Erik fell silent. He was surprised that Calis knew enough about them as individuals to know about Biggo’s theories on the Death Goddess or Sho Pi’s odd views of things. And he didn’t know if being close to the Captain, de Loungville, and Foster was a comfort or nuisance.
Days of cautious travel at last brought them to rolling lowlands. Then on the fifth day after leaving the mountains, they approached a village, one that sat athwart the major north—south road between Lanada and Khaipur. They found the houses abandoned, for the presence of a company of armed men usually meant a raid in this land. Calis waited an hour in the small town square, his men tending their horses with water from the well, but otherwise leaving everything untouched.
A young man in his early twenties appeared from hiding in a stand of trees close by. “What company?” he called out, ready to duck back into the sheltering copse at the first sign of trouble.
“Calis’s Crimson Eagles. What village is this?”
“Weanat.”
“Whom do you serve?”
The man, eyeing Calis suspiciously, said, “Are you pledged?”
“We are a free company.”
That answer didn’t seem to sit well with the villager. He spoke softly, conferring with someone hidden behind him, then at last he said, “We tithe the Priest-King of Lanada.”
“Where lies Lanada from here?”
“A day’s ride south along that road,” came the answer.
Calis turned to de Loungville. “We’re farther south than I wanted to be, but the army will catch up with us, sooner or later.”
“Or grind over us,” answered de Loungville.
“Make camp tonight in that meadow over to the east,” instructed Calis. Turning to the still-half-hidden villager, he said, “We’ll need a market. I need feed, grain for bread, chickens if you have any, fruit, vegetables, and wine.”
“We are poor. We have little to share,” said the man, backing deeper into the shadow of the trees.
Erik’s squad was stationed right behind Calis, and Biggo, who had listened to the exchange, whispered to Erik, “And I’m a monk of Dala. This is rich land, and those beggars have whatever they own stashed away somewhere in those woods.”
Luis leaned down from where he still sat his horse, and said, “And we are probably being watched over a half-dozen arrows.”
Calis called out, “We’ll pay in gold.” He reached into his tunic, pulled out a small purse, and turned it over, emptying a dozen pieces of gold onto the ground.
As if signaled, a score of men appeared, all holding weapons. Erik studied them, making a comparison to the townspeople he had grown up with. These were farmers, but they also held their weapons in a sure-handed fashion. These men had to fight to keep what was theirs, and Erik was glad that Calis was the sort of leader who paid for what he needed rather than taking it.
The leader, an older man with a limp who carried a large sword strapped across his back, knelt and picked up the gold pieces. “You’ll bond peace?” he asked Calis.
“Done!” said Calis, throwing the reins of his horse to Foster. He held out his arm and the village leader gripped his wrist, as Calis gripped in return. They shook twice and let go.
Abruptly the trees emptied of men, followed a short time after by women and children. Before Erik’s eyes he saw a market take form in the small square of the village.
Roo said, “I don’t know where they kept all this,” as he motioned to pots of honey, jars of wine, and baskets of fruit that seemed to have materialized out of nowhere.
“Get raided often enough and I expect you learn how to hide things in a hurry, fella-me-lad,” observed Biggo. “Plenty of basements with hidden traps, and false walls in those buildings, I’m thinking.”
Sho Pi, who motioned for the others to follow to where camp was being set up, said, “They have the look of fighting men, those farmers.”
Erik agreed. “I think we’re in a beautiful but very harsh land.”
They picketed their horses where instructed by Corporal Foster, then began the routine of making camp.
They rested while Calis waited. What he was waiting for wasn’t clear to Erik and the others, and Calis wasn’t taking them into his confidence. The villagers were guarded in dealing with the mercenaries; approachable, but not warm. There was no inn, but one of the local merchants had erected a pavilion and served average-quality wine and ale. Foster warned against any public drunkenness, promising a flogging to any man who couldn’t pull his weight the next morning because of a thick head.
Each day brought more drills and new practices. For three days they worked on holding their shields above their heads while moving heavy objects about. Foster and de Loungville stood on top of a hillock nearby throwing rocks into the air so they would fall straight down on the drilling men, reminding them to keep their shields up.