wELLSPRING OF CHAOS======================
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--------------------------------------------
Book Information:
Genre: Fantasy
Author: L.E. Modesitt
Name: Wellspring of Chaos
Series: Saga of Recluse, Book 12 
======================
 
 
Wellspring of Chaos
Book 12 of the Saga of Recluse
by L.E. Modesitt
 
I
Jvharl stood at the front window of his shop, looking westward for a moment at 
the wedge of twilight sky visible between the slate roofs of the buildings on 
the far side of the narrow Crafters Lane. A single lamp was visible through the 
middle window of Gharans quarters, above the weavers shop. Next door, at 
Hamyls, both the lower floor and the rooms above were dark. That wasnt 
surprising, Kharl told himself, since Hamyls consort had taken the children to 
her parents holding to help with the early-midsummer gathering. That had left 
the potter free to indulge himself at the Tankard, and the lane peaceful, since 
Kharls neighbor, the scrivener Tyrbel, was a widower and kept a quiet 
establishment.
Lowering his eyes, the cooper glanced at the five barrels in his display, all 
tight cooperage from the best white oak, ranging from the hogshead to the 
standard barrel and down to the quarter barrel and the fine-finished fifth 
barrel with the brass spigot, used by anyone who wanted to store and dispense 
expensive liquids, mostly spirits. Then he barred the front door and closed the 
shutters behind the lead-glassed panes that his grandsire had installed before 
Kharl had been born. At that time, glass windows had been considered 
particularly foolish for a cooper, unlike a goldsmith or an artisanor even a 
weaver or a potter who had to display work to attract buyers. Times had 
changed, and most shops along the lane had come to display their wares behind 
windows.
A barrels a barrel. Sos a hogshead. People buy barrels because they need 
barrels. Kharl smiled as he recalled the acerbic words of his grandmother, who 
had never let his grandsire forget what she regarded as the foolishness of the 
glass.
Foolishness? Kharl didnt think so. He still got orders from passersby who 
otherwise hadnt thought about barrels. Not many, never more than one an 
eightday, and sometimes only a few a season. Over time, though, the windows had 
paid for themselves.
He picked up the lamp and walked toward the rear of the shop, past the high 
racks that held the billets he would form into staves. Most of the billets were 
oak, white for the tight cooperage and red for slack. There were also some 
billets of tight-grained black oak, and a few of chestnut. He passed the 
workbench and the tool rack, with every tool in place. On
the left side of the rear wall was the small forge where he sized and shaped the 
hoops for tight cooperage. Beside the forge on the brick flooring was the fire 
pot and, beside it, the steaming ring. The faintest smell of ashes and charcoal 
drifted toward Kharl from the banked coals of the forge.
Just short of the rear wall, and the door to the loading dock, the cooper 
stopped and looked at the fifteen white oak barrels waiting there. Each was 
identical to the next, with the iron bands, set just so, and the smooth finish, 
with a medium toasting on the inside. Korlan was supposed to pick them up in the 
morningpick them up and pay the balance due. The vintner had taken the first 
fifteen barrels an eightday earlier. Kharl only hoped that the vintner did not 
come up with some excuse, as he had the summer before, waiting almost two 
eightdays before showing up, but, then, that was the problem in dealing with 
someone who lived more than ten kays to the south of Brysta.
Kharl half smiled, then nodded, and turned, the carry-lamp in hand, to head up 
the stairs.
 silvers and coppers are not for me, but a pretty girl whose charms are free
He frowned. Had he heard singing in the alley? The Tankard was four doors toward 
the harbor, but seldom did roisterers come wandering down the alley, even early 
in the evening. Kharl cocked his head.
 for when theres no lamps to see, any womans as fair as fair can be
No let go of me!
The womans voiceno, it was a girls voicewas familiar, but Kharl could not 
place it. He moved to the far side of the loading dock and swept up the cudgel 
in his left hand, then, leaving the lamp behind, eased the door open.
Let me go!
 mean you no harm, little woman. A raucous laugh followed. Well even pay 
you for what you give others for free
Let go! Let mmmpphhh The girls words were choked off.
Kharl closed the door behind him so that he would not be silhouetted by the 
light from the lamp. He glanced toward the Tankard, but saw no
one. He looked back to the north. There, less than a rod away, perhaps less than 
ten cubits, in the fading light and the dimness of the alley, were three figures 
that Kharl could barely make out. Two men held the girl, a thin figure with dark 
ringlets over a green summer blouse. The hair and the blouse belonged to Sanyle, 
the youngest of Tyrbels daughters.
One of the men had Sanyles arms cruelly twisted behind her, and the other had 
his hand on her shoulder, pulling the summer blouse down. Both men were 
laughing.
Kharl took three quick steps, then two more, bringing the cudgel up.
The nearer man, the one who had started to rip away Sanyles blouse, turned. A 
blade hissed from the scabbard at his belt.
Kharl took another step and struck the blade and the mans hand with the cudgel 
before the man had finished turning toward the cooper. The shortsword dropped on 
the cobblestones of the alley with a muffled clank.
Ah swine-slime misbegotten The youth jumped back, cradling his hand. The 
dark blue velvet of his tunic was almost lost in the dimness.
The second man let go of Sanyle, and his right hand darted toward
the hilt of his blade.
Dont growled the cooper.  Less you want a broken arm. Just let her go, and 
back away and head back where you came from. Have fun with your own or those you 
pay.
As soon as the man had released her, Sanyle slipped away into the shadows. There 
was a glint on the heavy brass key she held, and then the rear door of the 
structure beside the cooperage opened, and quickly shut.
You cant do this. The taller young man, who was still half a head shorter 
than the cooper, kept his hand on the hilt of his blade, but did not draw it. 
You dont know who youre talking to
Doesnt matter, growled the cooper. Dont force girls barely old enough to 
know the difference tween boys and men.
Theyre all the same.
Kharl raised the cudgel slightly. Back off, little man, less you never want to 
use that arm again.
The shorter youth scooped up the fallen blade with his left hand and backed 
away. After a moment, the taller one followed.
Kharl stood watching until the two were out of sight, and until the alley was 
quiet once more. Then he turned and reentered the cooperage, wondering from what 
merchants houses had come the overdressed and
spoiled youths. With a snort, he set down the heavy cudgel and barred the door.
After reclaiming the lamp, he started up the steps to the quarters above the 
cooperage. His boots thumped heavily on the wood, and the fourth step creaked, 
as it had for years.
Charee stood just inside the door at the top of the stairs. Shoulder-length 
black hair was bound back from her face, making it seem even narrower than it 
was. Her green eyes were cool. Your suppers cold. Thought you were coming up 
sooner.
I was. Heard something out back. Wanted to make sure that it wasnt someone 
trying to break in. Just a pair of youngsters thought they were men, drinking 
too much for ones so young. Kharl had no intention of saying more about the 
would-be bravos. For all her virtues, Charee lacked onethat of circumspection. 
The young men could scarcely have picked out one crafter in gray from another, 
not unless Charee told the entire lane. Because she well might have, while 
suggesting that Kharl was being foolish, Kharl saw little point in calling 
attention to the incident. Sanyle would doubtless tell her widower father, but 
the scrivener was more than taciturn, as were his children.
Wont you ever leave well enough alone, Kharl? Leave the roisterers alone. Or 
if you must, call them to the attention of Lord Wests Watch. Thats what he 
draws his tariffs for. Youve got a consort and sons that need you
. My hard-won coins, leastwise. Kharl shut the door to the stairs and the shop 
below and walked toward the washroom on the right side of the landing.
Lets not be starting that again.
Kharl forced a smile. I wont, dearest. I need to wash up. The pitcher on the 
wash table was full, and the basin empty and clean, with a worn but clean gray 
towel and a narrow bar of fat soap laid out on the left side. He closed the 
washroom door and began to wash, enjoying the faint rose scent that came from 
the petals in the soap. It took time to get the sawdust off his face and hands 
and arms, and out of his dark beard, short-cropped as it was.
When Kharl stepped into the main room, it was still warm from the day, but the 
harbor breeze blowing through the open windows offered a welcoming coolness, 
even if it did bear the scents of salt and fish and caused the two wall lamps to 
flicker.
The cooper walked toward the round table where Arthal and Warrl waited, their 
eyes following him, but not exactly looking at him.
Did you finish your lessons? Kharls eyes fixed on Warrl, his younger son, by 
three years.
Yes, ser. I did. After a moment, the younger boy asked, How much longer will 
I have to go to Master Fonwyl?
Until he says you can read and write well enough to pass the craft-masters 
tests. Kharl seated himself.
I dont see why, interrupted Arthal. Its not as though well ever have the 
golds to post the bond for mastercrafter.
Maybe so, and maybe not, replied Kharl. But if you get the chance, I dont 
want you looking back and complaining that I didnt prepare you. Reading and 
writing arent something you can pick up easy-like when
youre older.
But what use is it if youre not a mastercrafter or a merchant or a lord? You 
scarce have a chance to read a broadsheet
But I can, and once or twice its saved me good coins. Enough. Kharl managed 
not to snap. Lets enjoy supper.
As if she had been waiting for them to stop, Charee lifted the heavy cast-iron 
stewpot off the stove and carried it to the table. There, she set it on the 
well-browned trivet in the center of the oval oak table that had been one of the 
first pieces of actual furniture that Kharl had made after he had taken over the 
cooperage.
His consort set the large basket of afternoon-baked bread on the table and 
seated herself at the opposite end of the oval table from Kharl. Kharl began to 
ladle the stew into the chipped brown crockery bowls that had come from Charees 
mother.
Smells good, offered Kharl.
It does, added Warrl.
More summer squash and potatoes than meat, murmured Arthal.
Its tasty, and its hot, and you didnt have to spend the day cooking it, 
Kharl pointed out. If youd rather not eat, you can leave the table
right now.
No, Da Im sorry, Ma. Arthals voice was barely apologetic.
Kharl didnt feel like calling his older son on his borderline rudeness, not 
after a long day finishing the last of the barrels for Korlan, especially when 
he knew that Arthal would just make some other comment.
What was going on outside, Da? asked Warrl.
Tust some young fellows whod had too much at the Tankard. Had
^ ale than sense, and didnt know it.
Will the Watch catch them?
They settled down, Kharl said, after taking a mouthful of the stew, still 
Warm and peppery, despite Charees comments about it getting cold. Good stew. 
He broke oft a chunk of the crusty bread, then dipped it into the stew before 
chewing off the dipped end. Good bread.
Theyd better settle down, offered Arthal. Lord West likes Brysta peaceful.
The justicers worry inore about thieves and killers, Kharl said, taking a 
swallow of the warm ale, really only about half a mug for each of them, but that 
had been #H that was left in the quarter barrel in the cellar, and he couldnt 
afford any morenot until Korlan paid him for the wine barrels.
Cossal said they hung three brigands in the Justicers Hall on two-day, added 
Warrl. He was there.
They hung three men. Thats true. They might even have been guilty. Kharl had 
his doubts that everyone hanged was as guilty as charged.
Does it matter, if one brigand is strung up for something he didnt do? asked 
Charee. Anyone they catch has done more than enough anyway. Werent for Lord 
West, wed have thieves overrunning Brysta, like in his sires time.
That was a different time, Kharl said. Fairven had fallen. The more powerful 
steam engines had exploded. Many trading ventures had failed. People were 
starving, and white wizards were everywhere.
Better the whites than those blackstaffers from Reduce, Charee sniffed. Them 
and their fine clothes, and their noses in the air. Think they know everything. 
Father Jorum says that were all equal in the eyes of the Sovereign-
Kharl wasnt about to get into debating the opinions of the priest of the 
one-god believers. I cant see as they harm anyone, but its better that they 
stay i*1 Reduce. He took another chunk of bread and wiped out his empty b<?wl 
with it. Good dinner, dearest.
How would we kn^w? j^e lords wont touch em, not unless theyre caught a*ng 
son^j^g right awful. Merayni, she listened to one of em, last v ^ters e^^ y. 
wag^ ancj ^e was telling terrible tales. Terrible tales.
What kind of tales? asked Kharl, in spite of himself. He had his doubts about 
Charees older sister Merayni, although Merayni was certainly good-hearted, and 
she and her consort were more than successful with the pearapple and peach 
orchard that Dowsyl had inherited from his father. He paused. Didnt know 
blackstaffers got so far south as
Peachill or Eolya.
They get everywhere, Merayni was saying, and the tales he told! Terrible, she 
said. About how a body cant even walk across some hills in Candar without 
turnin black and shriveling up and dyin right there on the spot.
That may be, Kharl replied. Thats Candar, and not Nordla. Lord West is lucky 
to have one or two wizards that he can count on. Rather have him with wizards 
than some of the other Lords of the Quadrant.
This young blackstaffer, he said that the lords wizards werent proper mages. 
A course, Father Jorum says all wizardry is evil.
I wouldnt know if theyre proper wizards. Kharl tilted his mug to get the 
last drop of ale. Im a cooper, not a wizard or a lord. Thats their business. 
Mines barrels. Solid barrels.
Terrible stuff, magery. Charee sniffed again. As bad as thieves and brigands, 
if you ask me.
Im sure there are good mages and bad ones. There are good lords and bad ones, 
good coopers and bad ones.
No such thing as a good mage, if you ask me. Lord West can have them all. Be 
better if he hung em.
Thats what lords are for. Deal with raiders, and invaders, and brigands, and 
mages. Rather be a cooper.
Warrl yawned. So did Arthal.
You two can take the bowls to the wash table, Charee said.
Wish we had a sister, like Aubret does, mumbled Warrl. Do all the dishes.
You dont have a sister, Charee said. Two of you are enough.
 always say that murmured Arthal.
Did you say something? asked Kharl.
No, ser.
I didnt think so. Kharl pushed back his chair and walked to the window, 
letting the cool evening air flow around him. He hoped that Korlan would pick up 
the barrels in the morning.
II
Right after his early breakfast, Kharl took the broom and stepped outside the 
front of the cooperage to sweep the stones of the narrow sidewalk. Warrl was 
supposed to have done it, but the boy was already laying out the white oak 
shooks that Kharl would be jointing for the hogshead ordered by Captain Hagen 
for the Seastag. It was less trouble for Kharl to sweep than to rail at Warrl, 
and at least the boy was already working, unlike his older brother. Since the 
cooper didnt want to be caught out front if Korlan drove his wagon up to the 
loading door in the rear, Kharl swept quickly.
Every few moments, Kharl stopped briefly to listen, although he doubted that the 
vintner would arrive before midmorning, but with Korlan, one could never tell. 
The air already felt hot and damp. He glanced to the east, at the barrel set on 
the stone slab between the cooperage and Derdans woolen shop, the barrel filled 
with damp sand for use against fires. The water barrel was more toward the 
harbor, past Tyrbels scriptorium.
He began to sweep again, trying not to sneeze. As gently as he moved the broom, 
dust still rose from the stones, dust from a long and dry summer. With the 
prevailing easterlies, Brysta was hot and damp, but seldom had much rain until 
late summer. So the air was moist, and the streets were dusty. Finally, he 
lifted the broom and turned to reenter the cooperage.
Ahhh
Kharl looked up.
Tyrbel stood there, with a small smudge of ink on his jaw. Kharl just wanted 
to last night Sanyle. The angular scrivener did not met the coopers eyes.  
asked her to deliver some fancy cards up the hill. They must have followed her 
back.
Just fortunate to be back by the loading dock. Might not have heard otherwise.
WELLSPRING OF CHAUs
Some would have heard, and done nothing, Tyrbel replied. I owe you thanks and 
more.
You dont owe me. Neighbors dont look out for neighbors who will? Kharl 
smiled. Shes a good girl.
Best of them all, Tyrbel agreed. Do you know who they were? Kharl shook his 
head, still listening for Korlans team and wagon. No. Wore velvets and blades. 
Looked like some merchants spoiled brats. Had too much to drink and didnt care 
who they hurt.
Sanyle said they drew against you.
Had my cudgel. Worked better. Kharl laughed brusquely.
I hope they were very drunk and didnt know exactly where they were, offered 
Tyrbel. Merchants sons well, some of them dont forget. Sometimes wealth is 
the wellspring of chaos.
It was dark, Kharl replied, glancing toward the inside of his shop.
I wont keep you.
Im waiting for Korlan, and I dont want him to load his barrels without 
leaving whats in his purse.
Tyrbel laughed. I understand. It took me four eightdays to collect from him for 
making a copy of Emyls Tales. The scrivener paused. But I did want to thank 
you. Neighbors or not, most wouldnt put themselves out.
Been my daughter, Id have wanted someone to put themselves out, Kharl said. 
Shes always been thoughtful to us.
She is. Tyrbel smiled. That she is. After a moment, he cleared his throat. 
I must be going. I have to go to the Quadrant Hall.
Copying some records?
Exactly. I cant really say who or why, you understand?
Kharl didnt and never had, but he nodded anyway.
Thank you, my friend, said Tyrbel as he turned.
Kharl lifted the broom and headed back into the shop.
Warrl looked up. The shooks are here, Da, and there are two extra, like you 
said.
Except for the two of them, the cooperage was empty.
Good. Kharl looked around. Arthal?
Im coming. The lanky dark-haired youth slumped as he made his way down the 
stairs from above. Im coming. He paused on the fourth step and rocked back 
and forth, until the step squeaked.
So is year-end, suggested Kharl, and it well might get here before you. He 
waited until his older son reached the workbench before continuing. Smythal 
promised he would have the iron blanks for the hogshead last night. I need you 
to pick them up. Tell him Ill stop by with the coins later today.
Yes, ser. What if he wants the coins now?
He wont. But if he does, then come get me.
Kharl watched for a moment as Arthal left, not quite slouching, but not exactly 
hastening, either. Then he turned. During Kharls conversation with Arthal, 
Warrl had laid out the hollowing knife and the round shave. The younger boy 
stood at the end of the main workbench.
Have you sharpened the hollowing knife? And the planer blade? Kharl looked at 
Warrl.
I sharpened the blade the day before yesterday, Da The redhead looked down, 
not meeting his fathers eyes.
That was the day before yesterday. Today, we have heavy oak to joint.
Yes, ser.
Warrls tone was so resigned that Kharl had trouble not smiling in response 
before he replied, The sooner you start, the sooner youll be done, and then 
you can head off to Master Fonwyls.
Yes, ser. The younger boys tone was even more resigned.
Kharl was not amused at Warrls lack of enthusiasm about his tutor and his 
lessons, not with the coppers they were costing Kharl.
Ill
First thing on fiveday, Kharl had opened the loading door and left it ajar, 
waiting as he was for a teamster hed hired to cart the finished hogshead 
standing just inside the door down to the Seastag. Kharl had tried to complete 
the cask earlier, but hed had to wait for Smythal to finish the iron blanks 
that Kharl forged into hoops, and that had meant sending Arthal twice.
The Austran trader wasnt due to cast off until tomorrow, on sixday,
but Kharl found himself glancing at the large cask and loading door again and 
again as he continued to plane and joint the small black oak staves for the set 
of fancy fifth-barrels for Yualt. Hed already commissioned the brass spigots, 
and hed have to pay a silver to Cupret before
eightday.
Arthal was at the other workbench, rough-shaping red oak shooks into proper 
staves for flour barrels, not that Kharl had any orders, but because he always 
had some from Wassyt, the miller, come harvest. That was good, because, fast as 
he made coins, it seemed as though he had to spend them almost as swiftly.
Hot damp air seeped into the shop as always in summer in Brysta. Kharl hoped it 
wouldnt be too long before the winds changed, and Nordla got some rain, but the 
easterlies had lasted longer this summer.
The cooper blotted his forehead with the back of his forearm before pausing and 
readjusting the plane.
Ge-ha!
At the teamsters call and the crack of a whip, Kharl set aside the plane. 
Arthal! The teamsters here. Ill need you to help load the hogshead.
Yes, ser. Arthal straightened.
The two walked back to the loading door. Kharl opened the door wide. From there 
Kharl watched as the teamster brought the wagon and team to a halt. Kharl knew 
many of the teamsters, but not the burly and bearded young man on the wagon 
seat. Not that hed had a choice. A crafter put in a request at the teamsters 
hall and took what he got.
He stepped into the alley. Im Kharl, the cooper with the hogshead for the 
ocean pier.
Morat. The teamster spat out onto the alley, the side of the wagon away from 
Kharl. Be two coppers down to the pierand two back if it comes to that.
Kharl showed four coppers. But not until were at the pier.
And you tie the hogshead in place, and I check it. We dont move till I think 
its secure.
I expected that.
The brawny teamster lowered the rear wagon gate, and Kharl and Arthal lifted the 
hogshead and eased it into the wagon. While Kharl lashed the caskequivalent to 
three barrelsin place in the wagon bed, Morat closed the rear gate.
Arthal watched both men.
Kharl tied the last knot and looked at his eldest. Close the loading door and 
watch the shop until I get back. Keep working on those staves.
Yes, ser, replied Arthal.
With a nod to his son, the cooper looked to the teamster. Casks in place. 
Kharl climbed up into the wagon seat, waiting for Morat to finish checking the 
lashings.
After a moment, the teamster vaulted into his seat and released the wagon brake. 
Well be going. He flicked the leads to his team. The wagon rolled forward, 
slowly.
After Morat had the wagon and team clear of the alley behind the cooperage and 
onto Fifth Cross, he kept the team on the crossing street until they reached 
Cargo Road. There he turned westward toward the harbor. First ocean pier, you 
said.
The SeastagAustran deep water.
Once the wagon passed the square at Third Cross, Kharl could see the piers, 
because Cargo Road sloped downward just enough so that the harbor of Brysta 
could be seen spread out to the west. All the piers were to the north of the 
River Westlich, except for the stubby ferry pier. The ferry served those who 
wanted to cross to the peninsula road that ran south-southeast along the western 
side of the river. There, the marshes farther north and west, bordered by rock 
escarpments, had prevented much settlement on the southern part of the harbor. 
To the north of the piers was the flatland for the lower market and the 
slateyard.
Kharl checked the fair weather banner on the pole on the outer breakwatera 
green oval against a white background. There were no clouds in the western sky, 
but Lord Wests wizards used their glasses to scree well beyond mere sight to 
determine which banner flew.
There were only eight vessels spread across the three oceangoing piers and the 
two coastal wharfs, illustrating that late summer was the slowest time in the 
fair weather months. Closer to harvest and all through the fall, almost every 
berth on every pier would be taken, and in good times, merchanters would even 
anchor out beyond the breakwaters.
Lord West had but a handful of warships, iron-hulled steamers with but two 
single-gun turrets. Brystas real defenses were the two forts facing each other 
at the entrance to the harborthe south fort at the end of
one breakwater, and the north fort at the end of the other. Twin chains lay on 
the stones of the channel between them. Each chain was attached to a modified 
capstan so that the chains could be raised to deny access to
the harbor.
Once every four eightdays, the chains were raised briefly and inspected, and one 
of Lord Wests wizards renewed the order-spell on them. Kharl knew that well. 
For a year he had served as an assistant to the cooper at the south fort, and 
had been pressed into the work gang that turned the capstan.
The first ocean pier was emptyexcept for the Seastag, two-masted, like a brig, 
but with side paddle wheels. The Austran ensign drooped from the jackstaff in 
the heavy still air that blanketed the harbor. Several wagons were lined up and 
unloading barrels and crates, and the work gang was using a crane to swing 
lengths of timbers from a stack on the pier to the midships hold.
The teamster eased the wagon past the timber pallets and brought it to a stop a 
rod or so past the gangway. This is the best I can do.
Thats fine. Kharl handed three coppers to the teamster. It will only be a 
moment.
Hagen was halfway down the gangway before Kharl finished unlashing the hogshead. 
The Austran captain had three sailors with him. Cooper, your timing could not 
have been better.
I said today, Kharl replied.
So you did. The master of the Seastag hopped up into the wagon bed and began 
to inspect the hogshead. Kharl waited.
Finally, Hagen jumped down and gestured to the three sailorstwo men and a 
hard-faced woman as well muscled as the men. Take the cask up and set it just 
aft of the mainmast for now.
Yes, ser.
Kharl watched as the three eased the cask out of the wagon and carried it across 
the pier, past the timber being loaded, and up the gangway. Hagen watched as 
well, until the cask was on board the Seastag, before turning to the cooper. 
You charge a bit more than the Austrans, but no one makes a better hogshead. 
Hagen laughed and handed Kharl the three silvers, then added a pair of coppers. 
Thank you, ser. Kharl inclined his head. Behind them the teamster finished 
turning the wagon on the wide
pier and headed back toward the city proper. He gave the slightest of waves to 
Kharl.
In return, Kharl nodded to the teamster.
Ill be thanking you, cooper, said Hagen. That I will. Next trip, it might be 
sand barrels.
Sand barrels?
Been reports of raiders out of Lydiar, and the Black Brethren have those 
rockets. A chaos-wizards teamed up with pirates out of a place called Renklaar. 
Water doesnt always stop those chaos-flames. Were fortunate only one pirates 
got a wizard.
How long before you come back this way? asked Kharl.
Im only making a short voyage this time. Maybe half the ports in Candar before 
we return to Valmurl. Then, after an eightday there, well be headed here on the 
long trip of the winter. He laughed. Well end up in Hamor, where its warm.
The cooper nodded. You thinking of oak for the sand barrels?
The only thing for a vessel. The only thing. The graying Hagen tipped his 
battered cap to Kharl. Be seeing you next trip, cooper.
I look forward to it, ser.
Hagen nodded and turned.
Kharl walked past the timber, careful to avoid the empty sling coming down. 
Halfway back along the pier from the Seastag, he stopped as he notedand 
recognizedthe low vessel moored at the outboard end of the second pier, a ship 
entirely of shimmering black, without masts and with but one gun in a single 
forward turret. Two guards in the black of Reduce marines stood at the foot of 
the gangway.
The cooper studied the warship for a moment, then shook his head as he continued 
back along the pier for the kay-long walk back to the cooperage. He just hoped 
that no one had come by in his absence, but he wouldnt have dared to send 
Arthal with the hogshead.
Youth he muttered under his breath. Not what they used to be. Paid attention 
to my da. Theyd just as soon spit.
He squared his shoulders and stretched out his stride. He could have paid the 
teamster for a return ride, but he had better uses for his coppers.
rv
From the angle of the light slanting through the front windows of the cooperage, 
Kharl could tell it was getting on to late afternoon. He checked the brass 
spigot hed set into the first barrel. Hed augured the hole almost perfectly, 
so that he only needed the slightest bit of cordage between the wood and the 
brass flange and pipe. The second one was almost as good. He could start sealing 
the inside of the barrels in the morning. He didnt like doing barrels that 
required sealing, but Yualt had insisted on only the lightest of toasting and 
sealant afterward, saying that even the tightest grained oak would absorb some 
aspect of the contents and thus change them. Since Kharl was neither alchemist 
nor apothecary, and since the alchemist had refused to tell Kharl what he was 
putting in the fancy barrel, there wasnt much the cooper could sayespecially 
since Yualt was paying a premium that Kharl needed.
He checked the first barrel before him a last time, running his fingers slowly 
over the inside of the finely finished staves, nodding in satisfaction, before 
carrying it over to the finishing bench against the south rear wall. Then he 
returned to the turning bench and did the same with the second. The heads for 
both barrels were also laid out single round sections, rather than sections of 
quartersawn wood doweled in place.
With a smile, he eased over to the quarter barrel that held sealant.
The smile vanished, and he looked up. Arthal!
There was no answer, not that he expected one. After a moment, he walked to the 
steps and climbed up, and peered into the main room, where Charee was seated at 
her sewing table, working on the embroidery that she did for Fyona, the 
seamstress fancied by most of the consorts of the wealthier merchants.
Wheres Arthal? Kharl asked his consort.
He said you were finished with him, and he had to meet some friends.
Kharl pursed his lips tightly for a long moment. I said he was free if hed 
done everything. He did today. But he didnt yesterday, and he didnt tell me. 
Im out of sealant, and he was supposed to get two buckets from Hyesal. He said 
hed taken care of it, and he didnt, and that means oh never mind The 
cooper started to close the door, then turned back to Charee. If anyone should 
come by, Ill be back shortly. Im going over to Hyesals to get the sealant 
Arthal didnt. Ill leave the door open so you can hear if anyone comes in. Or 
if Warrl gets back from his lessons.
Dont be angry, Kharl. Arthals still young.
Hes near-on double-eight, and I dont like being misled. Kharl snorted, then 
headed down the steps. I should have asked him direct have to ask em every 
little thing thinks hes so bright he muttered to himself as he crossed the 
shop.
Kharl left by the front door. Outside, on Crafters Lane, he heard a low rumble 
and glanced up. Clouds were massing over the Eastern Ocean to the west of the 
harbor, and the wind had finally shifted from out of the east to the west, 
bringing with it an actual hint of rain, not just soggy air, and the chance that 
the long-overdue and welcome late-summer rains would finally arrive.
He glanced at Tyrbels small display window, which held several books, including 
a red leather-bound Book of Godly Prayera work that Tyrbel had done on his own 
as an offering to his faith. Kharl shook his head, thinking about the one-god 
believers. How could anyone believe that everything from the Great Western Ocean 
and beyond the Heavens to the Rational Stars could have been created by one god? 
Or that the same god knew everything everywhere, down to the smallest beetle? Or 
more important, from Kharls viewpoint, that such a god cared equally for all 
men, women, and children? Given what he saw on the streets of Brysta, Kharl 
didnt put much faith in such a god.
He laughed to himself at the last thought. He didnt put any faith at all in 
such a god. Tyrbel did. With a rueful smile, he kept walking.
Two blocks down toward the harbor, he came to the upper market square, although 
most of the peddlers and vendors had already packed up their wares and left. A 
one-handed beggar was seated on the low stone wall that surrounded the 
near-empty square. Topped with redstone with rounded edges, the wall was a good 
place for sitting and resting.
A copper, ser, just a copper for a poor fellow. The bearded beggar,
in a tattered gray tunic and trousers, held his cap upside down, lifting it 
toward Kharl.
The cooper ignored him and kept walking. Just a copper, ser. Just a copper
Another thirty cubits down Crafters Lane, also seated on the wall, was a young 
woman, with short-cropped dark hair and wearing a tan tunic and trousers. Her 
skin was pale, but unblemished. Her boots were sturdy and brown, and beside her 
was a canvas pack, against which rested a shimmering black staff. She was small 
enough that her boots did not touch the cobblestones beneath the wall.
As Kharl neared her, he took in the blackstaffer, then nodded politely. She 
looked up. Good day to you, ser. Her brown eyes smiled with her mouth.
And you as well, Kharl replied, almost in spite of himself. But her expression 
had been warm and friendly on a cloudy afternoon, and not asking for anything. 
He found himself smiling as he left the square behind and made his way the last 
hundred cubits to Hyesals apothecary shop, clearly marked with the crossed 
pestles above the door.
Kharl entered and stepped up to the long counter, time-aged golden oak, on which 
were arrayed various health tinctures. He looked around the small front room, 
but didnt see the apothecary. Hyesal? There was no answer. Hyesal!
Just a moment! came the querulous reply. If youre someone I know, just wait. 
If youre someone I dont, you can take that chance, too. Kharl grinned and 
stood there, waiting, his eyes going over the bottles lined up at the back of 
the counter, taking in the labelsMorning Tonic, Digestive Tincture, Rheumatism 
Salve ...
The small but angular apothecary appeared behind the counter, as if by magery. 
Well, Kharl what is it that wont wait but a moment?
Sealant, the one you make for the good barrels. Arthal was supposed to come 
by
Never did. I would have had it waiting here for you.
Do you have any ready?
I cant say as I do, Kharl, and its not something I can slop together while 
you stand there. Sides, its got to stand overnight.
Kharl could feel his anger rising, but Hyesal hadnt created the problem. Arthal 
had. So he held his tongue.
Tell you what. After I finish this tincture, Ill get to work on it, and you 
can pick it up first thing in the morning.
Id appreciate that. I would. Ive been working on these fancy fifth-barrels 
for Yualt Arthal he told me hed come by
And you never forgot anything when you were young and starstruck over some 
lass?
He doesnt have enough brains to be starstruck at the moment. Kharl snorted.
Hyesal laughed. Be ready in the morning. The apothecary turned and left Kharl 
standing at the counter.
With a shrug, the cooper stepped back and left the shop. In most cities, he 
would have gotten sealant from an alchemist, but not in Brysta, not that it 
mattered to Kharl so long as the sealant worked. What worked, that was what 
mattered, not which craft produced it.
Outside, he could smell the dampness of the rain that had already begun to fall 
on the ocean beyond the breakwaters, and he lengthened his stride as he hurried 
back up the gentle incline of Crafters Lane toward the square and his own shop.
The blackstaffer and the beggar had left the square, but a small figure in gray 
accosted Kharl as he passed the empty stone sitting wall. Master Kharl! How be 
the best cooper in Brysta?
Jekat hows the most flattering urchin in Brysta?
Not bad, Master Kharl. Course a copper or twod help. A grin crossed the 
towheads grimy face.
Coppers always help. The cooper grinned. You know anyone who needs barrels?
I heard the rendererWerwalhes going to be needing some barrels fore long. I 
told Sikalthats his manhe ought to see you. Werwal wont talk to me, but 
Sikal will.
Kharl slipped a copper from his purse. Take this, you worthless urchin. He 
couldnt help smiling.
Thank you, ser, and Ill not be telling no one bout your kindness. Jekat 
skipped away across the square.
Kharl was less than half a block from the shop when the rain began to fallfat 
drops that splattered against everything. He began to hurry, but the shoulders 
of his gray tunic were black with water by the time he dashed into the shop.
Is that you, Kharl? called Charee from up the stairs.
Sure as life. Kharl raised his voice to make sure Charee could hear him above 
the heavy rain pelting down on the roof. Almost made it back before it started 
raining. Arthal never ordered the sealant. Wont be ready before tomorrow. 
Wheres Warrl?
I sent him to Fyonas with the embroidery. He came in right after
you left.
Kharl stopped by the workbench, then turned as Arthal ran inside, his tunic and 
trousers darkened with rain. Arthal stopped as he saw his father. Im not too 
happy with you, young fellow.
Youre never happy with me, Da. Arthal did not meet Kharls eyes. You told 
me, yesterday, that youd taken care of all the chores. I just got back from 
Hyesals, and you never ordered the sealant. You told me youd done that.
I said Id do it. I was going down there Arthal stepped back. When? Next 
end-day? Whenever it met your fancy?
Its not like that.
How is it like? asked Kharl. I could have used the sealant today. It would 
have been ready today. Youre almost a double-eight, and I shouldnt have to 
follow up on everything you do.
You said you wouldnt finish those today. Arthals voice was low. That isnt 
the blades edge, Arthal. Kharls tone dropped into resignation. You led me to 
believe that youd ordered the sealant. Thats deception.
Arthal did not answer. Isnt that deception?
Yes, ser. Im sorry, ser.
You get a reputation for that, and no one will trust you to do anything. Dont 
you understand that? A mans worth is his reputation. Never forget that.
I said I was sorry, Da.
Kharl held in a sigh. Go on upstairs and see if your mother needs any help or 
any coal for the stove.
Arthal trudged past his father and started up the stairs.  worse than Father 
Jorum
The words were not supposed to reach Kharl.
What did you say? snapped the cooper.
Nothing, ser. I was just telling myself that you and Father Jorum feel the same 
way.
Thats about the only thing we agree on, Kharl snorted.
Once Arthal shut the door to the upstairs, Kharl walked back to the front 
window, looking out into the still-heavy rain. Children, he muttered to 
himself, so sure of themselves so stupid.
V
Carrying two covered buckets of sealant, Kharl left Hyesals so early in the 
morning that few people were out on the lane. He had placed a broom in Arthals 
hands before he had departed the shop, and told his older son to sweep the 
stones before the shop clear of standing water and mud from the rain of the 
night before. Hed even remembered to make it clear to his son that Arthal was 
to sweep gently, so that mud and water did not splatter up on the glass of the 
display window.
Because of the weight of the sealant, Kharl stopped at the uphill side of the 
square to readjust his grip on the buckets. Early as it was, there were no 
stalls or carts or peddlers set up. After a moments respite, he hurried up 
Crafters Lane toward his shop. As he passed the short ser-viceway between 
Fourth Cross and Fifth, a narrow passage little more than four cubits wide, he 
slowed.
Had he heard someone? Was there someone lying in the shadows where he could not 
see? Moaning? In early morning? He shook his head and continued the last hundred 
cubits to the shop. But his thoughts drifted backwho could be in the 
serviceway?
Once he reached the shop, he noted that the stones outside the door had indeed 
been swept clean and were already dryand that there was no mud on the bricks or 
glass of the display window. After opening the door, he entered the cooperage 
and lowered both buckets to the wooden floor.
Abruptly, he turned and walked out, closing the door behind him. On the lane, he 
headed back down toward the serviceway.
 a fool thats what you are stupid But despite his own words, he stepped 
into the darkness of the serviceway, checking carefully to make sure that no 
ruffians or cutpurses might be lingering. For a moment, he saw nothing. Then his 
eyes made out a bundle against the brick wall, a long bundle.
 ooo An arm twitched.
Kharl glanced around, but the serviceway remained empty except for him and 
whoever lay near the wall. He bent down, and, as his eyes adjusted to the 
dimness, he could make out a slender figureand the end of a smooth black staff. 
The figure was that of the young woman blackstaffer. Blood and mud splattered 
the tannish clothes, which had been partly ripped away from her for all too 
obvious purposes.
Kharl glanced around again, then took a deep breath, and bent down. He pulled 
her torn cloak back across her exposed body, then eased the nearly limp figure 
into his arms. Her back felt humped, but he realized that the lumpiness was her 
pack. He managed to grasp the staff, which, despite the cold damp stones and the 
mud, felt warm to his touch. Then he lurched to his feet and began to walk out 
of the serviceway.
Both Arthal and Charee were standing inside the open door to the shop as he 
carried the young woman through the doorway. Warrl stood farther back, his eyes 
darting from his father back to his mother.
Aryl was here. He said he might Charee broke off her words. What have you 
there?
A girl young woman. She was attacked and beaten. I heard her moaning in the 
serviceway. Kharl looked for somewhere to put her down. His eyes went to the 
stairs at the rear of the shop.
Charees eyes went to the section of shimmering black staff that extended beyond 
the figure Kharl held. She stepped back. Shes one of those. Shes one of those 
blackstaffers from Reduce. I wont have her in
my house.
Kharl repressed a sigh and bit back a retort. Then pull out that apprentices 
pallet by the rear bench. You dont have to have her upstairs.
Why how could you?
I was supposed to leave her there, where she could have been attacked again or 
killed? Or died from the rain and cold?
Charee sighed. No. Suppose you couldnt do that. There was only the slightest 
hint of emphasis on the word you.
Isnt Father Jorum always saying that his god wants us to help
strangers and those who cannot help themselves? asked Kharl.
Arthal and Warrl exchanged quick glances.
Put her on the pallet, Charee said. Ill get a blanket to put under her head 
and some damp cloths to clean away the blood.
Kharl waited as his consort pulled out the apprentices pallet, which had not 
been used in years, and wiped it off with a cloth. Then he eased the 
womanlittle more than a girl, he thought, and certainly slender and light as 
oneonto the pallet. Then he put the staff against the wall.
The cloak slipped slightly.
Charees hand went to her mouth. Oh
I said shed been attacked. She might need a dry cover of some sort.
Thatd be best. Ill be back in a moment. Warrl, you come with me! Charee drew 
herself up and headed for the stairs, bustling up them in a way that conveyed 
offended dignity. Warrl followed.
Ohhhh The young womans eyes opened for a moment, then closed.
Arthal looked closely at the uncovered womans exposed thigh, then away, almost 
guiltily, Kharl thought.
What do you know about this? Kharl partly lifted the woman and eased the pack 
off her shoulders, lowering her as gently as he could. Then he placed the pack 
next to the wall beside the black staff.
Do you know who did it? He straightened and looked at Arthal.
No, ser.
, Kharl continued to stare at his son.
Some of the fellows, the ones who work in the carpentry shop on the piers, they 
were saying that she was really good-looking, and theyd like to get her alone 
but that was all I heard.
They said a lot more, but nothing about hurting her? pressed Kharl. Or did 
they
No, ser. They didnt say anything like that. In fact, Derket said that she 
could be real dangerous. He once saw a woman from Reduce with a staff take down 
three of Lord Norths guards
Kharl had the feeling Arthal was telling the truth, and some of the tenseness he 
felt lessened.
Charee reappeared, carrying warm cloths and a thin brown coverlet. You two 
Dont you have some fancy barrels to finish, Kharl?
The cooper nodded and stepped back. You can bring those buckets over to the 
finishing bench, Arthal.
Yes, Da.
After leaving the injured girl to Charees ministrations, Kharl turned to his 
workbench. There, he thinned, then stirred the sealant gently before he began to 
apply it to the black oak fifth-barrels. He could hear Charee murmuring.
 dont care much blackstaffers sending women shouldnt come to this Now 
just take it easy, dear
Where?
Youre safe now. Youre at the coopers. Kharl found you in the ser-viceway 
Youd been hurt just rest. Charee looked across the shop at Kharl. Ill be 
getting her some water.
Kharl decided against mentioning ale, not when they were short themselves. Im 
not going anywhere.
As Charee headed up the steps once more, Arthal cleared his throat.
Ah Da?
Oh Arthal. You can get out some more shooksthe red oak onesand youll have 
to use the ladder because theyre in the upper front section of the racks. Ill 
need you to sharpen the knives, the shave, and the blade in the planer. After I 
put one coat on the fine fifth-barrels, then well work on those shooks while 
the barrels are drying.
Charee reappeared with a chipped mug. She went to the prostrate woman and held 
the water to her lips. Just a few sips at first. Thats
it
Kharl took out the finish brush and dipped it into the sealant, deftly but 
slowly coating the interior of the barrel, something he would not have done for 
a vintners barrel, but how and whether a barrel needed sealing depended on what 
the final use was, and when an alchemist like Yualt wanted a sealed black oak 
barrel with spigots, Kharl provided the best he could, even if he had no exact 
idea what Yualt intended to store in it.
Hed almost finished the first barrel when Charee stepped up to his shoulder, 
and whispered, Shes asleep. Got a knot on the back of her head. Shes still 
seeing two instead of one. Say you should keep em awake, but I couldnt.
We can only do what we can, Kharl pointed out.
Beasts muttered Charee. She shouldnt be going around like that, but no 
excuse to knock around anyone that way.
After I finish the barrels, Ill send Arthal off to tell the Watch.
Youll do no such thing, Kharl. The Watch can do nothing. There
was a scrap of velvet in her hand. Who wears velvet? You think theyll find 
anyone? And then all of Brysta will know youve been harboring a blackstaffer. 
You think that will help business?
Kharl knew she was right. What color velvet?
Doesnt matter. After a moment, Charee added, Dark blue, almost black.
I wont tell the Watch.
See that you dont, and Ill be telling Arthal and Warrl to say nothing. The 
sooner shes well and out of here, the happier Ill be.
Kharl already knew that. The fact that Charee didnt want to say anything was 
another indication of how worried his consort was.
After Charee went back upstairs to work on the piecework for Fyona, Kharl 
motioned to Arthal.
Yes, Da? Arthal stepped away from the stacked shooks. I got down enough for 
two barrels, and finished sharpening the planer blade and clamped it back in 
place.
Kharl didnt point out that Arthal had been done for some time. You need to run 
some errands. Smythal, first. We need the iron blanks for four flour barrels.
Hell want something.
Kharl took five coppers from his purse and handed them to Arthal. Then go out 
to the mill and see what the timber looks like. Dont talk to Vetrad, just see 
if his racks, especially the oak racks, are full or empty. And make sure that 
the billets in our section have been turned. If he asks what you want, say that 
you were checking the billets, then beg some scrap oak and tell him you need it 
for detailing practice.
Arthal nodded.
Before you go, your mother wants a word with you.
The youth frowned.
She told me she wanted to talk to you. Now, go, and dont dawdle, but your 
mother first.
Yes, ser.
After Arthal went upstairs, then came down and left, Kharl finished sealing the 
first barrel, then the second. As he wiped the brush as clean as he could, then 
dipped it into the small container of solvent, he became conscious that the 
blackstaffer had awakened and was looking at him.
He left the brush in the open solvent jar and turned.
What are you doing? The words were fluent, but strangely accented.
Kharl glanced over to the pallet where the young woman lay, her head propped up 
slightly on an old blanket that Charee must have provided. Im finishing a 
fancy fifth-barrel. He paused. How are you feeling?
My head is splitting. It looks like there are two of you sometimes. Most of my 
body hurts. They werent gentle.
Kharl looked around the shop, but, for the moment, no one else was there. Do 
you know who they were?
I dont know anyone here. I just arrived two days ago. Id left the tavern, and 
there were two men. Id never seen them. They wore their clothes were fancier
Dark velvet mayhap?
Their tunics were well cut, and they both had blades. But I was ready for 
them. I didnt see the third one, and he hit me in the head with something from 
behind She swallowed. Thirsty She reached for the old chipped mug Charee 
had left. Her hands trembled as she lifted it and drank.
Kharl could see thin lines of wetness along her cheeks, but he said nothing.
After several small swallows, she set down the mug, using both hands, and lay 
back. Her eyes closed.
Kharl watched for a moment, then finished cleaning the brush. He moved to the 
workbench where he checked the settings on the planer. He watched the 
blackstaffer as he began to pump the foot pedal, but she did not stir, despite 
the whirring of the planer when he guided the first red oak shook into position 
to rough-shape it into a stave. He was halfway through the staves for the third 
flour barrel when he could see the young woman began to wake again, but she said 
nothing, and he continued to work.
He had almost finished another set of staves when Charee came down the steps 
with a chamber pot, looking long at Kharl. The cooper finished shaping the stave 
he was working on and stopped pumping the foot pedal. He stepped back and walked 
to the front of the shop, then outside.
Standing before the window, taking in the breeze from the harbor, he still 
couldnt understand why the young swells had beaten the young woman so badly. 
Was it just because she had resisted their advances, or
because she was a blackstaffer? He wondered if it had been the same pair that 
had tried to force themselves on young Sanyle. If it had been, they were truly a 
bad lot, and if it hadnt been, there were all too many rotten young swells 
around. Kharl didnt like either possibility, not that there was much he could 
do.
VI
When Kharl came down to the shop early the next morning, he found that Charee 
had been there earlier, and that the blackstaffer was propped into a sitting 
position, sipping hot cider, the coverlet across her legs and midsection. The 
bruise on her cheek, one he hadnt noticed before, had begun to show a yellowish 
shade along with the purple.
How are you doing, young woman?
My name is Jenevra. You are Kharl?
Thats right. Kharl.
I am better, but I am still seeing two of you at times. My head still aches.
Youll need to rest for a time, I think.
I did not need this, Jenevra said. I should have been more careful.
With that, Kharl silently agreed, as he readjusted the blade on the planer. Then 
he tested the foot pedal, and moved the carry-cart with the red oak shooks next 
to the planer where he could easily reach the shooks. He glanced toward the 
stairs, but neither Warrl nor Arthal had yet appeared. He snorted quietly to 
himself.
Jenevra watched, without saying a word, just occasionally sipping the cooling 
cider.
Why do you blackstaffers come to Brysta? Kharl asked, moving back to the 
planer.
Many go to Candar and some to Hamor. A few go to Austra, she replied. We must 
go somewhere.
Kharl didnt understand that at all, and his face must have shown it, even to 
Jenevras blurred vision.
If we do not accept the tenets of order, as set forth in the book of order, and 
judged by the Council, and by the Institute, then we must undertake a 
dangergeldthats a trip away from Reduce to learn who we are and where we 
should fit in the world.
Fancy way of throwing you out if you dont agree, sounds like to me, Kharl 
replied. Dont go along, and out you go.
Sometimes it is, and sometimes people return with greater understanding.
Id wager not many return.
For a time, Jenevra was silent. Finally, she spoke. That may be true. There are 
always those in any town or city who do not fit in. Is it not kinder to allow 
them a chance, rather than executing or enslaving them?
They might not fit anywhere, and they may end up being killed elsewhere. People 
anywhere dont much care for those who are different.
You dont think much of people, do you? she asked gently.
I know what I see. For every kind act, theres one or more not so kind. People 
talk kindness. Dont always act that way.
I suppose kindness and unkindness must balance, like order and chaos.
You dont sound so certain about that, Kharl said.
Im too young to be certain.
Kharl laughed. Most young-uns are certain. Only when we get older that we see 
that naughts as sure as we thought.
Jenevras eyes moved to the right, looking past Kharl.
He nodded to her and turned to see Arthal almost tiptoeing down the steps. 
Arthal! I was wondering when youd be coming down. You can take the hollowing 
knife and smooth the inner side of the staves on the ones Ive already shaped.
Ah Id thought Id well Derket was saying that they might be looking for a 
carpenters apprentice at the ship works. It pays a half silver an eightday.
You think youd find that work more pleasing than being a mere cooper?
Da the shops good for but one of us, and Warrls better at it already than I 
am. Arthal did not quite meet his fathers gaze.
Kharl waited for a moment, then nodded. Mayhap you ought to go see, then.
Youll let me?
Arthal, I cant make you be a cooper. Go and see.
The young man looked at Kharl, then said, They might not want me.
You wont know that, will you, less you ask.
No, ser.
Then go and ask. But when youre done, come on back here, unless they offer you 
a position right then.
Yes, ser. Arthal nodded and was gone almost before his words died away.
You dont think theyll take him, do you? asked Jenevra.
I dont know. Know its harder to get a position than he thinks, but hes got 
more skill than he wants to admit. Kharl picked up the first of the red oak 
shooks, hoping that someone else would come in before long with an order for 
more barrels. Senstad had ordered twenty barrels for harvesttime, and that was 
good, except it would be four to six eightdays before Kharl could collect. 
Korlan had asked for another thirty, but, again, not until the end of harvest, 
and that was a good five eightdays away. Kharl would have to start soon, but he 
didnt have enough of the seasoned oak billets for all of them, and that meant 
more golds to Vetradas Vetrad had told Arthal.
Aryl had been in the shop three times, talking about barrels for his apples, but 
hed wanted them for almost less than the cost of the oak and iron.
Warrl had long since gone to his lessons, and Charee had left with her stitchery 
for Fyona, and Jenevra had drifted into a dozing sleep by the time Kharl had 
finished turning the shooks into rough staves. He checked the hollowing knife 
and began to work on smoothing and fine-shaping the staves. Hed finished the 
staves for one barrel and was working on the second, when he saw Charee coming 
back into the shop.
His consort slipped up to him, and said in a whisper, Kharl youve got to get 
her out of here.
Her names Jenevra.
I dont care what her name is, Charee replied. Fyona told me that Mallamet 
was going to put a complaint before the Crafters Council that youre using the 
blackstaffers magic on your barrels.
Thats stupid. The poor girl cant even see straight yet. Mallamets a poor 
excuse for a cooper who just wants to cause me trouble.
That well may be but if the Council decides youre using order-magery in 
support of a craft
How about tomorrow morning? Kharl said quietly. You could walk her down to 
Father Jorums, and she could rest there for the day. If Jenevra werent much 
better in the morning, perhaps he could persuade Charee to let her stay another 
day. He didnt want to think about what might happen after that day.
Why not now?
She cant even sit up for long without getting dizzy.
First thing tomorrow, Charee said. Ill make sure Father Jorum will be 
around, but I wont let him know why. But it will be first thing in the 
morning.
After breakfast, Kharl said.
After breakfast, but no later. Charee headed for the stairs, carrying another 
bundle of fabric and thread.
Kharl looked at the dozing blackstaffer, then slowly lifted the hollowing knife 
once more.
VII
In the early afternoon, somewhat to Kharls surprise, a lanky man ambled into 
the cooperage, an unpleasant odor clinging to him, for all of his neat and clean 
appearance, although his leather trousers bore stains that had clearly resisted 
all efforts at fullering. His heavy boots thudded on the floor.
Kharl set down the drawing knife and went to meet him.
You Kharl?
That I am. How might I help you?
Im looking for slack cooperage thats close to tight. Heard you were the best 
at that. The man gestured at the range of barrels on display. Those look to be 
tight.
They are, but Ive just finished a few slack barrels out of red oak. Theyre 
here in the back.
Be pleased to see them.
The two men walked to the back of the cooperage, past Arthal, who was slowly, as 
always, hollowing a red oak stave, and Jenevra, who was almost invisible against 
the wall and had drifted back into sleep.
Good slack work you see? Kharl gestured to the red oak barrel, open-topped, 
but otherwise completed.
Might I handle it?
Kharl nodded.
The other man inspected the barrel carefully, paying particular attention to the 
joints and the iron hoops. Finally, he straightened. How much?
A silver a barrel.
Mallamet sells them for eight coppers.
He does. Theyre not as tight.
For ten, nine silvers, offered the man.
Nine and five coppers, countered Kharl.
Nine and four, offered the other.
Done.
You have three here, I see. When could you have the other seven?
I have eight ready now. The others are on the other side.
Better yet. Five now, and five in two eightdays? Ill pay you six silvers and 
four now, and the rest when I pick up the others.
That would be good. Kharl paused. I must apologize, ser, but since we have 
not done business before
The man laughed. We have not. I had thought you might have guessed. Im 
Werwal.
The renderer? I have heard of you.
And I you. That is why I am here. Werwal counted out the coins. My wagon will 
be here shortly for the five barrels.
Theyll be ready.
With a smile, Werwal bowed slightly and left.
Kharl was smiling as well. The copper hed given Jekat had been well spent, even 
if that had not been his intention. Hed have to remember to slip another to the 
cheerful urchin. Jekat had probably given him more business than his own sons.
The cooper shook his head, sadly, and headed back toward the staves hed been 
fine-drawing.
Arthal coughed. Da he smelled.
Thats not surprising. Hes a renderer.
Shouldnt let him in
He bought ten barrels, Arthal. He cant help the smell. Thats what he does. 
Someone has to do it.
Stinks
Arthals mutter was so low that Kharl decided to ignore it as he went back to 
work. If he corrected Arthal on every word his son said, these days, he 
reflected, hed do little enough coopering and Arthal would get even more angry 
than he always seemed to be.
By late afternoon, Werwals man Sikal had arrived with a small and smellywagon 
and collected the barrels, and Arthal had gone with Charee to the market square. 
Kharl was getting the forge ready to set some hoops when the door to the 
cooperage opened.
He did not know the man who stepped into the shop, but the cooper stopped 
pumping the bellows in the small forge and stepped forward past the planer. He 
skirted Jenevra, who looked up silently, and moved to the sharp-featured figure 
in the rich brown tunic.
Might I help you, ser? asked Kharl, trying to determine what sort of merchant 
the man might be.
You might be Kharl, the cooper? The mans muddy brown eyes flicked up to the 
racks of billets, then toward the stairs in the rear, before settling on Kharl.
That I am. And you might be?
Let us just say that I have an interest in barrels. Special barrels. A faint 
smile appeared on the slender but muscular mans lips.
Kharl smelled scent on the man, more than even a wealthy man should use. 
Lavender, he thought. Large or small, slack or tight?
I was thinking of large slack barrels, for winter transport of seasonal game, 
and I understand such barrels could hold ice above the game, that would keep the 
game cold.
Thats possible, but only for an eightday in harvest. In winter, the ice would 
keep for a season, or longer.
I would be interested in a large barrel. The man gestured toward the hogshead 
in the window. Could you make one a third smaller than the largest there?
That is possible.
Good. The man in brown flashed a smile, then slipped around Kharl and studied 
the shop, moving toward the tool rack. His eyes took in the tools, implement by 
implement, then the forge and the open
hearth that held the fire pot. His eyes passed over the blackstaffer on the 
pallet against the wall and returned to Kharl. You have a well-laid-out 
cooperage.
Thank you. When would you like the hogshead?
I will have to think about that. When I return, well talk about the details. I 
needed to know whether it was possible. He bowed, then turned.
Kharl watched as the other left. He shook his head. For all his words, the man 
hadnt felt like someone who bought barrels. The lavender scent suggested a 
bravo of some sort, but Kharl hadnt the faintest idea why a bravo would find a 
cooperage of interest. It wasnt as though Kharl had large stocks of coins 
stashed away.
That man, said Jenevra, he was evil.
Is that something blackstaffers can tell? Kharl asked.
Not always, she replied. I wouldnt be here if we could. But that one, he 
carries the white of chaos around him like a cloak.
Hes a white mage?
No. Its not the same. His is the chaos of murder and destruction.
Why would one such as that, if Jenevra were indeed correct, be visiting a 
cooper? He hadnt even really looked at the blackstaffer, or at Kharl. You 
think hes an assassin? Or a thief?
Jenevra shrugged, then winced. He carries chaos. He could be an assassin or an 
armsman, or he could be an outland merchant who sails close to the wind. Or he 
could be a thief, or anything else. He is evil, whatever else he may be.
Thats not much help. Kharl paused. You speak well. You speak too well for a 
peasants daughter or for someone who works at hard labor.
I do? That may be because the Brethren want us prepared when we travel 
elsewhere.
The Brethren?
The Council of Reduce. They decide how we are prepared. That is, if your family 
can pay for the training.
Yours could, Kharl said.
It was difficult, but they did not wish me ill prepared. She laughed, 
ironically, a hint of bitterness behind the words. Much good it has done meor 
them.
You were trained with the staff?
I was. Some are trained with blades, or axes, or other weapons for 
self-protection.
Are all women trained with the staff?
No. It is what weapons are in accord with what we are.
In accord? The womans words were more than a little puzzling. How could a 
weapon be in accord with a person?
Every person growsor comes to be orderedin a certain fashion. Edged weapons 
make some uneasy with them. So a staff is better. It is not good to fight your 
weapon when you are trying to defend yourself.
Although her explanation was strange, the last words made sense to Kharl. He 
certainly could not fight his tools if he wanted to make good barrels, and he 
had no trouble seeing that it could apply to weapons as well. While he would 
have liked to talk longer, talking would not help get the barrels done, and 
those needed doing so that, if other business arrived, he would still have the 
slack barrels for harvesttime.
Kharl nodded, then turned back to the forge. He still needed to finish shaping 
and riveting the hoops for the remaining oak barrels that Werwal had ordered and 
for the ones that Wassyt the miller would be wanting, sooner or later. If the 
harvest were really good, Rensan might even buy a few if Mallamet couldnt 
supply themwhich was certainly likely, since Mallamet was neither that good a 
cooper nor that productive. He was cheap, though, Kharl had to admit.
The cooper also hoped that Jenevra felt much better in the morning. If she did 
not Kharl pushed that thought away. He had worries enough.
VIII
When Kharl hurried down to the cooperage after his breakfast, he found that 
Jenevra had turned so that she was sitting with her back against the wall. She 
was dressed, and wearing her boots once more, although her face was still pale.
Youre going to have to move today Kharl began.
Charee told me when she brought me breakfast and my clothes. She
repaired them. Shes very good with a needle. Jenevra smiled wanly for a moment 
before the expression faded. Im much better. Your consort does not like my 
being here.
Kharl didnt reply.
It is clear. She thinks I will hurt your business. If I stayed, I probably 
would. No one likes having blackstaffers around. They told us that, but I did 
not believe it then.
In a few moments, Kharl finally said, unable to refute her words, were going 
to take you out to Father Jorums
One of the one-god priests? He will not be that pleased.
They preach kindness to all
Except to those from Reduce.
I have never heard him say anything against Reduce, Kharl protested, although 
he seldom accompanied Charee to the end-day services.
What is not said
Both Jenevra and Kharl looked up at the sharp cracking sound, followed by the 
tinkling clank of glass falling on stone. His eyes darted toward the front 
window of his shop, but all the leaded glass panes were in place.
He frowned.
A muffled low boom rumbled past him, shaking the walls. One of the shooks left 
on the workbench fell to the floor with a flat, slapping sound.
Jenevra started to rise, then put her hand down to steady herself. Her face 
paled even more, until it was sheet-white.
Stay put! commanded Kharl. Youre still weak.
Fire! Fire at the scriveners!
Fire! The second voice was that of Tyrbel.
Kharl looked at Jenevra. You just stay there, unless the fire spreads here, and 
then you get out as fast as you can.
Yes, master cooper.
Kharl didnt argue that he wasnt a master cooper, because hed never had enough 
golds to pay the Crafters Guild. He didnt have time to explain as he rushed 
out of the cooperage. Outside and to the west a line of men had formed up, 
passing buckets from the fire barrel some forty cubits farther west from the 
door of Tyrbels scriptorium. Kharl could see that there werent enough buckets, 
not to stop the fierce flames darting from the broken glass of Tyrbels display 
window. From the
jagged-edged hole in the display window, along with the flames, came lines of 
thick black smoke, oily-smelling smoke.
A tall manGharanthrew the first bucket of water on the flames, and was 
rewarded with a hissingand very little diminution of flame.
Kharl looked for the nearest sand barrel, before belatedly realizing that it was 
at the front of his own cooperage, except on the east side, next to Derdans. He 
dashed for it and pulled off the cover, fumbling for the scoop bucket inside. As 
quickly as he could, he filled the bucket with the damp sand, then ran back 
toward the display window of the
scriptorium.
Gharan was about to throw another bucket of water, and Kharl waited, then 
followed with the sand. This time, the flames from the bottom of the display 
area, where the books were burning fiercely, actually subsided. Kharl hurried 
back to the sand barrel.
Between the flames and the men running to and fro, and the urgency of combating 
the fire, Kharl didnt know how many trips he had made before the display area 
was merely scorched and blackened wood, with water and sand oozing everywhere. 
Most of the leaded-glass panes in Tyrbels display window had been broken, and 
shards of glass littered the stones of the narrow sidewalk. The volumes that had 
been on display were charred scraps.
The odor of charcoal and soot was strong, but Kharl could still smell, if 
faintly, another acrid scent. He just stood for a moment, breathing hard, his 
eyes watering as he looked at the ruined front of the scriptorium.
Gharan looked at the cooper. Good thinking with the sand.
Had to try something. Water wasnt working very well. The weaver nodded. 
Behind him so did Hamyl the potter.
Tyrbel moved toward Kharl. His face was ashen. Someone set it. They broke the 
glass. The scrivener shook his head slowly. Ten golds worth of work gone. 
You know, I was going to give the oneThe Book of Godly PrayerI was going to 
give it to Father Jorum. Id promised it to him.
I know, Kharl replied. You told me. He paused. It the fire smelled like 
oils. Thats why I went for the sand.
Why would anyone why? Tyrbel sounded both puzzled and defeated. Im just a 
scrivener. I dont understand
Give way for the Watch! Way for the Watch! The call came from farther down 
Crafters Lane, toward the harbor.
Trust the Watch to show up after honest men have already put out the fire, 
groused Gharan from behind the cooper and the scrivener Where were they when 
the fire started? Why bother now?
It didnt just start, Tyrbel repeated himself. Someone set it, but why? Who 
would do such a terrible thing?
Someone who didnt like the documents you were copying for trials before the 
justicers? suggested Kharl.
But why would anyone thats not personal. Lord West likes my work, old as 
hes getting. Any scrivener would do the same for who-
ever-
Way for the Watch!
Kharl glanced toward the approaching armsmen, eight of them, with a young-faced 
captain, scarcely more than a boy, or so he looked to Kharl. They were less than 
thirty cubits away. The cooper wondered why there were so many for a fire, and 
how the officer had gathered that number so quickly.
No! screamed a woman.
Kharl looked away from the oncoming Watch. He recognized the voice, if 
belatedly. It was Charees voice.
Charee came running out of the cooperage, blood smeared across her blouse. 
Shes dead. Shes dead! Her voice broke with the words.
Whos dead? blurted Gharan from behind Kharl and Tyrbel.
She is the blackstaffer someone cut her throat.
Jenevra? Shed dead? Kharl said stupidly. But she was fine.
Shes dead, Charee said. Her throats cut. She looked at Kharl. I told you 
shed be trouble. I told you. I told you.
She was barely more than a girl. She hadnt done anything, Kharl protested. 
Why how?
I knew. But no you had to do things the way you always do.
Silence!
Kharl turned from Charee to see that the armsmen of the Watch were but a few 
cubits from the group in front of the cooperage and scriptorium. After several 
moments, the words and murmurs died away.
You! In the gray!
Kharl could feel his stomach tightening as he saw the young captain of the 
Watchthe same young swell who had been pawing Sanyleand
possibly one of those who had attacked and beaten Jenevra. The captain jabbed 
his finger at Kharl. You!
Yes, ser?
You own this cooperage?
Yes, ser.
Take him away. He killed the girl inside. Behind the captains voice was a 
hint of something, something almost like satisfaction, Kharl
thought.
Three armsmen moved out from behind the captain and toward Kharl, each with a 
long truncheon at the ready.
No! I didnt kill her. I didnt kill anyone. Kharl stepped back.
Thats what they all say. The captain made a motion.
Kharl took another step backward. Youve got the wrong person. I was out here 
fighting the fire. Everyone here knows that.
A convenient diversion, no doubt. The young captain smiled. You and all your 
friends down here need to learn some respect for the law, and for those who rule 
Brysta.
I didnt do it, Kharl protested.
Take him, snapped the captain, still smiling.
Kharl wondered if he should try to run.
Then a searing blow struck him from behind. He tried to turn, and he was struck 
again.
No! screamed someone.
That was the last word Kharl heard before he toppled into blackness.
IX
here was a low groan, then another. After a time, Kharl realized that he was the 
one groaning. He closed his mouth, and the sound stopped. Around him was 
darkness. Underneath him was something hardvery hard, slimy, and damp. His head 
was pounding. He levered one hand under him, then the other. His hand slipped, 
and he tried again. It took him more tries than he could count to get into a 
sitting position.
He put his hand to the back of his head, gently, wincing as his
fingers touched the huge lump there. As he lowered his hand, in the dimness that 
was like night, he could barely make out the dark substance on his fingertips 
blood.
His eyes took in the area around him. He was in a small, stonewalled chamber 
with a heavy door that had but the smallest peephole, through which a faint glow 
of light seeped, so little that he could not tell whether it was day or night.
What you in here for?
Kharl turned his head quickly, and more pain lanced through his skull. The words 
came from a figure sitting propped against the outside stone wall.
They say I killed someone. I didnt.
Thats what everyone says. The shadowy figure cackled. None of us did 
nothin, we didnt, and some of us didnt.
Kharl started to respond, but then winced as pain stabbed through his skull.
Dont matter what you did. Justicers going to say you did, less he finds 
someone else who did. That doesnt happen much.
Kharl eased himself across the damp and slimy stone floor to the other side of 
the cell, leaning back gingerly, careful not to bang his head against the rough 
wall stones.
You dont look like an assassin or a docker, offered the other man.
Im a cooper. Kharl took a deeper breath and wished he had not. The air was 
rank with the odors of unwashed bodies, filth, and worse.
Cooper, huh. You a good cooper?
I thought so.
Whyd you kill someone, risk losing all that?
I didnt, Kharl said tiredly. My neighbors shop caught on fire. I was 
fighting the fire, and someone cut the throat of one of those black-staffers in 
my shop.
Ha! Theyll hang you quick as they can. Lord West, he dont want to tell the 
black demons that the murderer got away. Dont want them shelling Brysta. No, 
ser. That he dont. Hang anyone he can to stop that.
Kharl could see the truth in what the other had said. But what could he do? 
They dont let anyone see you here?
You jesting? Wont see anyone till you go before the justicer. Thatd be 
Reynol, cause he hangs everyone, and thats what theyll want. Four 
sentencesthats all they got. Flogging, time in the quarries, cut off a hand
or foot or both, or hang you. You, theyll hang. Dont matter you did it or
not.
Youre cheerful. Kharl swallowed.
Yep. Cheerful Kaj, thats what they call me.
What about you? Why are you here?
Me? I called that pigswill Egen a bawdson.
For that, youre in here?
Lucky to be alive. Egens Lord Wests youngest, captain in the Watch. Likes 
girls, young girls. Didnt know he was watchin said he wasnt man enough to 
handle a real woman. Whole tavern laughed. Didnt say nothing. When I came out 
later, his men were waitin and
here I am.
Kharl had the sinking feeling that Egen and the young swell whod attacked 
Sanyle and Jenevra were the same man. There were too many coincidences far too 
many.
He could feel himself beginning to sweat, and with the nausea he was feeling 
intermittently, he wondered if he could hold his guts in.
Egen real pissprick and his daddy just looks the other way
That didnt surprise Kharl.
X
A day passed, and then another. Kharl thought it might have been three days 
since the fire, and since someone had killed Jenevra. That was if hed only been 
knocked out for less than a day. He walked back and forth, if taking three small 
steps between walls could be called walking. He stopped and coughed, then walked 
some more.
That wont do any good, observed Kaj from the corner of the cell the opposite 
outside corner from the slop bucket. I know, Kharl replied, but I cant just 
sit here.
Might as well. Not goin anywhere. Except dancin on air.
If its so important to hang me, Kharl said, why hasnt anyone done 
anything?
You in a hurry to get strung up? asked Kaj.
No.
Then dont ask for it.
But, Id think
Simple. They brought you in on sixday. Justicers and lords like long end-days. 
Lord West is gettin old. Needs the days off to keep his sons at bay. Todays 
oneday, I figure. Takes a day for the scriveners to write up things formal like. 
Maybe longer. They dont hurry once youre locked away. They wont come for you 
till tomorrow, earliest.
What about you?
Leave me here for another eightday. Drag me out and flog me, if Im lucky 
Egens still a pissprick.
Why doesnt Lord West rein him in?
Cause hes a smart pissprick. Never gets caught. Always brings you in 
law-like. Me, drunk too much. Claimed I was soused and disorderly. Was lucky. 
Hed been really put out, and hed a planted a ladys brooch or somethin on me. 
Thats what he did to Fliser. Twice. Second time, they hung him.
Lord West knows that?
Knows some of it. Doesnt care, Id say. Older son, Osten, hes more like his 
father. Rotten, but not all the way through like Egen. What they say anyway
Kharl wanted to shake his head. Hed always suspected those sorts of things 
happened, but when hed suggested it to Charee, shed have nothing to do with 
his suggestions. For her, all that mattered was that the streets were orderly, 
no matter how Lord West and his justicers got the job done.
Not so bad as Gorl, though
Kharl was certain that he didnt want to hear about Gorl, but there was no way 
to stop the garrulous Kaj, and he supposed, no reason to. All Kharl could do was 
to walk a few steps and fret, or sit and stew. He tried not to breathe deeply as 
he walked back across the cell.
XI
Despite Kajs predictions, the gaolers did not come for Kharl until threeday, 
slightly before midmorning. They took a bucket and splashed water over his hands 
and face and let him dry both with a small rough towel. Then they bound his 
hands before him and marched him up the narrow stone staircase. He climbed three 
flights of steps with centers hollowed by years of wear before they reached a 
door that led out into the courtyard of the Justicers Hall. The sky was gray, 
threatening rain, but the stone pavement was dry. Kharl glanced at the gallows 
scaffold at the north end of the courtyard, and below it, the flogging frames.
How had it all come to pass? All hed done was try to help two women and a 
neighbor, and he was going to be hanged for a killing he
hadnt done?
The unseasonably cool wind carried a sour odor to and around Kharl, a smell 
similar to rotting fish, even as he kept looking at the scaffold.
Youll be seeing that soon enough, fellow. One of the gaolers armsmen said, 
yanking Kharl to start him across the courtyard toward the narrow door at the 
back of the Hall.
Kharl stumbled, then caught his balance, walking deliberately. The armsmen did 
not try to hurry him. When they reached the outer door, one stepped ahead and 
opened it. Inside, they guided Kharl along a narrow corridor that ended at 
another door, which the same armsman opened, and which led into a foyer. On the 
left side of the foyer was a single set of double doors, through which the three 
proceeded.
The chamber in which Kharl found himself was large, but not so large as the 
outside of the Justicers Hall would have suggested. The width was about thirty 
cubits, the length fifty, and the ceiling height was roughly ten. At the end of 
the chamber were two daises, one behind the other, each holding a podium desk of 
age-darkened white oak that had turned a deep brownish gold. At the seat behind 
the lower dais sat a round-faced, blocky, and gray-haired man with a square-cut 
gray beard who wore a blue velvet gown, trimmed in black.
The single seat on the upper dais, its high, carved back gilded and upholstered 
in blue velvet, was vacant.
Kharl and the two armsmen stopped beside a heavyset man in a blue-and-gold 
tunic, who looked to the armsmen. You should have brought him sooner. Then he 
lifted the heavy staff and rapped it on the stones of the floor three times, 
hard enough that the sound echoed through the chamber. All the murmurs died 
away. All stand!
Since Kharl was on his feet, he merely kept standing.
Is there one who would take the Justicers Challenge? intoned the bailiff, 
barely pausing before continuing. There being none, the cooper Kharl is here, 
accused of murder, to be brought before justice!
Kharl wondered what the Justicers Challenge was, and who might take itor 
whybut no one said anything about it.
The man at the lower dais stood, his eyes fixing on the armsmen and Kharl.
Bailiff, intoned the justicer after he stood, bring forth the cooper Kharl.
Thats you, murmured one of the armsmen. Step firm.
Escorted by the two armsmen, Kharl walked to the armless chair set in the open 
space forward of the rows of benches. Standing before the benches to the right 
were several armsman and the Watch captain who had ordered Kharl taken. Before 
the benches to the left were Charee, Father Jorum, and Mallamet, the cooper 
whose shop was on Eighth Cross and Cargo Road.
Keep standing, whispered the armsman.
You, the cooper Kharl, have been charged with the murder of the blackstaffer 
Jenevra. What you say or believe is not a question. We are here to do justice, 
and that justice is to determine whether you killed that blackstaffer. The 
justicer cleared his throat, then seated himself.
From behind Kharl came a rap of the staff. All may sit.
Sit down, hissed the armsman.
Kharl sat, arms still bound before him. He looked at the justicer, but the man 
never seemed to look back at him.
Justice calls upon Egen, captain of the Watch, called the justicer.
The captain stood and stepped forward until he was but four paces back from the 
dais. He bowed. Lord Justicer Reynol.
You arrested the cooper. Please tell the Hall what happened.
Yes, Lord Justicer. Egen bowed again before speaking. It was last
sixday. Someone rang the fire bells, and we proceeded up Crafters Lane. When we 
arrived at the fireit was at the scriptoriumthe crafters and the scrivener had 
quenched the fire, but someone was screaming. She said something like, No! 
Shes dead. You cut her throat. That was what I heard.
Thats not Kharl started.
Silence! You will be heard, cooper, added the justicer. Continue, if you 
will, Captain Egen.
Wed come because of the fire. Sometimes, thieves set them, and sometimes 
people try to loot shops. So, when I heard that, I went into the coopers shop 
and found the blackstaffer. She was on the floor, and her throat had been cut. 
Egen inclined his head slightly. There was a bloody knife next to the body. The 
coopers apprentice admitted that the knife belonged to the cooper, that it was 
a drawing knife. His consort had accused him in public. He tried to escape, and 
it took three armsmen to subdue him.
Reynol nodded. That will be all for the moment. Please remain here
in the Hall.
Yes, Lord Justicer. Egen bowed again, politely.
Charee, consort of Kharl, please stand and come forward.
Charee stood. Her steps toward the dais were unsteady. She did not look at 
Kharl, and her eyes were fixed on the floor stones before her.
You are Charee, consort of Kharl. Is that correct?
Yes Lord.
You understand that you must tell the truth, and that if you do not, you also 
will be punished?
Yes, Lord. Charees voice trembled.
How did the blackstaffer come to the cooperage?
Kharl carried her in. Shed been beaten, bad, ser, left in the ser-viceway to 
die. We couldnt leave her on the street, but Charee looked down.
Go on.
Um blackstaffers Id heard tales and I told Kharl she could stay, but only 
in the shop, not in our quarters up the stairs, and that she had to leave soon 
as she could.
What did he say?
He said we couldnt throw her out on the street.
What happened after that?
We put her on the old apprentices pallet in the shop, and I cleaned her up, 
and got her some blankets. She slept some, then woke up, but she couldnt see 
proper. Said she was seeing two instead of one
How long was she in the shop?
Lets see, ser. It was fourday when Kharl found her, and sixday when when the 
fire happened.
Tell us what happened that morning.
I brought down some bread and cider, and the blackstaffers clothes. Id mended 
them. I helped her dress. See we were going to take her to Father Jorum so she 
wouldnt be in the shop once she could walk and get around. Then I went upstairs 
to get the morning meal for Kharl and the boys. Kharl ate and came down to the 
shop. A while later, I heard a boom, and people yelling, and then there was 
smoke. I came down and I thought she was lying down except there was blood 
and she wasnt moving, and I ran out front and told everyone.
What did you say? Do you recall the exact words?
I I said I think I said No! Shes dead. Someone cut her throat.
You didnt say that your consort cut her throat?
No, ser. Charee straightened.
Are you certain? Why didnt you?
It well, ser didnt seem hardly likely. He could have just left her. No 
reason for him to bring her home, then cut her throat. Sides, he was out front 
fighting the fire.
After a moment, Reynol nodded. You may return to the bench. I must ask you to 
remain.
The cooper Mallamet, step forward.
The stoop-shouldered older cooper stepped toward the dais with a gait that was 
not quite a shuffle.
Your name?
Mallamet. Im a cooper, honored justicer.
You know you must tell the truth or face punishment?
Yes, ser.
What do you know of the prisoner Kharl?
Hes a cooper, ser. Mallamet looked at the smooth stone floor tiles.
Hes accused of killing a blackstaffer from Reduce. What do you know of this?
He had her in his shop. I knew that, ser. And he was making black
oak barrels. He was using her to use order to make his barrels better than he 
could hisself.
How did you know that?
Everyone knew that.
How did you know that?
Folks at the Tankard were talking about it, how he was workin late, no one 
around, and they heard her chanting stuff.
Lord Wests wizard has inspected those barrels, and there is no additional 
order infused in them.
I was just tellin what I knew.
Did you tell everyone this so that you could take business from the cooper 
Kharl?
Ser?
You heard the question, cooper.
Ser I was just tellin what I heard
Bailiff!
Lord Justicer. The bailiff stepped forward.
Have the cooper Mallamet taken into custody for false witness. Ten lashes.
Armsmen! To the fore!
Ser no, ser. I was just tellin.
Silence!
Kharl just watched, totally puzzled, as two armsmen escorted Mallamet out of the 
Hall of Justice. If the justicer and Lord West wanted to hang Kharl, why were 
they arresting Mallamet? But why had the justicer not asked more questions about 
what had happened?
The cooper Kharl.
Stand, hissed one of the armsmen behind Kharl.
Kharl lurched to his feet, unsteadily. Lord Justicer. He bowed his head, then 
looked up, straight at the justicer.
Earlier, cooper, you had objected to the testimony of Captain Egen. Now, you 
have a chance to tell what happened.
Honored justicer, Kharl began carefully, it all started when I was carrying 
sealant back from Hyesal the apothecarys shop He told the entire story as it 
had happened, ending with,  and when the captain said Id killed her, I tried 
to explain that I hadnt done anything. I didnt run. I didnt do anything 
except I said I didnt do it, and then someone hit me over the head, and I woke 
up in gaol.
How do you explain that the blackstaffer was killed with one of your drawing 
knives?
There were lots of people around the front of the shop, ser. Anyone could have 
walked in. Also, Im not a killer. I mean, I dont know how to use a knife that 
way. I wouldnt know where to start.
Most crafters have a way to defend their shops. What is yours?
I keep a cudgel close by, ser. Its close enough to a forge hammer
And you are a cooper, and that means using a forge. Had you unbanked your forge 
that morning?
No, ser. Charee and I had to walk Jenevrashe was the blackstaffer to Father 
Jorums. I didnt want to waste the charcoal.
Have you anything else to say?
I didnt do it, ser.
But you did try to get away from the armsmen, did you not?
No, ser. I said I didnt do it. I might have backed up one step, but I didnt 
try to get away. They were saying I did something I didnt.
That will be all. Please be seated.
Kharl felt as though the justicer hadnt really paid any attention to his words. 
But there was no way out of the Hall, not with his hands bound, and armsmen 
behind him and all around the Hall.
Lord justicer! The bailiff in gold and blue rapped his staff on the stone 
floor of the chamber.
The justicer looked at the functionary. Yes, bailiff?
Your honor there is a witness. He has a pass from the Quad-rancy.
The frown of the justicer was so fleeting that Kharl would not have seen it had 
he even blinked. Very well. Have him step forward and state his name.
There was a slight sound behind the justicer, and a slender, gray-haired man, 
clean-shaven and in blue velvet, his tunic trimmed in gold, slipped into the 
seat at the higher dais behind the justicer, a seat that had been vacant 
throughout the trial. Even from where he sat, Kharl could see that the newcomer 
was old, and that there were dark circles ringing his deep-set eyes.
The figure who stepped forward from beside the bailiff as a witness was Tyrbel, 
wearing the black robe that he had told Kharl was for appearances before the 
justicers.
State your name.
I am Tyrbel, scrivener of Brysta, your honor of justice. The scrivener
bowed deeply.
What have you to say to what has been offered as evidence, master
scrivener?
What I have to say, your honor of justice, is most plain. Tyrbel looked 
squarely at the justicer. Kharl could not have killed the black-staffer. He is 
a good man, but there is another reason why he could not have killed her. She 
was still alive when he left his cooperage to fight the fire, and he was still 
with me and the others using the buckets when his consort came out to tell him 
that something terrible had happened.
How do you know the blackstaffer was still alive? The justicers face bore 
more curiosity than anger.
I saw her leaning on his workbench through the window when I called for help. 
She was still standing there when Kharl came out.
So your scriptorium was burning, and you had time to watch? The justicers 
sarcasm was scarcely veiled.
Kharl looked at Tyrbel. The scrivener was perfectly calm. What Tyrbel said was 
true. Jenevra had been alive. But Tyrbel had not actually seen that, and Kharl 
had not talked to Tyrbel since the murder.
I only watched for a moment. It was long enough to see that Kharl had heard and 
was coming to help.
Justicer? interjected the clean-shaven and elderly man in the high seat, 
before another word could be said.
Yes, Lord West?
Lord West looked squarely at the scrivener. Are you absolutely certain that the 
cooper could not have turned back and killed the black-staffer?
Yes, Lord. I had barely reached the fire barrel when Kharl was
beside me.
And he had no blood on him? asked the lord.
No, ser.
Does he wear the same garments now as then?
Tyrbel turned and studied Kharl. Yes, ser. They are more soiled, but they are 
the same.
I would note, Lord Justicer, that while there is filth on his tunic, there does 
not seem to be any blood.
It is so noted, replied Reynol.
Lord West sat back, an amused expression on his face.
Kharl didnt know what to think. One moment, he was convinced he would be 
hanged, and the next Lord West was suggesting that he could not have killed 
Jenevra.
Jorum, priest of the Sovereign, please come forward.
