Dane Stalling
Super-Earth
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2014
- Location
- Midwest
Mairon followed Cassidy into her small space, rolling the gold buttons around in his hand. Her trailer was neat, and he noticed that there was something else about it. Professional almost. There was no space wasted and things were organized in such a way as to be close at hand when they were needed. The decorations on the outside of the trailer were exquisite, and the inside had a beauty as well, but not fussy or overdone. He took a quick turn of the room and sat on a short stool.
"I confess I am not sorry that you have no escape this morning," Mairon said, touching his side gently. "You've been at the flaps and corners of my tent but you disappear when I turn to find you. I know about disappearing, and it makes me jealous when someone does it better than I can."
"I hid myself and my sister when we were children to escape beatings. Maybe you understand. I hid food for us in case of punishment. We never went to bed empty, even if we only had hard cheese crust or marrow from a soup bone. I still hide buttons."
He watched the crow, Morgaine, worry the little baubles in the bowl, enjoying the rattling. The bird seemed exceptionally tame, but for nipping Cassidy's finger. He wondered how much it understood of speech.
He reached out and brushed Cassidy's hair off her shoulder. "There's a button for your beautiful bird on your shoulder, and one under the cup yonder and one on top of the lamp and one tied to your crow's leg with a long dark hair."
The astonished look on Cassidy's face made him smile.
"Have you ever seen such tricks? I can teach you the simple ones if you like."
----
Barker Clive turned the coin over and over in his fingers as he sat on the narrow bench in Ava's trailer. "Coffee would be tip top," he said as he tipped his hat off and balanced it on his knees, "and I'd come up the line just to smell it brew." He'd have come just for as many words as he had already heard from her.
"You know the only exercise I get is tonguing words and the odd, ah, meal that comes along," he said, "but this morning's visit is on account of my unfortunate wager of last evening, and I'm afraid I've lost myself five coin and not a little self respect along with them."
He put Ava's silver coin on the table and five smaller brown coins of his own alongside them. She had his little gold flower in her fingers and he wondered what she thought of him. He pushed the coins to make a flower of coin on her table, a silver center and dark leaves.
"I'm not used to losing bets to ladies, or winning them neither. I save my gambling for marks, drunk ones if I can find them."
----
Filo the Blademan sat on the back of the last wagon, his feet hanging threespan above the dust of the hard old road.
"You can't say you're a better marksman than I am just because you can hit things that are further away," he said, turning a balanced knife over and over in his hand.
"That's a heap of the finest dung, man." Szem the shooter pointed his long rifle back along the road. Even clouded with dust, he could hit anything out to a quarter mile, and that from a moving trailer. "The idea is to keep a bastard too far away to throw rocks at you. Or fire arrows."
"You're always talking about combat. What are we, soldiers? I'm talking about showmanship. You can't use the rifle in the big top. Spooks the ladies. Besides, the audience can't see a bullet fly."
"I'm more accurate with a bow than you are with your knives," Szem said, then, and sighted down the barrel of his rifle at a cat crossing the road behind them. "And I can still hit things further out."
Filo yawned and flicked a knife at a tree trunk. It stuck in the center without wobbling. He flicked two more knives that embedded themselves to the left and right of the first one. He jumped off the back of the trailer and retrieved the knives, checking their points for chips. He paused a moment and carved the "F&C" in the trunk, then jogged back to the trailer and went inside. The afternoon was warm, not that it bothered him. He was used to his blast furnace, but the Doctor wouldn't let him use it on the road. Some bollocks about it being dangerous.
Szem drew a bead on the tree trunk and put a bullet in the middle of the "F."
----
The doctor sat on his couch with his hands on his knees, back straight. He explained the hysteria treatment again, the various techniques, the underlying science. Felicity listened, and he thought he saw some anxiety in her eyes. Stella lounged comfortably and listened, an amused look on her face.
"I hope that is sufficiently clear," he said, finally. "If you have any questions, of course, feel free to ask."
There were so many details that needed to fall into place, but the money would not be a problem now that Stella had taken a personal interest in his research.
"I have the use of a tinker who is training to assist me in my work," he said to Stella, "a very reliable fellow I have known for some time and who has a way with the gearworks. I will introduce you to him whenever you find it convenient. Now, however, I need to meet with him in his tinker shed to discuss his initial impressions of the great work we are beginning."
The Doctor stood and opened the door. "Please make yourselves at home, ladies. We should be arriving in Kaland in an hour or less and then we can make the therapy tent ready. I am most eager to begin."
He stepped out of the trailer and waited for Callum's trailer to come by. He swung up on to the back step and rapped on the door. "Hello Cal," he called, "Let's have a talk."
Callum opened the door, squinting, but happy. "Come in, Doctor. I think I have some good news."
He described the off-center cam and the piston wheel. "I think it would be possible to even combine both methods in various manners. We will have no shortage of things to try."
"Excellent work, Cal. We'll be setting up in Kaland before sunset and I want you to be there to get familiar with the conventional therapy so you have a full understanding of the essentials. I've ordered a curtain that will keep our patients who are not used to your countenance from unnecessary frights. We'll keep that particular asset of yours for the cage. So when you enter, use the back flap of the tent. Please trim and file your fingernails and make sure your hands are clean."
