The Sword of the Lady (42 page)

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Authors: S. M. Stirling

BOOK: The Sword of the Lady
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″Ah, bratwash and all the fixings!″ he said, with Mary smiling and looping her arm around his waist and enjoying his pleasure. ″Damn, this takes me back. I remember the first time we could afford it, when I was about ten. Dad had a big party like this, to celebrate us finally really getting on our feet.″
Folk were setting out trestle tables and benches, hauling bright lanterns up to the cross-girders, and wheeling in great wicker bins woven of split oak and full of fragrant warm loaves. The center space held four large hearths made from metal barrels cut lengthwise and full of glowing hardwood coals topped by mesh grills, beneath a broad dismountable smoke hood and metal pipe chimney. Right now big shallow pans were simmering there, with an intense smell of onions and . . .
″Beer?″ Father Ignatius said with interest. ″Some sort of marinade?″
He sipped at the mug in his fist with evident pleasure; he was a man of studied self-control and moderation, but saw no reason to pretend he wasn′t enjoying a beer if he was going to drink it at all.
One reason I like him,
Rudi thought.
He′s not like some Christian clerics I′ve met, who act as if they thought the world and all its pleasures were an evil produced by that bad spirit of theirs, rather than the Maker of Stars.
″Yah,″ Mark said, obviously happy to enlighten the foreigners. ″You simmer the brats . . . that′s a sausage—″
″My baptismal name was Bergfried, my son,″ the priest said gently, his slightly tilted dark eyes crinkling in amusement. ″I′ve heard of bratwurst. My mother and sisters make very good ones, in fact.″
″Oh, sorry, Father. Well, you simmer the brats in beer broth with onions, and then you grill ′em. We′ll be starting with that, though.″
He nodded to a much larger pot, which Wanda Vogeler was stirring, occasionally taking a sip from the ladle.
″Onion, cheese and beer soup,″ Ingolf said reverently. ″God, that smells just like the recipe Mom used, the one she′d never let anyone write down.″
″Yah, Grandma taught Mom, all right. Said she was getting too old to do it herself.″
Ingolf nodded, his face somber again for a moment; the news of his mother′s death was fresh for him, but his nephew was too young to sustain grief for years. Rudi took a deep sniff: under the cooking smells were others that made him suspect the feasting hall doubled as storage most of the time; he could detect strong hints of something sweet.
″Maple sugar,″ Ingolf said in reply to his question, as they stood waiting for the trestles to be set up. ″We get a
lot
of that and we used to put the barrels and tubs here. That and beer, usually, or that′s what we used it for when I was a kid.″
″Ingolf,″ Fred asked thoughtfully as he watched the crowd trickle in; his father had been a general, after all, and besides formal training as an officer he′d grown up around recruitment and logistics. ″Just how many people
are
there in Readstown?″
Ingolf looked at him in mild surprise. ″When I left? A bit more than a hundred farms that came through; call it, oh, twenty-five hundred people, Farmers and refugees together. That′s in the whole Sheriffry of Readstown, not just″—his gesture took in the settlement—″the homeplace here; say a hundred-odd here counting kids. Probably more now all up.″
″Three thousand six hundred in the Sheriffry,″ Mark Vogeler said. ″We took a count last year. The Bossman wanted to know.″
″Is that typical?″ the Boisean continued.
″Oh, some are a bit bigger, some a bit smaller,″ Mark put in, obviously proud of his knowledge—and his country. ″We don′t have big cities like Iowa, but there are some pretty large towns—Richland Center has three thousand people all by itself. I′ve been there. God, it′s more crowded than I thought any place could be. Half a million in the whole of the Free Republic, if you can
imagine
that many people.″
″Hmmmm,″ Fred said.
Mathilda shaped a soundless whistle. Rudi was impressed himself. Not nearly as many inhabitants as great Iowa, but it was still as many as the PPA had, and half what the United States of Boise or the Cutters could boast; seven or eight times as many as the Clan Mackenzie. And Richland wasn′t even the only such bossmandom in what had been Wisconsin; there was Ellsworth, to the north, and a spattering of independent little villages and counties farther northeast.
″And it seems this land breeds many strong young men,″ Rudi said thoughtfully. ″No doubt it′s formidable they would be, should foemen or reivers come this way.″
