Tom waved a hand toward the farms. “This belongs to…?”
“The Filmers, from Ralph’s land back a ways; their Prime’s seat is where Concord’s located FirstSide. Then the Tuke and the Hammon domains, down through Amador and Livermore valleys. The uplands on both sides are permanent Commission reserve; so’s Mount Diablo.”
“Yah, but how do the farmers fit in, if your friends and relatives own all the land?”
The houses scattered across the flat-to-rolling valley land were at roughly half-mile intervals, and the fields were modest-sized. It didn’t have the look of ranching country or large landholdings worked as single units. The Christiansen home place in North Dakota was a lot farther from the nearest neighbor.
“The farmers are tenants, allod tenants. The way it usually works is that the head of the Family, the Prime, keeps a seat—a home place—from his domain, and hands out the rest in estates of a few thousand acres to his kids and collaterals—everybody but the Prime and the eldest of the firstborn’s line are collaterals; I am, for example, but my eldest brother and father and grandfather aren’t. I hold Seven Oaks, and I can farm it, hand it down to my children when and if I have any, and sell or will it to another Family member. I’d need the Prime’s approval to sell. I can’t subdivide it or alienate it outside the Family. The landholders rent to farmers on shares; they provide the land and fixed assets, buildings and fences and irrigation and so forth, pay any taxes, and get three-tenths of the crop. The farmer finds the labor and working capital, the machinery and livestock, and keeps the other seventy percent.”
Tom grunted, and thought back to the prices he’d seen in that farmer’s market. “I don’t see how that makes the landlord any money,” he said.
“It’s hobby farming as far as the landholders are concerned, so far,” Adrienne said with a laugh. “Our country estates are how we spend our money, and where most of us live—the money comes out of the Gate and the mines.”
“And what does the ‘allod’ part mean?”
“Allod? It means ‘inalienable’; I think it’s a German word originally. As long as the tenant keeps the land in good heart and pays his share, he can’t be turned out, nor his heirs; the landholder only gets a say and part of the price if the tenant wants to sell it outside the farmer’s bloodline. Not that anyone would lean on his tenants anyway—good ones are too hard to find! Most landholders rent their land except for a home ranch around their country house, but I keep Seven Oaks in hand and work it directly myself, the way Aunt Chloe did. It takes more of my time, but I’ve got a good manager and usually I manage to keep in the black… a little, at least.”
She nodded down into the valley. “Ralph’s a special case. Granddad got him three hundred and sixty acres of Commission land here, rent-free. Long story.”
Tom grunted again, and put the Hummer in gear. The Mermaid Café sprawled parallel to the road but a hundred yards back and to the west of it; beyond was a stretch of lawn, then outbuildings, paddocks and a small reservoir that did double duty as a swimming hole, to judge by the kids swarming around it. One swung out over the water whooping as Tom watched, on a rope suspended from the branch of an overhanging tree, let go, and landed in the middle with a heroic splash.
The inn itself was an I-shape of single-story whitewashed adobe, with the inevitable red-tiled roofs, but the blocks were of slightly different sizes and the alignments were all a bit off—it gave the structure a funky look, something of a relief after the manicured neatness of Rolfeston, and so did the blocks of colorful tilework here and there on the walls. A line of big eucalyptus separated the parking lot from the roadway, their scent familiar and faintly medicinal. The dirt and gravel lot was dotted with the same great valley oaks that surrounded the rest of the inn, each on an island of long tawny grass extending out halfway to the drip line of the branches. There were a dozen cars in the parking lot, and another dozen pickup trucks—working vehicles, to judge from the dust and dings. They swung in and parked, the tires crunching on the crushed rock surface. Adrienne pulled her rifle out of the rack behind the front seat as they stepped down from the Hummer, carrying it casually in the crook of her left arm.
“Doesn’t all this adobe give a lot of trouble?” Tom asked, following her toward the café. “It isn’t southern California, after all.”
“Not with a powdered waterproofing compound in the stucco,” Adrienne said. “With that, as long as you keep the foundation dry and the roof tight it lasts like iron, it’s fireproof, and it’s good insulation. Dirt cheap, too.”
“Ouch,” he said, missing a stride, and found himself grinning for an instant.
More trees and a flower bed separated the cars from the outdoor patio with its picnic-style tables. Off to one side was a row of brick firepits; smoke and an intoxicating smell of grilling meat came from there, and several cooks wielded tongs and spatulas. Others, mostly teenagers, bustled in and out through the doors of a long adobe kitchen. A girl came and took the rifle, unloading it, working the action to make sure there wasn’t a round in the chamber, and then stashing it in another rack by the main doorway with matter-of-fact competence. About half the tables were occupied, mostly with family parties, and there were a few kids running from one to the next; a pleasant burr of conversation and well-wielded cutlery filled the air. An oak cast fifty feet of shade in the center; farther out there were striped umbrellas above the tables; chalk-boards with the menu stood at several places.
A big man came out from the main house as they entered the patio, a little under six feet but bear-wide, the kettle belly straining at his tie-dyed T-shirt simply adding to his impression of burly strength. He had a grizzled brown beard, and his graying shoulder-length hair was held back by a beaded headband; the shoes on his splayed feet were beaded as well, moccasin-style.
Leftover hippie, Tom thought automatically—California was still lousy with them, particularly in the backcountry, and would be until the last of the boomers went to their reward. Then: But a smart one, as he met the small shrewd eyes in the hairy face.
“Ralph Barnes,” Adrienne said in an aside to Tom. Then, louder: “Ralph! How’s my favorite subversive seditionist?”
“Hey, princess!” the thickset man said, in a happy bull bellow. “How’s it hanging in the Gestapo?”
“A continuous merry festival of arbitrary torture and death, Ralph,” she replied, and they exchanged bear hugs.
After a moment she turned. “This is Tom Christiansen—you’ll have seen his picture in the paper this morning. Tom, Ralph Barnes—one of the few people willing to talk to a wastrel like myself, back when I was doing the pimples and rebellion thing. You wondered where I picked up the taste for classic rock and folk songs?”
“Pleased to meet you,” Barnes said, looking him up and down and extending a hand. “Christ, it’s the Swedish Superman. You’re the game warden, right? Don’t let any of the von Traupitzes see you. Those Nazi shits’ll shanghai you off for breeding stock.”
“My family were Norwegian, actually,” Tom said as he took the hand and shook it; it was as strong as he’d expected, and callused with work. “Pleased to meet you,” he went on. “I presume you’re not as hostile to the Thirty Families as your sign suggests?”
“I hate their guts,” Barnes said with a broad white snaggletoothed smile, shepherding them to a vacant table. “I just make a few individual exceptions, like for the princess here. So sue me. I am vast”—he slapped his belly and misquoted—“I contain multitudes.”