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A Wizard In Peace
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A Wizard In Peace
The Fourth Chronicle of
Magnus D'Armand, Rogue Wizard
By Christopher Stasheff
ISBN: 0-812-56797-8
CONTENTS
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
CHAPTER 1
Miles fled swiftly through the forest or as swiftly as he could, in the dark. That was still fairly quickly, for he knew the forest well, this close to home. Nonetheless, fear chilled him, and the thought of turning back flitted through his mind-but through it he went, with all his heart helping it on its way, for he fled from Salina.
Well, from the magistrate, really. The thought brought the man's face instantly before his mind's eye, heavy fowled and hard-eyed, glowering down from behind his high bench against the paneled wall of the courtroom, with the clerk looking on from his desk in front of the bench and the other petitioners watching from their stools. The magistrate orated, "Salina, daughter of Pleinjeanne, and Miles, son of Lige, I have given you each five years and more to find mates, and you have found none."
"But we don't fancy one another, Your Honor," Miles protested.
Didn't fancy Salina, indeed! He glanced up at her--quite plain, rawboned and scrawny, with squinting eyes, a long, sharp nose, and a tongue quick to insult and blame linked to a mind that could find every fault unerringly and instantly. She was only five years older than he, but was a shrew already. "Salina, you came of age ten years ago," the magistrate intoned. "Miles, you came of age five years ago. If I leave you to find your own partners, you never will."
"Give me time, Your Honor!" Salina glared at Miles in a way that made it clear she was as appalled as he at the thought of marrying, for he was no prize. He was short, a full head shorter than she, and so stocky that he seemed fat. He was round-faced, with too strong a chin and too short a nose, quiet and reticent-too quiet for Salina's taste. She proclaimed far and wide that she loved a good quarrel. Miles hated them.
"Give me time," she said again, "and a permit to travel, and I'll find a man before I'm thirty."
"By thirty, fifteen years of childbearing will be past! Eight children you could have borne 4n that time-and you have already wasted ten years, forgone the bearing of five more citizens for the Protector."
Citizens and taxpayers, Miles thought sourly.
"But you, Miles." The magistrate frowned down at him, puzzled. "You've always been a good boy, never any trouble. You haven't broken a single rule in your whole life, never even gone poaching!"
Miles winced at the thought of the public punishments the reeve meted out to anyone the foresters caught. No, he had never gone poaching! He shuddered at the memory of the last flogging he had seen-a man from two villages away hanging by his wrists from the pillory while the cat-o'-nine-tails smacked across his back. His whole body had convulsed with every stroke; he had cursed at first, then begun to scream, and finally mewled before they cut him down. Miles had heard that he had lived, but hadn't walked straight again for six months.
"What has made you so stubborn now?" the magistrate demanded. "You know the Protector decreed long ago that everyone over eighteen must be safely bound into marriage, so that the men won't make trouble for the reeves and the women won't raise havoc among the men. Salina shouldn't waste her life in spinsterhood when she can bear many healthy babies nor should you, when you could be earning a living for a wife and family."
"But I don't love him," Salina snapped, glaring at Miles. "Love!" the magistrate snorted. "What has love to do with it? We speak of marriage and child-rearing, and since you two have not spoken nor been spoken for, you shall marry or go to the frontier farms, so that the Protector shall have some use from you!" He banged his gavel on the bench, and that was the end of it.
Until nightfall.
As he ran, Miles wondered if perhaps he should have chosen the frontier farms after all. He remembered what he had heard of them, those places that the Protector wished to see used, so that people wouldn't become crowded in their homelands as they increased. Some were in the north, where it was cool in summer but frigid in winter; some were in the western desert, where people broiled by day and froze by night. They were prisoners, those folk, lawbreakers-waste people for the wastelands-turning the desert into a garden or the frozen lands into oatfields for a few months of every year, making the land livable for their children, if they had any, or for settlers whom the Protector would send when the land was fertile. Then the prisoners would move on, always in the wastelands, always where the work was backbreaking and constant, always where life itself was a punishment.
But could it be worse than the punishment for trying to leave the village without a pass?
With the thought came the memory of Lasak in his shackles, the long chain stapled to the side of the courthouse, dressed in rags and striking blow after blow with sledgehammer or pickax, trimming blocks to shape for the magistrate's walls, smashing broken blocks into cobblestones, fourteen hours a day, gray-faced and haggard, his eyes losing luster with every sunrise. He had stayed at that labor for a year, and when the magistrate released him, he did whatever he was told, looking up in fear at the slightest word from the Watch, cringing at a word from the magistrate, going when he was told, coming when he was bidden, marrying the worst shrew in town as he was ordered, and going almost eagerly out to hoe all day in the fields, glad to be away from her. His spirit hadn't just been broken-it had been extinguished.
And here was Miles, daring to leave the village without a pass just as Lasak had, courting disaster just as Lasak had-but bound and determined that he would escape, as Lasak had not. He resolutely put the memory out of his mind-he would rather hang slowly than marry Salina. She might feel insulted at that, but she would thank him secretly, and who knew? The next husband the magistrate chose for her might be more to her taste. At least she wouldn't be sent to the frontier farm for disobeying, not when the crime was his.