Even now, Callum could feel the great train of trailers slowing. It took a long time for the whole queue to stop.
"I confess I am not sorry that you have no escape this morning," Mairon said, touching his side gently. "You've been at the flaps and corners of my tent but you disappear when I turn to find you. I know about disappearing, and it makes me jealous when someone does it better than I can."
"I hid myself and my sister when we were children to escape beatings. Maybe you understand. I hid food for us in case of punishment. We never went to bed empty, even if we only had hard cheese crust or marrow from a soup bone. I still hide buttons."
He watched the crow, Morgaine, worry the little baubles in the bowl, enjoying the rattling. The bird seemed exceptionally tame, but for nipping Cassidy's finger. He wondered how much it understood of speech.
He reached out and brushed Cassidy's hair off her shoulder. "There's a button for your beautiful bird on your shoulder, and one under the cup yonder and one on top of the lamp and one tied to your crow's leg with a long dark hair."
The astonished look on Cassidy's face made him smile.
"Have you ever seen such tricks? I can teach you the simple ones if you like."
----
Barker Clive turned the coin over and over in his fingers as he sat on the narrow bench in Ava's trailer. "Coffee would be tip top," he said as he tipped his hat off and balanced it on his knees, "and I'd come up the line just to smell it brew." He'd have come just for as many words as he had already heard from her.
"You know the only exercise I get is tonguing words and the odd, ah, meal that comes along," he said, "but this morning's visit is on account of my unfortunate wager of last evening, and I'm afraid I've lost myself five coin and not a little self respect along with them."
He put Ava's silver coin on the table and five smaller brown coins of his own alongside them. She had his little gold flower in her fingers and he wondered what she thought of him. He pushed the coins to make a flower of coin on her table, a silver center and dark leaves.
"I'm not used to losing bets to ladies, or winning them neither. I save my gambling for marks, drunk ones if I can find them."
----
Filo the Blademan sat on the back of the last wagon, his feet hanging threespan above the dust of the hard old road.
"You can't say you're a better marksman than I am just because you can hit things that are further away," he said, turning a balanced knife over and over in his hand.
"That's a heap of the finest dung, man." Szem the shooter pointed his long rifle back along the road. Even clouded with dust, he could hit anything out to a quarter mile, and that from a moving trailer. "The idea is to keep a bastard too far away to throw rocks at you. Or fire arrows."
"You're always talking about combat. What are we, soldiers? I'm talking about showmanship. You can't use the rifle in the big top. Spooks the ladies. Besides, the audience can't see a bullet fly."
"I'm more accurate with a bow than you are with your knives," Szem said, then, and sighted down the barrel of his rifle at a cat crossing the road behind them. "And I can still hit things further out."
Filo yawned and flicked a knife at a tree trunk. It stuck in the center without wobbling. He flicked two more knives that embedded themselves to the left and right of the first one. He jumped off the back of the trailer and retrieved the knives, checking their points for chips. He paused a moment and carved the "F&C" in the trunk, then jogged back to the trailer and went inside. The afternoon was warm, not that it bothered him. He was used to his blast furnace, but the Doctor wouldn't let him use it on the road. Some bollocks about it being dangerous.
Szem drew a bead on the tree trunk and put a bullet in the middle of the "F."
----
The doctor sat on his couch with his hands on his knees, back straight. He explained the hysteria treatment again, the various techniques, the underlying science. Felicity listened, and he thought he saw some anxiety in her eyes. Stella lounged comfortably and listened, an amused look on her face.
"I hope that is sufficiently clear," he said, finally. "If you have any questions, of course, feel free to ask."
There were so many details that needed to fall into place, but the money would not be a problem now that Stella had taken a personal interest in his research.
"I have the use of a tinker who is training to assist me in my work," he said to Stella, "a very reliable fellow I have known for some time and who has a way with the gearworks. I will introduce you to him whenever you find it convenient. Now, however, I need to meet with him in his tinker shed to discuss his initial impressions of the great work we are beginning."
The Doctor stood and opened the door. "Please make yourselves at home, ladies. We should be arriving in Kaland in an hour or less and then we can make the therapy tent ready. I am most eager to begin."
He stepped out of the trailer and waited for Callum's trailer to come by. He swung up on to the back step and rapped on the door. "Hello Cal," he called, "Let's have a talk."
Callum opened the door, squinting, but happy. "Come in, Doctor. I think I have some good news."
He described the off-center cam and the piston wheel. "I think it would be possible to even combine both methods in various manners. We will have no shortage of things to try."
"Excellent work, Cal. We'll be setting up in Kaland before sunset and I want you to be there to get familiar with the conventional therapy so you have a full understanding of the essentials. I've ordered a curtain that will keep our patients who are not used to your countenance from unnecessary frights. We'll keep that particular asset of yours for the cage. So when you enter, use the back flap of the tent. Please trim and file your fingernails and make sure your hands are clean."
Even now, Callum could feel the great train of trailers slowing. It took a long time for the whole queue to stop.