Father Jorum rose from one of the benches to the left and walked forward, past 
Kharl.
I will not trouble you with reminders, Jorum. Just answer directly.
Yes, Lord Justicer.
What did the woman Charee say to you about the blackstaffer?
Very little, ser. She said that someone had been hurt and that she wanted them 
to finish recovering away from the cooperage.
Away from the cooperage? Did she say why?
She only said that she didnt want the person to stay at the cooper-age.
She gave no reason?
No, ser. Except she said that she was having trouble with Kharl over it. She 
said that she might ask me to talk to the cooper.
Did you?
No, ser. She never did ask me.
Has she talked to you since?
She came to me on sixday and asked me what to do about her consort. She told me 
that the Watch had taken the body of the blackstaffer and that they had taken 
Kharl. She was very upset.
Did she say anything about the killing?
She only said that she wished it had not happened, that she wished the 
blackstaffer had never come to Brysta, and that she wished that she had not 
allowed the woman even in the cooperage.
Was that all?
She asked for me to pray for her and her children.
You may return to the bench, Jorum.
The priest inclined his head, then stepped back.
Captain Egen, Reynol stated. Approach the dais.
Egen rose, almost languidly, and stepped forward, stopping and bowing.
When you arrived with the Watch, Captain, did anyone have blood on their 
clothing? asked the justicer.
Egen frowned for a moment, as if recalling, before speaking. The
coopers consort did. She was the only one. There was blood on her blouse.
Did you examine the body?
Yes, ser.
How was the blackstaffer killed?
The blackstaffer had a large jagged cut across her neck, ser.
A jagged cut?
Yes, ser.
Did you look at the barrels of the cooper?
Kharl frowned. What did his barrels have to do with anything?
Yes, ser.
Are they well made?
Very well made, ser, in my judgment, but I am not a cooper.
And the cooper was not ill or trembling, or drunk when your men took him into 
custody?
No, ser. He was quite in possession of himself.
You may stand back, captain. The justicer looked to the bailiff. Have the 
woman Charee step forward.
Charee looked from the justicer to the bailiff before stepping toward the dais.
Did you like the blackstaffer?
Charee seemed to step back.
Would you answer the question?
No, ser.
Why not?
Theyre
Theyre what?
Theyre evil
Reynol nodded. Do you ever work with the coopers tools?
No, ser. I see em, but I dont work with them.
Could you explain why you had blood on your blouse?
Blood on me? Cause I saw her lyin there, and I bent down to see what was the 
matter. She was dead.
Are you certain of that? asked the justicer.  Course she was dead.
Ill ask you again. Are you certain the blackstaffer was dead? Kharl glanced 
from the justicer to his consort, and back again. He didnt understand the 
questions, or the reason for them.
She was dead.
Reynol nodded, then gestured to the bailiff. Restrain her.
No! I didnt do nothing! Charee protested, turning, then stopping as two 
armsmen appeared and bound her hands behind her back.
The Hall of Justice has heard enough.
All stand! The bailiff rapped the stone floor with the staff.
One of the armsmen had to drag Kharl to his feet. The cooper looked blankly at 
the justicer.
There are a number of facts of great import here. First, the cooper was 
fighting the fire, and noted witnesses saw him doing so, and also saw the 
blackstaffer alive. Second, dead bodies do not bleed profusely. There may be 
some blood, but it is limited. Third, the slash on the black-staffers neck was 
a jagged cut. Although the cut was made with a coopers knife, the cooper is a 
man skilled with the use of a knife, and the cut was made with a less skilled 
hand. Fourth, the cooper had no signs of blood on his tunic. Only one person 
did, and that person had to be the killer of the blackstaffer.
No! Kharl exclaimed.
Silence!
Keep your trap shut, hissed one of the armsmen holding Kharl.
The justicer looked squarely at Charee. You would have let your consort die for 
an act you committed. That is most heinous. You have been found guilty of the 
murder of the blackstaffer Jenevra.
No no The slightest of sobs escaped Charee.
Reynol turned his eyes upon Kharl. You did not kill, but you allowed the 
killing to take place. Further, you resisted the lawful authority of the Watch. 
Of both offenses are you guilty. The justicer turned and looked to Lord West. 
The woman Charee has been found guilty of murdering the backstaffer, and the 
cooper Kharl has been found guilty of failing to protect the defenseless under 
his care and of resisting lawful authority.
So be it, intoned the lord. He looked to Charee, who looked down at the 
polished stones of the floor, then to Kharl.
The cooper returned the gaze of the Lord of the Quadrant, fearlessly.
The sentence for the woman Charee is death by hanging. The cooper is sentenced 
to twenty lashes for neglect, and another ten for insolence to civil authority. 
Let the sentences be carried out immediately. Justice delayed is justice 
denied. West struck the silver chime that
rested on the desk of the dais before him. Justicing is done.
The two armsmen tightened their grip on Kharl.
You arent going to make trouble, now, cooper?
No Kharl choked.
How could he? What could he do, with armsmen all around him, and the 
insufferable swell Egen and another group of armsmen standing by? He watched, 
silently, as Charee was half carried, half dragged, away.
Just turn real easy, cooper.
Kharl turned. He still didnt understand. Charee couldnt have killed Jenevra, 
could she? Why would she have done that? It didnt feel right.
His legs moved, and he saw, but he was not really aware of what he saw or where 
he walked, not until the armsmen brought him up short outside in the courtyard 
under the gray sky, just short of the center flogging frame.
Now, were going to untie your hands, cooper. You try to get away, and its 
another twenty strokes. That makes fifty, and most men dont live with fifty.
Kharl nodded. He understood, not that it mattered in some ways, but he didnt 
see any point in doing something stupid that could get him killed for nothing.
Once Kharl was secured to the flogging frame, Captain Egen appeared, stepping 
forward and motioning the armsmen away, including the one with the whip. He 
stopped less than two cubits from the cooper. When the captain spoke, his voice 
was soft and very low. Usually, we do the flogging first, but then you wouldnt 
be able to see what happened to your consort, and I want you to see that, 
cooper. I want you to understand that Lord West is the law. I want you to 
understand that it is not ever a good idea to think that you should judge or 
question your betters. Egen paused. Now, do you have anything to say?
Kharl had plenty to say, but not where he was. No, ser.
You should never have intruded on the affairs of your betters, cooper. Perhaps 
you can learn. If you cannot well, you will see how youll end up. Its only a 
matter of time. Egen smiled and stepped back.
Kharl wanted to look away, but thought that would be cowardice of a sort. He 
watched as Charee half walked, and was half dragged, up the steps to the 
scaffold platform. Overhead, the gray clouds roiled and darkened, but without 
thunder, and without rain.
Two of the armsmen tied her wrists together, behind her back.
I didnt do it Charees words were faint but clear. I didnt. She was dead
Enough. The burly hangman pulled a heavy black bag over Charees head, then 
put the noose in place.
An off-tempo drumroll echoed through the courtyard, although Kharl could not see 
the drummer.
The hangman stepped back and pulled a lever. The trap dropped.
Kharl winced.
Within moments, Charees body hung limply.
Begin the flogging! snapped Egen.
Kharl didnt feel the lash for the first stroke, and not much for the second.
He lost track after ten, and he didnt feel the last ones, either. That was 
because he felt nothing at all.
XII
At some point, Kharl recalled being dragged into a cart, facedown. But each time 
the cart rolled over something, his back turned from a mass of pain into 
lightning strikes of agony, followed by blackness. About the time when he 
struggled into wakefulness again, despite the searing pain across his back, 
several people carried him somewhere, saying things he should have recalled, but 
didnt.
When he woke, thin knives of pain slashed down his back.
Ohh
I know. It has to hurt. But they flogged your tunic and undertunic into your 
skin, and if I dont clean it out, it will fester, and you will die.
Kharl knew he should recognize the womans voice, but the pain washed over him 
so frequently that he could not concentrate. Go ahead, he mumbled, his fingers 
digging into something.
Another strip of pain lanced down his back.
Im sorry, but the cloth, some of it, is matted into your flesh, and theres 
even salt they poured in some places. The voice trembled for a moment.
In a moment of clarity, Kharl recognized the speaker. Sanyle?
Yes. Father asked if Id help. Ive been cooking for the boys and watching over 
you.
Thank you
Just try to lie still. Im mostly finished. Then I can clean out the rest of 
the wounds. Father gave me something that will help numb your back when Im 
done.
Go on
Agony alternated with blackness until he finally succumbed totally to the 
darkness. Even then, the darkness was filled with unseen flame.
When Kharl woke again, he was lying facedown on his own bedthe bed he and 
Charee had shared for so many years. He swallowed, thinking, for there had been 
good times, if few in recent years. The thoughts of what had happened so 
suddenly and for so little reason swirled through his mind. At the same time, 
his back was still a mass of pain, and even the slightest movement intensified 
the agony.
Between the two kinds of pain, it was a while before he realized someone else 
was in the small bedchamber. Even so, he had to squint to make out the figure 
sitting on the stool opposite the side of the bed his head faced.
Warrl? Kharl croaked the single name.
Its me, Da. Warrl stood and went to the door. Hes awake. Then he returned 
and sat back down.
Kharl said nothing. What could he say?
Da Sanyle said she said they hung Ma Why did they do it? Ma didnt do 
anything.
Kharl tried to speak, but all he could do was cough, and for a moment, or 
longer, blackness washed over him.
Warrl was still sitting there when Kharl could see once more.
Da?
They discovered no way I could have killed the black-staffer wanted 
someone to hang tell the black demons
Why didnt you stop them? Why didnt you ?
Warrl, came a voice from behind Kharl, Sanyles soft voice, your father 
tried. My father saw it all. Your da struggled against the arms-men, but there 
were scores of them. Thats why they whipped him so badly. He tried to stop 
them, and they whipped him more.
 why? He didnt kill anyone. Ma didnt, neither
Let him rest, Warrl. He did the best he could. He did more than most men in 
Brysta would ever try.
Before the blackness reclaimed him, Kharl could hear Warrl sniffling, and he 
wanted to reach out, to say more.
XIII
Jvharl woke abruptly, at the sound of voices beyond the closed bedchamber door. 
From the light coming through the windows, and the damp warmth, it seemed to be 
late afternoon or early evening. Slowly, he managed to stand, even though every 
movement hurt, even after three days when hed done little except eat and sleep. 
He made his way to the door, putting his hand on the latch-lever. Then he 
stopped as the words in the main room began to make sense.
 hed never understand
 sees more than you think Kharl thought the voice was Sanyles, but it was 
hard to tell because she was speaking much less loudly than Arthal.
 never done except what he wanted never listened to any of us. He should have 
listened to Ma he should have Arthals voice was loud and angry.
 done more than youve seen, Arthal
 youre just sweet on him Ma not even gone an eightday
 who would cook and take care of him? You? You cant fire the stove or boil 
water.
 can, too
 not that Ive seen
Why should I after what he did hasnt even written Aunt Merayni
Kharl winced at that. He should write Merayni, or even take a day to go visit 
his consorts sister. The thought was painful, because Merayni would blame him. 
She had a tongue far sharper than Charees had ever been.
The words died away.
Kharl coughed, then rattled the latch-lever before easing the door open. He 
stepped through the doorway, then stopped. The two who had been arguing were 
Arthal and Sanyle. Tyrbels youngest daughter, more than two years older than 
Arthal, was slim and dark-haired, but with overlarge eyes and a nose slightly 
larger and sharper than her face
merited.
Da? began Arthal, looking toward Kharl. It hurts, Kharl admitted. But 
lying around isnt going to keep the cooperage going, or bring in coins.
I suppose not, Arthal replied.
Doing too much too soon wont help much either, suggested Sanyle. Why dont 
you sit down at the table? Suppers almost ready.
Wheres Warrl?
He was checking the door bars down below, Sanyle said. He should be back here 
any moment. She turned back toward the stove.
Kharl eased his way into the chair where he usually sat, but he had to sit on 
the edge so that his shoulders wouldnt touch the wooden spokes. He glanced 
toward the stove, where Sanyle was standing and where Charee had so often stood. 
For a moment, his eyes clouded, and he could not even see. His lips tightened. 
Charee had been right about Jenevra bringing trouble. Charee had been right 
about many things. But what was he supposed to have done? Let the blackstaffer 
die?
The door from the shop swung open, then closed with a thud.
Everythings barred up, and I closed the shutters, too, Warrl announced even 
before he stepped into the main room.
Thank you, Kharl said.
Da youre up.
After a fashion, Kharl admitted. Im slow. Probably be a few days before I 
can do much in the shop. Or anywhere else, he suspected.
You going to keep on with the shop? asked Warrl.
Im a cooper. What else would I do?
Without Ma?
It will be hard, Kharl admitted.
Sanyle carried the stewpot to the table, setting it on the old wooden
trivet.
Kharl just looked at the pot, but his eyes blurred, and he couldnt really see. 
After a moment, he said, Sanyle best you serve
Its the best I could do and the breads a little too crisp
Be fine Kharl choked.
Father sent over some ale. Said it would help you. Its in your mug.
You thank him Kharl reached gratefully for the mug and the ale it held. The 
ale might help. It might.
XIV
wo mornings later, Kharl donned just an undertunica soft and old oneabove his 
heavy brown boots and trousers and made his way down to the cooperage. He slowly 
walked around the shop. The coals in the forge, banked so many days ago, had 
long since turned to ashes, and the hearth was covered in a fine film of ash 
powder around the fire pot. There was a film of dust over everything.
He walked toward the wall where the apprentices pallet had been. It was gone, 
and someone had scrubbed the floor planks. He leaned over. Set on the bottom of 
the finishing bench were the black staff and Jenevras pack. He wondered why the 
staff had been left. Because no one wanted to touch it? Or had it just been 
overlooked and forgotten?
His fingers brushed the staff. For all that it had lain under the bench for more 
than an eightday, the wood still felt warm to his touch. So did the iron bands. 
He picked up the staff. Hed initially thought that it had merely been stained 
dark, or that it was black oak. When he studied it and held it, he could see 
that hed been wrong. The staff was lorken, finegrained, and almost as strong as 
iron, if far lighter. The bands on it, one near each end, and the other two 
equidistant between those at the ends, were also not plain iron, but mage-fired 
black iron, the black iron that could only be created in Reduce. Or so it was 
said.
 a warriors staff He shook his head and leaned the staff against the wall. 
Then he stooped and picked up the canvas pack and set it on the finishing bench.
Had Jenevra left anything in it that might have allowed someone to contact 
family? Did she even have any? Slowly, he untied the thongs and opened the 
flaps, before looking inside. There were clean underclothes, and one spare set 
of trousers, and beneath that a soiled tunic
and undertunic, and beneath them a leather-bound book and a pouch. In the pouch 
were clean rags and a bar of rose soap. That was all.
Kharl replaced everything in the pack, except for the book, which he placed on 
the corner of the finishing bench before walking toward the front of the shop. 
There, he deliberately unfastened the shutters and swung them back. After that, 
he unbarred the front door, opened it, and peered out. The day was cloudy, 
although the clouds were high and light gray, if thick. Rain would not arrive 
before afternoon, if at all. He glanced westward. Tyrbels glass had been 
repaired, and the window frames replaced and painted, but, without walking over 
to the window and peering through it, there was no way to tell if the scrivener 
had placed other books in the display window.
The cooper stepped back into his cooperage, counting the barrel shooks still in 
the high racks. He moved to the tool rack. Everything was there, except for his 
best drawing knife. Hed miss that, but he counted himself well off that nothing 
else seemed to be gone. He turned to the planer, as dusty as everything else.
There was the sound of boots on the steps, and Kharl looked to the stairs.
Arthal stood halfway down, with a canvas duffel slung over his right shoulder. 
He looked at his father without speaking.
You might have told me, Kharl said, mildly.
What is there to say? Arthals voice was flat.
Where youre going, the cooper suggested.
The Fleuryl had an opening for a carpenters apprentice. I took it. You already 
said that you wouldnt stop me if there was a position.
Kharl refrained from saying that he had been speaking of a position in Brysta. 
After what he had heard of the conversation between Sanyle and Arthal two nights 
before, he saw no point in arguing over his past words. He finally spoke. I 
wish you well, son. I hope it turns out as you would like.
Could it turn out worse than staying here? asked Arthal coldly, making his way 
to the bottom of the steps, then shifting the duffel to the other shoulder.
It could, but, for your sake, I hope it doesnt. Kharl forced a faint smile. 
You might remember that I was your age once. We all were.
Arthal was silent, his eyes avoiding Kharls.
You think I could have done more. You think that you could have
done more had you been in my boots. I hope you never find yourself in them, not 
that way.
Da I dont want to say more.
After a moment, Kharl nodded. Then youd better go. Youre welcome here anytime 
if you change your thoughts.
Arthal walked silently to the door of the cooperage.
Kharl did not follow him.
Then the younger man stopped. Good-bye, Da. He turned without waiting for a 
response.
Good-bye. Kharl watched as the door closed. His vision blurred for a moment, 
and he lifted his arm to blot his eyes, ignoring the additional pain the motion 
caused. Neither boy was happy with him. Not happy? Both were filled with anger 
and bitterness directed at him, as if he alone had killed their mother.
Arthal was ready to waste his life at sea, and Warrl had bolted out early, 
saying he had to catch up on his lessons with Master Fonwyl, rather than stay 
anywhere near his father.
Kharl took a deep breath and walked to the racks where the shooks were stacked, 
slowly taking down enough for a single red oak slack barrel. Each motion hurt.
Hed have to take his time. That he knew. But what else could he do?
Hed laid out the shooks, set up the planer, and shaped four of the shooks into 
rough staves when the door to the cooperage opened, and Tyrbel walked in.
Kharl eased the shook he was working away from the planer and took his foot off 
the drive pedal. He set the shook on the bench and walked forward to meet the 
scrivener.
Kharl I am so sorry began Tyrbel.
The cooper shook his head. You have nothing to be sorry about. Should have come 
over to thank youfor my life twice over. Without you and Sanyle, Id not be 
here. Im still not thinking as a man should
Youve lost your consort, and youve taken a flogging that would have killed a 
lesser man, my friend. Tyrbel smiled warmly. Perhaps because I work with 
words, I know their limits. Ive seen your acts, and they are far more eloquent 
than any words. I did what I could. The scrivener looked down. I didnt have 
any idea that Justicer Reynol I didnt know he could do something that base
Until I was in the gaol, neither did I. Kharl cleared his throat. The man 
with me Kaj he said that Id hang. He said that Lord West needed to hang 
someone to keep Reduce from shelling Brysta.
Reduce is not that vindictive, replied Tyrbel. That was an excuse because you 
stood up to Egen.
Kaj said he was a pissprick.
I know. They hung Kaj yesterday. I had to be at the Hall for something else 
when it happened.
They hung him? For calling Captain Egen a name? For being
drunk?
The charge was that he was a thief, that hed stolen some of the coin hed used 
at the Tankard, and that the other was counterfeit, and that hed been found 
guilty four times before.
1 dont know, Kharl said heavily. He didnt seem that type.
I doubt he was, Tyrbel said. Light! I wish that we had someone of character 
these days, someone who would take the Justicers Challenge and remove Reynol. 
Hes but a tool of young Egen. Tyrbel laughed ruefully. Of course, Lurtedd is 
a tool of Osten.
Justicers Challenge? Hed heard of it, but would anyone dare? How did it 
work?
Oh its a way that a man learned in law and justice can challenge a justicer. 
But its seldom done, because, if he fails, he suffers the punishment of those 
five people whose cases he takes.
Oh. After a moment of silence, Kharl added, Arthal left this morning. Hes 
going to be a carpenters apprentice on some ship.
Im sure that hurts. But, given the way he feels, it would be worse for him to 
stay here. Worse for him and much worse for you.
Did Sanyle tell you?
That the boys think its your fault? Yes we wont tell anyone else, but she 
needed to talk to someone. Tyrbel paused. It wasnt your fault. A man has to 
be a man, or hes nothing.
Kharl nodded. You spoke for me. Will that hurt you?
I would hope not. The angular scrivener shrugged, then brushed back a lock of 
brown-and-silver hair. But you risked your life for Sanyle. How could I not say 
the truth?
I am grateful. You were the only one.
Gharan would have. I asked him not to, unless something happened
L
to me. He has small children. I also let it be known that there were many who 
saw that you could not have murdered the girl.
That way ?
Tyrbel nodded. But that may not have been wise. I did not think that they 
would turn on Charee when they heard in open justice that you were innocent. 
They did not let anyone speak for her.
I tried.
They added extra lashes for that. Tyrbel paused. Egen was one of those who 
tried to force Sanyle, wasnt he?
Yes. I didnt know that until the Watch came. Kaj told me who he was. He told 
meCaptain Egen didbefore they whipped me, that I should never question my 
betters. He said that hed hang me if I ever did again.
Hes petty, and meaner than a mountain cat in heat, but hes cunning. Never 
says anything where anyone can hear, and always has some reason in the law for 
what he does. You know that they gave Mallamet just ten lashes for false 
witness. The lashes barely broke the skin.
So they can say they treated everything fair. Kharl snorted.
Tyrbel cleared his throat. I know some scriveners in Hemmen and Vizyn. I wrote 
them to see if there might be a need for coopers there.
You think I should leave Brysta?
Tyrbel shrugged. I dont know. But best you keep both eyes open. You end up in 
gaol again, for whatever reason, and you wont walk out, except to the gallows.
Kharl nodded slowly.
Youve got some time. Egens cunning. Anything happens to you soon, and people 
will talk, especially the crafters, and that would upset Lord West. Tyrbel 
looked to the door. I have to go.
Thank you. You have been a friend. A true friend.
You told me that was what neighbors were for. The scrivener smiled. Take your 
time in healing. Youll need your strength.
I can pay Sanyle some, Kharl said.
She would like that, but you dont have to.
Kharl felt he did, but he only smiled. Youve both been good to us.
After Tyrbel left, as Kharl walked back to the planer, he saw the leather-bound 
book on the edge of the finishing bench. Perhaps he should look at it in the 
evening. He couldnt afford enough ale to take
his mind off Charee, and he still needed to write Merayni if he could
only find the words.
Maybe puzzling through the book would help, one way or another.
He needed something.
XV
Because he knew how Warrl felt, Kharl did not press the boy to speak, except for 
his work, or request that his son stay too close to the cooperage for the next 
several days. He did insist on Warrl doing his chores, and his lessons, and on 
eating with Kharl and Sanyle.
On fiveday evening, as they were finishing supper, Kharl looked at Warrl. How 
are your lessons going?
Im going every day. You know that. Master Fonwyl says Ill never pass the 
craftmaster examination.
He said that?
Yes, ser, Warrl averred.
Did he say why?
Warrl did not meet Kharls eyes. Kharl waited.
He said all order would turn to chaos before a son of yours was allowed to be 
a craftmaster in Brysta. Warrl looked up at Kharl. Why do they all hate you? 
What did you do to make them hate me?
They dont all hate me. Tyrbel doesnt. Gharan doesnt. Hyesal
doesnt.
They dont matter. Lord West and the justicers matter. The craft-masters 
matter. And they all hate you.
Everyone matters, Kharl offered, not sure what he could say.
Its not right. They shouldnt hate me. Not because of what you did. Not 
because Im your son.
They shouldnt. People dont always do whats right. You know that dont you?
Why Warrl looked up. Im sorry, Da
Your father did the best he could, Sanyle said. There are evil
people in Brysta. Some of them are powerful. Do you think he should not do good 
because of them?
What good does it do? Warrl asked. The blackstaffer died, and Ma died, and 
Da, he almost died.
Kharl looked at Sanyle and gave the slightest of headshakes. He did not want her 
to mention what he had done for her. That would just give Warrl a chance to 
direct his anger at her. The young woman waited for a moment before she answered 
Warrl. My father always has said that if you do good because you expect to be 
rewarded, it is not good at all, but greed.
Then Ill be greedy when I get older, Warrl said. What good is it if you 
cant live to enjoy it?
Kharl cleared his throat. Did Master Fonwyl say if you had learned enough to 
pass the mastercrafter examination if you werent my son?
Warrl looked up, surprised. After a moment, he replied. He said I know enough.
Are you telling me what he said or what you think?
No, Da. He said I knew as much as most craftmasters.
Then, theres no reason for you to keep taking lessons, is there?
You mean that, Da?
I wouldnt say it if I didnt mean it. Of course, that means youll be able to 
help in the shop more.
Thats more interesting than Master Fonwyl. Warrl paused. Can I go over to 
Hergans now?
If youre careful and back before full dark.
Thank you, Da Warrl looked at Sanyle. Thank you for dinner.
Youre welcome, Warrl.
Neither Sanyle nor Kharl spoke until Warrl had closed the door and headed down 
the stairs and through the cooperage. Kharl heard the front door shut.
You dont want him to know that some of what you did saved others? asked 
Sanyle.
That would make him angry at you. It wouldnt make him less angry at me. The 
cooper shrugged. Not much I can do about that. He rose and carried his bowl 
and Warrls to the wash table.
After a moment, Sanyle followed his example. Ill do the dishes. She smiled 
briefly. You are paying me.
Not enough, Kharl said. I appreciate the cooking. Not something Id do well. 
Not well enough to eat what I fixed.
He did let Sanyle do the dishes, although he put them away in the single 
cupboard, another piece of furniture he had made years before. Thinking of that 
time, his eyes misted for a moment, and he shook his head. What had happened? 
Did it happen to others?
He could not answer his own questions. So he put the last bowl
away.
After Sanyle had left, and he was alone in the main room, he adjusted the wick 
in the lamp on the table by the one easy chair and picked up the black leather 
book he had brought up from the shop. He had to lean back into the chair very 
gingerly.
Slowly, he studied the slender tome, noting the fineness of the binding. There 
were no words on the cover or on the spine, just smooth black leather. He opened 
the front cover to the title page and read the words: The Basis of Order. That 
was all. There was no explanation, and no name for an author. He turned another 
page. The text began abruptly, under a simple numeral 1. He began to read.
Order is life; chaos is death. This is fact, not belief. Each living creature 
consists of ordered parts that must function together
Order extends down to the smallest fragments of the world. By influencing the 
smallest ordered segments to create a new and ordered form, an order-master may 
change where land exists and where it does not, where rain will fall and where 
it will not In contrast, control of chaos is simply the ability to sever one 
ordered segment of the world from another without the use of order, focused 
destruction is the highest level of control to which a chaos-master can aspire
Simple as these words are, learning about what order and chaos truly are is far 
from simple. One might say that order is like water, that it can change forms, 
and that it is vital to life, and that without it nothing lives That is less 
than the beginning
Kharl skipped to the next page.
Learning without understanding can but increase the frustration of the 
impatient, for knowledge is like the hammer of a
smith, useless in the hands of the unskilled and able to do nothing but injure 
the user who has not both knowledge and understanding All things are not 
possible, even to the greatest, and even to those with understanding
Kharl lowered the book, frowning, but not closing it, thinking
XVI
On sixday, Kharl was feeling stronger, but not strong enough to use the forge to 
finish the hoops for the slack barrels. Instead, he contented him self with 
working on the red oak shooks, first with the planer then spending time with the 
hollowing knife, including some time workine with Warrl, showing him some of the 
finer points of using the knife
Just before noon, the door opened, and a short wiry figure with a ginger beard 
and wearing a brown overtunic stepped into the cooper age. He glanced around, 
then, catching sight of Kharl, squared his shoulders, and moved toward the 
planer where Kharl stood From the other workbench, Warrl watched.
Master Senstad, the cooper said politely.
Cooper.
Kharl waited, suspecting he knew what was coming, but not wanting to make 
matters easy for the grower.
Id ordered twenty barrels, tight cooperage.
You did, for harvest.
I can only use five, Kharl. Im sorry but the harvest isnt goine to be that 
good. Too dry early in the summer. Senstads eyes never once met Khans.
Kharl could sense the lie, but he only nodded. Been a bad year for many folk. 
Least, thats what they say. *
Til pick up the five next sixday pay you then. That be all right? The 
barrelsU be ready.
Good. Senstad paused. Im sorry. You know how these things are  ies.Ido.lt 
happens.
The grower nodded and turned. At the door, he turned back. Next
sixday.
Theyll be ready, Kharl promised, and that was one he could keep.
The door closed.
Hes lying, Warrl said. Hergan said the growers are having a good year, best 
in a long time. Why?
He probably owes tariffs or money to Lord West. He rents some of his land from 
the lord, I think.
Why did he say he wanted five barrels, then? Warrls face showed
puzzlement.
If he canceled the order, hed still owe a quarterthatd be what hed pay for 
five barrels. So this way, he gets five good barrels, and he doesnt lose 
anything, and he can tell everyone that was all he could
do.
Da Warrl finally looked down without saying more.
You can go over to Hergans for a time, if youd like.
Id like that. You dont mind?
You can go, Kharl said. Ill be all right.
Warrl didnt wait, and within moments Kharl was alone in the
cooperage.
He went back to the planer.
In midafternoon there was a solid rap on the loading dock door.
Kharl frowned, but walked back to the door and opened it.
Werwal stood there, in his soiled leathers, his wagon in the alley behind him. 
Good afternoon, cooper.
Good afternoon, Werwal.
Wasnt sure Id be seeing you. Not after everything I heard, offered the 
renderer. You feeling all right?
Ive felt better, Kharl confessed. Good thing Id finished your barrels last 
eightday. Still too sore to use the forge.
Werwal laughed, a rueful sound. Most fellows wouldnt be standing after what 
you went through. He paused. I could hold off on the barrels, if you need them 
for someone else
Theyre ready. If you want them, theyre yours. Cant say as Ive been overrun 
with orders the past few days.
You wont be, I fear. Egens lets just say that he dislikes losing. Because 
youre alive, he feels hes lost.
How do you know so much about him about what goes on?
L
Werwals laugh was more open this time. No one holds their tongue around 
Tenderers and rag-pickers. Who are we, dealing with the dregs of offal?
Kharl realized something else that he should have noticed sooner. The Tenderer 
was far better spoken than most crafters, but that was hardly something that he 
could mention. Always felt how a man does his craft reckons his value more than 
what it is.
Your barrels show it. Werwal gestured to the slack barrels by the loading 
door. Are those mine?
That they arethe first five.
Ill get them. You dont need to be lifting them right now.
I can help
You roll them over, and Ill lift em, suggested the Tenderer.
Rolling the empty barrels was no problem for the cooper, and before long all 
five were in the Tenderers wagon.
Werwal closed the wagon gate and walked back to the loading door where Kharl 
stood.
I owe you three silvers and four coppers. The Tenderer extended the coins. 
Long as youre here, Ill be ordering barrels. I dont need too many, but they 
need to be good.
I thank you, Kharl replied. You seem free to say what you think when others 
will not even hint at it.
The lanky man grinned. Who else would do what I do? That gives me the freedom 
to say a bit more, though there are those to whom I would not speak so freely.
You dont worry about it?
I dont worry too much, Werwal replied. No one else wishes to do what I do. 
The Tenderer smiled. Youre always welcome if you dont mind the odor.
Youre always welcome here, Kharl responded.
For that, cooper, I thank you. Werwal offered a last smile. I need to get 
back. He turned and lithely vaulted up onto the wagon seat.
As the wagon rolled down the alley away from the loading dock, Kharl wondered 
about Werwals invitation.
Would things change that much, so much that the only place he might be welcome 
was with Brystas Tenderer?
XVII
By the beginning of the next eightday, Kharl was almost back to feeling normal, 
except that too much bending still sent shivers of pain through his back. He was 
only slightly slower than usual, but hed seen few of his normal customers. 
Some, like Korlan, he didnt expect to see for several more eightdays, although 
hed begun work on the vintners white oak barrels, after finishing the five for 
Senstad.
About midmorning on threeday, as Kharl was planing white oak shooks into staves 
for Korlans barrels, Aryl eased through the door of the cooperage.
Kharl glanced at Warrl, who had been working with the chiv to smooth the rims of 
a red oak slack barrel. You can take a break, if youd
like.
Thank you, Da. Might I go outside?
If you dont go too far.
With a nod and a smile, Warrl turned, sliding something thin and white and 
oblong into his tunic, like a folded sheet of paper, better than the kind Warrl 
had used for his lessons. Kharl wondered what it was, but didnt want to ask 
when Aryl was headed toward him.
The boy slipped to the side away from Aryl, waiting until Aryl was farther 
inside the cooperage before easing behind the brown-bearded and stocky man, then 
out the door.
How you doing, Kharl? asked the square-faced apple grower.
Been better been worse. You ready to order some barrels? Kharl set the stave 
he had just finished aside and took his foot off the drive pedal of the planer.
Depends you wouldnt talk much when I was offering seven coppers apiece.
Still wouldnt, Kharl said. Not much sense in selling something for less than 
the iron and oak cost. Told you that the price was ten coppers each.
I dont know, Kharl A silver a barrel thats a lot Mallame offers slack 
barrels for eight coppers.
You get what you pay for, Aryl, Kharl replied.
Doesnt matter that much for slack barrels when youre shippin apples, and two 
coppers a barrel adds up when you need twenty. Thats four silvers.
What about the ones you used for the apples you dry and put on Nenalts ships? 
asked the cooper.
Aryl fingered his beard. Youd have the right of it there. But Id be needing 
just ten of those.
What about twenty for nine coppers each? suggested Kharl.
Hmmm eighteen silvers, thatd be.
Youd be getting more than two silvers worth in the better barrels. Kharl 
didnt like cutting his prices. That led to ruin, but hed also checked the 
strongbox, and he needed more coin, or at least the promise of it, in order to 
claim the seasoned shook billets from Vetrad.
Well seeing the way things are Ill try twenty at nine each. Be needing them 
the end of next eightday.
Kharl waited.
Five silvers now; four on oneday, and the other nine when I pick up the 
barrels.
Kharl thought. Usually, Aryl paid half with the order, but oneday was less than 
an eightday away, and he did need the orders. Seeing as its you, Aryl, thatd 
be fine, and your barrelsll be ready an eightday from sixday.
Thatd be good. The grower reached for his belt wallet and laid out four 
silvers and ten coppers.
Theyll be ready. Good slack barrels.
Thats what Im payin for.
And what youll get. What youve always gotten.
Aryl nodded, glancing around the cooperage. Seems a little light on billets.
Got a full rack of seasoned oaks out at Vetrads. Wanted em seasoned well. 
Coming in before end-days.
Glad to hear it. Aryl did not look particularly glad, but merely speculative 
as he turned and left the cooperage.
After slipping the coins into his belt wallet, Kharl returned to planing the 
shooks into staves, although he had to stop and rest a bit more often than was 
his wont.
Before too long, Warrl reappeared, easing his way back to the barrel whose rims 
hed been smoothing.
What was that you took with you? Kharl asked. It looked like a good piece of 
paper.
Ah I owed Hergan some sheets from when I didnt have any. I begged the paper 
from Sanyle. You always said I should repay what I
owed.
That you should. Kharl was convinced Warrl wasnt telling the whole truth, and 
he wasnt so sure begging from Sanyle to pay back Hergan was the best, either. 
But he didnt want to press it, not when his younger son had been so good about 
helping and doing his chores, and not so soon after his mothers death.
Before Kharl could say more, Warrl looked at his father, and asked, Did Aryl 
order any, Da?
Well be doing twenty for him. Kharl didnt mention that hed be making ten 
percent less than normal on the barrels, and he hoped that the cut in price 
wouldnt prove too costly, when others found out. But he hadnt been getting 
that many orders, even before the killing.
You worried, Da?
That I am. Orders are slower than Id like. Mayhap its the times. Gharan says 
that hes not doing so well, either, and even Hamyls been fretting.
Ma she wasnt getting so much, either Fyona said she wouldnt have had 
Warrl looked down.
Could be that times are getting harder for everyone, Kharl said quickly. But 
he had to wonder as he turned back to the planer.
XVIII
I hat evening, after Sanyle had left and Warrl had climbed into his bed in the 
corner of the main room, Kharl sat at the table, with a pen in hand, looking at 
the paper before him. Only two words were on the paper Dear Merayni.
What could he write? That Charee had been hanged for a murder she
didnt commit? That hed been unable to do anything about it? That because hed 
prevented Egen from raping Sanyle and taken pity on a beaten blackstaffer, the 
lords son had tried to destroy Kharl, and failing that, had taken his vengeance 
out on Charee? Merayni would blame Kharl no matter what had happened.
Finally, he folded the paper and tucked it away. He stood and glanced to the 
corner, but Warrl seemed to be sleeping. With a faint smile, Kharl took the lamp 
and The Basis of Order into his bedchamber. There he stretched out on his 
stomachon the left side of the bed, where he had always slept.
He turned his head, and for a moment, with the faintest scent of rose, he 
thought he could almost feel Charee. And then the sense of her presence was 
gone. He still had trouble, especially at night, when he lay in the bed alone, 
accepting that she was gone. And for what? No matter what the justicer had said, 
Charee had not killed anyone.
He blinked several times, then blotted his eyes.
Finally, he opened the book and forced himself to look at the words on the page. 
He had to think of something else. He had to. For a moment, he could not make 
out the print. He blotted his eyes once more, then concentrated on the book.
All physical itemsunlike fire or pure chaosmust have some structure, or they 
would not exist
Because all wrought iron has a grain created from the forging of its crystals, 
the strength of the iron lies in the alignment and length of the grain. Using 
order to reinforce that grain is the basis of black iron Its strength lies in 
the ordering of unbruised or unstrained grains along the length of the metal
The cooper nodded. Those words made sense. Even with his limited work in forging 
the hoops from iron blanks, he could see where what the book said would make 
senseexcept for one thing. How could a mage actually infuse iron with order? 
What he had read so far gave no hint of how such might be done. Yet he had seen 
the bands on Jenevras staff and the warship from Reduce in the harbor. Even 
from a pier away, there was no doubt that it had been constructed of black iron, 
and that it was a deadly vessel.
Yet he had never seen more than one warship of Reduce at a time, and those most 
seldom. Why did Lord West fear the demon isle? Or did he? Had he used the isle 
as an excuse? Kharl frowned. Lord West had used the lawor his youngest son 
hadto increase his power over Kharl and those in Brysta and the western 
quadrant of Nordla. He had no need to mention Reduce.
Kharls eyes dropped to the book once more. What was it about Reduce? Would the 
book tell him more? He flipped back several pages, more toward the beginning of 
the first part, and reread a section that had bothered him.
The purpose of order is to support that life which can order chaos; and without 
chaos to be ordered, there can be no purpose to life. .
The function of chaos is to destroy order. Without order, no structure can 
existno man nor woman, no plant, not even an earth upon which to walk
He frowned. Was Egen the kind of man who was like chaos, destroying order even 
as he talked of maintaining it? What did maintain order in Brysta? Justicers? 
The armsmen under Lord West?
Those questions and thoughts were more than Kharl wanted to contemplate, and he 
closed the book, setting it aside as he prepared for bed. He still had more 
barrels to finish in the days ahead, and he needed the sleep. He just hoped he 
could.
XIX
On fourday, dark gray clouds, wind, and heavy showers buffeted Brysta, and no 
one came to the cooperage. Fiveday dawned cloudy, but without rain. No one came 
into the shop through the morning. Finally, in midafternoon, with the sun 
promising to burn away the clouds, Wassyt lumbered into the cooperage. The 
miller was a good half head taller than
Kharl, one of few men in Brysta who clearly overtopped the cooper. Wassyt was 
also considerably broader, his girth cinched in by a tight leather vest. 
Although he was a good ten years older than Kharl, his hair remained the same 
light brown that it had been since when Kharl had met him as a youth, and it 
still fell across the left side of his forehead.
Good afternoon, Kharl offered.
Same to you, Kharl. Wassyt glanced toward Warrl, who was rough-hollowing some 
white oak staves.
Warrl, you can take some time outside, Kharl suggested.
Warrl nodded, set down the hollowing knife, and left, quietly.
Wassyt stopped short of the fire pot, where Kharl had been checking the coals 
before toasting one of the white oak barrels for Korlan, and began to speak. 
You know Id never put anyone elses barrels against yours.
Id like to believe that theyre that good. Kharl managed to keep his 
expression pleasant, although he knew what would follow would not be something 
he wanted to hear.
Theyre the best, the miller replied. Not a cooper in Nordlas any better. 
Maybe a few as good on the eastern shore, but not around here.
Kharl waited for what had to come.
Wanted you to know that. The miller pushed back the lank brown hair, then 
blotted his forehead. I told everyone Id already ordered my harvest barrels 
from you, and paid for em, the half that goes first. Said Id ordered thirty.
Ill have them ready in two eightdays, Kharl said.
Threes fine. Harvests a bit late. Wassyt laid out a gold and five silvers, 
right on the bench. You got this even before the trouble.
Thats the way it is, Kharl agreed.
I heard Lord West is short of coin, the miller said. Thats what Sorkan was 
telling me.
Hard to believe that a lord would be short of coin.
You know, the tariff assessments be coming out, right after harvest, Wassyt 
observed. Maybe even quicker. Lord Wests middle son is reviewing the 
assessments. Thats what Fyngel told me. You know Fyngelhes the tariff farmer 
for our section?
Hes mine, too.
Youll probably be seein him afore long, Kharl. Might not want to. I didnt, 
light knows.
You think hes close to Lord Wests son?
Dont know as close. Id say Fyngels very respectful, do whatever young Lord 
Egen suggests. Fyngel, hes not quite a friend, but hes not so bad as some 
tariff farmers. Well, he was telling me that Lord Wests worried about the 
Austrans. Seems like theyre thinking of getting friendly with the Emperor of 
Hamor, and using that to look across the gulf.
Ive heard talk about that, Kharl said cautiously.
So the Lords of the Quadrant need to build more ships, and ships take coins. 
Wassyt spread his beefy hands. Coins come from us, specially millwrights, 
crafters, and artisans. Fyngel was given a list. A special-like list. Told that 
those crafters and artisans had paid too little in tariffs
for too long.
I gather that a certain cooperage might be on that list?
Aye. It might. Wassyt cleared his throat. So might others, and this was what 
Fyngel told me as he was talking to me about my new tariffs. He was saying that 
folks who bought casks and barrels from some coopers, well, they just might have 
their tariffs doubled twice over.
Thats an interesting tale, Kharl said, trying to keep his voice level.
Then, right after Fyngel left the mill, couldnt say that it was more than a 
glass, if that, Overcaptain Vielamthats Lord Wests middle sonhe came 
a-riding up to my door
Kharl had feared that what Wassyt would say wouldnt be good, but Wassyts words 
were far worse than hed expected.
 told me that I milled the best of anyone in the western quadrant, and that 
hed be pleased to keep having the lords grains milled, but that his sire had 
decided that well, that if I put it in certain barrels
My barrels?
In certain barrels, theyd have to find another miller, Wassyt concluded.
That would make it hard on you and your family.
Thats when I told the overcaptain that I heard him, but asked him for some 
care, seeing as Id already half paid for thirty barrels of that kind, and 
surely he could understand that, seeing how close it is to harvest. Well he 
hemmed, and tilted his head, but he said that he could see that, and so long as 
Id order no more, hed overlook it this one time, and hed make sure that my 
tariffs didnt rise like those would who hadnt supported his sire. Wassyt 
shrugged his overlarge shoulders. And there you have it.
I thank you for what you did and could do, Kharl said. There isnt more that 
you could, and those thirty barrels will be the best you could wish for.
Id be wishing I could do more, Master Kharl
Ive felt and seen what happens to those who cross Lord West and his sons. Id 
not wish that on anyone.
Thought you might understand.
I do.
Well best I be going for now. Just wanted to see things square.
Thank you.
The miller took several steps toward the door, before stopping and looking back 
at Kharl. Got a cousin in Jelenn. Hes a cooper. Better than Mallamet, not so 
good as you. Hes been thinkin of coming south. If you ever think of lettin 
the place go Id be staking him.
Until the trouble I wouldnt have thought about it, Kharl said. Its still 
hard.
Understand. Wassyt shifted his weight. All right if I send a teamster three 
eightdays from now?
Thatd be fine.
After the miller left, Kharl just stared at the bench and the coins lying there. 
He couldnt blame the miller, not when the tariffs were laid by Lord West. And 
unlike some, such as Aryl, Wassyt was trying to be fair and do the best he could 
in a difficult situation.
Kharl eased the coins into his belt wallet, then slowly turned to check the 
white oak barrel he was about to toast.
The cooperage door opened, and Warrl hurried back to the hearth area. Da? Did 
the miller order some barrels?
Not exactly, Warrl. Hed already ordered them.
You didnt
After everything well I wasnt sure, but hes stood by his words, and well 
be making twenty more slack barrelsthats in addition to the ones weve already 
got ready.
Thirty barrels you dont look so happy for all that.
Im still worried, son, Kharl confessed. Outside of Aryl and Wassyt, its 
been a slow harvest season, and people dont need near as many barrels in the 
late fall and in winter.
Sometimes they break them.
They dont break many of mine, Kharl pointed out.
Then why dont they buy more from you?
Mine cost a few coppers more, and people dont think about how long a barrel 
will last. And some of them dont need really good barrels.
Why dont you make two kinds of barrels, then?
Because most people would buy the cheap ones, and then theyd complain that 
they werent as good as the others, and Id have to make the good barrels for 
less to keep them buying from me. And, because, he had to admit to himself, he 
hated the idea of making barrels that werent as well crafted as they should be.
Oh Warrl didnt sound convinced.
You can get back to working on those staves.
Yes, Da. Warrl stepped back toward the front of the cooperage. He picked up 
the hollowing knife, then stopped. He looked out the window for a long time.
Kharl watched his son, wondering what the youth was dreaming about and whether 
there was really anything he could do about it.
L
XX
Another three days passed, and the end-days arrived with no one buying or 
ordering any barrels or casks. No one else even peered into the cooperage. It 
had not been that hot for harvest, and except for fourday it had not rained, 
although the sky had been overcast for most of the past two eightdays. Eightday 
had been quiet, the shop shuttered, and finally, oneday morning, the sun had 
finally come out in full brilliance. As on the previous few days, no one had 
even walked into the cooperage. Kharl was not surprised, but he still had to 
finish the barrels for Wassyt and Aryl, although he fretted that hed gotten no 
new orders since those two.
Around late morning, Kharl stepped back from the planer.
He glanced toward the steps upstairs, as he had so many times over the years, 
thinking about dinner. He swallowed, once more realizing that Charee was not 
there to fix it or there for anything else.
He looked down at the empty flask on the side of the bench.
Da? asked Warrl, whose eyes had been as much on the front window as on the 
shakes he was hollowing.
Were almost out of sharpening oil, Kharl said. I need to get some, and it 
will help to stretch my legs. You can watch the shop, and then you can take some 
time to eat when I get back.
I can do that.
Good. I dont plan to be long.
Kharl brushed off his garments, then, with a nod at his son, picked up the 
leather flask and hurried out of the cooperage into a bright sunny day, one more 
like midsummer than early harvest. He dodged around a well-dressed man who was 
studying the books in Tyrbels window and continued down Crafters Lane.
Less than a block farther west, Kharl saw Dhulatthe cabinetmaker whose shop was 
on the corner of Fourth Cross and Cargo. The cooper started to lift his hand in 
greeting to the older man, but as he did Dhulat abruptly looked down and crossed 
the lane, clearly not wanting to meet Kharl.
For a moment, Kharl almost stopped walking. People in Brysta were usually 
friendly, and hed even bought a chest from Dhulat several years back, a modest 
piece to be sure, but the cabinetmaker had seemed pleased enough to sell it. So 
why was the cabinetmaker avoiding Kharl? Were Egen and his brothers telling 
everyone about Kharl, warning them not to buy from him?
As he kept walking Kharl glanced around, but he saw none of the Watch nearby, 
just a few crafters, some women shopping, and a laundress with her wash in a 
tall basket on her head. The day was hot, hotter than it had been in more than 
an eightday, and he blotted his forehead as he continued along the lane.
He reached Hyesals shop without any other incidents, passing a few crafters or 
assistants that he knew, and trading nods, but no words. He stepped into the 
apothecary shop, with its faintly acrid odor.
The angular Hyesal was behind the counter, watching as Kharl approached. He said 
nothing until Kharl set the empty flask on the counter. Cant say Im surprised 
to see you, Kharl. You always did have more backbone than sense.
I just need a bit of that sharpening oil. Kharl gestured to the flask.
You need to have your head sharpened, and that doesnt take oil. Stupidity is 
the wellspring of chaos. Hyesal picked up the flask. Ill get
your oil. Without another word, he slipped into the back room.
His head sharpened? Kharl grimaced. Hyesal had never been known for his 
unwillingness to call a clipped coin, no matter who had tendered it.
The apothecary returned shortly and set the flask back on the counter. One 
copper. Same as always.
Kharl handed over the coin. Youre sharper than I am, Hyesal. Thats why youre 
the apothecary. What good would sharpening my
head do?
Might point you out of Brysta while you still have it. Your head,
that is.
You think
Does a bull have horns? Does a winter sea storm? You wager against either, and 
you lose. Always. You make good barrels. Make them someplace else. He shook his 
head. Ive said my piece. More than my piece. Do as you please. The apothecary 
turned and left Kharl standing there.
Slowly, the cooper picked up the flask and headed for the door. As he stepped 
out of the apothecary shop and turned eastward, away from the harbor and back 
toward the cooperage, Kharl could feel eyes on his backor so he thought. The 
feeling didnt go away. So, just opposite the square, Kharl stopped to look at 
the torque on display in the goldsmiths window. He wasnt that interested in 
it, even as artistry, but he wanted to see if someone happened to be following 
himor if he were imagining it. After a moment, he turned slowly, letting his 
eyes travel back along
the lane.
A single figure in the dark blue and black of the Watch stood waiting a half a 
block back toward the harbor. The squarish Watchman made no secret of his 
interest in Kharl, and his eyes met Kharls as the cooper continued to scan the 
square, looking past the Watchman.
Kharl nodded, as if to himself, then crossed the lane to the square, his eyes 
falling on the section of wall where hed first seen Jenevra. He shook his head.
Ser! A copper for a poor lad? A copper! A small figure in gray appeared and 
went to his knees in front of the cooper, totally abject. The bright eyes belied 
the position.
Kharl fumbled for a copper. He owed Jekat for Werwals business.
Pisser Egens after you, whispered Jekat. Tellin everyone to order from you 
isnt a good thing. He raised his voice. A copper, ser? Just a copper.
Kharl fumbled out two coppers. Why?
You made him look stupid you and the scrivener Scriveners got friends in 
high places you dont
Heres your copper. Kharl extended two.
Thank you, ser! exclaimed the urchin loudly, adding in a lower voice, More n 
one of his bullies watching you. Youre supposed to see one, not the other
Thank you, murmured Kharl.
Do what we can murmured Jekat, before scampering away.
Kharl resumed his progress back to the shop, wondering what he could do. He knew 
no one outside of Brysta and the surrounding area and there was Warrl to 
consider. For the moment, he could pay Sanyle to cook and help, but what would 
he do elsewhere? How would he get there?
The flask in his hand felt like a weight.
XXI
Jxharls hope that he could somehow avoid the unpleasantness predicted by Wassyt 
was shattered when the cooperage door opened late on threeday. A hearty-faced 
blond man taller than Kharl walked inside. While he came into the cooperage 
alone, before the door shut Kharl could see the pair of burly personal guards in 
green and gray station themselves outside, one on each side of the cooperage 
door.
Warrl looked to his father.
You can go upstairs and see how Sanyles coming with supper, Kharl said. His 
words were far closer to a command than a mere suggestion. The cooper set the 
drawing knife down on the bench.
Yes, Da. Warrl slipped away.
Now cooper, youll be having the boy think that Im a demon of some sort, 
called the man whod entered.
Not a demon, Fyngel, just a tariff farmer to be treated with respect.
Fyngel laughed. You put it better than most, cooper. You dont think different. 
You just speak nicer.
As Kharl watched, Fyngel surveyed the cooperage, walking to one side and 
counting the billets of oak set in the racks, then surveying those barrels on 
display in the window. Good-looking barrels you got there, cooper. First-rate, 
Id say.
I do the best I can.
Fyngel checked the workbenches, and the forge and the hearth, as well as the 
fire pots, then the loading door and the barrels stacked beside the door. He 
came back and studied the planer. Doin well, it looks like.
Its the slowest harvest in many years, Kharl pointed out.
Thats what everyone says when the tariff farmer shows. Every har-vesttime is 
the slowest. Fyngel laughed once more, producing a ledgerlike book that he set 
down and opened on the finishing bench.
Kharl waited.
Best you come here and take a look, cooper. Book hasnt been updated in some 
years, the tariff farmer said. Lord West told us we had to go out and check 
all the crafters, make sure that everything was down right.
Kharl walked to the finishing bench. Fyngel reeked of grease and a
sweet rose scent.
Now, you got a forge here. Book doesnt show that.
Its only a half forge. A farrier could use it, but a smith wouldnt be able to 
do all that he needed on it, and the hearth space isnt big enough.
Forge is a forge, so far as tariffs go. Thats another five golds. The tariff 
farmer made a note with his grease markstick.
Kharl held his tongue. His total tariffs due the previous winter had only been 
three golds, and hed had trouble raising the coin. Three golds didnt sound 
that large, not until you had to count out three hundred coppersand that was 
roughly Kharls margin on 150 barrelsor twice that many barrels on arrangements 
like the one hed been forced into with Aryl.
Then you got racks for your lumber. Those arent in the book. Say another gold 
for that. Fyngel smiled as he wrote a few more numbers, but the expression was 
anything but friendly.
The racks were there when the cooperage was first built, Kharl said. That was 
in my grandsires time.
That may be, cooper, but theyre not in the book. Looks like your
sire got a good deal. The rear loading door isnt in the book, either. So 
thatll add another three to your tariff.
Kharl waited.
After making a last notation, Fyngel looked up. Twelve golds. Be due the first 
eightday of winter, same as always. With another less-than-friendly smile, he 
closed the book. Lord West also says that any tariffs paid after the second 
eightday of winter, I have to charge another gold for each eightday theyre 
late.
Kharl just nodded.
Well be seeing you and your golds in a season, cooper. Fyngel smiled a last 
time before turning and walking out.
Kharl walked toward the door, watching as the tariff farmer rejoined his guards, 
men bigger than Fyngel himself, and the three walked eastward along the lane. 
Kharl stood just inside the door, trying to unclench his fists.
Tyrbel appeared outside his scriptorium and walked slowly to the cooperage, 
stepping inside. He looked at Kharl. You look less than pleased.
Did he visit you?
Before you, Tyrbel announced. I pleaded with him about my expenses in 
repairing the display window. He was not moved.
So he upped your tariffs, too?
Twice what they were last year, admitted the scrivener. And you?
Mine are four times last years.
If you pay it, next year, it will be double that. If you survive that long.
Youre cheerful, Kharl said dourly.
I see what I see. Do you think otherwise?
No.
I wrote to some I know in Hemmen and Vizyn. I told you that.
Vizyn mused Kharl. Would the Austrans let in a Nordlan?
A cooper who was mistreated by one of the Lords of the Quadrant?
I would think so. Tyrbel nodded. I have not heard back, but the
scrivener I know there is called Taleas.
Taleas in Vizyn. Then Kharl laughed, ruefully. As if I could even
get there. Golds for passage, and then what? Throw myself upon the
town, begging that Im a good cooper?
You could sell the cooperage here.
For what? A handful of coppers? Everyone would know, and Mal-lamet might bid a 
gold, if that, and Id still owe the tariff.
Tyrbel shook his head. They cannot collect from a man who does not live in 
Nordla.
I dont run.
My friend if you do not run, you had best find twelve golds in a season. 
Tyrbel paused. I will write others I know as well. It cannot
hurt.
Thank you. Kharl doubted it would help, but he wasnt about to say that to one 
of the few men who had stood up for him against Egen and Lord West.
Good evening. Tyrbel nodded, then turned and slipped out the
door.
After Tyrbel left, it was late enough that Kharl did not feel like working 
longer. Slowly, deliberately, he barred the doors, including the loading door, 
and closed and locked the shutters. Then he started up the steps to the upper 
level. He stopped at the door, slightly ajar, when he heard Warrls voice.
 tariff farmers?
 collect tariffs for Lord West best not to cross them, replied
Sanyle.
Da he didnt do anything he just stood there
Were you watching? Did he not tell you to come up here?
 just watched from the door no one could see but he just
stood there.
What would you have him do? Fyngel has his own armsmen, and he has the warrant 
to send anyone who opposes him to prison.
But Da he cant pay all those golds
You want him to fight the tariff farmer, get thrown into prison, flogged again, 
and still owe the tariffs while hes too hurt to work?
asked Sanyle.
 youre just like Da always telling me why I cant do things miss Ma she 
wasnt like that
That had been one of Charees faults, Kharl knew, one hed indulged. Shed never 
wanted to point out limits. He banged on the door. Supper ready, yet?
Almost, called back Sanyle.
Ill wash up.
When Kharl made his way into the main room, Warrl looked up from where he sat on 
a stool beside the serving table, but the boy did not speak.
Just sit down, and Ill have the dumplings out in a moment, Sanyle said.
As Kharl passed the single easy chair, his eyes dropped to the book lying 
thereThe Basis of Order. He had not read much of it, just skipped through it. 
He was a cooper, not a youth, and not an order-master. What good would learning 
more about order do him? It certainly wouldnt pay his tariffs. But then, it 
didnt look like coopering would, either.
XXII
lhe remainder of the eightday passed without another buyer even entering the 
cooperage, and eightday itself dawned bright. Because so few shopped or 
purchased anything on the second end-day Kharl did not open the cooperage doors, 
although he often worked. The present eightday was no exception, since he did 
not have all the barrels he needed for Korlan, or for Wassyt and Aryl. With the 
increased tariff he would owe to Fyngel at the first of winter, every copper 
counted more than ever.
While Kharl ran the shooks through the planer, Warrl was laying out more of the 
white oak billets, now that Kharl had scraped together enough to pay Vetrad the 
balance owed for the seasoned oak, which had finally been delivered the day 
before.
A thumping came from somewhere, barely audible above the noise of the planer.
Theres someone at the door, Warrl called.
Were not open, Kharl pointed out.
Warrl peered through the shutters. Its Aunt Merayni and Uncle Dowsyl.
With a feeling of dread about what was to come, Kharl stepped back from the 
planer and set the half-finished stave on the bench, then
walked to the doorway and unbarred the door. He held it open until the man and 
the woman standing on the sidewalk stones stepped inside. He closed the door, 
but did not replace the bar.
How long before you were going to tell us, Kharl? snapped Merayni, a tall and 
broad woman only a fraction of a head shorter than the cooper, wearing a brown 
tunic and trousers. She stepped past Kharl and into the cooperage.
Dowsyl was only slightly taller than Merayni, but broader. His sleeveless tunic 
and half-sleeved underrunic showed arms that were heavily muscled. He said 
nothing as he followed his consort.
Shortly, Kharl replied. Ive tried He closed the door.
Tried? I never got a word from you. How about never? It takes a message from my 
nephew for me to find out that my sister is dead, that one nephew has fled 
Nordla, and that you have angered every important person in the Quadrant.
You seem to know more than I do, Kharl replied.
Dowsyl cleared his throat, then spoke into the silence that followed. Charee is 
dead. Arthal is gone. You will lose the cooperage before winter. This is what 
Warrl wrote. Is that all true?
Charee Arthal those are true, Kharl admitted.
How do you plan to care for Warrl? asked Merayni.
Weve managed. We will manage.
Managed? For the sake of a woman you didnt even know, you got my sister 
killed. Is that how youll manage? asked Merayni.
Kharl looked to Warrl. The youth had edged toward Merayni. Kharl just looked. 
Finally, he spoke. We have managed. Warrl is my son. He is fed and taught and 
cared for.
For how long? questioned Merayni.
The cooper didnt have an answer, not one that would have been truthful.
Warrls coming to the holding with us, Kharl. Meraynis voice softened. Its 
better that way. You must know it is.
What about the cooperage? asked Kharl, knowing his words were futile, but 
feeling that he had to say something. Someday, it will be his, but not if he 
doesnt learn to be a cooper.
You promise that? How many orders for barrels did you get in the last 
eightdays?
Im to deliver thirty barrels to Korlan, thirty to Wassyt, and twenty
to Aryl, all in the next two eightdays. Kharl gestured to the stacks of 
unfinished shooks and semifinished staves.
Did any of them order any more? demanded Merayni. They only need barrels just 
before and during harvest.
Kharl Merayni paused, then spoke slowly. We may live a day away from Brysta, 
but we know people, and weve asked around. No one will order more from you. 
Theyre too afraid of Lord West and his tariff farmers. You wont be able to pay 
your tariffs, and youll lose the cooperage. In a few eightdays
Enough enough Kharl looked at Warrl. So you wrote your aunt?
I had to, Da I had to. You didnt. Warrl met his fathers gaze without 
flinching. I know you tried I saw but you didnt. Kharl turned to Merayni, 
but did not speak. Neither did she.
I tried to save a woman she was little more than a girl. She wasnt much older 
than your Dowlan, Merayni. Shed been beaten and abused. She would have died. I 
was supposed to let her die?
She was a blackstaffer from Reduce. You know how people feel about them. 
Nothing good could possibly come from trying to save her. What good did it do? 
She died anyway.
I was supposed to know that?
Sometimes, Kharl you have to think of your own. Thats always been your 
problem. You have too big a heart, and people take advantage of you. Charee knew 
that. We all know that. But this time, when you didnt think of your own, 
everyone suffered. Charees dead. Arthals on a ship somewhere
The Fleuryl, Kharl interjected.
Youre going to lose everything you ever worked for, Merayni continued 
implacably, and Warrl has to choose between leaving his father and becoming a 
beggar or an orphan. Thats all because you wouldnt think first of your consort 
and your family. She looked to Warrl. You can do whatever you will, but I am 
not letting my sisters son suffer any more because of your stubbornness.
Warrl looked helplessly at his father, even as he moved up beside his aunt. I 
didnt want to write but you someone had to tell Auntie
Someone had to, Kharl said heavily. I was wrong not to write. I
should have written. Do you He stopped. Whatever he said would make no 
difference. No difference at all. He could fight but for what? Keeping his son 
for another season before he lost everything? And if he didnt well, then, he 
could always make his way out to their holding and orchards and prove them 
wrong.
His eyes went to Warrl. Youd better get your things. Take anything you want. 
He turned and walked to the back of the shop, opposite the forge.
Da
Kharl did not turn.
Behind him, there were whispers, then footsteps on the stairs.
Dowsyl walked back to the forge. Kharl?
What?
You get through this, and Warrl would come back. Hes lost his mother. Hes 
worried, and hes scared. He needs to be someplace safe.
I can see that.
Can you?
He and Merayni have made it clear. Kharl paused, then looked squarely at 
Dowsyl. Ill get through it.
If you do, youre welcome. Even if you dont, youre welcome. Place could hold 
you and Warrl.
Thank you.
Glad it wasnt me found that blackstaffer, Dowsyl said. Cant make a right 
choice in a spot like that.
Dowsyl! called Merayni. I need some help here.
The grower nodded to Kharl. I meant it.
Thank you, Kharl said again.
Dowsyl turned and made his way up the steps.
Some time passed. Kharl didnt know how much. He heard footsteps coming down the 
steps. He didnt look.
Da please dont be angry at me
Kharl turned. He looked at the thin, tear-streaked face of his son. We all have 
to do what we think is right. I did what I thought was right. You did what you 
thought was right. Im angry, but Im not angry at you for that. I hope you 
understand someday.
Da
Kharl stepped forward and put his arms around Warrl. Its all right.
It is.
Come see me please
As I can, son as I can Kharl stepped back.
Are you ready, Warrl? asked Merayni.
Yes, Auntie. Warrl stepped back.
You can come to see Warrl anytime you want, Kharl, Merayni said. Anytime
Kharl just nodded.
Until then, she added.
Kharl just watched as the trio left the cooperage, carrying three large bundles.
The shop door shut. For a time Kharl just looked at the closed door.
Then, he stepped away from the cold forge, back toward the planer.
His eyes fell to the black staff, still where he had left it under the bench. He 
bent down and pulled it out. Once more, the wood felt warm, comfortable, in his 
hands. After studying the staff for a long moment, he leaned it against the 
wall. He still had barrels to do if he ever wanted to pay the tariffs.
XXIII
L/neday came, and went, and no one walked in the door, and Kharl finished the 
red oak slack barrels for Aryl. Twoday came and went, and so did threeday and 
fourday. Kharl continued to work, planing, drawing, fitting, firing, toasting 
And not a single buyer, or even anyone who might buy, came into the cooperage.
On fiveday morning, Kharl just looked blankly at the planer and the white oak 
shooks stacked on the carry-cart. Almost five days, and hed talked to no one 
except Sanyle, when she had brought him his midday dinner. At night, hed tried 
to read The Basis of Order, but the words drifted by and around him, their 
meaning not reaching him, as though he were a desert isle in the middle of the 
ocean, unable to drink the water surrounding him.
In less than half a season, hed gone from being a successful cooper with a good 
consort and two sons to a man whod lost both his consort
and his sons, and who would soon lose his cooperage, if not more, unless matters 
changed much for the better. And he saw no way to make that change.
He stepped away from the planer and absently brushed the thin strips of wood off 
his tunic and out of his beard, a beard that needed trimming.
He walked slowly to the display window, looking out and watching Crafters Lane 
for a time, noting the man in a grayish blue tunic standing on the corner. Over 
the past few days, hed seen the same man, more than a few times. Was he one of 
the Watchmen who were keeping an eye on Kharl?
Why did anyone care? Was Egen that vindictive? Because hed been thwarted of his 
pleasure with Sanyle? And because a mere cooper had dared to stand up to the son 
of a lord? Kharl hadnt even known who Egen was when all that had happened.
After a time, Kharl walked back to the planer. He still had more than a few 
staves to shape for the barrels already ordered. His eyes dropped to the cudgel 
that hed taken to keeping close by him. Then he began to pump the foot pedal.
XXIV
hose who do not understand order or chaos say that the two belong only to those 
with the gift for one or the other, and that those who have such gifts are few. 
This is a truth, and it is also a falsehood. Many men and women have gifts. Some 
are more intelligent than others; some are stronger; some are more patient; some 
have great courage; some have greater understanding. So to say that one has a 
gift for order or chaos can be a truth. Yet, to suggest that there is something 
improper about understanding order or chaos because it requires a gift is a 
falsehood. Each and every great talent, whatever it may be, requires a gift of 
greater ability. A man may have a gift for letters, and for distilling truth. A 
woman may have a gift for numbers, and for trading of goods.
A youth may have the gift of song, and another the gift of hands that can shape 
iron or wood. So it is with order and chaos.
Yet many would claim that the gift to understand order and chaos is different 
from the gift of understanding other aspects of the world, that anyone can be a 
crafter or an engineer, but that only a special few can become order-mages or 
chaos-masters. This is a falsehood, for the great ones in any area of endeavor 
are few, whether that area be engineering, cabinetry, fishing, or order-magery
In the beginning, as a child, a boy or girl can have a gift, not for one or the 
other, but for either, or, if the gift is great enough, for both So can a man 
or woman, once grown, if he or she approaches order as might a child. For order 
is a wonder, and those who can yet wonder as children can have their eyes opened 
at any age
The Basis of Order
XXV
After shaping the slope of the barrel chime of yet another red oak slack barrel, 
Kharl set the adze down and blotted his forehead with the back of his forearm. 
After almost an eightday of clear and sunny weather, it had rained earlier in 
the day, and then the sun had come out full force. By midafternoon all of Brysta 
was enveloped in hot wet air. Even the interior of the cooperage was hot and 
sticky. Kharl had left both the loading door and the front door open, because 
there was a slight breeze that seemed to make the cooperage fractionally cooler.
The back section of the shop was filled with barrelsboth slack and tight, and 
Kharl had all of those ordered by Korlan ready, as well as most of those for 
Wassyt and Aryl. Who would order or purchase more barrels, Kharl didnt know, 
but that was a stream hed ford later. With so few customers, he couldnt afford 
not to have barrels at the ready.
He laughed once, a harsh bark, then blotted his forehead again. He didnt have 
any choice but to wait and see.
He picked up the adze, turned the next barrel, and began shaping.
He stopped. Had he heard something? He frowned, and lifted the adze once more. 
Then he lowered it, listening.
Help! Thieves! The yell died out.
As he recognized Tyrbels voice, Kharl grabbed the cudgel that he had kept handy 
and, still holding the adze in the other hand, dashed to the front of the 
cooperage and out through the door, elbowing it full open, onto Crafters Lane 
and into the full sunlight. In a handful of long steps, he was just outside the 
scriveners door, still blinking as his eyes struggled to adjust to the 
afternoon glare.
A wiry figure in brown darted from the scriptorium, dodging away
from Kharl.
The cooper recognized the man, and, without thinking, threw the adze full force 
and straight into the mans shoulder and chest. The man lurched back, one hand 
grasping, then pulling at the adze wedged in his shoulder. Annoyance and pain 
flashed across the mans face.
Kharl stepped forward and brought the cudgel around in a short arc, with all the 
force hed developed over the years at the bench and forge. The heavy cudgel 
head crashed into the smaller mans temple, and his eyes widened, as if he could 
not believe he had been struck. He pitched forward, hand still on the haft of 
the adze. He shuddered once and was
still.
Kharl stood there, cudgel still in his hand, looking blankly down, realizing 
that he had killed the man who had visited the cooperage the afternoon before 
Jenevra had been killed. While the cooper could not have proved anything, he 
knew the dead man at his feet had been her
killer.
From inside the scriptorium came a long piercing scream that
seemed to go on and on.
Kharl turned. Sanyle was screaming. Tyrbel was dead.
A squat laundress coming up the lane staggered as she saw the body on the stones 
and Kharl and his cudgel, then put up her hand to straighten the basket balanced 
on her head before crossing the lane away from the dead man and Kharl. The 
Watchman in bluethe one who had been watching the cooperagesprinted down 
Crafters Lane.
Gharan appeared and ran across the lane. So did Hamyl.
Kharl! Get a pack and leave! Gharan ordered. Youve got to run. Now.
What? Kharl couldnt believe the weavers words.
You think youll walk out of the Hall of Justicers this time?
Lord Westll have you hanging from the scaffold by tomorrow night, added 
Hamyl. Unless the Watch get you first.
Well tell everyone what happened, Gharan promised. We will, but itll be too 
late if the Watch gets you.
The words finally broke through to the cooper.
He could not speak, but nodded. Then he hurried back into and through the 
cooperage, dropping the cudgel as he took the steps upstairs two at a time. Once 
into the bedchamber, he threw his best trousers, a good tunic, and underclothes 
into the pack, then another pair of boots and a winter jacket. He took the bag 
of silvers from the strongbox, hung it around his neck under his undertunic on 
the leather thongs. He scooped all of the coppers into the pack. As he 
straightened up, he saw the book on the table and stuffed it inside his still 
unfastened pack. Then he tied the pack shut.
Hed taken the book because, if the Watch found that, there was no telling what 
lies they might spread. He hurried down the steps, swinging the pack onto his 
back. Once on the shop floor, he started for the loading door that was still 
open to the alley.
He stopped as he saw the staff still leaning against the wall, then dashed to 
the far side of the shop and grabbed it. No one questioned staffs, and it was 
something else he didnt want to leave, although he couldnt have said why.
Hurry! hissed a voice from the loading door. The Watch is almost out front.
Kharl whirled.
Jekat gestured through the partly open loading door. This way, ser! You got to 
run! Watchll get you otherwise.
Should he follow the urchin?
Who else could he trustwho knew the alleys and the back streets?
Kharl ran, straight through the loading door. Abruptly, he stopped but for an 
instant to close the loading door behind him, before sprinting to catch up to 
the urchin who had begun to run, if slowly, toward the northeastern end of the 
alley.
Cant catch me! Jekat yelled as he ran out of the alley and turned
on Fifth Cross.
Ill get you! Kharl yelled back. You miserable urchin! Some of those on the 
cross street looked scandalized, others amused, and only one man tried to grab 
the elusive Jekat as Kharl raced after the urchin, trying to counterfeit the 
rage of a man robbed by a light-fingered
boy.
Jekat darted into a serviceway, and Kharl followed, panting heavily.
He might work hard in the cooperage, but he had not run so fast nor so far in 
years. The urchin slowed some and turned westward into the alley, again 
downhill. Kharl lumbered after him, down another road and up Fourth Cross, 
finally catching up with the beggar youth near the intersection of the alley off 
Fourth Cross and Old Mill Road, some five blocks southwest of where the chase 
had started behind his cooperage. Jekat ducked into another serviceway, moving 
into the shadows.  give it to you, ser can run panted Jekat.  give it to 
you good idea counterfeiting theft
No one heeds man chasing a beggar lad Kharl took some more deep breaths, 
half-bent over. He was still panting and soaked in sweat. How did you know?
 was watchin. I saw the Watch run off. Coward.
So now what do I do to keep out of Lord Wests hands? asked Kharl. Or 
Egens.
Same as I do, replied Jekat. Youll learn.
XXVI
In the twilight of early evening, Kharl leaned against the stones, trying to get 
comfortable in the narrow space between the two walls, one ancient brick and the 
other even more ancient stone, while attempting to ignore the greater stench 
from beyond the stone wall and the lesser from beyond the brick. Overhead was a 
roof of sorts, composed of odd pieces of timber and wood and covered with layers 
of discarded fabric and molded leather, but there was open space on each end of 
the makeshift
i
roof. To the east the space ended in a wall of yellow brick. At the west end was 
a jury-rigged partition of woven branches and cloth. The ground had been scraped 
smooth and clean, but it was still hard.
No ones going to come here, Jekat said.
With the rendering yard on one side and the tanner on the other and with no 
one knowing this space is here I can see why, observed Kharl.
Even Werwal doesnt know. The towhead brushed back ragged-cut hair.
You sure about that? asked the cooper.
Maybe he does. But he wouldnt say. Him and Sikal, they understand. Drenzel, 
he doesnt know, never even comes back behind the dumping vats. After a moment, 
the urchin looked at Kharl. Suppose you dont have many coppers?
I have a few, Kharl replied. I could only grab a handful or so before I got 
out of the cooperage. Didnt have long. For some reason, the deception bothered 
him, necessary as he felt it was.
You give me a pair I can get us a good chunk of fowl. Clean and hot. Tasty, 
too.
How will you manage that?
Enelyashes at the White Pony. Long as I got coin, theyll get grub for me. 
Jekat grinned. Wont do ale. She says Durol watches the barrels too close. See 
what she does is put the fowl or whatever on the tab for someone. Slips it off 
to me then. Durol doesnt care, so long as the coins match. Jekat frowned in 
the dimness. Mayhap, need three to get enough for us both.
Youre still a thief, Kharl said, ruefully.
Watch what you say. Without me and yer friends
I know. Id be dead or laid out in a gaol chamber, waiting to be hung.
If you were lucky. They took Quelyn and flogged him, then poured salt and 
tanning acid across his backthat was before
Dont think I need to know that, young fellow.
You should Egen dont like you. Never seen him put so many men after a 
fellow.
Its enough to know hell do his worst if he catches me.
Real pissprick girls at the Bardo say he doesnt get excited less he thinks 
hes hurtin em. Likes em young, too. Some of em cry real quick real tears 
They have to
Kharl winced. How could a lord accept that kind of man as his son? The more he 
learned about Captain Egen, the more despicable the image of him became in 
Kharls mind.
You got those coppers? questioned Jekat. Kharl fumbled with his belt wallet 
and handed three to the boy. Good. Theres not a clipped one there.
You dont think itd be better for me to come with you?
Nah. Egens still got the Watch lookin for you, and you dont know the alleys 
and the serviceways. Maybe we can find you some rags tonight. Jekat eased along 
the uneven stone wall until he came to what seemed the dead end of yellow brick. 
There, after putting his foot up on a projection of stone, he climbed over the 
wall and vanished.
Kharl wondered if Jekat would ever return, but looking toward the cavelike area 
in the stone wall, where there were items like candle stubs, a rough pallet, and 
even a battered chamber pot, he had the feeling that the youth had nowhere else 
to go.
Like Kharl himself, the cooper reflected.
As the oblong of sky that Kharl could see to the west dimmed, he wondered how 
long before Jekat would return.
He looked from one wall to another, a space narrower than the gaol cell hed 
been thrown into, if longer, and then back up at the patch of evening sky. He 
still had to ask how so many people accepted the evil around them. He shook his 
head. Most were like Charee. So long as things seemed orderly and life went on, 
they didnt care about what didnt affect them. After a moment, he laughed. Hed 
been no better. The sky darkened into full night, and still Jekat had not 
returned. Kharl frowned, more worried about the boys safety than about whether 
he would return.
Then there was the faintest of scraping sounds, a scuffing, and a muted thump, 
and the small figure in shapeless gray reappeared out of
the darkness.
It took Enelya a while tonight. White Pony was busy, but the birds good. 
Jekat handed a bundle to Kharl, a goodly chunk of fowl wrapped in two huge slabs 
of bread.
I take it back, Jekat, Kharl mumbled after a large mouthful. Couldnt manage 
this less youre very good.
Wasnt my doin, not all the way, leastwise. Some sort of party. Had extras. 
Durol was probably happy to get the coppers. Or Enelya was.
Even through the darkness, Kharl could make out a grin as the urchin raised a 
crockery mug without handles. Have a swallow.
Ale? asked Kharl as he carefully took the chipped and handleless mug.
First time in a season, but a fellow wont turn that down.
Kharl took a sip to make sure it was ale, then a swallow. Good stuff. Was it 
good because he was so hungry? Probably.
Durol told Enelya hed look the other way if the serving girls wanted some. 
Some fellow paid for the whole keg.
I thank you and Enelya. Greatly. How did you work out this arrangement with 
her?
Shes from Sagana. Thats where I come from. She was a friend of my sis. When 
Sis and Ma died, I came here, heard shed found work at a tavern. Found her. She 
helps as she can. Sometimes I can help her. Got to find folks who will. Thats 
the only way Jekat yawned.
Kharl handed back the mug.
Mosta thats for you. Drank half a mug there. Jekat took a small swallow and 
handed the mug back, then chewed on something. You know wont be this good 
most nights. You need to get outa Brysta.
I need to get out of Nordla, Kharl said tiredly. To Austra, if I can.
How you goin to do that?
Know a ship-master. Calls here every season, sometimes more often. Think he 
might take me.
How long afore he calls again?
Kharl shrugged. Dont know. He was here, maybe half a season ago, maybe a bit 
longer. Said hed be back late fall, early winter.
Itll take some doing to stay away from the Watch for that long.
You have.
No one cares about a beggar boy. You pissed off Egen good. He still has people 
looking for you. What you going to do?
Wait listen to you. Then if the ship-master from Austra comes back, Ill try 
and get aboard. Could be a while, though.
Better lie low till then. Egens mean.
Why are you helping me? asked Kharl.
Why not? You always treated me good as you could. Most dont. Also, you stood 
up to Egen. Most dont. Jekat yawned. Sides, youre strong. Might need that.
Might need that? Kharl wondered as he took another swallow of the
ale. With it and the fowl, he could almost ignore the stenches from the renderer 
and the tanner.
After they finished eating and drinking the last of the ale, Jekat took back the 
mug and crawled into his cubbyhole and curled up under a tattered and soiled 
cover that looked to have been a drapery or hanging many long years before, 
doubtless before the boy had even been born.
Kharl made himself as comfortable as he could under the makeshift roof between 
the two walls, using his pack for a pillow. He looked upward into the darkness. 
Eventually, he did drift into sleep, a sort of restless dozing.
XXVII
Jxharl woke with the gray light of dawn, and the crowing of a rooster that he 
could have done without. Every muscle ached, even muscles he hadnt known he 
had.
The moment he moved, Jekats blond head peered out of the tattered hanging 
masking the cubbyhole. We need to get some grub.
You have a plan for that?
You got coins, we can try the lower market, except everyones looking for you. 
Even be some Watch down there.
Got some smelly rags?
Most round here smell Jekat grinned. I grabbed stuff last night. Got a 
really old cloak. You leave behind the undertunic and tunic. See if
itll do.
Kharl didnt want to leave the clothes and the pack and staff, but neither would 
have matched the beggarly image. But hed need to tie the pouch with the silvers 
around his leg, fasten it somehow to the inside of his thigh. While Jekat 
rummaged through the corner of the cubbyhole, he made the switch, but left the 
undertunic on, at least until he had something to wear. It was getting later in 
harvest, and mornings were chill. He probably should have pulled out the winter 
jacket for a cover to sleep under, but hed been so tired he hadnt even thought 
of it.
Then, after he took care of other necessities well down the wall in the
place suggested by Jekat, he returned and donned the ragged hooded cloak that 
half concealed his face.
The urchinin patched and shapeless graylooked up from under a ragged thatch of 
curly hair, more sandy than true blond. Let me go over the wall and look around 
first
That bothered Kharl, but he couldnt say why. Be careful.
Im always careful.
Jekat scrambled up the wall nimbly, vanishing silently over the top.
Kharl listened.
Then he heard a scuffling, and a single sharp cry, followed by low words.
Been layin for you, beggar boy seen you comin and goin. You got coin hidden 
in there, and youre gonna share it all with us
Mmmmhph
Hold him goin over. Oh now, what do we have here. A laugh followed. This 
is going to be fun real fun Geehm you take a look-see whats there.
On the far side of the wall that was only a cubit more than head high, Kharl 
slowly took hold of the staff, far too long to be really useful in the narrow 
space between the walls, and probably beyond, but the staff was all he had, and 
he certainly owed Jekat. He stepped back, waiting.
A lean man in a grimy brown tunic and dark gray trousers, with boots bound 
together with strips of leather, scrambled down over the wall, a stubby knife 
shimmering in his right hand. Even before the man could register Kharls 
presence, the cooper drove the end of the staff into the others gut with all 
the force he could manage.
Uuufff
You all right, Geehm? came from the other side of the wall.
Before the intruder could reply, Kharl brought the staff back and jabbed at the 
mans knife hand because there was no room to do anything but jab, even with his 
grip halfway down the smooth black wood.
Aee The knife dropped from the attackers hand, although Kharl hadnt struck 
that hard.
Kharl shifted his grip on the warm wood.
Not going to be easy not now, you bastard The intruder bent down.
Kharl could sense something, and almost without thinking he slammed the staff 
into the others shoulder. A second knife went flying
against the wall. Kharl brought the staff up, then down, in an awkward sideways 
blow, but one hard enough to drop the man, because he pitched forward, clearly 
unconscious the way he sprawled.
Kharl half vaulted over the fallen figure and leaned the staff against the end 
and corner of the walls as he scrambled up to the top of the wall, then reached 
down and grabbed the staff. As he turned he could see a smaller man holding 
Jekat and a third man, somewhat larger, moving to meet him even as Kharl dropped 
down into the end of the
ancient serviceway.
