âItâs the richest and most beautiful city in the world,â Ragen replied, lifting his mail sleeve to reveal a tattoo on his forearm of a city nestled between two mountains. âThe Dukeâs Mines run rich with salt, metal, and coal. Its walls and rooftops are so well warded, itâs rare for the house wards to even be tested. When the sun shines on its walls, it puts the mountains themselves to shame.â
âNever seen a mountain,â Arlen said, marvelling as he traced the tattoo with a finger. âMy da says theyâre just big hills.â
âYou see that hill?â Ragen asked, pointing north of the road.
Arlen nodded. âBogginâs Hill. You can see the whole Brook from up there.â
Ragen nodded. âYou know what a âhundredâ means, Arlen?â he asked.
Arlen nodded again. âTen pairs of hands.â
âWell even a small mountain is bigger than a hundred of your Bogginâs Hills piled on top of each other, and the mountains of Miln are not small.â
Arlenâs eyes widened as he tried to contemplate such a height. âThey must touch the sky,â he said.
âSome are above it,â Ragen bragged. âAtop them, you can look down at the clouds.â
âI want to see that one day,â Arlen said.
âYou could join the Messengersâ guild, when youâre old enough,â Ragen said.
Arlen shook his head. âDa says the people that leave are deserters,â he said. âHe spits when he says it.â
âYour da doesnât know what heâs talking about,â Ragen said. âSpitting doesnât make things so. Without Messengers, even the Free Cities would crumble.â
âI thought the Free Cities were safe?â Arlen asked.
âNowhere is safe, Arlen. Not truly. Miln has more people and can absorb the deaths more easily than a place like Tibbetâs Brook, but the corelings still take a toll each year.â
âHow many people are in Miln?â Arlen asked. âWe have nine hundreds in Tibbetâs Brook, and Sunny Pasture up the ways is supposed to be almost as big.â
âWe have over thirty thousands in Miln,â Ragen said proudly.
Arlen looked at him, confused.
âA thousand is ten hundreds,â the Messenger supplied.
Arlen thought a moment, then shook his head. âThere ent that many people in the world,â he said.
âThere are and more,â Ragen said. âThereâs a wide world out there, for those willing to brave the dark.â
Arlen didnât answer, and they rode in silence for a time.
It took about an hour and a half for the trundling cart to reach Town Square. The centre of the Brook, Town Square held just over two dozen warded wooden houses for those whose trade did not have them working in the fields or rice paddies, fishing, or cutting wood. It was here one came to find the tailor and the baker, the farrier, the cooper, and the rest.
At the centre lay the square where people would gather, and the biggest building in the Brook, the general store. It had a large open front room that housed tables and the bar, an even larger storeroom in back, and a cellar below, filled with almost everything of value in the Brook.
Hogâs daughters, Dasy and Catrin, ran the kitchen. Two credits could buy a meal to leave you stuffed, but Silvy called old Hog a cheat, since two credits could buy enough raw grain for a week. Still, plenty of unmarried men paid the price, and not all for the food. Dasy was homely and Catrin fat, but Uncle Cholie said the men who married them would be set for life.
Everyone in the Brook brought Hog their goods, be it corn or meat or fur, pottery or cloth, furniture or tools. Hog took the items, counted them up, and gave the customers credits to buy other things at the store.
Things always seemed to cost a lot more than Hog paid for them, though. Arlen knew enough numbers to see that. There were some famous arguments when people came to sell, but Hog set the prices, and usually got his way. Just about everyone hated Hog, but they needed him all the same, and were more likely to brush his coat and open his doors than spit when he passed.
Everyone else in the Brook worked throughout the sun, and barely saw all their needs met, but Hog and his daughters always had fleshy cheeks, rounded bellies, and clean new clothes. Arlen had to wrap himself in a rug whenever his mother took his overalls to wash.
Ragen and Arlen tied off the mules in front of the store and went inside. The bar was empty. Usually the air inside the taproom was thick with bacon fat, but there was no smell of cooking from the kitchen today.
Arlen rushed ahead of the Messenger to the bar. Rusco had a small bronze bell there, brought with him when he came from the Free Cities. Arlen loved that bell. He slapped his hand down on it and grinned at the clear sound.
There was a thump in the back, and Rusco came through the curtains behind the bar. He was a big man, still strong and straight-backed at sixty, but a soft gut hung around his middle, and his iron-grey hair was creeping back from his lined forehead. He wore light trousers and leather shoes with a clean white cotton shirt, the sleeves rolled halfway up his thick forearms. His white apron was spotless, as always.
âArlen Bales,â he said with a patient smile, seeing the boy. âDid you come just to play with the bell, or do you have some business?â
âThe business is mine,â Ragen said, stepping forward. âYou Rusco Hog?â
âJust Rusco will do,â the man said. âThe townies slapped the âHogâ on, though not to my face. Canât stand to see a man prosper.â
âThatâs twice,â Ragen mused.
âSay again?â Rusco said.
âTwice that Graigâs journey log has led me astray,â Ragen said. âI called Selia âBarrenâ to her face this morning.â
âHa!â Rusco laughed. âDid you now? Well, thatâs worth a drink on the house, if anything is. What did you say your name was?â
âRagen,â the Messenger said, dropping his heavy satchel and taking a seat at the bar. Rusco tapped a keg, and plucked a slatted wooden mug off a hook.
The ale was thick and honey-coloured, and foamed to a white head on top of the mug. Rusco filled one for Ragen and another for himself. Then he glanced at Arlen, and filled a smaller cup. âTake that to a table and let your elders talk at the bar,â he said. âAnd if you know whatâs good for you, you wonât tell your mum I gave it to you.â
Arlen beamed, and ran off with his prize before Rusco had a chance to reconsider. He had sneaked a taste of ale from his fatherâs mug at festivals, but had never had a cup of his own.
âI was starting to worry no one was coming ever again,â he heard Rusco tell Ragen.
âGraig took a chill just before he was to leave last fall,â Ragen said, drinking deeply. âHis Herb Gatherer told him to put the trip off until he got better, but then winter set in, and he got worse and worse. In the end, he asked me to take his route until the guild could find another. I had to take a caravan of salt to Angiers anyway, so I added