Okay, I've been tied up with family and craft projects the past several days. No excuse for not posting snippets I know, but it was a distraction.
Goodlifeguide.com just got the manuscript back to me, 9 days early. So, I'm going to start the publishing process in a few moments. It should go live this afternoon or evening depending on the vendor. :)
Anyway, here is the last snippet:
Chapter 2
In the morning just after breakfast, Princess Zara was
called out to a local emergency. She decided to go despite the worry of her
guards. The guard captain Princeps Augustus Devitis insisted on going with her.
They disdained the normal beasts to take a set of branacks
they'd brought with them. The six-limbed beasts had recovered from the long
journey and seemed eager to get out of the smelly barn. They danced about on
their rear feet, pawing the air with their other limbs until they settled down.
Dominus Siegfried took a lance with him along with his
rifle. Zara kept her revolver in her shoulder holster.
They were joined by several of the people who had come
with them on the march north. Brynhild, one of the shield maidens, insisted on
coming with them.
They rode with the princess at the center of their
ranks. She nodded politely to people along the way. She was still getting cold
or concerned looks in passing. She tried to keep her responses warm but it was
hard.
When they arrived at the edge of the farm, they saw a
herd of Toucan Giraffe grazing in an orchard. Farmers came out waving poles,
rakes, beating on pots, and waving weapons in order to drive them off. Most of
the farmers were kids; they were too small to wave the implements and looked
absurd.
The animals flick their ears to show they are aware of
the humans but did not react until the humans approached within striking
distance. When they got within a few paces, they used their long legs to gallop
off and then resumed feeding.
"I don't know why they bother; the beasts eat the
fruit from the top of the tree that they can't reach anyway," Dominus
Wesdt said in disgust as he moved forward to join them.
The princess turned to the surly viscount with a
curious look and then went back to watching the show. After a moment, she
pulled out a small pair of binoculars and put them to her eyes to see better.
"Now that is an interesting device. A far seeing
one?" Siegfried asked.
"Yes." She watched the farmers herd the
animals off and then regroup. The herd did so as well, stubbornly unwilling to
go far.
"They need Garmr to drive them off,"
Siegfried said thoughtfully. "But they have to be fed and trained right.
Many were used for food during the hard winter."
"Yes, or they need something better and not so
much of an investment," the princess stated. "Maybe build a
fence?"
"A fence takes time and they can step over
it," Siegfried said in amusement. He was surprised she was thinking things
out and asking questions rather than just dictating to them. It was refreshing
and not expected. "The higher you build it, the deeper the footings need
to be. They can knock them over."
"Ah. So what does work other than animals?"
Zara asked, lowering the binoculars.
Siegfried wished she would offer them to him but held
his tongue on that matter. Instead, he focused on her question.
"Generally, I've heard good things about thorn
bushes. Tall ones around the perimeter would keep them at bay or thorny vines
on the fence. They tend to avoid them though they will go after the flowers and
fruit with their long tongues," he said thoughtfully. He was surprised by
her question.
"The herd needs to be culled," the berger,
the local mayor said, coming up behind them. They turned to him. "They are
not afraid of people anymore. We need to make them fear us again."
"I noticed no one used fire to drive them off?
Torches? Most animals fear it, even the smell of fire," the princess said,
making the statement more of a question.
"Yes, Your Majesty. Fire can burn the crops and
hurt the farmers as much as the animals," Siegfried replied patiently.
He'd come to realize that the princess genuinely wanted to know things. She was
strange in that she didn't mind expressing her ignorance and inviting someone's
opinion or an explanation.
"And there they go to the watering hole,"
the berger said with a sigh. "They'll drive off the Audumla and
other beasts the farmers have until they have their fill," he said in an
aggrieved tone of voice.
Zara turned and brought the glasses up for a look. She
could just make out the intruding herd at the watering hole. Several stood
watch while others would bend to sip at the water. The ones sipping would splay
their legs apart awkwardly. They seemed rather vulnerable in that position.
One had a tongue darting in and out to lap at the
water. Another was bolder, taking gulps of water and lifting the head up to
swallow.
"They'll want permission to hunt them,"
Wesdt said. "Usually the lords did it but only when other animals were not
available." The berger nodded grimly.
"Why?" Zara asked, expressing her ignorance.
The berger looked surprise.