So here was Miles, fleeing through the wood, though the punishment would be far worse if he were caught, far worse than for either refusing to marry, or for poaching, or any of the hundred other things the Protector forbade. Still, the difference between giving up a few hours' sport and a week's meat on the one hand, and sacrificing a whole lifetime's chance of happiness on the other, wasn't worth thinking about.
He slipped between trees, went down almost-hidden gametrails at a trot, for, poacher or not, he knew the ways of the forest well. He, like every other village boy, had hunted every fall during the open season. He didn't doubt that he could escape if he could be far enough away before the magistrate discovered he was missing and sent the foresters after him.
But hang, emigrate, or grind, Miles was leaving the village, and Salina would thank him for it. He would live a bachelor all his days, stay free to marry for love as the minstrels sang of it-or die trying.
The two men sat in soft chairs that tilted back and molded themselves to their occupants' bodies. Each had a tall, iced drink on the table between them, and sipped now and then as he watched the pictures changing on the huge wallscreen in front of him. The lounge in which the men sat was lit with subdued splashes of light that illuminated the c
opies of great paintings hung on the walls, and other pictures the great artists had never painted, although each painting looked as though they had. The subdued light that spilled over from those pools gave a glow to the thick wine-red carpet and the golden oak of the walls.
"All right, Gar, so they all could be better off--but I haven't seen a single one where I'd say the people were suffering," the smaller man grumbled. "At least, not most of them."
Actually, he was fairly tall, by the standards of his home planet but his companion was seven feet from toe to crown, and wide-shouldered in proportion.
The picture changed, and Gar said, "This one does look fairly standard, Dirk-like a picture from old Earth. They've built up plant life and oxygen, enriched the soil with fertilizers and carbon, and seeded it with Terran lifeforms."
Dirk nodded. "It's been settled for a few hundred years, then." "I'd guess a thousand, if Herkimer is right about there being walled cities in the middle of the forest. People don't build that way.
"I know-they chop down the trees and plant crops. Besides, he said his sonar probe showed that the biggest of them was built over the buried hull of the colony ship, and they wouldn't have tried to land it on top of all those trees. So you're pretty sure those cities are abandoned?"
"Herkimer is," Gar answered, "and a ship's computer that size is almost never wrong. He'll plead ignorance sometimes, but when he doesn't, be has so much evidence that it's no use to dispute."
"Of course, there could be a fact he doesn't know about," Dirk said sourly.
"Yes, and he doesn't know anything about the current government on this planet." Gar frowned as the picture changed to an overhead view of a town. "There isn't that much we can tell, sitting up'here inside a spaceship."
"What do you know about the people, Herkimer?" Dirk asked.
The computer's mellow voice answered from all about them. "Nothing, Dirk, except that their parents were Earthmen who left to escape crowding, and to gain fresh air and sunshine."
"That's very strange." Gar frowned. "There's usually something in the database."
"Well, he's got the best one around, when it comes to lost colony planets," Dirk agreed. "Absolutely nothing about what happened after Earth withdrew . all support from the colonies, huh?"
"You know we don't even have an idea whether or not the people survived," Gar reminded him.
"Well, we just found out." Dirk gestured at the screen, where they seemed to be descending as the camera expanded the picture. They found themselves looking down on people walking fairly quickly along the streets, wearing dark clothing. The women wore bodices and skirts and bonnets; the men wore knee pants, tunics, or short robes, and some wore conical hats with flat tops and wide brims. "These pictures are live, right?"
"Yes, Dirk," the computer answered. "Of course, I am recording them, and will store them for you."
Dirk frowned. "Odd to see the physical layout so similar on every continent, especially when none of them are very big."
"True," Gar agreed, frowning thoughtfully. "Every single one shows a lot of small towns in expanding rings around a few big cities with a network of roads and canals tying them together. No huge forests with occasional villages in clearings, no vast grasslands with tiny tribes following great herds, no wide-open spaces broken into patchwork fields around Neolithic villages. . ."
"And no medieval castles on hilltops overlooking collections of villages ringed by more patchwork fields," Dirk finished for him. "Not what you'd expect of a colony that crashed when it couldn't get spare parts, or trade with Terra for new machines."
"Still, it's scarcely modern," Gar pointed out. "There's no sign of automobiles or electricity, not even steam engines and railroads."
"So it crashed, but not very hard," Dirk inferred. "At a guess, the political system kept some kind of infrastructure going:"
"If that's so, then there may not be any need for us." Gar sounded almost gloomy. "Not if their government fits their needs."
"Don't rush to judgment, there." Dirk held up a cautioning palm. "Just because it kept them alive, doesn't mean it made them happy. Besides, after the crisis was over, whatever command structure saved them, might no longer be needed."
"True," Gar agreed, his eyes coming alive again, "and the look of the land does seem to indicate a strong-arm government of some sort. The layout being so much the same everywhere indicates a common social and political structure."
"Probably," Dirk cautioned his friend.
"But what kind?" Gar asked. "I've never seen a lost colony that looked so organized from space!"