Oh so you had someone guarding your loot, hissed the man
holding Jekat. Get him, Brot.
Brot lumbered forward, a long knife in each hand.
The serviceway was wider than the space of Jekats hideaway, and that allowed 
Kharl to shift his hands inside the middle iron bands, so that he could use the 
staff properly. He hadnt used one in years, although his father had taught him 
the basics years before, when hed still been a boy, since staffs or cudgels 
were the only weapons permitted to artisans and
crafters.
Still, it seemed like the staff had a mind of its own, because Kharl could 
almost sense what the bigger man was about to do, and within moments one of the 
knives was on the dirt-covered stones, and one of Brots wrists hung almost 
limply. Yet the man charged Kharl again.
Kharl struck once more, then again, and there was a sickening crack, and Brot 
clutched his arm and shoulder, then sank to the stones.
Demon the smaller man started to thrust Jekat away, but his eyes went wide, 
then he crumpled, blood welling across the gray cloth that covered his guts. He 
started to moan.
Jekat bent, then straightened.
Kharl could see the redness across the fallen mans neck. The moans
had stopped.
Go away! Jekat snapped at Brot. Far away!
The big man Kharl had wounded staggered to his feet, arms dangling limply, and 
lumbered out of the serviceway, not even looking back, not saying a word despite 
what had to be great pain.
What? Kharl blurted.
Brots a no-mind. He lost it to a wizard years back. Did whatever his brother 
asked. Jekat gestured to the dead man on the stones, then looked up. The other 
one?
Knocked him out.
Let me look. Jekat scrambled to the top of the lower section of wall between 
the tanners wall and the Tenderers wall. He peered over, then looked back down 
at Kharl. Think you killed him. Hes not moving at all.
I didnt hit him that hard, Kharl said.
Jekat dropped back down to the pavement, eyes on the staff Kharl still held. 
Thats a black staff. Must be something about it.
Kharl had wondered, but hed scarcely had time to think about it. He looked at 
the staff once more. It had certainly been well made, and of lorken and black 
iron but that shouldnt have given it any special powers.
Anyway we need to get rid of these two.
Kharl looked at Jekat, taking in the shapeless gray clothes, the raggedly cut 
hair, the smooth skin, carefully smudged with grime. Hed never bothered to look 
closely before. Who studied urchins? A lot of things made much more sense.
Maybe youd better go
What is your name? he asked. Jekai, Jekati?
Jeka. Easy enough to add at.
Where do you want me to go? Kharl asked. You know I dont know the alleys and 
serviceways.
You stay, nothing changes. Her voice was wary.
Do you really think Id force anything? he asked. Besides, that was why you 
helped me, wasnt it? You must have seen something.
Jeka nodded. Saw you save the scriveners girl. Heard about the blackstaffer. 
Some mend save one. I dont know any whod risk for two. Leastwise, I never saw 
any. A brief smile crossed her face. Three, I guess, now. The smile vanished. 
Nothin changes.
Nothing, Kharl promised.
We still got to get rid of him and the other, Jeka pointed out.
After dark, Kharl suggested. Lift this one over the wall for now. When its 
dark, Ill drag them out and over a street or two. Leave em in the shadows. Try 
that now, and someone would see. Watch wont come here, will they?
Havent ever.
Do you think they told anyone else?
No. That kindd want to keep the loot to themselves.
As he lifted the dead mans body and pushed it up over the wall,
Kharl hoped so.
He turned to Jeka. Might as well go.
She nodded. Leave the staff and bend over. Shuffle. Uncomb
your beard.
Kharl couldnt exactly uncomb his beard, but he tried to make it look less 
groomed. In a few days, the way it grew, it would look disreputable enough. He 
didnt like leaving the staff, but she was right. It was too good for a beggar, 
far too good. He eased it back over the wall, then shuffled after Jeka out onto 
Copper Road. Should I beg? muttered Kharl.
You dont, and somell be looking at you funny, less you want to twitch and 
mumble, something like that.
A copper, just a copper copper, please Kharl mumbled. Whine more, 
suggested Jeka under her breath. A copper just one hungry please
Better, she said. Now you got a few more coppers? Kharl handed over three, 
trying to keep stooped over and shuffling. He was finding that holding that 
position was hard work.
The lower market was in the open space on the north side of the harbor, below 
First Cross, a flat area that had once held warehouses before theyd been swept 
away by the great flood and storm in Kharls grand-sires time. The odors of 
ripeand rottenfruit mixed with the smell of fish and freshly lighted charcoal 
on small braziers, and with other less
obvious odors.
As they drew nearer, Jeka motioned. You squat over there by that post. Beggars 
not supposed to be in the market.
The post was half of a rotting bollard that lay on its side twenty cubits from 
the first cart, and Kharl sat down cross-legged, the rags covering his trousers 
and boots.
Jeka slipped away.
The cooper began to beg.  copper just a copper He tensed as he saw two men 
in Watch uniforms strolling down Copper Road toward the market, but for him to 
move would call more attention than remaining huddled by the decayed bollard. 
Instead, he dropped his voice into a mumble, careful to keep his face down and 
partly shielded by the ragged hood.
Surprisingly, the two Watchmen ignored him, as if he did not exist,
and stood less than fifteen cubits away, their eyes on the melange of carts, 
goods spread on ground cloths, and even on the counters of portable stalls.
 what about that business with the silversmith
 sort of thing that reeks of Egen and his lavender
 who could say no traces
 never any traces deadly little sneak
The taller man laughed.  fine when hes with you needs you but better wear 
plate on your back dealing with him rather be down here
 safer than in the Justicers Halls. Thats certain
After a silence, one of two Watchmen asked,  you seen the new one at Bardos?
From Hamor, they say
Frigging amazing
Uh-oh
The two hurried toward a stall where the counter had been knocked down and a 
wizened woman held a thin youth in blue.
Tried to steal my silks, he did!
The youth saw the two in Watch blue, and tried to bolt. He almost broke free 
before one of the Watch coshed him with his truncheon.
Hsst
Kharl turned his head.
Jeka beckoned. Need to get you clear fore those two head this way.
Kharl didnt argue, but mock-struggled to his feet and hobble-shuffled after 
Jeka.
I got some bread and dried figs, and a wedge of hard cheese. WatchU come up 
Cargo Road. Be a good thing to be gone. We can fill the flask at the fountain on 
Second Cross.
Kharl hadnt seen the flask, but Jeka could have concealed that and more in the 
shapeless garments. She had, in fact.
They kept to the side of the road, making their way back along the alleyway off 
Copper Road up to Second Cross. The fountain there was for horses, but there was 
only one spavined cart mare drinking from the stone trough under the fountain. 
Without direction from Jeka, Kharl eased into the morning shadows and settled 
down into a heap against the brick wall across the street.
A tradesman walking swiftly by glanced toward Kharl.
A copper just a copper
Go work for it, fellow. No time for lazy beggars.
 worked hard, ser cant now
 all say that With a snort, the tradesman walked on by.
From somewhere else a copper clattered on the stones. Kharl swept
it in, almost feeling guilty.
Jeka waited until the ashman led the limping mare away, then rinsed
the flask and filled it.
Kharl made his hobbling and stooped way northward along Second Cross, then 
downhill, following the alley to First Cross, keeping Jeka at a distance until 
they passed the last wall of the slateyard, where she made her way to a pile of 
stones above the ancient breakwater and settled onto a wide and flat stone.
Kharl took the stone across from her. His eyes surveyed the harbor and the piers 
to the south. There were but five oceangoing vessels tied up, and none bore the 
twin square-rigged masts of the Seastag, not that hed expected the vessel to 
return to Brysta so soon.
Looking for that ship? asked Jeka, extending a chunk of bread and a section of 
the hard cheese.
Its not there. Wont be for two or three eightdays, at least. Maybe longer. 
Good view of the harbor from here.
We can see anyone coming from here. Cant really see us, not with
the slateyard wall.
Why did you come here from Sagana? he asked after a mouthful
of bread and cheese.
What else could I do? My da died when his mule bolted and the harness broke, 
metal buckle slashed his neck. Ma found him in the field. Strong woman, she was. 
She farmed the plot and sheared the flock from the time I could recall. Me and 
Sis, we spun and wove. Got to be pretty good. Fever got Ma and Sis, three years 
back. Tariff farmer, he claimed the place owed tariffs, loom and all. He said he 
was goin to indenture me to Gelhalran the same sort of place as Bardos, cept 
worse. I took the coins and ran. Im small been passing for a beggar boy. 
Figured Id have to leave soon. People notice when you dont grow. Jeka stopped 
to eat, then passed the water flask to Kharl.
Thank you.
What happened to your boys? Jeka asked. Saw em, and then
they were gone.
Arthal he signed on a ship as a carpenters apprentice, and Charees sister 
took Warrl. Couldnt fight that. Knew, I guess, I was going to lose the 
cooperage.
 Fore that business with Vexon?
Vexon?
Fellow you killed with the cudgel. Hes an assassin. He was till you killed 
him, anyway. Lotsa folk be pleased you did him in. They say he worked for Egen.
Thought so, Kharl mumbled.
Whyd you say youd lose the place?
Tariff farmerFyngel. Twice-doubled my tariff. Said hed been ordered to by 
Lord West. Egen, I figure. No way Id be able to raise twelve golds by the turn 
of winter.
Twelve golds?
Kharl nodded.
Like a fortune. Egen musta wanted to hurt you bad, said Jeka. Dont know 
which is worse, lord or tariff farmer.
Lord, suggested Kharl. Tariff farmers do as theyre told. May be greedy, but 
thats what the lords want.
Justicers arent much better.
Not from what Ive seen, Kharl agreed. My father, he said they were better in 
the old times, when Lord Wests grandsire was lord.
Cant go back. Past doesnt come again.
No. Kharl swallowed, a lump in his throat at the words, sitting on stone 
rubble on the ruined northern side of the harbor, realizing again all that hed 
lost. It doesnt.
XXVIII
For the next eightday, every morning Kharl woke up listening, wondering whether 
that day would be the one that the Watch would find him, or whether another set 
of beggar-brigands would track and attack them. Neither happenednot in the 
space between the walls nor on their journeys down the shadowed sides of 
streets, alleys, and serviceways,
but he was all too aware that either couldand still might.
After two days, hed found a length of cast-off timber, and, over the next 
several, managed to use his belt knife to carve a grip on it, so that it could 
function as half staff or cudgel, while looking like a walking stick for a 
creaky old man. Since Kharl felt it was unwise to take the black staff with him, 
the makeshift stick and weapon offered some reassurance.
On sixdayat least, he thought it was sixdayKharl woke early, almost shivering 
in a morning that verged on frosty. Jeka was still asleep behind her canvases. 
He wondered how long it might be before Hagan returned, but he knew that was 
eightdays away, maybe a half season at best, even with the so-called short 
voyage the Austran captain was making. If matters got too bad, perhaps Kharl 
could find another ship. Too bad? He nearly laughed out loud, but that would 
have wakened Jeka. He wasnt certain how things could get much worse, not unless 
Egen caught him and tortured and hanged him. Had he been wrong just to leave the 
cooperage? He frowned, thinking. He couldnt have sold the building and the 
business for enough golds even to pay the tariffs due. That was clear. But he 
still wondered.
The canvas shivered, and before long, Jeka appeared. You look as if someone was 
goin to hang you. Kharl almost burst into laughter at the cheerful tone of her 
voice expressing such dour thoughts. Sad to think I dont dare show my face
to buy food.
You do, and the Watchll be lookin for you, quick-like. They keep
asking for you.
You havent
Havent told no one. Vaskalone of em sorta nice to meget a copper from him 
now n then, he told me if I ever ran across yousaid the cooper Kharlbe a gold 
in it for me
Kharl shook his head.
I wouldnt take no gold. Wouldnt turn anyone over to Egen. Jekas
voice turned dark.
After a moment, Kharl spoke. I was thinking about the cooperage. Was my das 
and my grandsires. Thought Id be able to pass it on to my
boys.
Not with pisser Egen after you. They say Jeka broke off her
words.
What?
 just things. Hes mean, a lot meaner n he should be.
Kharl could agree with that. I thought Id go out for a bit.
If you want best be careful still dont know the alleys well as you should
Kharl stood. Ill be careful. Cant always ask you to do everything. After 
taking his makeshift stick and weapon, and gathering the ragged cloak that was 
far from warm enough around him, he eased his way up the wall. Once he was 
certain no one was in the serviceway, he clambered over and scuttled out of the 
serviceway and onto the street.
It was early enough that there were few about, just servants headed down to the 
fish market, and dockers and laborers. No one looked at the ragged beggar moving 
uphill toward the crafters section of Brysta, and when he began to ask for 
coppers, most moved well away from him.
As he neared his cooperage, Kharl moved from the main street into the alley that 
ran behind the Tankard, an alley likely to be empty in the morning. He kept his 
eyes open, and listened carefully, as he neared the rear of the cooperage. Both 
the rear door and the loading dock doorway had been carelessly boarded up. He 
watched for a time, but neither saw nor heard anyone.
He edged past the cooperage to Fifth Cross, where he turned back toward 
Crafters Lane. There he turned and limped slowly past the tinsmiths, then 
Derdans woolen shop, and finally past the cooperage, as slowly as he could. The 
display window of the cooperage was covered with boards, and what he could see 
of the glass was streaked with dirt and a few pigeon droppings.
On the door, also boarded shut, was an oblong of parchment with a blue wax seal 
and a blue ribbon. Both parchment and ribbon showed signs of water spots and 
dust. Kharl peered and squinted at the parchment.
 know all by these present that the premises and contents will be presented at 
public auction on sevenday, the tenth week of fall all may bid, save any 
related by blood to the former owner, the cooper Kharl
Kharl caught sight of someone walking up the far side of the lane and looked 
away, slowly limping toward the square. From what hed
glimpsed, the rest of the notice had declared that no bid under fifteen golds 
would be accepted and had then merely spelled out the need for the winning 
bidder to be prepared to pay in gold at the conclusion of the
auction.
The signature had been that of Reynol, Lord Justicer.
That didnt surprise Kharl in the slightest, nor did the minimum price. Lord 
West wanted his tariffs, one way or another.
Kharl kept limping past Tyrbels scriptorium. The door was closed, but not 
boarded up. He wondered if Sanyle still lived there, or if she had gone to live 
with one of her older sistersor if, horribly, Egen had taken her for his own 
purposes. The coopers lips tightened as he limped downhill toward the upper 
market square, the one now too good for him, where a beggar would be run off.
XXIX
Sevenday came and went, as did eightday and oneday. Kharls stomach growled most 
of the time. The end-days had been lean, with fewer places for Jeka or Kharl to 
cadge or buy food cheaply. Thin clouds promised a brisk and cool day, but one 
without rain, and one suited for what Kharl needed to do. He opened his pack and 
took out a tunic.
Jeka looked at Kharl, quizzically, but not speaking.
Im going to leave for a few days, he said. You want to come?
Where?
Out to the southeast, a hamlet called Peachill. Jeka cocked her head. No. 
Better that you go alone.
You be all right?
She laughed. I was fine fore you came be all right if you go.
Ill be back in a day or so.
Thats what
I will, Kharl said.
Ill see you then. Jeka turned her head away. Im going out to see my boy. 
Kharl didnt know why he had to explain to Jeka, but he did. I want to know if 
hes all right. He knew
that, in some ways, going to Peachill was dangerous. Dangerous or not, he had to 
know that Warrl was all right.
Whyd you leave him?
I didnt. I told you. He left me. He was afraid Id lose everything, and that 
somehow it was all my fault, and he wrote his aunt, and she came, and he left 
with her.
Jeka looked up at him.
Kharl wasnt sure how to read the darkness in her eyes. I knew they were right, 
but how how could I have just given up the cooperage?
She didnt say anything, but she might as well have stated that hed lost it 
anyway, and lost his sons as well.
I have to make sure hes all right. Kharl knew he was repeating himself, but 
she had to understand.
Jeka nodded. Ill be here. She turned away.
Kharl pulled on his tunic and winter jacket. Hed wear the ragged cloak over the 
jacket until he was clear of Brysta, but he wasnt going to see Warrl as a 
beggar. Especially not when his son was staying with Merayni.
Once he left the space between the walls, it took him more than a glass to reach 
the southeast road at the foot of the harbor on the outskirts of Brysta. No one 
seemed to be following him, but he kept walking until he was a good kay beyond 
the pillars that marked the limits of Brysta and until the road was empty. Only 
then did he shed the ragged cloak, roll it into a cylinder, and hide it in the 
hedgerow behind the stone wall. He paused a moment, trying to mark the location 
in his memory.
He kept the short walking stick, and it was almost a pleasure to be able to 
straighten up and stretch his legs along the gently curving road.
Midmorning came and went, and he was still on the road.
Early in the afternoon, he saw a woman cleaning out her garden, and for several 
coppers, persuaded her to provide him with a half a loaf of bread, some hard 
cheese, a leek, and permission to use her well for water. The water and the food 
added some spring to his step, at least for another three or four kays, when his 
feet began to ache, and his steps slowed.
Still, by late afternoon, he reached the kaystone that announced Peachill. He 
knew that Dowsyls orchards were off a lane on the west side of the road, 
somewhere short of the hamlet, but it had been more than five years since he and 
Charee had visited Merayni, and Kharl could not remember the lane exactly. He 
walked another five rods, and stopped.
With a sigh, he walked another fifty cubits to a hutlike dwelling set amid 
gardens needing preparation for the winter. There, he knocked.
After several moments, the oblong peep-door opened. Dont need nothing 
sharpened, came a womans voice.
Im not a tinker. Im a traveler. Could you tell me which lane leads to 
Dowsyls place?
Why you want to know?
Because theyre family, Kharl replied.
While the small part of the womans face Kharl could see expressed doubt, she 
cleared her throat. If you were coming south, you already passed it. Last lane 
back. Go in about two kays, and the house is just past the peach trees.
He still have the little barn between the pearapples and peaches?
Yes. Even with the single word, some of the suspicion lifted from the womans 
face. Then, the peep-door closed with a click.
Thank you. Even with the door closed, Kharl bowed. Then he headed back 
northward to the first lane.
It could have been that he was tired, but the distance to Dowsyls orchards 
seemed far longer than two kays. The sun hung low in the western sky above the 
rolling hills covered with a mixture of graying broadleaf trees and pines before 
Kharl stopped at the low stone wall that bordered the lane.
Beyond the peach trees, their leaves now almost entirely winter-gray, Kharl 
could see the square dwelling with the heavy thatched roof, and beyond the 
house, the rows of pearapple trees, with some leaves still showing patches of 
green. After standing in the lane for a time, he walked through the gateless 
opening in the stone wall. He had almost reached the clear area around the house 
when he heard footsteps to his right and turned.
Da! You came! Warrl ran from the small barn toward his father. He looked as 
though he might throw his arms around his father, then stopped. You came. I 
wasnt sure you would.
Your aunt said I was welcome, and I wanted to see how you were doing.
Ive learned a lot, and Warrl stopped and looked past Kharl. Kharl turned. 
The broad-shouldered Merayni, wearing a ragged apron covered with flour, 
appeared on the narrow porch of the orchard cottage.
The cooper nodded toward Charees sister, then began to walk toward her.
Warrl walked beside his father. Aunt Merayni Da came.
I see that. Meraynis voice was level.
Merayni Dowsyl appeared behind Warrl. Kharls walked a long way. Im sure he 
could use something for his thirst.
Merayni looked at her consort, then at Kharl. Ill find something. She paused. 
Everything is wonderful, and youre going to take Warrl? Her voice was cold 
and edged.
No. Things are not wonderful. You were right. Kharl met Meraynis eyes 
directly. I lost the cooperage, and Im getting by best I can. I may have to go 
to sea. But I wanted to see Warrl.
Abruptly, Merayni looked down, if but slightly.
Hard thing, to lose something like that, said Dowsyl slowly. Wouldnt want to 
lose the orchards and land. Know I wouldnt take to that.
Da Im sorry. Warrls voice was low.
You didnt do that, son. I made some mistakes. Sometimes you make mistakes, 
and bad things happen.
How did you lose it, Da? asked Warrl.
I couldnt make the golds for the tariffs. The justicer put it up for public 
auction. Said no one related to me by blood could bid on it. Kharl was troubled 
by his own words. Although what he said was truthful, what he implied was not 
exactly so.
Comes from upsetting lords murmured Merayni.
It does, Kharl agreed. But theres little I can do now.
Merayni slipped into the squarish dwelling.
Dowsyl stepped closer. Long walk, Kharl.
It was, but I wanted to see Warrl. I wasnt sure when I might be able to get 
back here.
Said you were welcome to stay here. I meant it.
I know, Kharl replied. I thank you for that, but Im a cooper. Im not a 
grower. I dont know trees or the land.
Merayni came back out onto the porch, bearing a large mug. Just drew this.
Kharl accepted the worn clay mug and took a long swallow of the cool water. 
Thank you. He took another, draining the mug and handing it back.
Well your Das here, Warrl, Dowsyl said. Hes had a long journey. Least we 
can do is have a solid supper and offer him a bed for
the night.
Before Merayni could say anything, Kharl replied. Both would be welcome, but 
just a mat and a blanket in the little barn would be good. Ill have to leave in 
the morning.
Theres a comfortable pallet there, Merayni said, and weve blankets to 
spare.
Thank you.
Be a bit before supper, though.
Anything would be welcome anytime. Kharl bowed his head
slightly.
Da? Can I show you the orchard and the trees Uncle Dowsyl let me
prune? asked Warrl.
You surely can, replied Kharl.
Over this way he had me start on the pearapples
As Kharl followed his son, he could not but overhear the words
behind them.
 was such a proud man almost feel sorry for him
Almost
 not right, what happened
 doesnt matter should have known better. Charee warned him she did
They were right, Kharl reflected. Charee had warned him. Shed warned him that 
helping people could hurt her and the children, and Kharl had tried to help 
Sanyle and Jenevra and one was an orphan and the other was deadand Kharl had 
lost his consort and cooperage, and at least one son. For all that Merayni said, 
a sadness fell across the cooper as he considered that trying to do good had 
created such awful results. He forced a smile onto his face as he followed and 
listened to
his son.
This one I had to do twice. There was a graft you see,
here
Kharl just watched Warrl, listening.
XXX
On threeday morning, Kharl was up at dawn and used the well behind the cottage 
to wash up, chill as the air was, cold as the water was.
Warrl joined him just as the sun flooded a clear fall sky. You have to go 
today, Da?
I do.
Uncle Dowsyl said you could stay. I heard him.
Kharl decided against pointing out Meraynis views on that. Your uncle is a 
good and kindly man, Warrl. But Im not a grower. Im a cooper. I might be able 
to be a carpenter somewhere, or do other things, but a grower Im not.
Aunt Merayni doesnt think youll ever be a cooper again. She said so. Is it 
true?
I cant be a cooper in Brysta. Id have to go somewhere else, maybe even 
another land.
You could come here.
Kharl shook his head. Peachill is too small for a cooper. People only need a 
few barrels a year here.
You dont want to come?
I cant, son.
You dont want to
Its not that Kharl tried to think of an answer that would express what he 
felt. Its Id rather be with you but if I came here it wouldnt be fair to 
Merayni or Dowsyl or to you. Its too close to Brysta. Its still part of Lord 
Wests lands.
How could that be? You work hard. Youd do that, here. I know you would. You 
always work hard.
Warrl do you remember what happened in Brysta? Every time I cross the street 
there, now, I have to look to make sure there arent any of Lord Egens bravos 
around. Im staying with people, poor people, but I have to sneak in and out. If 
I came here, and Lord Egen found out Kharl shook his head slowly.
No! It cant be Warrls headshake was violent. Youre just saying that He 
turned and found himself held by Dowsyl. He looked Up. Uncle Dowsyl that it 
cant be
Lad I fear so, said Dowsyl slowly. Your das got the right of it,
sad as it is.
I had to make sure you were all right, Kharl said, his eyes fixed on Warrls 
narrow face, in some ways so much like his mothers. But I dare not come back 
too soon. And if I go to sea, Ill not be able to. Not for a
time.
But why? What did you do?
Your da did what was right, answered Dowsyl. Times when a man does, and a 
lords done wrong, all those around the man suffer. Its not fair, lad, but 
thats the way of the world. But dont be blaming your da for doing right. 
Theres too few that will in these days. Warrl slowly turned. Da
Kharl stepped forward and put his arms around his son. He also mouthed the 
words, Thank you, to Dowsyl.
The grower nodded, with a sad smile, before saying, Meraynis got breakfast for 
us. Come on in when youre ready. After a moment, he added, Your da will need 
a good fill, Warrl. Long walk back to Brysta. He turned and left them.
Im sorry, Da, offered Warrl, stepping back from Kharls embrace. So am I. 
Never thought Kharl shook his head again. Warrl looked down.
After another silence, the cooper said, Wed better go eat. Breakfast was 
hearty, with fried apples and pearapples, ham slices, and hot bread from the 
oven. There was little conversation, because he and Warrl had said what they 
could, as had Dowsyl, and because Merayni had long since voiced her views. Young 
Dowlan was interested in having more pearapples, and his sisters chattered about 
the new goat kid.
Before all that long, the food was gone, and Kharl had given Warrl a last hug, 
thanked Merayni and Dowsyl. In turn, Merayni had given Kharl some travel bread, 
cheese, and some dried pearapples. Then Kharl was walking down the long lane 
toward the main road. The light wind rustled the dry winter-gray leaves still 
clinging to the grove
trees.
The cooper reflected as he walked eastward on the lane toward the
road back to Brysta. Dowsyl had seemed concerned, and Kharl had sensed sadness 
in Warrl. Merayni had been polite. Shed not even said anything nasty and had 
been hospitable to him, if cool, although he could tell that she had been more 
than glad to see Kharl leavewithout Warrl.
When Kharl reached the main road to Brysta, where he turned north, he could feel 
eyes on his backprobably those of the woman with the less-than-orderly gardens, 
watching to see where the stranger might be headed. He kept walking.
By midmorning, he was hungry, and he stopped beside a stream and sampled some of 
the bread and dried pearapples. He saved the rest of what Merayni had given him 
for later. He knew hed be even hungrier then, and who knew when or what hed 
eat once he reached Brysta.
Hed walked another glass or so, when, at the sound of hoofs on the road, Kharl 
glanced behind him. He saw no riders coming from the south, and that suggested 
that they were on the far side of the curve in the road ahead. He looked around, 
then spied an opening in the hedgerow behind the stone wall bordering the road. 
He scrambled into the hedgerow just as the first rider of a column of lancers 
cantered around the curve and into sight.
While the lancers in blue tunics trimmed in burgundy rode past, Kharl counted 
more than twoscore riders. None said a word, and none had weapons at the ready, 
though all bore scabbards holding sabres.
Where were the lancers headed in such a rushand why?
Kharl wondered if hed ever know.
Once they had passed, and the sound of hoofs had died away, he eased himself out 
of his hiding place in the hedgerow and continued walking northward, doubting 
that he would reach the tannery walls until well after dark. Longer, if he 
encountered more lancers.
He hoped nothing had happened to Jeka in his absence.
XXXI
Early on fourday morning, Kharl woke to find a cloudy sky, with cold mist 
half-drifting, half-drizzling through the open ends of the makeshift roof 
between the walls, a harbinger of late fall and of the winter to come. 
Intermittently, water dripped down off each end of the roof, and, every so 
often, from somewhere in the middle.
Kharl drew the winter sheepskin jacket around him, taking comfort in its warmth, 
but knowing it was too fine to wear on the streets, at least not in his guise as 
a beggar. He reached out and ran his fingers over the black staff. It wasnt 
exactly warm, but it didnt feel cold, and somehow, touching it had a calming 
effect on Kharl. He almost felt as though life had somehow become more clear. He 
knew that was not true, not at all, but it felt that way.
Jeka had come back late the night beforelong after he had trudged through the 
alleys and servicewaysand she had scuttled into her hidey-hole without 
speaking.
Kharl pressed his lips together tightly, swallowing. Charee was dead. Her sister 
despised him. Arthal had stormed out. The cooperage would be sold, and Kharl was 
hiding like a rat between walls. Hed lost everything and everyone he had loved. 
While hed learned long before that fairness was absent in much of life, he 
hadnt expected such unfairness to descend on him.
His lips quirked into a sardonic smile. He doubted that his life would ever be 
clear again. If he didnt get out of Brysta before too long, the length of that 
life was likely to be short indeed. Yet, he couldnt walk far enough because all 
Nordla was under the laws of the Quadrant. That meant that, if he were 
discovered elsewhere in Nordla, Lord Westor Egencould request his return from 
any other lord. At best, that meant living like Jeka, or living a lie, waiting 
to be discovered. Neither alternative appealed to Kharl.
Gettin cold, observed Jeka as she eased from her cubbyhole. How was your 
boy?
Doing fine. Hes learning how to be a grower.
So he didnt want to be a cooper?
He lost his mother. Hed rather stay with his aunt and uncle than lose more.
Ida stayed with Ma anywhere, Jeka said in a low voice.
Your mother was lucky you felt that way.
Didnt help her none.
From the bleakness of her tone, Kharl decided not to pry. How do you make it 
through the winter?
Well as I can I keep the cubby sealed, much as I can. Its higher, so water 
doesnt come in. Jeka shrugged. Got pretty thin by spring this year.
You cant keep doing this.
What else is there? I wont go to a pleasure house. No one elseU have me
Kharl glanced at the section of sky visible between the wall and the crude roof, 
dark gray and getting lower. Wont find much at the lower market today. 
Anyplace else we can get something to eat?
We could go to the White Pony. See if theres stuff left. Sometimes, there is. 
Durolll let the girls sell it cheap, copper or two.
Might as well try. Kharls stomach was growling, as it often did of late. The 
slight paunch he had developed over the past few years had already begun to 
shrink, but the process wasnt pleasantor noiseless.
Its all right you know, Jeka said.
Whats all right? Kharl had no idea what she meant.
That you got some coppers. Everyone hides their coin. You have to. You been 
real generous.
So have you. Sharing your space. You helped me with shelter. I help with food.
Maybe maybe Jekas eyes dropped.
What?
Maybe youre too honest to be a cooper. Her words trailed away.
Too honest to be a cooper? Was Brysta that bad?
 shouldnta said anything, Jeka mumbled.
Never thought of that, Kharl replied. Still mulling over her observation, he 
packed away the winter jacket, regretfully.
Before long, they were over the wall and out of the serviceway,
jnaking their way uphill and eastward, toward the slightly better section of the 
harbor area where the White Pony was located off Third Cross, but farther to the 
south.
The wind picked up, and the misty rain struck Kharls face like icy needles, 
despite the hood of the ragged cloak. The icy needles also penetrated the ragged 
fabric in too many other places. Shoulda holed up for the day, suggested Jeka. 
You want to go back?
Not that far now. After a moment, she added,  Sides, then Id have to give 
back your coppers. A gaminelike grin appeared and quickly vanished.
They walked another long cross block before Jeka turned up a narrow alley. We 
take this to the stable.
Stable?
Ponys got a few rooms upstairs. Some folk stay there, those that dont know 
better. Jeka eased close to a red brick wall irregularly darkened by the misty 
rain. Best you wait here just around the corner, by the old gatepost.
Kharl followed her instructions and huddled in the corner formed by a short 
gate-wall and the corner of the stable nearest the alley. As Jeka scurried 
urchin-like toward the inn, from under his thin and ragged and increasingly damp 
cloak, Kharl watched her.
Jeka slipped along the stable wall toward the rear kitchen door of the inn. She 
had barely passed the open stable door when a squarish man, with an 
oiled-leather cape to protect him against the damp, stepped out of the stable. A 
burly man in a dark burgundy wool jacket followed him, and the second carried a 
knife in his belt, long enough almost to be a shorts word, and a truncheon in 
his right hand.
A sense of something surrounded the squarish man, something that Kharl 
couldnt exactly see.
You, beggar boy! ordered the man in the cape. You owe me something.
Jeka froze for a moment, then shook her head and started to dart away, but the 
bodyguard was quicker and grabbed her arm. A flash of somethingwhiteflared 
from the fingers of the well-dressed man, and Jeka once more froze.
Now, young woman dressed as a boy you will wait here with Farn until I 
return. I will not be gone but a few moments to collect
your companion. The squarish man laughed softly. Since you owe me He laughed 
again.
Jeka said nothing.
A broad and not terribly pleasant smile appeared on Farns face.
You will not disturb her, Farn. My uses come first. Two will be far better than 
one. What a wonderful coincidence, especially in this weather. The broad man 
walked along the side wall of the White Pony ignoring the rear kitchen door and 
heading for the front door. He did so without so much as a look backward.
Kharl eased his way out from the alley, shuffling toward the tavern and leaning 
on his stick. He tried not to look anywhere near the bodyguard or Jeka, but 
toward the kitchen door.
You! snapped Farn. Go somewhere else.
Hungry, whined Kharl. Copper for a hungry man? Copper, kind ser? Copper?
Farn let go of Jeka. She did not move. The bodyguard lifted his truncheon.
Kharl moved, bringing his shaped timber up in a single swift motion and driving 
the sharper end into the others gut with all the force that a cooper could 
bring to bear. The bodyguard staggered. His breath puffed out with an explosive 
grunt, but he held on to the truncheon.
Kharl grabbed the middle of his weapon and, holding it in two hands, slammed it 
straight up into the others jaw. There was a dull crack as the guards jawbone 
snapped. This time the truncheon fell, but the man slowly, so slowly, it seemed 
to Kharl, reached for Kharls neck.
Two-handed, again, Kharl drove his crude staff into the others nose.
Blood welled over the guards face, and his entire body went slack, slumping, 
then crumpling onto the muddy ground. For just an instant, Kharl thought he saw 
a netlike veil of white and black, a spiderweb of sorts within the body of the 
guard, appear, then disintegrate.
He shook his head, then lowered the makeshift staff.
Jeka still stood immobile, and the stillness and the total lack of expression on 
her face shocked Kharl. What had the other man done to her? Used some sort of 
wizardry? He glanced toward the White Pony, but no one seemed to have seen what 
had happened.
He grabbed Jekas arm. She didnt move.
Come on. Follow me.
This time, when he tugged at her arm, she followed, but her
movements were stiff and jerky. Kharl hurried them into the alley and out of 
sight from the tavern. They had gone almost another block before the mist began 
to change into a light rain. Still, it took far longer to return to the 
serviceway leading to Jekas hidey-hole than it had to
travel from it.
Once there, Kharl looked at the wall. He could easily boost Jeka over the wall, 
but he worried that shed fall on the other side. He couldnt carry her and 
climb the wall himself.
Climb over the wall and down the other side. Wait there, he finally
said.
Jeka followed his commands, again awkwardly. After a look back, Kharl scrambled 
after her. She stood waiting on the other side, her face blank. Drops of rain 
from the edge of the roof fell on her. Some dribbled down her face. She had not 
moved.
Move under the roof. Kharl guided her into the drier section of the makeshift 
dwelling, then set down his crude short staff.
He just looked at her for a time. What could he do? The wizard had done 
something with the white flash. White? He frowned, thinking, then nodded. It 
certainly couldnt hurt. He stepped to one side and slid the long black staff 
from under the rags.
Then he turned toward Jeka.
Her eyes widened, and she began to tremble. Kharl took her hand.
No! she screamed, struggling to get away from the staff.
Kharl pressed the staff to the hand he held.
Hsssttt! The hissing sound was almost like water on a red-hot iron blank.
Jeka collapsed like a street-show marionette whose strings had been cut, and 
Kharl had to struggle to hold her one-handed, while he set aside the black 
staff. Then he propped her form into a half-sitting position against the stone 
wall. The hand that had touched the staff was reddened, as if it had been 
slightly burned. Yet the staff had not been that hot to Kharls touch.
Did white and black magic always react that way?
Ohhh Jeka looked up, eyes darting around. What
How much do you remember?
There was a white flash, then She shook her head. Tears seeped from the 
corners of her eyes. I would have done anything anyone told me.
That was what he wanted.
But wont they come after us?
The bodyguard wont.
You killed him.
I didnt mean to. Kharl thought about his words, then added. No He felt so 
evil that I had to. Except I really wasnt thinking that then  His actions 
still confused him.
Wont the wizard come after us for that? Jeka shivered.
He might, Kharl conceded. But its raining, and its hard to track people in 
the rain, even with dogs. He didnt see me, I dont think. He paused. You have 
any other hiding places?
Theyre not very good. This is the only really good one.
Then, wed better stay here. Well have to be very careful when we go out. And 
Im coming with you.
Guess guess youd better. The faint tears still oozed from the corners of 
Jekas eyes.
Kharl didnt have any idea what he could say to make her feel better.
All that because hed been hungry.
XXXII
JVharls stomach had gone well beyond empty and painful by dawn five mornings 
later, after four days of weather ranging from mist to rain so heavy that it had 
fallen in walls of icy water. He was sore and stiff because only a small area of 
the poorly roofed hiding space had remained usableand that had been damp. When 
the sun finally rose on a cold and clear oneday, the cloudless sky and bright 
morning sunlight did little to cheer him. Nor did it ease his aching muscles and 
empty belly.
Jeka finally crawled out of her cubby, yawning. Need to sleep when you can. 
Sleep more, and you dont need to eat so much.
Could be.
Least its oneday, she offered. Lower markets good on oneday. Specially by 
afternoon.
Before too long, she left, and after a few moments, Kharl followed,
carrying his small wooden begging bowl. He had to be careful climbing the wall, 
because he felt a bit light-headed, but the walking, even at his affected 
hobble, cleared away some of the faintness.
The rain had washed away much of the stench from the rendering yard and from the 
tannery, and the cold breeze from the west brought a cleaner smell to Brysta. It 
wouldnt last that long, Kharl knew, but it helped as he hobbled down Copper 
Road, trailing Jeka by a good half block, when he could even see her elusive 
form.
He continued to plead, A copper, just a copper for a poor man As usual, most 
of those on the street ignored Kharl the beggar either by walking past quickly 
or by avoiding him. He did get one copper in the battered wooden bowl.
The sun was a good quarter of the way up the eastern sky when Kharl paused on 
the rubble-strewn corner on the northeast side of the harbor, short of the 
slateyard. From there, he looked at the lower market with its tents, carts, and 
portable stalls. He didnt see Jeka. He could see, except it was a feeling, more 
than a seeing, a patchy area of whiteness on the southern side of the open space 
that held the market.
Abruptly, and from nowhere, Jeka dashed from a cart and crossed the soggy ground 
between them. She stopped and extended a half loaf of bread. Mamata gave it to 
me. She said shed eaten some, and couldnt eat any more and couldnt sell it.
Kharl took a bite of the heavy rye, and his mouth watered. He forced himself to 
hand the bread back to Jeka after another bite.
I had more than that, she said, refusing the bread.
Kharl didnt argue. He took several more large mouthfuls, and within moments, he 
started to feel less light-headed. He handed the remaining bread to Jeka.
This time, she took the quarter loaf remaining and finished half of it, then 
gave the remainder back. He ate it, even licking the crumbs off his fingers.
I need to see what else I can scrounge or get cheap, she said.
Stay away from the southern end, he said.
Jeka looked at him.
Just a feeling, he said, not wanting to explain.
Ill be careful. Always am.
Be more careful, he suggested. Dont know where that wizard might show up.
Here? Not likely. Jeka laughed, then made her way back toward the carts and 
stalls.
Kharl followed. Even after the bread, his mouth watered as the scent of roasting 
fowl wafted around him. How long had it been since hed sat at his own table and 
eaten fowl? And ale? And as much bread as he wanted?
He kept moving. Instead of staking out a space and sitting down, he hobbled 
around the harborside end of the market, occasionally pleading, extending the 
bowl. A copper just a copper for a poor man
Over the eightdays hed been in hiding, he doubted that hed collected more than 
nine or ten coppers, but his efforts made it easier to
conceal the source of the coins hed given to Jeka, not so much for her__&#9632;
she knew betterbut from those with whom she dealt. He stopped and slumped, as 
if tired, but the slump was not all pose, not with the little he had eaten over 
the end-days.
Then he returned to walking and whining,  copper just a copper
As he neared the southwestern corner of the market, Kharl could see the patchy 
whitish fog more clearly, centered around a maroon-painted stall. He blinked, 
and the fog vanished. Was he seeing things because he was hungry? But the fog 
had become clearer after hed eaten.
He limped and hobbled farther south, easing himself closer to the maroon stall, 
finally squatting near the rotten bollard section where hed often placed 
himself.
Copper just a copper he mumbled, watching the stall where several youths, 
three girls, two women, and a tall man were gathered.
Ooos and aahhs came from the group.
A few coins here, any coin, came a voice, and youll see what youve never 
seen.
After a moment, a flare of bluish flame erupted from somewhere in front of the 
group, then vanished. It wasnt flame, Kharl could tell, although he didnt 
really know how he knew, but it looked like it, and everyone stepped back.
For a moment, Kharl caught a glimpse of the wizard, wearing a red cape. Behind 
and to the left of the wizard stood another man, almost identical to the 
bodyguard Kharl had killedor had he killed the man outside the White Pony? 
Kharl swallowed. The wizard was the same man who had ensorceled Jeka. But what 
was he doing in the lower
market? Looking for her? Kharls fingers tightened around his stick, a poor 
weapon against a wizard, but the only one he had. He kept watching/ more aware 
of the whiteness that was not fog.
The small crowd once more drew nearer to the wizard.
You see? The wizard laughed. All of you draw near, and you will see something 
truly special. Closer now and who might have a coin? For miracles do not come 
without a price. He laughed again,
heartily.
Kharl shivered at the laughter, feeling something more behind it.
A copper? Cannot someone add to it? asked the wizard. If not, you must step 
closer, for what marvels you will see will be smaller.
The cooper frowned. The wizard seemed more to want the crowd closer than to get 
another copper. Kharl glanced past the stall. Jeka was moving past a cart with 
scarfs tied around a polished wooden rod, slowly toward the wizard and his 
booth. Kharl hobbled in toward the crowd, then left, toward Jeka. She slipped 
right, as if to avoid Kharl.
Got a copper, brat? he asked in a louder voice that was half growl,
half whine.
Jeka stiffened at the tone.
Get back, Kharl whispered. Same wizard. Looking for you
Jeka darted off to the north.
Kharl hobbled quickly, as if Jeka had taken something. Stop! Brat!
Behind him, there was a flash of light, bright enough that he had to blink, even 
though his back was to the wizard. Screams filled the air, and Kharl looked 
back.
A column of smoke filled the space around where the wizards booth had been. 
More had happened than just a flash of light. Those around the smoke had their 
hands to their eyes. Some staggered. Two women had collapsed, as had a man.
As Kharl watched, the wizards guard emerged from the smoke, carrying a bundle 
of some sorta very long bundle. To the right of the guard was the wizard, but 
his figure was blurred, and Kharl had trouble looking at the mage, as the wizard 
and his guard slipped away from the smoke and the booth it had shrouded.
For a moment, Kharl stood frozen, his eyes flicking from the guard to the almost 
invisible figure of the wizard, then back to the guard in the burgundy jacket.
The wizard stopped, turned, and looked directly at Kharl. His eyes
seemed to burn. You will not thwart me again, half creature. Next time the 
weather will not favor you, and she will repay me.
Although the words were spoken from more than thirty cubits awaya good two 
rodsKharl heard them clearly, and wondered how he had.
The wizard turned and strode swiftly away from the market, moving more quickly 
than the guard burdened with the large and long bundle
Sellers and would-be buyers alike were turning toward the column of dissipating 
smoke and the booth emerging from the smoke, a squarish stall that looked only 
vaguely like the burgundy-walled stall before which the wizard had performed. 
More illusion? Kharl wondered how the stall could have changed so much, then 
looked back toward the wizard and the guard. They had reached a coach waiting 
east of the market.
Shes gone! Gone!
Kharl turned back toward the stall where one of the women had staggered upright. 
Shes gone!
Belatedly, Kharl realized that the bundle must have held a bodya small live 
body, and probably that of a girl. He glanced back to find the two men, but both 
the coach holding the guard and the wizard had already vanished.
The cooper began to hobble back uphill, even as the wizards words echoed 
through his thoughts not thwart me again
Kharl kept moving. He would have liked to tell someone, even the Watch, about 
the girl, but there wasnt much he could do, not now, and who would believe him 
if he told anyone there?
Slowly, he made his way back to the wall shelter adjoining the rendering yard. 
He did not enter the serviceway until the nearby street was empty. He quickly 
scaled the wall, then settled down to wait.
As time passed, Kharl began to worry, but he had no idea where he might find 
Jeka, none at all. She did not return to the space between the walls until close 
to sunset, but Kharl could smell the fowl she carried as she dropped over the 
wall.
I got some-at for you, Jeka announced.
What about you? asked Kharl.
Had some already. That dustup at the market found some coppers. Bought fowl 
for us both. You always buy. Jeka did not quite look at Kharl as she handed him 
the fowl in stale bread.
Kharl kept from frowning. Jeka was telling the truth. That he knew,
although he could not have said why. She had eaten, and she had found coppers, 
but he was missing something.
Whats the matter? he asked.
Nothing.
Somethings bothering you, he observed, before taking a bite of
the fowl.
Jeka did not reply, instead settling down with her back against the
ancient brick wall.
Kharl did not press her as he ate several more bites, before holding out the 
fowl. Sure you wouldnt like some?
Had more n enough.
After finishing the bread and fowl, Kharl licked his fingers as clean as he 
could. For the first time in days, his stomach felt comfortably full. Yet he 
couldnt enjoy it. Something was bothering Jeka. Still. Youre worried. You 
cant hide it.
Jeka just sat in the early twilight, not looking at Kharl.
He waited.
Finally, Jeka began to speak, slowly at first. Enelya had a sister. She was 
youngern me, lots younger. She was doing the morning dishes when we went to 
the White Pony
Kharl knew what Jeka was going to say, but he said nothing.
She was at the tub and like as disappeared
Did anyone find her?
Enelya looked much as she could. Jeka took another bite of the fowl. Found 
her this morning. In the harbor say she drowned, cause there wasnt a mark on 
her.
You dont think she did?
Enelya says she was scared of water. She almost drowned in the creek where they 
grew up backhills always stayed away from the harbor.
The wizard. He took someone else this morning at the market, Kharl said. He 
wanted to take you at the White Pony. He talked about two being better than one. 
And he said you owed him.
Heard that. Jeka shivered, although it was not that cold. Today, I woulda 
gone there. Felt like I was bein called. Didnt know you for a moment
I wondered about that, Kharl said. Thats why I was harsh.
Saved me maybe She shivered again. Hes gonna keep lookin
He wants young ones, girls almost Kharl murmured, more to himself, thinking 
that the wizard was worse even than Egen. But owing?
Must need em for his wizardry
The Watch doesnt say anything? asked Kharl abruptly.
They dont care. Not about street girls. Dont even care about poor ones. Safer 
as a boy than a girl.
How do you owe him?
Dont. Not him.
Although Jeka was lying, Kharl just nodded. What good would it do to press her? 
Except get him in more trouble. There wasnt much he could say. But he worried 
about the wizards words. Had the wet weather helped him in dealing with the 
wizard before? Why?
His lips curled into a wry smile. Until hed thought over the wizards words, he 
hadnt been aware of anything that seemed to favor him these days.
His eyes dropped to the rag-wrapped black staff. Would it, too, help against the 
wizard? Would anything help enough?
XXXIII
JSJiarl kept worrying on twoday, but he had a feeling that threeday or fourday 
would be when the wizard resumed looking for himor for Jeka. He still had no 
idea why the wizard was seeking out one young woman disguised as a beggar boy, 
but it was clear that he was.
On twoday, Kharl checked the harbor, as he had most days, but there was no sign 
of the Seastag, or either of the other two ships whose masters he knew, if less 
well than he did Hagen. He tried to push aside the worry that he might not be 
able to avoid Egen until a captain he knew ported in Brysta.
Jeka woke Kharl early on threeday, even before dawn. Feel that..  like a cord 
I cant see, tuggin at me.
The cooper looked at the shivering young woman posing as a ragged boy. As he saw 
the light frost on the stones, he couldnt help feeling guilty for his warm 
jacket, even if he only dared sleep in it. For a moment, her
words didnt mean anything. Then he stiffened and lurched up. We need to leave 
here. Now. He tried not to wince. His back and limbs were sore and stiff, as 
they had been every morning he had awakened between
the walls.
Leave? Sos he can catch us in the open? Jeka pulled her ragged
brown cloak around her more tightly.
If we stay here, hell follow whatever that cord is until he knows where you 
are. You want to stay and be cornered?
Got a little bread left, Jeka offered. Lets eat first. Two chunks of bread 
took little enough time to eat. Then Kharl took the rag-covered black staff and 
his pack and carried them farther along the space between the walls, hiding 
themand his jacketas well as he could beyond the stone-circled hole that 
served as a necessary, before using the crude latrine.
Whyd you move that stuff? asked Jeka.
So if the wizard or his guard looks, they wont know someone else is here. 
Kharls head throbbed faintly at the misstatement. He donned the ragged beggars 
cloak.
Better get on. Jeka turned and scrambled over the wall.
By the time the sun was rising over Brysta on what promised to be a bright fall 
day, one warmer than the light morning frost indicated, the two stood in the 
serviceway, flanked by long shadows on one side and the flat light of sunrise on 
the other.
Kharl looked at Jeka. Can you feel where the tuggings coming from?
No.
Kharl held in the harsh words he felt at Jekas rebellious tone. Well go up 
the street, say fifty cubits.
The two walked south on the cross street, and Kharl tried not to look back.
Stop. Kharl waited, then looked at Jeka. Does it feel stronger?
No feels weaker maybe closer She looked puzzled.
We go the other way.
Other way?
No pull when a fish on a line swims to the fisherman, Kharl said.
Jeka paled.
Kharl wished hed used different words. Come on. He turned back north.
Jeka scrambled to catch up to him. As they walked in the shadows on the east 
side of the cross street, Kharl wished hed brought the staff rather than his 
crude stick. At the end of the block, the cross street ended in a stone wall, 
and they turned westward, taking the walk on the south side, downhill toward the 
harbor. Jeka darted ahead, then froze for a moment.
Kharl peered toward the harbor. At the end of the next block, there were three 
Watchmen and an officerone whom Kharl recognized even from that distance as 
Egen. He was certain, although he didnt quite know why. Jeka slipped back 
toward Kharl.
Watch ahead, mumbled Jeka.
And the wizards somewhere behind. Kharl looked to the service-way to his 
left, which connected to an east-west alleyway. Into the ser-viceway.
Be Watch at the harborside end of the alley.
Cant be any worse. Kharl hoped it couldnt be worse, but he wasnt counting 
on that, not the way the last few seasons had been going.
In a few moments, they reached the point where the serviceway joined the alley. 
Kharl peered around the corner formed by two brick walls. As Jeka had predicted, 
there were Watchmen at the end nearer the harbor.
Kharl studied the alley, noting the thin line of shadows on the southern side. 
He looked at Jeka. We turn and start uphill on the sunny side, but we move 
toward the shadows. Once were in the shadows we crouch down, then come back to 
the serviceway right across from us.
It might work. Jeka sounded less than convinced.
Might not. Got a better idea?
No.
Then well try it. Kharl stepped out of the serviceway and began to walk up 
the alley at a slight angle.
So far as he could tell, the Watchmen below did not move. At least, he heard no 
steps on the stones, those that were high enough to stand out above the lower 
muddy stones. They covered close to a hundred cubits before they entered the 
shadows. Kharl took several more steps before he began to crouch as he slipped 
to the southern side of the alley.
He ducked into a recess formed by a loading dock, then peered around the corner 
and down the alley. The Watchmen had not moved.
The cord things stronger, Jeka muttered from behind him.
We need to slip along the shadow here. Keep low.
You keep low.
Kharl tried to keep low, crouching as he made his way back down
the side of the alley.
After fifty cubits, they had to duck behind a refuse bin as a loading
door opened.
Rats skittered and rustled in the bin as they waited. It seemed like a glass 
passed before the heavyset man in brown went back into the shop and closed the 
door. Finally, they slipped into the serviceway and walked quickly to where it 
ended short of the next street. Kharl halted.
Now what? asked Jeka.
We run across the street and into that serviceway, and we keep moving south 
until we get to the fountain. Then we head back uphill.
They sprint-scurried across Wellman Street, and down another serviceway then 
another, and a third. In time, they turned down the alley south of Cargo Road 
and made their way to the fountain. There they waited for a teamster to water 
his pair of mules, then slipped in ahead of a laundress to drink.
After they had drunk, Kharl turned to Jeka. Can you feel the cord
thing?
Jeka paused. No. I dont think so.
Good. Well keep moving along Second Cross toward the river.
The river? Cant swim.
We arent going to. White wizards have trouble with streams and running water. 
Leastwise, thats what they say. Well circle back later today. At least, Kharl 
hoped that they could, but he didnt know what else to suggest. He also didnt 
like the idea that the Watch seemed to be helping the wizard.
He had to wonder what Egen had to do with the white wizard. Was the wizard 
working for Egen? Or did Egen owe something to the wizard?
XXXIV
On threeday night, they did not go back to Jekas hidey-hole between the tannery 
and the Tenderers yard. Neither did they reach the river or the river road. 
Instead, they curled up inside a hedgerow beside the road headed southeast from 
Brystathe same road that led to the orchards held by Merayni and Dowsyl. Where 
Kharl hoped Warrl was safe.
Huddled inside the thick wall of brush, shivering at times, Kharl swallowed at 
that thought, but there was nothing he could do. Trying to see Warrl again would 
only make matters worse, and, if the wizard was working with Egen, the lord 
might well now have spared a guard or two to watch the place. More important, 
with each passing day, Kharl could offer Warrl even less.
Im cold, mumbled Jeka.
So am I. Those were the last words Kharl said before he drifted into a 
troubled sleep.
He woke in the gray before dawn. The way his body ached when he tried to uncurl, 
he decided there were worse places to sleep than between Tenderers and tanners 
walls. Much worse.
You snore, Jeka said. Loud.
So do you. Soft.
Softs better it loud.
Probably. Kharl crawled out through the brushy tunnel onto the field side of 
the hedgerow. The wheat had already been harvested, and the brown stubble jutted 
skyward from the dark ground. The air was chill enough that Kharls breath was 
like fog, and the ground crunched underfoot. The shutters of the hut beyond the 
small woodlot appeared to be closed. Kharl shifted his weight from one foot to 
the other, trying to loosen tight muscles.
Shortly, Jeka followed him, glancing toward the cottage, then at Kharl.
After a moment, he asked, You feel the cord thing tugging at you?
A little.
Frigging wizard, Kharl muttered. Moved south. We need to circle
around Brysta and get back to your place.
So whyd we leave?
So that he didnt catch us there, so he didnt find out that was the
only place you sleep.
It is.
Not any longer.
We cant keep moving. We cant get food.
You want to end up like Enelyas sister?
No. We cant keep doing this, either.
Kharl nodded. She was right about that. Need to get back and pick up your 
stuff if we can. Somehow. He looked back toward the cottage. At one side of 
the woodlot, there was a tree, one that looked to be an apple, and despite the 
thinning leaves, Kharl thought he saw a few fruits hanging. Probably rotten, but 
they might have good spots. Where you goin?
Apple tree.
Too manyll run your guts, Jeka warned.
Could be. Kharl kept moving, as quietly as he could. He reached the tree 
without any noise from the cottage, less than four rods away, although he could 
smell the smoke of a cooking fire. All of the fruit was beyond his reach from 
the ground, but the tree looked sturdy, and he levered himself up. From the 
lowest sturdy branch, he managed to pluck something, but his hand came away 
gooey. The entire fruit was spoiled. He had better luck with the next several, 
tucking them inside his under-tunic as he inched out on the branch and stretched 
upward.
Ruuufff! Rufff. The sharp but deep bark of a dog filled the dawn air, so sudden 
that it startled Kharl. He had to grab the trunk of the apple tree to keep from 
falling. Ruufff
The barking continued. Kharl scrambled down to the ground, scooped up an apple 
hed dropped, and began to run. As he scrambled through the stubble of the 
field, hurrying back toward the hedgerow, the dog barking behind him, he just 
hoped that the holder didnt have a bow. Thief! Coward! came the call from the 
cottage, but Kharl did not look back before squeezing through a narrow space in 
the hedgerow, an overgrown gate path.
Jeka waited on the roadside for Kharl. Real quiet, you were.
I was quiet. The dog wasnt.
Thats why they got dogs.
Kharl shook his head. She was right. He wasnt a very good thief. He didnt like 
being a thief, even of half-rotten apples. What did you get?
He extended two of the apples. Theyre half-good. Better than nothing.
You get any for you?
Kharl forced two on her, then produced two more. Wed better start walking.
Jeka nodded, and took several steps. Need to eat slow. Kharl caught up to her. 
You feel the wizard?
Were moving away, I think.
Let me know if it changes. Kharl took a small bite from the good part of the 
apple.
Given the growling of his stomach, Kharl had to force himself to take small 
bites, and make each last as they walked.
Need to head east and north, Kharl said. Know theres a ring road ahead.
Where? How far?
Kharl shrugged.
They walked south almost a glass before they reached the ring road that looked 
to circle east and north. Then, for the next glass or so, they walked back 
northward along the road, ducking behind the low stone wall, since there was no 
hedgerow, when wagons or riders neared. The road turned almost due north at 
another crossroads, and after that, for a time, they saw no one, and there were 
few tracks in the dust of the narrow road.
How about the wizard? Kharl finally asked.
Hes got to be back there. Jeka gestured behind them.
Good.
After a time, well after the apples were gone, and the sun had cleared the low 
hills to the east of Brysta, Kharl stopped, looking ahead.
What is it? asked Jeka.
Just thinking. Someplace ahead well reach the pike. We can come into Brysta 
from the northeast, down the pike, off Angle Road.
Lots of road guards, too.
Not many, and theyre not under Egen. His older brother, I think.
Whats his name?
Osgard, Osten something like that. Theres someone coming. Kharl eased toward 
the two thorn-olives before the stone wall, then hurried behind them. Jeka 
reached cover first, again.
To the north, a narrow wagon drawn by a single horse moved away from them. 
Farther southward, there was a peddler. Kharl couldnt tell which way he was 
pushing his handcart.
After a time, he said, We can get back on the road now.
Jeka joined him, glancing back over her shoulder, but the ring road remained 
mostly empty except for the peddler who was going northward, as they were, but 
certainly not any faster, and the wagon, which
was soon out of sight.
They had covered perhaps two kays, and a hedgerow began on the west side of the 
road, weedy and sparse at first, but thickening more
toward the north.
Another wagon, headed south and drawn by two dark chestnuts, appeared from 
around a gentle curve to the north and moved quickly toward them. Kharl eased to 
the side of the road, Jeka moving behind him. Behind the wagon were two mounted 
guards. A third sat beside the driver, with a cocked crossbow propped beside 
him. None of the four looked more than once at Kharl and Jeka. As the wagon 
rolled past, Kharl read the inscription on the side: Tekat & Sons, Merchants in 
Spirits.
Fancy wagon, Jeka said. Wonder what they carry.
Spirits, Kharl said. Thats what the sign on the side said, anyway.
Do all coopers know their letters? Jekas voice held a trace of wist-
fulness.
I dont know. Some do. Some dont. It helps some.
You have any books I mean, back Jeka broke off the sentence.
When I had the shop? Kharl laughed, softly, not quite bitterly. I had a few. 
Got em from my da. Books are dear. Some cost a gold or more. The thought of 
Tyrbels beautiful books, and the scriveners death, washed over him. He 
swallowed. So many deathsCharees, Tyrbels, the assassins, the wizards 
guard and while he could say he knew why, he wasnt sure he truly understood 
why Egen, why anyone, could be so vindictive.
Kharl thought he heard something, and he glanced back over his shoulder. A man 
was riding northward, at either a trot or a fast walk. The late-morning sun 
showed his burgundy jacket clearly. The cooper looked to Jeka. You feel?
No. Not any more n before.
That looks like one of his guards. Kharl glanced around. Hide in that patch 
of weeds. Behind them, anyway.
What about you?
Hes far enough away that he might not have seen you. Hes probably seen me. I 
hide, and he looks for us both.
Jeka scuttled into the weedy patch on the far side of the dried-up ditch. Kharl 
adopted a more laborious hobble. He covered another five rods before he could 
hear the hoof beats on the hard and damp road clay clearly. As they drew nearer, 
he finally looked back, then, as if in fear, he scuttled well back from the 
road, watching the rider carefully.
The burgundy-jacketed man reined up but did not leave the road. One hand rested 
on the hilt of the sabre at his side, but he did not draw it. He looked at 
Kharl. Old fellow did you see a boy running along here. A boy in gray rags?
Eh ? Kharl whined. A boy, you say ?
Thats what I said. If its the right boy, theres a copper or two in it for 
you.
A copper for an old man? A copper? . The boy?
Kharl let his shoulders sag. Seen no boy. Saw a peddler. Saw a wagon. Saw two. 
He peered at the rider. Copper for a poor old man?
The rider snorted. Go and starve somewhere else. Get off the road.
Kharl looked around, as if bewildered.
Get off the road!
Kharl scuttled backward, seeming almost to trip, before scrambling over the dry 
ditch and looking around as if wondering where he could go.
The rider laughed, then turned his mount northward.
As he rode away, Kharl realized that the guard had not been the one he had seen 
at the market, but that the man, like the wizard, had shreds of the unseen white 
fog clinging to him. Did it have to do with wizardry? What? He just stood and 
waited until the man was out of sight beyond the next low rise in the road. 
Before long, Jeka rejoined him.
He looked at her. What did you do to him?
Who? Jeka did not look at Kharl.
The wizard. Did you lift his purse, or something? He couldnt be searching so 
hard for you just to do whatever he does to girls. Kharl glanced to the road 
and at the heavy wagon rolling southward. Better
duck, just in case.
Jeka dropped flat in the weeds behind Kharl, and the cooper watched as the 
four-horse team rumbled past, shivering the ground. On the outer side of the 
road, Kharl could also see three men scything late wheat. Maybe Jeka was right, 
that they needed to get off the road and follow it from behind the hedgerows. 
They might run into holders and their families, but it was clear that the wizard 
had some men patrolling
the roads.
Kharl looked down. You didnt answer me.
Was only a silver had it in his belt. Goral gave me nine coppers for it.
When?
Two eightdays back.
So he wants you for two reasons. Because you made a fool of him, and also for 
his wizardry. Kharl paused. Why did you steal from a wizard?
Didnt know he was. Just a dandy like all the others. How did you
know?
Kharl paused. How had he known? Hed known from the white flash, but He shook 
his head. I dont know. I just knew.
Takes one to know one, maybe?
Im a cooper. You know that.
Jeka just shrugged.
We need to get moving. Away from the road.
I told you so.
Yes, you did.
Walking northward along the edge of the fields beside the hedgerow was slower, 
but since most of the fields had been harvested, they saw few holders there, 
save for the areas of meadow where youths and children watched small flocks of 
sheep. People watched them, closely, until they passed, but said nothing.
Once, Kharl would have watched people who looked the way he did. His beard was 
untrimmed and scraggly, his clothes ragged, and he was
certain he smelled rank, if not worse, although he had mostly gotten used to 
that. He hadnt gotten used to the itchy skin.
While they avoided any surveillance by not walking the road, going by the 
hedgerow paths meant it took even longer than Kharl had thought They also had 
little to eat, just a few bitter quinces he had retrieved from deep in the 
thorny branches of an unkempt bush near the hedgerow, and there had been only 
one small stream that looked clear enough to drink Both were walking slowly by 
late afternoon, when they neared the pike and the low ridges through which 
flowed Souangle Creek. Rather, Kharl corrected himself, the creek flowed into 
the pond that Vetrads grandsire had built and through the millrace that powered 
the sawmill.
Kharl thought they might be able to sneak into Vetrads lumber barn after dusk. 
It was dry, and a lot warmer than the hedgerow. There was also an orchard beyond 
it, and there might be a few apples left, discards, partly rotten, and the like. 
He hoped so. The mill and lumberyard were off the ring road, less than a kay out 
Angle Road from it on the creek. Kharl had never known why the same road was 
called the pike inside the ring road, and Angle Road outside, but it was.
He glanced back at the clouds, darkening and gathering out over the ocean, just 
beyond the harbor, then to Jeka. Her face was pale.
The wizard? he asked.
Things stronger. Stronger n its been.
Where?
Jeka half shrugged. I cant tell.
Kharl could feel that she was exhausted. He was tired, but he doubted that Jeka 
could have walked another ten rods without falling over. He wished he had the 
staff, rather than the stick.
Well rest for a while. Kharl pointed to a tumbled rock wall bordering the 
hedgerow.
Jeka slumped onto the rock. Not much to eat here. Theres more in Brysta.
Were headed back that way. I think I know a safer place to sleep tonight. Its 
not too far, a little more than a kay.
A low rumble rolled out of the west. Kharl looked over the empty fields and the 
trees beyond. While he could not see the dwellings and structures of Brysta, he 
knew they were there, and the harbor was beyondand the growing thunderheads 
were rising over the harbor, blocking out the late-afternoon sun.
I dont think the wizards that far away, Jeka said tiredly.
Can you walk some more? Kharl asked.
I can try. She stood slowly.
They walked along the narrow path. Kharl let her lead the way, afraid that he 
might set too fast a pace for her.
Were moving away from him, Jeka said after they had walked another twenty 
rods toward the spot where Angle Road met the ring road. Think so, anyway.
Hes probably stopped south of us, then. Kharl could feel the dampness in the 
air, and the wind began to gust around them.
Wind feels good, Jeka said. Longs it doesnt rain.
A ways farther along, perhaps a quarter kay, Kharl found a break in the hedgerow 
and squeezed through, watching the road carefully as he did. From beside the 
hedgerow, he could see Angle Road just ahead, and the old stone bridge where the 
road crossed Souangle Creek. Two wagons had passed the crossroads, heading out 
away from Brysta, in the direction of Sagana and Alturan. The road looked clear, 
and he didnt see any other easy way to cross the creek, except by the Angle 
Road bridge.
He turned and beckoned. We need to hurry.
Wizards getting closer. Jeka shivered.
Kharl looked to the south on the ring road. He thought he saw mounted figures. 
He grabbed Jekas arm and stepped up his pace, quickly crossing the ring road 
and hurrying along the right side of Angle Road, even though every step hurt his 
already sore feet. He could imagine that every step felt worse to Jeka.
By the time they reached the bridge over the creek, Kharl was almost dragging 
Jeka, and except for a wedge of blue-green to the east, the sky was filled with 
gray clouds that seemed to darken more with each moment.
He glanced ahead. There was almost a half a kay to go before they reached the 
low stone wall that encircled Vetrads mill and lumber barns. Well cross and 
wait under the bridge.
Good need to rest, Jeka gasped.
Kharl had to half carry her down the weed-tangled slope and under
bridge. They huddled together on a pile of stones amid the mud and
ris gathered against the stone buttress on the north side, the only really solid 
footing. There they waited.
A gust of wind whipped under the span of the bridge, so strong that Kharl had to 
gather the tattered beggars cloak around him to keep it from being blown off 
himor so he felt. Then the wind died away. He looked upstream, in the direction 
of the millrace, but he could not see it. He could see that no rain was yet 
falling. In the comparative silence after another gust of wind from the oncoming 
storms, Kharl heard voices.
 doesnt know which way she went from the crossroads
 doesnt know? He always knows
You want to tell him?
The riders did not stop and look under the bridge, as Kharl would have done. He 
wondered why. Did they not think of it? Or did they want to cover as much ground 
as they could before the storm struck?
Kharl and Jeka continued to wait, amid more gusts of wind, and a pattering of 
rain that came, then went. In time, the pair of riders returned, the hoofs of 
their mounts echoing on the paving stones of the span above.
 didnt go this way miller was out, and he would have seen them
 tomorrow maybe
So Vetrad was out? Kharl took a deep breath. That meant theyd have to take the 
way along the creek.
He waited for a time, then crawled up the steep slope and, crouching beside the 
stone restraining wall of the bridge, studied Angle Road. It was empty. Come 
on, he called down to Jeka.
He waited until she reached him.
Well cross the road. Looks like a path along the creek there on the other 
side. Just about a half kay
You said that a kay ago Jeka attempted a smile.
Suppose I did.
The path was overgrown and narrow, but it was also mostly shaded by weedy trees, 
interspersed with an occasional oak and, surprisingly, at one spot, an ancient 
black lorken. Another pattering of rain on the leaves overhead came and went, 
and a series of deeper thunderclaps rumbled overhead.
Finally, Kharl could see the stones of the lower spillway of Vetrads millrace. 
Were almost here. Through the berry bushes, and across the narrow meadow to 
the tall barn.
I hope so panted Jeka.
They stopped at the edge of the berry bushes, stripped of every last berry. The 
meadow looked empty. An even deeper thunder roll rumbled over them, and the rain 
began to fall. The first raindrops were fatand far apart. They hit the ground 
or the meadow grass slowly, then splattered.
Kharl had not taken four steps when Jekas legs gave way, and she sprawled out 
full length on tannish meadow grass. He turned, then scooped her up. He was 
amazed at how light she was, even as tired as he
felt.
Cant carry me
Its not far.
From his times of scouting out Vetrads stocks, Kharl knew that all the barn 
doors would be locked, but that the rear door facing the small orchard at the 
edge of the meadow was low enough, with a gap above it, that they could scramble 
through. Vetrad wasnt worried about people. He just didnt want them taking his 
timbers and billets, and the doors and locks were more than enough for that. 
Even so, by the time they huddled under the overhang by the small door, the 
rumble of thunder was all around them. A bolt of lightning struck somewhere on 
the ridge to the east of the millpond, so close and so loud that Kharls ears 
rang.
You just wait here, he told Jeka.
Where are you going?
Saw some pearapples on the trees. Looked near ripe, and no ones going to be 
looking now. Wont be long. Kharl hurried back into the
storm.
There was more wind than rain, although his ragged cloak was still damp when he 
returned with almost a half score of pearapples.
Doors locked, Jeka said dully.
Look up. Kharl picked Jeka up and lifted her so that she could scramble 
through the opening above the doorframe. Then he tucked the fruits into his 
trousers as best he could and jumped, catching the edge and slowly levering 
himself up. Going down was easier.
Jeka stood waiting in the dimness.
This way, he said, leading her along the wide space between the stacks of 
rough timbers, until they reached the ladder to the oak lofts.
Up there.
Once he reached the top of the ladder, Kharl led them along the catwalk to the 
left and to the space just under the eaves behind the last row
of red oak billets. Kharl hadnt remembered it as that large, but compared to 
where they had been sleeping, it was spacious, a good five cubits by five, 
although it was only three in height. No one comes here. Too dry to cure the 
oak properly. Dries too fast, uneven.
Jeka sank onto one of the planks, covered in shavings, sitting there.
They should clean out the billet shavings, but they never have. Its not as 
hard as it looks. Kharl extended a pearapple. Eat. Theres a place where we 
can get water, if the rain keeps up.
Dont feel the wizard at all, Jeka said after several bites of the fruit.
Not at all? questioned the cooper as he finished his own pearapple, far better 
than the poor apples that had begun the day.
Nah She cocked her head to the side, gaminelike. Not since it really started 
raining.
Kharl frowned. Rain? Could rain do that? Running water was supposed to slow 
wizards. He wasnt sure that it did, but what was rain but water running down 
from the skies?
Feels good. Jeka yawned. Can we go back tomorrow?
Well see. Kharl found himself yawning.
Later, as the rain streamed down, coming off the roof of the lumber barn in thin 
sheets, for the first time in days, Kharl fell asleep immediately.
XXXV
he journey back into Brysta proper was far easier than their flight except that 
Jeka had been right about the effect of so much fruit on Kharl, and that had 
slowed their travel. By late afternoon, they had reached the upper cross streets 
of Brysta. Kharl insisted on observing his cooperage from a distance. While 
there was no guard, and the proclamation had been taken down, it was boarded 
shut.
Somewhat later, they had reached the White Pony, where Jeka used some of Kharls 
coppers to buy them some fowl and bread. After eating, and visiting the 
fountain, they had made their way back to Jekas place. Along the way, Kharl had 
checked the harbor, but none of the vessels he
knew had ported. There had also been no trace or sign of the white wizard, and 
that bothered Kharl almost as much as if the wizard and his men had been chasing 
Jeka.
Still she could use the respite, and Kharl had no doubts that sooner or later 
the wizard would show up once more, although he had to admit to himself that he 
didnt understand why he felt that way.
While Jeka dozed in her hidey-hole, in the space between the walls, under the 
inadequate roof, in the last light of day, Kharl leafed through the 
blackstaffers book, trying to find something that would give him some insight 
into what had happened with the wizard.
 the greater the effort to concentrate order within material objects, the 
greater the amount of free chaos within the world
What in light was free chaos? He turned another few pages.
 all that is, everything that exists, is little more than the twisting of chaos 
in a shell of order, and the greater the complexity of those twistings, the more 
solid the object appears. A thumb of lead or gold may appear more solid than a 
feather or a flower, and may indeed overbalance the scales, yet there is no 
difference in the fashion in which they are constructed
He kept turning the pages, reading a phrase here, a sentence there.
 the form of everything under the sun is determined by the amount of order and 
chaos and the way in which they are combined and intertwined
After more than a glass of turning pages, he had found all too many 
incomprehensible phrases. He turned yet another page, stopping and rereading it.
Water is of both chaos and order, yet it is order, and represents order, for its 
structure overweighs its parts
Kharl rubbed his forehead. How could water have parts? Water was. You could boil 
it or freeze it, and it changed to steam or ice, but it was still water. He took 
a deep breath and kept reading.
Because water is both order and of order, yet comprised of parts that are 
totally chaotic, it challenges chaos with the depth of its order. Truly a river 
people or a sea people must hold to order or they will be lost. Chaos fares best 
upon the dry land, and least in a steady rain or snowfall
Rain or snow affected chaos? A faint smile crossed Kharls lips.
Even a fog will affect a chaos-wielder, but only those who are of the weaker 
sort. A steady rain is a patterned fall of ordered chaos. A raindrop is ordered, 
and the fall of each is unpatterned, chaotic, yet all raindrops falling together 
results in a pattern ordered by chaos, and that order can weaken or destroy many 
of the links of power created by those who wield chaos, as the fires of sun 
itself can weaken those who wield order, if they do not understand that the sun 
is a furnace of chaos
The cooper blinked. What did the sun have to do with order and chaos? Like 
water, it was. It gave warmth and light, and how could those be of chaos? And 
the sun weakened order? The book implied that a chaos-wielder could affect the 
sun. How could that be? A wizard could no more affect the sun than Kharl 
couldnt think of a comparison.
After a time, the cooper closed the book and nodded to himself. He did have one 
answer, but more questions than ever.
XXXVI
VJn sixday, Kharl was awake with the sun, bright and clear as on the day before, 
and cool, but without frost. He could see clouds forming out to the west over 
the open ocean, and there was a brisk wind off the water, promising rain 
sometime in the afternoon. He thought about reading more from The Basis of 
Order. Hed had to stop the day before when his mind had finally quit grasping 
the words, as if there had just been too many new ideas banging around inside 
his skullideas he
couldnt yet connect to each other. There was so much he didnt know.
What could he do about the wizard? Should he even try? How could he not, when 
Jeka had been the only one to offer him help and a place to hide? He glanced at 
his pack, debating whether to take out the book and
start once more.
With a sound between a grunt and a groan, Jeka rolled out of her hidey-hole and 
looked at Kharl. Need to get us something to eat.
You dont feel the wizard?
No. She shook her head. Ill go to the lower market.
I can go.
Jeka shook her head. No oned sell cheap or fair to you. No one looks at me. 
Some folk still watch you. They might tell Egen. You never know.
She was probably right about that, Kharl thought. But if you see or feel the 
wizard, you stop and come back here. Quick as you can.
I can do that. Got some coppers? The gaminelike urchin grinned.
Just a few. Kharl grinned back as he handed her three.
He watched her scramble over the wall, gracefully, wondering if he should have 
insisted on going himself, but he wanted to try to read more in the book, 
because he still didnt know what he could or should do about the white wizard.
After a moment, Kharl took The Basis of Order out from his pack and opened it 
once more, hoping that the words would make more sense. The first words he read 
seemed so obvious that he wondered why they were there.
 there is more that lies beneath the surface of anything, whether it be the 
ocean or the mountains Do not assume that what lies beneath is the same as what 
lies above, nor that it is different
The next words were far from obvious, and meant nothing to him, nothing at all.
In substance, there is no difference between chaos and order, for neither has 
substance in and of itself
Nor did many of the pages that followed help much, either. His head began to 
ache, but he kept reading, doggedly.
Sometime in early afternoon, Jeka climbed back over the wall and dropped down 
before Kharl. Her face was contorted.
Hurts hes after me
Who? The wizard?
Jeka nodded. Then she pulled out half a loaf of bread and a small wedge of hard 
cheese. I got you this.
Have you eaten? Kharl took the bread and cheese.
Yes.
As much as this?
About the same.
The words rang true, and Kharl began to eat. The headache he had not thought had 
come from reading began to subside, if slowly. When he had finished, he made his 
way along the walls and past the crude latrine to retrieve the black staff.
Jeka looked at him as he brought it back. You want me to touch it? She 
shivered.
It might help.
Jeka edged forward, then grabbed the staff, suddenly, before Kharl could reach 
out. Without even a cry or a murmur, her eyes closed; her knees buckled, and she 
dropped in a heap.
Alarmed, Kharl bent forward, but he could see that she was breathing. He half 
dragged, half carried her into her sleeping space. When he was certain she was 
still breathing, and seemed to be sleeping, he eased back away and sat down 
against the wall.
The staff had some power. That was certain. It could break whatever spell the 
white wizard laid on Jeka, but the effect didnt last.
Kharl tried to read more of The Basis of Order, but the words flowed by him 
without making much sense. Then he stood and stretched, and tried to figure out 
how he could deal with the wizardor if he should even try. Then he just sat 
against the wall.
A good glass passed before Jeka moaned.
Kharl lifted the canvas and peered into the hidey-hole. You all right?
No my head still hurts.
He waited for a time, and finally Jeka eased out into the indirect light of a 
cloudy afternoon, although the only place where rain looked to be falling was 
offshore.
Wizard hes bastard like Egen, she muttered.
Kharl agreed silently. Do you feel any better?
The cord thing is gone. My head hurts.
Kharl looked at her. Do you know someone who could tell you where the wizard 
lives? Jeka dropped her eyes. Kharl waited, but she did not reply. You already 
know? Because thats where you stole the silver from
him?
He was kicking a peddler woman pushing her she said he
hadnt paid He was awful mad served him right.
But stealing from a wizard?
Told you didnt know he was a wizard then. Just thought he was a dandy. Never 
miss a silver. He was stealin from her didnt think it was so bad to steal 
from him
I need to know where he lives.
Not all that far from the White Pony, cept its up the hill and
north.
Kharl glanced to the west. The afternoon rain that was so common in mid- and 
late fall looked to be moving inshore. He hoped that the coming storm would help 
conceal Jeka from the wizard. Youll have to take me
there.
Jeka looked down. Im tired again dont know why.
Kharl gestured in the direction of the wall and the serviceway beyond. Lets 
go. You climb over first.
Jeka dragged herself to the wall and over it, with a noticeable lack of 
enthusiasm. She just stood and watched as Kharl climbed, then descended into the 
shadowed serviceway.
You bringing that staff?
It might help.
Long as no one looks too close, she replied.
Kharl stayed almost abreast of Jeka as she wound her way through alleys, 
serviceways, and, occasionally, streets, but they did not stay on the streets 
long, and only on those streets that seemed crowded. The general direction was 
eastward. They did stop by a fountain, one that Kharl had not visited before, 
and drank. The water helped Kharl some, but Jeka looked pale and drawn, more so 
than earlier.
As they paused in an alley entrance, Kharl glanced at the cross street. Jeka was 
turning onto one of the older streets in upper Brysta,
where large houses had been set within twenty cubits of the street itself with 
ancient brick sidewalks, The yellow bricks were worn and, in some places, had 
been replaced with more reddish bricks. In other spots, there were just muddy 
gaps. The dwellings remained imposing two- and three-story edifices, but Kharl 
could sense the feeling of time and wear.
Not far she said in a low voice. Past the next street, on the right side.
The next block had slightly larger dwellings, but they seemed less well keptand 
olderand several had iron fences, and a few had iron-banded doors and shutters.
Jeka suddenly stiffened, then sprinted away from Kharl, moving faster than hed 
ever seen her move. She dashed down the street, then turned in at a high wooden 
gate in the middle of a short stone wall. The gate opened as she neared. A guard 
in burgundy stepped outside and closed the gate, stationing himself directly in 
front of the closed gate.
Stunned into momentary stiffness and silence, Kharl drew back into the shaded 
part of the alley. Trying to grasp what had happened, he stood close to the 
brick wall that enclosed either a courtyard or a garden. Where he was would have 
been in the shadow cast by the wall and the dwelling to the left of where he 
stood, except that the western sky was now completely cloud-covered. After a 
moment, Kharl shook his head, trying to clear his mind. Then, he bent forward 
and peered around the corner.
The guard did not even look in Kharls direction.
The cooper straightened. Now what? What could he do?
He had to do something. For eightday after eightday, hed just tried to survive, 
and one of the few who had helped was Jeka. Knowing what he knew about the 
wizard, he just couldnt walk away. And he couldnt wait. Not with what had 
happened to the other girls.
Taking a firmer grip on the staff, he edged out of the alley and began to hobble 
down the irregular stone walk flanking the narrow street. The wind had picked 
up, out of the west, and the clouds had thickened, but no rain was falling.
As he made his way in the direction of the guard, Kharl was glad he had brought 
the staff.
The guard watched, bored, but cautious, as Kharl hobbled toward him.
Kharl halted, a good four cubits back from the man. A copper, ser a copper for 
a poor man just a copper. He leaned on the staff
and took a step sideways, a step that brought him nearer to the brawny
guard.
Be on your way, fellow. The guard turned, catlike.
A copper? Surely, you can spare a copper? Kharl asked, as he took a step 
forward and paused. He could sense some of the white fog around the guard.
Out of here! The guard reached for his blade.
Kharl brought the staff up from below, a lesson hed learned years before, and 
never forgotten.
The blade went flying. The guard gaped, but only for an instant before the 
iron-banded end of the staff slammed into his gut. As the man doubled over, 
Kharl used his two-handed grip to bring the other end into the mans temple. The 
unseen whiteness around the guard
vanished.
A rasping sound followed the collapse of the first guard. Then the gate burst 
open, and a second guard came charging out, his blade out, glistening in the 
flat light. Kharl brought the staff into his ready position, noting that the 
guards blade was more of a bronzed white than the silver gray hed expected and 
seen on occasion when bravos had flashed theirs on the streets of Brysta.
