Chap. 89 The
horsetrader
Siskin flew to him as he approached, outrageously happy to
see him. K'ndar offered him a shoulder, then began scratching his head. The
blue rolled his eyes, purring in happiness.
He missed you. He was
a very good boy, he didn't try to leave. He stayed right here with me, even
when we flew to the pens.
Many of the dragonriders had gone home, many of them who
would wake up with hangovers, tomorrow.
"I'll be spending the night at Honshu Weyr," he told
D'mitran.
"Got a girl there?"
"No, although I wish! No, honestly, I want to spend the
day just looking around there, seeing the murals I've heard so much about, that
sort of thing."
D'mitran scratched his chin. "I like that idea. If I
didn't have work tomorrow, I'd go, too."
He looked around himself to see if Lord Holder Toric's spies
were around. He spotted at least one who looked suspicious, a man, wandering
around the dragons at a safe distance. There was a large crowd of noisy
children, tugging their parents to 'see the dragons'. He was in the middle of
them but it was obvious none of them were his.
He lowered his voice to a conspiratorial whisper.
"Good on you, son, for springing the Oldtimers. Toric
isn't going to be happy when he finds out he's got NO transport now, just like
F'mart said."
K'ndar nodded and then laughed. "Can he fight or WHAT!
Makes me glad I was never so cocksure as to challenge him, he'd have me done
less than a minute."
"Sort of surprised us all, but-you know F'mart. Makes
me glad he's on our side, I'd hate to face off with him. Anyway, have a good time at Honshu. This Gather
lasts all day tomorrow, I don't know if anyone from the Weyr is going to want
to come or return, but I'm not. I'd love to see the repercussions,
though."
D'mitran turned to his work, harnessing Careth.
Siskin wheeped a hello to a pair of fire lizards that
suddenly appeared over K'ndar's head. They were Lizard's. Behind them, K'ndar
saw the horseman, who'd tried to auction off the beautiful horse. He was
walking, so apparently, he'd sold the horse, despite the commotion at the pens.
He felt a huge pang of regret. That horse. He'd wanted the
horse so badly, yet knew he really didn't have the time-or the money!-for such a marvelous
beast.
Because Lizard was still in disguise, K'ndar expected that
he'd still play the part of the aristocrat from the North.
The spy saw Lizard, too, and fell in behind him after he'd
passed. Once Lizard reached K'ndar, he
stopped, hanging about just within earshot, pretending to be absorbed in
watching the dragonriders harnessing their dragons. K'ndar would make sure that
he heard precisely what he wanted him to hear.
"Good evening, sir, I have to compliment you on that
magnificent horse. Did you manage to sell him?"
"Yes, my good man, I did. Private treaty. I wasn't
about to try and convince him to go back to the auction pens after all the dragons
showed up. That also means I needn't pay Toric his usurious commission, which
would have been obligatory if he'd gone through the auction."
He laughed, deep in his chest.
"I was wondering,
sir, if you would be willing to transport me to Honshu Weyr? I'm staying there
for a while. I'm willing to pay."
"By all means, sir, I am going back to Honshu myself. I
charge a mark for transport, one way."
Lizard pulled out a very well made pouch.
"I hear a mark is the going rate for transport, now?"
"It depends, sir. That's the rate all us dragonriders
have agreed upon for the moment. If one needs transport IMMEDIATELY, or one has
a lot of cargo, it will, of course be more. You've been on a dragon before, I
assume?"
"No, I'm afraid not, but I'm certain you'll have no
problem out of me. So I owe you more money, as I want immediate
transport?"
"Aye, sir. Two marks for immediate transport."
Lizard pulled two brand new marks from the pouch and handed
them to K'ndar.
"I'll harness you in, sir, then we will go 'between'.
That's a few brief moments of nothing, and then we appear above Honshu. I'll
help you up."
Why…why is Lizard
dressed so differently? And he's ridden dragons before.
I know. But he is
pretending to be someone else. See that man just a few winglengths from you?
He's a 'spy'. He is not our friend, and means dragonriders no good. He is
listening to us talk, and will report to Toric, maybe, and we don't want him to
know we know he's listening.
That's confusing.
I know. I'll explain
later. You remember Honshu's dragonstones?
Yes. So do the
lizards.
By the way, I am so
proud of you and the rest of the dragons, coming to aid us at the horse pens.
It was FUN. I like
roaring like that, surrounded by other dragons. Can we do it again sometime?
Only if needed, my
brother
Please give Lizard a
knee
____________________________________________________________________________
Once at Honshu, Lizard wasted no time heading for his tent,
pitched next to his wagon. He began stripping the moment he was in the privacy
of the tent.
K'ndar remained just outside the tent, unharnessing Raventh.
