After the midday meal, Nylan returned to the north tower yard, and the cold wind out of the northwest. Huldran, Cessya, and Denalle worked on the roof, with Cessya lugging up the stones, Denalle placing them, and Huldran spiking them in place.
Nylan studied the stone that he was supposed to turn into a conduit. There had to be a faster way to cut the stone, didn’t there? For a long time, he let his senses range over the oblong of black rock before him. He’d already discovered that he felt uneasy, so much that his head ached and his stomach twisted, if he even came close to mimicking the white lines of fire that the local mages effected.
After concentrating on the stone for a time, he finally placed the chisel and lifted the hammer. The reverberations seemed to be less when he didn’t worry so much about precise chisel placement, but the order of the stone.
His progress was better with the new technique, not anything to boast about compared to the laser, but by the time the triangle clanged again, he had five more lengths of conduit bottom.
After he stacked the conduit in the corner of the bathhouse, on the eastern side under the completed roof, he flexed his sore and increasingly callused fingers-only small blisters.
“You really got that in place,” he told Huldran, looking up at the expanse of completed roof tiling.
“Thank darkness that the healer came up with another keg of spikes.” The marine reached out and knocked on the side of the crude ladder-pole she had just climbed down. “I never thought so, but you might get your bathhouse and laundry, ser.”
“I thought you wanted the showers,” Nylan joked.
“Choosing between stinking and bathing in ice water isn’t a choice I’d want to make.” Huldran lowered the ladder-pole, and she and Denalle laid it down under the completed roof, then gathered the spikes they had dropped.
Every single spike was valuable, Nylan realized, especially in a low-tech culture where each had to be fashioned by hand. He walked around the tower to the stream, hoping it wouldn’t be too long before he could use the bathhouse.
After washing his hands and face, he walked back around the tower and, as he neared the almost-completed archway from the bathhouse to the tower, he whistled a few notes. What were the words?
“ … an engineer’s work is never done, / not even after the long day’s run …”
He smiled to himself as he opened the door, which no longer scraped the stones-although it had taken Saryn and Selitra most of a morning to plane and carve it back into shape.
“You seem cheerful, Engineer,” said Gerlich. Narliat just bowed.
“The stone-shaping’s coming better, and Huldran’s got the roof in place.”
“Good.” Gerlich offered a quick smile, and he and Narliat turned, leaving Nylan as he closed the north door.
The engineer wondered why neither had looked pleased. Did they want to stink or bathe in freezing water? Or was it because each of Nylan’s accomplishments boosted Ryba’s authority and the satisfaction of the guards with her rule? And it was rule, Nylan knew full well, and there wasn’t that much doubt in Nylan’s mind that Gerlich would rather be the one doing the ruling-or that having Gerlich in charge would be a disaster. Ryba did what had to be done, but Nylan knew it wasn’t always easy for her. Gerlich would end up like every other male tyrant on the planet.
He pulled at his chin, wondering why so many men had to dominate. Then maybe women would be just the same, given the chance. With a shrug, he walked toward the hearth of the great room and the aroma of fresh-baked bread and cooked onions.
XLXIV
HISSL PACES ACROSS the small room, then peers out the window toward the river and the stubbled fields that lie beyond. Although the sun glints off the puddles in the fields, the sky is turning the bluer green-blue that presages winter. The wizard looks away from the distant points of glare and paces back toward the table.
“Nothing! We sit here and wait. And Terek meets with Lord Sillek while I rot here.”
He paces back across the small room, passing the table and the screeing glass again, then back to the window. The distant puddles still throw glare at him.
Finally, he seats himself at the table that holds the flat mirrorlike glass. He concentrates. The white mists swirl. He concentrates until the sweat beads on his forehead, although the room is pleasantly cool, filled with the scents from the bakery up the street, and the hum of conversations.
At last, the image appears-that of a black tower, with a second, and lower, building rising beside it, already roofed with the same black slate tiles that cover the taller tower. A short, stone-walled causeway leads to the tower and to a heavy door banded together with strips of metal-not iron, but some metal Hissl does not recognize, though it feels like iron through the glass.
Farther uphill, the angels, some in black and others in leathers, are digging a long ditch in a line that leads toward the tower. On the uphill portion of the ditch, the black mage and an angel are placing lengths of stone in the trench. There is a trough filled with what might be mortar beside the stones.
Hissl squints and tries to focus the image, but the best he can do is catch a glimpse of a section of rock that appearsto have a deep trench gouged in it. He slumps back into the chair.
“Black angels and a black mage.” He shivers for a moment. No lord he knows could have built a tower like that, and not in a mere two seasons. Yet the black mage who lives with the angels has done so, and the mage has done other things, as well, things that Hissl does not understand.
“Still, they have not felt the winter, and the number of cairns grows. By spring …” He raises his eyebrows and smiles.
In the spring and early summer, Ildyrom and his people will be busy planting. Hissl nods to himself.
XLV
A LOW FIRE burned in the bathhouse stove, but the building-still open inside except for the three jakes stalls at the north end-remained chill.
Nylan washed and shaved his several days’ worth of beard in one of the laundry tubs. He looked wistfully to his right, at the unfinished showers, and at the piles of slate stone and powdered mortar heaped in the middle of the room. While there was water to the ceramic nozzles, he and Huldran still had to finish the stone floors, or all they would have would be frozen clay. He took a deep breath and splashed away skin, whiskers, and blood.
After washing, he rinsed his waste water down the floor drain, with a breath of relief as the water gurgled out of sight. He hoped the combination of deeply buried drain lines and the outfall covering-and oversizing-would be enough to get them through the winter.
Wearing just a tattered pair of trousers-spoils, again-he walked the length of the bathhouse, along the already packed clay of the east side, and through the archway intothe tower and up the stairs, all four flights to the top level.
Ryba had already dressed, and was pulling on her boots as Nylan stripped off the leather trousers and donned his working shipsuit. She stood and straightened the blanket as he struggled into the leather boots.
“It looks like a storm is coming in hard,” she said. “Can you finish the bathhouse?”
“The inside will take a day or two more. We’ve got the jakes and the laundry area finished.” Nylan walked over to the sole armaglass window and looked up at the dark clouds boiling out of the northwest, cloaking Freyja in blackness, with snow thickening and dropping to shroud the lower parts of the western peaks and the heights behind the tower.
A thin layer of ice covered the window ledge outside the casement, and the engineer watched as one flake, then another, dropped onto the ice, melding with it and turning transparent, the black-gray stone showing through.
The flakes thickened, and even the lower sections of Freyja disappeared in the snow that seemed so white near the tower and so dark in the distance. The ground remained brown, with a few white patches.