Gregoryâs men remained respectful to the eurtiks over the following weeks, with no problems arising from having them. If anything, the morale of the men climbed higher. The food was better, with more flavor and variation. The former barmaids helping to serve dinner and bring drinks during training helped even more.
For the slaves, life was better than it had ever been. The sergeants were honest, the men were respectful, and they had possessions and time of their own. Nammi and Netty were still thinking of going with one of Gregoryâs wives, however, just to have more women around them.
Petal had agreed to Gregoryâs suggestion that she become the cook for Jennâs unit. It hadnât taken much, but the promise she would be treated just as well and that her son would be in charge of Gregoryâs kitchen was enough. May offered to go with her so that Petal would still have a friend.
Gregory had taken the step of sending May to Gardenia once. She arranged for their tables to be collected when the unit left and be brought back a week later. He didnât want to cause more problems in the town than he already had, if he could help it.
That would leave Gregory with Barny, Polka, and Dot. Flopsy hadnât wavered from her hope of serving Mindie as a maid. Gregory was happy for them, and promised that, if problems arose with the other units, he would welcome them back.
During one of his chats with the eurtiks, Gregory opened his resonance. All of them felt mostly solidâ Gregory chalked that up to his honesty with them and them still being a little nervous around the men.
All the slaves had taken to practicing the Peaceful Fist and unarmed combat training. With Rafiq leading them and the camp boys, they were basically another two squads training. Willof mentioned it during an officerâs meeting, saying that he was bemused that even slaves near Gregory quickly adapted to the way he did things. The others laughed at his observation, agreeing with him.
~*~*~
Gregory watched the men during breakfast. Everyone was talking excitedly, as they would be marching for Grakle in a few hours. He had to admit to himself that he was just as excited. Tomorrow, heâd get to see Yukiko and Mindie. He knew heâd only have the half day with Yukiko, but he would treasure it. Then, heâd have five days with Mindie before Jenn arrived and he got his half day with her.
âYouâve been smiling all morning,â Basal said.
âTomorrow, Iâll get to see my wives again. Well, two of them, at least,â Gregory chuckled. âItâs a good reason to smile.â
âI would hope so,â Rafiq said as he finished his meal. âIt will be years before I see my wife again.â
That statement hit Gregory in the gut.
âIt isnât your fault, Gregory. I volunteered, remember?â
âYeah, but if not for Damon, no one wouldâve needed to volunteer.â
âPossibly, or another wouldâve wanted to have foresight studied. Truly, I have embraced my role here. You trying your best for them,â Rafiq nodded toward the other slaves, âhas reaffirmed my views of you.â
âAre some of them really going to leave?â Basal asked.
âFive of them. Weâll have Polka, Dot, and Barny left with us,â Gregory said.
âThatâll be sad, but I understand, sir.â
âItâs their choice.â
âThe first real choice theyâve ever had,â Rafiq added. âBasal, youâve had a rough life, but even you know their lives have been worse.â
âI canât imagine not being able to choose what to do with my life,â Basal murmured.
âYou might get a taste of that in a few years,â Gregory said gently. âIf you test as a magi, youâll have your life restricted in ways you never have before.â
âBut I can join Aetherâs Guard, canât I, sir?â
Gregory smiled at the earnest young man. âThey would take you, but youâll have to push even harder.â
âBecause your clan has enemies. Iâll do my best, but honestly⦠Iâm not sure I want to be a magi.â
âItâs not for everyone. Being part eurtik will make the path harder, but youâd find friends in the clan.â Gregory stood up, having finished his food. âI need to check in with Davis before things get packed away.â
âIâll get everything in order, sir,â Basal said quickly, standing.
~*~*~
It took longer than Gregory thought it would to get everything packed. It was closing in on midday before they were marching toward the city. Gregory rode at the front with Davis and Willof while the men marched behind them with the eurtik, camp boys, Rafiq, and the wagon.
During the march, Gregory questioned the order they went in. If someone wanted to cripple the unit, they would just need to hit the wagon. Gregory wondered if splitting up the men to walk on either side of the wagon with another squad behind it might not be a better formation.
Willof laughed, agreeing that it would give better security to their supplies. Davis had grinned, as well, explaining that heâd wanted to see if Gregory knew how to best protect the critical supplies.
