Kel rubbed her face. He was right. She’d heard her peers’ opinions of commoners, had been accused of caring too much about them. Not so long ago, she had learned that the maximum punishment given to a noble who’d arranged the kidnapping of another noble’s servant was a fine, to compensate for the loss of the servant’s work. That law was being changed, but there were others like it. A noble owed a duty to those who served him, but such duty was not glorious. Fairness and consideration were unnecessary; the affairs and pride of commoners were unimportant. The noble who worried too much about them was somehow weak. Kel knew her world. Her respect for common blood was a rarity. Her father’s grandparents were merchants. Every branch of their family save his was still merchants to the bone. Perhaps it was also because her parents, as diplomats, were so used to seeing other points of view, foreign or Tortallan, that they had passed their attitudes on to their children.
She also knew Wyldon was right about Neal.
‘Well?’ her former training master enquired. ‘Will you do this, Keladry of Mindelan?’
Blayce! she thought, suddenly panicked. The Nothing Man! If I’m pinned to a camp, how will I find him? How will I stop him?
She remembered those thin faces in the barracks, child and adult alike. She remembered Tirrsmont, crammed with people. Looking at Wyldon, she saw trust in his face, the face of a man she respected as much as she did her father and Lord Raoul.
Kel sighed. ‘I’ll do it, my lord.’
Her first task was to choose supplies. Wyldon cautioned her not to get greedy. The next morning he sent Owen with her to write down her choices. When they reached the storehouse, Kel stopped to look at her unusually quiet friend. Owen wouldn’t meet her eyes.
She put her hand under his chin, startled to feel the scrape of newly shaved whiskers, and made him look at her. ‘You didn’t know,’ she said.
Owen grimaced. Words tumbled from his mouth: ‘Kel, I swear I didn’t! He told me this morning. He – he apologized , for keeping something important from me,’ he said, ’specially when I have to learn about making camps like this, but he said you’d see it on my face, and he wanted to talk to you first. Kel, if I knew, I’d’ve argued him out of it. Well, I’d’ve tried to,’ he amended as Kel took her hand away from his chin. ‘He’s hard to argue with. But I would’ve tried! I’m so sorry!’
Kel grinned. ‘Of course he wouldn’t tell you,’ she informed him. ‘You’re the worst liar I know, even if you’re just not saying anything. You ought to feel virtuous, that he knows you can’t lie.’
‘I feel like a failure,’ Owen confessed. ‘A true friend would have found out and warned you.’
‘How?’ Kel asked reasonably, leading the way into the storehouse. ‘Search his papers? That’s hardly proper. And what could I have done if you’d told me? Run off? Stop fussing.’ She opened the shutters, admitting the morning light so they could see the rows of goods. Her sparrows flew in. Some perched on Owen; others zipped around the stacked supplies, as if taking their own inventory.
‘But, Kel, making you a, a nursemaid!’ protested Owen, stroking a male sparrow’s black collar with a gentle finger. ‘When you’re a better warrior than anybody but my lord! And Lord Raoul, and the Lioness,’ he added, belatedly remembering that there might be others Kel would think were better. ‘It’s just not right!’
‘My lord says I’ll see plenty of fighting,’ Kel told him.
Owen studied her for a long moment. Whatever he sought in her face, he seemed to find it. ‘Anything you want me to do, Kel, you let me know,’ he told her seriously. He gripped her arm for a moment, then let go. ‘Anything I can do to help.’
For a moment they looked at one another, Owen’s gaze firm, Kel’s thoughtful. He’s growing up, she thought, surprised. And he’s growing up well.
She patted his shoulder, then surveyed the storehouse. ‘For now I need a quartermaster,’ she said. They might never talk about what had just passed, but neither would they forget it. ‘Someone who can say what’s reasonable to draw for my people.’
‘Be right back,’ Owen promised, and trotted out the door.