″Right!″ Mark said, his chest puffing out slightly. ″We Readstowners can muster a battalion of three hundred now for the Free Republic′s National Guard.″
Or should their Sheriff have a quarrel with the neighbors
, Rudi thought.
From what Ingolf says there was a fair bit of that, at least in his father′s time, before things found their balance here.
Mark went on: ″A quarter of them are cavalry. A lot of our guys fought in the Sioux War, or in the trouble we had with Ellsworth, or against outlaws and stuff. Our team won third place in the Guard muster competition at Richland Center this June.″
The tables were set up now, and covered with checked cloths; a group with drums and instruments—he recognized a tuba and an accordion—began playing cheerful music with an
oom-pah
,
oom-pah
beat for a minute or two. That was apparently a signal for everyone to seek their seats; the farm workers and laborers at the lower tables had a guest or two to each family group, and Mark and those of his siblings old enough led Rudi and his immediate followers to the master′s table.
The hall was filled with chatter and smiles; even the Southsiders were only mildly nervous despite the strangeness of place, folk and even food—many of them still thought of buttered bread as an exotic treat. The Mackenzie judged the Readstown folk were showing the pleasure to be expected at a break in routine, plus anticipation of the feast and the happiness anyone who lived close to the land felt when the main harvest was in and safely stored.
And local pride that they can afford to guest so many strangers so well,
he thought.
Which was pardonable. It
did
show that this was a prosperous community and well run.
″I′m glad it′s not Samhain itself,″ Edain murmured to him as they took their chairs.
Those seemed to be something of a luxury; most of the seating lower down was benches. More benches ran around the outer walls. On them were hollowed pumpkins with candlelight flickering through carved gap-toothed faces, between cooling rows of pies, some pumpkin, others apple, peach, cherry or rhubarb, all grouped around bowls of thick whipped cream sweetened with maple sugar or honey.
A Clan dun might show exactly the same jack-o′-lantern display around this mark on the Wheel of the Year . . . but they both suspected that Readstown didn′t take them nearly as seriously as their own folk.
″So am I also glad it′s not quite Samhain yet,″ Rudi said dryly. ″Inauspicious it would be, sure and it would.″
Every Mackenzie household set an empty place at the Samhain feasts, but that was a symbol of the welcome they extended to the beloved dead who might visit on the day when the Veil was thinnest. The problem was that
other
things might stray into the world of men on such a day; if someone actually came through the door and seated himself he had to be fed and entertained with everything of the best, but matters could get very tense indeed. Such an outsider might be anything—or possessed of such. The world held many beings who were not of humankind, some friendly, some playful in ways heedless of men and their lives and loves and needs, some not friendly at all.
Ingolf Vogeler had come into Sutterdown as just such a stranger on Samhain eve, and deeds bloody and terrible had followed; they were here now because of them.
The head table held the Sheriff and his immediate family, and his chief officers and
their
families—they included the head of his deputies, the field boss and stock boss who managed the Sheriff′s own farmland and beasts, the old Ojibwa Indian—Pierre Walks Quiet—who was chief forester and game warden, the fair-haired woman named Samantha who was housekeeper under the Sheriff′s wife, and a few others. Wanda Vogeler hung her apron over the back of her chair and wiped her hands on it before she sat down and beamed at them.
″Everything ready—at last!″ she said. ″Und Jenny sleeping—at last. Woof! Children! No wonder people get old!″
″There′s nothing you ever enjoyed more than laying on a big feed, Wanda,″ Ingolf said teasingly. ″Unless you′ve changed more than I think.″
″Nothing I enjoy more except eating it myself,″ she said. ″And talking while I eat. And dancing afterwards. Both with people who aren′t the same ones I see every day, and I know everything they′re going to say before they say it.″
Her husband cleared his throat and rose. The noise in the hall fell off and then vanished; faces turned towards them, some already chewing on rolls or pieces of cheese from the rounds and blocks and wedges that were set out on cutting boards down the tables, alternating with tubs of butter and jugs of milk, beer and cider.