Then he entered the tent, to see Lizard trying to pull off the shiny, knee high
boots.
"These boots about killed me," he moaned. K'ndar
bent down and held each boot to allow Lizard to pull each foot out.
"Oh, so much better," he sighed in relief, "It'll
take all night for them to stop complaining."
"They certainly made you look the dandy," K'ndar
said. The fire lizards swirled over their heads, wanting something to eat. "And taller!"
"Aye. The lifts in them, they're what made them so painful."
Siskin's eyes began to roll an unhappy yellow.
He's getting hungry, K'ndar thought, but he'd no meat for the fire lizard.
How about you,
Raventh? Hungry?
Yes. There is a
hunting area not far from here. I think there are other dragons there now.
Go. Good hunting. If you kill, will you call Siskin?
Of course. He is my brother.
Raventh trundled away and then leaped into the air, winging
his way towards the hunting area.
"He's going hunting?"
"Yes"
"How does it feel to see your dragon leave without
you?"
"At first it worried and scared me. But, as the
oldtimer at my weyr said, sometimes dragons just want to be with other dragons.
He'll be fine."
K'ndar watched, fascinated, as Lizard came out of disguise.
He pulled pieces of face off his face…not real, of course, but real enough when
seen at a distance. Took wads of something out of his cheeks and roughed his
hair up from where it had been plastered straight back. Even pulled something
off his ears that had made them look bigger than they were. The patch came off
his eye and he rubbed where it had been stuck.
In a few minutes, he looked like..Lizard.
"Amazing," he sighed, "It took me, what,
almost half an hour? to recognize you."
"Even when you stood right next to me?"
"Aye. Although I wasn't really looking at you. I was
feeling fairly sheepish after almost bidding on the draft horse."
Lizard chuckled. He finished dressing into his usual, drab,
nondescript clothing, then sat down in one of two chairs in his tent and
offered the second to K'ndar.
"What gave me away?' Lizard asked, rubbing his sore
feet.
"Um…….it was the way you called the horse in from the
rail. Just the way you said "Here, lad, that'll do," I could hear YOU
through the accent. I've heard you say that to your lizards in just that
tone."
Lizard poured them some klah. It was cold, but still good.
"Thanks. I'll remember that. Good thing about it is,
probably you're the only one there who'd heard me say it before."
"It was the patch, though, that distracted me. I
couldn't take my eyes off it."
"That was the idea, my friend. Sometimes the most
obvious thing is also the most distracting."
"I laughed when you said "I got his manhood."
I think every man there had his bollocks shrink up into his belly. I know mine
did."
Lizard roared.
I've killed a small
herdbuck. Send the fire lizards Raventh said.
"Siskin. Raventh has a fresh kill for you. Find
Raventh," he said, and the blue cheeped and vanished. Within seconds, so
did Lizards pair.
"Raventh's killed?"
"He has, and invited the lizards to come and eat."
"That's handy. I didn't know dragons shared their
kills."
"Some don't. MOST don't. Raventh has always been generous like that.
Since he's no longer eating firestone, I see all sorts of changes in him. He's
smarter, quicker to catch on, more…fun. He's not like a dragon anymore. He's
more like a kid brother. Funny, always has something to say, always the most
generous of souls. "
He thought of the horse again.
He had to ask.
"So…………what happened to that fabulous horse?"
"I sold him."
"I KNOW. But-for twelve marks?"
"Nay, nay. When you auction off a fine animal such as
that beauty, you ask a BIG price, much bigger than what is realistic. That way,
you scare off the cheapskates, the horse skinners, traders, the idiots who'd try to race him, or
worse, hook him up to a dung cart. That horse was meant for a horseman, a person
who knows good horseflesh when he sees it and handles him accordingly. Even so,
I'm betting I'd have gotten more money than twelve marks at auction. That was
just the STARTING price."
"But...when it's a one on one transaction, you start smaller, a more reasonable price, and work together. The man got a good horse, I got a good price, and I know the horse will get a good home."
"Oh. Whew." He paused, replaying the vision of the
horse in his mind. "Ahhh, I wanted him so badly, Lizard, I was ready to
sell my soul. Only thing that kept me from bidding was, as you noted, I haven't
the faintest idea what to do at an auction, and the price kept me scared off. I
kept thinking, what am I going to do with him? How am I going to get him
home?"
"Well, I can tell you this, there's more like him where
he came from."
"He really was steppe bred?"
"Aye. There's a family who knows horseflesh, down on
the western end of the mountains, on steppe, like your cothold, tucked in the
hills. They have a stallion and several mares who are priceless. Every one of
those mares could have brought twice as much as the gelding went for today.
