The next day ca fast and so was the order of business.
The reassignnt briefing lasted forty minutes and resolved nothing that felt urgent into anything that felt useful.
They sat in rows in the knight post’s main hall, twenty-three of the surviving recruits from their group, the others having been redistributed to different posts or retained at Harrowfield, and a senior administrator with ink-stained fingers read their assignnts from a ledger with the look of soone who had been delivering news of varying quality all morning and had stopped registering the difference.
Castle garrison. Interior patrol. Rotating watch on the eastern and northern gates.
Not the front. Not the border positions where Arthur’s forces were pressing against the kingdom’s skin. The castle.
Noah listened to his na read out and the assignnt attached to it and thought about the Ardenre pass twenty miles north sitting empty.
Pip received the sa assignnt and turned to look at Noah with an expression that said he had also done the arithtic and had also arrived at the conclusion that the arithtic was uncomfortable. Nami’s na ca next, sa posting. Werner’s after that, and Werner absorbed the information with the stillness he applied to things he had decided not to react to in public.
They walked to the castle together through the morning streets, four of them, their gear on their backs, the city doing its changed version of normal around them.
"Castle garrison," Pip said, after two blocks of silence. "We survived a gate and a harbor assault against Arthur’s opening move and they’ve put us on castle garrison."
"Soone has to guard the castle," Nami said.
"Regular knights guard the castle. That is what regular knights are for. We have blessed items and gate experience and we just spent a week at the front line of an actual invasion and they have decided the best use of that is walking the sa corridor every four hours."
"Pip," Noah said.
"I’m not complaining," Pip said. "I am making an observation. There is a difference."
"You are absolutely complaining."
"I am complaining and making an observation. Both at once. I contain multitudes." Pip said.
Werner said nothing. He had been saying nothing since the briefing with the intention of soone who was not choosing silence so much as occupied by sothing that had pushed everything else out.
Noah had noticed what Werner was occupied by approximately thirty seconds after they had entered the castle’s outer courtyard.
The man was standing near the main hall’s entrance in conversation with two senior knights, his bearing carrying the particular quality of soone who had been doing exactly this in exactly this space for long enough that the space had arranged itself around his presence rather than the other way around. Tall, silver at the temples, with Werner’s jaw and Werner’s eyes and the kind of face that had Werner’s current expression as its default setting rather than sothing it arrived at under pressure.
He had not looked at Werner.
Werner had not looked at him.
Both of them were working very hard at this, which ant both of them were aware of exactly where the other one was at every mont, which was its own kind of looking.
Noah watched this without saying anything about it because there was nothing to say about it that Werner wanted to hear from him.
---
The castle was a different world from Harrowfield.
Not better or worse, just different in the way that places were different when they had been built for a different purpose. Harrowfield had been built to exist, stone and timber and the accumulated repair work of generations of people who needed sowhere to be. The castle had been built to an sothing, its corridors wide enough for ceremony, its ceilings high enough for authority, its every proportion calibrated to produce a feeling in the people moving through it that the people who built it had intended them to feel.
It mostly worked, which was either a testant to the architects or a comntary on how reliably people responded to ceilings.
They were shown to their quarters by a castle servant who moved with the efficiency of soone managing a building that was currently housing three tis its normal population of knights. The room was small, a narrow space with two bunks and a window that looked onto an inner courtyard, and had clearly been a storage room recently converted by the simple thod of removing most of the storage.
Pip looked at the bunks. Looked at the four of them. Looked at the bunks again.
"There are four of us," he said.
"Correct," said the servant, who had clearly had this conversation several tis already this morning. "Two per bunk, or one of you takes the floor. There are pallets in the east storage if needed." He left before anyone could ask follow-up questions.
"I’ll take the floor," Nami said imdiately, dropping her pack.
"You will not," Pip said.
"I sleep better on flat surfaces."
"That is the saddest thing I have ever heard and I refuse to accept it." Pip pointed at Werner. "You and Noah take the bunks. Nami and I will manage."
Werner looked at the bunk he had been assigned and sat on it without comnt, which was the Werner version of agreent.
---
The patrol rotation was what it was.
