domain, reporting on the membership and training schedule of each. Captain Valichi, reminding him that he intended to retire as soon as the troops left for Aarenis, reporting that the neighboring Count Halar had agreed to let Fox Company recruit in his domain and shared more gossip about Dorrin Verrakai. Mayors of Dukeâs East and Dukeâs West, their usual reports, includingâfrom Dukeâs Westâa request for one more Countâs Court to hear a case that had arisen while heâd been in Vérella. Best to get that over before he took the troops south.
Before the afternoon was over, the gnome estvin arrived seeking audience.
âIt is that the stone is welcome,â he said.
âIt is large enough?â Arcolin asked.
âIt is,â the estvin said. âAnd the lordâs king? It is that the king agreed?â
âYes,â Arcolin said. âBy Girdâs Code, as I said.â He paused, wondering whether he should mention the dragonâs appearance at court. But why not tell the estvin something that concerned the gnomes? âBefore I came,â he said, âthe dragon visited the king.â
The estvin paled. âDragon said to king?â
âThat the land the dragon claimed must be released. The king agreedââ
The estvin muttered something Arcolin could not understand.
âAnd the king agreed to the grant of those hills to you and yours forever,â Arcolin said. âYou will be safe, in your own home, I hope. Did my steward give you the food I promised?â
âYes, lord,â the estvin said. âIt is that in ⦠in new stone kapristi have no need of as much. By midsummer at earliest will need no more from our lord.â
Arcolin started to say he did not grudge their need and was not their lord now that they had moved out, but the estvinâs expression was set. Better not to argue now, he thought. âYou will have food until you say you need it not,â he said. âDo not, I beg you, go hungry. I want you to prosper and grow.â
âIt is that my lord is ⦠is beyond the Law,â the estvin said.
âBeyondâhave I broken the Law?â Arcolin asked. To a gnome nothing was more serious than their Lawâas far as they were concerned, the only law that mattered, rigid and immutable.
âNo! Not to break. My lord is ⦠is ⦠more fair than fair.â
âIt is Girdâs command,â Arcolin said, having found that a useful phrase before in dealing with the gnomesâ intent to exact precise trade between them.
âYes, my lord,â the estvin said, bowing. âWill my lord come with me to the cellars to see if they are now acceptable?â
Acceptable? What could the estvin mean? Arcolin went with him into the space the gnomes had occupied. He had assumed theyâd leave it clean, but he had not imagined that they would leave it polished, plastered, and whitewashed as well. The stones of the floor gleamed; a little frieze of dark red foxheads ran around the top of the whitewashed walls. When had they had time to do this?
âIt is pleasing?â the estvin asked.
âIt is very pleasing,â Arcolin said.
Back upstairs, he explained that he would be gone almost a half-year on campaign, not to return until after Autumn Court. âFor whatever you need, ask Captain Arneson or the steward. They have my orders to supply you.â
The estvin bowed again. âMy lord goes to serve the king?â
âTo fulfill a contract made with Foss Council,â Arcolin said. âAnd to obey the orders of my king that I find out more about the danger to the South. A very bad man seeks to gain power he should not. I will be sending reports to the king during the summer and at least one or two all the way here, to Captain Arneson. If you wish to send me word of your welfare or any problem, you can do so using the same couriers. Only tell Captain
Dorothy Calimeris, Sondi Bruner