As he struck with the longer staff, Kharl also wondered how the wizards guards 
could carry blades, since the wizard wasnt a lord or a merchant. He supposed 
Lord West would either make an exception for a wizard or just look the other 
way.
The second guard parried Kharls first thrust, but had to back up from the force 
of the blow, dealt by a staff that felt more solid than mere wood. There was 
little enough space between the open gate and the wall, and Kharl slammed the 
staff into the guards knee. The man staggered, but tried to bring his blade 
around.
The move was too late, and Kharl hit hard enough that he could feel something 
snap in the mans shoulder area. He didnt wait, but struck again and again.
Then he stood there, dumbly, for a moment, trying to catch his breath, as he 
looked at the two immobile forms on the stones.
After another series of gasping breaths, he lurched through the open gate and up 
the three steps onto a small porch just large enough to shelter three or four 
people from the rain while waiting for entry. He turned the antique brass lever 
handle, and the door opened.
Kharl was only halfway through the doorway when he heard hurried steps and saw a 
tall figure stop at the back of the wide, deep and dim foyer. The ragged cooper 
could sense the cloud of that same unseen whiteness, and threw the staff up in 
front of him, even before the wizard flung a burst of whitish red fire at him.
The fire cascaded away from the staffmostly. Some flame flared against Kharls 
left leg, but he kept the staff up as he took two steps forward, ignoring the 
searing pain.
Another firebolt flashed toward Kharl, running up his left arm, hotter than the 
coals of the forge, hot enough to bring up patches of flame on the ragged cloak.
Charging forward through the pain and the heat, and the smell of burned hair, 
Kharl thrust the ironbound staff right into the wizards midsection. For an 
instant, flame flew in all directions, but not at Kharl. The wizards mouth 
dropped open.
Before the wizard could recover, Kharl reversed the staff and tried to bring the 
other end against the others jaw and neck. While the blow was not terribly 
strong, it was enough to jar the wizard and allow Kharl to advance with another 
blow.
In moments, the wizard collapsed.
Kharl drove one end of the staff straight down into the center of his chest. 
Ribs and bones cracked, and the wizard went limp, lifeless.
Kharl stood there, stupidly, looking at the figure on the floor. The dark hair 
turned white. The smooth skin wrinkled, then turned whitish yellow, tightening 
around the skull. The hair became more wispy, then vanished, as a skull replaced 
the face that had been there moments before. Before Kharl could even swallow 
more than once, all that remained of the wizard were his garments and a pile of 
whitish dust that, in turn, began to vanish.
Kharl stepped past the clothes and to the first door on the left, polished oak 
that had aged into a deep gold, with dark grain lines. He opened the door 
gingerly. The chamber beyond, some sort of sitting room, was empty. Kharl closed 
the door and stepped past the archway to the dining area, also empty.
He hurried through the entire first level, but it was uninhabited, and he 
struggled up the stairs all too conscious of the growing pain in his arm and 
leg. Outside, thunder rumbled, and he could hear the patter of raindrops. He 
just wished that it had started to rain earlier.
In the first small bedchamber at the top of the wide and ancient oak stairs, 
Jeka lay on the bed, her eyes wide. One wrist was tied to the bedpost on the 
left side, and a coil of rope lay on a coverlet that was a dull green and so old 
that Kharl could not make out the pattern on the fabric. He moved around the 
bed, toward the side where Jekas hand was tied. Her eyes did not follow him, 
nor did she offer any sound or movement, still staring sightlessly at the 
ceiling.
He fumbled with the rope, trying to hurry, but finding the knot difficult with 
only one hand. Jeka did not move when he untied the one bound wrist.
Kharl doubted that he could carry Jeka and the staff, and he feared that if he 
touched her with it, she would collapse again. Stand up, he ordered her 
quietly. Jeka stood. Follow me.
He hobbled down the stairs. Jeka followed, woodenly. Kharl didnt even try to 
find a rear door. He just wanted them out of the dwelling as quickly as 
possible.
Outside, the wind was gusting, and scattered sheets of rain swept around them as 
they stepped out of the gate. Unlike the wizards, the bodies of the guards 
remained right where they had fallen.
Murder! Someones murdered! came a call from somewhere. Kharl ignored that, 
too, and half trotted, half hobbled, not a counterfeited hobble, but one from 
the pain in his leg, toward the alley. Each step also stabbed through his left 
arm. There was no one in the alley, and another gust of wind blasted over them, 
rustling the graying leaves of the trees surrounding the ancient dwellings on 
both sides of the alley.
Kharl and Jeka managed three blocks before Kharl slowed to a true hobble, 
finally turning out of the last alley and onto Gemstone Road. Just after they 
turned the corner, they found themselves less than a rod from a Watchman on 
patrol.
You! snapped the Watchman. What are you doing here?
Just a poor man, ser a poor man my boy, ser, hes not right ran off he did, 
and Ive just gotten him
Truncheon in hand, the Watchman looked at Kharl, then at Jeka. Jeka did not look 
at the Watchman, but remained standing beside Kharl.
Does he speak, fellow?
Sometimes, ser Kharl looked at Jekat. Can you tell the man your name, 
Jekat?
Jekat. The two syllables were uninflected, dull, and she continued to look 
straight ahead.
The Watchman studied Jeka and then Kharl. He shook his head. On your way! Away 
from decent folk. And make it quick!
Yes, ser yes, ser thank you, ser Kharl whined.
He just hoped that they didnt run into more Watchmen or, worse, Egen, although 
he suspected the lords son might not even recognize him any longer. Not unless 
they held him and stripped him and found the scars on his back.
The rain began to fall more heavily, and by the time they were back in the 
serviceway beside the rendering wall, both Kharl and Jeka were soaked through. 
The rain had come too late to help Kharl with the wizard, but it might have 
helped them escape.
Kharl took a deep breath. Despite the chill of the rain, the staff continued to 
feel warm to Kharls hands. He looked at Jeka.
Climb over the wall and wait.
She did, and he followed, laboriously, and with inadvertent tears streaming down 
his face. Every movement sent stabs of pain through his injured arm and leg.
Only when they were under the roof, such as it was, did he touch the staff to 
Jeka.
She collapsed.
Then he eased her into her hidey-hole, pulling off her wet cloak, but not more, 
and wrapping her in drier woolen rags. Then, in turn, he collapsed against the 
stone wall, just sitting there, breathing deeply, and wondering what he had 
done.
He knew whybut not how.
XXXVII
Sevenday was cool and cloudy, even at dawn, but the clouds were high. Kharl 
thought it was unlikely there would be rain. For that he was grateful as he sat 
against the stone wall and checked his wounds. Three sets of half-scabbed and 
oozing lines ran from the knee to just above Kharls boot tops on his left leg. 
A shorter trio of lines ran between Kharls elbow and shoulder, also on his left 
arm. The pain from the night before had faded into a dull aching in both his 
injured leg and arm, unless he moved suddenly, then it sharpened.
Kharl still did not understand exactly what had happened. He knew that he had 
fought well enough to disable the guards, but he doubted that he had struck hard 
enough to kill them; and he certainly had not struck the wizard hard enough to 
stun himyet he had. Or was Kharl deceiving himself? Had he really used that 
much force? He wasnt sure hed ever know. What he did know was that, if he 
couldnt find a friendly ship soon, he needed another way to get out of Brysta. 
All around him bodies continued to mount, and if Egen ever suspected that Kharl 
was alive in Brysta and had killed his wizard, there would be more Watchmen 
looking everywhere.
He glanced up to find Jeka sitting on the edge of the hidey-hole ledge, studying 
him. While there were dark circles under her eyes, her face was not so drawn as 
the day before.
How are you feeling? he asked.
You came after me.
Kharl nodded, not knowing exactly what to say.
You killed the wizard.
He nodded again. I was lucky.
You were brave.
Im not brave. How could he explain that he wasnt, that hed just had to try, 
because it might have been the only chance left in his life to try to help 
someone who had helped him? He looked at Jeka carefully.
Her face was still pale. Ive got a few coppers. Im going with you to the 
lower market. You need to eat.
You shoulda taken coins from the wizard.
I was more interested in getting us out of there before anyone found us. Coins 
dont do much good if they hang you.
Coulda grabbed em without stopping.
You could have, Kharl said. Im not that good. Besides He paused and 
offered a grin. Wasnt that what got you in trouble with the wizard in the 
first place?
Yeah Jeka looked away slightly, then back. But if he was dead
If there were coins missing, the Watch might be looking for us a lot more. This 
way the wizards dead. So are his guards, and theres a rope tied to a bedpost. 
No wizards going to kidnap a ragged urchin everyone thinks is a boy. Clearly 
Kharl paused. He hoped it was clear. The wizard kidnapped the wrong person and 
paid for it.
Thats what you hope.
You think Egen is going to believe that a beggar and an urchin killed two 
guards and a wizardand didnt take a thing? countered Kharl.
Probably not, Jeka agreed.
Now lets go get something to eat.
I could do it myself.
You arent going alone.
You got hurt. Maybe you shouldnt walk that far.
We both got hurt. Besides, I can limp for real.
Jeka smiled.
Kharl stood. He would take the staff.
XXXVIII
Pog finally rolled in early on eightday, sometime well before Kharl woke. The 
air was cold and clammy. Even his hair was damp. He glanced toward the canvas 
that covered Jekas hidey-hole, hoping she was warm enough. He stood quietly, 
trying to stretch out sore muscles without pulling the scabs on his injured leg 
and arm. The burns werent deep, but at times they were painful, and doubtless 
would remain so for
days.
The Seastag hadnt tied up in the harbor by sunset the night before, and with 
the fog, wasnt likely to in the next day. It could be eightdays before Hagens 
ship showed up, and there wasnt even any certainty that Kharl could buy or beg 
his way aboard. Even if he did, what about Jeka? Sooner or later, shed run into 
something she couldnt handle. What could he do for her?
He laughed silently, ruefully. He couldnt even solve his own problems, and he 
thought he could do something for Jeka, an urchin whose only skills were cadging 
food? But were they? Shed mentioned once that shed been a weaver.
Kharl frowned, thinking.
He was still thinking about it a glass later, when he slipped out of the 
serviceway, the dark staff in his hand. Jeka was still dozing. Hed listened to 
Jeka enough to know that the market was dangerous, even for her at times, and 
there were few he could trust in buying or cadging food. But he wanted to do his 
share, and with the wizard gone, he could try the White Pony.
With the fog covering Brysta, the Watch wasnt likely to be able to follow him, 
although he doubted that they were all that interested in a ragged beggar. He 
walked slowly, trying not to stretch his left leg too much. The fog was so thin 
at times that Kharl could see almost a hundred cubits, and then so thick moments 
later that he could scarcely glimpse the tip of the staff he carried. He made 
his way southward until he reached Copper Road, where he paused.
He heard heavy steps, close by, and he ducked into the alley and flattened 
himself against the wall as the two members of the Watch walked down Copper Road 
toward the harbor.
 cold day
 just the fog always have hot and cold days in midfall
Kharl waited for the two to go on, but they stopped opposite the alley.
 say that fog makes it harder for the white wizards
 you really think someone killed Hanryl? All they found was his garments.
 two dead guards.
 had their blades out. Clubbed couldnt have happened without wizardry. Lord 
Egens worried thinks theres another wizard loose, stronger
Long as they fight each other dont much care.
Better get on over to Cargo Road
Kharl waited until the footsteps had long died away before heading toward the 
White Pony, where he hoped that Enelya would accord him the same courtesy as she 
did Jeka.
XXXIX
In the late afternoon, from the point of rock north of the slateyard, Kharl 
watched as the Seastag maneuvered toward the outermost pier. More than an 
eightday had passed since he had managed to rescue Jeka from the wizard, and, 
every day, he had checked the harbor, but few vessels had entered, although he 
had seen Lord Wests gunboats more than a few times.
He took a last look at the Austran vessel, sails furled and using her steam 
engine and paddle wheels to move toward the pier, before he began to walk 
southward toward the piers, his eyes open for the Watch. It would probably take 
him several glasses to circle the harbor to the piers from where he was, but 
Hagen spent at least three days in Brysta.
By the time Kharl had made his way past the warehouses, avoiding
tw harbor posts of the Watch, and reached the pier holding the Austran ship, 
several wagons had already appeared and were being readied to take cargo about 
to be off-loaded.
Kharl eased out along the pier, moving from unused bollard to bollard until he 
was almost at the stern of the Seastag. Then he watched for a time as palleted 
bundles were winched up from the center hold. Hagen stood on the poop deck 
watching.
After several loads filled the first wagon, the winching stopped.
Kharl slipped forward until he was on the pier, just below the captain.
Hagen! Kharl hissed.
The master of the Seastag glanced down, frowning as he took in
Kharl.
Its Kharl, the cooper.
For a moment, Hagen studied Kharl. What happened to you?
Could I work a passage to Austra?
Work a passage? What happened to you? repeated Hagen, as his eyes continued to 
study the ragged figure.
Lords son doesnt exactly like me. Doubled my tariffs twice over. No way I 
could pay that. Lost the cooperage. Lost most everything. All of what Kharl 
said was true, but he dared not be more truthful.
You look that way.
I can still work. Carpenters assistant until you make landfall in Austra?
I just came from there. I wont be making landfall there for half a season.
Could you use a carpenters assistant for half a season?
Hagen glanced down the pier, then back toward Kharl. What about your boys?
One left to be an apprentice ships carpenter on the Fleuryl. The others with 
Charees sister. She said I had no business raising Warrl. He agreed. Hed even 
written her
Hagen fingered his chin. I dont know
I know how to work. You know that.
You look
Disguise, Kharl admitted. I dont want anyone to see me. You can understand 
that. Ill come aboard in a good tunic and trousers.
I dont know. Been a hard trip already.
You cant get a good worker for less.
Passage is about all I can afford, Kharl.
Thats all Im asking.
Hagen frowned. Suppose I suppose.
Ill be back later tonight with my gear. Would that be all right?
How much gear?
Very little. Some clothes, a pack. No tools.
Hagen shook his head. Hate to see a man so down on his luck.
Ill be fine once Im away from Brysta.
Well be here in port almost an eightday.
Ill stay on board. Give you an extra body to help load and unload.
The captain laughed. For that, I could even pay you bottom level.
I wont object. Kharl smiled. Later tonight?
Ill tell the deck watch to get me.
Thank you. Kharl nodded, then hurried down the pier. He had more than a few 
loose ends he wanted to tie up, and he wanted to get back before Hagen had a 
chance to change his mind, although he didnt think Hagen was that kind of man. 
Still, he had a lot to do, including trying to do something for Jeka. What he 
had in mind might not work but it was all he had been able to come up with, and 
he had to try.
On his way back to the walled hideout, Kharl stopped by the fountain and, when 
no one was too close, washed up as he could, removing the worst of the dirt and 
grime.
Still, for all his concerns about Jeka, she was not between the walls when Kharl 
returned. He hoped she would not be too long in returning. In the meantime, he 
rummaged through his pack until he found the old scissors. By feel, he slowly 
trimmed his beard and mustache, making sure that it was shorter and more rounded 
than it had been before.
Then he dressed in his spare tunic and trousers. He hoped that he could get the 
dirt and soil out of the clothes he had been wearing, which he folded and put 
into his pack.
Well youre looking good. Jeka stood at the foot of the wall. Are you going 
somewhere?
The ship I was waiting for is here.
Goin to miss you, Jeka said warily, her eyes avoiding Kharls.
Despite the stench of the hidey-hole, and the dirt, Kharl realized he was going 
to miss Jeka as well. Ill miss you, but He shook his head. Cant stay here. 
You know that. Sooner later, Egend find me.
You can go, be a cooper anywhere. Me? She spread her hands.
You were a weaver once, you said? Kharl asked.
It was a long time ago.
Were you good at it?
Light-fired good, Ma said. So did Hunat, but he had three sons and
a daughter there.
Kharl nodded to himself, then eased his fingers into the pouch hed replaced 
around his neck and slipped out a silver. He handed it to her.
This might help.
You had silvers? Jeka looked at the coin. Had this, and you stayed
here?
Know anyplace Id have been any safer? he asked. With Egen
wanting my head?
The trace of a smile crossed her lips. You got more alley-smarts
than you let on.
Come on He pulled his pack into place and arranged the ragged cloak over both 
tunic and pack. Then he picked up the staff.
Where we goin?
To see a man. Hes a good man. The only one who helped me and stood by me. Who 
was still alivebut Kharl wasnt about to say that.
Why?
Kharl took her arm. We dont have that much time.
Jeka followed Kharl over the wall and out into the serviceway, clearly 
reluctant, and then along the alleys and cross streets until they were in the 
alley paralleling Crafters Lanethe alley on the south side, not the one on the 
north that ran behind the cooperage. In time, they came to the rear door of 
Gharans shop.
Kharl glanced around, then drew back the ragged hooded cloak enough to reveal 
his face and the better tunic underneath. He rapped on the door.
Amyla opened it. Her eyes widened.
Get Gharan. I wont be a moment.
After a long look at the cooper, Amyla stepped back, leaving the door slightly 
ajar.
Gharan appeared instantly. Kharl He looked down the alley,
then back at the cooper.
Theres no one out here. Not now. Youve stood up for me, and youve been 
honest, Kharl said. Im leaving Brysta, but I have a favor to asknot for me.
Gharan looked from Kharl to Jeka, quizzically.
Jekat isnt Jekat, exactly. Shes Jeka, and an orphan. Shes also a good 
weaver. Kharl fumbled at the pouch around his neck and under his undertunic, 
then handed three silvers to Gharan. Ill pay you to try her as a helper or an 
apprentice for two eightdays. You like what she does, then you keep her on. You 
dont, at least try to find her a place.
Gharan looked to Jeka again. Where are you from?
Sagana.
Why didnt you stay there?
I couldnt. Hunat had three sons and a daughter, and the tariff farmer took 
everything when Ma died, wanted to indenture me to a pleasure house.
Gharan winced, then looked at Kharl. Two eightdays trial. There is a chance.
Say shes a distant cousin. Kharl turned to Jeka. You stay here now. You 
dont need anything back there. He handed her two silvers. These are for 
decent clothes for you. He straightened. Id better go.
He stepped back, leaving Jeka standing there with Gharan, then ducked back along 
the alley, almost at a run, before anyone could say anything. He did not slow 
down until he was several blocks away. He forced himself not to look back.
He reached the pier where the Seastag was docked just after sunset. He stopped 
to study the area around the ship, but saw no Watchmen. He slipped off the 
ragged cloak and rolled it up, slipping it next to an unused bollard, then 
straightened up and walked toward the Austran vessel.
The crewman at the top of the gangway watched as Kharl approached.
The cooper stopped at the foot of gangway. Im Kharl. Captain Hagen is 
expecting me He wasnt sure what else to say.
He told me. Youre to come aboard and wait here on the quarterdeck.
Kharl walked up the gangway and stepped down onto the deck planks, although he 
saw nothing that resembled a quarterdeck.
The sailor on watch looked strangely at the ironbound staff.
Kharl did not offer to explain.
The sailor took a tin whistle and piped something. Shortly, Hagen appeared with 
a muscular and blocky man who looked to be about Kharls age.
Hagen smiled as he saw Kharl. You look somewhat better than this afternoon. He 
turned to the other man. Furwyl were payin a debt and getting some help. 
Kharl heres a cooper. Lost his consort and his family, then his cooperage to 
the tariff farmer. Done a lot of good work for us in the past. Working his way 
to Austra, as assistant to the carpenter. Doesnt do rigging, but anything else 
you need him for. Furwyl smiled. Hes a mite big to put up there.
Furwyl is first mate, number two, Hagen said to Kharl. You answer him and any 
of the other mates, like they were me. Mates are the ones with the vests, or the 
jackets with the stripes on the sleeves.
Yes, ser.
Ill need a moment more with Kharl, Furwyl. Then you can get him squared away 
in the focsle and take him down to the carpenter. I already told Tarkyn.
Yes, ser.
Oh, Furwyl I think wed better change the shore leave while were here. Its 
too late for tonight, but from now on, I want the crew to go in pairs. Anyone 
who leaves alone, or returns alone, loses a silver. Theres something going on. 
Theres a renegade wizard loosekilled a white mage, one serving Lord Wests 
youngest son. We dont want anyone tied up with that.
The crew wont like that.
Better that than no leave. We dont want to lose crew, and they dont want to 
end up dead or left here, either.
Yes, ser. Furwyl stepped away, moving toward the bow along the pierside 
railing.
Hagen turned his attention on Kharl. I made a quick trip to your cooperage. 
Someone else is there. He said he bought it at a tariff auction because you 
abandoned it. Why?
To stay alive, Kharl replied. I stopped Lord Wests son from forcing himself 
on my neighbors daughter, and he had my Charee killed. He had the tariff farmer 
raise my levy to twelve golds, and had an assassin kill my neighbor because he 
testified for me before the justicers
Hagen winced. I thought it might be something like that. You stay on board and 
out of sight when the port inspectors are around.
I can do that.
And you do whatever youre told by the mates, by Tarkynhes the
carpenteror by me.
Yes, ser.
Hagen beckoned. Furwyl you can take him now.
As Kharl followed the first mate, Furwyl looked at the cooper. Youve made some 
of our hogsheads and barrels?
Yes, ser. Some of them.
Wouldnt hurt Tarkyn to have some help. Its been a rough fall. In here. 
Furwyl gestured to the open hatchway on the starboard side, leading into the 
forecastle.
Kharl had to duck as he entered the passageway, dimly lit by a single lamp in a 
bulkhead bracket. A closed hatch was on the right, an open hatch straight ahead.
Furwyl gestured to the closed hatch. Womens crew quarters. Off-limits at all 
times. Youll be in the main section forward. Even have an extra bunk or so.
Most of the bunk spaces were empty, except for three. In two, the sailors were 
sleeping. The third sailor looked at the mate and Kharl.
Kharls the assistant to the carpenter, Furwyl explained.
The sailor nodded and rolled over.
The bunk spaces were about four cubits long, two high, and two deep, set against 
the hull. Each was painted white, and there was a thin mattress with a single 
blanket on each. Between each set of bunks were two open spaces with nets.
The mate pointed to the last bunk on the port side. That onell be yours. Your 
gear goes in the bin at the foot of your bunk. Have to lash that staff away down 
in the carpenter shop.
The bin was certainly large enough to hold Kharls pack, but as he looked around 
the triangular space, he could see why the staff would not fit anywhere. He 
stepped forward and put his pack in the bin, then tied the net in place.
Furwyl turned, expecting Kharl to follow. The cooper did, back outside, then 
into the passageway on the starboard side, and down a ladder one level, and 
forward into a narrow space where a sailor in gray sat on a stool carving 
something out of what looked to be a white bone. He looked up, but did not rise.
Tarkyn, the first mate said, this is Kharl. The captain said hed told you.
Didnt ask me, ser. Told me. The carpenter was a good decade older than Kharl, 
grizzled, and white-haired, and he wore a gray shirt,
not either tunic or undertunic, and matching gray trousers. He surveyed Kharl. 
Least hes no youngster.
Furwyl nodded to Kharl. Ill leave you two. He looked to Tarkyn. Captain said 
you could store his staff here. It wont fit in the focsle. Hope he doesnt 
need it, but we will be sailing offshore of Renklaar.
Well find a place.
Furwyl left.
Tarkyn looked at the staff. You from Reduce?
No. The staff came from a blackstaffer. Its useful in strange places.
You can rack it there. Tarkyn pointed at the overhead wood bin
that stretched aft.
Kharl eased the staff into the long wood bin on one side, carefully rearranging 
two timbers so that it fit snugly.
Tarkyn looked hard at Kharl. You after my spot?
Kharl laughed. No. I offered my services to help pay my passage. Im a cooper
Captain told me that. You a good cooper?
One of the better ones.
Why you here?
The Lords tariff farmer took a dislike to me. I couldnt come up with twelve 
golds in four eightdays. Not when the tariff had only been three golds the year 
before.
One thing about being a ships carpenter dont have to worry about such. Worry 
about pirates, storms, spoiled food, broken spars but not tariff farmers. 
Tarkyn laughed. Be here after morning muster, and Ill show you around. See 
what you can do.
Thank you.
Dont thank me yet. Tarkyn looked down at the carving he held, barely 
illuminated by the bronze lamp, and lifted the knife. See you first thing in 
the morning.
Ill be here, Kharl promised, stepping back out of the carpenter shop. For all 
of Tarkyns taciturn welcome, Kharl had sensed the basic soundness of the man, 
and the organization of the shop, from the wood set just so in the bins and bays 
to the tool chests that were carefully stowed and restrained.
He climbed up the ladder, then back onto the main deck. After a moment, he 
climbed the forward ladder and walked to the base of the bowsprit. There he 
stood, at the railing on the seaward side, looking
into the darkness wondering how he had ended up on the Seastag and where it 
would all lead.
After a time, he turned to view the lights of Brysta. Hed never thought of 
leaving the city where hed been born. But then, hed never thought that the 
cityor its rulerswould have cost him his consort his family, his livelihood, 
then driven him out.
Looking at the scattered lights spread across the harbor front, and the low 
hills overlooking the harbor, he swallowed, feeling the lump in his throat, and 
his eyes began to burn.
XL
JVharl spent the first five days, when not sleeping or eating, either with the 
winch crew or in the carpenter shop. Adjusting to the in-port morning muster was 
easy enough; hed always gotten up early anyway. Having regular meals turned out 
harder on his guts and system, much as he knew he needed them.
After testing Kharl on a few minor projects, such as replacing a smashed panel 
on an inside door-hatch and rebuilding a storm-damaged section of the poop deck 
rail, Tarkyn just asked if Kharl could do something. Most things he was asked to 
do, he could, and some, like turning a spar, were easy enough to pick up.
He had no idea about others, as when the carpenter had asked him how hed reset 
the rudder posts.
I suppose I could take it apart and learn, the cooper had offered, but I 
dont know as you and the captain would wish that.
Tarkyn had laughed. Wise man who knows what he can do. Wiser man who knows what 
he cant.
Kharl wasnt certain about that. Hed done a few things in the past eightdays 
hed never believed he could have done, and, before that, he certainly would 
have told anyone that he couldnt have done them.
Hed not seen either Watch or harbor inspectors, but the Watch usually didnt 
patrol the piers, and the harbor inspectors were only
interested in tariffs and quiet on the vessels tied to the piersand the Seastag 
was a very quiet ship.
By late afternoon on threeday, all the outbound cargo had been loaded, and the 
hatches secured, with everything battened down. Then the steam engine had been 
fired up, and with a slapping ihwup, thwup, the midships paddle wheels had begun 
to turn.
Kharl stood at the railing as the Seastag eased away from the pier, out into the 
harbor, then westward past the outer breakwater. He looked back at Brysta, the 
afternoon light illuminating the city in a golden glow, giving it a beauty he 
had not seenor experiencedin recent seasons.
You! Second carpenter! called a voice.
Kharl turned at the voice, recognizing the third, a hard-faced wiry woman with 
short-cropped hair and broad shoulders. Ser?
Well be setting canvas once we clear. Youre lead on the mainmast
winch.
Yes, ser. Kharl moved toward the winch. There he stood, waiting for orders, 
and looking back, wondering if he would ever see Nordla again, if he would ever 
want to, yet knowing that he would.
o
f?
XLI
Thirteen days had passed since the Seastag had steamed out of Brysta and hoisted 
sail. Once well clear of Nordla, Hagen had shut down the steam engine to 
conserve coal. All thirteen days had seen very rough seas, except for the last 
few glasses, when the seas had begun to calm. Kharl hadnt realized how much 
continual work was required of a ships carpenter, much of it while standing on 
a moving deck. Most of it was simple, in terms of craft, but necessary. Hed 
replaced railing spokes. Hed turned pulley brackets. Hed fashioned a 
replacement bar for the capstan, when the iron one had broken loose and rolled 
over the side during one of the heavier blows. He could have reinforced it with 
iron bands, but there was no forge available on the ship.
The cooper grinned at his recollection of Hagens anger over that. The fourth 
matethe bosunhad practically backed himself over the railing stepping away 
from the captain as Hagen berated the man for not making sure that the capstan 
locker had been secured for heavy weather.
It was near midday, and Kharl stood near the bow, just forward of the foremast, 
since the Seastag was only twin-masted, but full-rigged, a brigs rigging on a 
full ships hull, spread to allow engine and paddle wheels midships. He was 
taking a break from the pedal-powered lathe in the carpenters shop and enjoying 
the fresh air. Unlike some of the newer sailors, the weather hadnt bothered 
Kharl, and he found that merely working, eating, and sleeping on a regular 
schedule had improved both his attitude and his health. The thin mattress felt 
almost luxurious after nearly a season on rags and hard ground, and even the 
ships food wasnt that bad, although the fruit was dried and limited, and the 
biscuits that went with every meal tended to get rock-hard the moment they 
cooled.
Land ahead! came down the call from the lookout.
Land where? called back Furwyl, who had the con, on the platform before the 
steersman.
Ten off the starboard bow!
Within moments, Kharl could feel the Seastag turning to starboard. He couldnt 
see what the lookout had, not yet, and he headed back down to the carpenter 
shop.
Tarkyn stepped back from the lathe. Youre younger. You can finish.
Kharl took the turning chisel from the older man. The lookout sighted land.
Thought as much, replied Tarkyn. Shifted course.
We came starboard. It looked like we were headed too far south.
Not too far if the captain could see land. Means he was right within fifty kays 
after fifteen hundred on the open sea. Not many captains that good.
Do you mind if I watch as we come into port? Kharl adjusted the foot pedal and 
began pumping, so that the spruce in the lathe began to spin.
No. Not after you finish that gaff. Bemyrll want you up on the winch crew 
anyway.
Kharl didnt rush the turning. There was no point in spoiling the wood, and it 
would be a good glass, if not two or three, before the Seastag came anywhere 
near the shore. When he did finish, he handed the smoothed gaff to Tarkyn.
Not bad.
Kharl took out one of the rags and cleaned off the lathe, then got out the small 
broom and the handled flat scoop. He swept up the shavings and put them in the 
burn box, where the cook would collect them later. By the time he had finished, 
Tarkyn was back working on his scrimshaw, what would be a full-rigged ship 
carved into a red deer antler.
How long have you been working on that? the cooper asked.
This voyage and the last. Tarkyn looked toward the open hatch.
Kharl took the hint and slipped out of the carpenter shop and up to the bow. At 
times, the carpenter didnt want to talk at allnot to Kharl.
The ship was headed due north, and Kharl could smell the smoke from the engine 
being fired up. The third mate was barking commands at the riggers, terms Kharl 
didnt understand, except in general terms, naming sails to be furled, and those 
to be left in place. He had picked up some of the names, but he had no idea 
which sail the mizzen skysail was, nor the fore topgallant. So he just stayed 
out of the way near the bow and watched as the Seastag drew nearer to the coast. 
Before long, he could make out a long black line above the watera breakwater. 
Hagen, on the poop, brought the ship more to the west.
The third, her voice hard and sharp, issued another series of
commands, and the rest of the sails were furled as the paddle wheels began to 
move. The Seastag moved slowly northward, then hove to off the southern 
breakwater, waiting, the paddle wheels turning just enough to keep the ship with 
bare steerageway.
In less than a fraction of a glass, a pilot boat steamed up. The boat kept 
perfect station on the Seastag while the ladder went over the side. Shortly, a 
man in blue trousers and jacket climbed aboard. Furwyl met him on the deck and 
escorted him back to the poop, where he stood beside the captain and began to 
give orders to the helm.
The Seastag crept forward, wallowing slightly before gaining true headway, then 
picked up speed to perhaps three kays, Kharl judged, moving toward a channel 
marked with red and black buoys. The channel ran almost due east between the two 
long breakwaters of black stone. The breakwaters rose a good ten cubits above 
the water and seemed to be at least three times that wide, with the flat surface 
of a lords
causeway.
Never seen breakwaters like that murmured Hodal, one of the few deckhands who 
was actually taller and broader than Kharland a good fifteen years younger.
Lots of things youll see here you never saw before, someone else replied. 
Nothing like Nylan. Nothing nowhere.
Winch crew! Stand by! ordered Bemyr, the bosun.
Kharl moved aft to join the others, but continued to watch as the Seastag 
entered the harbor, not all that much larger than the one at Brysta. The 
difference was that there were piers and more piers, all of them stone, with 
clean lines and no signs of missing mortar, seemingly in perfect repair, with 
timbered rails and hempen buffers.
Is this part of Reduce called Nylan, or is it just the harbor? Kharl asked 
Reisl, who was the closest of the winch crew to him.
Who knows? Reisl shrugged.
The bosun looked at Kharl. The southern tip of Reduce is called Southpoint. The 
port here is Nylan, named after some old hero. He was a smith, I think. Anyway, 
weve been coming north past the point fore coming inshore. Thats cause the 
harbors on the west side, north of the southern tip. Pretty big port, more than 
a half score piers for deep-ocean traders, a few more for coasters from Candar 
and fishing vessels. Most of the time, its crowded.
They got girls there? asked the fresh-faced Wylat. The tavern maids are 
prettier here than anyplace youll ever be And all you can do is look. Bemyr 
laughed.
Dont believe that, came a voice from the other side of the winch crew.
You better believe it. This is the place that flattened Fairven some 
fifty-sixty years back. They got more mages here in Nylan than in the whole rest 
of the world. You see all that black stone out there? They got ships that move 
faster than the fastest war-steamers out of Hamor, and half the time you cant 
see em. They got patrollers on every street. You wont lose any coin to 
brigands there, and youll get fair measure for your coin. But you cant buy a 
woman for all the golds the captains got.
You cant?
As the Seastag eased past the inner end of the breakwaters, Kharls attention 
drifted from the comments about women to the harbor and the city to the north of 
it. Outside of a few blocks immediately north of the harbor, the city was built 
on a long sloping hill, an almost symmetrical ridge that was more than two kays 
from the harbor to the crest and nearly twice that wide. The dwellings and the 
buildings he could see were constructed of a blackish stone, with dark roofs, 
and the streets were wide and straight.
Anywhere you can buy a good woman a woman, anyway, another crew member said.
Except on board, cracked the third mate from across the deck.
Cant buy women in Nylan, stated Bemyr. Better not try, either. Now once in 
a while, onell take a liking to a sailor and thats something. Only knew of 
two fellows that happened to Bemyr broke off. Enough of that. Theyve already 
got the wagons moving down the pier. They move cargo fast here.
Lines out! ordered Furwyl. Tighten up forward! Bring her in!
The Seastags paddle wheel slowed to a stop.
Double up! ordered Furwyl. Bosun!
Bemyr put his whistle to his mouth and blew two shrill blasts. Before long, 
cargo hatchll be off. Winch crew in place! Step lively, now!
Kharl took his place and waited.
XLII
For the next two days, Kharl labored as a deckhand, shifting cargo, moving 
pallets. Not until midafternoon of the third day was he granted shore leave, 
along with Tarkyn and half the rigging crew. He had managed, with some 
difficulty, to wash his once-better outfit clean, but a close look would have 
revealed muted stains in the tunic. He also had the staff, which he felt he 
needed to return, although he wasnt quite sure where to take it, only that it 
had come from Reduce, and he thought Jenevra had mentioned Nylan.
He stood on the section of the deck behind the gangway, in that ill-defined area 
that was called the quarterdeck, along with the others going on shore leave, 
sunlight and shadows from the masts and rigging falling across them.
Dont be too long, or too late, Bemyr told those going on shore leave. You 
dont need a friend with you, not here, but be careful. Captain says we sail 
just after dawn. Thats when the winds turn and blow out of the northeast.
Kharl stepped back and let the younger men surge down the gangway.
As the cooper waited, the captain appeared, looking at the staff. Id forgotten 
that. Where did you get it?
It belongs here. I need to return it.
Thats probably a very good idea. Enjoy yourself.
Yes, ser, Kharl said politely, but Hagen had already stepped away. Kharl 
looked around as he walked down the gangway onto the pier. All the piers were of 
dressed stone, and the stonework was simple but flawless, the joins between 
stones as tight as those of his best barrels, and with only the thinnest lines 
of mortar.
The pier itself was almost clear of wagons, except for one last one holding 
barrels, probably of provisions. Kharl walked past it, then stopped at the end 
of the pier and looked up the long, inclined hillside that held most of the 
city. Even though it was well past harvest,
everything seemed either black or green. The streets and even the one alley he 
could see to his left were all paved in a dark gray stone that was almost black. 
The late-afternoon light glinting off it made it look gray, but as he looked 
closer, he could see that it was indeed black. In fact, he hadnt realized just 
how black, and how pervasive the black stone truly was. All of the buildings, 
all of the dwellings, were of the same black stone, and the roofs of the 
buildings and dwellings were of a stone that looked like split black slate.
There were trees, tall and green, and open areas of grass, also green at a time 
of year when most grass in Nordla was brown. The buildings and dwellings were 
set in their own greenery, and placed much farther apart than in Brysta, 
spreading the city out and giving a feeling of spaciousness.
Kharl looked at the open area, a rectangular paved square, separating the piers 
from the warehouses and buildings, then picked the widest-looking boulevard and 
walked toward it, his staff in hand. He stopped at the corner where it 
intersected the square and walked toward a man in a black-and-tan uniform, a 
patroller, from what Bemyr had said. Could you help me? Im looking for the 
Brethren.
All of Nylans got Brethren. Any ones special? The mans accent was so clipped 
it took Kharl several moments to piece together what the fellow had actually 
said.
The ones the place that sends people to other lands
Where they train the dangergelders, you mean? Up the hill, almost three kays, 
and theres a building on the left, with a green triangle on a stone marker 
outside. Thats the place. Only one with the green triangle.
Thank you.
The patroller nodded in response.
As he continued uphill, Kharl noted something else. Almost all the buildings 
were but one story, and most of those near the harbor looked newish, certainly 
not more than a generation old, and some more recently constructed than that. 
Yet the port had a feeling of being much older.
He had walked no more than a block when he realized that several passersby and 
others in the street had taken a quick glance at him and the staff, and looked 
away. No one said anything, but they definitely looked at him strangely. Because 
of his clothing, not that of a typical sailor? Or the staff? Or both?
He was breathing harder by the time he reached his destination, nearly a glass 
later. The structure was more than just a building. From what he could tell, 
looking over the low stone wall at the green grass and neatly trimmed hedges and 
well-kept flowers, he was looking at an
estate.
Finally, he stepped through the two black stone pillars that served as 
gateposts, although there was no actual gate, and made his way to the covered 
porch and the doorway beyond. After a momentary hesitation, he rapped on the 
door.
Shortly, the door opened, and a young woman stood there. She wore gray all over, 
except for a shimmering black scarf and a silver pin on the collar of her tunic. 
The pin was a lightning bolt crossed with a staff. Might I help you? Again, 
the accent was strange, but understandable.
I hope so, Kharl said. This staff its not mine I didnt know what to do 
with it.
For the first time, the woman, who had been studying the cooper intently enough 
to make Kharl uneasy, actually looked at the staff. She frowned, briefly. If 
you would come in, I think you should see Magister Trelyn. She held the black 
oak door open wider.
Kharl took the invitation and stepped inside, finding himself in an upper foyer, 
separated from the lower one by three black stone steps that ran the width of 
the foyer.
There are benches below if you would like to rest?
Kharl stepped down to the lower level and the benches set almost against each 
wall. His eyes were caught by a painting hanging over one of the benches. The 
woman portrayed wore black, and her hair was brown. Her eyes were black, and 
somehow very alive. She didnt look like anyone Kharl knew, yet she reminded him 
of Jenevra, the black-staffer.
He studied the walls, black oak panels set between heavy black oak timbers, and 
the floor, also of the black slate. Only the ceiling was light, a white plaster 
tinged bluish gray. There were three doors that led into other parts of the 
building. Two were closed, and the third was just ajar.
Kharl could hear voices.
 doesnt look like a dangergelder accent but the staff its not corrupted 
more ordered than it should be
 just have to see
Kharl turned and watched as the woman and a man dressed in dark,
dark gray appeared. His hair was silvered, but his face was that of a younger 
man. Kharl had the feeling that he was older than he looked He wore black boots, 
well polished. Like the woman, he wore a silver collar pin, but his looked like 
a sprig of a plant crossed with a staff. The cooper also realized something 
else. Just as the wizard in Brysta had been surrounded by a whitish fog that 
Kharl had sensed more than felt this man was surrounded by a blackness, a 
darkness, but the darkness didnt feel cold or evil. Instead, it felt almost 
warm solid, like well-made tight cooperage.
Im Magister Trelyn. The magister smiled. How could I help you?
The staff, Kharl said. Its not mine. It belonged to a blackstaffer named 
Jenevra. I thought I should return it.
Trelyn frowned. Could you tell me what happened to this black-staffer, and 
where it happened?
Her name was Jenevra, and she was from Reduce. She came to Brysta, she said, 
because she had to take a trip to learn something. She was attacked and beaten 
badly, and I took her into my shop. Kharl shrugged helplessly. She was getting 
better, and was almost well. Then someone set a fire next door, and while I was 
helping fight it she was killed. The justicers said my consort did it, and they 
hung her, but she was innocent.
You left Brysta just to return this?
Kharl laughed, almost harshly. No. I left Brysta because, after they flogged 
me, and increased my tariffs so much that I could not pay them, someone murdered 
my neighbor, who was the only one who stood up for me against Lord West and his 
son. I went into hiding until I could get on a ship away from Nordla. The ship 
ported here, and I thought I should return the staff.
Has it been the cause of your ill fortune?
No. I cant say it has. It wasnt mine. I had barely touched it when everything 
began to go wrong. I had to use it to save myself and someone else.
The magister nodded more. Might I see it?
Kharl might have balked at others touching it, although he could not have said 
why, but he readily handed it to the older magister. Here.
Trelyn ran his fingers over the wood and the black iron, his eyes
almost closed. After several moments, his eyes opened wide, and he studied Kharl 
intently. Then he handed the staff back to Kharl.
Its not mine, Kharl said.
It may have belonged to Jenevra, and we are sad to hear what happened to her, 
but it is now yours. It would be useless to anyone else, and it would have to be 
destroyed. That would not be good for you, either.
Not good for me? Kharl didnt want it destroyed, but it had not been his. 
But Im just a cooper
Trelyn smiled, an expression almost sad. One of the hardest tasks in life is to 
discover that we are more than we think we are. Whether you can discover truly 
what you are that I cannot say, but you are more than a cooper.
Kharl smiled ruefully. Always be a cooper, I think. Headed to Aus-tra ..  in 
time.
I did not say you were not a cooper, Trelyn said quietly, but that you are, 
or could be should be more than that. If you have the courage to look into 
yourself. You have a great affinity for order, and for instilling order.
The words made Kharl uncomfortable, and he shifted his weight from one foot to 
the other. I cant stay too long. My ship will be sailing.
Not that soon, Trelyn observed.
No, Kharl admitted.
Were you younger and raised on Reduce, you might have been an engineer or an 
order-master. Even so are people pleased with your barrels?
Always have been, those that buy em. Some dont, though.
Those that did not and will not are likely not to be trusted. They avoid your 
work because it embodies order.
Kharl frowned, considering what the magister had said. It was true that those 
who bought his work and kept buying it over the years were those he knew were 
honest and trustworthy. Hed never looked at it that way, though. Was that why 
he had been having more and more trouble selling his barrels? Because there were 
fewer and fewer trustworthy souls in Brysta?
Its a most disconcerting thought, is it not? asked the magister. That those 
who cannot be trusted do not trust those who produce truly ordered work.
I hadnt thought of it that way before.
If you wish to survive and prosper, you will need to think more along those 
lines, suggested Trelyn. You will become more aligned with order, and unless 
your thoughts become equally attuned, your troubles will continue.
My thoughts
Thoughts always precede action, yours or the thoughts of another. If you attune 
yourself to order, you will find that life will be more rewarding.
Not easier, though?
No, admitted the magister. Life is seldom easy for those who embody order, 
although it would seem it should be. But then, what seems is not always what 
is.
Why me?
The magister smiled, warmly, then shrugged. That I do not know. I do know that 
those who work with wood often understand order better, as do smiths. You do 
some of each, and that may be part of the answer. It may be that you are a 
cooper because that feels right to you.
Kharls lips quirked. What do you suggest?
Look beyond what you think you see. Learn new things. Reconsider old knowledge. 
Trust what you feel. Trelyn paused, then drew a book from his tunic. This 
might also help.
Kharl took the book, opened the cover, then smiled and handed it back. I did 
keep her book. I hope you dont mind.
I thought you might have, but I wanted to make sure you had a copy. You may 
have to read it several timesor more. It sometimes helps to skip through it and 
read those passages that make the most sense at the moment. Dorrin wrote it most 
logically, but most of us are not that logical.
Somehow, those words relaxed Kharl. Thank you. He glanced toward the door.
Also, added Trelyn, you can find those who understand order everywhere, not 
just on Reduce. In time, you might be one that others turn to.
Ive been having trouble just surviving. Kharl paused, and added, Until an 
eightday ago, anyway.
That was when you left your old life, I would guess, although sometimes the 
effects last for a long time. We often create part of our trouble
by not wanting to accept who and what we are. You should try to understand 
yourself, as well as the world. Trelyn smiled again. Those are really all I 
can offer in terms of words of wisdom, and Im not certain that they work for 
everyone. I do hope they help you. Trelyn moved toward the door.
Thank you. Kharl followed the magister.
When you discover yourself, truly, you can return here, if you so wish, Trelyn 
added, as Kharl stepped through the door and out into the
fall sunlight.
Dont know as Id want to, then, Kharl replied.
That is often the way. For it, the world is a better place. Our hopes
go with you.
As Kharl walked back down the wide and straight stone street, through a city far 
cleaner and better-smelling than Brysta, he pondered the magisters words, 
especially those about people not wanting to accept who they were. Hadnt he 
always accepted he would be a cooper? The magister had told him bluntly that he 
was more than thatbut had not said what he was, only that Kharl had to discover 
it, and that it would be hard. Hard? Kharl laughed to himself. Hed already 
discovered that.
Kharl looked up, sensing something. On the other side of the street were two 
figures in black, one man and one woman. Both wore silver insignia on their 
collars, one that looked like a cog crossed with a staff. Like the magister, 
they held the unseen blackness, if not so deeply or warmly.
The man glanced sharply at Kharl, but the woman leaned toward him and whispered 
something. Then she looked to Kharl and smiled, saying, Order always be with 
you.
What could he say back? After a moment, he replied with the only thing that came 
to mind, And with you.
The two both nodded and continued onward, past Kharl and up the hill.
Kharl wondered why the woman had gone out of her way to offer the strange 
greeting, and what she had said to her companion.
Rather than going straight back to the Seastag, Kharl looked for somewhere to 
eat. He still had silvers left, and a handful of coppers, and after the ships 
food, he wanted a good meal, perhaps the first one in a season.
The first innthe Copper Kettlehe approached, while looking neat enough, and 
smelling clean enough, did not appeal to him, for reasons he
could not have explained. He walked westward along a slightly narrower street, 
although one still broad by the standards of Brysta, and stopped abruptly at a 
smaller place, more like a tavern really. He went inside. The public room was 
not large, holding fewer than ten tables, with only two occupied, but that 
wasnt exactly unexpected in late afternoon.
A tall woman, broad, but not fat, wearing a dark green shirt and trousers with a 
spotless white apron, smiled at him. Any table thats free.
Kharl moved toward a table in a corner, one that was bright from the 
late-afternoon light slanting through the unshuttered windows, but not painfully 
so. He leaned the staff into the corner, trying to keep it out of the way, and 
settled into the armless chair that allowed him to survey the room. In one way, 
there was nothing at all remarkablenine round tables and chairs, wooden floors, 
white-plastered walls, bronze lamps in brackets on the walls. In another, it was 
all astounding. The tables were well crafted of red oak, covered in a hard 
finish, and they were clean. The same was true of the chairs. The floors were of 
wide golden oak planks, also finished with a smooth sort of varnish, Kharl 
judged, and without a speck of dirt or dust on them. The windows had glass, and 
the glass had been kept spotless. Hed never seen what might have been called a 
common eatery so clean.
Do you know what you want? asked the white-haired woman who had greeted him. 
Her eyes flickered to the staff, then back to Kharl.
I dont even know what you have, he admitted.
Not everything we usually do. Lets see. White fish or red fish, battered and 
fried. Always have a fish chowder. Also, weve got a quarter fowl, and chops. 
Chops might be a bit tough. All comes with mashed potatoes and fried pearapples, 
except the chowder, of course. Just bread. Fish is two coppers, fowl and chops 
three. Ale or wine is two, redberry
one.
Whats the best?
Today the white fish.
Ill try it, with an ale. Kharl fumbled in his belt wallet.
Pay when I bring the ale. She smiled and slipped away.
Kharl just watched her go, admiring her grace, even though he knew she was years 
older than he was.
She returned with the ale almost immediately, and Kharl placed the silver on the 
table. Need some change.
Where are you headed? she asked as she deftly swept up the silver, then looked 
strangely at the Brystan coin, then at Kharl, before shrugging. Silvers 
silver.
It is, Kharl agreed. Some things dont change. Lydiar, I think.
Better there than Hamor. She smiled politely. Do you know when you leave?
Tomorrow.
Youll have good weather. With another smile she was gone.
Kharl sipped the ale, far better than any he could recall. Then, that might have 
been because it had been so long since hed had good ale. As he took a second 
swallow, he thought over the servingwomans questions. There was some sort of 
honest misunderstanding, he knew, and it centered on the staff. Did she think he 
was a blackstaffer, being sent out?
Jenevra had been young, but the woman hadnt seemed surprised at all. Did that 
mean that the Brethren or whoever ruled Reduce could send people out as 
blackstaffers at any age? He frowned. He should have asked more questions of 
Trelyn, but he just hadnt thought of them. Hed always been like that, not 
fully understanding things until much later, if then. That didnt seem to have 
changed. He took another sip of the ale, enjoying it.
When the server returned with his meal, set on a new-looking crockery platter, 
accompanied by a small basket of bread as well, she slipped six coppers onto the 
table.
Thank you. Kharl left two coppers on the table. He hadnt even thought about 
coinage. Hed just discovered that silvers converted one for one, but coppers? 
Who knew? He supposed Tarkyn or the captain did, but he thought he ought to find 
out, before he ordered anything in Lydiar or anyplace else. He wasnt so sure 
the Lydians would be as accommodating as people in Reduce.
As the woman had promised, the fish was goodlight and flaky under the crisp 
golden batter, and the potatoes were rich and filling, the pearapples a pleasing 
combination of tart and sweet. He left nothing except the coppers.
When he stood to leave, the server smiled from across the room. Best of 
fortune.
Thank you.
Kharl didnt want to return to the ship, not immediately. So he kept walking. In 
time, he came to a square, except it wasnt a square, but a
park, with trimmed hedges, and yellow and orange flowers, and stone walks amid 
the green grass, grass that was trimmed short. The trees were all evergreens, 
some of types Kharl had never seen. He stood on the street side of the black 
stone wall and watched as two boys and a girl played some sort of tag, with two 
adults looking on from a nearby stone bench.
After a time, he walked farther downhill toward the piers on the western side of 
the harbor. He was curious, because even with the sun about to set, and the 
light falling across the westernmost set of piers, a sort of shadow lay across 
them. Kharl could not make out any of the vessels, although he could see the 
ships at the other piers clearly, and there were no clouds in the sky.
When he neared the piers, he discovered several things. First, the street ended 
at a black stone wall, with a guard post in front of the open iron gate manned 
by two soldiers or marines in black uniforms. Second, the guards had weapons in 
racks that had to be rifles. He looked again. No, they werent rifles, exactly, 
and their barrels were far too large. Third, he could see through the gate the 
late-day sunlight falling on the piers, yet there was a darkness that blocked 
any view of the ships.
Kharl knew that there was at least one vessel there; he could almost sense its 
solidity, but no masts extended above the ten-cubit-high wall. He immediately 
turned east, because the cross street in front of the piers also ended just to 
the west, with another black stone wall. He could sense the guards watching him, 
and he did not look back until the black wall endedor rather made a right-angle 
turn harbor ward. He walked on another fifty cubits before turning.
The way the walls were set, there was no way to see what might be tied at the 
pier behind the walls, but whatever was tied there did not have masts that 
extended very high.
The guards and the walls suggested that this section of the harbor held the 
dreaded warships of Reduce, but if such warships were so fearsome, why were they 
being hidden? Was there something about them that the rulers of Reduce did not 
wish known? After a moment, he shrugged and continued walking along the edge of 
the harbor.
When he finally returned to the ship, after looking at shops, vessels from Hamor 
and Candar, as well as from Nordla and Austra, it was well into evening.
He took the staff back down to the carpenter shop. For the first time in days, 
Tarkyn wasnt there. Kharl replaced the staff in the bin and
headed back toward the forecastle. He slowed as he passed the womens crew 
quarters, hearing voices ahead, then stopped just outside the hatch.
 tell you something strange about him
 imagining things
 wasnt imagining hes walking down the street, and two of those creepy types 
in black they greet him like hes one of
em
So? He works hard doesnt slack, and keeps his mouth shut
 tell you strange
 worry too much, Asolf you drank too much, too. Get some shut-eye
 tell you
Sleep it off.
Kharl waited quietly for a time before entering the forecastle. When he did step 
in and begin to ready himself for sleep, both Asolf and whomever he had been 
talking to were asleep, as were about half the crewthose that were aboard.
Kharl lay back on the thin mattress, thinking. How could he discover how he 
might be more than just a cooper? By further reading of The Basis of Order? By 
looking more deeply into things?
After a time, he drifted into sleep.
XLIII
Is there a sourcea wellspringof order or of chaos? Can something exist without 
a source? And if there be such, what is indeed the wellspring of chaos? Or that 
of order? There is but one, for chaos can be said to be the wellspring of order, 
and order the wellspring of chaos. These are so because, for so long as there is 
life, neither chaos nor order can exist by itself for long without the other.
Yet for so long as there have been peoples upon the face of the world, there 
have been those who championed order over
chaos, or chaos over order. There have been those who denied the power of one, 
or of both. All creatures that live are born, and birth is the triumph of life. 
All creatures, from the largest to the smallest, are brought low by death, and 
death is the triumph of chaos.
If all things that have been born were never to die, within generations the very 
earth would be filled until none could move, and there would not be enough 
sustenance for all. If nothing were to be born, there would be no towns or 
roads, no grasses upon the ground, no fishes in the sea, and all would be 
desolation
How can one say, then, that chaos is greater, or that order is?
The Basis of Order
XLIV
After breakfast, before he headed down to the carpenter shop once more, Kharl 
glanced forward as he stood on the main deck, pitching but slightly. In all 
directions, he could only see the gray-blue waters of the Northern Ocean. Or 
they might be sailing the Gulf of Candar by now. Hed asked Furwyl, but the 
first said he wouldnt know if they were actually in the Gulf until he took his 
noon sightings. The unseen border between the two varied with every map, in any 
case, Furwyl had pointed out.
Just another thing that hed thought was more certain than it was, Kharl 
reflected as he headed down to the carpenter shop. He stepped inside to find 
Tarkyn working on his scrimshaw.
I see that staff is still in the bin, offered the older man.
I tried to give it back. Kharl shrugged. The magister wouldnt take it.
He say why?
He said it was mine now, and that I should take care of it.
Might see a little use, if were unlucky. Not like it once was. Not like
twenty years ago, when there were pirates everywhere, mused Tarkyn. Nowdays, 
only have to worry when youre close to shore near Renklaar or Jera maybe Biehl 
and Quend.
There were that many pirates? I thought Reduce had always taken
care of them.
Not just Reduce. The white wizards of Fairven hated pirates as well. That one 
thing they agreed upon, and before the cataclysm, there were few pirates indeed, 
and most of them did not last long. After the cataclysm then there were many.
After the fall of Fairven? asked Kharl. I didnt realize that was a
cataclysm.
Aye, that it was. Tarkyn set down the scrimshaw on the narrow bench built into 
the bulkhead. Great waves swept out of the ocean and smashed into the harbors. 
Wasnt a war fleet anywhere that survived, not even the ships of Reduce. I heard 
tell that even the black iron of their mages is not so strong now as then. Many 
of the steam engines that once worked did no longer, and those that did had not 
the power they once had The carpenter coughed and cleared his throat. My 
grand-sire once said that the ships of Reduce were of black iron and more than 
two hundred cubits in length, and moved twice as fast as a horse at full gallop. 
Now they are swift, but not that swift, and little more than half that in 
length.
They dont let people see them in Nylan.
Dont let folk close anywhere. Still mighty ships. Saw one take down a Delapran 
pirate once. Like a shark half out of water she moved. Shells, something that 
looked like a cannon but wasnt. Couldnt have been half a glass before the 
pirate was sinking in flames from stem to stern. No one thing a skipper doesnt 
want to do is offend Reduce. Even worse than offending the Hamorians, for all 
their ships and guns. Upset the blacks, and you wont have a ship for long, 
thats certain. Thats why the pirates are few, and why they stay close to 
shore. At times, makes you wish for the old times, when there were almost none.
Does anyone know what caused the cataclysm? Fairven is it was somewhere in 
the middle of Candar. How could its fall cause great waves?
Tarkyn laughed. Folks have wondered that for years. Pride thats what it was. 
Ever since Cerryl the Great, the white mages got more and more sure of 
themselves. Cocky. First, they took over Certis, and
Hydlen, and then Gallos. Before anyone knew it, they held all of Candar east of 
the Westhorns. He snorted. Was that enough? No they started building a great 
road through the Westhorns, so as they could march their white lancers right 
into Sarronnyn.
Kharl hadnt heard that part of the story. What happened?
Reduce sent some black mages. They were proud, too. Thought a few troopers and 
magesd be more than enough to stop Fairven. They werent. The whites smashed 
em and the Tyrant of Sarronnyn. Whites had all of Candar under their thumbs, 
except the Great Forest, Delapra, and Southwind. Might have gotten them, too, 
except that something happened. Tarkyn smiled, as if inviting Kharl to ask.
What?
Fairven fell in a single afternoon. No one knows how. Some say mages from 
Reduce. The one-god believers claim their god leveled it with thunderbolts. 
Others say the very earth revolted. One things sure. Something melted most of 
the buildingsand they were stonelike they were wax in a furnace. Nothing grows 
there, and anyone who goes there these days doesnt come back. Some of the 
hilltops are like black glass. Heard of a fellow who climbed one. Days later, 
his hair fell out, got sores all over. Two eightdays later he was dead.
I still dont see how that caused great waves in the oceans.
Who knows? One thing certain though. The land moved. Some of the roadsthe old 
stone roads in places, theyre just split. Other places, the mountains fell on 
them, buried em and anyone who was traveling em them.
Kharl shook his head. Its still hard to believe. They ruled forever, and then, 
in one day, they were gone.
Like a mighty ship on the ocean, said Tarkyn. Proud, with sails billowing, 
engine pourin out smoke. No one checks the hull. Ship-worms cant see em 
until its too late. A storm, and the hull gives in, and the ship sinks, just 
like that. Lands are like ships. Dont see the worms till its too late. The 
carpenter glanced at the lathe. We could use another top gaff.
Kharl nodded. Spruce?
You dont want oak that high
Kharl stepped toward the overhead wood bin, but he was still thinking about 
lands being like ships with shipworms. Was Nordla like that? Or Reduce? How 
would you ever know until it was too late?
XLV
Another day passed before the Seastag sailed into the Great North Bay of Lydiar, 
barely past dawn. The bay was far larger than the harbor at Nylan or at Brysta. 
That was clear from the moment the Seastag passed through the straits formed by 
the two peninsulas of dark rock separated by more than thirty kays of water. 
Kharl had to take the seconds word that the second peninsula was there, some 
twenty kays north. Once past the straits, there was no other sign of land, just 
gray water sparkling in the sunlight.
It took most of the day before the Seastag neared the city of Lydiar, on the 
southwestern end of the bay. Only then, in late afternoon and perhaps five kays 
offshore, did Hagen order the sails furled and the engine fired up. A pilot boat 
appeared as the ship neared the outermost pier, off-loading a pilot who climbed 
aboard and up to the poop without a word to anyone.
As the pilot directed the Seastag toward one of the longer and sturdier piers 
near the northern edge of the hodgepodge of wharfs and piers, Kharl stood with 
the deck crew on the main deck. He watched, because the only thing Bemyr ever 
used him for was on the capstan or the winch. That was doubtless wise, because 
Kharl didnt know that much about other deck duties.
Ten to port! ordered the pilot, his voice carrying with the wind to the main 
deck.
The thwupping of the paddle wheels slowed as the ship neared the northernmost 
pier.
Most of the city was set on a low plateau above the bay, but there were 
buildings and dwellings on the slope that led down to the water. Lydiar had 
clearly grown haphazardly over the years, because Kharl couldnt make out a 
single straight street of any length, and the roofs and walls were of all of 
different colors, but worn and muted, and all beginning to gray.
See that pile of grayish white rock on the middle of the hillside
there, straight back? Right overlooking the harbor? asked Bemyr.
It looks like it was once something, Kharl replied.
Aye. It was. Used to be the stronghold of the Duke of Lydiar, more n eight 
hundred years back. Maybe longer. Say that the mage Creslin supposedly founded 
Reducehe destroyed it in an afternoon with lightnings from the sky.
Did the mages from Reduce like afternoons? Or was that just the way the stories 
came down? They never rebuilt it?
Nope. Wondered that myself. Maybe cause it was built by wizards and destroyed 
by other wizards. Wizards, theyre the wellspring of chaos.
There hasnt been anything like that lately, has there?
Not since the fall of Fairven, leastwise. The bosun stepped away, moving 
toward the first mate, who had beckoned to Bemyr.
Kharl looked back at the harbor. There appeared to be more piers at Lydiar than 
at Nylan, but that might have been because, compared to the spareness and order 
of the harbor at Nylan, Lydiar was haphazard and disorganized, with piers of all 
sizes and shapes jutting out from land in no recognizable order, neither by 
length, nor width, nor depth of water. All the piers were of grayed timber, but 
some were of heavy construction, with massive circular posts and bollards, and 
others looked so spindly that they could well fall to the next storm. Next to 
the spindly piers were smaller vessels, skiffs, fishing craft, and some that 
Kharl could not identify. The larger piers held oceangoing vessels and coasters, 
several of them sloop-rigged and without stacks.
The Seastag slowed to little more than headway as it turned starboard into the 
second large pier, one for oceangoing vessels that held but one other vessel, on 
the far side.
Shortly, lines went out.
Crew one! Take the forward line, ordered Bemyr. Crew two you got the stern 
line.
Once the lines were around the bollards, the paddle wheels slowed to a halt. 
Kharl was the last man in the first crew as they reeled in the line, walking the 
ship into the pier and snug against the fenders.
Double up, and make those lines tight! ordered Furwyl from the front of the 
poop deck.
The shrillness of the bosuns whistle cut through the low voices of the 
deckhands.
Deck crew to the foremast! called Bemyr.
Kharl followed the others, standing at the rear of the group.
No unloading tonight. We got in too late, and their crews are already off, 
Bemyr added. No shore leave until tomorrow. Not until weve off-loaded. Well 
start early.
A series of groans swept across the deck crew.
No duties tonight, except sentries on the lines and gangway, Bemyr added.
Kharl waited as most of the others in the deck gang slipped away.
Didnt bother you, did it? asked Reisl. Why not?
I dont have anyone to see, and little coin to spend. That was true enough, 
although Kharl also had little desire, not after Charees death.
And youre not interested in women?
Not in those likely to be interested in me right now, Kharl replied wryly.
Reisl laughed. Tell youve been around.
Not as much as he should have been, Kharl reflected.
XLVI
The second day in Lydiar, Bemyr put Kharl in the first shore leave section. The 
cooper stepped off the gangway in late afternoon, under a clear sky, although a 
chill fall wind blew out of the northeast off the Great North Bay. Bemyr had 
admonished the entire leave section to be back by midnightwhen the curfew bell 
rang.
Once more, Kharl waited and let the others pour off the ship and along the pier 
toward lower Lydiar, past the Sligan merchanter tied on the opposite side of the 
pier and inshore of the Seastag. Then, wearing his heavier tunic, he stepped 
off, with a nod to the quarterdeck watch. He took deliberate steps along the 
pier. He had decided against taking the staff into Lydiar. There was little 
sense in being identified as a blackstaffer from Reduce, and he hoped to avoid 
areas of the town where he might need the staffor any weapon.
The timbers of the pier were thick enough, but the wood was grayish,
with barely a trace of brown remaining, showing that it had been years since the 
pier had been built or substantially repaired. Even from looking at Lydiar from 
the ship, Kharl had gained the impression that most of Lydiar could have used 
some repair. As he walked off the end of the pier and onto the first waterfront 
street, Kharl studied the warehouses facing the harbor. One was clearly vacant, 
with the doors and windows removed. Another had the windows on the upper level 
boarded up. None looked to have been recently stained or painted.
Kharl turned uphill, passing a chandlery less than fifty rods up the street from 
the piers. The narrow porch was bowed, and the roof above the porch sagged. The 
shutters were peeling, and the small windows were splattered with salt and 
grime. Kharl kept walking, past a tavern the Red Kegwhere hed seen several of 
the deck crew enter. Just beyond the tavern was a fullers, but so dingy that 
Kharl wouldnt have wanted anything cleaned there.
Two youths glanced from the alley across the street at Kharl, taking in his 
size, then disappearing into the shadows. Kharl snorted and kept walking, his 
eyes and senses alert, but he neither sensed nor saw the youths returning.
The street was paved with a combination of older granite blocks and newer red 
sandstone replacements. At the end of the block on which the tavern sat, the 
main street crossed a narrow lane before curving to the right and ascending more 
steeply past narrow two-story dwellings with sharply pitched roofs. Kharl kept 
walking, until he reached the top of the hilland found that he hadnt climbed a 
hill at all, but more of a gentle bluff, because to the west the land neither 
rose nor fell that much. Perhaps half a kay west was an ancient stone wall that 
looked to mark the western edge of the city.
On Kharls right, the area that comprised the edge of the hill or bluff was open 
ground, rocky, and intermittently grassy, a strip perhaps ten rods in width that 
ran from the edge of the avenue to where the bluff steepened, then dropped 
downhill to the meaner dwellings on the hillside below. To his left, were modest 
dwellings, although several with more pretension had low hedges to separate 
their grounds from the street.
Kharl turned southeast, following the wide avenue at the edge of the bluff. 
Within twenty rods, the houses had become noticeably larger and grander, and 
constructed of solid gray granite, with grayish tile roofs. Each had a gray 
stone wall before it, slightly more than shoulder high,
with iron grille fencing above the stonework. Behind each wall was an enclosed 
space, some with lawns, and others with formal gardens. The shutters on the 
grander dwellings were more freshly painted, and in such shades as blue, dark 
green, or maroon.
A carriage passed Kharl, followed by another, and a man on horseback, wearing a 
deep blue jacket. A small wagon rumbled down the granite-paved avenue, coming 
toward the cooper, but the driver scarcely glanced in Kharls direction. The 
housemaid on the side porch of one of the houses looked in Kharls direction, 
then quickly away.
After half a kay, the houses ended, suddenly, as did the avenue, although a side 
street led back westward, away from the bluff edge. Directly before Kharl was an 
unkempt mass of undergrowth extending a good fifty cubits. Beyond *hat was a 
mass of tumbled white stone. Kharl realized that he stood at the edge of the 
former hold of the Dukes of Lydiar.
Following a narrow path, Kharl made his way through the undergrowth. The bushes 
and twisted high grass ended, abruptly. Nothing grew past a point five cubits 
from Kharls boots until somewhere on the farther southern side of the ruins. He 
could sense why nothing grew there, for the rocky soil looked and felt dead. It 
did not look evil or menacing, but it was empty. He could sense neither order 
nor chaos, just a feeling of great age. One of the white stones was a good five 
cubits long and half that in height and width. It had been cut, as if by a 
mighty knife, into two pieces, one twice the size of the other. Another stone 
still bore the imprint of a lightning bolt, black-etched into the white stone. 
Amid the larger stones were fragments of columns, and roof tiles, as if the 
entire structure had been smashed and the remnants tossed and stirred.
After a time, Kharl retraced his steps back to the avenue and followed the side 
street, then another avenue, making his way around the ruins, until he came to 
another street that led downward toward lower Lydiar.
Less than a hundred cubits down from the edge of the bluff, on the right-hand 
side of the street, behind a narrow garden surrounded by a knee-high wall, twin 
lamps beckoned from each side of the doorway of an establishment that billed 
itself as a cafe. Kharl paused and looked over the building, then stepped 
forward. It felt more orderly than any he had seen in Lydiar, and the mixed 
aromas of food smelled inviting, tinged with seasonings he did not recognize.
A menu was chalked on slate beside the door. It took him several moments to 
decipher the meanings, and the prices, before he opened the door and stepped 
inside. He could certainly use a meal other than shipboard cooking, even if the 
prices were higher than in more modest places.
A slender older woman greeted him. We only serve ale and wine with meals. Her 
voice was polite, level, and carried a tone of slight amusement.
I was looking for a good meal, not for drinks. He paused. Brystan silver good 
here?
We take anyones coins, so long as theyre not clipped. She turned, gesturing 
for him to follow her to a square table set beside a brick wall. There were two 
chairs, unpadded, but with arms. Kharl took the one that let him survey the rest 
of the cafe, a space no more than ten cubits wide and twenty long, with but 
eleven tables of various sizes. Only three of them were occupied, one with a 
couple, a second large circular table with a family of five around it, and a 
third with two men in the corner.
Youre not local.
No. Im a ships carpenter.
Howd you get up here?
I walked, past the large houses and the ruins
Most sailors dont get out of lower Lydiar.
Im not most sailors, he replied with a smile.
Did you see the bill of fare outside? I can tell you whats on it, if youd 
like.
I think I got most of it, Kharl replied, except for the langostinos. What are 
they?
Youre definitely not most sailors. The woman smiled. Theyre a Lydian 
lobster, with only one large claw. Very tasty.
Which is betterthe langostinos or the burhka with the black mushrooms?
The server cocked her head to the side. Thats a hard one to answer. The 
burhkas very spicy, very hot to the taste, but rich, and the mushrooms are at 
their peak. The langostinos are more delicate in taste, but very filling.
Ill try the langostinos, and whatever ale or lager you think will go best with 
them.
The lagers better; the red ale would overpower them.
Kharl smiled. Thank you.
She left the table and slipped through a narrow archway, returning almost 
immediately with a large glass mug, filled to the top with a pale liquid, which 
she set on the table. I hope you like it.
Im sure I will. Kharl took a sip, wondering, but after swallowing that small 
amount, found himself nodding. The lager was excellent, with a smooth bite that 
wasnt in the slightest bitter. He had the feeling that he might regret the 
evening, if only because he clearly couldnt afford to eat and drink such fare 
oftenif ever again.
He put that thought behind him as he took another sip of the lager and looked 
toward the doorway, where a tall man had appeared. The hostess greeted him, and 
the two exchanged words that Kharl strained to hear, well be full in a bit
 dont look that crowded
 have a number of people coming in within the glass
 couldnt fit us in?
 sorry, but it just isnt possible. The chef had promised The tall man 
scowled, then turned and left. There was something about the man, but he 
departed so suddenly that Kharl couldnt exactly figure out what it might have 
been.
Kharl took a slightly larger swallow of the lager, enjoying the taste, and the 
warmth of the cafe, feeling more relaxed than he had in days.
Before long, or so it seemed, the server returned with a large platter, on which 
were the langostinos, steamed in their shells, with a dark brown rice, and a 
butter cream sauce, and a small, crusty, freshly baked loaf of white bread. 
There you are.
It looks and smells good. Should I pay now? Kharl asked apologetically.
You can pay when you leave. Thats our way. If you honestly dont
like the food, you dont pay.
Youre very trusting. She laughed. Were not trusting at all. Kharl 
understood, abruptly. The man at the door?
He wouldnt have been happy here, and it wouldnt have been good
for him or us. Can I get you anything else?
No. This looks like more than enough.
Let me know if you need anything. She slipped away from Kharl and moved to the 
table with the family.
For a moment, Kharl just reflected. Somehow, the woman knew who could be trusted 
and who would enjoy the place, and just didnt let others in. Her remark about 
not being trusting at all suggested that there were other defenses, but he 
didnt see any. With a shrug, he began to eat.
He ate every morsel, and finished the lager down to the last drop.
You liked it, I see. The server smiled broadly as she appeared at his table.
The best meal Ive eaten in years, Kharl confessed.
Thank you. Ill tell Hasif. He likes it when people appreciate his cooking. 
The woman smiled. Youre welcome here anytime.
Thank you. Kharl put a silver and a copper on the table. I enjoyed it. 
Greatly.
Thats good to hear.
Kharl rose and made his way from the cafe, still smiling. The meal and the lager 
had cost eight coppers and, with the three coppers he left for the server, had 
been almost twice what hed paid in Reduce, and hed thought that high. Then, he 
had to admit, what hed just eaten was without a doubt the best food hed ever 
put in his mouth.
He walked from the cafe and out into the darkness, although it seemed more like 
twilight to him, for some reason. He turned and noted the sign on the far side 
for the first timeTravelers Rest Inn and Cafe. A peaceful place, he decided, 
and very ordered and restful. As he walked downhill through the dark streets of 
lower Lydiar, he kept his eyes and ears open, but hed either picked a good 
street, or brigands and thieves had decided the night was not for them.
About half the shore leave section had returned when Kharl finally made his way 
back aboard the Seastag. He was undressing and folding his tunic when Argan 
walked slowly through the hatch, clearly trying to control each step. An 
overpowering floral scent clung to him, almost sickening to Kharl.
Whered you go? asked Argan.
Walked around, got something to eat, walked back.
No girls? No ale?
Lager and no girls, Kharl replied with a smile. Halfs better than none, 
mumbled Argan, turning toward his own bunk.
Kharl smiled faintly. Those kinds of girls he didnt need. For some reason, the 
images of Sanyleand then of Jekat, or Jekacrossed his mind. He shook his head. 
He was too old for them, but he hoped they were doing well.
He slipped into his bunk and into sleep.
XLVII x
The next day Kharl was hard at work on deck duties, replacing weakened posts in 
the starboard quarter railing of the Seastag, before smoothing, then varnishing 
it. He had finished the job and been released for the day a glass before supper.
Hed thought about the ruins hed seen the day before, with the massive stone 
blocks clearly split in two and left to weather for ages. It did not appear the 
site had ever been quarried for stones, but perhaps the abundance of timber to 
the north along the low hills lining the Great North Bay had made using wood 
more attractive. Certainly, except for the larger dwellings at the top of the 
bluff, almost all the dwellings and buildings in Lydiar were of wood, and most 
looked to be decades old, if not older. While he had not felt any of the 
whiteness he had with the wizard in Brysta, the dead feeling of the soil told 
him that some great wizardry had to have been involved. Nothing grew around the 
ruins still. That might have been the reason why no one had tried to quarry 
them. Perhaps in ages past people had tried and suffered, even died, but that 
was something about which Kharl could only
guess.
Since he still had close to a glass before supper, he slipped The Basis of Order 
from his pack in his bin and carried it with him up onto the deck. He found a 
space beside the railing where the late and fading light from the setting sun 
illuminated the pages and began to read, not really trying to puzzle out each 
phrase, but just letting the words flow over and through him.
What are you reading?
Kharl glanced up to find the third mateRhyllalooking down at
him. Its a book on order and chaos, ser. Someone left it to me, back in 
Brysta.
Not many sailorsor coopersread, observed Rhylla.
I suppose not.
Furwyl said you lost everything to the tariff farmer. Why did he do that? 
Rhyllas voice expressed mild concern.
Because I stopped Lord Wests son from having his way with a neighbor girl.
Aye. That would do it. Rhylla snorted. What happened to the girl?
He had her father murdered. Her mother died years ago.
So they killed the father and ran you off?
Kharl nodded.
You look like it wasnt that simple.
Kharl laughed, half-bitterly. They hung my consort because she couldnt prove 
she didnt do something. My eldest son left Brysta as a carpenters assistant on 
a ship; my youngest left to live with my consorts sister. The tax farmer 
demanded twelve golds
Twelve golds?
Twelve. I got off with a mere thirty lashes, and the deaths of my consort and 
neighbor.
Thirtyand you still can walk?
I didnt for a while.
I can see why you wanted to leave Brysta. You think thingsll be better 
elsewhere?
Things? No. I figure that people are the same everywhere. But I wont have a 
lords son looking to do me in elsewhere.
Rhylla nodded. Good folk and bastards everywhere. Trick is to keep to the good 
ones and avoid the others.
Sometimes thats hard, Kharl pointed out.
These days harder. One reason why Im staying here as a third.
You could be a second on another ship?
Been offered twice. Payd be better, but the crew shared be smaller, and Id 
end up drinking all the extra coins to forget. Hagens a good captain. Too few 
like him. You know that he owns other ships, but still sails as captain?
No. It didnt surprise Kharl. Hagen was good, and he couldnt imagine the 
captain sitting in a countinghouse or a mansion and being happy. He didnt know 
why he thought that, but he did.
You hid out waitin for him, didnt you? Kharl smiled ruefully.
Smartest thing you coulda done. Rhylla nodded. Need to check on the duty 
sentries. She stepped away.
Kharl looked down at the page open before him.
 each thing under the sun, be it a man or a machine, a creature or an object 
created, is unique, no matter how closely it resembles another, and yet all 
these unique things are created from the sameness of order and chaos, and all 
that is unique is the manner in which order and chaos are twisted into the 
unique forms that we are and that surround us
He thought about the words for a time for a long time until the bell rang for 
supper, and he slipped the book inside his tunic and went below to the long 
narrow mess.
After eating, he went back on deck to think, and to watch the stars appear in 
the night sky, brightening as the sky darkened. In time, he returned to the crew 
quarters.
As he undressed and slipped into his bunk, he hoped he could sleep soundly. He 
didexcept for the time when Reisl staggered back into the forecastle, clearly 
drunk, and mumbled incoherently before collapsing into his own bunk.
Kharl sighed and went back to sleep.
XLVIII
JSJiarl had already washed up and trimmed his beard, and was getting ready to 
head to the mess for what passed for breakfast, when Bemyrs whistle shrilled 
through the forecastle, announcing that breakfast was ready. Another whistle 
would call the in-port morning muster, where additional duties might be 
assigned.
Frig mumbled Reisl, turning and sitting on the edge of his bunk, legs 
dangling as he held his head in his hands.
Too much ale, called Argan.
Behind them, Wylat just grinned.
Reisl slumped to his feet and began to pull out clothes from his bin, where he 
had tossed them the night before. He straightened abruptly. Know I was 
ale-decked, he mumbled, but not enough to lose every copper in my wallet.
You had some when you came back aboard? asked Kharl. Reisl nodded, then turned 
to Hodal. You know what happened to my coin?
Hodal looked up at the taller man. No. You think Im that stupid? Kharl could 
sense that Hodal was telling the truth. The cooper
glanced around the forecastle, taking in the sailors still in their bunks.
Some were asleep, others pretending to be so.
What about you, Kawelt? asked Reisl, stepping forward toward
the next bunk.
Like to take anything you have, Reisl. Didnt.
Kharl could see/sense just a touch of the strange whiteness that no one else 
seemed to notice around the third upper bunkthe one holding Asolf. Kharl eased 
toward it, nodding to Reisl.
Reisl stepped toward Asolf. Why did you empty my wallet, Asolf?
The broad-faced sailor cocked his head. Youre one to be making charges. You 
couldnt have seen the sun if it had risen right in front of you. He eased out 
of his bunk without looking at Reisl. He already wore trousers, but not deck 
shoes.
I just asked if you emptied my wallet.
Why would I do that?
Kharl looked at the younger man. You dont want to answer the question, and 
usually people who dont want to answer have a reason they dont want to.
Carpenter its not your business.
Theft in the focsle is everyones business, snapped Bemyr from the 
hatchway. Yes or no?
No, replied Asolf.
Thats a lie, Kharl said without thinking.
Asolf drove right toward the cooper. Kharl stepped aside and, as he did, 
one-handedly flung Asolf to the deck. The deckhand lay there for a moment, then 
started to gather his feet under him. Kharl wondered if the
sailor had a knife or a marlinespike. His own fingers tightened about the 
carpenters hammer in his belt.
You move, and youre off the ship in the clothes on your back,
Bemyr stated coldly.
Asolf froze.
I think Ill take a look in Asolfs bin, Bemyr said, moving forward.
Yeah I took all three coppers in his wallet, Asolf said tiredly.
Im sure you did, and Im sure you took more than that, Bemyr said. You and I 
are going to talk to the captain. Get up.
Asolf slowly rose, glaring at Kharl. Friggin half mage.
Didnt take no mage to figure out you were hiding something,
Reisl said.
Even I could figure it out, added Bemyr. Lets go.
After the two left the forecastle Reisl looked at Kharl. Thanks.
Always thought he was snitching coppers here and there. Never could
get him.
You seemed to know who it was, Kharl said.
Knew for a while, but hes mean. Reisl shook his head. You took him down so 
quick.
Just luck, Kharl lied. Hed sensed that Asolf would attack, and hed been 
ready. Since he was half a head taller, broader, stronger, and ready, the 
thieving sailor hadnt had a chance.
Take that kind of luck any day.
So will I, replied Kharl with a laugh. As he left and headed for the mess, 
Kharl wondered why Asolf had called him a half mage. Because the sailor was 
touched with chaos and had realized Kharl could sense it? Or just to get Kharl 
distrusted by the other sailors?
Breakfast in port wasnt badthere was hot bread and an egg mush with scraps of 
meat. Kharl took his bowl and sat at one end of the narrow table, scooping up 
the mush with a crust of the rye bread, listening as others entered the mess.
 the bosun and the captain threw Asolf off caught him stealing coppers, bosun 
did
 few morns woke up thinking I shoulda had more in my wallet now I know
 smart only took a few
Not smart enough.
Kharl finished and left the mess.
Immediately after muster, and before reporting to the carpenter shop, Kharl made 
his way to the bow, on the port side, the side where he could look out northward 
over the Great North Bay. He leaned on the railing, thinking. Hed been lucky 
that most of the crew had already suspected Asolf, but hed come close to giving 
himself away. He frowned. What exactly was he afraid of? That somehow he was 
able to sense chaos and when people told lies? Or that people would think he was 
a mage, when he scarcely knew anything about it?
Hed always had a feel for wood, and often Vetrad had complained when Kharl had 
refused certain lengths of wood, but the ones hed refused hadnt felt right, 
and hed seldom ever found himself with bad billets in the cooperage. Idly, 
thinking about the wood, he looked down at the solid oak hull, angling toward 
the gray water of the bay.
He frowned. About ten cubits aft of where he stood, just above the waterline, on 
the port side, he could sense an overtone of white.
What are you looking at?
