Tarashana Rachel Neumeier (top 10 motivational books TXT) đ
- Author: Rachel Neumeier
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Geras nodded. âYes, my lord.â He beckoned to some of the soldiers, and they pulled the young man to his feet, steadying him so he did not fall. They took him out.
Aras said, âIf everyone would step out, please,â to everyone else, but he beckoned for me to stay and also made a sign to Esau to remain. No one argued. When they were gone, Aras said to Esau, âThe girlâs bearing. The child is due in the fall.â
âAh,â said Esau.
âBut he did not marry this young woman?â I asked. âShe is not his wife?â
âNo, and ordinarily that would be seriously irresponsible, as a girl in her situation may well wind up in a one-candle house, or at best she might find a place as a low servant, or perhaps as a talon wife with a military company. Ordinarily, especially if heâs the acknowledged father and not married to anyone else, the womenâs court could sue for him to marry her and regularize the child, and impose a stigma if he refused. In this case, of course, itâs far better that no marriage took place. That puts the girl out of the way of the decree. The problem is the unborn child.â He tapped his fingers restlessly on the table, then glanced at me, seeing that I was still puzzled. âThe child falls under the decree regardless, unless a court rules it isnât his. If the girl has the sense to claim otherwise, the womenâs court would probably rule that thereâs enough uncertainty to justify sparing the child, but the lordâs court in Pitasosa might rule either way. I hate to risk it. Requiring this girl to carry and bear a child only to have it put to death once itâs born ... I would very much like to avoid that.â He paused again. âI gather the Ugaro customs regarding marriage and parentage are quite different. What confuses you?â
Everything about his explanation seemed strange to me. Among Ugaro, if a young unmarried woman comes to know she is carrying, she will certainly marry at once, so that any child she bears will be her husbandâs child. There is no need to ask anyone to rule on the matter. But I said, âIt is not important. I understand that this child may fall under the decree. I understand you would prefer this did not happen.â
âThatâs certainly the heart of the matter, yes. As only the gods can know for certain whether the child is his, Iâd rather believe it isnât. Iâd prefer not to wait to see whether a magistrate might decide otherwise.â He turned to Esau. âThe young womanâs name is Keraunani. She lives in Pitasosa. I want you to get there before anyone official arrives to arrest the Rahavet family and whomever else falls under the decree. Get that girl out of the Rahavet house if sheâs there. Bribe someone to write parentage lines for the child into the registerâthe girl should be able to suggest some plausible nameââ
âYou canât trust neighbors not to gossip,â Esau said without emphasis. âToo likely someoneâd say the wrong thing to the wrong person. Plus I wouldnât trust a man I didnât know. Doesnât matter how much I paid him, thereâd be too much chance heâd discard the girl once I wasnât there looking over his shoulder. Drop her and the baby both in some one-candle house, maybe. No, the thing to do is get someone trustworthy to marry her real quick and get her out of Pitasosa and someplace safe. I can do it, if you want, my lord. Wonât make any difference to me, and Iâll do as well by her as anybodyâs likely to. I can have an adjudicator write in my name, then get her away before anyone has a chance to say a word about it.â
Aras pressed his hands across his eyes. He stayed like that for a moment. Then he took a long breath, nodded, and looked up. âYouâre quite right. Thatâs a better solution, if youâre willing. Iâd have to promote you to troop leader.â
Esau shrugged. He had been promoted before, then stripped of that rank again as punishment for one fault or another. That had happened more than once. Everyone knew it. He said now, âIf youâre willing to put a promotion through, Iâll take it, my lord. Once the adjudicator writes the lines in, wonât matter if you drop me down again later, sheâll still be my wife. Iâll take her, get her clear of this mess. You wonât want her here. Iâll take her to Gaur, set her up there, then come back when sheâs settled. If thatâs all right with you, my lord.â
Aras nodded again. âVery well. Yes. This will do. If youâre willing, Iâm grateful. Have I missed anything else, Troop Leader Esau?â
Esau shrugged. âThereâs always some problem or other. Whatever comes up, Iâll take care of it.â
âVery well. Good. That will do, then, I expect. Youâll need coin. A horseâtwo horses. Whatever else you think youâll need, requisition.â He wrote out a promissory note and handed it to Esau.
âRight. Yes, my lord.â Esau took the note, saluted Aras, gave me a small nod, said, âSee you, Ryo,â and went out without any further comment.
I waited for him to go. Then I said, âMy lord, I do not want to change your mind. If this solution will let Esau step between this young woman and that law, this seems good to me.
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