The castle’s interior circuit covered the main corridors, the great hall, the council wing approaches, and the outer wall’s eastern section, and it took approximately forty minutes to walk at the pace the senior garrison knight demonstrated on their first circuit. His na was Ser Aldous, not the sa Aldous from Harrowfield, just another man nad Aldous in a world that had apparently not noticed it was producing too many of them, and he showed them the route with the bored expertise of soone demonstrating sothing to people who were going to do it worse than he did.
"Nothing happens on interior patrol," he said, by way of orientation. "That’s the point. If sothing is happening on interior patrol it ans exterior patrol has failed and exterior patrol has failed because the walls have been breached and if the walls have been breached you will know because the castle will be on fire."
"Reassuring," Pip said.
"It’s ant to be," Ser Aldous said, and left them to it.
They walked the circuit.
The castle in the daylight hours was populated with the specific kind of organized chaos that happened when a building designed for administrative function was also trying to serve as a military command center. Knights moved through the corridors with the urgent purposeful stride of people carrying information sowhere it needed to be. Servants navigated around them with the practiced invisibility of people who had learned to be unobtrusive while armies moved through the spaces they cleaned. Nobles appeared occasionally, clustering in doorways with the anxious energy of people who were accustod to being important and were currently uncertain whether that continued to apply.
Noah walked the circuit and watched all of it and thought about the Ardenre pass.
Nami walked beside him and said, after the second circuit, "You have the face."
"I know."
"Whatever you’re thinking about, it’s not this corridor."
"I’m thinking about this corridor," Noah said.
"You are thinking about this corridor in the way you think about anything that you have decided is a waste of ti," she said. "Which is not really thinking about it at all."
He looked at her.
"Pip told about your run last night," she said. "Apparently, he saw you because he was doing sothing similar."
"Pip sees everything," Noah said.
"Pip sees everything," she agreed.
They walked another stretch of corridor.
"The pass at Ardenre," Noah said, quietly enough that it did not carry past the two of them. "If Arthur’s column cos down the northern road and nobody has fortified the pass, they will be in sight of this city within two days of crossing the border. And every useful person who could be at that pass is walking a corridor."
Nami was quiet for a mont. "You’re going to do sothing about it."
"I’m going to try to do sothing about it," he said. "There’s a difference."
"There really isn’t," she said. "Not with you."
---
Werner saw his father four more tis before the afternoon circuit ended.
The first ti was in the main corridor outside the council wing, his father passing with two other senior knights without his eyes moving in Werner’s direction, which required a precise calibration of attention that you only achieved through effort.
The second ti was in the outer courtyard, his father looking up at the castle wall’s eastern section where Werner was standing on watch, their eyes making contact for approximately one second before his father found sothing else to look at.
The third ti was through a doorway, his father’s voice carrying out of a room Werner was walking past, the voice giving orders with the particular tone Werner had grown up hearing across dinner tables and training yards, the voice of a man who had decided what he thought and was communicating it rather than discussing it.
The fourth ti Werner was coming down a staircase and his father was going up it and there was no way to avoid the proximity. They stopped on the sa step with a landing between them, and his father looked at Werner’s remaining arm and at the gauntlet and at the space where the other arm was not, and his face did sothing that Werner had not seen his father’s face do before.
Then it stopped doing it.
"You’re assigned to interior patrol," his father said.
"Yes," Werner said.
"Good posting," his father said. "Safe."
And he went up the stairs.
Werner stood on the landing for a mont after he had gone, the gauntlet’s channel patterns running the faint ambient glow they maintained when he was not actively directing energy through them, and he thought about all the things that exchange had contained and all the things it had not, and then he went down the stairs because the circuit did not pause for conversations on landings.
Pip appeared at his shoulder at the bottom of the stairs.
"I didn’t see that," Pip said.
"Good," Werner said.
"For what it’s worth—"
"It’s worth nothing right now," Werner said, not harshly. "Ask again in a week."
Pip nodded and fell back, which was the right response, and Werner walked his half of the circuit alone.
Nami found Noah in the early evening sitting on the outer wall’s eastern section with his back against a rlon and his eyes on the northern horizon where the sky had gone the deep blue that happened between sunset and dark.
