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Chapter 87: The Outer Ring

The formal dispatch from Frunt arrived three mornings later.

It ca in Tavin’s handwriting at the top, precise and administrative, every letter legible, the way Tavin’s letters were always legible.

The top of the page held the standard alliance language. Updates on Frunt’s position, its civic work, its crop distribution, and its current obligations to Sun Harvest under the signed agreent.

However, Alistair read the top section with little interest. Routine. Due would note the useful parts later, but the rest was the kind of docunt written to maintain a relationship, not to transmit anything new.

Below Tavin’s handwriting was a second note in a different hand.

It was shorter, and more ink on the letters than necessary, the handwriting of a woman who had been writing carefully and quickly at the sa ti, pressing harder than she needed to because she was thinking while writing.

Alistair read Sera’s note aloud, since all four of them were at the table.

"The three settlents between Frunt and the eastern border have started calling themselves Sun Harvest’s outer ring. Nobody official told them to. They just started. I thought you should know, because it will matter, and you should not be surprised. Also, the water routing you sorted last month is working, and the family in question has nad their new crop after the faction, which I think is either a complint or a mild threat. Regards."

Alistair set the paper down.

Due picked it up. Then, he read it slowly, quietly.

"Is that a statent of alliance, or a warning?" Due asked.

"Both."

"How are you always certain?"

"I’ve been listening to her for two months."

Due was quiet for a mont.

"Having said that, I have been listening to her for two months also."

"And?"

"...Both."

Silas, from the corner, asked, "The crop is nad after the faction. Is that a good thing?"

Elara looked at the note. "It ans they think we are going to be here long enough for it to matter. People do not na crops after things they expect to go away in a year."

The room went quiet.

Four people sitting with the specific feeling of sothing becoming permanent in a direction they had not fully planned for.

"Outer ring," Due said. "That is the word."

"Yes."

"And nobody told them to use it..."

Due was turning the phrase over in his mouth. Alistair could see him doing it, the way Due always moved his lips slightly when mapping a word against the obligation structures it implied.

Eventually, Due exhaled. "It is a structural designation. They have decided, on their own, that they are organized around Sun Harvest. Regardless, it is not an alliance. It is a geographic identity." He adjusted his collar. "Alliances dissolve. Identities do not, except by replacing them with other identities, which takes longer."

"Is that good for us?" Alistair asked.

"Structurally, yes. Practically, it is complicated. If three settlents call themselves our outer ring, the rest of the Oasis will have to decide whether they are inside the ring, outside it, or sothing else. So will choose ’outside’ to assert they are not under anyone’s influence. Following that, you will see the first faction-adjacent politics in this region since Caldren’s network was dismantled."

"So it is good and bad," said Silas.

"It is good, and it is going to be followed by a complication."

Alistair nodded slowly. He was slightly unsettled, even if he refused to show it.

Then, before any of them could set Sera’s note aside, the second one arrived.

Not through the Sovereign Record, but through one of the settlent runners, Sable had been quietly paying for the last three months.

The note was folded twice, on the thin paper Sable used when she wanted sothing readable only once.

Due read it standing.

"The word," Due said quietly.

"Which word?"

"The one the settlents near the eastern border had been using for Sun Harvest. Sable’s note from two weeks ago." Due looked up, his eyes narrowing. "It has spread east."

"How far?"

"Past the Oasis of Grain’s border. Into territory that is not ours, among people who have never t us. Sable heard it in a settlent that trades with Frunt’s eastern edge. They had not traded with anyone inside the Oasis directly in over a year. They heard the word from a traveling rchant who had passed through three settlents on his way east."

Alistair was silent.

"That is the continental scale Caldren warned about," Due said.

"Yes."

"It is already beginning."

Alistair clicked his tongue, his jaw tightening.

’It is recent. It is moving faster than we are.’

"What is the word?" Elara asked. "Sable never wrote it the first ti. She just said there was one."

Due looked at the second note, having not yet read it aloud.

"She wrote it this ti."

Due read it.

The word sat in the middle of Sable’s note, underlined once. As Due said it aloud, the room got quiet in a way that did not have anything to do with surprise.

It was not a grand word. It was plain.

The kind of word ordinary people use when they are talking about a thing they do not fully understand, but have decided is real enough to na.

Alistair sat with it for a mont.

He had heard people in the settlents use it once or twice in passing. At the ti, he had not thought anything of it.

Now he understood what the casualness had been.

The word had already been in their mouths for weeks. Sable was the first to notice it had spread past the border.

"It fits us," Elara said quietly.

"It fits us too well," Due replied. "That is the problem with the words ordinary people choose. They fit better than the words factions choose, because the people who choose them are not trying to be clever. They are just trying to be accurate."

Silas nodded.

Nobody said the word a second ti. It did not need saying twice. The room absorbed it once and moved past it, the way a room moves past a thing that has beco true while no one was watching.

Due set Sable’s note carefully next to Tavin’s.

"I will write a response to Sera, and one to Sable," Due said. "Following that, I am putting both into the civic appendix as evidence of the second-order effects I have been tracking since the barley."

"The barley?" Silas asked.

"The barley. The thing the farr ca to ask about. I was right. It was important."

Alistair almost replied. Almost.

Then he stood, the chair scraping behind him, and looked at Sable’s note one last ti.

"We ride for Frunt before sundown."

Due looked up. "Why?"

"Because if the word has spread east, sobody is going to co looking for who owns it. I want to be there before they do."

Elara’s eyes narrowed slightly.

"How long do we have?"

Alistair did not answer imdiately. He was already at the door.

"Less than we should."

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