to a tree. Talis hastened up to the revolutionary leader, feeling her heart leap, as always, when she saw him. Not with romantic love, no. Talis felt that way about no man.
The love she felt for Castio was, in its way, more profound. He was her leader, the one who had shown her the vision of a free land. Rufen Castio was a great man.
Now she hurried up to him, smiling. “You were wonderful today! You had them all in the palm of your hand. If you’d told them to set sail for Pela to bring back Prince Salesin’s head, they’d have launched their boats, Castio!”
He nodded at her, as usual, all business. “I received a message that a courier was headed our way,” he said. “Did you get his report?”
“Yes” she said, repressing another flicker of guilt.
“What did you learn?”
“ ’Tis a standard layout for a frontier fort,” Talis said.
“Wooden stockade, twelve gun platforms, officers’ quarters, line troops barracks, armory, stables, commissary, store-house, magazine, and a kitchen and scullery building.”
Squatting down in the dirt, she used a small twig to reproduce what Levons had described to her.
“What’s their strength?”
“Levons saw a little over three hundred men, but some were out on patrol, he said. Probably a complement of four hundred, give or take.”
“Half a battalion,” Castio said. “No surprise there. Supplies?”
“They appeared well-supplied, he said. Plenty of hams in the smokehouse, many sacks of flour, and the dinner he ate with them was edible. No weevils, fresh vegetables. Good ale and cider.” She chuckled. “If you’d seen the girth on this fellow, you’d know why he was so interested in the food.”
“Edible army food, that
is
worrisome,” Castio said dryly.
“Did he get any glimpses into the magazine?”
“One of his ewes got loose and just
happened
to wander in that direction,” Talis said. “He was able to catch up to her right outside the window of the magazine. He caught only a glance before the guard demanded that he take himself off, but he estimated at least twenty-five kegs of powder, and he said there were some boxes that may have contained car-tridges with the new style bullets.”
“A well-equipped fort, indeed,” Castio said. “And just one of many that infest our land, may the Goddess help us.” He sighed, and Talis looked at him, distressed. Never before had she seen Rufen Castio look anything but determined.
“The cannon,” she said, continuing with her report, not knowing what else to say, “at least twelve of them, and they fire three-or four-pound shot.”
Castio glanced up at her and seemed to return to himself.
“Excellent, Talis,” he said. “Good work.”
Talis felt warm all over. Castio was not one to offer praise lightly. Quickly, she finished up her report, repeating everything Levons had told her. When she first met Castio and he’d considered her for this work, he taught her to use her eyes and her ears, and to remember in detail without the aid
of written notes. Talis had been highly motivated, and was a quick and able student.
When she was done, her mouth was dry from talking so much. Castio had a leathern flask fastened to his saddle, and she went over to it and unfastened it. “May I?”
“And welcome to it,” Castio said. “ ’Tis the least we can do for you, after such an exacting report.”
Talis drank, long and deep. The water tasted of leather and was tepid, but she was so thirsty she enjoyed it anyway.
When she was finished, she wiped her mouth, then gathered up her skirts. “I must go,” she said. “As it is, I can’t make it home before dark. I’m supposed to be hunting up on Lone-some Ridge. I’ll have to make up some story about missing my way or tracking a wounded doe and then losing her.”
Castio looked at her, concerned. “You’re nearly a league from Woodhaven,” he said. “How did you get here, and how will you get home?”
“I ran,” Talis said. “I told them I was going hunting on the mountain, so I couldn’t bring a horse. I’ll likely run back to Woodhaven, unless I can catch a ride on a farm wagon.”
“No, not likely. You’ve done the Cause a service today, and we’ll not repay you so shabbily. I’ll take you there.
Rebel will carry double for that distance.”
Soon enough Talis found herself perched pillion behind Castio on the rump of his chestnut, wishing she was wearing her trousers so she could ride astride. She was used to riding either astride or sidesaddle, but sitting sideways on a horse’s rump with no anchor save Castio’s back to hang on to felt strange and precarious.
“You took quite a risk today, playing the tavern wench so close to home,” Castio said as they jogged back into town to retrieve Talis’s hunting clothes from the inn, where she’d left them. “Why didn’t you wear a disguise?”
“I should have, I suppose,” she admitted. “But by the time I received that message telling me about that courier coming to town, I didn’t want to take the time. I figured it was worth a chance. Besides,” she added grimly, “men don’t look me in the face when I’m dressed like this, Master Castio.”
Castio shifted slightly in his saddle to glance back at her.
“Don’t take any more such chances, Talis. You are too valuable to the Cause. We can’t risk losing you.”
Talis was speechless with joy, and seized by a sudden bout of shyness. She nodded silently, eyes downcast.
They stopped briefly in North Amis for Talis to change in the back room of the tavern. She felt more comfortable in her buckskin trousers, homespun hunting shirt, buckskin jacket, and one of her father’s old broad-brimmed hats. She pulled it down low over her brow and stuffed her hair up under it so it was unlikely she’d be recognized. Talis’s father acknowledged that she was the surest shot in the family and that hunting required her to wear men’s clothing. But he’d have been shocked beyond words to see her dressed in hunting garb out in public.
Then, pleased that she could now ride astride, Talis swung up behind Castio again and they set out for the Aloro farm at a slow but steady jog.