Kharl straightened at Hagens question. Ser, I mean, captain. I think theres 
something wrong with the hull, the wood, that is, down there, right at the 
waterline.
Well you think so, and you go down on a bosuns chair and look real close. 
Hagen gestured.
Furwyl appeared.
Bosuns chair, Hagen said. Kharls worried about the hull down there. Like to 
have him take a look. Cant leave until tomorrow anyway.
Those are new planks and timbers
Cant hurt to have him look.
Kharl almost wished hed said nothing, but he remained silent until Hodal 
appeared with the rope-slung chair. The two of them attached the ropes and 
pulleys, then swung the chair over the railing. There Kharl climbed into the 
chair and was lowered.
The chair stopped two or three cubits too high.
A little lower, Kharl called.
The chair lurched down.
Thats good.
Up close, Kharl could feel that the damage was worse than hed thought, although 
the hull looked normal. An entire patch of hull going
at least three cubits below the waterline was rottenor something like it. He 
touched the wood and could feel some give.
Well? Furwyl called down.
You got a whole section of hull here. I could drive a maul through it.
Furwyl laughed. That sections only a year old. Come on up.
Its rotten.
Cant be. Its new oak.
Kharl took the hammer from his belt. Watch.
Be glad to.
The carpenter whod been a cooper took one swing, and buried the hammer in the 
wood just above the waterline. Splinters and chunks of rotten wood flew. Kharl 
pulled away a fist-sized chunk, holding it in his left hand. Pull me up. You 
can see for yourself.
Furwyls mouth hung open.
Then the first mate and Hodal pulled up the chair, and Kharl scrambled out, 
handing the chunk of oak to Furwyl.
Furwyl looked at the wood, taking in the strawlike parallel tubes in the 
fragment. Shipworms frigging shipworms. That Jeran swine paid for coppered 
wood He looked up. Captain!
Hagen reappeared.
Carpenters right. Shipworms. Bet all those timbers we replaced in
Biehl are no good.
Hagens jaw tightened.
Im sorry, ser, Kharl said. I dont claim to know ships but I know something 
about wood
Not your fault, man. Hagen shook his head. We hit a bad blow might lose the 
ship.
Leave the chair there, Furwyl said.
Kharl stepped aside, sliding down the railing as the two officers talked in low 
voices.
 not the best place to refit and retimber
 put that hammer through that like rotten cheese
 any kind of storm go down by the head quicker n a lead
barrel
Kharl looked out across the harbor, not really seeing anything. What had 
happened to him? Hed known wood, and once hed touched the hull, hed known it 
was weak, but hed never before been able to see or sense something like that 
from ten cubits away before.
XLIX
The single dry dock at Lydiar was old, and the steam engine that powered the 
pump groaned and wheezed as the water gushed in surges over the stone walls of 
the dock and out into the harbor until the Seastag rested on the wide keel 
blocks. The crew had already moved the cargo in the forward hold, and much of it 
was under tarpaulins on the aft section of the main deck.
Kharlstill sweating from that effortstood on the stone rim of the only dry 
dock in Lydiar, with Tarkyn beside him, looking down at the exposed hull.
Hamorian merchants soak their planks in copper solution, Tarkyn said. Then 
they sheathe the hull in thin copper plates. Costs more to begin with, but they 
claim that its cheaper over the life of the vessel. Course their warships are 
iron-hulled steamers. Dont worry about worms with those, but cost of coal will 
kill a trader
Lot of things are like that, replied Kharl. Most folks want things cheap as 
they can get them. Cooperage was like that. Good tight white oak cooperage costs 
two coppers more a barrel, four if its something as big as a hogshead, but a 
good barrelll outlast a poor one by half again as long. He shrugged. For some 
folks makes no difference, but for most after five years theyll spend 
silvers, sometimes even golds, more for what they thought theyd saved He 
cleared his throat. Is there any way the captain can get recompense from the 
Jeran?
Not so as Id know. Tarkyn laughed. Revenge, though. That he can get. Just 
tell every master he meets. In a few years, noned be dealing with the Jeran. 
Folks forget that theres a balance to life. Things come back. Not so as the 
black ones in Reduce say, always prating on about the Balance, but in life. Do a 
man good, and most will return good. Do a man ill, and few will forget.
Too bad that doesnt apply to rulers, mused Kharl.
It does, cooper. We just dont see it. The white wizards of Fair-ven they got 
too mighty and proud. Where are they now? Whole
citys a ruin. Nothingll ever live there again. The Prefect of Galloshes got 
more problems than a lathe has shavings. Most cause he treats all but a few 
like serfs. Tarkyn gestured back toward Lydiar. Lydiar goes through rulers 
like Tarkyn stopped to grope for a comparison, then looked at Kharl.
I suppose so. It just hasnt happened where Ive seen it.
It happens. Trust me. Tarkyn cleared his throat again. Friggin frog. Get 
older, and you spend more time clearing your throat than talkin. Then, could 
be, gettin paid back for talkin too much when youre young. Anyway you see 
the captain? He does right well. Know why? Cause he treats his crews right. 
Makes sure his captains on the other ships do, too. Word gets around.
Kharl recalled the third mate talking about staying as a third rather than 
becoming a second on another ship. I had that feeling, even when I was a 
cooper.
Course, sometimes a fellows got to help matters along. Got to stand up and do 
the right thing, not wait for others to do it. Captains like that. When he 
found out that fellow been lifting coppers, he booted him off just like that, 
and he took his crew share, divided it among the hands who lost coins. Tarkyn 
laughed. Some probably said they lost a copper or two more n they did, and 
some probably lost some they didnt recall, but a lot of skippers, theyd just 
pocket that share. Not the captain.
Kharl glanced down into the dry dock, where water still swirled around the lower 
sections of the keel, although the water level continued to drop, revealing 
greenish moss on the lower stones of the dry dock walls. He always dealt with 
me fairly when he bought cooperage.
You gave him the best, Id wager, because he did. Kharl had given everyone the 
best, but he merely answered, I did.
Sooner or later, what you do comes back, Tarkyn declared. Kharl still had to 
wonder whether that was truly so. No one had avenged Charees death, nor had any 
good come from it that he could see. While he had managed to help Jeka a little, 
no one had done anything about Lord Wests corrupt tariff farmers in either 
Sagana or Brysta. Tyrbels death and that of Jenevra had both occurred, and 
nothing had happened to Egen. Then, Kharl reflected, he had killed Tyrbels 
assassin, who had probably been the one who had killed Jenevra. Still nothing 
had happened to redress the balance with Lord West and his sons, and Kharl had 
seen nothing to make him believe that it would.
L
Even with the Lydian shipwrights workforce, the crew of the Seastag, and the 
wood-handling skills of Kharl and Tarkyn, it took almost an eightday to replace 
the worm-damaged hull sections. The actual woodwork had only taken about a third 
of that time, but the caulking and the finish work, and then the trials in the 
Great North Bay, and the second round of caulking and ensuring that the hull was 
both sound and watertight, accounted for the majority of the repair time.
Hagen had not wasted that time, but had the crew work on other repairs that 
would not have been enough to warrant a dry docking. The rudder was cleaned and 
repaired, as were several paddle wheel spokes, and all the fittings and piping 
in the steam engine were checked and cleanedas well as other small repairs that 
Kharl could not have explained. More coal was brought on board, and the bunkers 
refilled.
Kharl was kept busy with the hull work, and, at the end, with refitting the 
interior timbers and braces against the new hull. Hagen personally inspected 
every bit of work that affected the seaworthiness of the ship. The Seastag 
finally left Lydiar on a threeday.
Early afternoon on sixday found Kharl on the foredeck, just aft of the bowsprit, 
taking a break from the lathe. The wind was light, barely enough to puff out the 
sails, under a bright and cloudless sky that made the day seem warmer than it 
was. The swells were little more than a cubit and a half from trough to crest, 
and so long and flat that there was almost no foam at all, making the water look 
even darker.
Kharl stretched, then glanced to starboard, quickly taking in the headlands to 
the west and a pair of small islands, possibly as close as three kays away. He 
turned and looked off to port, out toward the seemingly endless Eastern Ocean. 
He frowned, seeing in the distance a speck of darkness. At first, he thought it 
might be the kind of darkness that hed first seen in Nylan, but it resolved 
itself into a low black shape a good four kays east. The black ship cut through 
the choppy waters, moving
swiftly northward, first passing abreast of the southward-bound Seastag, and 
then swiftly vanishing.
Kharl shook his head, still not certain hed seen the ship.
You saw it all right, said Rhylla, from his right. Move fast, dont
they?
That was one of the black warships?
The third nodded. Wish it had been headed south, instead ob back to Nylan. Do 
us more good, specially with the wind so light. She turned and crossed the main 
deck.
Musing on her words, Kharl started back down to the carpenters
shop.
Long for a short break, Tarkyn said, stepping away from the lathe. Im sorry. 
I saw one of the black ships. I couldnt believe how fast it
was.
You mark its heading?
It was headed north, maybe northeast. Third said it was going back to Nylan. 
Kharl stepped up to the lathe and readjusted the foot pedal for his longer legs, 
then took the shaping chisel, studying the section of oak that would become a 
rough-shaped spare railing support. >
Captain better think about powering up the engine, Tarkyn said.
Kharl looked up from the lathe, lifting the chisel.
Weve barely got headway. Were heavy-laden, bout as heavy as well be, cause 
weve got copper for the druids. Thats what the first said.
Kharl didnt understand.
Were south of Renklaar, short of Pyrdya, and were close to shore cause the 
trades blow north farther offshore.
The carpenters explanation still didnt make any more sense to Kharl.
Pirates, the carpenter finally said. Got to worry about em till were well 
south of here, past Worrak, for sure.
But Reduce I mean, were about as close as we can be to Reduce.
Thats the problem. All sorts of ships port at Nylan, with rich cargoes. They 
come through these waters. All sorts of islets and marshes off the mouth of the 
Ohyde. Hide a fleet there, if you wanted. Reduce doesnt have too many of those 
black ships. Cant be everywhere.
You think pirates would come after us?
Theyll come after anything they think they can capture. We had wind, with the 
engine, be a hard chase for them.
Kharl sniffed the air. Somethings burning.
Good. Captains lighting off the engine. Doesnt like to. Coals not cheap, but 
losing a ship to pirates makes coal cheap at twice the price.
Kharl continued to work the lathe, and neither man spoke until Kharl finished 
the turning.
Best you rack that and clean the lathe, stow the brackets and clamps.
Kharl nodded. After putting the railing support in the overhead rack used for 
partly finished work, he swept up the shavings and sawdust into the flat scoop 
and emptied them into the burn box. Then came the rags, and finally the oil to 
coat all the exposed metal.
Good, grunted Tarkyn.
Somewhere, Kharl could hear the hissing of steam as pressure built up in the 
boiler aft of the carpenter shop. A slow rumbling echoed through the ship, 
followed by a regular thumping, and then the deliberate thwup thwup of the 
paddle wheels.
Bemyrs whistle shrilled throughout the ship. All hands topside to repel 
boarders! All hands topside to repel boarders!
Worried about that, muttered Tarkyn.
Kharl glanced toward the overhead bin, looking for the dark staff.
The far side, Tarkyn said.
Kharl eased the staff out of the longer of the two overhead bins. He glanced 
over at the older man, and saw that Tarkyn had opened a locker and was taking 
out a crossbow, a rewinding assembly, and a quiver of dark bolts, but the bolts 
didnt look like iron.
Lorken, the carpenter said. Can make em here on the lathe. Almost as good as 
iron, and they work real well against pirates, specially those touched with 
chaos. You better get topside. Ill be up in a moment.
When Kharl left the carpenter shop, the paddle wheels had begun to pick up 
speed, but only fractionally, and a long groaning told Kharl that the engine was 
straining, probably because the steam pressure wasnt high enough yet. As he 
came up the ladder, staff in hand, he was met by the third, who stood by an open 
locker, filled with weapons of all sorts, ranging from long and short blades to 
cudgels and spears.
Rhylla looked at Kharl and his staff. Better put you on the poop. She 
gestured.
Yes, ser. Kharl glanced aft, across the main deck where sailors
were forming up behind each railing. Most carried cutlasses, but Kharl saw 
spears and a cudgel as well, and even one woman with a quiver and longbow. He 
took a quick look to starboard, inshore. There were two pirate vessels, each 
long and slim, with a bastard rig and a huge balloon sail, each less than a kay 
away. Both were filled with armed men.
Cooper!
Sorry, ser. Kharl hurried across the deck, waited for a sailor with a 
broadsword to climb the ladder, then followed him up to the poop.
He had no sooner reached the top when Furwyl motioned for him to take a position 
abeam the helm, but on the port side. You can cover more deck, and that means 
we can use someone else on the main deck.
Kharl nodded. He thought he understood.
Dont leave your space unless youre ordered to. Furwyl paused. Or unless 
theyve already overrun the main deck, and no ones climbing the poop.
Yes, ser. Kharl took the assigned space, but once there, looked back 
shoreward. With the speed of the paddle wheels increasing, the gap between the 
two pirate vessels and the Seastag was no longer obviously narrowing. In fact, 
Kharl could begin to see the Seastag start to pull away from the leading pirate 
vessel.
Port five, ordered Hagen, standing almost directly beside the helm.
Coming port, ser.
Kharl could barely feel the gentle turn.
Steady on heading, ser.
Steady as she goes.
Steady as she goes, ser.
Slowly, ever so slowly, the gap between the larger ocean trader and the pirate 
vessels widened, until it was more like a kay and a half.
Kharl kept checking, but the gap was still increasing, and the Seastag was 
edging farther and farther away from land. Hagen was trying not to lose what air 
he had, but to find a heading that played more to the strengths of the Seastag.
A muffled crummpt echoed through the Seastag. The entire vessel shuddered. 
Almost immediately flame flared from the stack, hot enough to scorch the limp 
lower sheets closest to the stack before fading into blackish gray smoke that 
settled down across the decks. The paddle wheels thzvup-thwup-thwup slowed, 
finally coming to a stop.
Kharl gaped for a moment. The smoke had held, for just an instant, the barest 
hint of chaos about it. What had happened? Why had the engine exploded?
The gap between the pirate vessels and the Seastag began to narrow once more.
An engineman, blackened from crown to boots, pulled himself up the ladder and 
made his way toward the captain. Kharl tried to listen.
Firebox exploded, ser awful steam metal
Is there a fire below? Hagens question was clipped.
No fire, ser. Not now. Sand and water got that. But no engine, much, 
neither, ser two stokers didnt make it
The cooper looked shoreward. The pirates were closer, little more than a kay 
away, and the sternmost of the two had shifted course slightly, to take a 
heading that would come up alongside the Seastag on the port side. That made 
sense, unhappily, because the pirates could board from both sides, and divide 
the defenders efforts.
Shut everything down, best you can, and bring the engine crew topside, Hagen 
told the engineer.
Yes, ser, those that can. The engineer turned and made his way down.
 some sort of wizardry muttered the captain to Furwyl.
 put out the word about Lydiar, returned the first mate.
 get through this first
As he waited for the pirates, Kharl tried to relax, tried to recall the warm-up 
exercises he had not used or needed in years and replicate them, to ready 
himself. The wind remained light, and with their smaller craft and larger sails, 
the pirates steadily closed on the Seastag, until they were only rods away, then 
within fifty cubits, one on each side of the trader.
Stand by to repel boarders! ordered Furwyl, and the command was echoed by the 
three other mates. Stand back from the railings until they close!
Kharl moved back, realizing the reason for the command as an arrow whispered 
past his head. He immediately dropped into a kneeling position, waiting.
Clunk!
At the heavy sound, Kharl turned his head to see a pronged iron that had been 
catapulted over the railing and onto the deck. Several arrows
skidded along the deck as well and one buried itself in the steering platform.
A seaman ran forward, crouching, with an ax and, keeping his head down, began to 
hack at the line attached to the grappling iron. Another iron arched over the 
railing, and dragged across the deck until it, too, was wedged behind the poop 
railing. The seaman with the ax had barely cut through the first line before 
there were two others wedged in place.
The young man attacked the second, but seemed to make no progress. Friggin 
thing wound with wire
Kharls eyes darted across the upper deck, taking in the four grapples still 
wedged in place. While he couldnt see more, he had no doubts that the same 
tactics were being employed against the main and forward decks. The seaman 
managed to part the line on two more grapples, but, by that time, another three 
had been wedged in place.
Kharl edged forward, because he could hear voices, scuffling, and muttered 
curses
 get your friggin ass up
 sows carry less lard n you
The cooper saw a brawny arm reach over the railing. He lunged forward and 
slammed the staff down on the arm, feeling the bones break, and seeing the 
pirate tumble backward off the rope and into the water just aft of where the two 
hulls rubbed against each other.
He brought the staff around in a sweep. One pirate ducked, but the lorken staff 
caught a second in the neck, and he sagged, then slid out of sight, while Kharl 
reversed the staff. His return was weak, and the one pirate was over the 
railing, cutlass slashing toward the cooper, and parrying the staff.
Kharl two-handed the staff, using both ends. The wood, almost as hard as iron, 
and springier, fended off the cuts from the pirate, who tried to circle away 
from Kharl, and found himself between a sailor with a spear and the cooper. In 
the pirates moment of indecision, Kharl struck with an underthrust, and the 
cutlass spun out of the pirates hand. The other sailor plunged the spear into 
the pirates belly.
Kharl turned back to the port railing, where two more pirates had appeared, one 
with the ubiquitous cutlass, and a taller man with a hand-and-a-half blade. 
Kharl took on the taller man, and found himself backing up against a man with 
far better blade skills than Kharl had staff capabilities.
Thzvunk! The huge pirate looked stunned at the quarrel in his left shoulder.
Kharl took the moment and knocked the big blade from his hand and attacked with 
all his strength. Even badly wounded, the pirate weathered two blows that would 
have felled a lesser man and ducked away from several that could have stopped 
him.
Kharl managed another strike, then a solid thrust into the mans guts. The 
pirate tumbled forward, and Kharl saw the blood from a deep cut across his back.
Two more pirates appeared from somewhere, and Kharl and another sailor found 
themselves slowly pushing the pair forward, toward the edge of the poop deck. 
One looked back, and took a spear. The other grabbed the railing and vaulted 
down.
Kharl stood for a moment, gasping, glancing around the poop deck, but it was 
empty, except for Kharl, the captain, the helmsman, and two other sailors from 
the Seastag. Below, the main deck swirled with fighters. The defenders were 
being pressed from both sides, although they did not seem that greatly 
outnumbered, and some pirates had fallen, but the attackers fought without much 
thought of caution, it seemed to Kharl, and kept pressing the Seastags 
defenders inward.
The cooper glanced down at the pirate vessel to port. Only two men stood on the 
low rear deck, beside the steersman. All three were watching the main deck of 
the Seastag.
Abruptly, staff in one hand, Kharl swung himself over the railing and clambered 
down one of the ropes left hanging by the pirates. When he was just slightly 
higher than the aft deck of the pirate vessel, he twisted his body and jumped. 
Even as close as the two vessels were, he barely cleared the railing and landed 
heavily on the deck.
The two pirates remaining were surprised enough that Kharl had a chance to get 
the staff into position before the first charged.
Kharl parried the slash by the pirate, and the cutlass clanked against the black 
iron band. The blade shattered, and Kharl reversed the staff into a wicked 
riposte into the mans guts, then, as the pirate staggered, finished him off 
with a blow to the side of his head.
The cooper barely managed to get the staff back and balanced in time to ward off 
the attack of the second helm guard, who was using two shortswords, one in each 
hand.
Kharl let the other attack, using a balanced two-handed grip on the
longer staff to block or deflect the others slashing attacks, giving a little 
space, and watching.
Then, after the pirate made a particularly vicious cut that left him slightly 
unbalanced, Kharl slammed the staff into the others knee with enough force that 
something crunched, and the pirate sprawled sideways on the deck. Kharl brained 
him, then turned to the helmsman.
The helmsman released the helm and grabbed for the cutlass at his belt. His hand 
closed on the hilt just as one of the iron bands ot Kharls staff crashed into 
his temple.
As Kharl surveyed the deck, he could see that there was no one near him, and 
forward on the pirate ship, no one had even looked aft. With a cold smile Kharl 
strode forward, toward the handful of pirates, along the railing, clearly 
wanting to board the Seastag.
The first two went down, one right after the other, without anyone noticing.
The third turned. Theyre behind us! He got his blade, more of a rapier than a 
cutlass, up and into a rough guard position. Kharl slammed the blade aside and 
brought the staff up from below, doubling the man over, and finishing him off 
with a reverse.
Then there were pirates all around Kharl, and the most he could do was try to 
weave a defense.
He stepped back, still creating a blur of blackness, when a taller man, taller 
even than Kharl, lunged forward with a huge broadsword. Because of the force of 
the cutthat missedthe big man was off-balance for a moment, and Kharl struck.
A shocked expression froze on the pirates face, and he brought the broadsword 
around in a last desperate swinging lunge.
Kharl managed to get the strength from somewhere to parry, but he slipped on a 
deck wet with blood and salt, and the flat side of the blade crashed into his 
chest, then slammed down into his foot. With a last effort, Kharl brought up the 
end of the staff straight into the pirates throat. Kharl could feel something 
give, and some of the pressure on his leg abate. He tried to lever the staff 
upward, but it was caught under the body of the fallen pirate.
Then something struck him from behind, and wave of red blackness crashed over 
him.
LI
A reddish dark haze swam around Kharl, and much as he attempted to grope his way 
through it, it merely thickened. When he tried to rest, it seemed to constrict 
around him, like an iron band across his chest and ribs, with an agonizing pain 
so sharp that he felt he could hardly breathe. He wanted to move, but neither 
his arms nor his legs would budge, and his head was a mass of flame.
In timehow long it had been, he had no ideathe haze thinned, and an image swam 
into his view, except that it was a pair of images. Kharl squinted, and the two 
images resolved into one, that of a single face, one he thought he should 
recognize, but did not.
Youll be all right, cooper. Youre acting like youre still fighting. You 
dont have to keep fighting. Try to loosen those muscles.
Pirates? Kharl mumbled, his mouth so dry that the single word was a croak.
You need to drink. Open your mouth.
Kharl did. The coolness was welcome. His tongue was swollen, and swallowing was 
difficult.
Pirates? he asked again.
Most of em are dead. We brought in their ships. Not bad prizes. Worrak isnt 
prime, but the captain figures that, even after replacing the engine, be a 
goodly prize share for everyone. Thats for you, too.
Kharl didnt care about that. He just knew his leg hurt, especially his footand 
his chest.
Hurts a bit
Your ribs are cracked bruised, and theres that right foot. Its going to hurt 
for a while, but youll walk fine. Your boots wont be so cramped on that side. 
That last pirate blade took the two smallest toes, but wound came up clean. 
Healing good. Worried about you. Been a couple of days now.
Hit my head.
Big lump, but nothings broken and no soft spots there. Local healer says 
youll be fine. Hes looked at all of you.
Kharl finally grasped that Rhylla, the third mate, was talking. He hoped his 
memory would improve. Thank you.
You need to drink some more.
So Kharl did, then drifted back into sleep, back into the reddish haze, except 
at times there were periods of black coolness.
He woke in dim light, either dawn or twilight, he thought, before realizing that 
all light was dim in sick bay or anywhere belowdecks. He only saw two other 
bunks, besides the one above him, and the two those across from himwere 
occupied. He lay back on the narrow bunk, closing his eyes and trying to ignore 
the dull aching in the toes he no longer had, and wondering what would happen 
next. He could hear voices from the two men in the opposite bunks, whispering as 
they were.
 thought he woke
 back asleep
 youd be sleeping, too what hit him. Tough old guy Kharl didnt think of 
himself as old, but he must have seemed so to young seamen.
 never saw anything like it cleared off everyone on the one looked like
 Reisl said he used that staff and batted down arrows Kharl wanted to snort, 
but it would have taken too much effort. No one could do that.
 saw him take out three pirates with that big staff one hit it with a blade, 
and the blade shattered
 blackstaffer
 hes not used to be a cooper in Brysta what the third said did something 
to piss off the Lord
There was a laugh. Got to like that anyone with enough guts to piss off a 
lord good man Kharl drifted back into sleep.
When he woke for the third time, the space was brighter, and the aching in his 
skull was only the faintest throbbing, although his foot didnt feel that much 
better. He was alone in sick bay, and the other bunks had been stripped.
Still, he thought he ought to try to sit up, and he gingerly eased into
a sitting position on the edge of the bunk. Knives jabbed through his ribs, and 
he could barely hold himself erect. Still he wasnt going to get better lying 
flat.
He slowly levered himself into a standing position, although he was as much 
leaning against the bulkhead as standing. He coughed, two or three times, and 
the sharp knives that went through his chest made him wonder if he would 
collapse right there. He just stood, hanging on until the coughing passed and he 
could breathe easier. Then he took one step, and another. He finally made it to 
the hatch, and looked out onto the main deck. It was midafternoon, and the ship 
was tied to a pier.
He stepped slowly out onto the deck, barefoot he realized, but he had no idea 
where his boots were, or if he could even bend over to put them on, or if they 
would fit. A wave of dizziness washed over him and he eased sideways until he 
reached the ladder to the forecastle deck, where he sat down.
Cooper?
Kharl looked up to see Furwyl standing there. Yes, ser?
Third and the healer said itd be a few more days
 if I got up at all?
Furwyl laughed. They didnt say that.
Not exactly. Figured Id better walk some. Rest some. Not worth spit right 
now.
You know how you feel, the first mate said carefully. Were leaving Worrak 
tomorrow.
Wont be doing much carpentering for a while, Kharl replied.
If you want to stay, youve got a berth, long as you want it.
Id like that. Kharl forced a smile, one that he meant, even if he still hurt 
so much that he didnt feel like smiling.
Good. Thats settled. Furwyl smiled. Maybe youd better lie down for a while 
get up in a bit for supper.
Supper sounds good. Kharl realized he had no idea if hed eaten, or what, or 
how often. He didnt like the idea that he had no idea what had happened to him. 
He did appreciate the loyalty of the captain and the first. Slowly, he rose, and 
putting one foot in front of the other, gingerly, headed back to sick bay.
LII
The Seastag waited two days more to leave Worrak, because the captain had been 
promised a cargo of brimstone for delivery to Dellash. Brimstone was a good 
cargo, provided it didnt burn or get spilled, and Hagen had planned to port at 
Dellash anyway, according to Rhylla. Kharl didnt complain about the delay 
because he appreciated being able to begin to walk on a steady deck. His damaged 
boot had been patched, but he felt unbalanced, even though he had lost just his 
littlest toes, rather than his largest.
By the evening before the Seastags departure, Kharl was walking with a slight 
limp, and the stabbing in his ribs had receded to a dull ache. Hed tried a 
little work with the lathe, but he could only manage it for a quarter of a glass 
before the pain in his ribs began to worsen. He stopped, but that was better 
than he had been doing.
After sitting on Tarkyns stool for a time, he made his way back onto the main 
deck. The sun was hanging above the low hills, just to the south of where the 
Fakla River entered the harbor. There was enough of a sea breeze to carry the 
harbor odors inshore and leave the deck with the clean scent of the Eastern 
Ocean, although the breeze was brisk enough that the deck would be chill once 
the sun set.
Cooper? called a voice.
Kharl turned. Ghart, the second mate, stood several cubits aft.
Yes, ser?
Captain and the first are on the poop. Theyd like to see you.
Ill be right there. Kharl headed aft and went up the ladder, carefully and 
slowly. So long as he moved smoothly, the pain in his ribs wasnt too bad.
Hagen and Furwyl stood waiting under the aft mast.
Kharl stopped several cubits short of the two officers. Captain, ser, you asked 
for me?
That I did, replied Hagen. Ive been thinking, Kharl. Weve got a long voyage 
ahead. Tarkyn says youre good, better than most ships
carpenters. You saved us from losing everything. So, were going to pay you as 
the carpenters second. Hagen smiled. And you start wearing carpenters grays 
onboard. You wont be doing deck work, but youll have to take in-port gangway 
watches once we get to Ruzor.
You use any sort of weapon besides that staff? asked Furwyl.
Im not bad with a cudgel, Kharl said.
That might be a little handier on watch, replied the first, with a laugh.
Hagen handed Kharl a small pouch. Thats your pay for the last eightday.
Thank you, ser. Kharl wasnt quite sure what else to say.
The captain nodded, as if he did not wish to be thanked. Ghart is in charge of 
in-port watches. Hell be letting you know which sections youll stand.
Yes, ser.
Tarkyns rustled up two sets of grays for you, added Furwyl. Says theyll fit 
you just fine. We can use another subofficer.
Ill do my best, captain, ser.
You already have, Hagen replied. More than most. Thats why youre crew, now, 
for so long as you want.
Yes, ser.
Hagen nodded, as if to dismiss Kharl, and the coopercarpenters secondstepped 
back and climbed down the ladder. He doubted that he really wanted to remain a 
ships carpenter, but if he couldnt find a place where he could be a cooper, at 
least hed have shelter and coin and something useful to doand with woods, 
which he knew.
He stopped as pain shot through his ribs.
Most healers were black mages. He wondered if The Basis of Order had sections on 
healing, and if they might teach him something about how to speed his own 
healing. He might as well read through it and see. He certainly couldnt work 
full-time as a carpenter. Not yet.
And, based on what hed already experienced, the informationif he could 
understand itmight prove useful.
LIII
A-gainst strong blustering gusts that were nearly direct headwinds, it took the 
Seastag five dayswith frequent tacking and the use of the engineafter leaving 
Worrak to make port in Ruzor. Kharl was glad for the respite, because every time 
the ship had rolled or pitched heavily, and he had been caught off guard, his 
ribs had reminded him that they had not yet healed. He thought that the efforts 
he had made to cultivate a sense of balance within himself had helped speed the 
healing, but that could have been wishful thinking.
Whatever the reason, there were timesbrief momentswhen they did not ache, and 
those seemed more frequent with each day. Even so, he was glad that the Seastag 
had ported, even if Hagen had said that they would be in Ruzor but two days.
Kharl had two in-port watches, but one was that afternoon, and the second the 
following morning. Ghart had given him an easy watch schedule, clearly in 
deference to his injuries, but Kharl had no doubts that his duties in other 
ports would include night and midwatches. He had been down in the carpenter shop 
since after breakfast, using the tools to tighten the grip on the cudgel hed 
taken from the weapons locker, and was headed back up to replace it.
He stopped halfway up the ladder from the carpenter shop as he heard voices from 
the main deck, as if two people were standing right outside the hatch.
 most fortunate to have captured the pirates understand you have a cargo of 
two hundred stone of brimstone
 already have a binding contract for the brimstone sell it here and Synadar 
wouldnt give me a copper were I broke and legless
 understand that, but the Prefect is willing to pay a third more than your 
contract price would free cargo space
Why is the Prefect of Gallos so interested in my cargo of brimstone? asked 
Hagen.
The Prefect is having trouble with the province of Kyphros the Prince of 
Analeria is always claiming another part of Gallos The prince has no mages, and 
gunpowder is useful.
His troubles dont matter to me, replied Hagen. All a traders got is his 
reputation. I sell out a cargo and a buyer, I lose that buyer, and anyone he 
tells
Its not wise to anger
Its not wise for you to anger him. Hagen laughed. The Prefect doesnt have 
more than twoscore lancers here in Ruzor. The piers stone and long. You send 
em down that pier, and Ill cut the lines and be off. Then Ill tell every 
trader to steer clear. Ruzors the Prefects only port, and hes got no fleet.
 youre a hard man, captain. Someday, youll regret that.
Regret what? Being honest? Being fair?
There was a long silence.
 tariffs are twenty golds on the cotton, the Brystan apples, and the tin 
ingots.
Thats twice what they were last year, Hagen pointed out, his voice 
indifferent.
Thats what they are.
They are what they are, and Ill report them to the buyers.
 seeing as you didnt know
Whatever they are we report them. And youll give me a receipt for that 
amount.
Eleven golds. The words were nearly spit out.
Were always happy to pay what is levied by the lord of the land, Hagen said 
cheerfully. We want everyone to know what we paid and to whom.
The voices faded as steps on the deck above indicated that the two men had moved 
away from the forecastle hatch above. Kharl waited several moments before 
climbing up, then going out on the main deck. He stopped for a moment and looked 
to the east and north. Ruzor sat on the east side of the Phroan River, 
underneath the cliffs serving as the western ramparts against the high desert 
that extended westward from the Little Easthorns. It was an old port town, and 
despite being located on the northeast edge of a large natural bay, had but a 
single long stone pier for oceangoing vessels. Farther seaward was a long stone 
breakwater, with a squarish gray stone tower fortress at its terminus. Under a 
clear sky and a
sun that shed little heat, the Seastag was tied between the set of bollards 
farthest out into the harbor.
Kharl headed for the watch locker, where he replaced the cudgel and secured the 
locker. Turning slowly, he watched as Hagen handed a leather bag to a bearded 
and bulky man wearing a dark blue winter jacket, its collar trimmed with golden 
fur. The bearded man took the pouch, bowed slightly, and walked down the gangway 
with stiff and jerky steps. His steps lengthened once he was on the pier, but 
they were still abrupt and forced.
Kharl eased toward Ghart, who had the in-port deck watch until noon.
 not a happy man, ser, the second said to Hagen.
That kind never is. There wont be any shore leave, but tell the crew well 
make that up in Southport. Im going below. Have to tell the engineer to keep 
some coals hot in the firebox.
Yes, ser.
As Hagen neared the carpenter second, he nodded.
Ser. Kharl returned the nod.
How are those ribs?
Better every day.
Good to hear that. Hagen stepped past Kharl and across the deck, before 
heading through the hatch to his cabin.
Ser. Kharl addressed Ghart, who remained beside the end of the gangway. I 
fixed the grip on the cudgel and replaced it in the weapons locker. He handed 
over the heavy bronze key.
Thats good. No shore leave, and thatll mean your watches will be quiet. Less 
that customs weasel gets the local lancers riled up.
Was that who the captain was talking to when I came topside? He didnt look 
pleased.
He wasnt. Tried to inflate the tariff, pocket the difference. Weasel. 
Surprised you couldnt smell him from across the deck. Ghart shook his head. 
The Prefect rules Kyphros with folk like that, and he wont be keeping it 
long.
I dont know, mused Kharl. Youd think so, but
Could be, replied Ghart. Folks are always fearing change. He glanced back 
along the pier, but the customs enumerator had disappeared.
Theyre always afraid change will make things worse. Kharl chuckled ruefully. 
For most folks, it does.
Youre saying that things never change, Ghart said.  Cause the worse they 
get, the more folk fear theyll get even worse.
Until they know they cant get worse
Youre a cheerful sort today, carpenter.
Kharl offered a rueful smile. Experience.
Dont think I want to know. Seen enough Id rather not see again. Ghart turned 
to look at the long wagon being driven down the pier toward the Seastag. Need 
to get the off-loading crew. Looks like the cotton factor.
Kharl slipped away to the railing near the bow. From there, he looked over the 
old town once more, taking in the ancient gray stone buildings and those newer 
dwellings, few as they were, with white plaster walls farther westward on the 
narrow bluff.
Gharts words echoed through his thoughts, and Kharl wondered just what it might 
take to get people to want to change a poor ruler, or if they feared change so 
much that no ruler would ever be changed except by death or conquest.
LIV
(
Jxharl looked down at the pier, and then out at Ruzor. A glass had passed since 
he had taken the deck watch, and the cotton factors wagons had come, been 
loaded, and departed. Two long and heavy wagons remained on the pier, and the 
deck crew was finishing the off-loading of tin ingots. Kharl walked slowly in a 
circle, around the quarterdeckthat ill-defined area on the main deck 
immediately inboard of the head of the gangway down to the pier.
The late-afternoon wind had picked up, and the sun had dropped behind the bluffs 
to the west of Ruzor so that the Seastag and the pier sat in shadow, chilled 
further by the wind out of the northeast. Glad that he had kept his winter 
jacket and was wearing it over the carpenters grays, Kharl stopped pacing and 
stood by the railing, looking down and across at the metal factors men placing 
the tin ingots in the second wagon. The only movements on the pier were those of 
the loaders, and the only ones
Kharl could see on the Seastag were the winch crew, although he knew some of the 
deckhands were down in the hold loading the heavy canvas
slings.
Last ingots! came the call from the hold.
Last load, Furwyl relayed from where he stood on the forward section of the 
poop.
The metal factor, a solid figure in a heavy brown work jacket, raised his arm in 
acknowledgment. The heavy sling rose out of the hold and then swung out to the 
pier and down onto the stone beside the wagon. The cotton had been loaded 
directly into the wagons, but the ingots were not. Was that because they were so 
much heavier that the wrong placement on the wagon could bend or snap an axle? 
By the time the dock loaders had placed the last ingots on the wagon, the boom 
was secured in its stowed position and the deck crew was folding up the sling 
and replacing the hatch cover.
Winch and deck crew, you can knock off. Bemyrs voice cut through the 
afternoon.
For what? mumbled someone. Nowhere to go.
You heard the captain. No shore leave here. More shore leave in Southport. Its 
warmer there, anyway.
Yeah
 except the women
You couldnt get a woman here, either, Sonlat.
 and the ales flat flat as the women
Men arent any better, cracked one of the women riggers.
A series of laughs followed as the men and the two muscular women drifted into 
smaller groups.
Kharl turned his attention back to the now-empty pier, a long stretch of gray 
stone, tinged with pink in some places and the green of algae in others. The 
only other vessel at the pier was an old fishing schooner. The sunlight falling 
on the harbor waters to the south and east of the Seastag suggested that sunset 
was still a glass or so away.
Quiet so far, carpenter? asked Furwyl, easing up to the quarterdeck.
Yes, ser.
Ill be checking the manifests with the captain. Let us know if you see 
anything strange.
Yes, ser.
As the first crossed the deck, Kharl glanced at the cudgel set against the 
railing forward of the gangway, then back to the pier. He looked farther west, 
toward the town. Was that someone on the harbor road? He scanned the pier and 
harbor, but his eyes kept going back to the road, and before too long he could 
see a rider moving at a quick trot toward the squarish heavy-timbered building 
that held the portmaster and the customs enumerator. The traveler neared the 
port building and tied his mount outside.
Kharl kept looking back toward the port building, but it was about a quarter of 
a glass later before the rider emerged and vaulted into his saddle. The rider 
was in uniform, probably a lancer of some sort, and he was continuing along the 
road bordering the harbor, his mount carrying him past the pier and toward the 
breakwaterand the fort that squatted on the seaward end.
Kharl did not want to ring the alarm bell, but he did think that either Furwyl 
or Hagen should know. He glanced around. No one was nearby. He crossed the deck 
quickly and stepped into the passageway way leading to the mates cabins, and 
that of the captain. The hatch door to the captains cabin was ajar, and he 
knocked.
Yes?
Captain, ser, theres a lancer riding from the port building to the fort on the 
end of the breakwater. I didnt know if you wanted to know, but the second told 
me that the customs enumerator was not to be trusted
Hes still riding? How do you know began Furwyl, turning.
The captain lurched up from behind the table. On deck, first. Back to your 
post, carpenter.
Kharl hurried back to the quarterdeck. From there he watched as Hagen climbed to 
the poop, a spyglass in hand. The captain only watched for a moment before 
calling to Furwyl, Have the engineer go to emergency fire-up!
Yes, ser. Furwyl dropped down the ladder to the engine spaces.
Kharl kept watching both the pier and the breakwater. The lancer had not yet 
reached the breakwater fort. The carpenter second had not realized just how far 
out the breakwater was and how much the harbor road wound between the base of 
the pier and the breakwater. Still, it wasnt that long before the lancer was on 
the breakwater road heading to the fort.
As Kharl watched, he could smell coal smoke, and after a few more moments, a 
thin line of black began to flow from the stack.
Bemyrs whistle shrilled through the late afternoon. All hands! All hands! Deck 
crew, make ready to cast off. Make ready to cast off! Harbor
rig! Harbor rig!
Furwyl appeared beside Kharl. Well leave the midships line in place and the 
gangway down. You know of anyone whos left the ship?
No, ser.
Good. The first turned, and two of the crewone burly man and an equally burly 
womandashed down the gangway onto the pier, the woman going forward, the man 
aft.
Single up! Furwyl ordered. Single up!
Singling up!
Clear the aft line!
The seaman by the aft line loosened it, then hurried back up the pier to the 
gangway, but waited. Aft line clear.
Clear the forward line.
Forward line clear. After undoing the forward line, the woman retreated to the 
single cleat beside the gangway, where the other sailor joined her. Both forward 
and aft lines were pulled in.
Clear the midships line.
The two unwound the line from the cleat, down to a single loop, then sprinted up 
the gangway. Kharl watched as the line flowed away and off the cleat as the deck 
crew reeled it in.
Up the gangway.
After the gangway was winched up and back, Kharl locked the quarterdeck railing 
back in place flush with the fixed railing.
With the cold wind out of the northeast filling the sails, the Seastag swung 
away smartly from the stone pier. The smoke from the stack thickened, and Kharl 
could hear a low groaning as the engine began to turn over, slowly, then stop 
because there wasnt enough pressure in the boilers yet. Even without the 
engine, the ship was headed seaward under sail with fair headway.
Kharl glanced from the pier to the fort at the end of the breakwater. From what 
he could tell, Hagen was piloting the Seastag into the section of the channel 
closest to the fort. While Kharl knew the captain must have had a reason, he had 
no idea what that might have been.
The ship was nearing the fort, but was still a good kay away from the closest 
approach, which Kharl judged to be a kay and a half.
Cruump! Something flew through the forward yards and landed another fifty rods 
south of the ship. A gout of water gushed skyward.
Kharl realized that the something had been a shell from a cannon in the fort.
Thivup thwup Slowly too slowly, it seemed, the paddle wheels began to turn.
Another shell whistled overhead and landed in the water less than five rods to 
starboard.
Hard port! Hagen ordered.
The Seastag turned port, headed almost directly at the breakwater, losing speed 
with each rod. Yet another shell slammed into the blue-gray harbor waters, 
barely off the starboard quarter, and another gout of water erupted skyward. 
Although the paddle wheels were beginning to pick up a slow and even rhythm, 
even Kharl could tell that the ship was losing headway and might soon even lose 
steerageway. He could also see the water ahead lightening as they neared the 
shallows that sloped up to the breakwater, and the fort.
Hard starboard! came the command. Full power!
As the Seastag turned back to starboard, and the sails caught the wind nearly 
full once more, the ship seemed to leap forwardand not a moment too soon. There 
was the faintest scraping on the port side, as if the hull had run against the 
edge of a sandbar or a rock, and then another cannon shell exploded into the 
water less than five rods directly aft of the sternpost.
Steady on zero nine zero! ordered Hagen.
Another shell slammed through the rigging, and this time, a rain of debris 
pattered and clattered down onto the poop deck. Kharl looked up. One of the 
sails on the starboard side had been ripped loose of the bottom rigging and 
flapped in the wind. The footlines dangled, and the end gaff was missing.
The paddle wheels turned over a shade faster with each moment, and the ship 
continued to gain speed. The Seastag had passed the end of the breakwater and 
was now moving away from the fort at a goodly clip, the open water between the 
Gallosian fort and the ship increasing.
Twenty starboard! ordered Hagen.
Just as the ship settled onto the new heading, another shell struck
just off the port quarter, close enough and with sufficient force to throw a 
spray of water across the forecastle. Kharl could even feel some of the spray 
from where he stood midships on the starboard side.
Glancing aft, he could see that once the Seastag had cleared the shallower 
waters seaward from the breakwater, Hagen had turned the ship onto a heading 
that presented only the stern to the cannon of the fort, keeping the ships 
exposure to cannon fire as narrow as possible. Another shell exploded in the 
waters aft of the Seastag. Kharl waited for another shell, perhaps to strike the 
ship itself, but no other shells were fired, not that he could see or hear.
Furwyl took the ladder down from the poop and crossed the deck to Kharl. 
Captain thinks were out of range now. He looked at the chunks of wood and 
line, and several pulleys, that lay across the main deck. You and Tarkyn are 
going to be busy replacing gaffs and booms, Hagen said. Lucky they didnt hit 
either of the masts square.
I dont know as it was luck, ser, was it?
Captain did his best, and hes good, carpenter, but theres always luck. 
Furwyl nodded and headed toward the bosun. Bemyr! Get a crew here to clean up 
the mess.
Kharl looked back into the twilight that was beginning to descend on Ruzor and 
the squat Gallosian fort on the breakwater. Why were people so vindictive? Hagen 
had done what was right, and the customs enumerator and the Prefects armsmen 
had tried to punish him and sink the Seastag because they hadnt gotten their 
way. Yet they would have been outraged had they been the buyers of the 
brimstone, and Hagen had sold it to someone else.
He shook his head. The Prefects enumerator and Egen were the same sort, wanting 
things, their own way and vindictive when they were thwarted. Did having power 
turn people that way?
Kharl laughed. It wasnt as though hed ever be tempted in that fashion. Coopers 
and carpenters never got that kind of power.
LV
Another five days passed before the Seastag made her way into the port at Diehl, 
the most sheltered harbor that Kharl had seen. A forested peninsula guarded the 
seaward approach, looming over the deep channel that was less than two kays wide 
at the harbor entrance. Once past the entry, the Seastag steamed almost due west 
through a bay more than thirty kays wide, and from the half day that it took to 
reach the actual port, more than fifty kays in length. Only the Great North Bay 
at Lydiar had been larger, almost an inland sea, as Kharl recalled.
Kharl had been assigned the morning deck watch the day after the ship had 
arrived, and Hagen had appeared almost as soon as the carpenter had taken his 
station on the quarterdeck, opposite the still-empty pier.
Weve got the copper to off-load and some of the woolens we picked up in Nylan. 
Expect their port-mistress anytime, or one of the assistants. Just give me a 
call or ring the bell twice. I dont need to tell you, but be exceedingly 
polite. With a nod, Hagen had turned and returned to his cabin, leaving Kharl 
on the deck under high clouds, on the warmest morning Kharl had experienced in 
eightdays.
As Bemyr supervised the deck crews removal of both hatch covers, Kharl studied 
the port and the land beyond. Diehl itself was the smallest port town Kharl had 
seen, not that he had seen many, with only two warehouses behind the 
port-mistresss structure at the foot of the single piera structure of old and 
heavy timber supported by equally old and massive stone columns. The Seastag was 
the only vessel tied at a pier large enough for two ocean traders.
The water in the bay was a warm blue, unlike the late-autumn dark blue of the 
Eastern Ocean or the harbor waters at the Candarian towns and cities where the 
Seastag had previously ported, and the air was warmerand moister. Beyond the 
port area, everything was green differing shades of green in a canopy of trees 
that stretched to the horizon in every direction where there was land.
A glass passed before a silver-haired woman walked down the pier toward the 
Seastag. Kharl had not seen her appear, but he almost nodded to himself, 
thinking that the port-mistress would probably be older. But as the woman 
neared, he could see from the unlined face and slender figure that the woman was 
anything but old. Hed heard that druids were silver-haired, but the druid 
approaching the ship was the first he had ever seen. He continued to watch, even 
as he stepped forward to greet her. The silver-haired figure walked up the 
gangway with a grace that looked youthful and had to be mature. That Kharl knew. 
Women were almost always the graceful ones, while girls betrayed their age 
through a myriad of little traits, including a touch of uneasiness and 
awkwardness with their movements.
Greetings, Kharl offered, inclining his head. Are you here about
the cargo?
The druid studied Kharl before finally speaking. You are not from
Reduce.
No. Im from Brysta. Kharl almost stepped back from her, so strong was the 
feeling of her presence and a swirling linkage of both the whitenessexcept it 
was unlike any whiteness he had sensed before and a deeper blackness, although 
that seemed more like what he had felt from the mage in Nylan.
She paused. Will you be here long?
The ship? The captain decides that. We have to off-load cargo, for you. Let me 
summon him. He wanted to know as soon as you arrived.
No not yet. I will be back with those for the cargoes. She turned and walked 
back down the gangway.
Kharl frowned, wondering what he had done wrongor if he had. Carpenter? What 
did you say to her? Furwyl crossed the deck. I asked if she were the one we 
had cargo for, and she didnt say, now that I think about it. Then, she asked 
how long we would be here, and I said that it was up to the captain, but that we 
would be here until we off-loaded. She said that she would be back with those 
for the cargo. At the last words, Furwyl relaxed. If she said that, shell be 
back. They never tell lies. He frowned. I wonder why she came aboard. Havent 
seen that one before.
She had deep green eyes, Kharl said, not knowing quite why he
did.
You leave them alone, the first mate said, if you value your life and
health. Unless, of course, they ask you. Then, I hear, youre a lucky fellow.
Kharl understood. Hed felt the power in the woman, a strange sort of power, an 
intertwining of golden whiteness with deep blackness.
Ill tell the captain that they know were here.
Yes, ser. Kharl looked down the pier, but the druid had vanished.
At least another glass passed. Kharl was looking forward to being relieved when 
noon came. When he scanned the pier, he saw two druids, both with silver hair, 
walking down the pier toward the ship, accompanied by another figure, a man in 
gray, with light brown hair.
Furwyl was at the gangway almost instantly, followed by the captain. Kharl stood 
back, behind them.
The first druid up the gangway was not the one Kharl had met. She was shorter, 
with amber eyes, and she turned directly to Hagen. Captain.
Port-mistress I had heard your assistant was here I hope we did not offend
The druid laughed, the sound warm. If anything I am her assistant. Dayala is 
one of the she is of the Great Forest. She told me that your watchershe 
glanced to Kharlwas most well-mannered, and she came to tell me that you bore 
our cargo. Would you mind if she and her consort have a few words with him?
Has he?
No, answered the druid Kharl had first met. He is a most honest man. But he 
was injured, and we would like to see if we could aid him.
By all means. Hagen bowed his head.
We will talk of cargoes while they talk to your man, suggested the 
port-mistress.
The brown-haired man, Kharl realized, was also a druid, with the same 
interweaving of order and chaos, and he motioned toward the bow. Kharl followed 
the two up the ladder and forward until the three stood beside the bowsprit.
The man smiled politely. Dayala said that youre from Brysta.
I am. Are you? Kharl asked politely.
No, and it doesnt matter, not really. Im from Wandernaught, but you reminded 
her of someone I used to know. The druid shrugged.
Kharl could sense clearly the coiled power in the man, power that made the white 
wizard he had killed seem less than a summer mist in comparison. I dont think 
weve ever met.
The other laughed. We have not, and I doubt well ever meet again. But one 
never knows. If you dont mind, would you answer a few questions?
I suppose so. Kharl was wary.
Justen he still suffers from the injuries to his ribs. We should help there 
first, suggested Dayala.
Justen shook his head, then laughed, before speaking. She has the right of it. 
She usually does. I trust you wont mind if we repair the rib that hasnt begun 
to heal right?
One of his ribs wasnt healing right?
It was broken inside, and theres The man frowned. Lets just say that if 
you got hit again there, you might not live through it.
You can do that? Without cutting into me?
It will not hurt, said Dayala. Why would you
Because its better for us, and better for you. Well explain afterward.
Kharl nodded.
Its easier if we touch you. Do you mind?
As long as you dont jab, Kharl said dryly.
Their touch was so light that the carpenter almost did not feel either of their 
hands, hers on his wrist, and Justens on the back of his neck. What he did feel 
was a golden warm darkness flowing into his chest, then an easing of a tightness 
that he had not even realized was there. The two lifted their hands from Kharl.
Your own order can finish the healing, and that will take time, Dayala said. 
Try not to injure yourself for the next eightdays. Kharl frowned.
You can sense order and chaos, can you not? the woman asked. Kharl looked to 
her, then to Justen.
It could be that you havent recognized them that way, Justen went on. 
Sometimes, when you see a person, is there a whitish fog or mist around them, 
one that others dont see? Or a darkness? The white means that someone is using 
chaos, the dark that he or she is using order
Like you do? asked Kharl.
Im somewhere between a druid and a gray mage, admitted the druid. You seem 
drawn more directly to order. You work with both wood and iron, do you not?
I was a cooper.
The druid nodded. You must have been very good, and I daresay that the better 
you got, the poorer your business became and the more unseen enemies that you 
gained.
Something like that. Kharl had the feeling that the other could see inside his 
head, and his feelings. What do you want with me?
Dayala and I dont want anything from you or with you. She feels that you are 
an ordered soul who could do much good wherever you go. Its obvious that you 
dont quite understand what has happened to you. Not totally, anyway. Its 
simple enough. You want order and what youd call truth in your life, and you 
try to create it. Most people have trouble with that kind of directness, and 
because you dont understand your power, you havent yet figured out how to be 
direct and ordered with yourself without unintentionally imposing that order on 
others.
Kharl was still wary, but he could sense none of the white chaos about the 
druid. What chaos the druid had was bounded in strips of golden black, or 
perhaps they were wound together. Most times when Ive tried to do the right 
thing, in recent years, it has not gone well
It is often that way when one such as you discovers himself, Dayala said. You 
must try to learn more about who you are and what you can do
You also need to understand, Justen added, his tone sardonic, that order, 
fairness, and justice, all those things you value, generally are less well 
regarded than gold, coins, and possessions by most people, and especially by 
those in power.
How do you know so much about me? asked Kharl. It is written within you, 
answered Dayala. Your spirit holds the honest darkness of order, and your 
thoughts the power of chaos. Your back and your ribs bear witness to the cruelty 
of others. Your captain is a good man, and he thinks well of you.
But the sea is not your home, added Justen, although it can help you find 
where you belong.
Where might that be?
Justen laughed. Thats up to you. But if you choose to leave where you were 
born, you will need to return there before you depart to make a new home. 
Otherwise, both will war within you.
Dayala frowned.
Did I say something wrong? Again? asked Justen.
Kharl looked from Justen to Dayala.
In time, she said, when you are sure, return home, and do what you must do. 
Do it with care, and with thought, and not with hatred. Hatred will destroy 
you.
The two druids looked at each other and nodded, then stepped
away.
Kharl felt so dazed that he just watched for a moment, then started to
follow them.
From the ladder she was descending, Dayala looked at Kharl. We all must find 
ourselves by ourselves. Only after that can we find others.
Kharl stopped, then waited a time before descending and walking back to the 
quarterdeck.
Furwyl appeared. Are you all right?
Im fine. Surprised, a little dazed. Kharl shook his head. They did something 
to my ribs took away most of the pain.
The first smiled, wryly. Lucky man. Most folks they leave alone. Only heard of 
them healing a few. All of em lived to a healthy old age. He paused. Good 
omen for the rest of the voyage.
It might be, but was it a good omen for Kharl? The idea of having to return to 
Brystafor any reasonwasnt exactly appealing. Not at all.
LVI
lhe next trading legfrom Diehl to Southportwas the longest yet between 
Candarian ports, taking seven days, partly because of the tacking required, and 
because Hagen used the Seastags engine sparingly to avoid burning any more coal 
than he had to. It was also busier for Kharl and Tarkyn, with all the rigging 
repairs necessitated by the Gallosian cannon, repairs that they had put off 
because of the rough seas between Ruzor and Diehl and had not finished in Diehl.
The Seastag neared the outer edge of Southport harbor in midmorn-ing, under 
harbor rigging and with the paddle wheels providing a good portion of the ships 
headway in the light quartering breeze. Kharl stood on the foredeck, enjoying 
the luxury of not having to be a part of the
winch or deck crew and looking out across the blue waters of the harbor toward 
the dwellings scattered on the hillside above the harbor, white structures set 
amid the greenery. While the buildings of Southport looked far more recently 
constructed than any of the Candarian ports where the Seastag had so far docked, 
the port had a very different feelingat least to Kharl. Was that because he was 
finally feeling healed?
Kharl couldnt help but frown as Hagen brought the Seastag past the outer 
breakwater, a long rampart of white stone stacked together, but not mortared or 
joined. Cut stones, he realized, but stones later broken, then piled to form the 
breakwater. Or had the breakwater once been a white stone wall against the 
Eastern Ocean, a wall broken by timeor cannon? Or the remnants of something 
else piled into the offshore waters?
Tarkyn stepped up beside Kharl. Good to be in a warmer port. Not so gray and 
chill here. Not too hot, either, not like Swartheld.
Is all of Hamor hot all the time?
Some of its just warm. Mostly, its hot. Tarkyn snorted. Atlas the worst. 
Like standing between a pair of coal stoves. Happy were not going there this 
voyage.
Kharl saw four long piers, two without ships tied at them. He didnt see a pilot 
boat, but the Seastag continued toward an empty pier. How does he know which 
pier? Or does it matter?
In Southport? It matters. The Marshals Armsll make you move your vessel if 
youre three rods off center in your berth. Tarkyn pointed. See the white 
banner with the green square? And the flag with the number one? Tells the 
captain hes got the first berth on that pier.
The paddle wheels slowed as the Seastag neared the designated pier, where two 
line-handlers waited.
Forward line! ordered Bemyr. Aft line.
Once the lines were secured to the white bollards, the paddle wheels thwupped to 
a halt, and the deck crew walked the Seastag in toward the pier.
Double up! Make it lively! ordered Bemyr.
The Seastag was soon snug against the fenders that cushioned her planks from the 
pier, a long solid structure entirely of white stone, all of the same shade, but 
with stones of differing lengths and thicknesses. Kharl could also sense 
something odd about the way the pier felt, as though it were ancient. He looked 
to Tarkyn, standing beside him. What do you know about Southport?
Its just another port.
Kharl looked at the sections of white stone that comprised the pier. He could 
sense that deep within the stone there was chaos overlaid and linked with order. 
I dont think so.
You dont think so?
Your seconds right, Tarkyn, said Ghart from behind the two carpenters. Some 
say its the oldest port in Candar. That pier there, the Marshal of Southwind 
had it built some two centuries back, all out of stone dredged from the harbor 
bottom. Came up without moss, just like itd been fresh-quarried. See how sharp 
the lines are. No one knew how long it had been there, either.
Another of your stories. Tarkyn snorted.
Ask the captain, if you dont believe me. Or one of the Marshals
Arms, if you dare.
Tarkyn just grunted, not looking at the second mate. Kharl repressed
a smile.
Ill be giving the in-port deck watch schedule, carpenters, Ghart added. 
Tarkyn, youll be having the afternoon watches, and Kharl, youll be having the 
evening watches for the first two days. Then you two will switch. We dont have 
that much to off-load here, but well be staying a few days to give the crew a 
break. Thats what the captain
promised.
Can I go ashore for a bit after were secured? Kharl asked. Dont see why 
not, so long as youre back by the fifth glass past
noon.
Thank you. Kharl nodded and slipped down to the carpenter shop, where he 
reclaimed his staff. Then he made his way back to the main deck, carrying the 
black staff. He had decided to take it, whether or not it falsely marked him as 
a blackstaffer. Hed seen enough to realize that Candar was a dangerous place, 
at least as deadly to the unprepared as He struggled for a comparison as 
Brysta had been for
him?
Ghart looked at Kharland the staff. Remember. Back by the fifth
glass.
Ill be here, Kharl promised.
Ghart just nodded.
Kharl walked down the gangway and along the white stone surface of the pier 
toward the harbor buildings and the city beyond. The stone
blocks of the pier had clearly come from different structures, but from what he 
could see, there were no markings, no letters, and no inscriptions on the stone. 
Who would have gone to the trouble of cutting so much stone without so much as a 
single letter or carving? And why, if Ghart had been telling the truth, would 
the stone have been dumped into the bottom of the harbor?
At the foot of the pier stood two women, each wearing an armless blue tunic over 
a long-sleeved white undertunic. In one hand, each held a long truncheon. Each 
also wore two scabbards suspended from their leather belts, holding paired 
shortswords, one on each side, the kind reputed to have been used by the women 
of Westwind and the Legend.
The taller woman looked at the staff. You intending to stay here?
Kharl had to concentrate. The way the woman spoke was different. After a moment, 
he shook his head. Im the carpenter second on the Seastag.
Why the staff?
I was given it in Nylan and told to discover who I was. So I signed on as crew. 
After a while, the captain decided my experience as a cooper fitted me to help 
the carpenter.
The patrolleror Marshals Arm, if that was what she happened to benodded. 
Most wont trouble you. She paused. You looking for anything?
Just some time on land, maybe something to eat. Have to be back before long.
Enjoy yourself. Best taverns are beyond Third Circle.
Thank you. Kharl nodded politely and continued past the two and toward a 
squarish structure set on the other side of the stone-paved avenue fronting all 
the piers. Behind him, he could sense the two patrollers talking, but not what 
they said.
He walked past the square white stone building with the lettered sign on one 
side. The first line, he could read. It said: Port-Mistress. The lines below 
were in different languages. One, from the swirls of the letters, he thought was 
the old tongue, and he suspected the third line was in Hamorian. The fourththat 
one he couldnt even have guessed.
There was actually a signpost on the avenue, proclaiming it as First Circle. 
That probably meant that all the roads around the harbor were circles. Kharl 
decided to follow First Circle for at least a few blocks, heading more toward 
what looked to be the center of Southport.
After he walked past the warehouses west of the port-mistresss building, Kharl 
passed a large chandlery, then a cooperage. Both were wooden-framed buildings, 
painted shades of blue. He continued on, walking past a cotton factors. Looking 
down the avenue, he just saw more shops and warehouses, some of white stone, 
others of plank and timber, but all in some combination of white and blue.
A number of wagons, most drawn by two horses, passed him, some heading in his 
direction, others passed him in the direction of the pier holding the Seastag. 
Some of the teamsters were men, but an equal number were women. The next cross 
street headed to his right, up a gradual slope, and bore the name Hill Road. 
Kharl turned onto it, immediately passing a small spice shop and another shop 
that displayed vials of oils; aromatic oils, he surmised from the scents that 
wafted into the street.
At the next corner, opposite a cafe of some sort, he stopped and studied the 
area, taking in a cabinetmakers establishment across from the cafe, and a 
potters beyond that. Most of the shops and dwellings had front porches with 
long, overhanging eaves, and rain barrels set at the corners to catch runoff 
from the tiled roofs.
Looking beyond the intersection, Kharl could see, farther uphill, where Hill 
Road continued and turned to the northeast, rising evenly toward a gap in the 
forested hillside above the regularly spaced dwellings on the lower hillside. He 
looked at the hillside higher still, noting that despite the covering of trees 
there was a pattern, almost as if the entire hillside had once been smoothed, 
then regular sets of rounded mounds, all of differing sizes, had been placed 
there, with the trees being added later. There was something He nodded to 
himself. Buildings, or dwellings, had once been spaced there, on each side of 
long and regular streets, and they had covered the entire hillside, and they had 
fallen into ruins and been covered by time and vegetation. That also suggested 
that few, if any, people had lived in the area, because the ruined dwellings had 
not been extensively quarried for building stones. The cooper walked on uphill 
for more than a kay before the houses began to thin out, each having more 
ground, including small orchards with trees in orderly rows and stone-walled 
meadows. The wall stones were neatly cut and mortared, but even from the side of 
the road where he walked, Kharl sensed that they were old.
A young woman walked downhill toward the center of Southport, pushing a handcart 
and accompanied by a girl who barely came to her
waist. As the two neared him, Kharl saw, in the railed space on the top of the 
handcart, several baskets covered with cloths.
Her eyes strayed from Kharl to the staff, and a faint smile crossed her lips as 
she spoke.
Kharl didnt understand a syllable of the clipped words, although he thought she 
was asking him to buy something. At that point, he noted the single shortsword 
at her belt.
She spoke again, haltingly, in what was not her native tongue. The buns the 
best.
Kharl was hungry. That he had to admit. How much?
She looked puzzled.
Kharl fished two coppers out of his wallet and held up one.
She shook her head.
He held up two.
She nodded and lifted the cloth off the top of a basket set in a rack on the 
cart. Then she pointed to the raisin buns and held up one finger. Kharl handed 
over the two coppers and waited to see her reaction. She studied the coins, then 
nodded.
Kharl took the largest bun, easily the size of a small loaf. Thank you.
She smiled a last time before continuing onward.
Kharl found that it took him little time to eat the entire bun. As he finished, 
he licked his fingers and wished he had an ale, but all he had seen on the road 
nearby were dwellings.
Several thoughts crossed his mind. First, he wondered about the woman with her 
daughter. The patrollers in Southport had spoken a version of Brystan, or 
perhaps Brystan was a version of what the patrollers spoke but the woman had 
not. Was another language spoken in Southport? Or did the patrollers at the port 
know two tongues? He hadnt thought about it, but he certainly should have.
The second thought was more troubling. Why was he climbing up the road? Hed 
started out just to look around, but he had found himself almost compelled to 
continue uphill. Why? He studied the road and the dwellings, their neatly tended 
gardens and orchards that had already fruited and been picked, with the trees 
leaves graying for winter.
There was a pull of some sort. Not exactly like the white mist or the blackness 
of Nylan, but similar, and it seemed to be coming from somewhere slightly uphill 
and to the east. After a moment, Kharl shook his
head and resumed walking. After another hundred cubits, he found his feet 
turning right onto a lane that wound away from the main road. The lane turned 
more to the east and, after several hundred rods, passed through two stone 
posts, half-buried in berry bushes and set nearly fifty cubits apart.
Ahead was a much larger moundone that was a least three hundred cubits in 
length and fifty high. It had no trees upon it, just low bushes and tall 
grasses. Kharl stopped well short of where the foot-trod path came to a gradual 
end in browning grass and blotted his forehead. All the walking had left him 
warmer than he had anticipated.
There was a sense of sadness, of ancient sorrow, emanating from the mound, and 
the feeling of attraction had subsided. Kh^rl kept looking, but he saw nothing 
out of the ordinary. He could only sense a diffuse and ancient chaos emanating 
from the mound, and that chaos was subtly but clearly different from that which 
he had experienced with the white wizard.
Well have you figured it out yet?
Kharl turned to see a thin white-haired woman, wearing a faded gray tunic 
trimmed with scarlet, a garment that appeared almost military, yet one that was 
tailored to her. A miasma of blackness surrounded her, as it had the mage in 
Nylan.
I beg your pardon? he said politely.
What drew you here, of course. She pointed to his staff. Thats the black 
staff of a beginning mage. Most never make it beyond that. With your age, youre 
probably one of them.
Im not a mage. Im just a ships carpenter taking a walk, he replied. What 
are you doing here?
Getting late berries from back there, and, when I feel like it, waiting for 
folk like you. They all come here, sooner or later. Her laugh was knowing, but 
full and almost soft, not the sort of cackle Kharl would have expected from a 
gaunt white-haired woman with eyes that had seen too much. Its the power in 
the mound. What would you do with it, if you could?
Kharl thought about denying what hed sensed, then shrugged. Nothing. I 
wouldnt know where to start. Anyway, its the wrong kind of power for me. Could 
be that anyjdnd is.
Power will come to you, she replied. Best you think about how you will use 
it, or it will end up using you. She turned.
Is that all you have to say? Kharl asked.
The woman stopped and half turned. What else would you have me say?
I dont know You have a certain power yourself
She laughed once more. Nothing at all, a trifle. When you see true black power, 
you will understand that. At least, I would hope so. Good day, carpenter. She 
turned and walked through the grass and northward into the bushes and then 
disappeared.
Kharl just looked for a time, then shook his head. He studied the mound once 
more, but could find nothing beyond the ancient sadness and strange buried 
combination of order and chaos. He finally walked back to Hill Road and downhill 
toward the harbor. When he reached Third Circle, remembering what the harbor 
patroller had said, he turned southwest, searching for a cafe or tavern that 
looked both inviting and not terribly costly.
In the first block he walked along after turning off Hill Road, he passed a 
goldsmiths, then a coppersmiths and a jewelers, while on the south side of 
the street, he could make out a shop window filled with fine cabinetry of all 
types, and another displaying a gray cloak trimmed in a gold brocade. A tall 
gray-haired woman in shimmering black trousers, a white shirt, a gray jacketand 
the paired shortswords at her beltnodded as she passed him. An older man, also 
well dressed, but in a rich dark gray tunic and jacket and without weapons, 
smiled politely.
Kharl had the definite feeling that, while there might be taverns on Third 
Circle, his wallet would be far lighter if he stopped in any of them. He decided 
to walk another block or so before heading down closer to the harbor.
Carpenter! Ser!
Kharl turned at the call, because he couldnt imagine anyone calling him that 
unless it was someone from the Seastag. He saw a sailor standing beside a 
patroller outside a shop across the street. In the doorway was a tradesman in a 
leather vest, gesturing animatedly to the patroller.
Kharl crossed the street and stopped several cubits short of the trio, now 
standing in front of a narrow window displaying various items crafted from 
silver. It took a moment for him to recall the sailors name. Yes, Flasyn?
Ser they think I took something but I didnt.
Wexalt says that your sailor made off with an object from his counter. The 
patroller was an older but muscular woman in the same armless blue tunic as 
those worn by the harbor patrollers. She held a similar truncheon, with the 
shortswords at her belt, and inclined her head to the tradesman.
Kharl disliked the tradesman on sight, although his face was open and guileless, 
and he offered an apologetic smile. Cant afford to lose things these days.
The words were false, genuine as they sounded, and Kharl tried not to show his 
dislike and skepticism.
Ser I didnt take nothing I didnt.
Kharl looked at the patroller, then at the merchant, who carried the faintest 
hint of the unseen white chaos. What is he supposed to have taken?
He lifted a silver rose. He must have dropped it when he knew hed been seen.
Kharl looked at Flasyn. Why were you in the silversmiths shop?
Ser my Berye she well I was lookin for something special for her, but he 
told me to leave, and seem as I wasnt welcome, I left straightaway
The mans words felt true, and Kharl turned to the merchant. Do you do the 
silver work?
What sort of
I just wondered. You dont seem like a silversmith.
My brother handles that. I take care of the accounts. Kharl nodded, looking 
more directly at the man. Did you see Flasyn take this rose?
It was missing. No one else was in the shop recently. Kharl forced a smile. 
That could well be, but that does not mean Flasyn took it, or that anyone did. 
Thats why I asked if you had seen him take it. The carpenter fingered his 
beard. Can you honestly say you saw this rose in the shop just before Flasyn 
came in?
Hes the thief! You should be questioning him. Kharl turned to Flasyn. Did 
you touch anything in his shop?
No, ser. Couldnt have. Only things that are out are big stuff, trays. The 
patroller looked at Kharl and the dark staff, then at the merchant, then back at 
Kharl. Is that staff yours?
It is, ser.
Where did you get it, if I might ask?
It was given to me in Nylan by the Brethren who
Thought so. The patroller looked to the merchant. Do you really want to make 
that complaint, Wexalt?
The merchant licked his lips nervously. I could have been mistaken, I suppose. 
It is missing, but I didnt see him take it
I thought it might be something like that The patroller smiled at Kharl. 
Better take your man back to your ship, ser.
Well be heading back. Kharl fixed his eyes on Flasyn. Now.
Ah yes, ser.
As he turned toward the harbor and the outer pier that held the Seastag, Kharl 
did hear the patrollers words.
 better be more careful, Wexalt real staff no one can even hold one of those 
unless its theirs anyone who holds one doesnt lie youd look like a fool 
and if anything happens to one of those blackstaffers doesnt often usually 
anyone who tries ends up dead not too patient with games that hurt folk
Kharl had hoped to have a bite to eat, but he was going to have to forgo that. 
He also had more to think about, especially about the comments of the woman on 
the hillside.
LVII
In the growing darkness of the late-fall evening, Kharl stood on the quarterdeck 
by the gangway, looking blankly down at the white stones of the pier, then up to 
the west, above the hills beyond Southport. There, the sky was fading from a 
deep purple to a violet blackness, and the stars were so clear that they seemed 
not to twinkle at all. The air was still comfortably warm, and only a hint of a 
breeze blew in from off the Eastern Ocean to the south.
Any of the crew back yet, carpenter?
Kharl turned to face Furwyl. Not yet, ser. Except for Flasyn, and he wasnt 
about to mention that to the first.
Most of them wont be back until after Bemyr relieves you. They missed shore 
leave in Ruzor. Be harder for some of them here.
Since Furwyl seemed in a talking mood, Kharl asked, Why would
that be?
Southports another place where the Legend is strong. Marshal of Southwind is a 
woman. Women run things. You saw those twin short-swords the Arms carry?
Theyre Westwind-type blades, arent they?
That they are, and they can throw them as well as use one in each hand. Most 
women here are armed, and they wont hesitate to use them. Theyll also use them 
on any man who seems to be getting the better of a woman. That said some of 
them like sailors a lot, but they want to do the choosing. Some of the crew have 
a hard time with that.
What happens?
The captain has to pay their way out of the wayfarers gaol. Furwyl laughed. 
Usually means they end up owing a good chunk of their crew share to the 
captain. They remember that. Its about the only thing that some of them recall. 
Let me know if theres any trouble. Ill be in my cabin.
While the firsts cabin was little more than a pantry-sized oblong with two 
bunks, he didnt usually have to share it with anyone, Kharl reflected. Yes, 
ser.
The deck was empty, and dim, the only lights being the stem and stern night 
lanterns, and the larger lantern that shed faint illumination on the quarterdeck 
and the top of the gangway.
It had been a strange day, as many had been in the past two seasons. Something 
had happened to him. Everyone looked at him differently. But was that just 
because of the staff? Or had they always and he just hadnt seen it? Or had it 
happened sometime in the last eightdays? He fingered his beard.
It couldnt be just the staff. Hed been having problems with some people before 
that. Hed angered Egen by keeping him from Sanyle. Why had he done that? Not 
because anyone had told him, but because he had felt that what Egen had been 
doing was wrong. Why had he felt that? Because he had felt it. There wasnt a 
better answer.
He nodded slowly.
That suggested to him that doing the right thing was attuned to order, to the 
blackness he had seen in Nylan, in the druids, and in the
t_
strange woman on the hillside. He had always sensed it, but never thought much 
about it. He had just accepted those feelings, but others had not. Charee had 
been more concerned with how what he did affected the family. While Charee would 
never have harmed anyone, she also would not have gone out of her way to help 
someone if it might cause trouble for her or her children. Kharl had done what 
he felt was right, without thinking, and the result had been disastrous.
He frowned again. He didnt want to be like Chareehe couldnt be that way. Yet 
doing as he had been doing was going to get him in trouble again, before long. 
What could he do differently?
He laughed softly to himself. The answer was what the woman on the hill had 
saidto think about how to use his enhanced senses. Not to act thoughtlessly 
from his feelings but to learn to think about how to act in response to others 
actions. In a way, he had done that with Flasyn, without truly understanding 
why. Hed only known that saying that the merchant was the thief would have only 
made matters worse.
Kharl looked out to the white oblong that was the pier. Despite the lack of 
light, it seemed clear enough to him. His night sight had always been good, but 
lately, or since leaving Brysta, it had seemed even better. But was it his eyes?
Musing on that thought, he closed his eyes and tried to sense the pier and the 
gangway. Even without looking, they seemed clear to him. Was that just his 
imagination?
He concentrated on the nearest part of the Seastags railing, then reached out 
and tried to place his hand just above the varnished surface. He opened his 
eyes.
Even in the dimness he could tell that his fingers were but a span above the 
wood, and for the first time, he knowingly perceived the difference between what 
he was sensing and what he was seeing. He shivered as he stood there on the 
quarterdeck in the darkness, a darkness that was far less than that to him.
What next? He had a little more power than he once had had. He frowned. No he 
had known that the staff had given him some power, or he had thought it had been 
the staff, but from what the mage in Nylan had said, the two druids in Diehl, 
and the woman on the hill, and what he had just discovered he had always had 
the ability. He just had not known it. His life had been like thatalways 
learning late what he should have known earlier.
That would have to change. How he wasnt quite sure, but whether it meant 
reading more of The Basis of Order and trying to find things in the book that he 
could door tryhe had to so something more than travel and watch and react.
He had to.
LVIII
Three days later, the Seastag steamed out of Southport and headed westward. 
Kharl found himself glad to be at sea, because hed spent much of the in-port 
time working with a shipwright)to replace the metal rigging fittings that the 
Gallosian cannon had damaged or blown away. Hed decided against any more 
expensive meals, and read several more chapters of The Basis of Order. After 
three and a half days at sea, when Seastag tied up at a rickety wooden pier in 
Dellash, Kharl was still trying to figure out how he could put some of what he 
read into actual practice.
No one had told Kharl much about Dellash, so that hed finally had to ask Ghart, 
who had told him that Dellash was the port on the isle of Esalian. That Kharl 
had known, but not that it had been held by Lord Fentrel until, less than ten 
years before, the Duke of Delapra had enlisted a renegade wizard to bring down 
the hold around Fentrel, then taken the isle.
The Seastag was the only ocean trader in the port that afternoon, and Kharl had 
taken The Basis of Order up on deck to read, since he would be taking the 
evening in-port deck watch once more. He had settled himself on the foredeck, 
with his back against the railing, out of the brisk northerly wind, and was 
debating where to begin, when he heard voices.
 run a tight ship, Hagen
 dont keep a ship unless you do, honored Synadar. Would you like to go below 
to discuss matters?
 nothing to discuss we cant say out here. You have the brimstone?
That we doall hundred and fifty stone. It was a rather costly
cargo.
Kharl frowned. The customs enumerator at Ruzor had claimed the brimstone was two 
hundred stone. Or was the other fifty stone for another buyer? That had to be 
the answer, but Kharl wondered who the other buyer might be.
How so?
The Prefect of Gallos wished to purchase it. We had to leave Ruzor rather 
quickly.
And you sold him none?
No, replied Hagen. I did not know for whom you acted. Were it him, I saved 
you coins. Were it someone at odds with him that would have been even less 
wise.
Some captains would not have shown such restraint
Some captains might call it stupidity to overlook a quick and high profit, 
replied Hagen. Those are the ones who will die coinless or with a knife in the 
back.
Stupidity? You have such contempt for extra coins?
I like coin as much as the next man, Hagen said. But you dont enjoy them by 
betraying committed buyers. Not for long.
Such noble words, such honesty Synadars laugh was mocking. So ethical
Hagen laughed. You have your cargo of brimstone. Would you have it were it not 
so?
No but you would not have ported here.
Nor would I have ever been able to, and what would that have cost me, year 
after year?
So much for your vaunted honesty, Hagen
Are you ready to have it off-loaded?
Such haste.
Haste indeed, Hagen agreed. Haste to obtain your coins. You surely understand 
that?
I have them in the strongbox. Come you can inspect them and begin 
off-loading.
Kharl did not budge as the two men moved away.
He had felt Hagens honesty, and the chaotic dishonor of the trader. Hagen had 
acted fairly and honorably, but under the guise of self-interest, and the trader 
had accepted self-interest even while he had scorned the ideas of fairness. Was 
that deception on Hagens part?
Did the book have any passages on deception and honesty? Kharl
began to leaf through the pages until he found a section that looked like it 
might address his questions.
The greatest danger in practicing deception is not the reaction of others, 
whether it be anger or cupidity. A greater danger is the cultivation of contempt 
for that which is. Deception is a practice of contempt, contempt for those whom 
one would deceive, and contempt for the world as it is. Just as understanding 
what is must be the first step toward using order, contempt for a true vision is 
the first step toward being the tool of power rather than its enlightened user
Kharl nodded. That made sense, but it didnt offer him anything to
do
He kept reading. In time, he came to another section.
 often those inexperienced in using order will force raw order upon an object, 
thinking that such an effort will strengthen the object. Such an effort will 
indeed strengthen the object, even as it weakens the one who attempts this, but 
only so long as the would-be mage lavishes his strength. When his strength is 
spent, the object will become once more as it was. Far better is to study the 
object, and to learn how it is tied together with order and chaos, and to gently 
change those bonds in keeping with what the object is, for if weak bonds are 
properly replaced by strong bonds within the object itself, those bonds will 
remain strengthened, just as black iron remains stronger than iron forged 
without ordering
Kharl sat up. He had black iron on his staff, and there were iron brackets in 
the carpenter shop. Could he compare the two somehow? He closed the book and 
stood, uncoiling in the brisk afternoon wind and stretching, before heading 
below.
The shop was empty, and Kharl eased his staff out of the overhead bin where he 
had replaced it and set it on the narrow bench against the bulkhead. Then he 
took out an iron bracket and set it on the bench, directly beside the banded 
section at one end of the staff.
He looked at the two metals. The black iron was darker, indeed
blackish to the sight, while the iron of the bracket was a duller gray. He 
couldnt compare their weights, and he already knew that the black iron was 
harder. So he closed his eyes and tried to sense the difference between the two. 
Almost instantly, he could feel the aura of darkness tied to the black iron.
He opened his eyes, and he still saw the difference. Was that because he was 
learning how to use some sort of order-sensing? He tried to sense the linkages 
or ordering within the black iron. At first, nothing happened. All he could feel 
was the order-darkness. But he knew there was more there. He tried to see if he 
could sense a difference in the grain of the metal. That made a difference, 
because the iron bracket somehow felt rough, almost jagged, in comparison to the 
black iron bands on the staff.
Could he make plain iron into black iron? Somehow, the bracket looked large and 
heavy, even though it was only slightly larger than his hand and but a fraction 
of a thumbspan in thickness. Kharl bent down and looked in the bins below the 
bench, where he found an iron nail. He straightened and set it on the bench 
beside the staff.
Then he concentrated on sensing just how the black iron felt, how the grain of 
the metal almost locked together. Could he somehow smooth the roughness of the 
nail into a pattern like that of the staff bands? He tried just imagining, 
visualizing that change. Nothing happened.
Could he use his order-sense more like a forge hammer, in a regular rhythm, 
striking, shaping?
How long he concentrated on that Kharl was not sure, except that a good quarter 
glass had passed, and the nail was darkernot quite with the smooth orderedness 
of the staffs black iron, but far more ordered and solid.
As he looked at the nail, he felt light-headed and had to reach out and steady 
himself with a hand on the bench. He looked down at the iron nail once more, 
which was no longer gray iron, but a form of black iron.
I did it he murmured.
But he felt so weakand all for a little nail.
He sat down on Tarkyns stool and took out the book. Doggedly, he began to skim 
through pages.
Black iron should only be created while being forged attempting to change 
less-ordered cold iron into black iron is possible only with great effort, 
enough to exhaust even the strongest of mages
Kharl didnt know whether to shake his head or laugh. Once more, he had almost 
gotten himself into danger because he hadnt been patient enough. He took a deep 
breath, then reached out and slipped the black iron nail into his wallet. 
Sometime, he might find a use for it, but if not, it might be a good reminder 
that he needed to try to learn more before he acted.
Then, that had always been his problemexcept where he had not acted at all.
LIX
Once through the Straits of Esalia and past Summerdock, where the Seastag did 
not port, Hagen brought the ship onto a course to the northwest for most of the 
day. In late afternoon, as Kharl took a break from working on a replacement for 
a top gaff that had splintered, and stood near the bow, he checked the position 
of the sun. Then he glanced to starboard, where he could just make out the thin 
line of darkness that was land. From what he could tell, the ship was headed 
back eastward. A glass or so earlier, Kharl had felt that the ship had begun to 
pitch more than earlier in the day, and ahead, the swells were deeper.