They let them run free for 10 months of the year, bring the mares in to foal, handle
the foals, it's called impressing, and then let them back out. Makes for good
minds and rock hard hooves, and a horse that can think himself out of any
trouble his rider gets him into. I didn't even have to tie him to the wagon. He
led the way, by the egg, acting as scout and leader.
"Were they the ones who trained him?"
"Nay."
"Who did?"
"Me."
"You! You're a wizard!"
"Nay, I just
understand animals, how they think, listen to what they tell us what they feel,
and mind you, I had a good solid six weeks on the road with him, every day, a
little work, a little training, a lot of kindness and treats. He honestly was
only saddle broken, what, perhaps a couple months before I bought him. Had
never even been bitted, just broke in a hackamore. He'd been running loose all
that time, building up all that stamina, good bone, good mind.
The woman at the
cothold "impresses' them as babies. They're out of the mare half an hour,
long enough to stand and suckle, then she handles them…feet, penis, tongue, ears,
tail: pulls them here and there, puts a halter on them and teaches them to
lead, lifts up a hoof and hammers on it, gently, even puts a band around their
belly like a girth. It makes it so much easier to do those things when they're
full grown.
By the egg, it broke my heart to sell him, K'ndar, but I had
to. He was too tempting, like a beautiful single woman smiling over a fine wine
at you when your wife has been in childbed for a week. I half considered selling off my draft
horses and wagon and just riding that horse all over the continent, exploring.
Like you, exploring the steppe."
"What's keeping you?"
Lizard stopped dead, his jaw dropped.
"I…I don't know."
It was the first time K'ndar had
ever stumped Lizard with a question.
"I'll have to think that through."
They were quiet for several moments. Then K'ndar remembered.
Pulling the marks from his pocket, he offered them to Lizard.
"Here. Thanks a lot."
Lizard looked at his stretched out palm.
"What's that for?"
"It's the money you 'paid' me for transport."
"K'ndar, you said two marks for immediate
transport."
"Yeah, I know, but that was for the spy to overhear. I
didn't intend to charge you a thing, especially when you'd asked for transport
in advance."
"K'ndar. If you're going to be a business man, you have
to stand by your price. Let the customer decide if he wants to pay it. I could
just as easily gone to a complete stranger and bartered for transport, or paid
a mark without questioning."
"Yeah, but, Lizard…not YOU. You're…you're family. I don't feel right charging you
a thing."
Lizard shook his head.
"No, K'ndar. Being family means you help each other, feed each
other, house each other, love each other. I wasn't 'family' when I was in
disguise, I was a wealthy customer who didn't think twice about paying your
price. I was interested in getting to Honshu as quickly and as comfortably as
possible. If your price was two marks, I was willing to pay it. That's what a
smart business man DOES-he doesn't undercut himself, and he knows that there's
always going to be somebody willing to pay his price-IF he conducts a business,
such as transport, well and fairly. You said you dragonriders had agreed on a
mark for transport."
"Well, we haven't actually all sat down and agreed.
It's just what Francie charged one day and that was totally off the top of her
head."
"Did you or did you not immediately transport me to
Honshu?"
"Welll, yes, but…"
"And, I note, you did NOT charge me for cargo, that being
two fire lizards," he added.
"Fire lizards aren't 'cargo'."
"If they'd been in a cage, they'd have been cargo. It
matters not that they rode along on Raventh's neck."
K'ndar sighed, exasperated, but part of him was grateful for
Lizard's generosity, despite his protests. He hated the idea but he was
becoming resolved to the idea of having to make money.
"So you earned the money. Who cares who it came from?
You performed the service. I paid you. It's your pay."
K'ndar knew when he was beaten.
"Thank you." The marks felt good in his hand.
Books. Books? A horse. THAT horse. Oh
my.
"So…what happened with that horse?"
"Oh, I sold him to a very fine gentleman, an expert
horseman who knew good horseflesh and had the right color of money. Last I saw,
he was riding it, bareback and on the buckle, no less, I think he was heading
for Southern Weyr. I didn't really want to know. That horse would tempt even
the most honest man to steal him if he could."
"Oh, I understand. Completely," he said.
K'ndar slipped the halter off the horse in his mind, letting
it run free. I am glad you are sold. I can let you go now.
He opened up his money pouch and put the marks in it.
Something made him think to count it. He'd not spent any in some time.
He counted it.
And slumped in despair.
"What's wrong?" Lizard asked.
"Now, I have twelve marks."
3 comments:
A very fun read and I love the final line.
Raven <3 <3
Thanks, Martine. It's....well you know what it's like to lose one. I don't know if you've noticed or not..but Raventh and Raven are one and the same. Except that Raven never flew...or teleported...but he was certainly very good at telepathing. Mostly carrots carrots carrots carrots. ;-)
Post a Comment