Chapter Six:
The Hordesdoom
The scouts and I sent two young riders ahead at marathon speeds to deliver the gist of the horde's destruction to General Heoldax. So, over the four days' ride to the main body of the army, we relaxed a bit and just rode fast in the day. The lands behind the pass were safe, so the scouts' primary purpose was both to provide an honorguard of sorts for me and to protect against accidental mishaps on the road.
Since I knew (or was reasonably certain) that I'd survive to return to Caeli, I wrote her a more honest letter before getting my first good night's sleep in what felt like months, albeit on hard mountainous ground.
The violence of battle remained glazed over in the long letter and I left out the Gartifian self-genocide, but I wrote frankly about my odyssey otherwise, the bravery of Thothoa and her kin, the arid waste of the dry grasslands on that sad rouncey, the desperation of the peaceful tribes to the south, and being mistaken for a deserter. I wrote of good things too though, bringing tribes to agree to cross the border, the beauty of a mountain stream, Herafu's pure joy as I handed her the reins to the jennet, and graceful hawks traversing the deep blue of an endless sky. Anything I thought might make her smile.
I also bothered to remove as much grime from myself as was possible before reporting to General Heoldax, albeit with mixed results.
Arriving at the main camp late in the evening, the auxiliaries visibly outnumbered the regular army and the tension could be felt even as I walked to General Heoldax's tent. Moreover, I could see great numbers of their non-warriors arrayed in the safety of the valley behind the rank and file army as we rode in, thousands of them elderly and children.
The Crown Princess had already received the news of the horde's demise - and received it with joy - but recognized the new problem. Cold as it sounds, the eventual battle with the horde would have likely killed many allied tribeswomen and others would have returned to the grasslands as rich and dominant warriors. Now we had a huge army which was no longer set to face an enemy in a bloody - but ultimately cathartic - battle in which the winners would take the victory spoils and fill the power vacuum.
"Our citizens will simply resume their lives in their lands between the mountains and the far border. Yet the temporary loyalty of most of those tribes arrayed out there is built on a common enemy that - however thankfully - no longer exists," Heoldax acknowledged before lamenting, "My nobles and the chieftains are at each others' throats already. The latter will be incensed at leaving a war camp with nothing and the former will be enraged at paying off 'a new horde we created.'"
I nodded. Ser Gharntex spat.
"There are several obviously poor options to choose from, but," Heoldax gave me a measured look. "I think I should save myself time. Taiglox Hordesdoom, how would you handle this?"
"You need gold and fallow lands to be garnered from your nobles, both to be given to unloved foreigners and both with as little cost to the crown as possible, Your Highness?" I ignored my new nickname, not placing much stock in such things.
"Yes," Heoldax answered, "And in no more than a month. Preferably far less. The thousands gathered must eat or riot."
I sat down and put my head in my hands to think. Heoldax held out her cup to be refilled, which Vostiv did immediately, having not even greeted me yet and wisely not interrupting to do so.
The problem was complicated. Some tribes would willingly return to beyond our borders with no payout, but those would be more inclined to raid our relatively unprotected lands between the mountains and the border, particularly as they'd have little or nothing to get them through the hard season. Others would settle on the grasslands between the mountains and our border, but be more inclined to rebel and would be in a geographic location where most citizens only had a few generations of citizenship themselves. In both cases, the same mountains would protect them that protected us now in the event of invasion or rebellion.
I thought like Tumnus, so hard that I could hardly breathe and made a Crown Princess wait. Eventually, I spoke.
"Were it me, I'd gather the highest ranking noble from each land-holding house and ask them to take equal portions of the thousands gathered. They won't want to, so one rich noble will introduce a buyout to not take tribes on their land. Almost all will jump on the idea, so make it a substantial cost and with a short deadline before the thousands are split. It'll be easier to raise the price and keep it high across the board if you introduce an exhausting debate on whether the buyout price should be based on the house's size in acreage, population, taxes, nobles, or levies. Plus, none will wish to openly admit before the others that they can't afford to pay by whichever method is eventually chosen."
"That would provide fast gold enough to pay off those who wish to leave, yes. But thousands would prefer to stay and will have no place. Moreover, I sent you with a guarantee that they could stay in the Queen's name." House Royal would not go back on promises authorized to be made in the name of the Queen, no matter the cost of keeping the Queen's guarantee and to whom the promise was made.
"Respectfully Your Highness, fulfilling the Queen's guarantee could be of value. Those who'd prefer to be poor and peaceful farmers over being wealthy and savage nomads are the ones you want to keep anyway. But not here on the border. Especially knowing we'll likely campaign over the mountains this spring, we don't want to install newly-minted civilians whose loyalty will be tested without need."
"I agree. Where would you put them?"
"Piadya, Faquardya, Chrerandya, Gaphindya, and - forgive me Vostiv - Miwirdya all pled off portions of their soldier levies and grain taxes for the army last year by claiming a lack of agrarian labor due to various plagues and natural disasters killing off droves of peasants."
"It was no lie," Vostiv asserted defensively, "House Miwirdya lost over a fifth of our farmers to a wasting sickness in our breadbasket."
"I did not mean to cast aspersions on the claims of those houses," I clarified, "Only to identify that they might benefit greatly from an influx of hearty immigrants to serve as both peasants and soldiers." I probably should have chastised my squire, but I sympathized with her fidelity and wouldn't scold her before the Crown Princess.
"Of course, ser. I'm sorry, ser," Vositv chastised herself.
I dismissed the offense with a gesture and continued, "Were you, Your Highness, to send emissaries to those houses offering to reduce their grain taxes to the crown in the amount they will already have paid unwillingly in absentia to not take those same potentially useful immigrants, they'd likely overcome any xenophobia and take the offer."
"A small loss this year for the crown which would be made up in grain and soldiers many times over for the next decade," Heoldax smiled and stood, causing us to stand too. "Take your squire and your squad of scouts and ride tonight for House Miwirdya to make the offer there. Ser Gharntex, put whispers in the right ears of foreigners and buyouts. Pages," she called and a half dozen smartly dressed noble youths entered the tent. She pointed to each in turn, "Inform Ser Trycix of House Piadya, Ser Yeanitix of House Faquardya, Ser Konchux of House Chrerandya, Ser Faswax of House Gaphindya, Ser Quoprix of House Mayrtedya, Ser Pliplax of House Chilandya, and Ser Bortox of House Hiruwodya that I wish to breakfast with them tomorrow after quarters."
"Your Highness, I'd request to leave at dawn, giving me the chance to recruit some likely tribeswomen for Miwirdya to question and giving Vostiv the chance to consult her eldest sister present in camp for familial openness," I requested. Vostiv audibly sighed behind me at not having to face that awkwardness later.
"Of course. Take all prudent action and leave at dawn."
"Yes, Your Highness," I bowed and stepped out with Vostiv on my heels.
"It's good to have you back, ser!" Vostiv hugged me suddenly.
"Good to be back, Vostiv." I patted my giant squire's back and released her, "How've you been?"
"Okay."
"How was your birthday?"
"Quiet."
No one in camp probably knew but me, "Right. Well, thirteen is a big one. We'll have to have a proper celebration once we get home. Do you understand everything well enough to talk with your sister?"