"At least those people on the screen look well-fed and healthy," Dirk said.
"Not very many of them look happy, though," Gar said, "and that is enough to arouse my suspicions."
"Mine, too. Definitely we want a closer look."
"I'm also suspicious because there's no sign of king or noblemen, even though the culture seems to have regressed to late medieval."
"Or early modern-take your pick." Dirk shrugged. "But what strikes me as strange is that there's no sign of clergy or churches."
"Most unusual, for a culture in this stage. Yes, I'd say we have reason to investigate." Gar rose from his chair and strode off toward the sally bay. "Down we go, Herkimer! Down to the nightside!"
Orgoru trudged homeward, his hoe over his shoulder, his face wooden as they came into the village and Clyde whooped to everyone who could hear, "Three! Orgoru only cut down three stalks of maize in his hoeing today!"
"Only three?" Althea looked up from snapping beans by her mother's door. "Better and better, Orgoru! Maybe we'll actually have corn to grind this fall!"
Orgoru took the gibe with a straight face, but he could feel his treacherous skin growing hot.
"Hear how they mock you, boy!" his father growled beside him. "Must you shame me every day of your life?"
The angry retort leaped hot to Orgoru's lips, but he held it within; he knew from bitter experience that talking back would only win him blows and kicks-and, full-grown or not, with the vigor of youth on his side or not, he knew that his father was stronger than he was, quicker than he was, in all ways a better fighter than he was.
"Can't even manage a hoe!" his father grumbled. "Thank heaven we never trusted you with a plow or a scythe!"
He'd certainly never taken the trouble to teach the use of them to his son-but Orgoru shrugged off the older man's complaints, telling himself once again that it was no wonder he was so useless with peasant's tools.
He had known he was clumsy since he was five, struggling so hard to please his mother in drawing water for her, sweeping, gathering kindling-but always she scolded him for spilling some of the water, for gathering too many rotten sticks, for missing a spot in his sweeping. His earliest memories, and his latest ones, were all of such scoldings, such blaming:
Little Orgoru tripped, stumbled into the table, and his mother's only vase crashed to the floor. "What was that?" she cried, and came running. Orgoru flinched away from her, trying to make himself as small as possible; but it did no good; she screamed, "My vase! You clumsy, stupid child!" and began beating him, beating and beating and beating....
Papa's fist caught him on the side of the head, making him sit down hard. Through the ringing in his ears, he heard the man shout, "You've left half the weeds in that row still standing!"
Orgoru whined, trembling. "I didn't know they were weeds, Papa."
"Stupid boy! Anything that's not corn is a weed!" Papa's big hand came around to slap his head again. "Do them again now, and chop down the weeds, but leave the corn!"
Orgoru had tried, had really tried his best, and he had chopped down all the weeds-but a quarter of the corn, too.
There was no dinner for him, and his father beat him with a strap that night. He cried himself to sleep lying on his stomach.
He didn't have a hoe in his hands that fall, when the children came running after the grown-ups, who were tired from reaping and binding sheaves all day-but in
spite of having done their share of binding, the children still had energy enough to run and shout.
The blow took Orgoru full in the back. He stumbled, nearly fell, but managed to catch his balance in only a few steps. He turned to see who had struck him, fighting down anger....
Clyde grinned down at him, a head taller and two years older, with his friends laughing behind him. "Sorry, Orgoru," Clyde said. "I stumbled."
Orgoru scrambled to his feet, knowing what was coming, dreading it....
The kick took him in the seat and sent him sprawling on his face. "Aw, now you stumbled! Get up, Orgoru! Can't you get up?"
Orgoru tried to stay down, knowing their rules, knowing they wouldn't hit him if he didn't stand up, but two of the boys yanked him to his feet, and they all took turns giving him a punch or two.
Finally they ran off; finally he heard the heavy tread, and looked up to see his father's face wrinkled in disgust. "Can't even fight back, can you? All right, come along home-but cowards get no dinner."
He had missed so many dinners that it was amazing he had grown up at all. It was completely unfair that he had become chubby-he hadn't eaten that much!
So Orgoru had grown up knowing that he was useless as a peasant. He had known it because his father growled at him for being too clumsy to throw a ball, for losing every fight, for always being the butt of every prank. He had struggled to please, tried harder and harder with every complaint, but no matter how hard he tried, his mother always found something wrong with what he had done, his father always demanded to know why he couldn't be like the other boys-until one night, whipped for knocking a loaf of bread onto the dirt floor, then denied his dinner for having shouted at them for the injustice, Orgoru went to bed weeping, feeling as though his little heart would break-and suddenly understood.
All at once it burst on him-why he was so clumsy at peasant's chores, why he couldn't even talk to the other children and be liked-because he wasn't like them! Wasn't of their kind! So unlike them indeed, that this man and woman couldn't possibly be his true parents! They didn't love him, they were ashamed of him, they behaved every day as though he were a burden they had to carry, but only grudgingly-so he couldn't actually be their child! His real mother and father must have left him with these surly grouches for some mysterious and important reason-and would come back for him someday!