He glanced up. Rhylla was standing just forward of the paddle wheels. Kharl 
walked toward the third mate.
Ser?
Carpenter. How are you coming with that gaff?
Be done later this afternoon. Kharl gestured toward the distant shore. 
Thought we were headed to Hamor.
We are. The captain heard that the Suntasan went aground night before last, 
broke her back on the reefs of Cape Feer. So were headed to
Biehl first. He didnt tell anyone, not even the officers, until we were clear 
of Dellash.
Kharl cocked his head. Are we trying to get to pick up a cargo that the 
Suntasan would have taken?
Its cargofine china. Captain thinks we can take their cartage. No one else 
knows yet. Rhylla paused. Some skippers know that the Suntasan went aground, 
and there might be some that know Captain Ceagir was the regular shipper for the 
china folk, but the ones who know that dont seem to be in this part of the 
Eastern Ocean. Captain thought it was worth a try.
Chinas worth that much?
This is very special china, for the emperors household. There are almost 
always special shipments in late fall, and they have to get to Swartheld before 
the turn of the year. Thats what the captain said. We might even get a bonus if 
it works out.
There any pirates around here? Kharls tone was dry, not quite ironic. Id 
heard of Delapran pirates.
Most of them were killed or hanged. Rhylla laughed. The rest not in these 
waters, this time of year. Pirates would be east of Biehl, looking for better 
pickings. Besides, there wouldnt be many buyers for stolen china marked for the 
Emperor of Hamor. Pirates like goods that cant be traced. Most thieves do.
Kharl nodded. That was true of other malefactors, even lordly ones. Egen 
certainly tried to keep his deeds hidden. Better get below and back to work.
LX
T C
In the late afternoon of threeday, Kharl stood just aft of the bowsprit, looking 
out at the town of Biehl, wondering if he should go ashore and try to find a 
decent place to eat. After a time, anything tasted better than ship fare, 
although not too many eightdays earlier, he would not have felt that way. He 
smiled at that thought.
Age hung over Biehl, so much so that the carpenter wondered if it
had ever been new. The stone edges of the single pier were rounded, as if every 
sharp corner had been worn away by time and water. Seaward from the pier was 
another set of gray columns and dark stones barely covered by harbor waters, the 
remnants of another pier. The one pier that held the Seastag jutted out into the 
River Behla, a narrow river that, from the marshy grass that choked both shores 
farther inland, had once been far larger.
Across the stone causeway that doubled as harbor wall and access road to the 
pier was a short row of structurestheir lower levels plastered and painted a 
pale blue. Both plaster and paint were worn away in places, exposing the old 
yellow brick beneath. The upper levels of those buildings were of weathered 
planks buried beneath layers of paint.
A much-painted but faded sign bearing the crossed candles of a chandlery was set 
above the sagging porch of the building just across from the foot of the pier 
where the Seastr.g was tied. To the left of the chandlery was a cooperage, its 
frontage less than half that of what Kharls had been in Brysta. A third 
building bore no sign at all.
Kharl turned, trying to make out the ruins that Furwyl claimed lay on the 
eastern side of the river, but he could see little above the marsh grass except 
irregular patches of trees. The mixed odors of dead fish, mud, and salt water 
swirled around Kharl in the late-afternoon breeze that gusted off the blue-black 
water north beyond the harbor. Whitecaps topped the choppy harbor waves.
To the northwest of the pier, well beyond the harbor and the dwellings, was a 
small bluff less than twenty cubits higher than the water of the harbor. At the 
top of the bluff was a long pile of stones, from which grew bushes and 
occasional trees. Kharl thought that the stones might have once been a fort 
guarding the harbor, but it was clear that it had been generations since the 
fort had been usedif indeed it had been a fort at all.
Feels like its dying, doesnt it? asked Ghart, from behind Kharl.
The town? It does, Kharl replied. Did we get that china?
Captain says we got the china consignment, and that weve even got space for 
some clay.
Clay?
Biehl clay is the best in Candar, maybe anywhere in the world. Has been so long 
as anyone can remember. We can stow it just above the bilges, replace some of 
the ballast, and sell it in Hamor.
Be loading tomorrow, setting out early the next morning.
Somehow hadnt thought you could make coins on clay. Kharl laughed.
You can make coins on just about anything, if you buy it cheap enough, Ghart 
pointed out. Captains always telling us that it matters more what price you 
buy at than what price you sell. You buy low enough, and you can sell anywhere 
at a profit. Even in Swartheld, with all the world trying to undercut you.
Thats if the qualitys good, Kharl said.
Ghart grinned. He says that, too.
Someone cleared his throat, and Kharl turned.
Im headed ashore, Tarkyn said to Kharl. Need some ale, and anything besides 
ship fare. Want to join me?
Id like that. Kharl had no in-port deck watch until midday the next day, and 
he liked the thought of eating with Tarkyn, rather than alone. They take our 
coins here?
Folks here will take any lands coins, with pleasure. Tarkyn gestured. 
Coming?
If my coins good, Im with you.
Have a good time, carpenters, Ghart called, as the two headed down the 
gangway.
Tarkyn snorted. Never have a good time, not one that doesnt cost more than 
youd want to pay, or more than that, but theres always a chance for good 
fare.
Or better than ship fare, Kharl pointed out.
Not hard to do better n that.
Kharl followed Tarkyns lead as the older man turned left on the causeway, and 
the two walked south toward the main part of the ancient town.
Havent been in Biehl in years. Tarkyn glanced at the chandlery. Looks about 
the same, shabbier maybe. But itd be hard to get much shabbier. Theres a 
better tavern down here, past the old square and across the way. Used to be, 
anyway.
Kharl followed the older carpenter down two long blocks, past warehouses, some 
boarded shut and others with doors that sagged on their hinges. Nothing they 
passed could have been built in Kharls lifetime, and he wondered if some of 
them had even seen paint or stain in that time.
Three blocks away from the harbor, the two men reached a square of sorts, an 
area once paved with smooth granite, but close to half of the paving stones had 
been replaced with bricks or cobblestones or, in some places, with clay. In the 
center was an obelisk, and unlike the stones of the town, it was sharp-edged, a 
crisp stone monument at odds with the decay that surrounded it.
Kharl could sense that the stone had been reinforced with order, order forced 
into and through the very essence of the granite, an ancient order. Whats 
that? Do you know?
Locals told me its as old as Biehl, maybe older, to some ancient emperor of 
Cyador. Maybe he came from here. Lots of old and strange things in Candar, 
especially in the west. Tarkyn shrugged. We go down that street there.
The street to which Tarkyn pointed looked to hold structures merely old, as 
opposed to ancient, and most had been maintained. The Crown was a narrow 
building, less than twenty cubits wide, sandwiched between a felters and an 
unmarked structure that might have been a boardinghouse, or something less 
reputable.
A rotund woman in blue met them just inside the door. The two of you?
It took Kharl a moment to understand her words.
Tarkyn had no such difficulty and replied immediately. Two, for supper.
Despite the narrowness of the placeand Kharl wasnt sure what to call it, 
because it was neither cafe nor tavernit was deep enough to hold a good ten 
tables in the public room. Most of the tables were taken, and the woman seated 
them at a smaller table along the wall.
Hope its as good as last time, said Tarkyn.
When was last time?
Maybe ten eleven years back. The older carpenter smiled. Things dont change 
so much here.
A younger woman appeared. She looked to the older carpenter.
A good dark ale, Tarkyn said.
Lager. Pale ale if you dont have it, added Kharl.
The woman nodded, then said, Tonight we have poached sea trout, fresh caught, 
with pasneti noodles. We also have boar steak with fried apples and baked golden 
yams. We also have net noodles with the fish stew, and chops with fried 
potatoes. Everything is five coppers.
The chops, not overdone, replied Tarkyn.
The boar steak, Kharl added, glad he had brought a silver or two with his 
coppers.
Thank you. With a smile, the woman stepped away from them and turned toward 
the rear of the public room, presumably toward a kitchen.
Good food costs more. Tarkyn stretched and took a deep breath. True anywhere 
you go.
You must know the good places to eat in every port.
Some dont have any. Tarkyn glanced up.
The server returned with two tall crystal mugs, setting the dark one before the 
older man, and the lighter brew before Kharl. Three coppers, each, sers.
Kharl extended four. He thought Tarkyn did as well. She smiled and slipped away.
In the momentary silence, Kharl caught some words from the nearest table.
 havent seen them before
 sailors from that ship just ported
 not sailors must be officers, mates
Kharl found it strange to be considered an officer, even a subofficer.
You got a feel for wood, dont you? Tarkyn took a long pull of the dark ale. 
Ah tastes good. Nothing better n good dark ale.
Kharl thought the dark brews chewy, much preferring pale ale or lager. Guess 
Ive always had a feel for woods. Liked to work with white or black oak best. 
Red oak just didnt feel the same.
What about spruce pine?
Depends on the tree.
Doesnt everything? Tarkyn laughed. No trees the same as another, no animal, 
no person, no ship
Is that why youve stayed on the Seastag7
Couldnt find a better captain, not anywhere. Be a good lord, too, were he 
minded. Top carpenter, thats as good as Ill do. So the ship matters most. 
Tarkyn paused as the server slid a large light blue platter in front of him. 
Another one went before Kharl.
Kharl set out a silver, as did the older man.
In a moment, there were two stacks of five coppers, one before each man, 
although the coppers were of differing sizes and thicknesses.
After just a few bites, Kharl decided that the boar steak was one of the better 
meals hed had, perhaps the best since the one hed had in Lydiar, and the fried 
apples were perfect, just between crisp and chewy, without being heavy.
Youre enjoying the grub?
Very much.
Thought you would. You should have been a ships carpenter from the first. 
Might even have made it out of the focsle early on.
Have you always been a ships carpenter?
Me? No. Started out as a cabinetmakers apprentice in Kaerloch little place 
not too far from Bruel. Didnt like all the detailing, the fussi-ness. Finally 
ran away after a couple of years. Worked as a sawboy in a mill. Didnt care much 
for that, either Tarkyn took another pull of the dark ale.
Kharl was content to eat and listen.
LXI
he voyage from Biehl to Hamor was longtwo and a half eightdays. Kharl kept busy 
at whatever tasks were set before him. Some of that was internal work on 
bulkheads and decks, anywhere that water had managed to damage wood. He even 
repaired one of the cover panels on the port paddle wheel. When he was not 
working, sleeping, or eating, he was reading orfar less oftentrying to 
exercise his still-limited order-skills. By the time the western coast of Hamor 
was in sight as a low dark line off the starboard bow, Kharl had read through 
every page of The Basis of Order. He could not say that he understood everything 
he had read.
He hadnt attempted to turn any more cold iron into black iron. He had tried 
using the ideas in the book to speed the healing of several minor cuts and 
scrapes he had received, and they did seem to heal more quickly, but whether 
that was because of his efforts, he still wasnt certain. The only thing that 
had been certain is that the healing had not been instantaneousand the book had 
said that it wasnt supposed to be.
Within the last few days of the voyage, the air had grown warmer and damper, and 
the heavy long-sleeved gray carpenters shirt had gotten uncomfortably warm. 
That had forced Kharl to purchase a short-sleeved gray shirt from the ships 
slop chest at more than hed wished to spend, but the shirt was well-made and 
far more comfortable than the heavier winter shirt.
As the Seastag continued southeast, the coastline of Hamor resolved itself into 
a line of whitish cliffs that rose to the south over calm and light blue waters. 
A good three kays seaward from those waters was a line of foaming water where 
waves broke over a reef.
Kharl stood at the bow on the starboard side. East of the Seastag but farther 
out to sea, a dark-hulled vessel without rigging steamed westward. As it drew 
nearer, Kharl could see the white metallic finish of gun turrets, two long guns 
to a turret, two turrets forward, and one aft.
Thats a Hamorian light cruiser, offered Hagen from behind Kharl. Newer 
class. Three turrets. Older ones just have two, one fore and one aft.
Kharl could sense worry behind the captains words. Do they attack 
merchanters?
Not that I know of. But the emperors been building up his fleet all with 
bigger guns.
Never saw a ship like that. Lord West has two ships with single turrets fore 
and aft. Lord West might have had more, for all Kharl knew, but hed seen two.
No one else has ships with that kind of power, except Reduce, and no one knows 
exactly what the black mages have. Hagen snorted. No one else has the ability 
to mine and forge that much metal. They say the ironworks at Luba produce half 
the worlds iron. The whole city is a forge, and you can walk anywhere, anytime, 
in the light of the furnaces. I dont know as I believe all thatbut thats 
where all the engines and plates for the Hamorian fleet come from. He glanced 
to the south, nodding. They do everything big in Hamor.
Kharl followed the captains gaze. At the point of a peninsula abeam of the ship 
was a tall stone tower with a shimmering dome. Kharl studied the tower.
Thats the northwest light tower, offered Hagen. At night, theres a beam of 
light that sweeps across the waters. More wrecks than you can count on the 
Heartbreak Reef there.
Even with the light?
Theres fog and storms and sometimes at night brigands will light fires 
farther west and use canvas to mimic the light. Hamorian fleet patrols the 
waters, but they cant get inshore, not with the reefs. Sometimes they turn 
their guns on the ship-breakers. Theyve been known to
a few. Turned a lot of rock into gravel in the process.
Kharl pondered that. Guns that could fire four kays over the reefs
and hit the shore?
Hagen cleared his throat. Wouldnt be taking that staff ashore, not in 
Swartheld. Folk here dont take kindly to Reduce. Never have. One place that 
doesnt fear the blacks. Dont think Reduce even sends black-staffers here any 
longer.
Do you know why? asked Kharl.
Something way back the mage who founded Reduce they say he destroyed a 
Hamorian war fleet with weather magery, except for a few ships that he refitted 
into his own fleet and that he refused to pay the emperor a single copper
A single mage went out and attacked the Hamorian fleet?
Doubtful mind youve got, cooper. Hagen laughed. Wasnt like that. They and 
the white mages of Fairven were trying to squash Reduce before it got started. 
This mageCreslin, that was his namedestroyed the invasion fleet. Emperors 
dont like that.
That must have happened a long time ago, and theyre still upset?
No one in Hamor ever forgets anything, the captain replied dryly. They dont 
learn much new, but they dont forget. Thats why some captains arent welcome 
here. Tread lightly onshore. Hagen laughed again and turned back toward the 
poop deck.
Kharl looked back toward the stone tower and the white cliffs. Were most people 
like that, never forgetting, and holding hard to hatred for generations, so long 
that most of the rest of the world had long since forgotten the cause?
LXII
Of all the ports the Seastag had visited while Kharl was aboard, Swartheld was 
the busiest. In the late afternoon, the harbor was filled with ships, some 
anchored in deeper waters offshore, others tied at the long and wide piers. 
Another set of piers ran along the far side of the bay, but all the vessels at 
those piers were the black-hulled warships of various sizes, all steam-powered, 
with iron hulls and a white superstructure and white gun turrets. Kharl had 
counted over thirty such vessels, and mooring space for at least triple that 
number, and he understood better Hagens wariness of a land with so many 
warships.
He had to wonder about all that iron and all that powder. Supposedly, a white 
mage could fire gunpowder or cammabark. Did all the ironand the ocean 
itselfprotect the ships? Or were there mages on board as well?
Kharl glanced out from the quarterdeck at the pier where the Seastag was tied. 
It was not only long, but a good hundred cubits wide, with wagons lined up for 
loading and off-loading, and vendors with handcarts pushing them from ship to 
ship. The voices of the vendors filled the air.
Silks, silks the finest silks from Atla
 the finest wools from Reduce and Brysta
Spices brinn from Candar, brinn and astra
Tools iron tools, Hamors finest from the works at Luba There were so many 
street and cart vendors that at times the teamsters driving the wagons being 
loaded and unloaded had to wait, or actually drive their teams into the crowds 
to force them away from the ships. While Brysta had peddlers and vendors, the 
numbers and variety were nothing compared to those on just the one pier where 
the Seastag was tied.
For once, Kharl did not have an evening watch, but the late-morning watch the 
next day. So he had decided to investigate Swartheld, despite limited coins. He 
had not drawn any of his pay recently, preferring to
leave it on account with Hagen, suspecting hed need all of it when the Seastag 
reached Austra.
If youre going ashore, offered Ghart, best be real careful. Any place said 
to be the wellspring of chaos, Hamor is. If you were one of the younger men, Id 
caution you about the girls never seen such lovelies, and you go with em, 
never will again. Probably end up working in the great ironworks at Luba, or 
lugging stone on that Great Highway the emperors building and rebuilding
Kharl hadnt heard of the Great Highway, but he didnt need an explanation, 
except perhaps why the Hamorians wanted to call everything great.
Drugged wine or ale?
Or just a cosh on the back of the head. Ghart snorted. No matter what we say, 
well lose someone. Usually one of the younger crew. Always someone who knows 
better.
Anything else I should watch?
Watch everything, Ghart suggested, his voice wry. The captain
does.
Kharl nodded. Ill be back before dark.
Thats what they all say. Ghart laughed good-naturedly.
Even before Kharl was halfway down the gangway, he felt a strangeness wash over 
him, a feeling that was both familiar and totally unfamiliar. What was the 
feeling? Why was it familiar? When he reached the end of the gangway and his 
boots rested on the wide stone wharf, he moved back, less than a body length 
from the hull of the Seastag. There, he took a deep breath and tried to recall 
where he had sensed that same feeling.
After a moment, he recalled. That feeling had been in Southport, when he had 
been at the site of the ancient ruins, with its deep-seated mixture of order and 
chaos. The port area of Swartheld felt similar, except there was more chaos 
swirling around, diffuse chaos, and that was what had felt both familiar and 
unfamiliar.
Carefully, Kharl began to walk down the pier, toward the buildings beyond the 
shoreward end of the pier. He kept his eyes moving, and his order-chaos senses 
alert. He passed a cart with an open grill, and the aroma of spiced roasted fowl 
made his mouth water.
The best fowl in Swartheld Those words were followed by another set with the 
same intonation, but in a tongue unknown to Kharl. A third language followed 
before the vendor returned to the Candarian
version of Brystanalthough Kharl couldnt honestly have said he knew whether 
Brystan was a version of Candarian or the other way around.
Cottons cottons shirts for the summer heat That vendor also pitched his 
wares in several languages.
Indentured slaves young men, young women in the best of health
Kharl glanced across the pier, where a young man and a girlish woman were 
displayed, standing on a wagon bed, chained to the frame, wearing little but 
cloths around their loins.
 in the best of health and form
Turning away, Kharl stepped to his right, then stopped as a four-horse team 
slowly moved out toward the Seastag. After the wagon passed, he continued 
walking, keeping some distance between himself and the peddlers and others on 
the wharf. Ahead of him, somewhere near the end of the pier, Kharl could sense 
the unseen swirling whiteness that marked a chaos-wizard, although the whiteness 
was not as strong as that of the wizard he had confronted in Brysta.
He eased to the edge of the pier away from the chaos-wizard, closer to a 
three-masted clipper, an ancient vessel without steam power and with an ornate 
carved figure of a woman with extravagant physical charms under the bowsprit. He 
stopped beside a bollard and bent, as if to check his boot, his back shielded by 
the bulk of the bollard, as he let his own senses study the whiteness on the far 
side of the pier and inshore.
He could feel nothing except the whiteness. He straightened, then continued in 
along the pier on the side away from the white miasma of chaos.
Four darker-skinned men wearing short-sleeved shirts and trousers of a light 
khaki fabric marched onto the pier from the stone-paved causeway perpendicular 
to it. Each wore a khaki cap with a bronze starburst set in a blue oval. They 
also carried polished oak truncheons and wore shorts words at their beltsand 
pistols. Kharl had heard that the Hamo-rians used firearms, but he had never 
seen any closely. He almost could have reached out with his senses and touched 
the shells and the powder within, not that he could have touched off the powder, 
not with order, but a brush of chaos might have done so, even within the ordered 
metal shell casings.
Directly behind the four armsmen, clearly being escorted by them, was an older 
and gray-haired man who also wore a uniform, but of black and orange. The older 
man carried no weapons, and the only insignia he bore was a heavy silver chain 
from which hung a white bronze starburst
medallion.
Along with the others on the pier, Kharl stopped and watched as the five halted 
opposite a dark red cart. Belatedly, Kharl recognized two things. First, the 
miasma of chaos was surrounding a thin man dressed in flowing green, and second, 
the man in orange and black was also a wizard, but his chaos power was 
contained, so that until he was within ten cubits or so, even Kharls 
order-chaos senses had not sensed the power held within some sort of shields.
The four men in khaki set themselves so that two flanked the uniformed wizard on 
each side. Light gathered around the figure in orange and black, and the crowd 
moved back once more, creating a circle around the thin man in flowing green.
You, began the uniformed wizard addressing the man in green. You have 
attempted the practice of wizardry without the permission of the emperor. You 
have not presented yourself for examination, and you have hidden from others 
that you employed the forces of chaos to deceive and to profit personally. You 
have preyed upon out-landers
A resigned expression fell across the face of the man in green. I did present 
myself, honored mage. I presented myself, but none would see me, save that I 
presented golds I do not have. One cannot
Silence!
The man in greens voice continued. I have not used wizardry. I have deceived 
no one. All I have done is to be too poor to provide golds
A whitish red fireball appeared at the fingertips of the uniformed wizard, then 
flared toward the man in green. Whhhsttt!!!
A white dome appeared around the man in green, and for a moment that dome was 
surrounded by the white fires of chaos, but the man in green remained behind his 
shield.
Kharl tried to sense what it was that the green wizard had done, but before he 
could truly and fully sense the chaos-shield, the gray-haired wizard flung a 
second firebolt, and the shield collapsed into a pillar of white fire.
Kharl had to blink, and when he could see, where the man in green had stood 
there was but a small pile of whitish ash in the midst of a black greasy smear 
on the grayish stones of the pier.
The will of His Mightiness! Striking down evil where it occurs, intoned the 
gray-haired wizard. Then he turned and walked back off the end of the pier.
Even from the far side of the wharf, Kharl had noted the fine sheen of sweat on 
the surviving wizards faceand the much-lowered level of chaos that remained 
locked around him. Clearly, using that kind of power took much energy.
At the faintest sense of someone too close to him, Kharls hand lashed out, 
slamming down on the wrist of a young cutpurse. As the carpenter whirled, a thin 
knife clattered on the stones, and two other youths began to run.
Another man in tan appeared, his truncheon smacked the cutpurse across the 
temple, and the youth went to his knees. Whiteness flashed from somewhere else.
Kharl looked at the Hamorian patroller, or Watch, or whatever keepers of the 
peace were called in Swartheld.
You were very quick, sailor.
Just lucky, ser, Kharl replied, noting that the crowd had moved away from him 
and the patroller. He could also see the Hamorian wizard returning, something he 
did not like at all. With the wizard were the other four patrollersand two 
dazed-looking youths with blank faces. Kharl could sense some sort of chaos laid 
over them.
You are from Reduce? The wizard looked directly at Kharl.
No, ser. I am from Brysta, and I am the second carpenter on the Seastag.
The wizard looked at Kharl for a long moment, and Kharl could sense some other 
sort of power, grayish, brushing him lightly, like the touch of an unseen 
spider, but he remained still and waited.
So it would seem. Did you see what happened here a few moments ago?
Yes, ser. You destroyed a wizard who had not followed the laws of Hamor.
Those laws apply to all who walk the soil of Hamor. Do you understand that?
Yes, ser.
Good. The wizard gestured to the patrollers. Take the cutpurses to the 
transfer gaol. He looked at Kharl. They will spend five years or morecutting 
and moving stone for the Great Highway. That is a light punishment. They could 
have gone to the furnaces at Luba.
Kharl wanted to lick his dry lips. He did not. I understand.
I believe you do, carpenter. Good day. Again, the wizard turned, and this time 
five patrollers followed him, herding the three captives
before them.
As they walked away, and those in the crowd gave Kharl passing looks before 
moving on, he just stood by the stone column marking the end of the pier. The 
wizard had delivered a clear message without spelling it out. The carpenter 
pulled himself together, then left the pier and turned left, toward the part of 
the waterfront that had looked to hold shops and taverns.
Once Kharl was off the pier and onto the street that fronted the harbor, he 
could move more freely, without feeling so crowded. By the time he had walked 
past the end of the next pier, one that held but a single small sloop, there 
were almost no peddlers or carts, just people heading in various directions, or 
standing before shop windows, or coming in or out of the shops. Compared to 
Brysta or any other port he had visited, it
was crowded.
Most of the shops seemed to carry fabrics. He counted four shops in a rowone 
dealing just in silks, another in woolens, a third in linens, and a fourth in 
cottons. In those four shops were as many bolts of cloth as in all of Brysta, 
from what Kharl knew.
He walked on, but then couldnt help but stop at the display window of a 
cooperage in the next block. The barrels were good, but not nearly so good as 
what hed crafted, especially the hogshead he saw on display. Yet the cooperage 
was clearly profitable.
The next shop was one that handled blades. Kharl found himself wincing as he 
looked at the gleaming array in the display window sabres, cutlasses, a 
menacing hand-and-a-half sword, an even longer and wider broadsword, and all 
manner of knives and dirks. Hed never cared much for blades, but hed also 
never felt the revulsion that he did as he beheld the assemblage before him. Was 
there a difference between working blades and weapons? If so, why did he feel 
that way? Or had he
always, and simply not recognized it? With a shake of his head, he turned and 
continued to the corner. Across the narrower cross street was a tavern, and one 
thronged from the sounds issuing forthdespite the fact that it was still 
afternoon.
Kharl turned left, away from the harbor, and walked along the side of the 
street, passing first a closed doorway without any sign or indication of what 
lay behind it, then a wider doorway, with a sign showing a bed, and the words 
beneath beginning with Rooms for the night in Brystan and repeating in other 
languages.
Girls you want one? A veiled woman beckoned from across the street. Come and 
see. Take your pleasure
Kharl kept his smile to himself and continued to walk, this time past a rope 
shop.
A rope shop? In any other port, rope would be in a chandlery. Was Swartheld so 
large that a merchant could sell just ropes of various types? He glanced through 
the open doorway, taking in all the coils of ropes and lines.
A sickish-sweet odor drifted down and across Kharl, a scent compounded of 
something burning, perhaps incense, with something stronger. He faintly recalled 
the smell, then nodded. Kernashthe substance smoked by those with little hope 
and less future.
Kharl continued toward the next major street. The grayish wooden buildings in 
the first block gave way to painted structures in the second, and then two- and 
three-story stone-walled buildings in the third, and then even taller 
structures, with carved cornices and wide windows above the first floors. Kharl 
emerged from the side street and turned right once more, glad to find himself on 
more of a boulevard, where several shops actually had flowers in planters beside 
their windows.
The second shop on the side of the street away from the harbor held 
hatsbroad-brimmed hats for women. The third shop was a tailors, and it 
displayed jackets and colorful vests, all of silk or light fine cotton, but for 
men.
Beyond the immaculate shops with their wide glass windows and open archways was 
a cafe under a white-and-black-striped awning. Both men and women sat at tables 
in the shade. Most wore shimmering white, the men in white trousers and boots, 
and embroidered white shirts with lace and designs in silver, and the women in 
loose white robes of some light fabric. The women also had filmy white scarfs 
across their bare
shoulders, as if the scarfs would be used as cover or veils when they left
the cafe.
Kharl strained to hear what they said, but realized that they must all have been 
speaking in Hamorian, because he understood not a word.
In his plain and worn carpenters grays, Kharl felt very out of place. He kept 
walking.
LXIII
After returning to the Seastag just before sunset on the first day in Swartheld, 
Kharl thought, and read, then slept less than easily. He dreamed of white 
wizards in burgundy, in black and orange, and in flowing greenall speaking in 
languages he did not understand and doing all manner of wizardly tasks he could 
not have explained, let alone duplicated. He asked them, and they ignored him, 
as if he did not exist, and went on with their incomprehensible tasks.
He woke early the next morning, pooled in sweat, and not just from the heat and 
dampness of Swartheld. After deciding that he could not sleep longer, he eased 
out of his forecastle bunk, and slipped out with his clothes. He washed up as 
quietly as he could and then made his way
topside.
In the gray light before dawn, Kharl stood at the railing near the bow. Even in 
the open air, there was not so much as a hint of a breeze. A light haze blurred 
the outlines of the buildings and the more distant piers and ships, giving them 
an air of unreality. For the moment, the pier was empty, without vendors and 
without teamsters and wagons, and Kharl relished the comparative silence. Even 
the city seemed hushed, and Kharl could hear the lapping of the harbor waters 
against the pier and against the hull of the Seastag.
In time, he heard footsteps, but he did not turn.
You came back early, Rhylla said. With all your coins, Id wager.
I didnt take that many, Kharl admitted. I had an ale, and some supper. The 
ale was worth it.
They like their foods hot and spicy here. I think most folks in warm
places do, but for the life of me, I dont understand why youd want to be 
hotter in a place thats already too hot. But they do.
I dont, either, the carpenter replied, absently blotting a forehead he hadnt 
realized was so damp until Rhylla had reminded him of the heat.
Why did you come back early? If I could ask?
Something about the place bothered me, Kharl paused. And I saw a wizard, and 
he was wearing a uniform.
You didnt know that? Rhylla paused. All wizards or mages have to work for 
the emperor. He pays well, they say. Course theres no alternative.
I saw that, too. He destroyed a man he said was a wizard who had broken the 
laws of Hamor. Something about being examined.
Huh didnt know that. Just knew that all the wizards and mages worked for the 
emperor. Anyone who tries to get one to do something for him without the 
permission of the emperorthats a death sentence.
A death sentence? Then Kharl nodded. In a way, it definitely made sense, at 
least from the emperors point of view. He controls the mages, and that means 
he controls everything.
I wouldnt say that the marshals are pretty strong, they say.
But if the mages and wizards are all under the protection of the emperor? 
Kharl looked at the third mate.
Oh frig see what you mean.
After Rhylla left, Kharl turned back to the railing to study the port city. 
Somehow, it wasnt just a coincidence that the two strongest lands in the world 
were the two where mages and wizards were placed to support those who governed. 
Reduce had some sort of council where the Brethren had a strong voice, and the 
emperor controlled the mages in Hamor. Candar had once been strong, but when 
Reduce had destroyed Fairven and the White Order, Candar had fragmented into 
conflicting lands. From what Kharl had seen, most of Candar, except for 
Southport and possibly Diehl, was in decline. Even Brysta looked shabby, but 
both Nylan and Swartheld looked vigorous.
Still, while all that might be true, what could a mere carpenter do about it?
LXIV
On the following afternoon, with one more day of loading to go before the 
Seastag was ready to put back to sea, Kharl decided to make another foray into 
Swartheld. Hed picked the late afternoon because he was off duty, because he 
wasnt certain he wanted to deal with the human creatures of the night who 
frequented port cities, and because he had the feeling that there well might be 
more of the emperors mages about later in the evening.
When he left the pier, he forced himself to remain on the lower harbor way as he 
walked southward along the edge of the water. He hadnt thought of it before, 
but none of the merchanters had iron hulls, and all had sails. Some were even 
full-rigged and without any form of steam power. Was that because of the cost of 
coal? Or for some other reason he
didnt know?
Yet warships were all iron-hulled, even the smaller gunboats of Brysta, and he 
had seen no merchanters with cannon. That made sense, in a fashion, because a 
white wizard could touch off gunpowder or cam-mabark and turn a wooden ship into 
an inferno. He still had no idea whether it was the combination of ordered iron 
vessels and the order of the sea that protected warships from mages or whether 
it was something else. Hed searched The Basis of Order, but as usual had found 
no
definitive answers.
Ahead, there was a small crowd of men standing opposite an open window. When 
Kharl neared, he could see that a single woman danced slowly in the wide 
unglassed window of the tavern. Her body was covered with the filmy fabric Kharl 
had seen on the veil-scarfs of the women at the cafeexcept the fabric was 
reddish and stained with the darkness of sweat. With the thinness of the fabric, 
little of the womans figure was left to mystery, and her figure was good, Kharl 
had to admit, although not any better than Charees had once been.
At that thought, Kharl swallowed. The sadness and emptiness still came when he 
least expected it.
You want to enjoy one like this? Just a silver for a half glass and shes all 
yours, sailor man. The big man who made the offer topped Kharl by half a head, 
and Kharl was not small.
Shes too costly for my wallet, Kharl said with a forced laugh, easing past 
the man and along the quieter space of the street immediately past the brothel. 
Was it just sadness? Or the sense that he and Charee had lost something over the 
years? Had they ever had that something? Or had their consorting just been an 
arrangement set up by their families and held together in the beginning by 
physical attraction and later by the boys? He shook his head. Why was he even 
asking himself such questions? He couldnt do much about what was past and gone.
Across the harbor road he caught sight of a pair of Hamorian patrollers in their 
khaki uniforms. He watched the pair as they walked along the street. The two 
never relaxed, but kept moving, and each held a truncheon at the ready.
Abruptly, after passing the patrollers, who had scarcely given Kharl a glance, 
the carpenter turned left, away from the harbor, and began to walk up the gently 
sloping street toward the better sections of Swartheld. Farther south, he 
discovered, he had to walk a greater distance east before he reached the more 
prosperous areaalmost eight blocks. But he did find another boulevard with 
shops and flowers and cafes with awnings and wide verandasand he felt almost as 
out of place as he had the first time.
Yet, why should he have felt out of place? He wondered. He was nicely dressed, 
if not so extravagantly as those on the boulevard. He was not poor, or without 
coins. He had a respectable trade, and even a position, low as a subofficer on a 
merchanter might be.
He kept walking as he saw another set of Hamorian patrollers. This pair walked 
with empty hands, their truncheons in their belts, and they smiled, although 
their eyes still never stopped surveying the street and the shops. A woman, her 
head covered by the filmy scarf that was almost transparent, nodded to the 
patrollers. Both returned the smile, an expression of friendliness, but 
continued on their way.
From a distance, he saw another of the mages in black and orange, again an older 
man, accompanying a single patroller in khaki. The two turned eastward, moving 
even farther from the harbor. Kharl thought
about following the pair, but almost immediately dismissed the idea. Instead, he 
turned back toward the harbor, hoping to find somewhere to eat, less fancy than 
where he was, but quieter and better than along the
harbor way.
Finding such a place was harder than Kharl had thought it would be, and he ended 
up walking along side streets for what seemed almost a glass before he found 
himself before a low, dark redbrick building with tan window trim. The still air 
held unfamiliar scents of food, but without the rancidness of grease, and there 
was little hint of chaos about the premisesexcept for the thin residual 
whiteness that seemed everywhere in Swartheld. Kharl stepped inside.
Immediately, a servingwoman in tan shorts and shirt, with a dark brown apron and 
sandals, greeted him. Yes?
A good meal and ale or lager?
She looked puzzled.
Food.
She beckoned, and Kharl followed her into a long narrow room with a high 
ceiling. The off-white plaster gave an impression of coolness. Kharl settled 
into the small table against the wall.
Drink what kind? the server asked.
Light ale? Lager?
She said something to another server, and got an answer back, then nodded at 
Kharl before slipping away. Within moments, a squarish older woman set a dark 
brown mug before Kharl. Be two coppers.
Kharl extended three coins.
She studied them and nodded. Fares simple tonight. Weve got burhka, cutlets, 
sea trout, and fowl in lemonweed with Luban noodles.
How much?
All the same. Four coppers.
Ill try the last.
Its the best. Be a bit. She slipped away.
Kharl settled back into the chair and took another sip of the ale, enjoying it 
as it washed away the last of the dust in his throat.
Two younger men, but well dressed in white shirts and multicolored silk vests, 
sat at the corner table. Although their voices were not that loud, they seemed 
to carry to Kharl, perhaps along the smooth white plaster of the wall.
 dont understand the edict just applies to outlanders trading here
 not just to outlanders like us another one harsher for Hamorians
 no brimstone to Valmurl but to Bruel? Why one Austran port and not the 
other? Not as though Lord Estloch has a huge fleet
 no saltpeter or cammabark, either
 doesnt make sense Valmurlans dont use firearms dont use powder except 
for cannon, and theyve got few enough of those were supposed to give up good 
trade and coins
 careful
 mages dont come down here
 dont know where theyll turn up walls sometimes report to the patrollers, 
too
 still makes no sense can ship dried fruits, but not grain?
 rich the only ones who can buy dried fruits everyone needs bread
Their voices died away as a server brought two platters and a basket of bread to 
their table.
Kharl sipped his ale and considered their words. He didnt care for the 
implications, not at all, and he knew hed need to mention the matter to Hagen, 
although he would not have been surprised if the captain already knew.
LXV
JTlagen had not been aboard the Seastag when Kharl had returned the night 
before, but immediately after eating the next morning, the carpenter made his 
way to the masters cabin, where he knocked gingerly on the door. Ser its 
Kharl. Id just heard something thought you ought to know
Come on in, carpenter. Hagens voice was polite.
Kharl eased through the hatch door into the captains cabin. The
space was large, but somehow not so large as Kharl would have guessed, with a 
double bunk built into the rear bulkhead, and a small closet, half-open, set 
into the left bulkhead. In the middle of the cabin was a circular white oak 
table, anchored to the deck, and behind that sat the captain. A stack of papers 
and parchment was at his left, and he still held a pen.
What is it?
Captain last night, I was eating at a place well away from the harbor, and 
there were two traders, outlanders Kharl went on to recount what the two had 
said, word for word.
When Kharl finished, Hagen nodded. He did not seem surprised. Id heard about 
the brimstone and saltpeter but I didnt know they could sell in Bruel. A 
darkness dropped across his countenance, before he forced a smile. I hadnt 
heard about the grain because we dont usually carry it, but its not 
surprising. Hamors been looking at invading Austra for years, and every so 
often they embargo goods, usually military equipment. Theyve had an embargo on 
gunpowder and cammabark for two years, but they decided on expanding that about 
a season ago to include brimstone and saltpeter and a few other goods.
Kharl tried to keep his own surprise to himself. The two traders he had 
overheard had clearly been talking about an edict recently issued, and Hagen had 
known about it for nearly a season. Is that why were carrying brimstone back, 
ser?
Hagen grinned. You noted that, did you?
I noted that it wasnt all off-loaded at Dellash, Kharl replied. Why is Hamor 
going after Austra? Arent some of the lands in Candar better targets?
Some are weaker, but Candar lies close to Reduce. Also, its a long voyage from 
Swartheld, and under steam power, a costly one, with nowhere to stop for coal. 
Austra is much closer, and considerably smaller.
And Lord Estloch does not have many warships?
He does not.
Kharl frowned. But Austra is united under a single ruler, while Nordla has the 
four Lords of the Quadrant, and they agree on little, and have even fewer 
warships.
Nordla is far less prosperous, is it not? Hagen laughed ironically. What 
would be the point of spending thousands of golds, hundreds of
thousands of golds perhaps, if one could not plunder the land to recover it, 
then tariff it heavily? Why does one seek to conquer anything? After the 
briefest of pauses, Hagen went on. Some think rulers seek fame and glory in 
war, but both are fleeting. No most wars are fought for gain, either to keep 
another land from gaining an advantage in power and wealth or to extend ones 
own power and wealth.
Thats not true if your land is attacked.
No but you can wagerwith heavy oddsthat the one attacking has planned on 
great gain. Unless the ruler is mad, and few mad rulers survive to make war, and 
fewer still survive their wars. Of course, such madness is the ruin of their 
land and their people.
The Emperor of Hamor is not mad. He controls his own lands too well for that, 
suggested Kharl.
Who would know? questioned Hagen. In a land as vast as Hamor, the governing 
is done by the emperors minions. Good minions can conceal much about a ruler. 
The captain snorted. But you are right. The emperor is most astute, and all the 
world may suffer for that.
Kharl could see that, and, despite the safety of the streets of Swartheld, he 
was less than certain that he would wish such a rule in either Nordla or Austra. 
He almost frowned, thinking that Lord Wests son Egen wouldif he had the 
chancegovern with the power of the emperor and even less wisdom.
That troubles you? Well it should.
Kharl did not correct the captain. That was all I heard, but I thought you 
should hear about it. He smiled. I thought you might already know, but I was 
not sure.
You see more than you let on, Kharl. That is a good trait. Hagen smiled in 
return. Youre welcome to remain as crew so long as you desire.
I thank you, ser. Im still thinking of going ashore in Austra, but I will 
consider your offer, and I do thank you.
Its my gain as well. Hagen laughed, then looked down at the sheets of paper 
on the table before him.
Kharl stepped back and eased the hatch door closed as he left. The captain had 
known about the embargoes, and he remained worried about them. Despite Hagens 
laughter, the worry had shown through.
As he walked back across the main deck, Kharl realized once more that there was 
far more to Hagen than merely a trading captain. Kharl
had heard the references to other ships, but would even a merchant factor with a 
number of ships have known what the Emperor of Hamor was planning a season in 
advance? Kharl didnt think so, and that left the question of what exactly Hagen 
might be, honorable as he appeared to Kharl and to the other crew members on 
Hagens vessels.
LXVI
When the Seastag had cast off from the pier at Swartheld, starting the voyage 
back to her home port of Valmurl, one of the crew, as Ghart had predicted, had 
failed to returnthe fresh-faced young Wylat. Thinking of Wylat toiling on the 
Great Highway or the fiery furnaces of Luba, Kharl had shaken his head. He could 
but hope the Fleuryl never ported in Swartheld, because he had his doubts about 
Arthals wisdom. But there was nothing he could do about either young mans 
fate.
The ship had traveled no more than a handful of kays northeast beyond sight of 
land when the seas began to turn rough, and bitter chill permeated the winds 
that had raised the waves and buffeted the Seastag. The remainder of the 
eightday journey was rough, although the seas had subsided somewhat as the 
Seastag neared Austra, and Kharl had found himself more and more fretful once 
the coastline appeared.
The winter sun hung low in the west, offering little warmth, as the Seastag 
steamed through the gray harbor waters toward the outermost pier of Valmurl 
harbor. Kharl was glad for his heavy jacket as he stood by the railing and 
looked at Valmurl. Unlike Brysta, which faced west on the Eastern Ocean, Valmurl 
faced eastand the Great Western Ocean. Valmurl was also an older port city, but 
set on a flat plain on the delta of the River Val. The bay on which the city was 
located was more open, and had no fortifications like the twin harbor forts of 
Brysta. While there were hills to the north, they looked to be low and some 
distance way and were covered entirely with a whiteness that could only be 
snow.
Farther back from the waterfront, Kharl could see taller structures, even stone 
towers. Thin lines of smoke rose from hundreds of chimneys into the cold air, 
and a smoky haze hung over the city. The smoke and
near-twilight shadows mixed together and imparted a gray cast to Valmurl, 
despite the late-afternoon sunlight that glinted on the gray waters between the 
ship and the city.
Furwyl eased up beside Kharl. You still intending to leave us here?
Id planned to, Kharl replied. Hoped to find a place as a cooper somewhere in 
Austra.
Youre a fine carpenter, and a good man to have around in a tight place. Hate 
to see you spend the rest of your life making barrels for someone else. Hard 
thing to make your way in a land not your own, the first mate pointed out. 
Youre already a subofficer on your first voyage. Not many do that.
Kharl knew Furwyl was right, yet he hesitated. Making my way here couldnt be 
that much harder than where I came from. Even as Kharl spoke, he wondered. Hed 
still have been a cooper, with a consort and sons, if hed not been so unlucky 
to have heard Egen in the back alley. Or would he? The druids had suggested that 
his situation would have worsened anyway. Did that mean matters could be worse 
in Val murl? Or Vizyn, if he got there? Leastwise, I hope not.
Furwyl chuckled. Were goin in to refit. Be in the yards two, may three 
eightdays. You dont find what you want, get back here afore we leavebet the 
captaind take you back as carpenter second. Not the billet hell fill except 
with someone he knows, and he knows all the ships carpenters in Austra. 
Leastwise, hed put you on one of his other ships.
How many does he have?
Ten. At least, that was the last number I heard. All something with sea in 
em Seahound, Seafox 
And he still sails? Rhylla had mentioned once that Hagen had other ships, but 
Kharl had not realized just how many.
Hes a man who likes what he does, Furwyl said. And he likes to keep good 
people. Especially carpenters.
Are good ones that hard to come by?
Harder than youd think. You get youngsters barely more than apprentices know 
a few things and think they know more, and mostly you get older men who love 
their ale so much that the only time theyre sober is at sea.
Where are the good ones? asked Kharl.
Thatd be a secret. Furwyl grinned, then added, With the
shipwrights, but they dont take many, and you got to be family or close to it, 
or be owed more than most would owe.
That made sense. Still
Thank you, Kharl finally said. And thank the captain. But I think I need to 
look and see if anyone needs a good cooper.
You can tell him yourself in the morning when he pays off the crew. Just 
thought Id put in a word with you. Furwyl nodded and turned.
Was Kharl making a mistake? Another mistake?
Kharl didnt think so, but then, he hadnt thought so before.
LXVII
Ihe morning after the Seastag ported in Valmurl, and after muster, Kharl placed 
his few belongings into his pack, now mostly full, and, staff in hand, headed up 
to the main deck to see Hagen. There he waited in the chill air until after the 
regular deckhands and riggers had been paid. Then he stepped forward to the 
small table behind which the captain sat.
You still intent on leaving us, carpenter? Hagens voice was cheerful, but 
Kharl could catch a sense of worry behind it.
I dont know about intent, ser. Its just that well I wouldnt feel right if 
I didnt try to be what Ive spent my life learning and doing.
Hagen nodded. When you put it that way, its hard not to see it so. The 
captain paused and looked down at the ledger before him, turning the pages until 
he was close to the end. Your crew share, right now, is fifteen silvers, and I 
owe you five silvers and three for your wages.
Two golds? Kharl certainly hadnt expected that. Hed come aboard hoping to get 
off with what hed had in his leather pouch. Yes, ser. Thats more than fair.
Hagen shook his head. Its fair. No more, no less.
Kharl sensed the others honest feelings and nodded.
You dont have to go, Hagen said. Id have you as carpenter second, and 
carpenter first when Tarkyn decides hes had enough of the sea.
I only asked for passage to Austra, ser.
I know, but Id still have you. Hagen paused. Where are you headed?
Id thought Vizyn, but anywhere that I could be a cooper.
Coopers there are more than enough here in Valmurl. You ought to stay on as a 
ships carpenter. Hagen laughed. Then, Id be the last one to tell any man 
what he should be doing. That I would be. He fingered his chin. Three good 
coopers here in Valmurl. None as good as you, in truth. Oldest one is Dezant. 
Hes off the Traders Square. Then theres Kundark, and he does mostly slack 
cooperage, and his place is on the south side of the city, by the Guard Barracks 
there. You might try Chalart. Hes on the north side, back of the refit yards. 
He supplies barrels for merchanters, mostly. You can tell any of them that I 
sent you. It might help, wont hurt.
You dont like Valmurl go and see Vizyn, but youd better take a coaster. Its 
a good nine hundred kays. Of the ones in port now, take the Norther or the 
Southshield tell em I sent you. You dont like it, then turn around and come 
back. Offers open until we leave Valmurl.
Thank you. How long will you be here? For refitting? Kharl added quickly.
Half a season, Id guess. Takes longer to refit in winter, but theres little 
enough trading to be done, and Id like to have the engineers go over the engine 
after that problem off Worrak.
Is there anything special I should know about Valmurl? Kharl asked. Things 
thatd be obvious to you, but not to me? If you dont mind, ser.
Valmurl is much like Brysta, save that it is the capital of all Austra, and 
there is but one lord. Lord Estloch has a good heart, and, unlike many rulers, 
he would be as fair as possible and still hold order within the streets. Still 
dark streets are dangerous especially harborside, and there are few patrollers 
past midnight. The wealthy are as they are in any city.
If those words were not a warning, Kharl wasnt a cooper. Thank you.
You change your mind, and therell be a place for you, if not here, then on one 
of the other ships.
I appreciate that, ser, and Ill just have to see.
That you will. Good fortune.
After hoisting his pack onto his shoulders and securing his silvers and
coppers in his concealed leather pouch, Kharl walked down the gangway of the 
Seastag, perhaps for the last time, and past the wagons already lined up to 
receive the cargo being off-loaded. While the pier was not so crowded as those 
at Swartheld, more than a score of loaders and others swirled around the area 
opposite the Seastag. Among them, he saw no patrollers, although more than a few 
men carried blades of various styles and lengths.
As Kharl reached the foot of the pier, he saw a wagon, with a platform. On the 
platform stood a blond girl, one certainly younger than Sanyle or Jeka. Despite 
the chill of the morning, the girl wore but the filmiest shift, and in the 
morning light, it was most clear that she wore absolutely nothing beneath, 
except for the bronze cuff on her left ankle, a cuff attached to a bronze chain. 
The chain was bolted to a bronze circlet affixed to the side of the wagon. The 
girls face was pale, and her green eyes carried sadness.
Four huge men with cudgels stood thereone at each corner of the wagon.
A man in a rich deep blue jacket stood on the stones of the street, his voice 
pitched to carry. Beauties for indenture young, beautiful girls His eyes 
took in Kharls staff, and there was the slightest hesitation before he 
continued. Girls for every taste and pleasure
Kharl glanced down the pier toward the Hamorian merchanter tied up beyond the 
Seastag. A blonde beautyand the girl was attractive would be welcome in 
Swartheld. The girls eyes did not meet Kharls or any others.
Blonde redhead any kind of beauty youd like
Kharl turned abruptly, his lips tight together as he walked away from the 
slaver. Indenture or not, the process was slavery. Hed hoped for better in 
Valmurl. His eyes moved from side to side, taking in the handful of people out 
so early. Most seemed well-dressed, and he saw no one in rags or begging.
He thought over Hagens words. Lord Estloch has a good heart would be as fair 
as possible. He understood the message beneath. Lord Estloch was either weak or 
having troubles in holding on to his land. Or perhaps those beneath him had too 
much power. Whatever Hagen had meant exactly, it was clear enough that matters 
were not as Hagen would have had them, and that troubled Kharl, for he knew 
Hagen to be a fair and more than decent captain and man.
Should he seek passage to Vizyn, and seek out Taleas, the scrivener whom Tyrbel 
had written? Or first check with the coopers that Hagen had mentioned? After a 
moment, he decided to visit the coopers in Val-murl. Why travel to a destination 
where the prospects were unknown until he exhausted the possibilities nearer at 
hand?
As he walked along the cobblestoned streets, avoiding the too-frequent potholes 
holding ice and mud, and the gutters that needed cleaning, he studied the shops 
and the narrow-faced brick dwellings squeezed tightly together. For the number 
of dwellings, he saw few enough men and women on the streets, although he still 
saw no beggars or peddlers or tinkers.
Traders Square was six long blocks west of the harbor, but it was still early 
when Kharl reached the square. Despite the winter chill, the air was still, and 
he had unfastened his jacket to keep from getting too warm. He stood at the edge 
of the square for several moments. The square was a good twenty rods in length 
and ten in width, with the center simply an open, paved space. A handful of 
carts had been pulled into place in the center of the square, but some of the 
shops and factors buildings were yet shuttered. The cooperage was on the far 
south side of the square, not exactly on it, but on the corner street leading 
into the square. The building was perhaps another ten cubits wider than Kharls 
had been, and featured double doors in front, with a front loading dock to one 
side. That suggested that there was not a usable alley behind the cooperage.
Kharl shrugged and stepped through the open doors and into a workroom nearly as 
deep as his own had been. He noted more shavings and sawdust than he would have 
preferred, but the cooperage was still relatively neat and clean, and the brick 
walls had been swept and cleaned recently. As he glanced around the shop, Kharl 
could see four figures working. One was slighter and smaller, probably an 
apprentice.
A young man, perhaps four or five years older than Arthal, stepped from the 
workbench at one side to meet Kharl. Ser? His eyes flicked across the staff 
and came back to Kharl.
Im looking for Dezant, Kharl said.
Yes, ser. Hes at the millers right now. Is there anything that I could help 
you with? Are you interested in tight or slack cooperage?
Are you his son? You seem to understand
The young man smiled. Im Elont. There are three of us working with Father.
Hes fortunate, indeed. There mi, ] all so busy.
Valmurl does require many barjv
, lV>
tiously.
But not quite so many as you
Its always better to sell more would interest you, ser?
Im afraid my interest is a shared C] ter, and my father was a cooper. I war^j 
t0 was true, if not telling the entire story.
Elont smiled politely, disappointed. It5 J
So I had heard, and Im glad to see it.
Youd be better off, ser, to remain as i tJ than to open a cooperage here.
I had no thought of opening a cooperatJ tainly not now, but one must think of 
the futn
Youre certain we couldnt sell your ves^
The captain is well aware of your work, J order it, Kharl replied politely. I 
appreJ inclined his head.
Thank you, ser.
Kharl eased out the door, grateful at least j in the shop. Outside, he looked 
around, According to Hagen, Kundark was on the i Guard Barracks. Kharl 
readjusted his pack breath still steaming in the chill air.
Ahead, he glimpsed two children in rag: so shabbily dressed. Onea girlwent to 
solid gray cloak of warmth and style. Khar but her pleading position was all 
too clear.
The man glanced around, twice, stiff* walking away.
A shrill whistle sounded. The boy va viceway, and the girl scrambled to her 
feet/ avoid the patroller who grasped her roug moved closer, he strained to hear 
the patrol^-  begging, you were
 wasnt beggin wasnt
 off to the indenturers Beggings against the Lords Law. You know that.
 no not that
 pretty little thing like you fetch a good price in Hamor wont be cold 
there, either
Kharl winced at the thought of the beggar girl ending up like the girl on the 
dock, but he did not try to interfere, much as he would have liked to, and he 
only watched as the patroller dragged the child down a side street. His guts 
churned, much as he imagined Charee both telling him hed done what was wise and 
asking him why he hadnt done so earlier.
He kept walking, but it was a while before he felt any calmer. A good half glass 
later, he stood across the street from the stone walls surrounding the Guard 
Barracks. He had completed a circuit of the streets facing onto the Barracks, 
but had not seen anything resembling a cooperage to the Barracks. Two uniformed 
figures stood as sentries outside the gate. One was scarcely more than a boy, 
and the other looked to be at least as old as Kharl.
The younger sentry looked at Kharl.
Kharl looked back and, after a moment, the youthful guard dropped his eyes. 
Kharl turned and started down the narrow lanelike street that angled northwest 
from the corner of the barracks. Fifty cubits or so down the lane, in front of a 
seamstresss shop, a white-haired woman in a patched coat swept dust and old 
snow away from the doorway of the shop.
Im looking for Kharl began.
Speak up. You looking for something, fellow?
A cooper named Kundark. Id heard his cooperage was here.
It was. Over there. The woman pointed to the burned-out shell of a building a 
hundred cubits farther along the narrow lane.
From what Kharl could see, the cooperage had been about half the size of 
Dezants shop, and the blaze had not been all that recent. What happened?
The woman shrugged. No one knows. No ones seen Kundark. Consort and son died 
in the fire. Terrible blaze it was.
How did it start?
No one knows. The woman looked away from Kharl and resumed sweeping, muttering 
to herself, Stupid question outland black-staffer.
After a long look at her, and a longer one at the burned ruins, Kharl turned and 
retraced his steps back northward in the general direction of where he had 
understood the refit yard to be.
Valmurl stretched much farther to the north than Kharl had thought, and it was 
close to noon before Kharl reached the workshops on the ancient street opposite 
the refit yard and the three dry docksall empty. The three largest structures 
facing the harbor and yards were shuttered and locked, large barnlike buildings 
whose exterior planks and timbers had weathered into faded gray. Grimy powdered 
snow lay drifted into the corners where the plank walls met the frozen ground or 
the worn and cracked cobblestones of the street.
Kharls face and hands were numb from the chill, even though he had periodically 
thrust his hands up under his jacket.
Between the two shuttered and larger structures on the northern end of the block 
was a smaller building, one with unshuttered windows and a half barrel displayed 
on a bracket to the right of the front loading doors. Kharl made his way to the 
cooperage and, with a shrug, opened the door and stepped inside.
A single gray-haired man straightened from where he stood over a machine that 
looked to Kharl as though it were a combination planer and router of some sort.
Kharl stepped forward. Youre Chalart?
Thats me. The coopers eyes raked across Kharl. You another cooper looking 
for a place? Before Kharl could reply, the wiry man went on. Not enough orders 
for me and my boy, and certainly not enough for another mouth.
How did you know? asked Kharl.
Chalart snorted. You got that look and a pack on your back. Buyers dont wear 
packs. Seen more He shook his head. Wager youre a good cooper, too.
One of the best, Kharl said.
Then why are you here?
Im from Nordla. The lords son didnt care that I stopped his pleasures with 
my neighbors daughter.
Think things be different here?
Id hope no one would want to kill me, Kharl replied ruefully.
You might get that. Chalart studied Kharl. What have you been doing?
Ships carpenter.
Keep doing it. I know a half score of coopers thatd jump for your position.
How did things get so bad? Kharl asked.
Ask the Emperor of Hamor or Lord Estloch. Im just a cooper, trying to hang on 
till things get better. They might, someday. Never know. Chalart looked down at 
the wood in the planer.
Kharl took the hint. Thank you. The best of fortune to you.
And to you.
Once outside, where the wind had shifted and now blew, colder and icier, out of 
the northeast, Kharl studied the refit area, seemingly almost abandoned, from 
the empty dry docks to the cold gray harbor waters with an increasing chopand 
not a single vessel tied to the one pier adjoining the dry docks. After several 
moments, Kharl turned back toward the harbor. Should he spend good silvers to 
get passage to Vizyn to find Taleas and see if the scrivener could help him? If 
he didnt go, how would he know if there might be a place for a cooper? Nine 
hundred kays might make a difference. And it might not.
The walk back south and east was long, but Kharl found the coaster pier by 
midafternoon. Standing at the foot of the pier, he studied both the Norther and 
the Southshield, then decided on the Southshield, a smaller version of the 
Seastagtwin-masted with midships paddle wheels.
He walked down the dock to the ship, and up the gangway to the sailor on watch, 
who could have been Tarkyns younger brother, gray-haired rather than 
white-haired, but square-faced and grizzled. The sailor watched, but did not 
speak as Kharl neared.
I was looking for passage to Vizyn, Kharl said.
Let me get the second. The watchstander rang the bell twice, but said nothing 
more.
Kharl did not wait long for the second mate, a narrow-faced woman within a few 
years of his own age, with gray eyes and short hair.
Were not hiring, she told him bluntly.
I was looking for passage to Vizyn.
You a blackstaffer?
No. I grew up in Brysta. Ive been the carpenter second on the Seastag.
Dont take deadheads.
Ill pay passage, if its not too much. Captain Hagen said to tell you that he 
sent me.
Whyd he say that?
The Seastags going into refit. Ive been his second carpenter, but Id heard 
there might be a need for my skills in Vizyn
The second laughed. Four silvers. Three more for return passage if you decide 
to come back on the same trip.
Is Vizyn that bad?
Its cold. Snow everywhere. Everyone knows everyone else. Dont care for 
outsiders.
Kharl thought. He wasnt going to be a cooper in Valmurl, not when no one would 
take him on and when he didnt have the golds to set up his own shop. The same 
might be true in Vizyn, but would he always look back and wonder if he didnt go 
there and see? When do you leave?
In about a glass.
What sort of quarters? Food?
Four gets you a bunk in a space for two, and meals with the crew. We just run 
two meals a day at sea. Youre the only passenger this run, so you get more 
space. If you need more gear, be back here in a glass. You can pay then.
Kharl smiled wryly. Got all the gear Ill need. You the one who gets
the silvers?
Me or the captain.
Kharl eased the silvers out of his wallet and tendered them.
Welcome aboard. Names Herana.
Kharl, he replied. ;
Ill show you your spaces and then have you meet the captain. She turned.
Kharl followed, noting that the deck was clean and that what he saw of the 
vessel looked shipshape. Then, Hagen had recommended the Southshield.
LXVIII
rue to Heranas words, Captain Harluk had cast off from the coaster pier at 
Valmurl in late afternoon and steamed out of the harbor. Once clear of the 
harbor, Harluk had shut down the engine and kept the Southshield heading due 
east until well after sunset. Then, in the dimness after twilight, in seas that 
were not quite so heavy as those the Seastag had encountered on its way to 
Valmurl, the captain had brought the coaster onto a northerly heading.
Kharls cabin was but big enough for two bunks, one atop the other, although he 
shared it with no one, and there was space enough under the lower bunk for his 
pack. He had been forced to angle the staff to get it to fit through the 
passageway and into the cabin.
Supper on the Southshield had been distinguished mainly by the hot bread and 
peppery gravy spread over slices of meat so salty Kharl hadnt been certain what 
it was, perhaps mutton that had been dried, before being boiled and covered with 
gravy. Still, with the bread, and some hard cheese, and dried apples, Kharl had 
found it far better than most meals he had eaten in the eightdays before signing 
on the Seastag.
In the late twilight, well after eating, Kharl had made his way on deck and 
stood slightly forward of the paddle wheel casing, aft enough that the spray 
from the bow did not mist around him, although there was more spray across the 
deck than on the Seastag, doubtless because of the Southshields narrower beam.
At times, the dark waters shimmered with a luminescence that was not light, but 
the darkness of order. Although Kharl could not have explained how 
order-darkness could create light within the very ocean, he felt and knew that 
somehow that was so.
Now that he was actually on his way to Vizyn, he had more questions of himself.
Why was he spending silvers, so hard gotten, to travel to Vizyn? Just because 
Tyrbel had written Taleas? How could there be a place for a cooper there when 
there were none in Valmurl, certainly much larger?
Or was he carrying out the trip because he had already decided that was what he 
should do? When did a wise man change plans? Why?
Youre a hardy one.
Kharl turned to see the second mate less than three cubits away, almost lost in 
the darkness. She stepped closer, then stopped.
Thinking, he explained.
You could do that in a far warmer place, she said with a laugh.
Then I probably wouldnt think. Id just fall asleep, he admitted.
Herana stepped closer, stopping a good cubit short of Kharl. Thats a sailors 
answer.
Thats what Ive been for the past seasons.
And youre leaving a good ship with a good captain without knowing where youre 
going or what youll do?
Put that way, his actions seemed foolish. Does seem strange, he admitted.
One way of putting it. After a moment, she asked, Howd you get that staff? 
Its a real Reduce blackstaff.
It belonged to someone else. She was murdered. I tried to return it to the 
Brethren when I got to Nylan, but they said it belonged to me and that I could 
keep it or theyd destroy it. Kharl shrugged. Couldnt see a good staff being 
destroyed.
That means youre a mage.
No. Im no mage. I was a cooper, then I became a carpenter.
They dont let just anyone who shows up with one of those keep it, the second 
pointed out.
They did say that I was drawn to order, Kharl admitted. But Im not a mage. 
Doubt if I ever could be one. At the uneasiness that settled over him with 
those woras, he quickly added, Not like any of them. Maybe I could put a bit 
more order in my workthings like that.
You probably already do. Captain Hagen looks for folk like that.
He does?
That and more. Some folk say hes the lords left hand, seeing as theyre 
cousins, seconds, though. Dont know as Id buy that, close as folk say they 
are. Captain Harluk doesnt, and theres little that escapes him, either.
I thought there was something about him, even when he first came to the 
cooperage
You had your own cooperage?
I did. That was a while ago. Things dont always turn out the way they should.
Herana laughed once more. Lifes like that. Then she nodded to him. Take care 
up here. Farther north we go and the colder it gets, deck could get icy and 
slippery.
Ill be careful, Kharl promised, watching as the second slipped away aft, back 
into the deeper shadows not touched by the lamps from the poop deck.
After a time, he turned and headed back to his cabin. It wasnt that much warmer 
than the deck, but the lack of wind and chill spray made it seem so, and the day 
had been long.
LXIX
In his winter jacket, hands thrust inside it to keep them warm, Kharl stood 
midships, just forward of the paddle wheel frame, where he was partly sheltered 
from the wind blowing from the stern, as the Southshield eased its way up to the 
single squat pier at Vizyn. His pack and staff were at his feet. The small 
harbor opened to the northeast, looking out on gray waters that might have been 
liquid ice from the chill carried by the wind. The hempen fenders that cushioned 
the hull from the pier crackled as the Southshield came to rest against the 
dock, and icy fragments sprayed forth in the morning air.
Everywhere that Kharl looked, there was white, from the steep hills that 
encircled the port town to the snow-covered evergreens on those hills. The roofs 
of the dwellings and buildings in Vizyn were covered with snow, and the streets 
that Kharl could make out were snow-packed. Had there been any sun, the glare 
would have been unbearable, but thick and low gray clouds covered the sky, and 
in places obscured the tops of the taller hills to the west. Smoke from chimneys 
drifted upward in grayish lines, eventually merging with the low clouds.
Double up, now! came the command from aft.
Kharl waited until the ship was secured, and the gangway down to the pier before 
shouldering his pack and picking up his staff. He moved
back around the midships paddle wheel and toward the quarterdeck area where 
Herana stood.
The second mate looked at Kharl. Well be casting off early morning tomorrow. 
Therell be space back to Valmurl if you need it. Dont carry many passengers in 
the winter, just timber and some hard coal.
Thank you. Kharl glanced beyond the pier. You were right. There is snow 
everywhere.
She laughed.
Kharl smiled in return and made his way down the gangway. The pier itself was 
generally clear of snow, but he saw patches of dark ice here and there. He 
decided to follow the wider street that was mostly clear of snow and lined with 
shops. The shop nearest the harbor, unsurprisingly, was a chandlery and looked 
to be open. Kharl stamped his boots on the planks of the porch, swept clear of 
snow, unlike parts of the street, before stepping inside and carefully closing 
the door behind him.
The man who was sweeping the floor stopped and looked up, his eyes taking in the 
long black staff. He appeared to be Kharls age, although his beard was streaked 
with white and bushy. Could I help you?
Im looking for a scrivener named Taleas
The chandler tilted his head slightly, frowning, before he smiled and answered. 
His place is about seven, eight blocks toward the center of town. Go up the 
street till you get to the White Deer. Turn right at the corner. Should be 
two-three hundred cubits farther, on the left.
Thank you.
Interest you in some winterbread? Fine travel food.
Kharl smiled. After I find Taleas then well see. He nodded and turned. Again 
he was careful to close the door behind him when he left and stepped back 
outside. His breath was a white plume in the cold air permeated by the mixed 
odcrs of both burning wood and coal.
Kharls ears tingled after several hundred cubits, and he could understand why 
the few people he saw on the streets wore caps or hats, generally with earflaps. 
He kept walking up the street, alternating putting one hand and then the other 
inside his winter jacket, a jacket that was clearly too light for the cold of 
Vizyn.
Healthy plumes of whitish smoke poured from the chimneys of the White Deer, and 
Kharl was almost tempted to step inside the inn, if only to warm himself. He 
could feel the chill creeping into his toes, and his ears and fingers were 
beginning to get numb. But the chandler had said
that Taleas was but a few hundred cubits from the inn. So Kharl turned right and 
kept walking. He walked a good three or four hundred cubits down the rapidly 
narrowing street. He saw a cobblers shop, a tiny coppersmiths, and dwellings 
cramped together with only small side yards heaped high with snow, but saw no 
sign of a scriveners shop.
He turned around and retraced his steps, this time going in the other direction 
from the White Deer. The street did not narrow, but widened slightly, and the 
dwellings seemed larger and better kept. The fifth dwellingmore like a small 
cottage surrounded by snow-draped conifershad a carving of a pen and an inkpot 
on the flat surface below the eaves that sheltered the small front porch. The 
short stone walk had been cleared and swept, and Kharl walked up it and onto the 
porch. He rapped gently on the door, then waited.
In time, a rotund figure in graygray trousers, gray shirt, with a heavy gray 
sweater over the shirtcracked the door and peered out without speaking.
Im looking for a scrivener called Taleas.
Lets say youve found him. The rotund man looked over Kharl. You a 
blackstaffer?
No.
Too bad. Could use one around here. Seafarer?
I have beensecond carpenter. I used to be a cooper. A scrivener named Tyrbel 
said that I should see you if I ever got to Vizyn.
The rotund man nodded. How are his sons?
Kharl frowned. He has none. He never did. Unless theres another scrivener 
somewhere named Tyrbel. I meant the one in Brysta.
Taleas nodded again. What do you know of Tyrbel lately?
Kharl shook his head. He was killed by an assassin before I left Brysta. That 
was one reason why I left. Wed been friends and neighbors, and I feared that I 
would be next.
What happened to the assassin?
Kharl glanced around, then, seeing no one close to the scriveners door, 
replied, I killed him with a cudgel.
Taleas laughed ruefully, once. Whats your name?
Kharl.
You look like the fellow he wrote about. The door opened wider. Come on in. I 
dont know as I can help you much, but I can at least offer you some hot cider, 
a bite to eat, and let you thaw out before a hot stove.
Thank you. Kharl followed the scrivener into the cottage, and then into a room 
off the front sitting room, where a wide and plain desk was set against a stone 
interior wall that suggested the room had been added later. On the other outside 
wall was a square iron stove from which radiated heat. On the top of the stove 
was a kettle. Kharl leaned the staff into the nearest corner.
Sit down. Sit down, Taleas said.
Kharl gratefully shed his pack, placing it on the frayed hooked rug covering the 
worn plank floor, then took the plain wooden chair, leaving the one with the 
cushion for the scrivener.
Taleas took a woolen pad and used it to lift the kettle, then poured the 
steaming cider into a mug set on the corner of the desk before easing the kettle 
back onto the side of the stove. Go ahead. Ive already had two mugs this 
morning. He reseated himself in his own chair.
Thank you, Kharl said again, leaning forward and stretching to take the mug 
from the desk. He took a small sip of the hot liquid, grateful for the warmth, 
both from the drink and from the heat of the mug on his chilled hands.
What was this business with Tyrbel? He wrote that you might be coming this way, 
and that you might need a position as a cooper. He said youd done him a favor 
he couldnt repay.
Kharl almost winced. He doubted hed done Tyrbel any favors at all, although 
hed meant well. Ah hed sent his youngest, Sanyle, to deliver something, and 
she was on her way back, just after twilight. Two men decided that they wanted 
her favors she called for help, but I was the only one who heard. Kharl 
shrugged. I stopped them, and she got home safely.
Taleas raised his bushy eyebrows. You a swordsman, too?
No. They had blades. I ;iad my cudgel. That was the problem. Kharl decided 
that the scrivener would get the entire story one way or the other and went on 
with a rush of words. I didnt know one of them was Lord Wests youngest son, 
not until later. Then he attacked and beat up a black-staffer Kharl made the 
story as quick as he could, including the assassin, and a shortened version of 
his own hiding out until he had gotten aboard the Seastag. So thats how it all 
happened and how I got here.
Taleas rocked forward and back in his chair. Tyrbel said you were the sort 
whod do what he thought was right, without much regard for the results.
Its been my undoing at times.
Doing right thoughtlessly can also be the wellspring of chaos/ Taleas said 
ironically. You got that staff from the blackstaffer?
I tried to return it in Nylan, but the Brethren said it was mine. Its helped 
at times, but Kharl smiled ruefully. I cant say I know much about it.
Taleas chuckled. Youll learn.
Kharl realized he wasnt totally sure he wanted to learn how to use it.
Youll learn, or youll end up like poor Tyrbel. Taleas tilted his head. The 
only cooper who might even think about needing help is Almard, and that would 
only be for a few years, until his eldest is of apprentice age. He would not pay 
well.
For now, I need little except for food, some clothes, and a roof over my head.
That is all youd get from Almard. The others can offer nothing. Taleas smiled 
sadly.
Is it just the winter? asked Kharl.
Life has always been harder here than in Valmurl. The winter is longer, the 
summer shorter, but the fishers brought in good catches, and they salted them 
and sold them. With the winter ice, they could keep the fish almost fresh. 
Vizyns fish was prized everywhere, and that was why we once had so many 
coopers. Then the fish disappeared from the Winter Banks. The only sources of 
coins left are the timber, and some of the hard coal, but theres getting to be 
less and less of that. Taleas shrugged. Were I younger but I have some coins 
laid by, and Elmaria gets some rents from the land she got from her father. 
Vizyn has been our families home for so long we cannot count the years. Where 
else would we go? He offered another sad smile. Besides, in these days, one 
place is much like another.
Much like another? In what way? Kharl drained the last of the warm and welcome 
spiced cider. Are you saying there is little difference between Candar or 
Reduce or Hamor or Austra?
Those that have the wealth and power decide. Here, we have a little wealth. 
Elsewhere, it would be less than nothing. Have you not seen that?
Kharl thought for a moment before responding. I think that wealth and power 
have always decided matters. He paused before adding, I would worry more about 
how they decide. Not whether they decide.
Taleas laughed abruptly. Well said! Well said! Perhaps you should have been a 
scrivener, or even a justicer.
Im a carpenter whos been a cooper, and hopes to be one again.
Nothing more.
I fear, friend Kharl, that is your problem. Tyrbel wrote as much, and in but a 
few words, I can attest to what he wrote. For a cooper or a carpenter, you think 
too much. And you think too deeply, and you are inclined to act on what you 
believe. If you do not act, those actions you do not take will eat you from 
within. If you do act, those in power will eat you from without.
You make my plight seem hopeless, Kharl observed.
Difficult, certainly, Taleas agreed.
Just how would you suggest that I escape this situation? asked Kharl, in 
spite of the fact that he was certain he would not like the reply.
You must obtain wealth or power, or obtain the protection of one who has them.
Ah just obtain wealth and power, or a friend who has both Kharl shook his 
head. I fear I will have trouble even finding a cooper to take me on.
You may indeed, Taleas said agreeably. Perhaps I have said too much. That is 
a failing of those of us who have grown old.
You are doubtless right about the cure to my situation, but the cure seems as 
hopeless as the situation, Kharl replied. I thank you for your hospitality, 
but I should be finding Almard.
Taleas rose from his chair. That should not be difficult. He is well outside 
the town. Just follow this road until you come to the mill. His house and shop 
are on the other side of the road from the mill. I would judge it is two kays.
Kharl stood and reclaimed his pack and staff. I wish I had brought
better news. i
You brought news in good faith, and you stood by Tyrbel as best you could. That 
is rare in any times, but rarer still in these. Taleas paused. Just a moment. 
He scurried from the room, moving more quickly than Kharl had thought he might 
for a man of his age and bulk, returning almost immediately, extending a pair of 
worn but still well-stitched and fleece-lined leather gloves. These were once a 
friends, and they were left to me. He held up a small and wiry hand. As you 
can see, they are far too large for me, but they will do you good, and do me 
none.
I could not take your
Taleas pointed to his belt and the heavy gloves stuffed there. I have good 
gloves.
Thank you. I appreciate your kindness. Kharl decided that to refuse the gloves 
would be but a gesture, and a foolish one. I do. I would that I could repay you 
in some fashion.
Oh you will. You already have in a way. Now pull up the collar of your jacket 
to shield your ears, Taleas added as he escorted Kharl back to the front door.
Kharl did so.
Give Almard my best, not that hell care, but it wont hurt. Taleas opened the 
door.
Thank you. Kharl stepped outside and bowed to the scrivener.
Do what you can, young fellow. All I ask. Taleas smiled and closed the door.
As Kharl headed out the road that led from Vizyn, he pondered the scriveners 
words about one place being much like another. Was that because people were 
alike? Somehow, those words went with what the druids had said to him, although 
he would have to think over why that might be so. He also had not considered 
himself a young fellow, but compared to Taleas, he was.
By the time he had covered the two kays on the snow-packed and chill road and 
reached the mill, clearly shut down for the winter, he was especially grateful 
to Taleas for the gloves. Without them, his hands would have been blocks of ice.
Almard had a cottage much like that of Taleas, with a barnlike shop attached to 
the left side of the cottage by an enclosed walkway. The walkway was half-buried 
in snow piled therepresumably from clearing the space in front of the shops 
loading dock, although Kharl only saw a single set of wagon tracks in the packed 
snow.
He walked to the workroom door and rapped, once. After a moment, he rapped 
again.
Come on in, and close the door, if you would.
Kharl stamped his boots clear of snow and stepped inside. Once there, he 
surveyed the work space, which looked as though it had indeed once been a barn. 
While Kharls breath did not steam, the cooperage was still chill, and only a 
handful of barrels were stacked inside, just behind the loading doors. The forge 
that had been added later, to the right side
of the barn, was cold, and had been for a time. A single cylindrical iron stove 
sat in the middle of the work space. Kharl could feel the heat, but he was 
distracted slightly to realize that the stove was not a true cylinder, but had 
six vertical sides. Hed never seen a stove shaped like that.
Almard stepped toward the door. The cooper was a heavy man, just a shade shorter 
than Kharl, but carrying a good two stone more than the carpenter. What can I 
do for you? Although the words were hearty enough, Kharl could sense a 
falseness behind them.
Taleas sends his best, Kharl began. He said I might stop and see
you.
You be needing some cooperage? Interest sparked in the eyes of
the heavier man.
I was wondering if you could use an assistant cooper. He said that
you might.
Not hardly. Not any more n hed need another scrivener. Not with the heart of 
winter comin on.
I heard there was good fishing here, even in winter, Kharl suggested.
Used to be. No more. Whyd you think thered be any place here? Not enough work 
for those of us still left.
Id heard about Vizyn a while back, Kharl replied. It took some
time to get here.
Waste a that time, you ask me. Almard gestured toward the barrels by the 
loading dock. Thats what I got for the last two eightdays, and theyre still 
waitin.
Im sorry. Kharl nodded. The best of fortune to you. He stepped back and 
opened the door.
Almard did not say a word as Kharl stepped back into the afternoon chill, 
closing the door behind him.
After taking a deep, slow breath, Kharl headed back toward the harbor. While he 
had not checked with any other coopers, it was clear enough from what he had 
seen of Vizyn that it was not the place for him. So he might as well tell Herana 
or whoever was on watch on the Southshield that hed need the return passage to 
Valmurl. It was also clear that hed spent almost a gold on nothing.
He winced within the winter jacket at that thought.
LXX
After leaving his pack and staff in the cabin on the Southshield, and paying a 
few coppers extra to be able to sleep on board that night, Kharl had turned 
around and walked back to the White Deer for an early supper. Behind him a crew 
of men used a short crane to swing lengths of planks from heavy wagons on the 
pier to the ship.
The clouds had not lifted, and the streets were hard, either with cold 
cobblestones, or clay frozen just as solid. A few stray flakes of snow fluttered 
down around Kharl, but they had stopped by the time he reached the inn.
A woman in a heavy gray tunic and trousers met Kharl as he entered the White 
Deer and stood in the archway to the public room. Ale or food or both?
Both.
Got a small table at the side. Early enough you can have it to yourself.
Thank you. Kharl followed her.
The public room of the inn was close, but warm, with heat oozing out from the 
hearth on one side of the room and the large iron stove on the other. There were 
close to a half score of tables, most of them long and narrow, but there were 
three smaller tables against the outside wall, and the server led Kharl to the 
one closest to the hearth, for which he was grateful. His feet were cold, almost 
numb.
What do you have?
Not much choice tonight, fellow. Got fowl pie or stew. Three coppers, either 
way.
Which is better?
Most times, the fowl pie. Id go for the stew tonight.
Then I will. Light ale?
Berks lagers better. Two coppers either way.
Ill try the lager. Kharl flashed five coppers, and the server nodded and 
left.
Within moments, the woman had returned. Lager. Be a bit for the
stew.
Thats fine. He handed her the two coppers, and then a third. With a smile, 
she was gone. He took a sip of the lagernot so good as many, but passable, and 
despite the cold outside he was thirsty. Something hot, like cider, would have 
been too cloying.
A group of men in sheepskin jackets entered the public room and took the long 
table nearest to Kharl without a word to anyone. When the server appeared, one 
of them just announced, Hard jack for us all.
Kharl took another sip of his ale, listening to the newcomers.
 been a cold one this winter a sows burden keeping the mill-race ice-free
The cooper frowned. The mill hed seen had been closed. Or were
the men from a sawmill?
 already broke one of the bars
 coins though and theyre hard enough to come by now
 still cold as a lords heart
 say that every winter
Well, its cold every winter.
Laughter welled up at the long table.
The server reappeared with a large bowl, a spoon, and a small loaf of rye bread, 
setting them before Kharl. He handed over four coppers and received another 
smile, a brief one as she hurried back to the kitchen. She reappeared in moments 
carrying a tray on which were five steaming mugs that she set down, one after 
the other, before the men at the long table.
Thats a lass!
Kharl took a small mouthful of the stew. It was thick, tasty, and only slightly 
overpeppered, and the vegetables actually had not been cooked to mush. The bread 
was still warm, if slightly dry. Still, it was the best meal hed had in days. 
After several mouthfuls, he began to pick up on the conversation at the long 
table once more.
 hear about what happened to Heyols cousin down in Gyran? The innkeeper 
well, he was an innkeeper till they hung him
 for what?
 for nothing magistrate there strung him up for some law no one ever heard 
of He never studied no books to be a magistrate just got the job cause Lord 
Estloch liked him. Justice what he thinks it is
 better than they got in Elkyn magistrate there hung a fellow for puttin 
lead in his wine said it was poison
 nothin anywhere that says that
 just wanted wine to taste better who could blame him for that? hung him 
anyway.
Kharl frowned. Tyrbel had told him something about that years back, about how 
powdered lead made wine taste better, but how too much of it was a poison that 
drove men mad if they drank it too much and too often.
 whos he to hang an innkeeper for some fool law no one ever heard of? 
Magistrates and justicers just tools for the lords and them with coins
 be good to have a justicer understood people, not coins
Kharl had to wonder about that. From what hed seen, most people didnt want to 
be understood. They wanted to do what they wanted to do, whether or not others 
got hurt. He took another swallow of ale from the mug.
 save that kinda dreams for hot nights in summer
 hot nights not gonna happen not here, not there, not anywhere
Another burst of laughter rose from the table beside Kharl.
Before long, he would head back to the Southshield. There wasnt anything else 
he wanted to do or anyone else to see in Vizyn. Of that he was certain.
Carpenter and Mage
LXXI
The voyage back from Vizyn to Valmurl was swifter, but colder and rougher, than 
the trip north to Vizyn had been, and Kharl was more than elad when the 
Southshield finally tied up at the pier in the harbor at Valmurl late on a 
cloudy fourday afternoon.
Herana stood by the railing as Kharl neared the gangway. You going back to the 
Seastag?
Kharl grinned sheepishly. If Captain Hagenll take me back.
Id wager he will. Herana offered a broad smile, one that carried a trace of 
laughter in her gray eyes, and took away the lines in her narrow face.
Lets hope youre right. Kharl returned the smile and, staff in hand and pack 
on his back, headed down the gangway.