She sat beside him without asking.
He had a piece of bread from the castle kitchen that he was eating with the absence of soone who was tasting nothing about it.
"Pip wants to know," she said, "if you’ve figured out what you’re going to tell people. About everything." She paused. "how long you’re going to let Werner keep building toward sothing before it becos a problem."
Noah ate the bread.
"He also wants to tell you that he’s not asking for himself," she continued. "He says he already decided he didn’t need to know everything and that he ant it. He’s asking because Werner is asking. Not out loud, not to anyone, but Pip watches Werner the way Pip watches everything and Werner is asking in the way that people asked things that were eating at them."
"I know," Noah said.
"He lost an arm in that gate," Nami said. "He ca out with one gauntlet and a father who looked at the missing arm and called his posting safe. He’s been watching you since the harbor and whatever conclusion he’s building toward, it matters to him that he gets it right."
Noah looked at the northern horizon.
’Werner deserves a real answer,’ he thought. ’They all do. The problem is that the real answer is not one I can give without making their world fundantally stranger than it already is. I am a nineteen-year-old from the year 2077 who entered a dinsional gate generated by a quest reward and fought a castle boss and lost and was deposited into a dieval tiline with a quest called extinguish the flas that I now understand ans stop this war before it produces a dead kingdom with one man left standing in it.’
’My na is not Burt. My mother’s na is not the woman who made soup tonight. I have three dragons in this tiline and a bonded pack in another one and sowhere in 2077 Sophie and Lila and Seraleth are waiting for to co back from a domain I entered and did not co out of.’
’How do I say any of that?’
He did not say any of that.
"Tell Pip I’m working on it," he said.
Nami looked at him in the way she looked at things she had decided to accept without full information, which was a look she had been giving him since training camp and which he suspected would outlast both of them.
"Okay," she said.
---
The war room eting started at the seventh evening bell.
Noah knew this because the castle had a rhythm to it the sa way any large organized place had a rhythm, and he had been reading it since morning, the movent of people toward specific rooms at specific tis telling you what was happening in those rooms before you arrived at them. The council wing cleared of minor traffic at the sixth bell, which ant whatever ca at the seventh was not for minor traffic. Senior knights moved toward it in ones and twos with the purposeful stride of people who had been told to be sowhere.
He was on corridor patrol when it started.
Pip was with him, walking the circuit with the calm of soone who had decided to be present rather than occupied, and they ca around the corner of the council wing’s outer corridor at the mont the voices inside reached a volu the door could not fully contain.
They stopped walking.
Not together, not coordinated. Just both of them stopping at the sa mont because the voices had said sothing that stopped feet.
A senior knight’s voice, carrying the frustration of soone who had been making the sa point for too long and had run out of diplomatic framings for it. "The Ardenre pass is undefended. Arthur’s column will reach it within three days at current intelligence. We have the forces to hold it if we move tonight and we are not moving."
A different voice, calr, with the weight of soone sitting at the head of sothing. "The strategic consolidation was ordered for reasons that have not changed."
"The reasons were based on intelligence that is three days old. The situation has changed."
"The situation has not changed sufficiently to—"
"Four more coastal settlents fell this morning." A third voice. "We received word an hour ago. The western supply road is now compromised at six points. If the Ardenre road falls as well, this city is encircled before Arthur has committed his main force."
A silence.
Pip looked at Noah.
Noah looked at the door.
’Mrs. Brooks,’ he thought. ’If they dictate where the fight happens, you have already lost.’
He pushed the door open and walked in.
The room held twelve people around a table covered in maps, and all twelve of them turned to look at the door at the sa ti. King Aldren sat at the table’s head, which Noah had known from the voice, a man in his late fifties with a crown sitting slightly crooked and the face of soone who had been managing a crisis for too many consecutive hours. Senior knights on both sides of the table. Lord Carstein near the far end with the expression of a man who had been winning an argunt and had just been interrupted. Werner’s father two seats from the king, his eyes going to Noah with an expression that did not have a na yet.
The senior garrison knight who had shown them the patrol circuit stepped forward from the wall. "This section is restricted to—"
"I disagree, your majesty," Noah said.
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