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“That might be useful. The young ones could gather the grass just before the snows hit. Anything else?”

Duessya frowned for a moment, as if trying to search her memories. “Lot of little things. When he heard the stables were stone, he did say that it might be better if the mangers were set so that the hay or feed didn’t touch the stone.”

“Condensation,” mused Saryn. “Cold stone catches the dampness, turns it into little rivulets. If there’s anything left in the bottom, the water that collects on the stone could drip down and spoil the hay or anything above…”

“Oh…”

“We should give him a try here once his leg is healed more.” Saryn paused. “Thank you for talking to him. Once he can walk, you’ll have to decide if he’d be a help.”

“Anyone who’d be interested in the horses besides riding them would help.” Duessya shook her head.

As she left, Saryn studied the stone runoff channel. It definitely was running higher.

Her steps were long and quick as she headed back down to Tower Black to catch Istril after her afternoon blade session with the older guards. Between trying to work out a plan for teaching Temple and accelerating arms training for the inexperienced young and newer guards, and all the other minor and continual items brought to her attention, Saryn hadn’t seen Istril except in passing in days. She was striding past the smithy.

Istril was leaving the practice field but stopped and waited at the edge of the road once she saw the arms-commander. “You’ve been running everywhere lately.”

“No more than you,” replied Saryn. “How is Suansa doing with that arm?”

“It’s healing. Likely be harvest before she’ll be close to having any real strength in it.”

“What about the Gallosian?”

“He’s as bad as some other people I know.”

Istril’s voice was even, but Saryn could sense a certain amusement. “Go on.”

“I had to spend some time explaining what he could safely do and what he couldn’t and why.” Istril began to walk down the road toward the causeway and the tower beyond.

Saryn glanced at the water in the stone runoff channel beside the road, then back to Istril. “Did he tell you that he wants to learn the basic arms exercise and training?”

“He did. I told him he shouldn’t try even the basic exercises for another eightday, except for the simple arm-strengthening ones that he can do sitting down. He really doesn’t need those, but I gave him some of those crude weights you had Huldran forge years back. I said they’d build up his arms more. That might keep him from doing what he shouldn’t.”

“Duessya thinks he knows a lot about horses. She didn’t say it quite that way, though. What do you think about him as a person?”

“He’s very polite. I think you should talk to him regularly. He might say more to you.”

“If he won’t talk to you…”

“That’s not what I meant. It could be Llyselle, or Hryessa, or Ryba, but every so often he should have direction from someone who’s an authority figure. You’re definitely that.”

“You have something in mind, Istril.”

“I do. The same thing you do, if you want him to fit in. You just can’t dump a man, especially a wounded one, into Tower Black without someone occasionally reinforcing the chain of command and the fact that women run things. Healers aren’t in that chain.”

“I’ll take care of it.”

“More than every few eightdays, I’d suggest.”

Saryn shook her head. “I don’t even know that I like him…but he’s young enough that he just might be able to adjust.”

Istril nodded.

“All right. I’ll talk to him.” After Istril said nothing, Saryn added, “As soon as I can.”

“Thank you, Commander.”

Once Saryn reached Tower Black, she found Dealdron sitting on a bench in the carpentry shop, watching as Vierna and an apprentice turned over a broken trestle table to replace the center pedestal legs.

The young Gallosian looked up at Saryn. “Ser?”

“Istril tells me that you’re trying to do too much and that you’ll hurt your leg more if you do.”

“I feel useless…ser.”

“You’ve been working in the carpentry shop, and you’ve made several bunks.”

“Mostly. There are things I cannot do on one leg.”

“It’s better to concentrate on what you can do and not what you can’t. That way, some things of value actually get done.”

“They aren’t what I do best.”

“No. They probably aren’t,” replied Saryn. “But they’re things that need to be done, and someone needs to do them. Everyone in Westwind ends up doing some things that they don’t do as well as they do other things; but if you keep at the distasteful jobs, you can get better so that you don’t spend as much time at them.” She added, “If you want to prepare yourself for arms training, you could also exercise with the weights.”

“I can lift them.”

Saryn realized that the idea of weight-training repetitions wasn’t one with which Dealdron was familiar. “Of course you can. But how many times in a row can you lift them?”

The Gallosian frowned.

Saryn walked over to the nearest wood bin and rummaged through it until she came up with a length of oak close to the size of a short sword. She carried it back to Dealdron, then thrust it at him. “Hold it as you would a blade-one-handed.”

“It is but wood.” His face wrinkled in puzzlement as he took the billet.

“Just hold it.” Saryn watched. Before long, she could see his arm begin to tremble. Unlike pine or spruce, oak was heavy. “Keep holding it.”

Tiny beads of sweat began to appear on Dealdron’s face, then the wood billet began to droop.

“Keep holding it,” Saryn said calmly.

Finally, Dealdron had to lower the oak. Frustration warred with puzzlement on his face although he did not speak.

“Iron is heavier than oak,” Saryn pointed out. “You could only hold that perhaps a tenth part of a glass. Do you think battles are over that quickly? What would happen to you if your arm got tired when someone was charging at you?”

The young man did not reply.

“What would happen?” Saryn asked again.

“I’d get wounded, or I’d have to get out of the way.”

“And what would happen to the guard behind you? Or her mount? Or the formation and the other guards?”

Dealdron just looked stoically at Saryn.

“You’ve seen Westwind. We can’t afford unnecessary casualties because someone doesn’t want to train hard enough. That’s why there were twenty-one dead Gallosians down in the vale and only one dead guard. Working with the weights will strengthen your arms so that you’ll be better able to handle a blade when your leg heals. The healer will show you how to use them. Listen to her.” Saryn managed to keep her voice level, but she could sense the unseen darkness swirling around her. That wasn’t good. She needed to keep the flow of forces even.

“I am sorry, Commander. There is much that is new to me.”

“There’s much that is new to everyone who comes here. Those who learn are those who remain and who survive.” What else could she say to him?

Abruptly, he lowered his eyes, if but for a moment. Then he said, “I will do as you say.”

She understood that his words were not so much a capitulation as a statement that he would try what she said…and hold her responsible for the results, if only in his own mind.

“And as the healer tells you. You will not improve if you do not learn the proper way to lift the weights, just as a rider cannot improve when she rides improperly.” She offered a polite smile. “I will talk to you later, and I will check with the healer as well.”

Then she turned and headed toward the stone staircase. Again, she could sense Dealdron’s eyes on her back as she left the carpentry shop.

XIX

When Saryn walked toward the arms practice field on oneday, she saw Dealdron standing at the back of the least experienced guards, his crutches laid on the hard ground beside him. Saryn frowned, wondering how he could do even the upper-body exercises without losing his balance. Then she saw a tripodal frame that the Gallosian had strapped to his leg at midthigh. He couldn’t move much that way, and if he did, the movement was bound to be painful. Still, the frame did allow him to work on some of the exercises without losing his balance.