The sun was close to setting and they were still an hour or two from Grakle when Davis called a halt to the march. Gregory handed his mare off to Basal, then followed Davis to learn.
The men unloaded just enough to get them through the night. No tents were pulled out, as they would be making a hasty camp. Petal and Barny had the toughest time of it, as they had to make and cook dinner without their usual setup, but they did the best they could.
The soup was good enough, though well under what they could do with a proper camp. None of the men said a word, as they all knew theyâd have done an even worse job of it.
It was as dinner was finishing up that Gregory sprang his last surpriseâ heâd never handed out the desserts heâd gotten three weeks ago. It was the third night after having the eurtik in camp that he even remembered his surprise for the men. When heâd pulled one of the pies from his ring, he was surprised that it was still warm.
That had him test it over the next few weeks. Gregory discovered that everything went into stasis when he pushed it into his ring. He couldnât put anything living inside, but severed items could go in, heâd tested it on plants to verify that observation.
The pies were a shock to the men as Gregory had them handed out. âMen, this is a gift from me to thank you for all your hard work. Youâll be on a weekâs leave soon. Before that happens, I wanted to remind you of something.â
Everyone was watching him, clearly intent on hearing what he had to say. Rafiq pulled out his notebook and charcoal pencil, ready to take notes on the speech.
âYour time off still reflects on you, the unit, myself, and my clan. The trouble you get into wonât just result in you being reprimanded; itâll mean a blackmark against us as a whole, a reprimand for your sergeant, our lieutenant, and myself. Itâll go on to tarnish Aetherâs Guard, as well.â
It was clear the men hadnât thought that their week off could be a way to hurt all of them.
âIâm not worried, though,â Gregory went on. âI know from your dedication these last couple of months that you wonât disgrace us. Now, some of you might make mistakes, minor errors. Donât hide them. Admit them, own your mistakes, and report them. Itâs in this way that we can smooth over any reprimands we might get. Then, learn from those mistakes, help your fellows learn from them, and together, weâll become even better.â
Chests puffed up at the faith Gregory was showing in them.
âI would ask you to stay in at least pairs to stop anyone from being singled out by the unscrupulous, but I wonât demand it. Enjoy your time off, and remember that you represent something more than just yourself. Now, enjoy the dessert. Youâve earned it.â
The men dug into the pie slices they were given, but they were clearly also discussing what theyâd been told.
Gregory gathered up Davis, Willof, and the sergeants for a meeting. Even Gregory didnât have a tent, so they just stepped away from the others. âDo you think I did enough to mitigate what might happen?â
âFrankly, sir,â Milton said, âif any of them fuck up, Iâd be shocked. You basically praised them for their dedication. How could any of them risk damaging that praise?â
âBut he went further,â Townson jumped in, âspeaking how any one mistake would reflect on the others. None of them wants to hurt their squadmates or the unit.â
âTo say nothing of us,â Bunson added. âIâm sure your men are as proud of you as mine are of me.â
âThen he said it would reflect badly on him,â Donald said. âThey donât want to do that, not after all heâs done for them.â
âSir,â Glasson snorted, âright now, theyâd rather sit in a quiet room doing nothing than party.â
âTheyâre right,â Davis chuckled, âbut theyâll go out and drink, gamble, and maybe even wench. They will go in pairs or as squads. Iâd bet on that.â
âGregory, my report for your first few months is about as glowing as it can be,â Willof told him. âYour men are dedicated to a degree Iâd never thought to see from a new unit. Iâm very curious how your wives have done, too, so Iâll be speaking to both of their trainers while weâre in Grakle.â
âMuch like me, Iâd bet, but differently.â Gregory smiled, thinking about Jenn and Yukiko. âYukiko will have gotten the best she could get for them without costing them any extra vela, probably even saving them some. Jenn will be just like me, getting into training with her men and pushing them as she pushes herself.â
âTheir lieutenants and sergeants will love them, then,â Davis said, âif theyâre even half of you, sir.â
The sergeants all agreed, and Gregory chuckled.
âWeâll need to do more to be the best unit when it comes time for the tournament,â Gregory grinned.
âYes, sir,â the officers chorused.