Drakk spent six days in Yohan.
On the third day Skarra took him to the learning hall in the early morning, before the regular session began, so he could see the room without the students in it. She showed him the study tables, the writing materials arranged in organized sets at each position, the tally forms used as primary teaching docunts, the section of the wall where Tharuk had begun chalking the law’s core provisions in preparation for the permanent carving that would follow the law’s finalization.
Drakk stood in the empty hall and looked at the chalk writing for a long ti.
"What does it say?" he asked.
Skarra read it to him: the eleven areas of the law, their headers, the key principle beneath each one. She read clearly and without stumbling because she had been reading since she was five and because Tharuk had asked her to read the drafts back to him as a check on whether the text was clear enough for soone reading it for the first ti.
"The law applies to all residents," she said, reading the preamble. "Not to orcs, not to citizens of specific rank, not to registered warriors. All residents. That ans Vornak. That ans the kobold mining teams. That ans the highland traders if any co through." She traced one of the chalk lines with a careful finger that did not touch the text itself. "Sakh’arran says the preamble is the most important part because every other provision is an application of what the preamble states." She looked at Drakk. "Do you have written law in the highlands?"
"No," he said.
"What do you have?"
"The chieftain’s word. The elders’ council. Custom that’s been followed long enough that people expect it to continue." He looked at the preamble again. "When the chieftain dies, the custom sotis dies with him. Or shifts. Depends on what the new chieftain prefers."
Skarra absorbed this. "That seems unstable," she said.
"Yes," Drakk said. "It is."
* * * * *
On the fifth day, Drakk t with Khao’khen in the evening.
They sat in the administrative hall with the door open and the cold-season air coming through, and Khao’khen said nothing while Drakk organized his thoughts. The chieftain had a quality that Drakk had been trying to identify since the day he arrived: the ability to produce silence that was not pressure. Most chieftains’ silence was a weight the person across from them had to fill. Khao’khen’s silence was simply space.
"Kael wants a formal military alliance," Drakk said.
"I know. He sent a communication through the Verakh network six weeks ago."
"Kael thinks in alliance structures. Combined force agreents, mutual non-aggression clauses, the architecture his mind produces when it sees a problem. He’s not wrong about any of it." Drakk paused. "But a military agreent isn’t what I ca here to understand. I ca here because Vor’gath described a city and I needed to know if the description was accurate before I could decide what to do with it."
"And?" Khao’khen said.
"The description was accurate. More accurate than I expected from an elder speaking to a grieving clan about sothing he’d seen." Drakk looked at his hands. They were rougher than they’d been a year ago, carrying Brokk’s axe having changed the distribution of callus across the palm. "The clan is five thousand people now. Most of them know how to fight and nothing else. The war used up everything that wasn’t fighting. We have stone and water in the mountains and iron in three mines and timber on the lower slopes and the knowledge of how to extract all of it." He looked up. "We have never built anything permanent because we never needed to. We moved. Moving was how we survived. But we can’t keep moving. There’s nowhere left to move to that isn’t soone else’s territory." He paused. "The question is how a people who have only ever moved start building without knowing how to build."
Khao’khen considered the question for a mont.
"I want to offer you Droktagar for three months," he said. "He is the best construction foreman I have and he knows how to teach people who have never built anything permanent how to build sothing that will last. He did exactly that here, with workers who had been warriors the season before they beca builders." He paused. "And Tharuk. The stonemason. He made that transition himself and he knows the territory between the two identities better than anyone I have."
Drakk was very still. "You would send two of your senior people into the highlands."
"For three months. With the expectation that what they teach stays in the highlands and serves the highlands’ people." Khao’khen’s hands were flat on the table. "I am not building an empire. I am building a web. Every part of the web that is stable and inhabited by people with sothing to protect makes the whole web stronger. The highlands three years from now with walls and water in pipes and a learning hall of their own are a part of the web that doesn’t need defending because it can defend itself and that can be relied on because it has sothing it doesn’t want to lose." He t Drakk’s eyes. "The Threian Kingdom has a new northern campaign consuming forty thousand of its conscripts. In three years, that campaign ends and the kingdom is looking south again. I would prefer the south, when the kingdom looks at it, to be a place that is very expensive to disturb." He paused. "The highlands are part of the south."
Drakk was quiet for a long ti. The city’s night sounds ca through the open door: the distant forge bell, a troll work crew finishing a late shift, sowhere a child still awake at an hour that suggested the child’s parents had given up for the evening.
"I can’t promise anything," Drakk said. "I ca here on my own authority. What I take back goes to the clan gathering and the gathering decides."
"Understood," Khao’khen said. "I’m not asking for a promise. I’m asking for a fair account."
"You’ll have that." Drakk stood. "The wall with the nas. The fourteen highland warriors on it." He looked at Khao’khen. "Tell who carved it."
"Tharuk."
"Send Tharuk first," Drakk said. "Before Droktagar. Send the warrior who beca a stonemason and carved the highland dead into his city’s wall, and let him introduce himself to the clan." He picked up his riding cloak from the chair. "A builder from the south is a stranger. A warrior who knows what it ans to carry the dead is sothing the clan will listen to."
* * * * *
Drakk left on the sixth morning with his four riders, Tharuk, and Droktagar, the latter two on pack ponies with tools, timber planks, and the patient preparedness of workers who had been told what the job was and were ready to begin it.
Khao’khen watched the column from the northern gate until it crossed the first ridge.
Sakh’arran ca to stand beside him. He was carrying his planning notes, which ant he had been in the middle of sothing when the departure hour arrived and had brought the work rather than finish and then co.
"Three years and seven months," Sakh’arran said.
"Three years and seven months," Khao’khen confird.
Behind them, Yohan ran its morning at full volu. The forges had been at temperature since before dawn. The learning hall’s doors were open. The kobold logging crews were running their route from the eastern ore depot to the forge district’s secondary intake with the organized speed that kobolds brought to any task they had perford enough tis to understand deeply. Two troll workers were fitting anchor blocks for Zul’jinn’s first wall-mount installation into the south face’s renovation cuts. Grukk was opening his door for what he later reported was the fifth ti that morning, having discovered that the door opened just as satisfyingly the fifth ti as the first.
The Ironbeard envoy was two days south on the road with a preliminary agreent in his docunt case and, in a different case, the archive reference numbers for three centuries of historical records about the territories Yohan stood in.
The law was nine days old. The third Keystone at the Arch held its seal. The first wall-mount installation would be completed in three weeks.
Khao’khen looked at the ridge where the column had disappeared and stayed looking at it for another few minutes in the manner of soone watching a seed go into the ground, where it would do its work out of sight and in its own ti.
Then he turned back toward the city.
There was a water system second phase to review, and a legal code to finalize, and a eting with the forge district’s production team about the void-seal process docuntation that had arrived in Durrek’s case and that Zul’jinn had taken away imdiately and had not yet returned to discuss, which ant Zul’jinn had found sothing in it worth understanding thoroughly before he talked about it.
Work waited. It always waited, and when you were building sothing that would outlast you, the waiting was not a burden.
Yohan ran its morning. Sowhere in the learning hall, Skarra was teaching a child to read a bent stick. The child would learn, and would teach another child who would teach another, and soday there would be grandchildren who took the reading for granted, who could not rember the ti before the words on the wall were simply the air they grew up breathing.
The pipe was in the ground.
Forward.
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