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"Seeing as it's your first day, we'll let you get settled in quarters."

The corporal took him to an old basement that had been timbered over with sod. Two ventilation pipes stuck up, without any sort of cover to keep out the rain. The corporal pulled back a tarp and brought him downstairs.

It smelled like body odor, wet wool, and possibly ferrets within, but to the eye it was clear enough. There were window wells, partially blocked up to prevent someone from sneaking out, that admitted some light. Most of the furniture was bunks, but there was also a big five-gallon plastic water barrel with a permanently stopped spigot hole. Instead of that there was a siphon hose and a cup.

"This is Hole Three. Can you say that?"

"Hole threes," Valentine repeated.

"Remember that. Any bunk without a blanket you can take."

Valentine decided he had to choose between light and fresh air and warmth. He chose light and fresh air, and took an unoccupied bottom-bunk near the door.

"Here, you won't eat until breakfast," the corporal said, rummaging in one of his big cargo pockets and pulling out something wrapped in foil. "Unless you're in the hospital, you only eat on the job site. Don't know if you're too smart or too dumb for all this, but I appreciate you not fussing and spitting, Scrubman."

The outer wrapper had a label with a picture of snowcapped mountains. It tasted of real cocoa and sugar and had plenty of peanuts in it. If a corporal in the Gray Baron's command could afford to give away chocolate like this to a prisoner as a kindly afterthought, they must be doing very well indeed in the Kurian Order. Valentine had sipped ersatz cocoa with many a New Universal churchman, even in Louisiana with its access to ocean trade.

Valentine ate half and saved the rest.

Everyone called him Scar.

Hole Three was run by a fleshy man known as Fat Daddy. Valentine wasn't sure of the source of his authority, as he went directly to his bunk and didn't move, even to urinate. His urine was collected and dumped into the basement urine bucket-he later found out every drop was saved, it went to a fertilizer manufacturer-by an injury-hobbled old man called Pappy.

They were all wary of him at first, in his clean new clothes. Fat Daddy distributed the soap ration, and there was none left once his own ample body and that of his rather gorgeous, bewigged golden boy were taken care of. A mix of servant, jester, and lover, the effeminate youth slept like a dog on his plastic-covered mattress at the foot of Fat Daddy's pushed-together bunks. Everyone called him Beach Boy and he was the one who gave Valentine the "Scar" moniker.

"Just do like Fat Daddy says and everything'll work out swell," Pappy advised him.

Valentine suspected they'd sniff his chocolate out sooner or later. Better to give it up voluntarily than be put in his place in the pecking order by having it taken from him forcibly. Despite his lurking hunger, he offered it to Pappy.

"You looks hungries, grandfathers," Valentine said, offering.

"Naw, I couldn't," Pappy said. He shot a glance around, most of the workers were stripping and hanging up their clothes so they'd dry out by morning, or they were taking drinks from the plastic bucket by letting a siphoned jet of water spray into their mouths so as not to touch the plastic end. Pappy still eyed it, licking his lips.

"Give it here, Pappy," Fat Daddy said. Valentine wasn't sure they were even watching.

Pappy grabbed it and brought it over to Fat Daddy in his bunk. Beach Boy-though Valentine didn't know the name yet-took it, smelled it, and insouciantly popped a chunk in his mouth before handing it to Fat Daddy.

"Naughty boy," Fat Daddy said. He tasted it. "This is good stuff, new meat. Hey, Boy, new meat needs a name."

Beach Boy made a great show of licking his lips. "Scar."

Valentine liked the work. Maddeningly so.

He spent his days working with excrement, or drying it and then transporting it to the fields, rather.

It was filthy stuff for a man as fastidious about his own cleanliness as Valentine, filling a trailer with liquid "hot honey" and raking it out into a field to dry with other organic waste in the sun. The better job, in some ways, was taking the dried version of it, known as "brown sugar" out to the fields, though in spreading it some dust would get up and you'd have to spend the day with a rag tied around your face and the uncomfortable thought that you were blinking feces out of your eyes. There it was turned into quick-growing heartroot, or other more traditional Midwestern vegetables and grains-there were even paddies for rice. Most of the heartroot was broken up and added to scraps for pig feed or to granary leavings for the chickens the Gray Ones kept in little household coops or vast stacks in the pole barns.

The work was done by men because Grog warriors would not be stained by such duty, fit only for slaves. So the men of the forced-labor group, a collection of criminals, last-chancers, and sold-off Grog slaves of dubious origins such as himself, did work no warrior would take up, and the few Grog females in the Baron's stronghold were too valuable to sully with such labor.

Valentine followed orders, took his three hots and a cot, and waited in absurd, smelly happiness. They ate their meals outdoors, in the sun in good weather, under a tent or inside available transport in bad. He felt his body toughening under the dawn-to-dusk days, and there were no worries beyond his being recognized. There was a part of him that hated responsibility, the endless choices between bad outcomes that came with military life, the paperwork that no one ever read, useful only to the creators of file cabinets and document storage boxes.

His work wasn't limited to agriculture. Anything having to do with shit would cause an officer or a Grog chief to call in the forced-labor group. Valentine and Pappy were sometimes called into the Grog Quarter to deal with a stuffed-up toilet drain. He'd crouch to walk under lofted housing, or pass through alleys just wide enough to allow two Grogs to face each other and squeeze through. He smelled delicious steak and vegetable kabobs being cooked on tiny charcoal stoves and took cover when raucous games of throw-and-block or breakgrip burst out of multihome courtyards and into the streets, paths and alleys. He smelled tobacco and hot iron and apple-wood smokers. The Gray Ones loved pine and orange oils in their homes to cover the scent of a stopped drain.

"They also slosh around a lot of oil and burn it when the she-Grogs go fertile," Pappy said. "Grogs theyselves don't cause too much trouble about mating if there are no eligible females about, as long as they don't smell 'em. But if they get a whiff, it's Katie bar the door, 'cause you're about to get plugged in like a surge protector."

He also saw the Golden One quarters. Many still lived in tents, but more permanent housing formed of bricks reclaimed from the town and the output of a new Golden One-run sawmill was going up. Their quarters were laid out with more precision than the Gray One piles of housing, but each Golden One had less space. A whole family of six would be put into just a half basement.

Valentine felt for them. It was never fun to sleep in the same place you cooked.

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