Ryba had tied the roan’s reins around one of the larger building stones when Nylan met her. She now carried one of the Sybran blades and the second blade Nylan had forged in the other Sybran scabbard-as well as the holstered slug-thrower.
Nothing like a walking armory, he reflected. “Where have you been?”
“I’ve been checking out the approaches from the west. We’re better protected than I thought. You can’t get here except by coming up the ridge. I stopped to see how you were coming before I go check out the road. There still haven’t been any signs of travelers-just scouts from Lornth.”
“How do you know?”
“They wear purple. Subtleness isn’t exactly ingrained in the local culture.” Ryba started up the steps. “Let’s see how things are going.”
“Not bad, actually.”
When they reached the spot where Nylan had been working, he glanced down toward the fields and the meadows that surrounded them, now dotted with the small sunflowers. A silver-haired marine weeding in the field suddenly dropped her hoe and dashed across the ditch, where she vomited.
“Ryba? Did you see that?”
“What?”
“Look down there. She looks sick.” The engineer pointed.
“That’s Siret. She’s sick, but it’s not an illness. I suspect her contraceptives have worn off-if she’s been taking them at all.”
“I haven’t seen Gerlich with her.” Nylan didn’t think the thoughtful silver-haired marine was the type to go for Gerlich.
“Who’s been looking?” Ryba shrugged.
“You did make a point about stud value with him.”
“That’s true.” Ryba half laughed. “You’d think you were building this tower to stand forever.”
“I figure that it will be a generation before anyone can expand on what we build. If they’re prosperous, fine. If not, this buys them time.”
“Assuming we can finish it.”
“We could roof what we have now and get better shelter than the landers.”
“You’re talking four levels?”
“Six. We’ve almost cut enough stone for five on the outside walls, and I could do the inside walls with mortar and uncut stones if necessary.”
“What about heat?”
“I’m thinking about a crude furnace. But that’s the reason for a tower with an underground foundation, except we’ll cover part of the lower level with stone and soil on the outside. Heat rises, and that’s going to be important in the kind of winter we have here.”
Ryba shook her head. “You’d better hope the laser holds out. Or that you learn to forge with local materials.” She paused. “Is there any way you could shape those local blades into something better? That wouldn’t take as much power as cutting and forming them from the lander braces, would it?”
“I don’t know. Do you want me to try?”
“Let me think about it. How many of those killer blades have you done?”
“Three so far.”
Ryba glanced toward the ridges where Nylan had quarried the black stone. “We’re going to need more. Demon-damn, we’ll need more of everything.”
“I know.”
“What about the stable?”
“We can’t do everything. I’ve been cutting the stone so the space could be used for storage, or for stables. The overhead would be low.”
“Outside of spacecraft, Nylan, they’re called ceilings.” Ryba laughed.
“I might get used to it someday.” He cleared his throat,then shrugged his shoulders, trying to loosen them. “Back to work.”
The sound of hooves echoed from the west, and Ryba glanced toward the top of the ridge and the approaching rider. “Kadran’s in a hurry. We’ve got close to enough mounts, but not nearly enough people who know how to ride.”
“Most of us were raised to ride ships, not horses.”
“Look where it got you.”
Nylan grinned ruefully. Sometimes, he really wondered about Ryba. She was planning to build a culture, a kingdom, as a matter of fact, without even a look back. She’d killed one marine and threatened to cripple Gerlich. At the same time, Nylan didn’t see that much of an alternative, not when everyone seemed to respond only to force.
He moistened his lips. For all Ryba’s apparent indifference to the past, the engineer still couldn’t help wondering about his family, his sister Karista, and his mother. They’d all be told he was dead, and he wished they knew he was alive. He shrugged to himself. Assuming they were in another universe, was it better for them to think of him as dead? No, but there wasn’t a thing he could do about it.
Ryba had already left the tower to wait for Kadran. Like all the marines, Kadran was full Sybran-big and tough.
Nylan looked up the uncompleted staircase, then turned and followed Ryba. He’d like to know what was happening, and Huldran would ask.
“There’s a bunch with a trading flag riding up toward our banner,” announced Kadran as she rode up. “They’ve got a lot of weapons showing.”
“That’s probably wise in this culture,” said the captain. “We’d better respond in kind.”
“Ser?” asked Kadran.
“You find Fierral, and have her get all of you ready for another attack. It shouldn’t come to that, but our local friend says some of these traders will take everything you have if you’re not tough.
“Tell Istril to come with me, and get Gerlich and have himwear that big crowbar he’s so fond of. And have Ayrlyn and Narliat come.” Ryba turned to Nylan. “You, too. That will make three and three.”
“I wouldn’t know how to swing one of those things. I’ve had maybe three lessons, and Istril died laughing the first time,” protested Nylan.
“Strap on a pistol and the blade. The locals don’t see the slug-throwers as weapons. We need to get moving. Meet me over by those rocks as quickly as you can. I need to gather up the coin and jewelry we’ve got, and some of those crowbars that pass for blades.” Ryba untied the reins and vaulted into the saddle of the roan.
As Ryba and Kadran rode off, Nylan shouted up into the unfinished structure. “Huldran! Cessya! Weblya! We’ve got company. Drop what you’re doing, and form up with Fierral.”
“Where, ser?”
“Up by those rocks, I think. On the double!”
Huldran laughed. “That’s Svennish. ‘Double-quick’ is marine.”
“Double-quick, then.”
Nylan began to half walk, half run toward the lander that held his sidearm and the blade he had formed and did not still know how to use.
By the time he had reclaimed his gear and splashed water on his face and hands to get rid of the worst of the dirt and grime, and hurried up to the meeting point, Fierral and two others watched from the top of the western ledge, the weapons laser ready.
Nylan hoped they didn’t have to use it. He fingered the pocket torch he had gotten from the lander, wondering if such a simple item would be useful, but he wanted something that would suggest power that didn’t involve hurting or killing anyone else.
The remaining sixteen marines-all wearing sidearms-were deployed in two groups, each group with a clear field of fire. Kyseen, her face white, and her leg still in a heavysplint, sat on a boulder at one end of the rocks with the easternmost group.
The traders, dressed in half-open quilted jackets and cloaks, had halted downhill from the trading banner.
Ryba glanced around the group, all in thin uniforms or shipsuits, some still sweating from their haste. “Before we start … the one thing we don’t trade is any of our weapons-or the new blades Nylan has forged.”
“Those blades … they are worth golds … many golds,” suggested Narliat.
“They’ll cost us far more than that if the locals get their hands on them. We can trade any of the captured blades, but that’s it.”
“How much are those armsmen’s blades worth?” Nylan asked Narliat.
“Whatever Skiodra will pay.”
Nylan gave the smaller man a sharp look.
Narliat stepped back a pace, then stammered. “That is true, but the worst of them would have cost Lord Nessil nearly a gold.”
“Good. That should help.”
“Let’s go. We’ll leave our pile of trading goods here.” Ryba fingered the leather pouch at her waist that contained almost all their local coins.