″Well, folks, you all know my brother Ingolf is back for a visit.″
There was a cheer and a ripple of raised mugs; Edward Vogeler looked surprised, and so did Ingolf.
″We all heard how well Ingolf did in the Sioux War,″ Ed went on. ″How the Bossman of Marshall gave him that medal and offered to make him a general.″
Rudi and his party looked at Ingolf in surprise; the only tales he′d told them about his part in that conflict had been things comical or tragic, mostly reflecting badly on himself.
″And how his salvage team got all the way to the East Coast after that, chosen by the Bossman of Iowa because he was the best. First people from the Midwest to do
dat
since the Change!″
Family pride rang in his voice as the folk of the steading cheered again. Then he went on:
″With him is his intended and her brother Rudi Mackenzie, the guy he′s ramrod for now, who comes all the way from the west coast—that′s a first, too! They′re our guests here, and so are their people. Let′s show them hospitality, and how the Free Republic of Richland, and we Readstowners, treat guests. They′ve got a priest with them, good Father Ignatius, and I′d like him to lead us in saying grace.″
He bowed his head, and Ignatius rose:
″O Christ our God, bless″—he signed himself—″the food and drink of Your servants for You are holy always, now and ever, and forever. As Jacob greeted Esau his brother, may we all be as brothers to one another, in Your love. Amen.″
There was a murmur of
Amen
from up and down the tables. Rudi and the others of the Old Religion waited in respectful silence with their heads bowed—courtesy, and also duty to their host—and then signed their plates with the Invoking Pentagram and quietly murmured:
″Harvest Lord who dies for the ripened corn—
Corn Mother who births the fertile field—
Blessed be those who share this bounty;
And Blessed the mortals who toiled with You
Their hands helping Earth to bring forth life.″
He didn′t think Edward Vogeler noticed what they were about, or perhaps he very thoroughly chose not to. Several others—the housekeeper among them—did, he thought.
A girl carried around a tureen of the soup; Wanda Vogeler wielded the ladle for the table, and Rudi accepted his gratefully. Baskets held half a dozen types of bread—fine white loaves with a crackling glaze, black rye, rich coarse-textured pumpernickel, round rolls with crosses cut in their surface, squares of slightly sweet cornbread. He cut a slice of the rye because it was rare at home and wielded the spoon with gratitude. The soup had a deep savory smoky richness that was just what you needed after a day′s hard work in brisk fall weather.
The bratwurst were sizzling on the grills, and a team split crusty rolls, buttered them and set out mustard and sauerkraut and sautéed onions to go with them. Rudi took several when they were borne around. His brows went up a little as others pulled back the cloths on tubs of honey-glazed chicken breasts and steaks kissed with garlic, pork chops, racks of ribs and skewers of venison and lamb and onions ready to go on the coals, and it became apparent that the brats were merely the introduction.
My Southsiders will be happy,
he thought; they had a carnivore′s idea of food.
Then the vegetable dishes came in, on wheeled trolleys.
″Yah hey, scalloped potatoes with bacon,″ Ingolf said, rubbing his hands as a heavy ceramic pot was lifted to the table and plopped on an oakwood coaster; it bubbled under its brown-gold topping of grated cheddar. ″My favorite!″
″Topped with cheese,″ Mary Havel said. ″It′s
good
cheese, all of it . . . but . . . don′t you ever get tired of cheese here?″
Ingolf grinned at her. ″Tired of
food
?″ he said.
 
 
 
Edward Vogeler called this his study. They seated themselves in big comfortable chairs around a table of polished dark wood; a desk stood in the shadows of a corner, and books lined the walls. Rudi had a chance for a quick glance at them. You could tell a good deal about a man by what he chose to read. These seemed mainly practical—tomes on agriculture and stockbreeding, war and building and metalworking, along with rows of account books.
A few were recent titles, their printing and binding less machine-perfect—one read
Salvaging Gears For Millwork
, and another
Modern Body Armor
.
And up in a corner were a few tales he recognized, well read but looking dusty and neglected now:
Joris of the Rock
, one of Mathilda′s favorites and her mother′s before her, and
Sir Guillame
, by Donan Coyle, one of his own beloved since boyhood that he′d been given by Sir Nigel. He suspected those had been Ingolf′s, along with the
Tarzan
and the
Wizard of Oz
series.

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