Tobe and Jump came in as he left, Tobe directing a scowl at Owen’s back. ‘I can do anything he might do,’ Tobe informed Kel.
She clasped his shoulder, amused and yet flattered. ‘I need you for other things, Tobe,’ she informed him. ‘We’ve a lot of work ahead.’
CHAPTER 4 Chapter 4: Kel Takes Command April 15–23, 460 the refugee camp on the Greenwoods River Chapter 5: Clerks Chapter 6: Defence Plans Chapter 7: Tirrsmont Refugees Chapter 8: First Defence April 30, 460 Fort Mastiff Chapter 9: Mastiff May 2–3, 460 Haven Chapter 10: The Refugees Fight May 6–June 3, 460 Haven and Fort Mastiff Chapter 11: Shattered Sanctuary June 4–7, 460 Haven and Fort Mastiff Chapter 12: Renegade Chapter 13: Friends Chapter 14: Vassa Crossing June 8, 460 Scanra, between the Vassa and Smiskir Rivers Chapter 15: Enemy Territory June 9–10, 460 the Pakkai road Chapter 16: Opportunities June 10–11, 460 Blayce’s Castle Chapter 17: The Gallan’s Lair Chapter 18: Blayce September 10, 460 Epilogue Cast of Characters Glossary Notes and Acknowledgments Read on for a Preview of Tempests and Slaughter Also by Tamora Pierce About the Publisher
KEL TAKES COMMAND Chapter 4: Kel Takes Command April 15–23, 460 the refugee camp on the Greenwoods River Chapter 5: Clerks Chapter 6: Defence Plans Chapter 7: Tirrsmont Refugees Chapter 8: First Defence April 30, 460 Fort Mastiff Chapter 9: Mastiff May 2–3, 460 Haven Chapter 10: The Refugees Fight May 6–June 3, 460 Haven and Fort Mastiff Chapter 11: Shattered Sanctuary June 4–7, 460 Haven and Fort Mastiff Chapter 12: Renegade Chapter 13: Friends Chapter 14: Vassa Crossing June 8, 460 Scanra, between the Vassa and Smiskir Rivers Chapter 15: Enemy Territory June 9–10, 460 the Pakkai road Chapter 16: Opportunities June 10–11, 460 Blayce’s Castle Chapter 17: The Gallan’s Lair Chapter 18: Blayce September 10, 460 Epilogue Cast of Characters Glossary Notes and Acknowledgments Read on for a Preview of Tempests and Slaughter Also by Tamora Pierce About the Publisher
With the men who had built the camp – soldiers, convict soldiers, and refugees – already in residence, Kel saw no reason to linger at Fort Giantkiller. She needed a thorough view of her new home and its surroundings before the bulk of her charges arrived. Once they did, she would be short on time.
Two days after her arrival at Giantkiller, she left at the head of a train that included Duke Baird, Lord Wyldon, Neal, Merric, and Owen, as well as the supplies she had taken with the quartermaster’s approval. She had been disconcerted to find that Neal, the camp’s healer, and Merric, their patrol captain, would technically be under her command. Neal didn’t seem to mind, but Neal never reacted like most people. On the other hand, she would have to be extra careful with Merric. She wasn’t sure that she would like being under the command of one of her year-mates.
Once the train was assembled, Giantkiller’s defenders opened the gates of the inner and outer walls. Lord Wyldon gave the signal, and they rode out in a rumble of hooves, the jingle of harnesses, and the creak of wagon wheels.
A pure, beautiful voice rose in the crisp air, singing an old northern song about the waking of the sun. Startled, Kel looked for the singer. It was Tobe, his face alight as he sang. A deeper voice joined his, then others: the song was a common one, though the words might vary from region to region. Above the baritone, bass, and tenor voices of the men and older boys soared Tobe’s perfect soprano. Even Kel, Wyldon, and Baird sang, their voices soft. Only Neal scowled at his saddle horn, still not awake.
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