Valmurl didnt feel all that much warmer than Vizyn. Was winter that cold in all 
of Austra? Kharl glanced at the warm gloves Taleas had given him, and for which 
he remained most grateful. He owed Taleas something, both for his honesty and 
the gloves, but how, and with what, could he repay the scrivener? Taleas had 
said Kharl had repaid him and would again, but hed never explained, and Kharl 
hadnt asked. A sense of sadness passed through him as he thought of another 
scrivener. He continued to make his way down the pier toward the harbor way.
You! With the staff!
Kharl turned.
Three men in yellow-and-black tunicsuniforms of some sort stood on the stone 
causeway at the shoreward end of the pier. The shorter armsman on the right 
pointed at Kharl. Best get back on whatever ship you came in on.
Kharl forced himself to look at the lead armsman directly, but openly, and not 
with hostility, despite the anger in the mans voice. The fellow had no hint of 
chaos, and Kharl did his best to project directness and honesty as he replied. 
Im a carpenter on the Seastag. I went to see friends while the ship was in 
refit.
Whos the master?
Hagens the captain, Furwyls the first
Get back out to the refit yard then, and, if you know whats good for you, 
dont carry a dark staff like that, not now.
Yes, ser. I will, ser, but I was traveling, and a staff helps Kharl paused as 
he realized that there were more of the uniformed armsmer everywhere. Whats 
happened? When I left
Lord Estloch was murdered, thats what.
Oh thats not good.
Worse n that. Be on your way. The words were gruff, but no longer hostile. 
And get that staff put aside soon as you can.
Yes, ser, Kharl replied politely, wondering why the guard had backed down so 
quickly. Then, he was glad the man had.
He made his way northward toward the street he thought led to the refit yards. 
Hed only been in that part of the harbor once before, seeking out Chalart to 
see about a position as a cooper. Had it only been little more than an eightday 
before? It seemed longer. Once he was away from the main part of the harbor, he 
saw no more guards in uniform, but there were few people out and about, fewer 
than he would have thought just from the cold weather and the chill wind.
When he reached the refit yard, Kharl stopped short of the single pier and 
looked northwest. It was easy to pick out the Seastag in the last dry dock. The 
other two dry docks were empty, as they had been earlier.
He made his way past the single pier and then along the edge of the water until 
he stood on the stone edge of the drained dry dock. The ship was resting on keel 
blocks and angled supports, and was also tethered with heavy hemp cables that 
ran from the masts and bowsprit to bollards twice the size of those in the 
harbor. Kharl looked down at the mud-smeared stone base of the dry dock, then 
toward the gangway.
He walked to the gangway, but stopped short as Ghart appeared from a small shed 
set short of the gangway.
You didnt like the country life so well, I see, observed Ghart.
They werent too interested in having a good cooper, just a cheap one, Kharl 
said, knowing he was shading the truth somewhat.
Thats the way of the world, Ghart replied. Captain told me youd most likely 
be back. Never took you off the crew list. Kharl didnt know what to say to 
that.
Hes done that more n once. Did it for me after my first voyage. Been with him 
ever since. Were all in the bunkhouse there. Ghart gestured toward the low 
stone structure set back from the refit area, and
north of the warehouses and Chalarts cooperage. Need to take your gear there, 
then report back here. He grinned. Tarkyn said youd be back. Been saving some 
work for you. Were about through for today, but hell still want to see you.
Kharl laughed. He was hoping Id be back.
That he was. Gharts eyes darted toward the southwest. Kharl could sense the 
seconds concern. Whats going on? I saw armsmen all over the port.
Someone murdered Lord Estloch the day before yesterday. Crossbow quarrel from 
the woods while he was hunting. No one knows who. Hed disinherited his eldest 
years back. Said Ilteron was cruel, and that cruelty didnt serve a land well. 
People have been saying that he Ilteron, thats the older onethat he was 
behind the killing, and that hes got an army and the support of Guillam. 
Guillams the head of the factors council, and most of the factors and crafters 
leastwise listen to him. Some even say that Ilterons marching out of the 
Shiltons against Lord Ghrantthats his younger brotherand the one Estloch had 
named as his heir.
Wheres the captain?
Hes in the Great House. He grew up with Lord Estloch, and Lord Ghrant sort of 
thought of him as an uncle. Sometimes, hed advise Lord Estloch. Thats what 
they said. Ghart looked at the dry dock. Were supposed to be out of here by 
the end of the eightday after this one. Wish it were sooner. Ship in dry dock is 
like a man with his legs broken.
Theyve got guards in uniformblack and yellowat the piers in the main part of 
the harbor, Kharl said.
Black and yellowthose are Lord Ghrants personal guards. The Austran regulars 
are black and green.
You dont think he trusts the regulars? Lord Ghrant, I mean.
Dont know as Id trust anyone, were I in his boots, Ghart replied. Better 
get your gear over there in the bunkhouse. Tarkyn said youd a lot of catching 
up to do.
Kharl laughed again as he turned from the gangway and headed toward the 
bunkhouse.
LXXII
After a passable supper in the common room of the bunkhouse, a fair nights 
sleep, and almost no comment by others in the crew about his absence, except a 
few jokes about coopers, the next morning Kharl was hard at work. Tarkyn had set 
up a lathe and a planer in a shed on the northern side of the dry dock, a shed 
kept passably warm inside by an ancient woodstove and surrounded outside by 
seasoned oak planks stacked chest high. Kharls task was to rough-finish the 
planks to the measurements Tarkyn had already made.
I thought the shipwrights were the ones working on the Seastag, Kharl said.
They do the hull. Captains paid extra to have the whole hull checked for ship 
worms. Problem is no one can afford to have every plank in the ship 
copper-treated. Just treat the hull and main timbers. Turns out that there were 
places where they ate into the interior planks. We get to craft the planking for 
the sections bein replaced.
Kharls eyes went toward the timbers stacked high outside the shed. All those?
Probably not, but theres a whole section in the main hold and another just 
above the bilges in the forward hold
Kharl had to smile. Fairness aside, there were reasons why Hagen had wanted him 
back.
So you rough-finish the ones for the main hold to size, while Im down getting 
the sizes for the forward ones
Leaving me the hard work, Kharl joked.
Beats being a cooper without a copper to your name, retorted Tarkyn with a 
mock-gruff ness. Should anyway
That it does, most honored master carpenter. Kharl grinned and offered a deep 
bow.
They both laughed. Tarkyn was still chucking when he left.
Kharl had been working in the shed for well over a glass and had a goodly sized 
pile of planks ready for Tarkyn when the door opened. He
looked up to see Hagen closing the door and moving toward the lathe.
Kharl slowed the lathe and stepped back.
Hard at work, I see, said the captain. Glad to have you back.
Yes, ser. Ive got some catching up to do. Have to say that Im
glad to be back, ser, Kharl replied. And I appreciate your kindness. I
do.
Even with everything Tarkyn had waiting? Hagens eyes twinkled
for a moment.
Even so. Kharl paused. Might I ask whats happening in Valmurl
with Lord Ghrant?
Hagens countenance turned sober. Its said that his older brother Ilteron has 
landed an army at Bruel, and the highland barons of the west have thrown in with 
him.
Bruel? Where the Hamorians could still send brimstone? Kharl decided not to ask, 
not yet, instead saying, Id heard that Ilteron was a cruel sort. Why would 
they support him?
They can accept his cruelty more than the rule of his brother. They dislike the 
reforms that Lord Estloch forced on them and Lord Ghrant is said to favor. 
Especially the right of peasants to buy their way out of indenture. They claim 
that theyll lose all their lands because the peasants will all leave.
How will most peasants ever raise that kid of coin? asked Kharl.
Hagen looked sharply at Kharl, then smiled wanly. Most wont. It doesnt 
matter. The highland lords are used to being absolute rulers over their lands. 
The merchants and factors have more power in the north and east, and most wont 
support Ilteron because they feel that his rule will ruin trade and factoring.
Are the east and west of Austra that different?
They are indeed.
Will the merchants and factors stand behind Lord Ghrant? Id heard that someone 
on the factors council
Guillam has left Valmurl. The others will hold for Ghrant, but it will be a 
hard battle because Ilteron has more than a few companies of Hamorian-trained 
free armsmen.
Free armsmen?
Armsmen who serve the highest bidder.
The Emperor of Hamor is paying them, you think? asked Kharl. With the 
brimstone going there, isnt that likely?
How would one know? I would guess so, but that isnt something thats proof 
Hagen shrugged. The highland barons love warfare, and they have waited for 
years to take revenge on the easterners and merchants.
If they are so warlike, how
They are fewer, and they could never long hang together, and when Lord 
Estlochs great-great-grandsire subdued them, he stationed arms-men all along 
the borders and stopped their raids. It was bloody, because the easterners lost 
twice as many men, but Lord Isthel kept the highlanders from getting enough 
food. After three years, they were starving, and he marched into the highlands 
and leveled all their keeps and took all their weapons. For two generations, he 
and his son garrisoned the west. Hagen laughed, ruefully. Then the garrison 
commanders became the lords of the highlands
Kharl shook his head.
Seems like what the fathers learn, the grandchildren forget, Hagen said. 
Enough of that. Im keeping you from your work, and well need the Seastag back 
afloat as soon as we can. He nodded. Good to have you back. Then he was gone.
Kharl turned his attention back to the planer and the next set of measurements. 
As always, he recalled his fathers maxim: Measure twice, cut once.
But he still fretted about landowners who seemed just like Egen. Did every land 
have them? What did it take to keep them from their evil? Was greater power or 
violence always the only answer? Then he shook his head, ruefully. Just what 
could a carpenter do?
Abruptly, he stopped.
Taleas had said that if he did not learn more about himself and the staff, he 
would end up as dead as Tyrbel. With turmoil everywhere he went, those words 
carried more impact.
LXXIII
For the next several days, Kharl and the rest of the crew worked from just 
before dawn to after dusk. By twoday of the following eightday, Kharl and Tarkyn 
had replaced all the damaged planks in the Seastag, including several that 
Tarkyn had not realized were damaged, but that Kharls order-senses had 
discovered. Kharl had been careful enough to show the damage with a hammer and 
chisel, rather than claiming anything.
In the evenings, on a straight-backed chair pulled up under one of the few wall 
lamps in the common room of the bunkhouse, Kharl had taken to reading and 
rereading sections of The Basis of Order.
He was puzzling over a phrasethe greater the concentration of order within 
objects, the greater the amount of free chaos in the world. At that moment, the 
door to the outside opened, and a gust of wind whistled through the room for the 
instant that it took a short and stocky man in a brown cloak to enter and close 
the door behind him. The newcomer glanced around the common room before his eyes 
lighted upon Kharl. Nodding, as if to himself, he stepped forward.
Kharl closed the book, still holding it, and stood. Although he had never seen 
the man, he could sense the darkness of order surrounding him.
Ive heard about youfelt you as well. The man was well muscled, if graying, 
and his hair and the tunic under his heavy brown cloak were almost the same 
shade. He pulled up a chair and seated himself but a few cubits from Kharl.
Kharl sat down slowly. Felt me?
Bit old for a blackstaffer, though.
Blackstaffer? Kharl shook his head. Im not from Reduce. Im a cooper from 
Brysta. Or I was. Who was the man, and what did he want with Kharl?
You cant stay as a ships carpenter forever, much as Hagen would like to keep 
you. Sooner or later, youll do too much, or one of Lord Ilteror/s mages will 
discover youre here.
An assistant to a carpenter?
Youre a better carpenter than Tarkyn is. He knows it, and thats why he has 
you doing the precise work. Hes been around long enough that it doesnt bother 
him, and it makes his life easier. The other smiled.
Why are you here? Kharl asked. Who sent you?
No one sent me. I came to see you, to offer you some insight if youre 
interested. You should be, if youve got any sense.
Kharl still felt uneasy and off-balance. Why did you mention Lord Ilteron? And 
not Lord Ghrant?
Lord Ghrant doesnt have any mages.
Kharl guessed. He has you doesnt he?
The other smiled. Such as I am, I suppose. I couldnt do much against true 
chaos-wizards. My little tricks wouldnt even slow them down. Thats why I stay 
away from the Great House. Id just call attention to Lord Ghrants lack of 
magery.
What kind of tricks?
Each skill has to be learned. Most cannot be taught.
Kharl snorted. I cant teach coopering to everyone, but I can teach it to those 
who have the good hands and the wish to learn. I dont see that magery is that 
much different.
Its not. But the costs are so much higher if the student is ungrateful. The 
mage, if indeed he happened to be one, rose from the chair. Now is not the time 
or place to talk. If you want to learn more, not that I can offer you more than 
a small portion of what you could do, you need to come find me. Im in the 
Nierran Hills. Thats just northwest of here.
You walked here?
Why not? Its only five kays, and I had to see who was creating such an 
order-focus. Besides, I could use the exercise.
Order-focus? Kharl frowned and, when the other did not respond, asked, Who 
told you to come to me, and how would I get away?
Just tell your captain that youre going to see Lyras. He wrapped his cloak 
around himself and walked to the bunkhouse door. With a brief wave, he was gone.
Who was that? called Reisl from the corner where he and several others were 
gaming.
I dont know, Kharl said, then added, He said his name was Lyras, but Ive 
never seen him before.
Reisl offered a cryptic smile and went back to gaming.
Kharl looked down at the book in his hand, thinking about what Lyras had said 
about the costs of magery being so much higher than those of coopering. After a 
time, he opened the book once more and began to read. He found it hard to 
concentrate on the words or what they meant.
LXXIV
Dy midmorning of fiveday, Kharl knew he needed to talk to Hagen. After three 
days of thinking, of evenings spent reading The Basis of Order and learning 
little new from it, the words of both Taleas and Lyras had continued to hammer 
at him. So during a break from working with the lathe to turn shafts for a 
bench back in the mess, Kharl eased away from the shed and toward the other side 
of the dry dock, where Hagen and Furwyl were standing and surveying the Seastag.
Kharl stood well back, under a welcome and even slightly warm sun, with the 
first clear skies in almost an eightday, waiting for the captain and first mate 
to finish their conversation, hoping for a break before too long.
 tomorrow the caulks set after that?
 timbers not as seasoned as wed like, ser, Furwyl replied. Well have to 
watch that for near-on half a year couldnt get the best seasoned timbers, not 
ones thatd take copper
 try for the first of the eightday.
Yes, ser. Furwyl headed toward the building that held the shipwrights 
foreman.
After studying his vessel for a time, Hagen turned. You wanted to speak to me, 
carpenter?
Yes, ser. Kharl stepped toward the captain. The other night I had a visitor.
Lyras. I heard.
He said I should visit him, and that all I had to do was tell you. Kharl 
waited.
Hagen laughed. That old devil! Maybe he does know something. By all means, go 
and see him. Work in the morning and see him in the afternoon. See what you can 
find out.
About what?
About anything. He wont tell you unless you ask.
He already told me that Lord Ilteron has some white wizards, Kharl ventured. 
He didnt say how he knew or where they came from.
He never does, Hagen replied. With matters as they are, its more important 
than ever that you go and see him. All I ask is that you tell me anything you 
learn about what may be happening here in Austra.
Are you sure
Hagen looked hard at Kharl. You might turn out to be a mage. You might not. If 
you are, well all be better off for it. If youre not, Lyras will tell you that 
as well, and youll be a better carpenter for it. Either way, Im better off, 
and so are you.
Yes, ser. Kharl wasnt certain that magery, especially any magery he might 
learn, would be that helpful to others. So far, his actions hadnt exactly 
benefited those close to him, but he wasnt about to say that.
Tell Tarkyn Im having you visit Lyras. Hell understand. Ill be here 
mornings. If something cant wait, Furwyl knows where to find me.
Yes, ser.
Hagen took a last look at the dry-docked Seastag, then walked back toward the 
stern, squinting as his eyes peered at the lower hull.
Kharl headed back to the shed that held the lathe and Tarkyn. Hed little more 
than entered it and closed the door before Tarkyn stopped the lathe.
What did you and the captain talk about? Saw you with him, Tarkyn observed.
I told him about Lyras, and what he told me. Captain said he wanted me to go 
see Lyras in the afternoon, more than once, if necessary.
Tarkyn fingered his chin. Thatd figure, the captain being thought so close to 
Lord Estloch and now Lord Ghrant. He cant visit Lyras, and no oned think twice 
about your going. He chuckled. Even if its as much for your good as his.
Kharl shrugged helplessly. What the captain said. Those were his words
Im sure they are. Tarkyn looked at the lathe. Best you get back to the lathe 
so that this old man doesnt have to do too much by himself. The gruff words 
were belied by the twinkle in the eyes of the white-haired carpenter.
Kharl chuckled and took over at the lathe.
Still, he felt guilty about leaving the carpentry shed at the dry dock not much 
after noon, but Tarkyn had almost shooed him out the door. Captain has a reason 
for everything. Go!
Kharl went. He decided against taking the staff, but he did persuade Ghart to 
let him take a cudgel from the weapons locker. He covered the first few kays, 
through the streets and out the north road from Valmurl, easily enough. Then the 
stones of the north road gave way to damp and sometimes slippery clay, and he 
wished he had a staff for balance as his steps slowed.
All in all, it was well into midafternoon by the time Kharl found Lyras, who was 
outside a modest cottage of red sandstone, stone smoothed and polished into an 
even finish, with a dark slate roof, glass windows, and green-painted shutters 
and front door. The dwelling was long and narrow, no more than fifteen cubits 
wide, but it ran back a good forty, Kharl judged.
The mage was on the south side, pruning dormant berry bushes with a pair of 
long-handled shears. Wasnt certain Id see you, Master Kharl. Lyras took a 
last snip with the shears.
Kharl Im no master.
Word is that youre a master cooper, and you might be a master of more than 
that someday. Lets go inside. I can have Zera heat up a kettle of something to 
warm us. Lyras walked to the low front stoop, two steps above the front walk. 
There he set down the shears, then opened the door, holding it for Kharl to 
enter.
Thank you. Kharl wasnt that cold, not after a walk that had left him all too 
warm, but he appreciated the hospitality.
A roundish brown-haired woman appeared at the back of the front room that 
extended the width of the cottage.
My consort, Zera, Lyras said, before turning to her. This is Kharl. Hes the 
one I told you about. If you wouldnt mind warming up the tonic dear?
Ive already put it on. Zera looked to Kharl. Ive some shortbread. Would you 
like some?
That would be most welcome if its not I wouldnt want
Zera laughed heartily. No you wont be eating us out of hearth and home. Weve 
plenty. With a smile, she slipped through the doorway leading out of the front 
room.
Lyras gestured to the pair of chairs set several cubits back from the
iron stove located in the northwest corner of the room. We can talk here.
Kharl sat, and, after a long silence, looked at the older mage. Tjj here.
And you want immediate enlightenment.
No. Id settle for a useful hint or two. Or an exercise that woulc teach me 
something.
You can already detect chaos at a distance, and you can tell wht people do not 
tell the truth. That is more than many who claim to mages. Why do you wish to 
know more?
Kharl thought for a moment before replying. I dont know. I onl} feel that I 
should.
So you can become wealthy and powerful, perhaps? A slightly ironic tone 
colored Lyrass words.
It would be good not to be coinless, Kharl countered, but I have enough 
coins.
Lyras nodded. So you came to see me without being able to explain why, and you 
want my advice and help, but you cant tell me where youd like this advice?
Kharl nodded, and was saved from having to make an immediate response by the 
arrival of Zera, carrying two black mugs. She handed one first to Kharl, then 
one to Lyras, and slipped out of the front room, only to return with a small 
platter that she set on the low table between the town chairs. Without speaking, 
she left as quickly and as silently as she had entered.
Its a sweetened redberry cider, Lyras explained. Takes the chill off the 
bones. He took a sip. Ahhh Then he reached for one of the oblong 
shortbreads.
Kharl followed the older mans example and found the hot drink neither too hot 
nor too sweet. He also had a shortbread. Its good. So is the shortbread. 
After a moment, and another bite of shortbread, he looked at Lyras. Why are you 
here? Outside of Valmurl?
Why not? Its a pleasant place, and far more comfortable than a few rooms in 
the Great House. Im not that good a black mage. Youre already stronger than I 
am, and youve had no training at all. Theres no use for a weak mage in Reduce, 
and none of the lords in Austra or Nordla really want any powerful black mages 
in their lands. The Emperor of Hamor just uses mages up. He gestured toward the 
window to his left, the one overlooking the berry bushes he had been pruning. I 
know enough to help
them produce and make jams and jellies, and no one pays much attention. 
5Ometimes, Id go to see Lord Estloch, but I never knew whether Id done more 
good or harm. He let me stay because a weak black mage is much less trouble than 
a weak white wizard, who can still be obviously dangerous.
Kharl wondered about the wordsobviously dangerous. I saw a white wizard once. 
He gathered young people, mostly girls, and when he was done, they died. Not a 
mark on them.
Did he look younger afterward?
I dont know.
He probably was younger. His body had more concentrated good chaos, the 
strength of youth. What happened to him?
He died. Kharl had said too much. But you must be from Reduce you know so 
much
Ah, yes. I must confess that I was born in Reflin. My father was a baker, and a 
poor bakery it was. I didnt learn a thing. Zera does all the baking, and a good 
thing it is. The mage took another sip of the redberry cider, then looked at 
Kharl. My talking isnt going to help you much. Of course, not knowing what you 
want doesnt help much either.
I know what I want, Kharl said. I want to put things to right. Id liked to 
have done that in Brysta. I just didnt know how.
What was wrong in Brysta?
My consort was hung for a killing she had nothing to do with. I was flogged for 
trying to defend her and for stopping the lords son from taking his pleasure by 
force with a neighbor girl. Another man was hung because he told the truth about 
the lords son
Ah, yes telling the truth. Thats often the recipe for disaster. Even a poor 
mage recognizes that. What else?
A weaver girl had to hide in a rendering yard because the tariff farmer seized 
her mothers house and shop and tried to force her into indenture at a pleasure 
house. That white wizardthe one I mentioned was working with the lords son 
and killed young girls for his use, and no one even seemed to notice.
Its that way in most lands. It has been more often than not, Lyras pointed 
out. Why should it be different in yours?
It should be better everywhere, but a man wants to see things better where he 
was raised.
Not all men. Not even most men.
Im not most men.
No. Youre not. Lyras laughed. Become a justicer. That way you can change 
some of those things.
A cooper? As a justicer?
Havent you ever heard of the Justicers Challenge? All the world knows about 
it. Its a practice thats only accepted here and in Nordla.
Ive heard of it, Kharl admitted. Didnt seem like something for a cooper.
Its seldom used. The older man laughed again. Thats because no one dares. 
Failure means that the challenger suffers the fate of the accusedthe punishment 
of each of the five accused comprising the challenge. Lyras took another sip 
from his mug. Forget about that now. What you really need is some exercises 
that will help you understand what power you may have and the limits of that 
power.
Kharl managed to refrain from saying that hed already said that.
I have several suggestions, Lyras went on. Some order-mages are weather 
mages. There is a way to tell if you have that talent. Take a kettle and put it 
on a hot stove. Watch the steam. Try to move the cloud of steam around. It works 
better in a cold room
Steam and weather?
Oh clouds are made up of water, like steam. Where do you think the rain comes 
from? Then, others are healers. Serious wounds create an angry reddish feel 
within them. If you can sense and remove that kind of chaos thats what a 
healer is.
An exercise? asked Kharl.
There arent any that I know of. Oh if you can study small animals with your 
senses, and feel how order works in them, that might help. Ive heard that there 
are earth mages, who can sense the flow of order and chaos in the ground 
beneath, and some of them are smiths. As a cooper maybe you come by that 
naturally. In hot metal right from the forge fire, the order bonds are weaker, 
and chaos is, well, more fluidthats how the black engineers on Reduce make all 
that black iron another trick, really only a trick is to use your senses to 
let light flow around you. Light flows like water in a way, you know. Unless 
youre very good with order-sensing whats around you, youll be blind, but 
sometimes its useful not to be seen never could do that one myself, but Ive 
seen it done
Kharl continued to listen, feeling that, perhaps for the first time, he was 
getting an idea of what order-magery was all aboutor rather the
feeling, beyond words on the pages of The Basis of Order, that what the words 
had hinted at could actually be accomplished.
 Now theres one last thing. About that staff. There was a reason why they 
wouldnt take that back, one that they didnt tell you. You need to look up a 
phrase in The Basis of Order. You have a copy, dont you?
Yes, Kharl admitted grudgingly.
Theres a phrase in there about staffs, blackstaffs. Its important and thats 
probably more than I should have said, and dont ask me more.
Why not? Kharl asked bluntly.
Because its something you have to find, or it wont mean anything. Tell it to 
someone directly it never works. Already, I may have told you too much.
How could anyone be told too much? But then hed tried to tell his boys things, 
and theyd had to learn for themselves. Thank you. Kharl paused, trying to 
make sure he remembered everything that Lyras had said. Why did the Emperor of 
Hamor send chaos-mages, and not order mages?
Im scarcely the emperor, Lyras pointed out. But Id guess thats because 
comparatively weak chaos-wizards can create much destruction, and there werent 
any strong order-mages here.
Kharl didnt quite understand the connection, and it must have shown on his 
face.
Oh you dont see. But then, how would you know? Lyras shook his head. 
Because black mages serve order, they preserve and strengthen ties and forces. 
So a strong order-mage couldnt throw free chaos at a white wizard, but he 
could walk through all that chaos with his order shields and strike one blow 
with a staff or something not a bladeand destroy the white wizard. But the 
emperor didnt think there were any order-mages in Austra.
So the mages he sent to support Lord Ilteron
Ilteron is only a hill baron. His sire couldnt strip him of his hill lands in 
the Shiltons, much as he would have liked to. Ilterons been building his own 
personal guards for years. Lord Estloch chose to ignore that, although I warned 
him.
Why does everyone think Ilteron was behind the lords death?
Lyras snorted. The timing, for one thing. Lord Ghrant reached his majority last 
year. If Estloch had been killed before that, there would have been a regency, 
and doubtless wiser heads, such as Hagen and
Lady Renyra, would have been on the regency council. Lord Ghrants 
inexperienced, but he wants things his way. But he doesnt like people arguing 
with him; he hates personal confrontation. Hes the sort thats happy to order 
someone else to shed the blood, but doesnt want to strike the blow himself
Kharl had his doubts about relaying that to Hagen.
And then theres Malcor. Hes been bowing and scraping all over the Great House 
for the last two years. Lord Estloch dies, and Malcor vanishes without taking 
his leave and reappears back in the hills, making a visit to Ilteron. Also, 
Malcor is known to be excellent with a crossbow.
Doesnt anyone else know this?
Several score, Id imagine, but none with the nerve to say such out loud. 
Theres no gain in it. It wont bring back Lord Estloch. It raises the question 
of why anyone who would state that didnt tell someone before, and, should 
Ilteron succeed in overthrowing Ghrant, which is most likely, it subjects the 
speaker to the loss of lands and life. So everyone is silent.
Kharl understood that. He just hadnt thought that powerful lords and 
landholders would behave in the same fashion as crafters, although, upon 
reflection, he could see there wasnt any reason why they wouldnt.
You had thought lords might speak up? asked Lyras.
I had considered it, but not for long.
They speak out for the truth less than crafters, for they have more to lose, 
and little to gain from the truth. Thats why no one trusts them, and they trust 
each other even less.
Its a wonder that anyone speaks the truth, Kharl said.
And when they do, examine their words closely. Lyras stood. Its getting 
close to sunset, and youd best be heading back. The parts of Val-murl north of 
the refit yards arent the best in full night, even with your sight.
How did Lyras know about his night sight? Or was that something that even minor 
mages had? Kharl stood and set the empty mug on a side table. Thank you. Might 
I come back when Ive had a chance to consider what youve said?
Id not be stopping you. Lyras opened the cottage door for Kharl.
Until then. Kharl nodded as he left the stoop.
He walked quickly down the path to the road, then turned southward, trying to 
sort out everything he had heard over the afternoon. He
certainly wanted to try out some of the exercises and tests Lyras had suggested, 
if only to see what he might be able to do.
And he had promised Hagen to pass on what he had learned, little as it seemed.
LXXV
he next morning was sunny, but the air felt damper, and Kharl could see clouds 
just above the horizon to the northeast. Since he had promised to report to 
Hagen on what he had learned from Lyras, Kharl found the captain even before he 
went to the shed to work with Tarkyn.
Hagen listened as Kharl reported on what Lyras had said. When Kharl had 
finished, Hagen tilted his head, not quite nodding, then tugged on his earlobe. 
Lord Estloch had told me about the personal guards, but I dont think he wanted 
to believe Ilteron had hired so many. As for Malcor, that I can believe. He 
comes from the old line.
Kharl didnt know anything about the old line and decided not to ask. And no 
one, not one lord or factor, said a word?
Oh, doubtless theyre all telling each other now that they knew it all along 
and that they each had told Lord Estloch in confidence, but that for reasons of 
his own, Lord Estloch chose not to act. By sunset, every one of them will 
believe it.
Kharl thought he understood better why Hagen preferred the sea to the Great 
House in Valmurl.
You arent that surprised, now, are you? asked Hagen.
No, ser. Id have to say that Id hoped for better, but I didnt expect it.
Hagen smiled, sadly. Thats a good precept. Hope and work for better, but dont 
expect it. Are you going to see Lyras again?
Id thought to, ser, but not for a while. Wouldnt do any good right now. 
Kharl wasnt sure that another visit would help, not until hed had a chance to 
try out some of what the mage had suggested, at least. He also wondered about 
the mysterious references to the staff.
Thats probably for the best. When you do, let me know if you find out anything 
else.
Yes, ser. Ill be heading back to the shed now.
Hagen just nodded, his thoughts clearly turning elsewhere.
Kharl was the first in the shed. Hed fired up the old stove and was setting up 
the lathe when Tarkyn arrived, closing the door behind him.
So whatd you find out from Lyras? asked Tarkyn. Didnt want to ask last 
night, not till you talked to the captain and not with other ears around.
Ilteron has some white mages, and its likely that someone named Malcor killed 
Lord Estloch.
Malcor names familiar. Dont know why.
Id never heard of him, but the captain had. Said he was out of the old line.
Oh him. His father was the out-of-consort son of Lord Estlochs uncle. The 
uncle had but daughters, and couldnt pass on the title. Thats how Estloch got 
it.
Kharl thought he understood, not that it made sense to him. A son was a son; a 
daughter was a daughter. Both were children. For a moment, the images of Arthal 
and Warrl flashed to mind, and he swallowed, wishing that he could have done 
more for them somehow. But there wasnt much else that he could do. Not at the 
moment.
Anything else? That you can say?
There wasnt much else. Lyras talked about why the Emperor of Hamor didnt send 
his best white wizards to Austra.
Thats trouble.
And Ilteron has more personal guards than anyone knew. That was about it.
Wager thats more than most folks knew. Captain pleased?
He seemed to know most of it, except for Malcor. Hes worried about something.
Course hes worried. Hes trying to advise a lord whos barely more than a 
boy, and that lords going to be attacked by his brother whos being supported 
by the Emperor of Hamor Id worry, too.
So would Kharl. Left unspoken was the understanding that Hagen was so closely 
linked to Estloch and Ghrant that if Ilteron triumphed, Hagen would lose his 
ships or even his life if he didnt flee Austra.
You about ready with that lathe? asked Tarkyn.
Furwyl had added another project for the carpentersa second
weapons locker beside the ladder to the poop deckand hed said Hagen wanted it 
finished in the next few days.
Second weapons locker, along with everything else, Kharl said, half to 
himself, as he made the final adjustments to the lathe settings. Thats not 
good
These days, not much is, countered Tarkyn.
Kharl couldnt say much to that.
By the end of the day, when he left the carpenter shed, Kharl still had 
questions swirling through his head. The clouds had moved in from the northeast 
by midafternoon, and a fine cold rain filtered out of a dark
gray sky.
Hed really been too busy to think in any depth about what Lyras had said, but 
the questions hadnt gone away. Although Kharl had not tried it, not having a 
forge that he could use while not being watched, he thought, just from his 
earlier efforts with iron, that he might be able to forge something like black 
iron. What he would use it for was another question. He clearly had no feel for 
what lay deep beneath the earth, although he could sense life and patterns 
within perhaps a cubit of the surface.
Kharl moved quickly from the shed to the bunkhouse. He was headed for the mess 
and common room when he recalled the kettle test suggested by Lyras. With a half 
smile, he made his way to the door of the kitchen area and slipped inside. As he 
had hoped, there was a kettle on the huge and antique iron stove.
Kharl stared at the kettle. While, with his senses, he could feel the swirl of 
order and chaos in the steam that poured from the spout, he could not seem to 
move it. He thought he could stop the steam, because when he concentrated on 
touching the bits of order and chaos, the steam cloud did not change shape, but 
he did not try that for long, since that was all he seemed able to do and since 
he didnt want anyone noticing. As far as moving the steam, light as it might 
be, he could not. While he didnt know how, even in a general way, he doubted 
that was the problem.
What you looking at, carpenter? asked Yilyt, the ships cook. Watching us 
cook isnt gonna get you fed earlier.
I wondered what you were fixing.
Got some kalfingood white fishhard to come by. Be frying that
up
Kharl nodded. To him most fish tasted the same. Thank you. He
slipped out and went to the washhouse adjoining the bunkhouse. The only water 
was coldice-coldand washing was a trial, but Kharl had always preferred being 
as clean as he could reasonably be.
Since he knew supper was still not ready when he headed back through the rain 
that was changing to a colder and heavier downpour, he stopped for just a moment 
and picked a leaf from the scraggly plant outside the front door to the 
bunkhouse. He wasnt sure whether it was a bush or a weed. Probably a weed from 
the broad leaf with the thornlike tips.
Carrying it gently in his left hand, he stepped into the common room. Except for 
several riggers that he knew only by sight and name, the tables were mostly 
empty. Kharl sat down at one end of a bench. He set the leaf on the table and 
looked at it, both with eyes and order senses.
Even though he had picked it, there was still some sense of life, although that 
was fading. Kharl could sense the way the order and chaos ebbed, almost like 
tiny threads, notched or hooked at the ends. Almost on a whim, he tried to 
link those hooks.
The leaf looked subtly different.
When Kharl touched it, it felt as hard as iron. He undid the twists in the order 
and chaos that he had somehow created, and both order and chaos disintegrated 
into minute fragments, a touch of white mist and one of black seeping unseen 
into the air. The leaf itself went limp. He could tell it was also dead, totally 
dead.
Somehow, he could make things so hard that they were like armor, but doing so 
would kill anything living. He just sat there in thought for a time.
Argan and Reisl slid onto the benches across the table from Kharl, setting 
platters down. At the clunk, Kharl looked up.
Better get some. Looks good, said Reisl.
Oh thank you. As Kharl stood, he looked at the table for the leaf, but all 
that was left was a whitish powder. Almost dazed, he walked to the end of the 
mess line and waited for his platter, then picked up a mug of a very poor ale, 
and returned to the table across from Reisl and Argan, sitting down, and taking 
a swallow of the ale. He was thirsty.
What were you doing? asked Argan. We came by and you were looking at some 
funny leaf. Didnt even hear us.
Coulda fired a cannon at you. Dont think youd have moved, added Reisl.
Guess I was tired, or hungry, Kharl replied. Weve been working on a second 
weapons locker. Got the frame tied to the poop frames, and
well have most of it done tomorrow. If the rain ever lets up. Got waterproofs 
over it now, but well still need sunlight to do it right.
Another weapons locker? Reisl looked at Argan. Cant say I like that. Captain 
hear something about more pirates?
Maybe it has to do with the lord out west, the one thats rebelled against Lord 
Ghrant, suggested Argan.
Say the Hamorians might back him, mumbled Reisl, looking at Kharl. What do 
you know about that?
Some folks say hes got a white wizard and more personal guards than most hill 
lords, Kharl admitted. Hes the brother of Lord Ghrant.
Brother against brother, and lords, too. Thatd be nasty. Be glad when were 
outa dry dock, Reisl said.
Kharl just nodded. The kalfin was actually fairly good, firm under a crispy 
crust, and the potatoes were less lumpy than usual. Think well get back afloat 
by next eightday
 Hemmen or Brysta next port captain hasnt said Kharl didnt say too much 
during supper, but tried to be pleasant and not withdraw into himself.
When Reisl finished, he looked up at Kharl. Too wet to go to the inn. You want 
to join the game?
Kharl smiled. Thanks, but I had a long day.
Just asking.
Better that I dont. And it was, for more than a few reasons, since Kharl 
suspected he would have been tempted to try to use his order-senses on the dice.
Instead, after returning his empty platter, he walked outside into the cold rain 
and stood under the eaves of the bunkhouse next to the wall. He studied the 
small puddle at his feet, just looking at it for a moment, then taking it in 
with his senses, trying first to see what the patterns of order and chaos might 
be, and then following them. He touched the water, ever so lightly, with what he 
thought of as his order-sense. It seemed to grow still, the way the steam had. 
Then, he could sense almost what were little hooks on each of the fragments. 
Somehow, he looked, and thought, and twisted the hooks so that they all locked 
together.
He almost staggered, because he could feel that hed exerted some great effort. 
He looked down at the small puddle, and watched as water droplets falling from 
the edge of the eaves splattered on the smooth unmoving surface of the water. 
Had he turned the puddle to clear ice?
Slowly, he bent down and extended his fingers. The changed water was more like 
cool glass, perhaps slightly warmer than the water had been, but definitely not 
frozen. He straightened and then stamped his left boot heel on the glassy 
puddle. The puddle was as hard as stone or steel.
Kharl took out his belt knife and bent down, drawing the tip across the hard 
water. Even with the unchanged water falling from the eaves and coating the 
order-hard water, he could see that the knife made no impression, not even the 
faintest scratch. After a moment, he replaced the knife and looked at the hard 
water.
Finally, he concentrated and untwisted the hooks of order and chaos. The water 
shimmered and a faint steamy fog rose from the puddle as the colder water from 
the eaves struck what had been order-hardened water.
Kharl was suddenly exhausted, as though he had worked at a forge or a lathe all 
day, then run five or even ten kays. Hed wanted to try some of the other things 
Lyras had suggested, but he was tired, far too tired. Without looking back, he 
slowly trudged back inside the bunkhouse, past Reisl and the deckhands gaming. 
He nodded to Reisl, and got a smile in return.
As he continued down the hallway, past the rooms for the mates toward the 
bunkroom, he could hear the voices behind him.
 something about him scary
 good man, Reisl answered. Youd keep to yourself, too, if youd lost 
everything he did consort, children, cooperage
 sides, said another voice, hes the one found the friggin ship-worms 
could be wed all be in the deep locker
The voices faded out as Kharl slowly undressed and climbed into the bunk. The 
blackness of sleep was more than welcome.
LXXVI
On oneday morning, Kharl and Tarkyn were attaching the last set of hinges on the 
door to the second weapons locker. The sky overhead was almost clear, with a 
faint haze to the west, but a chill and light wind blew out of the north with a 
dampness that cut through Kharls winter jacket. Tarkyn stepped back and nodded. 
An eightday or so, and no oned
know that it hadnt been there from the time the ship went down the
ways.
Better that way. Kharl checked the racks inside and closed the door. The hasp 
fit over the lock staple perfectly. He slipped the fitted dowel in place to keep 
the door shut. Once they were back afloat, Ghart would replace the dowel with an 
actual lock, but at the moment, no lock was needed, since there were no weapons 
inside the locker.
Captain ever say why he wanted another locker? Kharl had asked before, but 
Tarkyn had always deflected the question. Dont give up, do you?
You think I ought to? countered Kharl. Would you? Tarkyn chuckled, then 
glanced around the deck, empty except for the two carpenters at that moment. 
Didnt say. Not exactly. Said something about ports not being as safe as they 
used to be, even Austran ports.
He thinks someone might try to take over the ship?
With what he said, the thought had crossed my mind. Tarkyn frowned. Then, 
could be he didnt want to give the real reason. Could be he didnt have one, 
except a feeling.
Could be, Kharl agreed. You going back to see Lyras any time soon?
I hadnt planned on it. Kharl offered a laugh. I havent figured out half of 
what he told me last time. Nor had he had a chance to try several of the ideas 
Lyras had suggested. He hadnt found the passage in The Basis of Order about 
staffs, and he hadnt been successful, so far, in trying to become invisible. 
But that could have been because he was still tired. Or maybe he was missing 
something.
Mages are like that. Tarkyn paused. Youre getting like that.
Must be getting older, like you, Kharl countered. Reisl said he saw you 
looking at a leaf in the mess the other day. Just looked at it, and it got real 
stiff. Then, after a bit, just fell apart into white powder. Scared him stiff. 
He likes you, but still scared him. Tarkyn waited. Kharl almost swallowed. He 
hadnt realized that Reisl had been watching that closely. After a long moment, 
he finally said, I didnt mean to scare anyone. It was something Lyras 
suggested. Told me to study little things. I did it wrong. The leaf was almost 
dead anyway, but I didnt help it. Its hard work. I had to go to bed early 
that night. I was that tired.
For doing that to a leaf?
Well I was outside studying the rain/ Kharl added. That was hard, too. No 
one ever told me that even learning little things about magery took so much 
strength. He was pleased that hed managed to tell almost all the truth without 
revealing too much, and not much more than Tarkyn already knew.
The older carpenter nodded. Heard that from others. Said that one of the mages 
that destroyed Fairvenor might havehad been a big brawny smith came back a 
skinny old man. Others never came back at all.
I could see that. Just the little things, just studying things, and I felt so 
tired, like Id worked a forge all day. I guess thats why I keep telling people 
I can do a few things, but that Im not a mage and might not ever be one.
Tarkyn laughed. Id believe that, except for one thing.
Kharl raised his eyebrows in question.
Youre the kind that never gives up leastwise about that sort.
Kharl wondered. Hadnt he given up in a way about Charee, and about Warrl?
Trouble coming, said Tarkyn, looking over Kharls shoulder.
Kharl turned and watched as Furwyl crossed the gangway between the ship and the 
edge of the dry dock and made his way across the main deck.
You about finished? asked the first mate.
Just did, Tarkyn said.
Good. Put all your tools back in the carpenter shop below, and the ones you 
carried over to that shed. Then get your personal gear back aboard. Were 
refloating the ship. Captain wants us out of here and ready to sail morning 
after tomorrow. Were moving to the Lords Pier soon as we get clear.
Mind telling us why, ser? asked Tarkyn.
Captain didnt say much, except that we needed to be ready to shove off.
Kharl wondered how much of Hagens urgency had been created by the reports of 
conflict between Lord Ghrant and his elder brother.
LXXVII
Dy threeday evening, after two frantic and hectic days, the Seastag was back in 
Valmurl harbor proper, tied to the innermost pier for oceangoing vessels, the 
so-called Lords Pier. The last of the wagons that had been lined up on the pier 
had been unloaded in late afternoon, and the cargo stowed below. Now, the pier 
was empty, except for an occasional sailor. But a handful of vessels remained in 
the harbor, and no others at the Lords Pier.
Because the day had been warmer, and because the light was brighter, Kharl had 
come topside to read and found a quiet place forward of the paddle wheels. 
Hunched in his winter jacket, wearing a glove on the hand that held the book, 
but not on the one that turned the pages, in the dusk he looked down at the open 
page of The Basis of Order. He had read the words before, but he read them 
again.
Order cannot be concentrated in and of itself, not even within the staff of 
order, and no man can truly master the staff of order until he casts it aside.
How could anyone master something that he cast aside? And why should anyone cast 
aside something as useful as a staff? The next words had not been much more 
help.
For order cannot be divided in two without its power being diminished by four, 
and if it be divided into four parts, then its power is less by another fourth, 
so that the total of all portions is but one sixteenth of what it would have 
been undivided. Likewise, so it is with a staff imbued with order for whoever 
wields it
Kharl closed the book. He would have to think even more about what those words 
meant. He almost wished hed gone to see Lyras again, but hed had so little 
time when he hadnt been busy or so tired from work and
from what efforts he had made to try to do more with his order-abilities.
Youre not tired now, he murmured to himself. Not so tired as he had been, 
anyway.
He tried to recall what the mage had said about making himself invisible to 
others, something about letting light flow around him, that light flowed like 
water. But from where did it flow? Kharl glanced at the western sky above the 
roofs and towers of Valmurl. Some light flowed from the sun. Did it flow from 
lanterns or fires or torches? He had not found anything in the book about 
invisibility, or how to do it. Hed found very few references to light, and most 
of those referred to the chaotic nature of light, how it was not ordered.
He paused. Hed tried to let light flow around him beforea number of timesand 
nothing had happened. Lyras had said that becoming invisible was a trick, but 
one hed never mastered. And he thought Kharl could? The carpenter laughed to 
himself.
Still what was the harm in trying?
Could he try to order the light, use his senses to smooth it around him? As if 
he were really not standing there on the deck? He just leaned back against the 
chill wood of the paddle wheel frame and closed his eyes, trying to feel or 
sense the light.
Nothinghe sensed nothing. Except something like a whispering white breeze. Was 
that light? He tried to ease it around him, as if he were not there. Nothing 
seemed to change, and he opened his eyes only to find that he couldnt see. He 
was surrounded by blackness.
He swallowed and pushed at the light, and his sight returned.
For a time, he just sat there in the chilly dusk, breathing heavily and holding 
on to The Basis of Order.
What had he done? Did being invisible mean that he wouldnt be able to see? He 
tried to recall what Lyras had said. Something about needing his order-senses? 
Then Kharl remembered. Youll be blind. He shivered.
He considered. Hed been blind, and now he wasnt. So what was it? If the light 
flowed around him, and he needed light, even a little bit, to see He shook his 
head. It was so obvious. He really hadnt been blind. He just hadnt been able 
to see because hed had no light to see. But did that mean that others couldnt 
see him?
Slowly, he stood. Did he want to try again? If he didnt, how would he learn? 
But he also recalled that moment when he couldnt see. He took a slow deep 
breath and tried once more.
The second time the blackness was just thatblackness, no light. He tried to 
place where he was with his order-senses, and began to feel what was around him. 
Then, carefully, he eased his way aft, toward the quarterdeck where Rhylla had 
the deck duty.
He could sense her as he neared the railing, but he tried to make no sound. She 
turned, then leaned forward as if peering in his direction. Then she turned 
toward the gangway and pier.
Kharl slipped back forward and around the paddle wheel frame before he released 
his smoothing of the light. He sigheddeeply.
Again, he was tired. Not so drained as when he had hardened the water, but 
tired.
He paused. Could he harden something like the air he breathed? Into an invisible 
shield before him?
Kharl stood on the deck, letting his senses try to feel the air before him. For 
a moment, he just stood there, almost entranced, as he could see the tiniest 
fragments of order and chaos hanging in the air. Slowly, he concentrated on a 
square section of air a cubit before his eyes, twisting the hooks of order and 
chaos together.
Then he reached out with his hand, gingerly. The air was hard hard as if it 
were an invisible metal plate. He tried to push it, but it did not move or give 
way. He yawned, and his eyes blurred.
He could feel his knees turn to water, and he sat down on the deck, harder than 
he wanted to. Then, blackness washed over him.
Kharl? You all right, fellow?
The words slowly penetrated, and Kharl looked up at the shadowy figure of 
Rhylla. Tired was reading. Guess I just fell asleep. He pulled himself to his 
feet.
You look tired. Tarkyn must be working you hard. ^
Sometimes. Times, I just work myself too hard.
The third laughed. From anyone else but you Id call that a load of sowshit.
Could be from me, Kharl admitted. But I am tired.
Best not to sleep on the decknot in port. Never know who might slip aboard.
Youre right. Thank you.
Rhylla turned away.
Kharl reached up, trying to see what had happened to the air shield. It was 
gone. Did that mean that it took his own concentration to maintain
it or that it would melt away in time? He wasnt sure he wanted to spend the 
effort to find out. Certainly not at the moment.
He slowly headed for his bunk in the forecastle. If he were going to use the air 
as a shield, he needed to become better at it, or the effort would likely kill 
him faster than whatever he was trying to protect against. More practice might 
help he hoped.
He yawned again as he stepped through the hatchway. He was tired.
LXXVIII
Fourday had come, and gone, as had most of fiveday, and still the Seastag 
remained tied at the Lords Pier. Kharl and Tarkyn had spent the majority of 
fiveday cleaning out and reorganizing the carpenters shop, in an effort to undo 
the effects of the thrown-together stacks and lengths of wood and the hurriedly 
stowed tools required by the hasty reloading that had accompanied the rush of 
leaving the dry dock.
Kharl slipped the black staff into the longer overhead bin, still thinking about 
the passage in The Basis of Order. Why was it important to cast aside such a 
useful tool as the staff? He did not doubt the book, but he did question his own 
understanding of the words. That should do it.
Leastwise, gave us time to do it right fore we set to sea, grumbled Tarkyn. 
When we set to sea. If we set to sea.
You think were waiting for cargo?
At the Lords Pier? More likely waiting for Tarkyn broke off and turned in 
the stool.
Kawelt stood in the hatchway of the carpenter shop. Kharl got a visitor here.
Visitor? Kharl couldnt honestly think of anyone. Arthal? But his son wouldnt 
have even known that his father served on a ship, let alone which one, and Kharl 
doubted that Arthal would have cared, not given the way hed left the cooperage.
Second from the Southshield 
Herana?
Youre not thinking of changing ships? asked Tarkyn.
No. I dont know why shed
At the word she Tarkyn laughed. Even Kawelt looked amused.
Go on Were done for the day.
Kharl slipped on his winter jacket and gloves and headed topside, where he made 
his way to the quarterdeck. Herana and Ghart stood by the railing, talking.
 good man carpenter and a fighter a deck-stander guess thats all right
 doesnt talk much about himself
Both turned as Kharl neared.
Carpenter, said Herana, were in port till tomorrow. Thought you might like 
to join me for an ale. Ghart says youre not on the watch schedule until 
tomorrow morning.
Kharl looked to Ghart.
Still dont have that cargo, Ghart said. Go have an ale. Just take a look at 
the pier now and then.
Yes, ser. Kharl nodded.
See you later, Ghart, Herana said to the Seastags second mate.
Kharl followed Herana down the gangway, then drew abreast of her on the pier. He 
inclined his head to her. He wasnt quite sure what to call her, since he was 
neither passenger nor a crewman under her.
I was glad to see you came back, she said. Somehow, I didnt see you as the 
type that would have liked Vizyn.
You were right, but I had to see.
You dont like being a ships carpenter?
I like it. Im not certain its what I should be doing.
If you like it, and youre good ?
Kharl laughed. Once I was a cooper, and I was good at it, and I liked it. But, 
for all that, things didnt turn out so well.
Herana turned toward the open doors of the Crimson Pitcher. Kharl followed her 
inside. The tavern was half-empty, and they found a table in the far corner of 
the main public room. As Kharl seated himself across from her, he couldnt help 
but overhear words from a table nearby.
 said the regulars being marched south going to let Ilteron have Valmurl
 Lord Ghrant never was a fighter
A server appeared.
Dark ale, Herana said.
Lager. Pale ale if you dont have it, Kharl added.
Three for each.
Kharl showed his coins, as did Her ana.
Be back in a moment.
Ghart said youd had to leave Brysta. Was that what you meant by things not 
turning out? Heranas voice showed interest, but was not insistent as she 
looked at Kharl.
Something like that. Kharl paused, then waited as the server set down two mugs 
before handing over his coins. Once the woman left, he said, Board outside said 
two.
Everythings getting dearer. All the taverns are asking more.
Because of the fighting between Ghrant and Ilteron? Whats Captain Harluk going 
to do with the Southshield  if Ghrant and Ilteron start a battle here in 
Valmurl?
Steam off to where theyre not fighting, suggested Herana. Wait until 
everything clears, then go back to carrying people and cargo where they want to 
go. What else can he do?
Not much, Kharl replied. He took a swallow of the pale ale. He would have 
preferred lager, but he wasnt about to complain about what he couldnt get.
After another silence, Herana asked, You think things will work out better for 
you here?
I dont know. Once I thought that anywhere would be better. Now seems like 
people are mostly the same everywhere. Theres always someone Kharl shrugged 
and shook his head.
You see that on ships, too. Thought Id get away from that by going to sea, 
she said. Dont have as many folk, but theyre the same.
Why did you go to sea? Kharl asked. Not that many women do.
What was I going to do? Cant have childrenconsort near-on killed me when he 
found out.
Kharl winced. Im sorry.
Dont be. Was a long time ago. Made it easier. My brother knew Harluk. He 
carries a lot of passengers, especially in the summer. Helps to have some women 
in the crew. Turned out I was good at it. She looked at Kharl. You have a 
consort?
Not now. She was hung by Lord West for murder. She didnt do it Kharl gave as 
brief a description as he could of what had happened.  and that was how I got 
to be a carpenter on the Seastag.
Daresay you left out a lot.
Kharl nodded.
Your sons not real grateful, were they?
Dont think young people ever are. They know better. I did, too, back when I 
was their age.
Is that what happened with your consort?
Kharl didnt understand the question.
Herana laughed softly. My problem. Everyone got consorted. So did I. Then I 
discovered he didnt love me, just wanted children sons.
You couldnt have any. Kharl shook his head. No maybe I didnt want the 
children enough. Was always trying to do more, bring in more coins, so that wed 
have enough
Were you in love with her? asked Herana. Your consort?
The question was a shock. Kharl bit off a retort. Why was she asking? He looked 
at her, but he didnt sense anything from Herana except concern, and certainly 
there was no trace of chaos around her. Finally, he said, At times I still 
miss her
Thats not the same.
It wasnt. Kharl knew that. He also wondered if that was why he tried not to 
think about Charee much. When we were younger she was good-looking, not quite 
a beauty, but she turned heads. I thought I was in love
Now you arent sure?
Theres more than a few things Im not sure about these days, Kharl admitted. 
He forced a grin. Like why youre so interested in a carpenter second.
Because youre honest, and when youre not, youre trying to be Not that many 
men who are. Because Im either the one giving orders or taking them. Because 
its good to talk with someone not on the Southshield. Because whatever 
happens youre not the kind to be nasty She looked directly at him. Enough 
said?
Kharl couldnt help but smile. Enough said. He doubted that Herana would ever 
be more than a friend, but he had none, and certainly none who had sought him 
out.
Ghart says youre more than a carpenter
Not yet. Im not as good a ships carpenter as I should be.
A roll of laughter from two tables away was so loud that neither could speak for 
a moment.
 and if you think Id believe that, Lord Ghrant is as well-endowed as a prize 
bull
 and your mother has whiskers tougher than iron nails
Kharl could sense the chaos rising around the table. He touched Heranas arm  
need to get out of here along the wall there
The two were almost to the doorway when the table went over and men piled into 
each other. They kept moving until they were out in the cool twilight air.
Kharl took a deep breath.
You knew that was coming, Herana said.
I heard the words.
You knew.
I had a feeling, Kharl admitted. Took me a while to learn that its best not 
to ignore those feelings. He nodded toward the harbor. I probably ought to get 
back.
She nodded.
They turned toward the harbor.
LXXIX
Jxharl had been back aboard the Seastag for almost two glasses, a good glass 
after sunset, and according to Rhylla, no wagons had shown up with cargo. Nor 
had Hagen set a day or time for leaving, except that he expected that they could 
sail anytime in the next few days.
Because hed been so restless that he knew he couldnt read or sleepespecially 
as early in the evening as it was, hed made his way back topside and settled 
out of sight against the railing near the bowsprit, warm enough in his winter 
jacket and gloves. He was trying to sort out too many mattersfrom what he felt 
about what had happened over the past year to where he wanted to go and what he 
wanted to do. He really had no answers, not ones that made much sense, and what 
he read in The Basis of Order confused him as often as it explained things.
The ale hed had with Herana had made several things clear. First, he definitely 
missed feminine companionship. Second, he liked Heranas
company, but that was all. And third, hed lacked a closeness with Charee for a 
long time, something hed missed without knowing it. Or perhaps, he just had 
come to accept matters as they had come to be.
At the sound of hoofs on the pier, unusual after sunset, Kharl turned and looked 
down and aft. A rider had reined up and dismounted. He started up the gangway, 
and his voice carried. Captain Hagen! Captain Hagen!
Although the single lantern from the quarterdeck cast but faint illumination, 
Kharl thought the man wore a uniform, but not the black and yellow of Ghrants 
personal guards.
Kharl turned and moved aft, slipping around the paddle wheel frame in the 
darkness. He decided to try to cloak himself by using order, and concentrated on 
having the light flow around him. The dimness that surrounded him turned into 
absolute blackness, and for a moment he stopped, disoriented. He made an effort 
to sense his surroundings and, more slowly, continued toward the quarterdeck.
The evening deck watchstander was Ghart, and he was talking to the newcomer.
Ive called the captain, ser, and he should be here in a moment.
Sensing Hagen coming from aft, Kharl stepped back, as quietly as he could. While 
no one could see him, people could still hear him, and Hagen could certainly 
walk into him, and that would not be what Kharl wanted.
Captain, offered the slender man.
Majer my cabin? asked Hagen.
I think not. Perhaps aft and above.
As you wish. Hagen turned and crossed the deck.
The majer followed, and then, quietly, so did Kharl, several paces back, 
cautiously, climbing the ladder up to the poop well after Hagen and the majer. 
Kharl stopped less than five cubits from Hagen and the other man, possibly the 
son of a lord, as well as an officer, Kharl judged, certainly someone of high 
stature from his few words and carriage.
 would do almost aught to support Lord Ghrant, Hagen offered.
For now, what is of most concern to him is that you take his consort and sons 
to Dykaru. Tonight, if at all possible.
That is a goodly distance, said Hagen.
He does not want them threatened by Ilteron. Where else in Austra could they be 
more distant?
Or safer, suggested Hagen, seeing as it serves the center of the ancestral 
lands of Lord Ghrant.
If you agree, they will be arriving shortly.
Under the cover of darkness. Are matters that precarious here in Valmurl? Or 
does he fear that they soon will be?
Lord Ghrant does not want a pitched battle over Valmurl. If he wins, it will be 
a meaningless victory, because it will destroy the city. That is why he is 
moving south, and why he is making it known to Ilteron that he is.
And what if Ilteron takes Valmurl and does not follow Ghrant? asked Hagen.
The other man laughed, harshly. If Ilteron cannot dispose of Ghrant quickly, he 
will lose. He is known to be cruel and unforgiving. He has stated that he is 
strong and Ghrant is weak. If he cannot best Ghrant soon, that gives the lie to 
his words. And he has already killed Lord Bowar in a fit of anger. The longer 
the fight goes on, the more it favors Ghrant, and even the highland lords know 
that. Ilteron will have to fight Ghrant in the south. The southern lords will 
never support Ilteron, and it was for that reason, as well you know, Lord Hagen, 
that Lord Estloch disinherited
Kharl nodded to himself. It did not totally surprise him that Hagen was called 
lord.
I did not wish to see Austra torn in two, and yet what I did not wish has still 
come to pass, Hagen said in a voice so low that Kharl had to strain to hear the 
words.
If Ilteron does not press the fight to Lord Ghrant, the majer went on, 
eightday by eightday, the lords of the east, then the north, will slowly come 
back to Ghrant, for he will not rule them with an iron fist and curtail their 
powers. Ilteron will, and many follow him but through fear.
The Seastag is ready to set to sea, Hagen said. We will do what your master 
wishes, and I hope that your words are what comes to pass.
In his concealment, so did Kharl.
What will be will be, and the right will triumph, answered the majer.
Of that, I am certain, returned Hagen, and Kharl heard the irony in his voice. 
Let us hope that it is the proper right. For do not all men and lords believe 
that what they wish is right?
There was silence from the majer, and Kharl could sense a swirl almost of 
chaosanger, he thought.
Come, majer, Hagen went on. Relying primarily on ones cause as being right 
is an invitation to difficulty and defeat.
I have noted, Lord Hagen, came the stiff reply, that those who are convinced 
of the Tightness of their cause are more likely to persevere and triumph.
Theyre also more likely to show scorn and contempt for their opponents and to 
sow the seeds of future conflict. I have no love of this conflict, majer. No 
good will come of it, only less evil. I support Lord Ghrant, as I have told him 
to his face, not because he is a great lord, but because he has the chance to 
become one, while his brother can only become worse.
The cool matter-of-fact words spoken by Hagen chilled Kharl, but the majer 
remained agitated.
Ser
Enough. Hagens single word, delivered in a tone of cold command, silenced the 
majer. After a moment, he went on. We do not live in a world where all is good, 
majer. We must do the best we can with what we are given. We have the better 
cause, but it is far from perfect, and to think otherwise is vain arrogance. I 
await the Lady Hyrietta and her sons.
Ser. They will be here shortly. The majers words were clipped, but Kharl had 
the feeling that the man was still seething.
Still holding his shield around himself, Kharl quickly made his way back down to 
the main deck before the majer, hurrying forward past the paddle wheel on the 
starboard side. Then he released the shield. Even the dimness of night was 
welcome after the blackness he had endured.
Kharl had always felt that Hagen was more than a mere captain or factor, but 
from the majers reactions it was clear that Hagen held far more power in Austra 
than Kharlor most of the crewhad realized. It was also obvious how Hagen 
regarded Lord Ghrant.
Kharl had barely considered those facts before the sound of hoof-beats on the 
pier signaled the departure of the majer. In the comparative silence that 
followed, Kharl pondered whether he should head to his bunk in the forecastleor 
if he could even sleep immediatelywhen he heard footsteps.
Thought you might be here, said Furwyl. Cold as it is, most nights youre up 
here.
Its not that cold, ser, replied Kharl.
Im from Dykaru, and its a fair sight colder here in winter than
there. Anyway, captain wants to see you. Hes up on the poop, forward of the 
wheel.
Yes, ser. As he turned and headed aft across the foredeck, Kharl wondered if 
the captain had sensed his presence, or if Hagen had a task for him because of 
the majer. He made his way across the main deck not at all quietly, then up the 
ladder.
Hagen was standing at the rail, looking westward toward Valmurl.
Ser you asked for me?
The captain did not move for a moment, then turned. I did. Id like to ask you 
to undertake a different duty for the next few days. Youd share it with Ghart 
and Esamat.
Kharl waited. He only knew Esamat by sight and name, a wiry top rigger, but the 
combination of the three was definitely strange.
Were going to have a passenger, a lady and her two sons, and well be carrying 
them south to Dykaru. Shell have my cabin for the trip, and Ill be needing a 
guard in the passageway at all times. Youre good with that staff or a cudgel, 
and I can trust you. Youre also older, and that helps.
Yes, ser. Kharl wasnt about to say no, not when Hagen had done so much for 
him. If I might ask is this Lord Ghrants consort?
Hagen looked hard at Kharl.
Ser I dont know much, but I heard that Dykaru was where Lord Ghrants from, 
and if youre giving up your cabin, and want a guard all the time Kharl 
frowned. But maybe Im speaking out of turn, but wouldnt she have her own 
guards? Maybe Im presuming too much
Youre not presuming. I keep forgetting that youve seen more than most. It is 
the Lady Hyrietta, and she will have a detachment of guards. I dont have the 
greatest trust in those guards, and they will be stationed outside the 
passageway, but I want you or one of the others in that passageway at all times, 
even when she or the boys are on deck. No one is to enter the cabin, except her, 
the boys, their nurse, and me. No one.
Youre thinking treachery, ser?
Ilteron is famous for that, and I want to make sure nothing happens on board 
the Seastag. Hagen paused. You and Ghart and Esamat are to be here when she 
comes aboard. I also want her to know that only the three of youand Furwyl and 
Rhyllaare to be in that passageway, but none of the crew and officers except me 
are to enter the cabin.
Yes, ser.
Stand by somewhere on the decks. When you hear a carriage or mounts, join the 
others outside the hatchway on the main deck.
Yes, ser. Kharl nodded.
Ghart will have a cudgel for youunless youd prefer the staff.
Cudgeld be better in the passageway, ser.
I thought as much.
Kharl climbed down the ladder. The engineers had to be firing up the boilers, 
because he could smell coal as he moved forward, almost all the way to the 
bowsprit, where he stood at the railing and looked out at the city to the west, 
with its mostly shadowed shapes and intermittent torches and lamps. How many 
people out there knew that their futures hung on what happened between two 
brothers? And how many truly knew the alternative represented by each? Kharl 
knew that he didnt. Hed heard bits and pieces, yet he suspected hed heard 
more than most people. Was it always that way?
Not more than half a glass had passed before Kharl heard hoofs on the pier and 
the wheels of a carriage. He hurried aft to the hatchway leading to the 
captains quarters. Ghart and Esamat were already there.
Esamat looked at Kharl and smiled. Even fore the captain said it, figured you 
might be one.
Kharl shrugged. Surprised me.
Both Ghart and Esamat laughed.
Kharl could hear Hagens voice coming from the quarterdeck, and anothers voice. 
Neither sounded pleased, but Kharl said nothing and neither did the two standing 
beside him. More time passed, and then a group of people moved across the 
dimness of the main deck, led by Hagen, who carried a lantern.
Behind Hagen was an undercaptain in the yellow and black of Lord Ghrants 
personal guards, followed by a young woman who had to be Lady Hyrietta. The Lady 
Hyrietta wore a dark blue cloak and a brimmed hat. Neither could hide that she 
was slender, if full-figured. Her dark hair had been braided and mostly tucked 
under the hat. Slightly behind her came her sons. The two boys were young. The 
older one held his mothers hand. The younger was being carried by another 
woman, gray-haired, but not that much older than Kharl.
Hagen stopped short of the three sailors, inclining his head to the lady. Lady 
Hyrietta, as I explained, Hagen said, these three men will be your inside 
guards. The tall one at the end is Kharl. Hes one of the
ships carpenters. He also cleared almost the entire deck of a pirate vessel 
attacking us. The light-haired one is Esamat. He used to be an assassin in 
Hamor. While that was several years ago, hes still quite good. Ghart is the 
second mate, and he served a tour as an undercaptain with Lord Est-loch. Hes 
also the one who killed Varrot.
The faintest hint of a wry smile crossed Hyriettas heart-shaped face. You take 
your duties most seriously, Lo Captain.
I know where my duty lies, lady. Now let us proceed. Hagen looked at Ghart. 
Youll have the first watch, Esamat the second, Kharl the third.
Yes, ser.
You three wait here. Hagen turned to the undercaptain. If you and your men 
would also wait here while we settle Lady Hyrietta and the heirs?
The undercaptain nodded, politely, but with scarcely more than minimal approval.
Kharl surveyed the armsmen who stood behind the undercaptain. There were twelve, 
and they ranged in age from one barely a few years older than Arthal to one 
close to Kharls age. The undercaptain was bearded and graying, an older officer 
who had made his way through the ranks, Kharl surmised.
Hagen returned shortly and immediately addressed the undercaptain. You 
understand the arrangements. Your men will guard the hatchway here, on the 
outside. The only people to enter the passageway are me, the officers, and these 
three men.
Yes, ser.
Kharl could tell that the undercaptain was not totally pleased with the 
arrangement.
Hagen offered a smile. No man does two jobs well. Your men only worry about one 
area, and mine only worry about one.
The undercaptain nodded.
Hagen looked to Kharl and Esamat. You two best get some sleep. Youll be roused 
in your turn with the rest of the duty.
Yes, ser.
Neither Kharl nor Esamat spoke until they were back on the main deck and well 
back from the two personal guards in yellow and black.
The captain worries, offered Kharl.
Wouldnt you? With the lords lady and his heirs in your hands?
That I would. Kharl paused. Do you know if Lord Ilteron has any ships?
None of his own, Esamat replied. Leastwise, not that Ive heard. Hes in 
tight with the Hamorians, though.
Wed better hope that theyve no warships near.
Not likely, and the captains a better seaman than any of them. With the engine 
and favorable winds, no ironbound ship could catch
us.
Then wed best hope for favorable winds. Kharl hoped a great deal more than 
that was favorable.
LXXX
Slightly before four glasses after midnight, Kharl pulled on his clothes and 
readied himself to relieve Esamat. In the darkness, he took up his cudgel and 
made his way across the deck to where two armsmen in yellow and black guarded 
the hatchway to the captains cabin. Hagen was waiting, as was the undercaptain.
This is Kharl. Hes one of our three guards. Hagen held up the small lantern 
he was carrying so that the light fell on Kharls face.
The undercaptain nodded, and one of the guards stood back so that Kharl could 
open the hatch and step inside.
The passageway was a good twenty cubits long, but less than three wide and 
barely four high, so that Kharl had to duck his head to avoid hitting it on the 
overhead. There were doors on both sides for the mates cabins, and then smooth 
bulkheads for the last ten cubits leading to the captains cabin. Esamat rose 
from a stool set aft of the last doors. As the other man did, Kharl noticed that 
two changes had been made to the passageway. A bracket had been added to hold a 
small lantern, and a small watch bell had also been added where Esamat had been 
standing his watch.
The bell is only if we get attacked or threatened, Esamat said. Captain 
refilled the lantern maybe half a glass ago. The rigger stretched. Its been 
quiet. Hope it is for you.
So do I.
After Esamat left, Kharl took his position in the passageway outside the 
captains cabin. For almost the first three glasses, except for Hagens retiring 
to the firsts cabin, the only sounds in the passageway were those of Kharls 
breathing and his own movements.
Then, about a glass before Kharl was due to be relieved by Ghart, Hagen 
reappeared from the cabin that he was sharing with Furwyl.
Quiet, Kharl?
Very quiet so far, ser.
Lets hope it stays that way, but dont wager anything on it.
No, ser.
And dont hesitate to ring the watch bell there if anything looks wrong. 
Anything at all, you understand.
Yes, ser.
With a nod, the captain left the passageway.
Kharl heard him say, Good morning, to the armsmen outside on the deck before 
he closed the hatch.
In the next half glass, Furwyl appeared, as did Rhylla, then Bemyr, and they all 
went topside. Ghart was obviously still sleeping.
Then Kharl heard a high childish voice from behind him, loud enough to penetrate 
the closed cabin door.
Mommy want to go home dont want to be here
 be going to the summer place
 dont want summer want home
 well go home later. Your father will be coming to meet us
 want home
About that point, had the boy been his, Kharl would have gotten somewhat more 
forceful.
Lady Hyrietta merely murmured something else that Kharl could not hear.
 no home
No! Thats enough, Kyran!
Kharl smiled. The Lady Hyrietta wasnt all that much more patient than he was.
The voices subsided to murmurs, and Kharl studied the passageway, hoping that 
nothing did happen on the voyage southward, and especially not on his watches.
LXXXI
On the second day of the voyage, and less than a glass after sunset, Kharl was 
standing his second passageway watch of the voyage south to Dykaru. The seas 
were almost calm, and Hagen was on deck. In fact, all the mates were somewhere 
topside.
The Lady Hyrietta and her sons were in the cabin. The nurse had left the cabin a 
short while before, and from the silence, Kharl gathered that she and Lady 
Hyrietta had put the boys to bed and that the lady was reading or resting 
herself, while the nurse was on deck for a breath of night air.
After three glasses in the passageway, Kharl was due to be relieved in about a 
glass, and he was ready for that. Standing duty in the narrow passageway left 
him feeling restless and confined. Inadvertently, his thoughts skittered back to 
his imprisonment in the Hall of Justice in Brysta. Hall of injustice, he 
thought, wondering if better justicers would have helped, or if they would have 
been run out or dismissed by Egen or Lord West.
His lips curled into an ironic smile. People didnt really want justice, not 
unless they were desperate. Even he hadnt wanted justice so much as freedom. 
His thoughts were interrupted by a dull thump outside, from the main deck.
Kharl stiffened, easing off the stool and grabbing the cudgel, then turning as 
the hatch opened. He could sense someone outsidelifting somethinga crossbow. 
That left Kharl as a target more vulnerable than a grounded goose, outlined by 
the lamp on the bulkhead. He did the only thing he could think that would help, 
using his Talent to bind the very air into a shield, hoping that he was in time, 
and that he could hold the shield long enough.
Clank! Thunk! The crossbow quarrel dropped to the deck, bent. The armsman in 
black and yellow charged toward Kharl, his sabre extended and clearly expecting 
a wounded, if not a dead or dying, guard.
Kharl raised the cudgel slightly, but stayed behind the hardened air.
The armsman thrust, his blade striking the invisible shield. The sabre blade 
shattered, metal scattering across the deck and bouncing from the lower parts of 
the bulkheads.
At the momentary look of astonishment on the armsmans face, Kharl released the 
minute order-chaos hooks holding the air solid, and struck at the man, the 
cudgel slamming into the attackers lower ribs.
Oooof The armsman dropped the useless sabre hilt, trying to dance back and 
draw a long knife, but his steps were wobbly.
Kharls were not, nor was his aim off. His second blow was to the mans knife 
arm, and something cracked. His third shattered a kneecap, and the man toppled, 
slowly, sprawling onto the deck. The armsman did not make a sound, but lay on 
the deck, writhing.
Kharl stepped forward, his cudgel ready.
The attackers good hand went to his belt, and then to his mouth. He swallowed 
something.
Kharl grabbed for the mans arm, but with a second swallow, the armsman 
convulsed. Kharl began to ring the bell that Hagen had attached to the bulkhead.
What Lady Hyriettas head peered from the captains door.
Lady! Stay there and bolt the door!
Hyrietta did not argue, and Kharl heard the bolt slam home.
Within moments, Ghart and Hagen burst through the hatchway from the main deck.
In the dim light from the small lantern, Hagen looked down at the 
still-convulsing armsman.
I tried to stop him without killing him, ser, Kharl said. But he took poison 
before I could get to him.
Poison? Hagen looked to Ghart, then back at the fallen armsman, who gave a 
last shudder before slumping into silence.
He put something in his mouth.
He did something to the outside guards, Hagen said, his eyes darting from side 
to side, checking the passageway. Could have offered them something to 
drinkwater, wine. Both are dead. Poisoned, Id say.
But hed been with Ghrant for years thats what they said.
Treachery that has always been Ilterons way Hagen turned to Ghart. Go find 
the undercaptain and tell him what happened. Then
take care of this one. Dont let anyone inside here. The undercaptain can look 
from the hatchway if he insists.
Yes, ser.
Ghart made his way back onto the deck, closing the hatch behind him, leaving 
Hagen with Kharl in the passageway.
Hagen looked at Kharl. He picked you.
I suppose he did.
The captain laughed, mirthlessly. Bad choice.
You knew they would, Kharl said.
I thought, if there were any treachery, that they would. Id hoped that his 
personal guard would have been above subversion. I wasnt about to wager the 
lady and the heirs on that hope, though.
Ghart reappeared. Undercaptains on his way.
Ill talk to the lady. Hagen turned and walked to the door to his cabin, where 
he knocked. Lady Hyrietta? Hagen here.
After a moment, the door opened a crack, then more.
I need to come in for a moment. The cabin door closed behind the captain, and 
Kharl could hear the sound of voices, but not the words.
Ghart looked at the body of the dead armsman, then at the deck near Kharls 
boots. He bent down and picked up the crossbow quarrel, its tip bent back.
He must have hit something, Kharl said. He shot, then charged
me.
Ghart studied the deck again, this time picking up the shattered sections of the 
sabre. I suppose he missed with this, too?
Kharl shrugged. He tried to get me. I used the cudgel. Maybe he wasnt used to 
fighting in a narrow space.
Ghart laughed, humorlessly. Well leave it at that, but I think Ill just make 
sure all this goes overboard. Its probably better that way.
No one would believe I was that lucky, Kharl said.
Youre right about that, Ghart replied as he turned with the bent quarrel and 
broken sabre fragments.
Before long, Kharl could hear voices outside the hatchway.
Poisoned bastard poisoned his own mates You want me to
believe that?
I daresay that Lord Hagen doesnt much care what you believe, undercaptain. He 
knows what happened, and he knew it was likely
The undercaptain was furious. Kharl could feel the anger.
You see why the captain wanted two sets of guards? asked Ghart, his voice 
calm.
 and your man killed him so we cant find out
No Kharl disabled him, but he wasnt quick enough to stop him from taking 
poison.
You want me to believe that
One moment.
Ghart reappeared in the passageway. He shook his head as he bent and grasped the 
dead armsmans tunic and dragged the limp form out of the passageway, mostly 
closing the hatch behind him.
 face is blue
 poison does that better believe it.
Kharl waited, wondering if there would be another attempt to get to the lady and 
her sons. Yes, he decided. The question was merely whether the attempt would 
occur on the Seastag or elsewhere.
While he could hope that the attempts occurred where Hagen might prevent them, 
he had his doubts. Whenever there might be another attempt, it would be with 
greater stealth or greater forceor both. He didnt doubt his own courage but 
he did worry about knowing enough to deal with something that was less obvious.
LXXXII
Although Kharl and two others assigned to the passageway duty remained 
especially alert for the last two days of the voyage, there were no more 
attempts to attack either the armsmen or those standing duty in the passageway. 
Nor did the ship encounter any other vessels, not any that Kharl knew about, in 
any case. The seas had been calm, and there had not been much need for carpentry 
during the short voyage, for which Kharl had been grateful.
On a bright and much warmer eightday, one that was calm and
N windless, the Seastag steamed into the small harbor at Dykaru and tied
up at the single narrow pier that served oceangoing vessels. At least a
company of armsmen in yellow and black held the pier, as well as two squads of 
lancers in the same colors. Waiting opposite the spot where the Seastag tied up 
was a coach of golden oak, trimmed in black.
Wearing only a heavy gray shirt, Kharl looked beyond the pier, at Dykaru itself, 
not quite a city, rather a town composed of clusters of buildings, most of them 
with white plastered walls and orangish brown roof tiles. The trees were all 
broad-leafed, rather than the evergreens predominant in the north, and had 
remained green, rather than graying the way leafed trees did in the colder 
climes. On a low hillside to the west was a keep with light gray stone walls. 
The walls of the interior buildings were white and roofed in the same tile as 
the dwellings and structures in the town proper.
The harbor itself was empty of larger vessels, except for the Seastag, and a 
handful of fishing vessels at the smaller wharf to the west of deep-water pier.
From the foredeck, Kharl watched as the Lady Hyrietta and her sons crossed the 
main deck to the gangway and made their way down to the carriage. Hagen walked 
beside her the entire way to the coach, and the nurse followed. The armsmen in 
black and yellow surrounded them. After escorting the lady, her sons, and the 
nurse to the coach and closing the door, the captain bowed and stepped back. The 
lancers and the coach began to move, and then the armsmen on foot fell in 
behind.
Once the pier was clear, Hagen made his way back up the gangway. Kharl watched 
as the captain stopped on the quarterdeck and surveyed the ship, then turned 
forward and made his way toward Kharl. The carpenter waited.
Hagen stopped several cubits away. I wanted to thank you. I wasnt totally 
fair, but I knew I could count on you, and there arent many in the world so 
trustworthy.
I dont know that I am, Kharl replied.
In the things that matter you are. Youve proved that time after time, but 
then, you probably did in Brysta as well.
Kharl had his doubts about that. Instead, he asked, What do you think will 
happen?
Ilteron will bring his forces south and attempt to crush Ghrant before most of 
the lords, landowners, and factors come to understand how evil Ilteron truly 
is. For a moment, Hagens lips tightened. Doubtless the Emperor of Hamor has 
suggested that he can spare wizards,
ships, and armsmen for but a limited time, in order to force Ilteron to act 
quickly.
So that there will be a war that weakens both sides and leaves Aus-tra divided 
and in chaos? suggested Kharl.
For a former cooper, you have come to understand matters quickly, far more 
quickly than most of the lords of Austra, I fear.
Several times, you have been addressed as Lord/  Kharl said.
And you would like to know why?
If it would not trouble you.
Hagen laughed once. I am a lord, of sorts. My father was the arms-commander for 
Lord Estbach. Lord Estbach was Lord Estlochs father and the one who became Lord 
of Austra when his own brother died without proper heirs. My father was gifted 
with the lands of South Shilton. They are most rocky, fit for goats and sheep, 
if that, and without meadows, trees worthy of the name, or even a sizable 
stream. For that reason, and because my father was much respected, no one much 
cared about the gifting. After my fathers death, I borrowed against them to 
purchase my first vessel. I was lucky in my trading, and was able to repay the 
loan. I have not borrowed since, and consider myself most fortunate in that 
respect.
I dont think thats the entire tale, replied Kharl, but Id not ask for 
more.
I was also the head of Lord Ghrants personal guard for a brief time, a few 
years back. It was not a happy experience for either of us.
From what he had seen of Hagen and heard of Ghrant, Kharl could not say that he 
was surprised.
It was not a position I desired, Hagen said, but Lord Estloch prevailed upon 
me, and because of what I felt I owed, I did what was necessary and as quickly 
as possible, and Lord Ghrant and I remained on speaking terms. And there you 
have it, carpenter and mage.
Im not a mage, Kharl replied. I can do a few things that use order, but Im 
far from a mage.
Hagen smiled. Youre hard on yourself.
Not any harder than you are on yourself, ser.
Hagen shook his head ruefully. I think not, but the passing years will tell.
When will we put back to sea?
Not for a time yet. None of the cargo is that urgent.
Kharl nodded politely. It was clear that Hagen intended to see what happened, 
perhaps even have the Seastag standing by as a way for Ghrant and his family to 
leave Dykaruand Austraif necessary. You think things could get bad here?
If theres a fleet from Hamor that appears offshore that will tell
you how bad it is.
I hope not.
Nor I, but my luck hasnt run that deep in recent years. Hagen inclined his 
head. Thank you again. Then he turned and was gone.
Kharl glanced out to the west at the peaceful view of the white-walled buildings 
of Dykaru, set against the greenery. After a time, he turned away and headed 
down to the carpenter shop. With little carpentry to do, he would try to glean 
more from The Basis of Order.
LXXXIII
For the next day and a half, Kharl and Tarkyn worked on minor repairs to the 
exterior of the paddle wheel frames. The repairs were not immediately necessary, 
but there was little point in postponing them, since the damage would only 
increase over time, especially in winter. They also put another coat of finish 
on the new weapons locker, taking advantage of the warmer weather in Dykaru.
After completing the lockers finish work in the late afternoon, Kharl had taken 
a break and stood on the aft part of the poop, looking to the northwest, out 
across the harbor and the white walls and tile roofs of the town. Well beyond 
the keep of Lord Ghrant, he could sense something in the distance. He guessed 
that if he could have seen farther, he would have seen or sensed a white mist, 
the kind that surrounded a chaos-wizardor wizards.
You feel something?
Kharl turned to see Hagen standing by the wheel platform.
The carpenter shrugged. Im not certain, but I think theres a white wizard 
coming toward Dykaru from the northwest. Therell be more than one, but I dont 
know how many.
If so, I cant say Im surprised, Hagen replied. Ghrants arms-commanderand 
most of the regular officersthought that Ilteron would take Valmurl first. That 
never made sense to me.
Why not? asked Kharl, in spite of himself. Hed gain control of the capital 
and the largest port in Austra.
