The sun rose over Jerusalem with a quiet dignity, gilding the listone walls with a golden shimr that always seed to defy the reality within. Ethan stood at the high window of the northern bastion, his wrapped hand resting on the stone ledge, watching the city breathe. Beneath him, life stirred—porters moving crates of linen, Templar patrols cycling from the barracks, and rchants opening their stalls along the Holy Sepulchre's western wall.
The lesion on his forearm no longer bled. It no longer itched. Gerard's mold salve—refined over weeks from the green spores originally scraped from rotting bread and cultured in clay pots behind the infirmary—had begun to do what neither prayer nor poultice had managed.
Each morning brought less pain, less discoloration. It had not reversed the leprosy, but it had slowed it—visibly.
Gerard had whispered over the bandages that morning, "It is divine, my king. A rcy given to your flesh. We must honor it."
Ethan hadn't corrected him. Whether miracle or mold, the result mattered more than the source.
He had no ti for celebration.
There was too much to build.
In the courtyard of the Holy Citadel, beneath a newly constructed timber awning, Ethan reviewed hand-drawn maps with Balian and Odo de St. Amand. The maps were growing crowded with new symbols—small black dots for watchposts, blue crosses for canals, spirals for windmill sites, and squares for granaries.
The most ambitious of his early efforts—the paper mill and printing press—had stabilized. Paper flowed from the mill in the Kidron Valley in small but regular quantities, thanks to a steady supply of linen rags from Jaffa and Acre. The press now printed five to ten sheets per day—so scripture, so letters, others draft copies of tax forms and land grants.
The work was slow, but the system had teeth.
The Liber Throni Petri, hand-bound and already in Ro, had proven what could be done.
Now ca the harder part: everything else.
Balian pointed to the coast on the parchnt map.
"The canal projects near Jaffa. They're behind schedule," he said.
"The brick molds failed again?" Ethan asked.
"No, just manpower. Too few skilled masons. Too much reliance on conscripts."
Ethan nodded. "Shift the better laborers from Acre. Delay the windmill at Beth Shean if needed."
He turned to Odo.
"And the mountain road reinforcent?"
"Progressing," Odo said. "We've reinforced two key switchbacks north of Hebron. We'll start on the third next week. The archway supports are holding, and the mule teams can manage heavier loads."
That mattered more than it sounded. Roads that could bear iron carts ant easier transport of lumber, stone, food—and eventually settlers.
The settler initiative, however, was still embryonic.
Ethan had begun offering small grants of land—two acres here, five there—to loyal knights and second sons, on the condition they built a dwelling, dug a well, and maintained contact with local patrol routes. A few dozen had accepted the offer. Most still hesitated.
"They fear isolation," Balian said plainly. "And raids."
"Then we give them walls before hos," Ethan said. "Palisades. Small towers. Defensive outposts with central granaries. They'll feel safer if they can see strength with their own eyes."
He looked at a marked point southeast of Ascalon—an empty square with the label Novi Coloniæ scrawled beside it.
"If one of those towns survives through next spring, the others will follow."
By late afternoon, Ethan visited the Trebuchet Yard outside the city's southern gate. The sun glared off unfinished timber fras and tension cables wrapped in ox-hide. Three of the massive counterweight machines stood partially constructed, their slings tested but uncalibrated.
The master engineer, a grizzled man nad Lucien of Limoges, greeted Ethan with a stiff nod.
"She's throwing clean now," Lucien said, motioning toward the largest machine. "Last stone flew straight four hundred paces. More with the heavier load."
"How's accuracy?" Ethan asked.
Lucien grimaced. "Still two days away from confidence. Right now, she could hit a tower—or a cow."
Ethan smirked. "Keep tuning. I want her deadly at Gaza before year's end."
Beside the trebuchets, young apprentices were assembling the chanical fra of the multi-arrow launchers—rebranded as stormracks, their na simplified for use by both Frank and local commanders. The devices used taut torsion cords, wound tight with winches, to fire short iron-tipped darts in loose volleys. The darts were lightweight and spread wide—ant more to scatter charges and break cavalry formations than pierce armor.
Each launcher was hand-cranked and took ti to reload, but their presence atop walls and near gates lent the illusion of overwhelming firepower. Illusion, Ethan knew, was a kind of weapon.
"Stormracks go to Ascalon first," Ethan told Lucien. "Then Gaza. Then Jerusalem."
"You expect a siege?" Lucien asked.
"I expect ti to run out," Ethan replied.
That evening, Ethan returned to the scriptorium.
The monks and scribes worked in gentle candlelight now, aided by tallow lamps suspended from wood beams. Anselm oversaw two parallel lines of printing: sacred text and administrative docunts. The first supported the Church. The second supported the kingdom.
He inspected a fresh page—legal code in clear Latin, written in two columns.
Not parchnt. Not vellum.
Paper.
The seal of the Kingdom of Jerusalem had been pressed into the bottom corner in red wax.
He ran a thumb over it.
This was permanence.
Not of walls. Not of swords.
Of words.
As the moon rose and the bells rang for compline, Ethan stood again at his window. He could see the faint glow of torches outside the walls, where laborers still worked on granary foundations and stone bathhouses.
The sound of the city was different now. It wasn't quiet, but it wasn't frantic.
It was a city in motion.
Every stone laid. Every field sown. Every cartload of linen or li or grain was another inch of future gained.
It wasn't finished.
It wasn't even close.
But it was beginning to live.
And Ethan, behind his mask, breathed in the air of it—dusty, bitter, and utterly real.
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