Once outside of town, they met few passersby, and soon they were following a rutted track that led to some of the outlying farms. The afternoon sun cast greenish light through the massive trees that bordered the road. “It’s been months since I’ve seen you,” Castio commented, breaking a long silence.
“How have you been? Keeping up with your arms practice?”
“These days, we rarely waste powder and shot on practice,” Talis said. “With the King’s taxes so high, Father has to scrimp to make ends meet. But I do enough hunting to stay in practice.”
“Good, excellent. Did you read that pamphlet I lent you?”
“Yes, I did. It was hard going, at first. There were so many phrases I had to think about, and Master Sendith uses so many big words. ‘Guaranteed rights of the governed’ and such. But I stuck with it, and it got a bit easier.” She grinned.
“I prefer your broadsides, Master Castio. They’re interesting to read, not hard.”
“I’ve not authored a broadside in too long,” Castio said.
“I’ve been spending my writing time making up tavern
songs. Want to hear my latest one? The further it spreads, the better.”
“Sing it to me!” Talis urged.
Castio threw back his head, and, since they were totally alone on the back country road, sang out in his pleasant but untrained baritone.
“Hey, nonny, nonny and a ho ho ho
Everyone knows that the King must go!
Agivir the feeble, and the fat and slow
Hey nonny, nonny, and a ho ho ho!
If you pick a fight with Agivir he’ll offer you a treat
It’s silver coin in pocket you’ll be stowin’
He thinks he won’t be taken when he beats a fast retreat
If he fattens up the purses of his foemen!
Hey, nonny, nonny, and a ho ho ho
Everybody knows that the King must go
Agivir the purser, with his head hung low
Hey nonny, nonny, and a ho ho ho!
Agivir, he likes his food, it puts him in good cheer
He likes it rich and spicy, bake or boil it
The servants must be careful to keep burning candles clear
The explosion could wipe out the royal toilet!
Hey, nonny, nonny, and a ho ho ho
Everybody knows that the King must go
Agivir the windy, with his farts aglow
Hey, nonny, nonny, and a ho ho ho!
Agivir, he has three sons who might lord it over us
Succession is secure, and that’s the bother
Who’s to choose between the villain, the dimwit, or the puss?
At least we can be sure of who’s the father!
Hey, nonny, nonny, and a ho ho ho
Everybody knows that the King must go
Agivir the daddy with his brats in tow
Hey, nonny, nonny, and a ho ho ho!
Hey, nonny, nonny and a ho ho ho
Everybody knows that the King must go
Agivir the feeble, the fat and slow
Hey nonny, nonny, and a ho ho ho!
Talis listened wide-eyed, and when he was finished, she laughed uneasily. “Master Castio! I daren’t teach that song in the taverns, ’twould get me dragged off to gaol!”
“I know,” Castio admitted. “It’s not time for that one quite yet. In six months, a year at the outside, you’ll hear scores of men bellowing it in every tavern, or my name’s not Rufen Castio.”
“So, you’re saying it will come down to a … fight,” Talis said slowly, trying not to let her dismay show. “Revolution?
Are you sure?”
“Who can be sure of anything in this world?” he countered.
Talis was not going to give up so easily. “Don’t you think we can … avoid it? Somehow?”
“No, I don’t think we can,” he answered, all levity gone.
“But that’s not what you tell the people.” Talis shifted uneasily on the mare’s rump. The horse was sweating now, and the smell of it was sharp in her nostrils. She could feel dampness seeping through the seat of her trousers.
“The people must be led gently, like a flock with a good shepherd,” Castio said. “Push them too hard, rush them, terrify them, and they’ll turn tail and trample you. The key to revolution is to make them aware of all that plagues them, then let them know there are others who feel the same way.
Play your cards right, and soon they’ll be talking each other—and you!—into marching off to the revolution.”
Talis frowned. “When I talk to folks in the taverns, most of them think that if we can just get past Viceroy Salesin and gain the King’s ear, things here on Kata can still be sal-vaged.” She didn’t add that she wanted that to be the case.
“Do you think that’s possible?”
“No,” said Castio flatly. “Not possible.” He thought for a moment, then added, “If Agivir were to take control back again, I suppose there could still be a chance. But that’s not going to happen. Salesin will never give up the power he’s gained, and he’s constantly gaining more. He’s ruthless. I’d wager even Agivir fears him. There are rumors that the King may abdicate.”
“Oh, no!” Talis was shocked. She’d always known that Salesin would be King one day, but that had been something for a distant, hazy future. Talis had been born on Katan soil, but Gerdal was Pelanese, and proud of it. Every Holy Day he hoisted a glass to “Good King Agivir, may the Goddess keep him.” And every visit to the temple had included a prayer for the King’s health, wisdom, and long reign.
“Oh, yes. Agivir isn’t a bad man,” Castio said matter-of-factly. “I know I rail against him, and I think he’s indeed made some very bad decisions. He ceded the Isle of Talano, for example, and gave up Pelanese fishing rights east of Paalu. Those were the actions of a king who has lost his stomach for fighting. A leader must be prepared to back his threats with force, and Agivir has lost that ability.”
Talis sighed. “So it seems,” she said. “I’ve heard it said by others, too.”
“It’s plain to anyone that has watched what’s happening.
I’ll grant you that no man is a perfect villain, and Agivir did many good things, too. But his worst decision of all was to make Salesin Viceroy of Kata. I suspect he did it under pressure, but that doesn’t take away the effect.”