Siegfried coughed into his hand and then decided it
was up to him to explain. "The beasts taste terrible. Their hides do not
tan easily or well. Even some of the animals won't eat the meat," he
explained. "They'll kill them and leave the carcass which will draw in
predators which will cause more problems."
Zara frowned. She could see how they were all leg.
Still, just about any animal could be fed to the beasts like Garmr and Titans.
If they turned their noses up to them, then they must
taste truly terrible. She reminded herself to never eat an offering of their
meat. It was saying something that the Duluthians refused to eat them, even in
a stew after the hard winter they'd just endured.
"They are useless, pests," the berger said
as Zara offered her binoculars to Siegfried. He took them in gratitude and
carefully raised them to his eyes to see. "They should be
irradiated," he muttered darkly.
Zara considered that statement and decided it might be
a teachable moment. "I have spent a lot of time with the Terrans, looking
at how they view Midgard. They see us as stewards of the land and beasts, as
guardians to reign in our excess and keep things in balance. If we err, we need
to correct it. By slaughtering an animal, we might cause more harm long
term." She briefly remembered how they had sent out hunting parties that
had brought in a number of beasts. That might have opened up the territory to
the long necks.
"How so?" Siegfried asked curiously. Two
beasts began to spar by swinging their heads at each other and kicking at each
other. It was fascinating to see them up close, as if they were so close he
could touch them.
"They say that if you take away an animal it can
upset the balance. For instance, what these animals eat in nature might
suddenly grow out of control or the predators that eat them will have less to
eat and may become a problem, preying on the farm animals," Zara
explained.
The viscount nodded. "True," he said
grudgingly.
"Very true," the berger said with a shiver.
"What if all the hunting we did over the winter
allowed them to come here? And it deprived the basilisk in the area of their
natural prey." The men looked suddenly grim. "If the basilisk go
hungry, it won't be for long."
"They would come and prey upon the farm
beasts," Augustus said, indicating the farm, "or people."
"Correct."
"They are already a problem. The waters have been
bad. Drought in some areas has hurt us and apparently driven off some of the
beasts. Which means more of them come looking for food out of the wood,"
Wesdt admitted.
"Ah. See what I mean about balance?" Zara
asked.
"Then what do you propose, milady?" Augustus
asked.
"I'm not sure. We need to know more," Zara
said cautiously.
"Well, Princess, it goes to show, the Terrans
don't know everything," Wesdt said caustically before stalking off. The berger
followed.
Zara watched him ride off with a frown.
"Problem?" Augustus asked.
"He's still adjusting," Siegfried said as he
reluctantly handed the device back.
Zara smiled slightly in thanks as she put the
binoculars away in her carrying case.
"Funny, a bit of glass and tubes to be able to
make you see further," he said. "Why didn't someone here think of
that?"
She nodded. "We had someone in the capital
working on them apparently. I didn't know." She shrugged. "Theirs are
crude in comparison, though they have gotten better."
"Oh?"
"They used them to see the stars," she said,
pointing to the sky.
He looked up and then back down to her.
"Interesting. Why?"
"To study them for our calendar. And to predict
the weather," Zara explained. "They believed that some things were
written in the stars."
"Ah."
"Apparently," she hefted the case with the
device within, "they can make a single tube version or others. The Terrans
used the same concept to create a device to see tiny things too," she
explained.
"Tiny things?" he asked, wrinkling his nose.
"Why?"
She smirked. "Ever try to thread a needle?"
she asked.
He stared at her for a moment and then smiled.
"I've heard a few people complain a time or two," he admitted.
She nodded. "Things like that and also to see
other work that needs to be done. To pull a splinter for instance." He
grimaced. "Or to read fine print in an old book," she said. He
nodded. "Their medicus can use a thing called a microscope to look at
samples to see what is wrong with a person, beast, or plant and then recommend
a potion to fix the problem."
"Ah, very nice." He nodded at that idea.
She reminded herself that medicus were not well
received in some places. The Imperium had learned to treasure them after
several plagues, but that didn't mean they had been a well-paid profession.
That was changing though.
She intended to make the same changes in Duluth,
whether the natives liked it or not. Too many people died when it could be
easily avoided.
"They also have things to help people see
better," she said. He blinked. "They wear them in a frame around
their eyes." She used her fingers to outline the shape, going over her
ears. "The glass lenses bring the world back into focus. They were working
on making them for people when I left."
He suddenly had a vision of his aunt who had trouble
seeing. "Handy indeed," he murmured with a nod.
~~~^~~~
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