Ilterons strength is in the west, and hes not that well loved in the east. 
Why fight over a city that Ghrants abandoned? All he would do would be to 
damage what he hopes to gain. If he defeats Ghrant, Valmurl will be that much 
easier to take. In fact, most would accept his rule as necessary, if not exactly 
welcome.
Even if they dont care for him?
The alternative would be worse. If Ilteron defeats Ghrant, he will either kill 
him and his family or drive them from Austra. He will try for the first. It 
makes matters much easier. Hagens tone turned dryly ironic. Once that 
happens, what can the landholders do? Support someone else and prolong the war 
and destruction? Even if someone managed to kill Ilteron, and if one of Ghrants 
sons survived, or Ilterons, at best, Austra would be looking at a long regency, 
at worst another ambitious lord trying to seize power from underage and untried 
heirs. And that would make it far easier for the Emperor of Hamor.
If I happened to be Ilteron, Kharl suggested, Id be looking behind me as 
well as before. Thatd be more true if I won.
Youre even more suspicious than I am, mage.
As suspicious, perhaps. Not more. You must have considered that long ago.
Hagen laughed.
How long will we stay in Dykaru? Until the outcome is certain one way or the 
other?
Unhappily.
Kharl understood that. Is there any way you can help Lord Ghrant?
At the moment, I know of nothing else to be done. I have no arms-men, only a 
handful of unarmed vessels. Well have to see what opportunities arise.
If any do, thought Kharl bleakly.
LXXXIV
lwo more days passed, and Hagen remained onshore somewhere, leaving Furwyl in 
charge of the Seastag. After finishing the paddle wheel frame repairs, and 
giving the first weapons locker another coat of finish, because it looked too 
worn compared to the new locker, Kharl and Tarkyn retreated to the carpenter 
shop, where Tarkyn continued to work on his scrimshaw, and Kharl read and reread 
The Basis of Order.
Kharl searched the book for something that might explain what he had done by 
hardening the air and the water, but he could find nothing that mentioned what 
he had done, not in so many words. One passage offered a general thought:
Order is like glue, in that it links all together, while chaos is but the 
opposite. Its power lies in separating and when even the smallest bits of that 
which surround us are separated, basic fire and the heat of flame are released. 
A chaos-wizard channels that fire and flame, and yet he must use order to do so, 
lest he be separated from himself by the powers of separation
So he had been using order like glue? Kharl frowned. It made sense in a fashion, 
and yet, it did not, because no glue could turn air into a shield against a 
crossbow bolt.
He let the book drop, considering. Nowhere in the entire book, he realized, was 
there actually a description of how to use order or chaos to accomplish 
anything. There were only insights, observations, and explanations about the 
world or how matters worked. Had it been written that way on purpose? Or because 
it had been written by someone who was making discoveries as he wrote?
Wont learn how to be a mage from reading, suggested Tarkyn, looking up from 
the scrimshaw.
I know. But I look for hints and ideas, and then I try to see what I might be 
able to do.
Any luck?
I found the weak hull planks, Kharl pointed out.
Im glad of that. Wouldnt have wanted to swim my way to shore. Too much work.
You can swim? asked Kharl.
Used to be able to. Was a sawboy, and fell into the millstream. Owners son 
pulled me out, then taught me something about swimming. Claimed it was easier 
than training a new sawboy every few eightdays. Really not all that hard. Just 
keep your arms in the water and move em slow.
Thats all?
Tarkyn laid down the scrimshaw. Look. Youre floating in the water. You lift 
your arms out of the water and thrash, and two things happen. Theres more 
weight up over you, and that pushes you down. And your arms arent doing 
anything to keep you afloat. The older carpenter snorted. Everythings like 
that. Do it slow and easy, and you get in less trouble. Flap and thrash doesnt 
work. You see an eagle flying-wings move slow-like.
Kharl nodded. Youre right. Just hadnt thought of it in that way. He could 
swim, but no one had taught him that way.
Most times, you discover something, replied Tarkyn, you havent found 
anything new at all, just looked at the same thing differently. Its like you 
see it for the first time all over again. He picked up the scrimshaw and 
studied it. Then lifes like that, if you really live it.
Lifes like that if you really live itthe words seemed to echo, to resonate 
through Kharl. Had that been his problem all along, that hed never really 
looked at life? But did anyone? Really? Unless something happened and he was 
forced to reconsider everything that he thought he had held dear?
He looked down, blankly, at the open book.
LXXXV
On sixday, after he and Tarkyn had completed another round of minor repairs, and 
when the duty day in port was done, Kharl decided to take shore leave. Hagen had 
still not returned to the ship, and Ghart had merely admonished Kharl not to 
stay too long.
Kharl left the Seastag about a glass before sunset and walked in the empty pier 
toward the avenue along the stone wall that marked the edge of the harbor. 
Unlike Valmurl or Swartheld, there were no guards or patrollers on the pier or 
the avenue that fronted the harbor. He walked alone, and that was how he often 
felt, for as a carpenter and a subofficer, he was neither an officer on the 
Seastag, nor exactly a crewman.
The second street to the right off the harbor avenue was wider, almost a 
boulevard, and Kharl turned onto it, walking to the northwest, past a cobblers, 
then a cloth factors, where all manner of colored linen and cotton fabrics were 
displayed. The pavement itself was of oblong limestone blocks, and with raised 
sidewalks on each side of the street proper, but the boulevard was nearly 
deserted. At the first cross street, he looked to his left, and saw a group of 
men in the black and green of the Austran lancers. Two men in gray cloaks looked 
at the lancers from the small porch of a silversmiths.
 do more good if they were out north
 dont seem to care whats good for Austra
 who does, these days?
One glanced at Kharl, then the other, and they stepped back inside the shop.
Halfway up the next block, Kharl stopped under a green awning, turning and 
peering through the open, arched doorway. With the high-arched ceilings and the 
tables, it looked like a tavern or a cafe, but out of the close to twenty 
tables, only two were takenone by four officers in green and black, and one by 
two white-haired men.
An older woman appeared, wearing a brown apron over a tan shirt and trousers. 
Yes?
I wondered if you were open?
We are.
Everything is so deserted. I wasnt sure.
Were open. The gray-haired woman turned with a sigh and, walking with a limp 
to one side of the public area, seated Kharl at a table under a wall arch.
What will you have? Lager and dark ale, and some redberrythats all we have.
Lager. What about food?
Fowl with groundnuts and sauce or zatana.
Ill have the fowl.
After she limped away, Kharl studied the table, a wood hed not seen, light like 
white oak but with irregulars swirls in the grain, dark lines intertwined with 
brilliant gold ones.
Lager. The server set the tall green mug on the table. Three coppers.
Kharl handed her four.
Thank you. She paused. You off the ship?
Yes.
They say your captain is waiting, in case he needs to take the lady and the 
heirs to Nordla or Candar.
Hes waiting, but I dont think thats the reason. He hasnt said. Kharl 
offered a smile he hoped didnt look too forced.
Those in charge never do. With a sound halfway between a sniff and a snort, 
she turned, then stopped. Be a bit for the fowl.
Thats fine.
After the woman retreated, Kharl took a swallow of the lagercool, but not cold, 
and more welcome than he had thought it would be. He glanced around the public 
room, taking in the arches on each side and the paintings hung on the flat wall 
surface between the arches. The one directly across from him showed an 
old-style, full-rigged ship under full sail, with a spit of land on the right 
sidepresumably leaving Dykaru. The one farther away, across the room and to his 
left, showed a black-haired man lifting a large mug and smiling. The background 
was that of the same public room where Kharl sat, subtly different, looking 
perhaps newer.
Kharl took another swallow of the lager, thinking.
Here you are, ser. Thatll be three.
Kharl looked up, blankly, for a moment, his thoughts interrupted by the arrival 
of the fowl, accompanied by some type of yams and a basket of bread. Then, he 
handed over four coppers.
Thanks be to you, ser.
Kharl ate slowly, enjoying the combination of the mildly hot but creamy sauce, 
the piquant taste of the fowl, and the crunchiness of the toasted groundnuts. He 
wasnt that fond of yams, but dipping them in the sauce helped that problem. As 
he ate, he listened to the four officers, using his order-senses to boost his 
hearing.
 dont understand why were getting pushed back bastard lords only got forty 
companies of lancers
 doesnt count the wizards cant fight fireballs, and cant use rifles or 
cannon.
 retreating too much
 not for long. No place left to retreat
A laughbitterfollowed. Cant get any farther south.
Ilteronll go for the keep.
Better hope so
One of the officers stood. Time to get back.
 before we cant
Kharl watched as the four left. With an attack taking place, he had to wonder 
what they were doing where they were. Or was that just another of Ghrants 
problems? He was beginning to understandhe thoughtwhy Hagen had not stayed 
long as Ghrants arms-commander. But since the four were regulars, that did not 
say much for the Austran lancers and foot and their support of Ghrant.
He finished eating, more thoughts than he could have counted swirling through 
his mind, then rose and left.
Kharl had not taken ten steps away from the cafe or tavern before he heard a 
dull thump. He looked back and saw that the lamp by the door had been 
extinguished and the double doors closedprobably barred as well.
He picked up his pace on the empty boulevard although he heard no sounds. Hed 
walked almost two blocks when the low rumble of iron-rimmed wheels on the stone 
pavement echoed down the boulevard from behind him. The rumbling rapidly grew 
louder, and was accompanied by a low moaning. He slipped into the darker shadows 
of an alleyway, watching as the long and narrow wagon rolled toward him. Through 
the
darkness, he could sense the chaos of wounds, and imminent death, and the 
wounded armsmen lying or sitting in the wagon.
 gone too far
 said to take this road
 didnt say to drive into the center of town way past the keep
 what you expect couldnt find his way to battle without two guides
Better where we are highlanders less than ten kays from the harbor
 closer by now
Captain said to stay out of town.
 what does he know? Except about women
 girls too young to know real women
Kharl just waited, standing against the alleyway wall, as the wagon rumbled 
past, down toward the harbor. Then, he stepped out and continued, following it 
at a distance.
The wagon with the wounded had disappeared by the time Kharl reached the edge of 
the harbor, and the harbor avenue was totally deserted as he walked back toward 
the pier, so quiet that his boots echoed. The only other sounds were the low 
buzzing of insects and the lapping of wavelets on the harbor wall.
Rhylla was on the quarterdeck when Kharl made his way up the gangway.
Good to see you back. Captain called in everyone. Only missing a few.
Are we going to leave? Kharl glanced around, but the decks were empty. Where 
is he?
He didnt say. Hes off again. Left orders with the first. Rhylla looked more 
directly at Kharl. You know something?
The fightings getting close to Dykaru. Wagonload of wounded passed me on the 
way back to the ship.
Doesnt look good, she observed.
Kharl could only agree with that, and he wished he knew what orders Hagen had 
left with Furwyl, but he wasnt about to ask. Furwyl wouldnt have told him, 
anyway.
LXXXVI
Kharl was aware of a murmuring around the forecastle, even before he slowly 
swung out of his bunk on sevenday morning. He didnt pay much attention until he 
was on his feet and dressing.
 first says theres warships off the harbor black-hulled ships
 lots of em
 black isnt that Reduce? asked Kawelt.
Hamor, said Kharl. Reduce doesnt send its ships in fleets, and theyre 
usually invisible.
Frig muttered Reisl. Means were stuck here, maybe even get shelled or 
boarded.
Or worse, added Hodal.
Unless we get a storm. Then theyd have to stand off, Reisl said. There are 
some clouds to the east.
Youre dreaming, Hodal said.
Hoping fellow can hope
Good luck with that
Kharl agreed with Hodal. Hope was a frail reed against sheer power. The 
carpenter did not say so, but washed up as well as he could, dressed, and made 
his way out onto the main deck.
He looked south from there, but didnt see anything. After several moments, he 
crossed the main deck and climbed the ladder to the poop, where he stood on the 
port side, looking south and out across the Great Western Ocean. Just on the 
horizon, he could make out black dots, hard to distinguish against the gray-blue 
of the water and the grayish sky, although there were no distinct clouds, just 
enough of a haze to blur the sun and the horizon. There was a light wind from 
the southeast, slightly more than a breeze.
Looking to see them? asked Furwyl, as he reached the top of the ladder and 
walked toward Kharl. Its therefull Hamorian squadron. Ten ships. Not a fleet, 
but enough that well be staying here, leastwise in
the light of day. They were closer in, earlier, but the seas getting rougher. 
Wouldnt be surprised if we got a bit of a blow.
That would make it easier for us to get around them, wouldnt it?
It would. Thatd be if the captain were thinking of leaving.
Is he taking over command of Lord Ghrants forces?
Furwyl laughed. Too late for that. Lord Ghrant should have let him reorganize 
em when he suggested that years ago. Ghrant doesnt like to upset people. 
Weighs things, I hear, by whos upset. Sometimes, to do things right, you have 
to upset a lot of folk at first. Less people upset over time, but The first 
shrugged. Like a ship. Lay down the law fair and firm-like to begin with, and 
hold to it, and you get a happy ship. You tack to every little change in the 
wind, never get anywhere.
Kharl had to wonder. Hadnt he tried that in life? And where had it gotten him? 
Run out of his homeland, his consort killed, his sons hating him, and his 
neighbor and friend assassinated. Thats if you have the power to lay down the 
law. The captain didnt, and Lord Ghrant did, but Lord Ghrant didnt do 
anything.
Goes without saying, carpenter. Cant do much without both ability and power. 
Ability can sometimes get you power, but without power, abilitys wasted, and 
that can lead to ruin. Power and no skill leads you to ruin. Just takes longer. 
Thats all.
You dont think Lord Ghrant has much ability?
Couldnt be saying that, now, could I? Furwyl laughed, but there was little 
humor in the sound. He could learn, if he would but listen.
And Ilteron?
He seems to listen to all, and offers pleasant words. He heeds none, and uses 
and discards all. The contempt in Furwyls voice was in stark contrast to the 
more muted words about Lord Ghrant.
Kharl walked to the stern, by the port rudder post, thinking, considering what 
little he knew. Ilteron had to have ridden south to attack Dykaru before Ghrant 
had decided to retreat there. Likewise, the Hamorian ships had to have set out 
from Hamor even before Ghrant had left Valmurl. How did they know? Lands and 
lords didnt stake ships and battles and moving lancers and troops just on 
guesses about where the enemy would be. They had known. But how? Spying? 
Wizardry? What sort of wizardry allowed them to see across vast distances and 
know what would happen?
He looked up and forward. Furwyl had left the poop.
Kharl made his way down to the mess. Most of the crew had eaten,
but Kharl managed to scrounge enough bread, and some cheese, and a soft 
pearapple, as well as a mug of redberry. He sat down across from Hodal and 
Kawelt, who were finishing up what looked like fried and salted pork. Kharl 
didnt miss not having the pork.
You see the ships? asked Hodal.
Theyve moved farther offshore, the first said, replied Kharl after swallowing 
a mouthful of bread and cheese. He thinks a storms in the offing.
Told you so.
Captainll wait till its just right, and then well be off
 knows what hes doing. Thats why no shore leave.
Kharl had no doubts that Hagen knew what he was doing, but he was far less sure 
that those actions included leaving Dykaru while the future of Austra was yet in 
doubt.
 should have gotten here earlier. Cook had fresh eggs
 should have Kharl mumbled, his mouth full.
After eating, and the morning in-port muster on the main deck, Kharl made his 
way down to the carpenter shop. His eyes lifted to the overhead bin, and the 
staff, and the words of The Basis of Order came back to him the idea that a 
mage could not fully master his abilities until he cast aside the staff and the 
passage after that where the words talked about how dividing power weakened it 
more than just in half
Carpenter?
Kharl looked at the hatchway, where Dasket, a rigger he hardly knew, stood. 
Yes?
Captain needs you, ser. Right this moment. Hes in his cabin.
Thank you. Im on my way. Kharl had thought that Hagen was ashore, but perhaps 
the captain had already returned.
Dasket hesitated, then turned.
Kharl followed him out and up the ladder to the main deck. From there, Kharl 
crossed the deck and entered the passageway he had once guarded, noting that the 
lamp bracket remained but the watch bell had been removed. He knocked on the 
door to the captains cabin. Kharl, ser.
Come in. Close the hatch.
Yes, ser. Kharl opened the door, entered, and closed it behind him.
Hagen stood beside the circular table. His eyes were reddened, and deep black 
circled them. How do you feel?
Fine, ser.
Im going to ask you something. Its not an order, but a request, and I want 
you to understand that.
Kharl nodded, waiting.
The highlanders are about to attack the keep. They broke through the regulars 
early this morning. Before long, its likely theyll surround the town. Lord 
Ghrant will make an attack shortly, I believe, in hopes of breaking them and 
driving them back. He has charged me with the safety of his lady and heirs. I 
think you could help me.
Ill go, Kharl said immediately.
You dont have to.
You didnt have to take me aboard, ser. Whats right is right. I think I ought 
to bring my staff.
That wouldnt hurt. We need to hurry.
Ill get the staff. Kharl understood that Hagen had spent extra time, just to 
meet Kharl in private, so that Kharl would not feel influenced by others 
watching, and it was another measure of the man that Kharl appreciated.
The carpenter hurried down to the shop, where he reclaimed both the staff and 
his winter jacket and gloves, before hurrying back topside. Hagen met him at the 
quarterdeck. For the first time, the captain wore weapons, a sabre and a long 
belt knife.
Kharl followed Hagen onto the pier, a pier that grew wetter with each wave that 
broke against it, as higher waters surged into the small harbor from off the 
Great Western Ocean.
At the end of the pier waited a small detachment of armsmen in black and yellow, 
only eight in all. There were two mounts without riders.
Kharl had never ridden a horse. Hed seen riders mount, and he managed to do so. 
He struggled to get the base of the staff into what looked like a lance holder. 
Then he glanced at Hagen. Im not a lancer, ser.
Were not riding into battle. Were only riding to get there. Just hang on to 
the saddle and the reins.
Kharl hoped he could.
The undercaptain and another lancer led the way, two abreast, with Kharl and 
Hagen riding behind them. Kharl felt that he bounced more than rode as the 
column moved at a quick trot through the stone-paved streets of Dykaru, eerily 
empty under the hazy morning sky, with the horses hoofs being the loudest 
sound, echoing off the streets and white-plastered stone walls.
Were supposed to meet the rest of the company on the orchard lane leading to 
the causeway, Hagen said to Kharl.
Kharl nodded, as if the words meant something, not that they did. He had no idea 
even what the keep looked like, except from a distance. He would have liked to 
try to see if he could sense the white wizards, but merely staying on the mount 
took most of his concentration. Still, it was faster than walking.
Before long, they reached the northern edge of the town, where the dwellings 
thinned, and a parklike expanse of grass and trees extended toward the ridgetop 
keep a kay away. Kharl could smell smoke, if faintly. The park seemed empty of 
armsmen, except in the distance off to the right, where a squad of riders had 
reined up, facing toward the white walls of the keep. The lancers wore dark blue 
and gray.
Well circle to the west some to reach the lane, Hagen ordered, turning his 
mount left onto a graveled road that fronted the park.
From the keep a series of horn blasts rang out, and there was the muted thunder 
of hoofs, but Kharl could see no riders. He took a moment to let his order-chaos 
senses feel the area before him. Almost immediately, he could feel an upwelling 
of white chaos more to the right, beyond the riders in blue and gray, who had 
already ridden northward, and out of sight. There had to be fighting in that 
direction, Kharl felt, although he could not say exactly how he knew, only that 
he did.
None of the armsmen spoke. The loudest sound was the clicking of hoofs on the 
pure white gravel of the lane. Kharl tried to shift his weight and came close to 
falling but grabbed the saddle and caught himself. He was not an instinctive 
rider; that was certain. In less than a tenth of a glass, the short column 
turned right onto a paved road that arrowed through an orchard toward the 
southwestern corner of the keep.
From the right!
Kharl turned in the saddle to see a good score of riders in the dark blue and 
gray riding toward them along a gravel service path in the orchard. Somehow he 
managed to turn the horse to face the attack, but he wasnt about to try to 
charge the attackers and try to use the staff at the same time. He fumbled the 
staff out of the lance holder, hoping that he could stay mounted while using 
both hands on the staff.
Because the others rode toward the rebels, Kharl was at the rear when the enemy 
lancers reached them.
Several of Ilterons men went down, as did two of those in black and
yellow, and then a lancer in blue and gray was bearing down on Kharl, his sabre 
coming toward Kharl in a vicious cut.
Kharl underhanded the staff, bringing it up from below the mans guard. The 
heavy iron-banded end slammed into the lancers forearm, then into the side of 
his face. Kharl reeled in the saddle, but struggled back upright. The attacker 
lay on the ground unmoving.
Bringing the staff back into position, Kharl could only deflect the slash of the 
next attacker before the lancer was past him.
Another riderHagenhad wheeled his mount back and rode past Kharl, cutting down 
one of the attackers from the blind side.
The third lancer to charge Kharl saw the staff and tried to swing closer to the 
carpenter to block the staff short of its most effective length, but Kharl 
dropped the tip and angled it more from below, catching the attackers sabre arm 
while he was still a good three cubits from Kharl. There was a cracking sound, 
and the sabre went flying.
Then, just as suddenly as the attackers had appeared, they vanished, except for 
the six or so bodies that lay on the gravel of the service path.
Kharl found he was breathing heavily.
You wield a mean staff, even mounted, called out Hagen.
Not a mounted weapon, gasped Kharl.
We need to get to the end of the lane.
The six remaining lancers had regrouped. After putting the staff back in the 
lance holder, Kharl urged his mount up beside Hagens as they rode along the 
remaining quarter kay of the lane toward the two short stone columns where the 
orchard ended and a grassy expanse separated the orchard from the keep.
As they neared the stone posts, a column of riders in black and yellow rode 
toward them down a causeway from the keep. Kharl could see blood splashed across 
the tunics of those leading the oncoming column.
Captain Hagen! Captain Hagen! An undercaptain spurred his mount toward Kharl 
and the others.
Were here, Hagen said quietly once the other had reined up. The lady?
She and the boystheyre waiting at the keep gates. The guards there have the 
causeway clear, and theyve pushed them back. Dont know how long they can 
hold.
Lord Ghrant? asked Hagen.
The undercaptain shook his head. Hes trapped on the ridge to the
north of the keep. Holding them at bay. Hes trying to keep the wizards from 
getting close enough to fire the keep. Theyd be lofting fireballs over the 
walls. Kharl could sense the truth of that. He also hadnt thought about 
wizards being able to destroy a stone keep.
Hagen looked to Kharl.
Kharl nodded. Hes speaking the truth.
Get the lady and the boys down here as quick as you can, and with as many 
lancers as you can spare. Weve already been attacked once.
Yes, ser. The undercaptain turned his mount. Two riders galloped back up the 
causeway toward the gates, less than half a kay away.
To the right of the causeway, a squad of lancers had formed up, facing 
northeast, toward the chaos of battle that Kharl could sense all too clearly.
As they waited, Kharl looked down at his jacket and gray trousers, both streaked 
with blood, then at Hagen. A word, Lord Hagen?
Hagen eased his mount closer to Kharl, and the carpenter wondered how he could 
explain what he needed to do. Finally, he cleared his throat. I would not see 
Austra become as Nordla, nor as Hamor. I would like your leave to depart for a 
time.
Hagens eyes widened. You dont owe me that. You dont owe
No. This is another kind of debt. I will go, one way or another. I would like 
your leave.
You may have it. You know that if Lord Ilterons forces come to the harbor, we 
will depart?
I know. Even as he said the words, Kharl had to wonder if he were being a 
fool, searching for an act of meaning because no matter how hard he had tried, 
he had been unable to find one, not one that turned out well, at least.
There is one thing that may help you, Hagen said quickly. None have fought 
well or recently in Austra. Ilterons armsmen and lancers will not act quickly. 
If you act decisively, events will favor you.
Kharl nodded. He had already seen that, and he was not even an armsman.
Hagen gestured, and one of the lancers, perhaps a Serjeant, rode over and reined 
up. The mage needs to get as close to the ridge as you can take him.
The serjeant looked at Kharl skeptically.
Kharl ignored the skepticism. The closer I can get, the more I may be able to 
do to help Lord Ghrant.
Well get you closer than youd like, came the grim reply. You want to ride 
all the way?
The last part, if its not too far on foot, I think.
You could use bushes for cover going up the ridge. You all right with that?
That would be better. So long as its not too far.
Thought as much. Ilterons lancers cant ride you down in the bushes. There 
was a pause. What are you going to do?
What I can. That was the only truthful answer Kharl had.
Best we go. The serjeant motioned, and another rider joined them, grim-faced, 
and without saying a word.
The two lancers flanked Kharl as the three rode eastward past the front of the 
keep and turned northward down a narrow gravel path that slowly curved back 
eastward around the base of the ridge. Less than half a kay onward, still near 
the base of a long slope, the serjeant reined up. To Kharls right was a mass of 
bushes, yet with an edge as clean as if laid out with a rule.
This part of the ridge is mostly berry bushes. Been there since before there 
was a town, my grandsire said. Cant ride a horse through it, but itd be slow 
going unless you stay on the edges.
Ill stay beside them. Kharl dismounted and handed the reins to the serjeant. 
I wont be needing the horse.
Good luck, ser.
From the lancers tone, Kharl could tell that the man thought him a dead manor 
mad, or perhaps both.
Thank you. Kharl took the staff and started uphill. He did not look back as 
the two lancers rode off.
From the feeling of lessened chaos emanating from the top of the ridge, Kharl 
could sense that the battle was winding down. He could only hope that he was not 
too late, that something could be salvaged. And from what he had observed of 
white wizards, he had to see if he couldnt at least stop them, and Ilteron, 
even if they had already slain the less-than-wise Lord Ghrant.
Kharl moved uphill more swiftly, staying beside the bushes, but not using his 
light shield, not yet, and not wanting to until he had to.
Within moments, he could see figures aheadlancers in green and black and in 
yellow and black riding downhill, avoiding the berry bushes. Behind them came 
armsmen on foot. Some were pursued by
lancers in blue and gray, and others stumbled, as if they had trouble walking or 
seeing. Some were splattered with blood, but most were not.
The carpenter tried to sense the chaos ahead, but there were two pillars of 
unseen white, one not all that far away, but uphill and to his right, out among 
the more open grassy stretches where there were but few trees. The otherand 
stronger focuswas close to the top of the ridge, if not at the very top.
Kharl drew back into the bushes as mounts thundered down in his direction.
Someones in the bushes! Could be an archer!
Kharl dropped to his knees and willed the light to flow around him as the rebel 
lancers neared.
Gone now swore he was right there
A laugh followed. Theyre all running, like scared coneys.
 wont matter not in the end
 make sure we get to the end
Kharl barely waited until the lancers were past before he dropped the light 
shield and scrambled uphill. The rush of men fleeing and those pursuing seemed 
to dissipate, and he began to hurry across the hill.
Less than ten rods away, he could see a band of armsmen in yellow and black, 
using a stone pavilion as a makeshift redoubt and shield against a white wizard 
and a company of rebel lancers. There were bodies in blue and gray strewn before 
the amber stone structure, as well as many in yellow and black; but this group 
of armsmen loyal to Lord Ghrant had neither broken nor run, and the attackers 
had pulled back.
Kharl could see that no one was even looking in his direction as he crossed the 
slope.
Hsssstt! A reddish white firebolt arced from the wizard and flew between two 
stone pillars. Flame flared, and one of the defenders staggered forward, 
screaming, his entire body a mass of fire.
Kharl gathered the light shield around himself, forcing himself to keep moving, 
not to think, but to get closer to the wizard. Even from within the darkness of 
his light shield, he could easily sense the white energy of the wizard as yet 
one more firebolt flared into the stone pavilion. Another set of screams echoed 
across the morning.
Kharl winced but kept walking, until he was less than a rod behind the rear of 
the rebels.
 turn em to torches!
 southern weaklings
Kharl was still a good fifty cubits from the swirling of chaos and whiteness. He 
could only hope that his idea would work. It should but one never knew.
He took a slow and deep breath, then visualized the air around the wizard, then 
reached out and twisted all the order-and-chaos hooks, so that the air touching 
the wizards body turned solid.
There was not even a sound, except the wizard pitched forward, frozen as though 
he had been turned into stone.
What happened!
Must be another mage!
Where?
Despite the others immobility, Kharl could sense the gathering bolt of chaos, 
and he forced himself to wait until the last momenteven as the reddish white 
fireball was flaring toward himbefore hardening a shield of air between him and 
the chaos-bolt.
Still, heat and fire flamed past him, so close and so hot he could feel the ends 
of his hair and beard crisp and smell the burning hair.
The second fireball was weaker. That was good, because Kharl doubted he could 
hold the shields for too long.
He could sense the chaos folding in upon itself, and he let go of the shield 
before him, but not the one imprisoning the white wizard.
The entrapped wizard continued to struggle, but the last firebolt was but a tiny 
eruption of flame. Then, there was a reddish emptiness, and Kharl could feel the 
absoluteness of death, releasing the confinement that had destroyed the wizard.
The carpenter turned back uphill and moved back across the hillside, still 
light-shielded.
Once he was a good ten rods away from the forces battling over the pavilion and 
again moving uphill beside the bushes, he released the light shield, blinking as 
light flooded his sight. For several moments, he had trouble seeing and was glad 
that the grassy slope offered relatively even footing.
Behind him, he could hear the clash of metal and the grunting of armsmen as the 
rebels and the loyalists renewed the conflict over the pavilion. He would have 
to leave that battle to the armsmen, at least for the moment, because he needed 
to find the second chaos-wizard.
The bushes ended, suddenly. Before Kharl the grassy slope leveled
out. Ahead, a low white marble wall, less than two cubits high, and less than 
five rods away, encircled another larger stone pavilion. Behind or within the 
wall was the pillar of white chaosand a far larger gathering of armed men, many 
of whom were looking downhill.
Someones coming!
Kharl quickly donned his light shield.
Hes gone!
 vanished
 just turned and ran, thats all
 dont know might have wizards, too
 woulda seen em earlier
Kharl began to angle to his right, to where he could sense that there were fewer 
armed men, and slightly away from the chaos-focus. But he kept moving uphill and 
toward the remaining white wizardand, he hoped, Ilteron and perhaps even Lord 
Ghrant.
Theres an order-mage coming look for where things seem blurry! called out a 
voice.
Kharl tried not to hurry, to keep his steps and pace even, as he used his senses 
to make his sightless way toward the stone structure that rose in the center of 
the paved area enclosed by the wall and crowned the southern end of the ridge.
Go find him! The mage! Hes got to be close.
You find him
How?
For their confusion, Kharl was most grateful. He tried to keep his breathing 
even and as quiet as possible as he neared the stone wall and the men who stood 
behind it. He could sense an opening farther to his left, and he eased in that 
direction.
The white wizard who stood less than ten rods away was the stronger of the two 
with Ilteron. That Kharl could feel. But did he need to attack the other 
wizard? What he really needed was to destroy Ilteron. His only problem was that 
he didnt know which of the armed men happened to be the rebel lord, and there 
were close to a hundred figures on the ridgetop.
Then if Ghrant were dead, and Kharl killed Ilteron, and not the white wizard, 
the rebel lords would be able to continue the war. So Kharl had to deal with the 
white wizardif he could.
I know you are here, cowardly black. The voice boomed across the ridge, and 
Kharl could sense the chaos that amplified it. Lyras,
skulking in the back hills once more will get you nothing.
Kharl said nothing, moving along the stone wall, until he sensed a gap in the 
armsmen, one a good three cubits wide. He stepped up on the stone walland felt 
the reason for the gapa fountain or pool behind it.
While he disliked using his tricks even to get to the white wizard, he hardened 
the water and carefully made his way to the far side of the pool, where he 
released the order-ties. Then he stood in his darkness, trying to gather himself 
together.
The stone pavilion was but another fifteen cubits before him, and he could sense 
both the white wizard and two other figures within the stone-roofed and columned 
structure before him.
You have learned, Lyras but you have not learned enough.
Kharl thought. The white wizard could sense his presence in general terms, but 
not with any great accuracy, or fireballs likely would have been sent his way. 
Kharl eased forward, trying to figure out which man was which of those under the 
dome. There were three, and one lay on the stone floor, still alive, but dazed. 
That had to be Ghrant. But which of the other two was which?
You said there were no black mages in Austra.
The surprisingly high voice came from the taller figureIlteron.
It matters not. Black cannot stand against white, not in war.
Could Kharl just harden the air around Ilterons face and head? If he made it 
tight enough, it ought to suffocate the lord, and it wouldnt take as much 
strength.
Remembering Hagens words about speed, he twisted the order-and-chaos hooks 
together.
Ilteron staggered, his hands clawing at his face.
Kharl needed more strength. He could feel that the staff he held had strength, 
order, within it. Abruptly, the words of The Basis of Order made sense, and he 
wondered why he had not understood before. He he had been the one to put that 
order there, as a tool. Perhaps Jenevra had as well, but the order in the staff 
was limited to what a staff could do.
He concentrated not so much on breaking the staff, or even casting it aside, as 
reuniting the order that was his in the staff with that within himself.
A flow of darkness surged through him.
Crack Without even his willing it, the staff had broken, and the iron bands 
that had bound it were no longer black iron, but gray.
The lower fragment hit the stones by his feet with a dull thunk, and without 
thinking Kharl dropped the useless other half.
There! Hssst!
A massive firebolt flared toward Kharl before he could try to harden the air 
around the wizard. Still trying to hold the hardened air tight around the dying 
Ilteron, Kharl flung up weaker, barely hardened air shields.
The firebolt flared around and past him, again burning his skin. But the worst 
of the fire flared into the rebel armsmen, and more than a half score flamed 
like torches. Kharl smiled coldly and stepped to the side, releasing the air 
shields.
You missed! he exclaimed.
Hsstt! Another firebolt slammed toward Kharl, and again he raised the deflecting 
shields.
More rebel armsmen flamed and died.
Kharl darted farther to his right. You dont aim very well!
With the third splash of flame, there was a cry, Back! Theyll flame us all!
Kharl moved again. Over here!
Hssst! While the firebolt followed his voice, none of the armsmen were about to 
get close enough to attack, not when the odds were that theyd get burned to 
cinders.
Kharl could feel his breathing getting labored and his knees becoming weak.
Hssst/
Behind and around him, the armsmen backed away and began to run, slowly at 
first, then more quickly.
Kharl eased sideways and forward. Weak as he felt, he had to harden the air 
around the white wizardand quickly.
Your invisibility wont save you. You cant hide forever.
The carpenter reached out and hardened the air around the wizard, but just 
around his head and neck.
Hssst! The firebolt flared directly at Kharl, perhaps because the wizard could 
follow the order-link.
Kharl threw up his hardened air shields, then sat down. His legs were rubbery.
Hssst! Another firebolt flared around him, the heat even greater.
Then a third and a fourth bolt followed, and Kharl huddled behind his shields.
The fifth bolt was weaker, and the sixth died before reaching Kharl.
The carpenter released his own air shields, and just sat on the stone, shivering 
and holding the shields around Ilteron and the white wizard until both were 
dead. His face burned, and his entire body throbbed by the time he let go of the 
force holding the hardened air around the two.
But the job was far from done.
After releasing the sight shield, Kharl glanced around warily. There was no one 
alive within the circular stone wall, but charred bodies lay everywhere, and the 
stench of burned flesh roiled his guts.
He was surprised that more enemy armsmen were not returning to attack, and yet 
it made sense. He doubted if any of the armsmen had ever seen a battle between 
mages, and after a few score of the rebels had been incinerated, the rest hadnt 
wanted to remain close. Slowly, he crawled the last twenty cubits to the stone 
pavilion, partly because he didnt want armsmen beyond the wall to see him, and 
partly because he wasnt sure his legs had yet regained enough strength to hold 
him.
When he reached the pavilion, he looked around. The white wizard was a slight 
figure, smaller even than Ghrant. Ilteron had been even taller and broader than 
Kharl. The slightly built Ghrant was alive. How alive was another question.
The carpenter-mage reached out and grabbed the lords leather harness, then 
began to drag the smaller man across the stones and around the fallen bodies 
toward the gap in the stone walland not the one where the pond wasnearest the 
side of the hill with the berry bushes. At the edge of the wall, keeping himself 
low, Kharl glanced around.
Armsmen and lancers were beginning to edge back up the hillside.
 real quiet up there
 you want to go, you go
 anything take out a white wizard dont want to be the one to get in its 
way
Kharl just hoped that would keep them away for a moment.
He girded himself and cast the light shield. He needed to get at least a few 
hundred cubits downhill before releasing it. He made over a hundred cubits 
before he did. Thankfully, there was no one nearby when he could see again.
Then he continued, once more, to drag the unconscious lord down the hill. He had 
to stop every few cubits, and then rest, before dragging Ghrant farther.
Halfway down the hill, Kharl found a mount tied to a tree. Whose it was didnt 
matter.
He barely had the strength to lever the unconscious lord over the narrow space 
in front of the saddle, then untie and mount the horse himself. With the horses 
first steps, Kharl struggled to hang on to the lord with one hand and the saddle 
and the reins with the other as he tried not to lurch from side to side.
The ride back to the port, with his selective use of the sight shield, felt as 
though it must have taken glasses. At times, he knew armsmen were near, and he 
somehow shielded the two of them and the horse, then rode on, slowly. At other 
times, even without the sight shield, he could not see, but he kept riding.
The sun was low in the western sky even before he reached the harbor avenue. To 
Kharl, it had all been a blur after leaving the stone pavilion.
Then he was on the pier and riding toward the Seastag. The lines were singled 
up, and smoke was pouring from the stacks, but the gangway was downif with 
four armsman at its foot.
They had sabres at the ready.
Its Kharl! Hes got Lord Ghrant!
The armsmen still did not move.
Kharl staggered off the mount, and before he could say anything, blackness 
rushed over him.
LXXXVII
When Kharl tried to wake up, he could not, and white chaos swirled around him, 
then blackness, followed by fiery redness, shot with ugly whiteness. Arrows of 
pain pierced his body, one after the other, endlessly. He felt as though he 
walked through fire, then through the coldest of winters, and yet, somewhere in 
the darkness that clouded his thoughts, he knew he had walked not a step.
Drink this you must drink this Even the words burned through his ears, like 
flame-tipped arrows, and whatever he drank tasted like liquid fire.
Worst of all, he could not see, as if he were locked behind his own sight and 
light shields.
At other times, the words spoken to him, as gently phrased as they were, meant 
nothing. Every word was strange, as if spoken in the language of Hamor or of 
ancient Westwind, or even of antique and vanished Cyador.
At some point, a cooling blackness descended upon him, and his sleep was deeper, 
and dreamless.
Days later, he thought, he woke, without the fire, but he still could not see.
He could sense he was in a large room, with a light and cool breeze blowing 
across his face, a face that felt cracked and dry, and someone sat on a chair 
beside the wide bed. There was a darkness to that presence. A black mage?
Lyras?
Yes. I could feel the battle from the north, but it took an eightday to get 
here. Few coasters were willing to chance the voyage with all the reports of 
Hamorian warships off the shores.
Lord Ghrant?
He will recover, although he is yet weak.
The rebels the highlanders? Even a few words seemed to exhaust Kharl.
All is well you need to know that, but you also need to rest.
You should have been here.
A light laugh answered Kharls halting words. Me? I would have been burned at 
the first firebolt. I dont know how you did it. There were close to a hundred 
armsmen that you flamed. Yet you radiate darkness like the strongest of 
order-mages.
Did what had to Kharl was too tired to explain. He could do that later.
I said you were stronger than I, offered Lyras.
Dont feel strong.
Dont complain. Most people who took on two white wizards and companies of 
armsmen and lancers would be three cubits downif anyone could find enough to 
bury. That includes mages.
 not a real mage
If youre not a mage, then water isnt wet, and ice isnt cold. Lyras snorted. 
Maybe no kind of mage Ive heard about, but that doesnt
matter. A mage is a mage, and youre a mage. No question about that.
Mages not that stupidGhrant still lord?
Oh, yes, and matters will be much better now.
The Hamorians their fleet?
Oh that. When they discovered Ilteron was dead, they sailed off. They werent 
interested in shedding their own blood. Just ours. Enough of the questions. You 
need to rest.
Kharl wanted to protest, but the cool darkness flowed from Lyras over him, and 
he could not say a word as he dropped into another deep and dreamless sleep.
LXXXVIII
When Kharl woke again, he could see. He was quartered in a corner room in the 
keep, with white plaster walls and a wide window, its shutters open to the 
south. The high bed was of triple width, and had sheets of fine cotton, the kind 
Charee had dreamed of and Kharl could never have afforded. For a moment, sadness 
washed over him, and tears streamed from the corners of his eyes. Were all 
luxuries that costly? He blotted the tears awkwardly, wishing he were not 
crying, trying to ignore the figure hovering over him.
Are you all right?
Lyras had vanished. In his place was a young woman wearing a dark tunic and 
trousers, with her black hair tied back, and very intent brown eyes.
Just Im better. How could he explain? Better, he repeated.
When he could speak, he asked, Who are you? Then he tried to look at her more 
closely, and, abruptly, the blackness dropped across his vision as though he had 
raised the light shield.
Im Alidya. Im a healer in learning. Lyras summoned me.
Kharl forced himself to relax, not to think about seeing. What happened?
What do you mean, Master Kharl?
I dont remember much after I got Lord Ghrant to the ship.
No one could believe that you rescued him and killed the white wizards. Im 
sure you know, but there wasnt a mark on them. Not on Ilteron, either. Master 
Lyras, he said that the ways of the black mages are mysterious Is it true oh, 
Im not supposed to be talking, not so much. Would you like some lager or some 
ale?
Lager that would be good.
Just a moment, ser Ill be right back. Her voice died away, as did the sound 
of sandals on stone.
Kharl sat in his darkness. Why had he been able to see, then not see? Hed tried 
to concentrate on seeing the young healer and it was as if the concentration 
had brought on the blindness.
Within moments, it seemed, he heard Alidyas steps returning.
Here, ser. Ive got your lager.
Kharl managed to locate the tankarda real tankard and not a clay mugwith his 
order-senses and take it from Alidyas hands. He took a slow swallow, then 
another, enjoying the taste of perhaps the best lager hed ever had. Sometime 
after the third or fourth swallow, his sight returned, but he did not look 
directly at Alidya, just enjoyed the indirect light flooding around him and the 
distant hills to the south through the window.
You didnt tell me what happened afterward, after
Alidya smiled. Oh, it was glorious. Lord Hagen rallied the lancers and drove 
back the attackers and raised Lord Ghrants banner. Then he sent a message to 
the highland lords, and, when they learned that Ilteron and the white wizards 
were dead, they agreed to return to their lands and recognize Lord Ghrant as 
supreme ruler of Austra.
Ah Kharl couldnt believe it had been so simple. It could not have been that 
easy, could it?
Well he did have to send some captive officers back who saw Lord Ghrant so 
that they could say that he was alive, and he had to promise that he wouldnt 
execute any of the rebel lords. They say that Lord Ghrant wasnt happy about 
that.
That was all?
There was one other thing, Alidya said. The rebels wouldnt agree unless Lord 
Ghrant named Lord Hagen as both his chancellor and arms-commander.
Kharl couldnt help chuckling. He would have rolled with laughter if
he hadnt known it would have hurt too much. Even the chuckling sent spasms 
through his ribs and muscles.
I dont think thats at all funny. Alidyas voice turned prim.
Kharl managed to stop chuckling.
Why did you laugh, ser?
I cant explain except Kharl shook his head. Someday someday, youll 
understand.
A pained look crossed the young womans face, but she did not ask
again.
If I could have some more lager? Kharl asked after finishing
the tankard.
Yes, ser.
Kharl could only drink a third of what she brought before he had to put it down. 
He was far more tired than he had thought, and who knew how many days hed been 
abed?
Later that afternoon, a half glass after Kharl woke from dozing off, Hagen 
appeared.
Lord Hagen! Alidya bolted upright from the chair beside Kharls
bed.
You can go, Alidya, and close the door on the way out.
Ser
Kharl will be fine, and if he needs you, Ill call you.
Ah yes, ser.
Hagen waited until the door closed. I owe you again. His mouth twisted into a 
wry smile. And you owe me, after a fashion.
Alidya told me about your having to be the lord-chancellor.
And arms-commander.
Lord Ghrant must not be terribly pleased, offered Kharl.
Hes relieved that hes still Lord of Austra, and Lady Hyrietta has prevailed 
upon him to keep whatever anger he may have to himself.
What will you do with the Seastag?
Furwyl will become captain, and the others will move up, except for Bemyr. 
Hell always be a bosun. Hagen looked at Kharl. Lord Ghrant will be honoring 
you.
I didnt do it for honor.
Youll pardon me if I didnt tell him that. I did say that you had seen 
injustice in your past and that you could not allow it to triumph
in Austra if you could help it. Hagen grinned crookedly.
For a moment, Kharl did not understand the grin. Then he smiled broadly. That 
was almost evil, Lord Hagen.
What? To remind him that a lords task is to seek justice? To suggest that he 
owes his entire rule to a man who sought justice? Hagens grin faded. We are 
at least fortunate that he is one on whom that makes an impact. Though he will 
need frequent reminders.
Thinking of Ilteronand EgenKharl nodded.
You will be honored. I would guess a purse, a small continuing stipend and 
estate, and the support of Lord Ghrant, which is not to be dismissed, even 
here.
I had not thought Kharl had indeed not thought of rewards or of the 
possibility of remaining in Austra, and Hagens words said that his entire 
future might well be differentif he desired that future.
You had not. I know that. Hagen straightened. But I thought you should know.
After Hagen had left, Kharl looked out through the window into the brilliant 
gold of sunset. What did he want? Really? Could it be that his actions might 
bring a reward? Could that really be so after all that had happened? Or would he 
need to remain on the Seastag? Thinking of Furwyl, Rhylla, Ghart, and Tarkyn, he 
reflected that a man could have a fate far worsefar, far worse.
A faint smile crossed his lips, and he closed his eyes.
LXXXIX
Once Kharl was finally alert and eating, he recovered quickly, although he was 
left with a scar on his left temple, a jagged red mark no longer than the width 
of his thumb that resembled a miniature lightning bolt. His hair had been cut 
far shorter, probably to trim off all that had been singed and crisped. Dead 
skin had also flaked off over most of his face, leaving new and pinkish skin 
beneath.
By the end of the eightday, he was up and walking through the keep, which was 
not so much a keep as a large country house, around which
walls had been erected at some time, certainly not a structure designed to 
withstand a lengthy attack or a siege.
His own garments, doubtless too rent and bloodstained to save, had been replaced 
before he had even recovered with far finer garb, two dark gray shirts that were 
almost silvery, black trousers, and a black jacket. Even his boots had been 
replaced with black leather boots fitted to his feet. The garments signified 
changes, more than hed wanted to consider. First, the colorsthat had been 
obvious. The black and gray were because he was a mage, but the quality that 
bothered him. He could not have afforded such finery, and yet it was almost 
plain compared to that of those in the keep who attended Lord Ghrant, although 
somewhat finer than that of the servants or of Alidya.
In the late afternoon of eightday, he stood on the corner of the upper terrace, 
outside the walls, looking to the ridge and park to the north. The winter sky 
was clear, and there was no wind to dissipate the mild warmth of the sun. From 
close to a kay away, outside of a handful of gashes in the turf, Kharl could see 
no sign that a battle had been fought days before.
He still had a hard time believing that his tricks with hardening air had been 
so successful and that everyone seemed to think that he was a mighty mage. He 
had managed to learn a few things about order and chaosbut hed be in real 
trouble if he ever encountered a truly accomplished white wizard. That, he 
understood, even if no one else seemed to.
Ah the mysterious mage
At the sound of Hagens voice, Kharl turned. He shrugged helplessly. Im ready 
to go.
Not yet, Hagen said with a smile. You need to stay here for a few more days. 
Just until threeday.
Why then?
Because thats when Lord Ghrant has set your audience, replied the new 
lord-chancellor. It would be most unbecoming to depart before then. Hagen 
grinned.
Do I want that audience? Kharl asked dryly.
I would judge so, unless you want to go back to being a ships carpenter or a 
wandering mage. As for the moment, I came out here to suggest that now that you 
are well, you might join me and several of the lancer officers for supper.
The thought of company for a mealrather than being served in one of the small 
dining halls with minor functionaries he did not knowdid
have a certain appeal to Kharl, but he had no doubt that Hagen had more than 
that in mind. Senior officers?
Hagen smiled. I am certain they would appreciate any information you might 
provide about what you saw
Such as the officers dining in the town the day before the final battle? asked 
Kharl. While others were fighting?
They might not like such, but I would be indebted to you for such candor.
And they are not likely to doubt a mage as much?
They know that you have no history with the Austran lancers, Hagen pointed 
out. Unlike me.
Kharl thought he understood and gestured for Hagen to lead on.
The two walked back across the terrace and through a narrow bailey gatewhere 
two of Ghrants personal guards stood stifflybefore reen-tering the north wing. 
Kharl followed Hagen down a wide but short side corridor, one adorned with 
oversized portraits of men in restrained finery. The corridor ended in two 
double doors, the right one open.
Hagen motioned for Kharl to precede him, and the carpenter-mage did.
Inside, five officers in the green and gray of Austra stood around one end of 
the large circular table already set for a meal with white linen cloth and 
cutlery. More portraits graced the white plaster walls above the blond wainscot 
paneling.
Lord Hagen mage, offered a gray-haired and mustached officer with a broad 
forehead, pointed chin, and perfect mustache.
Hagen returned the greeting with a nod, then spoke. I thought that it might be 
useful for Kharl to dine with us. He saw a side of the last battle that none of 
us did. He inclined his head to the graying officer. Kharl, this is Commander 
Vatoran Majer Reseff, Majer Tralk, Majer Fuelt, and Majer Nyort.
Kharl nodded solemnly in response, hoping he could keep the names and faces in 
mind throughout the dinner.
Hagen moved to a place at the table, the one that faced the doorway. Kharl, 
perhaps He gestured to the chair across the table from him.
Kharl took the suggestion, but waited to seat himself until the other officers 
began to do so, and they waited until Hagen actually settled into his chair.
A long silence followed, one that pleased Hagen, Kharl felt.
Commander Vatoran is the eastern district commander, the lord-chancellor 
finally explained to Kharl as servers circled the table, asking each man whether 
he preferred wine, ale, or lager. In effect, he commands all of the lancer 
forces east of the Shiltons. Each of the majers commands a subdistrict, usually 
with between ten and fifteen companies. The organization is the same for the 
foot, but well be meeting with them later. Hagen turned to the server waiting 
patiently at his shoulder. Wine. Red. The Asolo, if you have it.
Kharl stayed with lager. To him, wine was too close to sweet vinegar. You have 
not been a lancer, or an armsman, mage, have you? asked Vatoran, his deep voice 
calm and even. I fear not, commander.
But you have been in battle?
Against pirates and a white wizard. This was my first battle where both sides 
were lancers and foot.
Hagen made no comment, just nodded and waited. Kharl took advantage of the 
moment of silence to sample the lager, a slightly edged but refreshing brew. One 
of the two women servers deftly slipped slices of white meat onto the 
gold-rimmed, pale blue china plate before Kharl, and the second added dumplings. 
A third followed with strips of green cetalya, then ladled a white sauce laced 
with black mushrooms over both meat and dumplings. Kharl cared little for the 
bitter cetalya and would have preferred the sauce over the vegetable
as well.
What weapons have you used? Besides your magely skills, that is?
asked one of the majers.
Im not one for the blade, Kharl admitted. Cudgel and staff.
One of the other majers sniffed, but did not speak as the first majer asked, 
How many men have you killed, mage, that is, with your weapons, not magery?
Kharl didnt care much for the majers tone, or the unspoken condescension of 
the other majers, but he fingered his chin before replying, thinking about 
Tyrbels assassin, about the very first white wizard and his guards, and about 
the pirates. I cant say for certain. I know about five for sure, before the 
battle here.
The mage is being modest, Hagen interrupted. Against the pirates alone, he 
took out ten men with his staff.
Kharl reflected once more. If he counted the deaths of the men killed
on the ridge by the white wizards efforts to stop him, then the total was 
doubtless several score.
Would you agree with Lord Hagens assessment? asked Vatoran, a slight smile 
without humor lifting the corners of his mouth.
Lord Hagen may have seen more than I did. He had a better vantage, and he is 
more familiar with fighting and warfare, Kharl said. I was just doing the best 
I could. He took a bite of the meatboar, he thoughtand a mouthful of the 
flavorful dark bread. Then he tried a dumpling, surprisingly delicate, with a 
plumlike flavor.
The mage cleared the deck of one vessel, Hagen explained, but he lost two 
toes and cracked his ribs in a number of places.
What about
I think we can dispense with more questions about the mages familiarity with 
weapons and fighting, Vatoran interjected, turning back to Kharl. Did you see 
much of the fighting before the day that you bested the wizards and Ilteron?
Hagen gave the slightest of nods to Kharl.
I had not realized that the fighting had begun, the mage replied. I was in 
the town, looking for somewhere to eat, and I went into a cafe. There were four 
lancer officers there, and they were eating and drinking, and talking about the 
fighting about how close the rebels were to Dykaru
 must be some mistake
 sure they wore the green and black?
They were in the green and black, Kharl affirmed, and when I left, I saw a 
wagon filled with wounded, and the teamster was complaining that hed lost his 
way and that his captain didnt seem to know much about where the battle was or 
how to direct the teamster Kharl took a swallow of ale before continuing. 
That was what I saw and heard before we got into battle the next day.
Vatoran nodded as if to himself before continuing. Id be most curious, mage, 
as to why you risked your life for Lord Ghrant. You dont have to speak to that, 
if you dont want to, of course. Its enough that you acted, whatever the 
reason.
Im not sure that it is, commander, Kharl found himself saying. I used to 
think that myself. I was a cooper. No secret about that. So long as I made good 
barrels, didnt matter to me why I made them. But it did.
He shrugged. I found that out. Heard enough about Ilteron and had seen enough 
of Lord Hagen to realize there was a difference. Didnt get to make a difference 
in Nordla, but I had a chance in Austra. Thats why.
But you are not Austran, Vatoran pointed out. Lord Hagens acts had made it 
clear that right is right. Wrong is wrong. Doesnt matter where. If you only 
protect whats yours, and everyone does that, then wrong usually wins, and right 
loses. In the end, you do, too.
Vatoran looked as though he wanted to reply to that, but, instead, the commander 
frowned, then asked, How did you get into battle?
Lord Hagen thought that I might be of some use in making sure that Lady 
Hyrietta and the heirs were safe Kharl went on to tell about the battle, but 
avoided any exact details about what magery he had used, only saying, I managed 
to use what I knew about order to block their firebolts and imprison them in a 
web of order. That killed the two wizards and Ilteron. Then I dragged Lord 
Ghrant off the ridge and managed to get him onto a mount. It took a long time to 
get him back to the harbor.
In the middle of the battle? Vatorans eyebrows lifted. That part of the 
battle was pretty near over. At least, no one was fighting there right then, and 
no one was looking at a carpenter dragging and carrying a wounded man. They were 
still worried about the firebolts on the top of the ridge. While what Kharl 
said was trueno one had been looking at them because they couldnt have seen 
themthe evasion of truth bothered him, but he didnt want to reveal exactly 
what he had done. And you just rode to the harbor?
What he says is true, Hagen interjected in a calm voice. We were on the 
Seastag, and we saw a rider come up the pier with a figure over the saddle 
before him. Until he dismounted, we didnt realize that it was the mage with 
Lord Ghrant.
It took a long time, Kharl added. I couldnt get there directly. That had 
been absolutely true.
I see. What did you notice about the foot and lancers in the battle that we 
should know?
Some of themLord Ghrants men who held the little stone pavilion on the south 
sidethey were brave and well-ordered. They were holding the pavilion even 
against the one mage until I killed him. There were
others who ran and fled from the white wizards before I got there. More of them 
were in green and black, but there were some in yellow and black. Lord Ilterons 
forces withdrew a number of rods when I was battling the last white wizard, but 
I didnt see any of them breaking or running. Kharl shrugged. Thats what I 
saw. I wasnt looking at the lancers and foot, though. I was trying to stop the 
wizards and find Lord Ghrant and Ilteron.
Did you see any standards or banners
Did you see any other rebel livery besides the blue
What about cannon
Kharl replied to the questions as well as he could, even if most of his answers 
were negative. In between questions and answers, he kept eating.
After a time, Hagen cleared his throat. Loudly.
I think the mage has been most forthcoming. It is most clear to me, both from 
what I saw and from what the mage and others have reported, that we have a solid 
task ahead of us if we are to be successful in halting other attempts by Hamor 
to weaken Austra. Hagens smile to the officers was polite, but far from warm 
as he stood and nodded to Kharl.
Kharl stood and inclined his head to the commander. My best to you, ser, and I 
trust I have not disturbed you too greatly, but I could only report on what I 
saw and experienced. I know too little about lancers to say anything but what I 
saw.
I am certain that is so, mage. Vatoran had risen, as had the majers, and he 
inclined his head in response.
Kharl followed Hagen out and down the corridor.
The lord-chancellor said nothing until they were back in a small study or 
library, where both walls were filled with shelves brimming with leather-bound 
volumes. Hagen closed the door, but made no move to seat himself at the black 
oak desk. That will do.
I dont think they were happy with my words, Kharl said.
They werent supposed to be. I wanted them to know that more than a few people 
understood that some of the lancers had not responded well. Eating in town while 
the fighting was going on. Hagen snorted. Running from battle while others 
fought
Was that why you did not see eye to eye with Lord Ghrant before?
Something like that.
Is there anything else youd like from me? asked Kharl.
Hagen laughed. Just be polite and mysterious for the next few days,
until you meet with Lord Ghrant, and then well talk about what youd like to do 
next.
Kharl understood that, too. He wasnt going to get a direct answer until 
something else happened, probably between Hagen and Lord Ghrant.
xc
About midmorning on threeday, a youngster in a yellow tunic with black cuffs 
appeared at Kharls door, with a neatly folded set of garments in his arms.
Master Kharl, ser?
Yes?
These are for you, ser. For the audience with Lord Ghrant, ser. At the first 
glass of the afternoon, ser.
Thank you. Kharl took the garments.
Ill be here to escort you, ser. Then, after those words, the young man was 
gone.
Kharl closed the door and looked down at the garmentsa silksheen silver shirt, 
black trousers, and a black jacket of fine and soft wool. They had clearly been 
tailored to his measurements and presumably were his to keep.
He shook his head. Never had he owned such finerynor needed it.
What would happen at the audience? What did Kharl have to say to Lord Ghrant? 
What he could have saidsuch as the fact that he didnt think much of the 
discipline of the Austran forces or of Ghrants personal guardwere not things 
that would have been wise to voice, and hed already said them to the lancer 
officers.
He also wasnt pleased with the idea of bowing and scraping to Ghrant, whod 
have been far better off to listen to Hagen from the beginning rather than 
having been forced to do so by events. Then, Kharl could always hope that Ghrant 
would be generous, although he had his doubts about that characteristic in 
rulersor their offspring.
Kharl looked at the garments once more, then shrugged and laid
them on the bed. After a moment, he began to disrobe. He might as well try on 
the new clothes. Not surprisingly, they fit well, and he looked almost 
impressive when he studied his reflection in the mirror above the chest set 
against the inner wall of the spacious chamber that had remained his.
Neither his pondering nor his pacing yielded more answers, and after several 
long glasses, the youth in yellow reappeared at his door. Wordlessly, Kharl 
followed him along the main corridor of the southern wing, up the main staircase 
in the middle of the sprawling structure, then along another white-walled 
corridor that ended in a single golden oak door. While the door was modest, 
there were two burly guards in the yellow and black.
Master Kharl, the mage, here to see Lord Ghrant, offered the youth.
We know, Bethem, said the shorter guard, smiling paternally before he turned 
and knocked. The mage, ser.
After a moment, the words came back. Show him in.
The guard who had not spoken opened the door, and Kharl stepped inside, into a 
study with wide windows opening to the north and west, with but a single case 
filled with books. The door closed behind him, almost silently, with just the 
faintest click.
The blond lord sat behind a wide desk of golden oak, unadorned, without a single 
carving.
Lord Ghrant. Kharl inclined his head, politely, but not too deeply.
Cant have too much formality here, not with a man who destroyed my enemies, 
then dragged and carried me to safety. Ghrant gestured to the straight-backed 
chairs before the desk.
Kharl took the one in the shade, so that he could see Ghrant more clearly, 
without the afternoon sun that poured into the room getting in his eyes.
You present a problem, Master Kharl. A happy one, but one requiring a solution. 
I cannot offer you what I owe you, and that is Austra. Nor even a fraction of 
that. A rueful smile followed the words.
Kharl waited. He wasnt about to offer Ghrant an easy way out. Self-denying 
graciousness did not count for much with those in power. That he had learned.
Lord Hagen has suggested that your service is worth a small estate, a stipend, 
and a minor lordship. It was worth more than that, but we have conferred and 
feel that, with your talents, those are more appropriate,
with certain adjustments I think you will find useful. Lord Hagen will tell you 
of those details at your convenience. But from this point on, you hold the lands 
of Cantyl, and shall formally be addressed as Ser Kharl. Ghrant smiled 
broadly. You will also receive your first purse from him later this afternoon.
You are most kind, ser. Kharl, although wary, could sense neither malice nor 
deception.
Most grateful, Ser Kharl. Ghrant cleared his throat. Lord Hagen will brief 
you on the details, but I did want to express my gratitude to you personally. My 
lady also conveys her thanks, as do my sons. Ghrant smiled, an expression both 
warm, polished, and somehow tired, then stood.
Kharl rose as well. I am glad I was able to be of service, and I am very glad 
that you remain Lord of Austra.
Let us hope that all my subjects come to that happy conclusion as well, ser 
Kharl.
When Kharl stepped out of the study, Hagen was waiting.
Ser Kharl.
Lord-chancellor. Kharl inclined his head.
We need to discuss a few more details. Lord Ghrant is often brief to the point 
of being cryptic. Hagens smile was rueful. Filling in those details seems to 
be a large part of being lord-chancellor.
Kharl followed Hagen a good fifty cubits down the corridor to another unmarked 
door, which opened into a very small chamber holding but a circular table and 
four chairs, and a narrow, east-facing window.
Hagen did not sit down after he closed the door. Lord Ghrant and I came to an 
agreement. Cantyl is set on and adjoining a headland southeast of Valmurl. The 
lands succeeded to Lord Estloch several years ago, but they are near none of his 
holdings. They consist of a small but good vineyard, some excellent timberlands, 
one small and fertile valley, and some most rocky hills, which provide a certain 
isolation. I thought you might appreciate the timberlands and possibly the 
isolation. There is just one rough road that eventually winds to Valmurl, but a 
very good, if small, natural harbor. The lands are well managed, and those who 
do so would like to stay. And there will be a considerable stipend for five 
years, and a modest one thereafter.
Kharl nodded. He was not quite sure what to say.
Hagen produced a plain leather purse. Your stipend is one hundred golds a year 
for the first five years, and fifty thereafter for the
following ten. This holds an additional fifty, not counted against the stipend, 
for your expenses and travel to Cantyl.
Kharl managed not to swallow. Hed never seen twenty-five golds at one time, let 
alone fifty, and probably never held more than ten at once everand the purse 
was only incidental.
Lord Ghrant does not anticipate this, but would wish to reserve the right to 
call upon your services occasionally.
That did make sense, unfortunately.
Youre still not sure whether youd want to go back to Brysta, if you could, 
are you? asked Hagen. Master and Ser Kharl.
No Kharl paused. Id thought about it, but Im certainly not welcome there. 
He smiled wryly. I had thought about staying in Austrabut as a cooper. Id 
never thought
I hadnt either, when you asked me for passage, Hagen replied.
Strange mused Kharl.
Hagen laughed. You should have been a lord in Brysta, but Lord Ghrants powers 
do not extend that far.
Why did you press my case so far with Lord Ghrant? Kharl asked.
There are several reasons. First, Lord Ghrant must understand that loyalty is 
rewarded. I can say such, but if I do not press for it, then my words mean 
little. Also, youre a powerful mage, Kharl. But you need to know more to use 
that power effectively. Whether you choose to stay hereand if you do, and you 
learn what you mustId not be surprised if Lord Ghrant would call on you for 
aid and advice, and you will serve yourself and those around you far better for 
having a standing well gained in battle
Kharl could sense the caution in Hagen, and he almost laughed. Even Hagen was 
worried about his power. The laughter died within him as he considered what that 
meant. Would he have to worry about everyone now? Whether they would use him and 
his powers, or try to manipulate him from afar, through others?
I can see you understand, Hagen said.
I almost did not, Kharl confessed.
The Seastag is leaving tomorrow for Valmurl. Ive arranged for Furwyl to make a 
stop at Cantyl. Theyll be expecting you.
Who will?
The estate steward. Thats Speltar. Lord Ghrant sent a messenger informing him 
an eightday ago.
Lord Ghrant or you? asked Kharl wryly.
I did have something to do with it, but he had to accept my recommendation.
I hope it didnt cost you too much.
Nothing at all. Hed much rather be indebted to you than, say, Lord Deroh.
The name meant nothing to Kharl.
Oh and youll be traveling as a passenger. As an honored passenger in my 
quarters.
I couldnt take Kharl paused. You wont be on board?
No. Ill be with Lord Ghrant and his family riding in triumph back across 
Austra.
Kharl realized something else. By not accompanying Lord Ghrant, his role in 
saving the lord would be diminished. There were advantages and disadvantages to 
that for him, but clearly only advantages for Ghrant.
So that he can show his banner and reassure everyone?
That is most necessary Hagen affirmed. Long and tiring as the journey will be 
by road.
The crew wont mind me as a passenger?
Not at all. They know you saved us all from having to leave Austra, and theyre 
more than ready to leave Dykaru and to get back to Valmurl. Hagen smiled. Im 
famished. Are you ready to join me in a quiet meal? With no discussion about 
rulers and their duties?
Kharl was.
XCI
As Kharl walked down the last few rods of the pier toward the waiting Seastag, 
the light breeze swirled the odor of burning coal around him, confirming that 
the ship was indeed making ready to cast off. He stopped just short of the 
gangway and looked westward, out over the white walls of Dykaru, and the 
orangish brown tile roofs, brilliant in the direct morning sunlight, then turned 
back toward the ship.
Ghart was grinning as Kharl walked up the gangway, carrying the
new leather bagblack, of coursethat contained equally new garments.
Do anything to get out of the focsle, wouldnt you? offered the new first 
mate.
I tried. Kharl couldnt help grinning in return. Even to keeping you from a 
bigger cabin.
Only for a few days. Then youll go off as lord of leisure.
Not a lord. Just a minor landholder, with some rocky hills and a vineyard, Im 
told. And a few trees. Maybe enough to set up a cooperage.
Ghart shook his head. Cooper, carpenter, warrior, mage and now youre going to 
be a lord.
No just a minor landholder, Kharl protested.
Ghart began to laugh. Finally, he stopped and looked at Kharl. Being a 
landholders worse than magery. Mages understand magery. No one understands what 
landholders do. There was the hint of a twinkle in the first mates eyes.
Kharl could understand Gharts amusementand appreciated the fact that Ghart was 
amused, rather than resentful or jealous. Maybe Ill learn enough to know why 
no one does
You might at that. Gharts head turned.
Kharl glanced to his left, his eyes taking in the figure crossing the main deck 
to the quarterdeckFurwyl, now wearing a blue masters jacket. Master Kharl
Captain.
Aye, and weve all gone up a little in the world, you more than us, Id wager. 
Furwyls smile was also warm and welcoming. Though Id not be saying that Lord 
Hagen is enjoying his fortune so much as us.
Kharl chuckled at Furwyls observation. The highland lords respect his 
abilities, perhaps more than do others.
Lord Ghrant will have to listen to him now, Furwyl replied. Hell soon be 
wishing that he had earlier, if hes not already.
Lord Ghrant is already listening, Kharl replied.
Ghart smiled knowingly.
Now that youre aboard, Master Kharl suggested Furwyl.
Im more than ready, captain.
Furwyl stepped back. Single up!
The bosuns whistle shrilled, and Bemyrs voice boomed out. Single up. Make it 
lively!
Best I stow my gear, Kharl said. What I have.
Ah Master Kharl, Ghart said. Youll not be minding that we took the liberty 
of putting your other things in the captains cabin as well.
Hardly. Thank you. The carpenter-mage shook his head. Seems strange to go 
from the focsle aft.
Happens to us all, ser. Youll get used to it. Ghart smiled. Remember when I 
had the smallest cubby on the Seasprite.
Left unsaid was the knowledge that very few seamen made the transition out of 
the forecastle.
Kharl nodded and made his way past the deck crew. Seeing Reisl and Hodal there, 
he smiled at the two. Its good to see you.
Good to see you, Master Kharl, replied Reisl. Wasnt sure we would when you 
fell off that horse. The deckhand grinned.
I wasnt either, Kharl admitted. I dont do well with horses. You could tell 
that. Belatedly realizing that hed distracted the deck crew, he added, Best 
let you get back to listening to Bemyr.
Aye
As Kharl stepped away, toward the hatchway leading to the captains quarters, he 
could hear the voices behind him.
 always said something strange
Strange or not, saved our asses more n once replied Reisl.
 never shirked any duty added Hodal.
Kharl wished he could thank the two for their words, but that would just have 
embarrassed them.
After stowing his bag in the captains cabinand he somehow felt guilty, no 
matter what Hagen and Furwyl saidKharl made his way out and up to the poop 
deck. There he stationed himself at the port railing, watching quietly as Furwyl 
guided the Seastag away from the pier and into the narrow channel leading to the 
Great Western Ocean.
Astern of the ship, the white walls and tiled roofs of Dykaru dwindled slowly 
under the cool and clear greenish blue sky. Ahead, there were but the slightest 
of whitecaps on the low and rolling swells of the endless gray-blue waters.
Only when the Seastag was well clear of the harbor did Kharl approach the 
captain, standing beside the steering platform and slightly forward of the helm. 
The engineman stood to starboard and aft of the wheel.
How long a trip, this time?
Were low on coal, but weve got favoring winds, Furwyl replied. Id guess 
four, maybe five days to Cantyl.
Five days five days before he set foot on lands that were his. That that still 
seemed more like a dream. But he would see. He certainly would. In the meantime, 
he watched the sea and the shrinking outline of the coast.
Once the Seastag was well clear of the coast, Kharl climbed down the ladder and 
crossed the main deck, making his way to the carpenter shop.
Tarkyn looked up from his stool and the scrimshaw he had been carving. Wondered 
if youd get down to see an old carpenter. Tarkyns voice was gruff as usual. 
Or if youd forgot where you started.
Dont think Ill ever forget that, Kharl replied.
What happened to the staff? You still have it somewhere?
No. Got broken in the fight with the wizards.
Must have been a real fight. Didnt think anything could break it.
Wizardry and magery did. After a moment, Kharl added, Fighting wizardry did.
Wasnt sure youd make it. You more like fell off that horse when you brought 
Lord Ghrant back.
I wasnt either. Felt like Id been run over by a herd of lancers mounts. That 
was when I woke up days later. Wouldnt let me do much for more than an 
eightday.
You get more than parchment from Lord Ghrant?
They tell me Ive got some landrocks, trees, and a vineyardand some coins. 
Took what they offered. Probably stupid not to have asked for more.
Probably, Tarkyn agreed amiably. Coins never been something that meant the 
most to you, though. He studied Kharl, a twinkle in his eyes. Still pretty 
fancy cloth youre wearing.
Kharl laughed. Its plain compared to what the lords and their servants wear. 
Feels good though. They gave it to me when they found out I had an audience with 
Lord Ghrant.
Wagered something like that. What are you going to do now? Dont think youre 
going to come back to carpentering now that youre a landed lord.
Not a lord, but I did get some land. Kharl shook his head. Still trying to 
figure out what to do next, whether I ought to try to get back to Brysta.
You dont forget, do you?
For a moment, Kharl was taken aback by the question. No Id guess not. But he 
wasnt sure what he wasnt forgetting, not exactly. Or
rather, he didnt want to say that he wasnt forgetting the injustice hed 
experienced and seen in too many forms. Charee hadnt cared for his feelings 
that way. Sanyle had understood, but most surprisingly to Kharl, Jeka had. He 
wondered how she was doing, but he could only hope that Gha-ran had managed to 
keep her on in his shop. He still felt guilty about leaving her, but at the 
time, he hadnt been sure what else he could have done.
Dont like to forgive those folks who do evil, either.
Kharl couldnt deny that, either.
Understand that, Tarkyn went on. Dont let revenge get in the way of doing 
what needs to be done.
Try not to. Kharl paused, then added, Thank you. For teaching me when I 
didnt know enough. For making sure I did learn.
Be a piss-poor carpenter if I didnt.
Youve always been a good one.
What I wanted. Nothing more. Tarkyn laughed. Mostly, anyway.
Isnt it that way always?
They both laughed.
In time, when Kharl made his way back topside, Tarkyns words echoed through his 
thoughtsDont let revenge get in the way of doing what needs to be done. Dont 
let revenge get in the way deep inside, was he after revengetargeted against 
Egen and Justicer Reynol? Or against all those in power in Brysta?
Could he not just accept his good fortune in Austra, where he had become 
recognized and been rewarded?
He looked to port, out at the long coastline lying on the horizon. He had wanted 
to have his own place in Austra.
XCII
he trip northward along the eastern coast of Austra was both uneventful and 
slow. While there were following winds, as Furwyl had hoped, they were light. 
Kharl used some of the time, as he could, talking to Furwyl and the mates, and 
especially to Tarkyn, whom he felt he had come to know later than the others.
On the afternoon of the sixth day after leaving Dykaru, Furwyl fired up the 
engines to bring the Seastag into Cantyl. Kharl stood at the poop railing, 
watching as the rounded headland to port grew ever larger. In the black leather 
bag waiting below, with his garments, was the parchment patent conveying Cantyl 
to him from Lord Ghrant, a patent that also conveyed the lands to his heirs in 
perpetuity.
As Hagen had told him, the harbor at Cantyl was small, with the headland he had 
been watching to the south of the harbora fjiordlike bayand a low line of 
cliffs to the north. The entrance to the bay was less than a kay in width, with 
steep cliffs more than a hundred cubits in height to the south and lower cliffs, 
perhaps twenty cubits above the gray waterto the north. The sails had been 
furled a half glass earlier, and with but the faintest of breezes, the Seastags 
paddle wheels carried the ship through the mouth of the harbor and into the bay, 
an irregular shape that might have fit in a square two kays on a side.
Be hard to get in here in a blow, Furwyl observed from behind Kharl.
Looks hard enough in calm waters, Kharl replied, thinking that the harbor 
would be comparatively easy to defend with a chain system such as the one 
employed in Brysta.
Old salts say it was once a pirate haven, back when Austra was but lands 
warring with each other could be just a tale.
As the Seastag eased closer to Cantyl, Kharl turned back to study the entrance 
to the harbor for a moment. It easily could have been a pirate refuge. He turned 
to say that, but Furwyl had retreated to the pilot platform. So the former 
cooper and carpenter, who was now both mage and landholder, just watched as the 
ship turned southward toward the pier a kay away.
Before that long, he was studying the five men who stood waiting on the narrow 
pier, a structure whose timbers had been bleached near-white by salt and sun and 
time. Two were clearly line-handlers. The other three watched the ship, and 
Kharl had the feeling that they were waiting for him. In the stone-walled harbor 
yard off the foot of the pier were two heavy wagons. One held beams, the other 
planks, both loads waiting to be loaded onto the Seastag.
Furwyl backed down the Seastag expertly, and the ship came to a halt within 
cubits of the pier.
Lines out! came the call from Ghart.
Kharl waited until the Seastag was tied at the pier before turning to Furwyl. 
Thank you, both for this voyageand for all the ones that made this one 
possible.
Our pleasure, Master Kharl. The captain gestured toward the pier. It would 
appear that you are expectedand that we might have a cargo.
If you do, it would be the least I could do to repay you and everyone on board. 
I cant tell you how much. Kharl grinned.
Then he headed toward the ladder down to the main deck. Once there, he slipped 
back into the captains cabin and reclaimed his new bag, and his old pack, 
before hurrying back out to the quarterdeck.
Furwyl, all the mates, and Tarkyn stood there. Behind them were a number of the 
crew. In the front Kharl spied Reisl, Hodal, and Kawelt.
For a moment, Kharl just looked at them. He swallowed. Finally, he spoke. Dont 
know that Im that good with words, but any of you are welcome here, any time. 
Wouldnt be here, and have this without you.
He looked at each of the officers in turn, then at Reisl and Hodal.
Reisl grinned.
Kharl swallowed again, before he spoke. Thank you. Thank you all.
Furwyl cleared his throat. Master Kharl were it not for you, its likely none 
of us would be standing here. Wed be thanking you for our lives and our health, 
and, likewise, youre always welcome here.
Bemyr lifted his whistle and gave a long ululating signal.
With a smile, Kharl walked down the gangway. Once on the pier, he turned back to 
the ship and raised his arm in a salute of sorts to the Seastag. He watched for 
a moment, then turned to those who had been waiting for him.
A short and slight figure, balding with some wisps of reddish hair, stood 
forward of the two taller men. The top of his head barely reached Kharls 
shoulder, but he bowed first. Lord Kharl?
Im Kharl Kharl eased the patent from the top of the leather bag. Heres 
Lord Ghrants patent to me
Speltar, ser Im the steward of Cantyl. He took the patent almost 
apologetically, reading it carefully before bowing and handing it back.
Kharl slipped the parchment carefully back into his bag.
This is Dorwan, the forester, and Glyan, the vintner, Speltar said, nodding 
first to a burly black-haired man close to Kharls age, then to a gray-bearded 
and angular man with deep brown eyes.
Kharl studied each man in turn. Im happy to meet you all. Ill be needing your 
advice and skills very much. The only thing I know anything at all about is 
woods.
Aye, ser, offered Dorwan. That was what the message from Lord Hagen said.
Are the timbers there cargo for the Seastag?
That they are, said Speltar. When Dorwan heard that the Seastag was putting 
in here, a real heavy cargo vessel, we got together some timbers we could send 
to Nussar in Valmurl on consignment. That way, youd have some more golds. We 
figured well theyd come in useful-like.
Since mages arent known for having full wallets? asked Kharl, laughingly.
Thatd be true, ser. Dorwan grinned at Kharl.
Kharl could not sense either calculation or chaos in any of the three, only a 
certain wariness in the vintner. He turned and gestured to Fur-wyl, asking the 
master to join them on the pier.
After a moment, Furwyl walked down the gangway.
Captain Furwyl is now master of the Seastag Kharl said, since Lord Hagen is 
occupied as lord-chancellor. He turned to Furwyl. It appears that you were 
correct, captain, and that the timbers are a consignment cargo for you to take 
to Valmurl.
Furwyl nodded to Kharl, then to Speltar. We would be pleased.
Got the invoices, and the golds right here, captain, offered Speltar, who 
looked to Kharl, if that would be fine by you, ser?
Kharl nodded, stepping back slightly.
Once Furwyl had the invoices and the shipping fees, and had returned to the 
Seastag, Speltar turned to Dorwan.
Dorwan inclined his head slightly. If youd not mind, ser Kharl, Ill be 
supervising the loading.
Go ahead. If youd join us when you can
Yes, ser. Be a while.
Kharl hitched the old pack into place on his shoulder.
Speltar led the way off the pier to the graveled lane that led from the pier 
westward and up a gentle slope covered with winter-brown grass to a series of 
buildings on a low hill overlooking the harbor. The path looked to be only about 
half a kay long.
The three had walked less than ten rods, when Speltar spoke again.
Ser begging your pardon but would you be bringing a consort?
No. After a moment, Kharl added, My consort died about a year ago, and my 
sons have left the house. For the moment, Im the only one. Kharl wondered if, 
with his newfound wealth, he might be able to track the boys down, perhaps even 
send for Arthal, or send someone to bring him back.
Im sorry, ser we didnt know
There was no reason that you would, Kharl replied politely. And I appreciate 
your concern.
As they neared the hilltop, Kharl studied the structures. The main house was 
modest, at least for a landholders dwelling, a two-story red sandstone 
structure only slightly larger than Kharls cooperage had been, if one excluded 
the wide, roofed porch that wrapped around the entire house. The roof was of 
gray tiles, a patchwork of older and newer darker gray that showed replacements 
over the years. The shutters were dark gray, standing out against the red stone 
of the walls.
To the south, slightly downhill, were two buildings that looked like barns. Much 
farther to the north was a stream and a mill of some sort. Kharl glanced to 
Speltar. Is that a sawmill?
Yes, ser. Lord Estloch had it built years back. That way, we can offer planks 
and timbers and charge more than we could just selling felled timber.
The timberlands, the vineyards how far do they go?
Not that far, ser Kharl no more than four kays to the northwest and five to 
the southwest, four if you could ride due south, but you cant, not over those 
crags.
Kharl turned to the vintner, Glyan. I know less about vineyards and wine than 
possibly anything in my life. Youll have to teach me everything you think I 
should know.
Youd be wanting to know? Glyans tone was somewhere between ironic and 
amused.
I do. I was wondering Do we have a cooperage here?
No, ser. Oak doesnt grow well on the lands round about.
Kharl nodded slowly. And about the grapes?
What would you want to know?
As much as you can tell me. Ill never know what you do, Kharl
admitted, but it seems to me that I ought to know as much as I can.
Glyan laughed. Thatd be taking some time.
I have time. Kharl grinned. And if you tell me a bit at a time, I might 
remember it more easily.
Glyan cleared his throat. Well ser the vineyards are over the second hill 
there, on the south-facing slope. We only grow two grapes here, the full red and 
the golden green. Greens better, makes a Rhynn like no one else
Kharl listened intently until they neared the house on the hillcrest and Glyan 
broke off his words.
 and thats why we check the stones in the watering runs with a bubble level. 
Theyve got to be just so. Too little water or too much, and youve got a juice 
thats good for vinegar and not much more.
Kharl stopped and looked at the house. A flagstone walk led from the lane, which 
ran up the hill, then beside the dwelling, to the front porch, the one 
overlooking the harbor. After a moment, he followed Speltar to the porch.
There he set down the leather bag, before turning and looking out over the 
harbor, slowly scanning the water and the surrounding lands. He found it hard to 
believe that he owned the lands lands that seemed too vast for someone 
considered a small landholder.
He stood and looked for some time, until he heard a cough.
Ser, offered Speltar, might I show you the house?
Kharl smiled broadly. You certainly can, then the barns and the sawmill. He 
turned to Glyan. And the vineyard and the cellars as well.
As he turned toward the door, he paused. There really wasnt any reason he 
couldnt have a cooperage now, was there?
With a nod to himself, he followed Speltar through the door.